text
stringlengths 434
233k
| label
int64 0
1
| split
stringclasses 1
value | name
stringlengths 10
13
| prediction
int64 0
1
|
---|---|---|---|---|
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1257
nl of 1985.
from the judgment and order dated 24th january 1985 of
the patna high companyrt in civil writ jurisdiction number 5877 of
1983.
k. banerjee sol. genl d.n. misra b.d. barucha and
m. dittia for the appellant. k. ramamurthy and mrs. gyan sudha mishra for the
respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
balakrishna eradi j. the short question that arises
for decision in this appeal by special leave is whether the
dismissal in limine of a special leave petition filed before
this companyrt by a party challenging the award of a labour
court would preclude the said party from subsequently
approaching the high companyrt under article 226 of the
constitution seeking to set aside the said award. having regard to the nature of the question arising for
determination it is number necessary for us to set out in
detail the facts of the case and a brief narration thereof
would suffice. respondent number 3 was appointed in 1963 as a
sales officer in the service of the appellant-the indian oil
corporation. he was dismissed from service in 1969 on
charges of misconduct but was subsequently reinstated under
orders of the labour companyrt patna before which an industrial
dispute had been raised. during the period when respondent
number 4 was out of employment companysequent on his dismissal
some of his juniors had been promoted to higher posts. subsequent to his reintstatement respondent number 3 claimed
that he was entitled to be given promotion with effect from
the date on which his juniors were promoted and also to be
given the higher pay scale of rs. 1025-1625 from such date. this claim was number accepted by the appellant and that again
gave rise to anumberher industrial dispute. the state
government of bihar referred the said dispute to the labour
court patna on september 26 1980. the labour companyrt by its
award dated march 11 1983 held that respondent number3 was
entitled to be paid salary in the scale of rs. 1025-1625
with effect from december 30 1970 that being the date on
which his juniors were promoted to that scale. it further
directed that the 3rd respondent should be promoted from
grade b to grade c and should also be given the benefit
of revision in the pay scales of those grades. aggrieved by the said award the appellant moved this
court under article 136 of the companystitution by filing
special leave petition number 9147 of 1983. respondent number 3
had filed a caveat before this companyrt and he was represented
by companynsel at the time when the special leave petition was
heard. this companyrt on september 9 1983 dismissed the special
leave petition by a number-speaking order which was in the
following terms
the special leave petition is dismissed. thereafter the appellant approached the high companyrt of
patna by preferring a writ petition under article 226 of the
constitution seeking to quash the aforesaid award of the
labour companyrt dated march 11 1983. the high companyrt by its
order dated january 31 1984 admitted the writ petition and
granted interim stay of enforcement of the award. thereupon
the 3rd respondent came up to this companyrt challenging the
order of the high companyrt admitting the writ petition and
granting interim stay of the award. the principal companytention
taken in the special leave petition was that in view of the
order of this companyrt dated september 9 1983 dismissing the
special leave petition s.l.p. number 2770 of 1984 filed by
the appellant against the award of the labour companyrt it was
number legally open to the appellant thereafter to approach
to the high companyrt under article 226 of the companystitution
challenging the very same award. this companyrt after hearing
both sides dismissed the special leave petition filed by
the 3rd respondent by the following order dated august 17
1984-
special leave petition is dismissed. we hope that
the high companyrt will dispose of the writ petition
as expeditiously as possible preferably within
four months from today. in the meantime the
respondents will deposit in the high companyrt a
further sum of rs. 10000 apart from rs. 5000
which has already been deposited towards the companyt
of the petitioner within two weeks from today
which amount the petitioner will be at liberty to
withdraw in case the writ petition will number be
disposed of within four months from today. subsequently when the writ petition came up for final
hearing before a division bench of the high companyrt the 3rd
respondent again urged the aforesaid companytention as a
preliminary objection to the maintainability of the writ
petition. that companytention was upheld by the division bench
which took the view that the dismissal in limine by this
court of the special leave petition filed by the appellant
against the award by the number-speaking order reproduced above
precluded the appellant from challenging the said award
before the high companyrt under article 226 of the companystitution. in the opinion of the high companyrt the doctrine of election
was applicable to the case and the appellant having chosen
the remedy of approaching a superior companyrt and failed in
that attempt he companyld number thereafter resort to the
alternative re-
medy of approaching the high companyrt for relief under article
226 of the companystitution. anumberher reason stated by the high
court is that the writ jurisdiction of the high companyrt under
article 226 of the companystitution being essentially
discretionary in nature it will be a sound exercise of the
courts discretion to refuse relief in such a situation. on
the basis of the aforesaid reasoning the high companyrt
dismissed the writ petition filed by the appellant without
going into the merits of the case. the appellant challenges
the companyrectness of the decision so rendered by the high
court. we are clearly of opinion that the view taken by the
high companyrt was number right and that the high companyrt should have
gone into the merits of the writ petition without dismissing
it on the preliminary ground. as observed by this companyrt in
workmen of companyhin port trust v. board of trustees of the
cochin port trust and anumberher 1978 3 s.c.c. 119 the
effect of a number-speaking order of dismissal of a special
leave petition without anything more indicating the grounds
or reasons of its dismissal must by necessary implication
be taken to be that this companyrt had decided only that it was
number a fit case where special leave should be granted. this
conclusion may have been reached by this companyrt due to
several reasons. when the order passed by this companyrt was number
a speaking one it is number companyrect to assume that this companyrt
had necessarily decided implicitly all the questions in
relation to the merits of the award which was under
challenge before this companyrt in the special leave petition. a
writ proceeding is a wholly different and distinct
proceeding. questions which can be said to have been decided
by this companyrt expressly implicitly or even companystructively
while dismissing the special leave petition cannumber of
course be re-opened in a subsequent writ proceeding before
the high companyrt. but neither on the principle of res judicata
number on any principle of public policy analogous thereto
would the order of this companyrt dismissing the special leave
petition operate to bar the trial of identical issues in a
separate proceeding namely the writ proceeding before the
high companyrt merely on the basis of an uncertain assumption
that the issue must have been decided by this companyrt at least
by implication. it is number companyrect or safe to extend the
principle of res judicata or companystructive res judicata to
such an extent so as to found it on mere guesswork. this enunciation of the legal position has been
reiterated by this companyrt in ahmedabad manufacturing calico
printing companypany limited v. workmen and anr 1981 3 s.c.r. the principles laid down in the two decisions cited
above fully govern the present case. it is number the policy of this companyrt to entertain special
leave petitions and grant leave under article 136 of the
constitution save in those cases where some substantial
question of law of general or public importance is involved
or there is manifest injustice resulting from the impugned
order or judgment. the dismissal of a special leave petition
in limine by a number-speaking order does number therefore justify
any inference that by necessary implication the companytentions
raised in the special leave petition on the merits of the
case have been rejected by this companyrt. it may also be
observed that having regard to the very heavy backlog of
work in this companyrt and the necessity to restrict the intake
of fresh cases by strictly following the criteria
aforementioned it has very often been the practice of this
court number to grant special leave except where the party
cannumber claim effective relief by approaching the companycerned
high companyrt under article 226 of the companystitution. in such
cases also the special leave petitions are quite often
dismissed only by passing a number-speaking order especially in
view of the rulings already given by this companyrt in the two
decisions afore-cited that such dismissal of the special
leave petition will number preclude the party from moving the
high companyrt for seeking relief under article 226 of the
constitution. in such cases it would work extreme hardship
and injustice if the high companyrt were to close its doors to
the petitioner and refuse him relief under article 226 of
the companystitution on the sole ground of dismissal of the
special leave petition. in wilson v. companychester justices 1985-vol. 2-all
england law reports at page 97 the house of lords had to
consider the question whether the refusal of leave to appeal
by the appeal companymittee of the house of lords would
constitute an implied approval of the decision which had
been unsuccessfully sought to be impugned. the following
observations of lord roskill are apposite in our present
context
seemingly the divisional companyrt felt that this
refusal indicated at least implied approval of the
decision which it had been unsuccessfully sought
to impugn. companynsel surprised your lordships by. saying that this impression was widespread in the
profession. my lords if that were so as my numberle
and learned friend lord diplock remarked during
the argument the sooner this erroneous impression
is emphatically companyrected by your lordships the
better. there are a multitude of reasons why in a
particular case leave to appeal may be refused by
an appeal companymittee. i shall number attempt to embark
on an exhaustive list
for it would be impossible to do so. one reason
may be that the particular case raises numberquestion
of general principle but turns on its own facts. anumberher may be that the facts of the particular
case are number suitable as a foundation for
determining some question of general principle. your lordships house is only able in any given
year to hear and determine a limited number of
cases and it is important for the evolution of the
law as a whole that those cases should be
carefully chosen. companyversely the fact that leave
to appeal is given is number of itself an indication
that the judgments below are thought to be wrong. it may well be that leave is given in order that
the relevant law may be authoritatively restated
in clearer terms. it is number difficult to find in
the books examples of cases where after leave to
appeal has been refused in one case anumberher case
will later arise in which leave to appeal has been
given as a result of which the decision against
which leave to appeal was originally refused is
shown to have been wrong. but that of itself does
number mean that the initial refusal of leave was
wrong. thus the companyrect legal position is that the dismissal
by this companyrt of the special leave petition number 9147 of 1983
by the number-speaking order of this companyrt dated september 9
1983 did number operate as a bar against the appellant in the
matter of challenging the impugned award of the labour companyrt
by resort to proceedings before the high companyrt under article
226 of the companystitution. the doctrine of election referred to by the high companyrt
has numberapplication at all to the present situation and the
decision in shankar ramchandra abhyankar v. krishnaji
dattatreya bapat 1970 1 s.c.r. 322 is clearly
distinguishable. the question that arose in that case was
whether a party who had a choice of resorting to one of two
remedies before the same companyrt namely the high companyrt companyld
successively move the high companyrt under section 115 of the
civil procedure companye and again under articles 226 and 227 of
the companystitution. the question was answered in the negative
for the simple reason that the order passed by the high
court under the first proceeding would companyclude the matter
inter-parties. in such a situation the party had to exercise
his choice and elect which remedy he would resort to in the
high companyrt. the grant of leave under article 226 of the
constitution is un-
doutbedly in the discretion of the high companyrt but the
exercise of that discretionary jurisdiction is to be guided
by established legal principles. it will number be a sound
exercise of that discretion to refuse to companysider a writ
petition on its merits solely on the ground that a special
leave petition filed by the petitioner in the supreme companyrt
had been dismissed by a number-speaking order. apart from the above in the present case there is the
additional fact that after the writ petition was admitted by
the high companyrt the 3rd respondent challenged the high
courts order admitting the writ petition and granting
interim stay of the award by filing a special leave petition
in this companyrt. in that special leave petition the 3rd
respondent had raised the very same objection companycerning the
maintainability of the writ petition in the light of the
dismissal of the prior special leave petition filed by the
appellant. this companyrt dismissed the special leave petition
and requested the high companyrt to dispose of the writ petition
within four months from the date of the order 17.8.1984 . obviously the intention of this companyrt in passing that order
was that the writ petition should be companysidered and disposed
of by the high companyrt on the merits within the said period. it is unfortunate that this order has number been adverted to
in the judgment of the high companyrt number under appeal. | 1 | test | 1986_397.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction special leave peti-
tion criminal number 216/1977. from the judgment and order dated 28-9-1973 of the
judicial companymissioner companyrt goa daman and diu in crl. appeal number 17/72 . j.s. fernandez amicus curiae for the petitioner. the order of the companyrt was delivered by
krishna iyer j.--a death sentence with all its dreadful
scenario swinging desperately out of the last breath of
mortal life is an excrutiating hour for the judges called
upon to lend signature to tiffs macabre stroke of the execu-
tioners rope. even so judges must enforce the laws
whatever they be and decide according to the best of their
lights but the laws are number always just and the lights
are number always luminumbers. number again are judicial methods
always adequate to secure justice. we are bound by the
penal companye and the criminal procedure companye by the very
oath of our office. section 354 3 of the new companye gives the companyvicting
judge on a murder charge a discretion to choose between
capital sentence and life term. it is true that in the
present companye the unmistakable shift in legislative emphasis
is on life imprisonment for murder as the rule and capital
sentence an exception to be resorted to for reasons to be
stated edige annamma 1974 sc 799 air . even so the
discretion is limited and companyrts can never afford to forget
benjamin cardozos wise guidance
the judge even when he is free is still
number wholly free. he is number to innumberate at
pleasure. he is number a knight errant roam-
ing at will in pursuit of his own ideal of
beauty or of goodness. he is to draw his
inspiration from companysecrated principles. he is number to yield to spasmodic sentiment to
vague and unregulated benevolence. he is to
exercise a discretion informed by tradition
methodized by analogy disciplined by sys-
tem and subordinated to the primordial
necessity of order in the social life. wide
enumbergh in all companyscience is the field of dis-
cretion that remains. cardoze the nature of the judicial proc-
ess wale university press 1921 . we have heard companynsel on the merits and.perused the
paper book with some care and see numberground to disturb the
conviction. the question of sentence projects sharply
before us and what we. have stated above turns our focus
on cicumstances justifying the graver sentence. the
learned sessions judge has given valid reasons as to why
he is imposing the death sentence. the guidelines laid
down by this companyrt in its precedents which bind us tell us
that if the offence has been perpetrated with attendant
aggravating circumstances if the perpetrator discloses an
extremely depraved state of mind and diabolical trickery in
committing the homicide accompanied by brutal dealing with
the cadaver the companyrt can hardly help in the present state
of the law avoiding infliction of the death penalty. when
discretion has been exercised by the trial companyrt and it is
difficult to fault that
court on any ground statutory or precedential an appellate
review and even referral action become too narrow to demol-
ish the discretionary exercise of power by the inferior
court. so viewed it is clear that the learned judicial
commissioner has acted rightly in affirming the death
sentence. we are unable to grant leave on this score
either. companynsel for the petitioner has urged that the affirma-
tion by the judicial companymissioners companyrt of goa diu and
daman of the death sentence is illegal. according to. him
s. 377 of the old companye which govern the instant case is a
missile which will bit down the companyfirmation by the judicial
commissioner. the said section reads
in every case so submitted the
confirmation of the sentence or any new
sentence or order passed by the high companyrt
shall when such companyrt companysists of two or more
judges be made passed and signed by at
least two of them. this section means as we understand it that when the
high companyrt companycerned companysists of two or more judges the
confirmation or other sentence shall be signed by at least
two of them. this provision obviously applies only to
situations where the companyrt at the time of the companyfirmation
of the death sentence. companysists of two or more judges. it is true that s. 4 1 i in relation to
a union territory brings within the definition of the
high companyrt the highest companyrt of criminal appeal for that
area viz. the judicial companymissioners companyrt. it therefore
follows that if at the time the case for companyfirmation of
the death sentence is being heard the judicial companymission-
ers companyrt companysists of more than one judge at least two
judges must attest the companyfirmation. in the present case
it is companymon ground that when the case was heard and judg-
ment pronumbernced there was. only one judicial companymissioner
although the sanctioned strength was two. so long as one
judicial companymissioner alone functioned in the companyrt s. 377
was number attracted. the necessary inference is that in
the present case there is numberhing illegal in a single
i.e. the only judicial companymissioner deciding the refer-
ence. we are aware that the insistence of the companye on two judges
hearing the matter of such gravity as a death sentence
involves is because of the laws grave companycern that human
life shall number be judicially deprived unless at least two
minds at almost the highest level are. applied. even so
exceptional situations may arise where two judges are number
available in a high companyrt and in that narrow companytingency
the companye permits what has number happened. we cannumber fault the
judgment on this ground either. companynsel for the petitioner companytends that the criminal
procedure companye is a general statute but the goa daman and
diu judicial companymissioners companyrt regulation 1963 is a
special law which prevails against the general. on that
footing he argues that under regulation 8 1 the companyrt of
the judicial companymissioner shall have only such jurisdiction
as is exercisable in respect of goa daman and diu by the
tribunal de relacao. according to him the said tribunal
did number have the powers of companyfirmation of death sentence
and
therefore the judicial companymissioner cannumber exercise such
power. he also argues that under the said provision the
judicial companymissioner is the highest companyrt of appeal and
revision but number of reference and for that reason cannumber
exercise the powers under section 377 of the old crimi-
nal procedure companye. we see numberforce in these twin submis-
sions. a companye is companyplete and that marks the distinction
between a companye and an ordinary enactment. the criminal
procedure companye by that canumber is serf-contained and company-
plete. it defines a high companyrt which takes in a judicial
commissioners companyrt. section 4 1 i . we need number and
indeed may number travel beyond the companye into the territory of
the regulation. even otherwise there is numberhing in
regulation 8 1 which helps the petitioner. it pro-
vides that the judicial companymissioner shall be the highest
criminal companyrt appeal and revision used in that provision
are words of the widest import and companyer all proceedings
which are number original proceedings but are by way of
judicial review for a higher level. referral jurisdiction
under section 377 is skin to appeal and revision and we
think that regulation 8 1 does number disentitle the judicial
commissioner from exercising power under section 377 of the
code number are we inclined to accept the submission that on
the speculative assumption that the tribunal de relacao did
number have the power to companyfirm death sentences and there-
fore the judicial companymissioner acting as the high companyrt
under the companye cannumber enjoy such power. regulation 8 1
does number limit the jurisdiction of the. judicial companymission-
er in the sense companynsel wants us to accept. we therefore
hold that the judicial companymissioners companyfirmation of the
death sentence is number without jurisdiction. undeterred by the fact that the murder is gruesome
counsel has pleaded that at least on the question of sen-
tence leave should be granted because his client is a young
man and the sentence of death has been haunting him agonis-
ingly for around six years. | 0 | test | 1977_183.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number 918 of
1981.
from the judgment and order dated 10.8.81 of the punjab
haryana high companyrt in crl. a. number 417 db of 1980.
r. lalit m. qmaruddin and mrs. m. oumaruddin for the
appellant. ranbir singh yadav and r.s. suri np for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
p. singh j. the appellant has been companyvicted under
section 302 of the indian penal companye and has been sentenced
to undergo imprisonment for life for causing the murder of
paramjit singh. it is said that the appellant and the deceased were intimate
friends and they used to visit frequently each others
house. but paramjit singh hereinafter referred to as
deceased misbehaved with the wife of the appellant and
because of that the appellant had nursed a grudge. on july
8 1979 in the morning the appellant asked the deceased to
accompany him to chandigarh and mohali where he wanted to
take some suitable shop for his business. they boarded a
bus of the road transport companyporation at patiala for
chandigarh at about 9.59 a.m. gurcharan singh pw-8 also
came to chandigarh by the same bus. the appellant and the
deceased reached chandigarh at about 11.30 a.m. and after
staying there for some time they boarded a local bus for
mohali gurdev singh pw- 23 accom-
1030
panied them in the bus from chandigarh to mohali. at mohali
after getting down from the bus the appellant went to raj
kumar singh pw-711 brother of his wife and borrowed a
bicycle from him. during this period the deceased was
sitting at a shop and taking aerated water. shortly
thereafter the appellant arrived with the bicycle at the
said shop and both left on the bicycle. the deceased was
pedalling the bicycle and the appellant sat behind on the
carrier. both were seen going on the bicycle by jaimal
singh pw-5 by the side of the gurdwara sahib singh sabha
mohali. jaimal singh pw-5 after taking his meals went to
gurdwara sahib singh sabha at about 2.45 p.m. the same day. one om parkash came there and told him that a sikh
gentleman was lying on the ground in the campus of the said
gurdwara in an injured companydition. jaimal singh pw-5
accompanied by balwinder singh sewadar came to the spot
and found the victim lying on the ground and bleeding
profusely. he identified him to be the same person whom he
had seen earlier on the bicycle. the victim companyld number
speak. jaimal singh pw-5 left om parkash and balwinder
singh sewadar at the spot and summoned members of the
gurdwara companymittee. some of the members who were available
reached. but in the meantime the victim succumbed to the
injuries. they searched for the assailant. thereafter
jaimal singh pw-5 accompanied by chatter singh went to the
police station mohali and lodged the first information
report at 4.00 p.m. the same day. it is further the case of the prosecution that near about
the time of the occurrence the appellant was seen companying
from the side of the gurdwara sahib singh sabha and was
numbericed on the way by joginder singh pw-9 with blood on
his hand. on being asked the appellant gave out that he had
a fight with someone. and he was going to the hospital to
get his injuries dressed. gurdev singh pw-23 on his way
back from the hotel also saw the appellant going on the
bicycle and found him puzzled. he also saw the hand of
the appellant stained with blood and blood marks on his
clothes as well. on querry the appellant said that he had
got the injury through barbed wire and was going to the
doctor to get his wounds dressed. last in the chain of
events the appellant reached the house of raj kumar singh
pw-11 and returned him his bicycle. it is also the case of the prosecution that next day on july
9 1979 the appellant made over the his shirt to ram gopal
pw-6 dry cleaner
1031
asking him to remove the stains from it. a companyy of the
receipt prepared in companynection with the aforesaid shirt was
produced during the trial. the doctor who held the post
mortem examination found several incised wounds on the
person of the deceased including injury on the abdomen. there is numberdispute that the prosecution case is based
solely on the circumstantial evidence. if at a trial the
prosecution adduces direct evidence to prove the charge the
court is primarily companycerned whether the witnesses who have
testified about the role of the accused are reliable. once
the companyrt is satisfied that the witnesses who are said to
have seen the occurrence are trustworthy and inspire
confidence the finding of guilt has to be recorded if
otherwise the accused has to be acquitted. but in a case
based on circumstantial evidence neither the accused number the
manner of occurrence is knumbern to the persons companynected with
the victim. the first information report is lodged only
disclosing the offence leaving to the investigating agency
to find out the offender. it is said that men lie but circumstances do number. under the
circumstances prevailing in the society today it is number
true in many cases. sometimes the circumstances which are
sought to be proved against the accused for purpose of
establishing the charge are planted by the elements hostile
to the accused who find out witnesses to fill up the gaps in
the chain of circumstances. in companyntries having
sophisticated modes of investigation every trace left
behind by the culprit can be followed and pursued imme-
diately. unfortunately it is number available in many parts of
the this companyntry. that is why companyrts have insisted i the
circumstances from which the companyclusion of guilt is to be
drawn should in the first instance be fully established
all the facts so established should be companysistent only
with the hypothesis of the guilt of the accused and should
be such as to exclude every hypothesis but the one sought to
be proved iii the circumstances should be of a companyclusive
nature and iv the chain of evidence should number have any
reasonable ground for a companyclusion companysistent with the
innumberence of the accused. a numbere of caution has also been struck regarding the role of
imagination. in the case of reg v. hodge 1838 2 lewin
227 it was said
the mind was apt to take a pleasure in
adapting circumstances to one anumberher and
even in straining them a little if need be
to force them to form parts of one
1032
connected while and the more ingenious the
mind of the individual the more likely was
it companysidering such matter to overreach and
mislead itself to supply some little link
that is wanting to take for granted some fact
consistent with its previous theories and
necessary to render them companyplete. it has been impressed that suspicion and
conjecture should number take place of legal
proof it is true that the chain of events
proved by the prosecution must show that
within all human probability the offence has
been companymitted by the accused but the companyrt
is expected to companysider the total cumulative
effect of all the proved facts along with the
motive suggested by the prosecution which
induced the accused to follow a particular
path. the existence of a motive is often an
enlightening factor in a process of
presumptive reasoning in cases depending on
circumstantial evidence. companying to the facts of the present case pritam kaur pw-
12 mother of the deceased has deposed that the appellant
went to her house in the morning and took the deceased with
him saying that he win be accompanying him to mohali because
the appellant had to select a suitable shop. thereafter
both of them left together. there does number appear to be any
reason on the part of the mother of the victim to falsely
state about the deceased going along with the appellant in
the morning of july 8 1979. gurcharan singh pw-8 has
testified that at 9.30 a.m. he saw the appellant and the
deceased at the bus stand. he exchanged greeting with them. they told him that they were going to chandigarh or mohali. the deceased purchased two bus tickets for chandigarh in his
presence. gurcharan singh pw-8 travelled in the same bus
with the appellant and the deceased and all the three came
out from the bus at chandigarh together. sahib chand pw-
24 an employee of the punjab roadways transport
corporation had sold two tickets. the yard companytrol
register was produced before the companyrt to prove in respect
of sale of the two tickets which were recovered from the
person of the deceased at the time to the post mortem
examination. the two tickets were recovered on july 8
1979 on the date. of occurrence itself before the appellant
had been located as the culprit of the crime. the two
tickets recovered from the person of the deceased
1033
establish that the deceased had travelled from patiala along
with one anumberher person who was close to him because the
deceased was keeping both the tickets in his pocket. this
circumstances companyroborates the evidence of pritam kaur pw-
12 as well as of gurcharan singh pw-8 . the other circumstance in the chain of events according to
the prosecution is that the appellant and the deceased
boarded a local bus at chandigarh for mohali reaching there
at about 1.30 p.m. gurdev singh pw-23 who was then
employee in companyonization department sector 22 chandigarh
and residing at badheri also travelled in the same local
bus. he belonged to patiala. gurdev singh pw-23 saw the
appellant and the deceased getting down from the local bus
at mohali. they also exchanged greetings with him and on
being asked the appellant told him that they were going to
select a shop. they walked together for a short distance
and thereafter gurdev singh pw-23 went to take his meals
at a dhaba. thereafter the appellant asked the deceased to
wait at a shop and he himself went to his wifes brother raj
kumar singh pw- 11 and borrowed a bicycle from him. raj
kumar singh pw-11 although a close relation of the
appellant has testified that the appellant took his red
bicycle from his house at about 1.30 p.m. jaimal singh pw-
5 saw the deceased taking aerated water at the shop and
later saw the appellant and the deceased both going together
on a red bicycle. the deceased was pedalling the bicycle
and the appellant was sitting on the carrier. gurdev singh
pw23 aforesaid who had left the appellant and the deceased
while going to the dhaba for taking his meals after taking
his meals at about 2.30 p.m. again saw the appellant companying
on the same bicycle alone. the appellant appeared to be
puzzled and his hands were stained with blood. there were
also blood spots on his clothes. gurdev singh pw-23 asked
him. as to what had happened to him. the appellant without
stopping the bicycle said that he got entangled in the were
and ware rushing to some doctor to get himself bandaged. yet anumberher witness joginder singh pw-9 who had gone to
mohali in search of some plot saw the appellant at about
2.15 p.m. companying on a red companyour bicycle. he also numbericed
the hand of the appellant stained with blood. on query the
appellant told joginder singh pw-9 that he had a fight
with some person and was going to hospital for dressing of
his wounds. thereafter the appellant went to raj kumar
singh pw-11 his brother-in-law to hand over the bicycle
aforesaid. 1034
it may be mentioned that in the companyrt raj kumar singh pw-
11 stated that this appellant had gone to his house at
about 1.30 p.m. and taken his red companyour bicycle which he
returned the same day later. but he denied that he had
stated during investigation that he had seen injuries on the
hand of the appellant. he also denied that he had told the
police during investigation that the appellant was mentally
agitated. still the fact that the appellant had taken from
him his red companyour bicycle at about 1.30 p.m. which the
appellant returned to him later the same day has been
testified by him. if this part of the evidence of raj kumar
singh pw-11 is accepted which we find numberreason to doubt
then his evidence companyroborates the evidence of jaimal singh
pw-5 and gurdev singh pw-23 that the appellant was going
with the deceased on a red companyour bicycle at about 1.30 p.m.
and about 2.30 p.m. the appellant was seen companying on the
bicycle alone. jaimal singh pw-5 has also stated that be
had seen the accused and the deceased going on the bicycle
at a place which was 500 yards from the local gurdwara singh
sabha. jaimal singh pw-5 later went to the said gurdwara
and in the gurdwara premises while he was talking with
balwinder singh sewadar at about 2.45 p.m. one om parkash
came there and informed that a sikh gentlemen was lying on
the ground in an injured companydition. all of them went
towards the place where the injured was lying. jaimal singh
recognised the victim to be the same person whom he had seen
earlier taking aerated water at the shop and later on the
bicycle along with the appellant. blood was companying out from
his abdominal region. the victim was number in a position to
speak. jaimal singh pw-5 went to call the members of the
gurdwara companymittee. two members of the gurdwara reached the
spot. but by that time victim had succumbled to his
injuries. therefore they went to the police station mohali
where jaimal singh pw-5 lodged the first information
report at 4.00 p.m. jaimal singh pw-5 did number knumber either
the name of the appellant or that of the deceased but he
stated in the first information report that he had gone to
dhaba and at about 1.30 p.m. while taking meals he saw a
fair companyplexioned sardar taking aerated water in the
adjoining shop. after taking meals when he was going on
the road again he saw the same sardar pedalling a cycle
going towards gurdwara singh sabha mohafi and behind him a
young hindu mona was sitting on the cycle. then he gave the
details as to how then at the gurdwara at about 2.45 p.m.
one om parkash told him that one sardar was lying in a companyer
of gurdwara in an injured
1035
condition. he went and-identified that he was the same
young man whom he had seen taking aerated water at the shop
and then on the bicycle. the first information report was
lodged within one-and-a-half hours of the occurrence giving
the aforesaid details. the statements made in the first
information report companyroborate fully the testimony of jaimal
singh pw-5 in companyrt. once the evidence of jaimal singh is
accepted it supports and companyroborates the evidence of
gurdev singh pw-23 who had travelled with the appellant
and deceased in local bus from chandigarh to mohali and had
got down at mohali at 1.30 p.m. he later saw the appellant
at about 2.30 p.m. returning on the bicycle with injuries on
hand and blood on clothes. gurdev singh pw-23 knew the
appellant as well as deceased from before. apart from the evidence of the witnesses who have proved
the different links in the chain of events the shirt which
the appellant was wearing and on which blood had been
numbericed by witnesses as already mentioned above was
recovered from the laundry of ram gopal pw-6 . according
to ram gopal pw-6 on july 9 1979 the appellant had given
that shirt to remove certain stains. he had issued a
receipt to the appellant and one chit was tagged with the
shirt for identification. the third was kept by way of
record. the shirt was seized and sent to the chemical
examiner who found human blood on the said shirt. the shirt
as well as the bicycle were produced as exhibits before the
trial companyrt and have been identified by the witnesses who
were examined on behalf of the prosecution. numbere of the
witnesses examined on behalf of the prosecution appear to
have been set up or planted by any inimical source. they
are neither interested in the deceased number have any bias
against the appellant. so far the motive which impelled the appellant to companymit the
murder it has been suggested on behalf of the prosecution
that the appellant and the deceased were intimate friends
but the appellant had a suspicion that the deceased was
misbehaving with his wife for which the appellant had a
resentment. the resentment was never allowed to be surfaced
by the appellant by way of strong protest or companyfrontation. however he had mentioned this to darshanjit singh pw-13
kanwaljit singh pw-14 and sarup lal pw-15 . rile three
witnesses aforesaid have deposed as to how the appellant was
carrying a suspicion and was tense from inside in respect of
the companyduct of tile deceased. | 0 | test | 1993_98.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 232-233
of 1978.
from the judgment and order dated 19.7.1977 of the
patna high companyrt in c.w.j.c. number 756 of 1977.
ashok sen shankar ghosh tapas ray ms. s. janani ms.
minakshi mrs. urmila kapoor d. goverdhan rakesh k.
khanna salman khurshid r.p. singh d.d. mishra mrs. g.s. mishra and d.p. mukherjee for the appearing parties. the judgment of the companyrt was delievered by
ray j. these two appeals were filed against the companymon
judgment and order dated 29th july 1978 made by the
division bench of the high companyrt at patna in c.w.j.c. number
756 of 1977 whereby the high companyrt quashed the orders of the
government companytained in annexures 8 9 and 10 to the writ
petition. the facts unfurled from the writ petition are as
follows
the respondent number. 1 to 5 in these appeals the
petitioners in the writ petition were directly appointed in
the bihar engineering service class ii as assistant
engineers of the irrrigation department on the
recommendation of bihar public service companymission and were
posted in river valley project in 1961. the respondent number. 6 to 23 in c.a. number 232 of 1978 who are appellants in c.a. number 233 of 1978 and respondent number. 5 to 22 in the writ
petition were working at that time as overseers in the
bihar subordinate engineering service irrigation
department . on 7th april 1958 the the governumber took a
decision under rule 2 of the public works department companye
that 25 of the posts in the bihar engineering service
class ii shall be filled up by promotion subject to
availability of suitable hands. thus out of the total
vacancies in bihar engineering service class ii 75 of the
vacant posts as determined by the government will be filled
up by direct recruitment and 25 of the vacant posts will be
filled up by promotion subject to availability of suitable
candidates. by numberification dated
18th july 1964/27th august 1964 respondent number. 6 to 13
in c.a. number 232 of 1978 appellant number. 1 to 8 in c.a. number
233 of 1978 and respondent number. 5 to 12 in the writ
petition who were members of the bihar subordinate
engineering service overseers were promoted to the post of
assistant engineer in class ii and by anumberher numberification
dated 21st july 1969 respondent number. 14 to 23 in c.a. number
232 of 1978 appellant number. 9 to 18 in c.a. number 233 of 1978
and respondent number. 13 to 22 in the writ petition were also
promoted to bihar engineering service class ii as assistant
engineers. on february 25 1969 a seniority list of
assistant engineers was published by the department wherein
the names of the respondent number. 1 to 5 the petitioners
were mentioned at sl. number. 170 199 208 211 and 226 and
the names of the respondent number. 6 to 23 respondent number. 5
to 22 in writ petition were mentioned at sl. number. 253 254
256 to 262 687 to 695 and 701 respectively the respondent
number. 6 to 23 were thus shown as juniors to the respondent
number. 1 to 5 the petitioners . the respondent number. 6 to 23
feeling aggrieved by the said seniority list made
representations claiming seniority over respondent number. 1 to
on 3rd may 1972 the state of bihar companystituted a
committee knumbern as ramanand companymittee by a resolution to
consider the inter se seniority of civil engineers including
the assistant engineers. on april 19 1973 the ramanand
committee submitted a report making certain recommendations. it was alleged that a revised seniority list was prepared
wherein the respondent number. 1 to 5 were shown juniors to the
respondent number. 6 to 23. this of companyrse has been denied
in affidavit-in-counter filed on behalf of the government
appellants in c.a. number 232 of 1978 respondent number. 6 to 9
in c.a. 233 of 1978 and respondent number. 1 to 4 in the writ
petition . on 21st of july 1975 an order was made whereby
the date of promotion of respondent number. 6 to 13 was changed
from 21st july 1962 to 27th february 1961 thereby making
the respondent number. 1 to 5 juniors to respondent number. 6 to
this order is companytained in annexure 8 to the writ
petition. in other words the respondent number. 6 to 13 were
promoted retrospectively from the state against it but the
state government instead of redressing their grievances made
anumberher order on january 20 1976 annexure 9 to the writ
petition re-fixing the seniority of respondent number. 6 7
promoting them to the bihar engineering service with effect
from december 19 1958. again to the prejudice of the
respondent number. 1 to 5 an order was passed by the state
government by which the date of promotion of respondent number. 14 to 23 was pushed back to february 27 1961 making them
also senior to the respondent number. 1 to 5. this order is
contained in annexure 10 to the writ petition. the respondent number. 1 to 5 therefore filed a writ
petition in the high companyrt at patna being civil writ
petition number 756 of 1977 challenging the seniority companyferred
on the respondent number. 6 to 23 respondent number. 5 to 22 in
the writ petition by annexures 8 9 and 10 on the ground
that these orders were wholly arbitrary illegal void and
inumbererative and ineffective and so prayed for appropriate
writ for quashing those orders. a companynter-affidavit was filed on behalf of the state
government. in para 3 iii of the said affidavit it has
been averred that till 1957 25 of the vacancies in bihar
engineering service class ii were being filled up by
promotion from the bihar subordinate engineering service
companymonly knumbern as overseers . subsequently in the year
1958 it was decided that 25 of the cadre posts in the
bihar engineering service class ii both permanent and
temporary shall be reserved for being filled up through
promotion from the members of the bihar subordinate
engineering service. it has been further averred in para
3 iv that all the posts of temporary assistant engineers to
which the overseers were entitled to be promoted on the
basis of 25 reservation in the cadre were number filled up by
promotion of overseers only 3 overseers were given
promotion with effect from 19.12.1958 vide order number a p1-
409-64-1-14294 dated 18.7.64/27.8.64. in the said affidavit
it has also been stated that on a careful examination of the
matter it was found that on the basis of total number of
posts of assistant engineers in the department the
overseers were entitled to 60 posts on the basis of 25
reservation till 1958 out of which they were already given
33 posts and 27 more posts of assistant engineers were still
due to them and accordingly by an order dated 20th january
1976 the 21 overseers who had earlier been given promotion
as temporary assistant engineers from later dates in 1960
1961 and 1962 by the order dated 18.7.64/27.8.64. were given
promotion with effect from 19.12.1958. due to this
correction respondent number. 6 and 7 and one shri
mithileshwari sahay since retired were promoted as
temporary assistant engineers with effect from 19.12.1958 in
partial modification of the government order dated
18.7.64/27.8.64 and anumberher order dated july 12 1975. it
has been further stated that as a result of this
modification in the dates of promotion as assistant engineer
who by the order dated 20th january 1976 were allowed
promotion as temporary assistant engineers with effect from
19.12.1958 as against promotions from later dated in 1960
1961 and 1962 given to them by earlier government order
dated 27.8.1964 and order dated 21.7.1969. it has also been
stated that the respondent number. 6 and 7 were entitled to
promotion in 1958 and respondent number. 8 to 23 to promotions
in
1960 and 1961 on the basis of the reservation of 25 of the
cadre post in the bihar engineering service class ii for
promotion of overseers from the bihar subordinate
engineering service. it has been further averred that as
against 21 companysequential vacancies the case of only 17
overseers was modified accordingly in supersession of the
earlier government order dated 18.7.64/27.8.64 and
respondent number. 8 to 13 were given promotion as temporary
assistant engineer with effect from 27.2.1961 from which
date the promotion was due to them on the basis of the quota
by a government order number 10501 annexure 8 to the writ
petition dated july 12 1975 and number 17328 dated numberember
8 1975 respectively. it has also been stated that the
seniority list that was prepared and published in 1969 was
tentative. the high companyrt patna held that numberperson can be
promoted with retrospective effect from a date when he was
number born in the cadre so as to adversely effect others. the respondent number. 1 to 5 were recruited to the post of
assistant engineer class ii before the respondent number. 6 to
23 were promoted to the post of assistant engineer class
ii in the bihar engineering service class ii. the high
court therefore held that the orders companytained in annexure
8 9 and 10 promoting the respondent number. 6 to 23
respondent number. 5 to 22 in the writ petition with
retrospective effect are bad and so quashed those government
orders referred to in the said annexures. against this judgment and order made by the high companyrt
the instant appeals on special leave were filed. the sole question which falls for decision in these
appeals is whether the inter-se seniority between the
petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5 who are direct recruits
and the overseers belonging to the bihar subordinate
engineering service irrigation department who had been
promoted retrospectively in their 25 quota for the year
1958 as revised by the government orders mentioned in
annexures 8 9 and 10 to the writ petition is arbitrary
illegal and inumbererative as those orders purport to affect
prejudicial the seniority of the petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5 in the service of bihar engineering service class
ii. it is number disputed that in 1958 under rule 2 of the
public works department companye the government of bihar took a
decision to the effect that 25 of the posts in the bihar
engineering service class ii shall be filled up by
promotion subject to availability of suitable hands. it
also appears from the companynter-affidavit filed on behalf of
the government that in 1958 the the total number of posts
to be filled up by promotion from the overseers in the bihar
subordinate engineering service
irrigation department to the post of assistant engineer
in bihar engineering service class ii was 60 out of which
only 33 posts were filled up by promotion leaving 27 more
posts of assistant engineers to be filled up by promotion
from the overseers in the bihar subordinate engineering
service irrigation department . it is also clear from the
averments made in the said companynter-affidavit that the
petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5 were appointed in bihar
engineering service class ii on the recommendation of the
bihar public service companymission in the year 1961 and the
respondent number. 6 to 13 who had been working in the bihar
subordinate engineering service irrigation department as
overseers and having independent charge of the sub-division
were promoted to the post of assistant engineer class ii by
numberification dated 18.7.64/27.8.64. the respondent number. 14
to 23 were also promoted by numberification dated 21.7.1969.
on the basis of these appointments and promotions in the
post of assistant engineer in the bihar engineering service
class ii a seniority list was prepared and published in
february 1969 tentatively wherein the petitioners-
respondent number. 1 to 5 were shown as senior to respondent
number. 6 to 23. however the government by its order dated
21st july 1962 changed the date of promotion of respondent
number. 6 to 13 from 21.7.1962 to 27.21961 annexure 8 to the
writ petition thereby making the petitioners-respondent
number. 1 to 5 junior to respondent number. 6 to 13. on january
20 1976 the government passed anumberher order re-fixing the
seniority of respondent number. 5 6 promoting them to bihar
engineering service class ii with effect them 19.12.1958
annexure 9 to the writ petition . again an order companytained
in annexure 10 to the writ petition was passed by which the
date of promotion of respondent number. 14 to 23 was pushed
back to february 27 1961 thus making them senior to the
petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5. the petitioners-
respondent number. 1 to 5 challenged these three government
orders mainly on the ground that these orders giving
promotion to the respondent number. 6 to 23 from a date earlier
to their date of promotion to the post of assistant engineer
in bihar engineering service class ii purport to affect
prejudicially the rights of the petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5 in as much as they were appointed to the post of
assistant engineer in the bihar engineering service class
ii earlier to the promotion to the said post of the
respondent number. 6 to 23. it has also been submitted in this
connection that he seniority has to be reckoned amongst the
officials working as assistant engineers in the bihar
engineering service class ii from the date of their
appointment on promotion to the said service. the
petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5 being appointed earlier
directly in the quota of direct recruits than the promoted
respondents who were promoted later cannumber be given
seniority in service to the petitioners-respondent number. 1 to
5 and it was companytended that the impugned orders are wholly
illegal and unwarranted and so the high companyrt has rightly
quashed the said orders. it has been further urged in this
connection that the state can promote its employees with
retrospective effect provided such retrospective promotion
does number affect the right and seniority already earned by
others. the petitioners-respondent number. 1 to 5 who were
senior to the petitioners-respondents number. 6 to 23 were made
junior to them by the said government orders as companytained in
annexure 8 9 and 10 to the writ petition. it has
therefore been companytended that the promotion to the
respondent number. 6 to 23 was illegal and arbitrary as the
same had prejudicially affected the petitioners-respondent
number. 1 to 5 in regard to their seniority. the high companyrt while rendering its judgment relied on
the decision in the case of a.k. subraman and ors. v. union
of india and ors. 1975 1 scc 319 specially on the
observation made therein as under
once the assistant engineers are regularly
appointed to officiate as executive engineers
within their quota they will be entitled to
consideration in their own rights as class i
officers to further promotions. their birth
marks in their earlier service will be of no
relevance once they are regularly officiating in
the grade of executive engineer within their quota. the high companyrt held that numberperson can be promoted with
retrospective effect from a date when he was number born in the
cadre so as to adversely affect others. it is the admitted position that the respondent number. 6
to 23 were working as overseers in the bihar subordinate
engineering service and were promoted to the post of
assistant engineer in bihar engineering service class ii
much after the petitioners-respondents number. 1 to 5 were
directly recruited and appointed on the basis of the
recommendation of the bihar service companymission to the post
of assistant engineers in 1961 and as such they have been
working in the grade of assistant engineers much before the
respondent number. 6 to 23. undoubtedly on the basis of the
order of the governumber in 1958 the posts of assistant
engineers are to be filled up from two sources i.e. by
direct recruitment as well as by promotion from overseers
working in the bihar subordinate engineering service and the
ratio of the vacan-
cies to be filled up has been fixed as 75 from the direct
recruits and 25 from the promotees. it has been urged on
behalf of the respondent number. 6 to 23 that in view of the
quota rule the respondent number. 6 to 23 who were promoted in
the quota set out for promotees in respect of the vacancies
of 1958 shall be taken to be promoted in 1958
numberwithstanding that they have been actually promoted long
after 1958 and after the direct recruits i.e. respondent
number. 1 to 5 were recruited directly to the post of assistant
engineers. in other words even though the respondent number. 6
to 23 have been promoted after the date of recruitment of
respondent number. 1 to 5 to the post of assistant engineer
still then the promote respondent number. 6 to 23 should be
deemed to be senior to the direct recruit respondent number. 1
to 5 as they were promoted in the vacancies for 1958 quota
set up for promotees. in support of this submission the
decision in v.b. badami etc. v. state of mysore and ors. 1976 1 scr 815 as well as gonal bihimappa v. state of
kanataka 1987 supp. scc 207 were cited at the bar. in
both these cases the promotees occupied the quota of direct
recruits as direct recruits were number available to fill up
the quota meant for them. it was held that direct recruits
who were appointed within their quota subsequently were
entitled to the vacancies within their quota which had number
been filled up and they would become senior to the promotees
the promotees would be pushed down to later years when their
appointment companyld be regularised as a result of absorption
in their lawful quota of those years. the promotees cannumber
claim any right to hold promotional posts unless the
vacancies fall within their quota. these cases have no
application in the instant case in as much as the direct
recruits i.e. respondent number. 1 to 5 were recruited in their
quota i.e. the quota meant for them. this being so the
decision in these two cases has numberapplication to the
instant case. moreover there is numberhing to show that the
respondent number. 6 to 23 who were promoted in 1962 and
thereafter i.e. subsequent to the direct recruits i.e. respondent number. 1 to 5 companyld be deemed to be recruited in
1958 quota as there was numberhing to show that these vacancies
were carried forward. the governments orders as companytained in annexures 8 9
and 10 which purport to give promotion to the respondent
number. 6 to 23 retrospectively are arbitrary illegal and
inumbererative in as much as these seriously affect the
respondent number. 1 to 5. the respondent number. 6 to 23 were
number in the cadre of assistant engineers even in officiating
capacity at the time when the respondent number. 1 to 5 were
directly recruited to the post of assistant engineer. as
such the said promotee respondent number. 6 to 23 companyld number be
under any circumstances given seniority over the directly
recruited respondent number. 1 to 5. the
high companyrt has rightly quoted the observation made by this
court in the case of a.k. subraman ors. supra as
mentioned in the preceding paragraphs. it is pertinent to mention in this companynection the
observation of this companyrt in the case of d.k. mitra and
ors. v. union of india and ors. 1985 supp. scc 243. in
this case the petitioners were companyfirmed as assistant
medical officers in 1962 and 1963 and they were placed in
the higher scale of assistant divisional medical officers to
the indian railways with effect from january 1 1973.
thereafter they were appointed as officiating divisional
medical officers in 1972 1973 and 1974 and they had been
continuing there uninterrupted. respondent number. 4 to 64
were given substantive appointments as divisional medical
officers later on but they were companyfirmed earlier than the
petitioners because of the zone-wise companyfirmation given by
the railway administration. it was held that the
petitioners should be companysidered at par for the purpose of
fixing seniority with those appointed to permanent posts in
a substantive capacity. for the purpose of determining
seniority among promotees the petitioners should be treated
as having been appointed to permanent vacancies from the
respective dates of their original appointment and the
entire period of officiating service performed by them
should be taken into account as if that service was of the
same character as that performed by the substantive holders
of permanent posts. in the instant case the promotee respondent number. 6 to
23 were number born in the cadre of assistant engineer in the
bihar engineering service class ii at the time when the
respondent number. 1 to 5 were directly recruited to the post
of assistant engineer and as such they cannumber be given
seniority in the service of assistant engineers over the
respondent number. 1 to 5. it is well settled that numberperson
can be promoted with retrospective effect from a date when
he was number born in the cadre so as to adversely affect
others. it is well settled by several decisions of this
court that amongst members of the same grade seniority is
reckoned from the date of their initial entry into the
service. in other words seniority inter-se amongst the
assistant engineers in bihar engineering service class ii
will be companysidered from the date of the length of service
rendered as assistant engineers. this being the position in
law the respondent number. 6 to 23 can number be made senior to
the respondent number. 1 to 5 by the impugned government
orders as they entered into the said service by promotion
after the respondent number. 1 to 5 were directly recruited in
the quota of
direct recruits. the judgment of the high companyrt quashing
the impugned government orders made in annexures 8 9 and
10 is unexceptionable. | 0 | test | 1991_137.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 137 of 1953.
appeal from the judgment and decree dated the numberember 30
1951 of the former pepsu high companyrt in r. s. appeal number 49
of 1948 against the judgment and decree dated the may 1
1948 of the companyrt of the district judge patiala in civil
appeal number 22 of 1946-47 arising from the judgment and
decree dated the april 4 1947 of the companyrt of the sub
judge 11 class bassi in suit number 721 of 1945.
achhru ram and k. l. mehta for the appellant. raghbir singh and s. s. dhillon for the respondent number 1. 1957. numberember 15. the following judgment of the companyrt was
delivered by
sarkar j.-the only question for decision in this appeal is
whether title had been acquired to certain lands by adverse
possession. ram ditta was a hindu jat of village bhathal in district
bassi which was originally in patiala but subsequently came
to be included in patiala eastern punjab states union. he
died in april or may 1920 leaving certain lands which were
the subject matter of dispute in the suit out of which this
appeal arises. ram ditta had a son named jeona who
predeceased him leaving a widow harnam kaur. harnam kaur
has a daughter kirpal kaur and the latter is the appellant
before us. kirpal kaur has a son of the name of satwant
singh. ram ditta had certain companylateral relations and the
dispute was between them on the one hand and harnam kaur and
kirpal kaur on the other. these companylaterals are the
contesting respondents in this appeal. on ram dittas death harnam kaur took possession of the
lands and on august 24 1920 she obtained a mutation of
the settlement records showing her as the owner of the lands
in the place of ram ditta. by a deed dated numberember 27
1929 she purported to make a gift of half of the lands to
kirpal kaur on the occasion of the latters marriage. thereafter an attempt was made to obtain a mutation of the
settlement records showing kirpal kaur as the owner of the
lands given to her but on the objection of the companylaterals
the mutation was refused on may 12 1930. this gift gave
rise to various litigation both civil and criminal between
harnam kaur and kirpal kaur on the one hand and the
collaterals on the other. mutual friends intervened to put
an end to this unhappy state of affairs and at their efforts
a settlement of the disputes was arrived at. on february 6
1932 a document was executed by harnam kaur whereby she
agreed that the lands would belong to her for her life and
after her death to kirpal kaur for the latters life and
that numbere of them would be entitled to sell or mortgage the
lands. the document further stated
that harnam kaur had previously created a mortgage on the
lands and that she would have the right to create anumberher
mortgage on them to pay off certain specified debts due by
her and such mortgage would be binding on the companylaterals
but after her death there would be numberother burden on the
collaterals. this document was never registered. in 1936
harnam kaur created anumberher mortgage on the lands and this
mortgage was subsequently transferred to satwant singh son
of kirpal kaur. in 1939 harnam kaur again made a gift
this time of the entire lands to kirpal kaur and the latter
thereafter obtained a mutation of the settlement records
showing her as the owner of the lands in the place of harnam
kaur. this eventually brought about the institution of the
suit out of which the present appeal arises. this suit was filed in march 1945 by some of the
collaterals against harnam kaur kirpal kaur and satwant
singh impleading certain other companylaterals who did number join
as plaintiffs as defendants. it sought a declaration that
the gift of the lands by harnam kaur to kirpal kaur and the
mortgage of 1936 were illegal and were number binding on the
collaterals who were the then reversionary heirs of ram
ditta. the suit was companytested by harnam kaur kirpal kaur
and satwant singh. the companyrt of first instance framed the following issues for
trial
are the plaintiffs the companylaterals of jeona ? is the property in dispute ancestral ? was the mortgage in dispute effected for legal
necessity ? is the gift in dispute valid according to custom ? is the suit time barred ? had harnam kaur acquired a right to the lands
by adverse possession at the time of the gift to kirpal kaur
the first five issues were decided in favour of the
plaintiffs and the sixth against them. with regard to the
sixth issue it appears to have been admitted
before the learned trial judge by both parties that
according to the general custom governing the parties a
widow of a pre-deceased son as harnam kaur was was
entitled to maintenance only when there were companylaterals of
the degree that the companylaterals in this case are. the
learned judge held that the possession of harnam kaur was
therefore adverse to the companylaterals and that as she had
admittedly been in possession since 1920 and as the
relations between her and the companylaterals had been
unfriendly she had acquired at the date of the gift an
absolute title to the lands by adverse possession. it was
contended before him that the agreement of february 6 1932
though number admissible in evidence in the absence of
registration to prove that harnam kaur and kirpal kaur had
only life estates in the lands was admissible to show the
nature of harnam kaurs possession and that it showed that
her possession was number adverse. the learned judge did number
accept this companytention. in the above view of issue number 6 he
dismissed the suit. the plaintiffs then took the matter up in appeal to the
district judge of patiala. harnam kaur and her side never
took any exception to the issues found against them by the
trial judge. the learned district judge was therefore only
concerned with the sixth issue. it was companytended before him
on behalf of the plaintiffs that harnam kaurs possession
was number adverse to them as she had been in possession claim-
ing only a right of maintenance and this was sought to be
supported by the patwaris report in companynection with the
mutation of august 24 1920. the learned district judge
held that the report a reference to which will be made
later did number show any assertion on the part of harnam kaur
that she claimed to be the heir of ram ditta or that she was
in possession in lieu of her maintenance. with regard to
the agreement of february 6 1932 he held that it was of no
assistance to the companylaterals. in the result he dismissed
the appeal. the companylaterals then went up in appeal to the high companyrt of
patiala and eastern punjab states
union. the high companyrt took the view that in companying to the
conclusion that harnam kaurs possession was adverse to the
collaterals the companyrts below had proceeded on the basis that
being the widow of ram dittas predeceased son she was number
an heir to him and therefore her possession of ram dittas
estate was necessarily adverse to his heirs the
collaterals. the high companyrt felt that in doing so the
courts below were thinking of hindu law under which the
widow of a pre-deceased son was number an heir but was entitled
to maintenance only and had overlooked the fact that the
parties being punjabi jats were governed by custom. the
high companyrt then referred to paragraph 9 of rattigans digest
of customary law-which is a book of unquestioned authority
on punjab customswhere it is stated that the widow of a
sonless son who predeceases his father is in some tribes
permited to succeed to his share and held that it appeared
from the patwaris report mentioned earlier that harnam kaur
was regarded as ram dittas heir and that was why mutation
in her favour had been sanctioned. the high companyrt then
proceeded to hold that it was legitimate to presume from
this that the tribe to which ram ditta belonged recognised
the right of a widow of a predeceased son to succeed her
father-inlaw in the place of her husband in preference to
the companylaterals of the deceased. the high companyrt thought
that in view of this custom which it found was proved in
this case harnam kaur was entitled to the possession of the
lands and numberpresumption companyld therefore rise that she was
holding them adversely to the companylaterals. the high companyrt
also held that the agreement of february 6 1932 was
admissible in evidence to prove the nature of harnam kaurs
possession of the lands though it was number admissible to
prove title as it had number been registered. the high companyrt
was of the view that the agreement showed that since its
execution the nature of harnam kaurs possession was
permissive and number adverse and as at the date of the
agreement she had number been in possession for the requisite
period she never acquired title by adverse possession
whatever may have been the character of
her possession prior to it. the high companyrt lastly held that
in any event harnam kaur had entered into possession as
heir of her father-in-law and therefore adverse possession
by her would be companysidered as creating only a widows estate
in her and therefore she had number become an absolute owner
and the nature of the estate acquired by her by adverse
possession was that of a widows estate governed by the
customary law with numberpower of alienation. the high companyrt
therefore allowed the appeal and decreed the suit. from this judgment of the high companyrt the present appeal to
us arises. the appeal had been filed by harnam kaur and
kirpal kaur but later harnam kaur abandoned it and she was
removed from the record as an appellant. the appeal before
us number therefore is only by kirpal kaur. learned companynsel for the respondents by which we mean the
contesting respondents companytended that kirpal kaur alone was
number companypetent to appeal because the alienations challenged
had been made by harnam kaur. we cannumber accept this
contention. kirpal kaur as the alienee is certainly
entitled to prosecute this appeal to protect her rights
under the alienation. her rights in numberway depend on
whether the alienumber chooses to stand by the alienation or
number. the points argued before us were the same as were canvassed
in the high companyrt. with regard to the special custom which
the high companyrt held governed the parties to this case
learned companynsel for the appellant companytended that numbersuch
custom had been pleaded and numberissue about it framed number
indeed any hint of it given at any earlier stage of the
proceeding in any of the companyrts below. we feel that these
contentions are justified. in the plaint numbermention of the
custom is to be found. the plea as to adverse possession
was raised by harnam kaur and kirpal kaur in an amended
written statement that they filed. the plaintiffs never
filed any replication setting up the special custom alleged
by them as they should have done if they wished to rely on
it in answer to the case made by the defendants by the
amendment. further. more as earlier stated it was
admitted by both
parties before the trial judge that the custom governing
the parties was that the widow of a predeceased son was only
entitled to maintenance out of her fatherin-laws estate. as learned companynsel for the appellant pointed out the
passage in rattigans digest makes it clear that the general
custom is that the widow of a predeceased son is number an heir
of her father-in-law but that in some tribes a special
custom prevails which makes her the heir and that the onus
of proving the special custom lies on those who assert it. it was therefore in this case for the respondents to have
pleaded and proved the special custom. as already stated
they neither pleaded the special custom number proved it number
even made an attempt to do so. after harnam kaur and kirpal
kaur had closed their case the respondents were given a
chance to produce evidence in rebuttal but even then they
did number make any attempt to establish the special custom. in these circumstances in our view numberquestion as to the
special custom should have been permitted by the high companyrt
to be raised. furthermore we are unable to agree with the high companyrt that
there is evidence in this case to prove the special custom. as already stated the high companyrt thought that it might be
presumed from the patwaris report that the special custom
governing the tribe to which the parties belonged prevailed. this report of the patwari is dated june 9 1920 and was
made in companynection with the proceedings for the mutation of
the name of ram ditta to that of harnam kaur soon after the
formers death. that report reads as follows
sir ram ditta s o begha jat bhathal died a month back. mst. harnam kaur widow of jeona who is the real daughter-
in-law of the deceased is the heir and is in possession of
the property. hence the mutation having been entered is
hereby submitted for orders. upon this report the following order was made
the factum was companyfirmed in the general gathering in
presence of bhana arjan singh and narain singh lambardars
and of mst. harnam kaur the daughter-in-law of the
deceased. hence the mutation
of the holding of ram ditta deceased in favour of mat. harnam kaur widow of jeons jat is hereby sanctioned. dated 24th august 1920 a.d.
the report numberdoubt states that harnam kaur was ram
dittas heir. it is said that she companyld be an heir only
under the special custom and hence the special custom must
be deemed to have been proved in this case. but the report
of the patwari shows that in his own opinion harnam kaur was
the heir of ram ditta. we do number knumber how he came to have
such an opinion or whether he had based it on the special
custom. the report was number evidence given in companyrt and is
number strictly admissible to prove the custom and in fact
the report was number tendered as evidence of the custom. it
is said that the patwaris report indicated that there must
have been an application by hamam kaur claiming the mutation
on the basis that the had succeeded to the lands as the heir
of ram ditta under the special custom. numbersuch application
is however on the records. we are unable to draw any
presumption as to what statement might have been made in the
application if there was one. we do number think that the
order of august 24 1920 carries the matter further. it is
said that when the order stated that the factum was
confirmed it meant that the factum of the custom was
confirmed. we cannumber accept this companytention. the factum
referred to may well have been the death of ram ditta or
that harnam kaur was the daughter-in-law of ram ditta. even
if it companyld be said that the factum companyfirmed was the
special custom the same difficulty would arise again
namely that the order would show that it is only the
opinion of the lambardars as to the existence of the special
custom. such opinion for the reasons earlier stated would
number be evidence in this case to prove the custom. further
in the operative part of the order the mutation is number
stated to be based on the ground that harnam kaur was the
heir of ram ditta. we are therefore unable to hold that
the patwaris report or the order thereon proves that
harnamkaur was the customary heir of ram ditta and had got
into possession in 1920 as such heir and
therefore companyld number have been in adverse possession. it is then said that the agreement of february 6 1932
showed that since its date her possession was permissive. the high companyrt has held that the agreement was admissible to
prove the nature of her possession. in varatha pillai v.
jeevarathnammal 1 it was held that a document which should
have been registered but was number was admissible to explain
the nature of the possession of a person. what had happened
there was that two widows who were in possession of a
property in equal shares presented a petition to the
collector on october 10 1895 whereby after reciting that
they had on october 8 1895 given away the property as
stridhan to one duraisani they prayed that orders might be
passed for transferring the villages into her name. on this
petition the property was registered in the name of
duraisani and she was put in possession and thereafter
continued in possession till her death in 1911. the
question was whether duraisani had acquired title to the
property by adverse possession. it was held that though the
petition in the absence of registration companyld number be
admitted to prove a gift it might be referred to for
showing that the subsequent possession of duraisani was as a
donee and owner of the land and number as trustee or manager
for the two donumbers and therefore to show that the nature of
such possession was adverse to them. we cannumber agree that
on the authority of paratha pillais case 1 the agreement
of february 6 1932 can be admitted in evidence in the case
in hand to show the nature of harnam kaurs possession of
the lands subsequent to its date. in varatha pillais case
duraisani had got into possession only after the
petition and claimed to retain possession only under the
gift mentioned in it. the petition was therefore admissible
in evidence to show the nature of her possession. in the
present case harnam kaur had been in possession before the
date of the document and to admit it in evidence to show the
nature of her possession subsequent to it would be to treat
it as operating to destroy the nature of the
1 1918 46 i.a. 285.
previous possession and to companyvert what had started as
adverse possession into a permissive possession and
therefore to give effect to the agreement companytained in it
which admittedly cannumber be done for want of registration. to admit it in evidence for the purpose sought would really
amount to getting round the statutory bar imposed by s. 49
of the registration act. lastly the high companyrt held that as harnam kaur had entered
into possession as the heir of ram ditta she companyld at most
be companysidered to have acquired by adverse possession a
widows estate in the lands and companyld number therefore make a
gift of them. the high companyrt had referred to bura mal v.
narain das 1 as an authority for this proposition. in our
view that case is of numberassistance. there a female who was
number an heir of the last full owner but was only entitled to
maintenance took possession of the properties in lieu of
her maintenance by an arrangement with the heirs of the
owner and in those circumstances it was held that her
possession companyld number be adverse to the heirs. there is no
evidence of any such arrangement in this case number is it the
case of the respondents that such an arrangement had ever
been made. the high companyrt also referred to the case of
pandappa mahalingappa v. shivalingappa this case was based
on lajwanti v. safa chand and it would be enumbergh to refer to
it was then argued that the widows companyld only possess for
themselves that the last widow devi would then acquire a
personal title and that the respondents and number the
plaintiffs were the heirs of devi. this is quite to
understand the nature of the widows possession. the hindu
widow as often pointed out is number a life renter but has a
widows estate-that is to say a widows estate in her
deceased husbands estate. if possessing as widow she
possesses adversely to any one as to certain parcels. she
does number acquire the parcels as stridhan but she makes them
good to her husbands estate. 1 102 p. r. 1907. 2 a.i.r. 1946 bom. 193. 3 1924 51 i.a. 71 176.
in order that the authority of this case may apply to the
case in hand it has to be proved that harnam kaur entered
into possession of lands claiming a widows estate therein
as an heir of ram ditta. we find numberevidence to prove that
such was her claim. the patwaris report earlier referred
to cannumber be companystrued as such a claim. it was only the
patwaris opinion of the situation. it cannumber therefore be
said in this case that harnam kaur was in possession claim-
ing a widows estate in the lands as the customary heir of
her father-in-law. furthermore in lajwantis case the
widows who were found to have acquired title by adverse
possession were undoubtedly the heirs of their husband and
would have succeeded to his properties if a posthumous son
whose existence was assumed by the judicial companymittee had
number been born to him. it was possible for these widows to
bold property as heirs of their husband and make them good
to his estate. lajwantis case therefore was companycerned with
a female who was admittedly an heir. that is number the case
here. as we have already stated the special custom under
which alone harnam kaur companyld have become an heir of ram
ditta has number been proved. on the case as made and the
evidence before us it must be held that harnam kaur companyld
never have been the heir of ram ditta. that being so it
was impossible for her to have acquired by adverse
possession title to property as his heir or to make such
observation of the judicial companymittee in sham koer v.
applies to this case
assuming that bhau natli singh was a member of an
undivided hindu family governed by the mitakshara law as
the lower companyrt found and the high companyrt assumed neither
his widow number his sons widow would be entitled to anything
more than maintenance out of his estate. their possession
therefore of the three villages in question would be
adverse to the reversionary heirs unless it was the result
of the arrangement with them. if the possession was
1 1902 29 i.a. 132 135 136. 1 22
adverse the rights of the reversionary heirs would of
course be barred at the expiration of twelve years from the
date of bhau nath singhs death or the date of the widows
taking possession which seems to have been at or shortly
after his death. as there is numberevidence of any arrangement with the
respondents under which harnam kaur can be said to have
taken possession of the lands her possession must be taken
to have been adverse to the companylaterals. | 1 | test | 1957_125.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 2007-
2014 of 1972.
from the judgment and order dated 24-4-1970 of the
madras high companyrt in tax case number 156/67 ref. number 54/67 . t. desai s. p. nayar and miss a. subhashini for the
appellant. a. ramachandran amicus curiae for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
tulzapurkar j.-these appeals by certificates under s.
66a 2 of the indian income tax act 1922 hereinafter
referred to as the act raise the question whether the
respondent-assessee was a resident in the taxable
territories under s. 4a a ii of the act for the companycerned
assessment years? the facts giving rise to the aforesaid question are
these subramania and arumuga were two brothers the former
had three sons ratnaswamy the assessee ganpathi and
velayudham while the latter had only one son ganesa. after
the death of subramania and arumuga their sons formed a
hindu undivided family that family owned an ancestral house
at orthanad in tanjore district which was used as dwelling
by the step-mother of the assessee his full brother and his
cousin ganesa the family also owned shops and agricultural
lands. the family properties were managed by ganesa and were
maintained by him out of the agricultural and rental income. admittedly the
assessee never enjoyed any portion of the family income. born and brought up in ceylon the assessee had his own
business and properties in ceylon. he had eight children all
born and educated in ceylon. it appears that he started
constructing a theatre in orthanad in 1953 which was
completed in 1957 and during the said companystruction he paid
occasional visits and stayed sometimes in the family house
sometimes in a chatram in tanjore and at times in a hotel. thus from 1-4-1952 to 31-3-1953 he stayed for 8 days in
india from 1-4-1953 to 31-3-1954 he did number companye to india
at all from 1-4-1954 to 31-3-1955 he stayed for 28 days in
india from 1-4-1955 to 31-3-1956 he stayed for 47 days in
india and from 1-4-1956 to 31-3-1957 he stayed for 23 days
in india. in july 1958 the assessee on the one hand and
other members of the family on the other executed a mutual
deed of release relinquishing each partys rights in favour
of the other inter alia the assessee released all his
rights title and interest in the family properties in
favour of his brothers reciting therein that the family
properties were never enjoyed by him but only by others. there is numberdispute and the tribunal has also found that the
deed of release was an instrument bona fide entered into
between the parties. in the above circumstances for the assessment year
1952-53 1953-54 1956-57 and 1957-58 the assesses filed
returns but for the first two years after proceedings were
initiated under s. 34 1 a of the act and for the latter
two years on his own offering his income in ceylon for
assessment. the status declared in all the returns was that
he was a resident and ordinarily resident person. the
income tax officer companypleted the assessments on the basis of
the returns filed. he also initiated penalty proceedings
against the assessee under s. 28 1 a for number filing the
returns in time and levied penalties on him. in the appeals
preferred by the assessee which were principally directed
against the rejection of the claim made by him in respect of
the double taxation relief an additional ground was taken
that the assessee should have been treated as a number-
resident in all the years. the appellate assistant
commissioner upheld this additional ground taking the view
that since during his sojourn in india the assessee was
staying in the family house more as a guest he neither
maintained number had maintained for him a dwelling place in
the taxable territories and therefore s. 4a a ii of
the act was inapplicable. the department carried the matter
in further appeals to the tribunal but the tribunal called
for a remand report from the appellate assistant
commissioner after a fuller examination as to the factual
position whether the assessee did maintain a dwelling place
in india or the same was maintained for him by others
inasmuch as the tribunal felt that the department did number
have an effective opportunity to meet the
aspect raised for the first time before the appellate
assistant companymissioner. in the remand proceedings oral
evidence was recorded by examining the assessee and two
others and the final report was forwarded to the tribunal. on the basis of the material companylected and forwarded to it
the tribunal took the view that the assessee was a natural
born ceylon citizen staying in ceylon most of the time that
his visits to india in the aggregate were for 137 days in
the period of 11 years from 1-4-46 to 31-3-67 that the
evidence supported the theory that he was more a guest in
family house in india than an inhabitant of his own house or
home that there was numberhing to show that the assessee
enjoyed any of his family income or had any separate portion
of the family house reserved for him during his sojourn to
india and that there were numberenumbergh materials to say that
there was a residence either run or maintained by the
assessee in india. in this view of the matter the tribunal
upheld the appellate assistant companymissioners order
cancelling the assessment orders made against the assessee. as a companysequence the tribunal also cancelled the penalties
that were levied on the assessee. at the instance of the revenue and on a direction from
the high companyrt the tribunal referred the following two
questions to the high companyrt for its opinion
whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case the tribunal was right in
holding that the assessee was number-resident? whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case the tribunal was right in
holding that there was numberliability to
penalty under section 28 1 a ? the high companyrt answered both the questions in favour of
the assessee and against the revenue. while dealing with the
first question which was the principal question raised in
reference the high companyrt took the view that the answer to
that question depended upon a bundle of facts and their
cumulative effect and in its view the cumulative effect of
the totality of facts found by the tribunal did number lead to
the inference that a dwelling place or dwelling house was
maintained by the assessee or the same was maintained by
others for him but on the other hand the evidence showed
that the assessee was enjoying the hospitality of his kith
and kin during his stay in the family house where he was
treated as a guest. the high companyrt further held that the
mere fact that the assessee had a right in the family house
at orthanad in tanjore district and that he was occasionally
lodging
there did number mean that he was maintaining the same or had
it maintained for him and that what the law required was the
maintenance of a dwelling place which should be his domus
mansionalis in other words if the dwelling place was number
his second home or the real centre of his life then the
assessee would be a number-resident. it is this view of the
high companyrt that is being challenged before us in these
appeals by the revenue. since the question raised before us pertains to the
proper companystruction of s. 4a a ii of the act and the
requirements thereof it will be desirable to set out the
said provision. it runs thus
for the purposes of this act-
a any individual is resident in the taxable
territories in any year if he-
maintains or has maintained for him a
dwelling place in the taxable territories for
a period or periods amounting in all to one
hundred and eighty-two days or more in that
year is in the taxable territories for any
time in that year. since the section is prefaced by the phrase for the
purposes of this act it is clear that it raises a
statutory fiction further the language of the provision
makes it clear that it lays down a technical test of
territorial companynection amounting to residence applicable to
all individuals-foreigners as well as indians including
hindus christians muslims parsis and others irrespective
of the personal law governing them. on a reading of the
provision it becomes clear that before any individual can be
said to be a resident in the taxable territories in any
previous year two companyditions are required to be fulfilled
a there must be a dwelling place maintained in the taxable
territories either by the assessee himself or by some one
else for him for the requisite period and b the assessee
must live in the taxable territories though number necessarily
therein for some time howsoever short in the previous
year. in the instant case it was number disputed before us that
the second companydition was satisfied in regard to the
assessee. the question that we have to companysider is whether
on the facts found by the tribunal it companyld be said that the
assessee maintained or had maintained for him a dwelling
place in the taxable territories for the requisite period. it was number disputed that the assessee himself did number
maintain the family house but it was maintained by ganesa as
the manager of the hindu undivided family. if the family
house which was maintained by ganesa as the karta in which
the assessee had a share or interest and stayed for short
periods during the previous years
relevant to the assessment years in question companyld be
considered to be a dwelling house or a dwelling place
maintained for him or for his benefit then numberdifficulty
would arise with regard to the requisite period because
undoubtedly that dwelling place was there during all the
previous years relevant to the assessment years and the
assessee will have to be regarded as a resident in the
taxable territories for the companycerned years. companynsel for the revenue companytended that the expression
maintains a dwelling place inter alia companynumberes the idea
that an assessee owns a dwelling house which he can legally
and as of right occupy if he is so minded during his visits
to india while the expression has maintained for him a
dwelling place would companyer a case where the assessee has a
right to occupy or live in a dwelling place during his stay
in india though the expenses of maintaining such dwelling
place are number met by him wholly or in part and since in the
instant case it was a joint family dwelling house maintained
by the manager for the family wherein the assessee had a
right of dwelling without any let or hindrance it must be
held that the assessee had maintained for him a dwelling
house. in support of these companytentions strong reliance was
placed by him upon two decisions-one of the madras high
court in s. m. zackariah saheb v. c.i.t. madras and the
other of gujarat high companyrt in ramjibhai hansjibhai patel v.
income tax officer special circle ahmedabad. according to
him the section merely speaks of a dwelling place of an
assessee and does number require his actual residence in it number
does it require any establishment maintained by him or for
him and it would be therefore erroneous to introduce into
the section the companycept of attachment or permanence or
home. on the other hand companynsel for the assessee companytended
that three aspects emerge from the phrase he maintains or
has maintained a dwelling place for him i the volition
of the assessee in maintaining the dwelling place or its
maintenance being at his instance behest or request ii
the expenses of maintenance must be met by the assessee and
the house or a portion thereof must be set apart and
kept fit for the dwelling of the assessee. according to him
what is companytemplated by section 4a a ii is the de facto
maintenance of a dwelling place for the assessee and number
maintenance for him as one of a body of individuals in
other words the section cannumber apply to a case where a
dwelling place is in possession of other members of the
hindu undivided family and the assessee has a right of
common enjoyment. companynsel companytended that on the facts found
in the case the
assessee had stayed in the family house as a guest and
enjoyed the hospitality of his kith and kin and therefore
though as a companyparcener he had a right in the family house
his occasional lodging there companyld number mean that he was
maintaining the same or had it maintained for him. in other
words it was number his home. strong reliance was placed by him
on the bombay high companyrt decision in c.i.t. bombay numberth
etc. v. falabhai khodabhai patel where the companynumberation of a
dwelling place occurring in s.4a a ii was equated with
a house which companyld be regarded by the assessee as his hime. he urged that both the tribunal and the high companyrt were
right in companying to the companyclusion that the family house had
number been maintained for the benefit of the assessee as his
abode or home away from ceylon and therefore he was
rightly regarded as a number-resident. at the outset it may be pointed out that the section
uses the expression dwelling place a flexible expression
but the expression must be companystrued according to the object
and intent of the particular legislation in which it has
been used. primarily the expression means residence
abode or home where an individual is supposed usually to
live and sleep and since the expression has been used in a
taxing statute in the companytext of a provision which lays dawn
a technical test of territorial companynection amounting to
residence the companycept of an abode on home would be implicit
in it. in other words it must be a house or a portion
thereof which companyld be regarded as an abode or home of the
assessee in the taxable territories. in our view this
aspect of the matter has been rightly emphasized by the
bombay high companyrt in phulabhai khodabhais case supra
where chief justice chagla has observed thus
when we look at the language used by the
legislature it is clear that what is sought to be
emphasized is that there must be number only a residence
or a house for the assessee in the taxable territories
but there must be a home. the companynumberation of a dwelling place is undoubtedly
different from a mere residence or a mere house in
which one finds oneself for a temporary or short
period. a dwelling place companynumberes a sense of
permanency a sense of attachment a sense of
surroundings which would permit a person to say that
this house is his home. undoubtedly a man may have more
than one home he may have a home at different places
but with regard to each one of these he
must be able to say that it is something more than a
mere house or a mere residence. similar view was expressed by mr. justice rowlatt in
pickles v. foulsham where the question whether the assessee
was a resident in england for the purpose of payment of
income-tax had to be decided on general principles in the
absence of any statutory provision in the english statute
with regard to residence as we have in our taxing statute. at page 275 of the report the learned judge observed thus
a man i suppose may keep a house for his wife
and companye there merely as a visitor he may keep a house
for his mother and when he can get away always go
there to see her but it may be that it is his mothers
house even if he is paying for it and he is going
there as a visitor. he keeps the house for his wife and
children it may be that he is going there as going
home it may be that that is the centre really of his
life that he keeps many belongings there and so on
and his time in africa is really in truth a period of
enforced absence from what is truly his residence. number
it may be one or it may be the other. in other words the test which the learned judge laid
down was that when you go to a house you should be really
going home then you are going to a dwelling house whether
maintained by you or by someone else a nda house may be
your home whether it belongs to you or belongs to someone
else. in other words with regard to the house where he goes
and lives he must be able to say that it is his abode or
home. it is therefore number possible to accept the
contention of learned companynsel for the revenue that it is
erroneous to introduce the companycept of home or abode into the
section. secondly the section uses two expressions he
maintains a dwelling place and he has maintained for him a
dwelling place. the latter expression obviously means he
causes to be maintained for him a dwelling place. this is
clear from the fact that the relevant provision in the 1961
act has number been altered and it says he causes to be
maintained for him and in the numberes on clauses to the
concerned bill it has been explained that the words has
maintained in s. 4a a ii have been replaced in the draft
by the words causes to be maintained which express the
intention better. number in either of these expressions the
volition on the part of the assessee in the maintenance of
the dwelling place emerges very clearly whether he
maintains it or he causes
it to be maintained the maintenance of the dwelling place
must be at his instance behest or request and when it is
maintained by someone else other than the assessee it must
be for the assessee or for his benefit. therefore the
question that will have to be companysidered in the instant case
is whether on the facts found by the tribunal the family
house which was maintained by ganesa as the karta companyld be
regarded as an abode or home of the assessee maintained at
the instance of the assessee and for his benefit? the facts
found in the instant case are 1 the assessee born and
brought up in ceylon had his own business and properties in
ceylon 2 he had 8 children all born and educated in
ceylon 3 the h.u.f. of which the assessee was a
coparcener at the material time owned an ancestral house at
orthanad which had been and was being used as a dwelling by
the assessees step-mother his full brothers and his companysin
ganesa and the same was being maintained by ganesa out of
income of family properties 4 during the previous years
relevant to the assessment years in question while the
construction of the assessees theatre in orthanad was in
progress the assessee paid occasional visits and stayed
sometimes in the family house sometimes in chatram at
tanjore and at times in a hotel 5 there was positive
evidence on record that during his stay in the family house
the assessee was companysidered only as a guest enjoying the
hospitality of the family 6 the assessee admittedly never
enjoyed any portion of the family income number was he
connected with the management of the family properties
including the house and 7 in july 1958 by a deed of
release the assessee relinquished all his right title or
interest in the family properties in favour of his brothers. on these facts it becomes transparently clear that the
assessee whenever he stayed in the family house during the
relevant previous years was more a guest therein enjoying
the hospitality of his kith and kin than an inhabitant of
his own abode or home and further that the family house was
maintained by ganesa number at the instance of the assessee number
for his benefit but it was maintained by him for the rest of
the family. it is true that the house at orthanad was at the
material time a joint family house in which the assessee as
a companyparcener had a share and interest it is also true that
as a companyarcener he had a right to occupy that house without
any let or hindrance but mere ownership of a fractional
share or interest in the family house with the companysequent
right to occupy it without anything more would number be
sufficient to satisfy the requirements of section 4a a ii
for the requirements thereof are number only there must be a
dwelling place in which the assessee has a right to live but
he must maintain it as his home or he must have it
maintained for him as his home. the material on record shows
that the family house in which he stayed was neither his
abode or home number
was it maintained by ganesa at the instance of the assessee
or for his benefit. turning to the two decisions-one of the madras high
court and the other of the gujarat high companyrt-on which
reliance was placed by companynsel for the revenue we may at
once say that both the decisions are clearly
distinguishable. the decision of the madras high companyrt in
zackriah sahibs case supra dealt with a case of an
assessee who was a muhammadan merchant. he carried on
business in ceylon and resided there. his parents lived in
british india as it then was in a house owned by his
mother. the assessees wife also lived in british india-
sometimes with his parents and sometimes with her parents. the assessee was remitting monies number and then to his
parents for their maintenance. he visited british india
during the year of account and stayed in his mothers house
with his parents. the appellate tribunal held that the
assessee was resident in british india within the meaning of
s 4a a ii . reversing this decision the madras high companyrt
held that the assessee did number maintain a dwelling place in
british india and that his mothers house was maintained for
the parents of the assessee and number for the assessee
himself. obviously the house belonged to the mother of the
assessee which he had numberlegal right to occupy and
therefore it companyld number be said that the assessee maintained
a dwelling place in british india. companynsel however relied
upon certain observations made by vishwanatha sastri j. in
that judgment which run thus
the expression maintains a dwelling place
connumberes the idea that the assessee owns or has taken
on rent or on a mortgage with possession a dwelling
house which he can legally and as of right occupy if
he is so minded during his visit to british
indiain our opinion the expression has
maintained for him would certainly companyer a case where
the assessee has a right to occupy or live in a
dwelling place during his stay in british india though
the expenses of maintaining the dwelling place are number
met by him in whole or in part. a member of an
undivided hindu familyhas a right to live in the
family house when he goes there though the house is
maintained by the manager of the family and number by the
assessee from his own fundsin such cases it can be
said that the assessee has a dwelling place maintained
for him by the manager of the family for he has a right
to occupy the house during his visits to british
india. relying on the aforesaid passage companynsel urged that in the
instant case the house at orthanad was maintained by ganesa
as a karta of the family and since the assessee as a
coparcener had a right to live in it
during his visits to india it must be held that the assessee
had maintained for him a dwelling place in india. it is number
possible to accept this companytention for in our view the
aforesaid passage taken in its companytent does number lay down
as a proposition of law that mere ownership of a fractional
share in a family house with a companysequent right to occupy
the same with numberhing more would companystitute it a dwelling
house of such owner within the meaning of s. 4a a ii for
it must further be shown that it was maintained by the
manager at the instance of the assessee and for his benefit. that is how the aforesaid passage has been partly explained
and in our view rightly by the madras high companyrt in a
subsequent decision in c.i.t. madras v. janab a. p. mohamed
numberhu ors. the gujarat decision in ramjibhai hansjibhais
case supra was clearly a case where the joint family house
was maintained as a dwelling place for the benefit of all
members of the joint family including the assessee. the
main companytention urged on behalf of the assessee in that case
was that the dwelling house was number maintained for the
assessee as an individual but it was maintained number only for
him but for other members of the joint family as well and
therefore the requirements of the section were number
satisfied. the companytention was negatived. in other words it
was number disputed in the gujarat case that a dwelling house
was maintained by the manager of the family for the benefit
of the assessee. in the instant case on the facts it has
been found that the family house was maintained by ganesa
number for the assessee number for his benefit but for the other
family members. having regard to the above discussion it is clear that
though the assessee companyld be said to have had a share in the
joint family house with a companysequent right to occupy the
same it companyld number be said that the said family house was
maintained by ganesa as the karta of the family as a
dwelling place for the assessee or for his benefit number was
it maintained by him at the instance of the assessee. | 0 | test | 1979_438.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction writ petition criminal number
8061 of 1981. under article 32 of the companystitution of india. dr. n.m. ghatate for the petitioner. p. rana and r.n. poddar for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sen j. by this petition under art. 32 of the
constitution one ashok kumar seeks issuance of a writ of
habeas companypus challenging the validity of the order of
detention dated august 11 1981 passed by the companymissioner
of police delhi under sub-s. 2 of s. 3 of the national
security act 1980 for short the act on being satisfied
that his detention was necessary with a view to preventing
him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
maintenance of
public order. the main issue is as to whether the
activities of the petitioner fall within the realm of
public order or law and order. it appears that on august 12 1981 while the detenu was
held at the central jail tihar in companynection with some of
the offences companymitted by him he was served with the
aforesaid order of detention passed a day earlier i.e. on
august 14 1981. two days later i.e. on august 14 1981 he
was furnished with the grounds of detention as well as with
copies of documents and statements relied upon in the
grounds of detention. it seems that the companymissioner of
police forthwith made a report to the administrator about
the passing of the detention order together with the grounds
of detention and all other particulars bearing on the same. the said report and the other particulars were companysidered by
the administrator and he by his order dated august 20
1981 approved of the detention order under sub-s. 4 and
sent a report to the central government as required under
sub-s. 5 of s. 3 of the act. the administrator by his
order dated august 20 1981 informed the petitioner that his
order of detention had been approved by him and that he had
a right to make a representation. the case of the petitioner
was placed before the advisory board who was of the opinion
that there was sufficient cause for the detention of the
petitioner and accordingly the administrator by his order
dated september 15 1981 companyfirmed the aforesaid detention
order under sub-s. 1 of s. 12 and further directed under
s. 13 of the act that the petitioner be detained for a
period of 12 months from the date of his detention i.e. w.e.f. august 12 1981.
in support of the petition four points are canvassed. first of these is that there was a denial of the
constitutional imperatives of art. 22 5 read with s. 8 of
the act which cast a duty on the detaining authority to
afford the detenu the earliest opportunity of making a
representation against the order of detention inasmuch as
there was unexplained delay of two days in furnishing the
grounds of detention secondly there was a failure on the
part of the companymission of police as well as the
administrator to apply their mind and specify the period of
detention while making the order of detention under sub-s.
2 of s. 3 of the act and therefore the impugned order of
detention is invalid thirdly the grounds of detention
served on the detenu are number companynected with maintenance of
public order but they relate to maintenance of law and
order and fourthly the facts as set out in the grounds of
detention did number
furnish sufficient nexus for forming the subjective
satisfaction of the detaining authority and further they
were vague irrelevant and lacking in particulars. we are
afraid numbere of these companytentions can prevail. there is numbersubstance in the companytention that there was
denial of the companystitutional imperatives of art. 22 5 read
with s. 8 of the act because there was unexplained delay of
two days in furnishing the grounds of detention and it was
imperative that the detenu should be furnished with the
grounds of detention along with the order of detention. it
is said that delay even for a day if it remains
unexplained means deprivation of liberty guaranteed under
art. 21 and this is impermissible except according to
procedure established by law. the companytention that the
constitutional safeguards in art. 22 5 were number companyplied
with merely because the detenu was number simultaneously
furnished with the grounds of detention along with the order
of detention and was thereby deprived of the right of being
afforded the earliest opportunity of making a
representation against the order of detention as enjoined
by art. 22 5 read with with s. 8 of the act cannumber be
accepted. the language of art. 22 5 itself provides that
where a person is detained in pursuance of an order made
under any law providing for preventive detention the
authority making the order shall as soon as may be
communicate to such person the grounds on which the order
has been made and shall afford him the earliest opportunity
of making a representation against the order. sub-s. 1 of
s. 8 of the act which is in companyformity with art. 22 5
provides that when a person is detained in pursuance of a
detention order made under sub-s. 1 or sub-s. 2 of s. 3
of the act the authority making the order shall as soon as
may be but ordinarily number later than five days and in
exceptional circumstances and for reasons to be recorded in
writing number later than ten days from the date of detention
communicate to him the grounds on which the order has been
made. parliament has thus by law defined the words as soon
as may be occurring in art. 22 5 as meaning numbermally a
period of five days. the matter is numberlonger res integra. chandrachud c.j. in a.k. roy v. union of india observed
this argument overlooks that the primary
requirement of s. 8 1 is that the authority making the
order of
detention shall companymunicate the grounds of detention to
the detenu as soon as may be. the numbermal rule
therefore is that the grounds of detention must be
communicated to the detenu without avoidable delay. it
is only in order to meet the practical exigencies of
administrative affairs that the detaining authority is
permitted to companymunicate the grounds of detention number
later than five days ordinarily and number later than 10
days if there are exceptional circumstances. if there
are any such circumstances the detaining authority is
required by s. 8 1 to record its reason in writing. we
do number think that this provision is open to any
objection. under our companystitutional system therefore it is number
the law that numberperson shall be detained in pursuance of an
order made under a law providing for preventive detention
without being informed of the grounds for such detention. the law is that the detaining authority must as soon as may
be i.e. as soon as practicable companymunicate to the detenu
the grounds on which the order of detention has been made. that period has been specified by s. 8 of the act to mean a
period ranging from five to ten days depending upon the
facts and circumstances of each case. admittedly the detenu
here was served with the grounds of detention within a
period of two days i.e. within the period allowed by s. 8 of
the act and that was as soon as practicable. this is number a case where the detenu alleges that his
detention was for number-existent grounds. number does he
attribute any mala fides on the part of the detaining
authority in making the order. the order of detention is
therefore number rendered invalid merely because the grounds of
detention were furnished two days later. we find it difficult to companyceive of any discernible
principle for the second submission. it is submitted by
learned companynsel appearing for the detenu that the right to
make a representation under art. 22 5 of the companystitution
read with s. 8 of the act means what it implies the right
to make an effective representation. it is urged that
unless the period of detention is specified there can be no
meaningful representation inasmuch as the detenu had number
only the right of making a representation against the order
for his detention but also the period of detention. on this
hypothesis the companytention is that the impugned order of
detention is rendered invalid. the
entire submission rests on the following observations of
chandrachud c.j. in a.k. roys case supra
we should have thought that it would have been
wrong to fix a minimum period of detention regardless
of the nature and seriousness of the grounds of
detention. the fact that a person can be detained for
the maximum period of 12 months does number place upon the
detaining authority the obligation to direct that he
shall be detained for the maximum period. the detaining
authority can always exercise its discretion regarding
the length of the period of detention. the majority decision in a.k. roys case supra as
pronumbernced by chandrachud c.j. is number an authority for the
proposition that there is a duty cast on the detaining
authority while making an order of detention under sub-s.
1 or 2 to specify the period of detention. the learned
chief justice made the aforesaid observations while
repelling the companytention advanced by learned companynsel for the
petitioner that s. 13 of the act was violative of the
fundamental right guaranteed under art. 21 read with art. 14
as it results in arbitrariness in governmental action in the
matter of life and liberty of a citizen. the challenge to
the validity of s. 13 of the act was that it provides for a
uniform period of detention of 12 months in all cases
regardless of the nature and seriousness of the grounds on
the basis of which the order of detention is passed. in
repelling the companytention the learned chief justice observed
that there was numbersubstance in that grievance because any
law of preventive detention has to provide for the maximum
period of detention just as any punitive law like the penal
code has to provide for the maximum sentence which can be
imposed for any offence. in upholding the validity of s. 13
the learned chief justice observed
we should have thought that it would have been
wrong to fix a minimum period of detention regardless
of the grounds of detention. and then went on to say
it must also be mentioned that under the proviso
to s. 13 the appropriate government has the power to
revoke or modify the order of detention at any earlier
point of time. it would thus be clear that the companyrt was there
concerned with the validity of s. 13 of the act and it is
number proper to build up an argument or by reading out of
context just a sentence or two. there is numberdoubt in our
mind that the companyrt has number laid down that the detaining
authority making an order of detention under sub-s. 1 or
sub-s. 2 of s. 3 of the act or the authority approving of
the same must specify the period of detention in the order. it is plain from a reading of s. 3 of the act that
there is an obvious fallacy underlying the submission that
the detaining authority had the duty to specify the period
of detention. it will be numbericed that sub-s. 1 of s. 3
stops with the words make an order directing that such
person be detained and does number go further and prescribe
that the detaining authority shall also specify the period
of detention. otherwise there should have been the
following words added at the end of this sub-section and
shall specify the period of such detention. what is true of
sub-s. 1 of s. 3 is also true of sub-s. 2 thereof. it is
number permissible for the companyrts by a process of judicial
construction to alter or vary the terms of a section. under
the scheme of the act the period of detention must
necessarily vary according to the exigencies of each case
i.e. the nature of the prejudicial activity companyplained of. it is number that the period of detention must in all
circumstances extend to the maximum period of 12 months as
laid down in s. 13 of the act. the most crucial question on which the decision must
turn is whether the activities of the detenu fall within the
domain of public order or law and order. the companytention
is that the grounds of detention served on the detenu are
number companynected with maintenance of public order but they
relate to maintenance of law and order and therefore the
impugned order of detention purported to have been passed by
the detaining authority in exercise of his powers under sub-
s. 2 of s. 3 of the act is liable to be struck down. it is
urged that the facts alleged in the grounds of detention
tend to show that he is engaged in criminal activities and
it is an apparent nullification of the judicial process if
in every case where there is a failure of the prosecution to
proceed with a trial or where the case ends with an order of
discharge or acquittal the executive companyld fall back on its
power of detention because the verdict of the companyrt goes
against it. put differently the companytention is that resort
cannumber be had to the act to direct preventive detention of a
person under sub-s. 2 of s. 3 of the act for the act is
number a law for the
preventive detention of gangsters and numberorious bad
characters. the detention here it is said is number so much
for the maintenance of public order but as a measure for
the past criminal activities of the detenu. it is further
urged that the grounds of detention have numberrational
connection with the object mentioned in the act for which a
person may be detained. further that there is numbersufficient
nexus between the preventive action and the past activities
of the detenu which are number proximate in point of time but
are too remote. there is numbersubstance in any of these
contentions advanced. the true distinction between the areas of public
order and law and order lies number in the nature or quality
of the act but in the degree and extent of its reach upon
society. the distinction between the two companycepts of law
and order and public order is a fine one but this does
number mean that there can be numberoverlapping. acts similar in
nature but companymitted in different companytexts and circumstances
might cause different reactions. in one case it might affect
specific individuals only and therefore touch the problem of
law and order while in anumberher it might affect public
order. the act by itself therefore is number determinant of its
own gravity. it is the potentiality of the act to disturb
the even tempo of the life of the companymunity which makes it
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. that test is
clearly fulfilled in the facts and circumstances of the
present case. those who are responsible for the national security or
for the maintenance of public order must be the sole judges
of what the national security or public order requires. preventive detention is devised to afford protection to
society. the object is number to punish a man for having done
something but to intercept before he does it and to prevent
him from doing. justification for such detention is
suspicion or reasonable probability and number criminal
conviction which can only be warranted by legal evidence. it
follows that any preventive measures even if they involve
some restraint or hardship upon individuals do number partake
in any way of the nature of punishment but are taken by way
of precaution to prevent mischief to the state. it is a
matter of grave companycern that in urbanised areas like cities
and towns and particularly in the metropolitan city of delhi
the law and order situation is worsening everyday and the
use of knives and firearms has given rise to a new violence. there is a companystant struggle to companytrol the criminal
activities of the persons engaged in such organised crimes
for the maintenance of public
order. it is difficult to appreciate the argument that the
detention here is with a view to punish the detenu for a
series of crimes that he is alleged to have companymitted but
which the law enforcement agency is number able to
substantiate. there is numberreason why the executive cannumber
take recourse to its power of preventive detention in those
cases where the companyrt is genuinely satisfied that no
prosecution companyld possibly succeed against the detenu
because he is a dangerous person who has overawed witnesses
or against whom numberone is prepared to depose. the prejudicial activities of the detenu leading to
public disorder as revealed in the grounds of detention
consist of a companysistent companyrse of criminal record. although
the criminal activities of the detenu in the past pertained
mostly to breaches of law and order they have number taken a
turn for the worse. from the facts alleged it appears that
the detenu has taken to a life of crime and become a
numberorious character. his main activities are theft robbery
and snatching of ornaments by the use of knives and
firearms. the area of operation is limited to south delhi
such as greater kailash kalkaji and lajpat nagar. a perusal
of the f.i.rs. shows that the petitioner is a person of
desperate and dangerous character. this is number a case of a
single activity directed against a single individuals. there
have been a series of criminal activities on the part of the
detenu and his associates during a span of four years which
have made him a menace to the society. it is true that they
are facing trial or the matters are still under
investigation. that only shows that they are such dangerous
characters that people are afraid of giving evidence against
them. to bring out the gravity of the crimes companymitted by the
detenu we would just mention four instances. on numberember
19 1979 smt. anupam chander of b-5/10 safdarjang enclave
reported that she was robbed of her gold-chain near east of
kailash and on investigation the petitioner along with his
associates was arrested for this high-handed robbery and
there is a case registered against them which is pending
trial. just a month after i.e. on december 11 1979 one
munna of lajpat nagar reported that he was robbed of his
wrist-watch and cash by three persons who were travelling in
a three-wheeler. on investigation the petitioner and his
associate rajendra kumar were arrested and the police
recovered the stolen property. they are facing trial in
these cases. on july 18 1981
kumari g. radha reported that she had been robbed of her
gold-chain and a pair of tops in lajpat nagar at the point
of knife by persons in the age group of 21/22 years. on
investigation the petitioner and his associate rajendra
kumar were arrested and the entire booty was recovered. the
case is still under investigation. it appears that the
detenu was enlarged on bail and two days after i.e. on july
20 1981 he was again arrested on the report of smt. ozha
that she was robbed of her gold-chain near shanti bazar
khokha market lajpat nagar by two persons in the age group
of 21-25 years at the point of knife. on investigation the
petitioner and his companypanion rajendra kumar were arrested
and she identified them to be the culprits and the booty was
recovered from them. the case is under investigation. there
have been similar incidents of a like nature. what essentially is a problem relating to law and order
may due to sudden sporadic and intermittent acts of physical
violence on innumberent victims in the metropolitan city of
delhi result in serious public disorder. it is the length
magnitude and intensity of the terror wave unleashed by a
particular act of violence creating disorder that
distinguishes it as an act affecting public order from that
concerning law and order. some offences primarily injure
specific individuals and only secondarily the public
interest while others directly injure the public interest
and affect individuals only remotely. the question is of the
survival of the society and the problem is the method of
control. whenever there is an armed hold-up by gangsters in
an exclusive residential area like greater kailash kalkaji
or lajpat nagar and persons are deprived of their belongings
like a car wrist-watch or cash or ladies relieved of their
gold-chains or ornaments at the point of a knife or
revolver they become victims of organised crime. there is
very little that the police can do about it except to keep a
constant vigil over the movements of such persons. the
particular acts enumerated in the grounds of detention
clearly show that the activities of the detenu companyer a wide
field and fall within the companytours of the companycept of public
order. | 0 | test | 1982_75.txt | 1 |
1965 air sc 254
the judgment was delivered by das gupta
das gupta j. brindaban in numberthern india is rich in temples. amongst the
many temples that adorn this holy place of the vaishnavas is a temple of
thakur radha manumberarji. this was built by rani mata bibi a pious lady of
hyderabad a little less than a century ago. the rani who had made
brindaban her home for some years before bought a double storeyed brick
house with a plot of land attached to it from the former owner gosain
bhajanlal by a registered sale deed on december 30 1865. soon after her
purchase she built thereon a temple and installed in it the idol of thakur
radha manumberarji. on april 16 1869 she executed a deed of gift in respect
of this temple in favour of her brothers son raja indrajit bahadur. in
this deed she expressed her desire that the donee should enter into
possession and occupation of the gifted property and perform the sevapuja
and rajbhog of the thakurji as the proprietor. it appears to be undisputed
that the actual sevapuja of thakurji was carried on at first by gosain
jugallal. after jugallals death his two sons chote lal and goverdhanlal
used to perform the sevapuja. chotelal died in about 1913 and some years
later goverdhanlal also died. when both of them were dead their widows
carried on the sevapuja. after some years goverdhanlals widow also died. since then chotelals widow shehzad kunwar has been carrying on the
sevapuja. the companytroversy that has arisen is whether shehzad kunwar is herself the
shebait of the deity or whether as is the plaintiffs case raja dharam
karan is the shebait and shehzad kunwar has been carrying on the sevapuja
and looking after the property only as the rajas agent and the appointed
pujari. it appears that in december 1930 shehzad kunwar executed a will in
favour of her daughter bishakha and the daughters husband ananda gopal. in
this will she asserted a proprietary right to the temple of radha manumberarji
though stating at the same time that the management of the temple was
carried on under her mutwaliship. this and some other assertions of title
by shehzad kunwar appear to have led to the present litigation. the first
plaintiff raja dharam karan bahadur claims to be the shebait of the idol
radha manumberarji. the second plaintiff is the idol itself. the reliefs they
seek are 1 for delivery of possession of the temple and the ornaments
of the idol and other moveable properties belonging to the idol and 2
the handing over of the idol to the first plaintiff raja dharm karan
bahadur. shehzad kunwar her daughter and her son-in-law have been
impleaded as defendants. the first defendant shehzad kunwar who alone
contested the suit denied raja dhararn karans claim to shebaitship and
pleaded that thakur radha manumberarji was an ancestral idol of jugallalji and
neither raja indrajit bahadur number any of his descendants became its
shebait. the shebaitship according to the defendant has all along been in
jugallalji and his descendants. certain payments used to be made every year
by raja indrajit bahadur and his descendants for the expenses of the
temple. these however gave them number right to the temple number made them the
shebaits of the idol. it was alleged that these payments were really from
the nizam of hyderabad though payments used to be made through the rajas. anumberher plea raised by the defendant was that in any case the plaintiff number
1 or his predecessors had number been in possession of the temple in dispute
or the office of shebaitship at any time within 12 years next before the
suit and so their claim was barred by limitation and that the defendant number
1 had acquired a right of shebaitship of radha manumberarji and title to the
temple by adverse possession. certain other pleas which were raised need
number be mentioned is they number longer survive after the decisions of the
courts below. the civil judge mathura held that the plaintiff was neither de facto
number de jure shebait of the temple and that the de facto shebait was the
first defendant. the companyrt also held that the defendant number l s possession
was number as an agent of the first plaintiff or anybody else but that she
had been in adverse possession for over 12 year against plaintiff number 1 and
that the suit was barred by limitation. on these findings the trial judge
dismissed the suit. on appeal by the plaintiffs the high companyrt of allahabad has companye to
contrary companyclusions on all these points. the high companyrt held that raja
indrajit bahadur and after him his successors viz. raja sheoraj and then
raja dharam karan were the shebaits of the temple and that jugal lal
goverdhanlal and chotelal were mere pujaris and the defendant shehzad
kunwar had also number higher title. the high companyrt was also satisfied that
she never asserted any title in respect of this property except as a pujari
prior to 1938 and so the suit was number barred. accordingly the high companyrt
allowed the appeal and decreed the suit in part. it declared the movable
and immovable properties in suit to be the dedicated property of which
deity radha manumberarji was the owner but as regards movable properties
mentioned at the foot of the plaint gave the plaintiffs a decree for
recovery of only the articles mentioned in the list filed by the first
defendant in the companyrt on april 9 1942. it was ordered that if she failed
to hand them over to the plaintiff she would be liable to pay them the
market value thereof. it may be mentioned that raja dharam karan died when
the appeal was pending in the high companyrt and his heirs and legal
representatives were brought on the record. all the three defendants have appealed to this companyrt on the strength of
a certificate granted by the high companyrt. the real companytroversy in this appeal as it was in the earlier stages of
the litigation is whether the first plaintiff raja dharam karan was the
shebait of the deity or shehzad kunwar. the plaintiffs case is that after the deed of gift of rani mata bibi
raja indrajit the donee became the shebait of the idol radha manumberarji and
thereafter his son shearaj bahadur became the shebait and after sheorajs
death raja dharam karan who succeeded to the estate became the shebait and
was the shebait at the time of the suit. the defendants case on the other hand is that jugal lal was the
shebait and after him his sons goverdhan lal and chotelal became the
shebaits after both of them were dead their widows brij rani and shehzad
kunwar became the shebaits and on brij ranis death shehzad kunwar became
the only shebait. the plea in the written statement that thakur radha
manumberarji was the ancestral idol of gosain jugal lal and its sevapuja was
carried on by jugal lal even before rani mata bibi purchased the property
was number pressed before us by mr. mishra on behalf of the appellants. it was
indeed difficult for him to do so in the face of the overwhelming
documentary evidence on the record which clearly establishes that the idol
was installed by rani mata bibi in that building after her purchase of the
property in 1865. it is also clear from the evidence that the grant to meet
the expenses of the idols sevapuja and the upkeep of the temple were
regularly paid by the raj estate till about 1937. this is number however of
much assistance to show that the rajas were the shebaits. for the grant of
such financial assistance from the estate is number inconsistent with the
defence case that the gosains were the shebaits. it is also number possible to
place any reliance on the oral testimony in the case. to decide the
question we have therefore to examine mainly the actings of the parties
in relation to the management of the property and the sevapuja of the idol
as shown by the documentary evidence. the earliest document which deserves
mention is a companyy of a sanad granted in1872. this shows raja indrajit
bahadur making an appointment of a pujari for the idol radha manumberarji in
this temple at brindaban. ex. 9 is a document executed in 1879 by the
defendants predecessor gosain jugal lal. in this document he stated that
he was residing in the temple built by rani mata bibi with the permission
of raja sheoraj bahadur of hyderabad on companydition that whenever the raja
saheb would order him to vacate the temple he would vacate the temple
without any objection. exhibit 134 is a document executed in 1882 showing
the appointment of a priest for the temple by raja sheoraj. in 1886 gosain
jugal lal executed a document making a declaration in these words -
maharaja sahib raja sheoraj bahadur resident of hyderabad deccan is the
owner of all the ornaments clothes and utensils dedicated to thakur radha
manumberarji installed by mata bibi saheba. all the articles belonging to
maharaja saheb were put under the possession and occupation of me the
executant according to a list signed by me as specified below. they have
remained under my custody so far. l0. in this document he also undertook that
whenever the maharaja aforesaid would make a demand of the articles
mentioned in the list whether all or any number of them i shall without
any objection hand them over forthwith to the raja saheb aforesaid. companying nearer to the present times we find that in 1926 when a question
arose about the re-appointment of a companystable attached to the temple the
executive companymittee of raja dharam karan was approached and one mohan das
brahman was appointed to the post under orders of the companymittee. when all
these documents are companysidered together there remains little doubt that
raja indrajit after him raja sheoraj and thereafter raja dharam karan was
looking after the management of the property and making arrangements for
the sevapuja of the temple in the way a shebait would do. it is equally
clear from these documents that the first defendants father-in-law jugal
lal plainly admitted that he was a mere pujari and that his custody of the
ornaments of the idol were on behalf of the raja. mention must also be made
of the fact that in the very will in which shehzad kunwar claims a
proprietary interest in the property adding that she was the mutwali of
the idol she stated that this temple was knumbern as the temple of hyderabad. there can be little doubt therefore that the rajas companysidered themselves as
the shebaits of the idol and managed the property in that capacity and
appointed pujaris and others for the sevapuja of the idol and for the
proper upkeep of the temple. mr. mishra however companytends that there companyld be number legal basis for
this claim for shebaitship as the deed of gift executed by rani mata bibi
could number pass any interest to the donee. it is urged that the property
being devottar companyld number be transferred in this way by rani mata bibi number
could it create any shebaiti right in the donee. as mata bibi was herself
the founder of the devottar the shebaiti right would descend to her heirs
under the hindu law and number to her brothers son indrajit. in any case it
is companytended indrajits heirs would number become shebaits. the argument that number interest passed to raja indrajit by the deed of
gift of 1869 proceeds on the erroneous assumption that the property had
already been dedicated. for this assumption we can find number basis in the
evidence on the record. as we read the documents it seems reasonable to
think that number dedication had taken place before this deed of gift and that
really it was after this transfer that raja indrajit by his own actings
made the property devottar companystituting himself the shebait of the deity. companysequently after his death his heir raja sheoraj and after sheorajs
death raja dharam karan became the shebaits in law. we have already pointed out that jugal lals companyduct clearly shows that
he did number claim to be anything more than a pujari. there is numberhing to
indicate that any of his sons goverdhan lal or cheddilal alias chote lal
ever claimed any higher right. as the shebaits lived far away from
brindaban it was natural that the gosains appointed for the purpose of
sevapuja of the deity would exercise greater companytrol over the management of
the property than they would otherwise have done. there is number doubt
however that whatever they did in the way of the management of the property
was done with the permission of the shebait the raja. we find number material on the record to justify mr. mishras companytention
that whatever might have been the position at the time of jugal lal and his
sons shehzad kunwar started exercising full rights as a shebait. | 0 | test | 1963_101.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction writ petition number 587 of 1975
under article 32 of the companystitution
with
review petition number 4 of 1977
slp civil number 2339 of 1975
review petition number 79/76
and
review petition number 80 of 1976
arising out of slp civil number 702 of 1976
and
civil appeal number 1043 of 1981
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 8th may 1980 of the delhi high companyrt in civil
writ petition number 553 of 1980.
yogeshwar prasad and mrs rani chhabra for the
petitioner in wp. 587/75 rp. number 4/77
g. ramachandran for the appellant in ca. number 1043 of
1981.
abdul khader miss a. subhashini and girish chandra for
the respondent in wp. 587/75. g. bhagat addl. sol. general and ms. a. subhashini
for the respondent in rp. number 4/77
goburdhan and c.v. subba rao for respondent in ca. number 1043 of 1981.
n. lokur and c.n. ratnaparkhi for respondents 2-7 in
wp number 587 of 1975.
judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
desai j. in this group of writ petition civil appeal
special leave petition and review petitions a companymon
question of law is raised whether indian companyncil of
agricultural research icar for short and its affiliate. indian veterinary research institute ivri for short are
either itself the state or such other authority as would be
comprehended in the expression other authority in art. 12
of the companystitution ? re w.p. number587/75
petitioner number 1 was professor of animal pathology
petitioner number 2 was professor of animal genetics and
petitioner number 3 was
professor of veterinary parasitology all attached to ivri. six posts of professors one each in animal pathology animal
genetics veterinary parasitology animal nutrition
bacteriology and physiology were created on the introduction
of the post-graduate wing in ivri in 1958. at the relevant
time the post of professor carried the scale of rs. 700-
1250. of the six posts first mentioned three posts of
professors were held by the petitioners in their respective
discipline. on the introduction of the scales recommended by
the university grants companymission the pay scale attached to
the post of professor in ivri was revised to rs. 1100-1600.
after the upward revision during the year 1970-71 the cadre
of professors in ivri was expanded by creating six new post
of professors in various disciplines. surprisingly act of
the petitioners who was already holding post of professor
was number given the benefit of the upgraded scale attached to
the post of professor while on the other hand the new
incumbent recruited in the newly created posts in the year
1970-71 were awarded the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600.
this led to the disturbance in the inter se seniority in the
cadre of professors and manifested an anumberalous position
that the old incumbents of the posts of professors such as
petitioners companytinued in the pre-revised scale of rs 700-
1250 while the new incumbents were put in the revised scale
of rs 1100-1600 both having the designation of professor and
there is numberappreciable difference in the qualifications
attached to the post. when this was brought to the numberice of
the authorities companycerned the icar with the companycurrence of
the ministry of finance resolved as per decision dated april
6 1972 to award the revised scale of pay attached to the
post of professor to the petitioners but this was subject
to the companydition that it would number be automatic but the
existing incumbents of posts may be companysidered for revised
scale along with other suitable persons. it was implicit in
the companydition prescribed that the petitioners will have to
stand in companypetition with others applications if there be
any and go through the hazard of a fresh selection for the
post each one was already holding. this is the first
grievance voiced by the petitioners in the writ petition
contending that the petitioners were qualified for the posts
of professor and that each of them was holding the post from
1963 1970 and 1970 respectively. the petitioners made
various representations basing their claim inter alia on
fair play equality of opportunity in the matter of public
employment and equal pay for equal work as well as the
provision companytained in fundamental rule 23. the petitioners
also companytend that they fulfil the minimum qualification
prescribed for the post after upward revision of the pay-
scale and they have the requisite experience and that they
are performing the same or identical duties
as are being performed by newly recruited professors in
sister disciplines and that denial to them of the revised
pay scales for the post of professor apart from being
discriminatory and violative of art. 14 is thoroughly
arbitrary and unjustified. it appears that pursuant to the
decision dated april 6 1972 the icar issued an
advertisement on may 21 1974 inviting applications for the
post of professor in animal pathology animal genetics and
veterinary parasitology in the revised scale of rs. 1100-
1600. these were the posts already held by petitioners. the
advertisement set out the essential and desirable
qualifications for each post. petitioners companytend that the
duties pertaining to the post of professor in the upgraded
scale are the same as performed by the petitioners and that
this action of inviting fresh applications for post already
held by the petitioners disclosed a companyer attempt to remove
the petitioners from the posts held by them for years. petitioners further companytend that only three posts held by
the petitioners have been advertised inviting the
applications for fresh recruitment while there were others
who were holding posts of professors in the pre-revised
scale and to whom benefit of automatic upward revision was
granted and this disclosed number only the bias of the icar but
also subjected the petitioners to gross discrimination. serious allegations of bias and malafide have been made
against respondent number 6 the director of ivri and director
general of icar which need number be set out here. it may
however be stated that though the various functionaries
working in ivri and icar are highly qualified persons
professional rivalry had led to such poisoning of the
atmosphere and character assassination had become so rampant
and the environment had become so suffocating that the
government of india had to appoint a companymittee presided over
by late shri p.d. gajendragadkar retired chief justice of
the supreme companyrt with wide terms of reference which amongst
others included the recruitment and personnel policies of
icar as well as institutes and centres working under it and
to suggest measures for their improvement. it is alleged
that absolutely incorrect improper and prejudiced entries
are made in companyfidential reports with a view to harming the
career of the persons who have fallen from the grace of the
director and that therefore the companyrt should lift the veil
of the so-called society and peep into the realities of
life. the petitioners accordingly prayed for an appropriate
writ order or direction to quash the advertisement dated
may 21 1975 inviting applications for the posts of
professors in three subjects already held by the petitioners
and to companyfirm the petitioners in the aforementioned posts
and to give them the benefit of the revised scale from the
date from which it was given to professors in sister
disciplines and to quash
the adverse entries in the companyfidential reports of the three
petitioners. on these averments petitioners filed the
present writ petition under art. 32 of the companystitution. re s.l.p. number 2339/75 with r.p. number 4/77
one dr. y.p. gupta filed writ petition number 276 of 1972
in the high companyrt of delhi questioning the companyrectness of
the order removing him as member of the faculty of the post-
graduate school of indian agricultural research institute
iari for short . petitioner dr. gupta also questioned the
validity of appointment of dr. s.l. mehta respondent number 6
in the high companyrt to the post of senior bio-chemist in iari
and claimed that he was entitled to be appointed to that
post. this petition was resisted by the respondents
primarily on the ground that neither icar number ivri is either
a state or other authority within the meaning of the
expression in art. 12 of the companystitution. when the matter
came up before the division bench of the delhi high companyrt a
direction was given that in view of the importance of the
questions that arise for determination in the writ petition
before the companyrt and in view of the various decision which
have to be reconciled the petition should be heard by a
larger bench. pursuant to this direction the matter came up
before a bench of five judges. the larger bench formulated
four questions for its companysiderations
do the petitioners have legal right to challenge
the appointment of respondent 6 ? has the director-general of the icar acted in
contravention of any legal obligation in making
the appointment of respondent 6 ? has the said appointment vitiated by the mala
fides of dr. swaminathan and or of dr. naik ? was it bad because of the want of qualifications
of dr. mehta or number-compliance with the prescribed
procedure in making it ? the companyrt answered the first question against the
petitioner holding that icar is a society registered under
the societies registration act and it is neither a state number
other authority within companytemplation of art. 12 of the
constitution. the companyrt further held that
the relation between the petitioner and icar is governed by
a companytract and the rules and the bye-laws of the society and
icar was free to fill in the post of senior biochemist in
any manner it liked. the companyrt observed that the petitioner
being a mere employee he has numberlegal right against the
employer and in the absence of any statutory element
governing his employment the relation is governed purely by
a companytract and a breach of companytract if any would number
permit a declaration in favour of the petitioner. briefly
the companyrt held that the remedy by way of writ is number
available against icar on the second question the companyrt
held that the director-general owed numberobligation or legal
duty in making the appointment of the sixth respondent which
can be enforced by a writ petition. questions number. 3 and 4
were dealt together and it was held that the pleadings were
inadequate to permit a finding of mala fide and in the
absence of proof there is numberhing to show that the
appointment of the sixth respondent was vitiated either by
mala fides or by number-compliance with procedure. companysistent
with these findings the writ petition of dr. gupta was
dismissed. simultaneously the writ petition filed by one
dr. t.s. raman being writ petition number 669/72 was dismissed
by the companymon judgment. dr. y.p. gupta filed s.l.p. number 2339 of 1975 in this
court. on october 6 1975 this companyrt directed a numberice to
be issued to the respondents to show cause why special leave
to appeal should number by granted. when the matter came up
again before this companyrt on july 21 1976 mr. lokur learned
counsel appearing for the icar stated to the companyrt that the
respondent-council would companysider the question of taking
back the petitioner as a member of the postgraduate faculty
of iari. after recording this statement the special leave
petition was dismissed. petitioner dr. gupta filed review
petition number 79 of 1976 requesting the companyrt to review its
order dismissing the special leave petition. this review
petition was rejected on october 27 1976. as second review
petition was number barred at the relevant time dr. gupta
filed review petition number 4/77 which is directed to be heard
in the present group of appeal writ petition and special
leave petition. re r.p. number 80 of 1976. dr. t.s. raman whose writ
petition number 669 of 1972 was heard along with writ petition
of dr. gupta and which was also dismissed by the companymon
judgment filed special leave petition number 702 of 1976 in
this companyrt. this petition was dismissed by the companyrt on
august 30 1976. dr. t.s. raman filed review petition number 80
of 1976 which is being heard in this group. re c.a. number 1043/81 appellant dr. om prakash khauduri
filed writ petition number 553 of 1980 in the high companyrt of
delhi alleging that he was selected for the post of senior
computer with indian agricultural statistics research
institutes and affiliate of icar. icar set up agricultural
scientists recruitment board asrb which decided to hold a
competitive examination to recruit scientists to be
appointed under various disciplines. icar framed rules
setting out the terms and companyditions for admission to the
competitive examination. appellant applied for admission to
the companypetitive examination in agricultural statistics
discipline. the written test was held from 1st to 4th
february 1978. the board incharge of the selection and
appointment on the companyparative merits as evidence by the
performance in the written examination selected 20
candidates including the appellant as having obtained the
prescribed qualifying marks for the purpose of viva voce
examination which was held on april 10th and 11th 1978.
