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Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud
Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud
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Dhananjaya Yeshwant Chandrachud (born 11 November 1959), often referred to as DY Chandrachud, is an Indian jurist, who served as the 50th Chief Justice of India from 9 November 2022 to 10 November 2024. He was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court of India in May 2016.[3][4] He has also previously served as the chief justice of the Allahabad High Court from 2013 to 2016 and as a judge of the Bombay High Court from 2000 to 2013. He also served as the ex-officio Patron-in-Chief of the National Legal Services Authority[5] and the de facto Chancellor of the National Law School of India University.

Key Information

The second child of India's longest-serving chief justice, Y. V. Chandrachud, he was educated at Delhi University and Harvard University and has practiced as a lawyer for Sullivan & Cromwell and in the Bombay High Court.

He has been part of benches that delivered landmark judgments such as the electoral bond scheme verdict, 2019 Supreme Court verdict on Ayodhya dispute, privacy verdict, decriminalisation of homosexuality, Sabarimala case, same-sex marriage case and on revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir. He has visited the universities of Mumbai, Oklahoma, Harvard, Yale and others as a professor.

Early life and education

[edit]

Dhananjaya Chandrachud was born in the Chandrachud family on 11 November 1959.[2] His father Yeshwant Vishnu Chandrachud, is the longest serving chief justice of India[6] and his mother, Prabha, was a classical musician who sang for All India Radio.[7]

After attending the Cathedral and John Connon School, Mumbai, and St. Columba's School, Delhi, he graduated with honours in economics and mathematics from St. Stephen's College, Delhi in 1979.[8] He then obtained a Bachelor of Laws degree from the Faculty of Law at the University of Delhi in 1982, followed by a Master of Laws degree from Harvard Law School in 1983. He was awarded an Inlaks Scholarship, offered to Indian citizens pursuing graduate education abroad, and received the Joseph H. Beale Prize at Harvard.[9] He later earned Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) from Harvard Law School in 1986.[10] His doctoral dissertation was on affirmative action where he considered the law in a comparative framework.[11]

He has a notable interest in cricket. During his tenure, he presided over cases related to the Board of Control for Cricket in India, reflecting his engagement with cricket administration matters.[12] His nickname "Danny" was given by a teacher during his school days in Mumbai.[13]

Career

[edit]
The president of India, Shri Pranab Mukherjee (left) meeting with Justice Chandrachud, Chief Justice of Allahabad High Court, at Rashtrapati Bhavan
The president of India, Smt. Droupadi Murmu administered the oath of office to Justice Dhananjaya Yashwant Chandrachud as the chief justice of the Supreme Court of India
The chief justice of India, Justice D.Y. Chandrachud along with his wife Smt. Kalpana Das calling on the president of India, Smt. Droupadi Murmu, at Rashtrapati Bhavan

Chandrachud studied law at Delhi University in 1982 at a time when few jobs were available to young law graduates. He worked for a while, as a junior advocate assisting lawyers and judges, including drafting some briefs for Fali Nariman. After graduating from Harvard, Chandrachud first worked at the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell. He described this experience as "sheer fluke" due to the strong pecking order that existed at that time, and a strong bias against hiring Indians and men from developing countries.[14] Upon returning to India, he practiced law at the Supreme Court of India and the Bombay High Court. He was designated a Senior Advocate by the Bombay High Court in June 1998. That year, he was appointed an Additional Solicitor General of India, a role he held until his appointment as a Judge.

He became a judge at the Bombay High Court on 29 March 2000 and served there as a judge until his appointment as Chief Justice of the Allahabad High Court. During this time, he was also Director of the Maharashtra Judicial Academy. He was chief justice of the Allahabad High Court from 31 October 2013 until his appointment to the Supreme Court of India on 13 May 2016.[15] Since 24 April 2021 he has been a part of the Collegium of the Supreme Court of India,[15] which is a body composed of the five senior-most judges of the Supreme Court of India responsible for the appointment of judges to the Supreme Court of India and all the High Courts. On 17 October 2022, he was nominated the chief justice of India designate and after the retirement of the then chief justice, Uday Umesh Lalit, he was sworn in as the 50th chief justice of India on 9 November 2022.[16]

Apart from his judicial service, Justice Chandrachud was also a visiting professor of comparative constitutional law at the University of Mumbai and University of Oklahoma College of Law in the United States. He has lectured at the Australian National University, Deakin University, Melbourne Law School, Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, the William S. Richardson School of Law at the University of Hawai‘i and the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.

On 5 December 2023, Senior Advocate Dushyant Dave wrote an open letter to Chandrachud stating that he was violating listing rules by moving politically sensitive cases to particular benches.[17][18] On 7 December, a report published by Article 14 alleged that there have been irregularities in allocating politically sensitive cases to bench led by Justice Bela Trivedi.[19][18] Advocate Prashant Bhushan argued that Chandrachud, instead of Trivedi, should have led the bench for the case related to the application of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act against journalists and lawyers in relation to their reporting on the 2021 Tripura riots.[18] In response, Chandrachud said on 15 December that Trivedi was given cases because Judge A. S. Bopanna was ill, stating: "It is very easy to fling allegations and letters".[20]

Notable judgments

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During his Supreme Court service, he had been on the highest number of constitutional benches (five judges or more) constituted to hear matters on constitutional questions.[21] During his tenure at the Supreme Court, he had delivered judgments on Indian constitutional law, comparative constitutional law, human rights, gender justice, public interest litigations, commercial law and criminal law.

Right to Privacy

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Among his notable judgments is his lead opinion in the Justice K. S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) and Anr. vs Union Of India And Ors. case as part of a unanimous nine-judge bench decision of the Indian Supreme Court, which affirmed that the right to privacy is a constitutionally guaranteed right.[22] Chandrachud grounded the right to privacy in dignity, liberty, autonomy, bodily and mental integrity, self-determination and across a spectrum of protected rights. Writing for himself and three other judges, he stated:

Dignity cannot exist without privacy. Both reside within the inalienable values of life, liberty and freedom which the Constitution has recognized. Privacy is the ultimate expression of the sanctity of the individual. It is a constitutional value which straddles across the spectrum of fundamental rights and protects for the individual a zone of choice and self-determination.[22]

The judgment is also noteworthy for his observations on sexual autonomy and privacy.[23] In 2013, a two judge bench of the Supreme Court of India in the Suresh Kumar Koushal v. Naz Foundation case upheld Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code which criminalized homosexuality. Chandrachud referred to the decision as striking "a discordant note which directly bears upon the evolution of the constitutional jurisprudence on the right to privacy."[22] He observed that the decision was wrong as "the purpose of elevating certain rights to the stature of guaranteed fundamental rights is to insulate their exercise from the disdain of majorities, whether legislative or popular."[22] He concluded by disagreeing "with the manner in which Koushal has dealt with the privacy – dignity-based claims of LGBT persons"[22] and held that:

The test of popular acceptance does not furnish a valid basis to disregard rights which are conferred with the sanctity of constitutional protection. Discrete and insular minorities face grave dangers of discrimination for the simple reason that their views, beliefs or way of life does not accord with the 'mainstream'. Yet in a democratic constitution founded on the rule of law, their rights are as sacred as those conferred on other citizens to protect their freedoms and liberties. Sexual orientation is an essential attribute of privacy. Discrimination against an individual on the basis of sexual orientation is deeply offensive to the dignity and self-worth of the individual.[22]

The above observations played a role[23][24][25][26][27] in the judgment of the Supreme Court declaring Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code unconstitutional.[28]

He is also known for expressly overruling the ADM Jabalpur v. Shivkant Shukla (habeas corpus) case in which the lead opinion was written by his father, the former chief justice of India Y. V. Chandrachud.[29][30]

Free speech

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Terming dissent as "the safety valve of democracy",[31][32][33] he has authored judgments upholding the right to the freedom of speech in numerous cases. In Indibility Creative Pvt Ltd v State of West Bengal,[34] he authored a judgment which imposed a fine on the State of West Bengal and granted remedial compensation for disallowing the screening of the political satire Bhobishyoter Bhoot through extra-constitutional measures. The Court had, by an interim order, directed that there must be no bar on the screening of the movie.[35][36] In the final judgment, Chandrachud held that even if there was any apprehension of public discontent, police protection must be provided instead of prohibiting the display of the movie. The judgment is noteworthy[37] for its recognition of the positive duty on the State to protect the freedom of speech and expression. He held that:

Free speech cannot be gagged for fear of the mob…Political freedoms impose a restraining influence on the state by carving out an area in which the state shall not interfere. Hence, these freedoms are perceived to impose obligations of restraint on the state. But, apart from imposing 'negative' restraints on the state these freedoms impose a positive mandate as well. In its capacity as a public authority enforcing the rule of law, the state must ensure that conditions in which these freedoms flourish are maintained. In the space reserved for the free exercise of speech and expression, the state cannot look askance when organised interests threaten the existence of freedom. The state is duty bound to ensure the prevalence of conditions in which of those freedoms can be exercised. The instruments of the state must be utilised to effectuate the exercise of freedom.

The judgment was reported[38][39] for preventing the censorship of free speech and limiting its exceptions strictly to the grounds mentioned in Article 19(2) of the Constitution. In another occasion, he has ruled against freedom of expression in the UPSC Jihad case, "Your client is doing a disservice to the nation and is not accepting India is a melting point of diverse cultures. Your client needs to exercise his freedom with caution".[40]

In the Romila Thapar & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors case, Chandrachud dissented with the majority which refused to constitute a Special Investigation Team to probe the case concerning the arrest of five activists in connection with the 2018 Bhima Koregaon violence and held that in light of the particular circumstances of the case, the constitution of a Special Investigation Team was necessary to ensure a fair and impartial investigation.

In the Chief Election Commissioner of India v. M.R. Vijayabhaskar case, Chandrachud upheld the freedom of speech and expression of the media in reporting court proceedings. In this case, the Election Commission of India sought to restrain the media from reporting the oral observations of judges. The plea came in the context of media reports on the observations of judges of the Madras High Court stating that the Election Commission was responsible for the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the country for allowing political parties to hold massive rallies without adhering to the COVID-19 protocols.[41] Dismissing the plea, the Supreme Court held that the plea by the Election Commission "strikes at the two fundamental principles guaranteed under the Constitution – open court proceedings; and the fundamental right to freedom of speech and expression."[42] The Court also recognised that reporting of judicial proceedings on social media is an extension of freedom of speech and expression that the media possesses.[43]

In the suo motu writ petition dealing with the management of the COVID-19 pandemic,[44] Chandrachud criticised certain State Governments for clamping down on free speech of citizens when they sought help for resources online. During the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, many Indians resorted to social media websites to source medical aid - procure oxygen, essential drugs or locate a hospital bed. State Governments in a bid to control the information on the abysmal state of healthcare system in their territories started registering police complaints against persons for posting pleas of help by stating that these were fake and were a bid to create panic and diminish the national image.[45] Coming down harshly against such tactics in open court, Chandrachud remarked that there could be no clampdown on free flow of information, especially during a humanitarian crisis.[46] The Supreme Court's order directed all Director Generals of Police to note that any such direct or indirect threats of prosecution or arrest against persons who air their grievances will amount to a contempt of court and invite penal action.[47]

Personal liberty

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Chandrachud authored the judgment which granted bail to Arnab Goswami, the editor-in-chief of Republic TV, who had been arrested by the Mumbai Police in connection with the suicide of an individual and his mother, who claimed Goswami had not paid him money owed for certain contract work.[48] In his judgment, Chandrachud noted that the High Court of Bombay had failed to prima facie evaluate whether a case of abetment of suicide was made against Goswami.[49] Finding that prima facie no such offence was made out from the facts of the matter, the Supreme Court held that he would be entitled to bail.[50] In an important section on "Human liberty and the role of Court", Chandrachud noted that it was important to ensure that criminal law did not become a tool for selective harassment of citizens.[51] Underscoring the importance of bail, the Court held: "More than four decades ago, in a celebrated judgment in State of Rajasthan, Jaipur vs Balchand, Justice Krishna Iyer pithily reminded us that the basic rule of our criminal justice system is "bail, not jail'. The High Courts and Courts in the district judiciary of India must enforce this principle in practice, and not forego that duty, leaving this Court to intervene at all times. We must in particular also emphasise the role of the district judiciary, which provides the first point of interface to the citizen. Our district judiciary is wrongly referred to as the 'subordinate judiciary'. It may be subordinate in hierarchy, but it is not subordinate in terms of its importance in the lives of citizens or in terms of the duty to render justice to them. High Courts get burdened when courts of first instance decline to grant anticipatory bail or bail in deserving cases. This continues in the Supreme Court as well, when High Courts do not grant bail or anticipatory bail in cases falling within the parameters of the law. The consequence for those who suffer incarceration are serious. Common citizens without the means or resources to move the High Courts or this Court languish as undertrials. Courts must be alive to the situation as it prevails on the ground – in the jails and police stations where human dignity has no protector. As judges, we would do well to remind ourselves that it is through the instrumentality of bail that our criminal justice system's primordial interest in preserving the presumption of innocence finds its most eloquent expression. The remedy of bail is the ―solemn expression of the humaneness of the justice system. Tasked as we are with the primary responsibility of preserving the liberty of all citizens, we cannot countenance an approach that has the consequence of applying this basic rule in an inverted form. We have given expression to our anguish in a case where a citizen has approached this court. We have done so in order to reiterate principles which must govern countless other faces whose voices should not go unheard."[52]

Further, the judgment, using publicly available data on the National Judicial Data Grid, also highlighted the number of pending bail applications throughout the country and directed the High Courts and lower Courts to use all tools at their disposal, including technology, to ensure that these applications are disposed off swiftly.[53]

In another case of Rahna Jalal v. State of Kerala, [54] Chandrachud dealt with the question of whether anticipatory bail can be granted to a person (Muslim man) accused of the offence of pronouncement of triple talaq to his wife, punishable under Section 4 of the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act 2019. Section 7(c) of the said Act provides that notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973, no person accused of this offence would be granted bail, unless the Magistrate has heard the Muslim woman and is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for granting bail to the accused. The State of Kerala argued that the non-obstante clause in Section 7(c) barred the courts from exercising their powers under Section 438 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to grant anticipatory bail.

Rejecting this argument, Chandrachud observed that the right to personal liberty and the grant of bail is a recognition of presumption of innocence where a trial is yet to take place. Given the value of personal liberty, in the absence of an express bar by the Legislature making the provisions of Section 438 inapplicable, no such bar can be presumed. It was further reiterated that a statutory exclusion of the right to access remedies for bail is to be construed strictly.

Gender justice

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Sabarimala

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Chandrachud has authored several judgments on gender justice that call for a 'change in mindsets'[55] as well as affirm the equal entitlements of women under the Constitution. In the Indian Young Lawyers Association v. State of Kerala case,[56] he authored a concurring judgment holding that the practice of prohibiting women of menstruating age from entering the Sabarimala temple was discriminatory and violated the fundamental rights of women. In his judgment, he highlighted that "the individual right to the freedom of religion was not intended to prevail over but was subject to the overriding constitutional postulates of equality, liberty and personal freedoms recognised in the other provisions of Part III."[56] He held that:

The Court must lean against granting constitutional protection to a claim which derogates from the dignity of women as equal holders of rights and protections… Does the Constitution permit this as basis to exclude women from worship? Does the fact that a woman has a physiological feature – of being in a menstruating age – entitle anybody or a group to subject her to exclusion from religious worship? The physiological features of a woman have no significance to her equal entitlements under the Constitution… To exclude women is derogatory to an equal citizenship.

