Legacy IAS · UPSC Polity · Article-by-Article Analysis
Fundamental Rights vs Directive Principles
Every specific Article clash — Art.15 vs Art.46, Art.19 vs Art.39(b)/(c), Art.14 vs Art.38 — explained with its case, amendment, and current position.
Art.15 vs Art.46
Art.19 vs Art.39(b)(c)
Art.14 vs Art.38
Art.21 ← DPSPs
Art.25 vs Art.44/48
Art.31 vs Art.39(b)(c)
Foundation — Read This First
Why Do These Articles Conflict?
The framers deliberately put Fundamental Rights (Part III) and DPSPs (Part IV) in tension — FRs protect the individual from the state; DPSPs push the state to build collective welfare. Real governance needs both, and sometimes they pull in opposite directions.
Part III · Articles 12–35
Fundamental Rights
Individual liberty · Negative duties on State · “State shall NOT discriminate / restrict / take property without law”
vs
Part IV · Articles 36–51
Directive Principles
Social welfare · Positive duties on State · “State SHALL distribute resources / reduce inequality / provide education / ban cow slaughter”
Article 37 — DPSPs “shall not be enforceable by any court, but the principles therein laid down are nevertheless fundamental in the governance of the country.” When the State makes a law applying DPSPs, that law may violate a FR. Courts then decide: which wins?
Conflict 1 — The Reservation Battle
Article 15 (FR) vs Article 46 (DPSP)
Fundamental Right
Article 15
State shall not discriminate on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth. Art.15(2): No citizen shall be denied access to public places on these grounds.
vs
Directive Principle
Article 46
The State shall promote educational and economic interests of the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and other weaker sections, and shall protect them from social injustice and all forms of exploitation.
📖 Champakam Dorairajan (1951) — The Story
1950, Madras. Champakam Dorairajan, a Brahmin woman with excellent marks, applies to a government medical college. Rejected — not because of her grades but because the Communal Government Order reserved seats by caste and religion: so many for Brahmins, so many for non-Brahmins, so many for Muslims etc.
State argued: We are implementing Art.46 DPSP — promoting educational interests of backward communities.
Champakam argued: Art.15(1) prohibits discrimination based on caste. Art.29(2) prohibits denial of admission to State educational institutions on grounds of caste. This G.O. does exactly that.
SC held: FRs win. DPSPs cannot override Fundamental Rights. The Communal G.O. is void. This was the FIRST case establishing FRs > DPSPs.
State argued: We are implementing Art.46 DPSP — promoting educational interests of backward communities.
Champakam argued: Art.15(1) prohibits discrimination based on caste. Art.29(2) prohibits denial of admission to State educational institutions on grounds of caste. This G.O. does exactly that.
SC held: FRs win. DPSPs cannot override Fundamental Rights. The Communal G.O. is void. This was the FIRST case establishing FRs > DPSPs.
⚡ The Tension
Art.15 = no discrimination by caste/religion. Art.46 = actively promote backward classes (which necessarily involves identifying them by caste). One prohibits using caste; the other requires using caste.
⚖ Court’s Answer
Champakam Dorairajan (1951) — FRs prevail over DPSPs. First clear statement that FRs > DPSPs in case of conflict. Communal G.O. struck down.
✅ Resolution — 1st Amendment 1951
Parliament added Art.15(4): “Nothing shall prevent the State from making special provisions for the advancement of socially and educationally backward classes or SC/STs.” Exception carved inside the FR itself.
1st Amendment 1951 → Art.15(4)
93rd Amendment 2005 → Art.15(5) OBCs
103rd Amendment 2019 → Art.15(6) EWS
Current Position: Art.15(3)/(4)/(5)/(6) are express exceptions to Art.15(1)/(2). The DPSP goal of Art.46 has been embedded within the FR itself by adding these clauses. Conflict resolved by constitutional design.
Conflict 2 — The Property and Trade Battle
Article 19 (FR) vs Articles 39(b) & 39(c) (DPSP)
Articles 39(b) and 39(c) are the most litigated DPSPs in Indian constitutional history. Art.39(b): Ownership and control of material resources of the community are distributed to best subserve the common good. Art.39(c): The economic system does not result in concentration of wealth to the common detriment.