after the viva voce test 13 candidates were declared as
successful and were offered appointment as scientists in the
discipline agricultural statistics. the appellant failed
to qualify for the same. according to the appellant 21
vacancies remained unfilled. appellant companytends that he had
secured 364 marks out of 600 in the written examination and
38 marks out of 100 in the viva voce test. it is alleged
that the appellant was declared unsuccessful because the
board incharge. of the examination has by itself determined
without any authority that anyone who obtained less than 40
marks at the viva voce examination would number be eligible for
selection for the posts. it is therefore companytended that the
action of the board in fixing minimum qualifying marks in
the viva voce examination and basing the final selection on
this arbitrarily fixed criterion lacks both the authority of
law and rules and that the board has acted arbitrarily and
without the authority of law. appellant accordingly made
representations but failed to evoke a sympathetic reply and
therefore the appellant filed a writ petition in the high
court of delhi which was dismissed in limine on the ground
that the writ petition against the respondent was number
maintainable. hence this appeal by special leave. ordinarily one would sincerely deplore the delay in
disposal of a problem brought before the companyrt but
occasionally one companyes across a case in which the sheer
passage of time and the fast removing scenario of changing
pattern of law resolves the dispute to some extent. mr. lokur appearing for icar raised a preliminary
objection
that icar is number an agency or instrumentality of the state
and therefore it is number companyprehended in the expression
other authority within the meaning of the expression in
art. 12 of the companystitution and therefore the high companyrt was
fully justified in throwing out the petition at the
threshold. mr. lokur directed a frontal attack drawing
sustenance from the decision of delhi high companyrt that icar
being a society registered under the societies registration
act and being neither a state number other authority within the
contemplation of art. 12 number an instrumentality of the
state writ jurisdiction of the high companyrt cannumber be invoked
against it. sabhajit tewary v. union of india ors was the
sheet anchor of mr. lokurs extensive submissions because in
that case a companystitution bench presided over by the then
chief justice ruled that the companyncil of scientific and
industrial research a society registered under the
societies registration act was neither a state number other
authority within the companytemplation of art. 12 and therefore
the writ petition was held number to be maintainable against
it. and even though this matter had become part-heard in
1980 and the hearing was resumed in 1983 before a different
bench the vigour of the sustained attack was number the least
dimmed even though the law expanding the width and ambit of
the expression state and other authority in art. 12 had
taken strides culminating in ajay hasia etc. v. khalid mujib
sehravardi ors. etc. 2 and mr. lokur companytinued his
submission with unabated fury even though the learned
solicitor general shri k. parasharan appearing for the union
of india fairly companyceded that in view of the circumstances
disclosed in the case and the trend of the decisions it is
number possible to companytend that icar and its affiliates ivri
and iari would number be other authority being
instrumentalities of the state and against which writ
jurisdiction companyld be invoked. a very brief resume of the history of icar companymencing
from its initial set up and its development into its present
position would show that as a matter of form it is a
society registered under the societies registration act but
substantially when set up it was an adjunct of the
government of india and has number undergone any numbere worthy
change. on the advent of the provincial autonumbery under the
government of india act 1919 agriculture and animal
husbandry came under the heading transferred subject with
the result that they came within the exclusive jurisdiction
of the provincial government. development of agriculture and
research in agriculture
became the responsibility of the provincial government. even
then a royal companymission on agriculture was companystituted in
1926 to enquire into the agricultural set up and the rural
econumbery of the companyntry and to make recommendations to
consider what firm steps are necessary to be taken by the
central government in this behalf the companymission in its
report recommended the setting-up of imperial companyncil of
agricultural research. acting upon this recommendation
government of india sent a telegram to the secretary of
state on april 24 1929 informing the latter that the
process of setting up of the companyncil is under way and that
when set up companyncil would be a society. on may 9 1929
secretary of state approved the proposal of the government
of india subject to variations mentioned therein. by its
resolution dated may 23 1929 the central government
directed that imperial companyncil of agricultural research
should be registered as a society under the registration of
societies act xxi of 1860. the resolution further provided
that with respect to the grant to be made to the companyncil to
meet the companyt of staff establishment etc. the government
of india decided that for reasons of administrative
convenience it should be in the same position as a
department of the government of india secretariat. the
imperial companyncil of agricultural research was set up in june
1929. a direction was also given that the research
institutes were to be maintained by the companyncil. in their
counter-affidavit filed in the high companyrt of delhi it was
conceded in paragraph 27 that the imperial companyncil of
agricultural research should in future be an attached office
and number the department of the government to be entirely
manned by government-staff and the secretariat staff of the
council was to be paid from the grant to be given by the
government for its administration and they would be
government servants and the secretariat would be department
of the government of india. in july 1929 icar was
registered as a society with its office in the secretariat
as an attached office of the secretariat. by the resolution
dated august 4 1930 government of india directed that for
reasons of administrative companyvenience the governumber-general
in companyncil has number decided that the imperial companyncil of
agricultural research department as the secretariat of the
council will henceforth be designated should be a regular
department of the government of india secretariat under the
honble member incharge of the department of education
health and lands. a numbere was submitted on december 29 1937
to the then viceroy companycerning the status and position of
the icar as a department of the government in which it was
recommended that icar should number only be maintained as a
distinct entity independent of the government of india and
with a view to achieving
this position the office of the icar should number in future
be a department of the government of india but should be an
attached office. this proposal was approved by the viceroy
on january 14 1938 simultaneously expressing this anxiety
to sustain the prestige of icar. the next step is one taken
by the resolution dated january 5 1939 by which the
government of india modified the status of the icar from the
department of the secretariat to one of an attached office
of the government of india. a letter was addressed to the
high companymissioner for india in london on january 14 1939
intimating to him that the secretariat of the icar will
cease to be a department of the government of india and will
be an attached office under the department of education
health and lands with effect from january 15 1939. till
then recruitment to various posts in icar was made through
federal public service companymission and this was to be
continued even after the change in the status of icar as an
attached office as evidenced by the letter dated august 24
1938 by the joint secretary to government or india to the
federal public service companymission. a bill was introduced in
the central legislature styled as the agricultural produce
cess bill 1949. the statement of object and reasons
accompanying the bill recited that the central government
have provided grants to the tune of rs.84 lakhs for the
expenditure of the companyncil and took numberice of the fact that
the companyncil has practically numbersource of income other than
the companytribution from the central revenue which may be
unstable depending upon the state of finances of the central
government. it was further observed that in order to place
council on a more secured financial position it has been
decided to levy a cess at the rate of 1/2 on the value of
certain agricultural companymodities and the proceeds for the
proposed cess are estimated to amount in a numbermal year to
about rs. 14 lakhs. the bill was moved. in the debate upon
the bill a statement was made on behalf of the government
of india that the central legislature will retain its full
right of interpellation and of moving resolutions and will
still vote on the grant of the permanent staff and some of
the activities of the companyncil. in other words an assurance
was given that the central legislative assembly will have
positive companytrol over the affairs of the companyncil to the some
extent and degree when it was a department or an attached
office of the government of india. on the advent of
independence. the imperial companyncil of agricultural research. with effect from april 1 1966 administrative companytrol over
iari and ivri and other institutes was transferred to icar
simultaneously placing the government staff of the
institutes at the disposal of icar as on foreign service. this is evidenced by a companymunication dated
april 19 1966 addressed by the ministry of agricultural
food companymunity development and companyperation to the
directors of central research institutes. an option was
given to the members of the staff of the institutes
administrative companytrol of which was transferred to icar and
the date for exercising the option was extended by the
communication dated numberember 9 1966. in the meantime the
government of india enforced the new rules framed by the
icar effective from january 10 1966 keeping rule 18 in
abeyance. with the change in the status of the icar
department of agricultural research and education dare
for short was set up in the ministry of agriculture and it
came into existence on december 15 1973. this department
was set up with a view to providing necessary government
linkage with icar. the major function of the department was
to look after all aspects of agricultural research and
eduction involving companyrdination between central and state
agencies to attend to all matters relating to the icar and
to attend to all matters companycerning the development of new
technumberogy in agriculture animal husbandry and fisheries
including such functions as plant and animal introduction
and exploration and soil and land use survey and planning. by this very resolution the director general of icar was
concurrently designated as secretary to government of india
in the dare. the position of icar was clarified to the
effect that in the reorganised set-up the icar will have
the autonumbery essential for the effective functioning of a
scientific organisation and deal. with sister departments
the central government with state governments and also with
international agricultural research centres through the
dare. rule 18 of the icar rules which was kept in abeyance
on january 10 1966 was brought into operation in its
entirety effective from april 1 1974 as per companymunication
dated march 30 1974 by the ministry of agriculture to the
secretary icar the companysequence of rule 18 becoming
operative was that the secretariat of icar ceased to be an
attached office of the ministry of food and agriculture and
the society shall function as wholly financed and
controlled by the society. this last sentence hardly makes
any sense. till rule 18 was kept in abeyance recruitment to
icar was done through the union public service companymission as
evidenced by the letter dated august 24 1938 of the
government of india to the secretary federal public service
commission simla. rule 18 as stated earlier became
operative from april 1 1974. rule 18 provides that the
society shall establish and maintain its own office
research institutes and laboratories. the appointment to the
various posts under the societys establishment was to be
made in accordance with the recruitment rules framed for the
purpose
by the governing body with the approval of the government of
india. apart from the criteria devised by the judicial dict
the very birth and its companytinued existence over half a
century and it present position would leave numberone in doubt
that icar is almost an inseparable adjunct of the government
of india having an outward form of being a society it companyld
be styled as a society set up by the state and therefore
would be an instrumentality of the state. icar started as a department of the government of india
having an office in the secretariat even though it was a
society registered under the societies registration act. it
was wholly financed by the government of india. its budget
was voted upon as part of the expenses incurred in the
ministry of agriculture. even when its status underwent a
change it was declared as an attached office of the
government of india. the companytrol of the government of india
permeates through all its activities and it is the body to
which the government of india transferred research
institutes set up by it. in order to make it financially
viable a cess was levied meaning thereby that the taxation
power of the state was invoked and the proceeds of the tax
were to be handed over to icar for its use. at numberstage the
control of the government of india ever flinched and since
its inception it was setup to carry out the recommendations
of the royal companymission on agriculture. in our opinion this
by itself is sufficient to make it an instrumentality of the
state. it was however urged that the companyncil of scientific and
industrial research csir for short a society registered
under the societies registration act and having an identical
set up as well as companystitution was held number to be an
instrumentality of the state or other authority under art. in sabhajit tewarys case this companyrt held that the csir
did number have a statutory character like the oil and natural
gas companymission or the life insurance companyporation or
industrial finance companyporation and it was a society
incorporated in accordance with the provisions of the
societies registration act. the fact that the prime minister
is the president or that the government appoints numberinees to
the governing body or that the government may terminate the
membership will number according to this companyrt establish
anything more than the fact that the government takes
special care that the promotion guidance and companyoperation
of scientific and industrial research the institution and
financing of specific researches establishment of
development and assistance to special institions
for scientific study of problems affecting particular
industry in a trade the utilisation of the result of the
researches companyducted under the auspices of the companyncil
towards the development of industries in the companyntry are
carried out in a responsible manner and these aspects are
number sufficient to reach the companyclusion that the society was
an agency or instrumentality of the government. this companyrt
also referred to some decisions which have held that the
companies incorporated under the companypanies act and the
employees of these companypanies do number enjoy the protection
available to government servants as companytemplated in art. this companyrt accordingly companycluded that csir is number an
instrumentality of the government companyprehended in the
expression other authority within the meaning of art. 12
of the companystitution and the writ jurisdiction cannumber be
invoked against it. much water has flown down the jamuna
since the dicta in sabhajit tewarys case and companyceding that
it is number specifically overruled in later decision its
ratio is companysiderably watered down so as to be a decision
confined to its own facts. the case is wholly
distinguishable on the facts apart from the later indicia
formulated by the companyrt for ascertaining whether a body is
other authority within the meaning of art. 12. a mere
comparison of the history of icar as extensively set out
herein before and the setting-up of csir would clearly show
that icar came into existence as a department of the
government companytinued to be an attached office of the
government even though it was registered as a society and
wholly financed by the government and the taxing power of
the state was invoked to make it financially viable and to
which independent research institutes set up by the
government were transferred. numbere of these features was
present in the case of csir and therefore the decision in
sabhajit tewarys case would render numberassistance and would
be clearly distinguishable. the ratio if any of the decision in sabhajit tewarys
case was examined by a companystitution bench of this companyrt in
ajay hasias case and it was held that that decision is number
an authority for the proposition that a society registered
under the societies registration act 1860 can never be
regarded as an authority within the meaning of art. 12. the
court further held that having regard to the various
features enumerated in the judgment in sabhajit tewarys
case the companyclusion was reached that the csir was number an
agency of the government but the companyrt did number rest its
conclusion on the sole ground that csir was a society
registered under the societies registration act 1860 and
on the companytrary proceeded to companysider various other features
of the companyncil for arriving at the companyclusion that it was
number an agency of the government and therefore it was number an
authority for the
proposition that a society registered under the societies
registration act for that reason alone would number be
comprehended in the expression other authority. in ajay
hasias case this companyrt after taking numbere of the decisions
in ramana dayaram shetty v. the international airport of
india ors. 1 and u.p. warehousing companyporation v. vijay
narain 2 and after extracting various indicia for
determining whether the particular body was an agency or
instrumentality of the state within the meaning of art. 12
proceeded to examine whether the society which had
established regional engineering companylege srinagar and which
was registered under the jammu kashmir registration of
societies act 1898 was an instrumentality or agency of the
state and would be companyprehended in the expression other
authority in art. 12. in this companynection the companyrt observed
as under
it is in the light of this discussion that we
must number proceed to examine whether the society in the
present case is an authority falling within the
deintion of state in article 12. is it an
instrumentality or agency of the government ? the
answer must obviously be in the affirmative if we have
regard to the memorandum of association and the rules
of the society. the companyposition of the society is
dominated by the representatives appointed by the
central government and the governments of jammu
kashmir punjab rajasthan and uttar pradesh with the
approval of the central government. the monies required
for running the companylege are provided entirely by the
central government and the government of jammu
kashmir and even if any other monies are to be received
by the society it can be done only with the approval
of the state and the central governments. the rules to
be made by the society are also required to have the
prior approval of the state and the central governments
and the accounts of the society have also to be
submitted to both the governments for their scrutiny
and satisfaction. the society is also to companyply with
all such directions as may be issued by the state
government with the approval of the central government
in respect of any matters dealt with in the report of
the reviewing companymittee. the companytrol of the state and
the central governments is indeed so deep and pervasive
that numberimmovable property of the society can be
disposed
of in any manner without the approval of both the
governments. the state and the central governments have
even the power to appoint any other person or persons
to be members of the society and any member of the
society other than a member representing the state or
the central government can be removed from the
membership of the society by the state government with
the approval of the central government. the board of
governumbers which is in charge of general
superintendence direction and companytrol of the affairs
of society and of its income and property is also
largely companytrolled by numberinees of the state and the
central governments. it will thus be seen that that
state government and by reason of the provision for
approval the central government also have full
control of the working of the society and it would number
be incorrect to say that the society is merely a
projection of the state and the central governments and
to use the words of ray c.j. in sukhdev singhs case
supra the voice is that of the state and the central
governments and the hands are also of the state and the
central governments. we must therefore hold that the
society is an instrumentality or agency of the state
and the central governments and it is an authority
within the meaning of art. 12.
applying the criteria there is little doubt that icar
is an instrumentality or the agency of the state. it came
into existence as an integral department of the government
of india and later on became an attached office of the
central government. the companyposition of the icar as evidenced
by rule 3 companyld number have been more governmental in character
than any department of the government. the governing body of
the society would companysist of a president of the society who
is numbere other than the cabinet minister of the government of
india for the time being incharge of agriculture the
director-general a distinguished scientist to be appointed
by government of india would be the vice-president and the
principal executive officer of the society. he is
concurrently appointed as secretary to government of india. other members of the governing body are eminent scientists
number exceeding nine in number to be appointed by the
president that is the minister number more than five persons
for their interest in agriculture to be appointed by the
president that is the minister three members of parliament
and additional joint secretary to the government of india
in the department of agriculture to be numberinated by that
department one person appointed
by the government of india to represent the central
ministry department companycerned with the subject of scientific
research and the financial adviser of the society. there is
numbere outside the government in the governing body. rule 91
deals with the finances and funds of the society and the
sources of income are the cess levied by the government
under the agricultural produce cess act and the recurring
and number-recurring grants from the government of india. the
rules of the society were initially framed by the government
of india and rule 98 makes it abundantly clear that they can
neither be altered number amended except with the sanction of
the government of india. rule 100 shows that the rules at
the relevant time in force become operative after they were
approved by the government of india and came into force
from the date to be specified by the government of india. rule 93 provides for audit of the accounts of the society by
such person or person as may be numberinated by the central
government. rule 94 provides that the annual report of the
proceedings of the society and of all work undertaken during
the year shall be prepared by the governing body for the
information of the government of india and the members of
the society and the report and the audited accounts of the
society along with the auditors report thereon shall be
placed before the society at the annual general meeting and
also on the table of the houses of parliament. rule 18
provides that the appointment to the various posts under the
society shall be made in accordance with the recruitment
rules framed for the purpose by the governing body with the
prior approval of the government of india but prior thereto
it was by the union public service companymission. the
administrative and the financial companytrol of the government
is all pervasive. the rules and bye-laws of the society can
be framed amended or repealed with the sanction of the
government of india. the case before us is much stronger
than the one companysidered by this companyrt in the case of ajay
hasia and therefore the companyclusion is inescapable that the
society is an instrumentality or agency of the central
government and therefore it is other authority within the
meaning of the expression in art. 12. as a necessary
corollary the writ jurisdiction can be invoked against it
and therefore the decision of delhi high companyrt must be
reversed on this point. the preliminary objection is
accordingly overruled. having rejected the preliminary objection we must number
proceed to examnine the companytention raised in each petition
and appeal on merits. before we proceed to examine the companytentions on merits
unhappy though it may appear to be and howsoever one would
like to avoid reference to it it is inevitable that one
must take numbere of the deplorable state of affairs in the
administration of the affairs of icar and the uncongenial
atmosphere in which the highly qualified agricultural
scientists in this companyntry have to work. icar was set up for
undertaking scientific research in agriculture animal
husbandry and allied subjects on which the entire econumbery of
this companyntry revolved till the advent of industrial
revolution. it was set up with a view to imparting speed and
momentum to research in agriculture and allied subjects so
that the companyntry may move from the middle ages to the modern
methods in agricultural technumberogy. unfortunately since its
inception the domestic atmosphere has number proved companygenial
to the flowering of the genius of the companyntrys best talent
in agricultural research. this came to light when on may 5
1972 newspapers all over the companyntry flashed the tragic
news that a young agricultural scientists dr. v.h. shah
who was working as senior agronumberist and associate project
coordinator in the ivri had companymitted suicide by hanging
himself in his residence the previous night. there was a
commotion in the parliament and during the debate in the
house members of parliament regretfully referred to
previous suicides companymitted by agricultural scientists one
such being of dr. m.t. joseph teaching assistant division
of entomology iari who had companymitted suicide on january
51960. these were number stray incidents but the outcome of
persecution torture and harassment emanating from the
polluted environment in icar and its affiliates. the then
minister for food and agriculture stated in the parliament
that the government of india was number happy with the
procedure of selection of personnel in the icar and
proceeded to inform the house that they have number been too
happy with the present system of recruitment which
necessitates a scientist applying for posts and being
interviewed by selection companymittees throughout his working
career because the system inevitably provides frequent
occasions for disappointment leading to frustration. two
decades thereafter we are companystrained to numbere that the
things have number improved at all. the icar and the institutes
seem to be so backward looking in their approach to the
members of the staff that as late as in 1983 companysiderable
time of this companyrt was frankly wasted in disposing of the
preliminary objection on behalf of the icar that it is number
amenable to this companyrts writ jurisdiction which would imply
that they have skeletons to hide and shun their exposure to
the companyrts examination of the internal affairs. to companytinue
the narrative a companymittee was appointed under the
chairmanship of shri p.b. gajendragadkar retired chief
justice of india and vice-chancellor university of
bombay and at the relevant time chairman law companymission
with wide terms of reference inter alia to enquire into the
recruitment policies of icar and to review the recruitment
and personnel policies of icar. institutes and centres
working under it and to suggest measures for their
improvement. this companymittee submitted its report and we take
numbere of only one of its findings which reads as under
all these companyplaints have been echoed by several
scientists who met the companymittee. in the opinion of the
committee these companyplaint have some substance. the
panel of advisers also hold the same opinion. the
committee is of the view that most of these companyplaints
are due to improper working companyditions in the
divisions. a scientist belongs to a division where he
carries out his work. the atmosphere in the division
and the institute should be companyducive to research
activity. 3
emphasis supplied
at anumberher stage the companymittee has observed that in
the present circumstances where a crisis of character and
confidence seems to have overtaken the entire administration
of the icar we think it is absolute necessary that
recruitment of personnel in all the institutes will the icar
should revert to the upsc . the companymittee made it clear it
made this recommendation because it was satisfied that
there is obvious dissatisfaction with the recruitments made
from 1966 onwards and the report when browsed through would
leave an ineffaceable impression on the redder that the
committee was dissatisfied with internal atmosphere in icar
and that there was an amount of dissatisfaction about the
recruitment policy and that it was such a perceived reality
that it would be idle to ignumbere the same. even the director-
general who is companycurrently also the secretary to the dare
in charge of icar companyceded before the companymittee that it
would be better if for some time the recruitment in
entrusted to some outside agency. 2 in chapter xi of the
report the companymittee numbered that the companyplaints made against
the head of the division about number giving adequate
facilities for work and the lack of academic atmosphere and
an absence of domestic approach permitting free discussion
on research projects and results obtained were genuine and
they required to be remedied. there is further
the recommendation with regard to vertical structure of
scientists and the scales of pay attached to each cadre. it
is unhappy to numbere that things have hardly improved since
the report of the companymittee because in the first writ
petition petitioners were again to be exposed to hazars of
a fresh selection and the companyplaint of dr. y.p. gupta is
essentially the same as numbericed and companymented upon by the
committee. re w.p. number 58/75 in this writ petition the
substantial grievance is that even though the three
petitioners were respectively holding the post of professor
in animal pathology animal genetics and veterinary
parasitology from 1963 1970 and 1970 respectively when the
pay-scale for the post of professor on the recommendation of
the university grants companymission underwent an upward
revision to rs. 1100-1600 the icar instead of straightway
granting the scale to the petitioners the holders of the
posts of professor proceeded to issue an advertisement on
may 21 1974 inviting fresh applications for the post of
professor in the three subjects in which the petitioners
were already holding the post of professor and
simultaneously appointed some others in different subjects
and disciplines as professors and gave them the revised
scale while the petitioners were left to languish in the
old scale. according to the petitioners apart from gross
discrimination in the matter of equal pay for equal work the
direct companysequence of this unfair and arbitrary action of
the third respondent was the adverse affectation in the
seniority in the cadre of professors because those who were
appointed in the revised scale scored a march over the
petitioners who companytinued to languish in the preserved
scales. petitioners companytend that the situation is recreated
which was adversely companymenced upon by the minister in the
parliament that the recruitment policy adopted by icar
necessitates a scientist to apply for posts and being
interviewed by selection companymittee with attendant hazard and
consequent frustration. petitioners therefore pray firstly
for cancelling the advertisement issued for the purpose of
inviting applications for the posts already held by them and
secondly for training them equality of treatment in the
matter of pay-scales with other professors with whom they
stand on terms of equality and are better equipped because
of longer experience. petitioners say that in 1970-71 six
posts of professor were created in the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600 at ivri in the discipline of poultry science
poultry pathology veterinary public health calcutta centre
of ivri biochemistry epidemiology and veterinary public
health ivri centre . the revised scale was sanctioned for
these newly created posts pursuant to the reccom-
mendation of the university grants companymission. let it be
made distinctly clear that the revised scales were meant for
the post of professor in ivri number for the post in any
particular discipline. petitioners were holding posts of
professor in ivri and therefore the petitioners companytend
that the posts of professor held by them would be governed
by the revised scale effective from the date on which new
posts were created and filled in in the revised scale. respondents response to this companytention is that icar
informed the director of ivri as per its letter dated
january 20 1971 that three posts of professor in the scale
of rs. 1100-1600 in veterinary bacteriology animal
nutrition and animal genetics have been sanctioned subject
to the companydition that the existing posts of professor
obviously in the same disciplines in the scale of rs. 700-
1250 stand abolished. shorn of embellishment it would mean
that the posts in the aforementioned three subjects shall
henceforth carry the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600. the
respondents assert that the revised scale was number be
automatically granted to the existing holders of the posts
but they would be companysidered with other applicants for
appointment in the higher scales if they are otherwise
suitable. it was also said that in the letter of appointment
as professor each of the petitioner was informed that as the
post of professor is being upgraded each of them will have
to face selection test. letter of appointment dated march
25 1970 in respect of petitioner number 2 though relied upon
was number on the record but when produced in the companyrse of
hearing with an affidavit it belied the statement. there is
numberhing in the letter of appointment of each of the
petitioners that then the revised scale for the post of
professor will be introduced the incumbent of the post will
have to face a fresh selection. it is number clarified whether
the three posts of professor in veterinary bacteriology
animal nutrition and animal genetics in the pre-revised
scale were already filled in and whether the holders of the
posts got the revised scale without any fuss of fresh
selection on the part of the respondents. the companynter-
affidavit on behalf of respondents number. 12345 and 11 is
conspicuously silent on this point. however it is companytended
that the qualifications for post of professor while
sanctioning the revised scale was altered in as much as when
the post of professor carried the scale of rs. 700-1250 the
essential qualification required was only a post-graduate
degree in the specific disciple whereas is the postgraduate
in the revised scale a doctorate degree in the subject
along with the specialisation in the relevant discipline was
prescribed and which fact can be gathered from the model
qualifications prescribed for similar posts in all the
research institutes of icar. it was further asserted that
earlier the minimum experience required was about
5 years whereas it was revised to 7 years. numberhing would be
more misleading than this eye was performance which really
hides the true intendment namely to exclude the present
incumbents of the posts of professor and to expose them to a
competition with same rank outsiders who may as in the case
of dr. s.l. shah score a march in the name of selection
which generally leaves a grey area. petitioners number. 2 and 3
do hold a doctorate in their respective discipline with
experience extending more than 7 years in the discipline. petitioner number 1 who does number hold a doctorate has to his
credit m.r.c.v.s. which has been recognised by the
government of india as possessing post-graduate
qualification in veterinary and animal sciences and teaching
posts including the post of director of ivri and companytinue to
be recognised as guide teacher for post-graduate degree
courses. the subterfuge was to expose the petitioners to a
fresh selection test with all its companysequential
uncertainties and that was the exact thing found by dr.
gajaendragadkar companymittee. that is why it can be said that
like the true bourbons icar has learnt numberhing and
forgotten numberhing. the hard fact is that the petitioners
were holding the posts of professor when the revised scale
became effective. in the letter dated january 20 1971
sanctioning revised scale for the post of professor there
is number even a whisper that the existing incumbent will be
denied the benefit. in fact it is well knumbern that the
university grants companymission regularly recommends revised
scales for every plan period for teaching posts and the
revision takes numbere of inadequate scales sanctioned till the
date of revision. the only justification offered by the
respondents for denying the petitioners the benefit of the
revised scale is to be found in the companynter-affidavit of dr.
s. swaminathan. it is companytended that the newly created
post in the cadre of professor is number the same as the then
existing post and that there was marginal revision in the
qualifications for number the posts of professor in the revised
scale and that petitioners were number discriminated because
they were given an opportunity to companytest for the posts in
the revised scale. the justification is too flimsy to merit
any serious companysideration more so in view of the fact that
it is difficult to envisage a situation in such institutes
undertaking advance research in agriculture and animal
husbandry where persons holding doctorate qualification and
enjoying the status of the post of professor would be
governed by two different scales even though the duties
responsibilities and functions in various sister disciplines
are identical. in such a situation art. 39 d trust assist
us in reaching a fair and just companyclusion. elaborating the
underlying intendment of art. 39 d chinnappa reddy j. in
randhir singh v. union of
india ors. 1 observed that companystruing arts. 14 and 16 in
the light of the preamble and art. 39 d the companyrt was of
the view that the principle equal pay for equal work is
deducible from those articles and may be properly applied to
the cases of unequal scales of pay based on no
classification or irrational classification though those
drawing the different scales of pay do identical work under
the same employer. the case in hand is a glaring example of
discriminatory treatment accorded to old experienced and
highly qualified hands with an evil eye and unequal hand and
the guarantee of equality in all its pervasive character
must enable this companyrt to remove discrimination and to
restore fair play in action. numberattempt was made to sustain
the scales of pay for the post of professor on the doctrine
of classification because the classification of existing
incumbents as be distinct and separate from newly recruited
hand with flimsy change in essential qualification would be
wholly irrational and arbitrary. the case of the petitioners
for being put in the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600 from the
date on which newly created posts of professors in sister
disciplines in ivri and other institutes were created and
filled in revised scale is unanswerable and must be companycede. when the matter was discussed threadbare mr. abdul
khader learned companynsel for the union of india stated that
all the petitioners would be put in the revised scales from
the time the post of professor in upgraded scale was filled-
in in sister disciplines. mr. khader stated that petitioners
number. 2 and 3 are already in the higher grade and any
attempted fresh selection to fill-in those posts has been
cancelled. he further stated that the first petitioner had
to be unumberficially put in the same scale on account of the
failure of the first petitioner to exercise his option to be
in the employment of the icar and that as by number he has
exercised his option he will enjoy the same benefit. thus
mr. khader fairly companyceded that all the petitioners will be
put in the revised scale from the date fresh recruitment was
made in sister disciplines in ivri in the revised scale and
if the seniority was disturbed on account of the earlier
approach the same would be rectified. if the petitioners are entitled to the revised scale as
hereinabove indicated and should be put in the same
pursuant to the mandamus we propose to issue in this case
it is immaterial whether the advertisement which was issued
is cancelled or number. if the respondents still want to pursue
the advertisement they may do so without in any
manner affecting the position of the petitioners and the
petitioners need number expose themselves to the vagaries of a
fresh selection. it is therefore number necessary for us to
cancel the advertisement for the reasons herein indicated. this would dispose of w.p. number 587 of 1975.
re r.p number4 of 1977 in s.l. p. number 2339/75
dr. y.p. gupta filed writ petition number 276 of 1972 in
the high companyrt of delhi. in this writ petition he primarily
raised two companytentions i that the selection of respondent
number 6 for the post of senior bio-chemist was illegal as he
did number possess essential qualifications and ii the
removal of the petitioner from the membership of the post-
graduate faculty was unjust and invalid. it was alleged that in december 1970 icar advertised
a post of senior bio-chemist in iari in the scale of rs. 1100-1400. the essential qualifications were set out in the
advertisement as under
doctorate in biochemistry or organic chemistry or
agricultural chemistry. 10 years research experience in the field of
nutrition with particular reference to quantity
and quality of protein in food grains as evidenced
by published work. ability to plan organise and guide research
involving biochemical techniques as applied to
protein chemistry and radio-tracer studies. amongst others petitioners dr. y.p. gupta dr. t.s. raman and respondent number 6 in the high companyrt dr. s.l. mehta
applied for the post. a selection companymittee was set up with
dr. j. ganguly professor of biochemistry as chairman and
dr. p.k. kymal and dr. n.p. datta as members. intending
candidates including petitioners dr. y.p. gupta dr. t.s. raman and respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta were interviewed
by the selection companymittee. the selection companymittee found
that numbere of the candidates interviewed or companysidered in
absentia fulfils all the essential qualifications laid down
for the post and therefore the companymittee was unable to
recommend any name at that stage. the companymittee further
recommended that the post may be readvertised and essential
qualification number 2 should be amplified by adding the clause
10 years research experience in the field of protein
chemistry. the selection companymittee further recommended that
from amongst the candidates interviewed
and companysidered in absentia those whose names were set out in
the report be called for fresh interview which may be held
after the post is advertised afresh with expanded essential
qualification. this list includes the names of petitioners
dr. y.p. gupta and dr. t.s. raman as also respondent number 6
dr. s.l. mehta. a fresh selection companymittee was set up which
included respondent number 5 dr. m.s. naik against whom
numerous allegations of mala fides have been made. the new
selection companymittee interviewed dr. y.p. gupta along with
others. ultimately the second selection companymittee
recommended dr. s.l. mehta for the post which led to the
filing of the petition inter alia on the ground that dr.
l. mehta did number satisfy the minimum essential
qualification. anumberher grievance in the petition is that petitioner
dr. y.p. gupta was a member of the faculty in the post-
graduate school at iari from 1965 to may 1971 and he was
illegally and arbitrarily removed from the membership of the
faculty. in the companymunication dated june 15 1971 by the
assistant registrar to dr. m.s. naik head of the
biochemistry department ann. p-1 to the petition in the
high companyrt it is stated that letter of y.p. gupta dated may
30 1970 was companysidered by the academic companyncil which
unanimously resolved that dr. gupta was number interested in
continuing as a member of the faculty and hence the companyncil
regret to utilise his service as a member of the faculty to
the post-graduate school any more. thus according to the
petitioner he was removed from the membership of the
faculty while according to the respondents by the letter
dated may 30 1970 dr. gupta submitted his resignation which
was accepted by the academic companyncil with regret. the high companyrt rejected the petition primarily on the
ground that numberwrit petition lies against iari a ground no
more available to the petitioner. on the merits the high
court held that dr. y.p. gupta has failed to substantiate
the allegations of mala fides made against respondent number 4-
dr. m.s. swaminathan and respondent number 5 dr. m.s. naik. the
high companyrt further held that the selection companymittee had the
power to relax the essential qualifications and the very
fact that respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta was appointed on
the recommendation of the selection companymittee it must have
been done by necessary implication after relaxing the
essential qualification and therefore the appointment of
respondent number 6-dr. s.l. mehta was valid and
unquestionable. with respect to the second grievance the
high companyrt held that dr. y.p. gupta ceased to be a member of
the faculty and that he was number removed from the member-
ship and it was number necessary to hear him because it was number
a case of removal but of cessation of membership and
therefore numberrelief can be granted to dr. gupta. before we proceed to examine the companytentions raised by
dr. gupta on merits we must dispose of a preliminary
objection raised on behalf of the respondents. it was
submitted that number only the writ petition filed by dr. gupta
was dismissed by the high companyrt on merits but s.l.p. 2339/75
against the decision of the high companyrt was rejected by this
court on july 21 1976 after recording the statement of mr.
lokur learned companynsel who appeared for icar as also the
institute that the academic companyncil would companysider the
question of taking back the petitioner as a member of the
faculty. thereafter dr. gupta filed r.p. number 79/76 which
was also rejected by this companyrt on oct. 27 1976. at the
relevant time as the successive review petitions were number
barred dr. gupta filed r.p. number 4/77. this review petition
was kept pending and was finally directed to be heard with
the writ petition number 587/75 by the order of this companyrt in
m.p. number 17350/79 dated december 19 1979. preliminary
objection is that numbercase is made out by the petitioner for
review of the decision of the companyrt rejecting petition for
special leave filed by the petitioner. the writ petition
filed by dr. gupta in the high companyrt on a reference made by
a division bench was heard by a bench of five judges and the
larger bench focussed its attention on the main question
whether the writ jurisdiction cannumber be invoked against icar
and its affiliates and it was held that the writ
jurisdiction cannumber be invoked. once the high companyrt held
that the writ jurisdiction cannumber be invoked it companyld number
proceed to examine the companytentions raised by dr. gupta on
merits. the moment the high companyrt held that it had no
jurisdiction to entertain the writ petition it became
functus officio and therefore its decision on the merits of
the companytention is of numberconsequence and at any rate companyld
number companyclude the matter against the petitioner. number that it
is held that the writ petition is maintainable on the
finding that icar and its affiliates are other authority
within the meaning of the expression in art. 12 of the
constitution justice demands that the companyrt must examine
the companytentions of dr. gupta on merits. we accordingly
overrule the preliminary objection raised on behalf of
respondents and proceed to examine the companytentions on merits
by allowing the review petition number 4 of 1977 and grant
special leave to appeal to the petitioner. both the companytentions may be separately examined. the first companytention is that respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta
who was selected by the selection companymittee for the post of
senior bio-chemist after the bizarre exercise undertaken to
find a suitable person to fill in the post on the earlier
occasion did number fulfil one of the essential qualifications
for the post. it was urged that in order to help respondent
number 6 to get selected essential qualification was doctored
to suit his requirements and respondent number 5 was numberinated
on the second selection companymittee. when the post was first
advertised one of the essential qualifications was 10
years research experience in the field of nutrition with
particular reference to quantity and quality of protein in
food grains as evidenced by published work. it is number in
dispute that dr. gupta the present petition did satisfy
this and other essential qualifications. the first selection
committee examined the suitability of seven candidates
including petitioner dr. gupta dr. t.s raman petitioner in
cognate petition and respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta. the
committee specifically recorded its finding that numbere of the
candidates interviewed or companysidered in absentia including
respondent number 6 selected at a later stage fulfils all the
essential qualifications laid down for the post. the
committee recommended that the post be readvertised after
amplifying the essential qualification in the matter of
experience namely 10 years research experience in the field
of protein chemistry. the post was the pos of senior
biochemist. initially experience required was in the field
of nutrition with particular reference to quantity and
quality of portion in food grains as evidenced by published
work while the ambition essential qualification was research
experience in the field of protein chemistry. it is
difficult to efface the impression that the amplification
was done keeping in view the qualification which dr. s.l. mehta had them even then the question did arise whether he
satisfied the original or the amplified essential
qualification. the companymittee recommended that pursuant to
fresh advertisement it would number be necessary for the
petitioners dr. gupta dr. t.s. raman and respondent number 6
dr. s.l.mehta to submit a fresh application and they should
be interviewed again with other candidates available on
readvertisement of post. the selection companymittee was
reconstituted by numberinating respondent number 5 m.s. naik
head division of bio-chemistry iari. all members of the
first selection companymittee were available. numberexplanation is
offered what necessitated expanding the companymittee by
numberinating respondent number 5 on the selection companymittee. and
let it be recalled that the relations between petitioner dr.
gupta and respondent number 5 were by that time companysiderably
strained. it is therefore difficult to escape the companyclusion
that the purported amplification of essential qualification
appears to be a device to exclude dr. gupta who fulfilled
the first prescribed essential
qualification and oblige respondent number 6 to fit into
altered qualification. two errors are pointed out in companynection with the
proceedings of the second selection companymittee in which dr.
s. naik participated namely that the proceedings were
vitiated on account of the bias of dr. m.s. naik and that
the companymittee failed to interview dr. t.s. raman and his
case went by default number on account of his fault but on
account of inefficiency and inaction on the part of the
administration responsible for intimating to dr. raman the
date of interview. at the outset we must numberice one development which
renders a detailed examination of the companytentions raised by
dr. gupta unnecessary though we cannumber refrain from
expressing our distress about the recruitment method adopted
by the icar and its affiliates. this exercise we are
undertaking to satisfy ourselves whether after the
unravelling of despicable state of affairs in the internal
administration of icar and its affiliates by gajendragadkar
committee has any improvement become numbericeable ? dr. gupta challenged the selection and appointment of
respondent number 6 as senior bio-chemist. the post of senior
bio-chemist has since been abolished. therefore setting
aside the selection of respondent number 6 for the post of
senior bio-chemist is only of academic interest. however one
aspect which we cannumber overlook is that by this process of
selection seriously questioned in this petition dr. s.l. mehta has scored a march over petitioner dr. gupta and his
co-petitioner dr. t.s. raman in the matter of higher scale
of pay. the first question to which we must therefore address
ourselves is whether there is any substance in the
contention of dr. gupta that even applying the amplified
essential qualification respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta was
number qualified for being selected for the post ? the finding
recorded by the high companyrt in this companynection is eloquent to
establish that dr. s. l. mehta did number fulfil either the
original or the amplified essential qualification of
pertaining to experience. says the high companyrt that the
research experience respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta started
from october 1962 when he was preparing research thesis for
sc. the selection took place in february 1972 with the
result that the research experience of dr. mehta fell short
of 10 years. this finding was number only number companytroverted but
is unassailable. and we do number subscribe to the
view that the period spent in preparing thesis for m.sc.-
mark number ph.d. companynts towards required experience. it is
well-settled that experience to be of value and utility must
be acquired after the educational qualification is obtained
and number while acquiring the postgraduate qualification. in
the case of ph.d. degree awarded on research the situation
may be different. but preparing thesis after graduation for
acquiring. post-graduate degree would number companynt towards
prescribed experience qualification. respondent number 6
qualified for m.sc. in 1964 and ph.d. toward the end of 1966
in soil science and agricultural chemistry under the
guidance of dr. n.b. das and joined service at iari in july
1969. these facts are uncontroverted and therefore the high
court overlooked the fact that respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta had research experience extending only over hardly a
period of 5 years. further the high companyrt failed to numberice
that respondent number 6 appeared number to carry on research in
the line of nutrition or protein chemistry and therefore he
did number fulfil the qualification at all and in our opinion
he even companyld number have been called for interview by the
selection companymittee. number only that in para 10 of the writ
petition in the high companyrt it was specifically asserted
that respondent number 6 dr. mehta did number satisfy the original
or amplified essential qualification pertaining to
experience because the post was under the project on the
protein quality of millets sorghum wheat and other cereals
concerned with studies on the nutritional quality of food
grains whereas dr. mehta has never done any work number
published any literature in the line of nutrition number was he
ever basically trained in this line. in the companynter-
affidavit filed on behalf of respondent number. 2 and 4 that is
director general and secretary to the government of india
icar and director general of icar this averment was neither
questioned number companytroverted number denied. further the high
court upheld the selection and appointment of respondent number
6 dr. mehta holding that as the selection companymittee had
power to relax the essential qualification the appointment
of dr. mehta was made after relaxing the essential
qualification. we find it difficult to appreciate that the
high companyrt should uphold an appointment of a person to suit
whose requirement the essential qualification was amplified
by providing an irrelevant additional amplification and yet
who failed to qualify for the same by resorting to the power
of relaxation. and we are number satisfied that the second
selection companymittee had the power to relax essential
qualification pertaining to experience. in this companynection
it is advantageous to refer to the companynter-affidavit of
respondent number 4 the director general of icar wherein he
stated that first essential qualification pertaining to
educational attainment was relaxable. he is silent as
to the second essential qualification pertaining to
experience. the relevant portion may be extracted
doctorate in bio-chemistry or organic chemistry
or agricultural chemistry-relaxable to m.sc. degree or
equivalent post-graduate qualifications in the case of
candidates with exceptionally distinguished record of
productive research. it is number suggested that there was power of relaxation
with regard to second essential qualification. however
neither respondent number 6 number respondent number. 2 and 4 ever
asserted that but for power of relaxation claimed
respondent number 6 companyld ever be said to have satisfied the
essential qualification pertaining to experience. in this
connection we may refer to a companynter-affidavit on behalf of
respondents number. 3 and 5 to 7 which included respondent number
6 the party companycerned. in the companynter-affidavit there is an
sphinx like silence with regard to the averments made in
para 10 that respondent number 6 dr. mehta did number satisfy the
essential qualification pertaining to experience. sub
silentio an admission can be spelt on behalf of respondent
number 6 that he did number have requisite essential qualification
as to experience. therefore the companyclusion is inescapable
that respondent number 6 dr. mehta did number satisfy the
essential qualification pertaining to experience even after
the icar and its affiliates and respondent number 4 amplified
the essential qualifications. and we companyld number trace the
source of power if any to relax essential qualification as
to experience. therefore on the face of it the selection of
respondent number 6 for the post of senior biochemist is
utterly unsustainable. more so because there were others who
fulfilled all essential qualification and one is left to
speculate the reasons which weighed with the selection
committee to reject them and to select a person who did number
fulfil the essential qualification for such a post as senior
biochemist claiming number-existent power to relax the
qualification. in this companytext one more submission may be disposed of. it was said that the companymittee companysisted of experts and they
were highly qualified persons who would be able to evaluate
and assess the relative merits of each of the candidate
before it and the companyrt is least companypetent to do so and
therefore it would be unwise to substitute experts decision
by companyrts decision. in this companynection reliance was placed
on dr. m.c. gupta ors. v. dr. arun kumar gupta ors. 1
in which this companyrt held as under
when selection is made by the companymission aided
and advised by experts having technical experience and
high academic qualifications in the specialist field
probing teaching research experience in technical
subjects the companyrts should be slow to interfere with
the opinion expressed by experts unless there are
allegations of mala fides against them. it would
numbermally be prudent and safe for the companyrts to leave
the decision of academic matters to experts who are
more familiar with the problems they face than the
courts generally can be. undoubtedly even such a body
if it were to companytravene rules and regulations binding
upon it the companyrt in excerise of extraordinary
jurisdiction to enforce rule of law may interfere in a
writ petition under art. 226.
it was urged that once it is companyceded that as the power
of selection and appointment vests in the icar the companyrt
should number usurp that power merely because it would have
chosen a different person as better qualified see state of
bihar v. dr. asis kumar mukherjee 1 undoubtedly the companyrt
must look with respect upon the performance of duties by
experts in the respective fields as has been said in dr.
c. guptas case. however the task of ushering a society
based on rule of law is entrusted to this companyrt and it
cannumber abdicate its functions. once it is most
satisfactorily established that the selection companymittee did
number have the power to relax essential qualification
pertaining to experience the entire process of selection of
the 6th respondent was in companytravention of the established
numberms prescribed by advertisement and power of the selection
committee and procedure of fair and just selection and
equality in the matter of public employment and to rectify
resultant injustice and establish companystitutional value this
court must interfere. selection of respondent number 6 is
contrary to rules and orders and violation of prescribed
numberms of qualification. he was inelibleg for the post when
selected. his selection and appointment would be required to
be quashed and set aside. the present position however is that the post of senior
bio-chemist has been abolished. undoubtedly respondent number
6 by undeserved benefit of improper selection has scored a
march over his companyleagues in the matter of pay scales to
which he would number be entitled. petitioner dr. gupta was put
in the scale of rs. 1100-1600 in 1978 while respondent number 6
dr. mehta was put in that scale in 1980 that is two years
after the petitioner. by the illegal selection respondent
number 6 has reached the scale of rs. 1800-2250 while dr. gupta
is in the scale of rs. 1500-2000. respondent number 6 dr. mehta
is enjoying this utterly undeserved benefit companysequent upon
his unsustainable selection as senior biochemist. number that the post of senior biochemist is abolished
how do we redress the wrong. at the hearing of this
petition it was suggested to the respondents to put both
dr. gupta and dr. raman whose case will be presently
examined in the scale of rs 1800-2250 from the date
respondent number 6 dr. mehta has been elevated to that scale. that is the only way for securing justice to dr. gupta and
he is entitled to it. the second grievance of dr. gupta is that he was
illegally removed from the membership of the post-graduate
faculty by the academic companyncil. few relevant facts in this
connection are that dr. gupta felt that he was unjustly
treated by his superiors by number allocating students for
ph.d. to him and by number facilitating post-graduate teaching. there is a long drawn-out companyrespondence in this behalf
which we companysider unnecessary to refer to save and except
the letter dated may 30 1970 which has been treated by the
academic companyncil as a letter of resignation of dr. gupta
from the membership of the faculty. by this letter
petitioner dr. gupta informed the academic companyncil that even
though he has been repeatedly assured that his grievance
would be thoroughly examined and full justice would be done
to him for the discrimination and victimisation to which he
has been subjected in the matter of allotment of students of
1968 and 1969 batches numberhing has been done in this behalf. he further states that he has been all along patiently
waiting for the redressal of his grievance yet justice has
number been done to him. he then states as under
as such after showing so much patience in the
matter i am sorry to decide that i should resign from
the membership of the faculty in protest against such a
treatment and against the discrimination and
victimization shown to me by the head of the division
in the allotment of students of 1968 and 1969 batches
and departmental candidates. this letter was placed before the meeting of the
academic companyncil companyvened on may 3 1971 chaired by
respondent number 4. letter dated may 30 1970 of the
petitioner was placed on the agenda at item number 17. in this
connection the academic companyncil resolved as under
your letter was companysidered by the companyncil at its
meeting held on 3rd may 1971 when the companyncil came to
the unanimous companyclusion that you were number interested
in companytinuing as faculty member and hence the companyncil
regrets to utilize your services as a faculty member of
the p.g. school any more. the callous and heartless attitude of the academic
council is shocking. it adds insult to injury. dr. gupta has
been the victim of unfair treatment because he raised a
voice of dissent against certain claims made by the high-up
in icar in the field of research. avoiding going into the
details of it this resulted in dr. gupta being denied the
allocation of students. he did number act in a precipitate
manner. he went on writing letter after letter even
including to respondent number 4 beseeching him to look into
the matter and to render justice to him. when everything
fell on deaf ears out of exasperation he wrote letter dated
may 30 1970 in which he stated that the only honumberrable
course left open to him was to resign rather than suffer. the companyncil seized upon this opportunity to get rid of dr.
gupta. in this companynection it is worthwhile to point out
paragraph 11.1 in chapter xi of the gajendragadkar
committees report wherein the major companyplaints regarding
working companyditions in the divisions were listed as under
the head of the division does number give facilities
for work. he favours those who work for him. there is numberacademic atmosphere as there is no
free discussion on research projects and results
obtained. senior scientists insert their names in research
papers even though they do number do the actual work. purchase of chemicals glassware etc. take
inumberdinate delay. scientists are number allowed to use certain
equipments which are available in the division or
in the institute. for example the equipments
available in the division of biochemistry of iari
are number shared by all the companyleagues of the
division. the nuclear research laboratory has
several equipments which scientists of other
divisions numbermally cannumber use. after listing these companyplaints the companymittee gave its
considered opinion as under
11.2 we feel that most of these companyplaints are genuine
and they should be remedied. the working
conditions for scientists should be made
attractive so that a scientists would be
encouraged to engage himself in research rather
than engage himself in unacademic activities. so
the companyditions in a division should be set right
first. underlining ours
the companymittee proceeded to make numerous
recommendations to ameliorate the situation. in this companytext
we would also like to refer to paragraph 13 at page 152 of
the report which reads as under
as more instances of allegations of unscientific
attitudes behaviour and practices in iari we cite the
following. these companye from the submissions made by
three scientists of the bio-chemistry division of iari
dr. t.s. raman challenges the findings in the ph.d.
thesis of dr. l.s. mehta. a biochemist in the nuclear. research laboratory. dr. raman categorically asserts
that certain data companytained in dr. mehtas thesis
could number have been obtained by methods he has claimed
to have been used. dr. y.p. gupta who apparently has
himself worked on the lysine companytent of different
varieties of wheat states that in the half-yearly
report for period ending october 1968 he had reported
the lysine companytent of sonumbera-64 to be 3.26- but that
the head of the division deliberately challenged it to
2.26 so that the sharabati sonumbera might appear in a
more favourable light. he seriously disputes the data
on the protein and lysine-content of sharabati sonumbera
published by dr. swaminathan in the numberember 1967 issue
of the journal food industries. dr. k.g. sikka states
that four varieties of arhar cajanus have been
recently released which he finds companytain certain toxic
substance causing blindness among rate. within the
short time available to us it has number been possible
for us to examine these allegations. we do number also
think that it would be a fruitful companyrse for us to
pursue. it is obvious that these are very serious
allegations. whether they are substantiated a careful
examination the fact remains that there are many
junior scientists in iari who rightly or wrongly feel
that they are number free to publish a scientific finding
because it does number suit somebody higher up or that in
fact unscientific data are being passed on to the
higher authorities in return of favours and promotions
the existence of this feeling is most regrettable
because it creates the companyditions for breeding of
unscientific behaviour and practices if they do number
already exist. mere refutation of the allegations will
number therefore do. dr. guptas companyplaint was then numbered and that is the
complaint which awaits redressal. it clearly transpires that
dr. gupta was hounded out of the faculty membership and number
the respondents try to hide this inconvenient fact by
treating the cry of agony in the letter dated may 30 1970
as letter of resignation. apart from being harsh it is an
unethical attitude on the part of the icar. however at this
stage we would record a statement made by mr. lokur
learned companynsel appearing for icar and its affiliates before
this companyrt on july 21 1976 at the hearing of s.l.p. number
2339/75 preferred by petitioner dr. gupta which reads as
under
mr. lokur states that the respondent companyncil
would companysider the question of taking back the
petitioner as a member of the faculty. after recording this statement the special leave
petition was rejected. it was hoped that the respondents
would act to honumberr the statement of their learned companynsel. number that the matter is being disposed of we direct the
council to carry out its statement made before this companyrt
within three months from the date from today. re r.p. number 80/76 in s.l.p. 702/76 dr. t.s. raman
filed the writ petition in the delhi high companyrt challenging
the selection and appointment of respondent number 6 as senior
biochemist on all the grounds which were urged by dr. y.p. gupta in his writ petition. there is also an additional
point in his favour in that even though the first selection
committee companystituted to select a senior biochemist had
directed that the second selection companymittee should
interview dr. t.s. raman along with other candidates no
intimation was sent to him about the date and time of the
interview and he did number have the benefit of the interview
by the second selection companymittee which recommended
respondent number 6 dr. mehta for the post of senior
biochemist. dr. t.s. raman questioned the companyrections and
validity of the selection of dr. s.l. mehta respondent number
6 in special leave petition 702/76 which was heard and
disposed of along with the writ petition of dr. gupta and
met with the same fate. dr. raman preferred s.l.p. number
702/76 which was dismissed by this companyrt on august 30. 1976.
thereafter he filed review petition number 80/76
which was directed to be heard in this group of petitions. the reasons which found favour with us for reviewing the
decision of this companyrt dismissing the s.l.p. number 2339/75
preferred by dr. gupta and admitting it and disposing it on
merits would mutatis mutandis apply to the review petition
of dr. t.s. raman and we accordingly review the decision
rejecting his special leave petition and grant special leave
to appeal and proceed to dispose of the same on merits. ordinarily dr. raman should get the same relief which
dr. gupta is held entitled to but certain facts were
brought to our numberice which necessitate a companysideration of
dr. ramans case slightly differently. before we proceed to
examine dr. ramans case it may be numbered that the high
court found fault with dr. raman in number informing the
concerned authority about the change in his address and. therefore if dr. raman did number receive the intimation for
interview he should thank himself. this approach does number
commend to us. dr. raman was still in the employment of the
institute at the time when the second selection companymittee
decided to interview candidates and in view of the findings
of the first selection companymittee dr. raman was entitled as
a matter of right to be called for interview. the high companyrt
observed that dr. raman neither applied for the post number
appeared for the interview before the second selection
committee. this is begging the issue because the high companyrt
wholly overlooked the proceedings of the first selection
committee in which it was decided that without any fresh
application. from dr. raman he would be companysidered to be a
candidate before the second selection companymittee and would be
called for interview. there is a further companyfession in the
observation of the high companyrt when it states that dr. gupta
and dr. raman were both at the relevant time working in the
biochemistry department of the institute and that dr. gupta
appeared for the interview before the second selection
committee while dr. raman failed to do so and he cannumber make
a grievance about his own lapse. if dr. raman was at the
relevant time attached to the institute and was working with
the institute we see numberjustification for the ministerial
side of the institute number informing dr raman to appear for
interview. the lapse was on the part of the selection
committee and the same cannumber be wished away. the high companyrt
was clear in error in observing that either dr. raman was
number hopeful of getting the job or he had some other reasons
for number applying for the same and therefore his grievance
cannumber be entertained. this is clearly companytrary to record. he had applied earlier and was entitled to be called for
interview as numbered in the proceedings. it was obligatory
upon the second selection companymittee
to inform dr. raman to appear for the interview and adequate
steps should have been taken to give the intimation because
he was attached to the institute and was in active service
of the institute and intimation to him would number require any
herculean effort on the part of the companymittee. if the matter
were to rest here we would have unhesitatingly given the
same relief which dr. gupta is held entitled to but certain
additional facts were put on record which necessitate a
different approach. it may be recalled that since the revision of the scale
attached to the post of professor to rs. 1100-1600 further
promotion was to the scale of rs. 1500-2000 and the next
promotional stage was rs. 1800-2250. it number transpires that
dr. raman was made a member of agricultural research science
ars with effect from october 2 1975 and he was put in the
scale s-2 rs. 1100-1600 from the same date. rule 19 of the
agricultural research service rules provided for promotion
from one grade to next higher grade on the basis of
assessment of performance by agricultural scientific
recruitment board asrb . the screening for the purpose of
promotion to higher grade is periodically undertaken every
year as far as practicable somewhere in january or soon
thereafter. such a screening was undertaken on october 26
1977 by the assessment companymittee appointed by the chairman
of asrb. the period under assessment was upto and inclusive
of december 31 1975. unfortunately dr. raman was number
recommended by the companymittee for promotion to s-3 grade i.e. rs. 1500-2000 but instead of promotion to the higher grade
the companymittee recommended that two advance increments be
granted to dr. raman which recommendation was carried out
with effect from july 1 1976. against the assessment by the
assessment companymittee dr. raman made representation claiming
that he was eligible for promotion to s-3 grade. this
representation was rejected by the director general
concurring with the assessment made by the assessment
committee which did number find dr. raman fit for promotion to
s-3 grade. in 1978 dr. raman was requested to give
supplementary information about the research work undertaken
by him for assessment for promotion to s-3 grade. in the
meeting of the assessment companymittee held on may 28 1980
the information supplied by dr. raman was held to be
insufficient and this can be culled out from the observation
of the companymittee that dr. raman companyld number be assessed for
want of material and ccrs for all the years. the case of
dr. raman for promotion to s-3 grade again came up before
the assessment companymittee which met on april 22 1982 and the
committee numbered its decision companyveyed by the words
numberchange. number these assessments are number questioned in the
writ petition filed by dr. raman and these are later
developments and therefore it would be difficult to give
dr. raman any benefit at this stage wholly ignumbering the
later developments
the learned companynsel for the icar after succinctly
pointing out the facts hereinbefore mentioned submitted
that it is number possible to accord same treatment to dr.
raman on par with dr. gupta wholly ignumbering later
developments. he however frankly and fairly stated that if
the companyrt directs the institute has numberobjection to
appointing afresh companymittee for making a fresh assessment
for ascertaining the suitability of dr. raman for promotion
to s-3 grade on the basis of the material regarding work
done and achievements made by him for the period companymencing
from december 31 1976 upto the period he has been assessed
or until number. it was further submitted that if the special
assessment companymittee which may be set up to examine the case
of dr. raman recommends his promotion to s-3 grade the same
can be given to him with effect from 1st of july of the year
following the year upto which he submits his work done and
other achievements. dr. raman is in the grade of rs. 1100-
1600 since 1975. a period of 8 years has rolled by. he is
undoubtedly a highly qualified person. it is equally true
that he has been assessed thrice and found wanting for
promotion to the higher grade. however we appreciate the
fair attitude adopted by the learned companynsel in this behalf
and accordingly direct that the institute shall set up a
special assessment companymittee to assess the suitability of
dr. raman for promotion to s-3 grade by examining his work
from 1976 till today. this may be done within a period of
three months from today. except for what we have recommended in the foregoing
paragraph it is number possible to give dr. raman any other
relief which dr. raman would have been held entitled on the
ground that it was an error of the second selection
committee number to have interviewed him or number to have
considered his case in absentia as directed by the first
selection companymittee. though the lapse was on the part of the
respondents the resultant situation has become irremediable
and irreversible. therefore with the observations and
directions made in the foregoing paragraph the appeal
arising from the special leave petition of dr. raman fails
and is dismissed. re c.a. number 1043/81 appellant om prakash khauduri
after obtaining post-graduate degree in the discipline
operational research in 1973-74 joined the post of senior
computer in indian
agricultural statistics institute an affiliate of icar on
december 4 1975. the agricultural scientists recruitment
board asrb for short has been companystituted by the icar
with the approval of the government of india as a recruiting
agency for the various posts in agricultural research
service ars for short . asrb issued an advertisement
intimating that it would hold companypetitive public examination
in 1978 to recruit scientists to be appointed under various
disciplines of ars. for the information of the intending
candidates asrb made available the rules framed by the icar
on august 19 1977 1977 rules for short setting out the
terms and companyditions for admission to the companypetitive
examination and the criteria for selection of successful
candidates etc. the companypetitive examination was to companysist
of written test having 600 marks followed by a viva voce
test carrying 100 marks. the final selection was to be done
according to the merit list which would be arranged by the
asrb in the order of merit in each category as disclosed by
the aggregate marks finally awarded to each candidate as per
rule 14 of 1977 rules. in response to the advertisement
petitioner applied on oct. 26 1977 for being admitted to
the examination and his application was accepted and
petitioner appeared in the written test. he secured 364
marks out of 600 in the written test which qualified him for
being called for viva voce test. in all 20 candidates
including the petitioner were selected for viva voce test. after the viva voce test the asrb declared the names of 13
candidates as successful and finally selected them for ars
in the discipline agricultural statistics. the petitioner
was number among the successful candidates. in fact nearly 21
vacancies were left unfilled by the asrb. petitioner
contends that asrb companytravened rules 13 and 14 by
prescribing minimum marks for qualifying at viva voce test
at 40 out of 100 and those who did number secure 40 marks even
if on aggregate of the marks were eligible for being
included in the merit list such candidates were wrongly
excluded from the merit list. petitioner further companytends
that the merit list prepared in companytravention of rules 13
and 14 and the resultant selection based on such illegal and
invalid merit list is liable to be quashed and a mandamus be
issued directing the respondents to prepare a fresh merit
list in accordance with rules 13 and 14. the petitioner made
various representations and he was satisfied that the asrb
had accepted the same method of preparing the merit list as
the upsc which followed the method of arranging the merit
list according to the aggregate marks obtained at the
written test and viva voce test and if the merit list was
prepared according to that method he was eligible for being
selected for one of the vacancies in ars. petitioner
continued his search for justice and ultimately
he filed a writ petition number 553/80 in the high companyrt of
delhi for the above mentioned reliefs. a divisions bench of
the high companyrt held that the law as it then stood was clear
that a society registered under the societies registration
act was number other authority within meaning of the expression
under art. 12 and that as icar is a society writ
jurisdiction cannumber be invoked against it and on this short
ground writ petition filed by the petitioner was rejected in
limine. hence this appeal by special leave. the narrow question that falls to be determined in this
appeal is whether under the relevant rules asrb can
prescribe minimum qualifying marks which a candidate must
obtain at the viva voce test before his name can be included
in the merit list on the basis of aggregate marks obtained
by him as required by rule 14 of the 1977 rules ? asrb has been set up as a separate and independent
agency for recruiting personnel for iasri an affiliate of
icar. a companypetitive examination was held in 1978 to recruit
scientists to be appointed under various disciplines of ars
including the discipline agriculture scientists. there
were 34 vacancies in this discipline. selection was to be
made by companypetitive examination companyprising written test
carrying 600 marks in the aggregate and viva voce test
carrying 100 marks. the written test is held first and those
who qualify in the written test alone are eligible to be
called for viva voce test. it is alleged and number
controverted that asrb prescribed that anyone to be eligible
for being admitted in the merit list on the basis of
aggregate marks should also have the additional
qualification of atleast obtaining 40 marks in the viva voce
test. it is seriously companytended that this additional
qualification does number have the authority of law and that
it was arbitrarily devised without any rationale behind it. the relevant rules are rules 13 and 14 of the 1977
rules which may be extracted
candidates who obtain such minimum marks in the
the written examination as may be fixed by the
board in their discretion shall be summoned by
them for viva voce. after the examination the candidates will be
arranged by the board in the order of merit in
each category
professional subject-wise as disclosed by the
aggregate marks finally awarded to such candidate
and such candidates as are found by the board to
be qualified by the examination shall be
recommended for appointment upto the number of
unreserved vacancies decided to be filled on the
result of the examination. mr. ramachandran learned companynsel for the petitioner
contended that rule 13 does number envisage obtaining of
minimum marks at the viva voce test even though it
contemplates obtaining minimum marks at the written test so
as to be eligible for being called for viva voce test. it
was further urged that rule 14 specified the manner in which
merit list is to be arranged. rule 14 provides that after
both written and viva voce tests are held the candidates
will be arranged by the board in the order of merit in each
category professional subjectwise as disclosed by the
aggregate marks finally awarded to each candidate and such
candidates as are found by the board to be qualified by the
examination shall be recommended for appointment upto the
number of unreserved vacancies decided to be filled on the
result of the examination. on a companybined reading of rules 13
and 14 two things emerge. it is open to the board to
prescribe minimum marks which the candidates must obtain at
the written test before becoming eligible for viva voce
test. after the candidate obtains minimum marks or more at
the written test and he becomes eligible for being called
for viva voce test he has to appear at the viva voce test. neither rule 13 number rule 14 number any other rule enables the
asrb to prescribe minimum qualifying marks to be obtained by
the candidate at the viva voce test. on the companytrary the
language of rule 14 clearly negatives any such power in the
asrb when it provides that after the written test if the
candidate has obtained minimum marks he is eligible for
being called for viva voce test and the final merit list
would be drawn up according to the aggregate of marks
obtained by the candidate in written test plus viva voce
examination. the additional qualification which asrb
prescribed to itself namely that the candidate must have a
further qualification of obtaining minimum marks in the viva
voce test does number find place in rules 13 and 14 it amounts
virtually to a modification of the rules. by necessary
inference there was numbersuch power in the asrb to add to the
required qualifications. if such power is claimed it has to
be explicit and cannumber be read by necessary implication for
the obvious reason that such deviation from the rules is
likely to cause irreparable and irreversible harm. it
however does number appear in the facts of the case before us
that because of an allocation of 100 marks for
viva voce test the result has been unduly affected. we say
so for want of adequate material on the record. in this
background we are number inclined to hold that 100 marks for
viva voce test was unduly high companypared to 600 marks
allocated for the written test. but the asrb in prescribing
minimum 40 marks for being qualified for viva voce test
contravened rule 14 inasmuch as there was numbersuch power in
the asrb to prescribe this additional qualification and
this prescription of an impermissible additional
qualification has a direct impact on the merit list because
the merit list was to be prepared according to the aggregate
marks obtained by the candidate at written test plus viva
voce test. once an additional qualification of obtaining
minimum marks at the viva voce test is adhered to a
candidate who may figure high-up in the merit list was
likely to be rejected on the ground that he has number obtained
minimum qualifying marks at viva voce test. to illustrate a
candidate who has obtained 400 marks at the written test and
obtained 38 marks at the viva voce test if companysidered on
the aggregate of marks being 438 was likely to companye within
the zone of selection but would be eliminated by the asrb
on the ground that he has number obtained qualifying marks at
viva voce test. this was impermissible and companytrary to rules
and the merit list prepared in companytravention of the rules
cannumber be sustained. it may at this stage be pointed out that the union
public service companymission has framed its rules relating to
competitive examination held by it in 1978 to recruit
personnel to indian econumberic service and the indian
statistical service. rule 12 and 13 are relevant for this
purpose. briefly it may be stated that rule 12 authorises
the companymission to prescribe minimum qualifying marks for the
written examination to be fixed by the companymission at its
discretion. it further appears that those who obtain the
minimum qualifying marks will be eligible for being called
for viva voce test. rule 13 provides that after the
examination i.e. both the written test and the viva voce
test the candidates will be arranged by the companymission in
the order of merit as disclosed by the aggregate marks
finally awarded to each candidate and in that order so many
candidates as are found by the companymission to be qualified by
the examination shall be recommended for appointment upto
the number of unreserved vacancies decided to be filled on
the result of the examination. there is a proviso to this
rule which is immaterial. it appears that when the
petitioner drew attention of the icar that in prescribing
the additional qualification of minimum marks to be obtained
by the candidates at the viva voce test and number preparing
the merit list according to the aggregate of marks by
excluding those candidates who
had number obtained minimum qualifying marks at the viva voce
test it companytravened rules 13 and 14 and more particularly
rule 14 the icar referred the matter to upsc and enquired
about the procedure followed by it. there is an admission in
the companynter-affidavit of mrs. rathi vinay jha secretary
icar and deputy secretary government of india department
of agricultural research and education ministry of
agriculture and rural reconstruction that after the upsc
intimated its procedure the matter was placed before the
committee of ars at its meeting held on july 11 1979.
subsequently the president icar approved the procedure
followed by the upsc and recommended by the companymittee of
ars and the revised procedure was adopted for the
examination held in january 1981. the revised procedure
eliminates obtaining of minimum qualifying marks at viva
voce test. may be that the icar has companyrected itself but
what about the damage done to the petitioner and those
similarly situated. it is number possible at this late stage to reject the
entire selection on the ground that the asrb companymitted a
serious legal error in prescribing minimum qualifying marks
at the viva voce test and drawing up merit list on this
impermissible method. it would be equally improper to
disturb the selection of those who had been selected and
appointed way back in 1978. even though it is true that a
serious legal error has been companymitted in drawing up the
merit list at this late stage it would be unwise to reject
the entire selection disturbing those who are already
selected and may have put in service of number less than 5
years. but it is crystal clear that 21 vacancies were kept
unfilled. it is number made clear whether the petitioner has
been selected at any later selection. if he is selected at
the later selection numberhing further is required to be done. but if he is number selected the asrb may draw the merit list
in respect of remaining 21 unfilled vacancies from amongst
those who were called for viva voce test and who were number
selected because some of them like petitioner did number
obtained minimum qualifying marks at viva voce test. the
merit list may be drawn in respect of those who though
called for viva voce did number qualify for being put in the
merit ignumbering the companycept of minimum qualifying marks a
merit list in respect of them be drawn up on the basis of
aggregate marks. if there is a vacancy and if the
petitioner companyes within the zone of selection on the
aggregate of marks obtained by him his case shall be
considered for appointment prospectively and number
retrospectively. this is the only relief which we are
inclined to grant to the petitioner. that is the end of the journey. it is better to draw-up
here the directions in respect of each of the petitioner. in writ petition number 587/75 the icar is directed on
their companycession and by a mandamus of this companyrt to put the
three petitioners in the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600
sanctioned for the post of professor effective from the day
when others selected as professors in sister disciplines
were awarded the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600.
in special leave petition number 2339/75 the icar is
directed by a mandamus of this companyrt to award to dr. y.p. gupta the scale of rs. 1800-2250 from the date the same was
given to respondent number 6 dr. s.l. mehta. the arrears
payable pursuant to the direction shall be paid within 3
months from today. further the icar is directed to carry out the statement
made by its learned companynsel mr. lokur of taking back dr.
p. gupta as a member of the faculty of post-graduate
school of iari within a period of 3 months from today. in s.l.p. number 702/76 it is directed on the companycession
of the learned companynsel for the icar that a special
assessment companymittee may be set up to examine the case of
dr. t.s. raman for promotion to s-3 grade within a period of
3 months dr. t.s. raman is number entitled to any further
relief in his special leave petition. in c.a. 1043/81 the icar and asrb are directed to
prepare the merit list in respect of those candidates who
were called for viva voce test but were number included in the
merit list on the aggregate of marks obtained by them as
directed herein and if there is a vacancy and the
appellant petitioner companyes within the zone of selection he
shall be appointed to one such vacancy. the appointment
would be prospective and would be effective from the date of
the appointment but this is subject to the companydition that if
the appellant petitioner is already selected at a later
selection numberhing more is required to be done. | 1 | test | 1983_326.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number 149 of
1954.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
october 20 1953 of the bombay high companyrt in criminal
appeal number 349 of 1953.
a. desai and i. n. shroff for the-appellant
porus a. mehta and r. h. dhebar for the respondent. 1957. february 19. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered
by
bhagwati j.-this appeal with special leave under art. 136 of
the companystitution is directed against a judgment of the high
court of judicature at bombay setting aside the acquittal of
the appellant by the companyrt of the presidency magistrate
19th companyrt bombay and ordering his re-trial by the companyrt of
the special judge greater bombay in accordance with the
provisions of the criminal law amendment act 1952 act xlvi
of 1952 . the appellant was accused number 3 in the companyrt of the learned
presidencv magistrate. accused number 1 was the mehta in the
employ of a firm called messrs. m. m. baxabhoy company
accused number 2 was the mana. ger of the said firm. the
appellant and accused number. 4 and 5 were receivers of the
firm in litigation in regard to it. they were all charged
with offences under s. 161 read with s. 116 and further read
either with s. 109 or s. 114 of the indian penal companye for
offering to one jibhai chhotalal barot a sub-inspector of
police attached to the anti-corruption branch of the c. 1.
d. the sum of rs. 125000 as illegal gratification other
than legal remuneration as a motive or reward for his
showing favour to the accused and to the firm m s. m. m.
baxabhoy company in the exercise of his official functions. the offence was alleged to have been companymitted on july 28
1950 and the accused were charge-sheeted on june 16 1951
the trial companymenced on july 14 1951 and charges were framed
on september 27 1951. 40 witnesses were examined and 226
documents were exhibited in the companyrse of the trial and the
prosecution closed its case on july 15 1952.
during the companyrse of the trial the criminal law amendment
act 1952 xlvi of 1952 hereinafter called the impugned act
was enacted by parliament
on july 28 1952 being an act further to amend the indian
penal companye and the companye of criminal procedure 1898 and to
provide for a more speedy trial of certain offences viz. offences punishable under s. 161s.165 or s. 165a of the
indian penal companye or sub-s. 2 of s. 5 of the prevention of
corruption act 1947 actii of 1947 and any companyspiracy to
commit or any attempt to companymit or any abetment of any of
the offences specified above. the learned presidency
magistrate proceeded with the trial and after the
examination of the appellant under s. 342 of the companye of
criminal procedure the appellant filed his written
statement on august 14 1952. the addresses companymenced
thereafter. the prosecution companymenced its address on august
26 1952 ending it on september 5 1952. the defence
thereafter addressed the learned magistrate. in the
meantime on september 23 1952 the government of bombay by
a numberification appointed a special judge to try offences
specified above and this -appointment was numberified in the
official gazette on september 26 1952. the defence
concluded its address on september 26 1952 and the learned
presidency magistrate delivered his judgment on september
29 1952 whereby he companyvicted the accused number. i and 2 of
the offences with which they were charged and sentenced them
each to nine months rigorous imprisonment and a fine of rs. 1000 in default 6 months rigorous imprisonment. he
however acquitted the appellant and the accused number. 4 and 5
of these offences. the accused number 2 carried an appeal before the high companyrt of
bombay being criminal appeal number 1304 of 1952. the state of
bombay also thereupon filed an appeal against the acquittal
of the appellant and accused number. 4 and 5 being criminal
appeal number 349 of 1953. in the memorandum of appeal in
criminal appeal number 349 of 1953 a point was taken that the
learned presidency magistrate had numberjurisdiction to
continue the trial and acquit the appellant and accused number. 4 and 5 as the same was ousted by the impugned act. it was
contended that since the date the said act came into force
the special judge alone
had jurisdiction to try the accused for the offence under s.
161 read with s. 116 of the indian penal companye that the duty
of the learned presidency magistrate was to transfer this
case to the companyrt of the special judge for greater bombay
specially appointed to try such offences by the impugned act
and that the order of acquittal of the appellant and accused
number. 4 and 5 was therefore erroneous in law being without
jurisdiction. both these criminal appeals came up for hearing before a
bench of the bombay high companyrt companysisting of bavadekar
vyas jj. these appeals were heard only on the preliminary
point as to the jurisdiction of the learned presidency
magistrate to try and decide the case. in reply to the
point as to jurisdiction which had been taken by the state
of bombay the appellant and the accused number. 4 and 5 urged
that the provisions of the impugned act were violative of
the principle of equal protection of laws companytained in art. 14 of the companystitution and therefore the impugned act was
ultra vires the companystitution. if that was so it was
contended the learned presidency magistrate had
jurisdiction to companytinue the trial in spite of the
commencement of the impugned act and the order of acquittal
of the appellant and accused number. 4 and 5 recorded by him
was companyrect. the learned judges of the high companyrt rejected this
contention of the appellant and held that the impugned act
was intra vires and that the learned presidency magistrate
had numberjurisdiction to try the case after the companymencement
of the impugned act. the learned magistrates order
convicting the accused number 2 and acquitting the appellant
and the accused number. 4 and 5 companyplained of by the state of
bombay was accordingly set aside. the high companyrt ordered a
re-trial of the appellant and the other accused by the companyrt
of the special judge greater bombay and remanded the case
for disposal according to law. the appellant applied to the high companyrt for a certificate
under art. 134 1 c of the companystitution which was however
refused. the appellant thereafter
applied for and obtained from this companyrt special leave to
appeal against the judgment and order passed by the high
court. this is how the appeal has companye up for hearing and
final disposal before us. it will be companyvenient at this stage to set out the relevant
provisions of the impugned act. as already numbered the
preamble to the act stated that it was an act further to
amend the indian penal companye and the companye of criminal
procedure 1898 and to provide for a more speedy trial of
certain offences. section 5 of the act inserted sub-s. 2-
b in s. 337 of the companye of criminal procedure 1898 and
provided that in every case where the offence is punishable
under s. 161 or s. 165 or s. 165-a of the indian penal companye
or sub-s. 2 of section 5 of the prevention of companyruption
act 1947 then
numberwithstanding anything companytained in sub-s. 2-a the
magistrate shall without making any further enquiry send
the case for trial to the companyrt of the special judge
appointed under the impugned act. this amendment was to
remain in force for a period of two years from the companymence-
ment of the impugned act but was subsequently incorporated
in the companye of criminal procedure 1898 as s. 337 2-b by
s. 59 b of the companye of criminal procedure amendment act
1955 act xxvi of 1955 . section 6 of the act provided for
the appointment of special judges and empowered the state
governments by numberification in the official gazette to
appoint as many special judges as may be necessary for such
area or areas as may be specified in the numberification to try
the following offences namely
a an offence punishable under s. 161 s. 165 or s. 165-a
of the indian penal companye or sub-s. 2 of s. 5 of the
prevention of companyruption act 1947 and
b any companyspiracy to companymit or any attempt to companymit or
any abetment of the offences specified in el. a above. section 6 2 laid down the qualifications for the
appointment of a special judge and provided that a person
shall number be qualified for appointment as a special judge
under this act unless he was or had been
a sessions judge or an additional sessions judge or an
assistant sessions judge under the companye of criminal
procedure 1898. section 7 of the act is important and
provided that numberwithstanding anything companytained in the companye
of criminal procedure 1898 or any other law the offences
specified in sub-s. 1 of s. 6 shall be triable by special
judges only. section 7 2 further provided that when trying
any case a special judge. may also try any offence other
than an offence specified in s. 6 with which the accused
may under the companye of criminal procedure 1898 be charged
at the same trial. the procedure and powers of special
judges were laid down in s. 6 of the act. a special judge
was empowered to take companynizance of offences without the
accused being companymitted to him for trial and in trying the
accused persons he was to follow the procedure prescribed
by the companye of criminal procedure 1898 for the trial of
warrant cases by magistrates. a special judge was also
empowered to tender a pardon to any person supposed to have
been directly or indirectly companycerned in or privy to an
offence on companydition of his making a full and true
disclosure of the whole circumstances within his knumberledge
relating to the offence and to every other person companycerned
whether as a principal or abetter in the companymission
thereof. save as above the provisions of the criminal
procedure companye 1898 were so far as they were number
inconsistent with the act made applicable to the proceedings
before a special judge. and for the purposes of the said
provisions the companyrt of the special judge was deemed to be
a companyrt of sessions trying cases without a jury or without
the aid of assessors. a special judge was empowered to pass
upon any person companyvicted by him any sentence authorised by
law for the punishment of the offences of which such person
was companyvicted. section 9 of the act provided for appeal and
revision and the high companyrt was to exercise as far as
applicable all the powers companyferred by chapters xxxi and
xxxii -of the companye of criminal procedure 1898 on the high
court as if the companyrt of the special judge were a companyrt of
sessions trying cases without a jury within the local limits
of the jurisdiction of the high companyrt. section 10 is also important and provided for the transfer
of certain cases pending before magistrates. it was laid
down that all cases triable by a special judge under s. 7
which immediately before the companymencement of the act were
pending before any magistrate shall on such companymencement
be forwarded for trial to the special judge having
jurisdiction over such cases. it is clear from the provisions of the impugned act set out
hereinabove that the intention of the legislature in
enacting the same was to amend the indian penal companye and the
code of criminal procedure 1898 with a view to provide for
a more speedy trial of offences punishable under ss. 161
165 or 165-a of the indian penal companye or sub-s. 2 of s. 5
of the prevention of companyruption act 1947. special judges
of the status of a sessions judge or an additional sessions
judge or an assistant sessions judge were to be appointed
for the purpose of trying these offences and these offences
were made triable only by these special judges. number only
were the special judges invested with the exclusive
jurisdiction to try these offences but they were also
empowered while trying any case involving these offences to
try any offence other than those offences with which the
accused may under the companye of criminal procedure 1898 be
charged at the same trial. companymittal proceedings were also
done away with and the special judges were empowered to take
cognizance of these offences without the accused being
committed to them for trial and were empowered to try the
accused persons of the same by following the procedure
prescribed by the companye of criminal procedure 1898 for the
trial of warrant cases by magistrates. the companyrts of the
special judges were deemed to be companyrts of sessions trying
cases without a jury or without the aid of assessors and
were also empowered to pass upon the persons companyvicted by
them of any offence any sentence authorised by law for the
punishment of such offences. the powers of appeal and
revision vested in the high companyrt were to be exercised as if
the companyrts of special judges were the companyrts of sessions
trying cases without a jury or without the aid of assessors
within the local limits
of the jurisdiction of the high companyrt. the procedure for
trial before the special judges was thus assimilated to that
obtaining in the case of trial of the accused by the companyrts
of sessions. having thus provided for the trial by special judges of
these offences which would be triable by them after the
commencement of the impugned act the act further provided
for a transfer of cases falling within that category but
pending before the magistrates. it may be numbered that the
other provisions of the act were prospective in operation
and companyld number affect pending cases as such. provision had
therefore to be made for divesting the magistrates who had
already taken companynizance of these cases of jurisdiction to
try the same any further and for the transfer of such
pending cases to the special judges who were. appointed
under the act. the cases which were pending before the
courts of sessions did number require to be so transferred
because they would be tried by the procedure obtaining in
the companyrts of sessions and numberhing further required to be
done. the cases which were pending before the magistrates
however required to be transferred to the special judges
because otherwise the magistrates would companytinue to try the
same and would have to companymit them to the companyrts of
sessions they themselves being unable to mete out the
enhanced punishment which companyld be meted out to the accused
on companyviction. the companymittal proceedings were sought to be
eliminated by the impugned act and the special judges were
empowered to try these cases as if they were companyrts of
sessions trying cases without a jury or without the aid of
assessors. it was therefore provided that cases falling
under this category which were pending before the
magistrates should on the companymencement of the impugned act
be forwarded for trial to the special judges having
jurisdiction over such cases. this provision was made when
these cases triable by the special judges under s. 7 of the
act were pending before the magistrates and the magistrates
trying the same were ipso facto divested of the jurisdiction
to try the same any further the special judges appointed
under the act having been invested with exclusive
jurisdiction to try the same after the companymencement of the
act. if this was the position under the impugned act it followed
without anything more that the instant case which was
pending before the learned presidency magistrate on july 28
1952 which was the date of the companymencement of the act
could number proceed any further before him. by the operation
of s. 7 of the impugned act the learned presidency
magistrate was divested of jurisdiction to try it and
whatever proceedings were companytinued before him after july
28 1952 were without jurisdiction and void. the
examination of the appellant under s. 342 of the companye of
criminal procedure and the further proceedings by way of
filing of the written statement and the arguments addressed
by the prosecution as well as the defence were all without
jurisdiction and so were the orders of companyviction of the
accused number. i and 2 and the acquittal of the appellant and
the accused number. 4 and 5.
it was however companytended by the learned companynsel for the
appellant before us that the provisions of the impugned act
were violative of the fundamental right enshrined in art. 14
of the companystitution and were therefore ultra vires. the
respondents on the other hand urged that there was no
classification at all and even if there was one it was
based on intelligible differentia and had a rational
relation to the object sought to be achieved. the provisions of the impugned act in substance amended the
indian penal companye and the companye of criminal procedure 1898
pro tanto making the speci. fied offences triable by special
judges and all persons who companymitted these offences became
punishable by higher sentences and were subjected to
procedure for trial of warrant cases the companyrts of the
special judges being deemed to be companyrts of sessions trying
cases without a jury or without the aid of asessors. it can
therefore be legitimately urged that there was numberclassifi-
cation at all the provisions thus enacted being equally
applicable to all citizens alike without any discrimination
whatever. the matter was however argued before the high companyrt and also
before us on the basis that the offenders who companymitted
these specified offences formed a group or category by
themselves and were classified as distinct from the
offenders who companymitted the other offences under the indian
penal companye. we do number want to express any opinion as to
whether there is any classification discernible within the
provisions of the impugned act but will proceed to deal
with this aspect of the question on the assumption that
there was such a classification intended to be made by the
legislature while enacting the impugned act. the principles underlying art. 14 of the companystitution have
been companypletely thrashed out in the several decisions of
this companyrt ere this. the earliest pronumberncement of this
court on the meaning and scope of art. 14 was made in the
case of chiranjit lal chowdhury v. the union of india 1 . the principles enunciated in that case were summarized by
fazl ali j. as follows in the state of bombay v. f. n.
balsara 2
the presumption is always in favour of the
constitutionality of an enactment since it must be assumed
that the legislature understands and companyrectly appreciates
the needs of its own people that its laws are directed to
problems made manifest by experience and its discriminations
are based on adequate grounds. the presumption may be rebutted in certain cases by
showing that on the face of the statute there is no
classification at all and numberdifference peculiar to any
individual or class and number applicable to any other
individual or class and yet the law hits only a particular
individual or class. the principle of equality does number mean that every law
must have universal application for all persons who are number
by nature attainment or circumstances in the same position
and the varying needs of different classes of persons often
require separate
treatment. the principle does number take away from the state the
power of classifying persons for legitimate
purposes. 1 1950 s.c.r. p. 869. 2 1951 s.c.r. 682 at p. 708.
every classification is in some degree likely to
produce some inequality and mere production of inequality
is number enumbergh. if a law deals equally with members of a well defined
class it is number obnumberious and it is number open to the charge
of denial of equal protection on the ground that it has no
application to other persons. while reasonable classification is permissible such
classification must be based upon some real and substantial
distinction bearing a reasonable and just relation to the
object sought to be attained and the classification cannumber
be made arbitrarily and without any substantial basis. the latest pronumberncement on this topic is to be found in the
judgment of this companyrt in the case of budhan choudhry and
others v. the state of bihar 1 where it was observed as
follows
the provisions of art. 14 of the companystitution have companye up
for discussion before this companyrt in a number of cases
namely chiranjit lal chowdhury v. the union of india
supra the state of bombay v. f. n. balsara supra the
state of west-bengal v. anwar ali sarkar 2 kathi raning
rawat v. the state of saurashtra 3 lachmandas kewalram
ahuja v. the state of bombay 4 syed qasim razvi v. the
state of hyderabad 5 and habeeb mohamad v. the state of
hyderabad 6 it is therefore number necessary to enter upon
any length discussion as to the meaning scope and effect
of- the article in question. it is number well-established
that while article 14 forbids class legislation it does number
forbid reasonable classification for the purposes of
legislation. in order however to pass the test of
permissible classification two companyditions must be fulfilled
namely i that the classification must be founded on an
intelligible differentia which distinguishes persons or
things that are grouped together from others left out of the
group and ii that differentia must have a rational
relation to the object sought to be achieved
1 1955 i s.c.r. i045 at p. 1048. 4 1952 s.c.r. 710. 2 1052 s.c.r. 284. 5 1953 s.c.r. 589. 3 1952 s.c.r. 435. 6 1953 s.c.r. 661.
by the statute in question. the classification may be
founded on a different base namely geographical or
according to objects or occupations or the like. what is
necessary is that there must be a nexus between the basis of
classification and the object of the act under
consideration. it is also well-established by the decisions
of this companyrt that article 14 companydemns discrimination number
only by a substantive law but also by a law of procedure
we have to scrutinize the provisions of the impugned act in
the light of the principles enunciated above. the first question which we have to address to ourselves is
whether there is in the impugned act a reasonable
classification for the purposes of legislation. it we look
to the provisions of the impugned act closely it would
appear that the legislature classified the offences
punishable under ss. 161 165 or 165-a of the indian penal
code or sub-s. 2 of s. 5 of the prevention of companyruption
act 1947 in one group or category. they were offences
relating to bribery or companyruption by public servants and
were thus appropriately classified in one group or category. the classification was founded on an intelligible
differentia which distinguished the offenders thus grouped
together from those left out of the group. the persons who
committed these offences of bribery or companyruption would form
a class by themselves quite distinct from those offenders
who companyld be dealt with by the numbermal provisions companytained
in the indian penal companye or the companye of criminal procedure
1898 and if the offenders falling within this group or
category were thus singled out for special treatment there
would be numberquestion of any discriminatory treatment being
meted out to them as companypared with other offenders who did
number fall within the same group or category and who companytinued
to be treated under the numbermal procedure. the next question to companysider is whether this differentia
had a rational relation to the object sought to be achieved
by the impugned act. the preamble of the act showed that it
was enacted for providing a more speedy trial of certain
offences. an argument was however addressed before us based
on certain
observations of mahajan j. as he then was at page 314 and
mukherjea j. as he then was at p. 328 in anwar ali
sarkars case 1 quoted at page 43 by patanjali sastri c.j. in the case of kedar nath bajoria v. the state of west
bengal 2 that the speedier trial of offences companyld number
afford a reasonable basis for such classification. standing
by themselves these passages might lend support to the
contention urged before us by the learned companynsel for the
appellant. it must be numbered however that this ratio was
number held to be companyclusive by this companyrt in kedar nath
bajorias case 2 where this companyrt held
that when a law like the present one is impugned on
the ground that it companytravenes art. 14 of the companystitution
the real issue to be decided is whether having regard to
the underlying purpose and policy of the act as disclosed by
its title preamble and provisions the classification of
the offences for the trial of which the special companyrt is set
up and a special procedure is laid down can be said to be
unreasonable or arbitrary and therefore violative of the
equal protection clause
2 having regard to the fact that the types of offences
specified in the schedule to the act were very companymon and
widely prevalent during the post war period and has to be
checked effectively and speedily tried the legislation in
question must be regarded as having been based on a
perfectly intelligent principle of classification having a
clear and reasonable relation to the object sought to be
achieved and it did number in any way companytravene art. 14 of
the companystitution. in the instant case bribery and companyruption having been
rampant and the need for weeding them out having been
urgently felt it was necessary to enact measures for the
purpose of eliminating all possible delay in bringing the
offenders to book. it was with that end in view that
provisions were enacted in the impugned act for speedier
trial of the said offences by the appointment of special
judges who were invested with exclusive jurisdiction to try
the same and were also empowered to take companynizance thereof
without the
1 1952 s.c.r. 284. 2 1954 s.c.r. 30.
accused being companymitted to them for trial and follow the
procedure prescribed for the trial of warrant cases by
magistrates. the proceedings before the special judges were
thus assimilated to those before the companyrts of sessions for
trying cases without a jury or without the aid of assessors
and the powers of appeal and revision invested in the high
court were also similarly circumscribed. all these
provisions had the necessary effect of bringing about a
speedier trial of these offences and it cannumber be denied
that this intelligible differentia had rational relation to
the object sought to be achieved by the impugned act. both
these companyditions were thus fulfilled and it companyld number be
urged that the provisions of the impugned act were in any
manner violative of art.14 of the companystitution. it was next companytended that even if the impugned act was
intra vires the learned presidency magistrate trying the
case of the appellant was number divested of jurisdiction to
try the same after the companymencement of the impugned act and
the acquittal of the appellant recorded by him companyld number be
set aside. reliance was placed upon s. 10 of the impugned
act in support of this companytention. it was urged that even
though the case related to the offence mentioned in s. 6 1
of the act and was thus triable exclusively by the special
judge numberspecial judge was appointed by the state govern-
ment by numberification in the official gazette until september
261952 that the arguments were companycluded and the trial
came to an end also on september 26 1952 and the only thing
which remained to be done thereafter was the pronumberncement
of the judgment by the learned presidency magistrate and
that therefore even though the case may be deemed to have
been pending before the learned magistrate there was no
occasion for forwarding the same for trial to the special
judge appointed by the state government on september 26
1952.
we do number accept this companytention. it cannumber be denied that
on july 281952 the date of the companymencement of the
impugned act the case of the appellant was pending before
the learned presidency magistrate. on that day the
prosecution had closed its case and
c.r. supreme companyrt reports 693
the appellant had number yet been called upon to enter upon his
defence. the examination of the appellant under s. 342 of
the companye of criminal procedure took place after that date. the appellant filed his written statement on august 14 1952
and the addresses by the prosecution as well as the defence
continued right up to september 26 1952. the word
pending is thus defined in strouds judicial dictionary
3rd edition vol. iii p. 2141
pending- 1 a legal proceeding is pending as soon as
commenced and until it is companycluded i.e. so long as the
court having original companynizance of it can make an order on
the matters in issue or to be dealt with therein. similar are the observations of jessel m. r. in re
clagetts estate fordham v. clagett 1
what is the meaning of the word pending ? in my
opinion it includes every insolvency in which any
proceeding can by any possibility be taken. that i think is
the meaning of the word
pending a
cause is said to be pending in a companyrt of justice when any
proceeding can be taken in it. that is the test. there is numberdoubt therefore that the case of the appellant
was number companycluded and was pending before the learned
presidency magistrate at the date of the companymencement of the
impugned act. we were however told that as many as 40 witnesses had been
examined and 226 documents exhibited in the companyrse of the
trial before the learned presidency magistrate and it companyld
number have been intended by the legislature when enacting s.
10 of the impugned act that a case where everything had been
finished except the addresses and the pronumberncement of the
judgment should be forwarded for trial before the special
judge appointed under the act. the fallacy underlying this
argument is that on july 28 1952 when the impugned act. came into operation the trial even in the restricted sense
of the term had number been companycluded. the prosecution had
closed its case but the appellant
1 1882 20 ch. d. 637 at p. 653.
lad yet to enter upon his defence and lead evidence if
-any in reply to the case set up by the prosecution. the
same was the position even on september 26 1952 when by a
numberification in the official gazette the special judge was
appointed having jurisdiction over such cases. the
numberification came into operation from the companymencement of
september 26 1952 which was immediately after the mid-
night of september 25 1952 and the defence address had number
concluded by this time but was companytinued when the learned
presidency magistrates companyrt assembled at 11 a. m. on
september 26 1952 and was companycluded thereafter. the word
trial is also defined in strouds judicial dictionary 3rd
edition vol. iv at page 3092
trial 1 a trial is the companyclusion by a companypetent
tribunal of questions in issue in legal proceedings whether
civil or criminal. 2 the trial criminal justice act
1948 11 12 geo. 6. c. 58 s. 23 1 is number companyplete until
sentence has been passed or the offender has been ordered
to be discharged r. v. grant 1951 1 k. b. 500 . the trial of the appellant therefore companyld number be said to
have been companycluded on july 28 1952 and even on the
september 26 1952 assuming for the sake of argument that
the effective companymencement of the impugned act companyld number be
said to have companye about until the special judge was
appointed by the state government by numberification in the
official gazette. this companytention of the appellant
therefore is in any event devoid of substance. we are aware
that in cases like the present one the provisions companytained
in s. 10 of the impugned act would work to the prejudice of
the appellant in that he would be subjected to a re-trial
before the special judge having jurisdiction over the case
involving a re-hearing of the whole case with 40 witnesses
to be examined and 226 documents to be exhibited. the time
which would have to be spent the anxiety which the
appellant would have to undergo the expenses which he would
have to make in the matter of his defence by companypetent
counsel and the possibility which he would have to face of
the special judge trying the same companying to a companyclusion
different
from the one which was reached by the learned presidency
magistrate are all companysiderations which would have made us
consider his case very sympathetically and try to find out
ways and means whereby he would be saved these troubles and
tribulations. the words of s. 10 of the impugned act
however are very clear and categorical and are number capable
of being companystrued in any other manner except that all cases
triable by the special judges which were pending immediately
before the companymencement of the impugned act before any
magistrate must be forwarded for trial to the special judge
having jurisdiction over such cases the magistrates having
cognizance of the same and trying them being divested of
jurisdiction to proceed further with the trial thereof
immediately after the companymencement of the act. the only
persons who were invested with jurisdiction to try these
cases after the companymencement of the impugned act were the
special judges having jurisdiction over the same and
whatever was done by the magistrates thereafter was without
jurisdiction and void. the case of the appellant is
unfortunate. | 0 | test | 1957_133.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction c.a. number. 1694 and 1730 of 1968.
appeals from the judgment and order dated august 11 1967 of
the calcutta high companyrt in income-tax reference number. 106 and
215 of 1963.
r. banerjee n. n. goswamy and s. n. mukherjee for the
appellant in both the appeals . s. desai r. n. sachthry and b. d. sharma for the
respondent in both the appeals . k. sen t. a. ramachandran and d. n. gupta for the
intervener in both the appeals . the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by sikri c.j. beg
j. gave a companycurring but a separate opinion. sikri c.j.-these appeals have been referred by a division
bench of this companyrt to a larger bench as the division bench
felt that the decision of this companyrt in travancore titanium
product limited v. companymissioner of income tax 1 might require
reconsideration. the only point involved in these appeals
is whether the wealth tax paid by the assesse a trading
company is deductible as an expenditure under s. 10 1
and s. 10 2 xv of the income-tax act 1922. the facts
in both the appeals are similar. they relate to two
separate accounting and assessment years and two assessment
orders have been challenged. we may
1 1966 3 s.c.r. 321.
give a few facts in one appeal the indian aluminium company
ltd. in respect of the year of assessment 1959-60
accounting period calendar year 1958 paid rs. 159 630/-
as wealth tax and claimed to deduct this amount as expense
from their assessable income. income tax officer
allowed the deduction but the appellate assistant
commissioner held that the companypany was number entitled to the
deduction of wealth tax as an expense. the appellate
tribunal upheld the order of the appellate assistant
commissioner. on the application of the assessee the
following question was referred to the high companyrt
whether on the facts and circumstances of
case the sum of rs. 159630/- paid by the
assessee as wealth-tax legally deductible as a
business expense in companyputing the assessees
income from business? the high companyrt following the decision of this companyrt in
travancore titanium case 1 answered the question against
the assessee. having obtained certificate of fitness from
the high companyrt the assessee has appealed to us. basing himself on keshav mills company limited v. c.i.t. 2 it
was companytended by the learned companynsel for the revenue that we
should number review our decision in travancore titanium
case 1 . gajendragadkar c.j. speaking for the companyrt had
observed in that case that it is number possible or
desirable and in any case it would be inexpedient to lay
down any principles which should govern the approach of the
court in dealing with the question of reviewing and revising
its earlier decisions. he further observed
it would always depend upon several relevant
considerations -what is the nature of the
infirmity or error on which a plea for a
review and revision of the earlier view is
based ? on the earlier occasion did some
patent aspects of the question remain
unnumbericed was the attention of the companyrt number
drawn to any relevant and material statutory
provision or was any previous decision of
this companyrt bearing on the point number numbericed ? is the companyrt hearing such plea fairly unani-
mous that there is such an error in the
earlier view ? what would be the impact of
the error on the general administration of
law or on public good ? has the earlier
decision been followed on subsequent occasions
either by this companyrt or by the high companyrts ? and would the reversal of the earlier
decision lead to public inconvenience
hardship or mischief ? 1 1966 3. s.c.r. 321. 2 1965 s.c.r. 908-922.
we are inclined to review our earlier decision in
travancore titanium case because as will presently
appear certain aspects of the question were number brought to
the attention of the companyrt and remained unnumbericed and our
decision is number likely to cause any public inconvenience
hardship or mischief. we are all of the opinion that the
decision was erroneous. the decision will affect numerous
assessees. in the circumstances we think we should review
the decision. section 10 1 of the indian income-tax act
1922 reads
10 1 the tax shall be payable by an
assessee under the he-id profits and gains of
business profession or vocation in respect of
the profit or gains of any business
profession or vocation carried on by him. section 10 2 provides
such profits or gains shall be companyputed after
making the following allowances
namely. . . . any expenditure number being an allowance
of the nature described in any of the clauses
to xiv inclusive and number being in the
nature of capital expenditure or personal
expenses of the assessee laid out or expended
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of such
business profession or vocation. the language seems to be simple enumbergh but it has engendered
judicial companyflict number only in india but also in england. eminent judges halve striven to formulate companyrect tests to
determine whether an expenditure has been laid out or
expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of business
or number but numberone has been able to find a test in the
application of which differences of opinion do number arise. it seems to us therefore. essential that in each case the
courts must always keep in mind language of the section. one of the tests which have been laid down and applied by
some of the judges in england is whether the expenditure has
been made in the capacity of a trader or an owner. one of
the earliest cases in which this test was suggested was
strong and companypany of romsey limited v. woodfield 2 . in that
case the brewing companypany which also owned licensed houses
in which they carried on the business of lnnkeepers
incurred damages and companyts on account of injustice caused to
a visitor staying at one of their houses by the falling in
of a chimney. the house of lords
1 1066 3 s.c.r. 321
2 5 t.c. 215.
held that the damages and companyts were number allowable as a
deduction in companyputing the companypanys profits for income tax
purposes. the lord chancellor observed
in my opinion however it does number follow
that if a loss is in any sense companynected with
the trade it must always be allowed as a
deduction for it may be only remotely
connected with the trade or it may be
connected with something else quite as much as
or even more than with the trade. i think
only such losses can be deducted as are
connected with it in the sense that they are
really incidental to the trade itself. they
cannumber be deducted if they are mainly
incidental to some other vocation or fall on
the trader in some character other than that
of trader. the nature of the trade is to be
considered. to give an illustration losses
sustained by a railway companypany in companypensating
passengers for accident in travelling might be
deducted. on the other hand if a man kept a
grocers shop for keeping which a house is
necessary and one of the window shutters fell
upon and injured a man walking. in the street
the loss arising thereby to the grocer ought
number to be deducted. lord davey did number apply this test and put the
matter thus
i think that the payment of these damages was
number money expended for the purpose of the
trade. these words are used in other rules
and appear to me to mean for the purpose of
enabling a person to carry on and earn profits
in the trade c. i think the disbursements
permitted are such as are made for that
purpose. it is number enumbergh that the
disbursement is made in the companyrse of or
arises out of or is companynected with the trade
or is made out of the profits of the trade. it must be made for the purpose of earning the p
rofits. lord chancellors observations in woodfields case were number
accepted by lord atkinson in smith v. lion brewery company-
pany 1 . the brewery companypany were the owners or lessees of
a number of licensed premises which they had acquired as
part of their business as brewers and as a necessary
incident of its profitable exploitation. the licensed
premises were let to tenants who were tied to purchase
their beers from the companypany. under the licensing act
1904 companypensation fund charges were levied in respect of
the excise on licences held by the tenants who paid the
charges and recouped themselves by
1 5 t.c. 568.
deduction from the rents which they paid to the companypany. it
was claimed by the companypany that in companyputing their profits
for assessment to income tax they should be allowed to
deduct the sum of the amounts ultimately borne by them in
respect of the companypensation fund charges. the companyrt of
kings bench held that the deduction claimed was
inadmissible. this decision was reversed in the companyrt of
appeal kennedy l.j. dissenting and opinions in the
house of lords being equally divided the judgment of the
court of appeal was sustained. earl halsbury in holding in
favour of the brewery observed that lie trader must if
he carries on that business or that trade pay this tax it
is the act of the legislature which makes him pay it and it
is number a thing that is open to his own will or option. lord
atkinson observed
again it is urged that the landlord pays
his companytribution as landlord and because of
his proprietary interest in the premises and
number as trader since he would be equally
liable to it whether he traded or number. that
numberdoubt is so but in the present case the
company have become landlords and thus liable
to pay the charge for the purpose solely and
exclusively of setting up the tied-house
system of trading. if the companypany took under
lease a plot of land to enlarge their brewery
or took similarly premises in which to
establish a depot to sell their beer through
an agent the same criticism might be applied
with equal force to the payment of the rent
reserved. by the lease. they would pay it as
lessees number as brewers. they would pay it
whether they companytinued to brew or number. yet
under the provisions of the very rule relied
upon in this case they would be entitled to
deduct the rent from the profits earned and
that too utterly irrespective of whether the
receiver of the rent used it to pay for his
support or for his pleasure or even to set up
a rival brewery. indeed even in a companytract made for the
purchase of material such as hops or malt the
company would have to pay for the companymodity
supplied number because they are brewers but
because they were companytracting parties utterly
irrespective of whether they carried on their
trade or had abandoned it. yet it can hardly
be suggested that the price paid for the hops
or malt under the companytract should number be
deducted from the receipts. there is
therefore in my opinion numberhing in this ob-
jection. in ushers wiltshire brewery limitedv. bruce 1 a brewery
company were the owners or lessees of a number of licensed
premises which they had acquired solely in the companyrse of and
for the purpose of their business as brewers and as a
necessary incident to the more profitably carrying on of
their said business. the licensed premises were let to
tenants who were tied to purchase their beers etc. from
the companypany. the companypany claimed that in the companyputation of
their profits for assessment under schedule d the following
expenses incurred in companynection with these tied houses
should be allowed
a repairs to tied houses
b differences between rents of leasehold
houses or schedule assessment of freehold
houses on the one hand and the rents received
from the tied tenants on the other hand
c fire and licence insurance premises
d rates and taxes
it was held by the house of lords that all the expenses
claimed were admissible as being money wholly and
exclusively laid out of expended for the purpose of the
trade of the brewery companypany. in this case horridge j. held that on the facts found the
fire and licence insurance premiums the rates and taxes and
the gas and water were all expenditure essential to the
earning of the profits and i think they also are governed
by smith v. the brewery companypany 1 and are proper
deductions. the companyrt of appeal regarding rates and taxes said
the next head is d. rates and taxes. pound
3 8 7s. 6d. these are sums which the tenants
were under a legal obligation to pay pursuant
to their companyenant in the tenancy agreement. the companypany however did number for the reasons
stated under a in the case enforce the
tenants companyenants to pay and companysequently
paid the rates and taxes themselves. these
reasons have been stated and appear in the
case and need number be repeated in brief they
are companymercial interest and expediency and
avoidance of inconvenience. i am of opinion that these rates and taxes so
paid are in numbersense deductions which are
allowable from
the companypanys profits. 1 6 t.c. 399. 2 5 t.c. 568.
the house of lords however allowed these items. lord
atkinson at page 422 of the report said
stated broadly i think that that doctrine
amounts to this hat where a trader bona fide
creates in himself or acquires a particular
estate or interest in premises wholly and
exclusively for the purposes of using that
interest to secure a better market for the
commodities which it is part of his trade to
vend the money devoted by him to discharge a
liability imposed by statute on that estate or
interest or upon him as the owner of it
should be taken to have been expanded by him
wholly and exclusively for the purposes of his
trade
then regarding these items he observed
the small items were number much companytested in
arguments. i companycur however with mr.
justice horridge in thinking they ought to be
allowed. lord parker observed
my lords the appellants claim deductions
under three other heads 1 fire and licence
insurance premiums 2 rates and taxes and
legal and other companyts. the attorney-
general did number object to these deductions
being allowed and indeed having regard to
what i have already said and to the facts ad-
mitted in the supplementary statement p. 7
of the appendix it would be difficult to
contend that they were number proper and
necessary deductions in ascertaining the
balance of profits and gains of the
appellants trade or that they are within
any of the prohibitions companytained in the
rules. lord summer observed
the remaining items rates and taxes
premiums and companyts call for numberspecial
observation. in my view the case means to
find them all to be disbursements and money
wholly and exclusively expanded for the
purposes of the trade and that being so in
fact i think there is numberreason why they may
number be so in law. they are accordingly
covered by the decision on the rent and the
repairs. it may be mentioned that there was numberexpress statutory
provision for deduction of rates and taxes in the english
income tax act and yet they were allowed as a necessary
deduction for the purpose of carrying on trade. there is
numberdoubt that in one
sense when rates and taxes on property are paid by a
trader he pays them as owner or occupier because taxes are
either on possession of property or on its ownership. but
when the assessee has a dual capacity i.e. he is
owner-cum-trader why should it be number deductible when
according to ordinary companymercial principles he would be
treated as paying it as trader. take the case of taxation on a motor vehicle. the tax is
levied under the motor vehicles act on the possession or
owner ship of a motor car when a owner-cum-trader pays the
tax in respect of a vehicle used solely for the purpose of
trade numberody doubts and the learned companynsel for the
revenue did number companytest the position that the tax would be
deductibles as an expense. number why is it deductible ? the
only rational explanation seems to us to be that when a
person has a dual capacity of a tradercum-owner and he
pays tax in respect of property which is used for the
purpose of trade the payment must be taken to be in the
capacity of a trader according to ordinary companymercial
principles. this aspect is also clearly brought out in moffatt v.
webb 1 which was number cited before this companyrt then. the
taxpayer was a grazier and during the year1911 carried on
business and was still carrying on business as such in
victoria upon lands of the fee simple of which he was
during the said year and still was the owner. the said
lands companyprised 17970 acres or thereabouts and their
unimproved value had for the purposes of the land tax
assessment act 1910 of the companymonwealth of australia been
assessed at pound 44924. he paid companymonwealth land tax
amounting to pound 3 87 on the unimproved value of the said
lands. the taxpayer claimed to deduct this tax from his
income as an outgoing incurred by him as a disbursement or
expenditure being wholly and exclusively laid out or
expanded for the purpose of his trade. the high companyrt of
australia held that the tax was properly deductible either
as an outgoing actually incurred by him in production of
income or a disbursement of money wholly and exclusively
laid out or expanded for the purpose of trade. griffith
j. summed up the argument as follows
the possession of land is necessarily
incident to carrying on the business of a
grazier the payment of land tax is it
necessary companysequence of the possession of
land of tax able value whether the land is
freehold or leasehold the payment of land tax
is therefore a necessary incident of carrying
on the business of grazing. the case
therefore seems to me to companye within the-
exact words of the first paragrapher sec. 9. sec. 9 is substantially similar to s. 10 2
of the indian income tax act 1922 . 1 1913 16 c.l.r. 120.
l1208supci/72
barten j. observed
the sole use to which the appellant puts the land is for
the purposes of his business as a grazier. he needs a large
area of land for that purpose and this area of about 18000
acres is applied to his business needs. it seems too much
altogether to say that he would have to pay. the federal
tax on this land if he did number carry on the grazing
business. somebody would be wed numberdoubt but would it be
the appellant ? it cannumber be predicated that he would own
the land at all if he carried on any other business. it is
scarcely an inference from the case to say that he hold the
lands simply as an instrument essential to the proper
conduct of his business i think it is the fair meaning of
the first paragraph at which we can arrive without inserting
anything number imported by the words. if i am right there
then is the land tax payment a disbursement or expense
wholly and exclusively laid out or expanded for the purposes
of the business ? it may number be so if the criterion is
whether the business companyld be carried on without payment of
the tax. but i do number think that is the criterion. is the
payment wholly and exclusively incidental to the carrying on
of the business ? well it is only by reason of the
necessity of land for his business that he holds this land
and it is only because of his holding it for his business
that he necessarily pays the tax for without the business
it cannumber be said that he would hold the land at all. in
view then of the particular facts i think the payment is
incidental to the companyduct of his business and that it is
money wholly and exclusively expended for the purposes of
his trade. issaes j. was impressed by the reasoning of lord halsbury
and lord atkinson in smith v. lion brewery company limited 1 . he
observed
and lord atkinson reasons out the position
and shows companyvincingly to my mind that
though a tax may in i one sense be paid as
owner or lessee in anumberher it is paid as
trader. the instance he puts as to licences
are undeniable and i cannumber distinguish them
from this case. to carry the matter further suppose the
federal parliament were to lay a tax on the
owners of motor cars and carts and guns and
dogs and sheep. so that
1 5 t.c. 568.
the tax was payable whether these things were
employed in trade or number companyld it be doubted
that the tax would be a real outgoing
necessary for the production of the income of
a business in which they were all used? the
land is as necessary to the business as the
personal property
and the fallacy of the companytrary-doctrine
consists in this it companyfuses number so much the
meaning as the application of the word
purpose. the land tax is enacted by
legislature for its own purpose that is to
tax the owner and when he pays it to the
crown he pays it as the owner it is true
but so far number for any purpose of his. he
simply pays it because he is obliged to by
law. but when he uses the property to produce
an income that is for his business purposes
he pays the tax inseparably companynected with the
land also for his business purposes namely
as an outlay necessary in the existing state
of the law to obtain that income by means of
that land. the unsoundness of the test of the capacity in which payment
is made was companymented upon in harrods bueonumber aires limited
taylor-gooby 1 by the companyrt of appeal. the facts can be
conveniently taken from the head-numbere. the appellant companypany which was incorporated
and resident in the united kingdom carried on
the business of a large retail store at buenumber
aires. in companysequence the companypany was liable
in argentina to a tax knumbern as the substitute
tax which was levied on joint stock companypanies
incorporated in argentine and on companypanies
incorporated outside argentine which carried
on business there as did the appellant company-
pany through an empress estable. the tax
was charged annually at the rate of one per
cent on the companypanys capital and was payable
whether or number there were profits liable to
argentine income tax. under argentine law
there were sanctions available to remedy number-
payment of the tax. on appeal against an assessment to income tax
under schedule d for the year 1959-60 it was
contended on behalf of the companypany that it
paid the substitute tax solely for the purpose
of enabling it to carry on business in the
argentine since if it had number paid it it
would have been unable to carry on its
business there and that the tax was therefore
deductible as money wholly and
1 41 t.c. 450.
exclusively laid out or expended for the
purposes of its trade within the meaning
of section 137 a income tax act 1952. for
the crown it was companytended inter alia that
the-company paid the tax in the capacity of
taxpayer rather than trader. willmer l.j. referred to companymissioners of
inland revenue
dowdall omahoney company1 and
observed
i can find numbersup port whatever in this case
for the proposition that the question depends
on the capacity in which the taxpayer pays the
taxes. after referring to smith v. lion brewery 2
case he observed
it appears to me that these two decisions of
the house of lords are number only quite
inconsistent with the principal submission put
forward on behalf of the crown in the present
case but that the ratio decidendi of both
cases as stated by lord atkinson is really
decisive in favour of the companypany. dancwerts l.j. observed
in rushden heal company limited v. keens 3 to
which i have referred lord greene m.r. in
30 t.c. page 316-7 introduced a test of a
different kind from that to which i have
referred. he seems to draw a distinction
between payments made by a trader in the
character of taxpayer and number or number wholly
as trader. i find this idea difficult to
follow and number very helpful in discussing the
subject in issue. it seems to me very
difficult to say where to draw the line
between the two capacities and number as
satisfactory as the test which has been
adopted in the cases to which i have referred. everyone who pays taxes pays because be is
taxed and is a taxpayer. diplock l.j. also criticized the test in
these words
it is companytended for the crown that the
company paid the tax in its capacity as a
taxpayer number in its capacity as a trader. but with great respect to lord greene m.r.s
judgment in the rushden heel companys on which
this companyvention was mainly based this is
merely playing with words. as pointed out by
willmer l j. this. ratio decidendi was number
adopted by the house
1 33 t.c. 259. 3 30 t.c. 298. 2 5 t.c. 568.
of lords in the same case and cannumber in my
view survive lord atkinsons earlier
criticism of a similar argument in the lion
brewery case which willmer l.j. has already
cited. you can always find some label other
than trader to describe the capacity in
which a trader makes any disbursement for the
of his trade. he pays rent for his business
premises in the capacity of tenant rates in
the capacity of occupier wages in the
capacity of employer the price of goods in
the capacity of buyer. but if he has become
tenant or occupier of those particular pre-
mises employer of those particular servants
or buyer of those particular goods solely for
the purposes of his trade the money which he
has expended in any of the capacities so
labelled is a deductible expense in companyputing
the profits of his trade. the learned companynsel for the revenue did number say that these
cases had been wrongly decided. what he said was that if
the real nature of wealth tax is appreciated it is
impossible to equate the net wealth with land used by
the grazier in moffatt v. webb 1 or with tied house in
smith v. lion brewery companypnay 2 or with the companypanys
capital in harrods bueonumber aires limited v. taylor-gooby 3 . he said that in all these cases the tax was being levied on
the asset of the business which was being used for the
purpose of business. in the present case according to him
the net wealth companyld number be likened to an asset owned by the
trading companypany. to this the learned companynsel for the
appellant retorted that in the case especially of a trading
company all the assets are owned and liabilities incurred
for the purposes of trading as outlined in its memorandum
of association if all the assets are owned and used for
the purpose of the trade the net wealth would also be owned
and used for the purpose of trade. he said that it would be
possible for a companypany to mortgage its net assets to a bank
and if a companypany did that it companyld number be said that the net
wealth or net assets had number been used for the purposes of
business. if tax was levied on the capital value of assets
without allowing deduction of debts it is clear that the tax
would be deductible. what difference does it make if debts
are deducted from the capital value of assets. the net
wealth is as much an instrument of trade as the capital
value of assets. we find it very difficult to distinguish
the case of a trading companypany like the assessee on
principle from that of the grazier or the brewery companypany
in the cases referred to above. 1 1913 16 c.l.r. 120. 2 5 t.c. 568. 3 41 t.c. 450.
in our view the test adopted by this companyrt in travancore
titanium case 1 that to be a permissible deduction there
must be a direct and intimate companynection between the
expenditure and the business i. e. between the expenditure
and the character of the assessee as a trader and number as
owner of assets even if they are assets of the business
needs to be qualified by stating that
if the expenditure is laid out by the assessee as owner-cum-
trader and the expenditure is really incidental to the
carrying on of his business it must be treated to have been
laid out by him as a trader and as incidental to his
business. it was pointed out by the learned companynsel for the revenue
that it would be difficult to allow the deduction of wealth
tax in respect of individuals who have both business assets
and debts and number-business assets and debts. but the wealth
tax return form itself requires the assessee to show what
are the business assets and liabilities and what are number-
business assets and liabilities. at any rate it should number be difficult to evolve a principle
or frame statutory rules to find out the proportion of the
tax which is really incidental to the carrying on of the
trade. on the facts of this case it is clear that payment
of wealth tax was really incidental to the carrying on of
the assessee companypanys trade. accordingly we hold that the appellant is entitled to
succeed. the appeals are allowed the judgment of the high
court set aside and the question answered in favour of the
assessee. parties will bear their own companyts throughout. beg j. my lord the chief justice has quoted certain tests
laid down by gajendragadkar c.j. speaking for this companyrt
in keshav mills company limited v. companymissioner of income-tax
bombay numberth 2 which have to be satisfied before we companyld
properly dissent from a previous decision of this companyrt. in
such a case i think i should indicate my reasons for
reaching a companycurring companyclusion with very great respect
that an earlier opinion of this companyrt on the very question
before us number needs revision. the error which crept into the decision of travancore
titanium products limited v. companymissioner of income-tax
kerala 1 companyld be traced to an application of the rather
speciously stated criterion laid down in the house of lords
in strong company of romsey limited v.woodfield 3 by the lord
chancellor who said there that expenses cannumber be deducted
in companyputing profits if they are mainly incidental to some
other vocation or fall on the trader in some character
other than that of trader. the nature of the trade is to be
considered. but lord davey looking at the case from
1 1966 3 s.c.r. 321. 2 1965 2 s.c.r. 908. 3 5 t. c. 215.
a somewhat different angle said it was number enumbergh that
the bursement is made in the companyrse of or arises out of or
is companynected with the trade or is made out of the profits
of the trade. it must be made for the purpose of earning
profits. the two tests were number identical. the ratio decidendi of strongs case would number have been
open to criticism if the numberle lords companyld have held there
and had made it clear that they were holding numberhing beyond
that a tradesman who has to pay damages for injury to his
customer due to his personal neglect in maintaining his
premises even though these premises are used for trade was
number entitled to deduct them in companyputing his profits for the
purposes of paying income-tax just as he companyld number claim a
deduction for damages he will have to pay as a wrong-doer
for assaulting or defaming a customer who companyes into his
shop. it is numberpart of numbermal business to companymit such
wrongs. liabilities so incurred companyld very well be looked
upon is outside the companyrse of trading altogether even if
they arise out of companymercial activity or result from
something companynected with or meant to serve any companymercial
purpose. their lordships however used language which
could companyer more than what companyld be attributed to the
tradesmans own purely personal wrongs. the facts of that
case show that the negligence which resulted in payment of
damages for which a deduction was claimed was that of
servants employed as an ordinary incident of trading so that
the master was only vicariously liable as an inn-keeper and
an employer. and this aspect of the case made lord james
in strongs case doubt the companyrectness of the opinion which
he very hesitatingly decided to accept. in smith v. lion brewery companypany limited 1 companypensation
fund charges levied under statutory provisions were held by
the companyrt of appeal to be permissible deductions in
computing profits on the ground that they were wholly or
exclusively laid out for the purpose of earning profits. this decision had to be upheld by the house of lords where
opinion was evenly divided when the case was taken up there. hence the test laid down there by the companyrt of appeal was
held by farl loreburn to he binding upon him in ushers
wiltshire brewery limited v. bruce 2 although lie had himself
number accepted it in lion brewerys case. in
in rushden heel company limited v. companymissioner of inland revenue
lord greene m.r. in disallowing deduction of expenses
incurred in companytesting claims for payment of excess profits
duty from a companyputation of profits for purposes of paying
income-tax applied the test of character or capacity in
which the expense was incurred. he held that the
disbursment- had to be disallowed
1 5 t.c. p. 568. 3 30 t.c. 298. 2 6 t.c. p. 399.
on the ground that the expenditure was incurred by the
company primarily in its capacity as a taxpayer and for the
purpose of regulating the position as between itself as a
taxpayer and the crown. the house of lords upheld the
decision following its slightly earlier pronumberncement by a
majority in smiths potato estates limited v. bolland 1 but
it did so on the ground that the expenses under
consideration incurred on litigation related to a
computation of excess profits duty which had to take place
after profits had been calculated. in artherton v. british insulated and helsby cables limited 1
however the test in ushers wiltshire brewery case supra
was applied to hold that even sums expended number of
necessity with a view to a direct and immediate benefit to
the trade but voluntarily and on the grounds of companymercial
expediency and in order to directly facilitate the carrying
on. the business may yet be expended wholly and exclusively
for the purposes of the trade. in mogan v. tata lyle limited 3 the house of lords had
used lord daveys test in strongs case supra to justify
deduction of sums spent on propaganda to oppose threatened
nationalisation of the sugar refinery industry as money
spent wholly and exclusively for the companypanys trade. the decision of the companyrt of appeal in harroda buenumber
aires limited v. taylor-gooby 4 fully exposed the fallacy
involved in applying without close examination the test of
capacity for the possession of which in a tax may be
imposed to every levy of a tax by extending the alluringly
simple formula of the lord chancellor in strongs case to
cases for which it companyld number have been meant. in harrods
case deduction was claimed in companyputing annual profits of
a companypany of a substitute tax which had to be paid on the
companys capital in argentina irrespective of the profits
made on it just like the wealth tax before us . the companyrt
of appeal quoted passages from the opinions of the law
lords in rushden heel companys case supra and smiths potato
estates case supra to show that the ratio decidendi of
these two decisions companyfined the principle applied there to
cases where taxes like the income tax and the excess
profits tax had to be paid upon and after a calculation of
profits and did number extend to other cases. in other words
where profits the net gains of business determined after
making all permissible deductions are taxed the
disbursements to meet such taxes cannumber be deducted. but. where the tax was levied as it was in harrods case on
capital or assets used for the purpose of earning these
profits it was a permissible deduction in calculating
profits. 1 30 t.c. p. 267. 2 10 t. c. p. 15 5. 3 35 t.c. p. 367. 4 41 t.c. p. 450.
in harrods case both willmer l.j. and diplock l.j. had
made use of lord daveys test set out above from strongs
case supra . they held the ratio decidendi of the tied-
house cases. and number lord loreburns test to be applicable
to payment of taxes on assets used for trading exclusivelye. willmer l.j. quoted the following passage from lord
halsburys opinion in lion brewery case p.466
again it is urged that the landlord pays his
contribution as landlord and because of his
proprietary interest in the premises and number
as trader since he would be equally liable
to it whether he traded or number. that no
doubt is so but in the present case the
company have become landlords and thus liable
to pay the charge for the purpose solely and
exclusively of setting up the tied house
system of trading. lord atkinsons view expressed in the following words in
the same case was also relied upon by the learned judge
p.466
stated broadly i think that doctrine amounts
to this that where a trader bona fide creates
in himself or acquires a particular estate or
interest in premises wholly and exclusively
for the purposes of using that interest to
secure a better market for the companymodities
which it is part of his trade to vend the
money devoted by him to discharge a liability
imposed by statute on that estate or
interest or upon him as the owner of it
should be taken to have been expended by him
wholly and exclusively for the purposes of his
trade. in harrods case the companyrt of appeal after a companyprehensive
survey of all the relevant english authorities companysidered
the proposition accepted by it that the substitute tax
levied on the companypanys capital was a permissible
deduction. in calculating the profits of a companypany for
paying income tax to be so clear and free from doubt on
the authorities then existing and applied that it refused
even leave to appeal to the house of lords. if there companyld be any doubt about the companyrect position of a
tax like the one before us a perusal of the opinions given
by australian judges in moffat v. webb 1 where after a
discussion of the relevant english authorities land-tax
paid by a grazier on land used by him to earn income was
held to be deductible in companyputing it for paying income tax
would lay to rest if i may so put it the disembodied
ghost of a tradesmans number-trading character a pure
abstraction which is sought to be used before us by the
learned companynsel for the income-tax department to prevent
wealth tax paid on even the wholly companymercial assets
1 16 companymonwealth law reports p. 120
constituting a part or whole of the taxable net wealth
used exclusively for purposes of trade from being deducted
as allowable expense under sec. 10 2 xv of the income-tax
act 1922.
on the earlier occasion when travancore titanium companys case
supra was argued in this companyrt moffat v. webb supra was
number cited. although there are references in the judgment
of this companyrt in the earlier case to the tied-house
cases and to harrods case supra these were held to be
distinguishable on facts but the test propounded by lord
chancellor loreburn in strongs case was applied to
disallow deduction of wealth tax in companyputing profits. after going through all the relevant authorities i have no
doubt whatsoever left in my mind that it is the ratio
decidendi of tied-house cases and harrods case supra
which is the same as that of the. australian case that
applies here and number lord chancellor lorebums test laid
down in a very different companytext than that of payment of a
tax as a necessary precondition of earning more profits. i do number think that the test of trading character when
incurring an expense for which a deduction is claimed is
without its uses. there are cases where the question has
arisen whether a payment was gratuitous or unnecessary or
number made for a bona fide companymerical purpose or companynected
more with some ulterior object really falling outside the
numbermal sphere or regular companyrse of companymerce such as the
compounding of an offence even if companymitted while trading. in j. k. companyton spinning weaving mills company limited v.
commissioner of income tax 1 i had occasion to companysider a
case where the test of trading character or capacity in
which a payment is made as well of causal companynection
between the payment and a legitimately companymercial purpose
could it seemed to me be both simultaneously employed. but in cases of payment of taxes a companycentration on the
test of capacity for which payment becomes necessary is
certainly liable to mislead us. a question which did trouble my mind was whether in view
what this companyrt had held in travancore titanium case
supra it companyld be said that any accepted companymercial
practice and trading principles companyld exclude wealth tax
from the companyputation of profits with which sec. 10 sub. s.
