Date: 25/05/2023
Relevance: GS-2: Functions of Judiciary
Key Phrases: National Capital Civil Service Authority, review petition, Article 239AA, National Capital Territory of Delhi Act, 1991, DANICS, Article 137, Roopa Hurra v Ashok Hurra (2002), curative petition, patent error, Union of India v. Sandur Manganese & Iron Ores Ltd, 2013.
Why in News?
- The Central government filed a review petition in the Supreme Court challenging a previous judgment that granted control over administrative services to the Delhi government.
- This was a day after the government promulgated an ordinance to create a National Capital Civil Service Authority, empowered to recommend transfers, postings, and disciplinary actions relating to all Group A and DANICS officers (Delhi, Andaman & Nicobar, Lakshadweep, Daman, and Diu and Dadra and Nagar Haveli civil services).
Why has this review petition been filed?
- Reinstatement of LG's Authority:
- The Centre's ordinance restores the final authority of the Delhi Lieutenant Governor (LG) in the transfers and postings of bureaucrats.
- It strengthens the LG's role as an empowered administrator, allowing decisions on proposals considered or decided by the elected government.
- Supreme Court Judgement:
- The dispute over whether the Lieutenant Governor or the Chief Minister would have powers over these administrative services in Delhi went to the Supreme Court and a judgment was delivered a few days ago.
- The ruling places three constitutional principles – representative democracy, federalism, and accountability – to an elected government within the interpretation of Article 239AA.
- In 1991, when Article 239 AA was inserted, Parliament also passed the Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi Act, 1991 to provide a framework for the functioning of the Legislative Assembly and the government of Delhi.
- The Court clarified that Part XIV of the Constitution, which governs the employment of persons in public services under the union and states, is applicable to union territories, including Delhi.
- Transfer of Power:
- The current ordinance transfers the authority previously held by the Delhi government to a statutory body comprising the Chief Minister of Delhi, the Chief Secretary, and the Principal Home Secretary of the Delhi government.
How does a review petition get heard in court?
- A judgment of the Supreme Court becomes the law of the land, according to the Constitution.
- The Supreme Court, under Article 137 of the Constitution, has the power to review its judgments or orders.
- Review petitions are entertained on specific grounds and aim to correct grave errors that have led to a miscarriage of justice.
- The court can review its rulings to correct "patent errors" but not minor mistakes of inconsequential importance.
- A review is accepted when there is a glaring omission, patent mistake, or grave error caused by judicial fallibility.
The rarity of review petitions:
- Review petitions are infrequent in the Supreme Court. The court typically refuses to review its judgments, as seen in the case of the Rafale deal in 2018.
- However, there have been instances where the court allowed review petitions, such as the March 2018 judgment diluting the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes Atrocities Act.
Grounds for seeking a review of an SC verdict:
- In a 2013 ruling, the Supreme Court laid down three grounds for
seeking a review of its verdicts:
- The discovery of new and important matters or evidence that was not within the petitioner's knowledge or could not be produced by them, despite exercising due diligence.
- Mistake or error apparent on the face of the record.
- Any other sufficient reason. The Court clarified that "any sufficient reason" refers to a reason comparable to the other two grounds.
- Union of India v. Sandur Manganese & Iron Ores Ltd, 2013:
- The court laid down nine principles on when a review is maintainable.
- It emphasized that a review is not an appeal in disguise and should only be sought for correcting a patent error.
- Mere differences in opinions or the possibility of alternative views are not sufficient grounds for a review.
Who can file a review petition?
- It is not necessary that only parties to a case can seek a review of the judgment on it.
- As per the Civil Procedure Code and the Supreme Court Rules, any person aggrieved by a ruling can seek a review.
- However, the court does not entertain every review petition filed. It exercises its discretion to allow a review petition only when it shows the grounds for seeking the review.
What is the procedure the Court uses to consider a review petition?
- Filing Deadline:
- A review petition must be filed within 30 days from the date of the judgment or order.
- Judgment vs. Order:
- A judgment is the final decision, while an order is an interim ruling.
- Condoning Delay:
- The court may allow a review petition filed after the 30-day deadline if strong reasons justify the delay.
- Consideration Process:
- Review petitions are typically heard "through circulation" by the judges in their chambers, without oral arguments from lawyers.
- The same combination of judges who delivered the original order or judgment usually reviews the petition. If a judge is retired or unavailable, a replacement is chosen based on seniority.
- Oral Hearing:
- In exceptional cases, an oral hearing may be granted, such as in death penalty cases where a Bench of three judges hears the petition in open court.
What happens if a review petition fails?
- As the court of last resort, the Supreme Court’s verdict cannot result in a miscarriage of justice.
- In Roopa Hurra v Ashok Hurra (2002), the court itself evolved the concept of a curative petition, which can be heard after a review is dismissed to prevent abuse of its process.
- A curative petition is also entertained on very narrow grounds like a review petition and is generally not granted an oral hearing.
Source: The Indian Express
Mains Question:
Q. Discuss the process of hearing a review petition in the Supreme Court and the grounds on which a review can be sought.