Published February 6, 2026 | Version v1
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Judicial Review or Public Pressure? Rethinking the Supreme Court's Reversed Stray-Dog Judgment.

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  • 1. ILS Law College, Pune

Description

The stray dog judgments of 2025 point out that judicial compassion cannot operate in isolation from constitutional discipline. If the Supreme Court was well within its powers in prioritising human safety under Article 21, the initial order revealed the risks of bypassing a settled statutory scheme under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 and the ABC Rules. While the manner of reversal restored rule of law equilibrium, its timing inevitably raises questions about judicial susceptibility to public pressure. Judicial independence is not compromised by judicial reconsideration of earlier orders, it is compromised when reasoned legal analysis appears reactive rather than principled. This case thus ultimately confirms that permanent solutions will lie only in rigorous statutory compliance, proportionate regulation, and accountable governance that make human life and animal welfare coexist within the four corners of the rule of law. Yet there is still a significant set of issues regarding court independence and public meddling. The next hearing is scheduled for January 13, 2026. The case essentially underlines the need to protect human life and animal welfare in compliance with the Constitution through proper, legally obligatory action.

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