| Relevance: GS-II (Indian Constitution, Structure & Functioning of Judiciary, Governance) | Source: Supreme Court Proceedings / Legal Reviews, 2026 |
SC Weighs SOP for urgent cases Affecting Life and Liberty
1 · What is the news in simple words?
| Imagine police coming to arrest someone or bulldozers arriving to demolish a house in the middle of the night or on a Sunday. If the courts are closed, where does a citizen go for immediate help?
To solve this, a three-judge Bench of the Supreme Court, led by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, has agreed to create a formal Standard Operating Procedure (SOP). This new rulebook will ensure that citizens can approach constitutional courts at any time—day or night—for urgent cases that threaten their basic life and liberty. |
2 · Why is a 24/7 rulebook needed right now?
| Currently, getting a late-night hearing depends heavily on chance and the personal discretion of judges. A formal SOP will make urgent justice a structured right rather than a random favor: |
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The Ground Reality
Off-Hour State Action
Harsh state actions—like late-night arrests, sudden morning demolitions, custodial violence, or deportations—often happen during weekends, holidays, or when courts are closed, leaving citizens helpless.
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The Morning Bell Rule
Liberty Can’t Wait
The petition rightly argues that human liberty cannot depend on office timings or wait for the morning court bell to ring. Once a house is demolished or a person is unlawfully deported, the damage is irreversible.
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The CJI’s Vision
One-Hour Response
CJI Surya Kant noted that a clear SOP would drastically cut down waiting times. He suggested that once an urgent plea is mentioned, the court should ideally respond within an hour!
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The Systemic Shift
Rules Over Discretion
While the Supreme Court has held famous “midnight hearings” before (like for urgent death penalty stays), they were ad-hoc. An SOP converts this unpredictable system into an official, guaranteed institution.
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- What is the Government’s Stand? The Solicitor-General agreed that an SOP is necessary, but suggested that the Supreme Court should prepare these rules internally on its administrative side, rather than passing a judicial court order.
- Why this matters for Democracy: In a country governed by the Rule of Law, fundamental rights must exist in practice, not just on paper. The Constitution cannot go to sleep at night!
| UPSC Prelims Quick Facts | ||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to constitutional remedies and judicial functioning in India, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (b) 1 and 3 only
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