Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Editors' Note
- Introduction
- 1 The Inadequacy of Judicial Enforcement of Constitutional Rights Provisions to Rectify Economic Inequality, and the Inevitability of the Attempt
- 2 The Interplay of Law and Politics in India
- 3 Beating the Backlog: Reforms in Administration of Justice in India
- 4 Judicial Review: Perspectives and Reflections for the Twenty-First Century
- 5 When ‘Creeping Jurisdiction’ Goes Awry: The Social Action Litigation to Ban Surrogacy
- 6 Judicial Review and the Democratic Judge
- 7 Judicial Review: A Tool to Shape Constitutional Jurisprudence
- 8 The Baxian Bioscope on Indian Judicial Process
- 9 Judicial Activism, Courts, and Constitutional Revolutions: The Israeli Case
- 10 Democracy, Constitution, and Judicial Review: A Critique
- 11 A Minor Jurisprudence of Pathos: Upendra Baxi as Teacher and Writer
- 12 The Need for Reinventing the Supreme Court as a Constitutional Court
- 13 Appointment of ‘Distinguished Jurists’ as Judges in the Supreme Court of India: A Critical Analysis
- 14 Judicial Dissent and Judicial Review: A Functional Analysis
- 15 The Power of Judicial Review: Judicial Chutzpah or Judicial Desideratum
- 16 Judicial Review of Legislations by Tribunals in India: Law, Problems, and Perspectives
- 17 Criminalization of Membership of Terrorist Organizations in India and the United States of America: Human Rights Concerns
- 18 Article 142 of the Indian Constitution: On the Thin Line between Judicial Activism and Restraint
- 19 Sketching the Limits of Article 142 of the Constitution of India: A Constitutional Necessity
- 20 Constitutional Morality and Judges of the Supreme Court
- About the Contributors
- Index
16 - Judicial Review of Legislations by Tribunals in India: Law, Problems, and Perspectives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Editors' Note
- Introduction
- 1 The Inadequacy of Judicial Enforcement of Constitutional Rights Provisions to Rectify Economic Inequality, and the Inevitability of the Attempt
- 2 The Interplay of Law and Politics in India
- 3 Beating the Backlog: Reforms in Administration of Justice in India
- 4 Judicial Review: Perspectives and Reflections for the Twenty-First Century
- 5 When ‘Creeping Jurisdiction’ Goes Awry: The Social Action Litigation to Ban Surrogacy
- 6 Judicial Review and the Democratic Judge
- 7 Judicial Review: A Tool to Shape Constitutional Jurisprudence
- 8 The Baxian Bioscope on Indian Judicial Process
- 9 Judicial Activism, Courts, and Constitutional Revolutions: The Israeli Case
- 10 Democracy, Constitution, and Judicial Review: A Critique
- 11 A Minor Jurisprudence of Pathos: Upendra Baxi as Teacher and Writer
- 12 The Need for Reinventing the Supreme Court as a Constitutional Court
- 13 Appointment of ‘Distinguished Jurists’ as Judges in the Supreme Court of India: A Critical Analysis
- 14 Judicial Dissent and Judicial Review: A Functional Analysis
- 15 The Power of Judicial Review: Judicial Chutzpah or Judicial Desideratum
- 16 Judicial Review of Legislations by Tribunals in India: Law, Problems, and Perspectives
- 17 Criminalization of Membership of Terrorist Organizations in India and the United States of America: Human Rights Concerns
- 18 Article 142 of the Indian Constitution: On the Thin Line between Judicial Activism and Restraint
- 19 Sketching the Limits of Article 142 of the Constitution of India: A Constitutional Necessity
- 20 Constitutional Morality and Judges of the Supreme Court
- About the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Judicial review is one of the methods, certainly not the only one, known in the world of law for preserving the sanctity, integrity, and effectiveness of the constitution. There are countries with written constitutions that have adopted different methods of constitutional review. In India, however, the framers preferred judicial review and had incorporated it into the Constitution. Even though the idea of judicial review, by an unelected judiciary, of legislative actions, in particular, did not have wide acceptability at the time of framing of the Constitution in India, the framers nonetheless provided for it. Under the scheme envisaged in the Constitution, the High Courts and the Supreme Court have been vested with the jurisdiction to test the validity of laws and to declare them void if found to be not in conformity with the provisions of the Constitution. This power has not been conferred on any other court or tribunal by the Constitution. It does not, however, explicitly and categorically prohibit conferment of such powers on other courts or tribunals. Per contra, it authorized the parliament, vide clause (3) of article 32, to empower ‘any other court’ to exercise, within its territorial jurisdiction, ‘all or any of the powers exercisable by the Supreme Court under clause (2)’. In this scenario, is it permissible for the parliament to empower, by law, such other courts and even tribunals to exercise the power of judicial review of legislations as well?
The said question is no longer res integra as it arose in many cases vis-à-vis tribunals established either under article 323A or under article 323B of the Constitution. In the first case, where the question arose, it was answered in the negative by the High Court of Karnataka but the same was overruled sub-silentio by the Supreme Court, which answered the question in the affirmative and upheld the tribunal's power to review legislations. How far empowering the tribunals, on whose worthiness doubts were expressed since beginning, to exercise the power of judicial review over legislative actions is in conformity with the overall constitutional scheme is the broad question the present chapter seeks to examine with specific focus on how did and why the Supreme Court upheld their powers to review legislations and the consequences thereof.
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- Information
- Judicial Review , pp. 293 - 314Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020