๐ Q.16 IAS Prelims 2024 โ Polity & Governance: Writ of Prohibition
๐ The Question
A Writ of Prohibition is an order issued by the Supreme Court or High Courts to:
(a) a government officer prohibiting him from taking a particular action
(b) the Parliament/Legislative Assembly to pass a law on Prohibition
(c) the lower court prohibiting continuation of proceedings in a case
(d) the Government prohibiting it from following an unconstitutional policy
โ Correct Answer: (c)
๐ง Indexive Theme of the Question
Judicial Remedies | Writ Jurisdiction | Articles 32 & 226 | Control over Subordinate Courts
๐งโ๐ซ Classroom Explanation
A Writ of Prohibition is a preventive writ issued by a Superior Court (Supreme Court or High Court) to a lower court, tribunal, or quasi-judicial authority.
๐น Purpose:
To stop the lower authority from continuing proceedings when it is acting:
- Without jurisdiction
- In excess of jurisdiction
- In violation of principles of natural justice
๐ Key Characteristics of Writ of Prohibition
- It is issued before the final order is passed (preventive, not corrective).
- It is issued only against judicial or quasi-judicial authorities.
- It directs inactivity (contrast with Mandamus, which directs action).
- It cannot be issued against:
- Administrative authorities
- Legislative bodies
- Private individuals
๐งพ Why Option (c) is Correct
โ Option (c) correctly states that the writ is issued to lower courts prohibiting continuation of proceedings in a case where jurisdiction is lacking or exceeded.
โ Why Other Options are Incorrect
- (a) Government officers are administrative authorities โ Prohibition does not lie.
- (b) Courts cannot direct legislatures to pass laws โ violates separation of powers.
- (d) Unconstitutional policies are addressed via judicial review, not prohibition.
๐ง Prelims Memory Hook
Prohibition = โSTOP before you exceedโ
(Issued before judgment, to lower courts only)
๐ง IAS Monk Whisper
Justice is not only about correcting wrongs already done, but also about preventing wrongs before they take form.















