The “Basic Structure Doctrine” is the most potent tool in the hands of the judiciary to maintain and check the balance of power that is required for the smooth functioning of the Indian Democracy. Legal systems always have a hierarchical normative order (1-wh). Each system in such an order always derives it authority from a system above it in hierarchy. A constitution whether written or unwritten, contains the norm of exalted authority and hence, is of the highest importance in any legal system. The constitution lives the closest to the “basic” norm of the legal system and derives its nature and character from it. (7-wh) This “basic” structure is the identity of a legal system and it is not desirable for elapses of time to sweep away its essential features. Recent literature calls for the codification of the basic structure doctrine, in an attempt to define its limits and effectively try to reduce the lack of judicial accountability that lies with its use.

The objective of this paper is to argue against its codification and propose some better alternatives. I will show how a codified doctrine has a theoretically unjustifiable form and would bring along numerous adjudicatory pitfalls. 

Every single feature of this doctrine was developed to address a situation that arose before the court in a particular case. Keshavnanda[i] never provided any affirmative theory about how the basic structure doctrine is to be discerned beyond a Potter Steward-esque view.[ii] Justice Chandrachud, in Indira Gandhi v Raj Narain[iii], promulgated the non-exhaustive nature of the doctrine in saying that "the theory of Basic Structure has to be considered in each individual case, not in the abstract, but in the context of the concrete problem.” Codification of the basic structure doctrine would be a potential threat to its legitimacy. This would be caused by a lack of conceptual crystallization of the doctrine’s elements and its potentially arbitrary use by the judiciary. I will also highlight a theoretical limitation of codifying the doctrine through legislative amendment.

I argue that firstly, it is not possible for the judiciary or parliament to predict all possible situations that would arise and must be protected by the doctrine. We still do not know if all what is considered to be basic today is conceptually crystallised.

The exact contents of this doctrine are not yet laid out conclusively. The way it has evolved has upset some major philosophical assumptions about legislative sovereignty and the boundaries of constitutional authority.[iv] The foundations of this doctrine have been built upon profound deliberation over multiple cases before attaining crystallization. It is likely that certain elements are still in this process and will move towards finality as individual cases would require its use over time. If at a certain instance, the doctrine is codified, it is possible that firstly, some elements would be left out and secondly, some that have not fully developed, be included. Let’s take the example of Judicial Review. If codification occurred immediately after Indira Gandhi, then Judicial review would not have been a part of the doctrine. The situation then created in Minerva Mills[v] would face great difficulty. Either the court would have to invoke it as an unwritten principle, making the initial process of codification futile, or have the legislature add it to the code, which would be impossible given the political situation. The unwritten nature provided the Supreme court with room for a “self-styled benchmark of structural essentialism” [vi] that helped judicial review become a part of the basic structure when required. This power has been the centre of much debate and the proponents of codification seek to define its limits. Codification, however, will lead to more problems. It will cause the arbitrary use of the basic structure doctrine. A misguided illusion of clarity, generally associated with codification principles, will only amplify these issues.

Courts bind themselves by precedent so as to prevent arbitrary and inconsistent decision making. A written doctrine will allow a court to depart from judicial precedent by invoking the written text as a generically valid reason and hence, weaken the “judicial commitment to stare decisis.[vii] Two features of a codified doctrine could be the reason for this claim. Firstly, the existence of an authoritative code would give definitive answers to questions of constitutionality. This would be explicitly expressed by the codified doctrine. Now, the second feature – the doctrine’s status as essential unamendable law would give possibly baseless interpretations by the judiciary, ratification. The court can insist that it is merely executing what the code dictates. Of course, the degree of this insulation would depend on the abstraction and generality of the codified doctrine. The constitution of Honduras has a highly specific eternity clause that dictates the character of the government.[viii] The 2009 Honduran Constitutional Crisis can be thought of as a direct result of the presence of such a specific dicta that blurred boundaries between rules and principles.[ix]The avenue to depart from precedent and such judicial insulation may not just encourage arbitrary behaviour, but also intellectual sloppiness and an opportunity for judges to pursue personal political agendas.[x]

Proponents believe that codification will provide clarity about the limits on legislative action.[xi] However we must understand that the meaning of many substantive principles, when formulated in a normative context- are inherently unclear. The political concepts associated with words such as “equality” and “liberty” are highly contested.[xii] Codification will present such contested concepts as clear and indisputable. This would only create and illusion of clarity and solidify the aura of judicial opinion that tries to define it, having negative consequences on any judicial or even societal debate over the content of such principles.[xiii]

One of the biggest problems faced by any legal system is to balance itself between maintaining stability and continuity on one hand, and flexible and responsiveness on the other. The form of the constitution, and more remarkably, of the basic norm that sustains it, plays a deterministic role in its position between these two extremes. The form of a codified foundation fails to strike the right balance mentioned above. An unwritten basic structure doctrine will find a better balance between this much required stability, and the need for some malleability to adapt to the changing needs of society. It does this as the uncodified elements respond to “policies and concerns of a society in an organic, diffuse manner without any compromise of stability.”[xiv]

Although not directly related to adjudication, I want to address the theoretical baselessness of having the legislature codify the basic features of a constitution. The 15th Amendment Act[xv] in Bangladesh, constitutionalized the essential features of their constitution and explicitly confirmed the limited amending power of the legislature. According to the ‘delegation theory’, “limitations upon the delegated secondary constituent power can solely be imposed by the higher authority from which it is derived – the primary constituent power.”[xvi] The validity of an unamendable doctrine codified by the legislature would be threatened when faced by a conflicting norm created by the same authority. Such codification, therefore, would be administered by the maxim – “lex posterior derogat priori”. The Bangladeshi Amendment was criticized by constitutional theorists who founded their claim on this maxim, arguing that a constitutional amendment cannot establish its own unamendibility. An implicit or unwritten doctrine would naturally come into existence for maintaining the legitimacy of such aamendment, making the initial process of codification theoretically futile. A national referendum could help in legitimizing such a code without an unwritten interpretation but conducting a fair referendum to know the true ‘will’ of the people would face some serious practical problems in the context of India.[xvii]

Many misjudgements have been woven into the unwritten doctrine that have caused critics to advocate for its explication. The doctrine has often been invoked in situations when the meaning of the subject constitutional norm has several reasonable interpretations. It is possible that judges link their own cores of jurisprudential understandings on questions of basic structure, even when reasonable minds might differ in opinion.[xviii] The lack of constitutional accountability and restraint has cause people to advocate for its codification and consequently, the explication of its limitations.

It is well received that its reins cannot be let loose without any accountability. However, for striking the right balance between restraining ‘constitutional’ procedures used to achieve unconstitutional ends and the unnecessary, baseless or overt use of this doctrine, codification is not the answer. Maybe two possible solutions exist.

Instead of codifying the doctrine and limiting its resilience against the unpredictable challenges posed by the various routes of action that can be adopted by anti-democratic actors, an approach where courts are influenced by democratic principles rooted in constitutional systems beyond the borders of its own jurisdiction, can be considered. The expansion of this idea would go beyond the scope of this paper.

The reformation of judicial review can also be explored. The doctrine was created in special circumstances to protect the fundamental structure of the constitution.  However, today, the unnecessary and excessive use of the doctrine is a reality that threatens its very special character.  It has been “extensively invoked to affect policy decisions”[xix] and its indifferent evocation has been the root cause of resentment against it. Explication or codification of the doctrine is, again, not the answer to limit such use. Rather, the process of judicial review needs to be restructured in a way that protects the basic features of the constitution against infringing laws without the actual invocation of the doctrine itself. This argument derives its strength from the understanding that any law which violates the basic nature of the constitution, would also, in most likelihood, be inconsistent with some other part of the constitution. This particular law could breach some fundamental right or some other constitutional provision which does not necessarily mean that the law is violative of the basic structure. In such a scenario, the judiciary must use the lower principle to invalidate the law. In other words, a law that is expected to infringe the basic structure, should not pass the judicial scrutiny of an applicable constitutional provision. The repeated use of the doctrine will not just impair it but also motivate institutions to bypass its moral authority.[xx]The restructured judicial review process can prevent this, without the need for codification and its associated issues. 

It must be noted that the core of both these opinions revolve around the willingness to trust the judiciary and the application of their discretion in protecting the Constitution of India. It would be a stretch of our imagination to believe that the decisions of a court fall neither towards the constitution not towards the ‘consent of the governed’.[xxi]The case against the doctrines codification far outweighs its benefits, especially in the light potential solutions for the shortcomings of an uncodified basic structure doctrine.


[i] AIR 1973 SC 1461

[ii]Jacobellis V. Ohio, 378 U.S. 184, 197 (1964) (Stewart J., Concurring).

[iii]1975 AIR 1590

[iv]Satya Prateek, Today’s Promise, Tomorrow’s Constitution: ‘Basic Structure’,

Constitutional Transformations and The Future of Political Progress In India, 1 NUJS L. Rev. 417 (2008)

[v]1980 AIR 1789

[vi]Supra 3

[vii]Pek, Jane. (2008). Things Better Left Unwritten? Constitutional Text and The Rule of Law. New York University Law Review (1950). 83.

[viii]Honduras Const. Article 374

[ix]Friedman, A. (2011). Dead Hand Constitutionalism: The Danger of Eternity Clauses in New Democracies.

[x]Richard A. Posner, The Problematics of Moral and Legal Theory 264 (1999).

[xi]William E. Nelson, Americanization Of the Common Law 90 (1975)

[xii]Margaret Jane Radin, Reconsidering the Rule of Law, 69 B.U. L. Rev. 781, 800 (1989)

[xiii]F.A. Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty: Rules and Order 86 (1983). 107

[xiv]Supra 7

[xv]Bangladesh Const. (Fifteenth Amend.) Act, 2011.

[xvi]Roznai, Y. (2013). Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments—The Migration and Success of a Constitutional Idea. The American Journal of Comparative Law, 61(3), 657-719. Retrieved from Http://Www.Jstor.Org/Stable/43668170

[xvii]Excerpt from Y. Roznai, Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments – The Limits of Amendment Powers, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2017 (Part Ii, Ch. 4, 5).

[xviii]Rosalind Dixon, David Landau, Transnational Constitutionalism and A Limited Doctrine of Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendment, International Journal of Constitutional Law, Volume 13, Issue 3, July 2015, Pages 606–638

[xix]Supra 3

[xx]Supra 3

[xxi]Levinson, S. (1995). Responding To ImperfectionThe Theory And Practice Of Constitutional Amendment. (Course Book Ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. 