The judgment was acknowledged[57][58] for recognising that denying entry into temples to women on the basis of physiology amounted to a constitutionally prohibited practice of untouchability under Article 17.[59][60][61] He stated that "the social exclusion of women, based on menstrual status, is a form of untouchability, which is contrary to constitutional values. Notions of 'purity' and 'pollution', which stigmatise individuals, have no place in a constitutional order."[56]

Following protests against the judgment in the State of Kerala,[62][63][64][65][66] a five-judge bench of the Indian Supreme Court, while hearing a review petition against the judgment in November 2019, decided to refer the matter to a larger bench. Chandrachud and Nariman (who were both part of the original bench that passed the majority judgment) dissented[67][68] and held that the parameters for the exercise of the review jurisdiction of the Court had not been met.[69]

Adultery

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In the Joseph Shine v Union of India case[70] he authored a concurring judgment declaring the provision of the Indian Penal Code which concerned the adultery law in India unconstitutional. Emphasising the constitutional commitment to equality and dignity, he held that:

The creation of a just, egalitarian society is a process. It often involves the questioning and obliteration of parochial social mores which are antithetical to constitutional morality…The ability to make choices within marriage and on every aspect concerning it is a facet of human liberty and dignity which the Constitution protects… Implicit in seeking to privilege the fidelity of women in a marriage, is the assumption that a woman contracts away her sexual agency when entering a marriage. That a woman, by marriage, consents in advance to sexual relations with her husband or to refrain from sexual relations outside marriage without the permission of her husband is offensive to liberty and dignity. Such a notion has no place in the constitutional order. Sexual autonomy constitutes an inviolable core of the dignity of every individual.[70]

His concurring opinion was noticed for its emphasis on the sexual autonomy of women even within the bounds of a marital relationship.[71][72] He held that:

…. in adjudicating on the rights of women, the Court is not taking on a paternalistic role and "granting" rights. The Court is merely interpreting the text of the Constitution to re-state what is already set in ink — women are equal citizens of this nation, entitled to the protections of the Constitution. Any legislation which results in the denial of these Constitutional guarantees to women, cannot pass the test of Constitutionality.[70]

It is reported[73][74] that the above observations have a significant bearing on the law employed for the restitution of conjugal rights as well as the exception carved out in law from criminalising marital rape. Interestingly, this case was the second case where Chandrachud overruled[75][76][77][78][79] a decision of his father, former Chief Justice of India Y. V. Chandrachud.

Armed forces

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Army

In 2020, he authored two decisions in the realm of gender justice and the armed forces of the country. In the Secretary, Ministry of Defence v Babita Puniya case[80] he directed the government to consider all woman officers in the Army appointed on Short Service Commissions for the grant of Permanent Commissions on an equal basis with their male counterparts. The Union Government had contended that "women are not employed on duties which are hazardous in nature unlike their male counterparts in the same Arm/Service."[80] It was also contended that the "inherent physiological differences between men and women preclude equal physical performances resulting in lower physical standards."[80]

In a section titled 'Stereotypes and women in the Armed Forces', he emphasised on the need for a change in mindsets and came down heavily on the submissions of the Union Government and held that:

The submissions advanced…are based on sex stereotypes premised on assumptions about socially ascribed roles of gender which discriminate against women. Underlying the statement that it is a "greater challenge" for women officers to meet the hazards of service "owing to their prolonged absence during pregnancy, motherhood and domestic obligations towards their children and families" is a strong stereotype which assumes that domestic obligations rest solely on women. Reliance on the "inherent physiological differences between men and women" rests in a deeply entrenched stereotypical and constitutionally flawed notion that women are the "weaker" sex and may not undertake tasks that are "too arduous" for them. Arguments founded on the physical strengths and weaknesses of men and women and on assumptions about women in the social context of marriage and family do not constitute a constitutionally valid basis for denying equal opportunity to women officers…If society holds strong beliefs about gender roles – that men are socially dominant, physically powerful and the breadwinners of the family and that women are weak and physically submissive, and primarily caretakers confined to a domestic atmosphere – it is unlikely that there would be a change in mindsets.[80]

The judgment was reported internationally[81][82][83] as well as in national media as a "landmark verdict ending gender bias"[84][85][86][87] which is "against deeply embedded patriarchal mindsets and strong institutional biases."[88] At the International Judicial Conference hosted by India on the 'Judiciary and the Changing World', which saw the participation of Chief Justices and judges from over 23 countries, the President of India welcomed the judgment and commended it for its "progressive social transformation"[89]

In 2021, the women who received the benefit of the Babita Puniya ruling contended that the Union Government applied a facially neural standard for their belated assessment for Permanent Commission, on medical standards that were applicable to men when they were 25–30 years old and by discounting their subsequent achievements. In granting relief to these women, he elaborated on the doctrine of systemic discrimination and indirect discrimination as a relevant framework for assessing claims of discrimination and structuring remedies.[90] He noted:

"Indirect discrimination is caused by facially neutral criteria by not taking into consideration the underlying effects of a provision, practice or a criterion….. Exclusive reliance on tools of direct or indirect discrimination may also not effectively account for patterns arising out of multiple axles of discrimination. Therefore, a systemic view of discrimination, in perceiving discriminatory disadvantage as a continuum, would account for not just unjust action but also inaction. Structures, in the form of organisations or otherwise, would be probed for the systems or cultures they produce that influence day-to-day interaction and decision making"[91]

The judgement was hailed internationally,[92][93] nationally[74][94][95] and by scholars[96][97] for broadening the horizons of Indian jurisprudence on Article 14 and 15(1) of the Indian Constitution.

Navy

A short while after the Babita Puniya ruling, he authored the judgment in the Union of India v Ld. Cdr. Annie Nagaraja case[98] wherein the Court directed a similar relief to be granted to women sailors in the Indian Navy. The Court noted the submission of the Union Government that "certain avenues such as sea-sailing duties are ill-suited for women officers as there is no return to the base" and that "Navy ships of today are not structured nor have the infrastructure to accommodate women sailors alongside men sailors" and rejected these submissions as "illusory and without any foundation".[98] The judgment received similar international attention[99] and was widely reported upon in national media.[100][101][102]

Sexual harassment at the workplace

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Recently, he authored a judgment which affirmed that sexual harassment at the workplace violates the fundamental rights of women guaranteed under the Indian Constitution.[103] The verdict was based on a complaint made by a senior officer of the Punjab and Sind Bank that she was transferred out from Indore to Jabalpur because she had complained about irregularities and corruption.[104] The woman, a chief manager and Scale IV officer, said she was also allegedly sexually harassed by her senior officer. He held that:

Sexual harassment at the workplace is an affront to the fundamental rights of a woman to equality under Articles 14 and 15 and her right to live with dignity under Article 21 of the Constitution as well as her right to practice any profession or to carry on any occupation, trade or business… There can be no manner of doubt that the respondent (woman officer) has been victimised. This is symptomatic of a carrot and sticks policy adopted to suborn the dignity of a woman who is aggrieved by unfair treatment at her workplace. The law cannot countenance this. The order of transfer was an act of unfair treatment and is vitiated by malafides.

He directed the bank to send the woman employee back to the Indore branch and held that the bank may pass any other order only after she has completed a tenure of one year at the Indore branch.[105]

Intersectional violence

[edit]

On 27 April 2021, he authored a judgement[106] which considered caste and the disability of the woman as a relevant factor in sentencing of the accused for the offence of rape. The judgement further held that a true reading of the SC & ST Act, 1989 shows that it will be attracted to a criminal offence as long as caste identity is one of the grounds for the occurrence of the offence.[107] This was an important intervention since certain earlier Supreme Court cases had held that a SC & ST Act charge would only be attracted if the crime was committed solely on the ground that the victim belonged to the Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe community.[108]

Chandrachud undertook an intersectional analysis to examine how gender violence can be a result of combination of various oppressions and observed that, "[w]hen the identity of a woman intersects with, inter alia, her caste, class, religion, disability and sexual orientation, she may face violence and discrimination due to two or more grounds. Trans women may face violence on account of their heterodox gender identity. In such a situation, it becomes imperative to use an intersectional lens to evaluate how multiple sources of oppression operate cumulatively to produce a specific experience of subordination for a blind Scheduled Caste woman."[109]

He further criticised single axis legislations which focus on oppression on account of a singular source, be it caste, gender or disability, noting that they make invisible the experiences of minorities within these broader groups who suffer on account of multiple oppressions.[110] Further, he also noted that such legislations impose an unrealistic evidentiary burden on individuals who are at the intersection of various marginalised identities since "evidence of discrete discrimination or violence on a specific ground may be absent or difficult to prove".[111] He noted that the 2015 amendment to the SC & ST Act, which changed the evidentiary requirement of proving that the crime was committed on the basis of the caste identity to a standard where knowledge of the caste identity was sufficient to sustain a conviction, was a positive development and enabled an intersectional analysis of caste violence.[112]

Another significant aspect of this judgement was the holding of the Court that testimony of a disabled witness cannot be considered weaker or inferior to their able-bodied counterparts. Chandrachud also issued certain guidelines to make the criminal justice system more disabled-friendly.[113]

Environment

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One of Chandrachud's significant[114][115][116] opinions in the sphere of environmental law is his judgment in the Hanuman Laxman Aroskar vs Union of India case.[117] A challenge was brought before the Supreme Court against the order of the National Green Tribunal upholding the grant of an Environmental Clearance to a proposed greenfield international airport at Mopa in Goa. A myriad of contentions were urged by the appellants questioning the grant of the clearance, which included the failure to make disclosures on forests and Ecologically Sensitive Zones as well as a faulty appraisal process and the use of erroneous sampling points. The Court observed the numerous deficiencies in the process leading to the grant of the clearance and directed that a rapid EIA be conducted afresh[118][119] by the project proponent. The Court highlighted that compliance with the core governing notification is mandatory in the following terms:

The 2006 notification represents an independent code with the avowed objective of balancing the development agenda with the protection of the environment. An applicant cannot claim an EC, under the 2006 notification, based on substantial or proportionate compliance with the terms stipulated in the notification. The terms of the notification lay down strict standards that must be complied with by an applicant seeking an EC for a proposed project. The burden of establishing environmental compliance rests on a project proponent who intends to bring about a change in the existing state of the environment… There can be no gambles with the environment: a 'heads I win, tails you lose' approach is simply unacceptable; unacceptable if we are to preserve environmental governance under the rule of law.[117]

The judgment has expounded on the concept of the 'environmental rule of law' as a groundwork for the protection of the environment.[120] The judgment was also welcomed by the United Nations Environment Program.[121] In a separate section titled the 'Environmental Rule of Law',[122] the Court drew from vast literature[120] on environmental law which included the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the work of Amartya Sen and Dhvani Mehta to draw a link between the protection of the environment and the right to life under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. In the Bangalore Development Authority v Mr Sudhakar Hegde case,[123] he authored a judgment directing the appellant to conduct a rapid EIA as a result of the numerous deficiencies in the process leading up to the grant of Environmental Clearance.[124] The Court noted the "patent contradiction" in disclosing the existence of forest land to be diverted for the project connecting Tumkur Road to Hosur Road.[125][126] In a section titled 'Courts and the Environment', he highlighted the importance of a broad-based approach to the protection of the environment in the following terms:

The protection of the environment is premised not only on the active role of courts, but also on robust institutional frameworks within which every stakeholder complies with its duty to ensure sustainable development. A framework of environmental governance committed to the rule of law requires a regime which has effective, accountable and transparent institutions. Equally important is responsive, inclusive, participatory and representative decision making. Environmental governance is founded on the rule of law and emerges from the values of our Constitution. Where the health of the environment is key to preserving the right to life as a constitutionally recognised value under Article 21 of the Constitution, proper structures for environmental decision making find expression in the guarantee against arbitrary action and the affirmative duty of fair treatment under Article 14 of the Constitution.[123]

Chandrachud has also authored a judgment on the validity of grating ex post facto Environmental Clearances in the Alembic Pharmaceuticals Ltd v Rohit Prajapati case.[127] The erstwhile Ministry of Environment and Forests had issued an administrative circular in 2002 envisaging the grant of ex post facto clearances to those industries that had failed to comply with the mandatory EIA notification of 1994. The ex post facto clearances granted to a group of drug and pharmaceutical companies located in Gujarat were challenged. Chandrachud set aside the administrative circular of 2002 and noted that the concept of ex post facto ECs derogates from the fundamental principles of the environmental rule of law. He noted that the grant of ex post facto ECs was contrary to both the precautionary principle as well as the principal of sustainable development.[128] Chandrachud noted that all the industries in question had made significant infrastructural investments. In this backdrop, he imposed a fine of Rs 10 crores each for the purpose of restitution and restoration of the environment.[129][130] He held:

Requirements such as conducting a public hearing, screening, scoping and appraisal are components of the decision-making process which ensure that the likely impacts of the industrial activity or the expansion of an existing industrial activity are considered in the decision-making calculus. Allowing for an ex post facto clearance would essentially condone the operation of industrial activities without the grant of an EC. In the absence of an EC, there would be no conditions that would safeguard the environment. Moreover, if the EC was to be ultimately refused, irreparable harm would have been caused to the environment. In either view of the matter, environment law cannot countenance the notion of an ex post facto clearance. This would be contrary to both the precautionary principle as well as the need for sustainable development.[127]

In a recent judgment in the Himachal Pradesh Bus Stand Management and Development Authority v. The Central Empowered Committee case, Chandrachud directed the demolition of a Hotel-cum-Restaurant structure in the Bus Stand Complex in McLeod Ganj, Himachal Pradesh, which had been constructed in violation of permissions granted under the various environmental laws.[131] The construction of the structure had been in dispute for nearly 14 years, before it was finally resolved through this judgment.[132] Developing on the concept of environmental rule of law propounded by him in the Hanuman Laxman Aroskar v Union of India case, he discussed how actual implementation may suffer from lack of access to scientific data to ascertain concrete harm. However, he held:

"The environmental rule of law calls on us, as judges, to marshal the knowledge emerging from the record, limited though it may sometimes be, to respond in a stern and decisive fashion to violations of environmental law. We cannot be stupefied into inaction by not having access to complete details about the manner in which an environmental law violation has occurred or its full implications. Instead, the framework, acknowledging the imperfect world that we inhabit, provides a roadmap to deal with environmental law violations, an absence of clear evidence of consequences notwithstanding."[133]

Labour

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In the wake of the pandemic, Chandrachud judicially reviewed a decision of the State of Gujarat to suspend some provisions of overtime pay, work intervals, working hours and other labour protections by resorting to Section 5 of the Factories Act, 1948 by terming it an 'emergency therein'. In tightly interpreting the scope of Section 5, which envisaged suspension of protections only when the 'public emergency threatens the security of the state', Chandrachud warned against "rendering hard-won protections of the Factories Act, 1948 illusory and the constitutional promise of social and economic democracy into paper-tigers."[134]

In addition to its contribution on labour jurisprudence and the interpretation of directive principles of state policy,[135][136] the judgement was also hailed for critically examining executive actions, which were otherwise given a wide leeway during the COVID-19 pandemic.[137]

Constitutional judgments on governance

[edit]

Ordinances

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Chandrachud was a part of the seven-judge bench in the Krishna Kumar Singh v. State of Bihar case,[138] which concerned the re-promulgation of ordinances. The enduring rights theory, according to which the rights and liabilities accrued by virtue of an ordinance were said to have an enduring effect even after the expiration of the ordinance was held bad in law.[139][140] Chandrachud writing for the majority held that the rights and liabilities accrued during the force of the ordinance would continue to exist even after the expiration of the ordinance only in public interest or on the basis of constitutional necessity and that 'irreversibility' and 'impracticability' are the yardsticks to determine what constitutes 'public interest'.[140] He observed:

The Constitution bench equated an ordinance with a temporary act enacted by the competent legislature. This approach, with respect fails to notice the critical distinction between an enactment of a competent legislature and an ordinance. Acceptance of the doctrine of enduring rights in the context of an ordinance would lead to a situation where the exercise of power by the Governor would survive in terms of the creation of the rights and privileges…The legislature may not have had an opportunity to even discuss or debate the Ordinance…. The enduring rights theory attributes a degree of permanence to the power to promulgate ordinances in derogation of parliamentary control and supremacy.[138]

He also observed that laying down ordinances before the Parliament is a mandatory constitutional obligation that cannot be bypassed. The judgment was recognised[141][139] for expanding the grounds of judicial review of an ordinance and limiting the scope of the mala fide exercise of ordinance promulgation.

