The Supreme Court is scheduled to pronounce its verdict today on whether MPs and MLAs enjoy immunity from prosecution for taking bribes to make a speech or cast a vote in the legislature.
Having reserved its judgement on October 5, 2023, a seven-judge constitution bench headed by Chief Justice DY Chandrachud will pronounce the verdict on the issue.
During the arguments, the Centre had submitted that bribery can never be a subject matter of immunity and a parliamentary privilege is not meant to place a lawmaker above the law.
The judgement was reserved after two day-long arguments advanced by a battery of lawyers including the attorney general, the solicitor general, and amicus curiae P S Patwalia, who was assisting the court in the matter.
The seven-judge bench is reconsidering the judgement delivered by a five-judge bench of the Supreme Court in 1998 in the JMM bribery case by which MPs and MLAs were granted immunity from prosecution for taking bribes to make a speech or vote in the legislature.
The Supreme Court revisited the judgement 25 years after the JMM bribery scandal rocked the country.
The Supreme Court, in the course of the hearing, said it will examine whether the immunity granted to lawmakers from prosecution for taking bribes to make a speech or vote in Parliament and state legislatures extends to them even if criminality is attached to their actions.
The Supreme Court had on September 20, 2023, agreed to reconsider its judgement, saying it was an important issue having a significant bearing on "morality of polity".
In 1998, a five-judge constitution bench had, in its majority verdict delivered in the PV Narasimha Rao versus CBI case, held that parliamentarians have immunity against criminal prosecution for any speech made and the vote cast inside the House under Article 105(2) and Article 194(2) of the Constitution.
The issue came under the Supreme Court's lens again in 2019, when a bench headed by then chief justice Ranjan Gogoi was hearing an appeal filed by Sita Soren, JMM MLA from Jama and daughter-in-law of party chief Shibu Soren, who was an accused in the JMM bribery scandal.
The Justice Gogoi-led bench had referred to a five-judge bench the crucial question, noting it had "wide ramification" and was of "substantial public importance".
Sita Soren was accused of taking bribes to vote for a particular candidate in the Rajya Sabha election in 2012. She had contended that the constitutional provision granting lawmakers immunity from prosecution, which saw her father-in-law being let off the hook in the JMM bribery scandal, be applied to her.
She had moved the Supreme Court against the Jharkhand High Court order of February 17, 2014, refusing to quash the criminal case lodged against her.
The three-judge bench had then said it will revisit the SC verdict in the sensational JMM bribery case involving Shibu Soren, a former Jharkhand chief minister and ex-union minister, and four other party MPs who had accepted bribes to vote against the no-confidence motion threatening the survival of the P V Narasimha Rao government in 1993.
The Narasimha Rao government, which was in a minority, survived the no-confidence vote with their support.
The CBI registered a case against Soren and four other JMM Lok Sabha MPs but the Supreme Court quashed it citing immunity from prosecution they enjoyed under Article 105(2) of the Constitution.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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