Doctrine of Prospective Overruling: By: Bhanu Jindal
Doctrine of Prospective Overruling: By: Bhanu Jindal
Doctrine of Prospective Overruling: By: Bhanu Jindal
PROSPECTIVE
OVERRULING
Justice Mathew J.
Observed that the doctrine was not meant
to supplant the traditional Blackstonian
doctrine but meant to protect the interests
of the litigants when judicial overruling of a
precedent entailed a change in the law.
PRIMARY INTEREST
That courts always want to do justice and may
apply various criteria to reach their ends
To avoid reopening of settled issues and also
prevent multiplicity of proceedings
That all actions prior to the declaration do not
stand invalidated
I.C. GOLAKNATH V. STATE
OF PUNJAB
Golaknath v. State Of Punjab was a 1967
Indian Supreme Court case, in which the Court
ruled that Parliament could not curtail any of
the Fundamental Rights in the Constitution
Chief Justice Subba Rao first invoked the
doctrine of prospective overruling in this case
He had taken import from the American Law
where this doctrine had been considered to
be an effective judicial tool.
I.C. GOLAKNATH V. STATE
OF PUNJAB
In the words of Canfield, the said expression
means:
"...a court should recognize a duty to announce
a new and better rule for future transactions
whenever the court has reached the conviction
that an old rule (as established by the
precedents) is unsound even though feeling
compelled by stare decisis to apply the old and
condemned rule to the instant case and to
transactions which had already taken place"
I.C. GOLAKNATH V. STATE
OF PUNJAB
Justice Subba Rao used this doctrine to
preserve the constitutional validity of the
Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment) Act,
legality of which had been challenged.
supported the legitimacy of the doctrine of
prospective overruling and held that overruling
as a concept included within its ambit the
discretion to decide whether a particular
decision will have retrospective effect or not
I.C. GOLAKNATH V. STATE
OF PUNJAB
further added that what is being laid down
cannot be considered to be obiter
According to Justice Subba Rao, what is being
done is to strike a pragmatic balance between
the two conflicting considerations, which are, a
court finds law and a court makes law.
PRINCIPLES
Principles of guidelines regarding the applicability of
prospective overruling: