NE LEGAL BUREAU
NEW DELHI, JULY 13
In a significant constitutional intervention with far-reaching legal implications, the Supreme Court on Monday stayed the operation of the Madras High Court’s blanket directive prohibiting the slaughter of cows and calves across Tamil Nadu, signalling that the contours of judicial power, statutory interpretation and constitutional policy will now come under the scanner of the nation’s highest court.
- Apex Court stays Madras High Court’s sweeping directive enforcing a statewide ban on cow and calf slaughter in Tamil Nadu, saying the operative portion ‘requires correction’
- Bench of Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta issues notice on Tamil Nadu government’s Special Leave Petition challenging the May 27 verdict
- State argues the High Court travelled beyond the scope of the PIL and overlooked the Tamil Nadu Animal Preservation Act, 1958, which regulates—not absolutely prohibits—cattle slaughter
- Case expected to examine the interplay between statutory law, executive orders, constitutional directives under Article 48 and judicial powers in PIL jurisdiction
- Interim relief preserves the existing legal framework until the Supreme Court delivers a final verdict on one of the country’s most closely watched constitutional disputes
- Ruling assumes national significance as it could shape future judicial interpretation of animal preservation laws, executive authority and limits of public interest litigation
A Bench comprising Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta issued notice on a Special Leave Petition (SLP) filed by the Tamil Nadu government and granted interim relief by staying the operation of the Madras High Court’s May 27 judgment. During the hearing, the Bench observed that the operative portion of the High Court’s order prima facie “requires correction”, paving the way for a detailed examination of the issues involved.
The Tamil Nadu government challenged the High Court’s direction requiring the State to ensure that no cow or calf is slaughtered anywhere in Tamil Nadu, either during Bakrid or on any other day.
In its appeal, the State contended that the High Court had travelled beyond the scope of the original Public Interest Litigation (PIL). While the petition sought to ensure that animal slaughter took place only in designated and licensed slaughterhouses, the High Court ultimately imposed what the government described as an absolute statewide prohibition on cow and calf slaughter.
The government further argued that such a blanket prohibition is inconsistent with the Tamil Nadu Animal Preservation Act, 1958, which regulates cattle slaughter by prescribing specific conditions under which it may be permitted, rather than imposing a complete ban. It also relied upon the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Slaughter House) Rules, 2001, the Tamil Nadu Urban Local Bodies Act, 1998, and the Tamil Nadu Urban Local Bodies Rules, 2023, asserting that the statutory framework already governs the issue comprehensively.
The impugned judgment had been delivered by a vacation Bench of the Madras High Court while allowing a PIL filed by K. Surya Prasanth, Youth Wing Secretary of the Indu Makkal Katchi, who sought preventive directions after alleging that temporary sheds had been erected in Coimbatore for cow slaughter during Bakrid.
While referring to Article 48 of the Constitution—which forms part of the Directive Principles of State Policy and calls upon the State to organise agriculture and animal husbandry while taking steps to prohibit the slaughter of cows, calves and other milch and draught cattle—the High Court had also relied on a 1976 Government Order prohibiting the slaughter of cows and heifers in slaughterhouses across Tamil Nadu.
Holding that the executive order possessed the force of law, the High Court directed the Chief Secretary and senior police authorities to ensure strict statewide compliance and reiterated that slaughter of animals could be carried out only in designated slaughterhouses.
However, before the Supreme Court, the State maintained that while regulation of slaughter through authorised facilities is consistent with existing law, the High Court’s direction imposing an absolute prohibition was legally unsustainable and contrary to the statutory scheme enacted by the legislature.
The Supreme Court’s interim order effectively restores the pre-existing legal position in Tamil Nadu pending adjudication of the appeal, ensuring that the statutory framework under the Tamil Nadu Animal Preservation Act, 1958 continues to operate until the final hearing.
Legal observers believe the case could evolve into an important precedent on the limits of judicial intervention in PILs, the relationship between executive orders and statutory law, and the interpretation of Directive Principles vis-à-vis enforceable legal rights. The final verdict is expected to have ramifications extending well beyond Tamil Nadu, particularly for states with differing legislative regimes governing cattle preservation and animal slaughter.