 (Avantika Rai is a student of OP Jindal Global Law University)


 


In the words of Granville Austin, the Constituent Assembly envisaged the Indian Judiciary as a bastion of rights and justice. However, recent string of orders from the Punjab and Haryana High Court reflectthe court’s tendency to relinquish their constitutionally mandated role, in favor of acting as a guardian of ‘public morality’ and ‘social fabric’ of society. The court on May 18, 2021, in a rather injudicious order, declined to grant protection to a couple who were apprehending danger from their parents. To add insult to injury, the court further went ahead to comment that the couple, under the garb of this protection petition, are seeking seal of approval on their live-in relationship which is morally and socially not acceptable. The court, in assuming that it is them who possess this imaginary authority to grant approval of relationships, has committed two blatant blunders: Firstly, it places social and moral acceptance of a practice over Article 21 protection of right to life and personal liberty that encompasses the right to live with a partner of one’s choice as a necessary coincident of liberty guaranteed under this article of the Indian Constitution. Secondly, the high court, exceeded its authority by exhibiting flagrant disregard to the Supreme Court of India as the apex court has, on numerous occasions, held the practice of live-in relationships to be within the bounds of law of this land, irrespective of how immoral the society may consider it to be. Nevertheless, even if the Supreme Court had not adjudged the issue, the fact that live-in relationships are not legislatively illegal, makes this absurd preference by the court of social and moral acceptance of live-in relationships over the constitutionally granted fundamental right of life and liberty, a mammoth infelicitous debacle. Having said this, it is not intended to state that had there been a legislation prohibiting live-in relationships, the orders of the court could have been tenable because in that eventuality, the constitutionality of that specific legislation would itself have been under the scanner by the Supreme Court as it would violate multiple facets of the Article 21 right viz. right to privacy, bodily autonomy, cohabitation, life and personal liberty.
 
As regrettable as it may appear, this order is not a one-off incident as the Punjab and Haryana High Court itself on May 12, 2021, passed another order wherein the court similarly declined to grant protection to a live-in couple stating that if such protection is granted, the entire social fabric of the society would get disturbed. The court rooted it’s reasoning for declining protection to the couple in the fact that the first petitioner was barely 18 and the other was only 21. If this order is indeed rightly reasoned, the court must go ahead and register a sou motu case against all the constitutional law professors of this country, for being so negligent in executing their duties that they forgot to teach us that our fundamental rights granted by the constitution are dependent upon the age or employability of a petitioner.Nevertheless, from what the Supreme Court of India has held, it can be authoritatively stated that Article 21 protection of right to life and personal liberty is not dependent upon any parameter (not even citizenship) or contingent upon any other right, leave alone public morality, social acceptance or social fabric of society. Notably, no other fundamental right, other than Article 25 and 26 (right to freedom of religion, which is subject to public order, morality, health and other fundamental rights) is dependent upon any moral or social acceptance requirement. People derive their right to equality and right to life and liberty from the constitution and it is the mandatory job of the courts to protect these rights from violation and not to impute intentions to petitioners or pass diktats perpetuating a view that smacks of antediluvian Victorian morality.
 
It is indeed despicable that a discussion on dispensation of legal rights of citizens, has such an inflated rate of bombardment of phrases like ‘public morality’ and ‘social acceptance’. As unfortunate as it may be, this begs the question that should judges be influenced by something as fluid and subjective as popular morality? The courts cannot hold an otherwise unconstitutional act to be constitutional because it is in consonance with the morality of the public.Consequently, the Punjab and Haryana High Court has erred in these orders by giving weightage to an abstract and unnecessary parameter of “public morality” in a proceeding that should have only considered the fact that the petitioners have a certain right to protection and no amount of public outrage should be able to jeopardize this constitutional right. If the court must worry about morality, it is Constitutional Morality that they should concern themselves with rather than public morality. Hon’ble Justice Chandrachud, in his Section 377 judgement, held that constitutional morality requires that the “right of an individual ought not to be prejudiced by popular notions of society”. He further stated that constitutional morality “reflects that the ideal of justice is an overriding factor in the struggle for existence over any other notion of social acceptance”. Chief Justice Dipak Misra (as he then was) along with Justice Khanwilkar and Justice Chandrachud held that the goal of the court is to “transform society”, or, in other words,“convert public morality into constitutional morality”. However, what the Punjab and Haryana High Court has done is that, in stark contrast to Supreme Court’s judgement, it has converted constitutional morality into public morality and this, in the words of Hon’ble Justice Nariman“is not open for a constitutional court to substitute societal morality with constitutional morality”. The Supreme Court, in the Sabarimala Judgment, has even held that the word “morality” contained in the restrictions of Article 25 and 26 mean constitutional morality and not public morality. It is evident that even when the constitution subjects a right to “morality”, it refers to constitutional morality and not the morality of the specific judge or public at large.  Therefore, in such cases that have no restriction of “morality” mentioned in the constitution, it is injudicious of the courts to start reading in the requirements of public morality and social acceptance into the rights-based framework of the Indian Republic.
 
