Instead of following the precedent in Prem Nath, the Court has deliberately chosen to diminish its import in subsequent cases. In Sampat Prakash, a narrowing down of the constitutional precedent was on full display. Extrapolating the silences of Article 370, the court vastly expanded the President’s authority to modify the provisions of the Indian Constitution for J&K, potentially risking abuse. In effect, the court’s interpretation of ‘modification’ in Article 370(1) essentially permitted radical amendments subsequently, relegating it to a procedure for abusive constitutional alteration rather than safeguarding J&K’s autonomy. The court further stated: ‘Article 370(2) only refers to the concurrence given by the Government of the State before the Constituent Assembly was convened and makes no mention at all of the completion of the work of the Constituent Assembly or its dissolution’. Notably, all the SC orders since Sampat Prakash appear to have sanctioned executive actions, even after the dissolution of J&K’s Constituent Assembly—the sole body authorised to endorse presidential orders. The contradiction, highlighted by the two cases, was, however, dismissed by the SC in the initial hearings in the Article 370 case. Now that the final verdict is out, the refusal to consider Prem Nath speaks for itself, amounting to a stealth narrowing of constitutional precedent.