Bharat Kumar Vs State of Kerela
Bharat Kumar Vs State of Kerela
Bharat Kumar Vs State of Kerela
The petitioners in this case were two private citizens and the various
chambers of commerce in the State of Kerala. The State of Kerala, the Director
General of Police and five registered All India political parties were impleaded
as respondents. It was contended that bandhs should be declared unconstitutional
as they violate Articles 19 and 21 of the Constitution and that they also contravene
the Directive Principles of State Policy and the Fundamental Duties enumerated
in the Constitution. The petitioners furtber prayed tbat the calling for and bolding
of bandhs sbould be declared an offence under the Indian Penal Code.
The Kerala High Court held that the calling for a bandh by any association,
organisation or political party and its enforcement, is illegal and unconstitutional.
The court also took the view that the organisations which call for such bandhs
and enforce them are liable to compensate tbe Government, the public and private
citizens for the loss suffered by them due to the resulting destruction of private
and public property.! On appeal, the Supreme Court upheld the decision of the
Higb Court, merely stating that the reasoning of the High Court was sound, and
that no interference of their part was necessary.2
WHAT THE COURT SAID
Tbe Court, by declaring tbat bandhs violate fundamental rights and are
hence unconstitutional, bas apparently accepted the argument that fundamental
rights are enforceable not only against the 'State', but also against private citizens.
* II Year B.A., LL.B. (Hons.), National Law School of India University.
Bharat Kumar v. State of Kerala, 1997 (2) KLT 287 (FB).
2 The Communist Party of India (M) 1', Bharat KlImar and others (unreported); The decision was
given by a three judge bench presided by the Chief Justice of India.
106 The Student Advocate [1998
CONCLUSION
It is submitted that it is neither desirable to ban bandhs entirely, nor leave
them entirely unregulated. The economic loss caused and the hardship suffered
by the calling of a bandh is too great to be ignored. The Court must try to strike
a balance between the freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution, and the degree
of social control permissible. In its efforts to grant relief to those affected by
bandhs however, the Court has gone too far, its judgment guided by emotion
rather than by sound legal reasoning.
Drawing an analogy from the Industrial Dispute Act and its handling of
strikes, differentiating between legal, illegal, justified and unjustified strikes, 13
the Court should have attempted to classify bandhs as legal or illegal, instead of
imposing a blanket ban on all bandhs. This would allow for peaceful expressions
of protest, and at the same time prevent undue hardship to the public. By declaring
all bandhs as unconstitutional, the Court has, in effect, violated the very rights it
has sought to uphold and has deprived the working class of a very strong
bargaining weapon.
9 This principle has evolved through a host of environmental pollution cases decided by the Supreme
Court, one of the notable ones being Indian Council for Environmental Legal Action v. Union of
India, AIR 1996 SC ]446.
] 0 See, Chapter 10: Maintenance of Public Order and Tranquillity.
1] See, Chapter 8: Of Offences against Pub]ic Tranquillity.
12 This was in response to the respondents contention that the imposition of any restriction on the right
of a political party to call for a bandh would be a violation of the Fundamenta] right of the political
party, protected by Articles 19(1 )(a) and 19(1)(b).
] 3 See generally, Chapter 5 of the Act dealing with strikes and lockouts.