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An aristocratic missionary and a question of property: When SC put checks on Parliament's power to tinker with Constitution
An aristocratic missionary and a question of property: When SC put checks on Parliament's power to tinker with Constitution

Indian Express

time25-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

An aristocratic missionary and a question of property: When SC put checks on Parliament's power to tinker with Constitution

In 1815, the Chatterjee family in Calcutta's Shibpur celebrated the birth of a male heir and marked the moment by donating 100 cows. They also named the boy Golaknath, meaning 'the owner of millions of cows'. Educated in a missionary school, Golaknath converted to Christianity at age 14. Shunned by his family, he is said to have walked thousands of kilometres, first to Benaras, then Allahabad and finally to Punjab. In Jalandhar, the aristocratic Brahmin joined the Scottish American Presbyterian Mission, becoming the first Indian to be ordained a minister. Over a century later, Golaknath Chatterjee's descendants would lend their name to what's perhaps one of the most consequential constitutional cases — IC Golaknath v State of Punjab. In 1962, land owned by the evangelical family ran into trouble with the Punjab government, which ordered that the family's land was 'surplus' under its land ceiling laws. While the right to property was then a fundamental right — it stayed that way until the 44th constitutional Amendment in 1978 — the government had through a series of reforms and Amendments diluted the right over the years. In 1964, through the 17th Amendment, the Parliament had added the Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act, 1953, to the Ninth Schedule, putting it beyond judicial purview. In 1967, the Supreme Court, while deciding on the family's petition challenging the Punjab land ceiling law and the 17th Amendment reopened the question on whether the Parliament could amend fundamental rights. The ruling, for the first time limited Parliament's power to amend the Constitution. While doing so, the court would reverse a view it had consistently held for 17 years until then — that Parliament had the power to tinker with fundamental rights. 'Golaknath was a moment where the judiciary asserted itself against a government that amassed more and more power to change the Constitution. The SC's responsibility to ensure that Parliament's majority does not become majoritarian is as relevant today as it was in 1967,' Dr Faizan Mustafa, Vice-Chancellor of Chanakya National Law University, Patna, says. In 1891, when Golaknath Chatterjee died, his son Henry Golaknath took over as Reverend of the church his father had founded in Jalandhar. Henry, one of Golaknath's 14 children, had in 1882 graduated from the Princeton Theological Seminary. Along with his brother William Golaknath, he bought and developed nearly 500 acres around the mission in Bhogpur, approximately 25 km from Jalandhar. While 101-year-old Henry died in 1962, his son Inder and daughter Indira were to inherit the land. However, the District Collector, under the land ceiling law, allowed Inder, Indira and Inder's four daughters a few acres each, declaring around 418 acres as 'surplus' that would vest with the state or the tenants. As the case landed in the Supreme Court, a host of leading lawyers — Nani Palkhivala, M K Nambyar, Ashoke Kumar Sen and Fali Nariman — made the case for Inder C Golaknath, the petitioner. In their arguments, they highlighted the perils of having no restrictions on the Parliament's powers to amend the Constitution. On February 27, 1967, an 11-judge Bench of the SC, headed by then Chief Justice of India Koka Subba Rao, reopened the issue of constitutional amendments diluting the right to property. The Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment) Act, 1964, had, among other aspects, added the Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act, 1953, to the Ninth Schedule, putting it beyond judicial purview. The amendment again raised the same larger question, which was discussed in earlier parts of The Indian Express's series — whether a constitutional amendment can truncate fundamental rights. In Sankari Prasad v State of Bihar (1951) and Sajjan Singh v State of Rajasthan (1964), the Court had ruled that Parliament had no fetters on its power to amend the Constitution. While it was the right to property that Parliament consistently tinkered with, as the ruling termed it, an 'argument of fear' had begun to take shape — that if Parliament can take away one right, it could take away any right. 'It is said that if Article 368 (dealing with amendment process) is held to confer full (power) to amend each and every part of the Constitution as has been held in Sankari Prasad's case, Parliament may do all kinds of things, which were never intended, under this unfettered power and may, for example, abolish elected legislatures, abolish the President or change the present form of Government into a Presidential type like the United States Constitution or do away with the federal structure altogether,' then CJI Rao articulated. In a 6:5 verdict, the SC, in one stroke, overruled its two earlier rulings and held that Parliament did not have the power to abridge or take away fundamental rights. While CJI Rao and five others formed the majority, Justice K N Wanchoo wrote a minority opinion. 'The power of amendment contained in a written federal constitution is a safety valve which, to a large extent provides for stable growth and makes violent revolution more or less unnecessary,' Justice Wanchoo wrote. It was in the Golaknath case that the 'basic structure' argument was first made by veteran lawyer M K Nambyar, who was inspired by German Professor Dietrich Conrad. Court records show that during the arguments in court, the lawyers referred to how the government was using the legislature as a means of securing changes in the laws which it desires. There were also references to Hitler's Germany. The ruling was perhaps also a reflection of its times. The Republic had moved from a new nation that had emerged from the shadow of colonialism to one that was beginning to confront its internal issues. For the first 17 years, the SC had allowed the Parliament to change the Constitution, but many of those parliamentarians were part of the independence movement. In fact, the first constitutional Amendment was made by the provisional Parliament, which was essentially the Constituent Assembly. As the generation changed, the relationship between the executive and the judiciary too began to change. The Golaknath ruling came around the same time when the Indira Gandhi-led Congress government had come back to power at the Centre, but lost power in several states. The political implications of the ruling had far-reaching consequences for the judiciary. It did not help that Justice Rao resigned as CJI, three months before his term ended and contested for the Presidential elections as the Opposition's candidate. He, however, lost the election to former President Giani Zail Singh. The government, however, saw the court's Golaknath ruling — and subsequent adverse rulings, including the bank nationalisation case (1970) — as open confrontation. The government hit back by superseding judges seen as inimical to its socialist policies. Despite the win, the Golaknaths did not get back their land. 'We didn't even get what was permissible under the law, where each family member could have a standard 30 acres. We received less than one-third of it. Whatever land we did get, we were pressured by villagers to sell it at a ridiculously low price,' Vimal, one of Inder Golaknath's four daughters, tells The Indian Express. The family still retains the 150-year-old 'The Retreat Golaknath House' spanning three acres in the corner of Football Chowk, located in the heart of Jalandhar city. The Golaknath Church, located on the mission compound, is run by Golaknath's sixth-generation descendants. Among Golaknath's many descendants are several illustrious personalities. Dora Chatterjee, the daughter of Golaknath's third child Mary, and Kali Charan Chatterjee, a leading Bengali Christian missionary who was one of India's first woman doctors. Then there was Rajkumari Amrit Kaur, daughter of Priscilla, Golaknath's fourth child, who became a minister in the first Cabinet. Six years after the Golaknath verdict, the Supreme Court would revisit it. This time, in the landmark Kesavananda Bharati ruling (1973), a 13-judge Bench, in a narrow 6:7 ruling, came up with the magic formula — the basic structure test. The SC would say that the Golaknath ruling was valid to the extent that Parliament cannot tinker with fundamental rights, which form part of the basic structure of the Constitution, but the right to property itself, which was essential to Golaknath's descendants, did not form part of that basic structure. Apurva Vishwanath is the National Legal Editor of The Indian Express in New Delhi. She graduated with a B.A., LL. B (Hons) from Dr Ram Manohar Lohiya National Law University, Lucknow. She joined the newspaper in 2019 and in her current role, oversees the newspapers coverage of legal issues. She also closely tracks judicial appointments. Prior to her role at the Indian Express, she has worked with ThePrint and Mint. ... Read More

