A five-judge constitution bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra today reserved its verdict after hearing arguments on the matter for almost five days from a battery of senior lawyers including Attorney General K K Venugopal, Harish Salve, Colin Gonsalves and Anand Grover.
The bench was faced with such questions including whether the court can rely on or refer to parliamentary committee reports in judicial proceedings.
The issue whether a parliamentary panel report can be relied upon in judicial proceedings had arisen after the petitioners had referred to the 81st Report of Parliamentary Standing Committee of December 22, 2014, allegedly indicting some pharma firms for conducting trials of the controversial Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine.
Salve, appearing for a pharma company, had said that the report of a parliamentary standing committee has a "persuasive" value but was neither binding, nor could it be used to prove disputed facts.
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Attorney General (AG) Venugopal had concurred with the submissions of Salve and, while referring to the privileges of the House and its committees and the concept of separation of powers, said that no report of any committee of Parliament can be subjected to "judicial scrutiny or review".
"The separation of power has been recognised as part of the basic structure of Constitution," Venugopal had said.
Senior advocate Grover, appearing for a petitioner opposing the controversial HPV vaccine, had said he was not relying on the parliamentary panel report but had rather referred to it.
The case came up for hearing in the apex court in 2012 and centred around aspects relating to action taken by the Drugs Controller General of India and the Indian Council of Medical Research pertaining to the approval of HPV vaccine manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline Asia Pvt Ltd and MSD Pharmaceuticals Pvt Ltd to prevent cervical cancer in women.
It had said it was of the "prima facie view" that the Parliamentary Standing Committee report may not be tendered as a document to augment the stance on the factual score that a particular activity was unacceptable or erroneous.
The top court had then framed two questions -- one, whether in a litigation filed before it either under Article 32 or Article 136 of the Constitution, the court can refer to and place reliance upon the report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee.
The court was hearing two PILs filed by activist Kalpna Mehta and Sama-Resource Group for Women and Health.
The issue of untimely death of some people and the grant of compensation to their families had arisen in the hearing in which the attention of the court was drawn to the Report of Parliamentary Standing Committee.
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