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Supreme Court Verdict In Ayodhya Case Perhaps First To Be Delivered On Saturday

Judges hold hearings in courtroom on Saturdays or other holidays only in extraordinary circumstances.

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Supreme Court Verdict In Ayodhya Case Perhaps First To Be Delivered On Saturday
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The judgment in the politically sensitive Ayodhya land dispute case is historic in more than one sense. It is perhaps for the first time in the 69-year history of the Supreme Court that a verdict was delivered on Saturday.

Judges hold court five days a week, from Monday to Friday, and in extraordinary circumstances hold hearing in courtroom on Saturdays or other holidays.

But it was rare that Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi chose Saturday to deliver such an important judgment, a senior official of the apex court said.

"There have been hearing of cases in extraordinary circumstances on Saturdays, Sundays and even during nights. However, I don't remember that any judgment has been delivered on a Saturday and perhaps it is one of the rare instances," H K Juneja, the PPS to the chief justice of India, said.

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He also recalled an instance relating to the demolition of the Babri mosque in Ayodhya on December 6, 1992, when the then CJI M N Venkatachaliah had a special sitting at his residence in the evening. During the sitting, the apex court had expressed anguish over then Uttar Pradesh chief minister Kalyan Singh failing in his promise to protect the 16th-century domed structure.

Settling a fractious issue that goes back more than a century, the Supreme Court in a historic verdict on Saturday backed the construction of a Ram temple by a government trust at the disputed site in Ayodhya. It also ruled that an alternative five-acre plot must be found for a mosque in the Hindu holy town.

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