Published on: April 9, 2025

SUPREME COURT ON GOVERNOR’S ROLE IN RESERVING BILLS

SUPREME COURT ON GOVERNOR’S ROLE IN RESERVING BILLS

 KEY RULING:

  • A Governor cannot reserve a Bill for the President’s consideration when:
    • The Bill, earlier rejected by the Governor, is re-presented by the State Legislature after being re-passed.

BACKGROUND OF THE CASE:

  • The case involved the Tamil Nadu Governor and 10 Bills:
    • Initially, the Governor withheld consent under Article 200.
    • After the Bills were re-passed, he chose to refer them to the President instead of granting assent.

SUPREME COURT OBSERVATIONS:

  1. Timing of Reservation:
  • If the Governor intended to reserve the Bill for the President:
    • He should have done it in the first instance, not after reconsideration.
  • The decision to refer the Bills after re-passage was termed “not bona fide”.
  1. Governor’s Obligation After Reconsideration:
  • Under the first proviso to Article 200, once the Bill is re-passed:
    • The Governor must grant assent forthwith, or at most within one month.
  • It is not open to the Governor to reserve it for the President after reconsideration.
  • The use of “shall not withhold assent” places a clear obligation on the Governor.

CONSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT:

  1. Article 200 – Provisions:
  • Gives Governor the power to:
    • Assent to the Bill
    • Withhold assent
    • Reserve for President
    • Return (if not a money Bill)
  • But after re-presentation, Governor is bound to assent.
  1. Removal of Discretion:
  • The phrase “in his discretion” present in Section 75 of the Government of India Act, 1935:
    • Was omitted when adopted into Article 200 of the Constitution.
  • This shows that any discretionary power to reserve Bills was removed with the Constitution’s commencement.