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Dr. Jaishri Laxmanrao Patil Vs The Chief Minister & Ors

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CASE TITLE Dr. Jaishri Laxmanrao Patil Vs The Chief Minister & Ors
DATE OF JUDGEMENT21 May 2021
CITATION LL 2021 SC 243
COURTSupreme Court 
PETITIONERJaishri Laxmanrao Patil , Amita Lalit Gugale , Sanjeet Shukla, Uday Govindraj Dhopale ,Mohd. Sayeed Noori Shafi Ahmed ,Sagar Damodar Sarda , Vishnuji P. Mishra ,Kamalakar Sukhdeo ,Ruchita Jiten Kulkarni, Devendra Roopchand , Aditya Bimal Shastri, Rajesh A. Tekale ,  Deshmukh Esha Girish , Shiv Sangram , Krishnaji Dattatrya Mor ,  Madhushri Nandkishor Jethliya 
RESPONDENTChief Minister Of Maharashtra; Chief Secretary, Maharashtra; Maharashtra State Public Services Commission; Vinod Narayan Patil; Union of India; Jharkhand; Bihar; Rajasthan; Andhra Pradesh; Tamil Nadu; Karnataka;Chhattisgarh; Karnataka; Kerala; Haryana; Meghalaya; Uttarakhand; Uttar Pradesh; Assam
BENCHJustice Abdul Nazeer , Justice L.N. Rao ,Justice Hemant Gupta ,Justice Ashok Bhushan ,Justice S.R. Bhat 
PROVISION REFFEREDArticles 15(4) and 16(4) is anyway abridged by Article 342(A) read with Article 366(26c)

INTRODUCTION

On May 5, 2021, the Supreme Court of India’s 5-member Constitutional Bench dismissed the “Maharashtra State Reservation for Socially and Educationally Backward Classes (SEBC) Act, 2018 (from this point forth referred to as the “SEBC Act,2018″)” in the case of “Dr. Jaishri Laxmanrao Patil Vs The Chief Minister & Ors.” This decision reignited debate over India’s reservation system.
Reservation is a type of quota-based scheme for impoverished populations that aims to pull them up in society, academically, and financially after experiencing prejudice and historical injustices. It is governed by both constitutional provisions and local regulations. The major goal of the reserving is to promote equality as established in the Constitution. 

FACTS

On July 9, 2014, the State of Maharashtra approved an ordinance allowing the Maratha community a 16% reservation for higher education and government jobs. On the 14th of November 2014, the High Court of Bombay granted a temporary decree suspending the ordinance’s implementation. On December 18, 2014, the nation’s highest court denied an appeal to the intermediate ruling.
On January 4, 2017, the Government of Maharashtra SEBC Commission. The Commission, led by Justice Gaikwad, proposed 12% and 13% reservations for the Maratha in colleges and universities and public sector jobs, accordingly.
On November 29, 2018, the Maharashtra government approved the Social and Educationally Backward Classes Act, 2018, in response to the Commission’s recommendations. The Act exceeds the stipulated quotas by allowing Marathas 16% reservation in Maharashtra’s state colleges and universities and public sector postings. The Bombay High Court heard three lead petitions and numerous additional writ petitions challenging the Act’s constitutional validity.
The state of Maharashtra government, on the other side, claimed that unusual conditions, such as a spike in suicides among Maratha families owing to debt and declining earnings, warranted the Act’s enactment. It further argued that the 2014 temporary order was not any longer in effect, as the 2018 Act’s provisions explicitly revoked both the 2014 Ordinances and the 2014 Act.

On July 12, 2019, the Supreme Court heard an appeal against the Bombay High Court’s verdict and sent notification on the Maharashtra state government. It decided not to overturn the Bombay High Court’s ruling. The preliminary issue was whether or not this case deserved to be referred to a bigger bench since it posed serious legal problems about constitutional interpretation. After hearing both sides, the Court opted to refer the matter to a bigger bench on September 9th, in a short, non-reportable decision. It also suspended the implementation of the SEBC Act to colleges and universities, with the possible exception of Postgraduate Medical Courses.

ISSUES RAISED

Sections that were struck down :

The SC struck down these following Sections of SEBC Act 2018 as these were found ultravires by the HON’BLE Court:

Petitioners Arguments

ARGUMENTS OF THE RESPONDENT

•Maharashtra State Commission for backward class declined to reconsider reservation of Maratha

•Narayan Rane Committee recommended a new Socially and Economically Backward Class (SEBC) in 2014

•Gaikwad Commission report concluding Maratha community is socially, educationally, and economically backward is flawed

•Politically organized classes dominating government are not backward in any Constitutional sense

•Judicial review should consider the substance of the matter and not its form or appearance

•Various reports of Maharashtra have found that it is not necessary to include Maratha despite persistent efforts

•Marathas are not deprived of sharing power, hence, no case is made out for granting reservation under Article 16(4)

•Shri K.K.Venugopal has made submissions on the 102nd Constitutional Amendment.

