External Aids
External Aids
External Aids
PARLIAMENTARY HISTORY
The ingredients of Parliamentary History are the bill in its original form or the
amendments considered during its progress in the Legislature, Speech of the minister
who introduced the bill in the Parliament which is also referred to as Statements of
Objects and Reasons, Reports of Parliamentary debates and resolutions passed by
either House of the Parliament and the Reports submitted different Parliamentary
Committees.
According to the traditional English view the Parliamentary History of a statute was
not considered as an aid to construction. The Supreme Court of India in the beginning
enunciated the rule of exclusion of Parliamentary History in the way it was
traditionally enunciated by the English Courts but on many an occasion, the court
used this aid in resolving questions of construction.
In Indira Sawhney v. Union of India, while interpreting Article 16(4) of the
Constitution the Supreme Court referred to Dr. Ambedkar‟s speech in the Constituent
Assembly as the expression backward class of citizens’ is not defined. The court held
that reference to Parliamentary debate is permissible to ascertain the context,
background and objective of the legislatures but at the same time such references
could not be taken as conclusive or binding on the courts. Thus in the Mandal
Reservation Case, the Supreme Court resorted to Parliamentary History as an aid to
interpretation.
In the Ashwini Kumar’s Case (1952), the then Chief Justice of India Patanjali
Shastri quoted that the Statement of Objects and Reasons should not be used as an
aid to interpretation because in his opinion the Statement of Objects and Reasons is
presented in the Parliament when a bill is being introduced. During the course of the
processing of the bill, it undergoes radical changes. But in the Subodh Gopal’s Case
(1954), Justice S.R. Das although he fully supported Chief Justice Patanjali Shastri‟s
views in the Ashwini Kumar’s Case but he wanted to use the Statement of Objects
and Reasons to protect the sharecroppers against eviction by the new buyers of land
since Zamindari system was still not abolished and land was still not the property of
the farmers. So Justice S.R. Das took the help of Statements of Objects and Reasons
to analyse the social, legal, economic and political condition in which the bill was
introduced.
In Harsharan Verma v. Tribhuvan Narain Singh, the appointment of Tribhuvan
Narayan Singh as the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh was challenged as at the time of
his appointment he was neither a member of Vidhan Sabha nor a member of Vidhan
Parishad. While interpreting Article 164(4) of the Constitution, the Supreme Court
held that it did not require that a Minister should be a Member of the Legislature at
the time of his being chosen as such, the Supreme Court referred to an amendment
which was rejected by the Constituent Assembly requiring that a Minister at the time
of his being chosen should be a member of the Legislature.