Fair, reasoned process must decide citizenship: Supreme Court
The Supreme Court on Monday (July 13, 2026) held that the determination of citizenship and foreigner status must be undertaken through a “fair, lawful and
The Supreme Court on Monday (July 13, 2026) held that the determination of citizenship and foreigner status must be undertaken through a “fair, lawful and reasoned” process, as it set aside a batch of 27 Gauhati High Court judgments declaring the appellants to be foreigners and remanded the cases to the Foreigners Tribunals concerned for fresh adjudication. A Bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta observed that while the state has a legitimate interest in ensuring that persons who are legally ineligible for an Indian citizenship do not obtain such a status through “false claims”, the “grave consequence” of being declared a foreigner must follow a procedure that adheres to constitutional guarantees. “A state action which is arbitrary cannot claim the protection of law merely because it is clothed in statutory form. A proceeding which may result in a person being declared a foreigner cannot be sustained if the procedure adopted is mechanical, one-sided, or devoid of application of mind... The Tribunal must examine whether the proceedee had a fair opportunity, whether the main grounds were disclosed, whether the evidence before it was capable of supporting the reference, and whether the conclusion follows from the material on record,” the judgment, authored by Justice Nath, said. The High Court had dismissed the appeals against the orders of the Foreigners Tribunals declaring the appellants to be foreigners after noting that none of them had appeared before the tribunals despite having been served notices. It had observed that, in the absence of any written statement, documents or evidence from the appellants, the tribunals had “no option” but to affirm the references.
‘Constitutional mandate’ The apex court, however, clarified that the remand should not be construed as an affirmation of the appellants’ claim to Indian citizenship. Rather, it said, the exercise was intended solely to ensure that the serious civil consequences of being declared a foreigner flow only from an adjudication that is legally sustainable and consistent with the principles of fairness. “The remand being directed is not intended to confer any equity in favour of a person who is unable to establish his or her claim. It is only to ensure that the serious consequence of being declared a foreigner follows from an adjudication which satisfies the requirements of the Foreigners Act, 1946 (1946 Act), the Foreigners (Tribunals) Order, 1964, and the constitutional mandate of fairness,” the Bench observed. Accordingly, the Bench set aside both the High Court judgments and the corresponding opinions of the Foreigners Tribunals concerned, directing the tribunals to decide the matters afresh without being influenced by their earlier findings or those of the High Court. It said the fresh adjudication must involve an independent assessment of the evidence and the rival claims in accordance with law and should, as far as possible, be completed within six months. The court further directed that no coercive steps be taken against the appellants until the Foreigners Tribunals render fresh opinions. It also directed the appellants to appear before the tribunals within four weeks, cooperate with the proceedings and refrain from seeking unnecessary adjournments. ‘High legal consequence’ Justice Nath also acknowledged that questions of citizenship and foreigner status occupy a field of “high constitutional and legal significance”, particularly because a declaration that a person is a foreigner carries far more than ordinary civil consequences.