•He  made arguments on the amendment only and confined his arguments to that amendment only

•The State has the power to identify and take affirmative action in favor of socially and economically backward classes under Article 15(4) and 16(4).

•It is inconceivable that no state should be allowed to identify backward classes, as directed by the Nine-Judge Bench and the majority in a recent judgment

•National Backward Class Commission Act, 1993 was passed in obedience to direction of the Supreme Court in Indra Sawhney’s case

•Article 342A was meant to cover the Central list alone, and the State Government identification of backward classes is not affected by it

•Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes were not consulted and the power was given to the President under the Constitutional Scheme

•Unless the State’s power cannot be touched by Parliament, the State cannot be affected by the Amendment.

The Supreme Court Bench heard submissions on these matters for 10 days, from March 15 to March 26, 2021.

JUDGEMENT 

The verdict was issued on May 5, 2021. The bench unanimously agreed on issues 1, 2, and 3. They concluded that the 50% reservation restriction should not be revisited. The Gaikwad Commission, the Bombay High Court’s order, and the SEBC Act all fail to establish a ‘exceptional scenario’ that qualifies as an exemption to this restriction. As a result, the SEBC Act, in so far as it recognizes and offers reserves to Marathas, is declared invalid.

On issues 4, 5, and 6, Supreme Court justices Rao, Gupta, and Bhat agreed. They concluded that the 102nd Constitutional Amendment does remove states’ authority to designate backward classes.

Indra Sawhney’s success was attributed to the majority and “proportion” by J Ashok Bhushan .The maximum allowed for reservations under Article 15 (4) and Article 16 (4) J Bhushan declared  that any of the arguments presented by both were compelling enough to reread the fifty percent limit in the Indra sahnewy case. The Gaikwad Commission report is subject to statutory scrutiny, but there is no uniform standard of scrutiny of such reports. 

According to J Bhat, Article 342A does not violate the principle of federalism. The Select Committee report and other parliamentary reports rejected proposals to involve state governments in the SEBC identification process. Only the president has the power to identify and recognize the socially and educationally weaker sections. 

ANALYSIS

The state of Maharashtra’s Reservation for Socially and Educationally Backward Classes (SEBC) Act, 2018, that offered 16% reservation for the Maratha group in higher education and public sector jobs, was struck down by India’s Supreme Court. This sparked controversy about Indian reservation system, which tries to benefit underprivileged populations. The primary points presented concerned whether the 1992 Indra Sawhney case should be reconsidered by a bigger bench in light of recent modifications and changing societal circumstances, and whether the SEBC Act qualifies as an unusual circumstance permitting reservations over the 50% limit imposed in Indra Sawhney. 

Other questions included whether the Constitution’s 102nd Amendment limits states’ ability to identify backward classes and whether Article 342A eliminates states’ ability to establish regulations for any backward class. The Supreme Court has already referred the case to a more substantial panel to address constitutional issues concerning states’ control over reservations.

CONCLUSION

The 5-member Constitutional Bench of India’s Supreme Court invalidated the “Maharashtra State Reservation for the Educationally and Socially Backward Classes (SEBC) Act, 2018” in the matter of “Dr. Jaishri Laxmanrao Patil Vs The Chief Minister & Ors.” This ruling has renewed controversy about India’s reservation system, that is overseen by both constitutional rules and municipal restrictions. On July 9, 2014, the Maharashtra state passed an ordinance giving the Maratha people a 16% reservation in higher education and government posts. On July 12, 2019, the Indian Supreme Court heard an appeal to overturn the Bombay High Court’s ruling and sent notification to the Maharashtra state government.

REFERENCES

https://www.scobserver.in/cases/jaishri-laxmanrao-patil-chief-minister-maharashtra-maratha-reservation-case-background/

https://articles.manupatra.com/article-details/Case-Comment-Dr-JaishriLaxmanrao-Patil-V-Chief-Minister-And-Others-Analysing-Rationale-Of-Constitutional-Bench-On-Maratha-Reservation-102nd-Constitutional-Amendment

https://indiankanoon.org/doc/189806642/ https://main.sci.gov.in/supremecourt/2019/23618/23618_2019_35_1501_27992_Judgement_05-May-2021.pdf

Written by Tannu An Intern Under Legal Vidhiya

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