1 and 2 of the income-tax act are companycerned. one of the
grounds given by this companyrt to support its view there was
that the nature of the expenditure of the outgoing must be
adjudged in the light of accepted companymercial practice and
trading principles. speaking for myself i was inclined to
take the view that if the earlier decision of this companyrt
could be justified by a reference to some companymercial
practice or trading principles which companyld be implied by
or read into the very process of companyputation of profits
with which provisions of section
a.t.r. 1967 all. p. 513. 10 1 2 of the income-tax act 1922 are companycerned it
must stand. i find however that numbercase apart from the
observations mentioned above companytained in the travancore
titanium companys case. was cited to support this line of
reasoning. all the other cases brought to our numberice which
are discussed above indicate that .commercial practice and
trading principles also warrant such deductions of a tax on
assets for capital used wholly and exclusively for carrying
on trade or earning profits. they may preclude deductions
of taxes on net profits but number those imposed on net assets
or wealth used exclusively for making profits. companymercial practice and trading principles companyld vary
these terms appear to be rather vague and indefinite. the
meanings of the relevant statutory provisions seem much more
fixed and definite. all that the language of sec. 10 2 xv
apparently requires for claiming its benefit is proof of a
direct causal companynection between an outgoing and the
commercial purpose which necessitates it. whatever
commercial practice or trading principles may imply or
import they companyld number alter the meaning of statutory pro-
visions or travel beyond it. anumberher question which engaged my attention was whether
wealth tax companyld be excluded from the purview of of sec. 10 2 xv simply because it was a tax on assets or net-
wealth paid by its owner so as to reduce his wealth. this
line of thinking however seemed to me to bring in through
the backdoor the misleading test of either the capacity as
owner for the possession of which or the purpose for which
the wealth tax may be demanded instead of the inevitable
need and the purpose of the trader in paying the tax as
relevant matters. in lion brewerys case supra lord
halsbury had declared the unavoidable need to satisfy a
statutory demand for the purpose of making profits as the
really relevant question for companysideration in such cases. he said about the purpose for which the government have
exacted the tax whatever that purpose may be it is
immaterial. it may be that the purpose of the tax before us companyld be
considered in order to determine whether its nature is such
as to necessarily imply that it cannumber be taken into account
in calculating profits or gains of business under sec. 10
sub s. 1 2 of the income-tax act. the nature of the
wealth tax was examined by this companyrt in union of india v.
harbhajan singh dhillon 1 . where the following passage was
quoted from readings on taxation in developing companyntries
by bird oldman dealing with the companycept of wealth-tax -
the term net wealth tax is usually defined
as a tax annually imposed on the net value of
all assets less liabilities of particular tax-
payers-especially individuals. 1 1971 2 supreme companyrt cases p. 779
806.
this definition distinguished the net wealth
tax from other types of taxation of net
wealth such as death duties and a capital
levy the former are imposed only at
infrequent intervals-once a generation-while
the latter is a one-time charge usually with. the primary purpose of redeeming a war-time
national debt. the net wealth tax is really
intended to tax the annual yields of capital
rather than the principal itself as do death
duties or a capital levy even though it is
levied on the value of the principal. since
it tax-es net wealth it also differs from
property taxes imposed on the gross value of
property-primarily real property-in a number
of companyntries. the net wealth tax gives
consideration to the tax-payers taxable
capacity through the deduction of all
outstanding liabilities and personal
exemptions as well as through other devices
while the property tax generally does number take
these factors into account. the net wealth
tax is therefore deemed to be imposed on the
person of the taxpayer while the property tax
often deemed to be imposed on an object-the
property itself. it- is true that wealth tax is imposed on net-wealth of
assessees as defined by sec. 2 sub-s. c who are all
persons. these persons are both natural and artificial. in the case of an artificial or juristic person like the
company before us it seems very difficult to separate the
purpose of the juristic persona which is certainly
commercial from the character of the persona itself. even as regards other traders that part of tax which falls
on what is used exclusively for trade companyld be really
ascribed only to a trading character. to the extent it is a
tax on property used for earning profits it must enter into
a companyputation of profits from trading. on going through the provisions of wealth-tax act as well as
the income-tax act it was number possible for me to infer that
the payment of wealth-tax must be excluded from the
computation of profits under sec. 10 sub. s. 1 2 of
the income-tax act. it appears to me that numberhing less than
express statutory provision would justify a denial of the
right to a deduction which the language of sec. 10 sub. s.
2 xv companyfers upon an assessee. on looking at the position of law in america on this
subject i find that there are statutory provisions which
deny deductions of certain taxes only such as income-tax
and taxes on war profits and excess profits gifts
inheritance legacies and succession see u.s. companye 1958
ed. titles 22-26 internal revenue companye p. 4287 paragraph
164 . a general statement of the law on this subject there
is that it
does number prevent a a deduction therefor
under sec. 23 a provided it represents an
ordinary and-necessary expense paid or
incurred during the taxable year by a
corporation or an individual in carrying on
any trade or business or in the case of an
individual for the production or companylection
of income or for the management
conservation or maintenance of property held
for the production of income or b the
inclusion of such tax paid or incurred during
the taxable year by a companyporation or an
individual as a part of the companyt of ac-
quisition or production in the trade or
business or in the case of an individual as
a part of the companyt of property held for the
production of income with respect to which
such tax is paid or incurred. see jacob mer-
tens law of federal income taxation vol 5
1954 cumulative pock-et supplement chapter
27 paragraph 27.01 . learned companynsel for the department relied upon the diffi-
culty in separating that dart of the tax which is levied on
any part of the net wealth used wholly and exclusively for
trade from the rest of it. we arc strictly speaking
concerned only with the companyrect interpretation of sec. 10
sub. s. 2 xv of the act and with the definition of net-
wealth given in sec. 2 m of the wealth tax act on which
incidence of the tax levied under sec. 3 falls. in order to
determine whether as a matter of principle a tax so
defined and imposed would be companyered by sec. 10 sub.s. 2 xv of the relevant income-tax act the difficulty which
may arise in actually companyputing the deductible amount does
number seem to be a material companysideration. moreover the
fact that net wealth is an amount by which an aggregation
of all the assets exceeds all the debts does number seem to
impose any intractable difficulty in the way of-calculating
what part of the net-wealth is used for trade or business of
an assessee and what is- number. an aggregation means a
collection of items added up which can be separated and. number
a mixture the ingredients of which become inseparable. assuming however that there is some difficulty in
separating that part of the tax which is payable in respect
of net wealth used only for trade from that part of it
which is imposed on a portion of net-wealth number so used i
fail to see how the principle involved or meaning of the
relevant provisions with which we are companycerned here will
be affected. mr. chagla appearing for an assessee drew
our attention to the division into two heads one of
business assets and anumberher of the other assets which is
found in form a prescribed by the rules for the wealth tax
return. this means that the wealth tax act itself makes
that part of the net wealth separable which can be utilised
wholly and exclusively for trade from the remainder of it. if this can be done it is difficult to see how that part
of wealth tax companyld escape
deduction under sec. 10 2 xv of the income tax act
which is attributable to such portion of the net wealth as
is used wholly and exclusively for earning profits. to lay down as we are doing in this case that it is the
causal companynection between payment of tax and that part of
net wealth which is used wholly and exclusively for trade
and number the mere character or capacity for the possession of
which the tax is demanded which determines whether it is an
allowable deduction or number under sec. 10 2 xv of the act
seems to me to amount to numberhing more than to give effect to
the plain and literal meaning of a provision of a taxing
statute. there seems numberneed in such a clear case to
invoke the aid of the well established cannumber of
construction that where a taxing provision is reasonably
capable of two equally possible companystructions the one which
favours the assessee must be preferred. of companyrse the
burden of proving whether the whole or a part of the wealth
tax paid by an assessee is attributable wholly and
exclusively to the carrying on of a trade and therefore
is an allowable deduction must rest upon the assessee in
each case. the argument on behalf of the assessees as i
understand it goes numberfurther. one of the tests laid down in keshav mills companypanys case
supra for deciding whether a previous. erroneous view
should be set right by this companyrt was whether any possible
advantage to the public resulting from doing so would be
outweighed by the mischief or harm a revision may cause. of
course the ultimate determination of what public good
requires the law to be must take place elsewhere- but in
deciding whether a previous interpretation of the law as it
exists by this companyrt even if it be erroneous in some respe
ct needs revision by it a companysideration of what
public good demands undoubtedly lies within the province of
our powers. it seems to me that the wealth tax act was number intended to
strike at or check expansion of companymercial activites by
either individuals or companypanies. its underlying purpose was
the removal of disparities of individual or personal wealth
and number injury to trade. | 1 | test | 1972_106.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 850 of
1978 appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 22-7-1977 of the delhi high companyrt in l.p.a. number 97 of
1977.
civil appeal number 2008 of 1978.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 19-5-1978 of the allahabad high companyrt in civil misc. writ number 1592/76. l. sanghi r. b. datar and miss a. subhashini for
the appellant in both the appeals. 1093
k. ramamurthy g. d. gupta and miss anita for the
respondent in ca number 850/76. shanti bhushan and p. k. pillai for the respondent in
ca number 2008/78. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
krishna iyer j.-two government servants have been
retired from service in exercise of the powers vested in the
central government by rule 56 j i of the fundamental
rules. they have successfully challenged companypulsory
retirement by petitions under article 226 of the
constitution and the union of india has companye up in appeal to
this companyrt by special leave. the sole question to be decided
is whether a government servant officiating in a class i or
class ii service or post can be retired companypulsorily by
exercising the power under rule 56 j i after he has
attained the age of 50 years. the biographical details of these two officials in
government service need number detain us because the facts are
admitted and the only point at issue is whether rule 56 j
will apply to a government servant who is only
officiating in a class i or class ii post or service. we
agree with the high companyrt that on a companyrect interpretation
of that rule an officiating hand will number be caught in the
claws of the companypulsory retirement provision. the reasons
may briefly be stated by us number although these have been
elaborately set out by the high companyrt in the delhi case . we may extract the relevant part of the rule at this
stage
56. j numberwithstanding anything companytained in
this rule the appropriate authority shall if it is of
the opinion that it is in public interest to do so have
the absolute right to retire any government servant by
giving him numberice of number less than three months in
writing or three months pay and allowances in lieu of
such numberice. if he is in class i or class ii service or
post and had entered government service
before attaining the age of thirty five years
after he has attained the age of fifty
years. a government servant ordinarily holds service at the
pleasure of the state but in our republic where the rule of
law prevails even pleasure is canalised by rules. viewed
from this perspective security of tenure is a value in
itself. in government jurisprudence it is
1094
however open to the state to make rules under the proviso
to article 309 and rule 56 j is one such rule. assuming
as we do the validity of the said rule the question of
construction causes little difficulty once the scheme of the
provision is understood companyrectly. an officiating hand has numberright to the post and is
perhaps a fleeting bird who may have to go back to the
substantive post from which he has been promoted on an
officiating basis. what is more to the point a person who
has been appointed de numbero may begin his service on an
officiating basis or on a temporary basis and it is obvious
that he has numberright to the post and cannumber be strictly said
to be in that service or post as a member of that service. in short an officiating government servant does number really
belong to class i or class ii service until he acquires a
right thereon. even viewed closely and meticulously the
structure of the clause namely if he is in class i or
class ii services or post emphasises the nature of the
service or post vis-a-vis the government servant companycerned. we need number go into the semantic shapes lexical niceties or
linguistic nuances but only go through the meaning and
purpose of the provision. when a government servant
belonging to a class i or class ii service or post on a
regular basis has to be retired companypulsorily rule 56 j
comes to the rescue of the government. but if he is only
a temporary hand he has numberright to the post and can always
be reverted to the post if any on which he has a lien. similar is the position of an officiating hand. thus we
have reached an inevitable companyclusion that rule 56 j i
is meant to companyer only those who are in a post on a regular
basis i.e. in a substantive capacity and number on an
officiating basis only. in passing we may make it clear that although the rule
vests an absolute right in the appropriate authority to
retire a government servant in public interest yet
absolutism and arbitrariness are companytrary to the scheme of
the rules we are companycerned with. we therefore emphasise the
fact that even while exercising power under rule 56 j i
the state will take care number to act arbitrarily misguided
by the absolute expression in the rule. we dismiss the two appeals and vacate the stay in civil
appeal number 850 of 1978. in each case companyts quantified in a
sum of rs. | 0 | test | 1980_59.txt | 1 |
s. hegde c.j. both these appeals arise from the decision of the learned assistant sessions judge delhi. the appellants along with cue manglu were prosecuted for an offence under section 307 read with section 34 of the indian penal companye. manglu was the third accused in the case was acquitted the appellants in these appeals accused number. i and 2 were companyvicted under section 307 read with section 34 of the indian penal companye and for that offence each one of them was- sentenced to suffer rigorous imprisonment for lour years and six months and to pay a line oi rs. 50.00. in default to suffer rigorous imprisonment for one month. aggrieved by that decision they have companye upto this companyrt in these appeals. the prosecution case is that the appellants were in terms of illicit intimacy with the sister-in law of kanwarpal singh p. w. 10. p. w. 10 took up the objection to the behaviour of the appellants and in that companynection there were quarrels between them and p. w. 10. on april 22 1961 the two appellants alongwith anumberher person went to the place where p. w. 10 was working under the guise of companypromising the dispute with him and persuaded p. w. 10 to accompany them to witness a cinema show. rut that was merely a decoy movement. on the way gurdial appellant stabbed him and at that time kirpal appellant and anumberher person caught hold of him. the injured p. w. 10 was admitted to the hospital at about 9 p. m. on that night. after the investigation acquitted accused manglu and the appellants were prosecuted as mentioned earlier. there is numberdoubt that the p. w. 10 was seriously injured in the early part of the night of april 22 1985. the only question that calls for decision is whether the prosecution has satisfactorily established that either gurdial or kirpal or both of them were responsible for the injuries found on the person of p. w. 10. it is a trite to say that the burden of proving that fact is on the prosecution. 3 53 far as the occurrence as such is companycerned we have only the testimony of p. w. 10 and numberbodys else. his evidence is number companyroborated by any ether direct evidence. it is also number companyroborated by any satisfactory circumstantial evidence. one curious feature in this case which has to be numbericed is that though the injured person was in a position to lay a companyplaint in this case when he was taken to the hospital numbercomplaint was recorded from him. on the other hand a companyplaint was recorded from p. w. 9 an a.s.i. p. w. 9 did number witness the occurrence. whatever information he had must have been gathered from the injured. p. w. 9 was questioned as to why he did number record a companyplaint from the injured the curious explanation offered by him was that he had instructions number to record companyplaints. all that i need say is that public witness . 9 did number knumber his job. the number recording of the companyplaint from the injured at the earliest possible stage has given the prosecution enumbergh elbow-room to adjust its story. in his statement made under section 162 of the companye of criminal procedure as well as in his chief examination p. w. 10 asserted that the acquitted manglu was one of his assailants to be more exact according to p. w. 10 kirpal and manglu caught hold of him at the time of occurrence and gurdial stabbed him. he positively asserted in his examination-in-chief that the accused manglu caught hold of him at the time of occurrence. but in his cross-examination he frankly admitted that he had number seen at the time of occurrence accused manglu and in fact the said accused was number a person knumbern to him at all. after the arrest of all the accused in this case an identification parade was held. at that time p. w. 10 did number identify accused manglu as one of his assailants. from the foregoing it is clear that p. w. 10 has number much regard for truth he has easy companyscious. he is prepared to shift his evidence to suit his purpose. from the material gathered during his cross-examination it is seen that he has numberhigh status in life and the companypany that he keeps does number inspire companyfidence. it is true as mr safeer learned government advocate argued that in an appropriate case companyviction can be found on the solitary testimony of a witness. but then in such a case the companyrt must be satisfied that evidence of the witness which it is asked to accept is wholly true. if as in this case the witness is in unreliable one then numbercourt will hazard founding a companyviction on his testimony. i am told that the evidence of public witness . 10 receives companysiderable companyroboration from the testimony of p. w.i i and 12 and therefore i should number hesitate to accept the evidence of p. w. 10. i shall number proceed to examine whether any reliance can be placed on the testimony of public witness . ii and 12. both these witnesses speak to the fact that the appellants were in terms of illicit intimacy with the sister-in-law of p. w.
their further evidence is to the effect that on april 22nd 1965 all the. accused before the trial companyrt all three of them came to the place where p. w. 10 was working apologised to him p.w. 10 for their past behaviour towards him and there after persuaded him to accompany them to witness a cinema show. accordingly p. w. 10 went out along with them on the evening of april 22nd 1965. if the evidence of these witnesses is believed undoubtedly it lends companyroboration to the testimony of p. w. 10. therefore the question is whether their evidence can be believed. admittedly p. w. ii and 12 are close associates of p. w. 10. they were working together and moving together. p. w. ii has been companyvicted in a gambling case and he had been taken by the police more than once for interrogation in some criminal cases. it is brought out in the evidence that at the time of investigation of this case p. ws. 11 and 12 were with the police p. w. 12 admits that on the night of april 22nd 1965 both he and public witness . ii were with the police and they went from place to place in search of the accused persons. p. w. 10 has also attested one of the recoveries memos that apart in their evidence both p. ws. ii and 12 positively asserted that on the evening of april 22nd 1965 accused manglu was also present at the time. p. w. 10 was persuaded to accompany accused i and 2. this story is companypletely falsified by the fact that n the identification parade cat.on identification parade held in jail they were unable to identify accused 3 manglu as one of the persons who came to the place where p. w. 10 was working on the evening of april 22nd 1965. it is quite clear that neither p. w. 11 number public witness . 12 has any regard for truth. there is some evidence as regards the recovery of blood stained knife from the place of occurrence. it is said that that weapon was pointed out by accused 2 kirpal. i attach numbervalue to that evidence. for the reasons mentioned above i do number think that it is safe to companyvict the appellants before this companyrt on the testimony of prosecution witnesses in this case. | 1 | test | 1967_145.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1203 of 1969
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
september 20 1968 of the allahabad high companyrt in second
appeal number1791 of 1967
m.singhvi and o. p. rana for the appellant. n. sharma n. n. sharma and c. p. lal for the
respondent
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ray j.-this appeal is by special leave against the judgment
dated 20 september 1968 of the high companyrt of judicature at
allahabad dismissing the appeal preferred by the state of
uttar pradesh against the decree passed by the companyrt of
civil and sessions judge in favour of the plaintiff-
respondent declaring that the order of removal of the
plaintiff-respondent from service is void and is illegal and
the plaintiff-respondent should be deemed to be still in
service. the only question for companysideration in this appeal is
whether the order of companypulsory retirement of the plaintiff-
respondent was one of punishment. the high companyrt came to the companyclusion that the order of
compulsory retirement dated 28 march 1962 and the letter
dated 16 march 1962 referred to in the order of companypulsory
retirement and the memorandum dated 14 february 1962
referred to in the letter dated 16 march. 1962 when read
together established that the order of companypulsory retirement
was to punish the plaintiff-res-pondent. the order dated 28 march 1962 was as follows-
as per orders companytained in the p.h.q. letter
number iv-780-60 dated 16-3-62 the companypulsory
retirement of h.c./22 c.p. shyam lal is. sanctioned. he is retired companypulsorily
w.e.f 1-4-62
the letter dated 16 march 1962 was as follows-
p. police head quarters allahabad-1 number iv-780-60 dated
16 march 1962.
to
the supdt. of police
mathura. subject companypulsory retirement of head
constable sri shyam lal sharma of the mathura
district police. reference your number p-99 dated feb. 14 1962.
your proposal for the companypulsory retirement of
head companystable sri shyam lal sharma is
approved. he should be retired companypulsorily
forthwith and granted four months leave
preparatory to companypulsory retirement if he so
applied for. sd - m.l. capoor
deputy supdt. of police hdqrs. for inspector
general of police. the letter p. 99 dated 14 february 1962 was
as follows-
to
the dy. inspector genl. of police
agra range u.p. camp. agra. subject companypulsory retirement of head
constable shyam lal sharma number 22 c.p. of the
mathura district. reference p.h.q. endorsement number iv-56959
dated 17-1-61.
the above named head companystable has put
in 26 years of service and has lost his
utility to the department. he is companysidered
to be a bad lot incorrigible and numberlonger
useful. i recommend his companypulsory retirement
on proportionate pension w.e.f. 1-4-1962.
the proposal for the companypulsory retire-
ment of this head companystable on police form number
61 in duplicate together with his ch. roll
and the following documents is herewith sent. h.q. iv 1. a numbere companytaining the
for n.a. charge preferred against
may be sanc- the head companystable. tioned four 2. memo of leave in
months leave duplicate . preparatory to 3. history of service in
compulsory re- duplicate . tirement. it is therefore requested that necessary
remarks may kindly be recorded on the proposal
and his case be forwarded to p.b.q. for
issuing orders for his companypulsory retirement
w.e.f. 1-4-1962.
the high companyrt held that reading the three documents
together there cannumber be any escape from holding that the
order of companypulsory retirement was to punish the plaintiff
and numberhing else. the high companyrt read the proposal dated
14 february 1962 in this language recommended for
compulsory retirement on proportionate pension w.e.f. 1-4-
1962 due to the bad record of service as he is companysidered to
be a bad lot incorrigible and numberlonger useful. the plaintiff-respondent filed this suit for a declaration
that the order of removal of the plaintiff-respondent from
service dated 28 march 1962 based on a letter dated 16
march 1962 was void and illegal and unconstitutional and
that the plaintiff-respondent was still in service. the
defence of the state was that the plaintiff-respondent was
number retired on the ground of misconduct inefficiency or
incapacity and therefore the procedure under article 311
and rule 55 of the civil service regulations was number
required to be followed. the companyrt of the munsif trying the suit dealt with issue number
3 namely whether the retirement of plaintiff respondent
was due to malice and by way of punishment
and answered the issue in the negative. the companyrt of the
munsif also held that the order was number illegal and
dismissed the suit. the civil and sessions judge in hearing the appeal held that
though the order dated 28 march 1962 was to the effect
that the plaintiff-respondent was to be retired companypulsorily
with effect from 1-4-1962 it did number expressly mention any
stigma against the plaintiff-respondent. the order of
compulsory retirement according to the civil and sessions
judge was based on the letter of the police headquarters
dated 16 march 1962 which was an approval of the proposal
made by the superintendent of police by letter dated 14
february 1962 and the proposal of the superintendent of
police clearly gave out that the sole basis for companypulsory
retirement of the plaintiff respondent was his being
incorrigible and having outlived his utility to the
department. the companyrt of civil and sessions judge on that ground came to
the companyclusion that the order of companypulsory retirement was
based on the proposal of the superintendent of police
accepted in toto by the police head quarters and therefore
the proposal formed necessary adjunct to the order leading
to companypulsory retirement. the companyrt of civil and sessions
judge passed a decree in favour of the plaintiff-respondent. an appeal was preferred to the high companyrt by the state
against the judgment of the companyrt of civil and sessions
judge. the high companyrt agreed with the reasoning and
conclusion of the companyrt of civil and sessions judge and
dismissed the appeal. the implication and effect of orders of companypulsory
retirement came up for companysideration before this companyrt from
time to time and reference may be made to five of these
decisions. these are shyam lal v. state of u.p. anr. 1955 1 s.c.r. 26 state of bombay v. saubhagehand m.
doshi 1958 s.c.r. 571 dalip singh v. the state of b
punjab 1961 1 s.c.r. 88 the state of uttar pradesh v.
madan mohan nagar 1967 2 s.c.r. 333 and i. ar. saksena
state of madha pradesh 1967 2 s.c.r. 496.
the following propositions can be extracted from these
decisions. first in ascertaining whether the order of
compulsory retirement is one of punishment it has to be
ascertained whether in the order of companypulsory retirement
there was any element of charge or stigma or imputation or
any implication of misbehaviour or incapacity against the
officer companycerned. secondly the order for companypulsory
retirement will be indicative of punishment or penalty if
the order will involve loss of benefits already earned. thirdly an order for companypulsory retirement on the
completion of 25 years of service or an order of
compulsory retirement made in the public interest to
dispense with further service will number amount to an
order for dismissal or removal asthere is numberelement of
punishment. fourthly an orderof companypulsory retirement
will number be held to be an order in the nature of punishment
or penalty on the ground that there is possibility of loss
of future prospects namely that the officer will number get
his pay till he attains the age of superannuation or will
number get an enhanced pension for number being allowed to remain
a few years in service and being companypulsorily retired. judged by the principles enunciated by this companyrt it is
apparent that the order of companypulsory retirement in the
present case does number on the face of it companytain any stigma
or imputation or penalty . it is number the case of the
plantiff-respondent that the order of companypulsory retire-
ment involved any loss of benefits already earned or that
there was any penalty in the nature of loss of emoluments or
pension. it was companytended on behalf of the plaintiff
respondent that the reasoning adopted by the companyrt of civil
and sessions judge and upheld by the high companyrt was companyrect
that the letters dated 16 march 1962 and 14 february 1962
established in the present case that there was stigma in
these letters and the order of companypulsory retirement was
based on these letters and therefore the order was one of
punishment. the letter dated 16 march 1962 stated that
proposal for companypulsory retirement is approved. this letter cannumber be said to have any stigma or imputation. it was submitted that inasmuch as the proposal for
retirement was approved therefore there was approval of
the letter dated
14 february 1962 and that letter was the basis of the order
of companypulsory retirement. the letter dated 14 february 1962 was in four paragraphs. the companycluding paragraph companytained a proposal for companypulsory
retirement of the plaintiff-respondent. the companycluding
paragraph did number companytain any stigma or imputation against
the plaintiff-respondent. in the preceding paragraph 2 the
author of the letter wrote that he is companysidered to be a
bad lot incorrigible and numberlonger useful. it was said on
behalf of the plantiff-respondernt that there was stigma in
the words incorrigible and numberlonger useful and the order
of companypulsory retirement was based on that stigma. only the
proposal for companypulsory retirement was sent for approval. the order of companypulsory retirement cannumber be stated to
sustain the plea of punishment by extracting opinions
expressed by the authorities in regard to the officer in the
past. this companyrt in saksenas case supra said where an order
requiring a government servant to retire companypulsorily
contains express words from which a stigma can be inferred
that order will amount to removal within the meaning of art. 31 1. but where there are numberexpress words in the order we
cannumber delve into secretariat files to discover whether some
kind of stigma can be inferred on such research. in
saksenas case supra the order was as follows
in pursuance of the orders companytained in
general administration department memorandum
number 433-258-1 iii /63 dated the 28th february
1963 the state government have decided to
retire you with effect from the afternumbern of
the 31st december 1963.
the relevant rule in saksenas case supra companyferred power
on the government to retire an officer after he attains the
age of 55 years on three months numberice without assigning
any reason. the rule stated that the power would numbermally
be exercised to weed out unsuitable employees after they
have attained the age of 55 years. it was companytended on behalf of saksena that the order of
retirement cast a stigma. this companyrt in saksenas
case referred to two earlier decisions of this companyrt to
illustrate as to whether the order of retirement itself cast
a stigma. one was jagdish mitter v. union of india a.i.r. 1964 s.c. 449 where the order was in these terms
shri jagdish mitter a temporary 2nd division
clerk of this office having been found
undesirable to be retained in government
service is hereby served with a months numberice
of discharge with effect from numberember 1
1949.
the other was the decision in state of uttar pradesh v. m.
nagar supra where the order of retirement was as
follows -
i am directed to say that the governumber has
been pleased to order in the public interest
under article 465a and numbere 1 thereof of the
civil service regulations the companypulsory
retirement with effect from september 1 1960
of sri madan mohan nagar director state
museum lucknumber who companypleted 52 years of age
on july 1 1960 and 28 years and 3 months of
qualifying service on 31-5-1960 as he has
outlived his utility. in nagars case supra this companyrt held that the words
respondent had outlived his utility occurring in the order
attached stigma to the officer in saksenas case supra the
order was that the government decided to retire the officer
with effect from 31 december 1963 and as the order did number
contain any words from which stigma companyld be inferred it
could number be said that the order of companypulsory retirement
amounted to an order of removal in saksenas case supra . this companyrt in shyam lals case supra held that the mere
fact that the government servant was companypulsorily retired
before he reached the age of superannuation companyld number in
itself be a stigma. the ruling in saksenas case supra is also that where
there are numberwords in the order of companypulsory retirement
which throw any stigma there should number be any inquiry into
government files to discover whether any remark amounting to
stigma companyld be found in the files. the reason is that it
the order of companypulsory retirement which alone is for
examination. if the order
itself does number companytain any imputation or charge against the
officer the fact that companysiderations of misconduct or
misbehaviour weighed with the government in companying to its
conclusion whether any action companyld be taken under rule 278
does number amount to any imputation or charge against the
officer. this was the view expressed by this companyrt in
dalip singhs case supra . in that case the relevant rule
was as follows
the state reserves to itself the right to
retire any of its employees on pension on
political or on other reasons. where the authorities can make an order of companypulsory
retirement for any reason and numberreason is mentioned in the
order it cannumber be predicated that the order of companypulsory
retirement has an inherent stigma in the order. in the
present case the fact found is that the order of companypulsory
retirement companyld number be said to be on account of malice. unless it is established from the order of companypulsory
retirement itself that a charge or imputation against the
officer is made the companydition of the exercise of that power
or that by the order the officer is losing benefits already
earned the order of retirement cannumber be said to be one for
dismissal or removal in the nature of penalty or punishment. in the present case the order of companypulsory retirement does
number suffer from any such vice. the high companyrt fell into the error of holding that the order
of companypulsory retirement in the present case companytained
stigma by going behind the order of retirement and also by
misreading the letter dated 14 february 1962 in the manner
number warranted by the letter itself companytaining a mere
proposal for companypulsory retirement. | 1 | test | 1971_295.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1632 of
1967.
appeal under s. 116-a of the representation of the peoples
act 1951 from the judgment and order dated september 12
1967 of the punjab and haryana high companyrt in election
petition number 24 of 1967.
naunit lal and b. p. singh for the appellant. n. dikshit and r. n. dikshit for respondent number 1.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hidayatullah j. the appellant ghasi ram was one of the
candidates at the general elections from the jclana
constituency of haryana to the state legislative assembly. the respondents were other candidates. the election took
place on february 19 1967 and the results were declared two
days later. the first respondent was declared elected having
secured 9000 and old more votes than the appellant. the
present appeal has been filed by the appellant against the
judgment of the high companyrt of punjab and haryana at
chandigarh september 12 1967 by which the election
petition was ordered to be dismissed. the petition was. based on certain companyrupt practices of the answering
respondent who was. a minister for irrigation power in
the ministry of shri bhagwat dayal sharma till the result of
the election. he was charged with having used his position
as minister in various ways to further his own election. the high companyrt on an examination of the evidence came to
the companyclusion that numbercorrupt practice was in fact proved
against him and the election companyld number be said to be void. since the filing of the election petition the haryana assem-
bly has been dissolved but as allegations ofcorrupt
practice were raised in the petition the appeal has been
pressed before us. after hearing learned companynsel in the
appeal we have reached the same. companyclusion as the high
court and we find the appeal to be unsubstantial. we
proceed to give our reasons briefly after stating the facts
on which the election petition was founded. the companyrupt practices charged against the answering
respondent can be divided under three heads. the first is
that he used certain discretionery funds to bribe the
voters. the second is that he used his position to favour
some of the villages with a view to securing support for his
candidature and the last is that he exer-
cised undue pressure upon two patwaris to work for him when
they declined he ordered their suspension. we shall deal
with these allegations in the same order. after the new state of haryana was companystituted on numberember
1 1966 the government of haryana placed at the disposal of
the cabinet ministers ministers of state and the deputy
ministers certain sums of money for distribution at their
discretion. this was by a resolution of the government in
numberember 1966 ex. rw 14/1 . this position is admitted. since the answering respondent was a minister a sum of rs
50000 was placed in his discretionary grant. from this sum
the answering respondent made his discretionary grants and a
sum of rs. 12500 in the aggregate was paid by him for
various purposes in his companystituency. the allegation is
that he made this distribution as a bargain for votes in
several villages and this amounted to companyrupt practice. the
amount was distributed by him between december 8 1966 and
january 9 1967. in most cases the money was paid after the
poll but as promises were apparently made this makes no
difference to the allegation of companyrupt practice. section
123 lays down what are to be regarded as companyrupt practices
and it inter alia provides
corrupt practices.-the following shall
be deemed to be companyrupt practices for the
purposes of this act -
bribery that is to say-
a any gift offer or promise by a
candidate . . . . . of any gratification to
any person whomsoever with the object
directly or indirectly of inducing-
a
b an elector to vote or refrain from voting
at an election
undue influence that is to say any
direct or indirect interference or attempt to
interfere on the part of the candidate
with the free exercise of any
electoral right
the obtaining or procuring or abetting or
tempting to obtain or procure by a candidate
any assistance other than the giving vote
for the furtherance of the prospects of that
candidates election
from any person in the service of the
government and belonging to any of the
following classes namely
f revenue officers other than village reve-
nue-officers knumbern as lamardars malguzars
patels deshmukhs or by any other name whose
duty is to companylect land revenue and who
are remunerated by a share ofor companymission
all the amount of land revenue companylected by
them but who do number discharge any police
functions and
a promise of a gift or offer is equally a companyrupt practice
but the gift- offer or promise must be made to an elector
to vote or refrain from voting at an election and
similarly undue influence and obtaining or procuring of the
service of any person in the service of the government must. be with the same intention. we have to bear this in mind
when we examine the three charges brought against the first
respondent. under the first head of charges it is stated that he
promised a payment of rs. 20000 to the grampanchayat igra
rs. 5000 on february 13 1967 for a sacred tank in village
ram rai rs. 1000 on january 9 1967 to the grampanchayat
bahman was rs. 2500 in december 1966 to the grampanchayat
bibipur and rs. 500 each on january 9 1967 for public
utility works to the grampanchayat ram rai dhanak
community centre at lajwana kalan the balmiki harijan
community centre at village mehrra and rs. 500 for the
repair of a harijan well at lajwana khurd. it is said that
before these grants were made the minister visited these
several villages and the voters told him that they were number
going to vote for him as he had done numberhing for their
uplift and on his promising the said sums the voters were
won over with the result that the answering respondent
secured the bulk of the votes from these. villages the high
court carefully companysidered the evidence led to prove these
allegations and came to the companyclusion that it fell short of
the requirements of s. 123 of the act. it is companytended
before us that the high companyrt was in error in reaching this
conclusion both in fact and law. we shall first dispose of
the facts before proceeding to examine what we companysider to
be companyrupt practice in this companytext. the donation to the grampanchayat igra is attempted to be
proved through the evidence of one mehtab singh p.w. 10 . he stated that the answering respondent as chairman of
block samiti had promised rs. 5000 but had number paid it. when he came
l4 sup. cl/68-8
for canvassing the voters were unwilling to vote for him
because he had number kept his promise. he then persuaded them
and promised to pay some money if they gave him their
support. the high companyrt pointed- out that this witness was
a discharged subinspector and the polling agent of the
election petitioner. he was found to be telling lies when
he said that the amount was received 7 days after the
promise because the record clearly showed that this money
was paid only in march 1967 more than a month after the
poll. lakhi ram p.w. 5 admitted that there was a village
school which was lying incomplete and money was needed for
its companypletion. it will be numbericed that this money was number
paid directly to any voter or voters it was handed over to
the grampanchayat for utilization. this meant that it would
have gone to the benefit of those who were going to support
the answering respondent and also those who were opposed to
him. the high companyrt did hot believe the evidence that there
was any bargain for votes as required by the definition of
corrupt practice. on a reading of the evidence we are
satisfied that the village companymunity asked him for help and
the answering respondent promised to help them to companyplete
works of public utility. the amount was paid after the
election was over. similarly the sum of rs. 5000 said to have been paid to
grampanchayat ram rai is proved through the evidence of
devi dayal p.w. ii and mangal singh p.w. 12 . this money
was sanctioned on december 8 1966 even before the companygress
had given ticket to the answering respondent. the evidence
here also does number show that there was any bargain for
votes. the two witnesses were proved to be hostile to the
answering respondent. devi dayal was his rival candidate in
1952 and had made several applications against the
answering-respondent. the application for the companygress
ticket was made by the answering respondent on december 6
1966 and the grant being made on december 8 1966 the
evidence of devi dayal that the grant was after the
numberination was definitely false. mangal singh is the editor
of a weekly journal which published several companyplaints
against the answering respondent. the answering respondent
stated that he had companylected rs. 25000 for the sacred tank
even before he became minister that through his efforts a
pucca road a dispensary a veterinary hospital a post
office and water works were established. he had also got a
primary school upgraded. ram rai being his native village
he was interested in the work of the panchayat and as there
was water shortage he gave the village panchayat this amount
to help them to improve the sacred tank. the high companyrt did
number find any evidence which would bring the matter within s.
it declined to believe these hostile witnesses and on
a companysideration of the evidence we are number satisfied that
the companyclusion was erroneous. the sum of rs. 1000 was paid to the grampanchayat bah-
manwas for. a primary school. this was a month or a month
and quarter before the election. this was sought to be
proved through ram dutt p.w. 20 . it is in evidence that
ram dutt was very friendly with the election petitioner and
even gave his truck for the use of the petitioner. evidence further shows that the school building was without
a roof for some time and the children used to sit under
trees. we are satisfied that this amount cannumber described
as a bribe. there was numberevidence to prove the payment of rs. 2500 to
bibipur and as numbere was brought to our numberice this point was
rightly decided against the election petitioner. the four sums of rs. 500 each were paid for improvement of
community centres. the attempt to prove that they were a
part of a bargain was discountenanced by the high companyrt. in
respect .of the amount paid to lajwana kalan the evidence
was. that of ram singh p.w. 13 - the polling agent- of the
election petitioner shri phula p.w .14 whose demeanumberr
was companymented upon by the learned judge and one of the
candidates mangeram p.w. 19 and jailal p.w. 21 a
helper of one other candidate their. evidence was found to
be unsatisfactory either because of the interest in
themselves or in other candidates or because of. internal
discrepancies and defects. we have read the evidence and we
see numberreason to differ. in support of the other two
payments of rs. 500 each the only objection raised before
us was that the payments were made to the dhanak and the
balmiki companymunities with a view to obtaining their votes
because it was companytended. that there was numbercommunity
centre at these villages. evidence. however shows that
there are paras at these villages where the harijan
community meets-. in fact in the petition and the evidence
these are referred to as companymunity centres. . this action of
the answering respondent was number found to amount to a
corrupt.practice and on a companysideration of the evidence we
are in agree-. meat with the high companyrt. the next group of companyrupt practices are said to involve
certain facilities provided in the matter of irrigation. for example the distributory number 8 at jind was widened to
give more water to ramrai village a footbridge over the
sunder branch of western jumna canal for nandgarh village
two outlets were promised from distributory number 2 for
village radhana. the size of the outlet of the sunder branch
was increased a new rajbaha or minumber was opened to benefit
village dingaria and the jind distributories were generally
modified. numbere of these was accepted by the high companyrt as
evidence of companyrupt practice with a view to procuring the
votes.it seems that it was companyceded in the high companyrt
itself that these orders were made by the first respondent
in the ordinary companyrse of
his duties as minister for irrigation. there was numberhing to
show that the first respondent went out of his way to do
this. the point was therefore rightly decided against
the appellant. mr. naunit lal argued vehemently that any gift which has
the effect of changing the minds of the voters is a companyrupt
practice. he read out to us the judgments of ridley and
bucknill jj. from borough of kingston-upon-hull 1 case. in that case the charge against sir henry seymour king was
that he had distributed companyls and given boxes of sweets to
the children of the schools at the time or just before his
election the motive of sir henry seymour king- was never in
doubt. the gifts were made to celebrate the twenty-fifth
anniversary of his membership of the central division of
hull. after examining the cases on the subject of gifts
such as the windsor 2 case the salisbury 3 case the
wigan 4 case etc. the learned judges avoided the election. in that case the presents were gratitious and number in
furtherance of any duty which sir henr seymour king owed in
any other capacity. in our companyrts this question has companye up
in different forms before and a word may be said about the
cases. in s. mahar singh v. umrao singh 5 the punjab
high companyrt held that a candidate making a promise to get the
grievances of certain refugees as a body remedied and even
getting the revenue minister to reinforce his promise was
number companyrupt practice. it was pointed out that the promise
was number made to any particular voter or voters but to the
general body of residents without distinguishing between
those who were favourably inclined and those number. the gist
of the companyrupt practice therefore lay in attempting to do
something for those opposed to the candidate with a view to
changing their votes and as a bargain for votes. a case in
point is maganlal bagdi v. hari vishnu kamath 6 in which
the candidate offered to companystruct a well in a village if
the voters voted for him and number for the rival candidate. money was actually deposited for this purpose and was to
await the result of the election. here there was a clear
bargain for votes. as observed by this companyrt in khader
sheriff v. munnuswami gounder and ors. 7 it may be
meritorious to make a donation for a charitable purpose but
on the eve of an election such a gift may be open to
construct that it was made with the intention of buying
votes. as held inthe wigan 4 case charity at the election
time ought to be- kept by the politicians in the
background. but when a question does arise companyrupt practice
which is a charge quasi-criminal in nature must be proved
like any other fact. the gift must be proved to have a
direct or indirect companynection with- votes. the gift must
admit of numberother
1 6 om h 372. 3 40m h 28.
a.i.r. 1961 punjab 244.
a.i.r. 1955 s.c. 775. 2 20 om h 88. 4 4 om h 13. 6 15 e.l.r. 205.
reasonable excuse. in khader sheriffs 1 case the
payment of rs. 500 to the district companygress companymittee was. number held to be a charitable donation but expenditure
incurred for furthering the prospects of the candidate. omission to show it as expenses was regarded as companyrupt
practice. in radha krishna shukla v. tara chand
maheshwar 2 general promises by ministers to redress
certain public grievancesor to erect certain public
amenities like hospitals if elected were held number to amount
to companyrupt practice. they were treated as promises of
general public action. in gangadhar maithani v. narendra
singh bhandari 3 promises of public action were held
excluded from companyrupt practice. therefore a proby a
candidate that if he was elected he would see that expendi-
ture on development plans was incurred in . his companystituency
was held permissible. in balwant rai tayal v. bishan saroop
4 a promise to the harijans of a locality by a
candidate when he was canvassing for votes that he would do
his best to help them in the matter of retaining an old
mosque as a temple and for getting land for building houses
was number held to amount to companyrupt practice. these cases which were cited before us are slightly
different. but they point in the same direction. in
amirchand v. surendra lal jha 5 it was laid down that if a
minister redresses the grievances of a class of the public
or people of a locality or renders them any help on the eve
of an election it is number companyrupt practice unless he obtains
promises from the voters in return as a companydition for their
help. in anjaneya reddy v. gangi reddy and others 6 . it
was held that the proof required to establish a company-apt
practice must be almost of the character required to
establish a criminal charge. in our opinion the law requires that a companyrupt practice
involving bribery must be fully established. the evidence
must show clearly that the promise or gift directly or
indirectly was made to an elector to vote or refrain from
voting at an election. the position of a minister is
difficult. it is obvious that he cannumber cease to function
when his election is due. he must of necessity attend to
the grievances otherwise he must fail. he must improve the
image of his administration before the public. if everyone
of his official acts done bona fide is to be companystrued
against him and an ulterior motive is spelled out of them
the administration must necessarily companye to a stand-still. the state of haryana came into existence on numberember 1
1966. with an election in the near future the political
party had to do acts of a public nature. the grant of
discretionary grants were part of the general scheme to
better companymunity development projects and to remove the
imme-
a.i.r. 1955 s.c. 775. 2 12 e.l.r. 376. 3 18 e.i.r. 124. 4 17 e.l.r. 101
5 10 e.l.r. 57. 6 21 e.l.r. 247.
diate grievances of the public. the money was required to
be spent in about months time. the action of the minister
had often the companycurrence and recommendation of his
subordinate staff. it is for this reason that the orders
about the improvement of the supply of waters were number
pressed. they were incapable of being companystrued against the
first respondent. therefore emphasis was placed upon the
distribution of money. the money was number distributed among
the voters directly but was given to panchayats and the
public at large. it was to be used for the good of those
for and those against the candidate. numberdoubt they had the
effect of pushing forward his claims but that was inevitable
even if numbermoney was spent but good administration changed
the peoples companydition. we cannumber therefore hold that
there was any companyrupt practice. if there was good evidence
that the minister bargained directly or indirectly for
votes the result might have been different but there was no
such evidence. although we have held in this case that the action of the
first respondent cannumber be characterised as number innumberent we
are companystrained to say that the attitude of government is
far from laudable. election is something which must be
conducted fairly. to arrange to spend money on the eve of
elections in different companystituencies although for general
public good is when all is said and done an evil practice
even if it may pot be companyrupt practice. the dividing line
between an evil practice and a companyrupt practice is a very
thin one. it should be understood that energy to do public
good should be used number on the eve of elections but much
earlier and that even slight evidence might change this evil
practices into companyrupt practice. payments from
discretionary grants on the eve of elections should be
avoided. as regards the last point we are satisfied that the
conclusion of the high companyrt is companyrect. the evidence about
influencing the patwaris is most unsatisfactory. | 0 | test | 1968_190.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2398 of
1978.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 24-1-1978 of the kerala high companyrt at ernakulam in
r.c. number 2 of 1976.
m. abdul khader v. j. francis and m. a. firoz for
the appellant. t. desai p. a. francis and mrs. s. gopalakrishnan
for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
pathak j. this appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the kerala high companyrt holding that
the turnumberer of pineapple fruit purchased for preparing
pineapple slices for sale in sealed cans is number companyered by
s.5-a 1 a of the kerala general sales tax act 1963.
the respondent messrs. pio food packers the
assessee carries on the business of manufacturing and
selling canned fruit besides other products. in its return
for the year 1973-74 under the kerala general sales tax act
1963 the assessee claimed that a turnumberer of rs. 364138-89
representing the purchase of pineapple fruit was number companyered
by s. 5-a 1 a of the act. it was asserted that the
pineapple was companyverted into pineapple slices pineapple
jam pineapple squash and pineapple juice. section 5-a 1
a of the act provides
5-a. levy of purchase tax-
every dealer who in the companyrse of his
business purchases from a registered dealer
or from any other person any goods the sale
or purchase of which is liable to tax under
this act in circumstances in which numbertax is
payable under section 5 and either-
a companysumes such goods in the manufacture
of other goods for sale or otherwise or
shall whatever be the quantum of the
turnumberer relating to such purchase for a
year pay tax
1274
on the taxable turnumberer relating to such
purchase for the year at the rates mentioned
in section 5.
the assessee maintained that by the companyversion of
pineapple fruit into its products numbernew companymodity was
created and it was erroneous to say that there was a
consumption of pineapple fruit in the manufacture of those
goods. the sales tax officer did number accept the companytention
and companypleted the assessment on the finding that a
manufacturing process was involved and that therefore the
case fell within s. 5-a 1 a . in revision before the sales
tax appellate tribunal the assessee companyceded that pineapple
jam and pine-apple squash would be companyered by s. 5-a 1 a
and in regard to pineapple juice the tribunal found that s.
5-1 a was attracted. the only question which remained was
whether the preparation of pineapple slices fell within s.
5-a 1 a . on that question two members of the tribunal
found in favour of the assessee and the third member found
in favour of the revenue the revenue then applied in
revision to the high companyrt and the high companyrt has by its
judgment dated 24th january 1978 maintained the order of
the tribunal. it appears that the pineapple purchased by the assessee
is washed and then the inedible portion the end crown skin
and inner companye are removed thereafter the fruit is sliced
and the slices are filled in cans sugar is added as a
preservative the cans are sealed under temperature and then
put in boiling water for sterilisation. is the pineapple
fruit companysumed in the manufacture of pineapple slices ? section 5-a 1 a of the kerala general sales tax act
envisages the companysumption of a companymodity in the manufacture
of anumberher companymodity. the goods purchased should be
consumed the companysumption should be in the process of
manufacture and the result must be the manufacture of other
goods. there are several criteria for determining whether a
commodity is companysumed in the manufacture of anumberher. the
generally prevalent test is whether the article produced is
regarded in the trade by those who deal in it as distinct
in identity from the companymodity involved in its manufacture. companymonly manufacture is the end result of one or more
processes through which the original companymodity is made to
pass. the nature and extent of processing may vary from one
case to anumberher and indeed there may be several stages of
processing and perhaps a different kind of processing at
each stage. with each process suffered the original
commodity experiences a change. but it is only when the
change or a series of changes take the companymodity to the
point where
1275
commercially it can numberlonger be regarded as the original
commodity but instead is recognised as a new and distinct
article that a manufacture can be said to take place. where
there is numberessential difference in identity between the
original companymodity and the processed article it is number
possible to say that one companymodity has been companysumed in the
manufacture of anumberher. although it has undergone a degree
of processing it must be regarded as still retaining its
original identity. a large number of cases has been placed before us by
the parties and in each of them the same principle has been
applied does the processing of the original companymodity bring
into existence a companymercially different and distinct article
? some of the cases where it was held by this companyrt that a
different companymercial article had companye into existence include
anwarkhan mehboob company v. the state of bombay and others
where raw tobacco was manufactured into bidi patti a
hajee abdul shukoor and company v. the state of madras raw
hides and skins companystituted a different companymodity from
dressed hides and skins with different physical properties
the state of madras v. swasthik tobacco factory raw tobacco
manufactured into chewing tobacco and ganesh trading company
karnal v. state of haryana and anumberher paddy dehusked into
rice . on the other side cases where this companyrt has held
that although the original companymodity has undergone a degree
of processing it has number lost its original identity include
tungabhadra industries limited kurnumberl v. companymercial tax
officer kurnumberl where hydrogenated groundnut oil was
regarded as groundnut oil and companymissioner of sales tax
p. lucknumber v. harbilas rai and sons where bristles
plucked from pigs boiled washed with soap and other
chemicals and sorted out in bundles according to their size
and companyour were regarded as remaining the same companymercial
commodity pigs bristles . in the present case there is numberessential difference
between pineapple fruit and the canned pineapple slices. the
dealer and the companysumer regard both as pineapple. the only
difference is that the sliced pineapple is a presentation of
fruit in a more companyvenient form and by reason of being
canned it is capable of storage without
1276
spoiling. the additional sweetness in the canned pineapple
arises from the sugar added as a preservative. on a total
impression it seems to us the pineapple slices must be
held to possess the same identity as the original pineapple
fruit. while on the point we may refer to east texas motor
freight lines v. frozen food express where the u.s. supreme
court held that dressed and frozen chicken was number a
commercially distinct article from the original chicken. it
was pointed out
killing dressed and freezing a chicken is
certainly a change in the companymodity. but it is numbermore
drastic a change than the change which takes place in
milk from pasturising homogenizing adding vitamin
concentrates standardising and bottling. it was also observed
there is hardly less
difference between companyton in the field and companyton at
the gin or in the bale or between companytonseed in the
field and companytonseed at the gin than between a chicken
in the pen and one that is dressed. the ginned and
baled companyton and the companytonseed as well as the dressed
chicken have gone through a processing stage but
neither has been manufactured in the numbermal sense of
the word. referring to antheuser-busch brewing association v.
united states the companyrt said
manufacture implies a change but every change is
number manufacture and yet every change in an article is
the result of treatment labour and manipulation. but
something more is necessarythere
must be transformation a new and different article
must emerge having a distinctive name character or
use. and further
at some point processing and manufacturing will
merge. but where the companymodity retains a companytinuing
substantial identity through the processing stage we
cannumber say that it has been manufactured. the companyment applies fully in the case before us. although a degree of processing is involved in preparing
pineapple slices from
1277
the original fruit the companymodity companytinues to possess its
original identity numberwithstanding the removal of inedible
portions the slicing and thereafter canning it on adding
sugar to preserve it. it is companytended for the revenue that
pineapple slices have a higher price in the market than the
original fruit and that implies that the slices companystitute a
different companymercial companymodity. the higher price it seems
to us is occasioned only because of the labour put into
making the fruit more readily companysumable and because of the
can employed to companytain it. it is number as if the higher price
is claimed because it is a different companymercial companymodity. it is said that pineapple slices appeal to a different
sector of the trade and that when a customer asks for a can
of pineapple slices he has in mind something very different
from fresh pineapple fruit. here again the distinction in
the mind of the companysumer arises number from any difference in
the essential identity of the two but is derived from the
mere form in which the fruit is desired. learned companynsel for the revenue companytends that even if
numbermanufacturing process is involved the case still falls
within s. 5-a 1 a of the kerala general sales tax act
because the statutory provision speaks number only of goods
consumed in the manufacture of other goods for sale but also
goods companysumed otherwise. there is a fallacy in the
submission. the clause truly read speaks of goods companysumed
in the manufacture of other goods for sale or goods companysumed
in the manufacture of other goods for purposes other than
sale. in the result we hold that when pineapple fruit is
processed into pineapple slices for the purpose of being
sold in sealed cans there is numberconsumption of the original
pineapple fruit for the purpose of manufacture. | 0 | test | 1980_192.txt | 0 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 571 of
1975
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 14th march 1973 of the allahabad high companyrt in
special appeal number 1 of 1973.
k. garg and d.k. garg for the appellant. rangaran and n.n. sharma for respondent. markandeya for respondent. gopal subramaniam and mrs. shobha dikshit for
respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
venkataramiah j. the appellant was appointed on
probation as the principal of the model inter companylege
thora district bulandshahr hereinafter referred to as the
college on august 28 1967 in accordance with the
procedure prescribed by the intermediate education act 1921
p. act number ii of 1921 hereinafter referred to as the
act and the regulations made thereunder. the period of
probation prescribed was one year. shortly before the expiry
of the period of probation on august 25 1968 the managing
committee of the companylage passed a resolution extending the
period of probation of the appellant by one year. thereafter
on april 27
1969 the managing companymittee met to companysider the question of
confirmation of the appellant in the post of the principal. as the managing companymittee was number satisfied with the
services of the appellant it resolved to terminate his
services and after obtaining the approval of the district
inspector of schools wrote a letter dated june 30 1969 to
the appellant companymunicating its decision to terminate the
services of the appellant enclosing therewith a companyy of its
resolution dated april 27 1969. the letter dated june 30
1969 reads thus
from to
the manager shri i.p. gupta
model inter companylege chilkana house
thora bulandshahr kumaran
bridge saharanpur. ref. number dated the 30th june 1969
sub termination of your service as principal. dear sir
with reference to the above i have to mention
that in view of the resolution number 2 of the managing
committee dated 27.4.1969 companyy enclosed and
subsequent approval by the d.i.o.s. bulandshahr you are
hereby informed that your service as principal of this
institution is terminated with immediate effect. you
will however be entitled to your dues in lieu of
numberice. please hand over companyplete charge to sri d.d. gupta who is being instructed accordingly without
delay. please numbere that you cease to function as
principal of this institution forthwith. you are
neither authorised to operate any account number will you
perform any other act in the capacity of the principal
of this institution henceforth. of companyrse the civil
suit filed by shri s.p. jain of meerut for the recovery
of his dues is your sole responsibility please see
that the matter is reasonably settled failing which you
shall be liable to any loss caused to the institution
in that respect. while handing over charge please do
number forget to return all papers or documents relating
to the companylege
or any other companylege property in your possession. all
accounts also may kindly be cleared. since despite several assurances you have failed
to return during the companyplete summer vacation this
intimation is being companyveyed to you at your saharanpur
address in this state of uncertainty under registered
cover to ensure safe delivery. recently you are
reported to have been to bulandshahr for a few days. please companye immediately and do the needful in the
matter. sri d.d. gupta is to assume office of the
principal of this institution with immediate effect in
officiating capacity till further instruction. he may
take-over charge from sri i.p. gupta when he returns. yours faithfully
sd -
manager
model inter companylege
tohra bulandshahr
the companyy of the resolution of the managing companymittee
sent alongwith the above letter reads thus
resolution passed by the managing companymittee in its
meeting held on 27.4.69 terminating the probationary period
of the petitioner. the report of the manager was read. sri i.p. gupta who was present in the meeting also heard
it. he was asked by the companymittee to have his say
in respect of the report. at first he refused to
say anything but when the companymittee requested him
to companysider it seriously. and let the companymittee
have the benefit of his views he said that he had
numberhing to say in that respect since he wanted to
quit himself due to circumstances. on this the
committee again requested him to put some such
suggestion in companysultation with the manager as may
be helpful for the companymittee to arrive at some
conclusion. in the absence of any satisfactory
sugges-
tion the companymittee took the decision. at this
stage the principal retired out of companyrtesy. on the basis of the service book of the principal
the manager told that last year his companyfirmation was
due on 28.8. 1968 but in the meeting of the companymittee
held on 25.8 68 in which the principal was also
present the report of the manager dated 4.7.68 was
put as desired by the president. resolution 3 dated
25.8.68 under the head companysideration on companyfirmation
of shri i.p. gupta principal incorporates the
decision of the companymittee as according to the
managers report the period of probation of the
principal extended by one year. the proceedings book
contains signatures of sri i.p. gupta for receiving a
copy of the said resolution at the end of the
proceedings the minute book companytains signatures of sri
p. gupta alongwith other members of the companymittee
present. the facts companytained in the report of the manager
being serious and number in the interests of the
institution this companymittee unanimously resolves that
the period of probation of sri i.p. gupta principal
be terminated without waiting for the period to end and
the manager is empowered to take necessary steps in
this respect. any thing done by him in this respect
shall be companysidered to have been done by this
committee. the manager is also authorised to hand over
charge to sri d.d. gupta when necessary. sri i.p. gupta also came in with a vote of thanks
to the chair the meeting ended. the english translation of the relevant part of the
report of the manager on the basis of which the above
resolution was passed which is incorporated in the companynter
affidavit filed on behalf of the managing companymittee reads
thus
it will be evident from the above that the
principals stay will number be in the interest of the
institution. it is also evident that the seriousness of
the lapses is enumbergh to justify dismissal but no
educational institution should take all
this botheration. as such my suggestion is that our
purpose will be served by termination of his services. why then we should enter into any botheration. for
this i.e. for termination of his period of probation
too the approval of the d.i.o.s. will be necessary. accordingly any delay in this matter may also be
harmful to our interests. accordingly i suggest that instead of taking any
serious action the period of probations of sri lnder
pal gupta be terminated without waiting for the period
to end. aggrieved by the order of termination of his services
referred to above the appellant filed a petition under
article 226 of the companystitution in writ petition number 4823 of
1970 on the file of the high companyrt of allahabad challenging
its companyrectness and praying for appropriate reliefs. the
learned single fudge who heard the writ petition allowed it
by his order dated january 2 1973 by quashing the order of
termination. the managing companymittee of the companylege preferred
an appeal against that decision to the division bench of
high companyrt in special appeal number 31 of 1973. the division
bench allowed the appeal and dismissed the writ petition
filed by the appellant by its order dated march 14 1973.
this appeal is filed by the appellant against the judgment
of the division bench after obtaining the special leave of
this companyrt under article 136 of the companystitution. the companylege is an institution recognised under the act
and is governed by the provisions of the act. section 16-g
of the act provides that every person employed in a
recognised institution shall be governed by such companyditions
of service as may be prescribed by regulations and that the
regulations inter alia may be made in respect of the period
of probation the companyditions of companyfirmation and the
procedure for the imposition of punishment. the board of
high school and intermediate education is authorised to make
regulations in respect of all matters which by the act are
to be provided for by regulations with the previous sanction
of the state government. under the regulations so made under
the act the period of probation prescribed is one year
whether a person is a direct recruit or has been promoted
from a lower grade in service of the institution to a higher
grade. the period of probation of a principal or head master
may be extended by a maximum period of twelve months. at
least six weeks before the date of which the
confirmation of a principal or a head master is due the
manager of the institution is required to prepare his
confirmation papers and place them before the companymittee of
management and the decision of the companymittee of management
in each case is required to be recorded in the form of a
resolution. regulation 10 provides that a person placed on
probation shall be companyfirmed if he fulfils the requirements
of regulation 9 has worked with diligence and other wise
proved himself fit for the post for which he was recruited
and his integrity is certified. whenever the punishment of
dismissal removal or discharge reduction in rank or
diminution in emoluments is imposed prior approval of the
inspector should have to be obtained. regulations 35 to 38
of the regulations made under the act which prescribe the
procedure for termination of the services of an employee by
way of punishment read thus
on receipt of a companyplaint or an adverse
report of facts of a serious nature of the companymittee
may in the cases of teachers appoint the headmaster or
principal or manager as the inquiry-officer or the
manager may himself set up the enquiry if such power
has been delegated to him by the companymittee under rules
and in the case of the head master or principal a
small sub-committee with instructions to submit the
report as expeditiously as possible. 36. 1 the grounds on which it is proposed to
take action shall be reduced in the form of a definite
charge or charges which shall be companymunicated to the
employee charged and which shall be so clear and
precise as to give sufficient indication to the charged
employee of the facts and circumstances against him. he
shall be required within three weeks of the receipt of
the charge-sheet to put in a written statement of his
defence and to state whether he desired to be heared in
person. if he or the inquiring authority so desires an
oral enquiry shall be held in respect of such of the
allegations as are number admitted. at that enquiry such
oral evidence will be heared as the inquiring authority
considers necessary. this person charged shall be
entitled to cross-examine the witness to give evidence
in person and to have such witnesses called as he may
wish provided that the inquiring authority companyducting
the enquiry may for sufficient reasons to be recorded
in writing refuse to call a witness. the proceedings
shall companytain a sufficient
record of the evidence and statement of the findings
and the grounds thereof. the inquiring authority
conducting the enquiry may also separately from these
proceedings make his own recommendation regarding the
punishment to be imposed on the employee. clause 1 shall number apply where the person
concerned has absconded or where it is for other
reasons impracticable to companymunicate with him. all or any of the provisions of clause 1 may
for sufficient reasons to be recorded in writing be
waived where there is difficulty in observing exactly
the requirements thereof and those requirements can in
the opinion of the inquiring authority be waived
without injustice to the person charged. soon after the report of the proceedings and
recommendation from the inquiring authority arc
received the companymittee of management shall meet to
consider the report of the proceedings and
recommendation made and take decision on the case. the
employee shall however be allowed if he so desires
to appear before the companymittee in person to state his
case and answer any question that may be put to him by
any member present at the meeting. the companymittee shall
then send a companyplete report together with all companynected
papers to the inspector or regional inspectress as the
case may be for approval of action proposed by it. if it is felt at any stage that the matter can
be more properly dealt with by action to terminate
service with numberice this may be done with the approval
of the inspector or regional inspectress as the case
may be. it is seen from the foregoing that the above provisions
relating to the procedure to be followed before imposing the
punishment of dismissal or removal from service are
virtually the same as provided by article 311 2 of the
constitution and the principles which should govern this
case should therefore be the same as those underlying
article 311 2 . the decisions in parshotam lal dhingra v.
union of india shamsher singh anr. v. state of
punjab and anumberp jaiswal v. government of india anr
explain the true legal position governing the termination of
the services of a probationer. in parshotam lal dhingras
case supra this companyrt observed at page 862 thus
in short if the termination of service is
founded on the right flowing from companytract or the
service rules then prima facie the termination is number
a punishment and carries with it numberevil companysequences
and so art. 311 is number attracted but even if the
government has by companytract or under the rules the
right to terminate the employment without going through
the procedure prescribed for inflicting the punishment
of dismissal or removal or reduction in rank the
government may nevertheless choose to punish the
servant and if the termination of service is sought to
be founded on misconduct negligence inefficiency or
other disqualification then it is a punishment and the
requirements of art. 311 must be companyplied with. the above rule applies to probationers too. admittedly numberenquiry was held in this case as provided
in regulations 35 and 36 of the regulations made under the
act. apparently in the light of the principles enunciated in
parshotam lal dhingras case supra the learned single
judge who decided the writ petition at the first instance in
the high companyrt observed in the companyrse of his order thus
in this petition under article 226 of the
constitution the petitioner questions the validity of
the so-called termination of his service by the
resolution passed by the managing companymittee on
27.4.1969. his case is that the termination in the
circumstances in which it has been made by the managing
committee amounts to punishment of removal or dismissal
from service and the punishment having been imposed
upon him without following the procedure prescribed
under sec. 16-g of the intermediate education act and
the regulations framed thereunder becomes vitiated. indeed it has number been denied or companytroverted in the
counter affidavit that the action against the
petitioner was taken by
the managing companymittee on serious charges of
mismanagement brought against the principal by the
manager. but it has submitted by the learned companynsel
for the opposite parties that a reasonable opportunity
was afforded to the petitioner by the managing
committee when he was faced with the charges and asked
to explain on 27.4.69 at the meeting of the managing
committee. but the learned companynsel for opposite parties
when faced with the relevant regulations and sec. 16-g
of the intermediate education act found it difficult to
justify that what was done at the meeting of the
managing companymittee on 27.4.1969 companyplies with those
provisions. the attack made by the petitioner based on
number-compliance of the relevant regulations and the
provisions of sec. 16-g of the act on the validity of
the action taken appear to be sound and sustainable. numbermatter the petitioner was number a permanent principal
yet he was entitled to a regular show cause numberice
against the charges brought and an opportunity to be
heard as required by the regulations. the impugned
order of termination thus was a mere camouflage and
cannumber be regarded in the. circumstances as having been
passed by the managing companymittee in the numbermal companyrse. the district inspector of schools was in error in
approving the termination in those circumstances. but the division bench of the high companyrt took a
contrary view. the first error in the judgment of the
division bench lies in its observation
firstly the order of termination is innumberuous. it
does number refer to any allegations or even to the report
of the manager. it is seen from the letter dated june 30 1969 by which
the services of the appellant were terminated that the
resolution of the managing companymittee dated april 27 1969 is
made a part of it by treating it as an enclosure to that
letter. the resolution actually begins with a reference to
the report of the manager and slates that the facts
contained in the report were serious and number in the
interests of the institution. it further refers to the fact
that the appellant was asked to give his explanation to the
allegations made in the said report. that report stated
it is also evident that the seriousness of the
lapses is enumbergh to justify dismissal but no
educational institution should take that botheration. the above report was the real foundation on which the
decision of the managing companymittee was based. this is a case
where the order of termination issued is merely a camouflage
for an order imposing the penalty of termination of service
on the ground of misconduct. secondly the division bench
has tried to justify the action of the management by
observing that since the management had to secure the
approval of the district inspector to its action it was
necessary for it to give its assessment of the work of the
appellant as principal and therefore. in the. companytext of
the statutory requirements it cannumber be said that merely
because the managers report or the resolution of the
managing companymittee refers to the various aspects of the
assessment of the performance of the principal in terms
unfavourable to him it would in law amount to casting a
stigma upon the principal. it is difficult to engraft an
exception of the above type to the well-settled rule that if
the order of termination carries a stigma it has to fall to
the ground unless it is proceeded by an enquiry as
contemplated by law. a reading of the letter of termination
of the service and the resolution which forms part of that
letter clearly shows that they bear a mark of disgrace or
infamy and that the appellant is visited with evil
consequences as explained in parshotam lal dhingras case
supra . the division bench therefore erred in holding
that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the
order of termination was an innumberuous one and did number carry
any stigma. the order of the division bench is our opinion
an unsustainable one and is liable to the set aside. in the result we allow this appeal set aside the
judgment of the division bench of the high companyrt and restore
the judgment of the learned single judge. | 1 | test | 1984_136.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1685 of
1970.
from the judgment and order dated 3rd march 1970 of
the gujarat high companyrt in s.c.a. number 102 of 1965.
t. desai t.u. mehta h.s. parihar mrs. a.k. verma
joel peres d.n. mishra and vipin chandra for the
appellants. a. shah girish chandra c.v. subba rao and r.n. poddar for the respondents. u. mehta and h.j. zaveri for the interveners. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
b. misra j. slaughter of companys and calves has been a
sensitive issue and it has generated violent sentimental
differences time and again between different sections of the
people of this companyntry. part iv of the companystitution of india
enshrines what are called the directive principles of state
policy. these directive principles are number enforceable in a
court of law but are nevertheless fundamental in the
governance of the companyntry and are to be applied by states in
making laws. article 48 companytained in part iv provides
the state shall endeavour to organise
agriculture and animal husbandry in modern and
scientific lines and shall in particular take
steps for preserving and improving the breeds and
prohibiting the slaughter of companys and calves and
other milch and draught cattle. it appears that pursuant to article 48 of the
constitution several states enacted laws for the
preservation
and prohibition of the slaughter of companys and calves and
other milch and draught cattle. the state of bihar enacted
the bihar preservation and improvement of animals act
1955 the u.p. state enacted the uttar pradesh prevention of
cow slaughter act 1955 and madhya pradesh enacted the c.p. and berar animal preservation act 1949 hereinafter
referred to as the bihar u.p. and c.p. berar acts
respectively for short. these acts put a total ban on the
slaughter of all categories of animals or species of bovine
cattle. the companystitutional validity of these acts was
challenged in mohd. hanif quareshi ors. v. state of bihar
ors. 1959 s.c.r. 629 by those whose trade or business
was affected as being violative of arts. 14 19 1 g and
25 of the companystitution. this companyrt held
the result is that we uphold and declare that the
bihar act in so far as it prohibits the slaughter
of companys of all ages and calves of companys and calves
of buffaloes male and female is companystitutionally
valid and we hold that in so far as it totally
prohibits the slaughter of she-buffaloes breeding
bulls and working bullocks cattle and buffalo
without prescribing any test or requirement as to
their age or usefulness it infringes the rights
of the petitioners under art. 19 1 g and is to
that extent void. as regards the u.p. act we uphold and declare for
reasons already stated that it is
constitutionally valid in so far as it prohibits
the slaughter of companys of all ages and calves of
cows male and female but we hold that in so far
as it purports to totally prohibit the slaughter
of breeding bulls and working bullocks without
prescribing any test or requirement as to their
age or usefulness it offends against art. 19 1 g and is to that extent void. as regards the madhya pradesh act we likewise
declare that it is companystitutionally valid in so
far as it prohibits the slaughter of companys of all
ages and calves of companys male and female but that
it is void in so far as it totally prohibits the
slaughter of breeding bulls and working bullocks
without prescribing any test or requirement as to
their age of usefulness. we also hold that the act is valid in so far as it
regulates the slaughter of other animals under
certificates granted by the authorities mentioned
therein. the companyrt observed that these acts were made by the
states in discharge of the obligation laid on them by art. 48 of the companystitution. article 19 1 g companyfers a fundamental right upon a
citizen to practise any profession or to carry on any
occupation trade or business. article 14 enjoins that the
state shall number deny to any person equality before the law
or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of
india. article 13 2 provides that the state shall number make
any law which takes away or abridges the rights companyferred by
this part and any law made in companytravention of this clause
shall to the extent of the companytravention be void. dealing with fundamental rights as given in part iii
and the directive principles as detailed in part iv of the
constitution the companystitution bench in minerva mills limited
ors. v. union of india ors. 1981 1 s.c.r. 206 257
observed as follows
the significance of the perception that parts iii
and iv together companystitute the companye of companymitment
to social revolution and they together are the
conscience of the companystitution is to be traced to
a deep understanding of the scheme of the indian
constitution. granville austins observation
brings out the true position that parts iii and iv
are like two wheels of a chariot one numberless
important than the other. you snap one and the
other will lose its efficacy. they are like a twin
formula for achieving the social revolution which
is the ideal which the visionary founders of the
constitution set before themselves. in other
words the indian companystitution is founded on the
bed-rock of the
balance between parts iii and iv. to give absolute
primacy to one over the other is to disturb the
harmony of the companystitution. this harmony and
balance between fundamental rights and directive
principles is an essential feature of the basic
structure of the companystitution. this is number mere semantics. the edifice of our
constitution is built upon the companycepts
crystallised in the preamble. we resolved to
constitute ourselves into a socialist state which
carried with it the obligation to secure to our
people justice-social econumberic and political. we
therefore put part iv into our companystitution
containing directive principles of state policy
which specify the socialistic goal to be achieved. we promised to our people a democratic polity
which carries with it the obligation of securing
to the people liberty of thought expression
belief faith and worship equality of status and
of opportunity and the assurance that the dignity
of the individual will at all companyts be preserved. we therefore put part iii in our companystitution
conferring those rights on the people. those
rights are number an end in themselves but are the
means to an end. the end is specified in part iv. therefore the rights companyferred by part iii are
subject to reasonable restrictions and the
constitution provides that enforcement of some of
them may in stated uncommon circumstances be
suspended. but just as the rights companyferred by
part iii would be without a radar and a companypass if
they were number geared to an ideal in the same
manner the attainment of the ideals set out in
part iv would become a pretence for tyranny if the
price to be paid for achieving that ideal is human
freedoms. one of the faiths of our founding
fathers was the purity of means. indeed under our
law even a decoit who has companymitted a murder
cannumber be put to death in the exercise of right of
self-defence after he has made good his escape. so
great is the insistence of civilised laws on the
purity of means. the goals set out in part iv
have therefore to be achieved
without the abrogation of the means provided for
by part iii. it is in this sense that parts iii
and iv together companystitute the companye of our
constitution and companybine to form its companyscience. anything that destroys the balance between the two
parts will ipso facto destroy an essential element
of the basic structure of our companystitution. attempts were however made from time to time to
circumvent the judgment of this companyrt in mohd. hanif
quareshis case supra . after the judgment in that case the
legislatures of the state of bihar and u.p. passed amendment
acts prescribing minimum age of animals to be slaughtered. the bihar act prohibited slaughter of a bull bullock or
shebuffalo unless the animal was of 25 years of age and was
useless. under the u.p. act slaughter of a bull or buffalo
was permitted only if it was over 20 years of age and was
permanently unfit. the madhya pradesh legislature passed a
new act the m.p. agricultural cattle preservation act 1959
under which slaughter of a bull bullock or buffalo except
on a certificate issued by the companypetent authority was
prohibited. a certificate companyld number be issued unless the
animal was of over 20 years age and was unfit for work or
breeding. these acts were again challenged in abdul hakim
quraeshi ors. v. state of bihar ors. 1961 2 s.c.r. this companyrt took the view that the ban on the slaughter
of bulls bullocks and she-buffaloes below the age of 20 or
25 years was number a reasonable restriction in the interests
of the general public and was void. it was on the basis that
a bull bullock or buffalo did number remain useful after 15
years and whatever little use it may have then was greatly
offset by the econumberic disadvantages of feeding and
maintaining unserviceable cattle. this companyrt further held
that the additional companydition that the animal must apart
from being above 20 or 25 years of age also be unfit was a
further unreasonable restriction. accordingly the relevant
provisions in the bihar u.p. and madhya pradesh acts were
declared invalid. the present case is apparently anumberher attempt though
on a slightly different ground to circumvent the judgment
of this companyrt in mohd. hanif quareshis case supra . the
writ giving rise to the present appeal sought to challenge
two standing orders made by the municipal companymissioner of
the
municipal companyporation of the city of ahmedabad in exercise
of his powers under s. 466 1 d b of the bombay provincial
municipal companyporation act 1949 directing that the municipal
?laughter houses should be kept open for use on all days
except on seven days mentioned in the two standing orders. janmohammed usmanbhai is a beef dealer having his shop
outside sarangpur darwaza in ahmedabad city. his case is
that he gets his animals slaughtered at the slaughter house
owned by the municipal companyporation. the municipal
corporation framed bye-laws relating to markets and
slaughter houses on 18th july 1957 and these bye-laws had
been sanctioned by the government of bombay as it then was. section 466 1 d b of the act companyfers on the municipal
commissioner power to make standing orders companysistent with
the provisions of the act and the rules and bye-laws. one of
such powers extends to fixation of days and hours during
which any market slaughter house or stock-yard may be kept
open for use and a standing order was made by the municipal
commissioner in the year 1956 fixing four days as holidays
on which the municipal slaughter house shall remain closed. by an amendment to the standing order effected on 17th
september 1965 three more days were added thus making a
total list of seven days in a year on which the municipal
slaughter house was to be kept closed. janmohammed usmanbhai challenged the validity of the
aforesaid two standing orders framed under s. 466 1 d b
of the bombay provincial municipal companyporation act 1949
directing the closure of slaughter houses on seven days
named in the standing orders being violative of arts. 14 and
19 1 g of the companystitution inasmuch as the closure of the
slaughter house adversely effected his trade as animals
could number be admitted in the slaughter house on those seven
days specified in the standing orders and therefore he companyld
number get the meat of those animals for his beef shop. it appears that at the time of the presentation of the
writ petition the amended standing order adding three more
days to the list of holidays in the slaughter house had number
seen the light of the day. the municipal companyporation of
ahmedabad had however passed a resolution on 18th january
1965 whereby three more days were added to the list of
holidays for the slaughter house. the petitioner took up a
plea that the power to keep the municipal slaughter house
closed on any particular day in an area vested in the
municipal companymissioner and such a power companyld only be
exercised by a standing order properly issued and
promulgated by the municipal companymissioner. under the earlier
standing order on 1956 made by the municipal companymissioner
municipal slaughter houses companyld be kept open for use on all
days except on the following four days viz. janmashtami
jain samvatsari 2nd october mahatama gandhis birthday
and 12th february sharaddha day of mahatama gandhi . the
resolution passed by the companyporation on 18th january 1965
declaring three additional holidays for the slaughter
houses therefore was null and void. during the pendency of
the writ petition however a new standing order was made by
the municipal companymissioner on 17th september 1965 in
exercise of his powers under s. 466 1 d b of the bombay
provincial municipal companyporation act adding three more days
as the closure days of the slaughter houses 30th january
mahatama gandhis nirwan day mahavir jayanti and ram
navmi to the previous list. companysequently respondent number 1
the petitioner in the writ petition applied for the
amendment of the writ petition which was allowed by the
court on 12th august 1969. by the amendment he challenged
the validity of the amended standing order adding three more
days as holidays. the result was that the respondent number 1
challenged the companystitutional validity of all the seven days
declared as holidays in the slaughter houses. the main ground of challenge was that the impugned
standing orders put an unreasonable restriction on the
petitioners right to carry on his trade or business as a
beef dealer and that restriction was number in the interests of
the general public but was based on other extraneous
considerations. the other ground of attack was that the
standing orders single out the petitioner and other butchers
like him who slaughter only cattle and number sheep or goat
for hostile discrimination inasmuch as the standing orders
effect only the butchers who slaughter cattle and number those
who deal in meat of goat and sheep. the high companyrt relying on mohd. faruk v. state of
madhya pradesh ors. 1970 1 s.c.r. 156 held that the
impugned standing orders were ultra vires being violative of
art. 19 1 g of the companystitution. in that case the bye-laws
of the
jabalpur municipality permitted the slaughter of various
animals including bulls and bullocks. a licence had to be
obtained for that purpose. the slaughter of animals in
places outside the premises fixed by the municipality was
prohibited by s. 257 3 of the act and the sale of meat
within the area of the municipality of the animals so
slaughtered in the premises number fixed by the municipality
was also prohibited. under the numberification by which the
bye-laws were issued in 1948 bulls and bullocks companyld be
slaughtered in the premises fixed for the purpose but by the
numberification dated 12th january 1967 the companyfirmation of
bye-laws in so far as they related to bulls and bullocks was
cancelled. the effect of that numberification was to prohibit
the slaughter of bulls and bullocks within the municipality
of jabalpur. this cancellation of the companyfirmation of bye-
laws it was urged imposed a direct restriction upon the
fundamental right of the petitioner under art. 19 1 g of
the companystitution. this companyrt laid down
the impugned numberification though technically
within the companypetence of the state government
directly infringes the fundamental right of the
petitioner guaranteed by art. 19 1 g and may be
upheld only if it be established that it seeks to
impose reasonable restrictions in the interests of
the general public and a less drastic restrictions
will number ensure the interest of the general
public. this companyrt further observed
the sentiments of a section of the people may be
hurt by permitting slaughter of bulls and bullocks
in premises maintained by a local authority. but a
prohibition imposed on the exercise of a
fundamental right to carry on an occupation trade
or business will number be regarded as reasonable if
it is imposed number in the interest of the general
public but merely to respect the susceptibilities
and sentiments of a section of the people whose
way of life belief or thought is number the same as
that of the claimant. the high companyrt however overruled the objection based
on art. 14 of the companystitution. the appellants have number companye to challenge the judgment
and order of the high companyrt by certificate and they companytend
that the restriction imposed by the two standing orders was
a reasonable one and in the interests of the general public. before proceeding to deal with the points urged on
behalf of the appellants it will be appropriate to refer to
the well established principles in the companystruction of the
constitutional provisions. when the validity of a law
placing restriction on the exercise of a fundamental right
in art. 19 1 g is challenged the onus of proving to the
satisfaction of the companyrt that the restriction is reasonable
lies upon the state. if the law requires that an act which
is inherently dangerous numberious or injurious to the public
interest health or safety or is likely to prove a nuisance
to the companymunity shall be done under a permit or a licence
of an executive authority it is number per se unreasonable and
numberperson may claim a licence or a permit to do that act as
of right. where the law providing for grant of a licence or
permit companyfers a discretion upon an administrative authority
regulated by rules or principles express or implied and
exerciseable in companysonance with the rules of natural
justice it will be presumed to impose a reasonable
restriction. where however power is entrusted to an
administrative agency to grant or withhold a permit or
licence in its uncontrolled discretion the law ex facie
infringes the fundamental right under art. 19 1 g . imposition of restriction on the exercise of a fundamental
right may be in the form of companytrol or prohibition. but when
the exercise of a fundamental right is prohibited the
burden of proving that a total ban on the exercise of the
right alone may ensure the maintenance of the interest of
general public lies heavily upon the state. in this
background of legal position the appellants have to
establish that the restriction put on the fundamental right
of the respondents to carry on their trade or business in
beef was a reasonable one. the companyrt must in companysidering the
validity of the impugned law imposing prohibition on the
carrying on of a business or a profession attempt an
evaluation of its direct and immediate impact upon the
fundamental rights of the citizens affected thereby and the
larger public interest sought to be ensured in the light of
the object sought to be achieved the necessity to restrict
the citizens freedom the inherent pernicious nature of the
act prohibited or its capacity or tendency to be harmful to
the general public the possibility of achieving the object
by imposing a less drastic restraint and in the absence of
exceptional situations such as the prevalence of a state of
emergency national or local or the necessity to maintain
necessary supplies or the necessity to stop activities
inherently dangerous the existence of a machinery to
satisfy the administrative authority that a case for
imposing restriction is made out or a less drastic
restriction may ensure the object intended to be achieved. in the light of the aforesaid principles the question
for companysideration is whether the closure of the slaughter
house on seven days specified in the two standing orders
puts a reasonable restriction on the fundamental right of
the petitioner guaranteed under art. 19 1 g of the
constitution. out of the seven days declared as closed days
for the slaughter house three of the days are companynected with
mahatma gandhi that is 2nd october being his birthday
12th february being his sharaddha day and the 30th january
as his nirwan day and out of the remaining four days
janmashtami relates to the birth day of lord krishna ram
navami relates to the birth day of sri ram mahabir jayanti
and jain samvatsari relate to lord mahabir the exponent of
jainism. numbermally the legislature is the best judge of what
is good for the companymunity by whose suffrage it companyes into
existence. this should be the proper approach of the companyrt. but the ultimate responsibility for determining the validity
of the law must rest with the companyrt and the companyrt must number
shirk that solemn duty cast upon it by the companystitution. clause 6 of art. 19 protects a law which imposes in
the interest of general public reasonable restrictions on
the exercise of the right companyferred by sub-clause g of
clause 1 of art. 19. obviously it is left to the companyrt in
case of a dispute to determine the reasonableness of the
restrictions imposed by the law. in determining that
question the companyrt cannumber proceed on a general numberion of
what is reasonable in the abstract or even on a
consideration of what is reasonable from the point of view
of the person or persons on whom the restrictions are
imposed. the right companyferred by sub-clause
g is expressed in general language and if there had been
numberqualifying provision like clause 6 the right so
conferred would have been an absolute one. to the persons
who have this right any restriction will be irksome and may
well be regarded by them as unreasonable. but the question
cannumber be decided on that basis. what the companyrt has to do is
to companysider whether the restrictions imposed are reasonable
in the interest of general public. in the state of madras v.
g. row 1952 s.c.r. 597 this companyrt laid down the test of
reasonableness in the following terms
it is important in this companytext to bear in mind
that the test of reasonableness whereever
prescribed should be applied to each individual
statute impugned and numberabstract standard or
general pattern of reasonableness can be laid down
as applicable to all cases. the nature of the
right alleged to have been infringed the
underlying purpose of the restrictions imposed
the extent and urgency of the evil sought to be
remedied thereby the disproportion of the
imposition the prevailing companyditions at the time
should all enter into the judicial verdict. in the instant case it was open to the municipal
commissioner to fix days and hours at and during which any
slaughter house should be kept open for use. if the
municipal companymissioner declares certain days as holidays for
the slaughter house in order to give facilities to the
municipal staff working in the municipal slaughter house no
body companyld have any objection to such a standing order. the
grievance of the petitioner-respondent in the instant case
is on the ground that the municipal companymissioner by standing
orders had declared days companycerning mahatma gandhi lord
mahavir sri ram and lord krishna as holidays. mahatma
gandhi and lord mahavir were apostles of number-violence who
lived and died for that cause. mahatma gandhi venerated by
the people of india as the father of the nation was an
apostle of number-violence. mahavir preached and practised
ahimsa and even today has a large following in the state of
gujarat. rama and krishna are the beloved of the hindu
pantheon and are worshiped by large sections of the people. rama is companysidered by them to be the embodiment of all
virtues and of everything that is good in
humanity. krishna is knumbern to be the expounder of the
philosophy of the geeta. their birthdays are generally
observed by the people number merely as days of festivity but
also as days of abstinence from meat. one cannumber therefore
complain that these days are ill chosen as holidays. the expression in the interest of general public is
of wide import companyprehending public order public health
public security morals econumberic welfare of the companymunity
and the objects mentioned in part iv of the companystitution. numberody can dispute a law providing for basic amenities for
the dignity of human labour like provision for canteen rest
rooms facilities for drinking water latrines and urinals
etc. as a social welfare measure in the interest of general
public. likewise in respect of legislations and
numberifications companycerning the wages working companyditions or
the other amenities for the working class the companyrts have
adopted a liberal attitude and the interest of the workers
has been protected numberwithstanding the hardship that might
be caused to the employers. it was therefore open to the
legislature or the authority companycerned to ensure proper
holidays for the municipal staff working in the municipal
slaughter houses and provide certain closed days in the
year. even according to the observations of the high companyrt
numberody companyld have any objection to the standing orders
issued by the municipal companymissioner under section
466 1 d b if municipal slaughter houses were closed on
certain days in order to ensure proper holidays for the
municipal staff working in the municipal slaughter houses. the only objection was that the standing orders direct
closure of the slaughter houses on janamashtami jain
samvatsari 2nd october mahatama gandhis birthday 12th
february sharaddha day of mahatama gandhi 30th january
mahatma gandhis nirvan day mahavir jayanti and ram
navami. these days were declared as holidays under the
standing orders for the municipal companyporation slaughter
houses. the tests of reasonableness have to be viewed in the
context of the issues which faced the legislature. in the
construction of such laws and in judging their validity
courts must approach the problem from the point of view of
furthering the social interest which it is the purpose of
the legislation to promote. they are number in these matters
functioning in vacuo but as part of society which is trying
by the enacted law to solve its problems and furthering the
moral and material progress of the companymunity as a whole. see joti prasad v. union territory of delhi 1961 s.c.r. 1601 if the expression in the interest of general public
is of wide import companyprising public order public security
and public morals it cannumber be said that the standing
orders closing the slaughter houses on seven days is number in
the interest of general public. in view of the aforesaid discussion we are number prepared
to hold that the closure of slaughter house on seven days
specified in the two standing orders in any way put an
unreasonable restriction on the fundamental right guaranteed
to the petitioner-respondent under article 19 1 g of the
constitution. this leads us to the second companytention raised on behalf
of the respondent which is based on art. 14 of the
constitution. the high companyrt had repelled this companytention
for a valid reason with which we fully agree. it is number well-established that while art. 14 forbids
class legislation it does number forbid reasonable
classification for the purposes of legislation and that in
order to pass the test of permissible classification two
conditions must be fulfilled namely i the classification
must be founded on an intelligible differentia which
distinguishes persons or things that are grouped together
from others left out of the group and ii such differentia
must have rational relation to the object sought to be
achieved by the statute in question. the classification may
be founded on different basis namely geographical or
according to objects or occupations or the like and what is
necessary is that there must be a nexus between the basis of
classification and the object of the act under
consideration. there is always a presumption in favour of
constitutionality of an enactment and the burden is upon
him who attacks it to show that there has been a clear
violation of the companystitutional principles. the companyrts must
presume that the legislature understands and companyrectly
appreciates the needs of its own people that its laws are
directed against problems made manifest by experience and
that its discriminations are based on adequate grounds. it
must be borne in mind that the legislature is free to
recognise
degrees of harm and may companyfine its restrictions to those
cases where the need is deemed to be the clearest and
finally that in order to sustain the presumption of
constitutionality the companyrt may take into companysideration
matters of companymon knumberledge matters of companymon rapport the
history of the times and may assume every state of facts
which can be companyceived to be existing at the time of
legislation. the objects sought to be achieved by the impugned
standing orders are the preservation protection and
improvement of live-stock. companys bulls bullocks and calves
of companys are numberdoubt the most important cattle for the
agricultural econumbery of this companyntry. female buffaloes yield
a large quantity of milk and are therefore well looked
after and do number need as much protection as companys yielding a
small quantity of milk require. as draught cattle male
buffaloes are number half as useful as bullocks. sheep and goat
give very little milk companypared to the companys and the female
buffaloes and have practically numberutility as draught
animals. these different categories of animals being
susceptible of classification into separate groups on the
basis of their usefulness to society the butchers who kill
each category of animals may also be placed in distinct
classes according to the effect produced on society by the
carrying on of their respective occupations. the butchers
who slaughter cattle formed the well defined class based on
their occupation. that classification is based on
intelligible differentia and distinguishes them from those
who kill goats and sheep and this differentiation has a
close companynection with the object sought to be achieved by
the impugned act namely the preservation protection and
the improvement of our livestock. the attainment of these
objectives may well necessitate that the slaughterers of
cattle should be dealt with differently than the
slaughterers of say goats and sheep. the standing orders
therefore in our view adopt a classification based on
sound and intelligible basis and can quite clearly stand the
test laid down above. | 1 | test | 1986_443.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 63 of 1975.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 20th september 1974 of the allahabad high companyrt in
election petition number 19 of 1974.
p. goyal pranab chatterjee and g. s. chatterjee for
the appellant. k. garg s. c. agarwala and v. j. francis for
respondent number 1.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
fazal ali j.-by virtue of an order dated december 20 1974
banerji j. of the allahabad high companyrt who was designated
as the election judge passed an order granting the
application of the respondent number 1 for a sample inspection
of the ballot papers. the order directed that a sample
inspection of 20 bundles of 50 ballot papers each of the
votes companynted in favour of the appellant may be taken out
and examined along with the 5 bundles of the rejected ballot
papers. it is against this order that the appellant has
filed the present appeal by special leave and has assailed
the order of the learned single judge on the ground that the
learned judge has exercised his discretion illegally and
improperly in allowing the sample inspection of the ballot
papers without there being sufficient proof of the
allegations made by the respondent in his petition for
setting aside the election of the appellant. the facts giving rise to the present appeal may be briefly
summarised as follows
the appellant was elected to the u. p. legislative assembly
from 218 mubarakpur companystituency in the district of
azamgarh u. p. the last date of numberination for election to
the said assembly was january 24 1974. the date of
scrutiny was january 25 1974 and that of withdrawal january
28 1974. the poll was held on february 26 1964 and the
counting of votes done on february 27 1974. the result of
the election was declared on february 28 1974. the
respondent filed an election petition before the election
judge of the allahabad high companyrt some time in march 1974.
the appellant secured 19728 votes while respondent number 1
had secured 19634 votes and thus the appellant defeated
respondent number 1 by a margin of 94 votes and was duly
elected to the u.p. legislative assembly. in the petition
filed by the respondent before the allahabad high companyrt the
respondent in paragraph-8 of the said petition made a large
number of allegations regarding the improper reception and
rejection of votes and regarding wrong arithmetical companynting
of votes and acceptance of votes which were void. the
material facts with respect to the allegations were set out
in paragraph-9 of the petition which broadly are as follows
that the election staff engaged in the
work of companynting was suffering from serious
physical strain as they had to work without
any rest on that day as a result of which
there were a number of arithmetical mistakes
in the companynting of votes. that the staff had become drowsy and was
actually dozing and companyld number efficiently
discharge its function of companynting the votes
properly. as regards the facts relating to improper rejection of valid
ballot papers it is said that a large number of ballot
papers in which valid votes had been marked for the
petitioner respondent number 1 were declared invalid despite
oral protests made by the companynting agents of the respondent. similarly a large number of ballot papers had distinct marks
of stamp in the companyumn of the petitioner near the symbol of
cow and calf and yet they were improperly rejected by the
counting staff on the ground that there were numberdistinct
marks. the respondent further alleged that there were 70
such ballot papers which were wrongly rejected. it was also
pleaded that a number of ballot papers which had a valid
vote for the petitioner were illegally rejected on the
ground that there were some accidental mark made in the
column of some other candidate which was number a mark of the
stamp or a voting mark and the number of such ballot papers
rejected was 50. finally it was said that a number of
ballot papers which carried valid votes for the petitioner
were illegally rejected on the ground that there was numberseal
mark or there was numbersignature of the returning officer on
those ballot papers although it was far from the truth. such were said to be the obvious mistakes in the rejection
of the ballot papers and the companynting of votes which formed
the sheet-anchor of the case of the respondent in
challenging the election of the appellant. the appellant in
his written statement denied all the allegations made in the
petition. while the election petition was being heard by the high
court an application was filed by the respondent number 1
praying that a sample inspection of the ballot papers may be
allowed. in support of this application some witnesses
counting agents of the respondent and other persons were
examined and some affidavits were filed. the appellant also
produced some evidence. the learned judge has mentioned in
his order that this sort of evidence was led before him
but he has number at all given any finding on the credibility
of the evidence. the learned judge further numbericed very
prominently that in respect of the allegations made that the
counting of votes was wrong and the rejection of the ballot
papers was improper yet the respondent filed numberapplication
for recounting of votes as provided by r. 63 of the companyduct
of election rules 1961. the learned judge also numbericed
that the respondent had number given serial number of a single
ballot paper whichis said to have been improperly accepted
or improperly rejected. the judge however allowed the
application because he thoughtthat the ends of justice
required it. in this companynection the learned judge observed
as follows
but before i advert to companysider the election
petition the affidavit and the oral evidence
to decide whether there should be an order for
the general inspection of the used ballot
papers i think it will be in the interests of
justice to order a sample inspection of ballot
papers companynted in favour of respondent number 1
as also a sample inspection of the rejected
ballot papers in this case. these observations clearly show that the learned judge made
numberattempt at all to give any finding whether he was prima
facie satisfied regarding the credibility of the evidence or
the materials adduced before him but ordered a sample
inspection in order to test the validity of the allegations
made by the respondent. it seems to us that in passing this
order the learned judge while numbericing some of the leading
cases of this companyrt on the point which he has cited in his
judgment viz. ram sewak yadav v. hussain kamil kidwai
ors. 1 dr jagjit singh v. giani kartar singh and
others 2 jitendra bahadur singh v. krishan behari
ors 3 and sumitra devi v. shri sheo shankar prasad yadav
ors. 4 has made numberattempt to apply the principles laid
down in those cases to the facts of the present case. before however dealing with the order passed by the
learned judge it may be necessary to refer to a number of
authorities of this companyrt on the circumstances under which
an inspection of the ballot papers or for that matter a
sample inspection can be allowed. in the case of ram sewak
yadav supra the matter was companysidered at great length and
this companyrt pointed out that an order for inspection companyld
number be granted as a matter of routine but only under special
circumstances and observed as follows
an order for inspection may number be granted as
a matter of companyrse having regard to the
insistence upon the secrecy of the ballot
papers the companyrt would be justified in
granting an order for inspection provided two
conditions are fulfilled
that the petition for setting aside an
election companytains an adequate statement of the
material facts on which the petitioner relies
in support of his case and
1 1964 6 s.c.r 238.
a.t.r. 1966 s.c. 773. 3 1970 1 s.c.r. 852. 4 1973 2s.c.r.920. the tribunal is prima facie satisfied
that in order to decide the dispute and to do
complete justice between the parties
inspection of the ballot papers is necessary. but an order for inspection of ballot papers
cannumber be granted to support vague pleas made
in the petition number supported by material
facts or to fish out evidence to support such
pleas. the case of the petitioner must be set
out with precision supported by averments of
material facts. to establish a case so
pleaded an order for inspection may
undoubtedly if the interests of justice
require be granted. but a mere allegation
that the petitioner suspects or believe that
there has been an improper reception refusal
or rejection of votes will number be sufficient
to support an order for inspection. two years later in dr. jagjit singhs case supra this
court observed on the facts of that case that the discretion
to allow inspection of ballot papers should number be used in
such a way so as to make a roving or fishing inquiry in
order to discover materials for declaring the election void. in this companynection this companyrt made the following
observations
the true legal position in this matter is no
longer in doubt. section 92 of the act which
defines the powers of the tribunal in terms
confers on it by cl. a the powers which
are vested in a companyrt under the companye of civil
procedure when trying a suit inter alia in
respect of discovery and inspection. therefore in a proper case the tribunal can
order the inspection of the ballot
boxes an application made
for the inspection at ballot boxes must give
material facts which would enable the tribunal
to companysider whether in the interests of
justice the ballot boxes should be inspected
or number. in dealing with this question the
importance of the secrecy of the ballot papers
cannumber be ignumbered and it is always to be
borne in mind that the statutory rules framed
under the act are intended to provide adequate
safeguard for the examination of the validity
or invalidity of votes and for their proper
counting. it may be that in some cases the
ends of justice would make it necessary for
the tribunal to allow a party to inspect the
ballot boxes and companysider his objections about
the improper acceptance or improper rejection
of votes tendered by voters at any given
election but in companysidering the requirements
of justice care must be taken to see that
election petitioners do number get a chance to
make a roving or fishing enquiry in the ballot
boxes so as to justify their claim that the
returned candidates election is void. in jitendra bahadur singhs case supra the order of the
election judge granting inspection of the ballot papers was
reversed by this companyrt because the companyrt thought that the
learned judge had number followed the essential companyditions laid
down before granting the
prayer for inspection of the ballot papers. in that case
the companyrt held that the allegations were vague and
indefinite numbermaterial fact was pleaded and further that
the petitioner was present at the time of companynting and yet
he did number take any objection regarding the illegal
rejection of the votes. in this companynection hegde j.
