[In its judgment today, the Supreme Court leaves the most crucial issues
(Article 21) undecided, and footballs them to the unicorn Constitution
Bench that is still to sit after a year and nine months after referral. The
Court’s analysis of Article 14 is sketchy, defined by its uncritical
reliance upon the State’s claims about Aadhaar (claims that were disputed
in Court, and are disputed on a daily basis in the public sphere), and its
analysis of Article 19(1)(g) is non-existent.

(An admirably systematic and reasoned analysis is presented below.)]

https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2017/06/09/the-aadhaarpan-judgment/

The Aadhaar/PAN Judgment
<https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2017/06/09/the-aadhaarpan-judgment/>

In a judgment delivered today
<http://supremecourt.gov.in/pdf/jud/wc24717_Sign.pdf>, the Supreme Court
upheld the constitutional validity of S. 139AA of the Income Tax Act, which
makes quoting one’s Aadhaar number mandatory while filing income tax
returns. The Court also stayed S. 139AA(2), which provided for the
cancellation of PAN cards for failure to comply. In view of the multiple
Aadhaar cases pending before the Supreme Court, it is important to clarify
what precisely the Court decided, what it didn’t decide, and what it left
open (a summary of the arguments can be read here
<https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2017/05/03/the-constitutional-challenge-to-s-139aa-of-the-it-act-aadhaarpan-petitioners-arguments/>
(Part
I), here
<https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2017/05/06/the-constitutional-challenge-to-s-139aa-of-the-it-act-aadhaarpan-ii-the-unions-arguments/>
(Part
II), and here
<https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2017/05/06/the-constitutional-challenge-to-aadhaarpan-iii-the-petitioners-rejoinder-and-the-issues-before-the-court/>(Part
III)).

*What the Court didn’t decide*

Recall that on August 11, 2015, a three judge bench of the Supreme Court
had referred the constitutional challenge to Aadhaar (then an executive
scheme) to a larger bench, on the basis that the constitutional status of
the right to privacy was uncertain, and needed to be authoritatively
decided. That larger bench has not yet been constituted. Consequently, at
the beginning of the Aadhaar/PAN arguments, the Court wanted to “tag” this
case to the pending challenge before the (still-to-be-constituted) larger
bench. The Petitioners then informed the Court that they would make their
arguments *without *relying on the right to privacy. The Court agreed to
this.

During the course of arguments, Mr Shyam Divan advanced arguments based on
the right to bodily integrity, dignity, and informational
self-determination, under Article 21 of the Constitution. In its judgment,
however, the Court held that all these arguments were facets of the right
to privacy, and could not be decided here. Consequently – and the Court was
very clear about this – *no argument under Article 21 would be decided by
it*, whether it was framed as an argument from dignity, or from
informational self-determination. This means that the constitutional
validity of Aadhaar on the ground of Article 21 has not been decided one
way or another by the Court (the Court has not even expressed an opinion),
and all arguments on that count remain open.

That said, it needs to be pointed out that the Court’s lumping of all
Article 21 arguments into an omnibus “right to privacy” is far from
satisfactory. For example, in paragraph 71 of its judgment, the Court cites
an American Supreme Court judgment (invoked by the Respondents) to hold
that the right to informational self-determination is an aspect of the
right to privacy, and so need not be considered by it. The Court does not
cite – or engage with – the material placed on record by the Petitioners
which specifically demonstrated that the right to informational
self-determination was *different *from the right to privacy, in terms of
its origins (in German constitutionalism) and development. As I shall show
subsequently, this is a problem that afflicts much of the Court’s opinion.

*What the Court did Decide: Process*

Two arguments were made before the Court on the nature of the law itself.
The first was that the law could not have been passed in the teeth of
Supreme Court orders specifying that Aadhaar could not be made mandatory,
without taking away the basis of those orders (which S. 139AA didn’t do –
see Part I for details). To this, the Court said that those earlier orders
had been passed when Aadhaar was still only an executive scheme, and it was
open to the legislature to pass a law making Aadhaar compulsory. The
Court’s decision here would imply that in future challenges to other laws
making Aadhaar mandatory, its prior orders would not be an impediment;
however, insofar as Aadhaar is sought to be made mandatory for
something *through
an executive order without a law*, those earlier orders would continue to
hold the field (paragraph 94).

It was also argued that the process of enrolling and obtaining an Aadhaar
number, as set out under the Aadhaar Act, was a voluntary process. S. 139AA
of the Income Tax Act, however, made quoting an Aadhaar number for filing
IT returns mandatory, and thus *indirectly *forced taxpayers to enrol for
an Aadhaar number, *even though *the Aadhaar Act explicitly stated that
Aadhaar was an entitlement, and not an obligation. To this, the Court
stated that the Income Tax Act and the Aadhaar Act operated in different
fields, and that the Aadhaar Act was not the “mother Act.” (paragraph 92) I
do not propose to deal with this reasoning in detail, since the argument
has been set out at some length in Part I (link above), and readers can
make up their own minds whether the Court’s answer was satisfactory.

