The PIL, which could be listed for hearing during the week, termed yesterday's notification of Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, as "dictatorial" claiming it did not grant reasonable time to citizens for exchanging the specified bank notes to legitimate notes to avoid "large scale mayhem, life threating difficulties".
The plea, filed by Delhi-based lawyer Vivek Narayan Sharma, has sought either quashing of the notification or a direction to the Centre for grant of "reasonable time frame" to citizens for exchanging the demonetised currency notes to avoid difficulties.
"As a result the lives, livelihood, existence, business, trade and education etc. Of billions of citizens shall get affected, in innumerable, uncalculated and uncountable ways.
"The implementation of phasing out of specified bank notes, overnight, fails the test of reasonableness and care for its citizens by the Respondent Government," the PIL said.
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of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes would mean more than Rs 15 lakh crore worth of high-value legal tender being withdrawn from circulation.
It, however, said the petitioner was not against the scheme of phasing out of specified bank notes, but against the manner of its implementation as it has created "panic and Emergency-like situation all around India".
"... 1.25 billion of citizens are going to be clueless about running their day-to-day life till the time the transition from specified bank notes to new bank notes takes place. The whole chain of transaction will be affected, making people worry more about procuring money, leaving them standing in line, in banks, to obtain legitimate currency notes and affect their work & trade," the plea said.
Referring to an RBI report, the PIL said "out of the total Rs 16.42 lakh crore value of bank notes in circulation as on March 31, 2016, as much as Rs 14.18 lakh crore, i.E. Over 86 per cent, consisted of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes."