Chapter 2 CI

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Chapter 2

Constitutional antecedents

I. Intro
WHAT are the antecedents of the Indian Constitution? For some, such as the Supreme Court of
India, the answer is simple. It described the coming into force of the Constitution as the moment
at which: Territorial allegiances were wiped out and the past was obliterated … at one moment
of time the new order was born with its new allegiance springing from the same source for all,
grounded on the same basis: the sovereign will of the peoples of India with no class, no caste, no
race, no creed, no distinction, no reservation. While the Constitution did usher in a new order, its
claims to have obliterated the past remain unconvincing, even to contemporary commentators.
The Constitution text contained aspects of imperial charters and colonial legislation, and in
several cases reproduced sections verbatim. Therefore, the question of origin remains a fraught
one. Traditionally, constitutional historians have traced the antecedents of the Constitution
through a series of British colonial legislation that laid down the architecture of the State and
introduced limited forms of representative government.2 This canon produces a Whiggish
narrative, where Independence and the republican Constitution appear to inevitably succeed the
various colonial reforms, echoing British liberal justifications of imperialism as training Indians for
self-rule.3 The Constitution’s perceived antecedents draw the ire of both the Right and the Left.

II. Constitutional Texts

1. The Age of Charters

Historians of British and American constitutionalism have focused on a particular


transformation, the shift from an organic, unwritten constitution to a definite and written
one. In contrast, modern constitutionalism in India begins with a written text on a precise
date: 31 December 1600, the day that Queen Elizabeth granted a Charter to a company of
London merchants to trade with the East Indies. Charters were grants of perpetuity in Latin
addressed to a particular group and kept as a permanent record. The Charter of 1600
delegated both legislative and judicial powers to the governor appointed by the English East
India Company (EEIC) in India ‘for the better advancement and continuance of said trade and
traffick …’ including the power to administer criminal law. Since the Company was formed
for maritime trade rather than territorial administration, many of the powers of the EEIC
officials derived from the absolutism of martial law and naval discipline, including the power
to make emergency regulations. As the EEIC’s territorial control expanded, new charters
granted them powers of full territorial jurisdiction, including the powers to issue coinage,
administer justice, and punish interlopers. Importantly, the charters incorporated a principle
of repugnancy by requiring that all company laws had to be ‘reasonable’ and not contrary to
the laws and customs of the English realm.

2. Parliamentary control and Mughal Constitutionalism


The English victory at Plassey in 1757 caused the first major disruption to this
imperial constitutional order. With the grant of the Diwani of Bengal, Bihar,
and Orissa, the EEIC found its powers dependent on two sources of authority,
through a Charter by the British Crown and as a vassal of the Mughal
emperor. Successive military victories transformed the EEIC territories from a
clutch of cities and factories to a large landed power. The EEIC’s military
successes in India corresponded with fiscal problems in London and gave the
British Parliament an opportunity to restructure the EEIC government in India
to check ‘abuses in administration’. The Regulating Act of 1773 introduced
three fundamental changes that would set a path of dependency for the
Indian administrative framework. First, it transformed the relationship
between the three presidencies by placing Bombay and Madras in
subservience to Bengal. Previously, each presidency lay with the Governor-
General in Calcutta. This gives India a longer history of local centralised
authority when compared to the British colonies in North America, Africa,
and Australia. Secondly, it formalised the idea of cabinet government by
vesting authority with the Governor-General and his council of four. The
original Act named the first four councillors, the majority of whom were
known political opponents of the Governor-General. By limiting the term of
the Governor-General and his councillors to five years, it gave British
parliamentary convention statutory authority. Finally, section 13 of the
Regulating Act established a Supreme Court of judicature at Fort William
which, apart from the civil, criminal, ecclesiastical, and admiralty jurisdiction,
also had the jurisdiction to ‘hear and determine all complaints against any of
His Majesty’s subjects for any crimes, misdemeanours, or oppressions … and
also to entertain, hear and determine any suits or actions whatsoever, against
any of His Majesty’s subjects … ’ The wide jurisdiction of the courts set the
stage for political conflict between the Supreme Court and the EEIC. The
Supreme Court now had a mandate to govern matters relating to all British
subjects and Company employees (which included Indians).