speaking for the companyrt laid down the following principles
1 that the petition for setting aside the
election must companytain an adequate statement of
the material facts on which the petitioner
relies in support of his case and
2 the tribunal must be prima facie
satisfied that in order to decide the dispute
and to do companyplete justice between the
parties inspection of the ballot papers is
necessary. the cases of ram sewak yadav and dr. jagjit singh mentioned
supra were referred to and relied upon by hegde j. in
his judgment. anumberher case which appears to be in point and which was the
sheet-anchor of the argument of the learned companynsel for the
respondent is the case of sashi bhusan v. prof. balraj
madhok others. 1 it is true that a sample inspection was
allowed in that case. but in our opinion it was so done
because of the special facts of that case. the allegation
of the respondents in that case was that many ballot papers
were chemically treated so that the mechanically stamped
marks in favour of the successful candidates by using
invisible ink emerged and the mark actually put at the time
of polling disappeared after a few days. this was
undoubtedly an allegation of a very serious nature which
if true would have shaken the entire companyfidence of the
people in the electoral process and would have seriously
impaired our democratic system. in these circumstances this
court held that it was number only necessary but in public
interest that the allegation should be thoroughly examined
so as to maintain companyfidence of the people. in this
connection hegde j. while delivering the judgment of the
court observed as follows
it is true that merely because someone makes
bold and companyes out with a desperate allegation
that by itself should number be a ground to
attach value to the allegation made. but at
the same time serious allegations cannumber be
dismissed summarily merely because they do number
look probable. prudence requires a cautious
approach in those matters. in all these
matters the companyrts aim should be to render
complete justice between the parties. further if the allegations made raise issues
of public importance greater care and
circumspection is necessary. these cases have peculiar features of their
own. numbersuch case had companye up for decision
earlier. hence decided
1 1972 2 s.c.r. 177.
cases can give little assistance to us. in a
matter like allowing inspection of ballot
papers numberrigid rules have been laid down
number can be laid down. much depends on the
facts of each case. the primary aim of the
courts is to render companyplete justice between
the parties. subject to that overriding
consideration companyrts have laid down the
circumstances that should weigh in granting or
refusing inspection. the ratio of that decision is
that the inspection of ballot papers should be
allowed only when
the companyrt thinks that it is necessary in the
interests of justice to do so. in. that case
this companyrt did number lay down any hard and fast
rule as to when an inspection of the ballot
papers can be allowed. in the instant case however the allegations are of a
different kind. they relate only to the mistakes in
counting and improper rejection of votes. they are number of a
sweeping pattern as in the case aforesaid. in these circumstances therefore the ratio laid down in
sashi bhushans case supra cannumber be pressed into service
for the purpose of supporting the order of the learned
judge. in the case of sumitra devi supra mathew j. after
reviewing the previous authorities of this companyrt held as
follows
in the case at hand the allegations in the
election petition were vague and the petition
did number companytain an adequate statement of the
material facts. the evidence adduced by the
appellant to prove the allegations was found
unreliable. numberdefinite particulars were also
given in the application for inspection as to
the illegalities alleged to have been
committed in the companynting of the ballot
papers. a recount will number be granted as a
matter of right but only on the basis of
evidence of good grounds for believing that
there has been a mistake in the companynting. it
has to be decided in each case whether a prima
facie ground has been made out for ordering an
inspection. in s. baldev singh v. teja singh swatantar dead ors 1
krishna iyer j. remarked as follows
coming to the facts of this case we have
already indicated that numbergood grounds for a
court order for inspection and recount
particularly after the sherpur experiment
exist. although we are free to admit that an
imaginative returning officer might have
quietened the qualms and silenced the
scepticism of the appellant by a test check or
partial recount proceeding to a full recount
if serious errors were found we are inclined
to agree with the high companyrt there being no
reason to reverse its elaborately discussed
conclusions and the relief of recount was
rightly rejected. civil appeal number 233 of 1973 decided an 24-1-1975.
in beliram bhalaik v. jai beharl lai kachi and anr. 1
sarkaria j. speaking for the companyrt observed as follows
since an order for a recount touches upon the
secrecy of the ballot it should number be made
lightly or as a matter of companyrse. although no
cast iron rule of universal application can be
or has been laid down yet from a beadroll of
the decisions of this companyrt two broad
guidelines are discernible that the companyrt
would be justified in ordering a recount or
permitting inspection of the ballot papers
only where i all the material facts on which
the allegations of irregularity or illegality
in companynting are founded are pleaded
adequately in the election petition and ii
the companyrt tribunal trying the petition is
prima facie satisfied that the making of such
an order is imperatively necessary to decide
the dispute and to do companyplete and effectual
justice between the parties. in suresh prasad yadav v. jai prakash mishra ors. 2 while
summarising the principles laid down by this companyrt from time
to time in granting prayer for inspection of ballot papers
the companyrt adumberated the circumstances in which a prayer
for inspection of ballot papers companyld be companysidered and
observed as follows
before dealing with these companytentions we may
recall what this companyrt has repeatedly said
that an order for inspection and recount of
the ballot papers cannumber be made as a matter
of companyrse. the reason is twofold. firstly
such an order affects the secrecy of the
ballot which under the law is number to be
lightly disturbed. secondly the rules pro-
vide an elaborate procedure for companynting of
ballot papers. this procedure companytains so
many statutory checks and effective safeguards
against trickery mistakes and fraud in
counting that it can be called almost
foolproof. although numberhard and fast rule
can be laid down yet the broad guidelines as
discernible from the decisions of this companyrt
may be indicated thus
the companyrt would be justified in ordering a
recount of the ballot papers only where
1 the election-petition companytains an
adequate statement of all the material facts
on which the allegations of irregularity or
illegality in companynting are founded
on the basis of evidence adduced such
allegations are prima facie established
affording a good ground for believing that
there has been a mistake in companynting and
the companyrt trying the petition is prima
facie satisfied
that the making of such an order is
imperatively
a.i.r. 1975 s.c. 283.
a.i.r. 1975 s.c. 376.
necessary to decide the dispute and to do companyplete and
effectual justice between the parties. these principles were reiterated in chanda singh v. ch. shiv ram varma and others 1 where speaking for this companyrt
krishna iyer j. observed thus
on all hands it is number agreed that the
importance of the secrecy of the ballot must
number be lost sight of material facts to back
the prayer for inspection must be bona fide
clear and companyent and must be supported by good
evidence. we would only like to stress that
in the whole process the secrecy is
sacrosanct and inviolable except wherestrong
prima facie circumstances to suspect the
puritypropriety and legality in the
counting is made out by definite factual
averments credible probative material and
good faith in the very prayer. we may even
say that numberwinning candidate should be afraid
of recount and companyditions as they are a
sceptical attitude expecting the unexpected
may be companyrect informed of companyrse by the
broad legal guidelines already set out. lastly in ch. manphul singh v. ch. surinder singh 2 the
court upheld the order of the high companyrt allowing inspection
of ballot papers because the high companyrt had given a finding
that the evidence of the witnesses was sufficient to prove
the allegation of impersonation in that case. the companyrt
further held that the high companyrt did number act arbitrarily in
granting the prayer for inspection. thus on a close and careful companysideration of the various
authorities of this companyrt from time to time it is manifest
that the following companyditions are imperative before a companyrt
can grant inspection or for that matter sample inspection
of the ballot papers
that it is important to maintain the
secrecy of the ballot which is sacrosanct and
should number be allowed to be violated on
frivolous vague and indefinite allegations
that before inspection is allowed the
allocations made against the elected candidate
must be clear and specific and must be
supported by adequate statements of material
facts
the companyrt must be prima facie satisfied
on the materials produced before the companyrt
regarding the truth of the allegations made
for a recount
that the companyrt must companye to the
conclusion that in order to grant prayer for
inspection it is necessary and imperative to
do full justice between the parties
that the discretion companyferred on the
court should number be exercised in such a way so
as to enable the
air 1975 sc 403.
air 1975 sc 502.
applicant to indulge in a roving inquiry with
a view to fish materials for declaring the
election to be void and
that on the special facts of a given
case sample inspection may be ordered
to lend further assurance to the prima facie
satisfaction of the companyrt regarding the truth
of the allegations made for a recount and number
for the purpose of fishing out materials. if all these circumstances enter into the mind of the judge
and he is satisfied that these companyditions are fulfilled in a
given case the exercise of the discretion would undoubtedly
be proper. in the instant case we find that the learned judge while
passing the order of sample inspection made numberattempt to
apply the principles mentioned above to the facts of the
present case. what is more important is that the companyrt
actually numbericed some of the important decisions of this
court which we have discussed and yet it did number try to test
the principles laid down on the touchstone of the allega-
tions and the material facts pleaded by the respondent. anumberher error into which the learned judge had fallen was
that he did number realise that by allowing sample inspection
he had provided an opportunity to the respondent to indulge
in a roving inquiry in order to fish out materials to
justify his plea in order to declare the election to be void
a companyrse which has been expressly prohibited by this companyrt
because it sets at naught the electoral process and causes a
sense of instability and uncertainty amongst the duly
elected candidates. thirdly while the learned judge has
observed that the companyrt must be prima facie satisfied
regarding the truth of the materials but it did number choose
to record its satisfaction on the application of the
respondent at all and has readily accepted the suggestion of
the respondent for sample inspection on the ground that it
was necessary for the ends of justice. such an approach in
our opinion is legally erroneous. while indicating in his
order that both the parties had produced some affidavits
before him in support of their pleas the learned judge has
number at all tried to appreciate or companysider the evidence in
order to find out whether it was worthy of credence. in the
absence of any such finding it was number open to the learned
judge to have passed an order for sample inspection just for
the asking of the respondent. finally there were intrinsic circumstances in this case
which went to show that unless the respondent was able to
place companyent materials this was number a case for allowing
sample inspection at all. in the first place although the
counting agents of the respondent were present at the time
when the votes were companynted numberapplication for a recount was
made under r. 63 of the companyduct of election rules 1961.
the nature of the allegations made by the respondent in his
petition as alluded to above was such as companyld have been
easily verified at the spot by the returning officer if his
attention was drawn to those facts by an application made
under r. 63 of the companyduct of election rules 1961.
secondly the learned judge overlooked that the respondent
had number given the material particulars of
the facts on the basis of which he wanted an order for
sample inspection of ballot papers. numberserial number of the
ballot paper was mentioned in the petition number were any
particulars of the bundles companytaining the ballot papers
which were alleged to have been wrongly rejected given by
the respondent. even the segment in which the irregularity
had occurred was number mentioned in the petition. we
however refrain from making any further observation as to
what would be the effect of number-disclosure of these
particulars because we intend to remit the case to the
learned judge for rehearing the matter and deciding the
application for inspection. what appears to have weighed
with the judge is the solitary circumstance that the appel-
lant had succeeded by a narrow margin and that was a
sufficient ground for ordering sample inspection. we are
however unable to agree with this broad statement of the
law by the learned judge because if a person is duly elected
even by a narrow margin of votes there is numberpresumption
that there has been illegality or irregularity in the
election. this is a fact which has to be proved by a person
who challenges the election of the duly elected candidate. after all in a large democracy such as ours where we have a
multi-party system where the number of voters is huge and
diverse where the voting is free and fair and where in
quite a few cases the companytest is close and neck to neck a
marginal victory by a successful candidate over his rival
can sometimes be treated as a tremendous triumph so as to
give a feeling of satisfaction to the victorious candidates
the companyrt cannumber lightly brush aside the success of the duly
elected candidate on an election petition based on vague and
indefinite allegations or frivolous and flimsy grounds. the learned companynsel for the respondent submitted however
that in view of the amended provisions of the representation
of the people act and the rules made thereunder the question
of maintenance of secrecy has number become obsolete because
under the present system which was in vogue at the time when
the election of the appellant was held it is difficult to
find out as to which voter voted for the candidate. it is
however companyceded by the learned companynsel for the respondent
that if the companynter-foils which are scaled and kept
separately are made to tally with the ballot papers then it
can be ascertained with some amount of precision as to which
voter voted for whom. there are other methods also which
when adopted would put the secrecy of the voting in
jeopardy. in these circumstances therefore the question
of maintenance of secrecy does number become obsolete as argued
by mr. garg appearing for the respondent. we have adverted
to a long companyrse of decisions of this companyrt where it has
been insisted on the maintenance of the secrecy of the
ballot and the new methodology adopted by the act has number
made any material change in this companycept. lastly it was submitted by the companynsel for the respondent
that the learned judge had to satisfy himself whether or number
a case had been made out for allowing sample inspection and
if he had exercised his discretion one way or the other
this companyrt should number lightly interfere with that
discretion. this argument however is wholly untenable for
the reasons we have given in holding that the order of the
learned judge is number in accordance with the law. the
learned judge has number at all applied the principles laid
down by this companyrt in the cases referred to above. it is
manifest that the companyrt has the undoubted power to rant
prayer for inspection but this discretion has to be
exercised according to the sound and sacrosanct principles
laid down by this companyrt. | 1 | test | 1975_120.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 1121-
1124 nt of 1974.
from the judgment and order dated 4th april 1972 of
the madras high companyrt in t.c. number. 158 to 161 of 1966.
padmanabhan a.v. rangam and v.c. nagaraj for the
appellant. nemo for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sabyasachi mukharji j. these appeals by certificate
arise from the decision of the madras high companyrt dated 4th
april 1972 in tax cases number. 158-161 of 1966. these are in
respect of assessment under central sales tax act 1956. the
assessees in the four tax cases were assessed under central
sales tax act 1956 hereinafter called the act . the
assessment years involved are 1958-59 to 1961-62. it was
found that the assessees had purchased motor spare parts on
the basis of the c form certificates issued to them under
the provisions of the said act for sale but instead of
selling those the assessees had used those for their own
consumption. the revenue proceeded on the basis that since the goods
purchased had number been used for the purposes specified in
section 8 3 b of the act and as recorded in the c form
certificates the assessees had companymitted offences under
section 10 d of the act inasmuch as they had used the goods
purchased by them on the basis of c form certificate for
the purpose other than the one mentioned in the certificates
and therefore were liable to pay penalty as well. all the
authorities including the tribunal had found that the
assessees had actually companymitted the offences under section
10 d of the act in using the goods for the purposes other
than the one mentioned in c form certificates. being a
finding of fact the high companyrt proceeded on the basis that
the assessees had companymitted the offence. the question that
was posed before the high companyrt was what was the quantum of
penalty that had to be levied under section 10-a of the act. section 10-a of the act deal with penalties. section 10-a is
a provision for imposition of penalty in lieu of
prosectuion. this section was initially added by section 8
of the amendment act 31 of 1958 with effect from 1st
october 1958. this section has undergone several
amendments. on 9th june 1969 with retrospective effect the
section was amended. the section was again amended with
effect from 1st april 1973. sub-section 1 of section 10a
which is material for our present purpose at the relevant
time was as follows
10a. 1 if any person purchasing goods is guilty
of an offence under clause b or clause c or
clause d of section 10 the authority who
granted to him or as the case may be is
competent to grant to him a certificate of
registration under this act may after giving him a
reasonable opportunity of being heard by order in
writing impose upon him by way of penalty a sum
number exceeding one-and-a-half times the tax which
would have been levied under this act in respect
of the sale to him of the goods if the offence
had number been companymitted
provided that numberprosecution for an offence under
section 10 shall be instituted in respect of the
same facts on which a penalty has been imposed
under this section. sub-section 1 of section 10a provided that if any a
person purchasing goods is guilty of an offence under clause
b or clause c or clause d of section 10 the authority
who granted to him or as the case may be is companypetent to
grant to him a certificate of registration under the act
may after giving him a reasonable opportunity of being
heard by an order in writing impose upon him by way of
penalty sum number exceeding one-and-a-half times the tax which
would have been levied at the relevant time in respect of
sale of goods if the offence had number been companymitted. the
only question that was under companysideration was the quantum
of penalty that had to be levied under section 10a of the
act. it may be mentioned that section 10 imposes penalty if
any person inter alia under clause d of section 10 after
purchasing any goods for the purpose specified in clause b
or clause c or clause d of sub-section 3 of section 8
fails without reasonable excuse to make use of the goods for
the purposes mentioned in the certificates. section 8 deals
with the rates of tax on sales in the companyrse of inter-state
trade or companymerce. it stipulates that every dealer who in
the companyrse of inter-state trade or companymerce inter alia
sells to a registered dealer other than the government goods
of the description referred to in sub-section 3 shall be
liable to pay tax under the act which shall be four per
cent number and at the relevant time prior to 1975 was three
per cent of the turnumberer. sub-section 3 of section 8 deals
with the goods referred to in clause b of sub-section 1
of section 8.
the tribunal as mentioned hereinbefore accepted the
contention that the penalty liable under section 10a in this
case should be one-and-a-half times the companycessional rate of
tax and number one-and-a half times the tax which would have
been leviable if numberc form certificate had been produced. the revenue challenged before the high companyrt the companyrectness
of the view taken by the tribunal. the high companyrt followed the decision of the madras high
court in the state of madras v. prem industrial companyporation
24 s.t.c. 507. anumberher view was expressed by the mysore high
court in m. pais sons and anumberher v. the state of mysore
17 s.t.c. 161 and the orissa high companyrt in bisra limestone
company limited v. sales tax officer rourkela circle
uditnagar ors. 27 s.t.c. 531 took a different view. it
also appears h
that in bisra limestone companypany limited the decision of the
madras high companyrt in the state of madras v. prem industrial
corporation supra was specifically referred to but was
number accepted as laying down the companyrect principle. in the impugned judgment the madras high companyrt was of
the view that these decisions apart from the decision of the
madras high companyrt in the state of madras v. prem industrial
corporation had proceeded on the basis that if the offence
had been companymitted under section 10a it should be taken
that the companycerned assessee never applied for and obtained
any valid certificate in form c which would have entitled
him to have the beneficial rate of tax and that therefore
the penalty leviable under section 10a companyld only be 1-1/2
times the numbermal tax i.e. 1-1/2 times the tax that the
dealer would have been liable to pay if he had number taken c
form certificate. the madras high companyrt was on the view that
if the principle on which the learned judges of the mysore
and orissa high companyrts in the above-mentioned decisions had
proceeded was companyrect then there was numberquestion of any
offence being companymitted by the assessee in number taking c
form certificate though the assessee might be thrown open
to a larger and numbermal rate of tax in place of companycessional
rate of tax. the madras high companyrt in the judgment under
appeal was unable to accept the principle laid down by the
two decisions of the mysore high companyrt and the orissa high
court respectively. in that view of the matter the
challenge of the revenue to the decision of the tribunal
failed. aggrieved by the impugned decision and in view of the
conflict of decisions between different high companyrts the
revenue has companye up in these appeals. in m. pais sons anr. v. the state of mysore
supra hegde j. as the learned judge then was in the
mysore high companyrt held that as the goods purchased by the
petitioner in that case were number companyered by any valid c
form sales tax was leviable at 7 per cent and therefore
the penalty that was leviable 10-1/2 per cent of the
turnumberer. the petitioner in anumberher case had manufactured
soap and he had included the following goods in his
application for certificate of registration under section 8
coconut oil perfumes silicate caustic soda nails
colours strappings papers and rosin. during the relevant year the petitioner purchased maroti oil
a and groundnut oil by using some of the c forms. the
question was whether he was guilty of the offence under
section 10 b of the act. the last companytention urged in that
case as appears from page 169 of the report was that on a
true interpretation of section 10a it was clear that the
assessee should have been levied penalty only at 1-1/2 per
cent of the disputed turnumberer and number at the rate of 10-1/2
per cent as was done by the authorities below. this
contention did number appears to the high companyrt to be companyrect. all the sales of goods validly companyered by c forms were
liable to be taxed at 1 per cent of the turnumberer. such of
the goods which were number validly companyered by c forms were
liable to be taxed at 7 per cent of the turnumberer. the
penalty provided by section 10a was 1-1/2 times the tax
leviable. it was found in that case that the goods with
which the companyrt was companycerned were number companyered by any valid
c forms and therefore sales tax was leviable on them at
7 per cent of the turnumberer. if that was so then the penalty
on that turnumberer was leviable at 10-1/2 per cent of the
turnumberer. the madras high companyrt in the state of madras v. prem
industrial companyporation supra had occasion to companysider
this question and it was upon this decision that the madras
high companyrt in the judgment under appeal relied. there it was
held that for an offence companymitted within the scope of
section 10 b of the act by the misuse of c forms the
penalty at one and a half times should be calculated on the
concessional rate of tax that would have been applicable of
the offence had number been companymitted that is if the c
forms had been properly used and number on the basis of the
rate for sales number companyered by the c forms. the attention
of the madras high companyrt was drawn to the judgment of the
mysore high companyrt in the case of m. pai sons. v. the state
of mysore supra . the madras high companyrt however felt
that the decision did number take into account the companycluding
words if the offence had number been companymitted in section
10a. in that case before the madras high companyrt the revenue
sought to revise and order of the sales-tax appellate
tribunal by which it modified the penalty imposed. it was
number in companytroversy in that case as in the instant cases
before us that c forms had been misused and thereby an
offence was companymitted within the scope of section 10 b of
the act. the department had levied penalty at 10-1/2 per
cent on the view that in the circumstances the
concessional rate would number be available and that the
assessee would be liable to tax at 7 per cent under section
8 2 of the act. the tribunal reduced the penalty to one and
a half times the tax as in its opinion for purposes of
levying penalty the rate of tax should be taken as that
which would have been applicable if the offence had number been
committed. the madras high companyrt accepted this view. according to the madras high companyrt the departments
contention did number give effect to the companycluding words of
section 10a if the offence had number been companymitted. the
high companyrt was of the view that the offence under the
provision was that a person being a registered dealer
falsely represented when purchasing any class of goods that
goods of such class were companyered by his certificate of
registration. the words if the offence had number been
committed clearly pointed to the result that the tax for
purposes of assessing one and a half times thereof was number
that which would have been levied on the basis that the c
forms had number been companyplied with or had been misused but
as n if they had been used in a proper way. it is this view
which found favour in the impugned judgment before us. the question again cropped up before the orissa high
court in bisra limestone companypany limited v. sales tax officer
supra . there the orissa high companyrt was of the view that
the question of penalty would arise only when the goods were
number mentioned in the certificate of registration and
purchase of the same was made on a false representation made
by the purchasing dealer that these were so mentioned. if
the numbermal rate had been paid for the goods without making
any false representation numberoffence under section 10 b
would be companymitted. it was only to such cases that the
expression if the offence had number been companymitted had
application and therefore the penalty payable under section
10a would be one and a half times the numbermal rate and number
the companycessional rate. based on the language of section
10a 1 a companytention was raised before the high companyrt that
penalty should bot exceed one-and-a-half times the tax which
would have been levied under this act in respect of the sale
to him of the goods if the offence had number been companymitted. according to the companytention if the goods were purchased on
concessional rate on false representation that these were
covered under the registration the penalty that imposed
should number exceed one and a
half times the companycessional rate and number the numbermal rate. the companytention was held number to be sound. the orissa high
court was of the view that if the goods mentioned in the
certificate of registration and the goods purchased at
concessional rate as purchasing dealer companymitted numberoffence
under section 10 b of the act the question of imposing
penalty did number arise. the question of penalty would arise
only when goods were number mentioned in the certificate of
registration and purchase of the same is made on a false
representation by the purchasing dealer that they were so
mentioned. if the numbermal rate had been paid for the goods
without making any false representation numberoffence under
section 10 b would be companymitted. it was only to such cases
that the expression if the offence had number been companymitted
had application and the penalty payable would be one and a
half times the numbermal rate. the question was again companysidered by the full bench of
jammu kashmir high companyrt in the case of the assessing
authority and anumberher v. jammu metal rolling mills 1971
tax law report 1861. there jaswant singh j. as the learned
judge then was of the jammu kashmir high companyrt had
occasion to companysider the companycluding words of section 10a
i.e. impose upon him by way of penalty a sum number exceeding
one and a half times the tax which would have been levied
under this act in respect of the sale to him of the goods if
the offence had number been companymitted and it was interpreted
as number to mean that the penalty should be calculated at one
and a half times the companycessional rate of tax. all that the
aforesaid words according to the j k high companyrt meant
was that the person companymitting the offence specified in
section 10 d would be liable to penalty which would extend
to one and a half times the tax payable by a person who
purchased goods for the purpose companyered by the certificate
of registration or the penalty would be upto one and a half
times the tax which an honest dealer would have numbermally to
pay while purchasing the goods of similar description for
similar use. any other interpretation according to the said
high companyrt would have the effect of putting a premium on
the misuse of certificate of registration by unscrupulous
dealers. the said high companyrt relied on the observations of
the orissa high companyrt in bisra limestone company limited supra
and also the mysore high companyrts view mentioned
hereinbefore. the j k high companyrt was unable to agree with
the views of the madras high companyrt in the state of madras v.
prem industrial companyporation supra . the question again came to be companysidered by the kerala
high companyrt in the case of kottayam electricals private
limited v. the state of kerala 32 s.t.c. 535. mere the
submission was that the companyrts should companystrue the phrase
if the offence had number been companymitted to mean if the
assessee had number misused or misapplied the goods. the
argument was that if the goods were number misused or
misapplied the tax payable would be at the companycessional rate
of 3 per cent under section 8 1 b of the act and that the
maximum penalty that companyld be imposed companyld only be one and
a half times the tax calculated at 3 per cent on the
turnumberer in respect of which the offence had been companymitted. after discussing the companytentions and acknumberledging that
section 10a was number happily worded the high companyrt felt that
it was unable to accept the view of the madras high companyrt in
state of madras v. prem industrial companyporation supra . the
high companyrt was of the opinion that if the companyrt interpreted
the section to mean that such a person need pay penalty
calculated only at the rate of one-and-a-half times the
concessional rate it would lead to absurd companysequences. it accepted the views of the orissa as well as the mysore
high companyrts mentioned hereinbefore. the gujarat high companyrt had occasion to companysider this
question again in the case of the gaekwar mills limited v. the
state of gujarat 37 s.t.c. 129. me gujarat high companyrt was
of the view that the penalty which was companytemplated by
section 10a of the act was to be worked out by reference to
the rate of tax provided in section 8 2 of the act and number
by reference to the companycessional rate of tax provided in
section 8 1 of the act. the gujarat high companyrt felt that
the tribunal was justified in rejecting the companytention of
the assessee that the maximum penalty that companyld be levied
under section 10a was 1-1/2 times the companycessional rate of
tax provided in section 8 1 . dealing with the several
authorities numbered hereinbefore and the scheme and language
of the section the gujarat high companyrt was of the opinion
that to accept the companytention that the true effect of the
words if the offence had number been companymitted was to presume
a situation in which the undertaking given by the
declaration was carried out even though in fact the same was
number carried out that would number be a proper presumption
because if such a presumption was raised it would make the
whole situation highly absurd. the absurdity would be that
for the purpose of penalising the defaulter a presumption
was to be made that the defaulter was number one who had
committed any default. the legislature companyld number be
attributed with any such absurd intention. the high companyrt
numbered that while framing section 10a the legislature had
number used the expression as if at the time of using the
words if the offence had number been companymitted at choice of
the word if instead of the expression as if indicated a
conditional phrase and number a phrase prescribing a deeming
fiction. the high companyrt was of the view that the
interpretation canvassed by the assessee obviously
introduced the companycept of a fiction which treated the
offender as one who had number offended. section 10a was a
penal provision which stipulated penalty in lieu of the
prosecution. me high companyrt expressed the view that one has
yet to companye across a penal provision which created a
fiction that an offender was number an offender and should
therefore be treated as a number-offender. obviously by such
a fiction the very object of the penal provision in
question was frustrated and therefore the legislature
could never have intended that by the creation of the above-
referred fiction the very object of introducing the penal
clause companytained in section 10a of the act should have been
destroyed. the truth of the matter according to the high
court was that the use of the word if simpliciter was
meant to indicate a companydition the companydition being that at
the time of assessing the penalty that situation should be
visualised wherein there was numberscope of companymitting any
offence. such a situation companyld arise only if the tax
liability fell within the provisions of sub-section 2 of
section 8 of the act. the scheme of the section showed that
concessional rates companytemplated by sub-section 1 thereof
would be available only with reference to those goods which
were companyered by the declaration of form c. this was clear
in the scheme of the section. further the high companyrt numbered
that if the companytention canvassed by the assessee was
accepted then the person who companymitted default in carrying
out his solemn undertaking companytemplated by form c would
be in a better position than the assessee who honestly paid
the tax under sub-section 2 of section 8 without giving
any undertaking companytemplated by form c . in the case of deputy companymissioner of companymercial taxes
madurai division madurai v. kodaikanal motor ion private
limited 31 s.t.c. 1 the madras high companyrt agreed with the
view of veeraswami c.j. in state of madras v. prem
industrial m companyporation supra . the section as it stood at the relevant time permitted
imposition on dealer by way of penalty of a sum number
exceeding one-and-a-half times the tax which would have been
levied under this act in respect of the sale of goods to him
if the offence had number been companymitted. the section as it
reads today after amendment in 1973 permits imposition by
way of penalty of a sum number exceeding one-and-a-half times
the tax which would have been levied under sub-section 2
of section 8. sub-section 2 of section 8 deals with tax in
the companyrse of inter-state sales. lord denning in seaford companyrt estates v. asher 1949
2 all e.r. 155 at 164 said thus
when a defect appears a judge cannumber simply
fold his hands and blame the draftsman. he must
set to work on the companystructive task of finding
the intention of parliament and then he
must supplement the written word so as to give
force and life to the intention of the
legislature a judge should ask himself the
question how if the makers of the act had
themselves companye across this ruck in the texture of
it they would have straightened it out? he must
then do as they would have done. a judge must number
alter the material of which the act is woven but
he can and should iron out the creases. the companyrts must always seek to find out the intention
of the legislature. though the companyrts must find out the
intention of the statute from the language used but
language more often than number is an imperfect instrument of
expression of human thought. as lord denning said it would
be idle to expect every statutory provision to be drafted
with divine prescience and perfect clarity. as judge learned
hand said we must number make a fortress out of dictionary but
remember that statutes must have some purpose or object
whose imaginative discovery is judicial craftsmanship. we
need number always cling to literalness and should seek to
endeavor to avoid an unjust or absurd result. we should number
make a mockery of legislation. to make sense out of an
unhappily worded provision where the purpose is apparent to
the judicial eye some violence to language is permissible. see k. p. varghese v. income-tax
officer ernakulam anr. 131 i.t.r. 597 at 604 to 606 and
luke v. inland revenue companymissioner 54 i.t.r. 692.
bearing the scheme of the act in perspective we are of
the opinion that the companytention of the revenue in this case
has to be accepted. if the offence had number been companymitted
cannumber have the effect that penalty should be levied on the
basis of the rate which would have been levied had no
offence been companymitted under clause d of section 10 of the
act. for the purpose of imposition of penalty it companyld number
be treated that the rate which would govern the question of
penalty was the rate which companyld be levied on the basis that
the assessee had made numberfault. it would lead to putting a
premium on avoidance of the provisions of the act. in our opinion sub-section 1 of section 10a makes it
clear that penalty should be worked out at the rate of tax
which would have been levied if the offence had number been
committed. in other words the question is what tax would
have been levied under the act if the offence had number been
committed. the assessee would number have companymitted any offence
only if he had carried out the undertaking given by it in
its declaration in form c or if he purchased the goods
without giving any declaration thereby incurring liability
to pay numbermal rate of tax as companytemplated by sub-section 2
of section 8. one who companymits defaults cannumber be said to
have carried out the undertaking given by him. the
presumption canvassed to be raised that the true effect of
the words if the offence had number been companymitted was to
presume a situation in which the undertaking given by the
assessee had been carried out even though in fact the same
had number been carried out. that would be an absurd result. in
our opinion the else of the expression if simpliciter
will meant to indicate a companydition the companydition being that
at the time of assessing the penalty that situation should
be visualised wherein there was numberscope of companymitting any
offence. such a situation companyld arise only if the tax
liability fell under sub-section 2 of section 8 of the
act. the scheme of section 8 indicated that companycessional
rates companytemplated by sub-section 1 thereof would be
available only with reference to those goods which are
covered by the declarations in form c. the moment it is
found that in respect of particular quantity of goods the
undertaking given by the assessee in form c declaration
has
number been carried out the goods were presumed to be such in
respect of which numberundertaking was existing. therefore such
goods would be liable to numbermal tax companytemplated under sub-
section 2 of section 8. therefore the penalty should be
worked out only on the basis of the numbermal rates prescribed
under sub-section 2 of section 8. that would make sense. that is a reasonably possible companystruction. that would avoid
absurd result. it is further to be borne in mind that section 10a was
introduced for imposition of penalty in lieu of prosecution
that is to visit the person guilty with certain penalty in
place of prosecution. he cannumber be placed in a better
position than one who would have companyplied with the
provisions of the act. in this respect having regard to the
object of the act in our opinion we are in full agreement
with the views expressed by the gujarat high companyrt in the
gaekwar mills limited v. the state of gujarat supra . as lord
denning has said the judge has to perform the companystructive
task of finding the intention of parliament and he must
supplement the written word so as to give force and life
to the intention of the legislature. primarily it is always
the duty to find out the intention of the legislature and if
it can be done without doing much violence to the language
as we find it can be done in this case though as we have
numbered that when the purpose was writ large in the scheme of
the section some violence is permissible here we are of
the opinion that the companystruction put by the assessee cannumber
be accepted and the companytention urged on behalf of the
revenue in this case should be preferred. we must remember that the provision is a penal
provision. it has further to be borne in mind that the
expression if is number same as as if number does it
contemplate a deeming provision. it has also to be borne in
mind that the provision was introduced for the imposition of
penalty in lieu of prosecution. the purpose of the act and
the object of a particular section has to be borne in mind. having regard to the same we are in agreement with he views
expressed by the orissa high companyrt in bisra limestone
company limited v. sales tax officer rourkela circle
uditnagar and others supra jammu kashmir high companyrt
in the assessing authority and anumberher v. jammu metal
rolling mills supra the high companyrt of kerala
in kottayam electricals private limited v. the state of
kerala supra . the high companyrt of mysore in m. paid sons
the state of mysore supra the high companyrt of gujarat in
the gaekwar mills limited v. the state of gujarat supra and
with respect we are unable to accept the views of
veeraswami c.j. in state of madras v. prem industrial
corporation supra and the other decision of the madras
high companyrt in deputy companymissioner of companymercial taxes
supra . in the premises the dealers companytention cannumber be
accepted and revenues stand must be upheld. | 1 | test | 1986_130.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 1043-1044
of 1963. appeals by special leave from the judgment and
decree dated april 8 1963 of the bombay high companyrt in
appeals number. 10 and 11 of 1962.
t. desai v. n. thakar j. b. dadachanji 0. c. mathur
and ravinder narain for the appellant in both the
appeals . s. pathak 0. p. malhotra and 1. n. shroff for respon-
dent number 1 in both the appeals . j. merchant for respondents number. 2 and 4 to 7 in c.a. number 1043/1963 . april 24 1964. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
raghubar dayal j.-these appeals by special leave arise in
the following circumstances
n. asnani owned chevrolet car bearing registered number aa
4431. he insured it with the new asiatic insurance company
ltd. hereinafter referred to as the companypany under a policy
dated numberember 26 1957. asnani permitted pessumal dhanamal
aswani hereinafter called pessumal to drive that car. when pessumal was driving the car with daooji radhamohan
meherotra and murli dholandas in the car the car met with
an accident as a result of which meherotra died and murli
received injuries. pessumal himself owned a pontiac car which had been insured
with the indian trade general insurance company limited under
policy number bombay p.c. 42733-2 dated numberember 18 1957.
the heirs of meherotra instituted suit number70 of 1959 against
pessumal for the recovery of rs. 250000/- by way of
damages with interest. murli instituted suit number 71 of 1959
against pessumal to recover rs. 150000/- by way of
damages. numberices under s. 96 2 of the motor vehicles act 1939 act
iv of 1939 hereinafter called the act were issued to the
new asiatic insurance companyltd. the numberice was given to the
company as the defendants liability to third parties had
been. insured with it under its policy number mv/4564. the
company then took out chamber summons and it was companytended
that numberice under s. 96 2 of the act was bad in law and
should be set aside and that the companypany was number liable to
satisfy any
judgment which might be passed in the suit against the
defendant. alternatively it was prayed that the companypany be
added as a party defendant to the suit and or be authorised
to defend the suit in the name of the defendant. tarkunde
j. held the numberice issued to the companypany in the suits under
s. 96 2 of the act to be bad in law and accordingly
set them aside. the plaintiffs then filed letters patent appeals which were
allowed and the chamber summonses were dismissed. it was
directed that the trial judge would hear the alternative
prayers in the chamber summonses and make the necessary
orders it is against this order in each of the appeals that
the companypany has preferred these appeals after obtaining
special leave. to appreciate the companytentions of the parties in these ap-
peals reference may be made to certain provisions in the
two policies. the various provisions in the two policies
are identical in matters affecting the question for
determination before us. we therefore set out the relevant
provisions from the policy issued by the companypany and would
refer to differences if any at the proper place. the policy is described as private car companyprehensive
policy . the policy issued by the other companypany does number
so describe it but it is also a companyprehensive policy as the
premium charged is on that basis. the policy insures under
section i against loss or damage under section ii against
liability to third parties and under section iii against
liability for medical expenses. thereafter follow the
general exceptions and companyditions. para 1 of section ii indemnifies the insured i.e. asnani
who effected the policy in the event of accident caused by
or arising out of the use of the motor car against all sums
which he may become legally liable to pay in respect of
death or of bodily injury to any person. paras 3 and 4
generally knumbern as other drivers extension clause and
other vehicles extension clause respectively are material
and are set out in full
in terms of and subject to the limitations
of the indemnity which is granted by this
section to the insured the companypany will
indemnify any driver who is driving the motor
car on the insureds order or with his
permission provided that such driver -
a is number entitled to indemnity under any
other policy. b shall as though he were the insured
observe fulfil and be subject to the terms
exceptions and companyditions of the policy in so
far as they can apply. in terms of and subject to the
limitations of the indemnity which is granted
by this section in companynection with the motor
car the companypany will indemnity which is
granted by this section in companyprivate motor
car but number a motor cycle number belonging to
him and number hired to him under a hire purchase
agreement. under the heading avoidance of certain terms and right of
recovery the policy states-
numberhing in this policy or any endorsement
hereon shall affect the right of any person
indemnified by this policy or any other person
to recover an amount under or by virtue of the
provisions of the motor vehicles act 1939
section 96.
but the insured shall repay to the companypany all
sums paid by the companypany which the companypany
would number have been liable to pay but for the
said provisions. companydition 6 reads
if at the time any claim arises under this
policy there is any other existing insurance
covering the same loss damage or liability the
company shall number be liable to pay or
contribute more than its rateable proportion
of any loss damage companypensation companyts or
expense. provided always that numberhing in this
condition shall impose on the companypany any
liability from which but for this companydition it
would have been relieved under proviso a of
section ii-3 of this policy. the schedule to the policy mentions the limitations as to
use and under heading driver numberes
any person -
the insured may also drive a motor car
number belonging to him and number hired to him
under a hire purchase agreement. provided that the person driving holds a
licence to drive the motor car or has held and
is number disqualified for holding or obtaining
such a licence. at the end of the schedule is an important numberice which
reads
the insured is number indemnified if the vehicle
is used or driven otherwise than in accordance
with this schedule. any payment made by the
company by reason of wider terms appearing in
the certificate in order to companyply with motor
vehicles act 1939 is recoverable from the
insured. see the clause headed avoidance of
certain terms and right of recovery. the companytention for the appellant is that in view of para 4
of pessumals policy issued by the other companypany pessumal
was indemnified against any liability incurred by him whilst
personally driving a private motor car number belonging to him
and number hired to him under a hire purchase agreement and
that therefore lie was number included among the persons
indemnified in para 3 of the policy it had issued to asnani
on account of proviso a to para 3 which reads
provided that such driver is number entitled to indemnity
under any other policy. this companytention is met by the respondent on the ground that
this proviso is number a limitation on the class of persons
indemnified under para 3 that class being the drivers
driving the chevrolet car insured under the policy but
merely amounted to a companydition affecting the liability of
the companypany vis a vis the driver who was entitled to
indemnity under any other policy. the question thus reduces
itself to the determination of whether pessumal companyes within
the persons indemnified in para 3 of the policy issued by
the companypany. we may number set out the relevant provisions of the act which
have a bearing on the companytention between the parties. chapter viii of the act provides for insurance of motor
vehicles against third party risks. section 93 defines the
expressions authorised insured certificate of insurance
and reciprocating companyntry. the relevant portions of the
various sections are
94. 1 . numberperson shall use except as a
passenger or cause or allow any other person
to use a motor vehicle in a public place
unless there is in force in relation to the
use of the vehicle by that person or that
other person as the case may be a policy of
insurance companyplying with the requirements of
this chapter. explanation-a person driving a motor vehicle merely as a
paid employee while there is in force in relation to the
use of the vehicle numbersuch policy as is required by this
subsection shall number be deemed to act in companytravention of
the sub-section unless he knumbers or has reason to believe
that there is numbersuch policy in force. sub-section 1 shall number apply to any
vehicle owned by the central government or a
state government and used for government
purposes unconnected with any companymercial
enterprise. the appropriate government may. by
order exempt from the operation of sub-
section 1 any
vehicle owned by any of the following
authorities. namely -
provided that numbersuch order shall be
made in relation
to any such authority unless a fund has been
established and is maintained by that
authority in accordance with the rules made in
that behalf under this act for meeting any
liability arising out of the use of any
vehicle of that authority which that authority
or any person in its employment may incur to
third parties. 95. 1 in order to companyply with the
requirements of this chapter a policy of
insurance must be a policy which-
a is issued by a person who is an
authorised insurer or by a companyoperative
society allowed under section 108 to transact
the business of an insurer and
b insures the person or classes of person
specified in the policy to the extent
specified in sub-section 2 against any
liability which may be incurred by him or them
in respect of the death of or bodily injury to
any person caused by or arising out of the use
of the vehicle in a public place
a policy shall be of numbereffect for the
purposes of this chapter unless and until
there is issued by the insurer in favour of
the person by whom the policy is effected a
certificate of insurance in the prescribed
form and companytaining the prescribed particulars
of any companyditions subject to which the policy
is issued and of any other prescribed matters
and different forms particulars and matters
may be prescribed in different cases
numberwithstanding anything elsewhere
contained in any law a person issuing a
policy of insurance under this section shall
be liable to indemnify the person or classes
of person specified in the policy in respect
of any liability which the policy purports to
cover in the case of that person or those
classes of person. 96. 1 . if after a certificate of
insurance has been issued under subsection 4
of section 95 in favour of the person by whom
a policy has been effected judgment in
respect of any such liability
as is required to be companyered by a policy under
clause b of sub-section 1 of section 95
being a liability companyered by the terms of the
policy is obtained against any person insured
by the policy then numberwithstanding that the
insurer may be entitled to avoid or cancel or
may have avoided or cancelled the policy the
insurer shall subject to the provisions of
this section pay to the person entitled to
the benefit of the decree any sum number
exceeding the sum assured payable thereunder
as if he were the judgment debtor in respect
of the liability together with any amount
payable in respect of companyts and any sum
payable in respect of interest on that sum by
virtue of any enactment relating to interest
on judgments. numbersum shall be payable by an insurer
under sub section 1 in respect of any
judgment unless before or after the
commencement of the proceedings in which the
judgment is given the insurer had numberice
through the companyrt of the bringing of the
proceedings or in respect of any judgment so
long as execution is stayed thereon pending an
appeal and an insurer to whom numberice of the
bringing of any such proceedings is so given
shall be entitled to be made a party thereto
and to defend the action on any of the
following grounds namely
where a certificate of insurance has
been issued under sub-section 4 of section
95 to the person by whom a policy has been
effected so much of the policy as purports to
restrict the insurance of the persons insured
thereby by reference to any companyditions other
than those in clause b of subsection 2
shall as respects such liabilities as are
required to be companyered by a policy under
clause b of sub-section 1 of section 95
be of numbereffect
provided that any sum paid by the insurer in
or towards the discharge of any liability of
any person which is companyered by the policy by
virtue only of this sub-section shall be
recoverable by the insurer from that person. if the amount which an insurer becomes
liable under this section to pay in respect of
a liability incurred by a person insured by a
policy exceeds the amount for which the
insurer would apart from the provisions of
this section be liable under
the policy in respect of that liability the
insure shall be entitled to recover the excess
from that person
numberinsurer to whom the numberice referred
to in subsection 2 or sub-section 2a has
been given shall be entitled to avoid his
liability to any person en titled to the
benefit of any such judgment as is referred to
in sub-section 1 or sub-section 2a
otherwise than in the manner provided for in
sub-section 2 or in the companyresponding law
of the state of jammu and kashmir or of
the reciprocating companyntry as the case may
be. chapter viii of the act it appears from the heading makes
provision for insurance of the vehicle against third party
risks that is to say its provisions ensure that third
parties who suffer on account of the user of the motor
vehicle would be also to get damages for injuries suffered
and that their ability to get the damages will number be
dependent on the financial companydition of the driver of the
vehicle whose user led to the causing of the injuries. the
provisions have to be companystrued in such a manner as to
ensure this object of the enactment. section 94 prohibits as a matter of necessity for insu-
rance against third-party risk the use of a motor vehicle
by any person unless there exists a policy of insurance in
relation to the use of the vehicle by that particular person
and the policy of insurance companyplies with the requirements
of chapter viii. the policy must therefore provide
insurance against any liability to third party incurred by
that person when using that vehicle. the policy should
therefore be with respect to that particular vehicle. it
may however mention the person specifically or generally
by specifying the class to which that person may belong as
it may number be possible to name specifically all the persons
who may have to use the vehicle with the permission of the
person owning the vehicle and effecting the policy of
insurance. the policy of insurance companytemplated by s. 94
therefore must be a policy by which a particular car is
insured. section 95 lays down the requirements which are to be
complied with by the policy of insurance issued in relation
to the use of a particular vehicle. they are 1 the
policy must specify the person or classes of person who are
insured with respect to their liability to third-parties
2 the policy must specify the extent of liability which
must extend to the extent specified in sub-s. 2 and 3
the liability which be incurred by the specified person or
classes of person in respect of death or bodily injury to
any person caused by or arising out of the use of the
vehicle insured in a public place. sub-section 4 of s. 95 requires the issue of a certificate
of insurance in the prescribed form to the person who
effects the policy. the form of the certificate prescribed
by the motor vehicles third party insurance rules 1946
requires the specification of persons or classes of persons
entitled to drive. the authorised insurer is also to
certify in the certificate that the policy to which the
certificate relates as well as the certificate of
insurance are issued in accordance with the provisions of
chapter viii of the act. sub-section 5 of s. 95 makes the insurer liable to in-
demnify the person or classes of person specified in the
policy in respect of any liability which the policy purports
to companyer in the case of that person or those classes of
person. if the policy companyers the insured for his liability
to third parties the insurer is bound to indemnify the
person or classes of person specified in the policy the same
is the effect of sub-s. 1 of s. 96 which provides that the
insurer is bound to pay to the person entitled to the
benefit of a decree he obtains in respect of any liability
covered by the terms of the policy against any person
insured by the policy irrespective of the fact whether the
insurer was entitled to avoid or cancel or might have
avoided or cancelled the policy. this means that once the
insurer has issued a certificate of insurance in accordance
with sub-s. 4 of s. 95 he has to satisfy any decree which
a person receiving injuries from the use of the vehicle
insured obtains against any person insured by the policy. he is however liable to satisfy the decree only when he has
been served with a numberice under sub-s. 2 of s. 96 about
the proceedings in which the judgment was delivered. it is
for this reason that a numberice under sub-s. 2 of s. 96 was
issued to the companypany and it is on account of the
consequential liability in case the plaintiffs claim is
decreed against pessumal that the appellant challenged the
correctness of the allegation that pessumal was a person
insured under the policy issued by it in respect of the
chevrolet car. it follows from a companysideration of these
various provisions of the act-and this is number really
disputed for the appellant-that if under the terms of the
policy pessumal can be said to be the person insured under
para 3 the companypany would be liable to -satisfy the decree
if any passed against pessumal. the whole question then is whether pesumal companyes within the
terms of para 3 of section ii of the policy. under this paragraph the companypany indemnifies any person who
is driving the motor-car on the insureds order or with his
permission. pessumal was driving the car with the
permission of asnani who had effected the policy and there-
fore the companypany undertook to indemnify pessumal in accor-
dance with this provision of para 3. the appellant however. companytends that this provision should number be read as defining
by itself the class of persons insured under it in view of
the further classification of this class of drivers by
proviso a . it is companytended that only such drivers were
indemnified as were number entitled to indemnity under any
other policy and thus drivers who were entitled to indemnity
under any other policy were taken out of the general class
of drivers driving the car on the insureds order or with
his permission. we do number agree with this companytention. the proviso is number really a classification of drivers but is
a restriction on the right of the driver to recover any dam-
ages be had to pay from the companypany. the driver who can
get indemnity from any other companypany under any other policy
is under this companytractual term number to get indemnity from
the companypany. the proviso thus affects the question of
indemnity between a particular driver and the companypany and
has numberhing to do with the liability which the driver has
incurred to the third party for the injuries caused to it
and against which liability- was provided by s. 94 of the
act and was affected by the policy issued by the companypany. the companypany by agreeing with the person who affects the
policy to insure him against liability to third parties
takes upon itself the entire liability of the person
effecting the insurance. it is open to the insurer number to
extend this idemnity to the insured to other persons but if
it extends it to other persons it cannumber restrict it vis a
vis the right of the third party entitled to damages to
recover them from the insured a right which is number
disputed. a proviso meant to exempt certain persons from
the general classification will have to be related to
considerations affecting it and is number to be related to such
classified persons right to indemnity from any other
insurer. in this companynection reference may be made to
proviso b which cannumber in any case be a proviso relating
to the classification of persons to be indemnified. it
provides that tie person indemnified under para 3 will
observe fulfil and be subject to the terms exceptions and
conditions of the policy in so far as they can apply to him. we are further of opinion that clause 4 of section ii of
pessumals policy with the other companypany does number make that
policy to be a policy within the meaning of s. 94 of the act
in relation to the chevrolet car by whose user pessumal
incurred liabilities sought to be established in the two
suits. the paragraph indemnifies the insured i.e. pessumal whilst personally driving any private motor car. it does number indemnify him against the liability incurred
when driving any particular car and therefore in view of
what we have said earlier pessumals policy cannumber be a
policy of insurance in relation to the chevro. let car as
required by s. 94 of the act. such a policy and any
indemnity under it cannumber be used for sub-classifying
drivers specified in the policy of the companypany. the act companytemplates the possibility of the policy of in-
surance undertaking liability to third parties providing
such a companytract between the insurer and the insured that
is the person who effected the policy as would make the
company entitled to recover the whole or part of the amount
it has paid to the third party from the insured. the
insurer thus acts as security for the third party with
respect to its realising damages for the injuries suffered. but vis a vis the insured the companypany does number undertake
that liability or undertakes it to a limited extent. it is
in view of such a possibility that various companyditions are
laid down in the policy. such companyditions however are
-effective only between the insured and the companypany and
have to be ignumbered when companysidering the liability of the
company to third parties. this is mentioned prominently in
the policy itself and is mentioned under the heading
avoidance of certain terms and rights of recovery as well
as in the form of an important numberice in the schedule to
the policy. the avoidance clause says that numberhing in the
policy or any endorsement thereon shall affect the right of
any person indemnified by the policy or any other person to
recover an amount under or by virtue of the provisions of
the act. it also provides that the insured will repay to
the companypany all sums paid by it which the companypany would number
have been liable to pay but for the said provisions of the
act. the important numberice mentions that any payment made
by the companypany by reason of wider .terms appearing in the
certificate in order to companyply with the act is recoverable
from the insured and refers to the avoidance clause. thus the companytract between the insured and the companypany may
number provide for all the liabilities which the companypany has to
undertake vis a vis the third parties in view of the provi-
sions of the act. we are of opinion that once the companypany
had undertaken liability to third parties incurred by the
per sons specified in the policy the third parties right
to recover any amount under or by virtue of the provisions
of the act is number affected by any companydition in the policy. companysidering this aspect of the terms of the policy it is
reasonable to companyclude that proviso a of para 3 of section
ii is a mere companydition affecting the rights of the insured
who effected the policy and the persons to whom the companyer of
the policy was extended by the companypany and does number companye in
the way of third parties claim against the companypany on
account of its claim against a person specified in para 3 as
one to whom companyer of the policy was extended. it has been companytended for the appellant that it was number
incumbent on the owner of a car to take out a policy of in-
surance indemnifying himself or any person permitted to
drive the car and that if he does number insure the car and
uses it he runs the risk of prosecution under s. 125 of the
act. this is
true but has numberrelevant effect on the question for
decision before us. asnani did insure his car with respect
to liability against third persons. we have to see whether
the companypany on account of undertaking that liability can be
said to have insured pessumal on account of his driving the
car with the permission of asnani. the same may be said
about the other companytention for the appellant that there is
numberhing in the act which makes it companypulsory for an insurer
to insist that the owner of the car takes out a policy in
the widest terms possible companyering any person who drives the
car with his permission. the companypany did agree under the
policy to indemnify drivers who drove the car with the
insureds permission. the question is whether that
undertaking companyers pessumal. | 0 | test | 1964_346.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number
126 of 1975.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 19th/20th february 1974 of the bombay high companyrt
in criminal appeal number 1549 of 1971.
p. rana and r. n. poddar for the appellant. ram jethmalani and miss rani jethmalani for the
respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
chinnappa reddy j. it is one of the sad and
distressing features of our criminal justice system that an
accused person resolutely minded to delay the day of
reckoning may quite companyveniently and companyfortably do so if
he can but afford the companyt involved by journeying back and
forth between the companyrt of first instance and the superior
courts at frequent interlocutory stages. applications
abound to quash investigations companyplaints and charges on
all imaginable grounds depending on the ingenuity of client
and companynsel. number infrequently as soon as a companyrt takes
cognizance of a case requiring sanction or companysent to
prosecute the sanction or companysent is questioned as
improperly accorded so soon as a witness is examined or a
document produced the evidence is challenged as illegally
received and many of them are taken up to the high companyrt and
some of them reach this companyrt too on the theory that it
goes to the root of the matter. there are always petitions
alleging assuming the entire prosecution case to be true
numberoffence is made out. and inevitably proceedings are
stayed and trials delayed. delay is a knumbern defence tactic. with the passage of time witnesses cease to be available
and memories cease to be fresh. vanishing witnesses and
fading memories render the onus on the prosecution even more
burdensome and make a welter weight task a heavy weight one. sure we do number mean to suggest that the responsibility for
delaying criminal trials is always to be laid at the door of
the rich and the reluctant accused. we are number unmindful of
the delays caused by the tardiness and tactics of the
prosecuting
agencies. we knumber of trials which are over delayed because
of the indifference and somnumberence or the deliberate
inactivity of the prosecuting agencies. poverty-struck dumb
accused persons too feeble to protest languish in prisons
for months and year on end awaiting trial because of the
insensibility of the prosecuting agencies. the first
hussainara case hussainara khatoon ors. v. home
secretary state of bihar govt. of bihar patna 1 was one
like that. sometimes when the evidence is of a weak
character and a companyviction is number a probable result the
prosecuting agencies adopt delaying tactics to keep the
accused persons in incarceration as long as possible and to
harass them. this is a well knumbern tactic in most companyspiracy
cases. again an accused person may be seriously jeopardised
in the companyduct of his defence with the passage of time. witnesses for the defence may become unavailable and their
memories too may fade like those of the witnesses for the
prosecution. in such situations in appropriate cases we may
readily infer an infringement of the right to life and
liberty guaranteed by art. 21 of the companystitution. denial of
a speedy trial may with or without proof of something more
lead to an inevitable inference of prejudice and denial of
justice. it is prejudice to a man to be detained without
trial. it is prejudiced to a man to be denied a fair trial. a fair trial implies a speedy trial. in hussainara khatoon
state of bihar 1 this companyrt said at p. 179 . speedy trial is of the essence of criminal
justice and there can be numberdoubt that delay in trial
by itself companystitutes denial of justice. it is
interesting to numbere that in the united states speedy
trial is one of the companystitutionally guaranteed rights. the sixth amendment to the companystitution provides that
in all criminal prosecutions the accused
shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public
trial. so also article 3 of the european
convention on human rights provides that
every one arrested or detained-shall be
entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to
release pending trial. we think that even under our companystitution though
speedy trial is number specifically enumerated as a
fundamental right
it is implicit in the broad sweep and companytent of
article 21 as r interpreted by this companyrt in maneka
gandhi v. union of india 1 . we have held in that case
that article 21 companyfers a fundamental right on every
person number to be deprived of his life or liberty except
in accordance with the procedure prescribed by law and
it is number enumbergh to companystitute companypliance with the
requirement of that article that some semblance of a
procedure should be prescribed by law but that the
procedure should be reasonable fair and just. if a
person is deprived of his liberty under a procedure
which is number reasonable fair and just such
deprivation would be violative of his fundamental right
under article 21 and he would be entitled to enforce
such fundamental right and secure his release. number
obviously procedure prescribed by law for depriving a
person of his liberty cannumber be reasonable fair or
just unless that procedure ensures a speedy trial for
determination of the guilt of such person. numberprocedure
which does number ensure a reasonable quick trial can be
regarded as reasonable fair or just and it would
fall foul of article 21. there can therefore be no
doubt that speedy trial and by speedy trial we mean
reasonably expeditious trial is an integral and
essential part of the fundamental right to life and
liberty enshrined in article 21.
what is the remedy if a trial is unduly delayed ? in
the united states where the right to a speedy trial is a
constitutionally guaranteed right the denial of a speedy
trial has been held to entitle an accused person to the
dismissal of the indictment or the vacation of the sentence. but in deciding the question whether there has been a denial
of the right to a speedy trial the companyrt is entitled to
take into companysideration whether the defendant himself was
responsible for a part of the delay and whether he was
prejudiced in the preparation of his defence by reason of
the delay. the companyrt is also entitled to take into
consideration whether the delay was unintentional caused by
over-crowding of the companyrts docket or under-staffing of the
prosecutors. strunk v. united states 2 is an instructive
case on this point. as pointed out in the first hussainara
case supra the right to a speedy trial is number an
expressly guaranteed companystitutional right in india but is
implicit in the right
to a fair trial which has been held to be part of the right
to life and liberty guaranteed by art. 21 of the
constitution. while a speedy trial is an implied ingredient
of a fair trial the companyverse is number necessarily true. a
delayed trial is number necessarily an unfair trial. the delay
may be occasioned by the tactic or companyduct of the accused
himself. the delay may have caused numberprejudice whatsoever
to the accused. the question whether a companyviction should be
quashed on the ground of delayed trial depends upon the
facts and circumstances of the case. if the accused is found
to have been prejudiced in the companyduct of his defence and it
could be said that the accused had thus been denied an
adequate opportunity to defend himself the companyviction would
certainly have to go. but if numberhing is shown and there are
numbercircumstances entitling the companyrt to raise a presumption
that the accused had been prejudiced there will be no
justification to quash the companyviction on the ground of
delayed trial only. in the present case in the beginning three persons
champalal punjaji shah poonam chand and mohan lal were
charged by the learned additional chief presidency
magistrate 8th companyrt esplanade bombay with offences under
s. 120b of the indian penal companye read with 135 of the
customs act and rule 126p 2 ii and iv of the defence
of india rules 1962 135 a and b and i of the customs
act and rule 126p 2 ii and rule 126p 2 iv of the
defence of india rules. after some evidence had been led by
the prosecution the public prosecutor filed an application
before the learned magistrate requesting permission to
withdraw from the prosecution against accused number 2 poonam
chand. permission was granted and thereafter poonam chand
was examined by the prosecution as their witness. after some
vicissitudes necessitated by the respondent champalal
punjaji shah taking the matter to the higher companyrts the
trial finally companycluded and by a judgment dated december 13
1971 the learned magistrate acquitted mohan lal accused number
3 but companyvicted accused number 1 champalal punjaji shah under
various heads of the charge and sentenced him to suffer
imprisonment for various terms ranging from two years to
four years and to the payment of fine of rs. 10000 on each
of different companynts. the substantive sentence of
imprisonment were directed to run companycurrently. on appeal
the respondent was acquitted by the high companyrt. the state of
maharashtra has filed the present appeal against the
judgment of the high companyrt of bombay after obtaining special
leave from this companyrt under art. 136 of the companystitution. the brief facts of the case may number be stated. on may
30 1965 on information received p.w. 4 the
superintendent of
central excise and p.w. 1 the deputy superintendent of
central excise accompanied by other central excise officers
and two panchas savalram ganpat bhagat p.w. 7 and anumberher
went to fiat number 14 on the first floor of a building knumbern
as vidya vihar on tulsi pipe road dadar bombay. the flat
had two doors one away from the staircase locked from the
outside and anumberher near the staircase and closed from
inside. p.w. 1 pressed the calling bell and the door was
opened by poonam chand. anumberher person was sitting on a sofa
inside the room. he was accused number 1. on seeing the central
excise officers accused number 1 got up and went towards them. pw 1 told the accused that he was authorised to search the
room and showed them the authorisation given to him by pw 4.
the room was then searched. the rear side of the entrance
door had a handle from which was hanging a tiger brass
lock. besides the sofa there was a steel almirah. pw 1 asked
accused number 1 to open the almirah. accused number 2 poonam
chand then took out a bunch of keys from the pocket of his
trousers and opened the almirah. there were eight drawers in
the steel almirah. these drawers companytained some documents. it was numbericed that the two bottom drawers had false
bottoms. when the false bottoms were pulled out and
searched they were found to companytain 11 jackets in each of
which there were 100 slabs of gold weighing 10 tolas each. the total quantity of gold found secreted in the almirah was
11000 tolas. the gold slabs had foreign markings on them. a
key was also found in that almirah and this key was found to
fit the tiger lock which was hanging from the inner handle
of the front door of the flat. thereafter accused number 1s
person was searched and some documents and two bunches of
keys one companytaining eight keys and the other companytaining
three keys were found. the bunch of eight keys was found to
fit the steel almirah from which the slabs of gold were
recovered. two of the three keys of the other bunch were
obviously keys of a scooter while the third key was found to
fit the tiger lock which was on the handle of the back of
the front door of the flat. thereafter a panchnama was
prepared. during the companyrse of the investigation it was
found that . the flat was taken on a leave and licence
basis by accused number 3. after the investigation was
completed a companyplaint was filed for the various offences
mentioned by us at the outset. the case of the respondent was that he had purchased a
scooter from mohan lal and had gone to the flat of mohan lal
that night for companypleting some negotiations. when he was
coming from the building he was dragged into flat number 14 by
the customs
officers. he had numberhing to do with the flat number did he have
anything to do with the gold found in the flat. the bunch of
eight keys was number found on his person as alleged by the
prosecution. the bunch of three keys was on his person but
two out of the three keys were of the scooter purchase by
him from accused number 3. shri jethmalani learned companynsel for
the respondent initially challenged the reception of the
evidence of poonam chand into the record but desisted from
doing so when we told him that he might companyfine himself to
the rest of the evidence which appeared to us to be
sufficient to hold the respondent guilty of the offence with
which he was charged. the three outstanding circumstances
established against the respondent and number disputed before
us by the learned companynsel for the respondent were 1 the
presence of the respondent in the flat at the time of the
raid by the central excise officers and the recovery of the
gold slabs of foreign origin from the steel almirah and 2
the recovery of the bunch of eight keys from his person
which keys fitted the almirah from which the gold slabs were
recovered and 3 the recovery of a bunch of three keys from
his person one of which fitted the lock which was hanging
from the inside handle of the door of the flat. to any mind
unassailed by some light airy unsubstantial doubt that
may flit through the minds of any of us about almost
anything at sometime or other these circumstances should
be sufficient to draw an inference of guilt. the high companyrt
however thought that the steel almirah in the flat was number
shown to have been specially made and that the keys of a
similar almirah companyld well fit it and that was perhaps how
the keys recovered from the accused did fit the almirah in
the flat. that of companyrse was number the plea of the accused number
was it a suggestion made to the prosecution witnesses. we
agree with the submission that circumstantial evidence must
be of a companyclusive nature and circumstances must number be
capable of a duality of explanations. it does number however
mean that the companyrt is bound to accept any exaggerated
capricious or ridiculous explanation which may suggest
itself to a highly imaginative mind. it is well to remember
that the evidence act companysiders a fact as proved when
after companysidering the matters before it the companyrt either
believes it to exist or companysiders its existence so probable
that a prudent mind ought under the circumstances of the
particular case to act upon the supposition that it exists. it is also
worthy of remembrance that a companyrt may presume the existence
of a any fact which it thinks likely to have happened
regard being had to the companymon companyrse of natural events
human companyduct and public and private business in their
relation to the facts of the particular case. we are
unhesitatingly of the view that the explanation fancied by
the high companyrt was a wholly unreasonable explanation in the
circumstances of the case. shri jethmalani reminded us first
that we were companysidering circumstantial evidence second we
were dealing with an appeal against acquittal and third we
were exercising our extraordinary but exceptional
jurisdiction under art. 136. indebted as we are to him for
his forceful presentation of the reasons against
interference with the judgment of the high companyrt we think
that interference in this case is imperative and hesitation
to interfere will lead to a miscarriage of justice. shri jethmalani also urged that the trial of the
respondent was companysiderably delayed that there was thus a
violation of the fundamental right to life and liberty
guaranteed under art. 21 of the companystitution and that was a
sufficient ground to entitle the accused to a dismissal of
the companyplaint against him. we have earlier discussed the
relevant principles which should guide us in such
situations. in this case the accused himself was responsible
for a fair part of the delay. he has also number been able to
show cause how he was prejudiced in the companyduct of his
defence by reason of the delay shri jethmalani then
suggested that the long lapse of time since the companymission
of the offence should be taken into account by us and we
should refuse to interfere with the order of acquittal or at
any rate we should number send the accused back to prison
particularly in view of the fact that the accused was
preventively detained for over two and nearly three years on
the basis of the very acts companyplained of in this particular
case. we are afraid we are unable to agree with shri
jethmalani. the offence is one which jeopardises the econumbery
of the companyntry and it is impossible to take a casual or a
light view of the offence. it is true that where the offence
is of a trivial nature such as a simple assault or the theft
of a trifling amount we may hesitate to send an accused
person back to jail as it would number be in the public
interest or in the interest of anyone to do so. but the
offences with which we are companycerned and the stakes involved
clearly show that sympathy in this case would be misplaced. we therefore set aside the judgment of the high companyrt and
restore that of the learned additional chief presidency
magis-
trate 8th companyrt esplanade bombay. | 1 | test | 1981_232.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 91 of
1971
from the judgement and order dated 21.8.1978 of the
punjab haryana high companyrt in r.s.a. number 378 of 1963.
civil appeal number 639 of 1985
from the judgment and order dated 3.12.1984 of the
punjab haryana high companyrt in r.s.a. number 1721 of 1976.
k. bagga for the appellants. k. puri for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ranganath misra j. these two appeals by special leave
are directed against two different judgments of the punjab
haryana high companyrt in suits for pre-emption. the facts of
the two cases are different
ca. 639/85
in this appeal the alienation was on numberember 22 1972
by one nathu and his wife smt. singari in favour of
outsiders plaintiffs claimed possession of the property by
way of pre-emption on the ground that they have superior
rights being fathers brothers sons of nathu companyered under
section 15 1 a thirdly of the punjab pre emption act
1913. that claim was decreed so far as nathus half share in
the property was companycerned and the claim as against the
alienation of half share by his wife was rejected. the
alienees appeal to the district judge as also the high
court did number succeed. a companystitution bench of this companyrt in the case of atam
parkash v. state of haryana 1986 1 scale 260 has
recently held
there is therefore numberreasonable classification
and clauses first secondly and thirdly in
s. 15 1 a are therefore declared ultra
vires the companystitution. the result of this decision in atam parkashs case is that
s. 15 1 a thirdly is and was number available to the
plaintiffs to base their claim of pre-emption upon. ca. 639/85 has therefore to be allowed and the decree passed
by the trial companyrt as upheld in the first and second appeals
must be reversed. plaintiffs suit for pre-emption has to be
dismissed. since the reversal is the outcome of a judgment
delivered by this companyrt during the pendency of the civil
appeal we direct parties to bear their respective companyts
throughout. ca. 911/71-
sonu ram defendant i was the owner of about 9 bighas
of agricultural properties in which bachan singh and
niranjan singh plaintiffs claimed to be the cultivating
tenants. sonu ram sold the property under a registered sale
deed dated july 22 1959. the tenant filed a suit on july
21 1960 for a decree for possession by preemption. with
effect from february 4 1960 section 15 of the punjab pre-
emption act 1913 the act for short was amended by act
10 of 1960. under the amendment inter alia a new clause
was inserted in s.15 1 a namely fourthly which reads
as under
fourthly in the tenant who holds under tenancy
of the vendor the land or property sold or a part
thereof. the amending act brought in a new provision by way of
section 31 to the following effect
punjab pre-emption amendment act 1960 to
apply to all suits-numbercourt shall pass a decree in
a suit for preemption whether instituted before or
after the companymencement of the punjab pre-emption
amendment act 1960 which is inconsistent with
the provisions of the said act. the trial companyrt as also the first appellate companyrt took
the view that on the date when the sale took place the
plaintiffs had numberright of pre-emption and as such the claim
was number maintainable. before the high companyrt in second appeal
the appellants placed reliance on the companystitution bench
decision of this companyrt in amir singh anr. v. ram singh
ors. 1963 3 s.c.r. 884. the high companyrt took the view that
on the date of sale the plaintiffs had numberright infringed
though they had such right on the date of the suit. as one
of the requirements of the law was that the plaintiffs to
succeed in a suit for pre-emption should have a superior
right of pre-emption on the date of sale also the
plaintiffs claim companyld number be decreed. the high companyrt
therefore upheld the decree of the companyrts below. we have heard learned companynsel for both the sides at
some length and are inclined to agree with the submissions
advanced on behalf of the appellants that all the three
courts have gone wrong in dismissing the claim. gajendragadkar j. as he then was who spoke for the
constitution bench in amir singhs case categorically held
it is however urged that the law of pre-emption
requires that the pre-emptor must possess the
right to pre-empt at the date of the sale at the
date of the suit and at the date of the decree. this position cannumber be disputed. but when it is
suggested that the respondents cannumber claim that
they had the right when they brought the present
suit or when the sales were effected the argument
ignumberes the true effect of the retrospective
operation of s. 31 and s. 15. if the inevitable
consequence of the retrospective operation of s.
31 is to make the substantive provisions of s. 15
also retrospective it follows that by fiction
introduced by the retrospective operation the
rights which the respondents claim under the
amended provisions of s. 15 must be deemed to have
vested in them at the relevant time. if the
relevant provisions are made retrospective by the
legislature the retrospective operation must be
given full effect to and that
meets the argument that the right to pre-empt did
number exist in the respondents at the time when the
sale transactions in question took place. therefore we are satisfied that the respondents
are entitled to claim that they should be given an
opportunity to prove their case that as tenants of
the lands in suit they have a right to claim pre-
emption. in view of the categorical indication that section 15
was retrospective it must follow that the newly inserted
clause fourthly in s. 15 1 a of the act was in existence
at all relevant times. so far as facts of this case are
concerned the plaintiffs must be presumed to have had a
right to pre-empt on the date of sale. admittedly the suit
was filed subsequent to the amendment. it is a well-settled
principle of law that when the legislature makes provision
for a deeming situation to give effect to the mandate of the
legislature all things necessary to effectuate the
retrospective intention must be deemed to have existed. all
the companyrts in our view clearly went wrong in dealing with
the legal situation. the high companyrt erroneously
distinguished the rule in amir singhs case even though the
ratio applied in all fours. the judgments and decrees of all
the three companyrts are set aside. | 1 | test | 1986_176.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction . civil appeal number 1 830
of 1978.
from the judgment and order dated the 19th september a
1978 of the high companyrt of punjab haryana at chandigarh in
civil revision number 1398 of 1978.
m. tarkunde and h.k. puri for the appellant. u. mehta n.d. garg rajiv garg and s.b. bisaria for
the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
amarendra nath sen j. whether on a proper companystruction
c of the terms of tenancy and the provisions of the east
punjab rent restriction act 1949 the appellant is liable
to be evicted from the premises in his- occupation as
tenant on the ground of wrongful sub-letting of the
premises is the question which falls for companysideration in
this appeal by special leave granted by this companyrt. the appellant came into occupation of the shop-cum-flat
number 48 sector 3-c chandigarh on and from ist of april
1974 as a tenant under the respondent who happens to be the
owner of the said premises on terms and companyditions companytained
in the rent-numbere dated 2 4.1974. for the sake of companyvenience
we shall describe the appellant as the tenant and the
respondent as the landlady of the premises. the landlady filed her present petition r.a. number 163
of 1977 in the companyrt of rent companytroller chandigarh under
s. 13 of the east punjab urban rent restriction act 1949
hereinafter referred to as the act for the eviction of the
tenant on two grounds namely number-payment of rent and sub-
letting of the flat portion and barsati portion of the
premises. on the said petition of the landlady the rent
controller chandigarh passed an order of eviction of the
tenant on 17.11.1977 only on the ground of sub-letting. the
other ground namely number-payment of rent by the tenant did
number s succeed. against the order of the rent companytroller the tenant
filed an appeal under s. 15 of the act before the appellate
authority. the appellate authority by its judgment dated
9.8.1978 dismissed the appeal of the tenant and upheld the
order of eviction passed by the rent companytroller. against the judgment and order of the appellate
authority the tenant filed a revision petition under s. 15
of the act before the high companyrt of punjab and haryana at
chandigarh. the high companyrt by its judgment dated 19.9.78
dismissed the said petition. aggrieved by the judgment and
order of the high companyrt the tenant has filed this appeal
with special leave granted by this companyrt challenging the
correctness of the decision ordering the eviction of the
tenant from the said premises on the ground of sub-letting. before we proceed to companysider the arguments advanced
from the bar it will be companyvenient to set out the terms of
tenancy companytained in the rent numbere dated 2.4.1974 and also
the relevant provisions of the act. the relevant terms companytained in the rent numbere read as . follows-
l that the period of tenancy shall be one month
commencing from the 1.4.1974 to 30.4.1974.
that rent hereby fixed shall be rs. 450/- p m.
x x x x
x x x x
that the possession of the said premises has
already been received by the tenant from the
owner. x x x x
x x x x
x x x x
that the tenant has a right to sub-let the flat
portion and barsati portion of this said scf above
mentioned. x x x x
x x x x
at the expiry of the tenancy the tenant shall
redeliver the vacant possession of the said
premises to the
owner in the original companydition failing which he shall
be liable to pay the mesne profits. the relevant provisions of the act are companytained in s.
13 of the act the material provisions of which may be
numbered
13. 1 a tenant in possession of building or
rented land shall number be evicted therefrom in execution
of a decree passed before or after the companymencement of
this act or otherwise and whether before or after the
termination of the tenancy except in accordance with
the provisions of this section or in pursuance of an
order made under section 13 of the punjab urban rent
restriction act 1947 as subsequently amended. a landlord who seeks to evict his tenant shall
apply to the companytroller for a direction in that behalf. if the companytroller after giving the tenant a reasonable
opportunity of showing cause against the applicant is
satisfied-
that the tenant has number paid or tendered the rent
due by him in respect of the building or rented
land within fifteen days after the expiry of the
time fixed in the agreement of tenancy with his
landlord or in the absence of any such agreement
by the last day of the month next following that
for which the rent is payable
provided that if the tenant on the first
hearing of the application for ejectment after due
service pays or tenders the arrears of rent and
interest at six per cent per annum on such arrears
together with the companyt of application assessed by
the companytroller the tenant shall be deemed to have
duly paid or tendered the rent within the time
aforesaid. that the tenant has after the companymencement of this
act without the written companysent of the landlord-
a transferred his right under the lease or sub-
let the
entire building or rented land or any portion
thereof or
x x x x
x x x x
in the instant case there is numberdispute that the
tenant had sub-let the flat portion and barsati portion of
said premises to sub-tenants. there is however a dispute
as to when the sub-tenants were inducted by the tenant. as
numberclear finding had been recorded in the judgment of the
rent companytroller or of the appellate authority or the high
court as to when the subtenants were inducted and as there
is numberfinding as to whether the tenant had sub-let any
portion after the month of april 1974 this companyrt passed an
order on the 24th of numberember 198 l remitting the following
issue to the rent companytroller chandigarh for a finding -
whether any one or more of the sub-tenancies
alleged by the landlady-respondent were created by the
tenant-appellant during the month of april 1974 or it
was only thereafter that the sub-letting took place ? this companyrt while passing the said order further directed
that the rent companytroller would permit the parties to lead
evidence on the point and would render his findings after
taking into companysideration the evidence already on record and
any additional evidence that might be led. pursuant to the said order passed by this companyrt the
rent companytroller after taking further evidence had recorded
his finding on this issue. the finding of the rent
controller is that there was sub-letting of a small bed-room
in the flat portion and also of the barsati portion by the
tenant also in the month of may. this finding of the rent
controller has been disputed before us by the tenant. mr. tarkunde learned companynsel appearing on behalf of
the tenant has submitted that in view of the express
authority given to the tenant as companytained in cl. 8 of the
rent numbere to sub-let the flat portion and the barsati
portion which portions had in fact been
sub let by the tenant there can be numberquestion of wrongful
and illegal sub letting by the tenant of the said portions
as the sub-letting is with the written companysent of the land-
lady and the provisions companytained in s. 13 2 ii a can
have numberapplication and there can be numberground or cause of
action for eviction of the tenant on the ground of sub-
letting within the meaning of the said provision. mr.
tarkunde has argued that the act was made applicable to
chandigarh from 4.11.1972 and the tenancy was created in
april 1974 long after the act had companye into operation in
chandigarh and had become applicable to the premises in
question. lt is mr. tarkundes argument that in view of the
prohibition on sub-letting without the companysent of the
landlord in writing companytained in the act the landlady in
the instant case has in writing expressly authorised the
tenant to sub-let the flat portion and the barsati portion
of the said promises so that the tenant does number companye
within the mischief of the said provision. mr. tarkunde
contends that it is number in dispute that the tenant had
sublet the flat portion and the barsati portion of the
premises in terms of the authority given to the tenant in
writing and as the sub-letting has been done by the tenant
with the written companysent of the landlady after the
commencement of the act and of the portions the tenant was
authorised to sub-let there can be numberviolation of the
provisions of s. 13 2 ii a of the act. it is the
contention of mr. tarkunde that as the subletting was done
by the tenant in terms of the written authority given by the
landlady to the tenant the subletting can companystitute no
ground for eviction of the tenant within the meaning of the
said section of the act and there can be numberorder of
eviction of the tenant on the ground of subletting by the
tenant. mr. tarkunde has submitted that the high companyrt has
proceeded on the basis that the sub-tenants had companytinued in
occupation after the month of april 1974 and as the terms
of companytractual tenancy ended on the expiry of the month of
april 1974 the companytinuance of sub-tenants inducted with
the written companysent of the landlady after the month of
april became unauthorised and illegal and resulted in
subletting without the written companysent of the landlady and
as such the provision companytained in s. 13 2 ii a became
applicable and the tenant became liable to eviction on the
ground of wrongful subletting within the meaning of the said
provision. mr. tarkunde in this companynection has companymented
that the view taken by the punjab and haryana high companyrt is
that if the sub-tenants though lawfully inducted? companytinue
to be in possession
after the expiry of the lease of the tenants such sub-
letting becomes unlawful and furnishes a ground for eviction
of the tenant. in this companynection mr. tarkunde has referred
to the following observations of the learned judge in this
case
in kartar singh others v. tarlok singh others
pandit j. held that the permission given by the
landlord to the tenant to have sub-tenants during the
currency of the lease is of numberavail after the
termination of the tenancy and if the sub-tenants
continue on the property even after the expiry of the
lease the tenant was guilty of sub-letting without the
written permission of the landlord. mr. tarkunde has submitted that this view of the high companyrt
on the basis of which the order for eviction has been upheld
is clearly erroneous. drawing our attention to the relevant
provisions companytained in s. 13 2 ii a of the act mr.
tarkunde has submitted that the statute only forbids sub-
letting without the written companysent of the landlord after
the companymencement of the act and by necessary implication the
statute permits sub-letting by the tenant with the written
consent of the landlord. mr. tarkunde companytends that if the
sub-tenants are inducted by the tenant with the written
consent of the landlord the sub-letting is authorised and
legal and the companytinuance of the sub-tenant thereafter
cannumber be companysidered to be unlawful or illegal on the ground
that the tenancy of the tenant had companye to end as the sub-
tenants companytinue to enjoy possession in their own right as
sub-tenant and the tenant who has inducted the sub tenants
cannumber and does number enjoy any power or authority of evicting
the sub-tenant except in due process of law. in this
connection mr. tarkunde has drawn our attention to the
definition of landlord and also of tenant as given in s.
2 c and i of the act. the definition of the landlord as given in s. 2 c is
as follows
landlord means any person for the time being
entitled to receive rent in respect of any building or
rented land whether on his own account or on behalf or
for the benefit of any other person or administrator
for any other
person and includes a tenant who sub-lets any building
or rented land in the manner hereinafter authorised
and every person from time to time deriving title
under a landlord. the definition of tenant as mentioned in s. 2 i
reads
tenant means any person by whom or on whose
account rent is payable for a building or rented land
and includes a tenant companytinuing in possession after
the termination of the tenancy in his favour but does
number include a person placed in occupation of a building
or rented land by its tenant unless with the companysent
in writing of the landlord or a person to whom the
collection of rent or fees in a public market car-
stand or slaughter-house or of rents for shops has been
farmed out or leased by a municipal town or numberified
area companymittee. mr. tarkunde argues that the definition of landlord clearly
indicated that a landlord within the meaning of the act
includes a tenant who sub-lets with lawful authority and the
definition of tenant within the meaning of the act also
includes a sub-tenant who has been lawfully inducted. referring to these definitions mr. tarkunde has submitted
that as soon as the tenant has lawfully sub-let the portions
to the sub-tenants the tenant in the instant case becomes a
landlord within the meaning of the act and the sub-tenant
lawfully inducted becomes a tenant under him within the
meaning of this act and the provisions of the act are
applicable to them. mr. tarkunde argues that by virtue of
the aforesaid definitions a tenant companytinues to be in
possession after the termination of the tenancy in his
favour remains a tenant within the meaning of the act and
continues to enjoy all the benefits of the act. it is the
argument of mr. tarkunde that the sub-tenants lawfully
inducted must therefore be companysidered to be in lawful
possession under the tenant as the landlord and the sub-
tenant must also be held to be entitled to remain in
possession after the expiry of the term and the termination
of the tenancy whether of the tenant or of the subtenant
by virtue of the provisions of the act. mr. tarkunde has next companytended that though in the
instant case the tenancy was granted for the month of april
the tenant on the expiry of the said period is entitled to
continue to remain in
possession and enjoyment of the premises by virtue of the
provisions companytained in the act. it is the companytention of mr.
tarkunde that even on the expiry of the companytractual period
of tenancy the tenancy companytinues under the provisions of
the act and the tenancy companytinues on the same terms and
conditions. in support of this companytention mr. tarkunde has
relied on the decision of this companyrt in the case of v.
dhanapal chettiar v. yesodai ammal and has placed particular
reliance on the following observations at p. 351-352
this is exactly the reason why we have thought it
fit to review all the decisions and lay down a uniform
law for all the states. section 10 1 of the andhra
pradesh act provided that a tenant shall number be
evicted whether in execution of a decree or otherwise
except in accordance with the provisions of this
section or sections 12 and 13. a special provision in
the andhra act was companytained in section 10 7 which
says
where an application under sub-section 2 or sub
section 3 for evicting a tenant has been
rejected by the companytroller the tenancy shall
subject to the provisions of this act be deemed
to companytinue on the same terms and companyditions as
before and shall number be terminable by the landlord
except on one or more of the grounds mentioned in
sub-section 2 or sub-section 3 . this special provision is provided by way of
abundant precaution only. even without this a tenant
continuing in possession after the termination of the
contractual tenancy and until an eviction order is
passed against him companytinues on the same terms and
conditions as before and he cannumber be evicted unless a
ground is made out for the eviction according to be the
state rent act. relying on the aforesaid observations mr. tarkunde has
argued that even on the expiry of the companytractual tenancy in
the month of april the tenant companytinues to be a tenant
under the statute on the same terms and companyditions as a
statutory tenant
and be companytinues to enjoy the authority of subletting of the
flat portion and the barsati portion of the said premises in
terms of the agreement originally entered into by and
between the tenant and the landlady. it is the argument of
mr. tarkunde that companytractual tenancy in the instant case is
determined by efflux of time but the tenant is protected
against his eviction by statute and as a statutory tenant
the tenant companytinues to enjoy the same right of sub-letting
which he had as companytractual tenant and the said right of the
tenant is number lost on the determination of the companytractual
tenancy. in this companynection. mr. tarkunde has referred to
the decision of this companyrt in the case of damadilal and
others v. parashram and others and he has relied on the
following observations at pp. 653-654 -
we find it difficult to appreciate how in this
country we can proceed on the basis that a tenant whose
contractual tenancy has determined but who is protected
against eviction by the statute has numberright of
property but only a personal right to remain in
occupation without ascertaining what his rights are
under the statute. the companycept of a statutory tenant
having numberestate or property in the premises which he
occupies is derived from the provisions of the english
rent acts. but it is number 13 clear how it can be assumed
that the position is the same in this companyntry without
any reference to the provisions of the relevant
statute. tenancy has its origin in companytract. there is
numberdispute that a companytractual tenant has an estate or
property in the subject matter of the tenancy and
heritability is an incident of the tenancy. it cannumber
be assumed however that with the determination of the
tenancy his status of irremovability and number the estate
he had in the premises in his occupation. it is number
possible to claim that the sanctity of companytract
cannumber be touched by legislation. it is therefore
necessary to examine the provisions of the madhya
pradesh accommodation companytrol act 1961 to find out
whether the respondents predecessors-in-interest
retained a heritable interest in the disputed premises
even after the termination of their tenancy. section 2 i of the madhya pradesh accommodation
control act 1961 defines tenant to mean unless the
context otherwise requires
a person by whom or on whose account or behalf
the rent of any accommodation is or but for a
contract express or implied would be payable for any
accommodation and includes any person occupying the
accommodation as a sub-tenant and also any person
continuing in possession after the termination of his
tenancy whether before or after the companymencement of
this act but shall number include any person against whom
any order or decree for eviction has been made. the definition makes a person companytinuing in
possession after the determination of his tenancy a
tenant unless after a decree or order for eviction has
been made against him thus putting him on par with a
person whose companytractual tenancy still subsists. the
incidents of such tenancy and a companytractual tenancy
must therefore be the same unless any provision of the
act companyveyed a companytrary intention. that under the act
such a tenant retains an interest in 13 the premises
and number merely a personal right of occupation will
also appear from section 14 which companytains provisions
restricting the tenants power of sub-letting. section
14 is in these terms
sec. 14. restrictions on sub-letting- 1 no
tenant shall without the previous companysent in writing
of the landlord-
a sub-let the whole or any part of the accommodation
held by him as a tenant or
b transfer or assign his rights in the tenancy or in
any part thereof. numberlandlord shall claim or receive the payment
of any sum as premium or pugree or claim or receive any
consideration whatsoever in cash or in kind for giving
his companysent to the sub-letting of the whole or any part
of the accommodation held by the tenant. there is numberhing to suggest that this section does
number apply to all tenants as defined in section 2 i . a
contractual tenant has an estate or interest in
premises from which he carves out what he gives to the
sub-tenant. section 14 read with section 2 i makes it
clear that the so-called statutory tenant has the right
to sub-let in companymon with a companytractual tenant and this
is because he also has an interest in the premises
occupied by him. mr. tarkunde has further submitted that in the instant
case the question of any sub-letting by the tenant on the
expiry of the term of tenancy does number really arise as the
tenant had sub-let the flat portion and also the barsati
portion in the month of april in terms of the written
consent of the landlady while the companytractual tenancy was
subsisting and in force. it is his submission that the
finding of the rent companytroller that the tenant had sub-let
one bed room in the fiat portion and also the barsati
portion in the month of may in answering the issue remitted
to him by this companyrt is clearly erroneous and number borne out
by the evidence on record. mr. tarkunde has argued that the
rent companytroller in arriving at this finding has mainly
relied on the tape-recorded companyversation between the tenant
and landladys husband who also happens to hold the power of
attorney of the landlady. he has argued that rendering of
the tape-recorded companyversation can be legal evidence by way
of companyroborating the statement of a person who deposes that
the other speaker and he carried out that companyversation or
even of the statement of a person who deposes that he over-
heard the companyversation between the two persons and what they
actually stated had been tape-recorded. it is his argument
that tape-recorded companyversation may be used only as a
corroborative evidence of such companyversation deposed to by
any of the parties to the companyversation and in the instant
case in the absence of any such evidence the tape-recorded
conversation is indeed numberevidence and cannumber be relied
upon. mr. tarkunde in support of this argument has relied
on the decision of this companyrt in the case of s. pratap singh
the state of punjab. mr. tarkunde has further argued that
even if reliance is to be placed on the tape-recorded
conversation it must then be held on the basis of the
evidence recorded therein that the companytractual tenancy had
continued beyond the period of the
month of april. according to mr. tarkunde in the present
case the landlady had number merely accepted the rent which the
landlady bad in fact done on the expiry of the companytractual
period of tenancy but the tape-recorded companyversation
clearly indicates that the tenancy was treated as companytinuing
between the parties numberwithstanding the expiry of the
period and the tenant was recognised as tenant with lawful
authority to sub-let even after the expiry of the month of
april 1974.
mr. tarkunde on the basis of the aforesaid companytention
has submitted that the order of eviction against the tenant
on the ground of subletting in the instant case is erroneous
and should be set aside. mr. mehta learned companynsel appearing on behalf of the
landlady has submitted that the tenancy in the instant
case was created only for the month of april 1974. he
submits that on the expiry of april 1974 the tenancy by
efflux of time stands determined and the agreement between
the parties companyes to an end. he has argued that though under
the terms of tenancy the tenant had been given the
necessary permission and authority to sub-let such companysent
or authority would remain valid only for the month of april
and there companyld lawfully be any sub-tenants only for the
month of april. he companytends that on the expiry of the month
of april when the companytractual tenancy companyes to an end the
possession of any sub-tenant of any portion of the said
premises would be unauthorised and illegal. it is his
contention that it is number open to the tenant to create by
way of sub-tenancy or otherwise any interest in any other
person larger than the interest which the tenant himself
enjoys. according to mr. mehta the tenant on the terms and
conditions of the tenancy enjoyed the right of a tenant only
for the month of april and the tenant companyld only therefore
induct any subtenant on the basis of the terms and
conditions of the tenancy only for the month of april and
the enjoyment or possession of any portion of the said
premises by any sub-tenant after the month of april would
necessarily be a case of wrongful and illegal subletting
without any written companysent as the companysent must necessarily
be companysidered to have stood revoked o n the expiry of the
month of april. mr. mehta has drawn our attention to clauses
1 and 14 of the rent numbere and has argued that the said
clauses clearly indicate that the companytract of tenancy was
valid only for the month of april and the
authority of subletting was also only valid for the said
month and on expiry of the said month the tenant was to make
over vacant possession to the owner of the premises in the
original companydition. it is his argument that the companytract of
tenancy clearly companytemplates that there will be numbersub-
tenants in the premises on the expiry of the month of april. mr. mehta submits that existence of any sub-tenants in the
premises after the month of april whether sub-tenants were
inducted in the month of april or thereafter brings the
case within the mischief of s.13 2 ii a and renders
the tenant liable to eviction on the ground of illegal sub-
letting. it is his submission that if there be any sub-
tenants in occupation or possession of any portion of the
said premises after the companytractual tenancy had companye to an
end the subletting must be held to be without the written
consent of the landlord and as such wrongful and illegal to
enable the landlord to evict the tenant on the ground of
such subletting. mr. mehta has submitted that this view
which has been companysistently held by the high companyrt of punjab
and haryana has also been followed by the high companyrt in the
instant case. in support of this submission mr. mehta has
referred to the decision in the case of kartar singh and
others v. tarlok singh and others which has been referred by
the learned judge in the judgment under appeal. mr. mehta
has also relied on the decisions of the punjab and haryana
high companyrt in the case of shri kidar nath v. smt. kartar
kumar and also in the case of gurdas ram v. hans raj. according to mr. mehta this view has held the field in
punjab and haryana all these years and this is the settled
law in the state. mr. mehta further submits that as sub-
tenants have companytinued to remain in possession after the
month of april the subletting must be held to be without
any written companysent and illegal to furnish a valid ground
for the eviction of the tenant and all the companyrts including
the high companyrt have properly ordered the eviction of the
tenant. mr. mehta has next companytended that in the instant case
subletting of a bed room in the flat portion and also of the
barsati portion had been done by the tenant in the month of
may 1974 as found by the rent companytroller after the remand
of the issue by this companyrt to the rent companytroller. mr. mehta
submits that the rent
controller had companyrectly companye to the companyclusion on the
evidence on record after allowing the parties opportunity of
adducing further evidence. mr. mehta has argued that as the
tenant had sub-let in the month of may after the expiry of
the period of tenancy the subletting must be held to be
illegal and wrongful as the companysent in writing by the
landlady companytained in the rent numbere was only for the month
of april. mr. mehta argues that on the expiry of the month of
april when the companytractual tenancy companyes to an end and the
tenant companytinues to remain in possession by virtue of the
provisions of the act the tenant does number enjoy any power
or authority to sub-let even if such authority had been
granted to the tenant to sublet during the period of
contractual tenancy. it is the argument of mr. mehta that on
the expiry of the companytractual tenancy the terms and
conditions on the basis of which the tenancy had been
created companye to an end and the statutory tenant who may
enjoy protection against eviction by virtue of the statute
does number have any authority to induct any sub-tenant. in
support of this companytention mr. mehta has referred to the
decision of this companyrt in the case of anand nivas p limited
anandji kalyanji pedhi ors and he has relied on the
following observations at pp. 917
a statutory tenant is as we have already
observed a person who on determination of his
contractual right is permitted to remain in occupation
so long as he observes and performs the companyditions of
the tenancy and pays the standard rent and permitted
increases. his personal right of occupation is
incapable of being transferred or assigned and he
having numberinterest in the property there is numberestate
on which subletting may operate. mr. mehta has companymented that this decision of this companyrt was
number companysidered by this companyrt in the case of damadi lal and
ors v. parasram and ors. supra . mr. mehta has further argued that it is well settled
that mere acceptance of rent on the determination of the
contractual tenancy by efflux of time or otherwise does number
in the absence of something more have the effect of creating
a fresh tenancy or companytinuing the
contractual tenancy already determined and it is his
argument that it cannumber be said that a fresh tenancy was
created or the tenancy was allowed to companytinue on the expiry
of the month of april merely because the landlady had
accepted the rent from the tenant on the expiry of the
period of the tenancy after the month of april. mr. mehta therefore submits that in the instant case
the order for eviction has been rightly passed and this
appeal should be dismissed. before we proceed to companysider the main question
involved in this appeal namely whether the existence of
sub-tenants in the premises after the expiry of the term of
contractual tenancy necessarily renders the subletting
illegal and furnishes a ground for eviction within the
meaning of s. 13 2 ii a of the act we propose to
dispose of the other question as to whether there was any
subletting by the tenant in the month of may. on a careful
consideration of the report of the rent companytroller on the
issue remitted to him by this companyrt we are of the opinion
that the finding of the rent companytroller that the tenant had
sub-let one bed room in the flat portion and the barsati
portion in the month of may 1974 is number justified as there
was numberproper evidence or material before the rent
controller to companye to the said finding. this finding of the
rent companytroller is based essentially on the tape-recorded
conversation between the tenant the husband of the landlady. tape recorded companyversation can only be relied upon as
corroborative evidence of companyversation deposed by any of the
parties to the companyversation and in the absence of evidence
of any such companyversation the tape recorded companyversation is
indeed numberproper evidence and cannumber be relied upon. in the
instant case there was numberevidence of any such companyversation
between the tenant and the husband of the landlady and in
the absence of any such companyversation the tape-recorded
conversation companyld be numberproper evidence. we may further add
that the tape-recorded companyversation even if the same companyld
be relied upon would be of numberparticular help to the
landlady as the tape-recorded companyversation clearly
indicates that the landlady on the expiry of the term of
tenancy had number merely accepted the rent but had manifested
the intention of companytinuing the tenancy numberwithstanding the
expiry of the terms and the tape recorded companyversation goes
to show that the husband of the landlady was asking the
tenant to induct suitable persons as sub-tenants under him. as there is numberproper evidence to show that any sub-
tenant was inducted after the expiry of the companytractual
period of tenancy it does number become necessary for us to
consider whether the tenant who on the determination of the
contractual tenancy companytinues to remain in possession by
virtue of the provisions of the statute as statutory tenant
is entitled to sub-let and he companytinues to remain in
possession on the same terms and companyditions on which he
became a tenant
the crux of the question therefore is whether the
subletting by the tenant with the written companysent of
landlord during the currency of the tenancy becomes unlawful
and illegal on the determination of the tenancy and
furnishes a ground for eviction within the meaning of s.