A parallel can be drawn between the handling of these cases by the High Court and the Supreme Court’s Ayodhya Verdict which received scathing criticism from eminent constitutional scholars for prioritizing “public peace and tranquility” rather than dispensing justice. By extension, it would mean that the court’s decision in the Ayodhya matter could have been different if they were of the opinion that a different decision would bring more public peace and tranquility in the society. Justice, seems to take the back seat in such calculations. The High Court’s handling of the present issues seems to be suffering from the same misplaced priority conundrum wherein it has prioritized public morality and social fabric of society over the constitutional rights that the people have. By extrapolation, one is tempted to think that would the decision of the court have been different if the practice of live-in relationships were socially acceptable in our society? At this juncture, it must be reiterated that the duty of the courts is to protect the rights of individuals from being violated rather than focus on maintaining peace or protecting the supposed social fabric of the society.Moreover, the link between a live-in relationship and the moral fabric of society is itself non-existent and if, in the esteemed opinion of the ever-righteous court, the moral fabric of our society does get disturbed by two heterosexual consenting individuals living together in their own private space, one needs to re-evaluate the utility of having such puritanical social fabric in our livesto begin with.
 
The process of adjudication of cases, is mostly an exercise in balancing out contested rights of opposing parties. In a conflict of rights, the court examines the contestations between the parties and favors the more legitimate right. In the present cases, the rights in conflict are the constitutional right to life and personal liberty of the couples versus the imaginary non-existent right of the Indian parents to control the lives of their children. Evidently, there is no precedent required to adjudicate this conflict of rights but if the Punjab and Haryana High Court wanted so, it need not go far as a bench of this very court, headed by Justice Sarin, in December, 2020 had ruled that even if the petitioner is not of marriable age, the live-in couple has a right to live together if they are major and that parents cannot force a child to live life on their terms. Justice Sarin held, and rightly so, that the live-in couple will not be declined protection of this court as the court cannot deny enforcement of the couple’s Article 21 fundamental right on the whims of their parents. In a more recent development, just two days after the May 18 order, Justice Sudhir Mittal of the Punjab and Haryana High Court itself, has, in a judicious, wise and concretely reasoned judgement, granted protection to a live-in couple stating that such a relationship is neither prohibited nor does it amount to commission of any offence and therefore the couple is entitled to equal protection of laws. Moreover,he held that social acceptance for live-in relations are on the increase. However, what is truly remarkable about this order is that although Justice Mittal held that there is increasing social acceptance of the concept of live-in relationship, he did not root his decision of granting protection to the couple in this social acceptance.Had he granted the couple protection on the basis of the increasing social acceptance, he would have committed the same mistake that the previous judges did, but would have just happened to come to a different conclusion by applying the same flawed reasoning. Instead, Justice Mittal turned to the constitution and held that there is no difference between couple who gets married against the wishes of their parents and couples who live together without a formal marriage and that the law should protect them both equally.
 
Such prudent reasoning of Justice Sarin and Justice Mittal is also in congruence with the thoughts of libertarian scholars like John Stuart Mill who argue that the only component of an individual’s behavior that can be the concern of state or society is that which effects other individuals directly and that the individual must be sovereign over his body and mind in all matters except this.In this case, no other right of anyone is being affected directly or indirectly other than the already stated imaginary right of the Indian parents to control the lives of their children. The rhetoric of social fabric and public morality are just windows through which the biases of the society and the judges themselves protrude.
 
Lastly, if the court is indeed turning to history, it is suggested, that they do so,not to refer to primitive Victorian morality, but to refer to the historical 1988 judgement of the European Court of Human Rights in Norris vs Republic of Ireland wherein it was held, in the context of homosexuality but it can be transposed to our present factual matrix as well, that “although members of the public who regard homosexuality as immoral may be shocked, offended or disturbed by the commission by others of private homosexual acts, this cannot on its own warrant the application of penal sanctions when it is consenting adults alone who are involved”. Perhaps it is time that the Indian courts realize that just because the enforcement of a constitutional right may offend, shock or disturb the public, this per se, does not make the right non-enforceable in any way whatsoever.

(Ayush Mishra is a practicing Advocate at the Hon’ble Allahabad High Court and a graduate of the NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad)



In the words of Bezwada Wilson,

The state must see that the law enforcing agencies are functioning. I must say that very clearly, these (deaths) are murders by the state.

The literal meaning of ‘manual scavenging’ is manual labour involving carrying and moving of human excreta. The conventional meaning of the same was understood in the context of manual labour practicing carrying and removing excreta from dry latrines, whereas, after the inclusion of modernization of sanitation technologies, there has been an inclusion of unsafe cleaning which has assumed new forms of manual scavenging, such as unsafe cleaning of septic tanks, drainage systems and sewer line in urban and rural cities.Even after the enactment ofseverallegislations, there has been a void, which can only be filled by proper implantation and improving social conditions.

There have been several variants in the contextual understanding of manual scavengers.There are three forms of manual scavenging in India which are propounded by the International Labour Organisation which are firstly, manual removal and carrying of human excreta secondly, cleaning of sewage tanks and thirdly, cleaning gutters and sewers. There have been several problems related to manual scavenging which were documented by the Indian Council of Medical Research ranging from several medical conditions related to manual scavenging including such as infectious diseases, respiratory diseases, musculoskeletal conditions, which can be highly fatal attributing to carbon monoxide and methane poisoning, especially when most manual scavengers work without any protective equipment.

