Ex-CJI Bhagwati to be cremated on Saturday
June 16, 2017  11:07
The funeral of former Chief Justice of India P N Bhagwati, who died in New Delhi on Thursday after a brief illness, will be held on June 17.   

Bhagwati, considered a pioneer of judicial activism in the country for introducing the concept of public interest litigation, is survived by his wife Prabhavati Bhagwati and three daughters.   

The 17th Chief Justice of India, Bhagwati remained in the highest judicial post between July 1985 and December 1986.   

A former chief justice of the Gujarat high court, he was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court in July 1973.   

As a Supreme Court judge, Bhagwati introduced the concepts of PIL and absolute liability to the Indian judicial system.   

As a champion of PILs, he had ruled there was no need for a person to have a locus standi (the right or capacity to bring an action or to appear in a court) to knock the doors of a court on the issue of fundamental rights.   

He was also instrumental in furthering the cause of prisoners when he ruled that they too enjoyed fundamental rights.   

One of the important judgments pronounced by him was in the Maneka Gandhi passport impounding case in 1978 in which he elaborated the concept of right to life, and ruled that a person's movement cannot be restricted. He had ruled that a person had the full right to hold a passport.   

The regional passport officer, New Delhi, had issued a letter dated 2/7/1977 addressed to Maneka Gandhi in which she was asked to surrender her passport under section 10(3)(c ) of the Passport Act in the public interest within 7 days from the date of receipt of the letter.   

Maneka Gandhi filed a writ petition under Article 32 of the Constitution in the Supreme Court challenging the order of the Government of India, claiming it violated her fundamental rights guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution.   

Bhagwati was also the lone dissenting judge in the Minerva Mill case who upheld the 42nd Constitution amendment during Emergency. It was struck down by a majority verdict.   

In the Minerva Mills case, the Supreme Court provided key clarifications on the interpretation of the basic structure doctrine. The court had ruled that the power of Parliament to amend the Constitution is limited by the Constitution. Hence Parliament cannot exercise this limited power to grant itself unlimited power.   

In the ADM Jabalpur case, popularly known as the Habeas Corpus case, a 5-judge Supreme Court bench in 1979 overturned the various high court rulings and upheld the Indira Gandhi government's right to suspend all fundamental rights during Emergency. 

While H R Khanna was the lone dissenting judge, Bhagwati was part of the four-judge majority verdict (the other three were Chief Justice Y V Chandrachud, Justices A N Ray and M H Beg). 

Thirty years later Bhagwati apologised for his "act of weakness'.
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