Fundamental Right
Art.19(1)(f) + 19(1)(g)
Art.19(1)(f): Right to acquire, hold and dispose of property [deleted by 44th Amendment 1978]. Art.19(1)(g): Right to practise any profession, occupation, trade or business.
vs
Directive Principles
Articles 39(b) & 39(c)
Distribute material resources for common good [39(b)]. Prevent concentration of wealth and means of production [39(c)]. Justify: nationalisation, land redistribution, state monopolies.
📖 Three Battlegrounds
1. Bank Nationalisation (1970): Indira Gandhi nationalised 14 banks to implement Art.39(c). Bank owners argued: violates Art.19(1)(g) — right to carry on banking business. SC in R.C. Cooper v. Union of India (1970) struck down the ordinance on procedural grounds. Parliament responded with a fresh ordinance.
2. Cow Slaughter — Hanif Qureshi (1958): Bihar banned cattle slaughter (Art.48 DPSP). Butchers argued it violates Art.19(1)(g) — right to trade. SC: Partial ban on cows/calves = valid reasonable restriction. Total ban on old bulls = unreasonable, struck down.
3. Zamindari Abolition: Taking landlords’ land for redistribution (Art.39(b)) clashed with Art.19(1)(f) — right to hold property. Resolved by 1st Amendment creating Art.31A and the 9th Schedule.
2. Cow Slaughter — Hanif Qureshi (1958): Bihar banned cattle slaughter (Art.48 DPSP). Butchers argued it violates Art.19(1)(g) — right to trade. SC: Partial ban on cows/calves = valid reasonable restriction. Total ban on old bulls = unreasonable, struck down.
3. Zamindari Abolition: Taking landlords’ land for redistribution (Art.39(b)) clashed with Art.19(1)(f) — right to hold property. Resolved by 1st Amendment creating Art.31A and the 9th Schedule.
⚡ The Tension
Art.39(b)/(c) require redistribution of wealth. But redistribution means taking from some — which can violate Art.19(1)(f)/(g): right to hold property and carry on trade.
⚖ Court’s Path
Kesavananda (1973) upheld Art.31C partly. Minerva Mills (1980) struck down extension of Art.31C to ALL DPSPs. Only 39(b)/(c) get Art.31C immunity from Arts.14 and 19.
✅ Current Resolution
Art.31C protects laws implementing only Art.39(b)/(c) from challenge under Arts.14/19. Art.19(1)(f) deleted by 44th Amendment. DPSPs justify “reasonable restrictions” under Art.19(6).
1st Amendment → Art.31A protects land reform
25th Amendment → Art.31C born
44th Amendment → Art.19(1)(f) deleted
“Article 39(b) and (c) represent the constitutional mandate for a socialist economic order. But this mandate cannot be used to destroy the constitutional framework within which it operates.”— Minerva Mills v. Union of India (1980)
Current Position: Art.19(1)(f) is deleted. Art.19(1)(g) survives — DPSPs constitute “public interest” justifying restrictions under Art.19(6). Art.31C protects only 39(b)/(c) laws from Arts.14/19 challenge (not all DPSPs). 42nd Amendment’s extension to ALL DPSPs struck down in Minerva Mills.
2024 Development — Property Owners Association v. State of Maharashtra: A 9-judge bench (8:1) held that NOT every privately owned resource can be treated as a “material resource of the community” under Art.39(b). The State cannot take over all private property by merely claiming Art.39(b). This significantly narrows the sweep of Art.39(b).
Conflict 3 — Equality vs Equity
Article 14 (FR) vs Article 38 (DPSP)
Fundamental Right
Article 14
The State shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws. Formal equality — treat equals equally.
vs
Directive Principle
Article 38
The State shall strive to promote the welfare of the people by securing a social order in which justice — social, economic, political — shall inform all institutions. Substantive equality — treat unequals unequally to achieve real equality.
📖 N.M. Thomas (1976) — The Story
Kerala, 1975. The state gave SC/ST government employees additional time to pass a qualifying test for promotion. N.M. Thomas, a non-SC/ST employee, argued this violates Art.14 — we are being treated differently in government employment. The State argued: Art.38 and Art.16(4) support affirmative action.
