Introduction
In 2017, a 2-Judge Bench of the Supreme Court in Shanti Fragrances v. Union of India2 (Shanti Fragrances) was dealing with a batch of cases concerning the taxability of pan masala under various State sales tax enactments. During the proceedings, the 2-Judge Bench noticed the “dichotomy between two lines of Supreme Court judgments” holding opposing and conflicting views.3 The first being Kothari Products Ltd. v. State of U.P.4 line of judgments and the second being CST v. Agra Belting Works5 line of judgments.6 Both Kothari Products7 and Agra Belting Works8 were three-Judge Bench decisions.9 Kothari Products10 was a unanimous decision, while Agra Belting Works11 was decided by a majority of 2:1. Noticing this conflict, the 2-Judge Bench referred this issue to the Chief Justice of India to constitute an appropriate Bench to ascertain which line of judgments lay down the correct law.12
However, while delivering its judgment, the 2-Judge Bench delved into another aspect. The Bench questioned that after the decision of Union of India v. Raghubir Singh13 (Raghubir Singh) whether it can be stated that Judges of the Supreme Court “do not sit in 2s and 3s for mere convenience but that a Bench which is numerically superior will prevail over a Bench of lesser strength”.14 In Raghubir Singh15, the court referred to the observations of Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Javed Ahmed Abdul Hamid Pawala v. State of Maharashtra16 in which the learned Judge relied on the decision of the Kings Bench in Young v. Bristol Aeroplane Co. Ltd.17 to observe that it would be “inappropriate for a Division Bench of three Judges” to overrule the decision of the Division Bench of two Judges.18 However, notwithstanding this observation, the court in Raghubir Singh19 noted that a practice in Indian courts “sanctified by repeated affirmation” has evolved to the rule that “the statement of law by a Division Bench is considered binding on a Division Bench of the same or lesser number of Judges”.20
Though this aspect was not in direct consideration before the 2-Judge Bench in Shanti Fragrances21, the Bench chose to examine the issue further. It referred to the judgment of Beaumon, C.J. in Emperor v. Ningapa Ramappa Kurbar22 (erroneously referred to as Ningapa Ramappa Kurbar v. Emperor by the Bench) in which Beaumon, C.J. stated that “it would seem anomalous to hold that a later Full Bench can overrule an earlier Full Bench merely because the later Bench consists of more Judges than the earlier”.23
The 2-JudgeBench further noticed that a similar view was echoed by M.B. Lokur, J. in his judgment in Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Assn. v. Union of India24 in which the learned Judge questioned whether the number of Judges on a Bench governs what is binding upon a subsequent Bench.25 Lastly, the 2-JudgeBench also referred to the provisions of law set out by Lord Denning M.R. in Harper v. National Coal Board26.
After referring to all the aforesaid judgments, the 2-JudgeBench felt that that time had come to “tear the judicial veil” on this issue and also requested the Chief Justice to constitute an appropriate Bench “to lay down, as a matter of law, as to whether and to what extent” the propositions contained in Ningapa Ramappa Kurbar27, Lokur, J.'s observation in Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Assn.28 and Harper29 judgment of the Court of Appeal in the UK “should guide us for the future”.30
Thus, two issues were referred to the Chief Justice by the 2-Judge Bench.
The author argues that the request made by the 2-Judge Bench to the Chief Justice to constitute a Bench to examine the second issue of the doctrine of precedent was unnecessary because the 2-Judge Bench has not considered law laid down by the seven-Judge Bench of the Supreme Court in A.R. Antulay v. R.S. Nayak.31 (Antulay case).
The law laid down in Antulay case
The facts of this case are well known but ascertaining the law is a tedious task due to various judicial opinions. This exercise is, however, made easier due to the editorial note in the Supreme Court Cases Reporter, which the author relies on for this column.32
Seven Judges of the Supreme Court assembled to decide two questions:
(1) Whether the directions of the Constitution Bench of five Judges of the Supreme Court in the previous round of litigation between the parties in Antulay case33 to transfer the proceedings from the Special Judge, Bombay to the High Court of Bombay itself were “inoperative, invalid or illegal”?
