The apex court, which had issued notices to the Centre and the federal bank on March 6, was responding to a plea that a very short time period had been given to them to respond to the petition.
"We did not intend to do anything. The intention was to make you alive to the situation," a bench headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar said and granted time till March 21.
"The only thing he (petitioner) is saying is that there was a window which was there in the first decision. He is saying the window was now closed in the Ordinance," the bench, also comprising Justices D Y Chandrachud and Sanjay Kishan Kaul, told Rohatgi.
The bench asked the Attorney General to peruse its earlier order and said the issue is very clear as there is "no left, no right and no centre. Everything is in black and white".
The Prime Minister's address to the nation on the evening of November 8 last year on demonetisation and subsequent notification of the federal bank that devalued currency notes can be exchanged at RBI offices even up to March 31, 2017 were valid assurances which stood breached by the ordinance, the counsel for petitioner, Sudha Mishra, had said.
The petitioner has referred to the Specified Bank Notes
Cessation of Liabilities Ordinance and said it had breached the assurance.
The Centre had come out with the Ordinance making possession of a large number of scrapped notes a penal offence that will attract monetary fine.
The Ordinance also provided for amending the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Act to provide legislative support for extinguishing the demonetised banknotes that are not returned.
Of the Rs 15.4 lakh crore worth of currency that was scrapped, about Rs 14 lakh crore has been deposited in banks or exchanged till December 28.