SC held (7-judge bench): Art.16(4) is not an exception to Art.16(1) — it IS part of the concept of equality. Real equality sometimes requires treating unequals differently. Justice Krishna Iyer’s landmark judgment — intellectual forerunner of Minerva Mills’ harmony doctrine.
SC held (7-judge bench): Art.16(4) is not an exception to Art.16(1) — it IS part of the concept of equality. Real equality sometimes requires treating unequals differently. Justice Krishna Iyer’s landmark judgment — intellectual forerunner of Minerva Mills’ harmony doctrine.
⚡ The Tension
Art.14 = formal equality (same law for all). Art.38 = substantive equality (different treatment to achieve equal outcomes). Special laws for backward classes seem to treat people unequally — Art.14 challenge.
⚖ Court’s Path
N.M. Thomas (1976): Art.16(4) is part of equality, not exception. Indra Sawhney (1992): 27% OBC reservation upheld with 50% cap. DPSPs support affirmative action within Art.14’s framework.
✅ Current Position
Art.14 now interpreted to include substantive equality. Art.38 DPSP gives content to what “equality” means. They are complementary — not conflicting. Classification serving Art.38/46 goals = valid “reasonable classification” under Art.14.
Current Position: Art.14 and Art.38 are read harmoniously. Affirmative action does not violate Art.14 — it expresses the substantive equality Art.14 intends. DPSPs give interpretive content to FRs rather than conflicting with them.
Conflict 4 — The 28-Year Property War
Article 31 (FR — Right to Property) vs Articles 39(b)/(c) (DPSP)
This was the biggest and most prolonged conflict in Indian constitutional history. It began in 1950 with zamindari abolition and ended only when Art.31 was deleted as an FR by the 44th Amendment (1978). Every landmark case — Shankari Prasad, Golak Nath, Kesavananda — is a chapter in this single story.
Fundamental Right (Now Deleted)
Article 31
No person shall be deprived of property save by authority of law. No property shall be compulsorily acquired save for public purpose and without compensation. [Deleted as FR by 44th Amendment 1978 → Now Art.300A]
vs
Directive Principles
Articles 39(b) & 39(c)
Distribute material resources for common good [39(b)]. Prevent concentration of wealth [39(c)]. Require the State to TAKE property from landlords and redistribute — necessarily without full market compensation.
📖 The 28-Year War — Zamindars vs India’s Poor (1950–1978)
The Problem: A few thousand zamindars owned most of India’s land. Millions of tenant farmers had no rights. The government wanted to give land to the tiller. But zamindari abolition = compulsory acquisition = must pay compensation under Art.31(2). Courts examined whether compensation was adequate and struck down land reform laws offering inadequate compensation.
Parliament’s response: 1st Amendment (9th Schedule, Art.31A/31B), 4th Amendment (courts cannot examine adequacy of compensation), 17th Amendment (more 9th Schedule laws). But courts kept finding new grounds to review them.
Golak Nath Crisis (1967): SC said Parliament cannot amend FRs at all. If Art.31 is an FR, Parliament cannot amend it to allow land reforms. India’s entire land reform agenda was at risk.
25th Amendment + Art.31C (1971): Laws implementing Art.39(b)/(c) shall not be void even if they violate Art.31, 14, or 19. A declaration in the law itself is final — courts cannot examine it.
Kesavananda (1973): Art.31C partly valid — 39(b)/(c) laws protected from Arts.14/19/31 challenge. But declaration clause struck down — courts can still examine if the law actually implements 39(b)/(c).
Final Resolution — 44th Amendment (1978): Right to Property deleted as FR. Art.19(1)(f) and Art.31 removed from Part III. Art.300A created — property is now only a constitutional right. The war ended.
Parliament’s response: 1st Amendment (9th Schedule, Art.31A/31B), 4th Amendment (courts cannot examine adequacy of compensation), 17th Amendment (more 9th Schedule laws). But courts kept finding new grounds to review them.
Golak Nath Crisis (1967): SC said Parliament cannot amend FRs at all. If Art.31 is an FR, Parliament cannot amend it to allow land reforms. India’s entire land reform agenda was at risk.
