Legal Services India - Law Articles is a Treasure House of Legal Knowledge and information, the law resources is an ever growing database of authentic legal information.

» Home
Thursday, November 21, 2024

No Fundamental Right To Protest Anywhere The Agitator Pleases: Kerala HC

Posted in: Constitutional Law
Wed, Jun 26, 24, 07:31, 5 Months ago
star star star star star
0 out of 5 with 0 ratings
comments: 0 - hits: 8049
The Federal Bank Ltd vs Federal Bank Officer’s Association that there is no fundamental right to protest at any place the agitator pleases and reasonable restriction can be imposed on the exercise of such right.

It is definitely at least honestly speaking for me myself most refreshing, most rejuvenating and so also most reassuring to note that the Kerala High Court while according the paramount importance to the interests of the people at large and so also to dignity, discipline and decorum in public spaces in a most learned, laudable, landmark, logical and latest judgment titled The Federal Bank Ltd vs Federal Bank Officer’s Association in OP(C) NO. 2332 OF 2023 against the judgment dated 16/10/2023 in CMA No.25 of 2021 of Additional District Court North Paravur and cited in Neutral Citation No.: 2024/KER/42258 and so also in 2024 LiveLaw (Ker) 381 which came up for admission on 27.05.2024 and that was finally pronounced as recently as on June 18, 2024 has minced just no words to hold most unequivocally that there is no fundamental right to protest at any place the agitator pleases and reasonable restriction can be imposed on the exercise of such right. It must be mentioned here that the Federal Bank Officers Association is a trade union which held a dharna in front of its Aluva officer holding posters, banners, placards and shouting slogans. They (respondent) argued that their acts are guaranteed under Article 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(b) of the Constitution and any order prohibiting it would be violative of the fundamental rights.

We need to note that the Single Judge Bench of Hon’ble Mr Justice Dr Kauser Edappagath minced just no words to hold clearly that the right under Article 19 is not absolute and it must be exercised in a way as not to interfere with the right of the employer to carry on their lawful business. It was also very clearly maintained by the Bench that:
The right also cannot be exercised in such a way as to intimidate the employers into submission. So it is really most heartening to note that the Kerala High Court restricted any demonstrations, dharnas, shouting slogans within 50 meters from the premises of the offices of the bank. No denying!

At the very outset, this remarkable, robust, rational and recent judgment authored by the Single Judge Bench comprising of Hon’ble Mr Justice Dr Kauser Edappagath of Kerala High Court sets the ball in motion by first and foremost putting forth in para 1 that:
This original petition has been filed challenging Ext.P7 judgment passed by the Additional District Court, North Paravur (for short, the appellate court) in CMA No.25/2021, dated 16th October 2023.

To put things in perspective, the Bench envisages in para 2 that:
The petitioner, the Federal Bank Ltd., is a banking company incorporated under the Indian Companies Act. The respondent is the Federal Bank Officers’ Association, a trade union which comprises officers in the cadre of Scale 1 to III (i.e., Assistant Managers, Managers and Senior Managers) of the petitioner’s Bank as its members. The petitioner instituted a suit as OS No.204/2020 before the Munsiff’s Court, Aluva (for short, ‘the trial court’) against the respondent for a permanent prohibitory injunction restraining the respondent, its members and supporters from obstructing the bank officials and customers from dealing with the bank, obstructing the ingress and egress of them, committing any acts of waste or damage to the bank’s property, holding any meeting or demonstration, dharna, erecting of tents, displaying posters and banners, shouting slogans within a radius of 200 metres from the premises of the head office, annex and nearby branches of the petitioner bank which are specifically described in the properties scheduled in the plaint and also for a mandatory injunction directing the respondent to remove the notice board, hoardings, banners and posters displayed in the plaint schedule properties.

