Law in India has evolved from religious prescription to the
current constitutional and legal system we have today, traversing
through secular legal systems and the common law.
India has a recorded legal history starting from the Vedic ages and some
sort of civil law system may have been in place during the Bronze Age and the
Indus Valley civilization. Law as a matter of religious prescriptions and
philosophical discourse has an illustrious history in India. Emanating from the
Vedas, the Upanishads and other religious texts, it was a fertile field
enriched by practitioners from different Hindu philosophical schools and later
by Jains and Buddhists.
Secular law in India varied widely from region to region and from ruler to
ruler. Court systems for civil and criminal matters were essential features of
many ruling dynasties of ancient India. Excellent secular court systems existed
under the Mauryas (321-185 BCE) and the Mughals (16th – 19th centuries)
with the latter giving way to the current common law system.
Law in British-ruled India
The common law system – a system of law based on recorded judicial
precedents- came to India with the British East India Company. The
company was granted charter by King George I in 1726 to establish “Mayor’s Courts”
in Madras, Bombay and Calcutta (now Chennai, Mumbai and Kolkata respectively).
Judicial functions of the company expanded substantially after its victory in
Battle of Plassey and by 1772 company’s courts expanded out from the three
major cities. In the process, the company slowly replaced the existing Mughal
legal system in those parts.
Following the First War of Independence in 1857, the control of company
territories in India passed to the British Crown. Being part of the empire saw
the next big shift in the Indian legal system. Supreme courts were established
replacing the existing mayoral courts. These courts were converted to the first
High Courts through letters of patents authorized by the Indian High Courts Act
passed by the British parliament in 1862. Superintendence of lower courts and
enrolment of law practitioners were deputed to the respective high courts.
During the Raj, the Privy Council acted as the highest court of appeal.
Cases before the council were adjudicated by the law lords of the House of
Lords. The state sued and was sued in the name of the British sovereign in her
capacity as Empress of India.
During the shift from Mughal legal system, the advocates under that
regimen, “vakils”, too followed suit, though they mostly continued their
earlier role as client representatives. The doors of the newly created Supreme
Courts were barred to Indian practitioners as right of audience was limited to
members of English, Irish and Scottish professional bodies. Subsequent rules
and statutes culminating in the Legal Practitioners Act of 1846 which opened up
the profession regardless of nationality or religion.
Coding of law also began in earnest with the forming of the first Law
Commission. Under the stewardship of its chairman, Thomas Babington Macaulay,
the Indian Penal Code was drafted, enacted and brought into force by 1862. The
Code of Criminal Procedure was also drafted by the same commission. Host of
other statutes and codes like Evidence Act (1872) and Contracts Act (1872).
Law after Independence
At the dawn of independence, the parliament of independent India was the
forge where a document that will guide the young nation was being crafted. It
will fall on the keen legal mind of B. R. Ambedkar to formulate a constitution
for the newly independent nation. The Indian Bar had a role in the Independence
movement that can hardly be overstated – that the tallest leaders of the
movement across the political spectrum were lawyers is ample proof. The new
nation saw its first leader in Jawaharlal Nehru, and a paternal figure in M. K.
Gandhi, both exemplary lawyers. Perhaps it is the consequent understanding of
law and its relation to society that prompted the founding fathers to devote
the energy required to form a Constitution of unprecedented magnitude in both
scope and length.
The Constitution of India is the guiding light in all matters executive,
legislative and judicial in the country. It is extensive and aims to be
sensitive. The Constitution turned the direction of system originally
introduced for perpetuation of colonial and imperial interests in India, firmly
in the direction of social welfare. The Constitution explicitly and through
judicial interpretation seeks to empower the weakest members of the society.
India has an organic law as consequence of common law system. Through
judicial pronouncements and legislative action, this has been fine-tuned for
Indian conditions. The Indian legal system’s move towards a social justice
paradigm, though undertook independently, can be seen to mirror the changes in
other territories with common law system.
From an artifice of the colonial masters, the Indian legal system has
evolved as an essential ingredient of the world’s largest democracy and a
crucial front in the battle to secure constitutional rights for every citizen.
No comments:
Post a Comment