25th Amendment + Art.31C (1971): Laws implementing Art.39(b)/(c) shall not be void even if they violate Art.31, 14, or 19. A declaration in the law itself is final — courts cannot examine it.
Kesavananda (1973): Art.31C partly valid — 39(b)/(c) laws protected from Arts.14/19/31 challenge. But declaration clause struck down — courts can still examine if the law actually implements 39(b)/(c).
Final Resolution — 44th Amendment (1978): Right to Property deleted as FR. Art.19(1)(f) and Art.31 removed from Part III. Art.300A created — property is now only a constitutional right. The war ended.
⚡ The Core Tension
Art.31 required compensation for property taken. Art.39(b)/(c) required redistribution — but full market compensation would make redistribution unaffordable. State could not simultaneously pay full price AND redistribute effectively.
⚖ Key Cases
Shankari Prasad (1951), Sajjan Singh (1965), Golak Nath (1967), Kesavananda Bharati (1973), Minerva Mills (1980) — entire FR-DPSP jurisprudence grew from this conflict.
✅ Resolution
44th Amendment (1978) deleted Art.31 as an FR. No longer in Part III — so no direct FR-DPSP conflict. Art.300A protects property as a constitutional right with limited court scrutiny.
1st Amend. → Art.31A, 31B, 9th Schedule
4th Amend. → Compensation = Parliament decides
25th Amend. → Art.31C born
44th Amend. → Art.31 deleted as FR
Current Position: Art.31 as FR is history. Art.300A = constitutional right only (enforceable in HC, not SC under Art.32). Art.31C still protects laws implementing Art.39(b)/(c) from Arts.14/19 challenge, subject to basic structure review. The 28-year war ended with the legislature winning.
Conflict 5 — Religion and the State
Article 25 (FR) vs Articles 44 & 48 (DPSP)
Fundamental Right
Article 25
Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion — subject to public order, morality and health. Covers “essential religious practices” of all faiths.
vs
Directive Principles
Articles 44 & 48
Art.44: State shall endeavour to secure a Uniform Civil Code for citizens. Art.48: State shall take steps to prohibit slaughter of cows, calves and other milch and draught cattle.
📖 Two Ongoing Tensions
Tension A — UCC vs Art.25: Art.44 directs a single civil code for marriage, divorce, inheritance, adoption regardless of religion. Currently Hindu Marriage Act, Muslim Personal Law, and Christian personal laws govern separately. Muslims argue: Art.25 protects their right to follow Islamic personal law. Art.25 vs Art.44 remains unresolved — Parliament has never implemented Art.44. SC has repeatedly called for UCC (Shah Bano 1985, Sarla Mudgal 1995). Uttarakhand enacted its own UCC in 2024 — first state to do so.
Tension B — Cow Slaughter vs Art.25: Art.48 directs ban on cattle slaughter. Muslims argue: cattle slaughter is part of Eid-ul-Adha (Art.25). Hanif Qureshi (1958): Partial ban = valid; total ban on useless animals = invalid. Mirzapur (2005): Gujarat’s complete ban upheld — ecological/agricultural justification overrides religious claim.
Tension B — Cow Slaughter vs Art.25: Art.48 directs ban on cattle slaughter. Muslims argue: cattle slaughter is part of Eid-ul-Adha (Art.25). Hanif Qureshi (1958): Partial ban = valid; total ban on useless animals = invalid. Mirzapur (2005): Gujarat’s complete ban upheld — ecological/agricultural justification overrides religious claim.
⚡ The Tension
Art.25 protects religious practice including personal law and religious customs. Art.44 requires a secular civil code replacing religious personal laws. Art.48 requires banning cattle slaughter practised religiously by some communities.
⚖ Cases
Hanif Qureshi (1958): Partial cattle ban upheld. Shah Bano (1985): Art.44 UCC mentioned — not enforced. Mirzapur (2005): Complete Gujarat ban upheld. Triple Talaq (2017): Art.14 strikes down instant triple talaq.
✅ Current Position
UCC = Art.44 remains unimplemented directive. Courts cannot force Parliament. Cow slaughter bans = upheld as reasonable restrictions under Art.25 (subject to public order, morality, health). “Essential religious practice” test applies — only essential practices get full FR protection.
