LawChakra

BREAKIING| Presidential Reference Row| Not On Individual States’ Issues But Interpreting Provisions of the Constitution: CJI Gavai

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Today, On 2nd September, in the Presidential Reference Row, CJI B.R. Gavai clarified that the Supreme Court is not dealing with issues of individual States but only interpreting constitutional provisions, stressing the focus remains on legal questions under Articles 200 and 201.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court’s five-judge Constitution Bench led by Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai is continuing the hearing of the Presidential Reference on whether fixed timelines can be imposed on Governors and the President for giving assent to State bills.

The matter is being heard under Article 143 of the Constitution, after the Court’s earlier ruling in April 2025 in the case of State of Tamil Nadu v. Governor.

During the hearing in the Supreme Court on the interpretation of constitutional provisions, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta strongly objected to the use of past examples from Andhra Pradesh and other states.

He told the court,

“If they are going to rely on examples of Andhra Pradesh etc… We would like to file a reply on this. Since we need to then show how the Constitution was taken on a joyride since its inception.. Let us see if we want to travel down that dirty path.”

Chief Justice of India responded that the Bench was not looking at individual state cases but focusing on the interpretation of the Constitution itself.

The CJI said,

“We are not on individual cases but interpreting provisions of the Constitution.”

Senior Advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi then pressed for the start of the substantive arguments. He urged the court to proceed with the main discussion and explained that under the constitutional scheme, certain provisions must be followed strictly.

He argued that the concept of “falling through” only arises if the first proviso is not fully complied with.

The Chief Justice reflected the other view and said,

“They say holds it back without sending it back.”

Responding to this, Singhvi clarified that falling through does not happen in that manner and explained that the first proviso is a complete code in itself, which includes withholding and returning back as one telescoped composite set.

He further explained the legislative steps, stating that reconsideration by the house comes first, followed by re-passing by the legislature and then returning it to the governor.

The hearing witnessed a clash of strong constitutional arguments, with the Bench focusing on interpretation rather than examples from individual states.

In May, President Droupadi Murmu exercised powers under Article 143(1) to seek clarification from the Supreme Court regarding whether judicial orders could impose timelines on the President’s discretion when dealing with state assembly bills.

Background

The Presidential Reference followed the April 8 Supreme Court ruling which held that Governors cannot indefinitely sit on Bills passed by State legislatures. Though Article 200 does not mention a deadline, the Court said Governors must act within a reasonable time and cannot stall the democratic process.

The Court also held that under Article 201, the President must decide on Bills within three months. If delayed, reasons must be recorded and conveyed to the concerned State.

The exact words of the April 8 judgment were:

“The President is required to take a decision on the Bills within a period of three months from the date on which such reference is received and in case of any delay beyond this period, appropriate reasons would have to be recorded and conveyed to the concerned State.”

President Murmu later sent 14 questions to the Court, asking whether the judiciary could impose such deadlines and whether the concept of “deemed assent” was constitutionally valid.

While the Centre backs the Reference, arguing that Governors’ powers cannot be curtailed by judicial timelines, both Kerala and Tamil Nadu have asked the Court to dismiss it as not maintainable.

These are the 14 key questions raised by the President:

Case Title: Re: Assent, Withholding, or Reservation of Bills by the Governor and President of India | SPL. REF. No. 1/2025 XVII-A

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