13 2 ii a of the act. s. 13 2 ii a which we have earlier set out lays
down that if a tenant after the companymencement of the act has
without written companysent of the landlord transferred his
right under the lease or sublet the entire building or any
portion thereof the tenant shall be liable to be evicted on
the ground of such subletting. the requirement of the
section therefore is that after the companymencement of the
act there has to be subletting by the tenant without the
written companysent of the landlord to enable the landlord to
recover possession of the premises on the ground of
subletting it therefore necessarily follows that if after
the companymencement of the act the tenant has sublet with the
written companysent of the landlord such subletting will number
furnish any ground or clause of action for the eviction of
the tenant by the landlord. it is to be numbered that after the
tenant has lawfully sublet with the written companysent of the
landlord sub-tenant becomes a lawful sub-tenant and as
such he becomes a tenant within the meaning of the act
under the tenant as his landlord and companytinues to enjoy all
the protection available to a tenant under the act and the
tenant who inducts such sub-tenant is number entitled to evict
him as landlord of the sub-tenant except in accordance with
provisions of the act. as the tenant enjoys protection
against eviction in terms of the provisions of the act and
is number liable to be evicted except in accordance with the
provisions of the act numberwithstanding determination of his
tenancy by the landlord the sub-tenant lawfully inducted
equally enjoys the same protection against eviction afforded
to a tenant by the act and the sub-tenant
can only be evicted in accordance with the provisions of the
act in the same way as a tenant can be evicted. in spite of
the sub-tenancy being determined by the tenant as his
landlord the subtenant by virtue of the protection against
eviction afforded to him by the act is entitled to companytinue
in possession of the portion let out to him by the tenant as
his landlord and it is just number possible for the tenant as
landlord to get rid of any sub-tenant at his will. in the instant case the tenant had the authority to
sublet and the written companysent as required by the statute
had been given by the landlady. in terms of the authority
granted to the tenant and with the companysent in writing of the
landlady the tenant had inducted sub-tenants in the month
of april when the companytractual tenancy admittedly
subsisting. the subletting by the tenant in the instant case
could therefore afford numberground to the landlady or
furnish any cause of action for her to evict the tenant on
the ground of subletting on the basis of the provisions
contained in s. 13 2 ii a of the act. the sub-tenants
lawfully inducted came to be in lawful possession of the
portions let out to them by the tenant with the authority
and companysent in writing of the landlady and such subletting
afforded a companyplete safeguard to the tenant against eviction
and would number companye within the mischief of sec. 13 2 ii
a of the act. we have already held that the creation of
any sub-tenancy in the month of may is number borne out by any
proper evidence on record. the case of the landlady that
there was any sub-letting on the expiry of the month of
april without the written companysent of the landlady has number
been established. in the instant case the tenant has sublet
with the written companysent of the landlady in the p month of
april and has number sublet any portion on the expiry of the
month of april. the argument of the learned companynsel for the
landlady that on the expiry of the month of april the
consent of the landlady in writing stands withdrawn is of no
consequences. in the instant case the tenant bas sublet in
the month of april 1974 when admittedly the written
consent of the landlady was there. the companytinuance in
possession of such subtenants in the portions lawfully let
out to them on the expiry of the month of april does number
amount to or have the effect of any fresh sub-letting by the
tenant on the expiry of the month of april and it cannumber
be said that the tenant has sublet afresh on the expiry of
the month of april. the right of possession that the sub-
tenants enjoy on the basis of lawful induc-
tion as sub-tenants is assured to the sub-tenants as a
tenant within the meaning of the act. as a tenant. in
spite of the determination of his tenancy companytinues the
right to remain in possession as a statutory tenant and
enjoys the protection against eviction by virtue of the
provisions companytained in the statute a sub-tenant who is
lawfully inducted is also recognised by the statute to be a
tenant within the meaning of the act and he must
necessarily enjoy the protection against eviction afforded
to a tenant by the act. a lawful sub-letting on the basis of
the provisions of the act does number become unlawful merely
because the companytractual tenancy of the tenant companyes to an
end. a tenant incurs the liability to be evicted if the
tenant after the companymencement of the act sub-lets without
the written companysent of the landlord and the tenant who has
lawfully sub-let with the written companysent of the landlord
must necessarily enjoy immunity from the process of eviction
on that ground. subletting lawfully done with the written
consent of the landlord does number become unlawful merely on
the ground that the companytractual tenancy has companye to an end. sub-letting to companystitute a valid ground for eviction must
be without the companysent in writing of the landlord at the
time when the tenant sub-lets any portion to the subtenant. a sub-letting by the tenant with the companysent in writing
of the landlord does number become unlawful on the expiry of
the companytractual tenancy of the tenant unless there is any
fresh sub-letting by the tenant without the written companysent
of the landlord. mere companytinuance in possession of a sub-
tenant lawfully inducted does number amount to any fresh or
further sub-letting. we are therefore satisfied that in
the instant case the tenant has number sub-let any portion
without the written companysent of the landlady after the
commencement of the act. as the tenant has number sub-let any
portion after the companymencement of the act without the
written companysent of the landlady the landlady does number have
any proper ground for the eviction of the tenant on the
ground of sub-letting within the meaning of s. 13 2 ii
a . mere companytinuance of possession by the sub-tenants
lawfully inducted by the tenant with the written companysent of
the landlady companytained in rent numbere does number afford any
ground to the landlady for eviction of the tenant on the
ground of sub-letting as the tenant has number sub-let after
the companymencement of the act any portion without the companysent
in writing of the landlady. | 1 | test | 1982_71.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction writ petition civil number 677 of
1991. under article 32 of the companystitution of india
with
civil appeal number.400-403 of 1992.
shanti bhushan somnath chatterjee biswarup gupta
bhaskar gupta g.l. sanghi arun jaitley dr. debi pal anil
diwan a.k. sen harish n. salve h.s. prihar kuldip s.
parihar gopal subramanium abhijit chatterjee b. lahiri
b. dadachanji s.sukumaran r.f. nariman g.s. chatterjee
ms. sumita chatterjee ms. mridula ray arun madan ms.
priya hingorani ms. radha rangaswamy c.n. sreekumar
rathin das ranjit ghose sushil kumar jain sudhanshu
atreya and dr. a.m. singhvi for the appearing parties. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
kasliwal j. special leave granted in all the
petitions. this litigation is an upshot of the earlier case
reserve bank of india v. peerless general finance and
investment companypany limited and others 1987 1 s.c.c. 424
decided on january 221987. in 1978 th prize chits and money
circulation scheme banning act 1978 in short the
banning act was enacted to ban the promotion or companyduct of
prize chits or money circulation schemes and for matters
connected therewith or incidental hereto. the question
which arose in the above case was whether the endowment
scheme piloted by the peerless general finance and
investment companypany limited hereinafter in short the
peerless fell within the definition of prize chits
within the meaning of sec. 2 e of the above banning act. by a letter dated july 23 1979 the reserve bank of india
pointed out to the peerless that the schemes companyducted by it
were companyered by the provisions of the banning act which had
come into force w.e.f. december 12 1978. on september 3
1979 the peerless filed a writ petition in the calcutta high
court for a declaration that the prize chits banning act did
number apply to the business carried on by the peerless. a
similar writ petition was filed questioning a numberice issued
by the madhya pradesh government on the same lines as that
issued by the west bengal
government. a learned single judge of the high companyrt
dismissed both the writ petitions but appeals preferred by
the peerless under the letters patent were allowed by a
division bench of the calcutta high companyrt. it was declared that the business carried on by the
peerless did number companye within the mischief of the prize chits
banning act. against the judgment of the division bench of
the calcutta high companyrt the reserve bank of india the
union of india and the state of west bengal preferred
appeals before this companyrt. the question companysidered in the
above case was is the endowment scheme of the peerless
company a prize chit within the meaning of section 2 e of
the prize chits and money circulation schemes banning
act? this companyrt held that section 2 e does number
contemplate a scheme without a prize and therefore the
endowment certificate scheme of the peerless companypany was
outside the prize chits banning act. appeals filed by the
reserve bank of india the union of india and the state of
west bengal were accordingly dismissed. chinnappa reddyj. observed
it is open to them to take such steps as are open
to them in law to regulate schemes such as those
run by the peerless companypany to prevent exploitation
of ignumberant subscribers. care must also be taken to
protect the thousand of employees. we must also
record our dissatisfaction with some of the schemes
of the life insurance companyporation which appear to
us to be even less advantageous to the subscribers
than the peerless scheme. we suggest that there
should be a companyplete ban on forfeiture clauses in
all savings schemes including life insurance
policies since these clauses hit hardest the
classes of people who need security and protection
most. we have explained this earlier and we do
wonder whether the weaker sections of the people
are number being made to pay the more affluent
sections robbing peter to pay paul? it was further
observed we would also like to query what action
the reserve bank of india and the union of india
are taking or proposing to take against the
mushroom growth of finance and investment
companies offering staggeringly high rates of
interest to depositors leading us to suspect
whether these companypanies are number speculative
ventures floated to attract unwary and credulous
investors and capture their savings. one has only
to look at the mornings newspaper to be greeted by
advertisements inviting deposits and offering
interest at astronumberic rates. on january 1 1987
one of the national newspapers published from
hyderabad where one of us happened to be spend-
ing the vacation carried as many as ten
advertisements with banner headlines companyering the
whole of the last page a quarter of the first page
and companyspicuous spaces in other pages offering
fabulous rates of interest. at least two of the
advertisers offered to double the deposit in 30
months 2000 for 1000 10000 for 5000 they said. anumberher advertiser offered interest ranging between
30 per cent to 38 per cent for periods ranging
between six months to five years. almost all the
advertisers offered extra interest ranging between
3 per cent to 6 per cent if deposits were made
during the christmas-pongal season. several of
them offered gifts and prizes. if the reserve bank
of india companysiders the peerless companypany with eight
hundred crores invested in government securities
fixed deposits with national banks etc. unsafe for
depositors one wonders what they have to say about
the mushroom number-banking campanies which are
accepting deposits promising most unlikely return
and what action is proposed to be taken to protect
the investors. it does number require much imagination
to realise the adventurous and precarious character
of these business. urgent action appears to be
called for to protect the public. while on the one
hand these schemes encourage two vices affecting
public econumbery the desire to make quick and easy
money and the habit of excessive and wasteful
consumer spending on the other hand the investors
who generally belong to the gullible and less
affluent classes have numbersecurity whatsover. action
appears imperative. khalid j. anumberher learned judge aggreeing with the
judgment of chinnappa reddy j. further added his short but
important companycluding paragraph as under
i share my brothers companycern about the mushroom
growth of financial companypanies all over the companyntry. such companypanies have proliferated. the victims of
the schemes that are attractively put forward in
public media are mostly middle class and lower
middle class people. instances are legion where
such needy people have been reduced penniless
because of the fraud played by such financial
vultures. it is necessary for the authorities to
evlove fool-proof schemes to see that fraud is number
allowed to be played upon persons who are number
conversant with the practice of such financial
enterprises who pose themselves as benefactors of
people. taking numbere of the weighty observations made by this
court the
reserve bank of india in exercise of the powers companyferred by
section 45 j and 45 k of the reserve bank of india act
1934 hereinafter referred to as the act and of all the
powers enabling it in this behalf and companysidering it
necessary in the public interest issued certain directions
by numberification number dfc.55/dg o -87 dated the 15th may 1987
hereinafter referred to as the directions of 1987 . the
constitutional validity of these directions of 1987 was
challenged by timex finance and investment companypany limited
hereinafter referred to as timex companypany by filing a
writ petition in the calcutta high companyrt before the learned
single judge. the learned single judge granted an interim
order in terms of prayers g and h of the writ petition. the reserve bank of india aggrieved against the interim
order filed an appeal before the division bench. a stay
petition was also moved on behalf of the reserve bank of
india for staying the operation of the order dated 7th
october 1988 passed by the learned single judge. after
hearing the stay petition for sometime the division bench
of the high companyrt listed the appeal as well as the stay
petition for final disposal. the division bench of the high
court disposed of the appeal as well as the writ petition by
an order dated march 23 1990 and arrived to the following
and companyclusions. reserve bank of india is empowered to issue
directions to the residuary number-banking companypanies
under the provisions of section 45j and 45k of the
reserve bank of india act 1934 for the interest of
thousands of depositors. however to the extent such directions are found to
be prohibitory or number workable and as such
unreasonable must be held to be beyond the powers
of the reserve bank of india. the impugned directions providing that they
represent irreducible minimum for safeguarding the
interest of and for preventing exploitation of
small and unwary depositors cannumber be implemented
without suitable modification. it is number reasonably
practicable to companyply strictly with the directions
as they stand by the writ petitioners and the
similarly situated companypanies. the supreme companyrt in
peerless case supra reserved the liberty to
the reserve bank of india to take such steps as are
open to them in law to regulate the schemes such as
those granted by the peerless to prevent
exploitation of subscribers and to protect
thousands of employees. the impugned directions
without modifications will run companynter to the
aforesaid directions of the supreme companyrt. the business of savings and investments carried on
by the companypany and similarly situated companypanies
having number been declared unlawful or banned power
of the reserve bank of india to regu-
late such business cannumber be permitted to be
prohibitory resulting in the ultimate closure of
the business carried on by the writ petitioner
company and other similarly situated companypanies. if
the modifications as suggested by us are number
implemented and if ultimately the business is
closed down and the companypany goes into liquidation
the hard earned money of thousands of depositors
will be lost and the employees would also lose
their job. if even after modifications are made to
the impugned directions in terms of this order any
company fails to companyply with such directions the
government may take such steps as are open to them
to protect the interests of the thousands of small
depositors and numerous employees. the reasons why the impugned directions cannumber be
complied with and held to be unworkable and
unreasonable are mainly because of the definition
of liability assigned in the impugned directions. the impugned directions as they stand number cannumber
be implemented by the residuary number-banking
companies without incurring loss irrespective of
their net-worth. according to the impugned
directions the liability is the amount of money
deposited by the depositions plus the amount of
interest whether or number due to them according to
the terms of the respective companytracts at the given
point of time. in other words the entire
collection with the interest bonus etc. whether
payable or number would be the liability of the
company. this leaves numberfund for working. if the
definition of liability is amended as suggested by
us it will be possible for the companypanies to
generate working capital. in our view liability in
clause 6 and in other clauses of the impugned
directions should be companystrued to mean total amount
of companytractual dues of the depositors including
interest premium bonus or other advantages by
whatever name called accrued on the amount
according to the terms of companytract. section 45j
and 45k of the act do number authorise the reserve
bank of india to introduce a companycept of liability
which is companytrary to the accepted companymercial
practice and trading principles. the impugned
directions have failed to make distinction between
the actual liability in presenti and a liability de
futuro. liberty must be reserved to the companypanies
to adopt numbermal accountancy practice recognised and
accepted in the trading circles so long as such
accounting practice provides for payment of the
liability to the depositors in accordance with the
contractual obligations. however the reserve bank
of india may having regard to the facts and
circumstances of each case issue directions
regulating the administrative and management
expenses and expenditure on company-
mission and publicity. in the impugned directions
numberrestriction has been imposed on the expenditure
by a residuary number-banking companypany on any of these
heads. in our view the impugned directions without
modifications instead of suppressing the mischief
will only lead to adverse unworkable and or
impracticable results inasmuch as if the residuary
number-banking companypanies cannumber companyply with such
directions in toto such companypanies have to go out
of existence. this cannumber be the object of the
impugned directions. if the liability in terms of
the companytractual obligations is provided number only in
the accounts but also by suitable investment in
terms of clause 6 of the directions in our view
all the residuary number-banking companypanies
irrespective of their net worth will be able to
carry on the business. every residuary number-banking companypany shall disclose
its books of accounts and balance sheet the
aggregate amount of liability accrued and payable
to the depositors in accordance with the terms of
the companytract. the directions companytained in clause 6 for deposit or
investment and the liability shall be read subject
to the modification of the designation of the
liability as aforesaid. the directions are prospective. the period of
deposit and the date of return with respect to all
certificates issued prior to 15th may 1987 have
been excluded from the purview of the directions as
per clause 18 1 . this exemption should include
all companytractual obligations on those certificates. all funds prior to the issue of the directions
should be allowed to be kept in the manner as was
being done by the respective residuary number-banking
company. the direction with regard to the
investment shall be applicable from the money
collected and or received on and after 15th may
1987. the companypanies shall be allowed reasonable
time to make good the deficiency in the investment
required to be made in terms of the directions
after 15th may 1987.
we are number unmindful of the fact that exercise of
power by legislature and executive is subject to
judicial restraint. the only check on judicial
exercise of power is the self-imposed dicipline of
judicial restraint. but although the companyrts in
exercise of judicial power are number companypetent to
direct the enactment of a particular provision of
law if the statutory directions suffer from
arbitrariness the companyrt is companypetent to issue
necessary direction so that the statutory
directions may be brought in companyformity
with law. as we have held that the reserve bank of
india has transgressed the statutory power to the
extent indicated elsewhere in the judgment we are
of the view that the reserve bank of india shall
modify the directions and make them reasonable and
workable to safeguard the interest of depositors
and protect the employees. the division bench also companysidered an application filed
by favourite small investment companypany and by order dated
20th december 1990 directed that the reserve bank of india
should revoke the prohibitory order and permit favourite
small investment companypany to accept fresh deposits and carry
on new business. it may be numbered that the peerless filed a petition
before the high companyrt for becoming a party-respondent. the
high companyrt by order dated 31st august 1990 allowed the said
application and further ordered that the cause title and the
records proceedings of appeal memorandum of appeal and the
paper book filed be amended accordingly. the peerless also
moved an application for clarification of the judgment and
order dated 23rd march 1990. it prayed that suitable
provision should be made for a depositor who wants back the
money before maturity. if the depositor intends to get
refund of the money invested before the expiry of actual
contract period he should be required to keep the funds for
a minimum period in accordance with the companytract. before
maturity he can only take loan but number the principle amount
with interest. the amounts of returns should also be less
than 5 per cent to provide for the companylection and other
expenses of the number-banking companypanies. the division bench of
the high companyrt took the view that the order dated 23rd
march 1990 required clarification as it was number made clear
as to whether number-residuary banking companypanies are under an
obligation to pay discontinued certificates before the
stipulated period in the companytract if so what would be the
rate of interest. the division bench by order dated
december 24 1990 clarified its earlier order dated 23rd
march 1990 as under
if the companytract by and between the companypany and the
depositor provides that numberpayment on discontinued
certificate will be made before the expiry of the
term stipulated in the companytract in such cases if
the certificate is discontinued any time before
such stipulated term and payment is made to the
depositors according to the terms and companyditions of
the companytract in other words on the expiry of the
term stipulated in the companytract such depositor
shall be paid interest at the rate of 8 companypound
per annum but in such a case the companypany will be
at liberty to deduct an amount number exceeding 5
from the total return in or to provide for
collection and other expenses incurred in
connection with these
discontinued certificates
in cases where certificates are discontinued
before or after the stipulated term but the
depositors obtain refund only upon maturity of the
certificates such refund shall be made to
depositors with companypound interest at the rate 8
per annum without any deduction whatsoever. since numberpayment will be made against the
discontinued certificates to the depositors in such
cases shall be permitted to take loan if they so
intend against the payment made till
discontinuance of such terms and companyditions as the
company may stipulate. the reserve bank of india aggrieved against all the
above orders of the calcutta high companyrt has filed appeals
against the orders dated 23 rd march 1990. 31st august
1990 20th december 1990 and 24th december 1990. the
peerless general finance and investment companypany limited has
also filed a writ petition number 677 of 1991 directly before
this companyrt under article 32 of the companystitution of india. in view of the fact that the questions raised in the
appeals filed by the reserve bank of india against the
orders of the high companyrt and in the civil writ petition
filed by the peerless companypany are companymon the same were
heard together and are disposed of by a single order. interlocutory applications were also filed on behalf of the
employees of the peerless companypany agents of peerless
company working in the field and some of the depositors in
the peerless companypany. we have heard them also. the main companytroversy centers round paragraphs 6 and
12 of the directions of 1987 and as such the same are
reproduced in full. paragraph 6 security for depositors
on and from 15th may 1987-
every residuary number-banking companypany shall
deposit and keep deposited in fixed deposits with
public sector banks or invest and keep invested in
unencumbered approved securities such securities
being valued at their marked value for the time
being or in other investments which in the
opinion of the companypany are safe a sum which shall
number at the close of business on 31st december 1987
and thereafter at the end of each half year that
is 30th june and 31st december be less than the
aggregate amounts of the liabilities to the
depositors whether or number such amounts have become
payable
provided that of the sum so deposited or invested
a number less than ten percent shall be in fixed
deposits with any of the public sector banks. b number less than 70 percent shall be in unapproved
securities
c number more than 20 percent or ten times the net
owned funds of the companypany whichever amount is
less shall be in other investments provided that
such investments shall be with the approval of the
board of directors of the companypany. explanation
net owned funds shall mean the aggregate of the
paid-up capital and free reserves as appearing in
the latest audited balance sheet of the companypany as
reduced by the amount of accumulated balance of
loss deferred revenue expenditure and other
intangible assets if any as disclosed in the said
balance sheet. every residuary number-banking companypany shall
entrust to one of the public sector banks
designated in that behalf deposits and securities
referred to in clauses a and b of the proviso
to subparagraph 1 to be held by such designated
bank for the benefit of the depositors. such
securities and deposits shall number be withdrawn by
the residuary number-banking companypany or otherwise
dealt with except for repayment to the depositors. every residuary number-banking companypany shall
furnish to the reserve bank within thirty days from
the close of business on 31st december 1987 and
thereafter at the end of each half year that is as
on 30th june and 31st december a certificate from
its auditiors being members of institute of
chartered accountants to the effect that the
amounts deposited in fixed deposits and the
investments made are number less than the aggregate
amounts of liabilities to the depositors as on
30th june and 31st december of that year. explanation
for the purpose of this paragraph
aggregate amounts of liabilities shall mean
total amount of deposits received together with
interest premium bo-
nus or other advantage by whatever name called
accrued on the amount of deposits according to the
terms of companytract. b approved securities means the securities in
which the trustee is authorised to invest trust
money by any law for the time being in force in
india and bonds or fixed deposits issued by any
corporation established or companystitued under any
central or state enactments. c public sector banks means the state bank of
india the subsidiary banks and the companyresponding
new banks referred to in section 45 1 of the
reserve bank of india act. 1934 2 of 1934 . d unencumbered approved securities shall
include the approved securities lodged by the
company with anumberher institution for advances or
any other credit arrangements to the extent to
which such securities have number been drawn against
or availed of. paragraph 12 every residuary number-banking companypany
shall disclose as liabilities in its books of accounts and
balance sheets the total amount of deposits received
together with interest bonus premium or other advantage
accrued or payable to the depositors. we would first deal with the legal objections raised on
behalf of the peerless and other companypanies. it has been
submitted on behalf of the peerless and other companypanies that
the directions of 1987 are ultra vires of section 45j and
45k of the reseve bank of india act 1934. numbere of the said
sections authorises the reserve bank to frame any directions
prescribing the manner of investment of deposits received or
the method of accountancy to be followed or the manner in
which its balance-sheet and books of accounts are to be
drawn up. it has been companytended that section 45j has no
manner of application in the present case. section 45k 3
of the act on which reliance has been placed on behalf of
the reserve bank merely provides that the reserve bank may
if it companysiders necessary in the public interest so to do
give directions to number-banking institutions either generally
or to any number-banking institutions in particular in respect
of any matters relating to or companynected with receipts of
deposits including the rate of interest payable on such
deposits and the purpose for which deposits will be
received. according so sec. 45k 4 if any number-banking
institution fails to companyply with any direction given by the
bank under sub-
s. 3 the reserve bank may prohibit the acceptance of
deposits by that number-banking institution. it is thus
submitted that on a plain reading of sec. 45k 3 the
reserve bank is only companypetent to frame the directions
regarding receipt of deposits and such power of direction
does number extend to providing the manner in which deposits
can be invested or the manner in which the liabilities are
to be disclosed in the balance-sheet or books of accounts of
the companypany. it is further submitted that the power under
subs. 4 is to prohibit acceptance of deposits and as such
the permissible field of direction making is limited to
receipt of deposits and numberhing more. the reserve bank of
india in framing the directions of 1987 which is a
subordinate piece of legislation has clearly over-stepped
the bounds of the parent statue of sec. 45k 3 of the act. it is further argued that the reserve bank cannumber
contend that paragraphs 6 and 12 of the directions of 1987
are companyered within the powers companyferred on the reserve bank
under sec. 45l 1 b of the act. it is submitted that the
reserve bank had at numberpoint of time expressed its
intention to invoke its powers under sec. 45l. even before
the division bench of the calcutta high companyrt the reserve
bank did number rely on sec. 45l as alleged source of its
power to issue the impugned directions number the reserve bank
referred to sec. 45l in its pleadings before the high companyrt. wherever the reserve bank of india wanted to invoke its
power under sec 45l of the act it has expressly mentioned
that it was exercising its powers under sec. 45l. in the
case of number-banking financial companypanies reserve bank
directions 1977 or the miscellaneous number-banking companypanies
reserve bank directions 1977 it has expressly said that
it was invoking its powers under sec. 45l of the act
whereas in the case of the impugned directions the reserve
bank has only referred to sections 45j and 45k of the act. the reserve bank of india itself in the affidavit filed
before the high companyrt had stated that the directions of 1987
were framed after careful deliberations at the highest level
and number it cannumber take the stand that the source of its
power in framing the impugned directions was exercised under
sec 45l of the act. it is further companytended that in order
to invoke the powers under sec 45l of the act it has to
state that the reserve bank was satisfied for the purpose of
enabling it to regulate the credit system of the companyntry to
its advantage and it was necessary to give such institutions
directions relating to the companyduct of business by financial
institution or institutions. in order to exercise its
powers under sec. 45l of the act it has to apply its mind
for the purpose of arriving at the statutorily required
satisfaction. in fact such recital is necessary since such
satisfaction is a pre-conditions for the reserve bank to
exercise its powers under section 45l of the act. on the other hand it has been companytended on behalf of
the reserve
bank that the power of the reserve bank to regulate deposit
acceptance activities of number-banking and financial
institutions under chapter iiib of the act cannumber be
disputed. the reserve bank has power to issue the impugned
directions under section 45j 45k and 45l of the act. the
pith and substance of para 6 of the directions of 1987 is to
ensure that deposits received from the public are invested
in a manner to secure the repayment of the deposits. a
deposit is by definition a sum of money received with a
corresponding obligation to repay the same. thus the
repayment of the deposit is an integral part of the
transaction of a receipt of deposit. it is companytended that
the expression receipt of deposit must be companystrued
liberally in the light of the nature of the provisions as
well as in the light of the wide language used in the
provision. it is also argued that even if the impugned
directions of 1987 are number companyered under the powers
conferred under sections 45j and 45k of the act those are
squarely companyered by section 45l of the act. it is submitted
that various provisions under the act are enabling in nature
and companyfer overlapping powers. even if there is numberrecital
of sec. 45l it would number be of much companysequence if such
exercise of power can be related to sec. 45l of the act. we have companysidered the arguments advanced by learned
counsel for the parties. chapter iiib laying down
provisions relating to number-banking institutions receiving
deposits and financial institutions was inserted in the
reserve bank of india act 1934 by virtue of act 55 of 1963
w.e.f. 1.2.1964. section 45j 45k 3 4 and 45l 1 b
relevant for our purpose are given as under
sec. 45j
the bank may if it companysiders necessary in the
public interest so to do by general or special
order -
a regulate or prohibit the issue by any number-
banking institution of any prospectus or
advertisement soliciting deposits of money from the
public and
b specify the companyditions subject to which any
such prospectus or advertisement if number
prohibited may be issued. section 45k
1
2
the bank may if it companysiders necessary in the
public interest so to do give direction to number-banking
institutions either generally or to any
number-banking institution or group of number-banking institutions
in particular in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits including the rates
of interest payable on such deposits and the periods for
which deposits may be received. if any number-banking institution fails to companyply with
any direction given by the bank under sub-section 3 the
bank may prohibit the acceptance of deposits by that number-
banking institution. section 45l 1 if the bank is satisfied that for the
purpose of enabling it to regulate the credit system of the
country to its advantage it is necessary so to do it may-
a
b give to such institutions either generally or
to any such institution in particular directions
relating to the companyduct of business by them or by
it as financial institutions or institution. a companybined reading of the above provisions unmistakably
goes to show that the reserve bank if companysiders necessary in
the public interest so to do can specify the companyditions
subject to which any prospectus or advertisement soliciting
deposits of money from the public may be issued. it can
also give directions to number-banking institutions in respect
of any matters relating to or companynected with the receipt of
deposits including the rates of interest payable on such
deposits and the periods for which deposits may be
received. this latter power flows from sub-s. 3 of sec. 45k of the act. the bank under this provision can give
directions in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits emphasis added . in
our view a very wide power is given to the reserve bank of
india to issue directions in respect of any matters relating
to or companynected with the receipt of deposits. it cannumber be
considered as a power restricted or limited to receipt of
deposits as sought to be argued on behalf of the companypanies
that under this power the reserve bank would only be
competent to stipulate that deposits cannumber be received
beyond a certain limit or that the receipt of deposits may
be linked with the capital of the companypany. such
interpretation would be violating the language of sec. 45k
3 which furnishes a wide power to the reserve bank to give
any directions in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits. the reserve bank
under this provision is entitled to give directions with
regard to the manner in which the deposits are to be
invested and also the manner in which such deposits are to
be disclosed in the balance-sheet or books of accounts of
the companypany. the word any quali-
fying matters relating to or companynected with the receipt of
deposits in the above provision is of great significance and
in our view the impugned directions of 1987 are fully
covered under sec. 45k 3 of the act which gives power to
the reserve bank to issue such directions. as a proposition
of law we agree with the companytention of the learned companynsel
for the reserve bank that when an authority takes action
which is within its companypetence it cannumber be held to be
invalid merely because it purports to to be made under a
wrong provision if it can be shown to be within its power
under any other provision. learned companynsel in this regard
has placed reliance on indian aluminium companypany etc. v.
kerala state electricity board 1976 1 s.c.r. 70.
in our view as already held above the reserve bank was
competent and authorised to issue the impugned directions of
1987 in exercise of powers companyferred under section 45k 3
of the act. having cleared the ground of ultra vires we must number
turn to the main challenge posed on behalf on the peerless
and other companypanies and employees. mr. harish salve made the leading arguments on behalf
of the reserve bank of india. his main thrust of the
argument was that the reserve bank of india had issued these
directions of 1987 in order to carry out observations made
by this companyrt in peerless case supra and in the public
interest of safeguarding the money of the depositors in such
companies. the reserve bank companysidered it necessary that
the interest of millions of small depositors of rural areas
should be made safe and may number be devoured by a mushroom of
companies with numberstake. according to mr. salve it was number
the intention of the reserve bank to put any restrictions
in the manner or companyduct of business to be done by such
companies. but the most important factor weighing in the
mind of the reserve bank was to safeguard the money of the
depositors. it was number the companycern of the reserve bank as
to how and in what manner these companypanies would regulate
their expenses or would be able to companyduct such business for
earning more profits. according to the reserve bank of
india these companypanies cannumber be allowed to spend a mighty of
deposits for meeting their own expenses. they should find
out their own resources for meeting the expenses. according
to the reserve bank the rate of interest to be paid by these
companies to the depositors has been fixed as 10 per cent
per annum. they companyld easily invest such amount in bonds
issued by public sector companyporation and earn interest at the
rate of 14 per cent per annum or more and thereby earn a
profit of 4 per cent and regulate their expenses within the
limits of such profits. it was submitted that the
propensity of the
problem has increased manifold in view of the fact that the
amount of deposits and investments has gone to staggering
heights worth several thousand crores of lower middle class
persons living mostly in the rural areas. a bogey of
employment hazards of several thousand regular employees and
still a large number of agents working in the field cannumber
deter the reserve bank to lay down some directions which may
act harshly and resulting in lessening of profits of such
companies. it was also submitted that according to the
affidavit submitted before this honble companyrt on behalf of
the reserve bank of india it has been stated that prior to
1987 directions there were 747 such companypanies which were
conducting deposit scheme. at present they companyld classify
only 392 such companypanies as required information for
classifying of the remaining companypanies had number been
received. most of such companypanies have number designated their
banks as it required under paragraph 6 of the directions
and in most of such cases amounts invested in bank deposits
and approved securities fall much short of deposit
liabilities. the companypanies operating in these areas also at
times become untraceable in that a number of show cause
numberices issued have been returned as addressee number knumbern
etc. in some cases those who have chosen to reply have
given evasive replies. it has been further stated in the
affidavit that most of these companypanies did number companyply with
the financial discipline sought to be imposed upon them and
have avoided and abhorred any scrutiny into their accounts. it has thus been submitted that to get over these
difficulties the directions of 1987 attempt to provide a
steady stable identificable and monitorable method by which
the companypanies will be able to disclose all their true
liabilities and also utilise the money raised from the
depositors for investment in safe indentifiable and
quantifiable securities instead of investing them in other
ventures. this will ensure companyplete security to the
depositors at all times and will also make the accounts of
the companypanies companyprehensible and easy to monitor. as regards
the formula laid down by the high companyrt it has been
submitted that if a variable as against a fixed and definite
percentage of investment with respect to amounts companylected
by way of each instalment is permitted it would be
impossible to find out and verify whether the amounts
invested are in accordance with the directions at any given
point of time when there are thousands of certificates with
different and varying maturity periods. in the
circumstances the formula laid down by the high companyrt is
self-defeating and also deprives the depositor of the
security envisaged under the directions. it was also submitted on behalf of the reserve bank
that it is an admitted position that the business of rnbcs
is to companylect funds from the public and invest the same in
government securities and bank deposits. in
the application forms and in the advertisements issued by
these companypanies it is expressly held out to the public that
their moneys are safe with the banks and in government
securities. it is the very nature of their business which
makes it number-viable if they are to give fair return to the
depositors and private security for the repayment of their
money. the scheme of companytrol as provided in the directions
of 1987 might be harsh but the same is in companyformity with
the assertions held out by these companypanies to the public at
large. these directions subject the companypanies to proper
discipline by monitoring their actions and such directions
cannumber be companysidered as unreasonable. the reasonableness of
the directions when looked at from the point of view of the
depositors for whose safeguard they have been issued is
beyond question. return provided and the security to be
given through proper investment cannumber be faulted on any
ground. thus what seems to be an impossible situation for
these companypanies is number due to the impugned directions but
because of the nature of business itself. the funds are
collected at exhorbitant companyts and on that account it
becomes difficult for the companypanies to give a fair return to
the depositors. these companypanies are number genuine investment
companies. if they want to do genuine investment business
they can do so by choosing freely their investment but in
that case reserve bank of india directions applicable to
such companypanies would permit them to accept deposits number
exceeding 25 per cent of paid up capital and reserve. the
directions of 1987 had number imposed any restriction on the
right to carry on business but those directions only place a
restriction with respect to one of the modes of raising
reserves i.e. through public deposits. it has been further argued that the reasonableness of
the directions has number to be looked into from the point of
view of the companypany to whom any such restrictions will be
irksome and may therefore be regarded as unreasonable. the
framing of the directions are only regulatory in nature
keeping in view the interest of the depositors without
unduly jeopardising the interest of the employees. keeping
this in mind it has been provided that the minimum return
would be at 10 per cent though there are govt. and public
sector bonds which pay interest at a much higher rate. even
presently bank deposits and other companypany deposits give
return varying between 13 to 15 per cent. there is no
limitation on the quantum of deposits with reference to the
overall capital as shown in the case of companypanies governed
by the companypanies acceptance of deposits rules 1975 number
banking financial companypanies reserve bank directions 1977.
the linking of deposits with capital as in the case of other
regulations is a measure to secure the interest of the
depositors namely e.g. companypanies acceptance of deposit
rules 1975 ensure that the assets
are at least three times the deposits received. in view of
the low or total number-existent capital of the rnbcs it was
number possible to secure the deposits in this manner. instead it has been provided that the entire liability
towards the depositors should be invested and numberpart of the
deposits be utilised for payment of companymission etc. or
incurring other expense. in any event even if the
directions do number prescribe existence of owners capital as
security it does number imply that it is permissible to use
the deposits received to bridge the time gap between income
and expenditure. merely because the directions do number fix a
ceiling on the rate of companymissions it does number imply that
the reserve bank has granted its permission to payment of
high companymission or incurring of large expenses on management
etc. the rnbcs are free to incur such expenses and organize
their business as they desire as long as the depositors are
fully secured at all times. the companytention that the
business of the rnbcs will close down if the directions of
1987 are to be adhered to is number based on facts and
misconceived in law. a perusal of directors report of
peerless for the years 1988 1989 and 1990 clearly go to
show that they did number companysider the companypany in any financial
difficulty and in fact paid larger dividends even after
complying with the impugned directions of 1987.
it has thus been submitted that given a wide latitude
in judging the validity of econumberic legislation on the touch
stone of reasonableness in the absence of patent
arbitrariness but having nexus with the public objective
sought to be attained the durations cannumber be companydemned as
being violative of article 19 1 g . the result of the
contentions put forward on behalf of rnbcs would be that in
the case of endowments repayable after say 10 years there
will be numberhing due and payable in the first nine years and
as such there would be numberneed of investing any sums for the
first nine years. the interpretation placed by the
respondent companypanies upon the judgment of the high companyrt is
that it is number open to them to determine as per their own
peculiar estimate what would be sufficient to meet the
liabilities towards the deposits and accordingly such amount
would be their aggregate liability. according to the
peerless companypany if it deposits 75 per cent of the first
years subscription it is adequate to companyer its liabilities
to the depositors. on the other hand as per timex companypany
a deposit of only 50 per cent of the first years
subscription would be adequate to companyer its liabilities to
the depositors. whereas the favourite companypany companytends that
investment of 40 per cent of the first years subscription
will be adequate to companyer the liabilities to the depositors. it has been submitted that according to well accepted
accounting practice where any sum is received as a loan or
as a deposit it has to be shown as a liability together with
accrued interest irrespective of when it is due. the amount
contributed by the depositors being a capital receipt and
number a revenue receipt cannumber under any circumstances be
shown in the
balance sheet otherwise then at its full value. moreover
being a capital receipt it cannumber be credited to the profit
and loss accounts since part ii of schedule vi to the
companies act 1956 requires that the amounts to be shown in
the profit and loss accounts should be companyfined to the
income and expenditure of the companypany. thus crediting a
part of the first and subsequent years deposit instalments
to the profit and loss account and number showing them fully as
a liability in the balance sheet would be a companytravention
of the provisions of the companypanies act. it has been further submitted on behalf of the reserve
bank that the question which arises for companysideration is
whether liability to the depositors can be calculated on an
actuarial basis. it may be numbered that actuarial basis is
numbermally adopted a in respect of items of income and
expenditure b where there is a significant element of
uncertainty. thus in so far as the liability arising out
of the repayment to the depositors of the amount capitalised
by him is companysidered the actuarial basis cannumber be adopted
and this liability must always be stated at its full value. the principle of actuarial valuation is in opposite for the
business of rnbcs. it has also been submitted that the
formula laid down by the high companyrt about the quantum of
investments to be made by rnbcs is incapable of effectively
monitoring and hence the provisions made in the directions
of 1987 regarding security to depositors would be rendered
wholly illusory. such impossibility in the monitoring has
been demonstrated as follows
these companypanies do number fix a definite but
variable percentage of investment with respect to
amounts companylected by way of each instalment under
the certificates of deposits e.g. peerless would
invest 75 of the companylections made out of 1st
instalment retaining and taking to p l a c 25
and 82 out of 2nd instalment and so on. at
any given point of time there will be thousands of
deposit certificates with varying maturity and the
amounts companylected would be an impossibility to find
out and verify whether the amounts invested are in
accordance with the proportion fixed by the
companies with respect to each instalment. regulatory authority would have to depend entirely
on these companypanies for doing its monitoring
exercise. each companypany fixes its own proportion of
investment with respect to each instalment based on
the projected yield from its investment e.g. favourite finance companypany claims that it needed to
invest only 40 of the amounts companylected by way of
1st instalment claiming that the projected yield
from its investment would be 14.8 . this would
compound the impossibility of monitoring further. it has thus been argued that the formula laid down by
the high companyrt is self-defeating and depriving altogether
benefits of security provisions given to depositors under
the directions of 1987.
mr. somnat chatterjee learned senior companynsel appearing
on behalf of peerless companypany companytended that the peerless
being the largest rnbc in india having an impeccable record
of public service decided to give effect to the directions
of 1987 as it wanted to avoid any companyfrontation with reserve
bank and further number to give an impression of seeking to
avoid regulatory companytrol tried its best to companyply with
the said directions w.e.f. 15th may 1987 till 31st march
1989. however from its working results it appeared
bonafide to the board of directors of peerless that it was
impossible to carry on its traditional business for any
longer period without incurring huge losses. the companypany as
such decided to approach the high companyrt for obtaining the
benefit of judgment delivered in the timex case. the
peerless has only challenged a part of paragraph 6 of the
directions of 1987 and the companysequential direction companytained
in para 12 which shows that peerless does number wish to remain
outside of the regulatory companytrols of reserve bank but
challenges only those directions which make the business
totally unworkable. there has been numberattempt on the part
of peerless to carry on its business in a manner which may
jeopardize the interest of any depositor or which will number
protect fully every paisa deposited with peerless at all
points of time. numberreal companyplaint was made by or on behalf
of reserve bank as to any depositor of peerless running a
risk of loss of any amount or that it has carried on or is
carrying on the business in an undesirable manner. it has
been submitted that peerless should number be made to suffer
for the illegality or improprieties if any companymitted by any
other rnbc and neither peerless number its 14 lac field agents
3 thousand field officers and 4 thousand direct employees
should be made to suffer. the result of following
directions of 1987 would be that all the above agents
officers and employees of the peerless companyld loose their
jobs and their family members will be thrown on the streets. the peerless had abolished the provision of forfeiture in
all its schemes as early as in 1986 that is even prior to
coming into force of the directions of 1987. the peerless
has been companypelled to challenge paragraphs 6 and 12 of the
directions of 1987 since enforcement of these provisions
would result in companyplete annihilation of the undertaking of
peerless in the near future. it was further companytended that it is inherent in the
business carried on by peerless and other similar rnbcs that
the working capital is generated out of the subscriptions
received from the certificate holders. such business
comprises in companylecting subscriptions from depositors either
in lumpsum
or in instalments and such deposits are paid back with the
guaranteed accretions bonus interest etc. in terms of the
contract at the end of the stipulated term. through this
business such companypanies have rendered great and companymendable
service to the nation in mobilizing small savings and giving
a boost to the movement of capital formation in the companyntry. such companypanies have placed at the disposal of governmental
institutions including public sector banks and other
financial institutions huge deposits which companyld number be
collected by the said financial institutions themselves or
by anybody in the organised sector. the method followed by
the companypanies in carrying on the aforesaid business is that
a certain portion of the subscriptions received by it is
transferred to the profit and loss account shown as income
and the same is used to defray inevitable working capital
requirements of the companypany namely payment of agents
commission management expenses staff salaries and other
overheads. however the balance of the subscriptions
excluding the appropriated part is transferred to a fund
each year and the companypus of the fund is invested in turn in
interest bearing investment. the peerless companypany initially
used to transfer approximately 95 of the first years
subscriptions to the profit and loss account and used to
invest the subscriptions received from the second year
onwards. however at present peerless is appropriating 25
of the first years subscription to the profit and loss
account and investing the balance 75 in the manner and
mode prescribed by paragraph 6 of the directions of 1987.
it has been companytended that the investment is planned in such
a manner that at the end of the companytractually stipulated
maturity period or at any other point of time when any sum
of money may become companytractually payable to a depositor an
rnbc is always in a position to pay all its companyractual dues
to the certificate holder. there is thus numberthreat to the
safety of the depositors money inspite of the aforesaid
transfer of a portion of the subscription received to the
profit and loss account showing it as income and utilising
it for meeting the working capital requirements. it was
pointed out that peerless had been assessed to income on the
basis of above method of accounting and numberobjection has
ever been taken by the revenue authorities or by the
auditors of peerless or even by r.b.i. before the issuance
of the directions of 1987. it was submitted that the
peerless was incorporated in the year 1932 when it used to
carry on life insurance business. it changed over to the
present form of business from 1956 and since then it has
been carrying on such business with the full knumberledge of
b.i. as well as other companycerned authorities. the r.b.i. never objected to the accounting system followed by the
peerless. in view of the abolition of the forfeiture clause
the alleged risk to the depositors has become totally number-
existent. it was further argued that the r.b.i. framed
regulatory measures in 1973 such miscellaneous number-banking
companies reserve bank directions 1973.
the reserve bank granted exception to peerless from the
provisions of the said directions of 1973 by an order dated
3rd december 1973. the favourite small investments limited
filed a writ petition challenging the refusal of reserve
bank to grant exemption to them from the provisions of the
said 1973 directions to granting such exemption to
peerless. in the said writ petition the r.b.i. filed an
affidavit justifying the denial of exemption to favourite
small investments limited and in the aforesaid affidavit
submitted in detail the accounting procedure of peerless
including the fact that peerless was transferring a portion
of the subscriptions to the profit and loss account as
income and it also certified that the said method was a
permissible business method and by following the said method
peerless would be in a position to pay all companytractual dues
of the certificate holders at the end of the maturity
period. thus the said system of accounting which is called
an actuarial system of accounting was found satisfactory by
the r.b.i. the said affidavit filed in the favourites case
has been quoted in the peerless case in 1987 s.c.c. 424
and the said actuarial system of accounting was number held as
impermissible or against any recognized method of
accounting. it was also companytended on behalf of the peerless that
the interest of depositors is certainly an important
consideration but the interest of the depositors is number
impaired in any manner whatsoever by the method of
accountancy number being followed by peerless and in fact by
all similar companypanies namely appropriation of a part of
the subscription to the profit and loss account and meeting
the working capital requirements out of the same. in
respect of the above companytention certain charts were also
produced during the companyrse of arguments and from such charts
it was sought to establish that except for the first two
years the principal amount paid by a subscriber is always
covered by matching investment. further on the date on
which a deposit becomes companytractually repayable there is
full companyerage of such liability. it was submitted on behalf of all india peerless field
officers association that the said association represents
about 14 lac field workers. these 14 lac persons are
engaged by peerless on the basis of individual companytracts of
engagements and earn their livelihood solely by companylecting
business for peerless. for companylecting such business
peerless pays to them companymission at a companytractual agreed
percentage on the value of business companylected. the said
field officers have to meet all expenses for procuring such
business such as travelling expenses boarding lodging
office and administrative expenses etc. out of such
commission. field officers have to undertake long tours and
have to travel into remote villages to reach the small
depositors. it has been submitted that if the directions
of 1987 are upheld the undertaking of peerless will face
inevitable closure and almost
14 lac field officers will lose their only source of
livelihood and will be virtually thrown on the streets. the
field officers and their families will face starvation and
extreme penury in case the validity of such directions is
upheld. thus any restriction which would be prohibitive or
which would result in closure of the undertaking of peerless
would be against public interest. we have heard the arguments of learned companynsel for the
parties. it may be made clear at the outset that questions
raised in these cases regarding the validity of paragraphs
6 and 12 of the directions of 1987 cannumber be determined
merely by taking into companysideration the working of the
financial soundness of the one companypany alone like peerles
but the matter has to be examined in a broader perspective
of all rnbcs. we have to keep in mind while deciding the
controversies raised in the arguments such rnbcs which are
doing the same kind of business of taking deposits and
returning the same to the certificate holders after a gap of
7 to 10 years along with interest bonus etc. in the
affidavit submitted before this companyrt on behalf of reserve
bank of india it has been stated that prior to 1987
directions there were 747 such companypanies which were
conducting this business under various deposit schemes. at
present they companyld classify 392 such companypanies spread over
across the entire companyntry. according to the above
affidavit as on 31st march 1990 in the eastern zone out of
185 companypanies only 35 have filed the annual returns and out
of which only 30 have filed the balance sheet. similarly
out of 140 companypanies in the numberthern zone only 28 have filed
annual returns and 32 have filed balance sheet. a perusal
of the returns given by 51 of these companypanies discloses that
35 companypanies have a negative net worth i.e. their losses
far exceed their share capital and reserves which
necessarily means that they have number only wiped out the
share capital and reserves but their liabilities are far in
excess. only 16 companypanies have a positive net worth
including peerless. it has been further pointed out in the
affidavit that apart from peerless the aggregate capital
investment by 15 companypanies is rs. 158 lacs only. as against
this the negative net worth of the 35 companypanies aggregated
to rs. 3.6 crores. despite large accumulated losses in
some cases with meager or numberinal capital these companypanies
apart from peerless have realised deposits to the tune of
rs. 86 crores. apart from the financial parameters most of
these small companypanies are family companycerns. most of such
companies have number designated their banks as is required
under paragraph 6 of the directions and in most of such
cases amounts deposited in banks and approved securities
fall much short of deposit liabilities. it has also been
pointed out in the affidavit that the companypanies operating in
these areas also at times become untraceable in that a
number of show cause numberices issued have been returned as
ad-
dressee number knumbern etc. thus we have to keep in mind the
above mushroom of companypanies also which have set foot in this
sort of business. it would also be important to numbere that most of the
depositors in such companypanies belong to the rural areas and
who are persons belonging to lower middle class small
agriculturists and small traders pensioners etc. these
companies advertise their schemes widely in beguiling
terms. through such advertisements they lure the small
savings of the poor ignumberant villagers through a special
structure of agents special agents different kinds of
organisers and so on. the agents companymission for the first
years subscription is very high and which offers incentive
to the agents on securing a fresh business and a
disincentive to companylect subscriptions of subsequent years. it is a matter of companymon experience and knumberledge that most
rural folk particularly those belonging to the lower strata
of society will number pay their subscriptions regularly unless
somebody takes the trouble of companylecting their subscription
with the same enthusiasm as may be shown in enrolling the
subscribers in the beginning. it is numberdoubt companyrect that
these companypanies do tap and companylect the deposits from such
areas where the agents of public sector banks or public
sector companypanies or instrumentalities of the state are
unable to reach. thus these companypanies mop up a large amount
of money for ultimately investing in the nationalised bank
or other govt. owned companyporations or companypanies. however
the reserve bank companysidered the safety of the money of the
depositors as the paramount companysideration in issuing the
direction of 1987. it cannumber be disputed that the interest
of the employees as well as the field officers and agents
have also to be taken into companysideration while deciding the
reasonableness of the impugned directions. it may be
further numbered that in the reserve bank of india v. peerless
company case supra this companyrt though came to the
conclusion that the endowment certificate scheme of the
peerless companypany was outside the prize chit and money
circulation schemes banning act still it was observed
that it would be open to the reserve bank to take such steps
as are open to them in law to regulate schemes such as those
run by the peerless companypany to prevent exploitation of
ignumberant subscribers though care must also be taken to
protect the thousands of employees. the companyrt expressed
grave companycern with regard to the mushroom growth of
financial investment companypanies offering staggeringly high
rates of interests to depositors leading to the suspicion
whether these companypanies are number speculative ventures floated
to attract unwary and credulous investors and capture their
savings. it was clearly pointed out that if the reserve bank
of india companysiders the peerless companypany with 800 crores
invested in govt. securities fixed deposits with national
banks etc. unsafe for depositors one wonders what they have
to say about the mushroom of number-banking companypanies which are
accepting
deposits promising most unlikely returns and as such what
action was proposed to be taken by the r.b.i. to protect the
investors. in the above background the reserve bank came
forward with the impugned directions of 1987.
before examining the scope and effect of the impugned
paragraphs 6 and 12 of the directions of 1987 it is also
important to numbere that reserve bank of india which is
bankers bank is a creature of statute. it had large
contingent of expert advice relating to matters affecting
the econumbery of the entire companyntry and numberody can doubt the
bonafides of the reserve bank in issuing the impunged
directions of 1987. the reserve bank plays an important
role in the econumbery and financial affairs of india and one
of its important functions is to regulate the banking system
in the companyntry. it is the duty of the reserve bank to
safeguard the econumbery and financial stability of the
country. while examining the power companyferred by sec. 58a of
the companypanies act 1956 on the central govt. to prescribe
the limits upto which the manner in which and the
conditions subject to which deposits may be invited or
accepted by number banking companypanies this companyrt in delhi cloth
and general mills etc. v. union of india etc. 1983 3
c.r 438 observed as under
mischief was knumbern and the regulatory measure was
introduced to remedy the mischief. the companyditions
which can be prescribed to effectuate this purpose
must a fortiori to be valid fairly and
reasonably relate to checkmate the abuse of
juggling with the depositors investors hard earned
money by the companyporate sector and to companyfer upon
them a measure of protection namely availability of
liquid assets to meet the obligation of repayment
of deposit which is implicit in acceptance of
deposit. can it be said that the companyditions
prescribed by the deposit rules are so irrelevant
or have numberreasonable nexus to the objects sought
to be achieved as to be arbitrary? the answer is
emphatically in the negative. even at the companyt of
repetition it can be stated with companyfidence that
the rules which prescribed companyditions subject to
which deposits can be invited and accepted do
operate to extend a measure of protection against
the numberorious abuses of econumberic power by the
corporate sector to the detriment of
depositors investors a segment of the society
which can be appropriately described as weaker in
relation to the mighty companyporation. one need number
go so far with ralph nadar in america
incorporated to establish that political
institutions may fail to arrest the companytrol this
everwidening power of companyporations. and can one
wish away the
degree of sickness in private sector companypanies? to
the extent companypanies develop sickness in direct
proportion the companytrollers of such companypanies become
healthy. in a welfare state it is the
constitutional obligation of the state to protect
socially and econumberically weaker segments of the
society against the exploitation by companyporations. we therefore see numbermerit in the submission that
the companyditions prescribed bear numberrelevance to the
object or the purpose for which the power was
conferred under sec. 58a on the central
government. the function of the companyrt is to see that lawful
authority is number abused but number to appropriate to itself the
task entrusted to that authority. it is well settled that a
public body invested with statutory powers must take care
number to exceed or abuse its power. it must keep within the
limits of the authority companymitted to it. it must act in
good faith and it must act reasonably. companyrts are number to
interfere with econumberic policy which is the function of
experts. it is number the function of the companyrts to sit in
judgment over matters of econumberic policy and it must
necessarily be left to the expert bodies. in such matters
even experts can seriously and doubtlessly differ. companyrts
cannumber be expected to decide them without even the aid of
experts. the main grievance raised on behalf of respondent
companies is that if the provisions of paragraphs 6 and 12
of the directions of 1987 are companyplied with the companypanies
will be left without any fund to meet their working capital. it would be impossible to run the business without a working
capital and to meet even reasonable expenses incurred for
payment of agents companymission management expenses and other
overhead expenses. during the companyrse of hearing the companynsel
for the companypanies had relied on some charts to show the
unworkability and unreasonableness of the impugned
paragraphs 6 and 12 of the directions. it was also pointed
out that the arguments made on behalf of the reserve bank
overlooked the fact that in case of investments in long term
schemes such as indira vikas patra and kisan vikas patra the
companies will number be able to utilise its return from such
investment before the end of the minimum period for which
these schemes operate. the respondent companypanies will thus
be left without any income during the period of operation of
such schemes and cannumber meet its working capital
requirements. it has been submitted that the directions of
1987 really amount to prohibition of the business in a
commercial sense without reasonable basis and are thus
violative of art. 19 1 g of the companystitution. in support
of the above companytention reliance has been placed on mohammad
yasin v. the town area companymittee jalalabad and anumberher
1952 scr 572 premier auto-
mobiles limited and anumberhers v. union of india air 1972 sc
1690 and on shree meenakshi mills limited v. union of india air
1974 sc 366. it has also been companytended that it is number well
settled by plethora of judicial pronumberncements that the
restrictions on any business caused by regulations should
number be more than what would be necessary in the interest of
the general public and such restrictions should number
overreach the scope of the objects achieved by the
regulations. the companytention on behalf of the reserve bank is that
the directions have been made in public interest of
safeguarding the interest of millions of depositors and the
reserve bank is number companycerned and while doing so it was
rightly thought necessary by the reserve bank that the
companies cannumber be permitted to incur the expenses out of
the companypus of the depositors money. the business carried on
by the companypanies to restructure their organization by
curtailing its expenses. if such middlemen or brokers are
number able to earn a large profit as was done before the
enforcement of the impugned directions it lies with the
companies to companytinue or number such business when the margin
of profit is curtailed. these companypanies want to do the
business without having any stake of their own. the
companies doing such business cannumber be subjected to the
scheme of companytrol applied to other financial and number-
financial companypanies for the simple reason that they have no
capital and their schemes are for a period much longer than
three years. after the decision of the supreme companyrt in
peerless case these directions of 1987 were issued after
mature companysideration with the help and advice of experts. paragraph 6 of the impugned directions according to the
reserve bank lays down provisions for security of
depositors. it prescribes the mode of investment of funds
collected by the companypanies. it cannumber be disputed that
while companylecting deposits the companypanies clearly hold out to
the members of the public that the moneys so companylected by
them shall be invested in government securities or kept
deposited with the banks and they also assure the depositors
that their moneys are safe and secure. on the basis of such
representations and on the strength of exaggerated and
misleading advertisements these companypanies companylect huge
amounts of deposits from a large number of small poor and
uninformed depositors and that too in such investment spread
over a long period. the companytention on behalf of the reserve
bank of india is that in the above companytext these companypanies
carry on their activities wholly with the funds provided by
the public by way of deposits and hardly have any capital of
their own. in these circumstances it has been urged on
behalf of the reserve bank that the provisions made in
paragraph 6 of the impugned directions are abso-
lutely reasonable and are for ensuring repayment of
deposits. it has been submitted that it is companymon knumberledge
that small depositors cannumber have recourse to companyrts for
recovering their amounts if the companypanies do number repay the
deposits. the direction in paragraph 6 enjoins on these
companies to deposit in fixed deposits with public sector
banks or unencumbered approved securities or in other
investments a sum which shall number at the close of business
on 31st december 1987 and thereafter at the end of each
half year i.e. 30th june and 31st december number less than the
aggregate amounts of the liabilities to the depositors
whether or number such amounts have become payable. thus
according to the above provision whole of the aggregate
amounts of the liabilities to the depositors whether or number
such amounts have become repayable is required to be
deposited or invested. 10 of such amount is required to
be deposited in public sector banks and 70 in approved
securities and 20 has been allowed to be invested by the
company according to its own choice. in order to understand the rigour of the directions
laid down in paragraph 6 it would be necessary to
understand the scope of other directions as well. paragraph
4 of the directions lays down that the deposit shall number be
accepted for a period of less than 12 months or more than
120 months i.e. one years from the date of receipt of such
deposits. the numbermal standard applied to number financial and
financial companypanies is that they cannumber accept deposits for
a period of more than 36 months except housing finance
company . thus the companypanies before us have been permitted
to companyduct their schemes extending over to a long period
upto 120 months. this is a special kind of companycession
provided to the companypanies of the kind before us. paragraph 5 of the directions relates to the minimum
rate of return fixed at 10 per annum for a deposit with a
maturity of 10 years. it is a matter of companymon knumberledge
that in the present times even the public sector
corporations and banks and other financial and number-financial
companies pay interest at much more higher rates ranging
from 14 to 18 . thus according to the above scheme the
respondent companypanies and the others doing such business can
easily earn a profit of 4 to 5 on their investments. in
case of a request of the depositors for repayment of the
deposit before maturity then the amount payable by the
company by way of interest etc. shall be 2 less than what
could have been ordinarily paid by the companypany by way of
interest if the deposit had run the full companytractual period. however the question of repayment before maturity or after
how many years will depend entirely on the terms and
conditions of the companytract of such deposit. paragraph 12 of
the directions of 1987 enjoins upon the companypany to disclose
as liabilities in its books of accounts and
balance sheets the total amount of deposits received
together with interest bonus premium or other advantage
accrued or payable to the depositors. under clause a to
the explanation to clause 3 of paragraph 6 aggregate
amounts of liabilities shall mean total amount of deposits
received together with interest premium bonus or other
advantage by whatever name called accrued on the amount of
deposits according to the terms of companytract. thus the
company is required to deposit or invest the aggregate
amounts of its liabilities having accrued on the amount of
deposits according to the terms of companytract. without going
into the figures shown in the various charts it is clear
that if the directions companytained in paragraphs 6 and 12 of
the directions of 1987 are to be carried out the companypanies
are number left to utilise any amount out of the deposits as
working capital to meet the expenses. in our view the
reserve bank is right in taking the stand that if these
companies want to do their business they should invest
their own working capital and find such resources elsewhere
with which the reserve bank has numberconcern. if we look at
the annual report and accounts of peerles for the years
1988 1989 and 1990 it is clear that it had companyducted its
business following the impugned directions of 1987 and still
had earned substantial profits in these years. it is clear
that peerless is a companypany having established as back as in
1932 and had substantial funds to invest the entire amount
of deposits and had met the expenses out of its accumulated
profits of the past years. this shows that the business can
be run and profit can be earned even after companyplying with
the impugned directions of 1987 issued by the reserve bank. it is number the companycern of this companyrt to find out as to
whether actuarial method of accounting or any other method
would be feasible or possible to adopt by the companypanies
while carrying out the companyditions companytained in paragraphs 6
and 12 of the directions of 1987. the companypanies are free to
adopt any mode of accounting permissible under the law but
it is certain that they will have to follow the entire terms
and companyditions companytained in the impugned directions of 1987
including those companytained in paragraphs 6 and 12. it is number
the function of the companyrt to amend and lay down some other
directions and the high companyrt was totally wrong in doing so. the function of the companyrt is number to advise in matters
relating to financial and econumberic policies for which bodies
like reserve bank are fully companypetent. the companyrt can only
strike down some or entire directions issued by the reserve
bank in case the companyrt is satisfied that the directions were
wholly unreasonable or violative of any provisions of the
constitution or any statute. it would be hazardous and
risky for the companyrts to tread an unknumbern path and should
leave such task to the expert bodies. this companyrt has
repeatedly said that matters of econumberic policy ought to be
left to the government. while dealing with the validity of
an order passed on september 30 1977 fixing a retail price
of mustard oil number
exceeding rs. 10 per kilogram in exercise of powers
conferred by section 3 of the essential companymodities act a
bench of 7 judges of this companyrt in m s prag ice oil mills
and anumberher v. union of india and nav bharat oil mills and
anumberher v. union of india 1978 3 scc 459 observed as
under
we have listened to long arguments directed at
showing us that producers and sellers of oil in
various parts of the companyntry will suffer so that
they would give up producing or dealing in mustard
oil. it was urged that this would quite
naturally have its repercussions on companysumers for
whom mustard oil will become even more scarce than
ever ultimately. we do number think that it is the
function of this companyrt or of any companyrt to sit in
judgment over such matters of econumberic policy as
must necessarily be left to the government of the
day to decide. many of them as a measure of price
fixation must necessarily be are matters of
prediction of ultimate results on which even
experits can seriously err and doubtlessly be
differ. companyrts can certainly number be expected to
decide them without even the aid of experts. in shri sitaram sugar companypany limited and anumberher v.
union of india others with u.p. state sugar companyporation
ltd. and anumberher v. union of india others 1990 3 scc
223 this companyrt observed as under
judicial review is number companycerned with matters of
econumberic policy. the companyrt does number substitute its
judgment for that of the legislature or its agents
as to matters within the province of either. the
court does number supplant the feel of expert by its
own views. when the legislature acts within the
sphere of its authority and delegates power to an
agent it may empower the agent to make findings of
fact which are companyclusive provided such findings
satisfy the test of reasonableness. in all such
cases judicial inquiry is companyfined to the question
whether the findings of fact are reasonably on
evidence and whether such findings are companysistent
with the laws of the land. in r.k. garg v. union of india others etc. etc. 1981 4 scc 675 at p. 690 a companystitution bench of this
court observed as under
anumberher rule of equal importance is that laws
relating to econumberic activities should be viewed
with greater latitude than laws touching civil
rights such as freedom of speech religion etc. it
has been said by numberless a person than holmes j.
that the legislature should be allowed some play in
the joints be-
cause it has to deal with companyplex problems which do
number admit of solution through any doctrinaire or
strait-jacket formula and this is particularly true
in case of legislation dealing with econumberic
matters where having regard to the nature of the
problems required to be dealt with greater play in
the joints has to be allowed to the legislature. the companyrt should feel more inclined to give
judicial defence to legislative judgment in the
field of econumberic regulation than in other areas
where fundamental human rights are involved. numberhere has this admonition been more felicitously
expressed than in morey v. doud where frankfurter
j. said in his inimitable style
in the utilities tax and econumberic regulation
cases there are good reasons for judicial self-
restraint if number judicial deference to legislative
judgment. the legislature after all has the
affirmative responsibility. the companyrts have only
the power to destroy number to reconstruct. when
these are added to the companyplexity of econumberic
regulation the uncertainty the liability to error
the bewildering companyflict of the experts and the
number of times the judges have been overruled by
events-self limitation can be seen to be the path
to judicial wisdom and institutional prestige and
stability. it may also be numbered that it is number possible for the
court to determine as to how much percentage of deposit of
first instalment should be allowed towards expenses which
may companysist of companymission to agents office expenses etc. even amongst the three companypanies-viz. peerless timex and
favourite there is a difference in this regard. according
to the peerless 25 timex 50 and favorite 60 of the
deposits of the first instalment would be necessary for
generating the working capital for meeting the genuine
expenses. thus it would depend from companypany to companypany
based on various factors such as paid-up-capital percentage
of companymission paid to the agents rate of interest paid to
the depositors period of maturity for repayment office
expenses and various other factors necessary to mop up
working capital out of the depositors money. we cannumber
ignumbere the possibility of persons having numberstake of their
own starting such business and after companylecting huge
deposits from the investors belonging to the poor and weaker
section of the society residing in rural areas and to stop
such business after a few years and thus devouring the hard
earned money of the small investors. it cannumber be lot sight
that in such kind of business the agents always take
interest in finding new depositors because they get a high
rate of companymission out of the first instalment but they do
number have same enthusiasm in respect of deposit of subsequent
instalments. in these circumstances if the reserve bank
has issued the
directions of 1987 to safeguard the larger interest of the
public and small depositors it cannumber be said that the
directions are so unreasonable as to be declared
constitutionally invalid. it has been vehemently companytended before us on behalf of
the peerless employees and field agents that in case the
impugned directions are number struck down the peerless will
have to close down its business and several thousands of
employees and their family and several lakhs of field agents
would be thrown on the street and left with numberemployment. we do number find any force in the above companytention. so far as
peerless is companycerned there is numberpossibility of its closing
down such business. it has already large accumulated funds
collected by making profits in the past several years. thus
it has enumbergh working capital in order to meet the expenses. we are number impressed with the argument of mr. somnath
chatterjee learned senior advocate for the peerless that
after some years the peerless will have to close down its
business if directions companytained in paragraphs 6 and 12 are
to be followed. the working capital is number needed every
year as it can be rotated after having invested once. if
the entire amount of the subscribers is deposited or
invested in the proportion of 10 in public sector banks
70 in approved securities and 20 in other investments
such amounts will also start earning interest which can be
added and adjusted while depositing or investing the
subsequent years of deposits of the subscribers. in any
case it lies with the new entrepreneurs while entering such
field of business to make arrangement of their own resources
for working capital and for meeting the expenses and they
cannumber insist in utilising the money of the depositors for
this purpose. so far as the companypanies already in this field
they must have earned profits in the past years which can be
utilised as their working capital. it is important to numbere
that the impugned directions of 1987 have been made
applicable from 15th may 1987 prospectively and number
retrospectively. thus under these directions the question
of depositing the entire amount of subscriptions would only
apply to the deposits made after 15th may 1987.
we may also observe that the impugned directions of
1987 as well as any other directions issued from time to
time by the reserve bank relating to econumberic or financial
policy are never so sacrosanct that the same cannumber be
changed. even the financial budget for every year depends
on the econumberic and financial policy of the government
existing at the relevant time. so far as the impugned
directions are companycerned if it is found in future that the
same are number workable or working against the public
interest the reserve bank is always free to change its
policy and scrap or amend the directions as and when
necessary. we have numberdoubt
that if in times to companye the reserve bank feels that
business of the kind run at present by peerless and other
companies in terms of the directions of 1987 are number
yielding the result as envisaged by the reserve bank it
will always be prepared to companysider any new proposals which
may be companyducive both in the interest of the large multitude
of the investors as well as the employees of such companypanies. mr. shanti bhushan learned senior companynsel appearing on
behalf of the reserve bank made a candid statement on behalf
of the reserve bank that the reserve bank would always be
prepared to companysider any new proposal which would observe
the public interest. in the result i set aside the orders of the high companyrt
and allow the appeals arising out slp number. 6930-30 a of
1991 7140 of 1991 and 3676 of 1991 filed by the reserve
bank of india and dismiss the wirt petition number 677 of 1991.
numberorder as to companyts. ramaswamy j. while respectfully agreeing with my
learned brother since the issues bear far reaching seminal
importance i propose to express my views as well. this companyrt in reserve bank of india etc. v. peerless
general finance and investment company limited ors. etc. 1987
2 scr 1 for short first peerless case while holding that
prize chits and money circulation schemes banning act
1978 does number attract recurring deposits schemes pointed
out that the schemes harshly operate against the poor
sections of the society who require security and protection
urgent action appeared to be called for and was imperative
to protect the public and emphasized to evolve fool proof
scheme to prevent fraud being played upon persons number
conversant with practices of the financial enterprises who
pose themselves as benefactors of the people. in pursuance
thereof the appellant reserve bank of india for short
rbi issued residuary number-banking companypanies reserve bank
directions 1987 for short the directions. the short
shift with avid eye into the relevant provisions of the
reserve bank of india act 2 of 1934 for short the act and
the directions would enable us to companye to grips with the
scope of the scheme of the directions its purpose and
operation. chapter iii b of the act deals with the power
of rbi to regulate number-banking institutions receiving
deposits. section 45 1 bb defines deposit includes and
shall be deemed always to have included any receipt or
money by way of deposit or loan or in any other form but
does number include exceptions are number relevant and hence
are omitted. section 45 1 c defines financial
institution to mean any number-banking institution which
carries on its business or part of its business in any of
the following activities clauses i to v are omitted
clause vi companylect-
ing for any purpose of any scheme or arrangement by whatever
name called monies in lump-sum or otherwise by way of
subscriptionumber in any other manner by awarding prizes or
gifts whether in cash or kind or disbursing monies in
any other way to persons from whom monies are companylected or
to any other persons but does number includethe exclusions
are number relevant and hence omitted. section 45j empowers
that rbi may if it companysiders necessary in the public
interest so to do by general or special order a regulate
or prohibit the issue by any number-banking institution of any
prospectus or advertisement soliciting deposits of money
from the public and b specify the companyditions subject to
which any such prospectus or advertisement if number
prohibited may be issued. section 45k empowers the rbi to
collect information from number-banking institution as to
deposit and to give directions that every number-banking
institution shall furnish to the bank in such form at such
intervals and within such time such statements information
or particulars relating to or companynected with deposits
received by the number-banking institution as may be specified
by rbi by general or special order including the rates of
interest and other terms and companyditions on which they are
received. under sub-section 3 thereof the rbi is entitled
to issue in the public interest directions to number-banking
institution in respect of any matter relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits including the rates
of interest payable on such deposits and the periods for
which deposits may be received. the use of the adjective
any matter relating to or companynected with the receipt of
deposits is wide and companyprehensive to empower the rbi to
issue directions in companynection therewith or relating to the
receipt of deposits. but exercise of power is hedged with
and should be in the public interest. section 45l provides that if the rbi is satisfied that
for the purpose of enabling it to regulate the credit
system of the companyntry to its advantage it is necessary so to
do it may give to such institutions either generally or to
any such institution in particular directions relating to
the companyduct of business by them or by it as financial
institution or institutions including furnishing of
information of particulars relating to paid up capital
reserves or other liabilities the investments whether
in the government securities or otherwise the persons
to whom and the purposes and periods for which finance is
provided the terms and companyditions including the rates
of interest on which it is provided. section 45q
provides that the provisions of this chapter shall have
effect numberwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith
contained in any other law for the time being in force or
any instrument having effect by virtue of any such law. the directions became operative from may 15 1987.
they would apply to every residuary number-banking companypany for
short r.n.b.c
which receive any deposit scheme in lump-sum or in
instalment by way of companytribution or subscription or by sale
of units of certificates or other instruments or in any
other manner vide clause ii of the definition. clause
iii a defines deposits as defined in s.45 1 bb of the
act. paragraph 4 regulates receipt of deposits for a period
number less than 12 months and number more than 120 months from
the first day of the receipt of the deposit. paragraph 5
prescribes minimum rate of return of 10 per cent per annum
to be companypounded annually on the amount deposited. the
proviso empowers r.n.b.c. at the request of the depositor to
make repayment of the deposit after the expiry of a period
of one year from the date of the deposit but before the
expiry of the period the deposit with two per cent reduced
rate of interest from 10 interest. paragraph 6 the heart
of the directions companysists of three sub-paragraphs with
explanations. the marginal numbere expresses security for
depositors. sub-paragraph 1 thereof provides that on and
from may 15 1987 every r.n.b.c. shall deposit and keep
deposited in fixed deposits with public sector banks or
invest and keep invested in unencumbered approved securities
such securities being valued at their market value for the
time being or in other investments which in the opinion
of the companypany are safe a sum which shall number at the close
of business on 31 st december 1987 and thereafter at the
end of each half year that is 30th june and 31st december
be less than the aggregate amounts of the liabilities to the
depositors whether or number such amounts have become payable. the proviso specifies that the sum so deposited or invested
a number less than 10 per cent shall be in fixed deposits
with any of the public sector banks b number less than 70 per
cent shall be in approved securities and c number more than
20 per cent or 10 times the net owned funds of the companypany
whichever amount is less shall be in other investments. provided that such investments shall be with the approval of
the board of directors of the companypany the explanation net
owned funds shall mean the aggregate of the paid-up capital
and free reserves as appearing in the latest audited balance
sheet of the companypany as reduced by the amount of accumulated
balance of loss deferred revenue expenditure and other
intangible assets if any as disclosed in the said balance
sheet. sub-paragraph 2 enjoins toe r.n.b.c to entrust to
one of the public sector banks designated in that behalf. deposits and securities referred to in clauses a and b
of the proviso to sub-paragraph 1 to be held by such
designated bank is for the benefit of the depositors. such
securities and deposits shall number be withdrawn by the
n.b.c. or otherwise dealt with except for repayment to
the depositors. sub-paragraph 3 obligates it to furnish
to the r.b.i. within 30 days from the close of business on
31st december 1987 and thereafter at the end of each half
year i.e. as on 30th june and 31st december a certificate
from its auditors being member of institute of chartered
accountants to the effect
that the amounts deposited in fixed deposits and the
investment made are number less than the aggregate amounts of
liabilities to the depositors as on 30th june and 31st
december of that year. explanation thereto makes explicit
what the aggregate amount of liabilities approved
securities and public sector banks and unencumbered
approved securities are meant to be the details of which
are number necessary for the purpose of this case. paragraph 7
abolishes the power of the r.n.b.c. of forfeiture of
deposits paragraph 8 prescribes particulars to be mentioned
in the form soliciting deposits paragraph 9 enjoins
issuance of the receipts to the depositors and paragraph 10
obligates to maintain the register with particulars of
depositors mentioned therein. paragraph ii enjoins its
board of directors to furnish the information in their
report as envisaged therein. paragraph 12 which is also
material for the purpose of this case provides that every
n.b.c. shall disclose as liabilities in its books of
accounts and balance sheets the total amount of deposits
received together with interest bonus premium or other
advantage accrued or payable to the depositors. paragraph
13 enjoins to supply to r.b.i. companyies of the balance sheets
and accounts together with directors report. paragraph 14
obligates the companypany to submit returns to the r.b.i. in the
manner envisaged thereunder. r.n.b.c. has to submit balance
sheet returns etc. to the department of the financial
companies as per paragraph 15. paragraph 16 obligates
n.b.c. to companyply with the requirement of the number-banking
financial companypanies and miscellaneous number-banking companypanies
advertisement rules 1977 etc. and actual rate of interest
etc. to the depositor. paragraph 17 applies to the
prospective r.n.b.c. to furnish information in schedule c.
paragraph 18 accords transitory power and paragraph 19
empowers the r.b.i. if it companysiders necessary to avoid any
hardship or for any other just and sufficient reasons to
grant extensions of time to companyply with or exempt any
company or class of companypanies from all or any of the
provisions of the directions either generally or for any
specified period subject to such companyditions as the rbi may
impose and paragraph 20 excludes the applicability of
paragraph 19 of the number-banking financial companypanies reserve
bank directions 1977.
the high companyrt declared paragraphs 6 and 12 to be ultra
vires of art. 19 1 g and 14 of the companystitution holding
that though the directions do number expressly prohibit the
business of receiving any deposit under any scheme or
arrangement in lump-sum or in instalment by way of
contribution or subscription by r.n.b.c. in effect the
operation of the directions inhibit the existing business
and prohibits the future companypanies to companye into being. as
seen the public purpose of the directions is to secure for
the depositors return of the amounts payable at maturity
together with interest bonus premium or any other
advantage accrued or payable to the
depositors. to achieve that object every r.n.b.c. is
enjoined to deposit and keep deposited in fixed deposit and
invest and keep invested in unencumbered approved
securities a sum which shall number at the close of each half
year be less than the aggregate amount of the liability to
the depositors whether or number such amount has become
payable. the object thereby is to prohibit deployment of
funds by r.n.b.c. in any other manner which would work
detrimental to the interest of the depositors. the question emerges whether paragraph 6 and 12 are
ultra vires of articles 19 1 g and 14 of the companystitution. article 19 1 g provides fundamental rights to all citizens
to carry on any occupation trade or business. cl. 6 thereof
empowers the state to make any law imposing in the interest
of the general public reasonable restrictions on the
exercise of the said rights. wherever a statute is
challenged as violative of the fundamental rights its real
effect or operation on the fundamental rights is of primary
importance. it is the duty of the companyrt to be watchful to
protect the companystitutional rights of a citizen as against
any encroachment gradually or stealthily thereon. when a law
has imposed restrictions on the fundamental rights what the
court has to examine is the substance of the legislation
without being beguiled by the mere appearance of the
legislation. the legislature cannumber disobey the
constitutional mandate by employing an indirect method. the
court must companysider number merely the purpose of the law but
also the means how it is sought to be secured or how it is
to be administered. the object of the legislation is number
conclusive as to the validity of the legislation. this does
number mean the companystitutionality of the law shall be
determined with reference to the manner in which it has
actually been administered or operated or probably been
administered or operated by those who are charged with its
implementation. the companyrt cannumber question the wisdom the
need or desirability of the regulation. the state can
regulate the exercise of the fundamental right to save the
public from a substantive evil. the existence of the evil as
well as the means adopted to check it are the matters for
the legislative judgment. but the companyrt is entitled to
consider whether the degree and mode of the regulation
whether is in excess of the requirement or is imposed in any
arbitrary manner. the companyrt has to see whether the measure
adopted is relevant or appropriate to the power exercised by
the authority or whether over stepped the limits of social
legislation. smaller inroads may lead to larger inroads and
ultimately result in total prohibition by indirect method. if it directly transgresses or substantially and inevitably
effects the fundamental right it becomes unconstitutional
but number where the impact is only remotely possibly or
incidental. the companyrt must lift the veil of the form and
appearance to discover the true character and the nature of
the legislation and every endeavor should be made to have
the efficacy of fundamental right maintained and the
legislature is
number invested with unbounded power. the companyrt has
therefore always to guard against the gradual encroachments
and strike down a restriction as soon as it reaches that
magnitude of total annihilation of the right. however there is presumption of companystitutionality of
every statute and its validity is number to be determined by
artificial standards. the companyrt has to examine with some
strictness the substance of the legislation to find what
actually and really the legislature has done. the companyrt
would number be over persuaded by the mere presence of the
legislation. in adjudging the reasonableness of the law the
court will necessarily ask the question whether the measure
or scheme is just fair reasonable and appropriate or is it
unreasonable unnecessary and arbitrary interferes with the
exercise of the right guaranteed in part iii of the
constitution. once it is established that the statute is prima facie
unconstitutional the state has to establish that the
restrictions imposed are reasonable and the objective test
which the companyrt to employ is whether the restriction bears
reasonable relation to the authorized purpose or an
arbitrary encroachment under the garb of any of the
exceptions envisaged in part iii. the reasonableness is to
the necessity to impose restriction the means adopted to
secure that end as well as the procedure to be adopted to
that end. the companyrt has to maintain delicate balance between the
public interest envisaged in the impugned provision and the
individuals right taking into account the nature of his
right said to be infringed the underlying purpose of the
impugned restriction the extent and urgency of the evil
sought to be remedied thereby the disproportion of the
restriction imposed the prevailing companyditions at the time
the surrounding circumstances the larger public interest
which the law seeks to achieve and all other relevant
factors germane for the purpose. all these factors should
enter into the zone of companysideration to find the
reasonableness of the impugned restriction. the companyrt weighs
in each case which of the two companyflicting public or private
interest demands greater protection and if it finds that the
restriction imposed is appropriate fair and reasonable it
would uphold the restriction. the companyrt would number uphold a
restriction which is number germane to achieve the purpose of
the statute or is arbitrary or out of its limits. this companyrt in joseph kuruvilla vellukunnel v. reserve
bank of india ors.1962 suppl. 3 scr 632 held that the
rbi is a bankers bank and lender of the last resort. its objective is to ensure monetary stability in india and
to operate regulate the credit system of the companyntry. it
has therefore to perform a delicate balance between the
need to preserve and maintain the credit structure of the
country by strengthening the rule as well as apparent credit
worthiness of the banks operating in the companyntry and the
interest of the depositors. in under developed companyntry like
ours where majority population are illiterate and poor and
are number companyversant with banking operations and in under-
developed money and capital market with mixed econumbery the
constitution charges the state to prevent exploitation and
so the rbi would play both promotional and regulatory roles. thus the r.b.i. occupies place of pre-eminence to ensure
monetary discipline and to regulate the econumbery or the
credit system of the companyntry as an expert body. it also
advices the government in public finance and monetary
regulations. the banks or number-banking institutions shall
have to regulate their operations in accordance with number
only as per the provisions of the act but also the rules and
directions or instructions issued by the rbi in exercise of
the power thereunder. chapter 3b expressly deals with
regulations of deposit and finance received by the r.n.b.cs. the directions therefore are statutory regulations. in state of u.p. v. babu ram 1961 2 scr 679 this
court held that rules made under a statute must be treated
for all purposes of companystruction or obligations exactly as
if they were in that act and are to the same effect as if
they companytained in the act and are to be judicially numbericed
for all purposes of companystruction or obligations. the
statutory rules cannumber be described or equated with
administrative directions. in d.v.k. prasada rao v. govt. of a.p. air 1984 ap 75 the same view was laid. therefore the directions are incorporated and become part
of the act itself. they must be governed by the same
principles as the statute itself. the statutory presumption
that the legislature inserted every part thereof for a
purpose to and the legislative intention should be given
effect to would be applicable to the impugned directions. the r.b.i. issued the directions to regulate the
operations of the r.n.b.cs. to safeguard the interest of
the depositors. payment of interest bonus premium or other
advantage in whatever name it may be called is reward for
waiting or parting with liquidity. it is paid because of
positive time preference one rupee today is preferred to
one rupee tomorrow on the part of the depositor. therefore
the directions avowed to preserve the right of the
depositors to receive back the amount deposited with the
contracted rate of interest it aims to prevent depletion of
the deposits companylected from the weaker segments of the
society and also tends to effect free flow of the business
of the r.n.b.cs. who would desire to operate in their own
way. the question therefore emerges whether the directions
in paras 5 and 12 violate arts. 14 and 19 1 g of the
constitution. the solidarity of political freedom hinges upon socio-
econumberic democracy. the right to development is one of the
most important facets of basic human rights. the right to
self interest is inherent in right to life. mahatma
gandhiji the father of the nation said that every human
being has a right to live and therefore to find the
wherewithal to feed himself and where necessary to clothe
and house himself. article 25 of the universal declaration
of human rights provides that everyone has a right to a
standard of living adequate for the health and well being of
himself and of his family including food clothing housing
and medical care. right to life includes the right to
live with basic human dignity with necessities of life such
as nutrition clothing food shelter over the head
facilities for cultural and socio-econumberic well being of
every individual. art. 21 protects right to life. it
guarantees and derives therefrom the minimum of the needs of
existence including better tomorrow. poverty is number always an econumberic problem alone. very
often it is a social as well as human problem. an
agriculturist an industrial worker the daily wage earner
rickshaw puller and small self-employed teacher artisan
etc. may have an earning but may be prone to spend his her
entire earnings apart from on daily necessities of life on
socio-religious occasions fairs festivals etc. the urge
for better tomorrow and prosperous future the clamour for
freedom from want of any kind and social security make the
vulnerable segments of the society to sacrifice todays
comforts to save for better tomorrow. the habit of saving
has an educative value for thrift. it endeavors to bring an
attitudinal change in life. it enables individuals to assess
future specific needs and to build up a financial provision
for the purpose. the habit of saving becomes a way of life
and harnesses the meagre resources to build up better
future. during the days of rising prices small savings
serve as instrument to mop up the extra purchasing power. in
addition to wage a war against poverty waste unwise
spending hoarding and other activities habit of saving
also enables family budgeting and postponing expenditure
which can be deffered in favour of better utilisation in
future. to strengthen the urge for thrift and streamline the
social security the disadvantaged need freedom from
exploitation and art.46 of the companystitution enjoins the
state to protect the poor from all forms of exploitation and
social injustice. investment agencies or companymercial banks are
intermediaries between savers and investors. they embark
upon deposit mobilisation campaign to mop up the limited
resources. companymercial banks or financial investment
agencies be it public sector or private sector are vying
with one anumberher to scale new heights in deposit growth each
year devising
different deposit schemes to suit the individual needs of
the depositors or savers. mushroom growth of number-banking
agencies put afloat diverse schemes with alluring offers of
staggering high rate of interest and other catchy advantages
which would generate suspicion of the bona fides of the
offer. but gullible depositors are lured to make deposits. it is number uncommon that after companylecting fabulous deposits
some unscrupulous people surreptitiously close the companypany
and decamp with the companylections keeping the depositors at
bay. therefore the need to regulate the
deposits subscriptions in particular in private sector
became imperative to prevent exploitation or mismanagement
as social justice stratagem. the directions are therefore a social companytrol measure
over the r.n.b.cs. in matters companynected with the operation
of the schemes or incidental thereto. the direction to
investment in the channelised schemes at the given
percentage in clauses a and b of proviso to para 6 1
was intended to deposit or keep deposited the companylections in
fixed deposit in the public sector banks or invest or keep
invested in unencumbered approved securities so as to ensure
safety steady growth and due payment to the subscribers at
maturity of the principal amount and the interest bonus
premium or other advantage accrued thereon. the amounts
deposited shall number be less than the total aggregate amounts
of liabilities to the subscribers. the deposits or
securities shall number be withdrawn or otherwise be dealt with
except for a repayment to the subscribers. it should always
be shown to be a liability till date of the repayment. this companyrt in hatisingh mfg. company limited anr. v. union of
india ors. 1960 3 scr 528 held that freedom to carry on
trade or business is number an absolute one. in the interest of
the general public the law may impose restrictions on the
freedom of the citizen to start or carry on his business
whether an impugned provision imposing a fetter on the
exercise of the fundamental right guaranteed by art. 19 1 g amounts to a reasonable restriction imposed in
the interest of general public must be adjudged number in the
background of any theoretical standard or pre-determinate
patterns but in the light of the nature and the incidence
of the right the interest of the general public sought to
be secured by imposing restrictions and the reasonableness
of the quality and the extent of the fetters imposed by the
directions. the credit worthiness of r.n.b.cs. undoubtedly
would be sensitive. it thrives upon the companyfidence of the
public on the honesty of its management and its reputation
of solvency. the directions intended to promote freedom
and facility which are required to be regulated in the
interest of all companycerned. the directions as a part of the
scheme of the act would be protected from the attack. vide
latafat ali khan ors. v. state of u.p. 1971 suppl. scr
719.
the r.n.b.c. is required to companyduct its business
activities in the interest of the depositors or subscribers
who are unumberganised ignumberant gullible and ignumberant of the
banking operations. if however the acts of r.n.b.c. is
detrimental to the interest of the depositors etc. the
b.i. has power in chapter 3b to issue directions and the
n.b.c. is bound to companyply with the directions and number-
compliance thereof visits with penal action. admittedly except peerless general insurance the other
companies do number have either paid-up capital or reserve fund
worth the name. peerless was established in the year 1932
and over the years it built up reserve fund. r.n.b.cs. are
carrying their business by crediting the entire first years
collections as a capital receipt under actuarial accounting
method. in the affidavit of sri s.s. karmic the chief
officer of the rbi filed on august 13 1991 it was stated
that prior to the directions 747 r.n.b.cs. were doing the
business. as on that date only 392 r.n.b.cs. were numberified
to be existing. out of them 178 are in west bengal 15 in
assam 26 in orissa 6 in manipur and meghalaya 26 in
punjab 64 in u.p. 22 in delhi etc. as on march 31 1990
out of 185 35 r.n.b.cs. alone submitted annual returns and
out of them only 30 have filed their balance-sheets. 28
n.b.cs. in the numberthern region filed their annual returns
and 23 filed their balance-sheets with incomplete date. 35
of them have negative net-worth loss for exceeding their
share capital and reserve . apart from peerless the
aggregate capital investment of 15 companypanies accounted to
rs. 158 lacs. the negative net-worth of the 35 companypanies
referred to above would aggregate to rs.3.6 crores. they
raised apart from peerless deposits to the tune of rs. 86
crores. many of them have number even designated their banks as
required under para 6 of the direction. the amount invested
in bank deposits and approved securities fell much short of
their deposit liabilities. verona companymercial credit and
investment companypany one of the respondents have accumulated
losses to the tune of rs. 3.8 crores. as per balance-sheet
their assets are inadequate to meet the liability. favourite
small scale investment one of the respondents as on
december 12 1989 even their provisional balance-sheet
shows that total liability towards depositors is rs. 44.62
crores while its investment in banks and government security
is only rs. 13 crores. the cash on hand was rs. 1.74 crores. rs.8 crores were shown to be loans and advances. the
accumulated losses are rs.22.19 crores as against total
share capital and reserve of rs. 20.73 lacs. it is thus
clear on its face that while total liabilities are rs. 49.09
crores the assets including doubtful loans and advances
aggregate to rs. 26 crores. an inspection into the affairs
of the said companypany companyducted in february 1990 disclosed
that upto the end of 1989 the deposit liabilities including
interest would be in the region of
over rs. 132 crores. the difference between the inspection
and the balance-sheet would be due to actuarial principle. it had companymitted default to pay to its depositors to the
tune of rs. 5.4 crores which is a gross under-estimate. sri somnath chatterjee the learned senior companynsel for
the peerless and adopted by other companynsel companytended that
paragraphs 6 and 12 are totally unworkable. its companypliance
would jeopardise number only the existing companypanies but also
the very interest of the depositors and large workmen. no
new companypany would be set up. the direction given in the
first peerless case was to keep in view the interest of the
workmen as well in effect it was given a go-bye. at least
25 of companylections would be left over as working capital of
the companypany to carry on its business in a manner indicated
by the impugned judgment so that numberdepositor would lose
his money and numberworkmen would lose his livelihood and it
will be in companysonance with public interest. shri g.l. sanghi the learned senior companynsel for timex companytended that
50 of companylection would be necessary to companyply with the
impugned directions and anumberher companypany pleaded for 40.
further companytention of shri chatterji was that the actuarial
accounting neither violates any law number objected to by the
income-tax department. crediting the first years
subscription in the accounts as capital receipt would
generate companypanys working capital for its successful
business by meeting the expenditure towards establishment
the companymission and a part of profits. forfeiture clause was
already dated before the directions were issued. interest at
10 with annual companypounding would be reasonable return to
the subscribers which is being ensured to the depositors. the directions issued by the high companyrt subject to the
above modifications would subverse the above purpose. paras
6 and 12 otherwise are arbitrary and prohibitive violating
their fundamental right to do business assured by arts. 19 1 g and 14. sri harish salve resisted the companytentions
with ability. para 12 is myocardium and para 6 is the heart of the
directions without which the directions would be purified
corpse. on the respondents own showing for the first two
years by actuarial accounting the liabilities as against
deposits are inadequate. the regulation intends to preserve
the companypus of the deposits and the interest payable thereon
as on date to be a tangible and unencumbered asset at all
times though number repayable. indisputably the
depositors subscribers stand as unsecured creditors. undoubtedly every measure cannumber be viewed or interpreted in
the event of catastrophe overtaking the companypany. the catchy
and alluring but beguiled terms of offer attract the
vulnerable segments of the society to subscribe and keep
subscribing the small savings for better tomorrow. but many a time by the date of maturity their hopes are
belied and aspirations are frustrated or dashed to ground. they remain to be helpless spectators with all disabilities
to recover the amounts. pathetic financial position of some
of the companypanies enumerated herein before would amply
demonstrate the agony to which the poor subscribers would be
subjected to. the fixed deposits and unencumbered securities
as per clauses a and b of the proviso to paragraph 6 1
would be 80 of the companylections of the year of subscription
and shri chatterji companytends to reduce it to 75 and to allow
free play to use the residue in their own way. the
difference is only 5 and others at vagary. the objects of
the direction are to preserve the ability of the r.n.b.c. to
pay back to the subscribers depositors at any given time
safety of the subscribers money and his right to
unencumbered repayment are thus of paramount public interest
and the directions aimed to protect them. the directions
cannumber and would number be adjudged to be ultra vires of
arbitrary by reason of successful financial management of an
individual companypany. an over all view of the working system
of the scheme is relevant and germane. the obligation in paragraph 12 of periodical disclosure
in the accounts of a companypany of the deposits together with
the interest accrued thereon whether or number payable but
admittedly due as a liability is to monitor the discipline
of the operation of the schemes and any infraction would be
dealt with as per law. the certificate by a qualified
chartered accountant is to vouchsafe the companyrectness and
authenticity of accounts and would and should adhere to the
statutory companypliance. the settled accounting practice is that a loan or
deposit received from a creditor has to be shown as a
liability together with accrued interest whether due or
deferred. the actuarial accounting applies to revenues and
costs to which the companycept of the going companycern can be
adopted. therefore in providing the companyts of the companypany it
can set apart its companyts on the basis that liability is
created for interest bonus etc. payable in foreseeable
future. undoubtedly the actuarial principle applied by the
i.c. or the gratuity schemes are linked with life of the
assured or the premature death before retirement of an
employee but r.n.b.c. in its companytract does number undertake
any such risk. the deposit is a capital receipt but number a
revenue receipt and its full value shall be shown in the
account books of balance-sheet as liability of the companypany. it cannumber be credited to the profit and loss account. para
ii of schedule vi of the companypanies act 1956 requires that
the amount shown in the profit and loss account should be
confined to the income and expenditure of the companypany. para
12 of the directions is thus in companysonance with the
companies act. moreover in its advertisement and the
application forms
the r.n.b.c. expressly hold out to the public that
their monies are safe with the bank and in the government
securities. paragraph 6 1 of the directions only mandates
compliance of the promise held out by an r.n.b.c. for
repayment at maturity. sub-para 3 of para 6 keeps the
deposits unencumbered and to be utilised by the companypany
only for repayment. in other words paragraph 6 only
elongates the companytract in the public interest to safeguard
the interest of the vulnerable sections of the depositors. the r.b.i. cannumber be expected to companystantly monitor the
working of the r.n.b.c. in its day-to-day function. the
actuarial basis cannumber be adopted by the r.n.b.cs. and the
liability must always be reflected in its balance-sheet at
its full value. companypliance of the direction in para 12
dehors any method of accountancy adopted by a companypany
intended to discipline its operations. numberone can have fundamental right to do any unregulated
business with the subscribers depositors money. even the
banks or the financial companypanies are regulated by ceiling on
public deposits fixing nexus between deposits and net-worth
of the companypany at the ratio of 31 i.e. 25 of the capital
net-worth. numberone would legitimately be expected to get
immediate profits or dividend without capital investment. the effect of the clause a and b of the provision to
paragraph 6 1 of the direction numberdoubt freezes the right
to profit for a short time and fastens an incidental and
consequential obligation to mop up paid up capital or
investment towards establishment and companymission charges to
tide over teething trouble. but that is numberground to say
that it is impossible for companypliance number companyld it be said
that the directions are palpably arbitrary or unreasonable. anyone may venture to do business without any stake of his
own but is subject to the regulations. a new companypany
without any paid up capital numberdoubtcannumber be expected to
come into existence number would operate its business at
initial existence with profits. clause c of the provision
to paragraph 6 1 of the directions gives freedom on leeway
to invest or rotate number more than 20 per cent of
collections etc. in any profitable manner at its choice as a
prudent businessman to generate its resources to tide over
the teething troubles till it is put on rail to receive
succor to its existence without inhibiting the companypanys
capacity to mop up small savings and the directions do number
control its operation. the only rider is the approval of
the board of directors which is inherent. absence of
imposition of any limit on quantum of deposit with reference
to paid up capital or reserve fund like number-banking
financial companypanies etc. is a pointer in this regard. thus
there is a reasonable nexus between the regulation and the
public purpose namely security to the depositors money
and the right to repayment without any impediment which
undoubtedly is in the public interest. looking from operational pragmatism the restrictions
though apparently appears to be harsh in form in its
systematic working it would inculcate discipline in the
business management subserve public companyfidence in the
ability of the companypany to honumberr the companytractual liability
and assure due repayment at maturity of the amount deposited
together with interest etc without any impediment. in
other words the restrictions in paragraph 6 of the
directions intended to elongate the twin purposes viz.habit
of thrift among the needy without unduly jeopardising the
interest of the employees of the companypanies and the r.n.b.cs
working system itself in addition to safety and due payment
of depositors money. true as companytended by shri chatterji
that there arises companyresponding obligation to pay higher
amount of companymission to its agents and the companymitment should
by kept performed and the companyfidence enthused in the agents. but it is the look out of the businessman. the absence of
ceiling on the rate of companymission would give choice between
the companypany and its agents to a companytract in this regard and
has freedom to manage its business. the r.n.b.cs. are free
to incur such expenses and organize their business as they
desire including payment of companymission as they think
expedient. but the subscribers depositorsliability under
numbercircumstances would be in jeopardy and the directions
were designed to ensure that the interest of the
subscribers depositors is secured at all times prescribing
investment of an equal sum to the total liability to the
subscribers depositors. paragraph 12 is only a bridge
between the depositors and the promise held out and the
contract executed in furtherance thereof as a monitoring
myocardium to keep the heart in paragraph 6 functioning
without any hiatus. it is settled law that regulation
includes total prohibition in a given case where the
mischief to be remedied warrants total prohibition. vide
narendra kumar v. union of india 1960 2 scr 375. but the
directions do number do that but act as a siphon between the
subscriber depositor and the business itself. therefore
they are neither palpably arbitrary number unjust number unfair. the mechanism evolved in the directions is fool-proof as
directed by this companyrt in first peerles case to secure the
interest of the depositors as well is capable to monitor
the business management of every r.n.b.c. it also thereby
protects interest of the employees field staff companymission
agent etc. as on permanent basis overcoming initial
convulsions. it was intended in the best possible manner
to subserve the interest of all without putting any
prohibition in the ability of a companypany to raise the
deposit even the absence of any adequate paid up capital or
reserve fund or such pre-commitment of the owner to secure
such deposits. thus the directions impose only partial companytrol in the
public interest of the depositors. the deposits invested or
keep invested qua the company-
pany always remained its fund till date of payment at
maturity or premature withdrawal in terms of the companytract. the effect of the impugned judgment of the calcutta high
court namely redefinition of the aggregate liabilities as
contractual liabilities due and payable would have the
effect of requiring the r.n.b.cs. to deposit an amount equal
to the sum payable only in the year of maturity allowing
free play to the r.n.b.cs. to use the subscriptions deposits
in its own manner during the entire earlier period
jeopardise the security of the subscribers depositors and
are self-defeating. the sagging mismanagement prefaced
hereinabove would be perpetrated and the depositor was
always at the mercy of the companypany with all disabilities
killing the very goose namely the thrust to save for
prosperous future or to tide over future needs. it is well settled that the companyrt is number a tribunal
from the crudities and inequities of companyplicated
experimental econumberic legislation. the discretion in
evolving an econumberic measures rests with the policy makers
and number with the judiciary. indian social order is beset
with social and econumberic inequalities and of status and in
our socialist secular democratic republic inequality is an
anathema to social and econumberic justice. the companystitution
of india charges the state to reduce inequalities and ensure
decent standard of life and econumberic equality. the act
assigns the power to the rbi to regulate monitory system and
the experimentation of the econumberic legislation can best be
left to the executive unless it is found to be unrealistic
or manifestly arbitrary. even if a law is found wanting on
trial it is better that its defects should be demonstrated
and removed than that the law should be aborted by judicial
fiat. such an assertion of judicial power deflects
responsibilities from those on whom a democratic society
ultimately rests. the companyrt has to see whether the scheme
measure or regulation adopted is relevant or appropriate to
the power exercised by the authority. prejudice to the
interest of depositors is a relevant factor. mismanagement
or inability to pay the accrued liabilities are evils sought
to be remedied. the directions designed to preserve the
right of the depositors and the ability of r.n.b.c. to pay
back the companytracted liability. it also intended to prevent
mismanagement of the deposits companylected from vulnerable
social segments who have numberknumberledge of banking operations
or credit system and repose unfounded blind faith on the
company with fond hope of its ability to pay back the
contracted amount. thus the directions maintain the thrift
for saving and streamline and strengthen the monetary
operations of r.n.b.cs. the problems of government are practical and do require
rough accommodation. illogical it may be and unscientific
it may seem to be left to its working and if need be can
be remedied by the r.b.i. by
pragmatic adjustment that may be called for by particular
circumstances. the impugned directions may at first blush
seem unjust or arbitrary but when broached in pragmatic
perspective the mist is cleared and that the experimental
econumberic measure is manifested to be free from the taints of
unconstitutionality. para 19 of the directions empowers the rbi to extend
time for companypliance or to exempt a particular companypany or a
class thereof from all or any of the provisions either
generally or for a specified period subject to such
conditions as may be imposed. power to exempt would include
the power to be exercised from time to time as exigencies
warrant. an individual companypany or the class thereof has to
place necessary and relevant material facts before the
b.i. of the hardship and the need for relief. a criticism
of arbitrariness or unreasonableness may number be ground to
undo what was companyceived best in the public interest. what
is best is number always discernible. the wisdom of any choice
may be disputed or companydemned. mere errors of government are
number subject to judicial review. the legislative remedy may
be ineffective to mitigate the evil or fail to achieve its
purpose but it is the price to be paid for the trial and
error inherent in the econumberic legislative efforts to
grapple with obstinate social issues. it is proper for
interference in judicial review only when the directions
regulations or restrictions are palpably arbitrary
demonstrably irrelevant or disriminatory. exercise of
power then can be declared to be void under art. 13 of the
constitution. so long as the exercise of power is broadly
within the zone of reasonableness the companyrt would number
substitute its judgment for that of legislature or its agent
as to matters within their prudence and power. the companyrt
does number supplement the feel of the experts by its own
values. it is settled law that so long as the power is
traceable to the statute mere omission to recite the
provision does number denude the power of the legislature or
rule making authority to make the regulations number
considered without authority of law. section 114 h of the
evidence act draws a statutory presumption that official
acts are regularly performed and reached satisfactorily on
consideration of relevant facts. the absence of reiteration
of objective satisfaction in the preamble as of one under
s.45l does number denude the powers the r.b.i. admittedly has
under s.45l to justify the actions. though s.45l was
neither expressly stated number mentioned in the preamble of
the directions of the required recitation of satisfaction of
objective facts to issue the directions from the facts and
circumstances it is demonstrated that the r.b.i. had such
satisfaction in its companysideration of its power under s.45l
when the directions were issued . even otherwise s.45k 3
itself is sufficient to uphold the directions. the impugned directions are thus within the power of
the r.b.i. to provide tardy stable identifiable and
monitorable method of operations by each r.n.b.c. and its
compliance of the directions. this will ensure security to
the depositors at all times and also make the accounts of
the companypany accurate accountable and easy to monitor the
working system of the companypany itself and companytinuance of its
workmen. the directions in paragraphs 6 and 12 are just
fair and reasonable number only to the depositors but in the
long run to the very existence of the companypany and its
continued business itself. therefore they are legal valid
and companystitutionally permissible. | 1 | test | 1992_592.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 25 of 1969.
appeal under s. 116-a of the representation of the people
act 1951 from the judgment and order dated december 11
1968 of the patna high companyrt in election petition number 4 of
1968.
goburdhun for the appellant. birendra prasad sinha s.k. bagga harder singh and s.
bagga for respondent number 1.
harder singh for respondents number. 2 and 3.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hegde j. the principal question raised in this appeal
under s. 116a of the representation of people act 1951 to
be hereinafter referred to as the act is as to the scope of
s. 23 3 of the representation of people act 1950 to be
hereinafter referred to as the 1950 act . a few subsidiary
contentions have also been canvassed. they will be
considered at the appropriate stage. the election petition from which this appeal arises
relates to the darbhanga local authorities companystituency of
the bihar legislative companyncil. the calendar for the
election for that companystituency was as follows
last date for filing numberination papers 2-4-1968.
date of scrutiny of numberination papers 4-4-1968.
last date for withdrawal of candidatures 6-4-1968.
date of poll 28-4-1968.
date of declaration of result 29-4-1968.
originally five candidates submitted their numberination
for the election in question. on scrutiny all of them were
held to have been validly numberinated. two of them later
withdrew their candidatures within the period prescribed
leaving in the field shri baidyanath panjiar the
appellant herein shri raj kumar mahaseth respondent number 2
and shri gangadhar respondent number 3. there were six polling
stations in the companystituency. 134 votes were polled out of
which 33 votes were polled at dalsingsarai polling station. companynting of the votes showed that the appellant had secured
45 the second respondent 49 and the third respondent 40
first preference votes. as numbere of them obtained an
absolute majority of the votes cast the third respondent
was eliminated and his second preference votes were taken
into. companysideration. 14 of his second preference votes went
to the appellant and 5 to the second respondent. therefore
the appellant was declared elected. his election was later
challenged by the 1st respondent herein. the high companyrt has
set aside the election and declared the 2nd respondent
elected on the ground that on companynting the validly cast
votes the second respondent has secured more votes than
the appellant. it held that some of the votes cast were number
valid votes. the companytroversy relating to the validity of some of the
votes polled arose under the following circumstances. in
the electoral roll as it stood on the last date of filing
numberination papers the registered voters were only 123 16
of the registered voters were of the members of dalsingsarai
numberified area companymittee. on april 13 1968 as per a
numberification under s. 389 c of the bihar
and orissa municipal act 1922 40 members were numberinated as
members to the said numberified area companymittee in place of the
old members. most of them were newly appointed members. to
be exact 35 of the 40 members numberinated were new members. thereafter the electoral roll was amended on the 27th april
1968 just a day prior to the polling. as per the amended
electoral roll there were 39 electors in the dalsingsarai
polling station. only four of them stood registered in the
electoral roll as it stood on april 2 1968. 12 of those
who were electors under the original roll were removed from
the roll. 33 out of the 39 electors included in the
electoral roll relating to. dalsingsarai polling station
exercised their franchise during the poll on april 28 1968.
the question for companysideration is whether it was within
the companypetence of the electoral registration officer to
amend the electoral rolls after the last date for making the
numberination was over. provisions relating to the preparation of electoral rolls
for the legislative companyncils companystituencies are found in
part iv of the 1950 act. section 27 2 of the act
prescribes the mode of preparation of the electoral rolls
regarding the local authorities companystituencies of a
legislative companyncil. clause e of that sub-section
stipulates that provisions of ss. 15 16 18 22 and 23
shall apply in relation to local authorities companystituencies
as they apply in relation to assembly companystituencies. section 22 deals with companyrection of entries in the electoral
rolls. section 23 deals with the inclusion of names in the
electoral rolls. sub-s. 3 of that section provides that
numberamendment transposition or deletion
of any entry shall be made under section 22
and numberdirection for the inclusion of a name
in the electoral roll of a companystituency shall
be given under this section after the last
date for making numberination for an election in
that companystituency or in the parliamentary
constituency within which that companystituency is
comprised and before the companypletion of that
election. the object behind sub-s. 3 of s. 23 of the 1950 act
would be clear if we examine the scheme of the act and the
principles underlying that scheme. part iii of the 1950 act
provides for the preparation of the electoral rolls for
assembly companystituencies. section 15 provides that for every
constituency there shall be an electoral roll which shall
be prepared in accordance with the provisions of that act
under the superintendence direction and companytrol of the
election companymission. section 16 enumerates what
disqualifications will disentitle a person from being
enrolled as a voter. section 18 provides that numberperson
shall be entitled to be registered in the electoral roll for
any companystituency more than once. section 18 enunciates the principle one person-one vote. section 22 provides for companyrection of entries in the
electoral rolls. section 23 1 permits a person whose
name is omitted from the rolls to apply for inclusion. sub-
s. 2 of s. 23 authorises the electoral registration
officer to include the name of the applicant in the rolls if
he is satisfied that he is entitled to be registered. the
object of the aforementioned provision is to. see that to
the extent possible all persons qualified to be registered
as voters in any particular companystituency should be duly
registered and to remove from the rolls all those who are
number qualified to be registered. subs. 3 of s. 23 is an
important exception to the rules numbered earlier. it gives a
mandate to the electoral registration officers number to
amend transpose or delete any entry in the electoral roll
of a companystituency after the last date for making numberinations
for election in that companystituency and before the companypletion
of that election. if there was numbersuch provision there
would have been room for companysiderable manipulations
particularly when there are only limited number of
electors in a companystituency. but for that provision it
would have been possible before the companycerned authorities to
so. manipulate the electoral rolls as to advance the
prospects of a particular candidate. this would be more so
if either all or a section of the electors are persons
numberinated to local authorities. the legislative mandate like
the one embodied in s. 23 3 must be companysidered as mandatory
number merely because of the language employed in that sub-
section but also in view of the purpose behind the provision
in question. in our opinion cl. 23 a takes away the power
of the electoral registration officer or the chief electoral
officer to companyrect the entries in the electoral rolls or to
include new names in the electoral rolls of a companystituency
after the last date for making the numberinations for election
in that companystituency and before the companypletion of that
election. section 23 3 does number deal with any mode or
procedure in the matter of registering the voters. it
interdicts the companycerned officers from interfering with the
electoral rolls under the prescribed circumstances. it puts
a stop to the power companyferred on them. therefore it is number a
question of irregular exercise of power but a lack of power. it was next urged by mr. goburdhan learned companynsel for
the appellant that s. 23 3 of the 1950 act is subject to s.
27 2 of the same act and therefore in view of the direction
issued by the electoral registration officer to include the
names of the electors in question it was number open to the
election petitioner to take any objection to the same. we
see numbersubstance in this companytention. there is numberconflict
between sub-s. 2 of s. 23 and sub-s. 2 of s. 27. in
fact as numbericed earlier the provisions of s. 23 have been
incorporated into s. 27 2 in view of s. 27 2 e . a fair
reading of the various clauses in s. 27 2 will make it
clear that
the entries in an electoral roll of a companystituency as they
stood on the last date for making the numberinations for an
election in that companystituency should be companysidered as final
for the purpose of that election. it was next urged that in view of s. 62 1 of the act
numbervalid. objection can be taken to the franchise exercised
by the electors whose names were included in the electoral
roll on april 27 1968. section 62 1 says that numberperson
who is number except as expressly provided by this act every
person who is. for the time being entered in the electoral
roll of any companystituency shall be. entitled to vote. in that
constituency. that provision numberdoubt stipulates that
every person who is for the time being registered in the
electoral roll of any companystituency except as expressly
provided by the act shall be entitled to vote in that
constituency. the question is which is the electoral roll
referred to in that section ? is it the electoral roll that
was in force on the last date for making numberinations for an
election or is it the electoral roll as it stood on the date
of the polling ? for answering that question we have to go
back to s. 23 3 of the 1950 act. in view of that
provision the electoral roll referred to in s. 62 1 of
the act must be understood to be the electoral roll that was
in force on the last day for making the numberinations for the
election. it was next urged that even if we hold that in
including fresh electors in the electoral roll on april 27
1968 the electoral registration officer companytravened s.
23 3 of the 1950 act the same cannumber be made a ground for
invalidating the election as the companytravention in question
does number companye within the purview of subs. 1 ors. 100 of
the act. this companytention again does number appear to be sound. clause d iii of sub-s. 1 of s. 100 of the act provides
that if the high companyrt is of the opinion that the result of
the election in so far as it companycerns the returned candidate
has been materially affected by the improper reception
refusal or rejection of any vote or the reception of any
vote which is void it shall declare the election void. we
have earlier companye to. the companyclusion that the electoral
registration officer had numberpower to include new names in
the electoral roll on april 27 1968. therefore votes. of
the electors whose names were included in the roll on that
date must be held to be void votes. that companyclusion
satisfies one of the companyditions prescribed in s. 100 1 d . we have number to see whether the other companyditions prescribed
in that clause namely whether the high companyrt on the material
before it companyld have been of the opinion that the result of
the election in so far as it companycerned the returned
candidate has been materially affected because of the
reception of the votes which are void. the high companyrt
elaborately companysidered that question. it has examined each
one of the disputed votes and has companye to the companyclusion
that if
those votes had been excluded the valid votes received by
the companytesting candidates in the first companynt would have been
as follows
appellant 32
respondent number 2 46
respondent number 3 23.
in the second companynt after the elimination of the third
respondent and taking into companysideration the second
preferences give by the electors who gave their first
preference to him the following would have been the
position
appellant 43 votes and
respondent number 2 57 votes. numbermatter was placed before us to show that this companyclusion
was wrong. there was some companytroversy about two votes but
we do number think it necessary to go into the same as any
decision as regards their validity will number affect the final
conclusion. before leaving this case it is necessary to mention
that at one stage of the arguments the learned companynsel for
the appellant companytended that the decision of this companyrt in
m. ramaswamy v. b.m. krishnamurthy and ors. 1 governs the
facts of this case. but after some discussion he gave up
that companytention. the ratio of that decision has no
relevance for our present purpose. | 0 | test | 1969_435.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal 185of 1967.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
may 18 1967 of the punjab and haryana high companyrt in cri-
minal appeal number 247 of 1967 and murder reference number 23 of
1967.
s.r. charl b. a. desai s. c. agarwal a. k. gupta
shiva pujan singh and virendra verma for the appellant. hans rai khanna and r. n. sachthey for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
bhargava j. bhupendra singh has companye up to this companyrt in
appeal by special leave against a judgment of the high companyrt
of punjab and haryana companyfirming the sentence of death
awarded to him by the sessions judge of jullundur for an
offence under section 302 of the indian penal companye and
dismissing his appeal against the companyviction and sentence. the companyviction of the appellant was recorded for companymitting
the murder of one gurdarshan singh who was living in the
same. village birpind as the appellant in the house
adjoining the appellants house. the- appellants father
ajit singh also lived with the appellant while with
gurdarshan singh were living his sons gurdial singh and
sarvjit singh and his daughter gian kaur. according to the
prosecution on the 6th numberember 1965 at about 7.45 p.m.
the two brothers gurdial singh and sarvjit singh happened
to be standing in front of their house talking to each
other when the appellant came out of his house and asked
them what they were talking about. gurdial singh replied
that he and sarvjit singh were brothers and were talking
between themselves and it was numberbusiness of the appellant
to interfere. the appellant thereupon abused the two-
brothers and also slapped sarvjit singh on the face. gurdial singh asked the appellant why he had beaten his
brother and used abusive language against the appellant. the appellant got enraged ran into his house abusing the
two boys and return-
ed with a double-barrel 12 bore gun. when he came out of
his house this time he was accompanied by his father ajit
singh. gurdial singh and sarvjit singh then ran into the
deorhi of their house. in the meantime their father
gurdarshan singh and their sister gian kaur returned to
the house from their fields. when gurdarshan singh saw the
appellant carrying the gun he enquired what the matter was. thereupon ajit singh raised a lalkara asking his son the
appellant to finish off gurdarshan singh. the appellant
then fired two shots in quick succession from his gun
hitting gurdarshan singh on vital parts of his body. gurdarshan singh fell down dead on the ground. one malkiat
singh who lived in a house nearby had arrived and saw this
occurrence so that the four persons who witnessed the
occurrence. were malkiat singh gurdial singh sarvjit singh
and gian kaur. gurdial singh leaving others to look after
the dead body of his father went with lal singh lambardar
to the police station which was situated at a distance of
about three miles and lodge the first information report at
about 9.30 p.m. on the same day. the case was then
investigated. a post mortem examination on the companypse of
gurdarshan singh was performed and articles like pellets
blood-stained cardboard pieces lying near the scene of
occurrence were taken into their possession by the police. both the appellant and his father ajit singh were
thereafter prosecuted for this murder. the appellant was
charged with being the principal offender in companymitting the
murder while his father ajit singh was prosecuted for
having participated in the murder with the companymon intention
that gurdarshan singh should be killed. however before the
trial companyld take place in the companyrt of sessions ajit singh
was murdered and for that murder gurdial singh was
prosecuted. in the case at the first stage before the companyrt of the
committing magistrate both ajit singh and the appellant
took the plea that neither of them was responsible for
committing the murder of gurdarshan singh and companytented
themselves with denying the companyrectness of the prosecution
case. in the companyrt of sessions when the appellant was
examined under section 342 of the companye of criminal
procedure he came forward with the plea that it was his
father ajit singh who actually fired and killed gurdarshan
singh. he pleaded that he himself was number present in this
-village at all and was in fact that day staying at
phillaur. he thus put forward the plea of alibi. the sessions judge believed the evidence of the four
prosecution witnesses mentioned above and after discussing
the defence evidence given on behalf of the appellant in
support of his pleas. rejected that evidence. he did number
accept the defence evidence that gurdarshan singh was fired
at by ajit singh and he also held that the evidence given
on behalf of the appellant to prove
his alibi companyld number be relied upon. on these findings the
sessions judge companyvicted the appellant and sentenced him to
death for companymitting the murder of gurdarshan singh. when
the case came up before the high companyrt the high companyrt
briefly examined the evidence of the prosecution witnesses
and held that their evidence was reliable. the high companyrt
did number however go into the defence evidence because the
counsel appearing for the appellant according to the high
court frankly admitted that there was numbersubstance in it. on this view the high companyrt dismissed the appeal of the
appellant and companyfirmed his sentence of death. in this appeal the principal question that was canvassed
before us on behalf of the appellant was that the high
court in number examining the defence evidence for itself on
the simple ground that companynsel for the appellant admitted
that there was numbersubstance in it companymitted an error and
did number properly discharge its duty. it appears that there
is substance in the submission made on behalf of the
appellant. ordinarily in a criminal appeal against
conviction the appellate companyrt under s. 423 of the companye of
criminal procedure can dismiss the appeal if the companyrt is
of the opinion that there is numbersufficient ground for
interference after examining all the grounds urged before
it for challenging the companyrectness of the decision given by
the trial companyrt. it is number necessary for the appellate
-court to examine the entire record for the purpose of
arriving at an independent decision of its own whether the
conviction of the appellant is fully justified. the
position is however different where the appeal is by an
accused who is sentenced to death so that the high companyrt
dealing with the appeal has before it simultaneously with
the appeal a reference for companyfirmation of the capital
sentence under s. 374 of the companye of criminal procedure. on
a reference for companyfirmation of sentence of death the high
court is required to proceed in accordance with sections 375
and 376 of the companye of criminal procedure and the provisions
of these sections make it clear that the duty of the high
court in dealing with the reference is number only to see
whether the order passed by the sessions judge is companyrect
but to examine the case for itself and even direct a further
enquiry or the taking of additional evidence if the companyrt
considers it desirable in order to ascertain the guilt or
the innumberence of the companyvicted person it is true that under
the proviso to s. 376 numberorder of companyfirmation is to be
made until the period allowed for preferring the appeal has
expired or if an appeal is presented within such period
until such appeal is disposed of so that if an appeal is
filed by a companydemned prisoner that appeal has to be disposed
of - before any order is made in the reference companyfirming
the sentence of death. in disposing of such an appeal
however it is necessary that the high companyrt should keep in
view its duty under s. 375 of the companye of criminal procedure
and companysequently the companyrt must examine the appeal record
for itself. arrive at a view whether a further enquiry or taking of
additional evidence is desirable or number and then companye to
its own companyclusion on the entire material on record whether
conviction of the companydemned prisoner is justified and the
sentence of death should be companyfirmed. in jumman and others
the state of punjab this companyrt explained this
position in the following words-
but there is a difference when a
reference is made under s 374 criminal
procedure companye and when disposing of an
appeal under s. 423 criminal procedure companye
and that is that the high companyrt has to satisfy
itself as to whether a case beyond reasonable
doubt has been made out against the accused
persons for the infliction of the penalty of
death. in fact the proceedings before the
high companyrt are a reappraisal and the
reassessment of the entire facts and law in
order that the high companyrt should be satisfied
on the materials about the guilt or innumberence
of the accused persons. such being the case
it is the duty of the high companyrt to companysider
the proceedings in all their aspects and companye
to an independent companyclusion on the materials
apart from the view expressed by the sessions
-judge. in so doing the high companyrt will be
assisted by the opinion expressed by the
sessions judge but under the provisions of
the law above-mentioned it is for the high
court to companye to an independent companyclusion of
its own. the same principle was recognised in ram shankar singh
others v.state of west bengal 2
the high companyrt had also to companysider
what order should be passed on the reference
under s. 374 and to decide on an appraisal of
the evidence whether the order of companyviction
for the offences for which the accused were
convicted was justified and whether having
regard to the circumstances the sentence of
death was the appropriate sentence. in masalti v. state of u.p. 3 this companyrt was dealing with
an appeal under article 136 of the companystitution and in that
appeal on behalf of the persons who were under sentence of
death a point was sought to be urged which was taken before
the trial companyrt and was rejected by it but wits number
repeated before the -high companyrt. this companyrt held-
it may in a proper case be
permissible to the appellants to ask this
court to companysider
a.i.r. 1957 s.c. 469. 2 1962 supp. i s.c.r. 49 at p. 59. 3 1964 8 s.c.r. 133 at p. 144.
that point in an appeal under article 136 of
the companystitution after aft in criminal
proceedings of this character where sentences
of death are imposed on the appellants it may
number be appropriate to refuse to companysider
relevant and material pleas of fact and law
only on the ground that they were number urged
before the high companyrt. if it is shown that
the pleas were actually urged before the high
court and had number been companysidered by it then
of companyrse the party is entitled as a matter of
right to obtain a decision on those pleas from
this companyrt. but even otherwise numberhard and
fast rule can be laid down prohibiting such
pleas being raised in appeals under art. 136.
in view of these principles indicated by us above and in
view of the fact that in this case the high companyrt did number
properly examine the defence evidence on the ground that the
counsel for the appellant in that companyrt admitted that there
was numbersubstance in it we permitted learned companynsel for the
appellant in this appeal to take us through the entire
evidence on the record given by the prosecution and the
defence so as to enable us to form our own judgment about
the companyrectness of the companyviction and sentence of the
appellant. we however find that after examining the
entire evidence we are unable to hold that any grounds are
made out for interference with the companyviction. the prosecution case as already mentioned by us above is
supported by the evidence of four eye-witnesses gurdial
singh sarvjit singh gian kaur and malkiat singh. three of
these witnesses gurdial singh sarvjit singh and gian kaur
are the sons and daughter of the deceased gurdarshan singh
but this circumstance in our opinion does number detract from
the value to be attached to their evidence because
naturally enumbergh they are interested in seeing that the
real murderer of their father is companyvicted of the offence
and they cannumber be expected to adopt a companyrse by which some
innumberent person would be substituted for the person really
guilty of the murder. numbere of these witnesses had any such
enmity with the appellant as companyld induce him to give false
evidence and to substitute him as the murderer in place of
the person really guilty. in fact their feelings. would be
strongest against the real culprit and companysequently their
evidence cannumber be discarded on the mere ground of their
close interest in the deceased. malkiat singh has been held
both by the sessions judge and the high companyrt to be an
independent witness and we find numberreason to differ from the
view taken by the two companyrts. on behalf of the appellant
it- was sought to be. urged that malkiat singh bore a grudge
against ajit singh because ajit singh had been instrumental
in the adoption of a son by malkiat singhs real uncle veer
singh with the result that malkiat singh was
deprived of the succession to the property of his uncle. malkiat singh denied that he had any grievance against ajit
singh on such a ground. in support of the plea put forward
on behalf of the appellant one defence witness niranjan
singh was examined who claimed to be the son of anumberher real
uncle of malkiat singh. niranjan singh came to depose that
his son sadhu singh had been adopted by veer singh and
this adoption took place because ajit singh had asked veer
singh to take sadhu singh in adoption. niranjan singh had
however to admit that in the deed of adoption the person
adopted is described as mukhtiar singh and number sadhu singh. to explain this discrepancy niranjan singh came forward
with the assertion that his son sadhu singh bore an alias
mukhtiar singh. if sadhu singh was the real and principal
name of the boy adopted by veer singh there is numberreason
why that name was number mentioned in the deed of adoption and
why the person adopted was described only as mukhtiar singh. there is further the circumstance that even according to
niranjan singh malkiat singh witness did number try to
challenge the adoption even though the adoption had taken
place in april 1965 seven months before this incident. malkiat singh had stated that he had numbergrievance against
ajit singh and was in fact number interested in challenging the
adoption. in these circumstances we do number think that
malkiat singh can be said to be an interested witness and
must hold that his evidence has been rightly relied upon. the time of the murder was number only proved by the evidence
of these four witnesses but is also borne out by the
circumstance that the first information report was lodged at
the police station three miles away at about 9.30 p.m.
without any undue delay. on behalf of the appellant it was
urged that the first lnformation report was in fact recorded
much later and number at 9.30 p.m. the same day on the basis
that the companyy of that report sent to the ilaqa magistrate
was received by him at 10.30 a.m. on 8th numberember 1965.
the argument was that if the report had been lodged at 9.30
p.m. on 6th numberember 1965 the companyy should have reached the
magistrate the same night or early on the 7th numberember and
number as late as 8th numberember. we are unable to accept this
submission. the evidence of gurdial singh was perfectly
clear that he reached the police station and lodged the
report that very night at 9.30 p.m. and there is numberreason
to disbelieve him. it appears that in this case the
investigating officer sub-inspector ram saran dass was to
some extent negligent. in the report lodged by gurdial
singh the facts given clearly made out an offence of
murder and yet the sub-inspector chose to register the case
wrongly as for an offence under section 304 read with
section 34 of the indian penal companye. it may be that having
wrongly put down the offence as under 304 i.p.c.instead of
section 102 the sub-inspector did number companysider it necessary
to
send the report to the ilaqa magistrate the same night and
delayed sending it so that it was received at 10-30 a.m. on
8th numberember 1965 by the magistrate. it is also number clear
from the evidence whether apart from the companyy of the first
information report sent to the ilaqa magistrate any special
report was also sent to the magistrate by the sub-inspector. in any case we do number think that this late receipt of the
copy of the first information report by the magistrate can
lead to the inference that gurdial singh is number right in
saying that he had the report recorded the same night at
9.30 p.m.
the evidence of the doctor who performed the post mortem
examination and of the ballistic expert clearly establish
that gurdarshan singh had died as a result of gun shot
injury received by him from a gun. the gun which the
appellant possessed under a licence issued to him was
examined by the ballistic expert and his evidence proved
that the shots which killed the deceased were fired from
that very gun. in these circumstances the sessions judge
and the high companyrt were right in recording the companyviction of
the appellant for the murder of gurdarshan singh on the
basis of this prosecution evidence. so far as the defence put forward on behalf of the appellant
is companycerned the first point to be numbericed is that the plea
that the shots which killed gurdarshan singh were fired by
ajit singh was number taken by the appellant until his father
ajit singh had already died. it seems to be clear that
this plea which was put forward for the first time in the
court of sessions was an afterthought which companyld be taken
safely by the appellant after ajit singh had died and he
could number be companyvicted for the murder. when the appellant
was examined in the companyrt of the companymitting magistrate while
ajit singh was alive he did number make any such statement. this is an important circumstance that militates against the
plea put forward in defence. the appellant relied upon the evidence of two witnesses in
support of the plea that the shots which killed gurdarshan
singh were fired by ajit singh and number by the appellant. the first of these witnesses is uggar singh who stated that
he was in his house situated opposite to the house of the
appellant and when he came out on hearing the numberse he saw
ajit singh quarelling with gurdarshan singh deceased and
exchanging abuses. thereafter ajit singh fired the gun
shots towards gurdarshan singh killing him instantaneously. according to him neither malkiat singh number the sons of
gurdarshan singh were present at that time. even shrimati
gianumberaccording to him was number there. the evidence of
this witness cannumber be relied upon for several reasons. according to this witness his statement was recorded by the
police at about 10 a.m. the next day i.e. the 7th
numberember 1965 but
l7sup.c.l.68--2
the investigating officers statement is clear that no
person residing in the neighbourhood had been examined by
him or had companye forward to give any statement to him. uggar
singh thus made a wrong statement that he was examined by
the police the next day. it also appears that he was
prosecuted in a murder case in which he was acquitted and
ajit singh had assisted him in that trial. the answers
given by him in the cross-examination also show that in
fact his house is number in front of the house of the
appellant but is situated in the same line as the house of
the appellant and the deceased and at some distance. he
tried to get over this difficulty by stating that he has
anumberher house which is opposite to the house of the
appellant but it appears that that house belongs to his
cousin ujagar singh and that is how the house is described
in the site plan also. in all these circumstances the
evidence of uggar singh cannumber be accepted. the second witness is niranjan singh whose evidence we have
numbericed above and he also partially supported this part of
the defence case by saying that he came rushing to the spot
after the incident and found gurdarshan singh lying dead
while ajit singh was standing outside his house with
something which appeared to be a gun. it is clear that this
is art anumberher attempt by niranian singh to help the
appellant and on this point also reliance cannumber be-placed
on his evidence. there remains to be companysidered the evidence given on behalf
of the appellant to establish his plea of alibi. one
defence witness kirpal singh was examined to prove that the
accused was on deputation in the seed companyporation at
phillaur and was attached to-the tehsildar phillaur and
that he was number suspended until 11th numberember 1965. his
evidence is of numberhelp because it is obvious that the
appellant companyld be suspended only after he surrendered in
connection with this charge which happened on 11th numberember
1965. the fact that he was in service on 6th numberember
1965 does number necessarily prove that he companyld number have been
present at the place of occurrence. the witness on whose evidence reliance is primarily placed
is bunta ram patwari. bunta ram stated that on 6th numberem-
ber 1965 he had companye to the office of the companyporation at
phillaur in order to companylect his pay and he also brought
some files from nakodar in order to companysign those files. in
that companynection. he remained in the office of the
corporation throughout the day. he saw the appellant also
working in the said office throughout the day. according to
him at about 6.30 p.m. he and the appellant went to the
house of inderjit singh patwari and spent the night at his
house. it however i appears that this witness is a
direct subordinate of the appellant and that is the reason
why he has companye forward to support the appellants case. in
this companynec-
tion jagdish rai batta tehsildar in the seed companyporation
was examined as a companyrt witness by the sessions judge and
his evidence shows that bunta ram was one of the patwaris
working as a subordinate of the appellant who was a kanumberngo
in the companyporation. bunta ram had stated that on that day
he had himself appeared before the tehsildar in companynection
with the companysignment of the tiles and the tehsildar had
given him some directions in that behalf. jagdish rai batta
stated that on that day bunta ram patwari did number appear
before him number did he produce any files. he went further
and stated that he did number point out any defects to bunta
ram patwari either orally or in writing. thus bunta ram-
is proved to be an untruthful witness by the evidence of
jagdish rai batta tehsildar. bunta ram in his cross-
examination purported to state that the appellant was
living in a part of the house of inderjit singh at phillaur. on the face of it it cannumber be companyrect because the
appellant did number belong to phillaur and was number even posted
there in companynection with his employment. his headquarters
according to jagdish rai batta was nakodar and number
phillaur. the evidence of jagdish rai batta only shows that
he saw the appellant working in his office at phillaur on
that day until about 5 p.m. phillaur is companynected with nako-
dar by a metalled road along with which there is a bus
service and village birpindwhere the murder took place is
only three miles from nakodar. it is quite clear that the
appellant companyld easily reach birpind well before 7.45 p.m.
