Admin Law Assignment
Admin Law Assignment
Admin Law Assignment
Separation of Powers: A
Comparative Analysis of the
Doctrine India, United States
of America and England.
INTRODUCTION
Meaning
The doctrine of Separation of Powers emphasizes the mutual exclusiveness
of the three organs of government, viz., legislature, executive and judiciary.
The main underlying idea is that each of these organs should exercise only
one type of function. There should not be concentration of all the functions
in one organ otherwise it will pose a threat to personal freedom, for; in that
case, it could act in an arbitrary manner. It could enact a tyrannical law,
execute it in a despotic manner and interpret it in an arbitrary manner
without any external control. The purpose underlying separation doctrine is
to diffuse governmental authority so as to prevent absolutism and guard
against tyrannical and arbitrary powers of the state, and to allocate each
function to the institution best suited to discharge it. The rationale
underlying the doctrine that been that if all power is concentrated in one and
the same organ, there would rise the danger of state absolutism endangering
the freedom of the people. However, it needs to be appreciated that in
considering this doctrine, we have moved from the discipline of law to that of
political theory. The separation of powers is a doctrine not a legal principle.
Origin
There is an old adage containing a lot of truth that “power corrupts and
absolute power corrupts absolutely”. To evolve effective control mechanism,
man had been looking for devices to contain the forces of tyranny and
authoritarianism. “Separation of Powers” was conceived to be one such
device.
The doctrine saw its full expansion in the hands of Charles Louis de Secondat,
otherwise known as Baron de Montesquieu (1689-1755). He felt that the
history of despotic Tudors and absolutist Stuarts, showed that freedom was
not secured, if the executive and the legislative powers were held in the
same hands. He deduced his ideas of separation of powers from his
observations and ideas of the relations between the Stuart King and the
Parliament. He thought that Parliament would never be arbitrary, and the
denial of legislative power to the King alone could make the rule by
extemporary decrees impossible. Montesquieu having experienced the
tyrannies in the monarchical France, must have watched the conditions on
the other side of the Channel with envy. In the second half of the
17th century, he would not fail to notice that the Englishmen stood under the
warm sunshine of the Magna Carta. Having lost his legislative and tax powers
to the Parliament, the English King was left with no prerogative. Parliament
made the laws. His Majesty’s Government was, even though the cabinet
system was not yet developed, administering the laws passed by Parliament.
By the end of the century the judges, like the Great Coke, could not be
dismissed by the King at his will, because the Act of Settlement gave them
tenure during good behavior as distinguished from tenure during the
pleasure of His Majesty. Montesquieu concluded that the secret of the
Englishmen’s liberty was the separation and functional independence of the
three departments of the Government from one another.
In his book, De L’Esprit des Lois (The Spirit of the Laws) 1748, Montesquieu
stated:
Constitutional Provisions
Under Article 53 the executive powers of the union are vested with the
President and under Article 154 the Governor is vested with execution
powers but they do exercise their powers with the aid and advice of the
council of ministers at the Centre (Article 74) and at the State, as the case
may be. Both President and Governor exercise the power of ordinance
making under the constitution thus performing legislative functions.
President makes laws for a State, after the dissolution of the State
Legislature, following the imposition of the President’s Rule (Article 356).
President has the power to disqualify any member of the house under Article
103. The judges of the Supreme Court are appointed by the President, while
the parliament has the power to impeach the judges. The President has the
power to decide a disputed question of the age of a judge of Supreme Court
or any High Court for purpose of set restrain from the judicial service.
The Union Council of Ministers is responsible to the Lok Sabha (Article 75).
This house has the powers to start impeachment proceedings against the
President (Article 61) and the judges of the Supreme Court. The members of
Council of Ministers will be members of either house of Parliament under
Article 75(5) which means there is overlapping of personnel also.
The High Courts in certain marginal spheres perform such functions which are
administrative rather than judicial. Their power of supervision over other
subordinate courts under Article 227 is more of the administrative nature
than judicial. When under Article 228 they have power to make transfer of
cases, they exercise administrative control over the State district courts as
well. The legislative power of the High Courts and the Supreme Court
includes their power to frame rules which is fairly wide.
There have been several landmark judgements that have changed the face of
the doctrine of separation of powers in India. These are discussed in this
section.
The only validity of the doctrine of separation of powers is in the sense that
one organ should not assume the essential functions of the other. This was
the view of Supreme Court in Ram Jawaya Kapur v. State of Punjab [AIR
1955 SC 549], it was held that the
The doctrine puts less and less emphasis on organizational pattern, and seeks
to effect increasingly functional division. In re Delhi Laws Act case [AIR
1951 SC 332], Hon’ble Kania, CJ., observed that.
Delegated Legislation
The American Administrative Law has certain distinctive features which are a
product of separation doctrine. A significant breach of the doctrine occurred
when the courts concede the legislative power could be conferred on
administrative authorities, and thus, the system of delegated legislation
came in vogue. But, in a bid to reconcile the separation doctrine, the courts
laid down that Congress cannot confer an unlimited legislative power on an
administrative authority, that the Congress must not give up its position of
primary legislator and that the Congress should therefore lay down the policy
which the delegate is to follow, while making the rules. J. Mukherjee in re
Delhi Laws Act [Supra] case observed:
“The position in America is that despite the theory that legislature would not
delegate its power to the executive a host of rules and regulations are passed
by non-legislative bodies, which have been judicially recognized as valid.
Viscount Henry St. John Boling Broke (1678-1751) in his book “Remarks on
the History of England”advanced the idea of separation of powers. He laid
emphasis on balance of powers within the constitution because an imbalance
would destroy it. He asserts that for protection of liberty and security in a
state, equilibrium is needed between the Crown, the Parliament and the
people.
In England, S.O.P has historical relevance only. Daniel Ullman says, “England
is not the classic home of the separation of powers. Each power there has
taken on a character of its own, while at the same time preserving the
features of the others.” The position has been summed up by the
Donoughmore Committee in the following words:-
“In the British Constitution there is no such thing as the absolute separation
of legislative, executive and judicial powers. In practice it is inevitable that
they overlap. In such Constitutions as those of France and the United States
of America, attempts to keep them rigidly apart have been made, but have
proved unsuccessful. The distinction is nonetheless real and… important. One
of the main problems of modern democratic State is how to preserve the
distinction whilst avoiding too rigid an insistence on it, in the wide border
land where it is convenient to entrust minor legislative and judicial functions
to executive authorities.
The U.K. does have a kind of separation of powers, but unlike United States it
is informal. Black Stones theory of ‘Mixed Government’ with checks and
balances is more relevant to the U.K. Separation of powers is not an absolute
or predominant feature of the U.K. Constitution. The three branches are not
formally separated and continue to have significant overlap.
“At a time when more and more cases involve the application of legislation
which gives effect to policies that are the subject of bitter public and
parliamentary controversy, it cannot be too strongly emphasized that the
British Constitution, though largely unwritten, is firmly based in the
separation of powers; Parliament makes the laws, the judiciary interprets
them.”
CONCLUSION