Paper IPaper I · Polity

Tribunals and Quasi-Judicial Bodies

Art 323A and 323B, the 42nd Amendment basis, administrative tribunals (CAT, SAT), the major sectoral tribunals (NGT, ITAT, AFT, debt and securities tribunals), and the leading court rulings

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At a glance
PaperPaper ISubjectPolitySyllabusThe country's political system and Constitution of India, social systems and public administration, and regional and international security issues and human rights including its indicatorsImportanceMedium
TribunalsArticle 323aArticle 323bCentral Administrative TribunalNational Green TribunalArmed Forces Tribunal42nd AmendmentL Chandra Kumar

Why this matters for CAPF

Tribunals are the part of the constitutional structure where administration meets adjudication, and CAPF tests the static spine: which Amendment introduced tribunals (42nd, 1976), which Articles created them (323A and 323B), what the Central Administrative Tribunal does, and which sectoral tribunal handles which subject. There is also a human-rights and access-to-justice angle, since tribunals are meant to deliver speedy, specialised and cheaper justice but raise concerns about the independence of their members. This note gives the Art 323A versus 323B distinction, the tribunal table, and the leading case (L Chandra Kumar). The standard references are Part XIVA of the Constitution, the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985, the various founding Acts, and Laxmikanth's chapter on tribunals.

Constitutional basis (Part XIVA, Art 323A and 323B)

The 42nd Amendment, 1976 added Part XIVA containing two Articles on tribunals. CAPF tests the difference between them.

Article Provides for Who can set them up Subjects
Art 323A Administrative tribunals Only Parliament Recruitment and service matters of public servants of the Union and the States
Art 323B Tribunals for other matters Parliament or a State legislature Taxation, foreign exchange, industrial and labour disputes, land reforms, elections to Parliament and the legislatures, food supply, rent and tenancy, and other listed subjects

Two recurring traps: under Art 323A only Parliament can create tribunals and only one tribunal for the Union and one for each State (or a joint one); under Art 323B both Parliament and State legislatures can, and a hierarchy of tribunals is allowed.

Administrative tribunals

Tribunal Founding Act Jurisdiction
Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 Service matters of central government employees (recruitment and conditions of service); benches across the country
State Administrative Tribunal (SAT) Same Act, on a State's request Service matters of State government employees
Joint Administrative Tribunal Same Act Two or more States together

CAT was set up in 1985 on the basis of Art 323A. Its members include judicial and administrative members. The armed forces are outside CAT (they have the Armed Forces Tribunal).

Major sectoral tribunals (Art 323B and other Acts)

Tribunal Founding Act / year Subject
National Green Tribunal (NGT) National Green Tribunal Act, 2010 Environmental disputes and the enforcement of environmental rights; not strictly under Art 323A/323B but a key sectoral tribunal
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Income Tax Act (the oldest tribunal, set up 1941) Appeals in direct-tax matters
Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT) Armed Forces Tribunal Act, 2007 Service and disciplinary matters and court-martial appeals of the armed forces
Debts Recovery Tribunal (DRT) and DRAT Recovery of Debts Act, 1993 Recovery of debts due to banks and financial institutions
Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) SEBI Act, 1992 Appeals against orders of SEBI
National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and NCLAT Companies Act, 2013 Company-law and insolvency matters (insolvency under the IBC, 2016)
Telecom Disputes Settlement Tribunal (TDSAT) TRAI Act Telecom disputes
Central and State Electricity Regulatory Commissions / APTEL Electricity Act, 2003 Electricity tariff and disputes

Tribunals versus courts (the key distinction)

Feature Regular court Tribunal
Source The Constitution (judiciary, Part V and VI) A statute under Art 323A/323B or another Act
Procedure Bound by the strict rules of evidence and the Civil/Criminal Procedure Codes Follows principles of natural justice; more flexible procedure
Membership Only judges Judicial plus technical or administrative members
Purpose General adjudication Speedy, specialised, cheaper adjudication in a defined field

A tribunal is a quasi-judicial body: it decides disputes and follows fair procedure, but it is not part of the regular court hierarchy.

The leading case: L Chandra Kumar (1997)

In L Chandra Kumar v Union of India (1997), a seven-judge bench held two crucial things CAPF can test.

  • The power of judicial review under Art 32 (Supreme Court) and Art 226/227 (High Courts) is part of the basic structure and cannot be excluded by tribunals.
  • Therefore tribunals function as supplements to, not substitutes for, the High Courts. An appeal from a tribunal lies to a Division Bench of the High Court before any approach to the Supreme Court (subject to later statutory variations for some tribunals).

This struck down the earlier scheme that had tried to make tribunals the final word and bypass the High Courts. The independence and composition of tribunals has since been the subject of further rulings on the appointment and tenure of members.