While elaborating on the facts of the case, the Bench enunciates in para 3 that, Three items of properties are described in the plaint schedule. The plaint A schedule is the property where the head office of the petitioner’s bank is situated. The Plaint B schedule property is the property where the training centre of the petitioner’s bank functions, and the Plaint C schedule property is the property where the administrative office of the petitioner’s bank functions. According to the petitioner, the plaint A and B schedule properties are in its absolute possession and ownership, and the plaint C schedule property is in its possession under the lease agreement. It is alleged that on 3/6/2020, the respondent and a few of its office bearers, without any notice or intimation, held a surprise dharna in front of the head office of the petitioner’s bank at Aluva situated in the plaint A schedule property, holding posters, banners and placards in protest against the transfers of its employees and displayed a poster containing false and misleading contents in the notice board in the plaint A schedule property. The suit was immediately instituted apprehending further trespass and agitation in an intensified manner.

As we see, the Bench then discloses in para 4 that:
Along with the suit, the petitioner filed Ext.P2 application for temporary injunction under Order XXXIX Rule 1 of CPC. The respondent filed Ext.P3 counter affidavit to the injunction application. After hearing both sides in detail, the trial court allowed Ext.P2 injunction application whereby, the respondent, its members and supporters were restrained from obstructing the bank officials and customers from dealing with the bank, obstructing their ingress and egress, and committing any act of waste or damage to the petitioner bank’s property. They were also restrained from holding any meeting, demonstration, dharna, erecting of tents, displaying posters, banners and shouting slogans within a radius of 200 metres from the premises of the head office and nearby branches of the petitioner’s bank at Aluva till the disposal of the suit. Ext.P5 is the said order. Assailing Ext.P5, the respondent preferred appeal before the appellate court as CMA No.25/2021. After hearing both sides, the appellate court allowed the appeal in part and modified Ext.P5 order as under:

Restraining the respondent and its members from obstructing the ingress and egress of the officials and customers, from committing any act of waste or damage in the plaint schedule properties and in any manner conducting any protest or demonstration so as to cause obstruction to the peaceful functioning of the Banks and offices situated in the pliant schedule properties till the disposal of the suit.

Ext.P7 is the said order. It is challenging the said order; this Original Petition has been preferred.

It is worth noting that the Bench notes in para 8 postulating that:
The respondent association is a recognized trade union of the officers’ community of the petitioner bank, affiliated to the All-India Bank Officers’ Confederation, which is the apex organization of the Bank Officers of the Commercial Banks in the country. No doubt, the trade union has the right to protest and to carry on peaceful gatherings and demonstrations in the workplace as guaranteed under Article 19 of the Constitution of India. But the said right is not absolute. It must be exercised in such a way as not to interfere with the right of the employer to carry on their lawful business.

The exercise of right stands terminated the moment it interferes with the right of someone else to enjoy property or to carry on business. The right also cannot be exercised in such a way as to intimidate the employer into submission (Sreekumar v. State of Kerala 1996 (1) KLT 25). In Railway Board, New Delhi and another v. Niranjan Singh (AIR 1969 SC 966), a trade union worker was charged with the misconduct of addressing meetings within the railway premises in contravention of the directions issued by the employer. When he sought protection under clauses (a), (b) and (c) of Article 19(1), this Court rejected the same by holding that the exercise of those freedoms would come to an end as soon as the right of someone else to hold his property intervenes.

It was held that the fact that the citizens of this country have freedom of speech, freedom to assemble peacefully and freedom to form association or unions does not mean that they can exercise that freedom in whatever place they please. The exercise of that freedom will come to an end as soon as the right of someone else to hold the property intervenes. The Supreme Court went on to state that the validity of that limitation is not to be judged by the test prescribed in sub Articles (2) and (3) of Article 19.

Most significantly, most remarkably and most forthrightly, the Bench while maintaining a fine balance and drawing clear red lines on right to protest mandates in para 11 propounding that:
The Supreme Court, as well as various High Courts, have devised methods to strike the balance between the conflicting and competing interests of the employer and employees by fixing the distance rule whereby restricting the dharna, picketing, holding demonstrations or gherao, shouting slogans, etc. to a certain distance from the employer’s premises [See Orchid Employees’ Union (supra), Standard Chartered Grindlays Bank Ltd. (supra), Punjab and Sind Bank (supra), Wings Pharmaceuticals Pvt. Ltd (supra), Food Corporation of India, Chennai (supra) and Maruti Udyog Ltd. (supra)].

