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Raja Ram pal v. hon’ble speaker, Loksabha (2007) 

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Citation-  

2007, 3 SCC 184

Date of judgment
  10/01/2007

Case no

 1 Of 2006

Case type

Writ Petition(Civil)

Petition/appellant

Raja Ram Pal

Defendant/respondent

The Hon’ble Speaker, Lok Sabha

Bench

Sabharwal, Y.K. (CJI) & Balakrishnan, K.G. (J) & Thakker, C.K.(J) & R.V. Raveendran (J) & Jain, D.K. (J)

Court

Supreme Court of India

Statue reffered :

Cases referred:

Introduction-

“The Parliament, the Press (Media), and the Judges, those three great institutions, are protectors of justice and liberty, embodying the spirit of the Constitution.” – Lord Denning. I have had the privilege of reading the comprehensive and scholarly judgment of the learned Chief Justice and the enlightening concurring judgment of learned Brother Thakker J., in which the expulsion of ten members of Lok Sabha and one member of Rajya Sabha was upheld. My respectful disagreement is expressed.

Facts of the case-

Issue:

  1. The contention put forth by the petitioner was that the power of self-composition is not possessed by the Parliament of India, and therefore, it does not acquire the right of expulsion.
  1. Whether the right of expulsion is possessed by the Parliament under Article 105.
  1. Whether such expulsion is subject to judicial review.

Arguments:

The Petitioner contended that

The Respondent maintained the following objections that

Judgement:

             Regarding the Rule of Law

Conclusion:

This landmark case pertains to the “cash for query” judgment issued by the Supreme Court of India. It involved an analysis of the scope of parliamentary privilege. The case highlights a fundamental aspect of India’s Constitutional system: the Constitution of India serves as the supreme law of the land, and the powers of the other organs of government are derived from it.

Drafted by: Jhalak Varshney, Lloyd Law college, Greater Noida an intern under legal vidhiya.

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