*What the Court did Decide: Article 14*

It was argued by the Petitioners that S. 139AA contravened Article 14 in
two ways: *first*, by drawing a distinction between individuals and
non-individuals, and requiring the former to acquire an Aadhaar number. If
– as the State claimed – its goal was to eliminate duplicate PANs and black
money, then why were individuals *only *being singled out through the means
of compulsory Aadhaar? The Court responded by stating that it was the
State’s prerogative to deal with problems such as duplicate PANs and black
money in an incremental or piecemeal fashion, and to make a start with
targeting individuals.

It was also argued, however, that the introduction of Aadhaar would not
actually solve the problem of duplicate PANs, *because there was evidence
to show the existence of multiple Aadhaar numbers themselves*, as well as
the well-documented ability to fake both biometric details and iris scans.
Consequently, there was no “rational nexus” under Article 14.

It is at this stage that the judgment becomes highly problematic, because
the Court appears to simply repeat the assertions of the State, without
adverting to or engaging with the objections raised by the Petitioners. For
example:

“*Respondents have argued that Aadhaar will ensure that there is no
duplication of identity as bio-metric will not allow that and, therefore,
it may check the growth of shell companies as well.”* (paragraph 99)

*“By making use of the technology, a method is sought to be devised, in the
form of Aadhaar, whereby identity of a person is ascertained in a flawless
manner without giving any leeway to any individual to resort to dubious
practices of showing multiple identities or fictitious identities. That is
why it is given the nomenclature ‘unique identity’.* (paragraph 118)

*“However, for various reasons including corruption, actual benefit does
not reach those who are supposed to receive such benefits. One of the main
reasons is failure to identify these persons for lack of means by which
identity could be established of such genuine needy class. Resultantly,
lots of ghosts and duplicate beneficiaries are able to take undue and
impermissible benefits. A former Prime Minister of this country has gone to
record to say that out of one rupee spent by the Government for welfare of
the downtrodden, only 15 paisa thereof actually reaches those persons for
whom it is meant. It cannot be doubted that with UID/Aadhaar much of the
malaise in this field can be taken care of.” *(para 118)

*“To the same effect is the recommendation of the Committee headed by
Chairman, CBDT on measures to tackle black money in India and abroad which
also discusses the problem of money-laundering being done to evade taxes
under the garb of shell companies by the persons who hold multiple bogus
PAN numbers under different names or variations of their names. That can be
possible if one uniform proof of identity, namely, UID is adopted. It may
go a long way to check and minimise the said malaise.”* (paragraph 118(ii))

*“Thirdly, Aadhaar or UID, which has come to be known as most advanced and
sophisticated infrastructure, may facilitate law enforcement agencies to
take care of problem of terrorism to some extent and may also be helpful in
checking the crime and also help investigating agencies in cracking the
crimes. No doubt, going by aforesaid, and may be some other similarly valid
considerations, it is the intention of the Government to give phillip (sic)
to Aadhaar movement and encourage the people of this country to enroll
themselves under the Aadhaar scheme.” *(paragraph 119)

*“As of today, that is the only method available i.e. by seeding of
existing PAN with Aadhaar. It is perceived as the best method, and the only
robust method of de-duplication of PAN database. It is claimed by the
respondents that the instance of duplicate Aadhaar is almost non-existent.
It is also claimed that seeding of PAN with Aadhaar may contribute to
widening of the tax case as well, by checking the tax evasions and bringing
in to tax hold those persons who are liable to pay tax but deliberately
avoid doing so.” *(para 119)

In each of these paragraphs, the Court effectively echoes the State’s
claim, *assumes it to be true*, and does not engage with the detailed
objections raised by the Petitioners (see Parts I and III). All the talking
points are here: how biometric identification is the “best method”, how
unique identity is actually “unique”, how terrorism will be tackled through
Aadhaar, how “ghosts” will be removed, and so on (note that every one of
these points were opposed in court). It is telling that, at various points,
the Court even uses language such as “it is claimed” and “Respondents have
claimed that”, but doesn’t even trouble to subject those claims to any kind
of independent scrutiny.

India has an adverserial legal system. An adverserial system presumes the
existence of opposing parties, who marshall their respective facts and
evidence into legal arguments, and place it before the Court, which acts as
a neutral umpire, adjudicating the rival claims. When there are competing
claims, especially competing factual claims, the Court decides by applying
legal techniques such as burdens and standards of proof, or taking the
assistance of *amici curiae *who are domain experts. What the Court is not
supposed to do is to act like a rubber stamp, simply accepting the State’s
assertions as true without engaging with the counter-arguments, or
subjecting them to independent scrutiny. However, “rubber stamp” is the
only way to describe the Court’s recitation of one side’s arguments, and
sidelining (to the point of ignoring) the other.