Current Position: Art.25 itself says “subject to public order, morality and health” — DPSPs can justify regulation of religious practice within these grounds. Non-essential religious activities can be regulated to implement DPSPs. Art.44 remains the great unresolved FR-DPSP tension.
Conflict 6 — The Modern Trend (Reverse Direction!)
Article 21 (FR) ← DPSPs: When DPSPs Expand FRs
This is the most important modern development for UPSC. Instead of DPSPs conflicting with FRs, courts now read DPSPs INTO Art.21 to expand it. A DPSP that cannot be enforced on its own becomes enforceable because it is part of the FR of “right to life.” This is how dozens of DPSPs became effective rights.
Fundamental Right
Article 21
No person shall be deprived of life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. Through judicial expansion, “life” = right to live with dignity — not just bare animal existence. Has absorbed numerous DPSPs.
←
DPSPs Absorbed into Art.21
Multiple Articles
Art.39(a) → Right to livelihood · Art.41 → Right to work · Art.42 → Maternity benefit · Art.45 → Free education · Art.47 → Right to health · Art.48A → Clean environment. Each read into Art.21 to become enforceable.
📖 How Each DPSP Became Enforceable via Art.21
1. Art.39(a) → Right to Livelihood [Olga Tellis 1985]: Mumbai pavement dwellers challenged eviction. SC: Right to livelihood is part of right to life (Art.21). Evicting someone from their means of earning = depriving them of life. Art.39(a) read into Art.21.
2. Art.45 → Right to Education [Unni Krishnan 1993]: Art.45 directed free education for children up to 14. SC: Right to education flows from Art.21, read with Art.45. Led to 86th Amendment (2002) → Art.21A (explicit FR for education 6–14) + RTE Act 2009.
3. Art.47 → Right to Health [Paschim Banga 1996]: Worker denied emergency medical care by government hospital. SC: Right to health and emergency medical care = part of Art.21. Art.47 read into Art.21.
4. Art.48A → Right to Clean Environment [M.C. Mehta series]: Art.48A directs State to protect environment. SC: Right to live in a clean environment = part of Art.21. Art.48A read into Art.21. Massive environmental jurisprudence followed.
5. Art.42 → Maternity Benefits: Art.42 directs just and humane working conditions including maternity relief. SC: Denial = deprivation of right to live with dignity (Art.21). Maternity benefits now enforceable via Art.21.
2. Art.45 → Right to Education [Unni Krishnan 1993]: Art.45 directed free education for children up to 14. SC: Right to education flows from Art.21, read with Art.45. Led to 86th Amendment (2002) → Art.21A (explicit FR for education 6–14) + RTE Act 2009.
3. Art.47 → Right to Health [Paschim Banga 1996]: Worker denied emergency medical care by government hospital. SC: Right to health and emergency medical care = part of Art.21. Art.47 read into Art.21.
4. Art.48A → Right to Clean Environment [M.C. Mehta series]: Art.48A directs State to protect environment. SC: Right to live in a clean environment = part of Art.21. Art.48A read into Art.21. Massive environmental jurisprudence followed.
5. Art.42 → Maternity Benefits: Art.42 directs just and humane working conditions including maternity relief. SC: Denial = deprivation of right to live with dignity (Art.21). Maternity benefits now enforceable via Art.21.
📌 The Technique
DPSPs, though non-justiciable under Art.37, give meaning and content to Art.21. When courts interpret “life,” they look to DPSPs for what a dignified life includes. DPSPs become the interpretive lens for Art.21.
⚖ Key Cases
Olga Tellis (1985) — livelihood. Unni Krishnan (1993) — education. Paschim Banga (1996) — health. M.C. Mehta series — environment. Bandhua Mukti Morcha (1984) — bonded labour.
✅ The Impact
What DPSPs could not do directly (being non-justiciable), they achieved indirectly through Art.21. The non-justiciable DPSP became a justiciable FR by absorption into Art.21. This is the Symbiotic Relationship between FRs and DPSPs.
86th Amendment 2002 → Art.21A (Education as FR)
RTE Act 2009 follows
Current Position: Art.21 and DPSPs are in a symbiotic relationship. Art.21 expands because DPSPs give it content. DPSPs become effective because Art.21 gives them enforceability. This is the modern resolution: not conflict, but mutual enrichment.