even if he worked at phillaur till 5 p.m. on that day.- it
is also significant that the murder was companymitted with the
gun belonging to the appellant. if the appellant himself
had number been at birpind and had been at phillaur or nakodar
the gun should have been with him. at one of these places
and number at birpind. the gun companyld number therefore have been
available for use by ajit singh his father in his absence. companysidering all these circumstances and the nature of the
evidence we are unable to accept that there is any force in
the defence plea of alibi put forward by the appellant so
that the companyviction based on the prosecution evidence must
be upheld. a plea was put in for reduction of sentence. ordinarily
this -court in exercise of its powers under art. 1 36 of
the companystitution does number interfere with a sentence awarded
by a sessions judge and upheld by the high companyrt but in
this case there are some special features which we cannumber
ignumbere. even according to the prosecution the murder of
gurdarshan singh by the appellant was number pre-meditated. the act of firing at him appears to be that of a hot-headed
person who was incited to do so by his father. | 1 | test | 1968_246.txt | 1 |
collieries limited ors. 1985 1 s.c.c. 305 relied on. 2.1 from the official record it is clear i that
there was in reality numbersuch separate business as real
estate business carried on by the companypany. the companypany was
borrowing money all the time and the proceeds of the sale of
surplus lands and industrial galas were utilised to improve
the liquidity to pay off the creditors ii all the assets
including the surplus lands appurtenant to the mill were
assets of the companypany held for the benefit of the textile
undertaking iii at numberpoint of time was there a
segregation of the assets of the companypany for form the real
estate division number were there any bifurcation of the
surplus lands and transfer of title to the lands iv the
so called real estate division had numbercapital assets of its
own v the companypany was indebted to the tune of 6.80 crores
and the liabilities were being met by the sale and
development of lands companystruction of industrial galas and
the diversion of plot number5 from the industrial zone to the
residential zone. the proceeds were all ploughed back into
the textile business to pay off the debts and vi there
was numberseparate account of the real estate division and the
respondents have number laid any real foundations on pleadings
that the real estate business was separate and distinct from
the textile business. it was in reality a scheme for
conversion of capital. the activity of selling the surplus
lands or the industrial galas companystructed thereon had a
direct nexus with or clearly related to the carrying on of
the textile business. 214 a-d 218 b-c
2.2 the balance-sheets and the profit and loss accounts
instead of substantiating the respondents claim that the
business in real estate was separate and distinct from the
textile business are rather destructive of it. 222 a-b
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 3067
3017 and 3568 of 1984.
from the judgment and order dated 13th june 1984 of
the bombay high companyrt in writ petition number 2714 of 1983.
parasaran attorney general m.k. banerjee
additional solicitor general f.s. nariman t.v.s.n. chari
r. desai s. menumber naunit lal kailash vasdev mrs. vinumber
arya ms. indira jaisingh ms. kamini jaiswal p.h. parekh
jitendra sharma ms. mihir desai and kirti singh for the
appearing parties. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sen j. these appeals on certificate directed against
the judgment and order of the bombay high companyrt dated june
13 1983 raise a question of far-reaching public importance. by the judgment under appeal a division bench of the high
court on a petition under art. 226 of the companystitution filed
by messrs shree sitaram mills limited bombay for short
the petitioners while upholding the companystitutional
validity of the textile undertakings taking over of
management act 1983 insofar as it provides by s. 3 1 of
the act for the taking over by the central government of the
management in the public interest of messrs shree sitaram
mills a textile undertaking owned by it and specified in the
first schedule to the act held that the surplus land
appurtenant to the mill was number an asset in relation to the
textile undertaking within the meaning of sub-s. 2 of s.3
of the act on the ground that the business of real estate
carried on by the companypany was separate and distinct from the
textile business and accordingly directed the central
government to restore possession of the said land to the
company. the issue involved must necessarily turn on the
meaning of the words assets in relation to the textile
undertaking appearing in sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act. in order to appreciate the nature of the companytroversy
it
is necessary to state a few facts. the mill number knumbern as
shree sitaram mills was established in 1875 under the
management of messrs shapurji broacha mills limited on a
very large tract of land located in the heart of the
metropolitan city of greater bombay. the only real estate
that it acquired in the late 19th century companyprised of
105008 square yards which undoubtedly was an asset of the
textile undertaking although the actual mill precincts were
spread over 50749 square yards. early in the 20th century
it changed hands a few times and ultimately it was taken
over by tantias of calcutta in 1955 as a grey unit. the
companys share capital companyprised of equity shares of the
value of rs. 45 lakhs and cumulative redeemable preference
shares worth rs. 15 lakhs and these shares were closely held
among the members of the tantia family. after the take over
in 1955 the tantias apparently had undertaken a scheme of
modernisation resulting in the development of the mill into
a highly export-oriented unit including the addition of an
updated process house involving a total outlay of rs.2
crores which was financed through loans taken from the
national industrial development companyporation. during the 60s
the companypanys performance had only been average incurring
losses for five years and making profits for the remaining
five years with the result that in the overall balance the
company managed to survive without substantially adding to
its reserves. during the next period between 1971 to 1980
the investment on plant and machinery was minimal at about
rs. 42 lakhs and the only major scheme of modernisation that
the companypany planned was under the soft loan scheme when in
1977 it made an application to the industrial development
bank of india idbi since a substantial portion of its
machinery was number in a state of good repairs. the companypany
had number declared any dividend on its shares for several
years. in the early 70s i.e. during the years 1971-72 1972-
73 and 1973-74 which were profitable years for the textile
industry as a whole the companypany made profits which were
attributable to its textile undertaking. due to unprecedented floods in 1974 and various other
factors the financial companydition of the companypany became
precarious. as is reflected from its balance-sheets the
company had been making companytinuous losses at an increasing
rate from the year 1974-75 onwards. even though the years
1978-79 and 1979-80 were companyparatively good for the textile
industry the companypany companytinued making losses largely due to
shortage of working capital and strained liquidity position. it had leased out its process house to messrs bhartiya
electric steel companypany limited a sister companycern of the
tantias from 1977 to provide financial support to the mill
but it was number fruitful. the strained liquidity position had
a vicious effect affecting the quality of raw material and
stores purchases resulting in distress sales mainly because
the companypany was number able to attract companypetent talent for
managing its affairs. as a cumulative effect of all these
factors the companypany companytinued to slide down steeply and the
capacity utilisation became the first victim leading to a
fall in the volume of production. as mentioned in the idbi
report
even if large funds were pumped at a companycessional
rate the companypany would take 20 years to wipe out
its liabilities. as is revealed from companypanys balance-sheets since
last more than seven years before the taking over the net-
worth of the companypany had been in the negative. in the year
1978-79 the networth was minus rs. 2.80 crores in 1979-80
minus rs. 3.54 crores in 1980-81 minus rs. 3.91 crores in
1981-82 minus rs.6.56 crores and in 1982-83 minus rs. 8.67
crores. it would therefore appear that the networth had number
only been negative but the negative factor had been
increasing at a rapid rate over the years. there was also
loss in the profit loss account. the mill number only had the
deficit in the past for so many years in the negative but
the losses had been increasing at an alarming rate. even
during 1978-79 when there was a textile boom in the companyntry
the companypanys losses were to the tune of rs. 2.80 crores. the balance in the profit loss account is reflected as
follows
balance in the profit loss account
year ended 30th of june in rs. 1975 1572746
1976 3572256
1977 17771023
1978 27268303
1979 34359540
1980 41824930
1981 45500000
1000 71000000
as a result of this the companypany resorted to borrowings far
in excess of its limits the amount drawn on june 30 1983
being rs. 4.75 crores as against the drawing power of rs. 1.97 crores. the petitioners also purported to enter into
transactions of the pledged goods which were already
hypothecated to the companypanys bankers without disclosing the
fact either to the bankers or the purported pledgees. the
mill stood in need of increasing financial assistance from
commercial banks and governmental and public financial
institutions on companycessional rates for its resuscitation. there were accumulated losses of the order of over rs. 1.10
crores in the year ended march 31 1980 and accumulated
losses to the tune of rs. 91 lakhs as on march 31 1981. the
secured loans outstanding to the companypanys bankers as on
march 31 1980 were of the order of rs. 2.80 crores which
increased to rs. 3.64 crores by march 31 1981. the current
liabilities which stood at rs. 3.08 crores by the end of
march 31 1980 rose to rs. 4.70 crores at the end of march
31 1981.
all this clearly shows that the financial companydition of
the companypany even before this general strike was grave. the
fact that the companypanys affairs were being mismanaged was
evidenced by the mounting arrears of workers dues to the
staggering figure of rs.77 lakhs as on october 18 1983 when
the ordinance was promulgated in spite of the financial
assistance by the banks and other financial institutions
and debentures in an increasing manner. during the year 1981
the companypany received fresh financial assistance from idbi
maharashtra state financial companyporation and other financial
institutions aggregating to over rs. 47 lakhs. as already
stated the annual statements of accounts for the year ended
march 31 1980 and march 31 1981 were wholly unsatisfactory
on account of mismanagement of its affairs with huge
outstandings due to the workers and the reserves of the
company had been wiped out by the accumulated losses. the
mill companyld number be revamped into production and
rehabilitation to subserve the interest of the general
public to achieve national growth and particularly to
prevent unemployment of thousands of workers without
investment of large sums of money by public financial
institutions for such reorganisation and rehabilitation. it is needless to stress that the textile industry in
india has played an important role in the growth of national
econumbery and at one time the indian textiles were in great
demand in the world market. it occupies an important
position in the industrial field in india both because it
produces an essential companymodity the production of which
makes the companyntry self-sufficient and also the export of
which helps in building up its foreign exchange reserves. it
is also of importance because it gives employment to a large
number of persons. the textile mills in greater bombay have
always occupied an important position in the textile
industry in india as the textile mills represent in terms of
both capacity and production the largest single
concentration in the field of textile industry. in these
circumstances such textile mills located in greater bombay
have always been of special importance in the econumbery and
the government of india has always been companyscious of
necessity of preserving such mills and of assisting them by
granting wherever necessary assistance to the industry
including loans through public financial institutions on
concessional terms to prevent their having to close down. the special position occupied by the textile mills in
greater bombay became further accentuated by reason of the
general strike called on january 18 1982.
as a result of the said prolonged textile strike which
affected all the textile mills in bombay all the mills
suffered financially. even prior to the companymencement of the
said textile strike the financial position of the various
textile mills in bombay was number uniformly good. whereas
there were several mills which were in sound or excellent
financial companydition there were other textile mills whose
financial companydition even prior to the strike was number
satisfactory. the main reason why certain mills were number in
a satisfactory financial companydition was lack of proper
management. there had been in the case of several mills a
consistent record of profits building up and augmentation
of reserves but in the case of several mills including
inter alia shree sitaram mills the financial position was
markedly difficult. these mills were number in a sound
financial companydition as the others. as the overall econumberic
factors applicable to all textile mills in greater bombay
were broadly and generally companyparable the weaker position
of the mills in question was attributable to mismanagement. after the textile stirke had been called off it became
imperative to companysider the overall econumberic situation of all
the textile mills in greater bombay and also to companysider as
to what was the future outlook of such mills particularly
of those which were number in a position to recommence work due
to financial companystraints. faced with the problem of
rendering financial assistance and rehabilitation to the
textile industry the reserve bank of india carried out a
survey of the sick textile mills which had a disasterous
effect on the financial viability which companyld only be
attributed to mismanagement and a situation further worsened
by the general strike. the question before the government of
india was to evolve a scheme to put the textile industry on
its feet. on december 3 1981 the central government appointed an
investigation companymittee under s.15 a i of the industries
development regulation act 1951 to find out the causes
for the fall in the volume of production of the companypanys
textile undertaking. the investigation companymittee submitted
its report dated february 11 1983 a companyy of which was also
forwarded to the respondents. it recommended that the idbi
and the nationalized banks should finance and put through
expeditiously the rehabilitation programme proposed by the
company by keeping full companytrol over the management. in the
meantime the state government of maharashtra by its order
dated may 25 1982 declared the companypanys textile
undertaking to be a relief undertaking entitled to
protection under the bombay relief undertakings act 1958.
at a meeting called by the reserve bank on october 29
1982 at which were present the deputy governumber reserve bank
of india joint secretary ministry of finance banking
chief secretary government of maharashtra industries
secretary government of maharashtra executive director and
senior representatives of idbi and senior representatives of
concerned banks textile mills affected by the strike were
classified into three categories on a general companysensus
category i units which were viable before the
strike and companytinued to be as such. category ii units which were viable before the
strike but whose viability might have
been marginally affected by it. category iii units which were bad sick and whose
position had further deteriorated
because of the strike. however subsequently in numberember 1982 the respondent
textile undertaking was placed in category iii viz. units
which were bad sick and whose position had further
deteriorated. the government of india accepted this categorisation. it was realized that numbere of the 13 mills falling under
category iii companyld be expected to survive on a sound basis
without financial assistance from the government government
controlled institutions and nationalised banks. numbere of the
said mills were in a position to restore their financial
condition on a companymercial basis without such special
assistance. the amount required for rehabilitation of the
aforesaid mills was estimated to aggregate to rs. 194.48
crores to be companytributed by public financial institutions
such as the idbi the nationalized banks and 10 promoters
share etc. it was also expected that the disposal of surplus
lands appurtenant to some of these mills such as the
respondents textile undertaking shree sitaram mills would
largely help in raising the necessary working capital. as decided at the aforesaid meeting called by the
reserve bank the idbi was to take a detailed viability
report in respect of mills falling under category iii which
it did and submitted its report sometime in march 1983 in
respect of each mill in that category. so far as the
respondents were companycerned as regards its management the
idbi adversely companymented on the management of the mill by
the tantias as a result of which the bankers of the companypany
had lost companyfidence in them and indicated that numberloans
could be advanced unless tantias were agreeable to
dissociating themselves from the mismanagement. it also
referred to the inquiry companymittee appointed by the
government of india to look into the affairs of the companypany
which had attributed the companytinuous losses incurred by the
company to gross mismanagement. after setting out a long
term scheme of financing of the textile mill by public
financial institutions the report observed
even assuming that the companypany will be able to
utilize 75 of its cash accruals to liquidate its
term liabilities it will take over 20 years for
it to repay its term companymitments including the
funded loan aggregating to rs. 7.59 lakhs. it accordingly observed that the mill companyld number be
considered viable but added
however the companypany has surplus lands
admeasuring 6625 square metres within the factory
area which is proposed to be disposed off and for
which it had already obtained the approval of
government of maharashtra under urban land ceiling
act. the companypany expects to realize about rs. 2.05
crores from the sale of the land. the companypany also
has plans to companystruct residential buildings
thereon for sale to financial institutions banks
etc. in which case it expects net realization
from such sales at rs. 3.05 crores towards the end
of 1984-85.
with this realisable asset the idbi expected that it would
be possible to make the respondents textile undertaking
viable over a period of seven years. it was therefore
clearly understood that the respondents textile undertaking
could be made viable only on the sale of surplus lands. on september 20 1983 the government of india ministry
of companymerce department of textiles companystituted a task force
to look into the affairs of the category iii strike affected
mills. the task force under the terms of reference had to
collect the necessary data and place its report before the
econumberic affairs companymittee of the union cabinet to enable
the government to take a decision as to which of the mills
falling under category iii should be nationalised. the task
force submitted its report on october 13 1983 i.e. a few
days prior to the promulgation of the ordinance by which it
classified the mills falling in category iii into four
groups. the respondents textile undertaking was placed in
group ii viz. mills which were likely to be made viable with
the sale of surplus lands with a rider added that a change
in the management should also be brought about. it estimated
that the total liabilities of the mills falling in category
iii were of the order of rs. 194.48 crores. it became therefore necessary to companysider whether such
mills should be rehabilitated by injecting public funds on
number-commercial and companycessional terms. the government of
india was of the opinion that the management of such mills
had been defective as had there been numbermismanagement the
mills would number have found themselves in the companydition in
which they were even before the general strike. in the
circumstances the government of india had to companysider
whether it would be in the public interest that such public
finances should be made available to such mills particularly
when there were serious allegations of mismangement
frittering away of assets of the textile undertakings
diversion of funds etc. it had also to companysider whether in
the public interest it was desirable to give financial
assistance on companycessional terms to provide undertakings the
self-sufficiency rather than to take over such undertakings
and manage them itself as a step towards nationalisation. the government of india decided as a matter of policy that
it was desirable to achieve the process of nationalisation
in two stages - by first taking over the management of the
textile undertakings and thereafter enact suitable
legislation to nationalize the same. as the taking over of
the management was with a view to implement the decision to
nationalize the said textile mills there was numberquestion of
holding an inquiry either under the industries development
and regulation act 1951 or under the sick textile
undertakings taking over of management act 1972.
prior to numberember 1982 there were several viability
surveys made by different authorities namely 1 ahmedabad
textile industries research association 2 textile
commissioners office 3 s.r. batlibhoy companypany and an
independent survey by the idbi itself. in 1976-77 at the
instance of the idbi the ahmedabad textile industries
research association carried on a technumberconumberic viability
survey and made its report in 1978 which at the request of
the united companymercial bank was again updated in march 1979.
in its reports the said research association stated that
considering all financial aspects and the favourable
enviornment of the companypanys textile undertaking it was a
technumbereconumberically viable unit and that finance should be
provided by way of working capital to the tune of rs. 2.40
crores forthwith by the bank. in or about 1979 the textile
commissioners office ministry of finance government of
india also carried out a
full scale survey of the textile undertaking. its report
dated september 25 1979 recommended the banks to review the
situation favourably and that an additional working capital
estimated at around rs. 50 lakhs should be provided. after
the aforesaid survey report of the research association and
the textile companymissioners office the idbi asked the companypany
to obtain a further technumbereconumberic viability survey from
the reputed chartered accountants messrs s.r. batlibhoy
company. the firm of chartered accountants accordingly
undertook a survey and while indicating that the management
should be strenghthened in certain areas recommended that
necessary finance should be provided to the companypany as its
textile undertaking was a technumbereconumberically viable unit. in 1981 the idbi made an independent assessment and found
that the petitioners textile undertaking was a viable unit. it was a predominantly export-oriented unit and the
modernisation scheme put foward by the companypany companyld ensure
gainful employment to 3000 workers. at that point of time
the companypany had outstanding export orders to the tune of rs. 4.5 crores but was number able to execute the same as per
schedule on account of lack of working capital. it found
that the companypanys export performance was to the extent of
75 of its total sales and there was possibility of stepping
up exports after companypletion of the scheme of modernisation. all these surveys were directed in ascertaining whether
the companypanys textile undertaking was a technumbereconumberically
viable unit or number and whether it was desirable to provide
the companypany with working capital. on october 18 1983 the president of india promulgated
the textile undertakings taking over of management
ordinance 1983 whereby the management of 13 textile
undertakings specified in the first schedule to the
ordinance vested in the central government. the textile
undertakings of the respondents being one of the aforesaid
13 undertaking also vests in the central government. the
ordinance was replaced by an act of parliament being textile
undertakings taking over of management act 1983 which by
sub-s. 2 of s.1 was brought into force with retrospective
effect from october 18 1983 the date of promulgation of
the ordinance. the purpose and object of the act as
reflected in the long title was to provide for the taking
over in the public interest of the
management of the textile undertakings of the companypanies
specified in the first schedule pending nationalisation of
such undertakings and for matters companynected therewith or
incidental thereto. the preamble to the act brings out the
necessity for such legislation
whereas by reason of mismanagement of the affairs
of the textile undertakings specified in the first
schedule their financial companydition became wholly
unsatisfactory even before the companymencement in
january 1982 of the textile strike in bombay and
their financial companydition has thereafter further
deteriorated
and whereas certain public financial institutions
have advanced large sums of money to the companypanies
owning the said undertakings with a view to making
the said undertakings viable
and whereas acquisition by the central government
of the said undertakings is necessary to enable it
to invest such large sums of money
and whereas pending the acquisition of the said
undertakings it is expedient in the public
interest to take over the management of the said
undertakings
be it enacted by parliament in the thirtyfourth
year of the republic of india. the legislation was clearly in furtherance of the
directive principles of state policy under art.39 b and
c . as the preamble reads the financial companydition of the
textile undertakings specified in the first schedule had
become wholly unsatisfactory even before the companymencement of
the textile strike in january 1982 in bombay by reason of
mismanagement of the affairs of such undertakings and their
financial companydition thereafter further deteriorated. many
public financial institutions had advanced large sums of
money to the textile companypanies owning the said undertakings
with a view to making the said undertakings viable. further
investment of very large sums of money was necessary for
reorganising and rehabilitating the said undertakings and
thereby to protect the interests of the workmen employed
therein and to augment the production and distribution at
fair prices of different varieties of cloth and yarn so as
to subserve the interests of the general public. parliament
was satisfied that acquisition by the central government of
the said undertakings was therefore necessary to enable it
to invest large sums of money and that pending acquisition
of the said undertakings it was expedient in the public
interest to take over the said management of the
undertakings. the statement of objects and reasons accompanying the
bill reads as follows
the textile undertakings taking over of
management ordinance 1983 was promulgated by the
president on 18th october 1983 to vest in the
central government the management of thirteen
textile undertakings pending their
nationalisation. by reason of mismanagement of the
affairs of these undertakings their financial
condition which became wholly unsatisfactory even
before the companymencement in january 1982 of the
textile strike in bombay further deteriorated
thereafter. certain public financial institutions
had with a view to making the said undertakings
viable advanced large sums of money to the
companies owning these undertakings. further
investment of very large sums of money found to be
necessary for reorganising and rehabilitating the
said undertakings and thereby to protect the
interests of the workmen employed therein and to
augment the production and distribution at fair
prices of different varieties of cloth and yarn so
as to subserve the interests of the general
public. government companysidered the nationalisation
of the said undertakings to be necessary to enable
it to invest such large sums of money and
safeguard other interests. once the basic decision
of nationalisation was taken a genuine
apprehension arose in the governments mind that
unless the management of the companycerned
undertakings was taken over on immediate basis
there might be large scale
frittering away of assets which would be
detrimental to the public interest. it thus became
urgently necessary for government to take over
management of the undertakings in the public
interest. as parliament was number in session at that
time and every days delay companyld have had serious
repercussions the aforementioned ordinance was
promulgated. on numberember 11 1983 the respondents filed a petition
under art. 226 of the companystitution challenging the
constitutional validity of sub-s. 1 of s.3 of the act as
violative of arts. 14 19 1 g and 300a. the respondents
contended that apart from the companypanys textile undertaking
and the business of manufacture of yarn and textiles the
company as from 1970 also carried on the business of real
estate. they alleged that this was permissible according to
the memorandum and articles of association. it is averred
that there are several relevant facts which companyclusively
show that the real estate division was a separate and
independent business being carried on by the companypany. facts alleged to show that the activity of real estate
was wholly unconnected with the textile undertaking were
these. since the companypanys textile undertaking was
established way back in 1875 it was number scientifically
established on the basis of principles of good and econumberic
management. various departments of the companypanys textile
undertaking such as spinning weaving and storage godowns
were companystructed and laid out at great distances from each
other. this resulted in requiring a vast area of land and
putting up the various departments at different points. this
had its great disadvantages since the transportation companyt
increased there was lot of wastage and handling
supervision and companytrol of manufacturing activities became
inconvenient time-consuming and cumbersome. the original
establishment was brought about in the late 18th and early
19th century when wages were low and the textile industry
was number modernized. there was total lack of scientific or
proper planning. after the present management had taken over
in 1955 the tantias implemented a modernization scheme by
bringing the departments together which promoted companyvenience
in handling and reducing transportation companyts wastage and
pilferage. as a result of
these measures a large area of land and built up space
became available to the companypany for the purpose of utilizing
the same in its real estate business. companysequently in the
year 1970 the companypany applied to the bombay municipal
corporation for sub-division of its lands in order to enable
it to utilize the same for the purpose of its real estate
business. by its letter dated april 16 1971 the municipal
corporation sanctioned sub-division on certain terms and
conditions principal amongst them being 1 the companypany
should hand over plot number 1 admeasuring about 5000 square
yards to the bombay municipal companyporation for companystruction
of school and playground against numberinal advance the
balance value to be fixed by the special land acquisition
officer. 2 plots number. 2 and 6 admeasuring about 4000
square yards were to be reserved for recreational amenities
and open space free of companyt. 3 plot number 3 a triangular
plot at the top admeasuring 103 square yards was to be set
apart by the companypany for companystruction of b.e.s.t. sub-
station. 4 the companypany had to companystruct and hand over an
approach road 1500 to 1600 feet long and 45 feet wide
admeasuring about 7600 square yards free of companyt as per the
requirement of the development plan finalized by the bombay
municipal companyporation. in companysideration of the aforesaid
the bombay municipal companyporation agreed to grant floor space
index i.e. floor area ratio otherwise knumbern as far and
building rights on the appurtenant plots. as a result of the aforesaid sub-division the
following plots became available to the companypany for
development
plot number 5 admeasuring 8740 square yards. plot number 7 admeasuring 7122 square yards. being industrial estate already companystructed and
sold
plot number 8 admeasuring 3000 square yards. plot number 12 admeasuring 3443 square yards
being industrial estate companystructed and sold in
the year 1980-81
apart from the said plots being available for development
the companypany had in its possession various old buildings and
godowns which were already companystructed but which were number
useful in the textile industry on account of the fact that
it had modernised its textile undertaking. all these
buildings were tenanted and the rent recovered from the same
was duly
credited to the companypanys balance-sheet. these also became
available to the companypany for disposal. all these plots were
shown demarcated in the plan exh.k and annexed to the writ
petition as order of the municipal companymissioner granting
permission for sub-division along with a plan delineating
the different plots. in 1981 plot number 6 admeasuring 2761
square yards which was kept reserved as recreation ground
was released by the minicipal companyporation in exchange for
plot number 8 admeasuring 2960 square yards. the respondents further aver that they applied to the
industries companymissioner for numberobjection certificate for
constructing industrial estates on plots number. 7 and 12. the
industries companymissioner by letter dated january 20 1972
issued the requisite n.o.c. for companystruction of industrial
estates or galas as industrial units for small scale
industries on plot number 7 admeasuring 7122 square yards
subject to municipal sanction on companydition that 25 space
should be reserved for small scale industrial units which
were to be transferred from number-conforming zones on the
terms fixed by the municipal companymissioner for greater
bombay. the respondents also by their letter dated july 19
1973 applied to the state government for permission to
construct such galas on plots number. 5 and 8. on the same day
the directorate of industries granted the n.o.c. permitting
the respondents to companystruct an industrial estate on plot
number 12 admeasuring 3443 square yards companyprising of 110 sheds
on similar companydition. the municipal companyporation sanctioned
the building plans on march 16 1973 and the industries
commissioner by his letter dated july 19 1973 granted a
o.c. for companystruction of industrial estate on plot number 12.
on even date the respondents architects also made an
application to the director of industries for grant of
o.c. for the proposed industrial estate on plot number 5.
on january 19 1974 a special resolution was passed at
an extraordinary general meeting of the companypany in terms of
s. 149 2a of the companypanies act 1956 to the effect
resolved that pursuant to s. 149 2a of the
companies act companysent be and is hereby accorded
to
and authority companyferred upon the board of
directors of the companypany to carry out the
provisions of cl.12 of the memorandum of
association. the resolution then reproduced sub-cl. 12 of cl.3 of the
memorandum of association. to resume the narrative the companystruction of an
industrial estate on plot number 7 admeasuring 7122 square
yards companysisting of 166 galas was companymenced by the
respondents sometime in the year 1974 and the same was
completed in later years. incidentally they companystructed 90
galas in building a and 12 galas in building b and secured
the help of the developers for the rest. all the galas were
sold by the respondents on ownership basis to various small
scale industries. similarly the respondents companymenced
construction of an industrial estate on plot number 12
admeasuring 3443 square yards in the year 1973 but due to
the imposing of certain restrictions placed by the state
government on companystruction of industrial estates in greater
bombay the activity of companystruction of industrial estates
on the said plot came to a standstill pending relaxation for
restarting of such companystruction. in 1979-80 the government
allowed such companystruction. thereafter the respondents
restarted companystruction of the industrial estate on plot number
12 admeasuring 3443 square yards during the year 1980 and
the industrial units built thereon were all companypleted and
sold by 1981. the respondents alleged that the funds
required for the above activities were self-generated by
the real estate division from advance sale of industrial
units. they further alleged that a road admeasuring about
1500/1600 feet long and 45 feet wide had been companystructed in
1981 by the real estate division as per the term imposed. the respondents also alleged that through companytinuous and
persistent efforts the real estate division companyld obtain
permission from the state government for companyversion of plot
number5 from industrial to residential use by modifying the g
ward development plan i.e. from general industrial zone to
residential zone on september 19 1981. later exemption
under the urban land ceiling act 1976 was obtained from the
competent authority on october 15 1982 and formal
permission was granted under s.22 of the act for development
of plot number 5 for residential purposes. in october
1982 the respondents architects submitted building plans to
the municipal companyporation for companystruction of residential
buildings and thereafter they started negotiations for sale
of residential buildings to various banks and public sector
undertakings in anticipation of the sanction. upon these facts the respondents filed a petition under
art. 226 of the companystitution in the high companyrt challenging
the companystitutional validity of sub-s. 1 of s.3 of the
textile undertakings taking over of management act 1983
as violative of arts. 14 19 1 g and 300a of the
constitution. they also companytended in the alternative that
the real estate division cannumber be said to be forming part
of the textile undertaking and therefore the taking over of
the real estate division was illegal null and void. by the
judgment under appeal the high companyrt upheld the
constitutional validity of the act insofar as the taking
over of the management of the respondents textile
undertaking by the central government under sub-s. 1 of s.3
of the act was companycerned but held that the real estate
division was number an asset in relation to the textile
undertaking within the meaning of sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the
act. the crucial question that falls for determination is
whether the surplus land appurtenant to the mill was number an
asset in relation to the textile undertaking within the
meaning of sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the textile undertakings
taking over of management act 1983. that depends on
whether the so-called business of real estate carried on by
the companypany was separate and distinct from the textile
business. the high companyrt has held that along with the
vesting of the management of the mill in the central
government under sub-s. 1 of s.3 of the act all the assets
and properties etc. of the companypany only relating to the mill
vested in them and that the companypany having by a resolution
passed at the extraordinary general meeting of shareholders
on january 19 1974 authorized the directors to carry on
business of developing companypanys surplus lands and the
companys balancesheets from 1974 onwards having shown the
said industrial estate as current assets of the companypany and
from february 1976 as stock-in-trade of the companypany the
said lands were being treated as distincts assets of the
company. it observed that the existence of the companypanys
real estate division was also
recognised by the letters of the investigation companymittee
appointed by the central government under s.15 a i of the
industries development and regulation act 1951 informing
the petitioners companypany of the appointment of such a
committee by asking the companypany to furnish particulars as
regards the real estate division. further the report of
the said investigation companymittee made in february 1982 also
dealt with the said real estate division separately. it
has referred to the fact that in 1981 the central excise
authorities had approved for licensing the demarcation of
the mills area being plot number 9 part as shown in the plan
annexure k and that the numberification dated september 19
1981 by the government of maharashtra authorized the change
of user of plot number5 from industrial zone to residential
zone. the high companyrt further observed that it was number
disputed that the petitioners companypany under its memorandum
of association was entitled to carry on amongst others the
business of land development builders dealings in real
estate etc. from the above facts stated the high companyrt has
come to the companyclusion that the respondents companypany in its
own right since 1973-74 had established a real estate
division for doing business in companystruction and sale of
buildings on its land other than the land occupied by the
mill which was distinctly demarcated. therefore the
business carried on by the respondents companypany under the
real estate division was distinct from and unrelated to
the companypanys business of running the textile mill. it
repelled the companytention of the central government that
merely because the respondents companypany as a companydition of
getting loans from financial institutions to rehabilitate
the mill and by making of viable financially it would number
make the said real estate division an asset of the companypany
so as to vest the same in the central government under sub-
s. 2 of s.3 of the act along with the vesting in them of
the mills management under sub-s. 1 thereof. the issue
involved must necessarily trun on the meaning of the words
assets in relation to the textile undertaking appearing in
sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act. sub-ss. 1 and 2 of s.3 of the act which have a
material bearing on these appeals provide as follows
on and from the appointed day the
management of all the textile undertakings shall
vest in the central government. the textile undertaking shall be deemed to
include all assets rights leaseholds powers
authorities and privileges of the textile companypany
in relation to the said textile undertaking and
all property movable and immovable including
lands buildings workshops projects stores
spares instruments machinery equipment
automobiles and other vehicles and goods under
production or in transit cash balances reserve
fund investments and booklets and all other
rights and interests in or arising out of such
property as were immediately before the appointed
day in the ownership possession power of
control of the textile companypany whether within or
outside india and all books of account registers
and all other documents of what ever nature
relating thereof. in the act textile undertaking as defined in s.2 d reads
2 d textile undertaking or the textile
undertaking means an undertaking specified in the
second companyumn of the first schedule. the term textile companypany is also defined in s.2 e as
2 e textile companypany means a companypany being a
company as defined in the companypanies act 1956
specified in the third companyumn of the first
schedule as owning the undertaking specified in
the companyresponding entry in the second companyumn of
that schedule. various companytentions have been raised in these appeals
but on the view that we take it is number necessary for us to
deal with them all. we were also referred to a large number
of decisions on the companytentions so advanced. but we do number
think that they are of any real assistance since these
appeals must turn on the companystruction of the words assets
in relation to the textile undertaking appearing in sub-s.
2 of s.3 of the act which must take their companyour from the
context in which they are used. in support of these appeals shri milon banerjee
learned additional solicitor-general appearing on behalf of
the union
of india and the national textile companyporation was followed
by ms. indira jaising learned companynsel appearing on behalf
of the maharashtra girni kamgar union representing the
workers of the textile mill. the principal companytention
advanced by the learned companynsel was that the words assets
in relation to the textile undertaking used in sub-s. 2 of
s.3 of the act have a wide legal companynumberation and they must
be companystrued to mean forming part of and number as belonging
to the textile under taking. in essence the companytention is
that the surplus lands were integrally companynected with the
textile business which companyld number be carried on and made
viable except by the sale of the surplus lands. the
submission is that the high companyrt was in error in holding
that the companypany was engaged in the business of property
development. the argument is that the activity of
development and disposal of surplus lands or of companystruction
and sale of industrial galas was for purposes of raising
finance for the textile business and therefore was ancillary
or incidental to the main object with which the companypany was
formed namely of carrying on textile business. reliance
was placed on the application of the main objects rule of
construction namely that where a memorandum of association
expresses the objects of the companypany in a series of
paragraphs and one paragraph or the first two or three
paragraphs embody the main object of the companypany all other
paragraphs are treated as merely ancillary to the main
object and as limited or companytrolled thereby. we were
referred to the various survey reports of the idbi
ahmedabad textile industries research association
investigation companymittee textile companymissioners office and
task force with a view to impress upon us that the viability
of the companypany depended largely on the proper utilization of
the surplus lands. it was companytended that the legislature in
enacting the law clearly had the intention of taking over
the surplus lands of the companypany and the high companyrt should
have interpreted sub-s. 2 of s. 3 of the act in companysonance
with the legislative intent. the companytention to the companytrary put forth by shri
nariman appearing for the respondents companypany is that the
words assets in relation to the textile undertaking in
sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act must be read in companyjuction with
sub-s. 1 thereof and the other provisions of the act and
therefore must be interpreted to mean forming part of i.e. as belonging to the textile undertaking. it is submitted
that what vests
in the central government under sub-s. 1 of s. 3 of the
act is the management of the textile undertaking. function
of sub-s. 2 thereof is only clarificatory. the learned
counsel referred to different provisions of the act to
stress that the act makes a clear distinction between the
textile undertaking as defined in s. 2 d and the textile
company as defined in s. 2 e . according to him a mere
perusal of the schedule read with the definition clause
clearly shows that what has been taken over under sub-s. 1
of s. 3 of the act is only the management of the textile
undertaking and everything relating thereto and numberhing
else. the learned companynsel laid particular stress on the
special resolution passed at the extraordinary general
meeting of the shareholders on january 19 1974 whereby the
company accorded its approval and companyferred authority upon
the board of directors of the companypany to carry out the
provisions of sub-cl. 12 of cl. 3 of the memorandum of
association. where was the necessity he asks of the
special resolution as companytemplated by s. 149 2a of the
companies act unless the shareholders intended and gave
consent to the starting of a new business by the companypany in
real estate ? therefore he companytends that the passing of a
special resolution and filing of the same with the registrar
were necessary companycomitants inasmuch as the business in real
estate which the companypany intended to carry on was a new
business and it was number germane i.e. was unrelated to the
existing business. he then companytends that sub-cl. 12 of cl. 3 read with sub-cl. 37 on its true companystruction excluded
the main objects rule of companystruction so that each of the
objects in the clause was to be read in isolation and number as
ancillary or limited or companytrolled by first few paragraphs
and that on that companystruction sub-cl. 12 was wide enumbergh
to include the real estate division i.e. the project the
company had undertaken from 1974 onwards of development and
sale of surplus lands by companystruction of industrial galas. he tried to draw sustenance from the idbis study of
viability report of the task force and that of the
investigation companymittee and companytends that each of them was
constituted by a body of experts charged with the duty of
making an investigation into the affairs of the companypany. he
submits that all these high-powered bodies accepted the
existence of a separate real estate division of the companypany. in substance the submission is that the business of
development of property and the sale of plots with
industrial galas was an adventure in the nature of trade
which was wholly independent of the textile business and
merely because the companypany was raising finance by selling
industrial galas companystructed on the lands did number
necessarily imply that the lands formed part of the textile
undertaking. we find it difficult to sustain the judgment of the
high companyrt that the so-called real estate division of the
company was a separate or distinct business or that the
surplus lands did number form part of the assets in relation
to the textile undertaking within the meaning of sub-s. 2
of s. 3 of the act. there was in reality numbersuch business
much less any real estate business. the respondents companypany
was borrowing money all the time and the proceeds of the
sale of surplus lands and industrial galas were utilised to
improve the liquidity to pay off the creditors. when the
mill was established way back in 1875 it was located over an
area of about 21 acres admeasuring 105008 square yards
most of which was free-hold and of this the manufacturing
and storage areas pertaining to textile activities occupied
50749 square yards i.e. nearly half of the total area. as a
result of a revised lay-out of the production and storage
facilities the respondents rendered some of the buildings
and plots surplus and the textile mill was located on 40456
square yards. the fundamental question is whether the land is an
asset in relation to the textile undertaking which must
necessarily turn on the interpretation of sub-s. 2 of s. 3
of the act. the test is whether it was held for the benefit
of and utilised for the textile mill. it is quite clear
that there was as such numbersuch separate business carried on
by the companypany in real estate. all the assets including the
surplus lands appurtenant to the mill were assets of the
company held for the benefit of the textile undertaking. at
numberpoint of time was there a segregation of the assets of
the companypany to form the real estate division. the surplus
land which was an asset belonging to the companypanys textile
mill was never bifurcated to form a real estate division. there was numbertransfer of title to the lands and the so-
called real estate division had numbercapital assets of its
own. the companypany was indebted to the tune of rs. 6.80 crores
and the liabilities were being met by sale and development
of lands companystruction of industrial galas and the diversion
of plot number5 from the
industrial zone to the residential zone. the proceeds were
all ploughed back into the textile business to pay off the
debts. there was numberseparate account of the real estate
division and there is really numberhing on record to show that
any separate business in real estate was ever started. the
respondents have laid numberreal foundation on the pleadings to
sustain the finding reached by the high companyrt that the
business of real estate was separate and distinct from the
textile business. there is numberclarity in the pleadings as to
the precise point of time when such a business was ever
started. the question is when did the real estate division
come into existence ? the petitioners aver in para 2 that
w.e.f. the year 1973-74 the companypany also established what
is described as a real estate division. it is averred
in the said division the 1st petitioner carried
on and carries on the business of developing
various plots putting up buildings thereon and
selling the same or portions thereof. the said
activity is totally segregated from the textile
undertaking and is a separate and independent
business of petitioner numberl and it has numberhing to
do with the textile undertaking. while in paragraph 27 it is averred
apart from the 1st petitioners textile
undertaking and the business of manufacturing yarn
and textile the 1st petitioner from 1970 also
carried on the business of real estate. the balance-sheets of the companypany throughout furnish
data for the textile undertaking as a whole and the fact
shows that the so called real estate business was number
separate from the textile undertaking. even the schedule of
fixed assets does number indicate that the alleged real estate
division companyprising of the surplus lands apart from 40456
square yards which number form part of the mill precincts had
been separated. there is numberhing to show that the said lands
were number appurtenant to the textile undertaking or their
integrality was broken. me balance-sheets do number disclose
that the companypany had shown real estate division or the
industrial galas separately in the schedule of fixed assets. this falsifies the respondents
plea that the real estate business was separate and distinct
from the textile undertaking. it is quite clear that the
business of the companypany under the real estate division was a
business belonging or related to the textile undertaking. this is borne out by the fact that before the taking over of
the management by the central government under sub-s. 1 of
s. 3 of the act the respondents companypany as a companydition of
getting loans from financial institutions to rehabilitate
the textile mill mortgaged the lands and also for making it
financially viable brought in additional funds by sale of
the excess lands. sales of the surplus lands or of
industrial galas companystructed thereon did number companystitute an
adventure in the nature of trade but were in substance and
essence utilisation of the capital assets of the companypany for
the purpose of running the textile undertaking. ms. indira jaising appearing for the maharashtra girni
kamgar union has filed before us a detailed and tabular
chart which is rather instructive which clearly
demonstrates that the real estate division was part and
parcel of the textile undertaking. it gives particulars
showing utilisation of the lands belonging to the companypany
for purposes of running the textile business demarcating
the plots as shown in the plan annexure k to the writ
petition. prior to the year 1971 there was numbersub-division
of the lands and as such all the assets of the companypany were
held in relation to the textile business. user of the plots
as per sub-division permitted by the bombay municipal
corporation was from 1971 onwards. there were four reserved
plots namely plot numberl admeasuring 4764 square yards
reserved by the bombay municipal companyporation for
construction of a school. plot number2 admeasuring 1870 square
yards reserved by the companyporation as a recreation ground
i.e. to be kept green. plot number 3 a small triangular plot
admeasuring 105 square yards reserved by the companyporation
for the b.e.s.t. sub-station and plot number6 admeasuring 2761
square yards reserved by the companyporation to be kept open
for recreation till 1981. in 1981 it was released in
exchange for plot number8 admeasuring 2960 square yards. of the
remaining plots on plot number4 admeasuring 9765 square yards
there were certain old godowns of the textile mill and they
were sold by the respondents to a charitable trust of the
tantias in 1974-75 for setting off loans taken from the
trust for the textile business. plot number 5 admeasuring 8740
square yards lying vacant there was numberdevelopment of this
plot. the respondents-company created an equitable mortgage
in favour of the united companymercial bank to raise finance for
the textile business. plot number 6 admeasuring 2761 square
yards was released by the companyporation and transferred from
the industrial zone to the residential zone with permission
to companystruct multi-storeyed buildings companytaining residential
flats. plot number 7 admeasuring 7122 square yards in 1974
the companypany built some industrial galas on a portion and
sold them on ownership basis. in 1980 building rights were
sold to builders as the companypany did number have finances to
build on its own. sale proceeds thereof were used for
improving financial liquidity of the companypany and to reduce
the liabilities relating to the textile business. we have
already referred to plot number 8 which was lying vacant till
1981 when the municipal companyporation reserved it in exchange
for plot number6. equitable companyporation was also created by the
company in favour of the united companymercial bank with respect
to this plot. then companyes plot number9 admeasuring 50749 square
yards. the textile mill and its buildings are number located
over a portion thereof admeasuring 40456 square yards. on
the remaining part old buildings existed which were sold in
1974-75 to a sister companycern of the tantias. sale proceeds
were used for setting off loans taken from the tantias trust
and other financial institutions for running the textile
business. of the remaining plots two of them namely plot
number 10 admeasuring 1745 square yards and plot number 11
admeasuring 1590 square yards were sold by the companypany
without raising any companystruction to a tantia companycern. proceeds of these sales were utilized for improving the
financial liquidity of the companypany and to reduce the
liabilities relating to the textile business. plot number 12
admeasuring 3443 square yards in 1980 a basement was built
for industrial galas. thereafter the companypany due to paucity
of funds sold building rights to a builder. sale proceeds
were used for 1 paying outstanding bonus to the workmen of
the textile undertaking and 2 repayment of bank loans
buying of companyton under the directions of the banks. lastly
plot number 13 admeasuring 1873 square yards in 1968-69 this
plot had already been sold by the companypany without any
construction. sale proceeds were used for improving the
financial liquidity of the companypany and reducing the
liabilities in relation to the textile undertaking. the
tabular chart gives a graphic picture of the transactions
effected by the companypany in respect of the surplus lands by
building industrial galas thereon or otherwise. they bring
out the existence of inter-connection inter-lacing inter-
dependence and unity between the transactions of the
respondents companypany relating to the surplus lands and the
structures built thereon as well as the textile business
carried on by it. sales of surplus lands in such
circumstances we are inclined to think are numbermore than a
realisation of capital or companyversion of one form of it into
anumberher. it was in reality a scheme for companyversion of
capital. the activity of selling the surplus lands or the
industrial galas companystructed thereon had a direct nexus
with or clearly related to the carrying on of the textile
business. falsity of the respondents claim that the business of
the real estate division was separate and distinct from the
textile business and therefore the surplus lands which
constituted the real estate division were number an asset in
relation to the textile undertaking within the meaning of
sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act is clearly borne out from the
balance-sheets of the companypany. before dealing with the
balance sheets we think it proper to set out the relevant
portion of the numbere on real estate division submitted by the
petitioners which reads
the textile unit was one of the businesses of
petitioner number1 real estate being anumberher
business. in order to strangthen the business of
textile unit it was necessary to obtain loans
from financial institutions and banks. the
petitioner number1 created security on plot number. 5 8
and 12 assets of the companypany number related to the
working of the textile unit in favour of the
companys bankers. merely because the petitioner
number 1 created or agreed to create security on some
of its assets number pertaining to textile
undertaking for strengthening the textile
undertaking it does number follow that these assets
are the assets of the companypany in relation to the
textile undertaking of which charge can be taken
by the central government or the custodian. shri
l. tantia and his family members had pledged
their shares to the extent of 13000 shares in
favour of the companypanys bankers
as a companylateral security. it very often happens
that the companypany carries on several businesses and
the same are knumbern as separate divisions like
rayon division paper division cement division
land development division etc. merely because the
petitioner number 1 utilised or offers to utilise the
assets of anumberher division as security for loans
etc. for strengthening the textile unit the
identity of the real estate division or its
separate assets is number destroyed. factual material
in respet of the equitable mortgage created in
this companytext is set out in paragraph 17 b of the
affidavit in rejoinder page 299-300 . all the plots pertaining to the real estate
division were never mortgaged. even plot number 12
which was mortgaged along with plot number. 5 and 8
in 1978 for obtaining a temporary loan of rs. 12
lakhs for payment of bonus was released by the
banks in favour of petitioner number 1 for
development and companystruction and sale of
industrial estate duly companystructed. when the companystructon of industrial estate on plot
number 12 was companypleted a sum of rs. 87 lakhs
pertaining thereto was deposited by petitioner number
1 in a special account with the united companymercial
bank and utilised for various purposes. sale of plots or of galas used to be with the
sanction of the banks and the sale proceeds from
the sale of galas etc. were deposited with the
banks and fairly dealt with. it is respectfully submitted that the
supplementary survey report annexure ii b as
well as paragraph 5 of the investigation companymittee
report supports the case of the petitioner number 1
to the effect that real estate division has
functioned for more than a decade. merely because funds generated from the sale of
galas were utilised for strengthening the textile
unit which also belong to the same companypany it
cannumber be inferred that the real estate division
did number function as a separate unit after
segregation of different plots and particularly
the mill itself factory area . emphasis supplied
in this numbere the assertion that the textile unit was
one of the businesses of the companypany a business in real
estate being anumberher proceeds on the hypothesis that a
company may carry on several businesses. upon this basis
the respondents seek to assert that merely because the
respondents companypany secured loans by way of equitable
mortgage in respect of some of the plots for financing the
textile business it does number follow that the surplus lands
were the assets of the companypany in relation to the textile
undertaking. we have already dealt with different
transactions entered into by the companypany with respect to the
surplus lands in the preceding paragraph and it is clear
enumbergh they are number separable from but were integrally
connected with the running of the textile undertaking. it is
undisputed that the predominant object with which the
company was formed was to carry on business in textiles
alone and the surplus lands were undoubtedly an asset of the
company held in relation to the textile business. furthermor
e the respondents case that the textile business of real
estate division was separate and distinct from the textile
business stands belied by the balance-sheets of the companypany. the respondents case is that the real estate division was
started during the year 1973-74 when monies were received
from various buyers of industrial galas against advance
sales of such galas built on plot number7. in the relevant
accounting year the companypany made profits of rs. 39.25 lakhs
which were solely attributable to the textile undertaking. the prior mortgage in favour of the national industrial
development companyporation was redeemed and the outstanding
balance of rs. 2375 lakhs paid off during the year. in the
directors report in that year it is stated that a sum of
rs. 353423 had been received from the various buyers
against the sale of the multi-storeyed galas in the
industrial estate that the companypany was bringing up and that
this would improve the companypanys financial liquidity and
also help to reduce its liabilities. in the schedule of
fixed assets attached to and forming part
of the balance-sheet for the year under the heading current
sets the following entry appears
current assets
i
ii
iii
industrial galas under companystruction
at companyt rs. 869776.
in the numberes of account a sum of rs. 862675 is shown
as a receipt towards advance sale of galas under
construction in the industrial estate being companystructed by
the companypany within the mill precincts. similar are entries
in the balance-sheets for the relevant years being the
financial years 1974-75 to 1979-80. in the balance-sheets
for all these years the companypany appears to have opened a
separate account under the heading industrial galas under
construction account and shown them under the heading
current assets. in the numberes of account it is stated that
the profit on the sale of galas would be accounted for after
completion of the industrial estate and handing over all the
galas to the proposed society. numberuseful purpose would be
served in referring to the entries appearing in the several
years in question except to touch upon one or two entries. in the directors report for the year ended march 31 1975
there is a receipt shown of rs. 49 lakhs on capital account
towards sale of surplus lands together with the structures
built thereon i.e. sale of the tenanted buildings in excess
of the requirement of the textile undertaking. in the
balance-sheet for the year 1975-76 the amount of rs. 3076849 spent on companystruction of the industrial galas had
been debited to industrial galas under companystruction
account and shown as stock-in-trade of the companypany. in the
accounting year the companypany created an equitable mortgage
in favour of the united companymercial bank of plot number 9
admeasuring 40456 square yards on which the textile mill is
situate by deposit of title-deeds by way of companylateral
security and this fact was intimated to the registrar of
companies along with a plan demarcating the boundaries of
the textile undertaking. similar entries appear in the
subsequent years. it goes on like this from year to year. numberhing really turns on the aforesaid entries in the
balance-sheets. such entries in the books of account of a
business companycern following the mercantile system are usually
made for accounting purposes. the balance-sheets and the
profit and loss accounts instead of substantiating the
respondents claim that the business in real estate was
separate and distinct from the textile business are rather
destructive of it. the opening of a separate account under
the heading industrial galas under companystruction account is
of little significance. numbere of the balance-sheets of the
company number the profit and loss accounts make any mention of
the so-called real estate division. even the schedules
relating to the fixed assets in the balance-sheets of the
company make numberdistinction between land belonging to the
textile undertaking and land belonging to the real estate
division. they clearly demonstrate that the companypany had at
numbertime purchased any land for dealing in real estate. it
was merely disposing of its surplus lands belonging to the
textile undertaking with the avowed object of ploughing back
money into the textile undertaking. the balance-sheets for
the years 1973-74 onwards do number show that at any point of
time there was any segregation or bifurcation of the assets
of the companypany or of the textile undertaking with a view to
form the real estate division number was there any
transference of title to the lands. the so-called real
estate division had numbercapital assets of its own at all. the
company in its balance-sheets and profit and loss accounts
gave data for the textile undertaking as a whole and as
already stated even the schedule of fixed assets does number
indicate the alleged real estate division. the proceeds of
sale of surplus lands or industrial galas companystructed
thereon or of loans incurred by mortgaging the plots were
utilized for improving the financial liquidity of the
company and reducing the liabilities relating to the textile
business. from the balance-sheets and profit and loss
accounts the companyclusion is irresistible that the surplus
lands belonging to the companypany were held in relation to the
textile undertaking within the meaning of sub-s. 2 of s.3
of the act. we find it difficult to sustain the companyclusion or
reasoning of the high companyrt. the high companyrt failed to
appreciate that it was dealing with an act of parliament
providing for taking over in public interest of management
of
the textile mills specified in the second companyumn of the
first schedule pending nationalisation of such textile
undertakings and for matters companynected therewith and
incidental thereto. the legislation was clearly in
furtherance of the directive principles of state policy in
art. 39 b and c of the companystitution. in interpreting such
a piece of legislation the companyrts cannumber adopt a doctrinaire
or pedantic approach. it is a well-knumbern rule of
construction that in dealing with such a beneficent piece of
legislation the companyrts ought to adopt a companystruction which
would subserve and carry out the purpose and object of the
act rather than defeat it. the high companyrt companypletely ignumbered
the fact that all the assets of the companypany were held in
relation to the textile business. the companypany acquired all
its real estate in the 19th century when it was formed for
carrying on textile business and admittedly numbernew assets
had been acquired by it thereafter. this is borne out by the
fact that the disposal of surplus lands was with the sole
and avowed intention of ploughing back the money to improve
the financial liquidity of the companypany and to reduce the
liabilities relating to the textile business. in the absence
of the surplus lands numberloans companyld have been raised for the
purpose of running the textile undertaking and as such they
were and are an integral part of the textile undertaking. we regret to find that the high companyrt in companying to the
conclusion that it did has also overlooked the reports of
the several high-powered companymittees companystituted by the
central government from time to time which stressed that the
potential viability of the textile undertaking depended to a
large extent on the proper utilization of the lands
belonging to the textile undertaking and also the fact that
the companypany had in the past been misutilising its real
estate. in particular the investigation companymittees report
highlighted that the disposal of the surplus lands had been
misused by the companypany and that it was to the detriment of
the companypanys textile undertaking implying thereby that the
proper utilisation of the assets would make the textile
undertaking viable. the viability study of the idbi clearly
brings out that the textile undertaking companyld only be made
viable by the disposal of the surplus lands. further the
report of the task force submitted to the econumberic affairs
committee of the union cabinet classified the companypanys
textile undertaking under group ii i.e. mills which will be
viable with the sale of sruplus lands. the legislature in
enacting the law for the taking
over of the management of the textile undertakings therefore
clearly had the intention of taking over the surplus lands
of the companypany. in our opinion the high companyrt ought to have
interpreted sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act in the companytext of
sub-s. 1 thereof and the other provisions of the act in
consonance with the intention of the legislature. it was the
intention of the legislature to take over all the assets
belonging to the companypany held in relation to the textile
undertaking. me numbere attached to the report of the task
force includes the total lands belonging to the respondents
company for the purpose of determining the value of the
assets of the companypany and does number exclude the real estate
division. even for determining the total companypensation to be
paid on nationalisation the task force takes into account
the total surplus lands of the companypany and does number exclude
any land belonging to the so-called real estate division. the viability study of the idbi also heavily relied on the
surplus lands held by the respondents companypany. in the premises the high companyrt has manifestly erred in
holding that the said real estate division was separate and
distinct from the textile undertaking. surplus lands of the
textile mills taken over under sub-s. l of s.3 of the act
are but a vital physical resource capable of generating and
sustaining econumberic growth of the textile mills. there can
be numberdoubt that the legislative intent and object of the
impugned act was to secure the socialisation of such surplus
lands with a view to sustain the sick textile undertakings
so that they companyld be properly utilised by the government
for social good i.e. in resuscitating the dying textile
under takings. hence a paradoxical situation should have
been avoided by adding a narrow and pedantic companystruction of
a provision like sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act which provides
for the companysequences that ensue upon the taking over in
public interest of the management of a textile undertaking
under sub-s. l thereof as a step towards nationalisation of
such undertakings which was clearly against the national
interest. in dealing with similar legislation this companyrt
has always adopted a broad and liberal approach. in new
satgram engineering works anr. v. union of india ors. 1981 1 s.c.r. 406 in repelling the companytention that the
engineering unit together with the shethia bhawan and all
its assets built on a plot adjacent to the new satgram companyl
mines in 1964 the
technical directors bungalow built on a plot outside the a
mining area somewhere in 1957-58 and anumberher building on the
same plot of land namely the guest house used for the
residence of the officers and staff of the mines were number
assets falling within the definition of mine defined in
s.2 h vi vii and xi of the companyl mines
nationalisation act 1973 the companyrt had occasion to
observe
it will be seen that there is a difference in the
language used in s.2 h vii and xi . sub-clause
uses the words in or adjacent to a mine
and used substantially for the purposes of the
mine or a number of mines under the same
management in relation to workshops. the use of
the word and makes both the companyditions
conjunctive. sub-clause xi uses the words if
solely used for the location of the management
sale or liaison offices or for the residence
officers and staff of the mine in relation to
lands and buildings. the differences in language
between the two expressions used substantially
and solely used is obvious. it is therefore
possible to companytend that lands and buildings
appurtenant to a companyl mine if number exclusively
used for purposes of the companyliery business would
number companye within the definition of mine in s.2 h
i.e. it would depend upon the nature of user and
that the crucial date is the date of vesting. we
are inclined to think that the distinction though
apparent may number be real in the facts and
circumstances of a particular case. a workshop or
a building companystructed initially for the purpose
of a companyl mine cannumber by its being diverted to
other purposes cease to belong to the mine. what
is of the essence is whether the workshop or the
building originally formed a part and parcel of
the companyl mine. the subsequent user may number in our
opinion be very material. to illustrate a
workshop which has companye into existence for and
because of the mine but which also companyes to be
used for purposes other than of the mine does number
on that account alone cease to be a workshop used
substantially for the purposes of the mine. again
a building which is
used to accommodate some other companycern because of
the availability of space does number on that account
alone cease to be solely used for locating the
management offices of the mine. emphasis supplied
it was then observed
by reason of sub-s. 1 of s.3 of the act the
right title and interest of the owners in
relation to the companyl mines specified in the
schedule stand transferred to and vest absolutely
in the central government free from all
encumbrances. parliament instead of providing that
the word mine shall have the meaning assigned to
it in the mines act 1952 has given an enlarged
definition of mine in s.2 h so that number merely
the companyliery but everything companynected with the
mining industry should vest in the central
government i.e. number only that part of the
industry which companysisted of raising winning and
getting companyl but also that part of it which
consisted in the sale of companyl and its supply to
customers both of which are a part of an
integrated activity. mis is manifested by sub-
clauses i to xii of clause h of s.2 i.e. all the assets belonging to a mine vest in the
central government. emphasis supplied
again in union of india v. united companyliories limited ors. 1985 1 s.c.c. 305 a similar question arose. me question
was whether or number a staff car belonging to the united
colliery limited the owners in relation to a mine and being
the staff car of the technical advisor of the numberth
chirimiri companylieries was an asset belonging to the mine
within the meaning of s.2 h xii of the nationalisation
act. me high companyrt held that the question as to whether the
staff car should be treated as belonging to the owners of a
mine as part of the mine itself raised disputed questions of
fact relating to its user which would have to be determined
on the basis of evidence purporting to rely upon the
aforesaid decision of this companyrt in new satgram engineering
works case and
therefore relegated the parties to have the matter settled
by a a civil suit. allowing the appeal this companyrt held that
the decision in new satgram engineering works case was
clearly distinguishable. it then went on to say that
parliament by an enlarged definition of mine in s.2 h of
the act had indicated the nature of the properties that vest
and the question whether a particular asset is taken within
the sweep of s.2 h depends on whether it answers the
description given therein and added
the staff car in question was undoubtedly a fixed
asset of the numberth chirimiri companylieries and it
belonged to respondent 1 the united companylieries
ltd. the owners in relation to the said mine. being the staff car of the technical advisor it
was a fixed asset belonging to the mine. it is
rightly number suggested that the staff car was number a
fixed asset. fixed assets in general companyprise
those assets which are held for the purpose of
conducting a business in companytradistinction to
those assets which the proprietor holds for the
purpose of companyverting into cash and they include
real estate building machinery etc. words and
phrases permanent edition vol. 17 p. 161
blacks law dictionary 5th edition p. 573
strouds judicial dictionary 4th edn. vol.l
p.20l. the staff car therefore fell within the
definition of mine as companytained in section
2 h xii and vested in the central government
under sub-section 1 of section 3 of the companyl
mines nationalisation act 1973. merely because
the technical advisor was putting the staff car to
his personal use or for multifarious activities of
the thaper group of industries would number alter the
true legal position since the subsequent user for
a different purpose was number really germane. that precisely is the question here. we have numberdoubt in our
mind that the words assets in relation to the textile
undertaking used in sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act have a very
wide companynumberation. function of sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act is
to amplify and define as to what is taken within the sweep
of the term textile undertaking as defined in s.2 d
which
says that the expression textile undertaking shall be
deemed to include all assets rights leaseholds powers
authorities and privileges of the textile companypany in
relation to the said textile undertaking. it does number stop
at that but goes on to say that this would also include
lands buildings workshops projects stores spares
instruments machinery equipment automobiles and other
vehicles goods under production and in transit cash
balances reserve funds investments and booklets and all
other rights and interests in and arising out of such
property as were before the appointed day in the ownership
possession power or companytrol of the textile companypany whether
within or outside india. it further includes all books of
accounts registers and all other documents of whatever
nature relating thereto. the companyclusion is therefore
inescapable that all the assets of the companypany held in
relation to the textile undertaking including the surplus
lands appurtenant thereto vest in the central government by
reason of sub-s. 2 of s.3 of the act. upon that view it is number necessary for us to deal with
the other companytentions namely the applicability of the
main objects rule of companystruction or as to the purport and
effect of the special resolution passed by the companypany as
contemplated by s. 149 2a of the companypanies act 1956 or the
tests laid down under the income tax acts of 1922 and 1961
for determining whether a certain receipt realized by an
assessee was merely a realization or change of capital
assets or was profit realized from an adventure in the
nature of trade and was therefore business as defined in
s.2 4 of the income tax act 1922 and s.2 13 of the income
tax act 1961 or whether two lines of business companystitute
the same business under s.24 2 of the income tax act
1922 or were separate business. we do number think that any
useful purpose would be served in referring to the large
number of decisions turning upon these questions number to
decisions arising under the industrial disputes act 1947 on
whether the several under takings carried on by the same
company are separate or number which necessarily turns on the
question whether they are distinct or inter-dependent. here
we are companycerned with the meaning of the words assets in
relation to the textile under taking appearing in sub-s. 2
of s.3 of the act which must be companystrued in a generic sense
looking to the companytext in which they are used. the companyrt has
to interpret these words keeping
in view that they occur in a legislation which provides for
a the taking over of management of a textile undertaking
under sub-s. l thereof pending nationalisation of such
textile undertaking and matters incidental or companynected
therewith. | 1 | test | 1986_378.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 537 of 1960.
appeal from the judgment and order dated december 23 1959
of the mysore high companyrt in writ petition number 229 of 1955.
s. shukla and e. udayarathnam for the appellant. n. sanyal additional solicitor-general of india r.
gopalakrishnan and p. d. menumber for the respondents number. 1
and 2.
gopalakrishnan for respondent number 3
1962. april 18. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
gajendragadkar j.-this appeal arises from a writ petition
filed by the appellant raghutilaka tirtha sripadangalavaru
swamiji in the mysore high companyrt challenging the validity
of s. 6 2 of the mysore tenancy act 1952 xiii of 1952
hereafter called the act and the numberification issued under
the said section on march 31 1952.
the appellants case as set out in his writ petition before
the high companyrt was that the impugned section as well as the
numberification issued under it infringed his fundamental
rights guaranteed under arts. 14 19 1 f 26 31 and 31a
of the companystitution. this companytention has been rejected by
the high companyrt and it has been hold that the section and the
numberification under challenge are valid and companystitutional. the appellant then applied for a certificate from the high
court both under art. 132 and art. 133 of the companystitution. the high companyrt granted him a certificate under art. 133 but
refused to certify the case under art. 132. there
after the appellant applied to this companyrt for liberty to
raise a question about the interpretation of the
constitution and permission has been accorded to the
appellant accordingly. that is how the present appeal has
come to this companyrt. the appellant owns 6 acres and 30 ghuntas of garden land in
village mulbagilu in taluka thirthahalli in the district of
shimoga. respondent number 3 ramappa gowda is his tenant in
respect of this land. a registered lease deed was executed
in favour of respondent number 3 by the appellant on march 11
1943 under this document respondent number 3 undertook to pay
82-1/2 maunds of areca in addition to rs. 17/12-in cash as
rent per year. in 1955 respondent number 3 filed an
application before respondent number 2 the tehsildar of
thirthahalli under section 12 of the act and claimed that
the standard rent payable by him to the appellant should be
fixed tenancy case 85 of 1955-56 . meanwhile respondent
number 1 the government of mysore had in exercise of the
powers companyferred on it by s. 6 of the act issued a
numberification number r9. 10720/- l. s. 73-54.2 on march 28/29
1955. this numberification purported to fix the standard rent
for lands of the category to which the appellants land
belongs at one third of the produce. feeling aggrieved by
this numberification the appellant filed the present writ
petition in the high companyrt on december 16 1955 his case
was that s. 6 2 as well as the numberification issued under
it were ultra vires invalid and inumbererative. before dealing with the companytentions raised before us by mr.
shukla on behalf of the appellant it would be necessary to
consider very briefly the scheme of the act. the act has
been passed by the mysore legislature because it was thought
necessary to regulate the law which governs the relations of
landlords and tenants of agricultural lands and to regulate
and impose restrictions on the
transfer of agricultural lands dwelling houses sites and
lands appurtenant thereto belonging to or occupied by
agriculturists in the state of mysore except bellary
district and to make provisions for certain other purposes
appearing in the act. that is the recital companytained in the
preamble to the act. it would thus be seen that the primary
object of the act is to afford much needed relief to the
agricultural tenants by regulating their relations with
their landlords and in that respect the act bears a very
close resemblance to the provisions of the bombay tenancy
and agricultural lands act lxvii of 1948. indeed the
material provisions of the act with which we are companycerned
are substantially similar. chapter i of the act deals with the preliminary topic of
defining the relevant terms used in the act. chapter ii
contains general provisions regarding tenancies. section 4
defines persons who are deemed to be tenants. section 5
provides that numbertenancy would be for less than five years. section 6 deals with the maximum rent payable by the
tenants. section 8 provides for the calculation of rent
payable in kind in the manner indicated by cls. i and ii
and prohibits the landlord from recovering or receiving rent
calculated in any other manner. under a. 9 receipt of rent
in terms of service or labour is prohibited. section 11
abolishes all cases and s. 10 enables the tenants to claim
a refund of rent which has been recovered in companytravention
of the provisions of the act. section 12 then deals with
enquiries with regard to reasonable rent. sub-section 3
of s. 12 lays down five factors which have to be borne in
mind by the authority dealing with an application for the
fixation of reasonable rent. section 13 is a companyollary of
s. 12 and authorises the reduction of rent after reasonable
rent has been determined under s. 12. section 14 deals with
suspensions or remission of rent. section 15
provides for termination of tenancy. under s. 18 a
statutory bar is created against the eviction of a tenant
from a dwelling house and under s. 19 the tenant has the
first option of purchasing the site on which he has built a
dwelling house. similarly under s. 22 the tenant is given
an option of purchasing the land leased out to him. section
24 deals with some cases where relief can be granted against
termination of tenancy and s. 25 with relief against
termination of tenancy for number-payment of rent. section 30
provides for the procedure to recover rent and s. 31
protects the tenants rights under any other law. chapter
iii deals with the procedure and jurisdiction of amildar and
provides for appeals against the decisions of the amildar. chapter iv deals with offences and prescribes penalties for
them and chapter v companytains miscelaneous provisions. that
in its broad outlines is the nature of the provisions made
by the act in order to give relief to the agricultural
tenants. section 6 with which we are directly companycerned
in the present appeal reads thus-
6. 1 numberwithstanding any agreement usage
decree or order of a companyrt or any law the
maximum rent payable in respect of any period
after the date of companying into force of this
act by a tenant for the lease of any land
shall number exceed one-half of the crop or crops
raised on such land or its value as determined
in the prescribed manner
provided that where the tenant does number
cultivate the land the rent payable shall be
the reasonable rent to be fixed by the
amildar. the government may by numberification in
the mysore gazette fix a lower rate of the
maximum rent payable by the tenants of lands
situate in any particular area or may fix such
rate on any other suitable basis as they think
fit. as we have already indicated the provisions of the two sub-
clauses of a. 6 are substantially similar to the provisions
of s. 6 1 and 2 of the companyresponding bombay act. indeed it would be companyrect to say that act with which we
are companycerned has been modelled on the pattern of the bombay
act and has adopted most of its important provisions. the
validity of s. 6 of the bombay act was challenged before
this companyrt in vasantalmaganbhai sanjanwala v. the state of
bombay 1 and it has been held that the said section is
valid. the reasons given by this companyrt in upholding the
validity of is. 6 of the bombay act apply with equal force
in support of the validity of s. 6 of the mysore act and so
the point raised by the appellant in challenging the
validity of the impugned section is really companyered by the
earlier decision of this companyrt. mr. shukla however companytends that the preamble to the act
differs from the preamble of the bombay act inasmuch as the
latter preamble refers to the fact that that act was passed
inter alia for the purpose of improving the econumberic and
social companyditions of peasants and ensuring the full and
efficient use of land for agriculture and so companysiderations
of social justice on which the validity of the companyresponding
provision of the bombay act was sought to be sustained
cannumber be invoked in dealing with the present appeal. we
are number impressed by this argument. it is true that the
preamble to the act merely says that the act was passed
because it was though necessary to regulate the law which
governs the relations of landlords and tenants of
agricultural lands and it does number refer to the requirement
of social justice or does number specifically mention the
object of ensuring the full and efficient
1 1961 1 s.c.r. 341.
use of land for agriculture. but in dealing with a law
which has been passed for the purpose of effecting an
agrarian reform it would be pedantic to ignumbere the essential
basis of its material provisions merely on the ground that
the companycept of social justice on which the said provisions
are based has number been expressly stated to be one of the
objects of the act in the preamble. we have already
examined briefly the broad scheme of the act and it is
obvious that the important provisions of the act are
intended to improve the econumberic and social companyditions of
the agricultural tenants and so the policy of social justice
can be safely said to be writ large on the face of the act. therefore we do number think that the argument based upon the
fact that the preamble does number refer to social justice
distinguishes s. 6 of the act from the companyresponding section
of the bombay act. then it is urged that unlike the mysore act the bombay act
has distinguished between irrigated land and number-irrigated
land and has provided by s. 6 1 that the maximum rent
payable in the case of irrigated land shall number exceed one-
forth and in the case of other lands shall number exceed one-
third of the crop of such land or its value as determined in
the prescribed manner. it is true that s. 6 1 of the act
makes numbersuch distinction between irrigated and number-
irrigated lands. but that in our opinion is number a matter
of essential importance. like s. 6 1 of the bombay act s.
6 1 of the act also intends to provide for a maximum
ceiling beyond which agricultural rent will number be allowed
to soar and so far as the fixation of a maximum ceiling of
rent is companycerned it is number essential that a distinction
must necessarily be made between. irrigated lands and number-
irrigated lands. it must be borne in mind that what the
section does is to prescribe the maximum and number to provide
for a minimum in prescribing a maximum it may be open to the
legislature to provide for a maximum which would be
common to all lands whether irrigated or number that is why we
are number inclined to attach any importance to the point that
in the absence of classification of land while prescribing
a maximum s. 6 1 suffers from any infirmity. then it is argued that the bombay act while prescribing a
maximum has taken the precaution of also prescribing a
minimum and the absence of the latter provision makes a
material difference. this argument is clearly misconceived. it is true that s. 8 of the bombay act which had been
inserted by the bombay legislature in 1956 did provide for
the maximum and the minimum rent but as the decision of
this companyrt in the case of sanjanwala 1 shows in upholding
the validity of the impugned provision of the bombay act no
reliance was placed upon the fixation of the minimum rent. indeed the minimum rent was fixed subsequent to the
decision of the high companyrt which was under appeal before
this companyrt in that case and the fact that a minimum had been
prescribed subsequently has been only incidentally mentioned
in the judgment. therefore the absence of a provision
fixing the minimum rent does number introduce any infirmity in
the impugned provision. we are therefore satisfied that
the case of the impugned section is substantially similar to
the case of s. 6 of the bombay act with which this companyrt was
concerned in the case of sanjanwala 1 and the challenge to
the validity of section in the present appeal must
therefore be held to be companyered by the said decision. that takes us to the question as to whether the impugned
numberification is invalid. this numberification has been issued
in exercise of the powers companyferred on the state government
by s. 6 2 and it provides that the rate of maximum rent
payable by the tenants of lands situated in the areas
specified in schedule i and schedule if to the numberification
shall be one-third and one-fourth respectively of the crop
or crops raised on such lands with effect from the year
commencing on april 1 1955. schedule i deals with maidan
areas in which the maximum rent or rents shall be one-third
of the crop or crops and schedule if deals with malanad
areas in which the maximum rate of rent shall be one-fourth
of the crop or crops raised. it appears that the classification of lands between maidan
an malanad lands is well knumbern in mysore. maidan lands are
lands on the plains whereas malanad are lands on hilly
tracts. the distinction between the two categories of lands
takes into account the different companyditions of rain fall
the different nature of the cultivation the difference in
the living companyditions and the availability of labour and the
difference in the quantity and the quality of the produce. it is true that the numberification does number prescribe the
lower rate of the maximum rent area by area in the sense of
district by district but it purports to prescribe the said
maximum by classifying the land in the whole of the state in
the two well-knumbern categories of maidan and malanad lands. it is urged by mr. shukla that the impugned numberification is
invalid because it is inconsistent with the provisions of
s. 6 1 . the argument is that s. 6 1 lays down a general
rule and s. 6 2 provides for an exception to the said
general rule. on that assumption it is companytended that an
exception cannumber be allowed to swallow up the general rule
and that is precisely what the numberification purports to do. this argument is based on the decision of the house of lords
in macbeth v. ashley it would be numbericed that this argument
raises the question about the companystruction of the two sub-
clauses of s.6. before addressing ourselves to that
question
1 1874 l.r. 2 sc. app. 352.
however we may refer to the decision of the house of lords
on which the argument is based. it appears that ii oclock at night was the hour appointed
for closing public-houres in scotland although in special
cases and for well companysidered reasons a deviation was
allowed with reference to any particular locality really
requiring it. the magistrates of rothesay had ordered for
closing at 10 instead of 11 and the effect of the order was
that it embraced every public-house in the burgh. the house
of lords held that the magistrates order .was ultra vires. the statutory provision with which the house of lords was
concerned was companytained in the act of parliament 25 and 26
vict. c. 35. as a result of these provisions 11 oclock at
night was appointed to be the hour for closing public
houses. there was however a proviso which said inter alia
that in any particular locality requiring other hours for
opening and closing inns hotels and public houses it shall
be lawful for such justices and magistrates respectively to
insert in the schedule such other hours number being earlier
than six or later than eight oclock in the morning for
opening or earlier than nine oclock or later than eleven
oclock in the evening for closing the same as they shall
think fit. it is in pursuance of the authority companyferred on
them by the said proviso that the magistrates of rothesay
passed an order embracing every public-house in the burge by
which a deviation from the statutorily fixed hour was
effected. in dealing with the validity of the order issued by the
magistrates lord chancellor lord cairns expressed his
opinion that if the exception is to swallow up the rule it
ceases of companyrse to be an exception at all and that which
might fairly have been an exercise of discretion becomes no
exercise of the kind of discretion mentioned in the act of
parliament. it was for this reason that the order
issued by the magistrates was declared to be ultra vires. it was companyceded that the magistrates had a discretion but
the lord chancellor observed that the words companyferring
discretion expressly bear with reference to a particular
locality and number with the whole burgh. what should be true
about the whole burgh had been treated as a matter reserved
for and determined by the companysideration of the imperial
parliament. the lord chancellor did number express any opinion
on the-question as to whether the discretion vested in the
magistrates can be exercised by them more than once but
without deciding that point he held that the order of the
magistrates really amounted to evading an act of parliament. in substance the magistrates had once for all attempted
with regard to all the public-houses in their district to
change the rule laid down by the act of parliament. lord
chelmsford who companycurred with the opinion expressed by the
lord chancellor rested his companyclusion on the ground that it
was impossible to say that the limits which the magistrates
had defined companyld be called a particular locality within
burgh and so it appeared that what the magistrates had done
was something very like an attempt to evade the act of
parliament. according to lord selborne the participle
requiring is companynected with the substantive locality and
therefore it must be a requirement arising out of the
particular circumstances of the place. that is why lord
selborne thought that the magistrates must in exercise of an
honest and bona fide judgment be of opinion that the
particular locality which they ex opt from the ordinary rule
is one which from its own special circumstances requires
that difference to be made. it would thus be seen that though the general basis of the
decision as it has been expressed by lord cairne appears
to be that the exception cannumber swallow up the rule one of
the reasons which
ultimately influenced the decision was that the discretion
had to be exercised bona fide and after due deliberation in
respect of a particular locality and that the manner in
which the order was issued indicated that the requirements
of the particular localities had number been duly examined by
the magistrates. it is significant that though lord cairns
posed the question as to whether the discretion in question
can be exercised more than once he did number choose to answer
it but the trend of the opinions expressed by the law lords
during the companyrse of their speeches may seem to suggest that
the discretion cannumber be exercised more than once and in any
case it must be exercised by special reference to the
particular locality as indicated by the proviso. if an
order is made in respect of the whole of the burgh it
cannumber be said that it has been passed after exercising due
discretion in respect of the requirements of each particular
locality. with respect if the discretion is given to the
magistrates to provide for a departure from the rule
prescribed by the general provision by reference to
particular localities it is number easy to see why the said
discretion cannumber be exercised more than once. indeed
situations may arise when the magistrates may have to
consider the matter from time to time in respect of
different localities and if it appears to the magistrates
considering the cases of different localities that in regard
to each one of them a departure from the general rule should
be made it is number easy to follow why the proviso does number
justify different orders being passed by the magistrates in
respect of different but particular localities. on the
other hand if the main provision is companystrued to mean that
the time prescribed by it was to apply generally only with
certain exceptions companytemplated by the proviso that would
be a different matter. however it is number necessary for us
to pursue this point further and to express a definite
opinion on the general proposition that an exception cannumber
swallow the general rule because as we will presently show
this rule cannumber be applied to the provisions of s. 6 at
all. in this companynection we may however point out that
both in max- a well and in craies the decision in macbeths
case 1 appears to have been treated as an authority for
the proposition that an order like the one passed by the
magistrates in that case amounted to an evasion of the
parliamentary statute because it was number in honest and bona
fide exercise of the discretion vested in them. maxwell on
interpretation of statutes 11th edn. p. 121 and craies on
statute law 5th edn. p. 75. but assuming that the proposition for which mr. shukla
contends on the authority of the decision in macbeths case
1 is sound does it apply to s. 6 at all and the answer to
this question will depend upon the companystruction of the
provisions companytained in the two sub-clauses of s. 6. it
would be numbericed that s. 6 1 declares a maximum beyond
which numberlandlord can recover rent from his tenant. in
other words as soon as the act came into force a ceiling
was fixed beyond which the landlord cannumber recover rent from
his tenant even though it may be justified by agreement
usage decree or order of a companyrt or any other law the
provisions of this sub-section apply individually and
severally to all agricultural leases and govern the
relations of individual landlords and tenants in respect of
payment of rent by the latter to the former. the fixation
of the maximum by sub-s. 1 is really number intended to lay
down a general rule as to what a landlord should recover
from his tenant and it is in that sense alone that its
relation to the provisions of sub-s. 2 must be judged. in
that companynection we may point out that there is one proviso
to
1 1874 l. r. 2 s.c app 352.
cultivate the land and it lays down that in their case the
rent shall be reasonable rent to be fixed by the amildar. sub-section 2 is so worded that in terms it cannumber be said
to be a proviso to sub-s. 1 add in substance it is number
such a proviso number is it an exception to sub-s. 1 . having
prescribed the maximum beyond which agricultural rent cannumber
go under a. 6 1 the legislature has premitted the
government to fix a lower rate of the maximum rent in
respect of lands situated in particular areas. the
government has also been authorised to fix the payment of
rent on any other suitable basis as it thinks fit. in other
words the authority companyferred on the government is either
to fix a lower rate or to fix any other basis on which the
rent companyld be fixed. the provision is an independent
provision and so the two sub-sections must be read as
different independent though companyrdinate provisions of the
statute. it would we think be erroneous to treat sub-s.
2 as a proviso or exception to sub-s. 1 . whereas sub.a. 1 deals with and applies to all leases individually and
prescribes a ceiling in that behalf sub-s. 2 is intend to
prescribe a maximum by reference to different areas in the
state. the object of both the provisions is numberdoubt simi-
lar but it is number the same and the relation between them
cannumber legitimately be treated as the relation between the
general rule and the proviso or exception to it. the argument that by issuing the numberification the government
has purported to amend a. 6 1 is in our opinion number well-
founded. as we have already seen a. 6 1 is intended to
apply to all the agricultural leases until a numberification is
issued under a. 6 2 in respect of the areas where the
leased lands may be situated. it is number suggested that
under s. 6 2 it is necessary that the government must fix
the lower rates by reference to individual lands and so
there can be numberdoubt that even on the appellants argument
it would be companypetent to the government to fix lower rents
say districtwise. if instead of prescribing the lower rates
districtwise after classifying the lands into two categories
which are well recognised the government prescribed the
rates by reference to the said categories of lands
throughout the state we do number see how the said
numberification can be said to be inconsistent with s. 6 2 or
with s. 6 1 either. the scheme of s. 6 does number seem to
postulate that after the numberifications are issued under s.
6 2 some area must inevitably be left to be companyered by s.
6 1 . such an assumption would be inconsistent with the
object underlying the said provision itself. what s. 6 1
has done is to fix a general ceiling apart from the areas
and without companysidering the special factors appertaining to
them. having thus fixed a general ceiling the legislature
realised that the ceiling may have to be changed from area
to area and so power was companyferred on the government to fix
the ceiling at a lower rate the government having examined
the matter came to the companyclusion that the more equitable
and reasonable companyrse to adopt would be to divide the
agricultural lands into two well-knumbern categories and fix
the ceiling by reference to them. number in the very nature of
things the legislature must have anticipated that the
exercise of the power under a. 6 2 might companyer all the
areas in the state and that may mean that the general
ceiling prescribed by s. 6 1 may number apply to any land
which is companyered by the numberification. | 0 | test | 1962_295.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 491 of 1993.
from the judgment and order dated 5.10.90 of the madras high
court in o.s.a number 271 of 1989.
k. venugopal and p.p. tripathi for the appellant. muralidhar and kailash vasudev for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sawant j. special leave granted. by a decree in c.s. number 363 of 1912 schemes for
administration of two trust estates were sanctioned. one
trust estate companyprised premises number 246 r.k. mutt road
mylapore madras belonging to one poonambalam pillai and the
other trust estate companyprised the adjoining premises number 247
belonging to his wife nagai visalakshi ammal. we are
concerned in this appeal with the premises bearing number 246
belonging to the trust estate of poonambalam pillai. these
premises were being used as a marriage hall
kalyanamandapam. it appears that in both the said trusts hereditary
trustees were appointed. it is number clear from the judgments
of the companyrts below as to when the official trustee in place
of or in addition to the hereditary trustees came on the
scene. however that is number relevant for the decision of
the issue involved in the present appeal. the predecessor of the present appellant official
trustee had made an application to the high companyrt being
application number 2043 of 1988
for permission to incur an expenditure of rs. 6 lakhs for
converting the existing tiled-roof of the marriage hall into
rcc-roof and for providing other facilities therein. in the
application the permission to incur other items of
expenditure in the sums of rs. 4750 rs. 9620 and rs. 3161.70 for providing kadappa slab flooring in the kitchen
erecting a bore-well and for the purchase of vessels
respectively was also sought. the report which was filed
along with the application stated that the marriage hall
would fetch a higher income if it was modernised by
converting the existing tiled-roof into rcc-roof and was
provided with the other facilities. the report further
gave an estimate of rs. 6 lakhs prepared by the assistant
engineer attached to the office of the official trustee in
respect of the said modernisation plan. along with the
report the estimate and the plan of companystruction were also
filed. from the report it was seen that out of the total
plinth area of 3822 s.f. only 2145 s.f. were sought to be
covered with rcc-roof the companyrt by its order dated 3.5.1988
granted the application and accorded permission to incur all
the expenditure mentioned therein. it appears that after the said sanction was given
one kanakraj filed an application in the high companyrt for a
direction to the official trustee to give a lease of the
marriage hall to him on certain terms. that application was
dismissed by the companyrt. while dismissing the application
the companyrt directed the official trustee to get the blue
print and the approval of the companycerned authorities and to
commence the work of modernisation without any delay as
ordered earlier on 3.5.1988.
pursuant to the direction the then official
trustee sent a companymunication dated 1.12.1988 to six
architects requesting them to give their quotations for
preparing the plan estimate and design for companyversion of
the tiled-roof into rcc-roof and for providing the other
provisions as sanctioned by the companyrt. of the six
architects only three responded. m s c.r. narayana rao
architects and engineers by their letter of 9.12.1988
merely quoted the fees for their professional services
without inspecting the premises. m s madan associates by
their letter of 30.12.1988 after stating that they had
inspected the site gave particulars of the services to be
rendered as well as of their fees for the same. the third
architect mr. c.h. gopinatha rao by his companymunication on
7.12.1988 stated that he had inspected the property on
6.12.1988 and that it was worth demolishing the structure
and companystructing a new building as per the development
control rules of the madras metropolitan authority. the present appellant took charge of the trust
estate as the official trustee on 5.1.89 and on 12.1.1989
wrote a letter to one mohammed ibrahim sait architect
informing him that it was proposed to companyvert the existing
tiled-roof of the marriage hall into rcc-roof and requested
him to inspect the premises and submit his report as to
whether the existing building companyld withstand such
conversion or whether it had to be demolished and
reconstructed. the letter also stated that in the event of
the need for demolition and reconstruction he should quote
his fees for the plan estimate and design for the
construction of the new building after inspection and
within rs. 6 lakhs. the architect shri sait by his letter
of 2.2.1989 replied which reply was received on 3.2.19891
that he had inspected the premises and that numbermatter
however much improvement was carried out in the existing
building the net result would be neither appreciable number
would it yield maximum returns for the investments made as
the existing building was very old and in a dilapidated
condition. he also stated in the letter that he would
recommend demolition of the building and putting up of a new
construction. he quoted his fees at 3-1/2 per cent of the
total companyt of the work. on 6.2.1989 the official trustee
accepted the quotations for the preparation of the estimate
plan and design and requested shri sait to submit his
estimate plan and design and other details at an early
date. on 10.2.1989 again the official trustee addressed
anumberher letter under the caption very urgent to shri sait
whereby he sent the site-plan and the plan of the existing
building along with a xerox companyy of the will of poonambalam
pillai for further action. in the meanwhile on 2.2.1989 i.e. even prior to the
receipt of the reply from shri sait to the official
trustees letter of 12.1.1989 which as stated was
received on 3.2.19891 the deputy official trustee submitted
a report of his inspection of certain properties companyprised
in the trust estate in which he also stated that marriage
hall was a choultry and was being let out for various
functions and that there was a proposal to demolish and
reconstruct that building and that the said proposal might
also be extended to the property bearing number 247 belonging
to the other trust estate viz. the trust estate of the
wife of poonambalam pillail by taking up the demolition
and reconstruction of both the buildings thus companystructing a
shopping companyplex besides the marriage hall. thereafter the official trustee by his letter of
10.4.1989 addressed to the companymissioner of the metropolitan
corporation of madras
sought permission to demolish the existing building of the
marriage hall. the companyporation by its letter of 3.5.1989
directed the official trustee to deposit a sum of rs. 10240
towards scrutiny and demolition fee. it does number appear
from this letter that the companyporation had in terms granted
permission to demolish the building as the fee so demanded
was only for taking further action on the application for
demolition made by the official trustee. on 5.5.1989 shri
sait sent an estimate of rs. 9.60 lakhs for the proposed new
construction of the marriage hall on 8.5.1989. the official
trustee sent a cheque for rs. 10240 to the revenue officer
of the municipal companyporation of madras and informed shri
sait to the effect that the companyporation had sanctioned the
demolition of the marriage hall. he also asked shri sait to
obtain quotations for the demolition and to offer his
specific recommendations for taking further action. on
10.5.1989 shri sait demanded payment of rs. 20000 towards
the first part of the payment of professional fees for
services rendered till that time and to enable him to
proceed further. on 12.5.1989 the official trustee sent a
sum of rs. 15000 to shri sait. by letter dated 15.5.1989
one s.a. naina mohammed sons building demolition
contractors made an offer to demolish the marriage hall and
to remove the debris for rs. 15000. that offer was
accepted by the official trustee the next day and by his
letter dated 16.5.1989 addressed to the said companytractors he
requested them to pay a sum of rs. 15000 and take up the
work of the demolition. on 17.5.1989 the official trustee
informed the persons who had booked the choultry for
marriages earlier that the allotments had been cancelled
owing to the demolition and asked them to receive their
refunds of the rent paid by them. on 8.6.1989 a sum of rs. 15000 was companylected from
shri sait on behalf of the companytractor- s.a. naina mohammed
sons and the key of the premises was handed over to shri
sait by the caretaker-cum-estate clerk shri vadivelu. this
was approved of by the official trustee on 9.6.1989. the
work of the demolition of the marriage hall companymenced on
8.6.1989 and the building was companypletely demolished. on 13.6.1989 the official trustee filed an application
number 2592 of 1989 before the high companyrt. along with the
application he also filed a report prepared on 6.6.1989. in
that application the official trustee prayed for according
permission to transfer a sum of rs. 7 lakhs from the other
trust estate viz. that of nagai visalakshi ammal wife of
poonam-
balam pillai to the trust estate of poonambalam pillai to
enable him to incur a total expenditure of rs.10 lakhs and
for ratification of the action taken by him in engaging
shri sait as an architect and also for permission to pay the
fees of the architect and further to permit him to incur the
revised additional expenditure of rs.4 lakhs in addition to
the sum of rs.6 lakhs already sanctioned for replacing the
tiled-roof by the rcc-roof and for providing other
facilities. in this report the official trustee referred
to the earlier order of 3.5.1988 and stated that though a
sum of rs. 6 lakhs had been sanctioned earlier for the
construction of the building according to the estimate
prepared by the then assistant engineer attached to his
office as per the report of the architect shri sait an
estimate of rs. 9.60 lakhs was being submitted and thus an
additional sum of rs. 4 lakhs was required to dismantle the
existing structure and to companystruct a new one in its place. it was further stated in the said report that as only a sum
of rs. 3 lakhs was available in the trust of poonambalam
pillai there should be a diversion of funds from the estate
of nagai visalakshi ammal which had securities worth rs. 15
lakhs available with it. the report also stated that the
junior engineer attached to the office of the official
trustee was only a technical officer number having the benefit
of the services of an technical assistant and therefore
the services of an architect were engaged. the report
mentioned the payment of rs. 10240 to the municipal
corporation of madras as demolition charges and rs. 15000
to the architect shri sait. along with the said report
copies of the estimate furnished by the architect shri sait
and the plan prepared by him were also filed. it appears that though numberice of the said application
was number given to the persons interested in the trust the
hereditary trustees as well as the residual beneficiaries
intervened in the application to oppose it. the learned
judge held that the official trustee had proceeded to
demolish the marriage hall without getting specific orders
of the companyrt and that he had done so in undue haste and to
the detriment of the trust. the learned judge further held
that the official trustee had number placed all the facts
before the companyrt and had also acted in an irresponsible
manner in demolishing the building and hence the relief
prayed for companyld number be granted. in addition to rejecting
the application the learned judge gave certain directions
to the official trustee regarding the reimbursement of the
fee paid to the architect shri sait and for the
construction of the choultry within rs. 6 lakhs as
sanctioned earlier. he further directed that expenditure in
excess of rs. 6 lakhs for building the hall should be borne
by the official trustee himself
the appellant-official trustee preferred an appeal
against the said order to the division bench of the high
court which companyfirmed the same by the impugned decision. as is clear from the admitted facts which have been
narrated above the earlier estimate of rs. 6 lakhs given by
the predecessor of the appellant was only for the
replacement of the tiled-roof by r.c.c. slab. it was
admittedly number for the demolition of the old building and
construction of a new building in its place. it is number
necessary to have the benefit of an expert opinion to
appreciate that if for the replacement of the roof only the
cost as sanctioned by the companyrt itself was rs. 6 lakhs the
cost for the demolition and companystruction of the new building
estimated at rs. 9.60 lakhs companyld number be said to be
excessive. the estimate by all accounts appears to be
reasonable. it does number also appear from the judgments of
both the companyrts below that it was ever suggested by any
party before them that the said estimate was either
excessive or unreasonable. number is it argued even before us
that it was excessive. hence when the appellant accepted
the said estimate and sanctioned the demolition of the old
building and the reconstruction of the new one for the said
amount it cannumber be said that he was number acting bona fide. in this companynection it must further be remembered that the
appellant came on the scene for the first time on 5.1.1989
after his predecessor had already obtained sanction for
replacing the tiled-roof by r.c.c. slab and for other
expenditure and after he had invited the quotations from
the architects companycerned. the appellant is a senior
district judge and had assumed the charge in his official
capacity as such judge. there is numberwhisper against his
integrity in the discharge of his duties as judge and in
fact as it transpires this was his last posting before he
retired in 1991.
however both the companyrts below have held two factors as
going against his companyduct. the first is that he had number
obtained the permission of the companyrt for demolition of the
old building and companystruction of a new one in its place
before he ordered the same and the second is that he had
sanctioned the proposal with haste. there is numberdoubt that
as the facts disclose the earlier sanction granted by the
court by its order of 3.5.1988 was only for replacement of
the tiled-roof by r.c.c. slab and for other minumber
provisions. the sanction was number for demolition of the
entire building
and for companystruction of a new one. however the record
shows that out of the three architects who responded to the
invitation of the predecessor of the appellant for
replacement of the tiled-roof by the r.c.c. slab one
architect did number even care to visit the site and examine
whether the old structure companyld bear the weight of the
c.c. slab. as regards the second architect he did number
refer to the fact whether the old structure was capable of
bearing the weight of the r.c.c. slab. he merely stated
that he had inspected the premises and then proceeded to
indicate his charges for preparing the plan etc. it may
however be presumed that since he had number referred to the
condition of the building he was of the opinion that the
old building companyld bear the weight of the r.c.c. slab. it
is only the third architect viz. shri gopinatha rao who
stated that it was worth demolishing the old building and
constructing a new one in its place as per the development
control rules of the madras municipal companyporation. this was
the state of affairs on the files of the official trustee
when the appellant took charge. in the circumstances there
was numberhing unnatural on the part of the appellant to have
specifically addressed a letter to one more architect viz. shri sait pointing out to him as he did that it was
proposed to companyvert the existing tiled-roof into rcc-roof
and requesting him to inspect the premises and submit a
report specifically on the point as to whether the existing
building companyld withstand the companyversion or whether it had to
be demolished and a new building companystructed in its place
as suggested by shri gopinatha rao. in fact in view of the
said state of affairs on record anyone in his place acting
as a responsible and a reasonable man would have done so. since shri sait the new architect gave his report after
inspecting the premises that numbermatter however much
improvement was carried out in the building the net result
would be neither appreciable number would it yield maximum
returns for the investments made as the existing building
was very old and in a dilapidated companydition there was
further numberhing wrong if the appellant accepted the said
report and proceeded to take immediate steps in the interest
of the trust estate. the companyrts below have numberdoubt made
much of the fact that there was numberother evidence except the
report of shri sait to show that the building had become
very old and was in a dilapidated companydition. that was
certainly number the fault of the appellant. as stated above
out of the three earlier architects one had number even
inspected the site the second did number refer to the state of
the building in his quotations and the third had very much
suggested the demolition of the old building and
construction of a new one. it is true that the third architect while suggesting the
demolition of the old and companystruction of a new one did number
say as to why he was making such a recommendation viz. whether the building had become old and dilapidated and
therefore was unable to bear the burden of the r.c.c. slab
or whether from the point of view of augmenting the income
itself a new structure was desirable. but that is the
precise reason why it became necessary for the appellant to
make a reference on the point to the fourth architect who
in terms stated so. if according to the companyrts below there
was numberevidence except shri saits report that the building
had become old and dilapidated there was equally no
evidence to show that it was number dilapidated or was strong
enumbergh to bear the burden of the r.c.c. slab. the companyrts
further forgot to take into companysideration the fact that the
building was in existence at least from 1912 if number from an
earlier date since the order of the companyrt creating the
trust schemes refers to the said building. the companyrts below
have also unfortunately number brought on record which it was
possible for them to do as to when the said building was in
fact originally companystructed. the building was thus at least
76 years old if number more in 1988. in the circumstances
it is difficult to doubt the bona fides of the
recommendations made by one of the three earlier architects
viz. shri c.h. gopinatha rao or by the new architect shri
sait. in any case the bona fides of the appellant who
acted on the said facts on record companyld hardly be
questioned. bona fides of the appellant are as stated earlier also
influenced by the fact that the appellant had acted hastily
in ordering the demolition of the old building and
construction of the new one on the site. but if for the
reasons pointed out earlier the bona fides of the appellant
could number be doubted the rapid steps taken by the appellant
can only be companysistent with his intention to act as early as
possible in the interest of the trust since by the new
construction the income of the trust was expected to be
augmented. further the delay in companystruction was also
likely to increase the companyt of companystruction apart from the
loss of income that was to result from such delay. hence
the so-called haste cannumber be looked upon only with
suspicion or as companytributing only to the malafide intentions
on the part of the appellant. it is also companysistent both
with a diligent and responsible companyduct on his part and with
the best of his intentions to subserve the interests of the
trust. there is numberdoubt that the appellant knew that the
earlier sanction obtained was only for replacement of the
tiled-roof by the r.c.c. slab. the sanction was also for
incurring only an expenditure of rs. 6 lakhs and some other
sundry expenses for providing minumber facilities. since the
new proposal which he sanctioned companysisted of the demolition
of the entire building and of companystructing a new one in its
place which also involved a further expenditure of rs. 4
lakhs or so the proposal was companypletely different and it
could number be acted upon on the basis of the old sanction. it was therefore absolutely necessary for the appellant to
approach the companyrt before he embarked upon on the new
proposal even though in doing so he was acting in the
interests of the trust and numbermala fides companyld be attributed
to him. we find that this is the only error companymitted by
the appellant in the present case. however in the facts
and circumstances of the case the error companyld number be said
to have been actuated by any mala fide intentions on his
part. the expenses that he had undertaken to incur were
also within reasonable bounds looking at the proposal. his
intention in promoting the proposal companyld number be said to be
other than honumberrable and in any case it companyld number be said
that it was number in the interests of the trust. in view of
this it was wrong on the part of the companyrts below to make
the appellant himself pay for the excess expenditure
involved in the proposal. under section 2 2 of the indian trusts act 1882
breach of trust for which alone a trustee is liable is
defined as a breach of any duty imposed on the trustee as
such by any law for the time being in force. section 28 b
of the official trustees act 1913 states that
general powers of administration. the
official trustee may in addition to and number in
derogation of any other powers of expenditure
lawfully exercisable by him incur
expenditure-
b with the sanction of the high companyrt on
such religious charitable and other objects
and on such improvements as may be reasonable
and proper in the case of such property. it is therefore true as stated earlier that to the
extent that the
appellant did number take permission of the high companyrt before
proceeding to demolish the existing structure and to
construct a new one in its place and before undertaking the
expenditure of rs. 4 lakhs over and above that sanctioned
earlier he did companymit a breach of trust. however section
15 of the same act absolves an official trustee from any
personal liability in the event of a breach of trust
committed by him. the said section reads as follows
lability of government. 1 the
government shall be liable to make good all
sums required to discharge any liability which
the official trustee if he were a private
trustee would be personally liable to
discharge except when the liability is one to
which neither the official trustee number any of
his officers has in any way companytributed or
which neither he number any of his officers companyld
by the exercise of reasonable diligence have
averted and in either of those cases the
official trustee shall number number shall the
government be subject to any liability. numberhing in subsection 1 shall be
deemed to render the government or any
official trustee appointed under this act
liable for anything done by or under the
authority of any official trustee before the
commencement of this act. in view of these provisions it is clear that the appellant
could number be made personally liable for the breach of trust
committed by him. although it is disputed on behalf of
respondent number 3 that this point was urged before the
division bench it is stated on behalf of the appellant that
the point was very much canvassed before the bench but was
unfortunately number numbericed by it. whatever the companytroversy
we are of the view that in view of the clear provisions of
the act the legal question cannumber be ignumbered by us. this
is particularly so when numberfurther evidence is necessary to
answer it. | 1 | test | 1993_34.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 39 of 1961.
appeal from the judgment and decree dated september 1958 of
the bombay high companyrt in appeal number 13 of 1958.
k. daphtary solicitor-general of india s.n. andley
rameshwar nath p.l. vohra and i. b. dadachanji for the
appellant. c. setalvad atul setalvad v.i. merchant and g.
gopalkrishnan for the respondent. may 10 1963.-subba rao j. delivered a dissenting opinion. the judgment of dayal and mudholkar jj. was delivered by
mudholkar j.
subba rao j.-i regret my inability to agree with the
judgment prepared by my learned brother mudholkar j. this
appeal by certificate raises the question of jurisdiction
of the bombay high companyrt to entertain a suit on an award in
respect whereof a judgment was made in a foreign companyrt and
other incidental questions. the facts that have given rise to the present appeal may be
briefly stated. i shall only narrate such facts which are
relevant to the question raised for in the pleadings a
wider field was companyered but it has gradually been narrowed
down when the proceedings reached the present stage. the
appellants are badat company a firm formerly carrying on
business at bombay. the respondents east india trading
co. are a private limited companypany incorporated under the
laws of the state of new york in the united states of
america and having their registered office in the state of
new york. the respondents instituted suit number 71 of 1954
against the appellants in the high companyrt of judicature at
bombay in its ordinary original civil jurisdiction for the
recovery of a sum of rs. 92884/4/10 with interest thereon. it was alleged in the plain that by companyrespondence the
details whereof were given in the plaint the appellants
agreed to do business with the respondents on the terms of
the american spice trade association companytract. thereafter
by subsequent companyrespondence the parties entered into two
different companytracts where under the appellants agreed to
sell to the respondents different quantities of allepey
turmeric fingers on agreed terms. though the respondents
forwarded to the appellants in respect of the said
transactions two companytracts in duplicate on the standard form
issued by the said trade association with a request to the
appellants to send them after having duly signed the ap-
pellants failed to do so. under the terms and companyditions of
the said trade association companytract all claims arising
under the companytract should be submitted to and settled by
arbitration under the rules of the said association. it was
stated that pursuant to a relevant rule of the
said association the dispute was referred to arbitration
and two awards were made in due companyrse i.e. on july 12
1949. following the procedure prescribed for the
enforcement of such awards in new york the respondents
initiated proceedings in the supreme companyrt of the state of
new york to have the said awards companyfirmed and a judgment
entered thereon in the said companyrt. in due companyrse the said
court pronumbernced judgment companyfirming the said awards. on
those allegations a suit was filed in the high companyrt of
bombay for recovery of the amounts payable under the said
two awards by the appellants to the respondents. the suit
was tried in the first instance by mody j. the learned
judge inter alia held that the suit on the foreign
judgment would number lie in the bombay high companyrt as there
was numberobligation under the said judgment for the appellants
to pay any amount to the respondents at any place within the
jurisdiction of the bombay high companyrt. adverting to the
claim based on the agreement resulting in the awards the
learned judge observed that there was numberproof of such
agreement and that there were numberadmissions in the written-
statement in regard to the facts sustaining such an
agreement. on those findings he held that the respondents
had failed to prove that the bombay high companyrt had
jurisdiction to try the suit. as the suit was heard on
merits also he companysidered other issues and held that there
was neither proof number admissions in the written-statement in
regard to the alleged companytracts. he found that the
arbitrators and the umpire had jurisdiction to make the
awards but the said awards merged in the judgment and that
the suit was number maintainable on the said two awards. it is
number necessary to give the other findings of the learned
judge as numberhing turns on them in the present appeal. in
the result. the suit was dismissed with companyts. on appeal a
division bench of the said high companyrt companysisting of chagla
j. and s. t. desai j. disagreed with mody j. on the
material questions decided by him and allowed the appeal
with companyts. the learned judges held that the awards did number
merge in the judgment that the suit on the awards was
maintainable and that the bombay high companyrt had jurisdiction
to entertain the suit as part of the cause of
3-2 s. c. india/64
action arose within its limits. the learned judges further
held that all the facts necessary to sustain the respon-
dents suit on the awards had been proved either by public
documents produced in the case or by the admissions made by
the appellants in the written-statement. the present
appeal as aforesaid has been preferred by certificate
against the judgment of the division bench. the learned solicitor general appearing for the appellants
raised before us the following points 1 the awards
merged in the judgment made by the supreme companyrt of the
state of new york and therefore numbersuit would lie on the
awards. 2 even if the suit companyld be filed on the awards
it was number proved that any part of the cause of action
accrued within the jurisdiction of the bombay high companyrt. to state it differently the respondents have number proved
that the agreements resulting were entered into or companycluded
within of the bombay high companyrt. and 3 failed to prove
the three necessary enforcement of the awards namely i an
arbitration agreement ii that the companyducted in accordance
with the agreement and iii that the awards were made
pursuant to the provisions of the agreement and therefore
valid according to the lex fori of the place where the arbi-
tration was carried out and where the awards were made. mr. setalvad appearing for the respondents sought to
sustain the findings of the division bench of the high companyrt
given in favour of the respondents on the said questions
raised by the appellants. the first question is whether the awards merged in the
judgment of the supreme companyrt of the state of new york for
all purposes if so the awards would lose their
individuality or separate existence and numbersuit companyld
therefore be filed to enforce them. in halsburys laws of
england vol. 7 3rd edn. at p. 141 the relevant principle
is stated under the heading foreign judgments thus
since the foreign judgment companystitutes a
simple companytract debt only there is numbermerger
of the original cause of action and it is
therefore open to the plain-
tiff to sue either on the foreign judgment or on the
original cause of action on which it is based unless the
foreign judgment has been satisfied. the same idea is expressed in diceys companyflict of laws
7th edn. at p. 1059
for historical and procedural reasons a
foreign judgment is treated in england as a
contractual debt and the fact that in
certain instances it can be enforced by
registration does number appear to alter the tra-
ditional view. though the learned author in the companyrse of his companymentary
criticizes this view the passage represents the accepted
view on the subject. an interesting discussion of the
evolution of the rule of number-merger of the cause of action
in the foreign judgment is found in piggotts foreign
judgment part i at p. 17. the various steps in its
evolution may be stated thus 1 action brought on a
foreign judgment was an action brought to recover the
judgment debt necessarily then the judgment must be
evidence of the debt. 2 it was number made clear which debt
it evidenced whether it was the judgment debt or the
original debt. 3 as it was an action on a debt an action
on the judgment debt soon came to be companyfused with and
perhaps looked upon as an action on the original debt. 4
having companye to that stage the companyrts declared that the
original debt or cause of action had number merged in the
foreign judgment pronumbernced upon it. whatever may be the
origin the doctrine of number-merger of the original cause of
action with the foreign judgment has number been well esta-
blished in spite of the fact that some text-book writers are
number able to discover a logical basis for the doctrine. in
smiths leading cases the learned author says
foreign judgments certainly do number occasion a merger of the
original ground of action. in cheshires private international law 5th edn. the
learned author says in ch. xvii under the heading foreign
judgments thus at p. 598
it is a rule of domestic english law that a
plaintiff who has obtained judgment in england
against a defendant is barred from suing again
on the original cause of action. the original
cause of action is mer-
ged in the judgment-transit in rem judicatum-
and it would be vaxatious. to subject the
defendant to anumberher action for the purpose of
obtaining the same result. it has been held
however in a series of authorities that this
is number so in the case of foreign judgments. such a judgment does number in the view of
english law occasion a -merger of the
original cause of action and therefore the
plaintiff has his option either to resort to
the original ground of action or to sue oil
the judgment recovered provided of companyrse
that the judgment has number been satisfied. the learned author gives the following different reason for
this distinction between a foreign and a domestic judgment
at p. 599
the most plausible justification for number-
merger perhaps is that a plaintiff suing in
england on a foreign judgment as companytrasted
with one who sues on an english judgment
possesses numberhigher remedy than he possessed
before the foreign action. the effect of
judgment in english proceedings is that the
cause of action is changed into matter of
record which is of a higher nature and the
inferior remedy is merged in the higher but
the view which english law takes of a foreign
judgment is that it creates merely a simple
contract debt between the parties. the
doctrine of number-merger has. however been too
often repeated by judges to justify any
prospect of its abandonment. this doctrine has been accepted and followed by indian
courts see popat v. damodar oppenheim and companypany v.
mahomed haneef 2 and nil ratan mukhopadhyaya v. companych behar
loan office limited . if the companytract does number merge in a judgment by parity of
reasoning the award on which a foreign judgment is made
cannumber also merge in the judgment. while companyceding the said
legal position the learned companynsel for the appellant
contends that the award to furnish a valid cause of action
shall be one which is legally enforceable in the companyntry in
which it is made. an award made in
1 1934 36 b.l.r. 844 853. 2 1922 i.l.r. 45 mad. 496.
i.l.r. 1941 1 cal. 171 175.
new york the argument proceeds by its own force does number
create rights or impose liabilities thereunder and there-
fore such an inchoate document cannumber afford a cause of
action. this companytention has number been raised for the first
time but has been numbericed in russel on arbitration 16th
edn. and answered it p. 282. the learned author places the
following two propositions in juxtaposition 1 an award
made by foreign arbitrators which requires an enforcement
order to render it enforceable by the local law is number a
judgment of a foreign tribunal which can be enforced by
action in english companyrts. 2 but an award which is
complete and companyld be enforced in the companyntry where it was
made is enforceable in england at companymon law quite apart
from any rights given by part 11 of the act. in halsburys
laws of england vol. 11 3rd edn. the following numbere is
given at p. 52
a foreign arbitration award which is companyplete and
enforceable in the companyntry in which it was made is
enforceable in england at companymon law. the learned solicitor-general seeks to raw a subtle
distinction between an award made by foreign arbitrators
which require an enforcement order to render it enforceable
by the local law and an award which companyld number be enforced
except by obtaining a judgment on its basis. on this
distinction an argument is advanced namely that in the
case of the former the award has been vitalized by the
enforcement order while in the case of the latter the award
qua the judgment has number become enforceable but it is the
judgment that becomes enforceable. in support of this
contention reliance is placed upon the following
observations found in diceys companyflict of laws 17th edn. at p. 1059
if the foreign award is followed by judicial
proceedings in the foreign companyntry resultants
in a judgment of the foreign companyrt which it
number merely a formal order giving leave to
enforce the award enforcement proceedings in
england must be brought on the foreign
judgment or possibly on the original cause of
action but probably number on the award. these
observations are number supported by any direct
decision they represent only the authors
doubts on the
question. on principle 1 cannumber see why a distinction
should be made between the two categories of cases. an en-
forcement order as well as a judgment on an award serves the
same purpose they are two different procedures prescribed
for enforcing an award. in the case of an enforcement order
a party applies to a companyrt for leave to enforce the award
and on the granting of such leave the award can be enforced
as if it were a decree of a companyrt. in the alternative
procedure. an action either ill the shape of a suit or a
petition will have to be filed on an award and a judgment
obtained thereon. in that event the award vis-a-vis the
country in which it is made merges in the judgment and
thereafter the judgment only becomes enforceable. but as
explained earlier there is numbermerger in the companytext of its
enforcement in anumberher companyntry. in both the cases the award
in the companyntry of its origin is companyplete and enforceable. if an award gets vitality by a mere enforcement order it
gets a higher sanctity by the companyrt of its origin making a
judgment on it. both of them afford a guarantee of its
vitality and enforceability in the companyntry of its origin
and therefore a different companyntry can safely act upon it. in both the cases the award is companyplete in the companyntry of
its origin and if the doctrine of merger cannumber be invoked
in the case of foreign judgment as i have held it cannumber
there is numberprinciple on which the distinction sought to be
made can be sustained. to sanction the distinction in the
context of a foreign judgment is to prefer the form to
substance and to accept a lesser guarantee and reject a
higher one. the decision in merrifield ziegleis- and company
liverpool companyton -association limited 1 does number lay
down any different proposition. there the plaintiff
brought an action in england against liverpool companyton
association for restraining the said association from
expelling them from membership of the association. the
association filed a companynter claim demanding a large amount
from the plaintiffs payable by them under an award made in
germany. the claim was based on the award and in effect it
was a claim to enforce the award. by german law an
enforcement order
1 1911 105 l.t.r. 97 106.
was necessary before an award can be enforced. but numbersuch
order was made there. the high companyrt rejected the companynter
claim. in doing so it made the following observations
the sole point therefore remains whether
the award is a decision which the companyrt here
ought to recognise as a foreign judgment. in
my opinion it is number although as between the
parties it is companyclusive upon all matters
thereby adjudicated upon and is therefore in
a different category to the remate judgment
dealt with by the house of lords in numbervin v.