*What the Court did not decide: the strange case of the vanishing Article
19(1)(g)*

The Court records Mr Datar’s argument that the invalidation of PAN cards
affects an individual’s right to do business, and violates Article 19(1)(g)
of the Constitution. The Court also records – and agrees – with his
argument that for an infringement of Article 19(1)(g) to be justified under
Article 19(6), the test of proportionality is to be applied. However, after
recording this, and after waxing eloquent about the wonders of biometric
identification, *the Court returns no finding on the issue of
proportionality*. The discussion on Article 19(1)(g) begins at paragraph
106, and ends at paragraph 124, where the Court notes:

*“Therefore, it cannot be denied that there has to be some provision
stating the consequences for not complying with the requirements of Section
139AA of the Act, more particularly when these requirements are found as
not violative of Articles 14 and 19 (of course, eschewing the discussion on
Article 21 herein for the reasons already given). If Aadhar number is not
given, the aforesaid exercise may not be possible.”*

However, there is absolutely no analysis on whether making Aadhaar
compulsory, on pain of cancellation of PAN cards, is *proportionate *in
relation to the stated goal of deduplicaton. This is a crucial omission,
because the proportionality test is a detailed and complex four-part test,
which requires the State to show that its proposed act *infringes upon a
right only to the minimal extent necessary to achieve the goal*, as well as
an overall balancing exercise. It is here that a number of arguments would
have become extremely salient, including statistics on the percentage of
duplicate PANs (0.4%) which the Court dismisses at an earlier part of the
judgment, the existence of multiple Aadhaars (which the Court never engages
with), and so on – all of this would have been extremely important in
determining whether S. 139AA was a proportionate interference with the
right under Article 19(1)(g). (Notably, the only response of the
Attorney-General of India to the 19(1)(g) argument was “*who cares about
Article 19(1)(g) these days*?)

The omission is all the more glaring because the proportionality test was
introduced by the author of this judgment – Justice Sikri himself – in his
judgment in the *NEET *case. It is truly extraordinary that a judge who
introduces a doctrine in one judgment, writing for a Constitution Bench,
simply refuses to apply it a few months later when sitting as part of a
two-judge bench!

What is even more problematic is the absence of a finding on
proportionality. This is reminiscent of the Supreme Court’s judgment
in *Koushal
vs Naz*, where the Court’s chosen method of dealing with inconvenient
arguments is to set out the submissions, set out the position of law, and
then just move on to something else: if you close your eyes and chant “na
na na”, long enough, maybe it will go away. A correct application of the
four-part proportionality test would have required rigorous scrutiny of the
State’s claims on behalf of Aadhaar – but if there is one thing that
defines this judgment, it is a complete and utter unwillingness to hold the
State to account.

*Relief*

There is a significant amount of confusion with respect to the relief that
the Court does grant – a “partial stay” of S. 139AA(2) (cancellation of
PAN) until the main Aadhaar case is decided. The Court states:

*“Those who still want to enrol are free to do so. However, those assessees
who are not Aadhaar card holders and do not comply with the provision of
Section 139(2), their PAN cards be not treated as invalid for the time
being. It is only to facilitate other transactions which are mentioned in
Rule 114B of the Rules.”*

One reading of this passage is that it remains mandatory to provide an
Aadhaar number while filing IT returns (after July 1), but if one doesn’t
already have an Aadhaar Card, then one’s PAN will not be canceled for
failure to comply; *however*, one’s tax returns shall be invalid, and
therefore subject to other penal provisions for not paying tax. On another
interpretation, however, S. 139AA(2) provides the punishment for failure to
comply with S. 139AA (refusal to provide Aadhaar number for IT returns).
The staying of S. 139AA(2) (for those who have no Aadhaar number yet)
necessarily implies that there is no penal consequence to follow from
violating S. 139AA itself. Over the course of the day, I have heard both
views being defended by competent lawyers, implying that at the very least,
there is *some *amount of confusion here.

*Conclusion*

***In its judgment today, the Supreme Court leaves the most crucial issues
(Article 21) undecided, and footballs them to the unicorn Constitution
Bench that is still to sit after a year and nine months after referral. The
Court’s analysis of Article 14 is sketchy, defined by its uncritical
reliance upon the State’s claims about Aadhaar (claims that were disputed
in Court, and are disputed on a daily basis in the public sphere), and its
analysis of Article 19(1)(g) is non-existent.*** [Emphasis added.]

In a matter where the stakes are this high, this is just not good enough.

—

(*Disclosure: The author assisted the Petitioners in the present case*)



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