By relying on these decisions, the trial court, through a well-reasoned order, regulated the activities of the respondent association in the plaint schedule properties by restraining them from holding protests in any form within a radius of 200 metres from the premises of the head office and nearby branches of the petitioner bank at Aluva. It is settled that the appellate court would not interfere with the exercise of discretion of the court at the first instance and substitute its own discretion except where the discretion has been shown to have been exercised arbitrarily, capriciously or perversely or where the court had ignored the settled principles of law regulating grant or refusal of interlocutory injunctions.

If the discretion has been exercised by the trial court reasonably and in a judicial manner, the fact that the appellate court would have taken a different view may not justify interference with the trial court’s exercise of discretion [Punjab and Sind Bank v. Frontline Corporation Ltd. AIR 2023 SC 2786]. If the appellate court interferes without the existence of such grounds, it acts with material irregularity in the exercise of its jurisdiction; no doubt this court, under the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction under Article 227 of the Constitution of India, can interfere with the order of the appellate court.

The appellate court erred in ruling contrary to the ratio laid down in the decisions of the Supreme Court and various High Courts mentioned above wherein dharna/demonstrations have been restricted to certain metres from the premises of the employer. The appellate court failed to recognize that there is no fundamental right to protest at any place the agitator pleases, and that reasonable restriction can be imposed upon the exercise of such rights if proved to exist.

Hence, the judgment of the appellate court modifying the injunction order passed by the trial court taking away the distance rule restriction imposed by the trial court totally cannot be justified. Striking a balance between the rights of the petitioner bank as well as the rights of the respondent association, I am of the view that the respondent association should be restrained from making protests in any form within a radius of 50 metres from the premises of the head office and nearby branches of the petitioner bank more particularly described in the plaint schedule. By such modification, the constitutional right of the respondent association to protest and to form peaceful gatherings and form associations would not be curtailed.

Finally, the Bench then concludes by holding in para 12 that:
For the reasons stated above, Ext.P5 injunction order passed by the trial court as modified by the appellate court in Ext.P7 is further modified as follows:

The respondent association and its members are restrained by a temporary prohibitory injunction from obstructing the petitioner’s bank officials and customers from dealing with the bank, obstructing their ingress and egress, commit any act of waste or damage to the bank’s property, holding any protest meeting, dharna, demonstration, erecting tents or shouting slogans within a radius of 50 metres from the premises of the head office, annex and branches of the petitioner bank which are specifically described in the plaint schedule properties till the disposal of the suit.

OP(C) is disposed of as above.

In a nutshell, it is high time and Centre must enact a law prohibiting blocking of public spaces and public roads. It brooks no more delay any longer now! This definitely does not mean that citizens don’t have a right to protest. Of course, citizens have a right to protest but it cannot be at the cost of putting the other people at huge inconvenience by blocking public roads, rail tracks or any other public spaces putting others at huge inconveniences.

It thus merits no reiteration that this Kerala High Court ruling must now definitely be applauded, adored and strictly followed in all such similar cases to send a loud and clear message that right to protest cannot be unfettered and those who protest have to accord respect to the public space to protest in the most disciplined manner and only then can they claim the right to protest as guaranteed in Article 19 of the Constitution!

Sanjeev Sirohi, Advocate,
s/o Col (Retd) BPS Sirohi, A 82, Defence Enclave,
Sardhana Road, Kankerkhera, Meerut - 250001, Uttar Pradesh

Comments

There are no comments for this article.
Only authorized users can leave comments. Please sign in first, or register a free account.
Share
Sponsor
About Author
Sanjeev Sirohi Advocate
Member since Apr 20, 2018
Location: Meerut, UP
Following
User not following anyone yet.
You might also like
This article critically analyses the concept of Parliamentary privileges enshrined under Article 105 of the Constitution of India along with various judicial pronouncement.
Here we have two legal systems, one tracing its roots to Roman law and another originating in England or we can say one codified and the other not codified or one following adversarial type of system other inquisitorial or one is continental whereas the other one Anglo-American
The principle of gender equality is enshrined in the Indian Constitution in its Preamble, Fundamental Rights, Fundamental Duties and Directive Principles.
The constitutional interpretations metamorphose a non-federal constitution into a federal one which results into a shift from reality to a myth
What justice is? and why one wants access to it? are important question which need to be addressed in introductory part of the literature. Justice is a concept of rightness, fairness based on ethics, moral, religion and rationality.
It is not the whole Act which would be held invalid by being inconsistent with Part III of the Constitution but only such provisions of it which are violative of the fundamental rights
Thomas Mann had in 1924 said; a man’s dying is more the survivor’s affair than his own’. Today his words are considered to be true as there is a wide range of debate on legalizing euthanasia.
India became one of 135 countries to make education a fundamental right of every child, when the Parliament passed the 86th Constitutional amendment in 2002.
Following are the salient features of the amended Lokpal bill passed by Parliament:
Good governance is associated with efficient and effective administration in a democratic framework. It is considered as citizen-friendly, citizen caring and responsive administration. Good governance emerged as a powerful idea when multilateral and bilateral agencies like the World Bank, UNDP, OECD, ADB, etc.
A democratic society survives by accepting new ideas, experimenting with them, and rejecting them if found unimportant. Therefore it is necessary that whatever ideas the government or its other members hold must be freely put before the public.
This article describes relationship between Indian Legislative provisions and freedom of press.
This article gives an overview of the Definition of State as per Article 12 Of the Constitution of India with emphasis on Relevant case law
Coming straight to the nub of the matter, The Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court in Bir Singh v Delhi Jal Board held that Pan India Reservation Rule in force in National Capital Territory of Delhi is in accord with the constitutional scheme relating to services under the Union and the States/Union Territories
Jasvinder Singh Chauhan case that denial of passport or its non-renewal without assigning reasons as listed under the Passports Act, 1967 infringes the fundamental rights. who was praying for the renewal of his passport and issuance of a fresh passport to him.
In Indian Young Lawyers Association v/s Kerala has very laudably permitted entry of women of all age groups to the Sabarimala temple, holding that 'devotion cannot be subjected to gender discrimination'. It is one of the most progressive and path breaking judgment that we have witnessed in last many decades just like in the Shayara Bano case
Sadhna Chaudhary v U.P. has upheld the dismissal of a judicial officer on grounds of misconduct, on the basis of two orders passed by her in land acquisition cases. This has certainly sent shockwaves across Uttar Pradesh especially in judicial circles.
The term judiciary refers to the higher officials of the government i.e Judges of all the hierarchy of the courts. The constitution of India gives greater importance to the independence of the Indian judiciary. Every democratic country set up it’s own independent judiciary for the welfare of it’s citizens.
various allowances, perquisites, salaries granted to mp and mla
This article presents a glimpse of human life through the constitutional approach.
Er. K. Arumugam v. V. Balakrishnan In the contempt jurisdiction, the court has to confine itself to the four corners of the order alleged to have been disobeyed
As Parliamentarians, we remain the guardians and protectors of fundamental rights, and always need to ensure we are fulfilling our many responsibilities, as legislators, representatives and role models. to uphold the rights set out in the Declaration, particularly as regards safeguarding political and civil society space.
Kashmiri Sikh Community and others v. J&K has very rightly upheld PM's Employment Package 2009 for Kashmiri Pandits living in the Valley.
The Supreme Court on 12th September stuck down the penal provision of adultery enshrined under Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code.