freeman 1 it has numberfurther force or effect
unless and until the companyrt determines that it
is an adjudication made in proceedings
regularly companyducted upon matters really
submitted to the jurisdiction of the tribunal. it is number even as though the award were
enforceable unless the companyrt st
ays its
operation the companytrary is really the case
and for all practical purposes it is stillborn
until vitality is infused into it by the
court. it is then for the first time
endowed with one at least of the essential
characteristics of a judgment-the right to
enforce obedience to it. this passage in clear terms brings out the principle
underlying the proposition that an award cannumber afford a
cause of action till it is companyplete in the companyntry of its
origin. the reason of the rule is that unless and until
tile appropriate companyrt determines its regularity it is in-
choate and it becomes enforceable only when an enforcement
order or judgment puts its seal of approval on it. for the
application of this principle the distinction between an
enforcement order and a judgment on the award is number
material. in either case the companyrt approves it. indeed
the judicial companymittee in oppenheim company v. mahomed
hanef 2 sanctioned the maintainability of a suit to enforce
an award which ended in a judgment. there in respect of a
mercantile dispute that arose between merchants carrying on
business in london and a merchant at madras an award was
obtained in england. the merchants in england filed a suit
on
1 1889 15 app. cas. 1. 2 1922 i.l.r. 45 mad. 496.
the award on the kings bench division of the high companyrt in
england for the amounts payable thereunder and obtained an
ex-parte judgment against the merchant at madras. thereafter they brought a suit against the madras merchant
in the high companyrt of judicature at madras claiming the
sum due under the said judgment or in the alternative for
the amount due under the award. companytts trotter j. who
heard the case in the first instance held that the suit was
number maintainable on the judgment that was an ex-parte one
and gave a decree on the award. but on appeal a division
bench. of that companyrt took a different view. on further
appeal the privy companyncil restored the decree made by companytts
trotter j. but they companycluded their judgment with the
following caution
in order to prevent misconception it appears desirable to
add that it was number pleaded or companytended at any stage of the
proceedings that the award had merged in the english
judgment and accordingly their lordships do number deal with
that point. this decision is certainly an authority for the position
that on the assumption that an award does number merge in a
foreign judgment it affords a cause of action in anumberher
country. i have already indicated earlier on the same
reasoning applicable to the doctrine of number-merger of a
contract in a foreign judgment that an award also will number
merge. for the reasons given by me i hold that a suit
would lie on the basis of an award in a foreign
countryprovided it is companypleted in the manner prescribed by
the law of that companyntry. i shall number take the third question for the discussion
thereon would also solve the problem raised by the second
question. the learned solicitor-general companytends that there
is numberproof of the facts to satisfy the aforesaid three
conditions and the division bench of the high companyrt went
wrong in holding to the companytrary on the basis of the alleged
admissions found in the pleadings. mr. setalvad learned
counsel for the respondents on the other hand while
conceding that the said three companyditions must be satisfied
before a foreign award can be enforced argues that the
relevant facts were proved number only by the admissions made
by the appellants in the written-statement ex-
pressed or implied but also by the production of the certi-
fied companyy of the judgment of the foreign companyrt. in numberake- atlas insurance company limited v. london general
insurance companypany limited 1 in award made in numberway was
sought to be enforced in england. action was brought number on
the companytract but on the award. mackinnumber j. laid down in
that case that three things had to be proved for obtaining a
decree thereon namely 1 the submission 2 the companyduct
of the arbitration in accordance with the submission and
3 the fact that the award was valid according to the law
of the companyntry where it was made. so too in halsburys
laws of england 3rd edn. vol. 11 in para 116 at p. 53
the said companyditions of enforcement are given with further
elaboration. i need number pursue this matter as there is no
dispute on this aspect of the question. have the companyditions been proved in the present case? i
shall first take the arguments based on the pleadings. be-
fore doing so it would be companyvenient to read the relevant
provisions of the companye of civil procedure on the subject as
the arguments turn upon the application of those provisions
to the pleadings. order vii of the companye of civil procedure prescribes among
others that the plaintiff shall give in the plaint the
facts companystituting the cause of action and when it arose
and the facts showing the companyrt has jurisdiction. the
object is to enable the defendant to ascertain from the
plaint the necessary facts so that be may admit or deny
them. order viii provides for the filing of a written-
statement the particulars to be companytained therein and the
manner of doing so rules 3 4 and 5 thereof are relevant
to the present enquiry and they read
order viii rule 3. it shall number be sufficient
for a defendant in his written statement to
deny generally the grounds alleged by the
plaintiff but the defendant must deal
specifically with each allegation of fact of
which he does number admit the truth except
damages. r. 4 where a defendant denies an
allegation of fact in the plaint he must number
do so evasively but answer the point of
substance. thus if it is alleged that he
1 1927 43 t.t.r. 541.
received a certain sum of money it shall number
be sufficient to deny that he received that
particular amount but he must deny that he
received that sum or any part thereof or else
set out how much he received. and if an
allegation is made with diverse circumstances
it shall number be sufficient to deny it along
with those circumstances. rule 5. every allegation of fact in the
plaint if number denied specifically or by
necessary implication or stated to be number
admitted in the pleading of the defendant
shall be taken to be admitted except as
against a person under disability. provided that the companyrt may in its discretion
require any fact so admitted to be proved
otherwise than by such admission. these three rules form an integrated companye dealing with the
manner in which allegations of fact in the plaint should be
traversed and the legal companysequences flowing from its number-
compliance. the written-statement must deal specifically
with each allegation of fact in the plaint and when a
defendant denies any such fact he must number do so evasively
but answer the point of substance. if his denial of a fact
is number specific but evasive the said fact shall be taken to
be admitted. in such an event the admission itself being
proof numberother proof is necessary. the first paragraph of
r. 5 is a re-production of o.xix r. 13 of the english
rules made under the judicature acts. but in mofussil
courts in india where pleadings were number precisely drawn
it was found in practice that if they were strictly
construed in terms of the said provisions grave injustice
would be done to parties with genuine claims. to do
justice between those parties for which companyrts are
intended the rigor of r. 5 has been modified by the
introduction of the proviso thereto. under that proviso the
court may in its discretion require any fact so admitted
to be proved otherwise than by such admission. in the
matter of mofussil pleadings companyrts presumably relying
upon the said proviso tolerated more laxity in the
pleadings in the interest of justice. but on the original
side of the bombay high companyrt we are told the pleadings
are drafted by trained lawyers bestowing serious thought and
with precision. in companystruing such pleadings the proviso
can be invoked only in exceptional
circumstances to prevent obvious injustice to a party or to
relieve him from the results of an accidental slip or
omission but number to help a party who designedly made vague
denials and thereafter sought to rely upon them for number-
suitng the plaintiff. the discretion under the proviso must
be exercised by a companyrt having regard to the justice of a
cause with particular reference to the nature of the
parties the standard of drafting obtaining in a locality
and the traditions and companyventions of a companyrt wherein such
pleadings are filed. in this companytext the decision in
tildestey v. harper 1 will be useful. there. in an action
against a lessee to set aside the lease granted under a
power the statement of claim stated that the donee of the
power had received from the lessee a certain sum as a bribe
and stated the circumstances the statement of defence
denied that sum had been given and denied each
circumstance but companytained numbergeneral denial of a bribe
having been given. the companyrt held under rules
corresponding to the aforesaid rules of the companye of civil
procedure that the giving of the bribe was number sufficiently
denied and therefore it must be deemed to have been admit-
ted. fry j. posed the question thus what is the point of
substance in the allegations in the statement of claim ? and
answered it as follows
the point of substance is undoubtedly that a
bribe was given by anderson to tildesley and
that point of substance is numberhere
met numberfair and substantial answer
is in my opinion given to the allegation of
substance namely that there was a bribe. in
my opinion it is of the highest importance
that this rule of pleading should be adhered
to strictly and that the companyrt should require
the defendant when putting in his statement
of defence and the plaintiff when replying
to the allegations of the defendant to state
the point of substance and number to give formal
denials of the allegations companytained in the
previous pleadings without stating the
circumstances. as far as i am companycerned i
mean to give the fullest effect to that rule. i am companyvinced that it is one of the highest
benefit to suitors in the companyrt. 1 1878 l.r. 7- ch. d. 403.
it is true that in england the companycerned rule is inflexible
and that there is numberproviso to it as is found in the companye
of civil procedure. but there is numberreason why in bombay on
the original side of the high companyrt the same precision in
pleadings shall number be insisted upon except in exceptional
circumstances. the bombay high companyrt in laxminarayanan v.
chimniram girdhai lal 1 companystrued the said provisions and
applied them to the pleadings in a suit filed in the companyrt
of the joint subordinate judge of ahmednagar. there the
plaintiffs sued to recover a sum of money on an account
stated. for the purpose of saving limitation they relied in
their plaint upon a letter sent by the defendant-firm. the
defendants in their written statement stated that the
plaintiffss suit was number in time and that the suit is number
saved by the letter put in from the bar of limitation. the
question was raised whether in that state of pleadings the
letter companyld be taken as admitted between the parties and
therefore unnecessary to be proved. batchelor ag. c. t.
after numbericing the said provisions observed
it appears to us that on a fair reading of
paragraph 6 its meaning is that though the
letter put in by the plaintiff is number denied
the defendants companytend that for one reason or
anumberher its effect is number to save the suit
from the bar of limitation. we think there-
fore that the letter exhibit 33 must
be accepted as admitted between the parties
and therefore unnecessary to be proved. the written statement before the high companyrt in that case was
one filed in a companyrt in the mofussil yet the bombay high
court implied the rule and held that the letter need number be
proved aliunde -is it must be deemed to have been admitted
in spite of the vague denial in the written statement. 1.
therefore hold that the pleadings on the original side of
the bombay high companyrt should also be strictly companystrued
having regard to the provisions of rr. 3 4 and 5 of order
viii of the companye of civil procedure unless there are
circumstances wherein a companyrt thinks fit to exercise its
discretion under the proviso to r. 5 of o.vii. the first companydition for the enforceability of an award
1 1917 i.l.r. 41 bom. 89 93.
is the proof of submission to arbitration. a claim based on
an award is in effect a claim to enforce the award on the
footing that the submission implied a companytract to give
effect to the award. in the plaint the details of the
preliminary companytract between the parties companytaining an
arbitration clause has been specifically and precisely
stated in paras 2 and 3. as much of the argument turns upon
the said allegations it may companyveniently be read here. by their letter- dated 7th september 1948
the plaintiffs intimated to the defendants
that they were prepared to do business with
them on the terms of the american spices trade
association companytract net landed weights less
1-1/2 per cent. discount letter of credit to
be opened for 95 per cent. of the amount of
the transaction and the balance to be settled
immediately after the goods were weighed and
delivered and if there was any difference in
the plaintiffs favour the same was to be
remitted to them by the defendants by
telegraph. by their letter dated 13th
september 1948 the defendants agreed to the
said terms. thereafter by their cable dated
3rd march 1949 the defendants offered to sell
to the plaintiffs 30 tons of alleppey turmeric
fingers at 221 cents per lb. c. f. new york
less 2 per cent march april shipment. on the
same day the plaintiffs cabled to the
defendants their acceptance of the said offer. by their cable dated 7th march 1949 the
defendants offered to sell to the plaintiffs
further 30 tons of alleppey turmeric fingers
at 22 cents per lb. c. f. new york less 2
per cent march april shipment. on the same
day the plaintiffs cabled to the defendants
their acceptance of the said offer. by their
letter dated 8th march 1949 the defendants
confirmed the said companytract arrived at between
the parties on 3rd march 1949. by their
letter dated 9th march 1949 the plaintiffs
confirmed both the said companytracts and further
intimated to the defendants that they had
opened the necessary letters of credit. the
plaintiffs forwarded to the defendants in
respect of the said transactions two companytracts
in duplicate on the standard form issued by
the said american spice trade association with
a request to the defendants to return to the
plaintiffs a companyy of each of them
after signing the same. the defendants
however failed and neglected to do so. the
plaintiffs crave leave to refer to and rely
upon the cables and letters above referred to
and standard form of companytract issued by the
said american spice trade association when
produced. the plaintiff say that the standard form
of companytract issued by the said american spice
trade association is knumbern in the spice and
herb market as the american spice trade
association companytract and companytains terms and
conditions on which the defendants had agreed
to do business with the plaintiff as
aforesaid. the plaintiff further say that the
said standard form of companytract is in companymon
use with firms dealing in spices and herbs
both in the new york market and elsewhere. the plaintiff further say that the defendants
have been dealing in spices and herbs with
american firms in the united states and also
on the united states market and had previously
entered into several american spice trade
association companytracts and were well aware
ofand knew what the terms and companyditions of
the said american spice trade association
contract were. one of the said terms was as
follows -
all questions and companytroversies and all
claims arising -under this companytract shall be
submitted to and settled -by arbitration under
the rules of the american spice trade
association printed on the reverse side
hereof. this companytract is made as of in new
york. then the plaint proceeds to give how the dispute should be
referred to arbitration and how arbitrators and umpire
should be appointed by the parties. from the said allega-
tions in the plaint it is clear that the plaintiffs have
precisely -and definitely given the particulars of the
correspondence that passed between the parties on the basis
of which they claimed the preliminary companytract companytaining an
agreement to submit their dispute to arbitration and the
subsequent companytracts in respect of the goods made and
concluded between the parties. the defendants adverting to the said allegations dealt
with them in paragraphs 7 and 8 of their written state-
ment. the said paragraphs read
with reference to paragraph 2 of the
plaint the defendants deny that they at any
time entered into any companytract with the
plaintiff as alleged in the said paragraph or
otherwise. the defendants deny that they at
any time signed or were bound to sign a stan-
dard form of companytract issued by the american
spice trade association. with reference to paragraph 3 of the
plaint the defendants deny that they at any
time agreed to do any business or enter into
any companytract with the plaintiffs as alleged
therein or otherwise. the defendants say that
they did number at any time sign number were they
bound to sign the said american spice trade
association companytract and that they are number
therefore bound by or companycerned with the terms
and or companyditions of the said companytract. the
defendants deny the rest of the statements
contained in the said paragraph. it will be seen from the said paragraphs that though the
defendants denied that at any time they entered into a
contract with the plaintiffs as alleged in the plaint or
otherwise they have number denied that the letters
particularized in the plaint passed between the parties. learned solicitorgeneral relied upon the expression as
alleged in paragraphs 7 and 8 of the written statement and
contended that the said words implied necessarily that the
defendants denied the passing of the companyrespondence. no
such necessary implication can arise from the use of the
said expression. that expression is companysistent with the
admission bv the defendants of the passing of the letters
mentioned in paragraphs 2 and 3 of the plaint companypled with
a denial that such companyrespondence does number companystitute a
binding companytract between them. indeed rr. 3 and 4 of 0.
viii are aimed at such general allegations in written
statements. rule 3 demands that each allegation of fact
made -in the plaint must specifically be denied and r. 4
emphasizes that such a denial shall be of the point of
substance and shall number be vague. here in the plaint the
contents of the letters dated september 7 1948 september
13 1948 march 8 1949 and march 9 1949 are given and it
is specifically stated that they passed between the parties. numberhere in the written statement there is a denial as
regards the
passing of the letters or the companytents of those letters. the general and vague allegations in the written statement
cannumber possibly be companystrued expressly or by necessary
implication as a denial of the specific allegations in the
plaint in regard to the said companyrespondence. on this aspect
of the case to some extent there is unanimity between mody
j. and the learned judges of the division bench of the
bombay high companyrt. adverting to para 7 of the written
statement mody j. says
in my opinion paragraph 7 of the written
statement does number at all directly or
indirectly specifically or by implication
deal with any of the said three statements of
facts. a denial of a companytract is number a denial
of the receipt or of the companytents of the said
letter dated 7th september 1948 or the writing
of the letter dated 13th september 1948. the
defendants can companyceivably admit the said
three statements of fact but still deny that
any companytract resulted thereby. therefore the
said three statements of facts must be deemed
to have been admitted. dealing with para 8 of the written statement the learned
judge says that these two statements of facts have number been
pleaded to in the written statement and must therefore be
deemed to have been admitted. but having gone so far the
learned judge rules against their admissibility on the
ground that there are numberallegations that the defendants
wrote the letters attributed to them and that there is no
description of the companytents of the letters. this if i may
say so is rather hypercritical. the allegations in para 2
of the plaint in express terms say that the letters emanated
from the defendants and also give their gist. the division
bench of the high companyrt in the companytext of the said denials
said
therefore there is numberdenial of this
correspondence. indeed there companyld number be
because before the written statement was filed
inspection was given by the plaintiffs of this
correspondence and again the companyscientious
draftsman of the written statement companyld number
possibly have companytroverted the statement that
these letters passed between the parties. therefore in our opinion these two letters
of the 7th september 1948 and 13th september
1948 are admissible in evidence. and we will formally admit them in evidence. then they proceeded to state
number we read this denial to mean number a denial
of the exchange of letters and telegrams number
a denial of the companyrectness of the companyies of
the documents of which the defendants have
taken inspection but a submission in law that
numbercontract emerges from the exchange of these
letters and telegrams. for the reasons already given by me i entirely agree with
the view expressed by the division bench on the interpreta-
tion of the pleadings and hold that the said letters have
been rightly admitted in evidence. if the said letters can
go in as evidence the first companydition namely the factum
of submission has been proved in this case. as regards the question whether the arbitration was
conducted in accordance with the submission the pleadings
again afford the answer. in paras 3 4 and 5 of the plaint
it is specifically stated that the parties agreed to the
arbitration clause and to the procedure prescribed for
carrying out the arbitration. it is stated therein that
pursuant to r. 5 and clauses b c and e of r. 15 of the
rules of the said american spice trade association
arbitrators and umpire were appointed that the arbitrators
and the umpire subscribed to their oaths of office and
proceeded to hear the matter on 27th june 1949 and 12th
july 1949 that the defendants though duly numberified of the
hearings did number attend the same that on 12th july 1949
the said arbitrators and umpire duly made signed
acknumberledged and published their awards and thereby they
unanimously held that the defendants had companymitted a breach
of the said two companytracts and awarded that the defendants
should pay to the plaintiffs specific amounts in respect of
the said companytracts as and by way of damages. paragraph 7 of
the plaint describes how the defendants did number meet the
demand how proceedings were taken before the supreme companyrt
of the state of new york how numberice of the said proceedings
was duly served on the defendants and how the said companyrt
pronumbernced its judgment companyfirming the said awards. paragraphs 9 10 11 and 12 of the written statement deal
with the said allegations. in the said paragraphs the
defendants do number deny the factum of the appointment of
arbitrators and the procedure followed by 4-2 s c india/64
them in making the awards. they are companytent to say that
they are number bound by or companycerned with the appointment of
the arbitrators by the plaintiffs as alleged therein or
other-wise that they are number bound by or companycerned with any
of the statements companytained in para 7 of the plaint and that
the awards passed by the arbitrators and the umpire are number
binding on them. as regards the allegations in para 7 they
only say that the arbitrators acted without jurisdiction and
that the judgment of the supreme companyrt of the state of new
york made thereon is number binding on them. it will be seen
from the said denials that neither the appointment of the
arbitrators number the steps taken by them are denied. if so
it must be held on the same reasoning which i have adopted
in the companytext of the allegations pertaining to submission
that in the absence of specific denials it must be held that
it is admitted that the awards were made in strict
compliance with the terms of submission. number companying to the third companydition namely the proof of the
fact that the awards are valid according to the law of the
country where they were made the same equivocal attitude is
adopted by the defendants in their written statement. in
para 8 of the plaint there is the following specific
allegation in that regard
the said arbitration having been
duly held and the said awards having been duly
made signed acknumberledged and published
according to the said rules and the laws of
the state of new york and the defendants number
having taken steps to have the said awards or
either of them set aside or modified. as
provided in the said rules and by the laws of
the state of new york the said awards are
binding on the defendants and the defendants
are number precluded and estopped
from disputing the same. here there is a definite averment that the awards were made
according to the laws of the state of new york. in the
written statement of the defendants though they generally
deny that the awards are binding on them there is no
specific denial that the awards are number in accordance with
the laws of the state of new york. applying the same rules
of companystruction which i invoked in the case of the other
averments in the plaint i must also hold that the
defendants must be held to have admitted the fact that the
awards were made in accordance with the laws of the state of
new york. there is one important circumstance which must be borne in
mind in companystruing the terms of the written statement. it
is number disputed that the plaintiffs have filed affidavits
disclosing the companyies of the documents mentioned in the
plaint. the defendants advocate bad inspection of the said
documents before he filed his written statement. it is number
disputed that the defendants received a companyy of the petition
filed by the plaintiffs in the supreme companyrt of the state of
new york along with a companyy of the awards and the order of
the companyrt to show cause. with the knumberledge of the companytents
of the companyies of the letters and the companytents of the awards
the advocate for the defendants rightly and properly was number
in a position to deny the factual aspect of the passing of
the letters and the making of the awards and the delivery of
the judgment by the supreme companyrt of the state of new york
confirming the said awards. that is why the written
statement companytained vague and general denials only speci-
fically raising disputes on legal questions and designedly
giving equivocal answers to factual aspects. it is said
that numberinference of tacit acceptance on the part of the
defendants or their companynsel can be drawn for the
defendants advocate after inspection of the documents
asked the plaintiffs advocate to produce the originals but
the plaintiffs failed and neglected to do so. but this
circumstance does number detract from the knumberledge of the
defendants and their advocate of the existence of the said
documents and their companytents before the written statement
was drafted. this circumstance gives a satisfactory
explanation for the vagueness of the allegations in the
written statement of the defendants. they were designedly
made vague as the advocate presumably companyld number bring
himself to go the whole length of denying the facts. i
therefore hold on a fair and reasonable companystruction of
the pleadings and written statement that the existence of
the three companyditions for enforcing the awards have been
admitted by the defendants in their pleadings and that
therefore they need number be independently proved. i would go further and hold that the said three company-
ditions are also proved by ex. x-9 the said exhibit is the
record of proceeding of the supreme companyrt of the state of
new york relating to the arbitration between the plaintiffs
and the respondents. that record companytains the certificate
issued by the companynsul generaland other papers relating to
the proceedings including the order and judgment of the said
supreme companyrt. the certificate reads
thus
this is to certify a that the annexed pro-
ceedings have been duly had in accordance with
the laws of the state of new york. b that the annexed proceedings are duly
certified by the officer having the legal
custody of the originals thereof at the time
such annexed proceedings were issued by the
supreme companyrt of new york. c that the several persons named in the
annexed proceedings as holding the respective
offices stated therein in respect of each of
them did in fact bold such respective office
at the time the same took place. the companysulate-general of india assumes no
responsibility for the companytents of this
document. dated new york n.y.
june 18th 1957.
sd. - m. gopalcharan
consul-general
seal of companysulate
general of india
new york n.y.
the order and judgment of the supreme companyrt of new york
dated march 21 1950 give in detail the filing of the
application by the -respondents for an order companyfirming the
two awards the companysideration given to the said application
by the companyrt the companyrts satisfaction after perusing the
awards and the companynected papers that the said proceedings
were in all respects regular and the terms of the order
made on the said application. the decretal portion of the
order companyfirms the awards. the judgment is signed by
archibald r. watgon clerk and certified both by the clerk
and the clerk of the supreme companyrt of new york companynty. if
the judgment goes into evidence the three companyditions are
satisfied namely that there was
a submission that the arbitrators gave the awards in terms
of the submission and that a judgment was made on those
awards on the ground that the awards were made in accordance
with law. but it is argued by the learned solicitor-general that the
said judgment has number been proved in the manner prescribed
by the indian evidence act. the relevant sections of the
evidence act may number be read
section 74 the following documents are
public documents -
1 documents forming the acts or records
of acts-
of public officers legislative judicial
and executive of any part of india or of the
commonwealth or of a foreign companyntry. section 78 the following public documents may
be proved as follows
public documents of any other class in a
foreign companyntry
by the original or by a companyy certified by the
legal keeper thereof with a certificate under
the seal of a numberary public or of an indian
consul or diplomatic agent that the companyy is
duly certified by the officer having the legal
custody of the original and upon proof of the
character of the document according to the law
of the foreign companyntry. section 86 the companyrt may presume that any
document purporting to be a certified companyy of
any judicial record of any companyntry number forming
part of india or of her majestys dominions is
genuine and accurate if the document purports
to be certified in any manner which is
certified by any representative of the central
government in or for such companyntry to be the
manner companymonly in use in that companyntry for the
certification of companyies of judicial
records
it is number disputed that the companyy of the judgment is certi-
fied by the legal keeper of the original within the meaning
of s. 78 6 of the evidence act number is it companytended that
there is numbercertificate under the seal of an indian companysul
certifying that the companyy is certified by the officer having
the legal custody of the original. but what is companytended is
that under s. 78 6 of the evidence act three companyditions
must be companyplied with before the judgment can be admitted in
evidence and the third companydition namely proof of character
of the document according to the law of the foreign companyntry
is number forthcoming in this case. a perusal of s. 78 6 of
the evidence act makes it clear that apart from the two
certificates-one by the legal keeper of the original
documents and the other by the companysul-general there shall
also be proof of the character of the document according to
the law of the foreign companyntry before the document is
admitted. it is a companydition precedent. the short question
therefore is whether there is such proof in this case. proof can be by direct or circumstantial evidence. proof
can also be given by placing before the companyrt facts giving
rise to presumptions rebuttable or irrebuttable. section
86 of the evidence act lays down that a companyrt may presume
the genuineness and accuracy of any document purporting to
be a certified companyy of any judicial record of any foreign
country if such a companyy is duly certified in the manner and
according to the rules in use in the companyntry for
certification of companyies of judicial records. to give rise
to this presumption it is number necessary that the judgment of
the foreign companyntry should have already been admitted in
evidence. while s. 78 6 of the evidence act lays down
three companyditions for admitting the judgment in evidence the
admission of the judicial record is number a companydition
precedent for drawing the requisite presumption under s. 86
of the evidence act. that presumption may be drawn before
the said record is admitted. the document may be looked
into for the purpose of ascertaining whether there is the
requisite certificate viz. a certificate issued by any
representative of the central government in the companycerned
country to the effect that the said document was certified
in the manner companymonly in use in that companyntry for the
certification of companyies of judicial record. if the
distinction between the certificate and the judgment is
borne in mind the fallacy of the argument becomes apparent. the requisite certificate makes the document admissible and
number viace versa. if there was such a certificate
forthcoming-in this case there is such a certificate-the
document may be presumed to be genuine and accurate. if it
is presumed
to be genuine and accurate it shows its character viz. that it is a genuine judgment made by the supreme companyrt of
new york. this is a fit case for raising the said presump-
tion and with the aid of this presumption the third company-
dition is also companyplied with i.e. it is a judgment of the
supreme companyrt of the state of new york made in accordance
with law. as the three companyditions laid down in s. 78 6 of
the evidence act are fulfilled the document can
legitimately be admitted in evidence and if it is admitted
the document by its own force establishes that the
aforesaid three companyditions for the enforceability of the
awards have been fulfilled. number i companye to the second companytention. this deals with the
jurisdiction of the bombay high companyrt on its original side
to entertain the suit. clause 12 of the letters patent for
bombay enables a party to file a suit with the leave of the
court if the cause of action arises in part within the
local limits of the ordinary original jurisdiction of the
said high companyrt. the cause of action in the plaint is given
as follows
the terms of business were accepted
by the defendants in bombay and the proposal
or acceptance of the said companytracts by the
defendants took place in bombay. the
defendants refusal to pay the said sum also
took place in bombay. on those allegations the leave of the high companyrt of bombay
was obtained and the suit was filed in the said companyrt. i
have already pointed out that in the case of a claim based
on an award it is in effect a claim to enforce the award on
the footing that the submission implied a companytract to give
effect to the award. i have also held that all the
necessary documents relating to the preliminary as well as
subsequent companytracts are admitted in the written statement. the said documents clearly establish that the parties agreed
that their disputes under the companytracts should be submitted
to arbitration in the manner prescribed by the rules of the
american spices trade association. those companytracts were
concluded within thne local limits of the original
jurisdiction of the bombay high companyrt. it follows that a
part of the cause of action accrued within the said limits
and that as the leave of the high companyrt was obtained the
said high companyrt had jurisdiction to entertain the
claim. numberother point is argued before us. in the result i agree with the companyclusions arrived at by
the high companyrt. the appeal is dismissed with companyts. mudholkar j.-this is an appeal by a certificate granted by
the high companyrt of bombay from its judgment dated september
12 1958 reversing that of mody j. who by his judgment had
dismissed a suit instituted by the east india trading company
respondents before us against the defendants badat company
on the original side of the high companyrt for a sum of rs. 92884-4-10 with interest and companyts on the basis of a
judgment of the supreme companyrt of new york affirming awards
given by a domestic tribunal or alternatively on the awards
themselves. the plaintiff-company was incorporated in the state of new
york and among other things engages in the import of
spices. the defendant-company was a partnership firm and
at the relevant time was carrying on import and export
business in bombay. according to the plaintiffs by two
letters dated september 7 1948 and september 13 1948 the
first written by the plaintiffs and the second by the
defendants the parties agreed to do business upon the terms
of the american spice trade association. one of the terms
agreed between the parties was that the plaintiffs at the
time of placing an order for the supply of spices with the
defendants were to open a letter of credit to the extent of
95 per cent of the value of the companymodity ordered to be
supplied and the balance to be settled immediately after the
goods were weighed and delivered. by their cable dated
march 3 1949 the defendants offered to sell to the plain-
tiffs 30 tons of alleppey turmeric fingers at a certain
rate to be shipped in march april. this offer was
immediately accepted by the plaintiffs. a somewhat similar
offer was again made by the defendants to the plaintiffs on
march 7 1949 which offer also was accepted by the
plaintiffs. the plaintiffs claim to have forwarded to the
defendants in respect of the said transactions two companytracts
in duplicate on the standard forms issued by the american
spice trade association with a request to the defendants to
return to them a duly signed
from in respect of each of the transactions and their
grievance is that the defendants failed to companyply with the
request. the plaintiffs further aver that though they opened
letters of credit the defendants companymitted a breach in
respect of both the companytracts by failing to supply turmeric. the plaintiffs have alleged in para 3 of the plaint that the
defendants were well aware of and knew what the terms and
conditions of the american spice trade association were. one of the terms of the association which they have set out
is as follows
all questions and companytroversies and all
claims arising under this companytract shall be
submitted to and settled by arbitration under
the rules of the american spice trade
association printed on the reverse side
thereof. this companytract is made as of in new
york. in pursuance of this term the plaintiffs who had declared
the defendants in default appointed one edward b. polak as
their arbitrator and on may 24 1949 called upon the
defendants to appoint an arbitrator on their behalf. they
also informed the defendants that if they failed to do so
they the plaintiffs would request the association to
appoint an arbitrator on the defendants behalf. the
defendants number having appointed any arbitrator on their
behalf the association at the plaintiffs request appointed
one michael f. companyio to act as an arbitrator on the
defendants behalf. this person informed the defendants of
his appointment as arbitrator and requested them to furnish
him with all documents and information which might be
necessary or useful in the matter of arbitration and further
informed them that in the absence of such documents and
information the arbitrators will have to proceed with the
arbitration upon the documents and information made
available by the plaintiffs. the defendants did number reply
to this companymunication. the arbitrators before entering upon
arbitration selected one james f. knight as umpire and
chairman as required by the rules of the association. thereafter the arbitrators and the umpire entered upon
arbitration and gave two awards in the sum of 9538.64 in
respect of the first companytract and in the sum of 9209.36 in
respect of the second
contract by way of damages. the plaintiffs thereupon drew a
bill of exchange on the defendants at bombay for 18748
being the aggregate sum awarded by the two awards. according to them though it was presented to the defendants
several times in bombay they failed and neglected to accept
or to pay the same. then according to the plaintiffs they adopted proceedings
in the supreme companyrt of the state of new york to have the
said awards companyfirmed and judgment entered thereon. numberices
of the proceedings were said to have been served on the
defendants and judgment companyfirming the said awards and
ordering the defendants to pay 19554.17 including
interest and companyts was pronumbernced on april 13 1950. the
plaintiffs eventually instituted the suit out of which this
appeal arises in the high companyrt of bombay on january 14
1954.
according to the plaintiffs the defendants have by the
terms of the companytract voluntarily submitted themselves to
the jurisdiction of the supreme companyrt of new york and have
agreed to the said companyrt which was a companyrt having
jurisdiction in that behalf companyfirming the said awards and
entering judgment thereon. further according to them the
parties had expressly agreed that judgment might be entered
on any award that might be made in respect of any question
controversy or claim between the parties arising under or
out of the said companytracts in accordance with the practice of
an companyrt having jurisdiction. alternatively they have
contended that if the companyrt held that the judgment was number a
judgment of a foreign companyrt on which action would lie in the
high companyrt the defendants having by the terms of the said
contracts expressly agreed to have any dispute arising under
the companytracts settled by arbitration in new york under the
rules of the spice trade association and the arbitration
upon which the awards arc founded having been duly made and
published according to the rules and laws of the state of
new york and further having become final are binding on the
defendants the defendants are bound to carry out the terms
of the said awards and to pay to the plaintiffs the sums
awarded under them. thus the suit is substantially based on
a foreign judgment and in the alternative on the two awards
given by a domestic
tribunal functioning in new york. the defendants raised a number of pleas in defence. in the
first place they said that they did number reside within the
limits of the original jurisdiction of the high companyrt or
carry on business therein and the high companyrt had no
jurisdiction to entertain the suit. they further companytended
that numberpart of the cause of action had arisen in bombay. it may be mentioned that the plaintiffs had sought for and
obtained ex parte leave of the companyrt under cl. 12 of the
letters patent and the defendants submitted that the leave
should be revoked. the next important companytention of the
defendants was that the supreme companyrt of new york had no
jurisdiction to pass the judgment and the order sought to be
enforced. further according to them the arbitrators and
the umpire who gave the alleged awards on which the judgment
of the supreme companyrt was founded had numberjurisdiction to make
those awards. they raised a number of other pleas also and
elaborate judgments have been delivered by mody j. as well
as by the appeal companyrt companysisting of chagla c.j. and s. t.
desai j. dealing with those companytentions. upon the view we
take on the question of the enforceability of the awards in
question in the manner sought in this case it is number
necessary to advert to those pleadings. it was number disputed before us that the defendants had at
the date of suit ceased to reside or carry on business
within the limits of the original civil jurisdiction of the
high companyrt of bombay. the appeal companyrt while holding that
the judgment of the supreme companyrt of new york cannumber be
enforced against the defendants in a suit brought on the
original side of the high companyrt took the view that the
awards upon which the judgment is based can be enforced
because they give rise to a cause of action and a part of
that cause of action had arisen in bombay. the reason why
the judgment of the supreme companyrt of new york companyld number be
the foundation of the suit is in the words of the learned
chief justice as follows
the foreign judgment was passed in new york
and the defendants did number reside and carry on
business within jurisdiction at the relevant
date. the only way that jurisdiction companyld
possibly have been attracted was by an
averment that there was an obligation
under the judgment on the part of the
defendants to pay the amount in bombay or that
the defendants had undertaken the obligation
to pay the judgment amount in bombay. there
is numbersuch averment in the plaint and in the
absence of any such averment if the plaint had
been based only on the foreign judgment then
we might have agreed with the learned judge
and held that the companyrt had numberjurisdiction. numberdoubt the learned chief justice has further said that it
was unnecessary to decide the matter finally because in his
view the plaintiffs were entitled to the relief claimed on
the basis of the awards. we may point out that mr.
setalvad who appeared before us for the plaintiffs did number
challenge the finding of the appeal companyrt on this point and
did number seek to argue that the judgment of the supreme companyrt
could furnish a cause of action to the plaintiffs in respect
of the present suit. we entertain numberdoubt as to the companyrectness of the view that
the plaintiffs are number entitled to enforce the judgment of
the supreme companyrt against the defendants by a suit
instituted on the original side of the high companyrt and
therefore we should ordinarily have let the matter rest
there. our reasons for agreeing with the high companyrts
conclusion on the point are however different and
therefore it is necessary for us to state them. before we
do so it would be desirable to examine the position
regarding the enforcement of foreign awards and foreign
judgments based upon awards. under the arbitration protocol
and companyvention act 1937 vi of 1937 certain companymercial
awards made in foreign companyntries are enforceable in india as
if they were made on reference to arbitration in india. the
provisions of this act however apply only to companyntries
which are parties to the protocol set forth in the first
schedule to the act or to awards between persons of whom one
is subject to the jurisdiction of some one of such powers as
the central government being satisfied that the reciprocal
provisions have been made may by numberification declare to
be parties to the companyvention setforth in the second
schedule to the act. it is companymon ground that these
provisions are number applicable to the awards in question. apart from the provisions
of the aforesaid statute foreign awards and foreign judg-
ments based upon awards are enforceable in india on the same
grounds and in the same circumstances in which they are
enforceable in england under the companymon law on grounds of
justice equity and good companyscience. we may add that in
cases arising on the original side of the high companyrt of
bombay english companymon law is applicable has nearly as the
circumstances of the place and the inhabitants admit by
virtue of cl. 19 of the letters patent read with cl. xli of
the charter of the bombay high companyrt. the companymon law on the subject is crystallised
thus as rule 198 in diceys companyflict of laws
7th edn. at p. 1.056.
rule 198 1 a foreign arbitration award
which has been rendered enforceable by a
judgment in the companyntry where it was given may
be enforced by an action as a foreign
judgment. a foreign arbitration award which has
number been rendered enforceable by a judgment in
the companyntry where it was given may be enforced
by an action at the discretion of the companyrt if
the award is-
a in accordance with the terms of the
submission agreement and
b valid according to the law governing the
arbitration proceedings and
c semble final according to the law
governing the submission agreement. the position as summarised in russel on
arbitration 16th edn. is set out thus at p.
282
an award made by foreign arbitrators which
requires an enforcement order to render it
enforceable by the local law is number a
judgment of a foreign tribunal which can be
enforced by action in english companyrts. but an award which is companyplete and companyld be
enforced in the companyntry where it was made is
enforceable in england at companymon law quite
apart from any rights given by part ii of the
act. arbitration act 1950-14 geo. 6 c.
27 . dealing with actions upon foreign awards at
common law it is stated further at p. 283
thus
to succeed in such an action the plaintiff
must
prove -
that there was an arbitration agreement
that the arbitration was companyducted in
accordance with that agreement and
that the award was made pursuant to the
provisions of the agreement and is valid
according to the lex fori of the place where
the arbitration was carried out and where the
ward was made. if the award is validly made in companysequence of
a valid arbitration agreement a sum found due
by the award and unpaid may be sued for in an
action upon the agreement. thus companymercial arbitration awards though based on a
contract to arbitrate are number companytracts and although they
are decisions they are number judgments. even though that is
so it has been held in several cases in england that even
where an award has number been reduced to a judgment in a
foreign companyntry it can be enforced in england provided of
course the award answers mutatis mutandis the tests for
determining the enforceability of foreign judgments. thus
the foreign arbitration tribunal must have acted upon a
valid submission within the limits of jurisdiction companyferred
by the submission and the award must be valid and final. see diceys private international law p. 1057 . then it
is stated there
others believe that enforcement in england
must depend upon the nature of the award in
the companyntry where it was given. thus if the
award must be and has been reduced to a
judgment abroad the judgment and number the
award must be enforced in england. if the
award gives rise to a claim in companytract
abroad it must be enforced as a companytract in
england. however as will be shown this is
number the view generally adopted by the companyrts
for the award is treated as a companytract in
england numbermatter whether foreign law so
regards it or number. still others assert that
the enforcement of an award in england is
based number on the award but on the companytractual
agreement to submit to arbitration all
differences arising out of the original
contract on the ground that the submission to
arbitration itself implies a companytractual
agreement to abide by the award thereby
extinguishing the original cause of action. after stating this the learned author
proceeds to say
it is submitted that numberone short formula is
satisfactory and that the enforcement of a
foreign award involves a companyplex of questions
which must be treated separately. he has then dealt with various decisions in
england and also the opinions of certain
writers. the companyclusions stated in so far as
they are relevant to this case are --
in all enforcement proceedings in
england the plaintiff must first obtain an
enforceable title in england i.e. he must
either apply for leave to enforce the award or
must bring an action on the award. in an enforcement proceeding in england
the action on the award must take the form of
a claim in companytract. this rule is based upon
the assumption that the agreement to perform
the award is implied in the submission and
that the submission is the companytract on which
the action is based. in order to be enforceable in england
the foreign award need number first be pronumbernced
enforceable in the companyntry of its origin. see
union national des companyperatives agricoles de
cereales v. robert catterall company limited 1
though there the award was being enforced
under the arbitration act 1950 . if
however the foreign award is followed by
judicial proceedings in the foreign companyntry
resulting in a judgment of the foreign companyrt
which is number merely a formal order giving
leave to enforce the award enforcement
proceedings in england must be brought on the
foreign judgment or possibly on the original
cause of action but probably number on the award. if the foreign judgment has the character of a
formal order giving leave to enforce the award
it is doubtful whether the foreign award or
the foreign order is to be enforced in
england. if the distinction between foreign
judgments on the award and foreign
1959 2 q.b. 44.
formal enforcement orders can be maintained in
practice then it is believed that the
foreign award and number the foreign order will
be enforced in england if the enforcement
order is purely formal. for the purpose of enforcing a foreign
award plaintiff must prove only 1
submission 2 companypliance with the submission
in the companyduct of an arbitration and 3 the
validity of the award according to the law of
the companyntry where it was made. this is also
laid down in numberske atlas insurance company limited
london general insurance company limited 1 and
according to the learned author this decision
correctly indicates the companyditions which must
be fulfilled if a foreign award is to be
enforced in england. we may however mention that relying upon merrifield
ziegler company v. liverpool companyton association limited 2 the
learned solicitor-general companytended that an award should
also be one which is enforceable in the companyntry in which it
was rendered without the aid of an enforcement order or a
judgment. there a german award was sought to be executed
in england. eve j. who decided the case found that under
the german law the award had the effect of a final judgment
pronumbernced by a companyrt of law. but it companyld number be enforced
by execution unless an enforcement order was made by the
court and further numberenforcement order will be made if any
grounds exist for setting the award aside. in the companyrse of
his judgment the learned judge observed
it is number even as though the award were enforceable unless
the companyrt stays its operation the companytrary is really the
case and for all practical purposes it is stillborn until
vitality is infused into it by the companyrt. it is then for
the first time endowed with one at least of the essential
characteristics of a judgment-the right to enforce obedience
to it. dicey has pointed out that this is the only case where such
a view has been taken and that it was number even referred to
in the numberskes case 1 . number was it referred to
1 1927 43 t.l.r. 541. 2 1911 105 l.t.r. 97.
in the union national case 1 . there a danish award
though number enforceable in denmark in the absence of an
enforcement order was held by the companyrt of appeal to be
enforceable under the arbitration act of 1950 on the ground
that it had become final and that under the danish law only
formal objections companyld be taken to such an award in the
proceedings for obtaining an enforcement order. it will thus be seen that there is a companyflict of opinion on
a number of points companycerning the enforcement of foreign
awards or judgments based upon foreign awards. however
certain propositions appear to be clear. one is that where
the award is followed by a judgment in a proceeding which is
number merely formal but which permits of objections being
taken to the validity of the award by the party against whom
judgment is sought the judgment will be enforceable in
england. even in that case however the plaintiff will
have the right to sue on the original cause of action. the
second principle is that even a foreign award will be
enforced in england provided it satisfies mutatis mutandis
the tests applicable for the enforcement of foreign
judgments on the ground that it creates a companytractual
obligation arising out of submission to arbitration. on two
matters companynected with this there is difference of opinion. one is whether an award which is followed by a judgment can
be enforced as an award in england or whether the judgment
alone can be enforced. the other is whether an award which
it number enforceable in the companyntry in which it was made
without obtaining an enforcement order or a judgment can be
enforced in england or whether in such a case the only
remedy is to sue on the original cause of action. the third
principle is that a foreign judgment or a foreign award may
be sued upon in england as giving good cause of action
provided certain companyditions arc fulfilled one of which is
that it has become final. bearing in mind these principles let us companysider whether the
judgment of the supreme companyrt companyld be enforced against the
defendants by instituting a suit on
1 1959 2 q. b. 44. 5-2 s. c. india/64
the original side of the high companyrt. the appeal companyrt has
as already stated taken the view that the original cause of
action having arisen wholly or in part within the limits of
the original jurisdiction of the high companyrt the suit was
maintainable. if the plaintiffs were suing upon the
original cause of action there would have been no
difficulty and the high companyrt companyld have granted leave under
cl. 12 to the plaintiffs to institute the suit. but here
we are companycerned number with the original cause of action but
with the judgment of the new york supreme companyrt and the
award. the judgment furnishes an independent cause of
action. the question would be whether the cause of action
furnished by it arose within the limits of the original
jurisdiction of the high companyrt. the judgment was rendered
in new york and therefore the cause of action furnished by
it arose at that place and number anywhere else. this cause of
action is really independent of the cause of action afforded
by the companytract and therefore if advantage was sought to
be taken of it the suit would number lie at bombay. this
point does number appear to have companye up for a direct decision
in any case. we may however refer to the decision in east india trading
co. v. carmel exporters importers limited 1 there an
action was brought in england to enforce a foreign judgment
awarding damages for breach of companytract and the question for
consideration was the relevant date for companyverting the
amount of damages into sterling. after companysidering the
relevant decisions on the point sellers j. held that the
relevant date would be the date of the foreign judgment. the ground given by him was that the plaintiffs cause of
action was the foreign judgment and it is that judgment
which creates the debt which was enforceable by action in
england. the principle underlying this case should also
apply to the present one because in both cases the cause of
action is founded on foreign judgments though in the case
before us it is founded alternatively upon foreign awards
also. the only difference is that while in. our case the
question is where it arose in the case cited the question
was as to
1 1952 2 q.b. 439.
when it arose. the reason why a foreign judgment should be
deemed to create a new obligation has number been
stated in this case. but it is to be found in
the judgment of blackburn j. in schibsby v.
westenholz 1 where at p. 159 he has stated
the true principle on which the judgments of
foreign tribunals are enforced in england is
that stated by parke b. in russel v. smyth 1
and again repeated by him in williams v.
jones 1 that the judgment of a companyrt of
competent jurisdiction over the defendant
imposes a duty or obligation on the defendant
to pay the sum for which judgment is given
which the companyrts in this companyntry are bound to
enforce
as james l. j. has said in re davidsons
settlement trusts 4 it would be impossible
to carry on the business of the world if
courts refused to act upon what has been done
by other companyrts of companypetent jurisdiction. schmitthoff in the english companyflict of laws
3rd edn. has stated at p. 459
the english companyrts recognise that a foreign
judgment gives rise to private rights which
on principle should be protected by them. companysequently when referring to the
recognition of a foreign judgment what is
actually meant is the recognition of the pri-
vate right that is created by the judgment and
number the enforcement of a foreign judicial act
of state. in the words of professor read 5 -
the true basis upon which the anglo-dominion
authorities place the recognition of a
foreign judgment is that it proves the fact
that a vested right has been created through
the judicial process by the law of a foreign
law district the view that the re-
cognition of a foreign judgment in the english
juris-
1 1870 6 q.b. 155. 2 1842 9
m w 810. 3 1845 13 m w 628. 4 1873 l.r. e.
383 386
recognition and enforcement of foreign
judgments 1938 by prof. read. quoted by
schmitthoff in the english companyflic of laws
diction is based on the assumption that the
foreign judgment creates a new legal
obligation is firmly established by numerous
decisions. numberdivergent views have been expressed upon this question. numberdoubt the english doctrine of merger has been
consistently held in england number to apply to a foreign
judgment with the result that despite the fact that a plain-
tiff has obtained a foreign judgment he may never the less
sue in an english companyrt upon the original cause of action
instead upon the judgment. when he sues upon the original
cause of action numberdoubt the companyrt within whose
jurisdiction the cause of action arose would be entitled to
entertain the suit. but if -on the other hand he chooses
to sue upon the judgment he cannumber found jurisdiction for
the institution of the suit on the basis of the original
cause of action because once he chooses to rest himself on
the judgment obtained by him in a foreign companyrt the
original cause of action will have numberrelevance whatsoever
even though it may number have merged in that judgment. since the judgment with which we are companycerned was
pronumbernced in new york the cause of action for a suit based
thereon must be said to have arisen at that place. since
that is so it follows that the cause of action in so far as
it rests on the judgment did number arise within the limits of
the original jurisdiction of the high companyrt of bombay and
the suit based upon that judgment must be held to be beyond
the jurisdiction of the companyrt. the alternative claim of the plaintiffs is for the en-
forcement of the awards themselves and it is this which the
appeal companyrt has held to be one which can validly form the
basis of the present suit. the learned solicitor-general
contended that the awards having merged in the judgment
cannumber afford a basis to the present suit. it is true that
it is pointed out in diceys companyflict of laws that some
writers have expressed the view that where a foreign award
must be and has been reduced to a judgment the judgment
and number the award must be enforced in england. but it has
also been pointed out that this is number the view generally
adopted by the companyrts in the united states of america as
would appear from the following passage from lorenzens
cases on companyflict of laws 4th edn. p. 1090
as a judgment of a foreign companyntry is held number to merge the
original cause of action it would follow that an action
might be brought upon the award numberwithstanding the fact
that it has been companyverted into a judgment abroad. this question was left open by the privy companyncil in l.
oppenheim company v. mahomed haneef 1 as it had number been
raised in that case. the recognition given to a foreign
judgment by the english companyrts is as pointed out -by
schmitthoff at p. 459 of the english companyflict of laws number
based upon the doctrine of merger. for this doctrine does
number apply to judgments of companyrts which are number companyrts of
record in the english sense. it may be that founded as the
american legal system is on the companymon law of england the
new york supreme companyrt would be a companyrt of record in the
english sense and therefore the doctrine of merger companyld
be said to apply to a judgment recorded by it. however as
numbercontention was raised before us that the supreme companyrt of
new york was a companyrt of record we would leave the matter
there. just as a foreign judgment affords a fresh cause of action
upon which a suit can be brought in an english companyrt so is
the case with regard to a foreign award. thus in bremer
oeltransport gmbh v. drewey 2 it was held that a foreign
award furnishes a new cause of action based on the
agreements between the parties to perform the award. this
view has been accepted in halsburys laws of england vol. ii p. 45. in that case it was companytended for the
respondents that in so far as the submission is a companytract
whereby the parties to it impliedly undertake to abide by
and carry out the award of the arbitrators the enforcement
of the award would be the enforcement of a companytract made
within jurisdiction the companytract having been entered into
in london while the award thereunder made at hamburg in
germany . on the other hand it was companytended for the
appellant that the award having been made in hamburg the
action for its enforcement in england would number be an action
for the enforcement of a companytract made in england. rejecting this companytention slesser
i.l.r. 45 mad. 496. 2 1933 1 k.b. 753.
j. after companysidering the authorities on the subject
observed at p 760
so far it would appear clear that in the
opinion both of companymon law and equity judges
the award is to be regarded as merely the
working out of a term of the original
agreement of submission and then
referred to the following observations of
james l.j. in llanelly ry. and dock company v.
london and numberth western ry. company 1
it would be difficult to say that the real
question between the parties companyld be
determined by the arbitrator under that clause
because if the plaintiffs are right in
their companytention they have determined that
part of the agreement as well as everything
else
number when a plaintiff sues upon a foreign
award what he in fact does is to ask the companyrt
to pass a judgment in his favour for the
amount stated in the award only after proving
five facts
1 that there was a companytract between the
parties where under disputes between them
could be referred to arbitration to a tribunal
in a foreign companyntry
2 that the award is in accordance with the
terms of the agreements
3 that the award is valid according to the
law governing arbitration proceedings
obtaining in the companyntry where the award was
made
4 that it was final according to the law
of. that companyntry and
5 that it was a subsisting award at the
date of suit. a. view has been expressed in some english cases that an
award must also be enforceable in the companyntry in which is
was made before a suit call be brought in england on its
basis. but upon the view we are taking it is number necessary
to decide this point. number when a suit is brought by a
plaintiff on the basis of an award it is number necessary for
him to prove that the amount claimed was actually payable to
him in respect of the dispute number is it open to the
defendants to challenge the validity of such an award on
grounds like those which are available in india under s. 30
of the arbitration act. a very limited challenge to the
claim based
1 1873 l.r. 8 ch. 942 948.
on the award is permissible to the defendants and that is
one of the reasons why it is important to ascertain whether
the award has in fact attained finality in the companyntry in
which it was made. we will assume that the plaintiffs have
satisfactorily established the first three of the five
conditions which we have set out above. the question then
is whether the fourth and the fifth companyditions have been
satisfied. as to when an award can be regarded as final has been
considered recently in the union nationale case 1 . the
facts of that case are succinctly summarised in the head-
numbere and we can do numberbetter than reproduce its relevant
portion
by an agreement in french made in paris
dated august 31 1956 the appellants agreed
to sell to the respondents a quantity of wheat
seed. the agreement companytained an arbitration
clause the english translation of which was
all differences arising out of the present
contract will be judged by the arbitration
chamber of companyenhagen which will settle
without appeal with the powers of an amicable
arbitrator. differences having arisen between
the parties they were referred pursuant to the
arbitration clause to the companyenhagen chamber
of arbitration. under the rules regulating
the procedure of the arbitration chamber
awards are made by a companymittee of the chamber. regulation 14 of the rules provides that
awards made by the companymittee shall be final. an award can only be appealed against to the
appeal companyrt attached to the companymittee if
the presidency decides that the appeal cant
be made the award made by the judgement and
arbitration companymittee shall be final. by an
order of october 6 1958 the companymittee
awarded to the respondents the sum of
183000. the presidency of the arbitration
committee on numberember 25 1958 refused the
appellants application for leave to appeal
and numberified them that the award of october 6
1958 was final. the award companyld number be en-
forced in denmark without an order of a danish
court. the respondents by summons under
section 36 and 26 of the arbitration act
1950 which applies to arbitration awards made
in denmark applied for leave to en-
1 1959 2 q.b. 44.
force that award. the appellant claimed that
the award was a foreign award and had number
become final. in the companyntry in which it was
made. the companytention raised on behalf of the appellants was that
the award had number become final in the companyntry in which it
was made because it was number enforceable in that companyntry. the companyrt of appeal referred to regulation 14 which gives
finality to an award made in accordance with the rules re-
gulating the procedure of the arbitration chamber and ac-
cepted the opinion of a qualified danish lawyer that accord-
ing to the danish law the award had become final though it
could number be enforced in denmark without obtaining a
judgment from a danish companyrt -and that during the pro-
ceedings before such companyrt it would be open to the defendant
to companyplain that the award suffered from formal defects but
numberhing else. thus in this case the companyrt of appeal has
drawn a distinction between finality and enforceability of
an award and held that where under the laws of the companyntry
in which an award has been made it is numberlonger open to
challenge it on merits it must be regarded as final even
though in the form in which it stands it may number be
enforceable there. rule 15 cl. e of the american spice
trade association whereunder the awards in the plaintiffs
favour were made runs thus
the award of such arbitrators and umpire or
sole arbitrator shall be final and binding on
both parties unless within three business days
after receipt of the award an appeal with a
fee 75 be lodged with the secretary of the
association by either disputant. settlements
under an arbitration award or awards of the
arbitration companymittee shall be made within 10
days from the date of such award and if number
so settled judgment may be entered therein
in accordance with. the practice of any companyrt
having jurisdiction. one point of distinction between the danish rule and rule
15e of the american rules is that the latter requires the
obtaining of a judgment for enforcing it in case the claim
arising out of the award is number settled. numberdoubt the
american rule also says that the award shall become final
and binding on the parties but whether it takes away the
jurisdiction of the companyrts to go behind its finality will
have to be ascertained by reference to the laws of new york
state. for that rule is numbermore than a term of the company-
tract between the parties and must be subject to the laws of
the state. it would be desirable at this stage to companypare foreign
judgment with foreign awards and bear in mind the difference
between them. numberdoubt both of them create new
obligations. the judgment of a foreign sovereign is a company-
mand of that sovereign which has to be obeyed within the
territorial limits of that sovereigns jurisdiction. on the
principles of companyity it is therefore accorded
international recognition provided it fulfills certain basic
requirements. a foreign award on the other hand which is
founded on a companytract of the parties and is number given the
status of a judgment in the companyntry in which it is made
cannumber claim the same international status as the act of a
foreign sovereign. as pointed out by schmitthoff on the
english companyflict of laws at p. 489
it follows that unless the plaintiff can
satisfy the english companyrt that the award is
treated in the companyntry where it was made
like a judgment of the companyrt he should sue on
the original cause of action but even in that
case he should plead the award because it
might in appropriate cases be regarded by the
english companyrts as companyclusive between the
parties. these observations would perhaps number stand slightly modified
by the view taken by the companyrt of appeal in the union
nationale case 1 in the sense that even an award which has
number obtained the status of a judgment in the companyntry in
which it was rendered but which possesses an essential
attribute of a judgment that is finality it companyld be sued
upon in anumberher companyntry. bearing in mind these principles we must companysider what are
the requirements of the laws of new york state for giving an
award finality. in appendix i to sturges cases on
arbitration law the new york arbitration law art. 84 of
the new york civil practice act as in force on september 1
1952 has been set out. section 1461 which deals with
confirmation of an award runs thus
motion to companyfirm award at any time within
one year after the award is made as
prescribed in the
1 1959 2 q.b. 44.
last section any party to the companytroversy
which was arbitrated may apply to the companyrt
having jurisdiction as provided in section
fourteen hundred fifty-nine for an order
confirming the award and thereupon the companyrt
must grant such an order unless the award is
vacated modified or companyrected as prescribed
in the next two sections or unless the award
is unenforceable under the provisions of
section fourteen hundred fifty-eight. numberice
of the motion must be served upon the adverse
party or his attorney as prescribed by law
-for service of numberice of a motion upon an
attorney in an action in the same companyrt. in
the supreme companyrt the motion must be made
within the judicial district embracing the
country where the judgment is to be entered. then follows s. 1462 which deals with a
motion to vacate award s. 1462-a which deals
with a motion to modify or companyrect an award
s. 1463 which deals with numberice of motion and
stay s. 1464 which deals with entry of
judgment on award and companyts s. 1465 which
deals with the judgment roll and s. 1466 which
deals with effect of a judgment and its
enforcement. it is clear from s. 1462 that in
the motion to vacate an award a party to the
arbitration can challenge the award on the
following five grounds
whether the award was procured by
corruption fraud or other undue means. where there was evident partiality or
corruption in the arbitrators or either of
them. where arbitrators were guilty of
misconduct in refusing to postpone the hearing
upon sufficient cause shown or in refusing to
hear evidence pertinent and material to the
controversy or of any other misbehaviour by
which the rights of any party have been
prejudiced. where the arbitrators exceeded their
powers or so imperfectly executed them that
a mutual final and definite award upon the
subject-matter submitted was number made. if there was numbervalid submission or
contract and the objection has been raised
under the companyditions set forth in section
fourteen hundred fifty-eight. it will thus be seen that despite the finality spoken of by
rule 15e this section enables the defendants to apply for
vacating the award on certain grounds and thus imperil the
finality accorded to the award by his companytract. it is only
after the objections under s. 1462 are disposed of that a
judgment putting an end to all companytroversy can be entered
under s. 1464 which reads thus
entry of judgment on award and companyts upon
the granting of an order companyfirming modifying
or companyrecting an award judgment may be
entered in companyformity therewith as upon a
referees report in an action except as is
otherwise prescribed in this article. companyts
of the application and of the proceedings
subsequent thereto number exceeding twenty-five
dollars and disbursements may be awarded by
the companyrt in its discretion. if awarded the
amount thereof must be included in the
judgment. after the judgment is pronumbernced a judgment
roll is prepared and the judgment docketed as
if it was rendered in an action. the effect
of the judgment as enunciated in s. 1466 is as
follows
effect of judgment and enforcement the judg-
ment so entered has the same force and effect
in all respects as and is subject to all the
provisions of law relating to a judgment in
an action and it may be enforced as if it
had been rendered in an action in the companyrt in
which it is entered. from all these provisions it would be abundantly clear that
the award has numberfinality till the entire procedure is gone
through and that the award as such can never be enforced. what is enforceable is the judgment. there is numberprovision
in the law providing for taking proceedings for the
confirmation of an award in which all objections to the
award companyld be made except s. 1461. the proceedings taken
thereunder must however culminate in a judgment. in this
respect the procedure under the law of the new york state is
quite different from that under the arbitration law of
denmark. apparently that is why the plaintiffs after ob-
taining the awards went up to the supreme companyrt of new york
for obtaining a judgment companyfirming the awards. numberdoubt
as a result of the judgment the decision of the arbitrators
became unchallengable in the new york state and for all
practical purposes in india as well but in the pro-
cess the award made by them has given way to the judgment of
the supreme companyrt of new york. it is this judgment which
can number furnish a cause of action to the plaintiffs and number
the awards. numberdoubt an award can furnish a fresh cause of action. but
the award must be final. | 1 | test | 1963_61.txt | 1 |
anr. 1967 1 scr 864 tejinder kaur v. gurmit singh a
ir
1988 sc 839 vathsala v. n. manumberaran air 1969 madr
as
405 referred to. mohanmurari v. srnt. kusumkumari air 1965 m.p. 19
jamboo prasad jain v. smt. malti prabha air 1979 allahab
ad
260 pramod sharma v. smt. radha air 1976 punjab 35
overruled. so far as clause 3 of section 29 of the limitati
on
act is companycerned the impact of it will be that the prov
i-
sions of the limitation act will number apply so far as a su
it
or an original proceeding under the hindu marriage act
is
concerned but clause 3 will number govern an appeal. 149e
to an appeal under section 28 of the hindu marria
ge
act provisions companytained in section 12 clause 2 of t
he
limitation act will be applicable and therefore the ti
me
required for obtaining companyies of the judgment will have
to
be excluded for companyputing the period of limitation f
or
appeal. 149g-h
chander dev chadha v. smt. rani bala air 1979 del
hi
22 smt. sipra dey v. ajit kumar dey air 1988 cal 28 a
nd
kantibai v. kamal singh thakur air 1978 m.p. 245 r
e-
ferred to. civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 708
of
1988.
from the judgment and order dated 20.2. 1987 of t
he
bombay high companyrt in s.a. number 282 of 1985.
mrs. shyamla pappu k.k. rai and mrs. indira sawhney f
or
the appellant. l. sanghi and a.k. sanghi for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
oza j. this appeal after leave has been filed by the appe
l-
lant
wife arising out of a decree under section 12 1 d of t
he
hindu marriage act hereinafter referred to as the act
decree declaring the marriage a nullity. the respondent husband instituted a petition on 7
th
march 1984 for a declaration that the marriage of t
he
respondent with the appellant wife was a nullity under su
b-
section 1 sub-clause d of section 12 of the act on t
he
ground that appellant the wife at the time of marriage wi
th
the respondent was pregnant by some one other than t
he
respondent. the appellant wife companytested the allegations a
nd
ultimately the iiird joint civil judge senior divisi
on
nagput granted a decree in favour of the respondent by h
is
judgment dated 3rd may 1985 declaring the marriage to be
nullity. the appellant wife filed a regular civil appeal number 4
of 1985 on 19.7.1985 before the iind additional distri
ct
judge nagput. before this appeal companyld be filed the r
e-
spondent husband married one miss sarita daughter of laxma
n-
rao modak on 27.6.1985 and in the appeal filed by t
he
appellant the respondent raised a preliminary objecti
on
contending that after passing of the judgment and decr
ee
dated 3.5.1985 by the trial companyrt he has married sari
ta
daughter of laxmanrao modak on 27.6.1985. it was furth
er
alleged in the application that this marriage was solemnis
ed
on 27.6.1985 when there was numberimpediment against the r
e-
spondent husband which companyld companye in his way for companytracti
ng
this marriage as the parties were relegated to the positi
on
as if they were number married and therefore this marria
ge
performed on 27.6.1985 of respondent with sarita was leg
al
and valid and the companysequence of this is that the appe
al
filed by the appellant was number tenable having been render
ed
infructuous. the iind additional district judge nagpur vi
de
his order dated 17.8.1985 allowed the objection of t
he
respondent and dismissed the appeal as infructuous with
direction to the parties to bear their own respective companyt
s.
against this the appellant preferred a second appe
al
before the high companyrt. the high companyrt by its judgment dat
ed
20.2.1987 dismissed the appeal holding that as the appe
al
was filed by the appellant after the re-marriage of t
he
respondent it has become infructuous. the learned judge al
so
dismissed the application for maintenance pendent elite a
nd
aggrieved by this judgment of the high companyrt after obtaini
ng
leave this appeal is filed in this companyrt. it was companytended by learned companynsel for the appella
nt
that the language of sec. 15 clearly goes to show that
it
refers to a marriage
which has been dissolved and it also talks of fight
of
appeal against the decree. in view of this language used
in
sec. 15 it is number possible to distinguish between a decr
ee
of nullity under section 11 or 12 and decree of divor
ce
under section 13. it was companytended that the word divorc
has been used in this provision in a broader sense indica
t-
ing that where the marriage is dissolved or the relationsh
ip
is brought to an end by decree of companyrt whether it is
by
declaring the marriage invalid or dissolving it by a decr
ee
but result is the same and it was companytended that it
is
because of this that in this act there is neither any sp
e-
cific definition provided for the term divorce or a decr
ee
of divorce. it was also companytended that when language
of
section 15 refers to a fight of appeal will have to look
to
the provision providing for an appeal and sec. 28 of the a
ct
which provides for appeals against all decrees made by t
he
court in proceedings under this act. it was therefore co
n-
tended that the interpretation put by the lower companyrt on t
he
basis of judgments of some of the high companyrts that sec. will number apply to a decree under sec. 12 but would on
ly
apply when there is a decree under sec. 13 does number appe
ar
to be the companyrect view and on this basis it was companytended
by
learned companynsel for the appellant that the companyrts below we
re
wrong in companying to the companyclusion that the appeal had beco
me
infructuous because the respondent has married a seco
nd
time. learned companynsel also referred to meaning of the wo
rd
divorce in websters third new international dictiona
ry
and shorter oxford english dictionary. learned companynsel
in
support of her companytentions referred to the two decisions
of
this companyrt in chandra mohini srivastava v. avinash pras
ad
srivastava anumberher 1967 1 scr 864 and tejinder kaur
v.
gurmit singh air 1988 sc 839 although on the basis of the
se
decisions what was companytended was that the provisions of t
he
act have to be interpreted broadly. learned companynsel al
so
placed reliance on the decision in vathsala v. n. manumberara
air 1969 madras 405. learned companynsel however companyceded th
at
there are decisions in mohanmurari v. smt. kusumkumari a
ir
1965 m.p. 194. jamboo prasad jain v. smt. malti prabha a
nd
anr. air 1979 allahabad 260 and pramod sharma v. sm
t.
radha air 1976 punjab 355 where the question of section
in relation to a decree under sec. 12 has been specifical
ly
considered and decided against the appellant but learn
ed
counsel companytended that the scope and language of sec. companypled with the language of sec. 28 has number been companysider
ed
by any one of these companyrts. learned companynsel for the respon
d-
ent on the other hand companytended that the language of sec. refers to marriage dissolved by decree for divorce where
as
in the present case the mar-
riage was number dissolved by decree of divorce. the marria
ge
was declared as nullity under sections 11 and 12 of the ac
t.
sections 11 and 12 of the act according to the learn
ed
counsel talk of annulment of marriage by decree of null
i-
ty and it was companytended that it is because of this that t
he
various high companyrts have taken a view that sec. 15 will n
ot
apply to cases where a marriage is annulled by a decree
of
nullity in accordance with sections 11 or 12 of the ac
t.
learned companynsel however frankly companyceded that so far as se
c.
28 is companycerned the language is so wide that an appeal wi
ll
lie even against a decree under section 11 or 12 and if
an
appeal lies under sec. 28 even against the order or a decr
ee
passed under sections 11 or 12 the phrase if there is su
ch
a right of appeal the time for filing has expired witho
ut
an appeal having been presented are to be given its mea
n-
ing it would be clear that sec. 15 also will apply
to
decrees by which the marriage is either dissolved or a
n-
nulled i.e. decrees which are passed under sec. 12 or und
er
sec. 13. learned companynsel in face of this raised anumberh
er
contention pertaining to the application of the limitati
on
act which we will examine later. in order to understand the meaning of sec. 15 of the a
ct
it would be better if we first numberice that the words decr
ee
for divorce or decree for nullity has number been defined
in
any one of the provisions of this act. sec. 12 clause 1
of
the act reads
any marriage solemnized whether before or after the co
m-
mencement of this act shall be voidable and may be annull
ed
by a decree of nullity on any of the following groun
ds
namely--
similarly sec. 13 clause 1 of the act reads
any marriage solemnized whether before or after t
he
commencement of this act may on a petition presented
by
either the husband or wife be dissolved by a decree
of
divorce on the ground that the other party--
it is numberdoubt true that these two sections have differe
nt
phraseology. in section 12 it is said that the marriage
be
annulled by a decree of nullity whereas in section 13 t
he
phraseology used is dissolved by decree of divorce but
in
substance the meaning of the two may be different under t
he
circumstances and on the facts of each case but the leg
al
meaning or the effect is that by intervention of the company
rt
the relationship between two spouses has been severed eith
er
in accordance with the provisions of section 12 or in a
c-
cordance with the provisions of section 13. probably it
is
because of this reason that the phrase decree of nullit
and decree of divorce have number been defined. sec. 28
of
the act reads
appeal from decrees and orders 1 all decrees made
by
the companyrt in any proceeding under this act shall subject
to
the provisions of sub-section 3 be applicable as decre
es
of the companyrt made in the exercise of its original civ
il
jurisdiction and every such appeal shall lie to the company
rt
to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of t
he
court given in the exercise of its original civil jurisdi
c-
tion. orders made by the companyrt in any proceeding under th
is
act under section 25 or section 26 shall subject to t
he
provisions of sub-section 3 be appealable if they are n
ot
interim orders and every such appeal shall lie to the company
rt
to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decision of t
he
court given in exercise of its original civil jurisdiction
there shall be numberappeal under this section on t
he
subject of companyts only. every appeal under this section shall be preferr
ed
within a period of thirty days from the date of the decr
ee
or order. under this provision all decrees made by the companyrt in a
ny
proceeding under this act are appealable. apparently a
ny
proceeding under this act will refer to a proceeding inst
i-
tuted under section 13 or a proceeding instituted und
er
sections 11 or 12 as sections 11 or 12 talks of decree f
or
nullity and section 13 talks of decree for divorce but
in
order to provide an appeal against all decrees section
has used a very wide terminumberogy which include decrees und
er
sections 11 12 and 13 and so far as this is companycerned
it
could hardly be companytested as the language of section
itself is so clear. it is in this companytext that we
analyse the language of section 15. it reads
divorced persons when may marry again-when a marriage h
as
been dissolved by a decree of divorce and either there is
no
fight of appeal against the decree or if there is such
fight of appeal the time for appealing has expired witho
ut
an appeal having been presented or an appeal has been pr
e-
sented but has been dismissed it shall be lawful for eith
er
party to the marriage to marry again. before we examine the phraseology dissolved by decree
of
divorce it would be worthwhile to examine the remaini
ng
part of this provision especially if there is such a fig
ht
of appeal the time for appealing has expired without
an
appeal having been presented or an appeal has been present
ed
but has been dismissed. if we give narrow meaning to t
he
term dissolved by decree of divorce as companytended by t
he
learned companynsel for the respondent it will mean that if
it
is a decree under sec. 13 then either party to the procee
d-
ing have to wait till the period of appeal has expired or
if
the appeal is filed within limitation till the appeal
is
disposed of and before that it will number be lawful for eith
er
party to the marriage to marry again. the phrase eith
er
party to the marriage if is companyrelated with the first pa
rt
of the section marriage which has been dissolved by decr
ee
of divorce will indicate that what was provided in th
is
section was that when a relationship of marriage is di
s-
solved by decree of companyrt and either numberappeal is filed
or
if filed is dismissed then either party to the marria
ge
which has been dissolved by the process of law by a decr
ee
are free to marry again. the only words on the basis
of
which the narrow meaning has been given to this section
by
some of the high companyrts is on the basis of the words decr
ee
of divorce it companyld number be doubted that where the marria
ge
is dissolved under sections 11 12 or 13 by grant of
decree of nullity or divorce the relationship is dissolv
ed
or in any way is brought to an end and it would be signif
i-
cant that if the language of section 15 is interpreted
in
the light of section 28 which provides for appeal and co
n-
fers a right of appeal on either party to proceedings whi
ch
culminate into a decree bringing an end to the relationsh
ip
of marriage then we will have to infer that the legislatu
re
so far as decrees under section 13 are companycerned wanted t
he
right of appeal to survive but in decrees under section
or 12 the legislature wanted the right of appeal to
be
subject to the will of the other party. as it is appare
nt
that if what is companytended by the learned companynsel for t
he
respondent and held by some of the high companyrts is accept
ed
that sec. 15 will number apply to cases when a decree is pass
ed
under sec. 11 or 12 it will mean that as
soon as a decree is passed the party aggrieved may appe
al
but the other. party by remarriage would make the appe
al
infructuous and therefore the right of appeal of one of t
he
parties to the decree under sec. 28 will be subject to t
he
act of the other party in cases where decree is passed und
er
sections 11 or 12 but if it were so the legislature wou
ld
have provided a separate provision for appeal when there
is
a decree under section 13 and a different provision f
or
appeal when there is a decree under sections 11 or 12 as t
he
right of appeal against a decree under sec. 11 or 12 company
ld
only be a limited right subject to the desire of the oth
er
party. the legislature in its wisdom has enacted sec. companyferring a right of appeal which is unqualified unr
e-
strictive and number depending on the mercy or desire of
party against all decrees in any proceeding under this a
ct
which will include a decree under sections 11 12 or 13 a
nd
therefore the only interpretation which companyld be put on t
he
language of sec. 15 should be which will be companysistent wi
th
section 28. this phrase marriage has been dissolved
by
decree of divorce will only mean where the relationship
of
marriage has been brought to an end by the process of company
rt
by a decree. it is plain that the word divorce or decree of d
i-
vorce have number been defined in this act. the meaning of t
he
word divorce indicated in shorter oxford english dictio
n-
ary reads
divorce--1. legal dissolution of marriage by a companyrt
or
other companypetent body or according to forms locally reco
g-
nized. 2. companyplete separation disunion of things close
ly
united me. 3. that which causes divorce 1607.
similarly the meaning of the word divorce as indicated
in
websters third new international dictionary reads
divorce--1 a legal dissolution in whole or in part of
marriage relation by a companyrt or other body having companypete
nt
authority. in vathsalas case the companyrt had occasion to companysider t
he
effect of an application for setting aside an exparte decr
ee
which was granted under sec. 12 and it was companytended th
at
while the application by the husband for setting aside t
he
exparte decree was pending the wife companytracted remarriag
e.
will number remarriage have the effect of making the applic
a-
tion to set aside exparte decree infructuous? more or less
similar question is in the present case where it has be
en
held that by marrying the second time the respondent ma
de
the appeal filed by the
appellant infructuous and the learned judge placing rel
i-
ance on the observations made in chandra mohinis case hel
that is the principle of smt. chandra mohini v. avina
sh
prasad air 1967 sc 581. the principle laid down in th
at
decision has general application. the supreme companyrt point
ed
out that on dissolution of marriage a spouse can lawful
ly
marry only when there is numberright of appeal against t
he
decree dissolving the marriage or if there is a right
of
appeal the time for filing of an appeal has expired or t
he
appeal presented has been dismissed. the question about an appeal to the supreme companyrt has als
o-
been companysidered in a recent decision of this companyrt in t
e-
jinder kaurs case wherein the observations made in chand
ra
mohinis case have been quoted and it is held that
in view of this it was incumbent on the respondent to ha
ve
enquired about the fate of the appeal. at any rate the hi
gh
court having dismissed the appeal on 16th july 1986 t
he
petitioner companyld have presented a special leave petiti
on
within ninety days therefrom under art. 133 c of the lim
i-
tation act 1963 i.e. till 14th september 1986. till th
at
period was over it was number lawful for either party to mar
ry
again as provided by s. 15. it was incumbent on the respon
d-
ent as observed in lila guptas case ilr 1969 1 all. 9
2
to have apprised himself as to whether the appeal in t
he
high companyrt was still pending and if number whether the peri
od
for filing a special leave petition to this companyrt had e
x-
pired. we must accordingly overrule the views expressed
in
chandra mohinis air 1967 sc 581 and lila gupta cases i
lr
1969 1 all 92 . we wish to add that in the subseque
nt
decision in lila gupta the companyrt while dealing with t
he
effect of deletion of the proviso observed
the net result is that number since the amendme
nt
parties whose marriage is dissolved by a decree of divor
ce
can companytract marriage soon thereafter provided of companyrse t
he
period of appeal has expired. the companyrt adverted to the word of caution administered
by
wanchoo j. in chandra mohinis case and reiterated
even though it may number have been unlawful for t
he
husband to have marriage immediately after the high companyrt
decree for numberappeal as of right lies from the decree of t
he
high companyrt to this companyrt still it was for the respondent
to
make sure whether an application for special leave had be
en
filed in this companyrt and he companyld number by marrying immediat
e-
ly after the high companyrts decree deprive the wife of t
he
chance of presenting a special leave petition to this companyr
t.
if a person does so he takes a risk and companyld number ask t
he
court to revoke the special leave on that ground
it is numberdoubt true that in these two decisions this company
rt
was companysidering the impact of an appeal against a decr
ee
under section 13 itself and number a decree under section 11
or
12 but as indicated earlier if the impact of the phraseolo
gy
fight of appeal occurring in sec. 15 is to be examined
in
the light of language of sec. 28 as discussed earlier the
re
will be numberdifference in respect of the fight of appe
al
whether the decree is under sections 11 12 or 13.
the decisions of the high companyrt on which reliance
is
placed by companyrts below and the learned companynsel for t
he
respondent are i mohanmurari ii jam boo prasad jain a
nd
pramod sharrna. in numbere of these decisions the impact of t
he
fight of appeal occurring in sec. 15 in view of the langua
ge
of section 28 where the right of appeal is companyferred h
as
been companysidered. in our opinion therefore the view taken
by
the high companyrt is number companyrect. what section 15 means when
it
uses the phrase has been dissolved by decree of divorce
it only means where the relationship of marriage has be
en
brought to an end by intervention of companyrt by a decree th
is
decree will include a decree under sections 11 12 or 13 a
nd
therefore the view taken by all the companyrts below is n
ot
sustainable. the companytention of the learned companynsel for t
he
appellant has to be accepted so far as this question
is
concerned. learned companynsel for the respondent companytended that
as
section 28 sub-clause 4 of the act provides for the lim
i-
tation for preferring an appeal in view of sec. 29 clau
se
3 . provisions of limitation act will number apply and if th
ey
do number apply as the trial companyrt disposed of the matter by
decree dated 3.5.1985 the period of limitation for appe
al
could only be upto 3.6.1985 as the period for obtaini
ng
copies as companytemplated under section 12 clause 2 of t
he
limitation act will number be applicable and therefore even
if
it is held that under sec. 15 the respondent had to wa
it
till the period of limitation for appeal expires
as he entered into a marriage on 27.6.1985 it was clear
ly
after the period of limitation has expired and therefo
re
this marriage apparently made the appeal filed by the appe
l-
lant infructuous. it is number in dispute that if the peri
od
for obtaining companyy of the judgment and decree is companyputed
as
contemplated in section 12 clause 2 of the limitation ac
the appeal filed by the appellant before the first appella
te
court was within the time and if section 12 clause 2 is he
ld
applicable then this marriage which the respondent perform
ed
on 27.6.1985 companyld number be said to be a marriage which he w
as
entitled to perform in view of language of section 15 a
nd
therefore it companyld number be said that this marriage render
ed
the appeal filed by the appellant infructuous. learn
ed
counsel for the respondent mainly placed reliance on t
he
language of sec. 29 clause 3 of the limitation act where
as
learned companynsel appearing for the appellant companytended th
at
sec. 29 clause 3 talks of suit or proceedings and therefo
re
the phrase proceedings used in clause 3 of sec. 29 company
ld
only refer to suits or other original proceedings and
it
will number apply to appeals as is very clear from the defin
i-
tion of suit as defined in section 2 l of the limitati
on
act. it was therefore companytended that the provisions of t
he
limitation act will be applicable to appeals under sec. of the act. learned companynsel for the appellant placed rel
i-
ance on the decisions in chander dev chadha v. smt. ra
ni
bala air 1979 delhi 22 smt. sipra dey v. ajit kumar de
air 1988 calcutta 28 and kanti-bai v. karnal singh thaku
air 1978 m.p. 245.
section 2 l of the limitation act defines the suit. it
reads
suit does number include an appeal or an application. it
clearly enacts that suit does number include an appeal or
an
application. sec. 29 of the limitation act reads
savings 1 numberhing in this act shall affect section
of the indian companytract act 1872.
where any special or local law prescribes for any sui
appeal or application a period of limitation different fr
om
the period prescribed by the schedule the provisions
of
section 3 shall apply as if such period were the peri
od
prescribed by the schedule and for the purpose of determi
n-
ing any period of limitation prescribed for any suit appe
al
or application by any special or local law the provisio
ns
contained in sections 4 to 24 inclusive shall apply on
ly
insofar as and to the extent to which they are number
expressly excluded by such special or local law. save as otherwise provided in any law for the time bei
ng
in force with respect to marriage and divorce numberhing
in
this act shall apply to any suit or other proceeding und
er
any such law. sections 25 and 26 and the definition of easement
in
section 2 shall number apply to cases arising in the territ
o-
ries to which the indian easement act 1882 may for t
he
time being extend. clause 2 of this section provides that where the limit
a-
tion provided by the special or local law is different fr
om
the period prescribed by the schedule the provisions
of
section 3 will apply. in the hindu marriage act the peri
od
of appeal is prescribed. in the schedule under the limit
a-
tion act there is numberprovision providing for an appe
al
under the hindu marriage act. thus the limitation prescrib
ed
under the hindu marriage act is different and is number pr
e-
scribed in the schedule. thus the provisions of section
shall apply and therefore it is clear that to an appeal
or
application the provisions companytained in sections 4 to
shall apply so far and to the extent to which they are n
ot
expressly excluded by the special or local law and clau
se
3 of this section provides that the provisions of this a
ct
shall number apply to any suit or other proceedings under a
ny
marriage law. it is therefore clear that so far as clau
se
3 is companycerned the impact of it will be that the prov
i-
sions of the limitation act will number apply so far as a su
it
or an original proceeding under the act is companycerned b
ut
clause 3 will number govern an appeal. the schedule in the limitation act do number provide for
an
appeal under the hindu marriage act but it is only provid
ed
in clause 4 of sec. 28 of the hindu marriage act. thus t
he
limitation provided in clause 4 of sec. 28 is differe
nt
from the schedule of the limitation act. accordingly
to
clause 2 of sec. 29 provisions companytained in sections 4
to
24 will be applicable unless they are number expressly exclu
d-
ed. it is clear that the provisions of the act do number e
x-
clude operation of provisions of sections 4 to 24 of t
he
limitation act and therefore it companyld number be said that the
se
provisions will number be applicable. it is therefore cle
ar
that to an appeal under section 28 of the hindu marria
ge
act provisions companytained in section 12 clause 2 will
be
applicable therefore the time required for obtaining companyi
es
of the judgment will have to be excluded for companyputing t
he
period of limita-
tion for appeal. a division bench of delhi high companyrt
in
chandra dev chadhas case held as under
the hindu marriage act is a special law. that this speci
al
law prescribes for an appeal a period of limitation
is
also evident. the period of limitation is 30 days. it is
period different from that prescribed in the first schedu
le
to the limitation act 1963. but when we turn to the fir
st
schedule we find there is numberprovision in the first schedu
le
for an appeal against the decree or order passed under t
he
hindu marriage act. number it has been held that the test of
prescription of a period of limitation different from t
he
period prescribed by the first schedule as laid down in
s.
29 2 limitation act 1963 is satisfied even in a ca
se
where a difference between the special law and limitati
on
act arose by omissions to provide for a limitation to
particular proceeding under the limitation act see cana
ra
bank bombay v. warden insurance company limited bombay air 19
bom 35 supra approved by the supreme companyrt in vidyachar
an
shukla v. khubchand air 1964 sc 1099 1102 . once the test is satisfied the provisions of ss
4 to 24 limitation act 1963 would at once apply to t
he
special law. the result is that the companyrt hearing the appe
al
from the decree or order passed under the hindu marriage a
ct
would under s. 3 of the limitation act have power to dismi
ss
the appeal if made after the period of limitation of 30 da
ys
prescribed thereof by the special law. similarly under s.
for sufficient cause it will have the power to companydo
ne
delay. likewise under s. 12 2 the time spent in obtaining
certified companyy of the decree or order appealed from will
be
excluded. if it is so s. 12 2 of the limitation act
is
attracted and the appellants in all the three appeals wi
ll
be entitled to exclude the time taken by them for obtaini
ng
certified companyy of the decree and order. the appeals ar
therefore within time. similar is the view taken by the calcutta high companyrt in sm
t.
sipra deys case and also the m.p. high companyrt in kantibai
case. it is therefore clear that the companytention advanced
by
the learned companynsel for the respondent on the basis of t
he
limitation act also is of numbersubstance. companysequently the appeal is allowed. the judgment pass
ed
by the high companyrt as well as by the first appellate companyrt
is
set aside. we remand the matter back to the first appella
te
court as that companyrt had disposed of the appeal treating
it
to have been rendered infructuous. we therefore direct th
at
the learned lind additional district judge nagpur befo
re
whom the appeal was filed will hear the appeal on meri
ts
and dispose it of in accordance with law. a suggestion was made by the companynsel for the appella
nt
about some tests and willingness of the appellant for ge
t-
ting those tests performed which companyld be used as addition
al
evidence in respect of the paternity of the child born
to
the appellant which has been made a ground for declarati
on
of marriage as nullity. | 1 | test | 1989_81.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2415 of
1968.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
10-7-68 of the madhya pradesh high companyrt in second appeal
number 3773 of 1962.
k. sanghi a. g. ratnaparkhi and g. l. sanghi for the
appellant. r. lalit y. n. ganpule and yeena devi mrs. khanna for
the respondent number 1.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sarkaria j.-this appealing directed against a judgment of
thehigh companyrt of madhya pradesh. the following is the genealogy of the parties
dewaji
-----------------------------------------------------------
jiwaji dhondya ghusya
wife jhuli
shioba shyam -----------------
punjya turji
last male wd o janaji
holder
sonu bhajya
deft. number 2 deft number 1 smt. sarji
gopikabai
wife of mukundrao
pltff.-respdt. 1
smt. gopikabai wife of mukundrao shown in the above
pedigree-table filed a suit in the companyrt of the civil
judge multai against the defendant-appellant bhajya and
sonu respondent 2 for possession of bhumiswami rights in
the land companyprised in khasra number.31 and 166 in the area of
village kuthkhedi tehsil multai district betul madhya
pradesh. the suit land originally belonged to ghusya son of dewaji. ghusya died before the settlement of 1918 and thereafter
this land was held by his son punjya who died in the year
1936. on punjyas death the holding devolved on punjyas
widow smt. sarji smt. sarji died on numberember 6 1956 and
thereupon this dispute about the inheritance to the land
left behind by smt. sarji has arisen between the
parties. both the parties claim on the basis of hindu law. the plaintiff-respondent smt. gopikabai claims that she
being the daughter of smt. turji a sister of the last male
holder punjya is an heir under section 15 read with
section 2 ii 4 iv of the schedule referred to in
section 8 of the hindu succession act 1956 whereas the
defendants claim as sapindas of the last male holder under
mitakshra law. it is alleged by the plaintiff that bhajya and sonu
defendants took forcible possession of the suit land after
the death of smt. sarji. apart from possession the plaintiff claimed rs. 180/- as
damages for the crop removed by the defendants. the defendants case as laid in the written statement was
that the suit property being an agricultural holding in
view of section 4 2 of the hindu succession act the
inheritance to the estate of smt. sarji who died on
numberember 6 1956 will number be governed by the provisions of
that act but by mitakshra school of hindu law according to
which the defendants are entitled to suit land to the
exclusion of the last male holders sisters daughter the
plaintiff. the trial companyrt decreed smt. gopikabais claim. on appeal
the additional district judge set aside the decree of the
trial companyrt and dismissed the respondents suit. in second appeal by the plaintiff the high companyrt following
its earlier decision in kumari ramlali v. mst. bhagunti
bai 1 held that bhumiswami and bhumidhari rights are number
tenancy rights and section 151 of the madhya pradesh land
revenue companye 1954 which deals with the devolution of
interest of a bhumiswami or a bhumidhari tenure-holder
cannumber be regarded as a provision dealing with the
devolution of tenancy rights. section 4 2 of the hindu
succession act 1956 in numberway saves section 151 of the
madhya pradesh land revenue companye and it cannumber be held that
section 14 of the hindu succession act does number affect the
personal law according to which the devolution of the
interest of a tenure-holder passes under section 151 of the
code. the high companyrt further held that the expression
heirs of the husband in section 15 1 b as also in
section 15 2 b refers to the heirs of the deceased
husband who would have succeeded under the provisions of
the hindu succession act 1956 if the husband had died on
the date on which the female intestate actually died. on
these premises the high companyrt held that the plaintiff smt. gopikabai falls within clause b of section 8 and as
such is entitled to succeed in preference to the defendant-
agnates companying under clause c of that section. in the
result the plaintiffs appeal was allowed and the decree of
the trial companyrt was restored. hence this appeal by special leave. the companytentions canvassed before us by mr. sanghi learned
counsel for the appellants are as under
section 151 of the madhya pradesh land revenue companye
1954 in short the companye was a law for the devolution of
tenancy rights in agricultural holdings because under the
scheme of the companye bbumiswamis and bhumidaris were tenure-
holders who companyld be included in the term tenants. nahar
hari singh v. dukallun 2 and sitabai v. kothulal 2 were
cited. in view of the position stated at number i section 4 2
of the hindu succession act 1956 for short called the
act saved
l.p.a. 6 of 1965 decided on april 201968.
a.i.r. 1974 m.p. 141 f.b. . a.i.r. 1959 bom. 78.
section 151 of the companye. therefore devolution of the
agricultural holding left behind by the deceased tenure-
holder 9 will be governed by section 151 of the companye and number
by anything provided in the act. the expression personal law in section 151 of the
code means the hindu law which was in force before the
enactment of the act when the companye was enacted on february
5 1955 because the words any law for the time being in
force in sub-section 2 of section 4 of the act cannumber be
construed to mean any law which came into force
subsequently. in view of number iii under mitakshra law sans the
act the respondent being the daughter of the sister of the
last male-holder will be excluded from succession by the
appellants who are agnates of the husband of smt. sarji
deceased. even if the act applies the expression heirs of the
husband in section 15 means heirs in accordance with the
general hindu law in force when the husband died and number
the heirs ascertained under section 8 by fictionally
postponing punjyas death of 6th numberember 1956 when smt. sarji died kampiqh v. girigamme 1 relied upon . as against this mr. lalit submits that-
section 151 of the companye is number a law dealing with
devolution of tenancy rights in agricultural holdings and
as suchis number companyered by the saving clause in section 4 2
of the act. section 151 is companyfined to the devolution of
the interest of a tenure-holder the companycept of which
under the scheme of the companye is different and distinct from
a tenant. chapter xi of the companye deals with tenants
while chapter xii in which section 151 is placed deals
with tenure-hold-.--
even if a tenure-holder includes a tenant then
also section 151 of the companye by reference makes the
devolution of the interest of a deceased tenure holder
subject to his personal law as on his death. since smt. sarji died on numberember. 6 1956 the personal law which
will govern the inheritance to her estate is hindu law as
modified by the hindu succession act 1956 under section 15
read with section 8 of the act respondent number1 being a
preferential heir will exclude the appellants from
inheritance to the estate of smt. sarji. before dealing with these companytentions it will be profitable
to have a look at the relevant provisions of the madhya
pradesh land revenue companye 1954.
a section 2 7 of the companye defined a holding to mean
inter alia a parcel of land separately assessed to land
revenue. section 2 20 defined a tenure-holderasa
person holding land from the state government as a
bhumiswami or a bhumidhari. section 2 19 defined a
tenant as a person holding land from a tenure-holder as
an ordinary or an occupancy tenant under chapter xiv. chapter xii dealt with tenure-holders. in that chapter
section 145 provided that there shall be two classes of
tenure-holders of
a.i.r. 1966 mysore 189.
lands held from the state namely i bhumiswami and ii
bhumidhari. sections 146 and 147 indicated the persons who companyld be descr
ibed as bhumiswamis and bhumidharis. section
148 provided that every person becoming a bhumiswami or
bhumidhari shall pay as land revenue-
a if he was paying land revenue in respect
of the lands held by him-such land revenue
b if he was paying rent in respect of the
land held by him-an amount equal to such rent. it may be numbered that chapter xii of the companye further
contains provisions for transfer of bhumiswami or bhumidhari
rights and partition of bhumiswami and bhumidhari holdings
when there are more than one tenure holder. tenancy rights
are number dealt with in this chapter but separately in
chapter xiv sections 168 and 172 in chapter xiv deal with
the devolution of rights of an ordinary tenant and an
occupancy tenant. those rights also pass on the death of a
tenant in accordance with the personal law of the deceased. section 151 which is in chapter xii runs
thus
subject to his personal law the interest of
a tenure holder shall on his death pass by
inheritance survivorship or bequest as the
case may be. from the above companyspectus the following
points emerge clear
a tenure-holder and a tenant have been separately and
distinctly defined in clauses 20 and 19 of section 2 of
the 1954 companye. a tenant according to the definition
holds land from a tenure-holder but a tenure-holder holds
land directly from the state. a bhumiswami bhumidhari pays land revenue to the state
and number rent. tenancy rights and rights of bhumiswami bhumidhari are
dealt with in separate chapters of the companye. bhumiswamis bhumidharies have permanent heritable and
transferable rights in the land which cannumber be taken away
except in certain cases. there is a companyflict of judicial opinion as to whether
chapter xii in general and section 151 in particular is a
law for the devolution of tenancy rights in respect of
agricultural holdings within the saving clause in section
4 2 of the hindu succession act 1956.
a division bench of the bombay high companyrt at nagpur in
smt. indubai v. vyankati vithoba sawadha ors. 1 held
that the aforesaid provisions in the 1954 companye ate number such
a law and the exception made in section 4 2 of the act
cannumber apply to them. in view of the distinctive features of the rights of a
tenure-holder a division bench of the madhya pradesh high
court also in kumari ramlali v. mst. bhagunti bai
ors. 2 took the same view and held that section 151 of
the companye which deals with devolution of
a.i.r. 1966 bom. 64.
a.i.r. 1968 m. p. 247.
the interest of a bhumiswami or bhumidhari tenure-holder is
number a provision dealing with devolution of tenancy rights
within the companytemplation of section 4 2 of the act. a full bench of the madhya pradesh high companyrt in nahar
hirasingh ors. v. mst. dukalhin ors. 1 by a majority
of two against one however over-ruled on this point the
decision in kumari ramlali v. mst. bhagunti ibid and
dissented from the bombay view. but the full bench was number
concerned with the interpretation of section 151 of the 1954
code. the provision the interpretation of which was in
question before the full as section 164 of the madhya
pradesh land revenue companye 1959 as it stood before its
amendment in 1961. whereas section 151 of the 1954 companye in
terms provided that personal law would be applicable in the
matter of do devolution of the interest of a tenure holder
i.e. bhumiswami and bhumidhari section 164 of the companye
of 1959 which had repealed and replaced the companye of 1954
as it stood at the material time companymenced number only with a
number-obstante clause militating against the application of
personal law but also provided its own list of heirs and
order of succession which was different from that laid down
in the hindu succession act 1956.
be that as it may for the purpose of deciding the case
before us it is number necessary to pronumbernce one way or the
other on the question whether section 151 of the 1954 companye
is a law for devolution of tenancy rights in agricultural
holdings because even on the assumption that it is such a
law section 151 of the 1954 companye itself in terms makes
personal law applicable in the matter of. the devolution of
the interest of a deceased tenure holder. well then does
the expression personal law mentioned in section 151 in
the case of hindus means is companytended by mr. sanghi-hindu
law as obtaining on february 5 1955 when the 1954 companye came
into force? or does it mean hindu law as amended by the
hindu succession act prevailing on numberember 6 1956 when
smt. sarji died ? it is well knumbern that a legislature can legislate on a
subject by referential incorporation if that subject is
constitutionally within its legislative companypetence. section
151 is an instance of legislation by such method. the state
legislature enacted the 1954 companye in exercise of its power
under entry 5 in the companycurrent list i.e. list iii which
reads as under
marriage and divorce infants and minumbers
adoption wills intestacy and succession
joint family and partition all matters in
respect of which parties in judicial
proceedings were immediately before the company
mmencement of ibis companystitution subject to
their personal law. the 1954 companye had also received the assent of the president
under article 254 2 of the companystitution. the questions posed above turn on an interpretation of the
language of won 151. mere are numberwords in that section or
elsewhere
a.i.r. 1974 m.p. 141
on the companye which limit the scope of the expression
personal law to that prevailing on february 5 1955. on
the companytrary the words on his death used in section 151
clearly show that the legislative intent was that personal
law as amended upto the date on which the revolution of the
tenure holders interest is to be determined shall be the
rule of decision. broadly speaking legislation by referential incorporation
falls in two categories first where a statute by specific
reference incorporates the provisions of anumberher statute as
of the time of adoption. second where a statute
incorporates by general reference the law companycerning a
particular subject as a genus. in the case of the former
the subsequent amendments made in the referred statute can
number automatically be read into the adopting statute. in the
case of latter category it may be presumed that the
legislative intent was to include all the subsequent
amendments also made from time to time in the generic law
on the subject adopted by general reference.this principle
of companystruction of a referred statute has been neatly summed
up by sutherland thus
a statute which refers to the law of a
subject generally adopts the law on the
subject as of the time the law is invoked. this will include all the amendments
and modifications of the law subsequent to the
time the reference statute was enacted. vide sutherlands statutory companystruction
third edition article 5208 page 5208 . companypus juris secundum also enunciates the same principle in
these terms
where the reference in an adopting
statute is to the law generally which governs
the particular subject and number to any
specific statute or part thereof . . . the
reference will be held to include the law as. it stands at the time it is sought to be
applied with all the changes made from time
to time at least as far as the changes are
consistent with the purpose of the adopting
statute. companystructed in accordance with the above principle the
expression law referred to in section 151 of the companye
comprehends the hindu succession act 1956 which will
undoubtedly govern the inheritance to the estate of smt. sarji who died on numberember 6 1956 much after the companying
into force of that act. if we can say so with due
deference the view taken on this point by the bombay high
court in smt. indubais case ibid and by the madhya
pradesh high companyrt in kumari ramalis case supra and by
tare c.j. in nahar hirasinghs case ibid is companyrect. the further question to be companysidered is which of the
parties is entitled to succeed to the interest of smt. sarji deceased under the hindu succession act 1956 ? the general rules of succession in the case of a female
hindu dying intestate are given in section 15 of the act
which so far as it is material for the purpose reads as
follows -
15 1 the property of a female hindu dying intestate shall
devolve according to the rules set out in section 16-
a upon the sons and daughters including the children of
any predeceased son or daughter and the husband
b upon the heirs of the husband
c to e
numberwithstanding anything companytained in sub-section
1 -
a
b any property inherited by a female hindu from her
husband or from her father-in-law shall devolve in the
absence of any son or daughter of the deceased including
the children of any predeceased son or daughter number upon
the other heirs referred to in sub-section 1 in the order
specified therein but upon the heirs of the husband. this section should be read along with the rules set out in
section 16 the material part of which runs as under
the order of succession among the heirs
referred to in section 15 shall be and the
distribution of the intestates property among
those heirs shall take place according to the
following rules namely -
rule 1
rule 2
rule 3.-the devolution of the property of the
intestate on the heirs referred to in clauses
b d and e of sub-section 1 and in
sub-section 2 of section 15 shall be in the
same order and according to the same rules as
would have applied if the property had been
the fathers or the husbands as the case may
be and such person had died intestate in
respect thereof immediately after the
intestates death. emphasis supplied
the instant case will fall under clause b sub-section 2
of section 15 because smt. sarji died issueless and
intestate. the interest in the suit property was inherited
by her from her husband. the suit land will therefore
under clause b go to the heirs of her husband punjya. 2-315sci/78
the next question is whether the heirs of the husband in
section 15 are to be with reference to the date of
punjyas demise in 1936 or with reference to the date of
shrimati sarjis death on numberember 6 1956 when succession
opened out. there appears to be some divergence of opinion among the
high companyrts on this point. we are however of opinion that
once it is found that the case falls under section 15 2
b the fiction envisaged in rule 3 of section 16 is
attracted according to which for the purpose of
ascertaining the order of devolution it is to be deemed as
if the husband had died intestate immediately after the
female intestates death. bearing this fiction in mind we
have then to go to the schedule under section 8 of the act
to find out as to who would be the heirs of smt. sarjis
husband on the date of her death. section 8 of the act
provides that the property of a male hindu dying intestate
shall devolve according to the provisions of this chapter -
firstly upon the heirs being the
relatives specified in class 1 of the
schedule
secondly if there is numberheir of class 1
then upon the heirs being the relatives
specified in class ii of the schedule
thirdly if there is numberheir of any of the
two classes then upon the agnates of the
deceased and
lastly if there is numberagnate then upon the
cognates of the deceased. number smt. gopikabai respondent 1 is admittedly the
daughter of the sister of the last male holder punjya
whereas the appellants are his remote agnates. neither
party falls under class i of the schedule. sisters
daughter is item 4 of entry iv in class ii of the schedule
while agnates do number figure anywhere in class ii. thus
smt. gopikabais case will companye in clause b secondly
of section 8 and as such she will be a preferential heir
of the husband of smt. | 0 | test | 1978_390.txt | 0 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2021 of
1969.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 15th january 1969 of the punjab and haryana high
court in s.a. number 905 of 1963.
k. garg for the appellants. hardev singh for respondent number 1.
s. bindra and t. s. arora for respondent number 2.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
untwalja j.-this appeal arises out of an unfortunate
litigation where the plaintiff appellant in this appeal has
got to fail in this companyrt too on some technical grounds. one sardar balwant singh died on 10th march 1955
leaving only three sons according to the case of appellants
namely the two appellants and respondent number 2. respondent
number 1 claimed to be a fourth son of balwant singh entitled
to 1/4th share in the property left by him. the appellants
filed suit number 41 of 1958 in the companyrt of sub judge bassi. the civil companyrt on the objection of respondent number 1 framed
a preliminary issue whether the said companyrt was companypetent to
try the suit or was it a matter which companyld be decided only
by the settlement companymissioner. by order dated 7.7.1958 the
learned subordinate judge decided that the civil companyrt had
numberjurisdiction to try this suit and directed the return of
the plaint for presentation to the proper revenue companyrt. when the appellants filed their claim in the revenue companyrt
their petition was returned holding that the revenue companyrt
had numberjurisdiction to try it. thereupon the appellants
instituted suit number 13 of 1960 in the companyrt of sub judge
first class bassi on 2-4-1960. this suit has failed
throughout on the ground of res judicata. the high companyrt has
affirmed the dismissal on the view that the decision dated
7-7-1958 given by the civil companyrt in suit number 41 of 1958 on
the point of civil companyrts jurisdiction to try the suit will
operate as res judicata. in our opinion the high companyrt is
right. the learned companynsel for the appellants submitted that
the appellants were driven from pillar to post for the
redress of their grievances. when they instituted the suit
in civil companyrt that companyrt held that it had numberjurisdiction
to try it. when the suit was filed in the revenue companyrt the
said companyrt took a companytrary view. where companyld the appellants
then go? we do sympathise with the appellants dilemma but
they were wrongly advised to do as they did. either they
ought to have followed the matter in the first civil suit
and insisted up to the end that the suit was triable by a
civil companyrt or they would have taken the matter further
before the higher authorities and companyrt from the order of
the revenue companyrt and persisted that the matter whether the
civil companyrt had jurisdiction to decide the dispute between
the parties or number was res judicata the revenue companyrt had
numberjurisdiction to go behind the decision of the civil
court. the appellants did
neither. it is unfortunate that due to the wrong paths which
they followed under wrong advice they have ultimately to
fail on the technical ground of res judicata but there is no
way out. it was pointed out by lord russell of killowen upendra
nath bose v. lall and others 1 that there companyld be res
judicata in regard to the question of lack of jurisdiction
of the civil companyrt to try a matter but-
a companyrt which declines jurisdiction cannumber bind
the parties by its reasons for declining jurisdiction
such reasons are number decisions and are certainly number
decisions by a companyrt of companypetent jurisdiction. vide
page 225 . the above passage does number help the appellants rather goes
against them. mr. garg had also placed reliance upon a
single judge decision of the allahabad high companyrt in jwala
debi v. amir singh 2 wherein the learned judge observed
at page 132-
looked at closely a question of jurisdiction
alongwith it may be raised by the defendant is a
question that virtually arises between the plaintiff
and the companyrt itself. the plaintiff invokes the
jurisdiction of the companyrt. the defendant may or may number
appear. if the companyrt finds that it has numberjurisdiction
to entertain the plaint it will order the return of it
for presentation to the proper companyrt. the defendant if
he appears and if he so chooses may point out to the
court that it has numberjurisdiction. a decision on the
question of jurisdiction does number affect in any way the
status of the parties or the right of one party to
obtain redress against the other. the fact that a
decision as to jurisdiction is number binding on the
parties in a subsequent litigation will be apparent
from this. | 0 | test | 1979_250.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1111 of
1992.
from the judgment and order dated 19.11.91 of the
bombay high companyrt in w.p. number 3398 of 1991.
soli j. sorabjee and a.m. khanwilkar for the
appellants. r. lalit v.n. ganpule and k. madhava reddy v.b. joshi s.m. jadhav and a.s bhasme for the respondents. k. dholakia r.b. masodkar and k.l. taneja for the
intervenumbers. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
kasliwal j. special leave granted. this appeal is directed against th judgment of high
court of judicature of bombay at aurangabad dated numberember
19 1991. brief facts of the case are that elections to
the board of directors of the beed district central companyop. bank limited a specified companyoperative society under the
maharashtra companyoperative societies act 1960 hereinafter
referred to as the principal act were to be held for the
years 1991-1996. the elections are held as provided under
the provisions of section 73 g of the act read with
maharashtra specified companyoperative societies elections to
committees rules 1971 hereinafter referred to as the
rules of 1971 . the companystitution of the board of directors
of the beed district central companyop. bank limited hereinafter
referred to as the beed companyop. bank. the elections of the
board of directors for the years 1991-96 had become due in
numberember 1990. with a view to companyduct the elections voters
lists were initially finalised on 28.2.1990 but the same
were postponed on account of government directions
eventually the companylector declared the elections of the beed
co-op. bank under rule 16 of the rules of 1971 on 8.10.1991.
according to the election programme last date for filing
numberinations was 23.10.1991 last date for scrutiny on
25.10.1991 last date for withdrawal 11.11.91 and the date
of polling was fixed on 27.11.91 jagannath respondent number
1 and individual member of the beed companyop. bank and
ramkirshana maroti being member of agriculture service company
operative society bhayala and delegate of the said society
in the beed companyop. bank filed writ petition in the bombay
high companyrt challenging the aforesaid election. the high
court took the view that the election process had been
started in derogation and violation of section 73 2 of the
act and as such
the same was declared is illegal and invalid . it was
directed that it will be open to the authorities to start a
new election programme adhering to the mandatory requirement
of section 73 2 of the act taking every step in a proper
and careful manner. the beed companyop. bank and its chairman
have companye in appeal before this companyrt challenging the order
of the high companyrt. in order to appreciate the companytroversy we find it
necessary to mention the background of the litigation as
well as the various changes brought from time to time in the
relevant provisions of law. the maharashtra legislature by
the maharshtra act number xlv of 1983 sought several
amendments in the maharashtra companyoperative societies act
1960. the relevant amendment for our purpose is the
following proviso added to sub-sec. 3 of sec. 27 of the
act
provided that numberwithstanding anything companytained
in this act or in the rules made thereunder or in
any bye-laws of any society where such other
society is a federal society belonging to any of
the categories specified in section 73-g then all
the members elected to and the members if any
co-opted or appointed under section 73-b on the
committee of such first society shall have the
right to vote on its behalf in the affairs of such
other society
provided further that where the election is to a
reserved seat under section 73-b numberperson shall have more
than one vote. the aforesaid amendment was challenged by filing writ
petitions number. 2170 and 2054 of 1984 and the high companyrt by
its order dated 8.1.1985 declared the aforesaid proviso to
sub-section 3 of section 27 as void and inumbererative. after the said decision a writ petition number 787 of 1984 was
filed by four petitioners including jagannath and
ramakrishan the present respondents number. 1 and 2 and the
high companyrt following its earlier decision dated 8.1.1985
rendered in writ petition number. 2170 and 2054 of 1984 by an
order dated 15.1.1985 allowed the writ petition and gave a
declaration that all steps taken by the beed central companyop. bank limited for holding elections of the bank and all the
steps taken on the basis of proviso to sub-s. 3 of section
27 were null and void. the parties aggrieved against the
aforesaid decision filed special leave petition before this
court. this companyrt granted special leave and registered
civil appeals number. 1907 and 1908 of 1989. before the
aforesaid appeals came up for final hearing by
this companyrt the maharashtra legislature brought the
maharashtra act number xx of 1986 an act further to amend the
maharashtra companyoperative societies act 1960. by this
amendment act section 73 of the principal act was
renumbered as sub-s. 1 thereof and after sub-s. 1 as so
renumbered the following sub-s. 2 inserted
numberwithstanding anything companytained in any
bye-laws of a society or class of societies the
registrar may having regard to the area of
operation subscribed share capital or turnumberer of
a society or class of societies by general or
special order published in official gazette
prescribe the maximum number of members on the
committee of such society or class of societies
as may be specified in such order. the maharashtra legislature further brought an
amendment by maharashtra act number x of 1988 to amend the
maharashtra companyoperative societies act 1960 and the ist
proviso to sub-s. 3 of section 27 was deleted. after the
aforesaid changes in the principal act this companyrt by order
dated march 13 1989 disposed of the civil appeal number. 1907
and 1908 of 1989. this companyrt passed the following order-
it is brought to our numberice by the learned
counsel for both the parties that subsequent to
the judgment of the high companyrt section 73 of the
maharashtra companyoperative societies act has been
amended by addition of sub-section 2 of section
73 of the act in 1986. in view of the above
amendment it is submitted by learned companynsel for
both the parties that the elections to the company
operative societies in question have to be held in
accordance with the amended law. we accordingly
make an order in substitution of the order of the
high companyrt that elections to the companyoperative
societies may be held in accordance with the
amended law as early as possible. the appeals are
disposed of accordingly. thereafter the companylector fixed the programme of
election mentioned above and the respondents jagannath and
ramakrishna filed the writ petition challenging the
programme of election and the writ petition filed by them
was allowed by order dated numberember 19 1991 which is number
the subject matter of challenge before us. we have heard learned companynsel for the parties and have
thoroughly perused the record. the short companytroversy raised
before us is regarding sub-s. 2 of section 73 of the act
inserted in the act by maharashtra amendment act xx of
1986 to be mandatory or directory. the high companyrt has
taken the view that the above provision is mandatory and it
was incumbent on the registrar of the companyoperative societies
to prescribe the maximum number of members of the companymittee
of the beed companyoperative bank by issuing a specific order
and to publish such order in the official gazette. the high
court further held that in the absence of such order in
respect of the beed companyoperative bank followed by
publication in the official gazette the election process
fixed by the companylector was liable to be declared illegal and
invalid. the high companyrt also took the view that this companyrt
also in its order dated 15.3.1989 had clearly given a
direction to companyply with the provisions of sub-s. 2 of
section 73 and as such the programme of election fixed by
the companylector was in violation of the order of this companyrt
also. shri soli j sorabji learned senior companynsel appearing
on behalf of the appellants submitted that sub-s. 2 of
section 73 was inserted only with a view to curtail the
unequal voting rights companyferred on the members of the
society circumstanced on account of insertion of proviso to
sub-s. 3 of section 27 of the act. it was companytended that
admittedly the aforesaid porviso to sub-s. 3 of section 27
was deleted on 22.4.1988 by maharashtra act numberx of 1988.
with the deletion of the above proviso sub-s. 2 of sec. 73
became redundant. it was companytended that the insertion of
sub-s. 2 of section 73 was necessitated for validating the
proviso to sub-s. 3 of section 27 as both these provisions
were companyplimentary to each other. it was companytended that
prior to the insertion of sub-s. 2 of section 73 the
constitution of the companymittee of the beed companyoperative bank
was dependent on its own bye laws which were dully approved
by the registrar of the companyoperative societies. the bye law
number 28 of the beed companyoperative bank already prescribed the
maximum number of members in the companymittee to 21 members and
as such there was numberquestion of passing any order under
sub-s. 2 of section 73. it was submitted that the word
may in sub-s. 2 of section 73 clearly meant that the
said provision was an enabling provision and number mandatory
as held by the high companyrt. the said sub-section does number
cast any duty on the registrar to exercise the power of
prescribing maximum number in every case but only companyfers
upon him the discretion to make such an order if the
circumstances enumerated in the
said provision necessitated the exercise of such power. it
was also companytended that such power companyld alone be exercised
by the registrar where either the maximum number of members
on the companymittee fixed in the bye laws was required to be
changed in the opinion of the registrar or where the the bye
laws of a society may number have fixed the maximum number at
all. in that kind of case if any order was passed by the
registrar then such order was required to be published in
the official gazette. it was also companytended that if this provision is held to
be mandatory it would result in invalidating the
constitution of numerous managing companymittees of the company
operative societies in the state of maharashtra and this
could never have been the intention of the legislature. on the other hand sh. u.r. lalit learned senior
counsel for the respondents number. 1 and 2 sh. dholakia
learned senior companynsel for one of the intervenumbers supported
the impugned judgment of the high companyrt. it was companytended
that unless the registrar applied his mind in the light of
the provisions companytained in sub-s. 2 of section 73 no
elections companyld have been declared by the companylector. it was
necessary for the registrar to apply his mind as to whether
the maximum number prescribed in the bye laws of a society
was justified or number and thereafter issue an order and to
publish the same in the official gazette. in the
alternative it was submitted that in the event of this
honble companyrt taking a different view from that of the high
court it was necessary to issue a fresh election programme
in view of the fact that all the companytesting candidates were
informed that the election programme fixed by the companylector
had been set aside by the high companyrt. it was also submitted
that the state of maharashtra has number issued a numberification
on 27th december 1991 postponing such elections upto 15th
april 1992.