The Role of Judiciary and Legislations

The problem is of a two-fold nature, firstly policy making and secondly proper execution of the same. Human Rights watchdog had re-iterated that the World Health Organisation has asserted the need for manual scavenging but there has not a translation into any certain reasonable form. The nature of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has largely remained evasive of widened health problems which call for action on social detriments of health envisaged by though the National Health Policy (2017).

 

The Union Government brought into force the "Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines (Prohibition) Act" in the year 1993, which did away with the employment of manual scavengersfor the purpose of dry latrines. What followed the measure was the introduction of  "Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013", to underline the pressing need of rehabilitating manual scavengers within the context of prohibiting employment of manual scavengers.In 2014, the Supreme Court envisaged directives as for the fulfillment of the objectives laid in earlier legislations w.r.t end manual scavenging.The law also focused on increasing punishment for manual scavenging and rehabilitation of those who were involved in the occupation. The Apex Court observed in Safai Karamchari Andolan and Ors. Vs. Union of India and Ors that the abhorrent practice of manual scavenging negates international human rights and is strictly ordered to put an end to the said practice. In addition,"In no country, people are sent to gas chambers to die," observed the Apex Court of the country while taking note of the practice of manual scavenging in 2019.

To put an end to the practice of manual scavenging, the said Act has various provisions for stringent penalties, for any form of employment in hazardous cleaning undertaken by any person& the same is made punishable. In addition, if a worker dies while performing such hazardous work above mentioned, even with various safety gears, the employer is legally obliged to pay compensation of Rs 10 lakh to the legal heirs of the worker.

Even after stringent provisions, there is hardly any action being witnessed on the round – not a single FIR was filed in 2014, according to the 57thStanding Committee of Social Justice and Empowerment, 2017-2018. The reports of the parliamentary standing committee in 2017-18, citing that the support to the manual scavengers has been atrociously inadequate so far. The problem with manual scavenging isn’t an urban challenge, as the pertinent fact is that the situation of rural sanitation be also taken into consideration.The Social Justice and Empowerment Ministry in response to a question about the deaths of manual scavengers informed that 340 people had died while cleaning sewers and septic tanks in the past five years.

The democratic society consists of a legal system that vehemently endorses unequivocally the idea of civil and political freedoms which are in paramount nature necessarily accompanied by the notion of social freedom and economic rights. Since the inception ofthe 1980s, the Indian judiciary via observations and judgmentwhich expanded the right to life guaranteed in Article 21 of the Indian Constitution into a right to life with dignity.

The duty is of the state to protect the manual scavengers without compromising their constitutional accountability. Article 51 of the Indian Constitution embodies Directive Principles of State Policy, which makes it incumbent upon the State to foster respect for treaties & international law. The right to healthy, safe & secure conditions of work has been protected under the Constitution. Indian Constitution expresses unfeigned concern for the welfare of workers and has stipulated in Article 42 that the State shall undertake steps for securing just and humane conditions of work. Further, Article 43 expounds an obligation that the State shall endeavour to secure to all workers a decent standard of life, including enjoyment; leisure, etc.

These principles are decisive fundamentals in the governance of the country & were upheld in U.P.S.E. Board v Hari Shankar; D.B.M. Patnaik v State of AP Consequently, India is bestowed with the responsibility of ensuring the right to work, to just and favourable conditions of work, right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with pay, right to life, social protection & protection against the torturous treatment as per the sanction of Article 3, 5, 23 & 24 of the UDHR. Further, ICCPR directs the state parties to protect the inherent right to life, protection from torturous or degrading treatment directed by Article 6 &7, which can’t be curtailed even during the pubic emergency as provided by Article 4 of the convention. Article 9 further protects the security of the person. Similarly, ICESCR recognizes the human right of everyone to the enjoyment of favourable & just conditions of work, in particular: healthy; safe working conditions, leisure, rest and periodic holidays with pay and, reasonable limitation of working hours as well as remuneration for public holidays, right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health; to ensure steps with regard to prevention; control of occupational diseases as per Article 7 &12 of the convention.

These rights are expressly recognized in international conventions and agreements which India has ratified, including the UDHR, ICESCR, and ICCPR. India has a constitutional mandate to honour these internationally recognized Principles &Rules.India is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The Supreme Court upheld that right to life about human rights has to be interpreted in conformity with established internation allaws &principles. 3 Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 7 (b) of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights have been duly recognized by the Supreme Court while safeguarding the right to health by a worker.In the process, the scope of Article 21 enunciating “right to life” has been rightfully enlarged, bestowing an incumbent duty on the executive to act proactively against the abhorrent practice.

Common Problems Faced by Manual Scavengers

Manual scavenging is exploitative in nature as, the form prevalent in our society is of forced labour as people enter into this practice without their respective choice or assent, and leaving isn’t an economically viable option because leaving the employment manual scavenging leaves the workers with no choice of alternate employment but to return to their work and those, who are able to find alternate employment are facing harassment.

