The court was disposing of petitions challenging the grant of classical status to Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada and Odiya and norms governing such conferment.
First bench comprising Chief Justice S K Kaul and Justice R Mahadevan said an expert body set up for the purpose was satisifed that these languages met the criteria and the court could not go into the body's opinions and findings.
The bench had on July 13 last reserved its orders on the petitions filed by senior advocate R Gandhi who had challenged the norms governing the grant of the classical status and the status accorded to the four languages.
The court also said it disagreed with the petitioner's stand that the prominence of Tamil languge would be lost if it was treated on par with the other languages, which have been conferred classical status.
"We do not agree with the petitioner. The prominence of a language would not depend on the development or fall of other languages," the bench said.
The bench said it was for experts to verify that the languages satisfy the norms and recommend for the declaration of classical status.
Having satisfied themselves, the experts had recommended declaration of the languages in consideration to be classical.
"Facts which made the expert body to recommend promulgation of such declaration has also been placed before us. As such we do not find any reason to interfere with the impunged declaration," the judges said.
He can also make suggestions for determination of the type of literature that can be the benchmark for consideration of the language for classical status.
The petitioner had sought a direction to the authorities to strictly abide and implement the November 25, 2015, criteria laid down by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs for determining the eligibility of languages to be considered for classical status.