The National Capital Territory

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Chandrachud was part of the constitution bench in the National Capital Territory v. Union of India case,[142] in which the nature of power of the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi vis-à-vis the Government of Delhi was decided. The majority unanimously observed that the Chief Minister, not the Lieutenant Governor, is the executive head of the territory and that the Lieutenant Governor had no independent decision-making power, save and except as provided by the Constitution in exceptional situations. It was observed that he had to follow the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, except when the matter was related to police, public order and land. It was also held that by virtue of Article 239AA(4) of the Indian Constitution, the Lieutenant Governor could, in the case of any disagreement between the Delhi Government and the Lieutenant Governor, refer 'exceptional' matters to the President seeking his opinion. In such cases, the decision of the President would be final. Chandrachud's concurring opinion which was commented upon for its clarity and nuance,[143] held that an 'exceptional matter' is one in which "the Government of the NCT is likely to impede or prejudice the exercise of the executive power of the Union Government". Chandrachud emphasised on the obligation of the Lieutenant Governor to abide by the aid and advice of the Delhi Government and observed that the interpretation that aids the basic features of representative governance and the cabinet form of government should be adopted. He held:

…in defining the ambit of the constitutional powers entrusted to the Council of Ministers for the NCT and their relationship with Lieutenant Governor as a delegate of the President, the Court cannot be unmindful of the constitutional importance which has to be assigned to representative government. Representative government is a hallmark of a Constitution which is wedded to democracy for it is through a democratic form of governance that the aspirations of those who elect their representatives are met.

Floor test for elections

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Chandrachud authored a judgment with far reaching consequences in the political sphere in the Shivraj Singh Chouhan v. Speaker, Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly case.[144] Chandrachud held that the Governor's exercise of power to convene the legislative assembly for a floor test during an ongoing session of the assembly was "legitimate to the purpose of ensuring that the norm of collective responsibility is duly preserved". He accepted the submission that the Governor commands the power to order a floor test if the Governor has – based on "objective material" – reasons to believe that the government has lost its majority. Significantly, he noted that the power of the Governor is not unbridled in the following terms:

Where the exercise of the discretion by the Governor to call a floor test is challenged before the court, it is not immune from judicial review. The court is entitled to determine whether in calling for the floor test, the Governor did so on the basis of objective material and reasons which were relevant and germane to the exercise of the power. The exercise of such a power is not intended to destabilise or displace a democratically elected government accountable to the legislative assembly and collectively responsible to it.[144]

In a first of its kind observation, Chandrachud also noted the state of politics in the country and called for changes to strengthen the nature of the Indian democratic system in the following terms:

The spectacle of rival political parties whisking away their political flock to safe destinations does little credit to the state our democratic politics. It is an unfortunate reflection of the confidence which political parties hold in their own constituents and a reflection of what happens in the real world of the politics to lure away persons from rival camps… It is best that courts maintain an arm's length from the sordid tales of political life. In defining constitutional principle, however, this Court must be conscious of the position on the ground as admitted by Counsel of both sides and an effort has to be made to the extent possible to ensure that democratic values prevail.[144]

Doctrine of legitimate expectations

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Chandrachud authored a judgment in the State of Jharkhand v. Brahmputra Metallics Limited case, where at issue was a notification issued by the State of Jharkhand under which the electricity rebate under the Industrial Policy of 2012 was granted only from 2015 onwards.[145] While the High Court of Jharkhand had struck down the notification based on the doctrine of promissory estoppel, Supreme Court's judgment, through an analysis of English and Indian law, clarified that its basis would instead be the doctrine of legitimate expectation. The Court held that the doctrine of legitimate expectations was one of the ways in which the guarantee of non-arbitrariness enshrined under Article 14 of the Constitution of India finds concrete expression.[146] In striking down the notification, Chandrachud came down harshly on the lethargic attitude of the State of Jharkhand in belatedly issuing the notification and held:

"It is one thing for the State to assert that the writ petitioner had no vested right but quite another for the State to assert that it is not duty bound to disclose its reasons for not giving effect to the exemption notification within the period that was envisaged in the Industrial Policy 2012. Both the accountability of the State and the solemn obligation which it undertook in terms of the policy document militate against accepting such a notion of state power. The state must discard the colonial notion that it is a sovereign handing out doles at its will. Its policies give rise to legitimate expectations that the state will act according to what it puts forth in the public realm. In all its actions, the State is bound to act fairly, in a transparent manner. This is an elementary requirement of the guarantee against arbitrary state action which Article 14 of the Constitution adopts. A deprivation of the entitlement of private citizens and private business must be proportional to a requirement grounded in public interest."[147]

COVID- 19: In Re: Distribution of essential supplies and services during pandemic

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During the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in India in April 2021, a bench of the Supreme Court of India headed by then–Chief Justice SA Bobde, Justice LN Rao and Justice S Ravindra Bhat, took suo motu cognisance of the situation in the country to deal with issues pertaining to the availability of oxygen supply, essential drugs and modalities for vaccination. After the retirement of Chief Justice Bobde on 23 April 2021, the bench composition was altered with Chandrachud replacing Chief Justice Bobde.

The Supreme Court bench led by Chandrachud highlighted that the exercise of its suo motu jurisdiction was to discharge its constitutional duty as protector of the fundamental rights during a pandemic, along with the High Courts and not in usurpation of their jurisdiction.[148] Additionally, the bench adopted a bounded-deliberative approach [149] to facilitate dialogue between the Union Government, various State Governments and the relevant stakeholders in order to assess the policy of the Union Government on the touchstone of Article 14 (right to equality) and Article 21 (right to life) of the Constitution of India.[150] Through a series of directions, the Supreme Court directed the Union Government to formulate a national hospital admission policy to ensure no person is denied medical aid on grounds of non-residency in a particular State and raised concerns regarding the augmentation of medical oxygen available and steps taken by the Government. Pertinently, the Supreme Court had made critical observations on the Liberalised Vaccination Policy of the Government of India and noted that the vaccination policy of free vaccination for persons above the age of 45 and paid vaccination for persons between 18 and 44 years was prima facie arbitrary and irrational.[151] The court also sought justification for the decentralised procurement leaving the State Governments to approach global vaccine producers, instead of the Union of India acting collectively; concerns regarding augmentation of vaccine production, issues relating to the modality of vaccination through the use of a digital platform, CoWIN given the digital divide in urban and rural India. In light of these issues, the Union Government was directed to provide justifications or revise its policy.[152]

A week after the Supreme court order, the Narendra Modi led Government revised its vaccination policy, centralising its procurement and providing free vaccination to all adults, including between ages 18–44 years. It is widely believed that the change in the vaccination policy was a result of the continuous engagement of the Supreme Court with the Government and its scathing remarks against the Government's vaccination policy.[153][154][155]

Affirmative action

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Chandrachud has authored numerous judgments on affirmative action in India. Foremost amongst these is his judgment in the B.K. Pavitra II v. Union of India case,[156] where he upheld the constitutional validity of the Karnataka Extension of Consequential Seniority to Government Servants Promoted on the Basis of Reservation (to the Posts in the Civil Services of the State) Act 2018. The Act concerned the grant of consequential seniority to candidates appointed on the basis of reservation. The judgment was recognised[157][158][159] for undertaking a critical and nuanced analysis that weighs towards an inclusive definition of 'efficiency' and consequently 'merit', - one that is consistent with the principle of substantive equality, as opposed to formal equality.[158] Drawing on the work of Amartya Sen, he held that:

A meritocratic system is one that rewards actions that result in the outcomes that we as a society value…Thus, the providing of reservations for SCs and the STs is not at odds with the principle of meritocracy. "Merit" must not be limited to narrow and inflexible criteria such as one's rank in a standardised exam, but rather must flow from the actions a society seeks to reward, including the promotion of equality in society and diversity in public administration.[156]

In the chairman and managing director, Food Corporation of India v Jagdish Balaram Bahira case,[160] Chandrachud affirmed the principle that a person who receives the benefit of public employment on the basis of a false caste certificate is not entitled to protection in exercise of the equitable power conferred upon Courts. Chandrachud held that the "withdrawal of civil benefits flowed as a logical result of the validation of a claim to belong to a group or category for whom the reservation is intended" and that "the selection of ineligible persons is a manifestation of a systematic failure and has deleterious effects on good governance." Observing that the governing state legislation explicitly specified the consequences of relying upon a false caste certificate, the Court held that recourse to the inherent powers of the Supreme Court under Article 142 would not be justified. In the same vein, Chandrachud observed that where there was a statutory bar to conferring benefits on the basis of a false certificate, administrative circulars and government resolutions, being subservient to legislative mandate, would not be permitted to cure the defect of a false caste certificate.[161]

Disability rights

[edit]

In the Vikash Kumar v. Union Public Service Commission case,[162] Chandrachud elaborated on the concept of reasonable accommodation under the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016. In the case, an appellant, who was a civil servant aspirant, suffered from writer's cramp. His application for writing the exam with the assistance of a scribe was rejected by the UPSC as he did not have a benchmark disability under the Act. Chandrachud while allowing the petition held that the concept of reasonable accommodation is at the heart of the Act. It is a positive obligation of the State and private parties to provide additional support to persons with disabilities to ensure their participation in the society. He further held that disability is a social construct which has to be remedied by ensuring conditions that facilitate development of the disabled and must meet the needs of every individual disabled person. Chandrachud also stressed on the intersectional nature of disability based discrimination. In doing so, he held that a previous decision of the Supreme Court in the V. Surendra Mohan v. Tamil Nadu case, where the Court refused to allow a visually disabled person from becoming a judicial officer, did not incorporate the principle of reasonable accommodation as it was rendered under the old Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act 1995 and would no longer be a binding precedent.[163]

Commercial law

[edit]

Chandrachud has also authored opinions in several commercial disputes and emphasised the principles of certainty and objectivity in the area of commercial law. He rejected the challenge by Adani Gas Limited[164] to the grant of authorisation for the construction and operation of consumer gas distribution networks in the state of Tamil Nadu. The dispute concerned the alleged addition of certain bidding criteria after the last date for bidding. In upholding the decisions taken by the Petroleum and Natural Gas Regulatory Board, Chandrachud noted that the additional criteria had only been proposed by the regulator as an agenda item, but was never subsequently adopted. He also observed that when a tender is challenged by a bidder, the dispute remains solely between the bidder and the regulator, and the regulator's treatment of other bids that have no bearing on the disputed bid cannot be used to allege a case of arbitrariness against the regulator's actions.[165][166]

Chandrachud also authored a judgment governing the liquidation of Super Bazar. The once-iconic Co-Operative Society had fallen on hard times and Writers and Publishers had won the bid to revive Super Bazar under a court regulated recovery scheme. However, an audit by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India found several accounting irregularities in the management of Super Bazar by Writers and Publishers. Chandrachud's judgment held that it would be against the first principles of insolvency if a resolution applicant were to be refunded their investment after a failed revival effort. His opinion directed that Super Bazar's assets be handed over to the official liquidator and disposed of in accordance with the statutory order of preferences.

Insurance law

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Chandrachud has authored opinions regarding the interpretation of insurance contracts. In one such decision,[167] a claim was filed by the wife of the deceased who while riding his motorcycle, experienced pain in the chest and shoulder, suffered a heart attack and fell from the motorcycle. Chandrachud discussed extensively the jurisprudence on insurance law in various jurisdictions, dealt with the interpretation of the expressions 'accident', 'bodily injury' and 'outward, violent and visible means'. He rejected the claim noting that there is no evidence to show that any bodily injuries were suffered due to the fall from the motorcycle or that it led to the assured suffering a heart attack.[167]

In another decision,[168] Chandrachud relied on the doctrine of uberrimae fidei and held that any suppression, untruth or inaccuracy in the statement in the proposal form by the insured is a breach of the duty of good faith and will render the policy voidable by the insurer. Chandrachud noted that the system of adequate disclosures helps to narrow down the gap of information asymmetries between the parties and helps the insurers to assess their risk appetite. He held:

Proposal forms are a significant part of the disclosure procedure and warrant accuracy of statements. Utmost care must be exercised in filling the proposal form. In a proposal form the applicant declares that she/he warrants truth. The contractual duty so imposed is such that any suppression, untruth or inaccuracy in the statement in the proposal form will be considered as a breach of the duty of good faith and will render the policy voidable by the insurer. The system of adequate disclosure helps buyers and sellers of insurance policies to meet at a common point and narrow down the gap of information asymmetries

In a judgment reported in national media,[169][170][171][172][173] Chandrachud dealt with the question of whether a death caused due to malaria occasioned by a mosquito bite constituted a 'death due to accident' covered under the terms of an insurance policy.[174] He rejected the contention that being bitten by a mosquito is an unforeseen eventuality and should be regarded as an accident. Chandrachud noted the distinction between the occurrence of a disease which may be considered as an accident and a disease which occurs in the natural course of events. He referred to the World Health Organization's World Malaria Report 2018 and noted that in a country severely afflicted with malaria, the mosquito bite was neither unexpected nor unforeseen and therefore, death caused by a mosquito bite would not be covered by the insurance policy.

