Analysis

#2: Sabarimala Review

Court to hear constitutional questions surrounding review of Sabarimala judgment.

This post is a part of our 10 Cases the Shaped India in 2019 series.

Issue:

In September 2018, the Supreme Court declared the Sabarimala Temple’s custom of excluding women in their ‘menstruating years’ from entering the Temple to be unconstitutional. It reasoned that the Temple’s custom violated the fundamental right to freedom of religion of female worshippers. The judgment resulted in mass protests in Kerala and was immediately challenged in over 50 Review Petitions.

What were the expected outcomes in the Review Petitions?

Based on the hearings, we predicted the following outcomes (and their likelihood) in the Review Petitions:

Sl.No. Outcome Reasons Likelihood
I Yes
  • Customs of a temple not subject to non-discrimination under Art. 15(2). Religious belief cannot be tested on grounds of rationality
  • Judgment violates Art.25 of worshippers. Celibate character of deity will be lost if women enter
  • Erroneous application of essential religious practices test – whether a practice is universally practiced cannot be test for a religion as diverse as Hinduism
  • Other Devaswom Boards not party to dispute, even though judgment applies to other temples in Kerala
Unlikely
II No
  • Non-consideration of argument not a ground for review
  • Sabarimala is a public temple and subject to Article 15(2)
  • Essential religious practice test applies at level of a religion, not a single temple
  • Disruption of social-peace not a ground for review
Likely

What did the Court actually do?

In an unprecedented move, by a narrow 3:2 majority, the Court decided to keep the Petitions pending. In doing so, it referred certain overarching constitutional questions related to right to religion and equality to a larger bench.

The Court issued the referral in part on the ground that similar questions have arisen in other pending cases. It held that this overlap of issues may warrant a referral later. R.F. Nariman and D.Y. Chandrachud JJ dissented, observing that it was beyond the scope of the Court’s narrow review jurisdiction to consider whether similar issues were before other benches and if these benches may make a referral in the future.

Source: Mir Suhail, News18

What Now?

On January 6th 2020, the Registrar of the Supreme Court announced the composition of the Bench which will hear the overarching constitutional questions. It comprises S.A. Bobde CJI and R BanumathiAshok BhushanNageswara RaoMohan ShantanagoudarS. Abdul NazeerR. Subhash ReddyBhushan Ramkrishna Gavai and Surya Kant JJ.
On January 13th, the Bench convened for its first hearing and the CJI suggested that all the counsels should hold a conference to reframe the issues as suggested by the Review Bench. Further, he said this conference could be used to decide which counsel will argue on which issue.

Must Reads:

  1. Supreme Court Observer explains the power of Supreme Court to review its decisions.
  2. Kalpana Kannabiran criticises the majority opinion for its overreach and asserts that it is a setback in the struggle against the prohibition imposed by the Temple.
  3. Suhrith Parthasarathy argues that the Court went beyond its narrow review jurisdiction in making the reference.
  4. Ronojoy Sen traces the evolution of the Essential Religious Practices doctrine and how it has enabled the rationalization of religious practices.
  5. Pranjal Kishore asserts that although the Review Judgment is flawed, it may provide an opportunity to re-examine the Essential Religious Practices doctrine and move towards a jurisprudence steeped in the Constitutional text.

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