Security and human-rights angle

  • Tribunals embody the access-to-justice value: they are meant to give faster, specialised and cheaper redress, easing the burden on courts and helping ordinary litigants (service employees, tax payers, debtors, environmental petitioners).
  • The Armed Forces Tribunal is the CAPF-relevant body: it hears the service and disciplinary grievances and court-martial appeals of armed-forces personnel, a forum for the rights of those in uniform. Note, however, that the AFT covers the armed forces of the Union; the service grievances of Central Armed Police Force personnel are handled through their own departmental and CAT mechanisms. Verify the precise forum for each force.
  • The recurring independence concern, that tribunal members are appointed and their tenure controlled by the executive whose actions they often review, is a fair-trial and separation-of-powers issue that the courts continue to police.

How CAPF asks it

  • Single-correct: which Amendment added tribunals (42nd, 1976); which Article covers administrative tribunals (Art 323A).
  • Matching: tribunal to subject (NGT environment, AFT armed forces, ITAT direct tax, DRT debt recovery).
  • How-many-statements-correct: a cluster on Art 323A versus 323B (only Parliament for 323A; both for 323B).
  • Assertion-reason: tribunals supplement the High Courts because judicial review is part of the basic structure.

Authored practice

Authored practice, not a verbatim PYQ.

  1. Provisions for tribunals were added to the Constitution by which Amendment. (a) 24th (b) 42nd (c) 44th (d) 73rd. Answer (b). The 42nd Amendment, 1976 added Part XIVA (Art 323A and 323B).

  2. Under Article 323A, administrative tribunals can be established by. (a) Parliament only (b) State legislatures only (c) either Parliament or a State legislature (d) the President. Answer (a). Only Parliament can establish them under Art 323A.

  3. Match the tribunal with its subject. (1) NGT (2) AFT (3) ITAT (4) DRT, with subjects: armed-forces service matters, environment, debt recovery, direct tax. Answer 1-environment, 2-armed-forces service matters, 3-direct tax, 4-debt recovery.

  4. In L Chandra Kumar (1997) the Supreme Court held that. (a) tribunals replace the High Courts (b) judicial review by the High Courts and the Supreme Court is part of the basic structure and tribunals are supplements (c) tribunals are unconstitutional (d) tribunals can override Art 32. Answer (b).

  5. The Central Administrative Tribunal was set up under which Act. (a) the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985 (b) the NGT Act, 2010 (c) the SEBI Act, 1992 (d) the Companies Act, 2013. Answer (a).

Common confusion

Often mixed up The correct position
Art 323A vs 323B 323A is administrative tribunals by Parliament only; 323B is other matters by Parliament or a State
Tribunal vs court A tribunal is a quasi-judicial statutory body, not part of the regular court hierarchy
Can tribunals exclude judicial review No; L Chandra Kumar held judicial review by the High Courts is basic structure
CAT vs AFT CAT handles central civil-service matters; AFT handles armed-forces service and court-martial appeals
Oldest tribunal The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (1941) is the oldest

Memory hook

  • "323A administrative, A for Parliament alone." Only Parliament under 323A.
  • "323B is for the rest, B for both legislatures."
  • "Tribunals supplement, not supplant," the L Chandra Kumar holding.
  • "Green NGT, soldier AFT, tax ITAT, debt DRT," the sectoral pairings.

Night before

  • The 42nd Amendment, 1976 added Part XIVA: Art 323A (administrative tribunals) and Art 323B (other matters).
  • Under Art 323A only Parliament can set up tribunals (CAT for the Union, SAT for a State).
  • Under Art 323B both Parliament and State legislatures can, for listed subjects (tax, labour, elections, land reforms).
  • CAT was set up under the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985.
  • Major sectoral tribunals: NGT (environment), AFT (armed forces), ITAT (direct tax), DRT (debt recovery), NCLT (company law).
  • L Chandra Kumar (1997): judicial review by the High Courts and Supreme Court is basic structure; tribunals supplement, not replace, the High Courts.
  • Tribunals are quasi-judicial, with judicial and technical members, following natural justice rather than strict procedure.

One-line recall

  • The 42nd Amendment, 1976 added tribunals (Part XIVA).
  • Art 323A covers administrative tribunals for service matters.
  • Only Parliament can create tribunals under Art 323A.
  • Art 323B covers tribunals for other matters.
  • Both Parliament and State legislatures can act under Art 323B.
  • CAT was established under the Administrative Tribunals Act, 1985.
  • The NGT handles environmental disputes.
  • The Armed Forces Tribunal handles armed-forces service and court-martial appeals.
  • The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (1941) is the oldest tribunal.
  • L Chandra Kumar (1997) held judicial review is part of the basic structure.
  • Tribunals supplement, and do not replace, the High Courts.
  • A tribunal is a quasi-judicial body with judicial and technical members.

Glossary

  • Tribunal: a statutory quasi-judicial body for specialised adjudication.
  • Quasi-judicial: deciding disputes by fair procedure without being a regular court.
  • Art 323A: administrative tribunals for the service matters of public servants.
  • Art 323B: tribunals for taxation, labour, land reforms, elections and other listed matters.
  • CAT: the Central Administrative Tribunal for central employees.
  • NGT: the National Green Tribunal for environmental disputes.
  • AFT: the Armed Forces Tribunal for service and court-martial matters.
  • L Chandra Kumar: the 1997 ruling that judicial review cannot be excluded by tribunals.
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