
Ouster Clause: Legislative Blaze and Judicial Phoenix
Author(s) -
Sandhya Ram S A
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
christ university law journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2278-4322
DOI - 10.12728/culj.2.2
Subject(s) - constitution , constitutionality , constitutionalism , legislature , judicial review , political science , law , impeachment , separation of powers , enforcement , obedience , democracy , politics
If constitutionalism denotes obedience to the
Constitution, the scheme for enforcement of obedience
and invalidation of disobedience should be found in the
Constitution itself. It is important that this scheme be
clear and the task of enforcement be vested in a
constitutional body. In such a situation, the question of
custodianship i.e., who will ensure the rule of
constitutionalism assumes prime importance, as any
ambiguity regarding the same will result in conflicts
uncalled for between legislature and judiciary. This
conflict intensifies when judiciary determines the
constitutionality of the legislations and the legislature
defends by placing it in the „ouster clauses‟ within the
Constitution to exclude the judicial determination.
Judiciary counters by nullifying the legislative attempts
through innovative interpretation. An attempt is made to
study Article 31 B, the most prominent ouster clause in
the Constitution of India barring judicial review of
legislations and how the Indian judiciary retaliated to
such legislative attempts and effectively curbed them. The
study outlines the historical reasons which necessitated
the insertion of Article 31 B in the Constitution and
analyses the myriad implications of such an ouster clause
within the Constitution. The constitutional basis of
judicial review is studied to audit the justifiability of the
open ended Ninth Schedule along with Article 31 B. A
comparison between Article 31 B and the other ouster clauses namely Articles 31 A and 31 C is also made,
bringing out the effect and scope of Article 31 B. The
study covers a critical survey of judicial pronouncements
from 1951 to 2007.