There is a need to broader the meaning, as in to accommodate every employment which has proximity with manual scavenging such as toilet cleaners, formal or informal and caretakers who’re subcontracted in domestic, public or even institutional settings, wherein workers working at faecal waste treatment and disposal sites, emptying pits and septic tanks and other. Broadly they also include faecal sludge handlers who clean sewer and manholes that's called manual scavengers.

Several problems are being faced by the workers, but common accidents are a noxious repercussion of accidents which are reported included losing consciousness and death by asphyxiation resulting from the gases which are toxic in nature and are released in septic tanks and sewers, and wounds from sharp detritus. Poor sanitation is linked to 4,32,000 deaths annually across the length & breadth of the country.The workers, who are indulged in manual scavenging regardless of being subcontracted in the formal or informal sector, they’re not provided with protective gear. This results in endless suffering of miseries for scavengers in the form medical condition, which includes fever, fatigue, cholera, typhoid, asthma, polio, hepatitis, skin burn or irritation.They’re also prone to skin and respiratory tract infections, because of the higher degree of proximity to working conditions.

The number is not conclusive in nature as they are typically not classified distinctly but, are majorly in aggregate form i.e., there is no disaggregated number as to cite the number of deaths in a different type of employment wherein the field of concern is modern scavenging in any form, above mentioned in the article. Example:  There can be a quantification of the workforce by aggregating municipal workers with solid waste management workers.

There are several problems even after excluding social stigma, there is labour exploitation with mere remuneration and even, causing life long health risk and problems which are totally fatal in nature, as occupation health is being side-lined as workers are working without proper protection, under unjust working condition.

Although it is completely irrefutable, as the established fact is Swachh Bharat Abhiyan has made unprecedented and positive behavioural and infrastructural changes with regard to the campaign promoting the usage of toilets but at the same time, there is a need for more substantial effort to substantially reduce manual scavenging. Therefore, Swachh Bharat Abhiyan at the policy level has addressed the core issue such as accessibility to toilets, but on a critical note, ignoring those cleaning them.

Conclusion

A detailed & comprehensive report released by World Health Organisation (WHO) deduced that despite several  laws and regulations, the practice of manual scavenging, contrary to the popular belief has not been eliminated from the country but has been forced underground.

The cases of manual scavengers forced the government to bring in new and more comprehensive legislation in 2013 i.e., The Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act which was inclusive of several developing doctrines and principles, being evolving in the problem of the forced labour in manual scavenging. Many principles evolved, one of them was an established principle for compensation of Rs. 10 Lakh by the court, which was payable to each for the sewer death since 1993 in addition, the legislation also established the accountability of the state even though the worker was employed or contracted by the state, or not their state shall be responsible for payment of compensation. This was very significant considering that the major worker population indulged in state-provided sewage (or equivalent) services were being not accounted for, thereby no accountability and responsibility was established.

Conclusively, in the contemporary-socio issues,several problems are to be addressed by stringent law & action accordingly. Manual scavenging is one such problem which neither desired in unsafe working conditions nor be employed for a high-risk job. These jobs are where the dominantly employed in the unorganized market which is temporary in job protection. In addition, the workers who are unprotected by law with the basic working condition not being par at requisite conditions.

(Kumar Aditya and Devashish Tiwari are law students of JIMS School of Law)




On 28th March, 2021 the President of India gave his assent to the Government of National Capital Territory Amendment Act, 2021 which seeks to enhance the power of the Lt. Governor and limits the power of the elected Government’s power in Delhi. The main aim of this blog is to provide a holistic analysis as to how this Act is against the very cherished principles of the Constitution i.e. “Popular will of the people”, Constitutionalism, Federal nature of the Constitution and Constitutional Morality and how this Act tends to overshadow the ratio of law decided by the Supreme Court in the case of Government of NCT of Delhi v. UOI[i]

A BRIEF ABOUT THE ACT

The NCT Amendment Act, 2021 brings drastic changes with regards to the powers exercised by the Lt. Governor. The new law amends Sections 21, 24, 33 and 44 of the GNCTD Act, 1991.[ii] The objective of the 1991 Act as highlighted by the apex Court in the Government of NCT of Delhi case[iii]stated that, “The said Act will promote harmonious relations between the Legislature and the Executive, and further defines the duties of the elected Government and the Lt. Governor, in consonance with the Constitutional scheme of governance of National Capital Territory of Delhi”. However, the 2021 Amendment Act completely reverses the situation.

The GNCTD (Amendment) Act, 2021 clarifies that the ‘Government’ in Delhi would mean the ‘Lieutenant Governor’. After a bill has been passed by the Legislative Assembly, it shall be presented to the Lt. Governor, who would decide whether to give his or her assent to the bill or to save it for the consideration of the President, further the Delhi Government is required to seek the opinion of the Lt. Governor after the passage of a bill before considering any executive action. The Lt. Governor, under the amendment has been ‘necessarily granted an opportunity’ to advice the Delhi Cabinet before the implementation of any law and restricts the Assembly or the Committees from conducting inquiries related to administrative relations or the matters concerning the day-to-day administration of the Assembly.

Violation of the popular will of the people

In a democratic republic, the people who are the sovereign elect their law-making representatives for enacting laws and shaping policies which are reflective of the popular will of the people. The trite saying that democracy is “for the people, of the people and by the people” has to be remembered for ever. In a democratic Republic, it is the will of the people that is paramount and becomes the basis of the authority of the Government and this popular will defines the ‘Spirit’ of the Constitution.

However, the present Act seems to negate this ‘Spirit’ of the Constitution. The present act minimizes the role of the elected Government and enhances the power of the Lt. Governor. By minimizing the power of the elected Government, the principle of the Representative Governance in a Republican form of democracy wherein the people of a nation elect and chose their representatives has been violated because now the power is vested with an authority who does not represent the popular will of the people and such act violates the principle of rule of law, the apex court in the case of State of Bihar v. Bal Mukund Shah[iv]held that:

“Besides providing a quasi-federal system in the country and envisaging the scheme for distribution of Legislative powers between the State and the Centre, it emphasizes the establishment of Rule of Law. The form of Government ideated under a Parliamentary system of democracy is a representative democracy in which the citizens of the country are entitled to exercise their sovereignty.”Therefore, the present act undoubtedly lexographise the sovereignty of the people.

The ultra democratic conception of sovereignty is, premised on the very concept of the “will of the people” the parliamentary form of democracy as envisaged by the Constitution has its very base the power bestowed upon people to vote and make the Legislature accountable for their functioning to the people. If the Legislature fails to transform the popular will of the people into policies and laws the democracy like ours have the power to elect new representatives by exercise of their vote. So, the question which now arises whether the elected government of the NCT of Delhi failed to perform its duties? The answer is no.

The present act appears to be a political whip on the Preamble of our Constitution, as the Preamble tells us, the document was adopted by “We the People of India”. It is through this expression the sovereignty of people is defined and when the people have elected their representative then in which democracy does the Government possess the power to overshadow the “popular will of the people”? Therefore, the authors are of the firm viewpoint that this act is nothing but a finesse to jeopardized the power of the elected Government.

Against the principle of Constitutionalism

The present Act seems to bypass the established norms and conventions of the decision-making policy. When the terms Constitutionalism and Constitutional Governance are read together they defines the fundamental polity of law which effectively controls the exercise of political power. However, the present act defiles this spirit of the Constitution, by vesting the power of law making into the hand of the authority whose job is to aid and advice the Council of Ministers.

The Constitution distributes the powers in such a manner that they are each subjected to reciprocal controls and forced to cooperate in formulating the will of the State.[v] However, in the present Act there is a disruption of the powers because it is against the will of the State and the will of the State is the will of the people. The power given to the Lt. Governor under proviso to Article 239 AA (4) contains the rule of exception and should not be treated as a general norm. The Lt. Governor must act with Constitutional objectivity keeping in mind the high degree of Constitutional Trust entrusted in him while exercising the special power consecrated upon him. As per the 1991 Act and Rules of Business, Lt. Governor has to be apprised of every decision taken by the Council of Ministers but he cannot the change the decision because this restriction has been conferred upon him by the Constitution and he should protect the interest of NCT of Delhi and the principles of Constitutionalism but sadly the act mandates that the elected Government must take the Lt. Governor’s opinion before taking any Executive action. In a similar manner according to Section 2(3) of the Amendment Act, 2021 it specifies that the Government of Delhi will mean the Lt. Governor and not only this it goes one step ahead and highlights that Lt. Governor does not have to act on the advice of the council of ministers.

According, to proviso to Section 4 (b) of the Act the legislative assembly or its committees can no longer make rules to empower itself or its committees to consider the issue of everyday administration or conduct inquiries according to administrative decisions. Making the law retrospective, the Act provides that such framed law will be declared void. Thus, this act practically takes away all the powers of the elected Government.Within a Federal Constitution like ours the tasks of the Government are divided into between the Center and the State and this division of powers is one of the aspects of the Constitutionalism which must not be overreached by any act of the Parliament. Therefore, the present act is against the principle of Constitutionalism.

Against the Federal nature of the Constitution

In a democratic nation any law must be in accordance with the principles of Constitutional objectivity and symphonious with the spirit of the Constitution[vi] and balance of federalism is one such spirit of the Constitution and Article 239-AA is a classic example of the hallmark of federalism in our Constitution which reserves the Legislative primacy of Parliament in certain limited areas but there is no such corresponding provision in the Constitution which reserves the Executive power of the Central Government.The essential feature of a federation is that in it the two types of governments- the Central and the State should be both independent in their spheres and coordinate.However, The GNCTD (Amendment) Act, 2021 has changed this course for the National Capital Territory of Delhi. Not only has this act undermined the powers of the elected Government of Delhi in absolute terms, but has also upturns the Supreme Court’s landmark judgment in 2018, which upheld the primacy of the elected legislature in matters of governance. The Constitution Bench[vii]very well held that the Lt. Governor was to act on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers in all his acts, except those functions where the Lieutenant Governor was permitted to exercise his own discretion.The court also held that the “status of the Lt. Governor of Delhi is not akin to that of a Governor of a State, rather his position remains of an administrator, in a limited sense, working with the designation of Lieutenant Governor” and that the elected government must keep in mind that Delhi is not a State.However, the new law vests enormous powers in the hands of the Lt. Governor which is abusive of the doctrine of pith and substance and crumbles the solid foundations of federalism and democracy on which our country has thrived.[viii]

Against Constitutional Morality

Another aspect on which this act fails to pass the Constitutionality test is that this act is against the concept of Constitutional morality. Constitutional morality in simpler terms means strict adherence to the established principles and norms of the Constitution. In the case of Krishnamoorthy v. Sivakumar[ix]held that“Constitutional morality acts as an instrument which provides a proper check and balance against the infirmities on the part of the Governmental agencies and colorable activities which affects the democratic nature of polity”.