The Pivotal Provision — Three Stages
Article 31C — Birth, Expansion, and Partial Death
Article 31C is the constitutional provision that directly addressed the FR-DPSP conflict by giving DPSPs explicit protection from FR challenge. Its history is a rollercoaster across three stages:
| Stage / Event | What Art.31C said | Court’s Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| 25th Amendment (1971) Original Art.31C |
Laws implementing Art.39(b) and 39(c) are immune from challenge under Arts.14, 19, and 31. Also: a declaration in the law that it implements 39(b)/(c) is final — courts cannot examine this. | Kesavananda Bharati (1973): First part VALID — 39(b)/(c) protection upheld. Declaration clause STRUCK DOWN — courts can still examine if the law actually implements 39(b)/(c). |
| 42nd Amendment (1976) Art.31C Expanded |
Extended protection to laws implementing ALL DPSPs (not just 39(b)/(c)). Any law implementing any DPSP = immune from Arts.14 and 19. | Minerva Mills (1980): STRUCK DOWN. Expanding Art.31C to ALL DPSPs destroys the harmony between FRs and DPSPs — which is itself a basic structure feature. |
| Current Art.31C Post-Minerva Mills |
Only laws implementing Art.39(b) and Art.39(c) are immune from challenge under Arts.14 and 19. Courts can review if the law actually implements these DPSPs. No immunity from basic structure challenge. | This position survives — confirmed in multiple cases. Art.31C as originally inserted (first part only) remains in force. |
“To give absolute primacy to the Directive Principles over the Fundamental Rights would be to destroy the very soul of the Constitution. The harmonious interplay between Parts III and IV of the Constitution is itself a basic feature.”— Chief Justice Y.V. Chandrachud, Minerva Mills v. Union of India (1980)
Quick Reference
Article Conflict — Complete Summary Table
| Case | FR Involved | DPSP Involved | Who Won / Held | Amendment Triggered |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Champakam Dorairajan (1951) | Art.15, Art.29(2) | Art.46 | FR won — communal G.O. struck down | 1st Amendment → Art.15(4) |
| Shankari Prasad (1951) | Art.13, Art.31 | Art.39(b)/(c) | Parliament — amendments can abridge FRs | Post-1st Amendment |
| Hanif Qureshi (1958) | Art.19(1)(g), Art.25 | Art.48 | Split — partial ban valid, total ban not | None — judicial balance |
| Golak Nath (1967) | All FRs | All DPSPs | FRs — Parliament cannot amend them | 24th Amendment reversed it |
| Kesavananda Bharati (1973) | All FRs | Art.39(b)/(c), Art.31C | Balance — Basic Structure; Art.31C partly valid | 42nd Amend. (struck down in Minerva) |
| N.M. Thomas (1976) | Art.14, Art.16(1) | Art.38, Art.46 | Harmony — Art.16(4) is part of equality | None — judicial harmonisation |
| Minerva Mills (1980) | Art.14, Art.19, Art.21 | All DPSPs via 42nd Amend. | Balance — harmony = basic structure; 42nd Amend. Art.31C void | 44th Amendment corrected |
| Olga Tellis (1985) | Art.21 | Art.39(a), Art.41 | Both — DPSP read into FR | None — DPSP enriched FR |
| Unni Krishnan (1993) | Art.21 | Art.45 | Both — Right to education = Art.21 via Art.45 | 86th Amendment → Art.21A + RTE |
| I.R. Coelho (2007) | Arts.14, 15, 19, 21 | 9th Schedule Laws | FRs — post-1973 9th Schedule laws subject to basic structure | None — judicial limit |
The Arc of History
How the Relationship Evolved — 1950 to Now
📈 FR-DPSP Relationship: From Conflict to Harmony
FR wins
1950–1951
Phase 1 — Fundamental Rights Supreme
Champakam Dorairajan: FRs > DPSPs. Any law violating FR is void even if it implements DPSP. Courts enforce FRs strictly against state action.
Amend.
1951–1967
Phase 2 — Parliament Inserts Exceptions Into FRs
1st Amendment: Art.15(4), Art.31A, Art.31B, 9th Schedule. 4th Amendment: Compensation not justiciable. 17th Amendment: More 9th Schedule laws. Parliament works around FRs by amending them directly.
