Complete Justice by Supreme Court of India Under Article 142 of Constitution of India
Complete Justice by Supreme Court of India Under Article 142 of Constitution of India
Complete Justice by Supreme Court of India Under Article 142 of Constitution of India
of Constitution of India
In the past, Supreme Court has interpreted the power enshrined under Article
142 of Constitution of India in restricted or limited sense. In Prem Chand
Garg v. Excise Commissoner, U.P held that "Though the powers conferred
on this Court under Article 142(1) are very wide, and the same can be
exercised for doing complete justice in any case, this court cannot even
under Article 142(1) make an order plainly inconsistent with the express
statutory provisions of substantive law, much less, inconsistent with any
Constitutional provision". This view was endorsed by a nine-judge Bench in
Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar v. State of Maharashtra and was reiterated by
a seven-Judge Bench in A.R. Antulay v. R.S. Nayak.
However, in recent past, Supreme Court has in real sense has expanded
scope of the power and the source of this expanded power is Art. 142 of the
Constitution of India only exercised powers as defined under Indian
constitution but for doing justice. In an eminent decision of a three-judge
Bench decision in Delhi Judicial Service Association v. State of Gujarat
the Supreme Court extolled its power to new heights by declaring Article 142
as a part of basic structure of the Constitution. Supreme Court held that:
“This Court’s power under Article 142(1) to do ’complete justice’ is entirely of
different level and of a different quality. Any prohibition or restriction
contained in ordinary laws cannot act as a limitation on the constitutional
power of this Court...No enactment of Central or State Legislature can limit
or restrict the power of this Court under Article 142 of the Constitution though
while exercising power under Article 142 of the Constitution, the Court must
take into consideration the statutory provisions regulating the matter in
dispute.”
The Supreme Court in this case rectified the error of In Re, Vinay Chandra
Mishra by holding that the suspension of an advocate can only be done by
the Bar Council of India under the Advocates Act and the Supreme Court
cannot usurp this statutory power to suspend an advocate by invoking Article
142. That Hon’ble Supreme Court held that “It, however, needs to be
remembered that the powers conferred to the court by Article 142 being
curative in nature cannot be construed as powers which authorise the court
to ignore the substantive rights of a litigant while dealing with a case pending
before it...Article 142, even with the width of its amplitude, cannot be used to
build a new edifice where none existed earlier, by ignoring express statutory
provisions dealing with a subject and thereby to achieve something indirectly
which cannot be achieved directly.”
In Supreme Court Bar Assn. case was referred to in M.S. Ahlawat v. State
of Haryana wherein it was held that the order passed by the Supreme Court
by issuing a show-cause notice and conviction summarily under Section 193
of the Indian Penal Code for making false statement, was one without
jurisdiction and such an order could not be passed relying on Article 142.
In A.B. Bhaskara Rao v. CBI, wherein Supreme Court held that the powers
under Article 142 of the Constitution cannot be exercised by this Court in
contravention of any statutory provisions.
That Supreme Court Court had in the famous Vishaka case formulated
guidelines providing for protection of women from sexual harassment at the
workplace in the absence of any enacted law on the same and the same are
binding on all the courts under Article 141. The Supreme Court has ordered
the dissolution of a marriage of an estranged couple, living separately for 22
years and failing to reconcile their differences. The court termed the marriage
“unworkable, emotionally dead, beyond salvage and broken down
irretrievably”. A bench of Justices Sanjay Kishan Kaul and M.R. Shah said:
“We are of the opinion that while protecting the interest of the respondent-
wife to compensate her by way of a lump sum permanent alimony, this is a
fit case to exercise the powers under Article 142 of the Constitution of India
and to dissolve the marriage between the parties.”