NOT PLACING AN ORDINANCE IN THE
LEGISLATURE IS FRAUDULENT, SAYS SC CONSTITUTION BENCH
The
Supreme Court today reserved its judgment in the case of Krishna Kumar Singh v
State of Bihar, after grilling the counsel on both the sides on the propriety
of promulgating an ordinance, and not placing it in the legislature to seek its
approval, within the prescribed period.
Under
Article 123(2)(a), an ordinance shall cease to operate at the expiration of six
weeks from the reassembly of Parliament, or, if before the expiration of that
period resolutions disapproving it are passed by both Houses, upon the passing
of the second of those resolutions.
Article
213(2) (a) has a similar provision with regard to the validity of ordinances
promulgated by the Governor of a State, during the recess of state legislature.
Senior
advocate, Salman Khurshid, appearing for one of the petitioners, argued that
the focus in the case is on repromulgation of ordinances, and therefore, the
question whether a Government can avoid placing an ordinance in a legislature,
to seek its approval to it, after promulgation, is a minor issue. This prompted
the Chief Justice T.S.Thakur to remark that power can’t be exercised without
concomitant obligation.
Khurshid
then asked the bench to lay down grounds which would ensure that certain
effects of an ordinances would endure, even after its expiry. Khurshid
suggested that whatever the ruling of the bench in this case, it should apply
prospectively, so that the petitioners’ prayer is granted.
When
Justice Chandrachud pointed out that the Constitution mandates that the
Government should place the Ordinance in the House, senior advocate, Amarendra
Sharan, also appearing for a petitioner, suggested that every Ordinance should
be treated as a separate ordinance, even if there is a series of repromulgated
Ordinances. Therefore, the question of the first Ordinance losing its validity
because of the Government’s failure to place it in the legislature, and thereby
making the subsequent repromulgated ones vulnerable, does not arise, he
contended.
Earlier, the Solicitor General, Ranjit Kumar,
suggested that whether the effects of an Ordinance would endure after its
expiry would differ from case to case. He showed his agreement with Justice
Sujata Manohar who said in her 1998 judgment that the effect of an Ordinance
can be considered as permanent when that effect is irreversible or possibly
when it would be highly impractical or against public interest to reverse it,
e.g. an election which is validated should not again become invalid.
The Solicitor General’s view came as a
disappointment to many petitioners, who are retired Sanskrit teachers, and who
were present in the Court today.
The
Bihar Government, through an Ordinance, had granted them the status of
government employees, and allowed the Ordinance to lapse subsequently, after
repromulgating it a few times. The principle of reversibility would mean that
their status as government employees could be reversed, by virtue of the expiry
of the Ordinance.
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