The present act is one such colorable activity which mars the very concept of Constitutional morality. All the above discussed principles are the essential elements of the Constitutional morality and with the implementation of the act a hindrance will be created in the proper administration of the NCT of Delhi. Another major aspect of the Constitutional morality is that it prevents Government from turning tyrannical in the instant case the NCT of Delhi occupies a special status and the elected Government is vested with the power to take decisions in the proper administration of the Government whereas the Lt. Governor only act as an advisory authority. However, the present act reverses the situation and now the elected Government has been reduced to a mere advisory body thus establishing the tyranny of the Central Government. An act which can erode the popular will of the people, which can mar the federal nature of the Constitution and which can defile the principle of Constitutionalism. Such act can never justify the principle of Constitutional morality.

Against the ratio of law decided in Government of NCT Delhi v. UOI

An ingrained reading of Article 239AA (4) highlights that the role of the Lt. Governor is an advisory one and only in the case of difference of opinion he can refer the matter to the Lt. Governor.The Article further highlights that the Lt. Governor is bound by the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers and the same was highlighted by the Constitutional bench that “Article 239AA (4) provides Constitutional status to the Council of Ministers, whose duty is to aid and advice to the Lt. Governor on matters which are co-extensive with the Legislative powers.” But the present act provides the provision of ‘prior concurrence’ of the Lt. Governor which is undemocratic in nature and very much against this verdict.

As per Article 239AA(4), the Lieutenant Governor must act on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers in respect of matters which fall within the legislative competence of the Legislative Assembly, or in which he is not required by or under any law to act in his/her discretion or exercise his/her judicial or quasi-judicial functions. Therefore, the President through the Lieutenant Governor shall not administer the NCT of Delhi in respect of matters over which the Legislative Assembly of the NCT has authority to make laws.[x]

The Lieutenant Governor occupies aposition which is hybrid in nature, in simpler terms, matters in which the Legislative competence is vested with the Legislative Assembly of Delhi, he would act on the aid and advice of the Cabinet. Article 239-AA defines a well-established Legislature for Delhi which is completely different from the body constituted by Parliament under Article 239-A to function as a Legislature for a Union Territory. There is a distinction between a body constituted by Parliament and the legislature created by the Constitution.[xi]Under Article 239-AA, a Cabinet form of Government has been put in place for Delhi wherein the Council of Ministers along with the Chief Minister are collectively responsible to the people of Delhi and consequently the Lieutenant Governor is bound by the aid and advice of the Council of Minister headed by the Chief Minister.[xii] Therefore, the present act clearly subdues the ration of law decided by the Constitution bench in the instant case.

CONCLUSION

The present amendment act can be very well compared to the situation which once arose in Russia in 1991 when the elected President of Russia in the Soviet Union's newly minted democracy Boris Yeltsin challenged Mikhail Gorbachev's right to rule Moscow as President of the Soviet Union, there has been two tiers of the same Government in the annals of modern nation States.

Though under Article 239 the Union Territories are administered by the President acting through an administrator to be appointed by him. But this does not mean that the Union Territories agglutinates with the Central Government. They are centrally administered but they retain their independent identity.[xiii]The Lt. Governor can only exercise his powers only on those subjects which he is authorised to do else he is bound by the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers headed by the Chief Minister. Since NCT of Delhi is being governed by a democratically elected Government. The defence taken by the Center that the present Act is Constitutionally valid under Article 239 i.e. administration of the Union Territories does not hold any grounds because the territory of Delhi as a part “C” State under the First Schedule to the Constitution was a separate and distinct constitutional entity as from that of a Chief Commissioner’s province under the Government of India Act, 1935.[xiv] By virtue of the Constitution (69th Amendment) Act, 1991, under Article 239-AA Delhi has been given a special status and this status cannot be overshadowed by any act of the Parliament.Therefore, the authors are of the firm viewpoint that this act is a classic example of political animosity which defiles the very spirit of the Constitution.

(Neha Bhandari & Shreshth Srivastava are 3rd year law student of School of Law, University of Petroleum and Energy Studies, Dehradun)


[i] (2018) 8 SCC 501.

[ii] The Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi (Amendment) Act, 2021, No. 55, §§ 21, 24, 33, 44 (2021).

[iii]Supra note 1.

[iv] (2000) 4 SCC 640.

[v]See id.

[vi]See id.

[vii]Supra note 1.

[viii]See id.

[ix] (2015) 3 SCC 467.

[x] Anil Kumar v GNCT of Delhi, 2015 (4) ADR 758.

[xi]Shiv Kirpal Singh v. V.V. Giri, (1970) 2 SCC 567.

[xii]UNR Rao v. Indira Gandhi, (1971) 2 SCC 63.

[xiii] Chandigarh Admn. v. Surinder Kumar, (2004) 1 SCC 530.

[xiv]Express Newspapers Pvt Ltd v UOI, AIR 1986 SC 872.


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