(2) If the directions were invalid, then could the seven-Judge Bench “recall, withdraw, revoke or set aside the directions”?34
The appeal was allowed by a majority of 5:2 and the directions of the five-Judge Bench to transfer the case to the Bombay High Court were set aside and quashed.35 The lead judgment was delivered by Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. for himself, G.L. Oza, J. and S. Natarajan, J.; Ranganathan Misra, J. concurred with Mukharji, J. with a separate opinion and differed with him on certain aspects.36 Even though Oza, J. was a party to the opinion of Mukharji, J., he delivered a short opinion he expressed his dissent with Mukharji, J. and concurred with Ranganathan Misra, J. only on the issue of whether a writ of certiorari by the Supreme Court could be issued to correct its own judgment or order.37 B.C. Ray, J. concurred with Mukharji, J. The dissenters were M.N. Venkatachaliah, J. and S. Ranganathan, J.38
Mukharji, J.
During the course of his judgment, Mukharji, J., speaking for the majority, directly dealt with the issue of whether the size of a Bench matters or not.39 Disagreeing with the observations of Chinnappa Reddy, J. in Javed Ahmed Abdul Hamid Pawala40 as well as the decision of Young v. Bristol Aeroplane Co. Ltd.41 where it was “held that a Division Bench of three Judges should not overrule a Division Bench of two Judges”, Mukharji, J. opined that this principle has not been followed by “our courts”.42 The learned Judge went onto opine that the “law laid down” by the Supreme Court “is somewhat different. There is a hierarchy within the court itself here, where larger Benches overrule smaller Benches”. According to the learned Judge, “This is the practice following by this Court and now it is a crystallised rule of law.” Therefore, Mukharji, J. clearly holds that larger Benches overruling smaller Benches is (i) the law laid down by the Supreme Court; and (ii) a practice that is now “rule of law”.43
Ranganath Misra, J.
In his concurring judgment, Ranganath Misra, J. does not disagree with Mukharji, J. and acknowledges that “The practice has developed that a larger Bench is entitled to overrule the decision of a smaller Bench notwithstanding the fact that each of the decisions is that of the Court”.44 However, the learned Judge opined that this principle would not apply to the case before the Court and further stated that the seven-Judge Bench was “not entitled to reverse the decision of the Constitution Bench” of five-Judges.45
According to the learned Judge, “Overruling when made by a larger Bench of an earlier decision of a small one is intended to take away the precedent value of the decision without affecting the binding effect of the decision in the particular case.”46 The learned Judge opined that only the five-Judge Bench could rectify its mistake and a larger Bench was not required to do so. However, he agreed with the “ultimate conclusions” of Mukharji, J.
Venkatachaliah, J.
Venkatachaliah, J. as mentioned earlier delivered a dissenting opinion. According to the learned Judge, “A larger Bench, merely on the strength of its numbers, cannot undo the finality of the decisions of other Division Benches.”47 The learned Judge opined that “if the decision suffers from an error the only way to correct it, is to go in review under Article 13748” of the Constitution of India49 (the Constitution) “read with Order 40 Rule 150” of the Supreme Court Rules framed under Article 14551 of the Constitution.52 The learned Judge further went onto to opine that the seven-Judge Bench “cannot sit in appeal” over what the five-Judge Bench said.53 In order words, according to Venkatachaliah, J., the seven-Judge Bench of the Supreme Court could not undo or overrule the decision of the five-Judge Bench transferring the case from the Special Judge to the Bombay High Court. However, what is crucial to note is that Venkatachaliah, J. has not disagreed with Mukharji, J.'s view that larger Benches overruling smaller Benches is “a crystallised rule of law”.
S. Ranganathan, J.
S. Ranganathan, J. did not opine on this issue.
Is the opinion of Mukharji, J. on the issue the majority view in Antulay case?
The reader of this column would be entitled to ask that if the opinion of Mukharji, J. has been delivered for himself and two other Judges, then would the learned Judge's opinion constitute the majority view having fallen one short of the magic figure of four? The answer to this question lies in the opinions of Misra, J. and Venkatachaliah, J.
We have already seen that Misra, J. has not differed with Mukharji, J. on the position of law, namely, that a larger Bench is entitled to overrule the decision of a smaller Bench notwithstanding the fact that each of the decisions is that of the Court. The learned Judge has only opined that “this principle” (which is not disputed by him) would not apply to the case before the Court. The general principle of law and the law laid down by Mukharji, J. has not been countered by Misra, J.
Venkatachaliah, J. on the other hand has stated that a larger Bench cannot “undo the finality of the decisions of other Division Benches”; but the learned Judge has not expressly disputed the statement of law, set out by Mukharji, J. that larger Benches overrule smaller Benches. What the learned Judge has disputed is that the larger Benches cannot undo the finality of the decision or the ultimate decision of a smaller Bench. The learned Judge has not stated that the principle of law laid down by a smaller Bench cannot be overruled by a larger Bench. There is a difference between the principle of law and the actual decision in a judgment. Therefore, it is submitted that Mukharji, J.'s opinion has in effect not been countered either by Misra, J. or Venkatachaliah, J.
However, supposing the reader of this column is of the opinion that Venkatachaliah, J. has expressly disagreed on this issue with Mukharji, J., even then, the concurring opinion of Misra, J. on this issue would be sufficient to conclude that in Antulay case54, the Supreme Court has by a majority of 4:3 opined that the practice of larger Benches of the Supreme Court overruling smaller Benches is a crystallised rule of law and therefore, the Supreme Court in Shanti Fragrances55 ought not to have referred this issue to the Chief Justice to constitute a larger Bench.
But let us assume for a moment that Misra, J. has neither concurred with Mukharji, J. nor dissented with his opinion. Would it still be open to conclude that the opinion of Mukharji, J. would be the majority view on this issue? Reliance may be placed on the judgments of the Gujarat High Court in Goswami Kalyanraiji Govindraiji v. Goswami Vallabraiji Govindraiji56 and Gajubha (Gajendrasinh) Bhimaji Jadeja v. Union of India57 in which the High Court has held that it is a settled principle of law when the other Judges of a Bench do not dissent from or contravene the view of a particular Judge on the same Bench, then it is presumed that the other Judges who have not expressed contrary views have agreed with the view expressed by the said Judge. Both judgments of the Gujarat High Court have placed reliance on a passage from the decision of the Queen's Bench in Guardians of the Poor of the West Derby Union v. Guardians of the Poor of the Atcham Union58 in which Lord Esher M.R. has opined as under:
The question is, what is the true construction of the 35th section of the Act of Parliament which is before us, and, when we have got at the true construction, what is the application of it to this case? …The House of Lords heard the cases, and did not give judgment at once, but considered the matter carefully, and four of the learned Judges in the House of Lords gave judgment. Now we know that each of them considers the matter separately, and they then consider the matter jointly, interchanging their judgments, so that every one of them has seen the judgments of the others. If they mean to differ in their view, they say so openly when they come to deliver their judgments, and if they do not do this, it must be taken that each of them agrees with the judgments of the others.
(emphasis supplied)
The view of the Gujarat High Court and the Queen's Bench has also been echoed by the Supreme Court in the decision delivered in Kaikhosrou (Chick) Kavasji Framji v. Union of India59 in which the Court rejected the objection raised by the respondent in the said case that the view expressed by A.P. Sen, J. in Express Newspapers (P) Ltd. v. Union of India60 was his own view and not the majority view as two other learned Judges on the Bench did not express any opinion on a particular question. By relying of the aforequoted decision of the Queen's Bench, the Court held that since the two other Judges on the Bench did not dissent with A.P. Sen, J. while expressing their concurrent opinions, the view of A.P. Sen, J. was the law laid down under Article 14161 of the Constitution.
Therefore, by this logic, even if it is presumed Misra, J. did not express any clear opinion, the fact that the learned Judge did not disagree with Mukharji, J. would be enough to leave the statement of law set out by Mukharji, J. untouched. This is also fortified by the fact that Ranganathan, J. in his dissenting opinion has not expressed any view on the statement of law set out by Mukharji, J.
Is the reference in Shanti Fragrances on the second issue necessary in light of Mukharji, J.’s opinion in Antulay case
Once the majority view by Mukharji, J. in Antulay case62 holds the field, the reference by the 2-Judge Bench in Shanti Fragrances63 would be unnecessary. In a recent decision of the Supreme Court in Shah Faesal v. Union of India64, a five-Judge Bench of the Court opined:
19. When a decision is rendered by this Court, it acquires a reliance interest and the society organises itself based on the present legal order. When substantial judicial time and resources are spent on references, the same should not be made in a casual or cavalier manner. It is only when a proposition is contradicted by a subsequent judgment of the same Bench, or it is shown that the proposition laid down has become unworkable or contrary to a well-established principle, that a reference will be made to a larger Bench.65
Albeit in the context of Article 145(3)66, a three-Judge Bench of the Supreme Court in Shrimanth Balasaheb Patil v. Karnataka Legislative Assembly67 opined:
160. Any question of law of general importance arising incidentally, or any ancillary question of law having no significance to the final outcome, cannot be considered as a substantial question of law. The existence of substantial question of law does not weigh on the stakes involved in the case, rather, it depends on the impact the question of law will have on the final determination. If the questions having a determining effect on the final outcome have already been decided by a conclusive authority, then such questions cannot be called as “substantial questions of law”.68
“A substantial question of law, therefore, cannot arise where that law has been finally and authoritatively decided” by the Supreme Court.69 Though the reference in Shanti Fragrances70 does not appear to have been made under Article 145(3) of the Constitution but under Order 6 Rule 271 of the Supreme Court Rules, 201372, the principal of law set out in both judgments above would certainly guide the Court in cases which are referred to a larger Bench.
