Court rules: Supreme Court may prescribe practice and procedure, including judge quorum and open court delivery. The Supreme Court, with parliamentary law and Presidential approval, may make rules governing practice and procedure-including practitioner qualifications, appeal procedure and timelines, enforcement of fundamental rights, review conditions, costs and fees, bail, stay, summary disposal of frivolous appeals, and inquiry procedures. Rules may fix minimum judges and single Judge powers; a bench of at least five Judges is required for substantial constitutional questions or references, and smaller benches must refer such questions. Judgments and specified opinions must be delivered in open Court with majority concurrence, though dissenting opinions remain permitted.
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Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Court rules: Supreme Court may prescribe practice and procedure, including judge quorum and open court delivery.
The Supreme Court, with parliamentary law and Presidential approval, may make rules governing practice and procedure-including practitioner qualifications, appeal procedure and timelines, enforcement of fundamental rights, review conditions, costs and fees, bail, stay, summary disposal of frivolous appeals, and inquiry procedures. Rules may fix minimum judges and single Judge powers; a bench of at least five Judges is required for substantial constitutional questions or references, and smaller benches must refer such questions. Judgments and specified opinions must be delivered in open Court with majority concurrence, though dissenting opinions remain permitted.
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