Insolvency law

[edit]

Chandrachud has recently authored key judgments in relation to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. In the Phoenix Arc Private Limited v. Spade Financial Services Limited case, the issue before the Supreme Court was whether entities who may have been related parties of a corporate debtor at the time of acquiring of a financial debt, but are no longer related parties, can be excluded from the Committee of Creditors.[175] In taking a purposive approach to the issue, Chandrachud looked at the objects of the Insolvency Code and highlighted the importance of checking on actions where the "related party financial creditor devises mechanism to remove its label of a 'related party' before the Corporate Debtor undergoes CIRP, so as to be able to enter the CoC and influence its decision making at the cost of other financial creditors."[176]

Further, Chandrachud also held that "collusive transactions" between two parties would not give rise to "financial debt" for the purposes of Insolvency Code, since the nature of transaction needs to be ascertained to ensure that parties do not collude to the detriment to legitimate creditors.[177] In the Ramesh Kymal v. M/S. Siemens Gamesa Renewable Power Private Limited case, Justice Chandrachud clarified that the ordinance suspending applications under the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process after 25 March 2020, in accordance with Section 10A of the Insolvency Code,[178] which had been introduced on 5 June 2020, would also affect any pending application that had been filed after 25 March 2020, since that was consciously the cut-off date chosen by the Parliament.[179]

Chandrachud delivered a significant judgment in the Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Limited v. Amit Gupta case, where the termination of a Power Purchase Agreement with the corporate debtor, solely on account of its insolvency, was under challenge.[180] The judgment clarified the jurisdiction of the National Company Law Tribunal and National Company Law Appellate Tribunal by holding that their jurisdiction is limited to adjudicating disputes which arise solely from or which relate to the insolvency of the Corporate Debtor.[181] It also analysed the validity of ipso facto clauses in contracts, which allow termination solely on a party entering insolvency proceedings, across international materials and other jurisdictions.[182] Noting that the validity of such clauses was unclear in India, the judgment resorted to dialogical remedy to direct the Parliament to provide legislative guidance.[183] In the present case, however, the Supreme Court noted that the Power Purchase Agreement was the sole contract of the corporate debtor and held:

"Given that the terms used in Section 60(5)(c) are of wide import, as recognised in a consistent line of authority, we hold that the NCLT was empowered to restrain the appellant from terminating the PPA. However, our decision is premised upon a recognition of the centrality of the PPA in the present case to the success of the CIRP, in the factual matrix of this case, since it is the sole contract for the sale of electricity which was entered into by the Corporate Debtor. In doing so, we reiterate that the NCLT would have been empowered to set aside the termination of the PPA in this case because the termination took place solely on the ground of insolvency. The jurisdiction of the NCLT under Section 60(5)(c) of the IBC cannot be invoked in matters where a termination may take place on grounds unrelated to the insolvency of the corporate debtor. Even more crucially, it cannot even be invoked in the event of a legitimate termination of a contract based on an ipso facto clause like Article 9.2.1(e) herein, if such termination will not have the effect of making certain the death of the corporate debtor. As such, in all future cases, NCLT would have to be wary of setting aside valid contractual terminations which would merely dilute the value of the corporate debtor, and not push it to its corporate death by virtue of it being the corporate debtor's sole contract (as was the case in this matter's unique factual matrix)."[184]

In the Arun Kumar Jagatramka v. Jindal Steel and Power Ltd. case, Chandrachud barred back-door entry under the Companies Act, 2013 to a promoter of a corporate debtor who is barred from submitting a resolution plan under the Insolvency Code, to submit a scheme of arrangement under the Companies Ac, 2013.[185] The Supreme Court, while noting that promoters ineligible under the Insolvency Code cannot be allowed a back-door entry through the Companies Act, 2013, held that "[p]roposing a scheme of compromise or arrangement under Section 230 of the Act of 2013, while the company is undergoing liquidation under the provisions of the IBC lies in a similar continuum. Thus, the prohibitions that apply in the former situations must naturally also attach to the latter to ensure that like situations are treated equally."[186]

The judgment was hailed for clarifying the inconsistencies in legal position caused by varying decisions of the National Company Law Tribunals.[187] Through the judgment, the Supreme Court also upheld the constitutional validity of Regulation 2B of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (Liquidation Process) Regulations, 2016, which provides that a party ineligible to propose a resolution plan under the Insolvency Code cannot be a party to a compromise or arrangement.[188] The judgment was also considered of particular importance, since the Supreme Court noted that scheme and arrangements in the Corporate Insolvency Resolution were introduced only through the judicial intervention of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal, and cautioned them to keep such an intervention to a minimum so as to not destroy the sanctity of the Insolvency Code.[189]

Others

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Chandrachud has also authored judgments on access to justice and the commitment to a transparent judicial system. In the Swapnil Tripathi v. Supreme Court of India case,[190] a three judge bench of the Supreme Court ruled that proceedings of cases before it of constitutional and national importance must be streamed to the public. The judgment emphasised the right to know of every citizen and the principle of accountability of every institution.[191] In his concurring opinion, Chandrachud emphasised the principles of open court and open justice and the public's right to know and drew upon comparative jurisprudence from across national frontiers.[192] He stated that:

Live-streaming of proceedings is crucial to the dissemination of knowledge about judicial proceedings and granting full access to justice to the litigant… Live- streaming is a significant instrument of establishing the accountability of other stake - holders in the justice process, including the Bar… Full dissemination of knowledge and information about court proceedings through live-streaming thus sub serves diverse interests of stake holders and of society in the proper administration of justice.[190]

The judgment was welcomed by lawyers[193][194] and academicians[195] alike. In 2021, as the chair-person of the eCommittee of the Supreme Court, Chandrachud has released a draft proposal for introducing live-streaming of court proceedings.[196]

Chandrachud also delivered a concurring opinion in the case of the Central Public Information Officer v. Subhash Chandra Agarwal[197] where he agreed with the majority that the office of the chief justice of India is a public authority and falls within the ambit of the Right to Information Act 2005. Chandrachud's opinion was widely discussed[198][199] for evolving jurisprudence around the balancing of the right to privacy and the public interest. His opinion was also commented upon[198][200] for expanding the ambit of the phrase 'public interest' to include information 'on the adequate performance of public authorities' which includes 'information on the selection of judges to the higher judiciary which must be placed in the public realm'. While the majority and the other concurring opinion applied the proportionality test to balance the right to privacy and public interest, Chandrachud expanded the application of the proportionality test to balance the rights of privacy and information.

On 12 August 2022, the Madhya Pradesh High Court discharged a rape accused of all charges on the ground that there was delay in registering the FIR. He was a part of the bench of Supreme Court which called the High Court judgement "heart-breaking" and "perverse".[201]

Notable dissents

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Justice Chandrachud has dissented in various notable Supreme Court judgments. He has been called the 'judge who is not afraid to dissent'.[202][203] His dissents have drawn the attention of the academia and media and one article notes that:[204]

Justice Subba Rao was a libertarian keen on establishing individual rights. He stood up to Indira Gandhi's impulses. Justice Chandrachud too has a libertarian interpretation of constitutional rights. He has shown he is not afraid to dissent.

Aadhaar – The biometric project

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Foremost amongst his notable dissents is his opinion in the Puttaswamy (II) v. Union of India case.[205] In 2016, the Government of India enacted the Aadhaar Act, which is the world's largest biometric ID system. World Bank chief economist Paul Romer described Aadhaar as "the most sophisticated ID program in the world". As the basis for the overarching system had been laid down in 2010, the Aadhaar system was subject to a wide range of orders by the Supreme Court between 2013 and 2019. The Act was challenged before the Supreme Court on numerous grounds, which included a charge of bypassing the Upper House or Rajya Sabha by being passed as a Money Bill, of creating a surveillance state, and creating a class of citizens which would be excluded from the class of beneficiaries.[206] Some groups also raised significant privacy concerns with the government database that held the biometric and personal information of every individual in the country.

In the judgment dated 28 September 2018, the Indian Supreme Court upheld that constitutional validity of the Act by a 4–1 majority, with Chandrachud penning the sole dissent. His dissent, which came to be called the 'dissent for the ages'[207] noted numerous deficiencies in the proposed system and struck down in its entirety the Act as constituting a "fraud on the Constitution".[208][209] In the celebrated dissent,[210][207][211] he based his analysis of the Aadhaar architecture on five key aspects - surveillance, proportionality, Money Bill, inequality and individual identity.

Surveillance

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Chandrachud noted that profiling and surveillance of individuals are possible under the Aadhaar framework as metadata can be used to track and profile people, third-parties can access the centralised database and the linking of databases may take place. He held:

The risks which the use of Aadhaar "for any purpose" carries is that when it is linked with different databases (managed by the State or by private entities), the Aadhaar number becomes the central unifying feature that connects the cell phone with geo-location data, one's presence and movement with a bank account and income tax returns, food and lifestyle consumption with medical records. This starts a "causal link" between information which was usually unconnected and was considered trivial. Thus, linking Aadhaar with different databases carries the potential of being profiled into a system, which could be used for commercial purposes. It also carries the capability of influencing the behavioural patterns of individuals, by affecting their privacy and liberty. Profiling individuals could be used to create co-relations between human lives, which are generally unconnected… When Aadhaar is seeded into every database, it becomes a bridge across discreet data silos, which allows anyone with access to this information to re-construct a profile of an individual's life.[205]

At the time when the case was being heard before the Supreme Court, whistleblowers had warned of the possible implications of the infrastructure in creating a surveillance state.[212] Following the judgment, academicians documented the growth in state surveillance[213][214]

Privacy

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He held that informational self determination (as a facet of privacy) and bodily integrity impart to the biometric details of every person a high degree of privacy. He held that the absence of consent within the Act, the extent of information disclosed, the expansive scope of the term "biometrics", the burden placed upon the individual to update her own biometrics, and lack of access to the record, cumulatively constitute a serious infringement of privacy.[207]

Proportionality

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Chandrachud drew from academic literature as well as jurisprudence across national frontiers on the proportionality standard and held that the burden to justify that the method adopted lies on the state and it must be demonstrated that the chosen method is both necessary and the least intrusive manner of achieving the stated objective. Circumspect of the Aadhaar infrastructure in plugging loopholes in welfare leakages, he held that:

The test of proportionality stipulates that the nature and extent of the State's interference with the exercise of a right (in this case, the rights to privacy, dignity, choice, and access to basic entitlements) must be proportionate to the goal it seeks to achieve (in this case, purported plugging of welfare leakage and better targeting… … by collecting identity information, the Aadhaar program treats every citizen as a potential criminal without even requiring the State to draw a reasonable belief that a citizen might be perpetrating a crime or an identity fraud. When the State is not required to have a reasonable belief and judicial determination to this effect, a program like Aadhaar, which infringes on the justifiable expectations of privacy of citizens flowing from the Constitution, is completely disproportionate to the objective sought to be achieved by the State… the state has failed to demonstrate that a less intrusive measure other than biometric authentication will not sub serve its purposes.[205]

As part of his analysis, he noted the potential of the Aadhaar infrastructure to further bread inequality and the burden on the state to remedy any potential failings prior to the implementation of a nationwide infrastructure. He held:

Technological error would result in authentication failures. The concerns raised by UIDAI ought to have been resolved before the implementation of the Aadhaar project. Poor connectivity in rural India was a major concern. The majority of the Indian population lives in rural areas. Even a small percentage of error results in a population of crores being affected. Denial of subsidies and benefits to them due to the infirmities of biometric technology is a threat to good governance and social parity… No failure rate in the provision of social welfare benefits can be regarded as acceptable. Basic entitlements in matters such as food grain, can brook no error. To deny food is to lead a family to destitution, malnutrition and even death.[205]

Money bill

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Considered the 'heart' of his dissent,[215] Chandrachud struck down of the entire Act as it was passed as a Money bill. Chandrachud noted that while "Ordinary bills can be passed only when they are agreed to by both Houses… the Constitution carves out a limited role for the Rajya Sabha in the passage of Money Bills."[205] He noted that in the case of a Money Bill, the Rajya Sabha has no amending power, but merely the power to recommend changes which are not binding on the Lok Sabha. In other words, any change that the Rajya Sabha wishes to seek in the bill can be rejected in its entirety by the Lok Sabha.

Chandrachud proceeded by affirming that there is a degree of "constitutional trust" that attaches to a certificate by the Speaker of the House certifying a bill as a Money Bill and is open to judicial review:

The purpose of judicial review is to ensure that constitutional principles prevail in interpretation and governance. Institutions created by the Constitution are subject to its norms. No constitutional institution wields absolute power. No immunity has been attached to the certificate of the Speaker of the Lok Sabha from judicial review, for this reason… Constitutional courts have been entrusted with the duty to scrutinise the exercise of power by public functionaries under the Constitution. No individual holding an institutional office created by the Constitution can act contrary to constitutional parameters... If our Constitution has to survive the vicissitudes of political aggrandisement and to face up to the prevailing cynicism about all constitutional institutions, notions of power and authority must give way to duties and compliance with the rule of law[205]

Chandrachud embarked on an analysis of the origins and rationale of bicameralism to conclude:

Bicameralism, when entrenched as a principle in a constitutional democracy, acts as a check against the abuse of power by constitutional means or its use in an oppressive manner. As a subset of the constitutional principle of division of power, bicameralism is mainly a safeguard against the abuse of the constitutional and political process. A bicameral national parliament can hold the government accountable and can check or restrain the misuse of government power. Among its other roles is that of representing local state units, acting as a body of expert review, and providing representation for diverse socio-economic interests or ethno-cultural minorities.[205]

After embarking on a comparative analysis of bicameralism across the world, Chandrachud grounded Indian bicameralism in both a commitment to a federal polity as well as participative governance to hold that the Rajya Sabha is a "symbol against majoritarianism". He extensively analysed Article 110 of the Indian Constitution and emphasised that any bill within the ambit of Article 110 must contain "only provisions" dealing with the matter specified therein. Laying emphasis on the use of the words "if" and "only" within the provision, he cautioned that judges "cannot rewrite the Constitution, particularly where it is contrary to both text, context and intent." He noted that to allow bills that traverse outside the scope of Article 110 to be passed as money Bills would have "consequences in terms of the nature of the Bill and the legislative participation of the Rajya Sabha," and "reduce bicameralism to an illusion." He held:

A Bill, to be a Money Bill, must contain only provisions which fall within the ambit of the matters mentioned in Article 110…The Lok Sabha cannot introduce and pass a legislative measure in the garb of a Money Bill, which could otherwise have been amended or rejected by the Rajya Sabha. Bicameralism is a founding value of our democracy. It is a part of the basic structure of the Constitution. Introduction and passing of a Bill as a Money Bill, which does not qualify to be a Money Bill under Article 110(1) of the Constitution, is plainly unconstitutional… Introducing the Aadhaar Act as a Money Bill has bypassed the constitutional authority of the Rajya Sabha. The passage of the Aadhaar Act as a Money Bill is an abuse of the constitutional process. It deprived the Rajya Sabha from altering the provisions of the Bill by carrying out amendments. Superseding the authority of the Rajya Sabha is in conflict with the constitutional scheme and the legitimacy of democratic institutions. It constitutes a fraud on the Constitution… This debasement of a democratic institution cannot be allowed to pass. Institutions are crucial to democracy. Debasing them can only cause a peril to democratic structures.[205]

One academician wrote shortly thereafter that Chandrachud's reading of the constitutional provision and assessment of the Aadhaar Act upheld "the delicate balance of bicameralism" which lies at the heart of India's parliamentary democracy"[216]

Individual, state and identity

[edit]

Chandrachud's judgment also analysed the intersection between identity and individuals. The dissent was noted for the emphasis on the protection of individual identity. Emphasising on the plurality of identities of an individual, he observed that:

Technologically, at this level, Aadhaar was to be a means of identification. Yet at another level, the Aadhaar project also offered itself as providing a documentary identity to persons who may not have possessed one at all... Identity includes the right to determine the forms through which identity is expressed and the right not to be identified. That concept is now "flipped" so that identification through identifiers becomes the only form of identity in the time of database governance. This involves a radical transformation in the position of the individual…Identity is a plural concept. The Constitution also recognises a multitude of identities through the plethora of rights that it safeguards. The technology deployed in the Aadhaar scheme reduces different constitutional identities into a single identity of a 12-digit number and infringes the right if an individual to identify himself/herself through a chosen means. Aadhaar is about identification and is an instrument which facilitates a proof of identity. It must not be allowed to obliterate constitutional identity.