Kendal Ludden, CPA, Esq. Launches '1913 The Death of US' to Reignite Constitution Literacy & Entrepreneurial Spirit
Kendal Ludden, CPA, Esq. Launches '1913 The Death of US' to Reignite Constitution Literacy & Entrepreneurial Spirit

Int'l Business Times

time22-04-2025

  • Business
  • Int'l Business Times

Kendal Ludden, CPA, Esq. Launches '1913 The Death of US' to Reignite Constitution Literacy & Entrepreneurial Spirit

Entrepreneur, CPA, and former US Congressional candidate Kendal Ludden, Esq. announces the launch of '1913 The Death of US,' a nonprofit organization dedicated to education. It focuses on business, rebuilding America's understanding of its founding principles, and empowering all generations, including the next, with knowledge of the Constitution, limited government, and entrepreneurial independence. Named after the pivotal year when the 16th Amendment, 17th Amendment, and the Federal Reserve Act were enacted, creating the modern income tax system, shifting Senatorial elections, and founding the IRS, this nonprofit organization is Kendal's bold response to what he calls 'the systematic erosion of liberty.' "The Constitution was a perfect document before the addition of the 16th and 17th Amendments," Kendal says. "But if people aren't taught it, they won't know their rights." As a longtime tax expert, founder of the accounting firm, Better Tax & Accounting LLC , and founder of the organization Ludden4Liberty , Kendal's career has been steeped in the very system he now seeks to challenge. He began doing taxes at age eight for his mother and later earned a Master's in Taxation. While he acknowledges the irony of his professional path, Kendal says it has given him insider knowledge and fire to help others avoid blindly accepting systems that strip away their money and freedom through taxation. The nonprofit will offer an interactive learning system and experience rooted in his experience in business and law and allow others to contribute their own knowledge. The foundation will be on America's founding texts—the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, and overlooked financial truths of the Federal Reserve System. Designed as an alternative education platform, 1913 The Death of US will eventually include a series of innovative programs. This includes the Ludden School of Law (LSL), a non-accredited law school dedicated to teaching Constitutional law from a freedom-first lens. Another program under its helm is the College of Ken Doll (CKD), a tongue-in-cheek take on traditional higher education that emphasizes practical knowledge and skills that are needed in today's world. Monkey Business School (MBS) is another unique program. Kendal states, "In this program, kids will teach kids what kids are not taught in school. And for the adults out there, you weren't taught this in school either so you need this knowledge as well!" All schools will be taught through interactive online platforms and Kendal's YouTube channel. Kendal also references a board game to explain inflation and monetary supply using real-world analogies. "When you put $500 in the middle of the board for free parking, that's a 33% inflation every 40 turns," he explains. "It's not in the rules, but everyone does it. That's what's happening in our economy." Kendal emphasizes that taxation is theft. He says, "In 1912, 100% of the federal government's revenue came from tariffs. Today, we've got an income tax system that penalizes productivity, inflates our money supply, and robs people of property through stealth taxes and regulation. We need to go back to principles that work." This educator believes that today's education system needs to teach business, American civics, and critical thinking, combined with the fundamentals of liberty. "Schools nowadays have only been teaching on how to get a job. But a job means you're 'Just Over Broke.' We need to bring back the entrepreneurial spirit and teach people how to own something, build something, and think independently," Kendal states. A self-identified Libertarian, Kendal says the nonprofit 1913 is not about partisan politics but about returning to what unites all Americans: freedom. "Everyone's a Libertarian. They just don't know it yet," he says. "Once they read the Constitution, they'll understand. And when they understand, they'll be truly free to have a nonpartisan discussion about government." While previously, Kendal ran for two Congress seats, the US House of Representatives District #10 and South Carolina State District #20, he intends to run against Nancy Mace for US House of Representatives District #1. His idea is to remove income tax and property tax and bring sound money to his district as a model to others.

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