My conclusions are (i) that the Fundamental Rights are outside the amendatory process if the amendment seeks to abridge or take away any of the rights; (ii) that Sankari Prasad 's case (and Sajjan Singh 's case which followed it) conceded the power of amendment over Part III of the Constitution on an erroneous view of articles 13(2) and 368; (iii) that the First, Fourth and Seventh Amendments being part of the Constitution by acquiescence for a long time, cannot now be challenged and they contain authority for the Seventeenth Amendment; (iv) that this Court having now laid down that Fundamental Rights cannot be abridged or taken away by the exercise of amendatory process in article 368, any further inroad into these rights as they exist today will be illegal and unconstitutional unless it complies with Part III in general and article 13(2) in particular, (v) that for abridging or taking away Fundamental Rights, a Constituent body will have to be, convoked; and (vi) that the two impugned Acts, namely, the Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act, 1953 (X of 1953) and the Mysore Land Reforms Act, 1961 (X of 1962) as amended by act XIV of 1965 are valid under the Constitution not because they are included in schedule 9 of the Constitution but because the, are protected by article 31 A, and the President 's assent.