He analysed the intersection between law and technology and observed that the biometric technology "which is the core of the Aadhaar programme is probabilistic in nature, leading to authentication failures." He observed that:

Dignity and the rights of individuals cannot be made to depend on algorithms or probabilities. Constitutional guarantees cannot be subject to the vicissitudes of technology.

Aftermath of the dissent

[edit]

Chandrachud's dissent has received academic analysis[210][217] and has led some scholars to write that the dissent ranks alongside the great dissents in the history of the Indian Supreme Court. Lead commentators and experts described the dissent as 'stirring',[218] 'fiery',[219] 'historic',[210] 'stinging'[220] and 'lone yet powerful'.[221] Some invoke in reference to the dissent the famous lines of Chief Justice Charles Hughes[222][223] that "a dissent in a court of last resort is an appeal to the brooding spirit of law, to the intelligence of a future day when a later decision may possibly correct the error into which the dissenting justice believes the court to have been betrayed." His dissent was noticed in judicial pronouncements elsewhere in the world.

In the judgment concerning the constitution validity of the Jamaican National Identification and Registration Act, Chief Justice Sykes relied on Justice Chandrachud's dissenting opinion to strike down the Act.[224][225][226][227][228] He commended the dissent in the following terms:

In words, which I respectfully wish to adopt as my own, the learned Judge [i.e., Chandrachud J.] summarised the overall constitutional failings of the Aadhaar scheme thus … 'the technology deployed in the Aadhaar scheme reduces different constitutional identities into a single identity of a 12-digit number and infringes the right of an individual to identify herself or himself through a chosen means. Aadhaar is about identification and is an instrument which facilitates a proof of identity. It must not be allowed to obliterate constitutional identity…From reading the judgments, in this case, Dr Chandrachud J, in my respectful view, demonstrated a greater sensitivity to the issues of privacy and freedom that is not as evident in the judgments of the majority of the other judges who delivered concurring judgments. His Lordship had a clear-eyed view of the dangers of a state or anyone having control over one's personal information and generally, I preferred his approach to the issue over that of the other judges… I must also say that in the application of the standard I prefer the reasoning of Dr Chandrachud J to that of the majority.

One constitutional law expert observed[229] that:

…a dissent is not limited to a footnote in the judicial lore of a nation, waiting for the years to pass by until the "intelligence of a future day" dawns. Sometimes, like the swallow flying south, a dissent becomes part of the global migration of ideas. It finds fertile soil far from home, there to bloom into the full richness that it has been denied in its own native environment… Sometimes, we need friends and colleagues in other parts of the world to hold up the mirror that we are unwilling or unable to look into. Perhaps it is the fate of the Aadhaar Dissent to travel around the world, a light in dark places, long before it is recognised by the brooding spirit of law in its homeland, and the error is corrected at last.

Later, Chandrachud's observations on the aspect of the Money Bill were resurrected by a constitution bench in the Roger Mathew v South Indian Bank Ltd case.[230] Chief Justice Gogoi, writing for the majority held that the law on Money Bills must be "given an appropriate meaning and interpretation to avoid and prevent over-inclusiveness or under-inclusiveness". Noting deficiencies in the reasoning of the majority in the Aadhaar judgment and referring the question of law on money bills to a bench of a higher strength, he stated:

Upon an extensive examination of the matter, we notice that the majority in K.S. Puttaswamy (Aadhaar-5) pronounced the nature of the impugned enactment without first delineating the scope of Article 110(1) and principles for interpretation or the repercussions of such process. It is clear to us that the majority dictum in K.S. Puttaswamy (Aadhaar-5) did not substantially discuss the effect of the word 'only' in Article 110(1) and offers little guidance on the repercussions of a finding when some of the provisions of an enactment passed as a "Money Bill" do not conform to Article 110(1)(a) to (g)... Being a Bench of equal strength as that in K.S. Puttaswamy (Aadhaar-5), we accordingly direct that this batch of matters be placed before Hon'ble the Chief Justice of India, on the administrative side, for consideration by a larger Bench.[230]

Chandrachud agreed with the majority that the law on the Money Bills must be clarified. Consequently, the matter is pending further consideration by the Supreme Court.[231]

On 11 January 2021, Chandrachud further was the lone dissenter against the dismissal of review petitions filed against the judgement dated 28 September 2018 (which upheld the constitutionality of Aadhar) on the ground that the aspect of what constitutes a 'Money Bill' under Article 110 of the Indian Constitution, which was the heart of the matter and a potential fraud on the constitution,[209] has been referred to a larger bench by another constitutional bench of the Supreme Court, which is yet to be constituted.[232]

Free speech

[edit]

Chandrachud delivered a dissent in the Romila Thapar & Ors. v. Union of India case,[233] where an investigation by a Special Investigation Team (SIT) was sought by five human rights activists who were charged and arrested for commission of offences under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1947 following the violence that broke out during an Elgar Parishad event in 2018. The majority refused the constitution of the SIT. In his dissent, Chandrachud directed that the investigation should be conducted by a SIT and reprimanded the Pune Police for their mala fide behaviour in aiding the conduct of the "media trial".[234]

His dissent was reported for upholding the freedom of speech and the principle of fairness under Article 14 and 21 of the Indian Constitution.[235][236][237] He observed that "dissent is the safety valve of democracy. If dissent is not allowed, then the pressure cooker may burst". He also opined that it was necessary to draw a balance between dissent and unlawful activities. He held that:

Dissent is a symbol of a vibrant democracy. Voices in opposition cannot be muzzled by persecuting those who take up unpopular causes. Where, however, the expression of dissent enters upon the prohibited field of an incitement to violence or the subversion of a democratically elected government by recourse to unlawful means, the dissent ceases to be a mere expression of opinion. Unlawful activities which violate the law have to be dealt with in accordance with it.[233]

Justice Chandrachud also emphasised the necessity of ensuring a fair and impartial investigation which he regarded as an 'integral component' of the guarantee against arbitrariness under Article 14 and of the right to life and personal liberty under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution.[235] He observed that "if this Court were not to stand by the principles which we have formulated, we may witness a soulful requiem to liberty".

Gender justice

[edit]

Chandrachud, along with Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman delivered a dissent[238][239] in the Kantaru Rajeevaru v. Indian Young Lawyers Association case.[240] He held that the decision of five judges in the Sabarimala case which held that women between the age of ten and fifty shall not be denied entry to the Sabarimala temple is not a fit case for the exercise of review jurisdiction as the judgment does not suffer from an error apparent on the face of record. The dissent observed that the executive is under a constitutional obligation to implement the decisions of the Supreme Court even if they were not parties before them.[241][242][243] Justice Nariman observed:

Bona fide criticism of a judgment, albeit of the highest court of the land, is certainly permissible, but thwarting, or encouraging persons to thwart, the directions or orders of the highest court cannot be countenanced in our Constitutional scheme of things.[240]

Election speech

[edit]

Chandrachud authored the minority opinion for himself and two other judges in the Abiram Singh v. C.D Commachen case[244] which concerned the interpretation of Section 123(3) of the Representation of the Peoples Act, 1951. The provision states that appealing for votes based on "his" religion, race, caste, community or language amounts to a corrupt practice by a candidate. The question concerned was whether the word 'his' qualified only the candidate or the election agent, or whether it included the person to whom the appeal was addressed.[245] The majority affirmed a broader reading of the term to include a prohibition on the appeal to the religion, race, caste community or language of the voters themselves.[245] Chandrachud wrote:

...the Constitution… recognises the position of religion, caste, language and gender in the social life of the nation. Individual histories both of citizens and collective groups in our society are associated through the ages with histories of discrimination and injustice on the basis of these defining characteristics…[244]

While "the majority viewed group identities as sites of division and fracturing of the fragile democratic consensus, the dissent questioned the very existence of any such consensus."[245] Chandrachud held, as a noted columnist wrote, that with the coming of democracy, these identities had become the sites of redressing historical discrimination through political mobilisation. To now deny that opportunity would be to simply perpetuate a status quo built upon exclusion and marginalisation.[245]

Tax

[edit]

In the Jindal Stainless Ltd. v. The State of Haryana case,[246] Chandrachud authored the minority opinion on the constitutional validity of entry tax imposed by states. He differed from the view of the majority which held that free trade throughout the territory under Article 301 of the Constitution of India does not mean freedom from tax and observed that such a position violated constitutional principles. He held that entire nation must be viewed as one economic unit in the following terms:

Article 301 sub serves the constitutional goal of integrating the nation into an economic entity comprising of a common market for goods and services.

He propounded the 'direct and inevitable effect test' to identify whether a tax amounts to a restriction on the freedom of trade and commerce.

Notable speeches

[edit]

Chandrachud has been a speaker at conferences organised by bodies of the United Nations including United Nations High Commission for Human Rights,[247] International Labour Organisation and United Nations Environmental Program, the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. He delivered a lecture titled "Global Constitutionalism in the Age of Transnational Judicial Conversations in Human Rights", organised by the Supreme Court of Hawai'i and the University of Hawai'i on 6 June 2018.[248] He has delivered numerous speeches in India at premier law institutions as well as events organised by civil society. His most recent speeches include:

Speeches
Date Topic Location
September 2018 Rule of Law in a Constitutional Democracy[249] 19th Annual Bodh Raj Sawhney Memorial, NLUD, Delhi[250]
December 2018 Law and Storytelling[251] Increasing Diversity by Increasing Access (IDIA), Delhi
December 2018 Why the Constitution matters[252] Bombay High Court
February 2019 Law, Culture and Identity Kala Ghoda Arts Festival, Bombay[253]
March 2019 A Borrowed Constitution: A fact or a myth?[254] Annual Nani Palkhiwala Lecture, Delhi[255]
April 2019 Green Law Lecture[256] O. P. Jindal Global University[257]
August 2019 Imagining Freedom Through Art[258] Literature Live, Annual Independence Day Lecture, Bombay[259]
December 2019 Adding Nuance to Human Rights Discourse[260] International Institute of Human Rights Society
February 2020 The hues that make India from plurality to pluralism[261] P.D. Desai Memorial Lecture, Gujarat
July 2020 A changing society and constitutional continuity: experiences in the pursuit of justice[262] ILS, Pune
November 2020 Constitutionalism, Liberal Democracy and Enlightened Citizenship[263] JGLS Worldwide Forum
November 2020 Visualising the Constitution through Artistic Prisms- Stories of Aspiration and Emancipation[264] Kalakshetra, Chennai
April 2021 Why Representation Matters[265] Inaugural Event of CEDE, Virtual Lecture on Livelaw

In February 2020, he delivered the speech titled 'The hues that make India: from plurality to pluralism'[266] at the P D Desai Memorial Lecture in Gujarat. He stated:

…the employment of state machinery to curb dissent instils fear and creates a chilling atmosphere on free speech which violates the rule of law and detracts from the constitutional vision of a pluralist society…The true test of a democracy is its ability to ensure the creation and protection of spaces where every individual can voice their opinion without the fear of retribution…A state committed to the rule of law ensures that the state apparatus is not employed to curb legitimate and peaceful protest but to create spaces conducive for deliberation. Within the bounds of law, liberal democracies ensure that their citizens enjoy the right to express their views in every conceivable manner, including the right to protest and express dissent against prevailing laws. The blanket labelling of such dissent as 'anti-national' or 'anti-democratic' strikes at the heart of our commitment to the protection of constitutional values and the promotion of a deliberative democracy.

In an impassioned appeal to pluralism and the celebration of diversity, he stated:

The framers of the Constitution rejected the notion of a Hindu India and a Muslim India. They recognised only the Republic of India…A united India is not one characterised by a single identity devoid of its rich plurality, both of cultures and of values. National unity denotes a shared culture of values and a commitment to the fundamental ideals of the Constitution in which all individuals are guaranteed not just the fundamental rights but also conditions for their free and safe exercise. Pluralism depicts not merely a commitment to the preservation of diversity, but a commitment to the fundamental postulates of individual and equal dignity. In this sense, pluralism furthers the basic postulates of the Constitution and nourishes and provides content to the goal of national unity...No single individual or institution can claim a monopoly over the idea of India…what is of utmost relevance today is our ability and commitment to preserve, conserve and build on the rich pluralistic history we have inherited.

The speech was reported [267][268][269][270] as a plea to protect the right to dissent in a free and democratic society.

Recently, in a speech delivered in December 2020 on "Legal Professionals with Disabilities"[271] for the International Summit on Legal Professionals with Disabilities, ILS Pune, he highlighted the inaccessibility of the Common Law Admission Test for the visually challenged.[272] This remark was noticed and promptly addressed by the Consortium of National Law Universities who assured the public of a course-correction.[273]

e-Committee

[edit]

Chandrachud was the chairperson of the e-Committee of the Supreme Court of India. The e-Committee is the body tasked with the implementation of the e-Courts Project in India which aims to digitise the judiciary at the level of High Courts and District Courts. Currently the e-Court's Project is in Phase II, which in addition to providing necessary hardware to courts for meeting technological demands, has also undertaken to introduce various digital services for the benefit of the lawyers and general public.[274] Under the chairpersonship of Chandrachud, the e-Committee has introduced and overseen the implementation of, inter alia, the following measures:

Virtual Courts

[edit]

Virtual Courts were inaugurated in Delhi on 13 May 2020, in Pune on 15 May 2020 and in Chennai on 26 May 2020 by Chandrachud. Virtual Courts allow adjudication of cases on a virtual platform. Communication, sentencing, payment of fines or compensation takes place online. The facility is functional 24x7. At present this service is available for traffic violations under Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.[275]

National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG)

[edit]

NJDG is a flagship project of e-Committee that tracks the country's pending cases, ensuring transparency in the functioning of the judicial system by making this information available in the public domain.[276]

Inter-Operable Criminal Justice System (ICJS)

[edit]

ICJS allows live electronic exchange of data between courts and police. FIR and charge sheet details are electronically received in courts through a CIS software system.[277]

e-Filing Software 3.0

[edit]

A new e-Filing software application has been developed, enabling electronic filing of legal papers and promoting paperless filing.[278] The upgraded version of the e-Filing software is more user-friendly with a simpler registration process for advocates. It also, inter alia, enables advocates to add their partners and clients, provides online vakalatnama, readymade templates for pleadings, provision for online recording of oath and digital signing of case papers.[279]

e-Payments

[edit]

The e-Committee has introduced the facility of online payment of court fees, fines, penalty and judicial deposits.[280]

e-Sewa Kendras

[edit]

e-Sewa Kendras have been created in High Courts and in one District Court in each State to provide digital aid to those who do not have access to internet or electronic equipment for accessing the services provided under the e-Courts Project. The litigants and lawyers can, inter alia, obtain case information, obtain copies of judgements and orders and use the e-Filing services at the e-Sewa Kendras.[281]

National Service and Tracking of Electronic Process (NSTEP)

[edit]

The e-Committee has digitised the delivery of processes through the National Service and Tracking of Electronic Process (NSTEP). It consists of a centralised process service tracking application and a mobile app for bailiffs/process servers. NSTEP is used for the speedy delivery of processes and reducing inordinate delays in process serving. NSTEP mobile application provided to bailiffs helps in real-time and transparent tracking of service.[282]

Judgement search portal

[edit]

