HomeNewsIndiaNo 'constitutional fraud' in abrogating Article 370: Centre tells SC

No 'constitutional fraud' in abrogating Article 370: Centre tells SC

The CJI asked the Centre to furnish a list of states out of the 562 princely states that merged with India without signing any merger agreement besides original papers existing with the Department of State under the Ministry of Home Affairs.

August 24, 2023 / 21:17 IST
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The hearing remained inconclusive and will resume on August 28.
The hearing remained inconclusive and will resume on August 28.

Commencing their arguments in support of abrogation of Article 370 in the Supreme Court, the Centre’s top law officers Thursday asserted there was no "constitutional fraud" in annulling the provision that accorded special status to the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The five-judge constitution bench headed by Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud, which heard their contentions at length, told them they would have to justify the procedure adopted for abrogation as the court cannot postulate a situation "where the ends justify the means". The petitioners opposing the repeal of Article 370 have been insisting that the provision could not have been abrogated, as the term of the Jammu and Kashmir Constituent Assembly, whose concurrence was required before taking such a step, ended in 1957, after it had drafted the erstwhile state’s Constitution.

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With the constituent assembly having become extinct, Article 370 acquired a permanent status, they have said. "We cannot postulate a situation where ends justify the means. The means have to be consistent with the ends," the CJI observed when Attorney General R Venkataramani said it was necessary to abrogate Article 370 and there were no infirmities in the process adopted. There was no constitutional fraud, as alleged, in abrogation of the provision, said Venkataramani, who opened arguments on behalf of Centre. "Due process was followed. There was no wrongdoing and there was no constitutional fraud as alleged by the other side. The step was necessary to be taken. Their argument is flawed and inconceivable," Venkataramani told the bench, also comprising Justices Sanjay Kishan Kaul, Sanjiv Khanna, BR Gavai and Surya Kant.

CJI Chandrachud told Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, also appearing for the Centre, that eventually he will have to explain how the word "constituent assembly" which existed in clause 2 of Article 370 was replaced with the word "legislative assembly" August 5, 2019, the day the provisions of Article 370 were done away with. "You will have to argue how it was not a constituent assembly but a legislative assembly in its original form. You will have to answer how it will square up with clause 2 of Article 370 which specifically says the constituent assembly formed for the purpose of framing the constitution of that state….because, there is a textual answer which may militate against your line of approach," CJI Chandrachud told Mehta.