Daily Current Affairs on Judges only interpreters of law, need a balance b/w judicial activism & restraint for UPSC Civil Services Examination (General Studies) Preparation

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Judges only interpreters of law, need a balance b/w judicial activism & restraint

Context: Judges are only interpreters and are not here to make the law or to evolve a policy and a balance has to be maintained between judicial activism and restraint, said Delhi High Court Chief Justice.

Key Points

  • There is always a gap between justice and law. Merely because the law is enacted, there is no guarantee that justice will be done. 
  • There is some role to be played by judges. And if there is any gap, a judge has to fill up the gap. That is known as judicial activism. 
  • That is inevitable but as a matter of exception, and not as a matter of a rule.
  • Judge are concerned with the law as it is and not with the law as it ought to be. It is a matter for parliament, and in the absence of law, it is for the executive to draft the policy as per the bifurcation of the power and the Constitution. 
  • One has to maintain the balance between judicial activism and judicial restraint.

Judicial Activism

  • It is doctrine which originated and developed in the USA.
  • It was introduced in India during the mid-1970s.
  • Black's Law Dictionary Definition: It is a judicial philosophy which motivate judges to depart from the traditional precedents in favour of progressive and new social policies.
  • It gives an assertive role to the judiciary to force the legislature and executive to discharge their constitutional duties.
  • Also known as “judicial dynamism”, it is an antithesis to judicial restraint.
  • Manifestation of judicial dynamism is reflected in Public Interest Litigation (PIL).
  • Activators of Judicial Activism are mainly social or human rights activists.

Criticism: describes judicial rulings suspected of being based on personal or political considerations rather than on existing law.

  • Example: In Maneka Gandhi’s case, substantive due process was introduced into Article 21 by judicial interpretation.

Judicial Restraint

  • Judicial Restraint is a theory of judicial interpretation that limits the exercise of judges’ powers.
  • It believes that judges should not reflect their personal political values and policy agendas to while delivering judicial opinions.
  • Basic ideology: The courts should interpret the law and not intervene in policy-making.

Judges should always try to decide cases on the basis of:

  • The original intent of those who wrote the constitution.
  • Precedent past decisions in earlier cases.
  • The court should leave policy making to others.
  • Example: In S.R. Bommai v Union of India the judges said that there are certain situations where the political element dominates and no judicial review is possible.

Basis of doctrine of judicial restraint

  • The court is undemocratic because it is non-elective and presumably non-responsive to the popular will.
  • The origin of the judicial review is being questioned, as it is not granted in the constitution.
  • The doctrine of separation of powers.

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