A judgement search portal has been created which is a repository of all the judgements and final orders passed by the High Courts and District Court. The portal uses a free text search engine, which provides judgments based on a given keyword or combination of keywords.  The portal has also been designed keeping in mind the needs of the persons with disabilities. It provides the facility of audio captcha along with text captcha. It also uses combo boxes making it easier for persons with visual disabilities to access the website.[283]

Other initiatives include installation of touch screen kiosks at court complexes to obtain case information,[284] e-Courts Services application for mobiles[285] and the e-Committee YouTube Channel.[286]

Live streaming of court proceedings

[edit]

The e-Committee has undertaken the task of introducing live streaming of court proceedings. It has released model draft rules to invite comments from all stakeholders.[287] The rules come in the backdrop of the judgement of the Supreme Court in the Swapnil Tripathi v Supreme Court of India case which held that live broadcast of proceedings of the Supreme Court flows from the right to access justice under the Indian Constitution.[288]

During the tenure of Chandrachud, the services provided by e-Courts Project recorded more than 354.1 crores e-transactions during 2019–2020, which is the highest number of e-transactions recorded for any electronic governance related project in India.[289] The e-Committee of the Supreme Court of India was also awarded the Digital India Award (Platinum Award) for Excellence in Digital Governance for the year 2020 by the President of India.[290] The e-Committee also undertakes training of advocates, judges and court staff on issues of technological awareness. It conducted online training for over 1.6 lakh lawyers, judges, court staff during pandemic from May 2020 to December 2020.[291]

Awards

[edit]

The Harvard Law School awarded the Center on the Legal Profession Award for Global Leadership to Chandrachud.[292]

Personal life

[edit]
D.Y. Chandrachud with his family

His first wife, Rashmi, died in 2007 due to cancer. He later married lawyer Kalpana Das. He has two sons and two foster daughters.[293]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dhananjaya Yeshwant Chandrachud (born 11 November 1959) is an Indian jurist who served as the 50th of the from 9 November 2022 to 10 November 2024. The son of Vishnu , the 16th who held office from 1978 to 1985, he constitutes the only father-son duo to occupy India's highest judicial position. Chandrachud completed his early education at St. Xavier's High School in and St. Columba's School in , followed by a in and from St. Stephen's College, in 1979, and a from the Faculty of Law, . He further pursued advanced studies at , earning a in 1983 and a in 1986. After practicing as an in the and serving as a , he was appointed an additional of that court on 29 March 2000, becoming a permanent thereafter. Elevated to Chief Justice of the Allahabad High Court on 31 October 2013, Chandrachud served until his transfer to the on 13 May 2016. Over his tenure, he authored or participated in several pivotal judgments, including the 2017 declaration of as a fundamental right under the Indian Constitution in the Justice K.S. Puttaswamy case and the 2018 decriminalization of consensual same-sex relations in Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India. As , his administration emphasized judicial digitization, such as expanded live-streaming of constitutional benches and e-filing systems to reduce pendency, which saw a net decrease of over 3,500 cases during his term. Chandrachud's jurisprudence, often lauded for advancing individual liberties, also attracted criticism for inconsistencies, particularly in high-stakes matters like the 2023 denial of legal recognition for despite affirming related rights, and perceived leniency in electoral bonds transparency until their invalidation. Legal commentators and practitioners have questioned his case allocation practices as "master of the roster," alleging selective bench formations that undermined institutional impartiality, alongside broader concerns over vacation schedules and delays in politically sensitive disputes. These critiques, emanating from bar associations and senior advocates, highlight tensions between his reformist initiatives and demands for stricter procedural accountability in India's apex court.

Early Life and Education

Family and Upbringing

Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud was born on November 11, 1959, as the only child of , who served as the 16th from February 22, 1978, to November 11, 1985—the longest tenure in the Supreme Court's history—and Prabha Chandrachud, a classical singer affiliated with . The family belonged to the Deshastha Rigvedi community, with roots in a tradition of legal and scholarly prominence. Chandrachud was raised in in a household blending rigorous legal discourse from his father's judicial career with cultural influences from his mother's musical pursuits, fostering an environment emphasizing intellectual discipline and artistic appreciation. His early schooling occurred at in , followed by attendance at St. Columba's School in , reflecting the peripatetic lifestyle often associated with his father's professional elevations within the .

Academic and Professional Training

Chandrachud earned a Bachelor of Arts degree with honors in economics from St. Stephen's College, University of Delhi, in 1979. He subsequently obtained a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) from the Campus Law Centre at the Faculty of Law, University of Delhi. Chandrachud pursued advanced legal studies in the United States, completing a Master of Laws (LLM) at Harvard Law School in 1983, followed by a Doctor of Juridical Science (SJD) in 1986. His doctoral research focused on broadening the understanding of law's interdisciplinary connections. Upon returning to India, enrolled as an advocate with the Bar Council of Maharashtra and , joining the Bombay Bar. He began his legal practice primarily before the and the , handling matters in constitutional, civil, and . In June 1998, he was designated a Senior Advocate by the . also served in leadership roles, including as Chairman and General Secretary of the Bar Council of Maharashtra and .

Judicial Career

Bombay High Court Service

Chandrachud was appointed as an Additional Judge of the on 29 March 2000. He was confirmed as a permanent and served for over 13 years until his elevation as Chief Justice of the on 31 October 2013. During this period, Chandrachud handled a range of civil, criminal, and constitutional matters, with a focus on litigation involving and social issues. His judgments addressed concerns such as the of bonded women workers, protections for HIV-positive individuals, contract labor disputes, and protections for religious and linguistic minorities. He also contributed to oversight roles, including a Supreme Court-appointed inquiry into conditions at Bombay's beaches. Chandrachud's approach to cases involving crimes against women evolved during his tenure, incorporating gender-sensitive perspectives influenced by his collaboration with Justice Ranjana Desai, emphasizing feminist interpretations of to prioritize victim rights and systemic reforms. This reflected a broader commitment to themes, building on his pre-judicial advocacy in similar domains.

Supreme Court Appointment and Tenure

Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud was appointed as a Judge of the on 13 May 2016 by President , on the recommendation of the Collegium comprising Chief Justice and senior judges. This elevation followed his service as Chief Justice of the since October 2013, making him the second judge from that court to join the in quick succession after Justice Shiva Kirti Singh. At the time of appointment, Chandrachud was 56 years old, with over 15 years of high court experience, positioning him for a potentially long tenure under the constitutional retirement age of 65. His initial years in the Supreme Court involved assignment to constitutional benches addressing , , and , reflecting the court's workload distribution by and expertise. Chandrachud's judicial output during this period included authoring opinions in cases on environmental regulation and litigation, contributing to the court's emphasis on evidence-based over expansive interpretations. By 2022, as the senior-most judge after U. U. Lalit, he was recommended by the Collegium for elevation to , adhering to the principle established in judicial conventions to mitigate executive influence. Chandrachud's overall Supreme Court tenure spanned from 13 May 2016 to 10 November 2024, totaling over eight years, during which he participated in more than 1,000 cases and authored approximately 590 judgments, including those as Chief Justice. This period marked a phase of institutional reforms under his benches, such as live-streaming proceedings to enhance transparency, though implementation faced logistical challenges in a court handling over 80,000 pending cases annually. His retirement on 10 November 2024, upon turning 65, concluded a career emphasizing procedural rigor amid criticisms from legal analysts regarding selective case prioritization favoring high-profile matters over routine backlogs.

Chief Justice of India Role

Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud was sworn in as the 50th Chief Justice of India on November 9, 2022, succeeding U. U. Lalit, with President Droupadi Murmu administering the oath at Rashtrapati Bhavan. His term extended until November 10, 2024, when he retired upon attaining the age of 65, marking a two-year tenure as the head of India's judiciary. In this capacity, Chandrachud held administrative authority over the Supreme Court, including the allocation of cases as master of the roster and leadership of the collegium system for recommending judicial appointments to higher courts. Chandrachud's tenure emphasized administrative reforms aimed at modernizing court operations, such as expanding digital initiatives including e-filing systems and live-streaming of proceedings to enhance accessibility and transparency. He oversaw the disposal of significant constitutional matters, with the court delivering 18 Constitution Bench judgments in 2023 alone, reflecting a focus on priority listing for long-pending cases. These efforts were credited by some observers with advancing judicial efficiency and public engagement, though the Supreme Court's pendency hovered around 70,000 cases throughout his term without substantial reduction. Criticism during Chandrachud's leadership centered on allegations of selective case management, with senior advocates like Dushyant Dave claiming arbitrary allotment of sensitive matters to benches perceived as favorable to government positions, potentially undermining institutional impartiality. Such concerns, echoed in legal commentary, highlighted tensions between and perceptions of executive influence, though Chandrachud maintained that allocations followed established protocols to ensure balanced . His role also involved recommending successors through the collegium, influencing the judiciary's composition amid ongoing debates over transparency in appointments.

Judicial Philosophy

Interpretive Approach and First Principles

Justice D.Y. has articulated a constitutional interpretive approach that treats the Indian Constitution as a , capable of evolving to address contemporary societal, legal, and economic contexts rather than being confined to its original framing. He has explicitly rejected strict , arguing that limiting interpretation to the framers' intent would undermine the document's adaptability and do injustice to both its drafters and its enduring purpose. Instead, emphasizes that no single generation holds a monopoly over constitutional meaning, as doctrines develop through ongoing interaction between citizens and the text, ensuring relevance amid changing needs. Central to this framework is the , established in the 1973 case, which Chandrachud describes as a "North Star" providing directional guidance for interpreters while preserving core constitutional identity against amendments that erode fundamental features like , , and . This principle anchors his reasoning, allowing purposive interpretation that prioritizes the Constitution's transformative objectives—such as equality and —over rigid or historical fixation. In practice, his judgments reflect deep empirical engagement with societal impacts, extending beyond strict precedents to incorporate data on discrimination's effects and evolving rights, as seen in and equality rulings. Chandrachud's method aligns with causal realism by tracing legal outcomes to underlying societal dynamics, advocating for judicial techniques that identify unamendable features through collaborative, evidence-based analysis rather than abstraction divorced from real-world effects. This approach critiques overly abstract interpretations that ignore implementation challenges, favoring those grounded in the Constitution's first-order goals of human dignity and rule of law, while cautioning against judicial overreach that substitutes legislative policy. His tenure demonstrated this in Constitution Bench decisions, where interpretive flexibility balanced individual liberties against state imperatives without eroding foundational constraints.

Balancing Individual Rights and State Authority

Justice Chandrachud's judicial philosophy emphasizes the primacy of individual liberties, including personal autonomy, dignity, and , as enshrined in Articles 14, 19, and 21 of the Indian Constitution, while permitting state authority to encroach upon these rights only when pursuing legitimate aims through proportionate measures. In his lead opinion in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India (2017), he established as an intrinsic element of the and liberty, rejecting absolute state claims over personal data or spheres of life. However, he introduced a three-pronged test for permissible state intrusions—legality (via enacted law), legitimate aim (such as or public order), and proportionality (requiring rational nexus, necessity, and a balancing of rights infringement against societal benefits)—to ensure state power does not arbitrarily override individual protections. This balancing framework recurs in Chandrachud's opinions on and , where he insisted on of state actions under Article 21 to prevent abuse of laws like the National Security Act. For instance, in Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb (2021), co-authored with him, the held that undertrial detention exceeding the maximum punishment for the offense violates , mandating to weigh individual liberty against state security interests, even in terrorism cases. He critiqued historical overreach, noting in extrajudicial remarks that must align with constitutional safeguards rather than serving as a tool for indefinite curtailment of freedom. Chandrachud applied similar reasoning in religious freedom disputes, advocating reconciliation of individual equality with collective practices. In the Indian Young Lawyers Association v. State of (Sabarimala, 2018), his the exclusion of women aged 10-50 from the temple, arguing that gender-based customs infringe Article 14 equality unless justified by essential religious practices, but allowed for state facilitation of group rights where they do not systematically discriminate. This approach prioritizes empirical assessment of harm to individuals over unsubstantiated deference to state or institutional claims of tradition. As from November 8, 2022, to November 10, 2024, Chandrachud reiterated the judiciary's role in safeguarding liberty amid state assertions of necessity, as in his December 2022 statement during a habeas corpus hearing: the right to personal liberty is "precious and inalienable," compelling the to intervene promptly against arbitrary arrests, regardless of case scale. Yet, he upheld state measures in contexts, such as the 2019 abrogation of Article 370, where the bench (including him) balanced federal disruptions against India's unitary interests in , applying proportionality to validate presidential powers under Article 356. Critics from rights advocacy groups have argued this occasionally tilts toward state deference, but Chandrachud's framework consistently demands evidence-based justification over blanket authority.

Landmark Majority Opinions

Privacy and Surveillance Cases

In the landmark case of Justice K. S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India, decided on August 24, 2017, a nine-judge Bench of the unanimously held that the is an intrinsic part of the and personal liberty under Article 21 of the , as well as protected under Articles 14 and 19. Justice Chandrachud authored a separate , emphasizing that derives from the inherent dignity of the individual and serves as a bulwark against arbitrary state intrusion, including excessive . He reasoned that encompasses decisional , informational , and of the body from compelled disclosure, rejecting earlier precedents like M. P. Sharma v. Satish Chandra (1954) and Kharak Singh v. State of U. P. (1963) that had limited such protections. This framework subjected state actions impinging on —such as biometric or monitoring—to proportionality tests, requiring legitimate aims, rational connection, and minimal impairment. Chandrachud's opinion explicitly addressed surveillance risks, noting that unchecked governmental access to personal data could erode liberty by enabling pervasive tracking without safeguards. He distinguished privacy from mere secrecy, framing it as essential for pluralistic coexistence and individual flourishing, while acknowledging permissible limitations for compelling public interests like national security, provided they pass strict scrutiny. The ruling arose amid challenges to the Aadhaar scheme's biometric mandates but deferred specific validations, establishing a doctrinal foundation for future surveillance disputes. As Chief Justice, Chandrachud led benches applying this privacy doctrine to digital surveillance concerns. In petitions alleging unauthorized Pegasus spyware use, the Court in 2021 appointed an expert committee to investigate potential executive overreach, underscoring the need for independent oversight in interception regimes. Subsequent hearings under his tenure, including listings in 2023 and 2025, reinforced that surveillance tools must comply with procedural rigor and judicial review to prevent mass privacy violations, balancing state security claims against fundamental rights. In a February 2025 ruling on digital surveillance parameters, his bench mandated strict procedural safeguards for state monitoring, deeming blanket authorizations unconstitutional absent individualized suspicion and proportionality. These decisions extended Puttaswamy's principles, critiquing opaque executive practices while permitting targeted measures under legal bounds.