3. The Viceregal Age: Petitioning the Representation

In November 1858, Queen Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India and the
Indian territories brought under direct control of the British government in
London. The Proclamation went on to assure native princes that their treaties
would be ‘scrupulously maintained’; present territorial possession would not
be extended; all natives in Indian territories would enjoy the same privileges
as all British subjects; anyone, irrespective of their race or creed, could be
admitted to offices; all religious observances would enjoy equal and impartial
protection of law and there would be no interference with religious practice;
and the Proclamation assured her subjects that ‘all rights’ connected with
land inherited from their ancestors would be protected and in framing laws
due regard would be paid to ‘the ancient rights, usages and customs of India’.
The Proclamation of 1858 had sought to address the perceived causes of the
revolt of 1857, securing the loyalty of the princes and zamindars, as well as
addressing fears of interference with religious and social matters. However,
the Proclamation took on a life of its own and was frequently referred to as a
‘magna carta’ by Indians in various walks of life. Glimpses of the Queen’s
Proclamation appear in more informal settings; for instance in 1884 Dennis
Fitzpatrick, the Lt Governor of Punjab, reported that ‘a Mussulman’ quoted
constitutional principles at him demanding that he overturn an order by a
district magistrate that placed a local ban on cow slaughter. The petitioner
argued that the 1858 Proclamation protected his right to slaughter cattle for
religious purposes.32 Almost half a century later, Muslim groups from Mysore
petitioned the Viceroy asking him to intervene to overturn legislation by the
Mysore Assembly banning cow slaughter on the grounds that it violated the
‘Magna Carta of Queen Victoria’.33 These arguments carried a lot of political
traction with the executive but had little impact before the courts of law. In
Queen Empress v Tegha Singh, the temple custodians who had been arrested
for violating the Arms Act by storing weapons in the temple premises argued
that the Arms Act violated the Queen’s Proclamation of 1858 that guaranteed
no one would be molested by reason of their religious faith or worship.

4. The last acts of Empire: The Government of India Acts of 1919 and 1935

It is only in the 1920s that we see the popularisation of the notion of Indian
constitutional law and its introduction as a separate subject for study in law
faculties.39 This was partly due to consolidation. The Government of India
Act 1915 finally repealed the unrepealed provisions of over forty-seven Acts
going back to 1772 and consolidated them into a single legislation, building in
the idea of the Constitution as a single statute. The Government of India Act
of 1919, which codified the Montague– Chelmsford proposals, broke with the
earlier reforms in two important ways. First, unlike the Morley–Minto
reforms, Edwin Montague categorically stated that this concession to India
was with a view to the ‘progressive realization of responsible government in
India as an integral part of the British empire’.40 Recognising that this move
could only come in phases, it introduced a system known as ‘dyarchy’ within
the provincial governments. This system divided the areas of functioning into
‘transferred’ and ‘reserved’, the former being looked after by ministers
responsible to a popularly elected assembly and the latter (more crucial
subjects) held by executives. While the Governor was to govern on the advice
of the ministers with regard to transferred subjects, he had the discretion of
rejecting such advice when he had ‘good reason’ to.41 More exclusions from
popular rule were built into the reforms as the Montague-Chelmsford report
had acknowledged that all provinces contained ‘areas where material to build
political institutions was lacking’ or were seen as ‘civilisationally backward’.
Provincial governors applied for excluding a variety of territories from the
operation of the Act, including almost the entire States of Assam, Orissa, and
the Chota Nagpur plateau. Almost all the exclusions applied for were granted.
While regimes of exception had existed in colonial India since the eighteenth
century, this was the first time the exceptions were codified and made
permanent. Despite the celebratory tenor, the Constitution of 1919 angered
both the colonial officials in India and the Indian public. The reforms were
followed almost immediately by the draconian Rowlatt Act, which curbed
existing rights and remedies under the Penal and Criminal Codes, limited the
jurisdiction of courts, and sought to extend the powers of the executive to
detain and try political prisoners.

III. Constitutional aspirations

In terms of checking the rising tide of nationalism, the constitutional settlement