Conclusion
R.S. Pathak, C.J. in Raghubir Singh73 while examining whether the Supreme Court is bound by its own decisions painstakingly referred to the law laid down in different jurisdictions in certain common law countries. While examining the law laid down on this issue by the House of Lords, reference was made to Dr Alan Paterson's The Law Lords which summarises the guidelines framed by the House of Lords. One such guideline is that “a decision ought not to be overruled if it would be impracticable for the Lords to foresee the consequences of departing from it” or “if to do so would involve a change that ought to be part of a comprehensive reform of the law”.74 While this is in the context of overruling decisions, it is submitted that these guidelines are relevant to the issue at hand. The consequence of attempting to unsettle with the law laid down in Antulay case75 would shake the very foundation of the law of precedent as it stands today which would certainly entail unforeseen consequences which even the Supreme Court would not be able to imagine. Therefore, unless a comprehensive law reform is undertaken, (which seems highly unlikely), it would be advisable for the Supreme Court not to stir up a hornet's nest and lay the issue to rest.
† Author is a practicing Advocate at the Bombay High Court and the NCLT Mumbai. He can be contacted on Twitter@DormaanD.
2. (2018) 11 SCC 305. The Bench comprised of R.F. Nariman and Sanjay Kishan Kaul, JJ. The judgment was delivered by R.F. Nariman, J.
3. (2018) 11 SCC 305, 312 para 7.
9. (2018) 11 SCC 305, 314-315 para 12.
12. (2018) 11 SCC 305, 320, para 18.
14. (1989) 2 SCC 754, 777-778, para 27.
17. 1944 KB 718 : (1944) 2 All ER 293.
18. (1989) 2 SCC 754, para 26.
20. (1989) 2 SCC 754, para 27.
23. (2018) 11 SCC 305, 315-316, para 13.
25. (2018) 11 SCC 305, 316-317, para 14.
30. (2018) 11 SCC 305, 320, para 18.
32. A.R. Antulay v. R.S. Nayak, (1988) 2 SCC 602.
34. (1988) 2 SCC 602, 605.
39. (1988) 2 SCC 602, 653, para 43.
41. 1944 KB 718 : (1944) 2 All ER 293.
43. (1988) 2 SCC 602, para 44.
44. (1988) 2 SCC 602, 688, para 105.
47. (1988) 2 SCC 602, 706, para 157.
48. Constitution of India, Art. 137.
50. Supreme Court Rules, 2013, Or. 40 R. 1.
51. Constitution of India, Art. 145.
58. [LR] 24 QBD 117, 119-120.
59. (2019) 20 SCC 705, 718-720, paras 38-46.
61. Constitution of India, Art. 141. Law declared by Supreme Court to be binding on all courts. The law declared by the Supreme Court shall be binding on all courts within the territory of India.
65. (2020) 4 SCC 1, 10.
66. Art. 145(3). The minimum number of Judges who are to sit for the purpose of deciding any case involving a substantial question of law as to the interpretation of this Constitution or for the purpose of hearing any reference under Article 143 shall be five:
Provided that, where the Court hearing an appeal under any of the provisions of this chapter other than Article 132 consists of less than five Judges and in the course of the hearing of the appeal the Court is satisfied that the appeal involves a substantial question of law as to the interpretation of this Constitution the determination of which is necessary for the disposal of the appeal, such Court shall refer the question for opinion to a Court constituted as required by this clause for the purpose of deciding any case involving such a question and shall on receipt of the opinion dispose of the appeal in conformity with such opinion.
68. (2020) 2 SCC 595, 650, para 160.
69. State of J&K v. Thakur Ganga Singh, AIR 1960 SC 356, para 9.
71. Supreme Court Rules, 2013, Or. 6 R. 2.
72. Supreme Court Rules, 2013. Where in the cause of the hearing of any cause, appeal or other proceeding, the Bench considers that the matter should be dealt with by a larger Bench, it shall refer the matter to the Chief Justice of India, who shall thereupon constitute such a Bench for the hearing of it.
74. (1989) 2 SCC 754, 770, para 16.