Religious and Cultural Disputes

In the Indian Young Lawyers Association v. State of case, decided on September 28, 2018, Chandrachud authored a forming part of the 4-1 majority that declared unconstitutional the prohibition on women aged 10-50 from entering the , a Hindu site in dedicated to Lord Ayyappa. He ruled that the exclusionary custom did not qualify as an "essential religious practice" under Article 25 of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion subject to public order, morality, and health, emphasizing instead the primacy of "constitutional morality" rooted in equality and dignity over discriminatory traditions. Chandrachud argued that the practice perpetuated -like discrimination beyond caste, invoking Article 17's abolition of untouchability, and rejected claims of biological impurity as patriarchal impositions incompatible with under Articles 14 and 15, which prohibit gender-based discrimination. The decision sparked widespread protests in , highlighting tensions between judicial intervention in temple customs managed under state oversight and claims of religious , though Chandrachud maintained that such practices must evolve to align with the Constitution's transformative ethos rather than remain insulated from scrutiny. Chandrachud's approach in Sabarimala extended the "essential practices" doctrine, originally from the 1954 Shirur Mutt case, to interrogate whether exclusions were integral to the faith's theology or accretions influenced by social norms, concluding that failed to substantiate the ban's religious necessity. He distinguished between belief and practice, noting that while devotion to Ayyappa as a celibate warranted deference, gender-based bans lacked scriptural or historical primacy and undermined women's agency, a view critiqued by dissenters like Justice for encroaching on denominational rights under Article 26. This ruling influenced subsequent reviews, including a 2020 referral to a larger bench, but reaffirmed judicial authority to enforce non-discrimination in publicly funded religious institutions. In the Madrasa Education Board v. State of Bihar and related Aligarh Muslim University minority status determination, delivered on November 8, 2024, Chandrachud wrote the 4-3 majority opinion overruling the 1968 S. Azeez Basha v. Union of India precedent, which had denied statutory universities minority status under Article 30(1), empowering religious and linguistic minorities to establish and administer educational institutions. He held that an institution's minority character hinges on its founding intent and community control at inception, not subsequent state regulatory involvement, allowing AMU—established in 1920 by Muslim leaders—to potentially reclaim minority privileges despite its central university designation under the 1920 Aligarh Muslim University Act. The judgment clarified that Article 30 safeguards cultural and religious preservation through education, rejecting rigid tests that would dilute minority autonomy amid secular oversight, while permitting state funding without forfeiting status if core administration remains community-driven. Dissenters argued this blurred lines between minority rights and public accountability, potentially enabling segregation, but Chandrachud countered that historical evidence of AMU's origins as a response to colonial marginalization justified deference to self-determination over uniform secular models. This decision balanced religious-cultural preservation against national integration, affirming that minority institutions can impart religious instruction without violating the secular framework, provided they do not discriminate arbitrarily.

Electoral and Constitutional Governance

In v. Union of India (decided 15 February 2024), a five-judge Bench presided over by D. Y. unanimously struck down the Electoral Bonds Scheme of 2018 as unconstitutional. authored the lead opinion, holding that the scheme violated voters' right to information under (1)(a) of the by enabling unlimited anonymous donations to political parties, which obscured funding sources and risked arrangements between donors and parties. The scheme, introduced via amendments to the Finance Act 2017 and notified on 2 January 2018, allowed individuals, companies, and entities to purchase bearer bonds in denominations from ₹1,000 to ₹1 crore from specified branches during designated periods, with parties required to redeem them within 15 days but without disclosing donors. Chandrachud's opinion emphasized that electoral transparency forms part of the rule of law and democratic accountability, rejecting the government's arguments on national security and voluntary disclosure as insufficient to override informational interests. The Court invalidated related provisions, including the deletion of Clause 182 of the Companies Act 2013 (prohibiting corporate political contributions) and amendments to the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act 2010 and Representation of the People Act 1951 that shielded donor identities. It directed the State Bank of India to submit encashment details for bonds issued from 12 April 2019 to 15 February 2024 to the Election Commission of India by 12 March 2024, with the Commission required to publish the data by 15 March 2024, enabling retrospective scrutiny of over ₹16,000 crore in bonds redeemed primarily by the Bharatiya Janata Party (52%), followed by the Indian National Congress (11%) and others. The ruling reinforced constitutional limits on executive overrides of legislative transparency norms, applying proportionality analysis to balance donor privacy against public interest in informed voting. While the government defended the scheme as curbing black money—citing data that 97% of bonds were ₹10 lakh or higher and most sales occurred pre-elections—the Court found no empirical evidence supporting reduced illicit funding, prioritizing verifiable transparency over presumed benefits. This decision, preceding the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, mandated immediate cessation of bond issuance and underscored the judiciary's role in safeguarding electoral integrity against opaque governance mechanisms.

Gender and Social Reforms

In the Indian Young Lawyers Association v. State of Kerala (2018), Justice Chandrachud delivered a affirming that the exclusion of women aged 10 to 50 from the did not constitute an essential religious practice under Article 25 of the Constitution, thereby upholding the right of all women to enter the temple on equal terms with men. He reasoned that such restrictions perpetuated gender discrimination incompatible with constitutional equality, emphasizing that religious practices must yield to where they infringe on dignity and autonomy. In Joseph Shine v. Union of India (2018), Justice Chandrachud concurred in striking down Section 497 of the , which criminalized adultery solely by men against married women, deeming it a "codified rule of " that treated women as chattel and undermined their agency and sexual . He argued that the provision reinforced outdated notions of spousal , violating Articles 14, 15, and 21 by discriminating on grounds of sex and failing to recognize women's equal in marital relations. As , Chandrachud authored the minority opinion in (2023), advocating for legal recognition of civil unions for couples as an extension of and equality rights under Articles 14, 19, and 21, though the 3-2 majority deferred marriage recognition to , citing legislative domain over personal laws. He stressed that non-recognition stigmatized relationships and denied entitlements like and , but the ruling affirmed state obligations to protect dignity without altering marriage's heteronormative framework. In Lt. Col. Nitisha v. Union of India (2021), Chandrachud's concurring view held that excluding women from permanent commissions in the contravened constitutional equality, directing the government to extend such commissions to women officers on par with men, addressing systemic barriers in . This built on prior rulings like Union of India v. Madhvi (2020), reinforcing empirical evidence of women's competence in combat roles through performance data from short-service commissions. On broader social reforms, Chandrachud contributed to judgments dismantling caste-based labor practices, such as in Sukanya Shantha v. Union of India (2021), where the Court, with his involvement, prohibited hereditary scavenging and tied to caste, mandating rehabilitation and compensation based on documented violations under the Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers Act, 2013. These decisions prioritized causal links between historical and ongoing exploitation, rejecting defenses rooted in tradition absent constitutional justification.

Economic and Commercial Matters

In Cox and Kings Ltd. v. SAP India Pvt. Ltd. (2023), a five-judge bench led by Justice Chandrachud upheld the "group of companies" doctrine in arbitration law, allowing non-signatories to arbitration agreements to be bound if they manifest intent to be part of the arrangement through conduct or mutual intent, thereby expanding party autonomy and facilitating efficient resolution of complex commercial disputes involving corporate groups. This decision, authored by him, reinforced 's pro-arbitration stance by interpreting the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, to prioritize consensual dispute mechanisms over rigid formalism, influencing multinational commercial contracts. Chandrachud further advanced commercial arbitration in In Re: Interplay between Arbitration Agreements under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996 and the Indian Stamp Act 1899 (2023), where his majority opinion clarified that unstamped or insufficiently stamped instruments are inadmissible only at the pre-enforcement stage, not curbing arbitral tribunals' jurisdiction outright, thus minimizing delays in commercial proceedings and aligning with economic efficiency goals. In a November 2024 ruling on unilateral arbitration clauses, he authored the majority view invalidating clauses imposing one-sided costs on parties as unconscionable under Section 28 of the Contract Act, 1872, promoting fairness in commercial agreements without undermining arbitration's speed. On insolvency matters, Chandrachud's opinion in Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Ltd. v. Amit Gupta (2021) emphasized the primacy of the (IBC), over general contract remedies, holding that triggering corporate insolvency resolution processes (CIRP) for operational debts requires genuine disputes to be adjudicated by the (NCLT), safeguarding commercial certainty for creditors. This built on his contributions to upholding IBC's framework, as seen in subsequent affirmations of committee of creditors' (CoC) commercial wisdom in resolution plans, prioritizing economic revival of distressed assets over individual creditor recoveries. A landmark economic rights decision came in the nine-judge bench ruling on property acquisition (2024), where Chandrachud's majority opinion interpreted Articles 39(b) and (c) of the to preclude state appropriation of without compensation, even for socialist redistribution, as it would undermine and individual incentives essential for wealth creation. The 8:1 verdict rejected expansive state claims over private resources, reinforcing constitutional limits on economic policies that erode property rights, with implications for land reforms and industrial licensing.

Notable Dissents

Aadhaar and Biometric Identification

In the 2018 judgment on the constitutionality of the (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016, a five-judge bench ruled 4:1 to uphold the legislation, finding it did not violate Articles 14, 15, 19, or 21 of the and was validly enacted as a . Justice Chandrachud authored the sole , spanning 481 pages, in which he declared the entire program unconstitutional from its inception in 2009 due to violations and procedural irregularities. Chandrachud argued that the Act's classification as a Money Bill was a misuse of to circumvent scrutiny by the , as its provisions extended beyond fiscal matters to regulate biometric and for non-subsidy purposes, undermining . He contended that Aadhaar's mandatory biometric enrollment—requiring fingerprints and iris scans from over 1.3 billion individuals—erodes the by centralizing sensitive data under the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), enabling potential through data aggregation, profiling, and tracking via linked databases and IP addresses. This framework, he noted, lacks robust mechanisms and exposes individuals to risks from UIDAI's dependency on foreign entities for biometric software , which it does not own. Applying the proportionality test derived from the 2017 ruling, Chandrachud found deficient across its components: while acknowledging the legitimate aim of efficient subsidy delivery, he held that the scheme lacks a rational to this goal given biometric authentication's documented failure rates—estimated at 2-15% in empirical studies—and disproportionate exclusion of marginalized groups, as evidenced by the Economic Survey 2016-17 reporting authentication failures leading to denied services. He emphasized that less intrusive alternatives, such as multi-factor demographic verification, exist and were not proven inadequate by the state, and that permitting private entities to use for authentication (e.g., banking, telecom) tilts the balance against without necessity. , in his view, are neither unique nor infallible, with errors compounding in large-scale systems to create exclusionary barriers that violate equality and under Article 21. Chandrachud's dissent further critiqued the reduction of plural identities to a singular 12-digit number, arguing it imposes a homogenized state-defined identity incompatible with constitutional and informational . In a 2021 review petition dismissal (again 4:1), he reiterated his position, dissenting on grounds that a subsequent five-judge bench in Rojer Mathew () had cast doubt on the Money Bill reasoning, necessitating referral to a larger bench rather than dismissal. His opinion has been cited internationally, including by Jamaica's in striking down a similar biometric ID system in , for its analysis of surveillance risks and data protection deficits.

Free Speech and Political Expression

In Abhiram Singh v. C.D. Commachen (decided January 2, 2017), Justice Chandrachud authored a 55-page dissent in a 4:3 ruling interpreting Section 123(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, which prohibits appeals to voters' religion, race, caste, community, or language during elections. The majority held such appeals by candidates or their agents as corrupt practices, extending the prohibition to voters' identities to prevent communal polarization. Chandrachud contended that the provision's grammatical structure—"his religion" or "his community"—referred solely to the candidate's identity, not voters', allowing candidates to discuss historical injustices tied to group identities without violating the law, as Parliament did not intend to suppress broader political discourse on social inequities. He emphasized that restricting speech on caste or religious grievances would unduly limit democratic expression, provided it did not directly appeal to voters' sectional identities for electoral gain. In Romila Thapar v. Union of India (decided September 28, 2018), concerning arrests under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, of activists linked to the 2018 Bhima Koregaon violence, Justice Chandrachud delivered a 43-page dissent advocating for a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe allegations of Maoist incitement, contrasting the 2:1 majority's refusal to mandate a specific investigative mode. The petitioners, including historian Romila Thapar, argued the Maharashtra Police's actions violated Articles 14, 19, and 21, including free expression rights, amid claims of fabricated evidence and prejudicial media leaks by investigators that tainted public perception and judicial fairness. Chandrachud highlighted investigative lapses, such as reliance on unverified electronic evidence and selective targeting, asserting that police bias—evident from leaks portraying arrestees as urban Naxals—compromised impartiality and necessitated an independent SIT to safeguard political dissent from state overreach. He noted the charges appeared "indiscriminate and unwarranted," part of a pattern potentially stifling civil liberties in politically charged contexts.

Fiscal and Legislative Procedures

In Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India (2018), Justice Chandrachud dissented on the legislative validity of the (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016, arguing that its passage as a under Article 110 of the Constitution bypassed essential parliamentary checks. He held that the Act's core provisions established a comprehensive identity and authentication ecosystem with regulatory and data-sharing mandates, extending far beyond the "only" financial elements—such as subsidies and benefits—required for classification, thus rendering the Speaker's certification a "fraud on the Constitution." Justice Chandrachud asserted that Article 110(3), deeming the Speaker's decision final, does not preclude , as certification involves substantive constitutional interpretation rather than mere procedural formality; he distinguished this from precedents like Mohd. Saeed Siddiqui v. State of (2014), emphasizing that unchecked executive influence over fiscal routes undermines and the Rajya Sabha's role in scrutinizing non-fiscal implications. The dissent, spanning significant portions of his 481-page opinion, warned that conflating incidental expenditure provisions with predominant non-financial objectives erodes democratic deliberation, potentially enabling governments to enact transformative laws without input. While the 4:1 majority upheld the status, citing the Act's focus on targeted financial delivery, Justice Chandrachud's position influenced later proceedings, including the referral in Rojer Mathew v. South Indian Bank Ltd. () to a seven-judge bench on of Money Bill certifications and his reiteration in the review petitions (2021).

Reforms and Institutional Initiatives

Leadership of e-Committee

Justice Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud chaired the e-Committee of the , the nodal agency established in 2005 to oversee the computerization and technological integration in the country's judicial system. During his tenure as chairperson, which commenced by early 2020, he directed efforts to modernize court infrastructure and processes under the e-Courts Mission Mode Project, focusing on phases II and the transition to phase III. This included prioritizing the development of robust digital platforms to address longstanding issues like case pendency and access to justice in subordinate courts. Under Chandrachud's leadership, the e-Committee expanded the National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG), a centralized database offering real-time monitoring of case status, institution, disposal, and pendency across more than 18,000 and subordinate courts, encompassing data on over 4.5 crore cases as of recent updates. The committee also rolled out nationwide e-filing capabilities, enabling electronic submission of pleadings and documents in civil and criminal matters, which by 2021 had been adopted in all high courts and a majority of courts to reduce physical filings and paperwork. Virtual court infrastructure was significantly bolstered, facilitating video conferencing for hearings; this proved instrumental during the , with over 19.2 million virtual hearings conducted in select high courts alone by mid-2022. Additionally, specialized modules for commercial dispute resolution were developed to expedite business cases through digital triage. Chandrachud advocated for in case management systems, culminating in the largest such FOSS-based platform globally, and initiated steps toward AI-assisted tools like for case management while emphasizing and judicial autonomy in technology adoption. His oversight extended to formulating rules for live-streaming proceedings in high-profile cases, enhancing public access to judicial functioning without compromising sensitive matters. These reforms aimed to bridge the urban-rural in legal services, though implementation varied across states due to infrastructural challenges.