President A. Akeem Raja case it has been made amply clear that, Freedom of religion can't trump demands of public order. Public order has to be maintained at all cost. There can be no compromise on it.
Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghosh who is a former Supreme Court Judge and former Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh High Court who retired in May 2017 and a current member of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) was appointed as India's first Lokpal
colonial era Official Secrets Act (OSA) as many feel that it has far outlived its utility. Before drawing any definite conclusion on such an important issue, we need to certainly analyse this issue dispassionately from a close angle.
Sri Aniruddha Das Vs The State Of Assam held that bandhs / road/rail blockades are illegal and unconstitutional and organizers must be prosecuted.
ABout changes in Changes in Constitutional (Forty-Second) Amendment Act
Definition of State as per Article 12 f the Constitution of India with emphasis on Relevant case law
Justice KS Puttaswamy (Retd) and Anr vs UOI held that right to privacy is a fundamental right.
You want India to defend Kashmir, feed its people, give Kashmiris equal rights all over India. But you want to deny India and Indians all rights in Kashmir. I am a Law Minister of India, I cannot be a party to such a betrayal of national interests.
Faheema Shirin RK Vs State of Kerala and others that right to access internet is a fundamental right forming part of right to privacy under Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
the Supreme Court of UK has gone all guns blazing by categorically and courageously pronouncing in Gilham v Ministry of Justice the whistle-blowing protection envisaged under Employment
The Constitution directs the government that High Court shall have power, throughout in relation to it jurisdiction, to issue to any person or authority, including in appropriate cases, any Government, directions, orders or writs, for the enforcement of any of the rights conferred by Part III and for any other purpose also.
What is child labour ? Why bonded in india?
Shiv Sena And Ors. Vs UOI whether the newly sworn in Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis enjoys majority in the State Assembly or not! This latest order was necessitated after Shiv Sena knocked the doors of the Apex Court along with Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and Congress.
Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and the National Register of Citizens (NRC), saying they are two different things. We all saw in different news channels that many people who were protesting did not had even the elementary knowledge of CAA but were protesting vehemently just on the provocation of leaders from different political parties
Sanmay Banerjee v/s. West Bengal in exercise of Constitutional writ jurisdiction on the appellate side has that people have every right to criticize dispensation running the country, being legislature, executive or judiciary
On May 16, 1946 Cabinet Mission Plan arbitrarily announced to group British Indian states in A, B & C categories. Assam was kept in Group C with Bengal, creating a predominantly Muslim zone in Eastern India like the one proposed to be setup in western India.
Top political leaders and Members of Parliament from Left Parties have very often raised the questions of atrocities and accommodation of these minorities even in the Parliament. Unfortunately when this dream of opening the doors of India for her cultural children was about to be realized
Why is it that even after more than 81 days the blocking of road at Shaheen Bagh in Delhi is continuing uninterrupted since 15 December 2019? Why is it that Centre allowed this to happen? Why were they not promptly evicted?
The Basic Structure Of Indian Constitution Or Doctrine Applies During The Time Of Amendments In Constitution Of India. These Basic Structure State That The Government Of India Cann’t Touch Or Destroy
Arjun Aggarwal Vs Union Of India And Anr (stay) dismissed a PIL filed by a petitioner who is a law student. The PIL had challenged the June 30 order of the Ministry of Home Affairs wherein considerable relaxations from lockdown were operationalised under Unlock 1.0
This blog deals explains the Right to Access Internet as a Fundamental Right under Constitution of India and the reasonable restrcitions which it is subject to and whether it can be considered to be a fundamental right or not.
This article talks about what exactly is meant by the doctrine of colourable legislation, how various case laws have come up time and again to reiterate its meaning and how the supreme court views this doctrine. To address legislative transparency for some improvements in the legislative system, colorable legislation is necessary to be studied
Shri Naini Gopal Vs The Union of India and Ors. in Case No. – LD-VC-CW-665 of 2020 has minced no words to hold that: We need to remind the Bank that the pension payable to the employees upon superannuation is a property under Article 300-A of the Constitution of India
Article 25 of the Constitution of India, thus ruled that the immediate family members of Covid-19 victims be permitted to perform the funeral rites of the deceased subject to them following certain precautionary guidelines
Top