of 1935 was a spectacular failure. Not only did the princes, the bulwark against
the nationalists, refuse to participate in the federation, but also the Congress
Party decided to contest elections and performed spectacularly, forming
governments in most provinces. Within days of the election, eight provinces and
the central legislative assembly had passed a resolution asserting that the
Government of India Act 1935 ‘in no way represents the will of the people’ and
‘has been designed to perpetuate the subjection of the people of India’. They
demanded the repeal of the Act and its replacement by a constitution for a free
India framed by a Constituent Assembly elected by universal adult franchise.51
How does this act of ‘constitutional defiance’ then fit into a history of the Indian
Constitution?52 In this section, we briefly explore the history of constitutional
aspirations, which is ‘the passionate insistence that the constitution must be (or
in other words must be made to be) a recognition and expression of legitimate
aspirations’.53 It is an account of how the constitutional texts discussed in the
previous section were received and reimagined by Indians over the years. This
section focuses on readings and understandings of rights, though one could do
the same exercise for questions of federalism, separation of powers, or local self-
government. The earliest sets of rights claims against the colonial State emerged
in the new urban centres of Bombay, Madras, and Calcutta. As scholars have long
recognised, the most articulate statement of liberal constitutionalism came from
Rammohan Roy in early-nineteenth-century Calcutta. Roy, who has been usually
cast into the teleology of Indian modernity, has recently been located within a
global trend of demanding liberal institutions across the world in the early
nineteenth century. His centrality to this world was recognised by the decision of
Spanish liberals to dedicate the Cadiz constitution of 1820 to Rammohan Roy. 54
Roy’s liberal constitutionalism was not a product of Western education, but arose
from a particular urban social milieu at the turn of the nineteenth century, when
an association of non-official Europeans, mixed-blood Eurasians and Portuguese,
and the new Indian elites of Calcutta formed ‘a novel, even if unstable and
shortlived early modern formation seeking to assert the freedoms of the subject
against arbitrary and absolute power’.55 English migration to India increased in
the early nineteenth century, and Englishmen who were not associated with the
Company found that their traditional liberties of appeal to the British Crown were
severely restricted, and made common cause with others similarly
disenfranchised by influential social groups.

IV. Constitutional culture

One of the key features of constitutional culture is a limited government, usually checked by
the judiciary. Unlike the UK, the courts of the British Empire came to exercise judicial review
quite early through the application of the doctrine of ultra vires. Since the colonial
legislature was created through a British legislation, it was subordinate to the British
Parliament. Therefore any law that transgressed the provisions of the parent statute that
constituted the colonial legislature could be void.65 In 1877, the Calcutta High Court
acquitted two persons accused of murder on the grounds that the law that they were
convicted under was ultra vires the Indian Councils Act 1861.66 The Privy Council would
reverse the acquittal on appeal but did not question the powers of the High Court to review
legislation for constitutionality. The Privy Council observed that the Indian legislature had its
powers expressly limited by the British Parliament and could not go beyond its limits.67
While there was no express provision for judicial review in the 1935 Act, the discussions
before the parliamentary committee had recognised that this would be a necessary
consequence of a distribution of legislative powers betewen the centre and the provinces.
Despite the gradual centralisation of the executive and legislature after 1857, the judicial
architecture of India remained fragmented. The Indian High Courts Act of 1861 abolished
the old ‘Supreme Courts’ established by Royal Charter in Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras and
replaced them with High Courts which acted as the Supreme Courts of appeal, reference,
and revision from all subordinate courts in their province. Subsequent legislation duplicated
the High Courts in other provinces, though in recognition of their former royal status, the
courts in Bombay, Madras, and Calcutta continued to enjoy a limited original jurisdiction
within the limits of the original Presidency towns.68 The final seat of judicial authority
remained the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London, which exercised wide
powers of superintendence, as the royal prerogative to give special appeal could not be
restricted by a law in British India. Despite frequent avowals of the superiority of the Privy
Council and praise for its wisdom, by the 1920s the Indian legal profession had begun to
articulate a demand for a Supreme Court in India. Not only were appeals to the Privy Council
expensive, time-consuming, and available only to the super-wealthy, but institutionally, the
limited awareness of Indian laws and the absence of dissenting opinions hampered the
clarity that lawyers wanted. The Privy Council’s lack of connection with public opinion in
India was one of its greatest flaws. Several provincial authorities and almost all the legal
public bodies such as bar associations and vakils’ associations favoured a Supreme Court in
India in the 1920s. However, when the proposal for a court with an all-India jurisdiction was
finally put forward during the Round Table Conferences, it was driven more by concerns of
federalism than by judicial autonomy or unresponsiveness. The Round Table Conferences
proposed to create an all-India federation of the British Indian provinces and the Princely
States and to provide responsible government in the provinces.

V. Conclusion
This chapter seeks to explore both meanings of the Constitution in preIndependence India.
Instead of rejecting earlier texts as ‘imperial’ and therefore contaminated, it recognises the
active participation of several members of the future Constituent Assembly in the drafting
and reception of these earlier documents. The members of the Constituent Assembly and
their adivsors did not operate behind a veil of ignorance, but as this chapter outlines, carried
a certain conception of the constitutional order in their mind.

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