Key Technological Implementations

As chairperson of the e-Committee of the , Justice Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud oversaw the integration of digital tools to enhance judicial efficiency, including the development of AI-driven systems for case management and translation. The e-Committee, under his leadership, advanced the e-Courts Project Phase III, which emphasized automation, data analytics, and virtual infrastructure to process over 5 pending cases across Indian courts as of 2023. A flagship initiative was the launch of SUPACE (Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Court's Efficiency) in 2021, an AI-powered platform designed to sift through vast case data, generate summaries, and identify relevant legal precedents, thereby reducing judicial workload by automating research tasks. Complementing this, SUVAS (Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvaad Software), inaugurated during his tenure as Chief Justice in 2023, employs AI for real-time translation of judgments and orders into nine Indian vernacular languages, including , Tamil, and , to improve accessibility for non-English speakers and address linguistic barriers in a multilingual . Further implementations included the rollout of e-Office and e-HRMS systems in the by 2024, promoting paperless administration and through digital workflows, which minimized physical documentation and enhanced eco-friendly operations. In parallel, a standardized operating procedure for digitizing and records, endorsed by the e-Committee on October 21, 2022, facilitated the online availability of historical judgments and archives, enabling public access via platforms like the National Judicial Data Grid. These efforts, building on earlier phases of e-Courts, incorporated live-streaming of select proceedings and AI-assisted transcription, collectively aiming to expedite case disposal rates, which improved by integrating for backlog management.

Criticisms and Controversies

Accusations of Activism vs. Restraint

Critics have accused Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud of in cases expanding , such as his lead opinion in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017), where he recognized the as intrinsic to life and liberty, interpreting Article 21 broadly to override statutory limits on . Some conservative commentators viewed this as overreach into legislative domain by imposing without textual basis in the . Conversely, Chandrachud faced accusations of excessive restraint during politically charged matters, particularly as . In the Maharashtra political crisis (2022), a bench led by him criticized Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari's invitation to Eknath Shinde's faction but declined interim relief to Uddhav Thackeray's government, citing his resignation, which opponents labeled as deferential to executive maneuvers. Similarly, in the electoral bonds scheme ruling (2024), the under his leadership struck down the scheme as unconstitutional for enabling opaque donations but refrained from ordering probes into past contributions or penalties, prompting critics like former judge to decry it as a "successful operation but dead patient" for avoiding accountability against ruling party beneficiaries. These charges often highlight perceived selectivity: activism in social reforms like disability rights expansions (Vikash Kumar v. UPSC, 2021) or queer union recognitions (, 2023, where rights were affirmed without marriage legalization), contrasted with restraint against central government actions, such as upholding Article 370's abrogation (2019) and limited intervention in cases like demonetization or Rafale procurement. Left-leaning sources, including senior advocates, attributed this to institutional pressure under a majoritarian , while rejected the activism-restraint binary, framing judicial as responsibility over . A rare counter-accusation of "hyperactivity" arose in a 2025 bail matter, where retired Rakesh Kumar alleged undue intervention, triggering inquiry. Such critiques underscore debates on judicial balance, with empirical patterns showing Chandrachud's dissents (e.g., biometric mandates) favoring expansive review, yet majority opinions as CJI often deferring on policy-laden executive decisions to preserve . Source credibility varies, as many restraint accusations emanate from opposition-aligned media potentially biased against the incumbent government, while claims appear in outlets wary of inflation eroding legislative primacy.

Political Case Handlings and Perceived Biases

Justice D. Y. Chandrachud, as from November 8, 2022, to November 10, 2024, presided over or participated in several high-profile political cases involving the central government's actions, including the abrogation of Article 370, the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), and the electoral bonds scheme. In the Article 370 case, a five-judge Bench upheld the Union government's 2019 presidential orders abrogating the special status of Jammu and Kashmir on December 11, 2023, ruling that Parliament had the competence to reorganize the state into Union Territories, though it directed elections for the by September 30, 2024, without restoring statehood immediately. Chandrachud authored a emphasizing the temporary nature of Article 370's provisions and rejecting claims of a federal breach. In contrast, on February 15, 2024, a five-judge Bench led by unanimously struck down the electoral bonds scheme introduced by the BJP-led government in 2018, declaring it unconstitutional for violating voters' right to information under (1)(a) and enabling arrangements between donors and political parties, with the ordered to disclose donor details by March 31, 2024. Regarding the CAA, challenges to its 2019 notification granting citizenship to non-Muslim refugees from , , and remained pending during his tenure, with no final ruling delivered, though interim stays on related rules were not imposed despite protests. On farm laws, had earlier dissented in a 2020 case on agricultural , advocating broader farmer protections, but the laws themselves were repealed by the government in November 2021 before a full verdict. Perceptions of bias in Chandrachud's handling of these cases diverged sharply along ideological lines. Critics aligned with opposition viewpoints, such as retired Justice , accused him of compromising by upholding Article 370's abrogation without restoring statehood and assigning benches perceived as favorable to the government in cases involving opposition leaders' arrests by agencies like the , labeling these as among his "seven mistakes" that eroded institutional autonomy. Similarly, analyses from left-leaning outlets portrayed his tenure as equivocal, with selective activism—progressive on electoral transparency but restrained against executive overreach in security-related matters—suggesting susceptibility to political pressures amid the BJP's dominance. Conversely, conservative and pro-government commentators alleged an anti-majoritarian or "Hindutva-skeptical" bias, pointing to Chandrachud's dissents in cases like Bhima Koregaon, where he advocated bail for activists in 2018, and his broader progressive leanings in social issues intersecting politics, such as privacy rights post-Aadhaar, as evidence of favoritism toward minority or opposition narratives over concerns. Social media trolling by pro-BJP accounts amplified claims of "anti-Hindu bias," particularly in temple-mosque disputes like Gyanvapi, where his benches allowed surveys but delayed final resolutions. As master of the roster, Chandrachud faced accusations from lawyers of failing to curb government influence over bench formations, potentially skewing outcomes in politically charged litigation, though he defended judicial neutrality by emphasizing evidence-based adjudication over presumptions of opposition roles. These perceptions, often amplified by partisan media, highlight systemic tensions in India's judiciary under executive dominance, with Chandrachud's mixed rulings—upholding some government actions while invalidating others—fueling debates on whether outcomes reflected legal merits or implicit ideological tilts.

Post-Retirement Residence Dispute

Following his retirement as Chief Justice of India on November 10, 2024, Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud was required to vacate the official Type VIII bungalow at 5, Krishna Menon Marg in New Delhi within the permissible period, typically one month, to allow for reallocation to serving judges. By July 2025, approximately eight months post-retirement, he had not vacated the premises, prompting the Supreme Court administration to formally request the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs to facilitate his removal. This delay exacerbated a housing shortage, with four incumbent Supreme Court judges reportedly lacking government-provided accommodation at the time. Chandrachud attributed the extended occupancy to familial circumstances, specifically the special needs of his two daughters, which necessitated time to identify and adapt a suitable, accessible residence. He emphasized that the stay was not intended to be indefinite and had packed luggage in preparation for relocation, while expressing intent to comply within legal bounds. The matter drew public and judicial scrutiny, including a perceived indirect reference by incumbent Sanjiv Khanna's successor during proceedings in 2025, highlighting the need for timely vacation of official entitlements. later addressed the episode, defending the delay as rooted in unavoidable family health requirements while acknowledging others' rights to voice opinions on the issue. He vacated the bungalow on August 2, 2025, relocating to a government-allotted Type VII residence at 14, Tughlaq Road.

Public Speeches and Engagements

Key Addresses on Judicial Independence

On April 8, 2023, during the platinum jubilee celebrations of the in , , Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud underscored that forms the foundation of public faith in the , stating that its legitimacy derives from the confidence people place in it as their "first and last access" in times of distress. He advocated for laws infused with "a touch of humanity" and to address real community challenges, such as floods affecting access to justice for marginalized groups in the court's jurisdiction. Chandrachud also called for collaboration among the , executive, and legislature through dialogue rather than public confrontation to advance . In a January 28, 2024, address at the Supreme Court's Diamond Jubilee celebrations in , Chandrachud asserted that the "art of judging must be free of social and political pressure and from the inherent biases which human beings hold," emphasizing initiatives to sensitize judges on biases related to , , race, , and sexuality. He clarified that an independent extends beyond institutional insulation from the executive and to the autonomy of individual judges in fulfilling their duties, principles rooted in the Supreme Court's inaugural sitting on the same date in 1950. On November 4, 2024, at an event organized by group in , shortly before his retirement, Chandrachud remarked that "independence of the judiciary does not mean always delivering verdicts against the government," citing instances where his rulings against the state, such as striking down the electoral bonds scheme, earned praise for independence, while agreements with government positions drew scrutiny. He warned of pressures from interest groups leveraging electronic and to influence outcomes and stressed that true requires judges to follow their conscience as guided by law and the . This address highlighted ongoing tensions between perceived judicial autonomy and external influences in high-profile cases.

Views on Constitutional Evolution

Justice D. Y. Chandrachud has articulated that the Indian Constitution functions as a , adapting to societal transformations rather than remaining confined to its original textual intent. In a speech on September 26, 2024, he emphasized that constitutional doctrine evolves alongside society, asserting that no single generation holds a monopoly over its interpretation and that restricting it to originalist readings would be unjust. He further noted on September 27, 2024, that the Constitution's enduring relevance stems from its sensitivity to changing societal needs, enabling it to address contemporary challenges without rigid adherence to 1950 framers' visions. Central to Chandrachud's perspective on this evolution is the , which he described on January 21, 2023, as a "north star" providing directional guidance for constitutional interpreters amid interpretive ambiguities. He views the doctrine not as a static barrier but as an evolving framework that has shaped the Constitution's identity through ongoing citizen-state interactions, allowing courts to safeguard core principles like and while permitting legislative adaptations. In a November 5, 2024, Supreme Court judgment he authored, Chandrachud clarified that the doctrine comprises "undefined concepts" such as and , applicable primarily to constitutional amendments rather than ordinary laws, underscoring its role in maintaining structural integrity without overreach into legislative domains. Chandrachud has positioned judges as active participants in this evolutionary process, stating on October 24, 2023, that the judiciary plays a vital role in social by serving as a focal point for engagement and transformation. This view aligns with his broader , where constitutional interpretation draws from lived human experiences to bridge foundational principles with modern realities, as reflected in compilations of his speeches. He advocates for an interpretive approach that privileges adaptability, cautioning against interpretations that fossilize the document and thereby undermine its capacity to foster equality and fraternity in diverse contexts.

Legacy and Assessments

Positive Impacts and Achievements

Chandrachud's tenure as Chief Justice of India, from November 9, 2022, to November 10, 2024, emphasized technological integration to improve judicial efficiency and access. He launched the e-SCR (Supreme Court Reports) portal on January 3, 2023, digitizing and providing free online access to over 34,000 historical Supreme Court judgments, facilitating easier research and transparency for litigants and the public. This initiative built on his prior role chairing the Supreme Court e-Committee, where he advocated for AI-driven case management and live-streaming of proceedings to reduce pendency and enhance accountability. Under his leadership, virtual hearings expanded nationwide, sustaining post-pandemic operations that minimized travel burdens and enabled remote participation, thereby broadening access to justice in a country with over 50 million pending cases as of 2023. In jurisprudence, Chandrachud contributed to rulings affirming core constitutional protections. As part of the nine-judge bench in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017), he helped establish the as intrinsic to Article 21's guarantee of life and personal liberty, setting a against arbitrary state intrusions while balancing security needs. In M. Siddiq v. Mahant Suresh Das (2019), the five-judge bench he joined awarded the disputed site to Hindu parties for a Ram temple, supported by archaeological evidence and historical title claims, while directing alternative land for a , thus resolving a 70-year communal flashpoint through legal finality. These decisions provided doctrinal clarity and empirical grounding, influencing subsequent privacy and property rights litigation. Chandrachud's administrative reforms included pushing for data-driven pendency reduction and upgrades, such as modernized courtrooms, which he described as essential for equitable delivery. Upon retiring, he reflected that he had "left the system better than I found it," citing institutional strides in and public engagement that enhanced judicial legitimacy amid rising caseloads. His efforts received international recognition, including the 2022 CLP Award for Global Leadership from Harvard Law School's Center for the , honoring his rule-of-law advancements in .

Critiques from Conservative and Progressive Viewpoints

Conservative commentators have accused Justice Chandrachud of excessive that undermines democratic processes, particularly in the Supreme Court's unanimous decision on February 15, 2024, to strike down the electoral bonds scheme, which they argue interfered with the legislature's policy on political funding transparency despite the scheme's intent to reduce black money in elections. Right-wing accounts, often aligned with the (BJP), have portrayed him as a to national interests, amplifying criticisms over rulings perceived to favor opposition-led governments, such as the May 2023 verdict granting the administration greater control over civil services, which was seen as overriding central authority. These critiques frame his tenure as prioritizing progressive interpretations over restraint, potentially eroding institutional balance, though such attacks have been dismissed by supporters as politically motivated trolling rather than substantive legal analysis. Progressive critics, including left-leaning legal scholars and activists, have faulted Chandrachud for selective liberalism and acquiescence to executive power, notably in the December 11, 2023, ruling upholding the government's 2019 abrogation of Article 370, which they contend legitimized federal overreach into Jammu and Kashmir without adequately safeguarding constitutional or . His authorship of the 2019 verdict awarding the disputed site to Hindu claimants drew ire for perceived capitulation to majoritarian sentiments, undermining secular principles despite prior dissents in privacy cases like the 2017 recognition. In the October 17, 2023, same-sex marriage denial, while acknowledging evolving societal norms, the bench under his leadership refused legal recognition, prompting accusations of timidity in advancing equality amid government opposition, with outlets like highlighting this as part of a pattern of compromises that preserved judicial pragmatism over bold reform. Such views, often from publications with progressive editorial slants, argue his equivocations—balancing rhetoric on dignity with deferential outcomes—eroded the judiciary's role as a counterweight to authoritarian tendencies.

Personal Life

Family and Health Challenges

Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud was first married to Rashmi Chandrachud, who died in 2007 after battling cancer. The couple had two sons, Abhinav Chandrachud and Chintan Chandrachud. In 2008, at age 49, Chandrachud married Kalpana Das, a from who shares his vegetarian lifestyle. Chandrachud and Kalpana Das have fostered two daughters, Priyanka (aged 22) and Mahi (aged 18), both diagnosed with , a rare causing and respiratory complications. This condition involves structural abnormalities in muscle fibers, leading to and delayed motor development, with no cure available; management focuses on supportive therapies like physical rehabilitation and ventilatory assistance. The daughters' health has imposed significant caregiving demands, including frequent medical interventions and specialized accommodations, which Chandrachud cited as reasons for delaying vacation of his post-retirement in November 2024. He described their comorbidities as severe, revolving family life around their needs and noting that invasive diagnostic tests, such as muscle biopsies, are particularly painful. has publicly stated that fostering these daughters transformed his worldview, emphasizing and the challenges of children with disabilities.

Interests and Post-Judicial Activities

Chandrachud follows a rigorous personal regimen centered on physical and mental wellness, incorporating daily practice—often starting at 3:30 a.m.—and a vegan diet to sustain vitality amid demanding schedules. He limits socializing to prioritize introspective "me-time," reflecting a preference for that predates his retirement. His longstanding interest in music, including aspirations to play —a skill deferred for 24 years due to judicial duties—has gained prominence post-retirement, alongside expanded reading of works such as A Year of Living Constitutionally. After retiring as on November 10, 2024, Chandrachud transitioned to academia, accepting a role as at , effective May 2025, to mentor emerging legal scholars and impart constitutional insights. He has undertaken selective private engagements to maintain intellectual engagement, eschewing sedentary idleness while defending post-retirement judicial assignments in tribunals as extensions of expertise without impropriety.

References

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