FR frozen
1967
Phase 3 — Golak Nath Freezes All FRs
11-judge bench: Parliament cannot amend any Fundamental Right. FRs are “transcendental.” Prospective overruling saves past amendments. Constitutional crisis — entire land reform and nationalisation agenda at risk.
Amend.
1971–1976
Phase 4 — Parliament’s Counter-Attack
24th Amendment reverses Golak Nath — Parliament CAN amend FRs. 25th Amendment: Art.31C — 39(b)/(c) laws immune from Arts.14/19/31. 42nd Amendment: Extends Art.31C to ALL DPSPs + claims unlimited amending power.
Balance
1973
Phase 5 — Kesavananda: Basic Structure Born
13-judge bench, 7:6: Parliament can amend FRs but cannot destroy basic structure. Art.31C partly valid — 39(b)/(c) protection upheld, declaration clause struck down. Neither Parliament nor Courts have absolute supremacy.
Harmony
1978–1980
Phase 6 — 44th Amendment + Minerva Mills: Harmony Established
44th Amendment: Right to Property deleted as FR — biggest source of conflict removed. Art.300A created. Minerva Mills: Harmony between FRs and DPSPs is itself basic structure. 42nd Amendment’s Art.31C expansion struck down.
Symbiosis
1985 – Present
Phase 7 — DPSPs Enrich FRs: Symbiotic Relationship
Olga Tellis, Unni Krishnan, M.C. Mehta: DPSPs read into Art.21 to expand its scope. Right to livelihood, education, health, clean environment — all from DPSPs absorbed into Art.21. FRs and DPSPs now strengthen each other.
UPSC Exam Memory Aids
Never Forget These Article Pairs
🎯 Article Conflict Quick-Fire Reference
Art.15 vs Art.46 → CHAMPAKAM
No caste discrimination (FR) vs promote backward classes (DPSP). Resolved by Art.15(4) — exception carved inside the FR itself. Champakam = first FR-DPSP case = medical seat = Brahmin woman = Madras 1951.
Art.19 vs Art.39(b)(c) → ART.31C
Right to hold/trade property (FR) vs redistribute material resources (DPSP). Resolved by Art.31C — only 39(b)/(c), not all DPSPs, get immunity from Art.19. Art.19(1)(f) deleted by 44th Amendment.
Art.14 vs Art.38 → N.M. THOMAS
Formal equality (FR) vs substantive equality (DPSP). Resolved by interpretation — Art.16(4) is part of Art.16(1), not exception. DPSPs give content to “equality.” Thomas = Kerala = SC/ST promotion test = 1976.
Art.31 vs Art.39(b)(c) → BIG WAR
Right to Property (FR) vs land redistribution (DPSP). 28-year war. Shankari Prasad → Golak Nath → Kesavananda → 44th Amendment. Ended when Art.31 deleted as FR. Now Art.300A — constitutional right only.
Art.25 vs Art.44 → UCC UNRESOLVED
Freedom of religion including personal law (FR) vs Uniform Civil Code (DPSP). Still unresolved — Art.44 is directive, Parliament hasn’t implemented it. Uttarakhand first state UCC 2024. Shah Bano case key context.
Art.25 vs Art.48 → HANIF QURESHI
Religious practice of cattle slaughter (FR) vs ban cattle slaughter (DPSP). Partial: cows/calves/milch cattle ban = valid. Old bulls total ban = invalid (1958). Gujarat complete ban upheld later (2005 — Mirzapur).
Art.21 ← Art.39(a)/41/45/47/48A → SYMBIOSIS
DPSPs give content to Art.21. Right to livelihood (Olga Tellis), education (Unni Krishnan → Art.21A), health (Paschim Banga), clean environment (M.C. Mehta). DPSPs become enforceable through Art.21.
Art.31C — THREE STAGES
25th Amend (1971): 39(b)/(c) immune from 14/19/31 — VALID (Kesavananda). Declaration clause: STRUCK DOWN. 42nd Amend (1976): All DPSPs immune — STRUCK DOWN (Minerva Mills). Current: Only 39(b)/(c) have Art.31C protection.


