Create a custom practice set
Pick category, difficulty, number of questions, and time limit. Start instantly with your own quiz.
Generate QuizPick category, difficulty, number of questions, and time limit. Start instantly with your own quiz.
Generate QuizNo weekly quiz is published yet. Check the weekly page for the latest updates.
View Weekly PageAnswer: Courts can review decisions if ouster clause violates Constitution or basic structure, or if decision suffers from jurisdictional error, mala fides, or violation of natural justice
Ouster clauses jurisprudence in India: (a) L. Chandra Kumar v. Union of India (1997): Tribunals' decisions subject to HC/SC judicial review; ouster clauses cannot exclude constitutional courts' jurisdiction, (b) Judicial review grounds despite ouster clause: (i) Jurisdictional error (decision-maker acted beyond authority), (ii) Mala fides (bad faith, improper purpose), (iii) Violation of natural justice (no hearing, bias), (iv) Constitutional violation (Fundamental Rights, basic structure), (c) Rationale: Constitutional supremacy — Parliament cannot by ordinary law exclude judicial review of constitutional matters; basic structure doctrine limits amendment power too, (d) Balance: Respect for legislative intent vs protection of constitutional rights. Illustrates calibrated judicial oversight: ouster clauses not absolute bar to review.