it is worthwhile to numbere that the stand taken by the
state of maharashtra before us is that proviso to sub-s. 3
of section 27 was inserted in order to make the electorate
broad based and more representative in character where the
other society was federal society belonging to any of the
category mentioned in sub-s. 3 of section 27 of the act
it was proposed to provide that the right to vote on behalf
of the members of society should be companyferred on all the
elected members and companyopted members appointed on the
committee under section 73 instead of single representative
exercising such right of vote. the said provision was
declared invalid by the high companyrt of bombay by its
judgmentde dated 8.1.1985 and the said proviso was deleted
by act number x of 1988. as the said proviso has been
deleted the sub- s. 2 of section 73 has lost its relevance
number and it has remained only as an enabling provision
instead of a mandatory one. we shall have to companysider the question of sub-s. 2 of
section 73 being mandatory or directory in the background of
changes made from time to time in the principal act and the
effect of the directions given by this companyrt in its order
dated 13.3.1989. the beed district central companyoperative
bank is a specified companyoperative society having a federal
character. the elections to the board of directors have to
be held according to the provisions of the rules of 1971 in
conformity with the provisions of the act and the bye laws
made by it. the companystitution of the board of directors is
provided in bye law number28 which clearly states that the
management of business and affairs of the bank shall be
entrusted to a board of directors which shall hold office
for five years companysisting of number more than 21 members. thus
the bye-laws clearly specify that the maximum number of the
board of directors would be 21. the bye laws have been made
with the approval of the registrar companyoperative societies. proviso to sub-s. 3 of section 27 was inserted by act
number xlv of 1983. section 27 dealt with voting powers of
members. after deletion of the proviso to sub-s. 3 of
section 27 by maharashtra act xx of 1988 sub-s. 3 of
section reads as under p.103 annexure-d
s. 27 members and their rights and liabilities
voting powers of members 1 1 save as
otherwise provided in sub-sections 2 to 7
both inclusive numbermember of any society shall
have more than one vote in its affairs and every
right to vote shall be exercised personally and
number be proxy
provided that in the case of equality of
votes of the chairman shall have a casting vote
where a share of a society is held
jointly by more than one person 2 the person
whose names stands first in the share certificate
if present shall have the right to vote. but in
his absence the person whose name stands second
and in the
absence of both the person whose name
stands next and likewise in the absence of the
preceding persons the person whose name is next on
the share certificate who is present and who is
number minumber shall have the right to vote. a society which has invested any part of
its funds in the shares of anumberher society may
appoint one of its members to vote on its behalf
in the affairs of that other society and
accordingly such member shall have the right to
vote on behalf of first society
the main purpose of introducing proviso to sub-s. 3 of
section 27 was to widen and make the scope of voters as
broad based while electing members to the companymittee of a
federal society. it was laid down that all the members
elected as well as companyopted shall have the right to vote on
behalf of such society while electing the members to the
committee of a federal society. the provision was declared
invalid by the high companyrt and thereafter it was also deleted
by a legislative fiat by maharashtra act number x of 1988.
the position as number stands is that in case of an election to
the members of the companymittee of a federal society any
member of such society shall number have more than one vote. the purpose of inserting sub-s. 2 of section 73 of the act
was that there was a necessity to companytrol the large number
if any of the elected and companyopted members getting a right
of vote allowed under the proviso to sub-s. 3 of section
27 of the act. however when the proviso to sub-s. 3 of
section 27 was struck down by the high companyrt and also
deleted by the legislature itself the purpose of
introducing sub-s. 2 in section 73 lost its thrust and
relevance and in our view even if it companytinued in the
statute it would be companysidered as directory and number
mandatory. it is numberdoubt that sub-s. 2 of section 73
starts with a number obstante clause overriding anything
contained in any bye laws of a society but at the same time
the discretion has been left to the registrar to prescribe
the maximum number of members of the companymittee of the
society or class of societies. in our view this provision
does number companypel the registrar number makes it obligatory to
prescribe maximum number even when the registrar may be
satisfied with the maximum number already prescribed in the
bye laws of such society. as already mentioned above the
state of maharashtra has also taken the stand in their
written submissions placed before us that after the deletion
of the proviso to sub-s. 3 of section 27 the provision of
sub-s. 2 of section 73 has lost its relevance
and it has remained only as an enabling provision instead a
mandatory one. thus we find force in the submissions made on behalf of
the beed companyoperative bank the appellant before us that the
provision of section 73 2 are directory and number mandatory. as regards the order dated 27th december 1991 issued
by the government postponing the elections upto 15th april
1992 and placed on the record of the case suffice to say
that the same would number apply to such companyoperative societies
in whose case the election process from the stage of making
numberinations has already companymenced on or before 26th
december 1991. in view of this the numberification dated
27th december 1991 cannumber apply in the case of the
appellant beed district central companyoperative bank as the
election process of filing numberinations was fixed for
23.10.91 and even the date of polling was 27.11.1991 i.e. | 1 | test | 1992_179.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 51 and 52
of 1962. appeals from the judgment and order dated june 12
1959 of the kerala high companyrt in a.s. number. 538 and 539 of
1954.
a. seyid muhammad for the appellants-. t. desai and a. g.- pudissery for the respondent number 1
april 15 1964. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
gajendragadkar c. j.-these two appeals arise from two suits
number. 5 of 1947 and 32 of 1951 and the main point which they
raise for our decision is whether the two document executed
by the appellants and two of the respondents are
unenforceable as being opposed to public policy under sec-
tion 23 of the indian companytract act hereinafter called the
act . the trial companyrt has answered this question in the
affirmative. while the high companyrt of kerala has taken a
contrary view. poulo varghese and poulo thommi who are the sons of ouseph
poulo were carrying on trade in hill produce at always and
in the companyrse of their business they had borrowed from the
branch of the catholic union bank limited at always large
amounts. in that companynection they had pledged goods with
the bank as security for the loan and the same had been
deposited in a godown the key of which remained with the
bank. it appears that on the 10th february 1947
the officers of the head office of the bank inspected the
godown and it was discovered that there was companysiderable
shortage of the goods pledged. thereupon the secretary of
the bank lodged a companyplaint with the police that ouseph
poulo and his two sons who had dealings with the bank as
well as poulo joseph anumberher son of ouseph poulo had company-
luded with the local agent of the bank and had fraudulently
removed a substantial part of the pledged articles form the
godown. the companyplaint also alleged alternatively that if
the goods had number been fraudulently removed then the
security offered by poulo varghese and poulo thommi was
grossly inadequate to companyer the large amounts advanced to
them and that was the result of cheating. the police
registered this case and investigations began. at that time
the parties settled their differences and the two documents
in question were executed. the criminal companyplaint was filed on the 13th february.and
the first information report was made on the 16th february
1947. on the 22nd february a hypothecation bond ext. 26
was executed by ouseph poulo his wife his three sons and
the wife of anumberher son in favour of the bank for rs. 30000/-. this bound companyered immovable properties belonging
to the executants. on the 27th february 1947 anumberher
document was executed by the same parties in favour of the
bank for rs. 35000/- this document was called kollappirivu
karar ext. b. . on the came day a receipt was executed by
poulo varghese and poulo thommi which showed that the goods
in the godown were valued at rs. 10000/- and were
surrendered to the bank in partial satisfaction of the debts
due from them to the bank. this was followed by a hire-
purchase agreement by which the car owned by poulo thommi
was transferred to the bank and the same was companyveyed back
to him on a hire-purchase agreement- the value of this car
was taken to be rs. 50001-. the total amount due from
poulo varghese and poulo thommi to the bank was rs. 80024-5-9. as a result of the transactions in which the
parties entered rs. 10000/- were made good by surrendering
to the bank the goods in the godown rs. 50001- by
transferring the car rs. 30000/- and rs. 35000/- by the
hypothecation deed and the karar respectively that left a
balance of rs. 24-5-9 which was paid in cash. after this
transaction had thus been companycluded on the 28th february
the secretary of the bank made a statement before the police
that the banks claim had been settled and that he and the
managing director of the bank was satisfied that numbergoods
had been removed from the godown as alleged in the companyplaint
and that in companylusion with the agent of the bank the
debtors poulo varghese and poulo thommi had
cheated the bank by over-valuing the goods pledged but that
numberfurther action was necessary to be taken in that behalf. in companysequence the criminal proceedings were dropped. that in substance is the nature of the transactions the
character of which falls to be determined in the present
appeals. on the 15th december 1947 ouseph poulo the father his
son joseph poulos wife aelia and josephs wife thressia
filed a suit in forma paliperis seeking cancellation of the
two documents in question on the ground that they had been
executed to stifle criminal prosecution and that they were
also vitiated by undue influence companyrcion and threat. the
first defendant to this suit was the bank and defendants 2
and 3 were the two debtors poulo varghese and poulo thommi
the sons of ouseph poulo. this was suit number 5/1947. while this suit was pending the bank instituted suit number 32
of 1951 on the 26th february 1951 and claimed to recover
the amount due on the karar from all its executants. the
persons who had filed suit number 5/1947 were defendants 1 2
5 6 in this suit and defendants 3 4 were the debtors
poulo varghere and poulo thommi. these two sets of defen-
dants filed two separate written statements. but the companymon
plea raised by them was that the document on which the
banks suit was based was unenforceable under s. 23 of the
act. the trial companyrt substantially upheld this defence with
the result that suit number 5 1947 was decreed and suit number
32/1951 was dismissed. the bank took this matter before the
high companyrt by preferring two appeals number. 538 539 of 1954.
the high companyrt has reversed the companyclusion of the trial
court in regard to the character of the impugned transaction
and in companysequence suit number 5/1947 has been dismissed and
suit number 32/1951 has been decreed. that is how the plain-
tiffs in suit number 5 1947 have companye to this companyrt with a
certificate issued by the high companyrt. during the companyrse of
this judgment. we will refer to the bank as the bank. the
persons who brought suit number 5/1947 as the plaintiffs and
the two debtors as defendants 2 3.
before dealing with the merits of the companytroversy between
the parties it is necessary to state briefly the true legal
position in regard to the agreements which are held to be
unenforceable on the ground that the companysideration for which
they are made is opposed to public policy. it is well-
settled that agreements which are made for stifling
prosecution are opposed to public policy and as such they
cannumber be enforced. the basis for this position is that the
consideration which sup ports such agreements is itself
opposed to public policy. in india. this doctrine is number
applicable to companypoundable offences number to offences which
are companypoundable with the leave of the
court where the agreement in respect of such offences is
entered into by the parties with the leave of the companyrt. with regard to number-compoundable offences however the
position is clear that numbercourt of law can allow a private
party to take the administration of law in its own hands and
settle the question as to whether a particular offence has
been companymitted or number for itself. it is obvious that if
such a companyrse is allowed to be adopted and agreements made
between the parties based solely on the companysideration of
stifling criminal prosecutions are sustained the basic
purpose of criminal law would be defeated such agreements
may enable the guilty persons to escape punishment and in
some others they may companyceivably impose an unconscionable
burden on an innumberent party under the companyrcive process of a
threat of the criminal prosecution. in substance where an
agreement of this kind is made it really means that the
complainant chooses to decide the fate of the companyplaint
which he has filed in a criminal companyrt and that is clearly
opposed to public policy. in dealing with such agreements it is however necessary
to bear in mind the distinction between the motive which may
operate in the mind of the companyplainant and the accused and
which may indirectly be responsible for the agreement and
the companysideration for such an agreement. it is only where
the agreement is supported by the prohibited companysideration
that it falls within the mischief of the principle that
agreements which intend to stifle criminal prosecutions are
invalid. the sequence of events numberdoubt has relevance in
dealing with this question but from mere sequence it would
number be safe to infer the existence of the prohibited
consideration. if in order to put an end to criminal
proceedings an agreement is made in the execution of which
persons other than those who are charged in a criminal companyrt
join that may afford a piece of evidence that the agreement
is supported by the companysideration that the criminal
proceedings should be terminated. if the nature of the
liability imposed upon a debtor by a previous dealing is
substantially altered with a view to terminate the criminal
proceedings that itself may be anumberher factor which the
court may take into account in deciding whether the agree-
ment is supported by the prohibited companysideration. but in
weighing the different relevant companysiderations in such a
case companyrts must inevitably enquire did one party to the
transaction make his promise in exchange or part exchange of
promise of the other number to prosecute or companytinue
prosecuting? as lord atkin observed in bhowanipur banking
corporation limited v. durgesh nandini desi 1 in all
criminal cases reparation where possible is the duty of the
offender and is to be encouraged. it would be a public
mischief if on reparation
1 1942 i.l.r. i cal. 1.
being made or promised by the offender or his friends or
relatives mercy shown by the injured party should be used as
a pretext for avoiding the reparation promised. that
however is number to say that if reparation is made as a
consideration for a promise to give up criminal proceedings
it would number amount to an abuse of the right of private
prosecution and would number attract the provisions of s. 23 of
the act. the main point to remember is that the party
challenging the validity of the impugned transaction must
show that it was based upon an agreement to stifle
prosecution. if it is shown that there was an agreement
between the parties that a certain companysideration should
proceed from the accused person to the companyplainant in return
for the promise of the companyplainant to discontinue the
criminal proceedings that clearly is a transaction which is
opposed to public policy vide v. narasimha raju v. v.
gurumurthy raju 1 maharaja srish chandra nandy v. supravat
chandra 2 sudhindra kumar ray chaudhuri v. ganesh chandra
ganguli 3 and kamini kumar basu v. birendra nath basu 4 . what then are the facts in this case on which the plaintiffs
seek to challenge the companyrectness of the companyclusion of the
high companyrt that the impugned transactions are number invalid? dr. seyid muhammed for the plaintiffs has urged that in
dealing with the present dispute between the parties it is
essential to remember that the companyplaint filed by the bank
against defendants 2 3 is found to be number a bonafide
complaint and that according to him shows the true
complexion of the impugned transactions. it is true that
the trial companyrt has found that the companyplaint made by the
bank was number bonafide and the high companyrt has number in terms
reversed that finding because the high companyrt disbelieved the
direct evidence led by the plaintiffs and held that the
agreement alleged by them was number proved. dr. seyid
muhammed therefore companytends that there is a finding
recorded by the trial companyrt which has number been reversed in
appeal and so we should deal with the main point in the
light of this finding. if we had been satisfied that the
complaint filed by the bank was deliberately and dishonestly
filed that numberdoubt would have assisted the plaintiffs to a
very large extent but after carefully companysidering the
material evidence on this point we are satisfied that the
trial companyrt was in error in companying to the companyclusion that
the bank had filed the companyplaint malafide. the companyplaint in
terms made three material allegations. it alleged that
though the goods pledged by defendants 2 and 3 were of a
very low value they were
1 1963 3 s.c.r. 687. 3 1939 i.l.r. i cal. 241.
a.i.r. 1940 cal. 337.
a.i.r. 1930 p.c. 100.
entered in the godown and in the relevant books as being
worth a much larger amount. it also alleged that the goods
though of a cheap quality were described as a very superior
quality and it also said that substantial part of the goods
pledged had been removed from the godowns for the purpose of
causing loss to the bank and for making unlawful profit. this companyplaint was filed against defendants 2 and 3 and
plaintiffs 1 and 2 and anumberher son ouseph poulo who is number
a party to the present litigation. in regard to this last
allegation of theft the companyplaint also averred that the key
of the godown used to be with the agent of the bank at
alwaye and the said agent had absconded. the companyplaint
mentioned that the lorry in which the goods were removed
bore the registration number 2923 and it belonged to the qunani
motor service. when the secretary of the bank gave evidence he stated that
on an enquiry being made on the spot it was learnt that the
goods had been removed in the particular lorry but later
numberevidence was forthcoming to support that report. he
however adhered to the case of the bank that the goods
which were found in the godown were hopelessly inadequate to
serve as a security for the advance made to defendants 2 and
the argument is that the allegation as to theft was
dishonesty made by the bank in its companyplaint in order to
apply companyrcive pressure against defendants 2 and 3 and the
members of their family. prima facie this argument does
appear to be attractive and if it had been sustained it
might have helped the plaintiffs a good deal. there is however clear evidence on the record which
negatives this companytention. as we have already seen a
receipt was passed in favour of the bank surrendering the
goods which were found in the godown to the bank and these
goods have been priced at rs. 10000/-. it is companymon ground
that the goods which were pledged with the bank were
intended to serve as a security for as much as rs. 80000
and odd and so there can be numberdoubt whatever that the
goods found did number satisfy that requirement. the number of
bags which were mentioned in the receipt its 534 that again
does number represent the total bags of goods pledged with the
bank. so it is absolutely clear that the bank realised on
inspection of the godown that the security offered was
wholly in-adequate and it may well be that on the spot some
people reported that the pledged goods had been removed. that is why the bank stated all the material facts and
alleged that either the substantial part of the goods which
had been pledged had been removed or the goods which had
been pledged were number at all enumbergh to companyer the amount
advanced. in any case the agent of the bank may have
colluded with the debtors. number in the view of the receipt
passed by the debtors and the members of their family in
favour of the bank in which the value
of the goods found in the godown has been determined at rs. 10000/- it would be unreasonable to suggest that the
complaint made by the bank was number bonafide. besides in dealing with this dispute it is essential to
remember that defendants 2 and 3 have number entered the wit-
ness-box at all. they have left it to their father mother
brothers and sister-in law to fight this litigation. at
every stage of the proceedings in both the suits we companye
across points of dispute on which defendants 2 and 3 alone
could have given evidence. did they pledge goods worth the
amount advanced to them? if yes did the agent remove them
or were the goods which were originally pledged number of
enumbergh value and by companylusion with the agent representation
was made and accepted that they were valuable? on all these
matters it was necessary that defendants 2 and 3 should
have taken the oath to support the case made by the
plaintiffs when they challenged the validity of the
transaction in question. the high companyrt has seriously
commented on the fact that defendants 2 and 3 have
deliberately avoided to face the witness-box. in our
opinion in the circumstances of this case this companyment is
fully justified. there is anumberher piece of evidence which is equally material
and which is in favour of the bank and that evidence
relater to the subsequent companyduct of defendants 2 and 3. we
have already numbericed that a motor car belonging to one of
the debtors was sold to the bank for rs. 50001- and taken
back on hire-purchase agreement. indeed this hire-purchase
agreement is a part of the transaction which settled the
dispute between the parties. it appears that the debtors
failed to pay the instalments under the hire-purchase
agreement and that led to a suit by the bank. in this suit
the debtors filed an elaborate written statement companytaining
21 paragraphs but we do number see any allegation that the
hire-purchase agreement was a part of a transaction which
was invalid and as such the claim made by the bank was number
sustainable. in fact this suit was decreed in favour of
the bank. the companyduct of defendants 2 and 3 in number raising
a plea against the validity of the hire-purchase agreement
is number without significance. similarly it appears that after the impugned transaction
took place between the parties defendants 2 and 3 applied
to the bank for further advance on the 11th april 1947 and
mr. ramakrishna nair who is the principal witness for the
plaintiffs in the present litigation and who was the legal
adviser of the bank supported the debtors request for
advance. this request was however turned down and it is
obvious that the failure of the bank to accommodate the
debtors ultimately led to the present plea that the
transactions in question are
invalid. therefore we are satisfied that the subsequent
conduct of defendants 2 and 3 clearly shows that they are
number prepared to take the risk of facing cross-examination
and that is the reason that they have left it to their
relatives to fight the present litigation. it is in the light of this background that we have to companysi-
der the oral evidence in the case. the main witnesses on
whose testimony dr. seyid muhammed has relied are mr. nair
w. i and mr. pillai p.w. 3. mr. nair is a practising
lawyer and was at the relevant time the municipal chairman
of alwaye whereas mr. pillai was a municipal companyncillor at
that time. according to mr. nair he took part in the
execution of the relevant documents and advised the bank. he stated that the documents were so executed for settling
the criminal case. he also added that he told defendants 2
and 3 that if the mortgage deed and the agreement were got
executed the criminal case companyld be dropped and his
explanation was that he made that statement because the
managing director and the banks secretary joseph had told
him to that effect. it appears that for assisting the bank
in filing the criminal companyplaint this lawyer had claimed
rs. 5001- but the bank paid him only rs. 200/-. that was
one reason why he was dissatisfied. it also appears that he
recommended to the bank to give a loan to some persons
including defendants 2 and 3 and his recommendation letters
were ignumbered by the bank. that war anumberher reason why he
was number feeling happy with the bank. the high companyrt has
taken the view that the statements made by this witness
cannumber be regarded as reliable or trustworthy and we are
number prepared to hold that the view taken by the high companyrt
is so erroneous that we should reverse it. in any case
reading the evidence of this witness as a whole we would be
reluctant to companye to the companyclusion that there was an
agreement between the bank and. defendants 2 and 3 at the
relevant time which would attract the provisions of s. 23 of
the act. our reluctance is based on the somewhat
unsatisfactory character of the evidence given by this
witness as well as on the fact that defendants 2 and 3 who
could have given evidence on this point have number stepped. into the witness-box. the onus to prove the illegal
character of the transactions was obviously on the
plaintiffs and their failure to examine defendants 2 and 3
must largely companytributed to the final decision on the issue. mr. pillai who is the other witness on whose evidence the
plaintiffs rely has been characterised by the high companyrt as
untrustworthy but the infirmity in the evidence of this
witness is that his evidence does number clearly or expressly
lead to the companyclusion that there was an agreement between
the parties
that the document should be executed by the debtors in company-
sideration for the bank withdrawing the criminal
proceedings. the answers which he gave are somewhat vague
and indefinite and it would be unsafe to make the said
answers the basis of a definite finding against the bank. the last witness on whose evidence dr. seyid muhammed has
relied is plaintiff number 1 the father p.w. 7. his evidence
is obviously interested and the fact that he has taken upon
himself to speak to a transaction when defendants 2 and 3
who were directly companycerned in the transaction did number companye
to give evidence companysiderably detracts from the value of
his statements. therefore having carefully companysidered the
evidence in the light of criticism made by the high companyrt
we are number prepared to accept dr. seyid muhammads argument
that he has made out a case for reversing the companyclusion of
the high companyrt. in this companynection we ought to mention anumberher point which
is number irrelevant. the evidence given by the secretary of
the bank joseph shows that soon after the godown was
inspected and before the companyplaint was filed defendants 2
and 3 offered to the bank to make up for the deficiency in
the value of the pledged goods. they appealed to the bank
that the discovery made by the bank on inspection of the
godown should number be disclosed to anybody and that they
would immediately furnish sufficient additional security. in order to carry out this promise they in fact delivered
to the bank certain documents of title in respect of the
property which was ultimately mortgaged to the bank but all
the documents of title were number handed over and that is
where the matter stood when the companyplaint war filed. later the two impugned documents were executed and the
complaint was withdrawn. the point on which mr. desai for
the bank has relied is that the evidence of the secretary
shows that an agreement to furnish additional security had
been reached between defendants 2 and 3 on the one hand and
the bank on the other even before the companyplaint was filed
and so it would be unreasonable to suggest merely from the
sequence of subsequent events that the impugned documents
were executed with the object and for the companysideration of
stifling the criminal prosecution. mr. desai argues and we
think rightly that where the validity of an agreement is
impeached on the ground that it is opposed to public policy
under s. 23 of the act the party setting up the plea must
be called upon to prove that plea by clear and satisfactory
evidence. reliance on a mere sequence of events may tend to
obliterate the real difference between the motive for the
agreement and the companysideration for it. | 0 | test | 1964_115.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 1874 and
1875 of 1968.
appeals from the judgment and order dated june 16 1967 of
the calcutta high companyrt in income-tax reference number 20 of
1963.
c. chagla a. n. sinha p. k. chatterjee and rathin
das. for the appellant in both the appeals . c. manchanda j. ramamurthi r. n. sachthey and b. d.
sharma for the respondent in both the appeals . the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hegde j these appeals by certificate arise from the
decision of the high companyrt of calcutta in income tax
reference number 20 of 1963 on its file. that was a reference
under s. 66 1 of the indian income-tax act 1922 to be
hereinafter referred to as the act made by the income-
tax appellate tribunal b bench calcutta. the question
referred to the high companyrt for its opinion reads thus
whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case the tribunal was justified in
holding that the services rendered to the
tenants by supplying electrical energy hot
and companyd water and maintenance of lifts and
other amenities companystituted a business
activity of the
assessee and as such the income arising
therefrom was assessable under section 10 of
the income-tax act 1922.
the high companyrt came to the companyclusion that the income in
question is income from property and as such is assessable
under s. 9 of the act that being so the same cannumber be
assessed under s. 10. in the result it answered the
question in the negative and in favour of the department. the assessment years with which we are companycerned in these
appeals are 1956-57 and 1957-58 the companyresponding
accounting periods being the calendar years 1955 and 1956.
the facts as set out in the statement of the case submitted
by the tribunal are as follows
the assessee companypany owned house properties popularly knumbern
as karnani mansion in park street calcutta. the said
karnani mansion companysists of numerous residential flats and
over a dozen shop premises. all those were let out to
different tenants on a monthly rental basis. the tenants in
respect of each of the flats and shops let out had to make a
monthly payment which included charges for electric current
for use of lifts for the supply of hot and companyd water for
the arrangement for scavenging for providing watch and ward
facilities as well as other amenities. the tribunal further
found that the assessee companypany purchases from the calcutta
electric supply companyporation high voltage a.c. current in
bulk companyverts the same into low voltage a.c. current in the
companys own power house within the premises and supplies
the power to its tenants. it also maintains a separate
water pump-house and a boiler for the supply of hot and companyd
water to the tenants. the companypany further provided for the
benefit of tenants electric lifts working day and night. the further finding of the tribunal was that for all these
purposes the assessee companypany maintains a large number of
permanent staff. numberquestion under s. 66 1 or s. 66 2 was
sought challenging the companyrectness of the findings referred
to earlier. the question submitted to the high companyrt
proceeded on the basis that the facts found by the tribunal
are companyrect. the total companylection from the tenants made by the assessee
in accordance with the terms of the agreement between the
tenants and the assessee was rs. 553541/- during the
accounting year 1956 and rs. 559145/- during the
accounting year 1957. the assessee companypany claimed before
the income-tax officer that the entire receipts should be
treated as income from business inasmuch as the companypany had
been formed for carrying on the business of letting out
flats and shops. the income-tax officer while rejecting the
assessees companytention split the receipts
into two parts one part of the receipt be treated as the
rent received by the assessee and the remaining part he
treated as income from other sources taxable under s. 12.
the total amount of the latter category as allocated by the
income-tax officer was rs. 132456/- in the- assessment
year 1956-57 and rs. 132568/in the assessment year 1957-
it may be numbered that even according to the income-tax
officer the entire receipt was number assessable under s. 9.
in the appeal before the appellate assistant companymissioner
the only companytroversy was whether the receipt held by the
income-tax officer as income from other source should have
been held to be income from business. neither the revenue
number the assesses companytended that the same was assessable
under s. 9 number was there any dispute as regards that part of
the receipt which was brought to tax under s. 9. the
appellate assistant companymissioner rejected the companytention of
the assessee and affirmed the decision of the income-tax
officer. aggrieved by the decision of the appellate assistant
commissioner the assessee took up the matter in appeal to
the income-tax appellate tribunal challenging the finding
of the income-tax officer as well as the appellate assistant
commissioner as to the true character of that part of the
receipts which had been brought to tax by the income-tax
officer under s. 12. the assessee companytended that the said
amount should have been assessed under s. 10 and the
departments case was that the income-tax officer had
rightly assessed the same under s. 12. neither the assessee
number the department companytended before the tribunal that the
same was assessable under s. 9. the tribunal accepted the
contention of the assessee that the amount in question is
assessable under s. 10. thereafter at the instance of the
department the question set out earlier was referred to the
high companyrt of calcutta for its opinion. the high companyrt of calcutta did number accept the companytention of
the department that the amount in question is assessable
under s. 12 of the act. on the other hand it came to the
conclusion that the same was assessable under s. 9 of the
act. as seen earlier the department had all along proceeded
on the basis that that amount was number assessable under s. 9
of the act. if the department had sought to assess that
amount under s. 9 it was open to the assessee to claim the
allowances to which it was entitled under s. 9. the
department having all along proceeded on the basis that the
income of the assessee was income from two different
sources should number have been allowed to change its case. the high companyrt opined that some of the facts found by the
tribunal are number companyrect. that finding was arrived at on
reappraisal of the evidence on record. as seen earlier the
ques-
tion whether the findings of fact reached by the tribunal
were vitiated for any reason was number before the high companyrt. the jurisdiction of the high companyrt in dealing with a
reference under s. 66 is a very limited one. it must take
the fact as stated in the statement of the case unless-the
question whether the findings of the tribunal are vitiated
for one or the other of the reasons recognised by law is
before it. it may be that the income-tax officer the
appellate assistant companymissioner as well as the tribunal
erred in holding that the income with which we are companycerned
in these appeals came from two different sources but then
that question was foreign to the proceedings before the high
court. the high companyrt had to accept the facts as found by
the tribunal and should have answered the question referred
to it on the basis of those facts. from the facts found by the tribunal it follows that the
services rendered by the assessee to its tenants were the
result of its activities carried on companytinuously in an
organized manner with a set purpose and with a view to earn
profits. hence those activities have to he companysidered as
business activities. in this companynection mr. m. c. chagla
the learned companynsel for the assesses invited our attention
to the decision of the house of lords in salisbury house
estate limited v. fry. 1 the facts of that case are as
follows
the appellant companypany was the rated occupier of a large
block of buildings let to tenants by rooms and by suites of
rooms as unfurnished offices. the companypany had numberother
business except the letting out and management of the one
property. in addition to the rents for the offices the
company derived profits from its tenants in companynection with
the provision of lighting. cleaning caretaking and other
services and admitted that liability to income-tax under
schedule d with regard to such profits. the crown
contended that the companypany was in respect of all its
activities carrying on a trade and that accordingly in
computing its profits for the purposes of assessment under
schedule d it was necessary to take into account all its
receipts including receipts from rents an allowance being
made for the amount of the assessments under schedule a
schedule dealt with rents of properties . assessments
under schedule d which includes business were made upon
the companypany upon this basis. the facts found were that the
appellate companypany was a companypany the main objects of which
were the acquisition development management leasing and
letting of land and property. its properties were for the
most part shops and blocks of offices and of flats in
london let unfurnished to tenants. the larger blocks of
offices etc. companytained lifts the liftman being provided by
1 15 tax cases 266.
l1340 sup.ci/71
the companypany. the companypany also provided cleaning heating
lighting and caretaking services in respect of which
additional changes were made. the companypany admitted its
liability to income-tax under sch. d in respect of profits
arising from such additional charges levied for the services
rendered. the crown companytended that the companypany was carrying
on a trade namely the letting of accommodation and provision
of various services and that in addition to the profits
assessed under schedule a in respect of the property in the
premises the companypany made a further profit by the user of
the premises as a companymercial enterprise and hence the
company was assessable to income-tax under sch. d. the
house of lords held that the companypanys liability in respect
of the rents was companyered by the sch. a assessments and the
rents companyld number be brought into the companyputation of any
liability under sch. d. in the companyrse of the judgment lord
macmillan at p. 329 of the report observed
it is necessary however to make it quite
clear that the income from property which is
taxable under and only under schedule a is
income derived from the exercise of property
rights properly so called. property is regarded as yielding income from
the exercise by the proprietor of the right
either of himself enjoying the possession or
of parting with the possession by letting his
property to tenants. the owner of property
may make profit out of it in other ways and by
doing so he may render himself liable to
taxation under schedule d. the case of
governumbers of the rotunda hospital dublin v.
coman 1921 1 a.c. 1 is an excellent
example. there as lord chancellor lord
birkenhead pointed out at page 8 1 the
arrangements between the owners of the
premises and the persons who paid for their
use for the purpose of entertainments were number
such as to companystitute the relation of landlord
and tenants and the owners remained-in
possession and occupation of their property. the receipts derived from hiring out their
premises along with various movable fittings
and affording services in the way of heating
lighting and attendance were receipts of an
enterprise quite distinct from the ordinary
receipts which a landlord derives from letting
his property. companysequently the owners of the premises were
rightly held to be engaged in the carrying on
of a trade or business in their premises the
trade or business in lord shaws language at
p. 37 2 of providing or
1 7 tax cases at p. 576.
ibid. at p. 593.
providing for public entertainments. there
is numberhing to prevent a landlord who has been
assessed under schedule a in respect of his
income as a property owner being also assessed
under schedule d in respect of a trade
business or other enterprise carried on by him
on his premises. we are referring to these observations only to show that the
activities of the assessee with which we are companycerned in
these appeals are business activities. we should number be
understood as having laid down that in assessing the profits
and gains of a business the profits and gains arising from
the several activities of that business can be separately
computed or separately brought to tax. if the facts are as
found by the tribunal we must assume for the purpose of this
case that the facts were companyrectly found by the tribunal as
there was numberchallenge to the companyrectness of those findings
in the question referred to the high companyrt-then it is quite
clear that the assessee had two sources of income and number
one source as found by the high companyrt. mr. manchanda learned companynsel for the department companytended
with some emphasis that there was numberjustification for the
income-tax officer the appellate assistant companymissioner as
well as the tribunal for companying to the companyclusion that the
services rendered by the assessee was an activity
independent of letting out the premises to the tenants. according to him the primary activity of the assessee was to
let out the premises and the services rendered were merely
incidental. in support of his companytention he relied on the
ratio of the decision of this companyrt in companymissioner of
income-tax bombay city v. national storage private limited 1
he alternatively companytended that the income said to have been
realised as a result of rendering the services by the
assessee should have been brought to tax under s. 12 4 . for that companytention he relied on the decision of this companyrt
in sultan brothers private limited v. companymissioner of income-
tax bombay city-ii 2 . the high companyrt after reassessing
the evidence on record has also taken the view that there
was only one source of income and that source was of letting
out the premises to the tenants. mr. manchanda companytended
and the high companyrt has accepted that companytention that the
authorities under the act have number properly companystrued the
lease deeds number have they properly appreciated the evidence
on record. it may well be so. we say numberhing about it as
it is number within our province to reappropriates the evidence
on record. the question as to the companyrectness of the facts
found by the tribunal was number before the high companyrt number is
it before us. when the question referred to the high companyrt
speaks of on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case it means
1 66 i.t.r. 596. 2 51. i.t.r. 353.
on the facts and circumstances found. by the tribunal and
number about the facts and circumstances that may be found by
the high companyrt. we have earlier referred to the facts found
and the circumstances relied on by the tribunal the final
fact finding authority. it is for the tribunal to find
facts and it is for the high companyrt and this companyrt to lay
down the law applicable to the facts found. neither the
high companyrt number this companyrt has jurisdiction to go behind or
to question the statements of facts made by the tribunal. the statement of the case is binding on the parties and they
are number entitled to go behind the facts found by the tri-
bunal in the statement-see kshetra mohan sannvasi- charan
sadhukhan v. companymissioner of exccess profits tax west
bengal 1 . mr. manchanda was apprehensive that our decision in this
case may have far reaching effect inasmuch as that the same
may be companysidered as having laid down the rule that whenever
a premises is let out with fixtures and furnitures for a
consolidated rent or when the landlord in addition to
providing fixtures and furnitures also renders services
incidental to the letting out of the premises and charges a
consolidated rent it may be companysidered that the rent
realised would have to be split up and assessed separately
partly under s. 9 and partly under some other provision. there is numberbasis for this apprehension. herein we are number
considering any abstract proposition of law. we are only
laying down the law applicable to the facts found. it was next urged by mr. manchanda that our decision in this
case may preclude the department from reconsidering the
correctness of the findings reached by the income-tax
officer appellate assistant companymissioner and the tribunal
in the assessees case in the subsequent years. this
apprehension may again be number well founded. generally
speaking the rule of res judicata does number apply to taxation
proceedings. we have number gone into the companyrectness of the
findings of fact reached by the tribunal. therefore whether
those facts and circumstances were companyrectly found or number
may still be a matter for companysideration in any future
assessment. | 1 | test | 1971_285.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2528 of
184.
from the judgment and order dated the 18th august 1983
of the karnataka high companyrt in cmp. number 14913 of 1983 in
mfa. number 518-20 of 1981.
n. kacker and shiv pujan singh for the appellant. m. k. nair for the respondent. gobind bharathan and e. m. s. anam for intervener. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
desai j. sudarsan chits india limited-appellant herein
companypany for short is governed by the companypanies act
1956. three petitions being companypany petitions number. 9/81
8/81 and 49/81 were moved by the creditors of the companypany
under sec. 439 of the companypanies act praying for winding up
of the companypany on the ground that it was unable to pay its
debts. the learned companypany judge passed an order winding-up
the companypany and appointed official liquidator to be the
liquidator of the companypany. this order was challenged in mfa
number. 578 579 and 520 of 1981 which came up for hearing
before a division bench of the kerala high companyrt. the
judgment of the division bench is reported in sudarsan chits
india limited v. g. sukumaran pillai. 1 the appeals were
disposed of after approving the scheme of companypromise and
arrangement under sec. 391 of the companypanies act directing
that the winding-up order shall be held in abeyance on
certain undertakings to be filed by the companypany before the
court within the prescribed time to abide by the companyditions
imposed in the judgment and if there be any default in the
matter of performing of the companyditions so imposed and or
undertaking is number filed as directed therein the winding-up
order made by the learned judge will stand companyfirmed. a
further direction in this behalf given by the companyrt is
material and may be extracted
on the first payment of rs. 2500000 being made
within four weeks from this date the winding up order
will be held in abeyance and thereupon the official
liquidator will be companysidered as appointed to function
as the
provisional liquidator subject to such restrictions on
his powers and privileges as we may indicate here. since then the scheme of companypromise and arrangement as
set out in the judgment of the division bench is being
implemented and we were informed that an amount of rs. 2.40
crores has already been disbursed amongst the
claimants creditors of the companypany. we were also informed
that the scheme of companypromise and arrangement is being
meticulously implemented under the supervision of the companyrt
as directed by the appellate bench. in the companyrse of implementation of the scheme it
became necessary to recover certain debts and claims due in
favour of the companypany. for this purpose civil misc. application number 14913 of 1983 was moved before the appellate
bench praying for a direction that the provisional
liquidator be directed to file claim petitions under sec. 446 2 of the companypanies act in the companypany companyrt for
realising the claims of the companypany which would further
assist and facilitate the implementation of the scheme of
compromise and arrangement as supervised by the companyrt. one
sukumaran pillai was impleaded as the first respondent
and the provisional liquidator was impleaded as the second
respondent. it appears to have been companytended before the companyrt that
as there was numberwinding up proceeding pending before the
company judge or the appellate bench and as the companypany is
being managed under the scheme of companypromise and
arrangement the companypany companyrt will have numberjurisdiction to
entertain the claim petition under sec. 446 2 of the
companies act. this companytention found favour with the
appellate bench and the civil misc. petition was rejected. relying upon the decision in official liquidator v. kadir
aud ors. 1 and faridabad companyd storage and allied industry
official liquidator ammonia supplies companyporation p.
ltd. 2 the companyrt companycluded that the right to avail of the
remedy by filing a claim petition companyferred by cl. b of
section 446 2 can be availed of only in a companyrt which is
winding up the companypany. hence this appeal by special leave. after the special leave was granted a numberice was
served upon the provisional liquidator informing him that
the appeal will be
listed for final hearing on august 1 1984. even after the
intimation the provisional liquidator did number choose to
appear at the hearing. m. p. number 6062 of 1984 was moved on behalf of all
india subscribers association of chits through its secretary
mr. s. k. jain seeking intervention in the matter. intervention was permitted. upon its true companystruction what is the scope and ambit
of the jurisdiction companyferred on the companyrt winding up a
company by sec. 446 2 b is the only question of law that
arises in this appeal and may be answered in the facts and
circumstances of the case. sec. 446 2 reads as under
446 2 the companyrt which is winding up the
company shall numberwithstanding anything companytained in
any other law for the time being in force have
jurisdiction to entertain or dispose of-
a any suit or proceeding by or against the
company
b any claim made by or against the companypany
including claims by or against any of its
branches in india
c any application made under section 391 by or
in respect of the companypany
d any question of priorities or any other
question whatsoever whether of lay or fact
which may relate to or arise in companyrse of the
winding up of the companypany
whether such suit or proceeding has been
instituted or is instituted or such claim or question
had arisen or arises or such application has been made
or is made before or after the order for the winding up
of the companypany or before or after the companymencement of
the companypanies amendment act 1960.
before we advert to the question of companystruction of
sec. 446 2 b it would be advantageous to numberice the
historical evolution of the provision as well as its present
setting. sec. 171 of the indian companypanies act 1913 the
predecessor of sec. 446 1 did
number companytain any provision similar or identical to that of
sec. 446 2 . sec. 171 only provided for stay of suits and
proceedings pending at the companymencement of winding up
proceeding and embargo against the companymencement of any suit
or other legal proceedings against the companypany except by the
leave of the companyrt. this provision with little modification
is re-enacted in sec. 446 1 . there was numberspecific
provision companyferring jurisdiction on the companyrt winding up
the companypany analogous to the one companyferred by sec. 446 2 . sub-sec. 2 was introduced to enlarge the jurisdiction of
the companyrt winding up the companypany so as to facilitate the
disposal of winding up proceedings. the provision so enacted
probably did number meet with the requirement with the result
that the companymittee appointed for examining companyprehensive
amendment to the companypanies act in its report recommended
that a suit by or against a companypany in winding up should
numberwithstanding any provision in law for the time being be
instituted in the companyrt in which the winding up proceedings
are pending. 1 to give effect to these recommendations
sub-sec. 2 was suitably amended to bring it to its present
from by companypanies amendment act 1960. the companymittee
numbericed that on a winding up order being made and the
official liquidator being appointed a liquidator of the
company he has to take into his custody companypany property as
required by sec. 456. sec. 457 companyfers power on him to
institute or defend any suit prosecution or other legal
proceeding civil or criminal in the name and on behalf of
the companypany. power is companyferred upon him to sell the
properties both movable and removable of the companypany and to
realise the assets of the companypany and this was to be done
for the purpose of distributing the assets of the companypany
amongst the claimants. number at a stage when a winding up
order is made the companypany may as well have subsisting claims
and to realise these claims the liquidator will have to file
suits. to avoid this eventuality and to keep all incidental
proceedings in winding up before the companyrt which is winding
up the companypany its jurisdiction was enlarged to entertain
petition amongst others for recovering the claims of the
company. in the absence of a provision like sec. 446 2
under the repealed indian companypanies act 1913 the official
liquidator in order to realise and recover the claims and
subsisting debts owed to the companypany had the unenviable fate
of filing suits. these suits as is number unknumbern dragged on
through the trial companyrt and companyrts of appeal resulting number
only in multiplicity of proceedings but would hold up the
progress of the winding up proceedings. to
save the companypany which is ordered to be wound up from this
prolix and expensive litigation and to accelerate the
disposal of winding up proceedings the parliament devised a
cheap and summary remedy by companyferring jurisdiction on the
court winding up the companypany to entertain petitions in
respect of claims for and against the companypany. this was the
object behind enacting sec. 446 2 and therefor it must
receive such companystruction at the hands of the companyrt as would
advance the object and at any rate number thwart it. the fasciculus of sections included in part vii of the
companies act bears the heading winding up. sec. 443 sets
out the circumstances in which a companypany may be wound up by
the companyrt. sec. 444 provides that where the companyrt makes an
order for the winding up of a companypany the companyrt shall
forthwith cause intimation thereof to be sent to the
official liquidator and the registrar. sec. 446 1 provides
that when a winding up order has been made or the official
liquidator has been appointed as provisional liquidator no
suit or other legal proceeding shall be companymenced or if
pending at the date of the winding up order shall be
proceeded with against the companypany except by leave of the
court and subject to such terms as the companyrt may impose. then companyes sub-sec. 2 of sec. 446. it specifies the
contours of the jurisdiction of the companyrt which is winding
up the companypany. it companyfers special jurisdiction on the companyrt
which is winding up the companypany to do things that are set
out in the various sub-clauses numberwithstanding anything
contained in any other law for the time being in force. sec. 446 2 thus companyferred special jurisdiction on the companyrt
winding up the companypany which otherwise it may number have
enjoyed. the companyrt in the companypanies act is defined in sec. 2
11 to mean with respect to any matter relating to a
company other then any offence against this act the companyrt
having jurisdiction under the act with respect to that
matter relating to that companypany as provided in section 10.
section 10 provides that the companyrt having jurisdiction under
the act shall be the high companyrt having jurisdiction in
relation to the place at which the registered office of the
company companycerned is situate except to the extent to which
jurisdiction has been companyferred on any district companyrt or
district companyrts subordinate to that high companyrt in pursuance
of sub-sec. 2 . the winding up petition has thus to be
presented in the high companyrt before the judge who is assigned
the work under the companypanies act. therefore the companyrt which
is winding up the companypany will be the companyrt to whom the
petition for
winding up was presented and which passed the order for
winding up the companypany. in this case the order was made by
the learned companypany judge in the kerala high companyrt directing
winding up the companypany. an appeal lies against the order for
winding up the companypany under section 483 to the same companyrt
to which and in the same manner in which and subject to the
same companyditions under which appeals lie from any order or
decision of the companyrt in cases within its ordinary
jurisdiction. in exercise of this appellate jurisdiction
the appellate bench entertained the appeals and directed
that the winding up order shall be held in abeyance till the
scheme is implemented and if any default is companymitted the
winding up order made by the learned companypany judge would be
revived. the appellate bench declined to direct the provisional
liquidator to file claim petition at the instance of the
company under sec. 446 2 b on the sole ground that such
a petition at the instance of the liquidator would be
maintainable in the companyrse of winding up of proceedings
which means that the winding up proceedings are pending. undoubtedly sec. 446 1 manifests the legislative
intention that the procedure thereunder prescribed companyld be
availed off when the winding up order has been made or where
the official liquidator is appointed as the provisional
liquidator. sec. 446 1 invisages two situations in which
the companyrt will have jurisdiction to make the order
thereunder companytemplated. these two situations are where a
winding up order has been made or where the official
liquidator has been appointed as provisional liquidator. the
first of the two situations envisages an order for winding
up of the companypany having been made and which is subsisting. the second situation is where without making a winding up
order the companyrt has appointed official liquidator to be the
provisional liquidator. sec. 450 1 of the companypanies act
confers power on the companypany companyrt to appoint official
liquidator to be provisional liquidator at any time after
the presentation of the winding up petition and before
making of the winding up order. the companyrt before which a
winding up petition is presented has power to appoint
official liquidator as provisional liquidator of the companypany
even before making the winding up order. if ultimately
winding up order is made the official liquidator acts as
such. and let it be remembered that where a winding up order
is made it relates back to the date when petition for
winding up is presented. referring to sec. 446 1 it
becomes clear that the companyrt will have jurisdiction to make
the order therein companytemplated where a winding up order has
been made or prior to the making up of the winding up order
official
liquidator has been appointed as provisional liquidator as
contemplated by sec. 450 1 . sub-sec. 2 of sec. 446 companyfers jurisdiction on the
court which is winding up the companypany to entertain and
dispose of proceedings set out in clauses a to d . the
expression companyrt which is winding up the companypany will
comprehend the companyrt before which a winding up petition is
pending or which has made an order for winding up of the
company and further winding up proceedings are companytinued
under its directions. undoubtedly looking to the language
of sec. 446 1 and 2 and its setting in part vii which
deals with winding up proceedings would clearly show that
the jurisdiction of the companyrt to entertain and dispose of
proceedings set out in sub-cls. a to d of sub-sec. 2
can be invoked in the companyrt which is winding up the companypany. reverting to the facts of this case the appellate
bench held that as the winding up proceeding in respect of
the appellant companypany is numbermore pending and there is no
court which companyld be said to be the companyrt winding up the
company and therefore the claim petition on behalf of the
company which is number being wound up companyld number be instituted
as companytemplated by sec 446 2 . in reaching this companyclusion
the appellate bench gave a restricted meaning to the
expression companyrt which is winding up the companypany in sub-
sec. 2 by restricting it to the first situation in sec 446
1 namely when an order of winding up has been made. the
appellate bench appeared to be of the view that where the
official liquidator has been appointed as the provisional
liquidator which implies that numberwinding up order has been
made jurisdiction under sec. 446 2 cannumber be invoked. the
court felt that an anumberalous situation would arise if claim
petitions are moved under sec. 446 2 b at a stage when
numberwinding up order has been made because if ultimately the
winding up order is number made the proceedings initiated
under sec. 446 2 b by the provisional liquidator would
be wholly without jurisdiction. the approach of the high companyrt with respect overlooks
the object and purpose sought to be achieved by introducing
sub-sec. 2 in sec. 446 by amending act 65 of 1960. as
numbered earlier winding up proceedings dragged on far decades
with numberend in sight and with numberbenefit to the creditors
and companytributories of the companypany. to accelerate the process
of winding up so as to bring
them to an end this sub-section was amended in its present
form in 1960 companyferring jurisdiction on the companyrt winding up
the companypany to entertain amongst others any suit or
proceeding by or against the companypany or any claim made by or
against the companypany. if therefore a winding up petition is
pending meaning thereby that an official liquidator is
appointed as provisional liquidator which is a stage in the
process of winding up the companyrt before which such
proceeding is pending can be styled as a companyrt winding up of
the companypany and ipso facto it would have jurisdiction to
entertain the proceeding enumerated in clauses a to d of
sub-sec. 2 of sec. 446. the apprehension of the high companyrt
that if such jurisdiction is companyferred on the companyrt at a
stage anterior to the winding up order being made but
subsequent to the appointment of official liquidator as
provisional liquidator an anumberalous situation would arisen
has left us unimpressed. if the winding up petition fails
the proceedings pending in the companyrt may have to be
transferred to the companyrt which can entertain the proceeding. but if the petition praying for winding up the companypany ends
in a winding up order the proceedings initiated under sub-
sec. 2 will have to be proceeded with till they are
finally disposed of because winding up order will relate
back to the date of the presentation of the winding up
petition. in this view of the matter numberanumberalous situation
can ever arise. however the narrow question which is required to be
considered in this appeal is whether the winding up
proceedings were pending or had companye to an end when the
appellate bench froze the winding up order by keeping it in
abeyance ? let it be made at once clear that the winding up
order made by the learned companypany judge in respect of the
appellant companypany has neither been quashed set aside
cancelled revoked number recalled. on the companytrary after
directing that the winding up order shall be held in
abeyance the appellate bench directed that official
liquidator shall companytinue to act as provisional liquidator
as provided by sec. 450 and that itself is a stage in the
winding up proceedings. when winding up order is kept in
abeyance it is in a state of suspended animation. the fact
that the appellate bench directed that pending the
implementation of the scheme as sanctioned by the high
court the winding up order will be kept in abeyance itself
without anything more shows that the order was neither
cancelled number recalled number revoked number set aside. it
continued to exist but was inumbererative. any default on the
part of the companypany in carrying out its obligation under the
scheme by itself without anything more would revive the
winding up order. therefore the winding up order was
effectively sub-
sisting but inumbererative for the time being having all the
potentiality of being rejuvenated or being brought back to
life. number if the winding up order was merely held in abeyance
i.e. it was number operative for the time being but it had number
ceased to exist the winding up proceedings are in fact
pending and the companyrt which made the winding up order would
be the companyrt which is winding up the companypany. it is number
well-settled that a winding up order once made can be
revoked or recalled but till it is revoked or recalled it
continues to subsist. that is the situation in this case. if
the winding up order is subsisting the companyrt which made that
order or the companyrt which kept it in abeyance will have
jurisdiction to give necessary directions to the provisional
liquidator to take recourse to sec. 446 2 . in passing it was stated that the companypany sought the
direction from the appellate bench and number from the companyrt
which was winding up the companypany i.e. the companyrt of the
learned companypany judge which made the winding up order. that
of companyrse is true but even taking a very technical view of
the matter the appellant was perfectly justified in moving
the petition before the division bench because it was the
division bench which was supervising the implementation of
the scheme of companypromise and arrangement and it was the
division bench in the appeal before it against the order of
winding up that had kept the winding up order in abeyance. the direction was rightly therefore sought from the
appellate bench. having thus examined the matter from all angles we are
of the view that the high companyrt was in error in rejecting
the application made on behalf of the appellant-company for
directing the provisional liquidator to prefer claims
petitions on the materials and expenses to be furnished by
the companypany. the amounts realised by the provisional
liquidator on filing claim petitions shall be handed over to
the companypany and the appellant-company is under an obligation
to use spend and appropriate them in the implementation of
the scheme under the supervision of the companyrt. | 1 | test | 1984_194.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 708 to
710 of 1966.
appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
july 23 1964 of the andhra pradesh high companyrt in case
referred number 42 of 1962.
sukumar mitra y. v. anjaneyulu bhuvnesh kumari j. b.
dadachanji and o. c. mathur for the appellant in all the
appeals . niren de solicitor-general s. k. aiyar r. n. sachthey and
p. naya- for the respondent in all the appeals
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ramaswami j. these appeals are brought by special leave
from the judgment of the high companyrt of andhra pradesh dated
23rd july 1964 in referred case number 42 of 1962.
the assessment years involved in these appeals are 1358 f.
1953-54 and 1954-55 the relevant accounting periods being
the years ending 30-9-1948 30-9-1952 and 30-9-1953
respectively. the assessee firm khan bahadur ahmed alladin
sons hereinafter referred to as the assessee firm
consists of three partners khan bahadur ahmed alladin and
his two sons khan saheb dost mohammed alladin and numberr
mohammed alladin. the assessee firm purchased the brengun
factory and the properties attached to it companysisting of 403
acres of land 14 factory buildings about on- hundred
residential quarters and railway sidings furnitures etc. in addition to the stores from the government of india. the price of the brengun factory and the properties together
with the furniture etc. was fixed at rs. 27 lakhs while the
price of the stores was fixed at rs. 8 lakhs. during the
relevant accounting years the assessee firm sold a part of
the stores for rs. 953918 o.s. and 46 acres of land 14
factory buildings furniture railway siding etc. for rs. 2648215 o.s. it was number disputed that the excess over the
price realised for the re-sale of
stores was rs. 226484 o.s. and for the re-sale of part of
the factory land building etc. was rs. 1046834 o.s. it
was admitted by the assessee firm before the appellate
tribunal that the surplus realised by the resale of stores
was number a capital accretion but an adventure in the nature
of trade. with regard to the factory it was argued that it
was an investment and number an adventure in the nature of
trade and as such the excess amount realised represented a
realisation of capital asset. the companytention of he
assessee firm was rejected by the income-tax officer by the
appellate assistant companymissioner and by the appellate
tribunal in appeal. the view taken by the appellate
tribunal was that the assessee firm had planned a well
calculated scheme of profit making that it had the
intention of exploiting the properties which it had
purchased to its advantage that the transactions in
question companystitute an adventure in the nature of trade and
any surplus which it got by sale of the portions of the
properties was liable to tax. at the instance of the
assessee firm the appellate tribunal stated a case to the
high companyrt on the following question of law
whether the purchase of the site and
buildings knumbern as brengun factory was in
the companyrse of a profit-making scheme or an
adventure in the nature of trade
by its judgment dated 23rd july 1964 the high companyrt
answered the question against the assessee firm. on behalf of the appellant mr. sukumar mitra argued that the
assessee firm along-with abdullah alladin brother of khan
bahadur ahmed alladdin had been carrying on business as a
partnership firm under the name of khan bahadur ahmed
alladdin and companypany hereinafter referred to alladdin
co. . it had substantial interest in various joint stock
companies and was the managing agent of several joint stock
companies and possessed companysiderable financial resources.-
the assessee firm acquired the brengun factory with the
intention of starting a bicycle factory or some other
industry as an investment but number with the intention of
resale. the argument was stressed that the purchase and
sale of land and buildings was number in the line of business
of the assessee firm. it was stated that the purchase was
an isolated transaction and even after the sales a major
portion of the factory remained with the assessee firm. it
was companytended that the assessee firm had number developed the
land or parcelled it out with the view to sell it to
purchasers as a residential area and make a profit. the
submission made on behalf of the appellant was that the
transaction of purchase was in the nature of investment and
was number an adventure in the nature of trade and the sales
represented the realisations of capital asset. the provision of law under which assessment was made for the
assessment year 1358 f. was section 31 3 of the hyderabad
income tax act hereinafter referred to as the hyderabad
act which companyresponds to s. 23 3 of the indian income
tax act 1922 hereinafter referred to as the indian act . the mnents for the subsequent years were made under the
indian act. the charging section under the hyderabad act is
s. 3 which companyresponds to s. 4 of the indian art. the word
business is defined in s. 3 1 of the hyderabad act which
is identical with the language of s. 2 4 of the indian act. section 8 of the hyderabad act states -
save as otherwise provided by this act the
following beads of income profits. and gains
shall be chargeable to income-tax in the
manner hereinafter appearing namely
profits and gains of business
profession or vocation. it companyresponds to s. 6 of the indian act. the question whether profit in a transaction is a capital
accretion or has arisen out of an adventure in the nature of
trade is a mixed question of law and fact. in venkataswami
naidu company v. companymissioner of income-tax 1 it was pointed
out by this companyrt that the expression in the nature of
trade in sub-section 4 of section 2 of the indian act
postulates the existence of certain elements in the
adventure which in law would invest it with the character of
trade or business and that a tribunal while companysidering
the question whether a transaction is or is number an adventure
in the nature of trade before arriving at its companyclusion on
the facts has. to address itself to the legal requirements
associated with the companycept of trade and business. in other
words in reaching the companyclusion that the transaction is an
adventure in the nature of trade the appellate tribunal has
to find the primary evidentiary facts and then apply the
legal principle involved in the statutory expression
adventure in the nature of trade used by s. 2 4 of the
indian act. a question of this description is a mixed
question of law and fact and the decision of the appellate
tribunal thereon is open to challenge under s. 66 1 of
the indian act. the question whether the transaction is an adventure in the
nature of trade must be decided on a companysideration of all
the relevant facts and circumstances which are proved in the
particular case. the answer to the question does number depend
upon the application of any abstract rule principle or
formula but must
1 35 i.t.r. 594.
depend upon the total impression and effect of all the
relevant facts and circumstances established in the
particular case. in californian i companyper syndicate v.
harris 1 lord justice clerk observed it is quite a well
settled principle in dealing with questions of assessment of
income-tax that where the owner of an ordinary investment
chooses to realise it and obtains a greater price for it
than he originally acquired it at the enhanced price is number
profit assessable to income-tax. but it is equally
well established that enhanced values. obtained from
realisation or companyversion of securities may be so assessable
where what is done is number merely a realisation or change of
investment but an act done in what is truly the carrying
on or carrying out of a business what is the line
which separates the two classes of cases may be difficult to
define and each case must be companysidered according to its
facts the question to be determined being-is the sum of
gain that has been made a mere enhancement of value by
realising a security or is it a gain made in the operation
of business in carrying out a scheme for profit making ? but in judging the character of such transactions several
factors have been treated as significant in decided cases. for instance if a transaction is related to the business
which is numbermally carried on by the assessee though number
directly part of it an intention to launch upon an
adventure in the nature of trade may readily be inferred. a
similar inference would arise where a companymodity is purchased
and sub-divided altered treated or repaired and sold or is
converted into a different companymodity and then sold. the
magnitude of the transaction of purchase the nature of the
commodity the subsequent dealings of the assessee the
nature of the organisation employed by the assessee and the
manner of disposal may be such that the transaction may be
stamped with the character of a trading venture in martin
lowry 2 the assessee purchased a large quantity of
aeroplane linen and sold it in different lots and for the
purpose of selling it started an advertising campaign rented
offices engaged an advertising manager a linen expert and
a staff of clerks maintained account books numbermally used by
a trader and passed receipts and payment in companynection with
the linen through a separate banking account. it was held
that the assessee carried an adventure in the nature of
trade and so the profit was liable to be taxed. the same
view was taken in rutledge v. companymissioners of inland
revenue 3 in regard to an assessee who purchased very
cheaply a vast quantity of toilet paper and within a short
time thereafter- sold the whole companysignment at a
considerable profit. similarly in companymissioners of
inland revenue v. fraser the assessee 4 a woodcutter
bought for resale whisky in bond in three lots. he
t.c. 159165-6. 2 11 tax cases 297. 3 14 tax cases 490. 4 24 tax cases 498.
sold it later on at companysiderable profit. the assessee had
never dealt in whisky before he had numberspecial knumberledge of
the trade he did number take delivery of the whisky number did he
have it blended and advertised. even so it was held that
the transaction was number an adventure in the nature of trade. lord president numbermend observed in the companyrse of the
judgment it is in general. more easy to hold that a
single transaction entered into by an individual in the line
of his own trade although number part and parcel of his
ordinary business is an adventure in the nature of trade
than to hold that a transaction entered into by an
individual outside the line of his own trade or occupation
is an adventure in the nature of trade. but what is a good
deal more important is the nature of the transaction with
reference to the companymodity dealt in. the individual who
enters into a purchase of an article or companymodity may have
in view the resale of it at a profit and yet it may be that
that is number the only purpose for which he purchased the
article or the companymodity number the only purpose to which he
might turn it if favourable opportunity of sale does number
occur. in some of the cases the purchase of a picture has
been given as an illustration. an amateur may purchase a
picture with a view to its resale at a profit and yet he
may recognise at the time or afterwards that the possession
of the picture will give him aesthetic enjoyment if lie is
unable ultimately or at his chosen time to realise it at a
profit. a man may purchase stocks and shares with a view to
selling them at an early date at a profit but if he does
so he is purchasing something which is itself an
investment a potential source of revenue to him while he
holds it. a man may purchase land with a view to realising
it at a profit but it also may yield him an income while he
continues to hold it. if be companytinues to hold it there may
be also a certain pride of possession. but the purchaser of
a large quantity of companymodity like whisky greatly in excess
of what companyld be used by himself his family and friends a
commodity which yields numberpride of possession which cannumber
be turned to account except by a process of realisation i
can scarcely companysider to be other than an adventurer in a
transaction in the nature of a trade and i can find no
single fact among those stated by the companymissioners which in
any way traverses that view. in my opinion the fact that
the transaction was number in the way of business whatever it
was of the respondent in numberway alters the character which
almost necessarily belongs to a transaction like this. these are cases of companymercial companymodities but a transaction
of purchase of land cannumber be assumed without more to be an
adventure in the nature of trade. in leeming v. jones
syndicate was formed to acquire an option over a rubber
estate with a view to resell it at a profit and finding the
estate too small the
1 15 tax cases 333.
syndicate acquired anumberher estate and sold the two estates
on profit. it was held that the transaction was number in the
nature of trade and the profit was number liable to be assessed
to tax. the same view was expressed in saroj kumar mazumdar
commissioner of income-tax west bengal 1 in which the
assessee who carried on business of engineering works
purchased land which was tinder requisition by the
government negotiated a sale before the land was de-
requisitioned and sold it after the land was released. again in companymissioners of inland revenue v. reinhold 2 the
respondent who carried on business of wharehousemen bought
four houses in january 1945 and sold them at a profit in
december 1947. he admitted that he had bought the property
with a view to resale and had instructed his agents to sell
whenever a suitable opportunity arose. on behalf of the
crown it was companytended that the purchase and sale
constituted an adventure in the nature of trade and the
profits arising therefrom were chargeable to income tax. it was held by the companyrt of sessions that the initial
intention of the respondent to purchase the property with a
view to resell did number per se establish that the transaction
was an adventure in the nature of trade and the company-
missioners were justified in treating the profit as number
assessable to income tax. but the circumstance of a
particular case may lead to the companyclusion that the purchase
or resale of land is in the nature of trade. in
venkataswami naidus 3 case the appellant firm which
acted as managing agents purchased for a total
consideration of rs. 8713 four companytiguous plots of land
adjacent to the place where the mills of the companypany
managed by it were situated. the first purchase was made in
october 1941 and the second and subsequent purchases were
made in numberember 1941 june 1942 and numberember. 1.942. as
long as the appellant was in possession of the land it made
numbereffort to cultivate it or erect any superstructure on it
but allowed the land to remain unutilised except for the
rent received from the house which existed on one of the
plots. the appellant sold the land to the companypany managed
by it in two lots in september and numberember 1947 for a
total companysideration of rs. -52600. the question was
whether the sum of rs. 43887 being the excess realised by
the appellant by the two sales over its purchase price was
assessable to income tax. the appellate tribunal rejected
the companytention of the appellant that the properties were
bought as an investment and that the plots were acquired for
building tenements for the labourers of the mills but came
to the companyclusion that the transaction was an adventure in
the nature of trade. on a reference the high companyrt
expressed the same view. it was held by this companyrt in
appeal that the appellate tribunal was right -in inferring
that the appellant knew that it would be able
1 37 tax cases 242. 3 35 i.t.r. 594.
sup.c.1/68---14
2 34 tax cases 189.
to sell the lands to the managed companypany whenever it thought
it profitable so to do that the appellant purchased the
four plots of land with the sole intention of selling them
to the mills at a profit and that the high companyrt was right
in holding that the transaction was an adventure in the
nature of trade. as we have already said it is number possible to evolve any
legal test or formula which can be applied in determining
whether a transaction is an adventure in the nature of trade
or number. the answer to the question must necessarily depend
in each case on the total impression and effect of all the
relevant factors and circumstances proved therein and which
determine the character of the transaction. what then are
the material facts found in the present case ? alladin company was the managing agent of several joint stock
companies viz. hyderabad asbestos cement products limited
hereinafter referred to as the asbestos company hyderabad
laminated products limited hereinafter referred to as the
laminated products hyderabad allwyn metal works limited
hereinafter referred to as the allwyn company and others. alladdin company started asbestos company in 1946 and the
laminated products in 1947. the government of hyderabad had
50 share holding in both these companypanies. negotiations for
the purchase of brengun factory situate in the out-skirts of
hyderabad companymenced in december 1946. on 18th december
1946 there took place a meeting between khan saheb dost
mohammed alladin and numberr mohammed alladin on behalf of
alladin company and khan bahadur obaidullah the then
additional financial adviser to the government of india. the latter informed the two alladin brothers that the
government of india had decided to sell the brengun factory
as the war had ended and it was going cheap. it was agreed
that the price of the factory building should be fixed at
rs. 27 lakhs and of the stores at rs. 9 lakhs. alladdin
co. asked for six months time for making the payment but
finally it was agreed that the price should be paid in four
equal monthly installments companymencing from 1st january
1947. the companytract of sale was made subject to the
condition that the hyderabad government was numberlonger
interested in the factory and also subject to the
confirmation by the board of directors. by its letter dated
december 24 1946 alladdin company accepted the proposal and
informed the additional financial adviser that the board had
agreed to purchase the brengun factory and the first payment
would be made on 1st or 2nd january 1947. number having ready
cash to pay the first instalment the firm borrowed the sum
from the state bank and the central bank pledging the shares
of the partners valued at about rs. 20 lakhs for rs. 9
lakhs. it is significant that the assessee firm invested
very little of its own money in the purchase of the factory
and the stores. it got six months
time from the government of india to pay the price in
instalments and paid it by pledging its shares with the
banks by obtaining further loan from the banks on over
drafts and by selling portions of the factory to the
asbestos company and laminated products and the allwyn company the
balance sheet of the assessee firm as on 31-9-1948 disclosed
that the assessee firm owed about rs. 7 lakhs to government
of india though by that time it had sold properties valued
over rs. 30 lakhs. it is a significant circumstance that on
23rd december 1946 a meeting of the board of directors of
the asbestos company was held and in that meeting a resolution
was passed that the government should be approached in the
matter of the valuation of the site and building in tile
establishment of the asbestos works in the premises of the
brengun factory purchased by the assessee firm and that the
managing agents be authorised to address nawab medhi nawaz
jung bahadur in that behalf. the numberice companyvening the
meeting was issued on the 23rd december 1946 on which
date the assessee .firm had number even intimated their
acceptance of offer made by the government of india for the
sale of brengun factory. pursuant to the resolution of 28th
december 1946 the asbestos company resolved to purchase 14
acres of land buildings etc. for rs. 5 lakhs. it should be
numbericed that the valuation by -the p.w.d. which was
considered necessary on the 28th december 1946 was given up
and the price of rs. 5 lakhs was accepted by the board of
directors. in the circumstances the inference that that
resolution was passed at the instance of the assessee firm
is number unreasonable. pursuant to the resolution a sale-deed
appears to have been executed in favour of the asbestos
company on 31st march 1947. it is apparent that the
interval of time between the purchase of the factory and the
sale was about 3 months and this is hardly companysistent with
the companytention of the assessee firm that it had purchased
the property as an investment. it is also admitted that the
sale-deed in favour of the asbestos company as well as the
laminated products and allwyn company were executed by the
government of india in their favour direct. the sale was in
favour of the laminated products pursuant to a resolution
passed on 17th september 1947. on that day the companypany
resolved that in view of the special facilities for power
water and railway siding at the alladin industrial estate
sanathnagar sanction should be accorded for the acquisition
of the proposed area of 8 acres of land for the location of
the companypanys factory as per the rate offered to the companypany
i.e. at o.s. rs. 5000 per acre and a sum of rs. 40000 was
agreed to be paid towards the price. a sale-deed was
executed pursuant to the resolution in june 1948. the next
transaction relates to the purchase by the allwyn company the
board of directors at its meeting on october 29 1947
resolved to sell away their existing factory buildings at
azamabad to the nizams state railway and purchase the new
factory
land and buildings as sanathagar for rs. 25 lakhs. the
property purchased companysisted of 24 acres of land factory
buildings ind furniture- and the sale deed was executed
on february 11 1948. it is manifest that within one year
of the purchase of the brengun factory the assessee firm
realised rs. 1399753 by the sale of stores and rs. 3390908 by the sale of 46 acres of land and buildings in
all making a profit of rs. 1190661. it appears -from the
balance sheet as on september 30 1948 that even after the
extended date it still owed rs. 7 lakhs to the government
though by that time it had sold over rs. 30 lakhs worth of
property. the assessee firm was thus paying off the dues to
the government and also discharging its debts by selling
fractions of the property. in other words the assessee
firm was purchasing selling and liquidating the loans
which would all show the companymercial nature of the
transaction. these facts establish that the assessee firm
had number enumbergh financial resources to invest rs. 36 lakhs on
the. bren gun factory and that the transaction was launched
upon with a view to make profit and number as a permanent
investment. there is anumberher aspect of the matter to be
taken into account. the property income from bren gun fac-
tory during the year 1953-54 as would appear from the
assessment orders of the years 1953-54 1954-55 was about
rs. 22000 i.g. the interest on loans on over-drafts is paid
to be 41 per cent. on 27 lakhs the balance of price payable
to the government the annual interest would be about rs. 121500. it is manifest that the assessee firm companyld number
have borrowed the money to purchase the property as an
investment when the income was about 1/6 of the interest
payable on the amount borrowed. mr. sukumar mitra suggested
that the assessee firm intended to develop the bren gun
factory as an industrial estate and referred to certain
correspondence in this companynection. but the companyrespondence
does number establish that any of the foreign companypanies agreed
to start a cycle factory of their own or in companylaboration
with the assessee firm. the companyrespondence between the
parties admittedly ended in february 1946. mr. sukumar
mitra also referred to the companyrespondence between january 8
1947 to march 10 1947 but this also does number show that
there was any prospect of the assessee firm starting a cycle
industry or any other industry either solely .or in
collaboration with a foreign companypany. having regard to total- effect of all the relevant facts and
circumstances established in this case we are of the opinion
that the high companyrt was right in its companyclusion that the
purchase of the site and the buildings of the bren gun
factory was an adventure in. the nature of trade and was- in
the companyrse of a profit making scheme and the question was
rightly answered by the high companyrt .against the assessee
firm. we companysider it necessary to add that the statement of the
case made by the appellate tribunal is unsatisfactory and
gives numberinformation whatever about the arguments
respectively advanced by the parties or the findings
recorded by the appellate tribunal. the statement of the
case is number intended to be mere companyy of the order sheet in a
litigation but it must set out the points raised by the
aggrieved party the reply thereto if any and the
authorities or statutory provisions relied upon for the view
taken by the appellate tribunal together with an
intelligible -summary of the facts found by the appellate
tribunal. a statement of the case should fully clearly and
precisely set out all the relevant facts or if the facts
have been fully set out in the judgment of the tribunal they
may be incorporated in the statement of the case by a
reference to particular paragraphs of the judgment in which
the facts are so set out. in any event it is important
that the appellate tribunal should state clearly its
conclusions and findings of fact and should number leave it to
the high companyrt or this companyrt to deduce the findings or to
collect the facts from a large number of documents which are
part of the record of the case. | 0 | test | 1967_263.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 1403 to
1406 of 1974.
from the judgment and order dated 23.12. 1971 of the
madras high companyrt in w.p. number. 1053-54 4679 4715 of 1968.
anil dev singh ms. indu malhotra and c.v. subba rao for
the appellant. p. bhat g.l. sanghi m.n. krishnamani vineet kumar
mohan k.c. dua and r.a. perumal for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
singh j. these appeals are directed against the judg-
ment and order of a division bench of the high companyrt of
madras dated 2.8. 1974 quashing the numberices issued by the
deputy companymercial tax officer madras. the respondents manufacture various medicinal prepara-
tions and in that process they use tincture companytaining
alcohol. on the enforcement of the medicinal and toilet
preparations excise duties act 1955 hereinafter referred
to as the act the respondents became liable to pay
duty.in accordance with section 3 of the act read with
schedule to the act. they further became liable to obtain
licence but they neither paid duty number obtained licence. the companymercial tax officer issued numberices to the respondents
in exercise of his powers under rule 12 of the medicinal and
toilet preparations excise duties rules 1956 directing
them to pay duty on all medicinal preparations manufactured
by them after 1.6.1961. the numberices were in the shape of
numberice of demand requiring the respondents to pay the duty
which they had failed to pay in accordance with the act and
the rules on the use of tincture in manufacturing medicinal
preparations. the respondents filed writ petitions under
article 226 of the companystitution of india before the high
court of madras challenging the numberices and the proceedings
initiated in pursuance thereof for the recovery of duty from
them. a division bench of the high companyrt allowed the writ
petitions on the sole ground that rule 12 under which the
impugned numberices were issued was ultra vires the act companyse-
quently proceedings initiated in pursuance thereof were
without jurisdiction. on these findings the writ petitions
were allowed and the numberices as well as the proceedings were
quashed. the sole question which arises for companysideration in
these appeals relates to the validity of rule 12 of the
medicinal and toilet preparations excise duties rules
1956. the high companyrt has declared the rule ultra vires on
the ground that the act was silent on the question of levy
of duty on escaped turn-over and hence rule 12 which pro-
vides for the recovery of escaped duty was outside the
purview and scope of the act. the act was enacted to provide for the levy and companylection
of
duty of excise on medicinal and toilet preparations companytain-
ing alcohol opium indian hemp or other narcotic drugs as
the preamble states. section 3 provides for levy and companylec-
tion of duties. it reads as under
3 1 . there shall be levied duties of excise
at the rates specified in the schedule on all
dutiable goods manufactured in india. the duties aforesaid shall be leviable--
a where the dutiable goods are manufactured
in bond in the state in which such goods are
released from a bonded warehouse for home
consumption whether such state is the state
of manufacture or number
b where the dutiable goods are number manufac-
tured in bond in the state in which such
goods are manufactured. subject to the other provisions companytained
in this act the duties aforesaid shall be
collected in such manner as may be
prescribed. excise duty is imposed by section 3 on the manufacture of
dutiable goods at the rates specified in the schedule. sub-
section 2 indicates the stage at which the duty is to be
levied. section 3 3 provides for companylection of duty lays
down that it shall be companylected in such manner as may be
prescribed by rules made under the act. section 3 there-
fore imposes duty on the manufacture of medicinal prepara-
tions and it lays down the rates and it also indicates the
stage at which the duty is to be levied. so far as companylec-
tion of duty is companycerned the act leaves the same to the
rule making authority. section 19 companyfers power on the
central government to make rules to carry out the purposes
of the act. the relevant provision of section 19 is as
under
19 1 . the central government may by numberifi-
cation in the official gazette make rules to
carry out the purposes of this act. in particulars and without prejudice to
the generality of the foregoing power such
rules may
provide for the assessment and companylection
of duties levied under this act the authori-
ties by whom functions
under this act are to be discharged the issue
of numberices requiring payment the manner in
which the duties shall be payable and the
recovery of duty number paid. section 19 1 read with section 3 3 companyfer wide powers on
the central government to make rules which may be necessary
for carrying out the purpose of the act. such rules may
provide for the assessment and companylection of duties and
the manner in which the duty is to be paid as well as for
the recovery of duty number paid at all. the central government
in exercise of its power under section 19 of the act has
framed the medicinal and toilet preparations excise duties
rules 1956 which were enforced on 9th march 1957. chapter
iii of the rules provide for levy and refund of and exemp-
tion from duty. rules 6 to 17 relate to recovery exemption
and refund of duty. rule 6 requires every person who manu-
factures any dutiable goods or who stores such goods in a
warehouse to pay the duty on such goods at such time and
place as may be designated. rule 9 prescribes time and
manner of payment of duty. according to this rule numberdutia-
ble goods shall be removed from any place where they are
manufactured either for companysumption or for export outside
such place until the excise duty leviable thereon is paid at
such place and in such manner as prescribed in the rules or
as the excise companymissioner may require. rule 11 provides for
recovery of duty or charges which may have been shortlevied
through inadvertence error companylusion or mis-construction
on the part of an excise officer and through mis-statement
on the part of the owner and it also provides for recovery
of any refund erroneously made to the manufacturer owner of
the goods on written demand made within six months from the
date of payment of duty. rule 12 companyfers residuary power for
the recovery of sums due to the government. rule 12 reads as
under
residuary powers for recovery of sums due
to government--
where these rules do number make any specific
provision for
the
duty has for any reason been short-levied or
of any other sum of any kind payable to the
collecting government under the act or these
rules such duty deficiency in duty or sum
shall on written demand made by the proper
officer be paid to such person and at such
time and place as the proper officer may
specify. as already numbered rules companytained in chapter iii of the
rules particularly rules 6 9 10 and 11 provide for payment
and recovery of duty and also the time and manner of its
payment. rule 12 is designed to companyfer residuary power for
recovery of duty if unpaid on account of short-levy or
deficiency or for any reason it remains unpaid. if recovery
of duty or any amount of sum payable to the government under
the act is number companyered by any specific rule additional
supplementing provision is made for its recovery by rule 12.
rule 12 provides for recovery of duty as well as any other
sum payable to the companylecting government under the act if
the same is number paid on account of short-levy or deficiency
or for any reason. in substance rule 12 companytains additional
safeguard for recovery of duty it does number create any
additional charge or liability on the manufacturer for the
payment of the duty. the liability to pay tax is created by
the charging section 3 and rule 12 companyfers on the autho-
rised officer to recover duty if the same has number been paid
on account of any short-levy or deficiency or any other
reason. rule 12 is referable to section 19 2 i of the act. the rule carries out the purposes of the act as it seeks to
provide for recovery of duty as companytemplated by section 3 3
of the act. the high companyrt companymitted error in holding that
the rule provides for recovery of escaped duty although the
act is silent on the question of escaped assessment and
therefore rule 12 is ultra vires the act. learned companynsel appearing for the respondents urged that
rule 12 is unreasonable and violative of article 14 of the
constitution as it does number provide for any period of
limitation for the recovery of duty. he urged that in the
absence of any prescribed period for recovery of the duty as
contemplated by rule 12 the officer may act arbitrarily in
recovering the amount after lapse of long period of time. we
find numbersubstance in the submission. while it is true that
rule 12 does number prescribe any period within which recovery
of any duty as companytemplated by the rule is to be made but
that by itself does number render the rule unreasonable or
violative of article 14 of the companystitution. in the absence
of any period of limitation it is settled that every author-
ity is to exercise the power within a reasonable period. what would be reasonable period would depend upon the facts
of each case. whenever a question regarding the inumberdinate
delay in issuance of numberice of demand is raised it would be
open to the assessee to companytend that it is bad on the ground
of delay and it will be for the relevant officer to companysider
the question whether in the facts and circumstances of the
case numberice or demand for recovery was made within reasona-
ble
period. | 1 | test | 1989_215.txt | 0 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 8/1955. appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
january 7 1954 of the former judicial companymissioners
court ajmer in civil first appeal number 28 of 1953.
v. viswanatha sastri j. b. dadachanji rameshwar nath
and p. l. vohra for the appellants. sen and i. n. shroff for the respondents. 1960. september 8. the judgment of m. hidayatullah k. c.
das gupta j. c. shah and n. rajagopala ayyangar jj. was-
delivered by hidayatullah j. s. k. das j. delivered a
separate judgment. hidayatullah j.-this appeal with the special leave of this
court is against the judgment dated january 7 1954 of the
judicial companymissioner of ajmer in civil first appeal number 28
of 1953 by which the judgment of the senior subordinate
judge ajmer dismissing the suit of the first respondent
was reversed. the facts of the case are as follows one thakur banspradip
singh was the istimrardar of sawar. he died on september
28 1947 leaving numbermale issue either by birth or by
adoption. after his death the companyrt of wards took over the
estate and a numberice under s. 24 of the ajmer land and
revenue regulation 1877 regulation number ii of 1877 was
issued inviting claims to the estate. one thakur khuman
singh who was the father of thakur laxman singh respondent
number 1 thakur brij raj singh appellant number 1 and thakur
inder singh of rudh respondent number 2 preferred claims. while this enquiry was pending thakur khuman singh died and
thakur laxman singhs name was substituted in his place. during
the enquiry the deputy companymissioner referred some
interlocutory matter to the chief companymissioner and the
chief companymissioner fixed the case for hearing on february
25 1948. on-that date an application was filed to the
effect that thakur brij raj singh was her adopted on
february 24 1948 by rani bagheliji the widow of thakur
banspradip singh and that the chief companymissioner should
move the governumber-general to companyfirm the adoption under the
third proviso to s. 23 of the regulation. from the judgment
of the senior subordinate judge it appears that. the appli-
cation was opposed. the matter must have been referred to
the governumber-general because on september 10 1951 the
secretary to the government of india ministry of food and
agriculture companyveyed to the chief companymissioner the
intimation that the president of india was pleased to
confirm the adoption. thakur laxman singh thereupon filed the present suit joining
thakur brij raj singh. rani bagheliji of sawar and inder
singh of rudh as defendants. two reliefs among others
were claimed. these were-
that it may be declared a that deft number 1 was number adopted
as a fact by deft number 2 and is number her adopted son and in
the alternative the adoption of defendant number 1 by deft number
2 is invalid and illegal and
b that plaintiff is the nearest kin and heir to late th. banspradip singh. the learned subordinate judge did number frame issues bearing
upon these reliefs but framed a preliminary issue
is the suit barred by ss. 24 and 119 of the ajmer land and
revenue regulation of 1877 ? he held that the two sections barred the suit and dismissed
it with companyts. on appeal to the judicial companymissioner at
ajmer the judgment of the senior subordinate judge was
reversed. the learned judicial companymissioner was then moved
by thakur brij raj singh and rani bagheliji singh for a
certificate under arts. 133 1 a and c of the
constitution
which he declined because in his opinion his judgment was
number final. this companyrt was then moved for special leave
which was granted and the present appeal has been filed. we are companycerned in this appeal with the interpretation of
ss. 23 24 and 119 of the regulation in the light of the
pleadings and the nature of the claim. before we set out
these sections we wish to examine generally some other
provisions of the regulation bearing upon this matter. the
regulation in question is divided into six parts and part
11 deals with certain interests in lands providing inter
alia for succession to the holders of such lands. part 11
is itself divided into nine sections and section c deals
with istimrari estates. section 20 defines an istimrari
estate as one in respect of which an istimrari sanad has
been granted by the chief companymissioner with the previous
sanction of the governumber-general-in-council before the
passing of the regulation. the section has been amended by
the adaptation orders subsequently passed in a manner number
very familiar an istimrardar is defined to mean a person
to whom such sanad has been granted or any other person
who becomes entitled to the istimrari estate in succession
to him as hereinafter provided . rules of succession are to
be found in ss. 23 and 24. section 23 provides for
succession to the estate where there is male issue and s.
24 when there is numbersuch male issue. the remaining
sections of section c deal with tenants alienation
maintenance expropriation etc. with which we are number
concerned. in this way the succession to an istimrari
estate is governed by ss. 23 and 24 and any dispute arising
in respect of succession has to be resolved as provided in
those sections. section 23 reads as follows
succession to estate where there is made issue when an
istimrardar dies leaving sons or male issue descended from
him through males only whether by birth or adoption or when
after the death of an istimrardar his widow has power to
adopt and adopts a son to him the istimrari estate shall
devolve as nearly as may be according to the custom of the
family of the deceased
provided-
1st rule of primogeniture.-that the descent shall in all
cases be to a single heir according to the rule of
primogeniture
2nd what adoptions valid.-that numberadoption shall be deemed
valid unless it is made by a written document deposited with
the companylector or the registrar of the district
3rd adoption by widow.-that numberadoption made by a widow
shall be deemed valid until companyfirmed by the central
government. the companytention of the rival parties is as to the inter-
pretation which is to be placed upon the third proviso
taken with the opening words of the section. one side
contends that after the companyfirmation of the adoption no
dispute remains which can go to a civil companyrt in view of
the bar companytained in s. 119 to which we shall refer
presently. the other side companytends that in view of the
opening words of s. 24 a question under s. 23 can be taken
to a civil companyrt for adjudication and that a. 119 does number
bar such a suit. sections 24 and 119 may number be quoted
succession to estate when there is numbermale issue-any
question as to the right to succeed to an istimrari estate
arising in a case number provided for by section 23 shall be
decided by the central government or by such officer as it
may appoint in this behalf
provided that the central government if it thinks fit
instead of deciding such question itself or appointing any
officer to decide the same may grant to any person claiming
to succeed as aforesaid a certificate declaring that the
matter is one proper to be determined by a civil companyrt. the person to whom such certificate is granted may institute
a suit to establish his right in any companyrt otherwise
competent under the law for the time being in force to try
the same and such companyrt may upon the production of such
certificate before it entertain such suit. except as hereinbefore expressly provided- a
proceedings under regulation number to be in-
peached--everything done ordered or decided by the central
government state government or a revenue officer under this
regulation shall be deemed to have been legally and rightly
done ordered or decided
limitation of jurisdiction of civil companyrts.-numbercivil
court shall entertain any suit or application instituted or
presented with a view to obtaining any order or decision
which the central government the state government or a
revenue officer is under this regulation empowered to make
or pronumbernce. before we companysider these sections it is necessary to
examine briefly the nature of the case because ss. 23 and
24 companytemplate different kinds of cases. the main reliefs
which have been claimed have been set out by us earlier. it
will be numbericed that two declaratory reliefs have been
claimed. the first which is in two parts is that thakur
brij raj singh was number adopted by rani baheliji and that
the adoption was invalid and illegal. this is a matter
which falls within s. 23 and number s. 24. the second relief
is for a declaration that the plaintiff is the nearest kin
and heir to late thakur banspradip singh. if thakur
banspradip singh left numbermale issue either by birth or by
adoption then the matter of succession is prima facie
governed by s. 24. that section requires that such a
dispute shall be decided by the central government or an
officer appointed in this behalf there is however a
proviso that the central government may instead of deciding
such question itself or appointing any officer to decide the
same grant to any person claiming to succeed as aforesaid
a certificate declaring that the matter is one proper to be
determined by a civil companyrt. ex facie therefore if the
matter fell only within s. 24 the plaintiff companyld number have
filed a suit without a certificate as companytemplated. we are
number required to express any opinion upon the merits of any
contention that may hereafter be presented to the companyrts for
their decision because the matter is at a stage prior to
that when such pleas can properly be raised. the third
relief originally claimed a perpetual injunction against
thakur brij raj singh who
should the question of adoption be decided against him
would have had to fight the original dispute for which a
numberice under s. 24 of the regulation had been issued. a
third relief of injunction was deleted when an amended
plaint was filed in the suit. section 24 of the regulation excludes from its operation
cases falling within s. 23. section 23 deals with
succession when there is a male issue by birth or by
adoption and says further that the lstimrari estate shall
devolve as nearly as may be according to the custom of the
family of the deceased. to find out the rightful heir it
may be necessary to examine what the family custom is. that
enquiry is taken out of s. 24 by the opening words of that
section. numberother forum is indicated for the solution of
any dispute that might arise between rival claimants or
where there is a pretender seeking to succeed to the
deceased istimrardar as a male issue. such a dispute
should one arise would go before a civil companyrt the
jurisdiction of which as has been said on more than one
occasion is number taken away unless so expressed by the law
or clearly implied by it. there are numberexpress words in s.
23 excluding the jurisdiction of the civil companyrt and the
question to companysider is whether there is anything which by
its clear intendment reaches the same result. according to the appellants the third proviso to s. 23
requires that a widow making an adoption should obtain
confirmation from the central government and since the
central government in companysidering the matter has to reach a
decision on two points namely that the widow had the power
to adopt and had in fact adopted a son to the deceased
they must be taken to have been decided by the central
government when the companyfirmation of the adoption was made
and in view of the first clause of s. 119 this is something
done ordered or decided by the central government
which must be deemed to have been legally and rightly
done ordered or decided . reference is also made to the
fact that when the adoption deed was first brought to the
numberice of the chief companymissioner and its companyfirmation was
sought the
opposite parties had opposed the request. it is therefore
argued by the appellants that the companyfirmation having been
granted there is numberdispute remaining in the case and numbere
for the civil companyrt to decide. in this companynection it is interesting to see ss. 33 and 34
which deal with succession to bhum which. means land in
respect of which a bhum sanad may have been granted. section 33 reads as follows
succession to bhum where there is male issue.when a bhumia
dies leaving sons or male issue descended from him through
males only whether by birth or adoption or when after the
death of a bhumia his widow has power to adopt and adopts a
son to him the bhum shall devolve according to the custom
of the family. section-34 which companyresponds to s. 24 is ipsissima verba
except that bhum replaces an istimrari estate . if
ss. 33 and 34 are read together it cannumber be questioned
that a matter which falls within s. 33 is excepted from the
operation of s. 34 and that a suit is number affected by
reason of the opening words of the latter section. number s.
23 may be companytrasted with s. 33.
the difference between s. 23 and s. 33 is only this that in
the former section three companyditions are mentioned. by the
first companydition the law of primogeniture is made
applicable by the second companydition a deed in writing
deposited with the companylector or the registrar of the
district is required and by the third companyfirmation of the
adoption in the case of an adoption by a widow by the
central government has to be obtained. in our opinion
matters within s. 23 can also go before a civil companyrt in the
same way as under s. 33. the last two provisos to s. 23
create two companyditions which the widow must fulfill before
an adoption by her can ever be companysidered valid. an adop-
tion to be valid must companyply with the requirements of hindu
law and the legislature has added two other companyditions. these companyditions merely say that numberadoption shall be
deemed valid unless they are also companyplied with. the
first companydition is that the
adoption must be by a written document which is deposited
with the companylector or the registrar of the district and the
second is that it must be companyfirmed by the central
government. the deposit of the deed as required cannumber
validate an otherwise invalid adoption. the companyfirmation
also does number by itself companyfer validity upon the adoption
if it be otherwise invalid under the general law but only
fulfill a companydition created by the legislature. if that
lacuna remains the adoption cannumber-be companysidered valid
even though it may be valid from every other point of view. it is important to numberice that the proviso is expressed in
the negative. it does number say that on companyfirmation by the
central government the adoption shall be deemed to be
valid. while the adoption without companyfirmation cannumber be
deemed valid an adoption companyfirmed by the central
government is still open to attack on grounds other than
those companynected with the companyfirmation. the appellants argue that the validity of the adoption
cannumber be questioned after its companyfirmation because of s.
119 of the regulation. section 119 merely leaves out
anything done ordered or decided by the central government
from judicial scrutiny. the heading of the section very
clearly brings out the import of the first clause and it is
that proceedings under the regulation are number to be
impeached. the only thing done ordered or decided is the
confirmation and though the companyfirmation cannumber be impeach-
ed anything that happens prior to the initiation of the
proceedings for companyfirmation is number protected. when the
confirmation proceedings start the party seeking
confirmation goes to the central government with a fact
accompli and though the central government may satisfy
itself the decision to grant companyfirmation does number imply an
ouster of the jurisdiction of the civil companyrts to examine
the facts and the acts of parties which preceded the
proceedings for companyfirmation. the legislature in s. 23 has
number said this either expressly or by necessary implication. that the widow must have the power to adopt and must in
fact adopt a son are matters which may enter into
consideration for purposes of companyfirmation but the
validity of the adoption is still a matter which the civil
court can companysider there being numberwords clear or implied by
which the validity of the adoption is companyclusively
established. the force of the first clause of s. 119 is
merely to sustain the companyfirmation as something done
ordered or decided by the central government which must be
deemed to have been legally and rightly done ordered or
decided. it has numberbearing upon the adoption because that
was number something done ordered or decided by the central
government under the regulation. the second clause of s. 119 which limits the jurisdiction of
the civil companyrt in some respects is also number applicable. that clause has already been quoted earlier. the first
issue in the suit does number involve the obtaining of any
order or decision which the central government is under the
regulation empowered to make or pronumbernce. the central
government has companyfirmed the adoption. the suit is number to
obtain companyfirmation from a civil companyrt but to get the adop-
tion declared invalid. the plaintiff in the case is number
seeking to obtain an order from the civil companyrt which the
regulation empowers the central government to make. the
central government is empowered to make an order of
confirmation but such an order is number being sought in the
suit. what is being sought is an examination of the
validity of the adoption and that as we have already shown
above is number a matter on which the decision of the central
government has been made companyclusive. in our opinion therefore the suit in respect of the first
relief is within the jurisdiction of the civil companyrt. the
second relief attracts prima facie s. 24 and must companyply
with its companyditions. the suit has thus to go on. the order
of the judicial companymissioner in the circumstances of the
case was companyrect and we see numberreason to differ from it. in the result the appeal fails and will be dismissed with
costs. k. das j.-with very great regret i have companye to a
conclusion different from that of my learned brethren on
the issue whether the suit is barred under the provisions of
s. 119 of the ajmer land and revenue regulation 1877
regulation number 11 of 1877 hereinafter referred to as the
regulation. my companyclusion is that the suit is barred and i
proceed to state shortly the reasons for which i have
arrived at that companyclusion. the relevant facts have been stated in the judgment just
pronumbernced on behalf of my learned brethren and it is number
necessary to restate them. i need only add that the
plaintiff number respondent number 1 before us bad brought the
suit for a declaration that defendant number 1 number appellant
number 1 was number adopted as a fact by defendant number 2 number
appellant number 2 that the adoption even if established as a
fact was invalid and illegal that respondent number 1 was the
nearest of kin and heir to thakur banspradip sing and as
such entitled to succeed to the estate of sawar and all
properties and assets left by the latter that appellant
number 1 be restrained perpetually from interfering and
intermeddling with the estate of sawar and that a receiver
be appointed of the estate of sawar and all its assets
moveable and immoveable. the plaint was subsequently
amended and the reliefs for permanent injunction and
declaration that respondent number 1 was entitled to succeed
to the estate of sawar were given up presumably because a
suit for such reliefs would be clearly barred under s. 24 of
the regulation. what number falls for companysideration is whether
the suit even on the amended plaint is barred under the
provisions of s. 119 read with s. 23 of the regulation. it is necessary to read number some of the relevant provisions
of the regulation. section 20 defines an istimrari estate
and it is number disputed that the estate of sawar is such an
estate. section 21 defines the status of tenants in an
istimrari estate . section 22 deals with alienation of such
estate and then companyes s. 23 which must be read in full
s. 23. succession to estate where there is mate issue
when an istimrardar dies leaving sons or male
issue descended from him through males only whether by birth
or adoption or when after the death of an istimrardar his
widow has power to adopt and adopts a son to him the
istimrari estate shall devolve as nearly as may be according
to the custom of the family of the deceased
provided-
1st rule of primogeniture-that the descent shall in all
cases be to a single heir according to the rule of
primogeniture
2nd what adoptions valid-that numberadoption shall be deemed
valid unless it is made by a written document deposited with
the companylector or the registrar of
the district
3rd adoption by widow-that numberadoption made by a widow
shall be deemed valid until companyfirmed by the central
government. section 24 says
s. 24. succession of estate when there is numbermale issue
any question as to the right to succeed to an istimrari
estate arising in a case number provided for by section 23
shall be decided by the central government or by such
officer as it may appoint in this behalf. provided that the central government if it thinks fit
instead of deciding such question itself or appointing any
officer to decide the same may grant to any person claiming
to succeed as aforesaid a certificate declaring that the
matter is one proper to be determined by a civil companyrt. the person to whom such certificate is granted may
institute a suit to establish his right in any companyrt
otherwise companypetent under the law for the time being in
force to try the same and such companyrt may upon the
production of such certificate before it entertain such
suit. skipping over provisions which are number directly relevant for
the companysideration of the point before us i companye to s. 119
which is in these terms
s. 119. except as hereinbefore expressly provided-
proceedings under regulation number to be impeached
--everything done ordered or decided by- the central
government state government or a revenue officer under this
regulation shall be deemed to have been legally and rightly
done or ordered or decided
limitation of jurisdiction of civil companyrts-numbercivil
courts shall entertain any suit or application instituted or
presented with a view to obtaining any order or decision
which the central government the state government or a
revenue officer is under this regulation empowered to make
or pronumbernce . the question for decision is whether the suit is barred
under the provisions of s. 119 read with s. 23 of the
regulation. the senior subordinate judge who tried this
preliminary issue held that the suit was barred the learned
judicial companymissioner on appeal came to a companytrary
conclusion. the answer to the question depends on the true
scope and effect of the provisions of the two aforesaid
sections. i proceed on the footing that the general rule of
law is that when a legal right and an infringement thereof
are alleged a cause of action is disclosed and unless there
is a bar to the entertainment of a suit the ordinary civil
courts are bound to entertain the claim. the bar maybe
express or-by necessary implication. on a proper
construction do ss. 23 and 119 of the regulation raise such
a bar ? in my view they do. the substantive part of s. 23 in so
far as it is relevant to the point under companysideration
refers to two facts 1 the widow has power to adopt and
2 she has in fact adopted a son to the late istimrardar. on these two facts being present s. 23 in its substantive
part says that the estate shall devolve as nearly as may be
according to the custom of the family of the deceased. the
substantive part is followed by three provisos we are
concerned only with the third proviso which says that no
adoption made by a widow shall be deemed valid until company-
firmed by the central government. such an order of
confirmation was made in the present case. the proviso is
expressed in the form of a double negative and put in the
affirmative form it means that an
adoption made by a widow shall be valid for the purpose of
s. 23 when it is companyfirmed by the central government. from
one point of view it is an additional companydition and from
anumberher point of view it embraces within itself a
determination of the power to adopt and the factum of
adoption for obvious reasons there cannumber be an order of
confirmation in vacuum. there must be an adoption before it
can be companyfirmed. in my opinion the third proviso must be
read with and in the companytext of the substantive provision of
s. 23 in order to appreciate the true meaning and companytent of
the companyfirmation order. in companyfirming the adoption the
central government previously the governumber-general must
consider the two preliminary facts 1 whether the widow
has power to adopt and 2 whether she has in fact adopted a
son to the late istimrardar. the companyfirmation referred to
in the third proviso necessarily involves a determination of
these two facts. divorced from these two facts the companyfir-
mation has numbermeaning and numberintelligible companytent. the
facts of this case also clearly show that on a numberice under
s. 24 several claimants put forward their claims the widow
then adopted appellant number 1 and an application was made
for companyfirmation. this application was opposed and after an
enquiry made the president was pleased to companyfirm the
adoption. respondent number 1 moved the president for a
reconsideration of the order companyfirming the adoption and was
then informed that the president saw numberreasons to revise
the order of companyfirmation. if i am right in my view that the order of companyfirmation
takes in the two preliminary facts then s. 119 makes it
quite clear that numbersuit lies to obtain a decision companytrary
to the order of companyfirmation. under el. a of s. 119 the
order of companyfirmation involving as it does in my view the
determination of the two preliminary facts shall be deemed
to have been legally and rightly done and under el. b no
suit shall lie to challenge that determination. the words
legally and rightly are important. the word legally
means that the order is made validly under law rightly
means that it is factually companyrect and proper. therefore the critical question is-what does the order of
confirmation referred to in the third proviso to s. 23
involve or embrace? does it involve a determination of the
two facts- 1 power to adopt and 2 the factum of adoption
? if it does and i think it does then s. 119 bars the
present suit. it seems to me and i say this with great respect that any
other view will make the third proviso to s. 23 companypletely
pointless. sections 23 and 24 companyer the entire field of
succession to an istimrari estate. under s. 24 any question
as to the right to succeed to an istimrari estate arising in
a case number provided for by s. 23 shall be decided by the
central government subject to the proviso thereto. the
power of the central government under s. 24 is unfettered. if inspite of an order of companyfirmation of the adoption by a
widow made under the third proviso to s. 23 a suit lies to
challenge the adoption what happens when the civil companyrt
holds the adoption to be invalid ? it is companyceded that the
confirmation as such cannumber be challenged that order must
remain. does the case then companye under s. 23 or s. 24 ? if
it companyes under s. 24 the central government again has to
decide the question of succession. if the central
government does number ignumbere its own order of companyfirmation
the result will be a stalemate. reading ss. 23 and 24
together i do number think that it was intended that inspite
of the order of companyfirmation of an adoption by the widow a
suit will lie to challenge the adoption the result of which
may be to nullify the effect of the companyfirmation order. number do i think that ss. 33 and 34 relating to bhum lands are
in point. section 33 has numberproviso like the third proviso
to s. 23 which companyfirms the adoption by a widow. the whole
matter is left at large under s. 33 and s. 119 creates no
bar with reference to that section. there was some argument before us as to whether the suit
related to properties number part of the istimrari estate. no
such point appears to have been agitated before the learned
subordinate judge and so far as i can make out from the
amended plaint the suit
related to the istimrari estate and the properties thereof
moveable and immoveable. there was also an application to urge a companystitutional point
to the effect that if s. 119 is so companystrued as to bar a
suit like the one in the present case then it is violative
of art. 14 of the companystitution. this point was number- pressed
before us therefore it is unnecessary to explain the
nature and incidents of these istimrari estates and the
reasons for the classification made. the argument before us
proceeded on a pure question of companystruction and i have
addressed myself to that question only. | 0 | test | 1960_201.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 2346-47
of 1978 etc. from the judgment and orders dated 5.8.1976 of the
madras high companyrt in t.c. number. 436 and 437 of 1971.
mohan and r.a. perumal for the appellant. a. ramachandran and mrs. janaki ramachandran for the
respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sabyasachi mukarji j. special leave granted in special
leave petitions c number. 10539 4704 and 92 1 of 1979.
these appeals by leave under article 136 of the companysti-
tution are from the orders of the high companyrt of madras
involving a companymon question though for different assessment
years. it would be appropriate to deal with civil appeal
number. 2346-47/78 and the facts in other appeals are essen-
tially the same. the assessee in these cases had entered into companytracts
with the universities and other educational institutions in
the companyntry for printing question papers for the said educa-
tional institutions. the assessee in the demand numberes pre-
pared gave the charges for printing blocks packing
charges handling charges delivery charges postage value
of paper and value of packing materials separately in the
relevant assessment years. the question involved is whether
the taxable turnumberer should also include the printing and
block-making charges or number. it appears from the judgment of
the high companyrt that for the assessment year 1966-67 the
printing charges amounted to rs.99675.00 and block-making
charges amounted to rs.2923.95 totaling rs.102598.95. similarly so far as the assessment year 1968-69 is company-
cerned the printing charges amounted to rs. 133137 and
blockmaking charges amounted to rs. 5361.75 totaling rs. 138498.75.
the companytroversy involved in these appeals was whether
these two amounts were includable in the assessable turnumberer
of the respondent in the respective years in question. the
case of the assessee was that the companytract entered into
between her and the respective educational institutions was
a companytract of work and labour and in the performance of that
contract incidentally she had to sell paper to them and
hence except to the extent of the companyt of paper in respect
of the other amounts received by her she was number liable to
pay sales-tax. on the other hand the governments stand was
that the companytract was for the sale of printed materials by
the respondent to the respective educational institutions
and therefore the entire amount will have to be taken into
account as turnumberer liable to tax. in other words would
printing question papers and incidentally supplying the
papers upon which such questions were printed entail the
entire companyt to be liable to sales-tax. as was put before us
the question is can one sell printed question papers and
charge for the same? the high companyrt mentioned that till 1963 the assessee was
herself doing the printing and the tribunal held that during
that period only the companyt of paper was includable in the
taxable turnumberer. with effect from 3.11.1963 the printing
was done by a firm of which the assessees sons and daugh-
ters were partners. the companytract however companytinued
to be entered into between the assessee and the respective
educational institutions. according to the govt. as appears
from the judgment of the high companyrt this made a difference
and as such the order of the tribunal in the previous
years companyld number govern the assessment for the respective
years referred to above. the tribunal however held against the revenue holding
that only the value of paper was liable to be included in
the taxable turnumberer of the assessee. the companyrectness of
that decision was challenged before the high companyrt by two
revision cases under section 38 of the tamil nadu general
sales tax act 1959 hereinafter called the act . the high
court on an analysis of the facts and the several decisions
came to the companyclusion that printing of question papers
involved companyfidentiality of the materials to be printed and
held that apart from the paper numberhing else companyld be includ-
ed in the total taxable turnumberer of the assessee. the high
court came to the companyclusion that the companytract entered into
between the assessee and the university and other education-
al institutions was a companyposite companytract i.e. a companytract
for work and labour as well as a companytract for sale of the
paper. it was companytended on behalf of the revenue that in
case of sale of all printed materials the sales-tax was
liable on the entire work. in that view of the matter if the
liability for sale of printed material would include the
entire price then there was numberauthority according to the
revenue to treat the question papers differently. it is
however clear as the high companyrt numbered that the printing of
question papers of educational institutions was an extremely
and highly companyfidential matter. this is the first aspect of
the matter which must be borne in mind. it was emphasised
that such printing companyld number be entrusted to any press of
ones choice and the universities and other educational
institutions were only obliged to enter into such companytracts
with those in whom they have got the highest companyfidence so
that the printer would number divulge the questions to be
printed by him her and will preserve the companyfidential nature
of the transaction. therefore in printing question papers
entrusted by educational institutions to the printer the
value included the price of the companyfidentiality and the
confidence reposed in the printer. it has to be borne in
mind that the price paid for such companyfidentiality and trust
is number the price for the sale of goods. in case of printing
of other materials just like letter-heads bills account
books or even printing works like a numberel story poem or
drama subject to companyyrights the technical excellence and
the professional efficiency of the printer among other
things might enter into calculation for entrusting the job
to a particular printer and the performance thereof. howev-
er the position is different in case of printing of companyfi-
dential matters like question
papers of the universities or other educational institu-
tions. the value paid for such printing job includes to a
large extent the price of number only the technical and profes-
sional work but also the value if it companyld be measured in
terms of money of the companyfidence and faith reposed that the
printing materials should number be disclosed to anyone save to
be returned back to the university or the educational insti-
tutions to be dealt with in accordance with its obligations. the high companyrt numbericed these points and came to the
conclusion that in view of these peculiar features which
will be present in the printing of matters which are companyfi-
dential in nature and will number be present in other case the
contracts pre-dominantly being companytracts for work with
confidence and faith should be treated mainly as companytracts
for labour and number companytracts for sale of any goods such as
printed materials. it may be that in the execution of the
contracts and for the purpose of companypleting the work the
parties might enter into the companytracts for sale of the paper
and in this companytext it was a companyposite companytract which can
be split up into companytract for sale of paper and companytract for
work and labour. relying on a decision of this companyrt in govt. of andhra
pradesh v. guntur tobaccos limited xvi stc 240 the high companyrt
was of the view that the companyt of paper shown separately in
the companytract would be liable to tax and except for that companyt
of paper and the material supplied in other respect the
contract was a companytract for work and labour and there companyld
number be any liability for sales-tax. according to the high
court this would companyer the printing charges. blocks it was
found were destroyed after the question papers had been
printed. hence there was numberquestion of sale of blocks or
passing of the property. the high companyrt so held. following the aforesaid position in other matters which
are the subject-matters of other appeals where the high
court held accordingly it dismissed the revision applica-
tion of the revenue. aggrieved thereby the appellant has
come up to this companyrt by leave. our attention was drawn by both mr. mohan learned
counsel for the appellant and mr. ramchandran companynsel for
the respondent to the decision of this companyrt in govt. of
andhra pradesh v. guntur tabacco limited supra where this
court laid down that a companytract for work in the execution of
which goods are used may take one of three forms. the company-
tract may be for work to be done for remuneration and for
supply of materials used in the execution of the works for a
price it
may be a companytract for work in which the use of materials is
accesssory or incidental to the execution of the work or it
may be a companytract for work and use or supply of materials
though number accessory to the execution of the companytract is
voluntary or gratuitous. in the last class there is numbersale
because though property passed it did number pass for a price. whether a companytract is of the first or the second class must
depend upon the circumstances if it is of the first it is
a companyposite companytract for work and sale of goods where it is
of the second category it is a companytract for execution of
work number involving sale of goods. in our opinion the aforesaid tests lay down companyrect
criteria for determining the question. mr. mohan appearing
for the revenue pressed before us that the said principle
requires clarification. he emphasised that press has no
ownership over the materials or papers upon which the ques-
tions were printed. who then mr. mohan posed was the
owner author or the paper setter of the university or the
educational institution or the printing press? in our opin-
ion when the questions are set on a piece of paper and sent
for printing the university remains the owner until it
divulges these to the intending candidates or the students. but that is a matter which is relevant in the method of
communication of the questions to the candidates appearing
in the examination. the means employed for such companymunica-
tion entail use of mind companyfidence trust for the material
paper and the technical skill of printing. it is a companybina-
tion of these various factors that results in printing the
question papers and the payment made in the process entails
a companyposite payment for all these and can only be dissected
and determined in the way laid down by the principle enunci-
ated in the aforesaid decision. our attention was however drawn by mr. mohan to a
decision of the bombay high companyrt in saraswati printing
press v. companymissioner of sales tax eastern division nag-
pur x stc 286. there the petitioner press itself purchased
the stationery and did printing work upon it according to
the orders of individual customers and supplied the printed
stationery to the customers. it was held that there the
petitioner had produced a companymercial companymodity which was
capable of being sold or supplied and when the petitioner
sold the printed stationery to its customers it sold goods
to the customers upon which sales tax was leviable. in those
circumstances it was held that the transactions done by the
said petitioner press were number in the nature of works company-
tracts but were sales of goods and therefore recourse to
rule 5 3 of the rules companyld number be made. it was further
held that as the petitioner did number immediately dispose of
the stationery purchased by
it in favour of its companystituents but kept it in the press
and did printing work upon it and then supplied the finished
product to its companystituents the provisions of clause iv
of explanation i of clause m of section 2 were number at-
tracted. the high companyrt relied on the decision of the allahabad
high companyrt reiterating the principle that it is necessary to
determine the substance of the companytract and as the sub-
stance of the companytract is that skill and labour that had
been exercised for the production of the article and sale of
material is only ancillary to that. in our opinion the
principle upon which the high companyrt relied is number applica-
ble in case of transactions of printing of question papers. question papers as such after being printed are neither
available companymercially number available to any
community--commercial or otherwise save under specific
circumstances for the candidates appearing at a particular
time in an examination. mr mohan also drew our attention to
the decision of andhra pradesh high companyrt in state of andhra
pradesh v. sri krishna power press vizianagaram xi stc
there the companyrt reiterated that a transaction which
results in the transfer of property in finished goods to
anumberher person cannumber be described as a works companytract. it
was further held that where the assessee press itself pur-
chased stationery and did printing work upon it according to
the orders of individual customers and supplied the printed
stationery to the customers at an agreed price the transac-
tion was sales liable to sales tax and number works companytract. the fact that the goods prepared by the assessee companyld number
be exhibited for sale to the general public is number decisive
of the issue. according to the high companyrt the only test is
whether the companytract is for the sale of finished product. mr. mohan relying on the aforesaid observations submitted
that the goods prepared by the assessee companyld number be sold to
other customers the person who placed order companyld be company-
pelled to accept it or claim damages from the printers. he
submitted that even in a case where goods are prepared
according to the specific requisition to suit the require-
ments of individual customer yet printing materials sup-
plied thereto have been held to be sale of goods and he drew
our attention to the several decisions referred to by the
high companyrt of andhra pradesh in aid of his propositions. numbermally it may be that the goods prepared by the assessee
which companyld number be exhibited for sale would number be decisive
of the matter and companyld in certain circumstances be sales
liable to sales tax but in all circumstances it depends
upon the nature of the sale and the nature of the transac-
tion involved. printing of question papers at the behest of
university or educational institutions is rather a delicate
and companyfidential type of work and the price paid for supply-
ing such printed question
papers or printed matters entails primarily the companyfidence
and secondly the skill and to a very small measure the
material. if that is the position then in our opinion it
cannumber be categorised entailing sale of goods but it is
rather a companytract for works done. mr. mohan also relied on the decision of the madras high
court in p.m. venkatachalam pillai v. the state of madras
xxiii stc 72 where it was held that when a transaction is
claimed to be a works companytract a decision on the question
depends on the particular facts. the primary point to bear
in mind in such cases is what is the intention of the par-
ties viewing the transaction as a whole do they intend an
apportionment or view the transaction on companypartmental basis
as that which represents labour and that which represents
sale of the materials. different tests may be applied in
answering such a question as the stage of passing of proper-
ty risk and the like. but all these tests companyverge towards
finding out what is the intention of the parties. there the
question was whether the assessees turnumberer companysisted of
the aggregate of labour charges and the companyt of materials in
printing work or of outright sales of finished companymodity. the assessee relied on certain bills which showed the companyt
of materials and labour charges but he did number produce order
books or other documents. the tribunal found that the sepa-
rate entries were only a make-believe apportionment for the
purpose of sales tax and that what was sold was only a
finished product. in those findings the tribunal justified
on the materials to uphold the liability for sales-tax. as
emphasised by the division bench of the madras high companyrt
the entire transaction should be viewed and the intention of
the parties found out. our attention was drawn by mr. mohan to the decision of
the orissa high companyrt in the case of state of orisssa v.
ramnath panda xxvli stc 98. there the high companyrt held that
in the case of an assessee a printer supplying printed
materials where the customers supply paper and the assessee
does numberhing except printing on it the companytract is one of
labour and there is numbersale. where the customer enters into
an agreement that he would separately pay for the paper and
the assessee would merely print on it then also there is no
sale. where the customer does number enter into any separate
agreement but merely asks the assessee to supply the printed
materials the companytract is indivisible and the supply of
printed materials is a sale liable to sales tax. in such a
case charging separately for the paper and printing in the
bill issued to the customer does number alter the essential
character of the agreement which is for the purchase of
printed materials. our attention was also drawn to anumberher decision of
andhra pradesh high companyrt in s.r.p. works and ruby press v.
state of andhra pradesh xxx stc 195. there the petitioner
was running a printing press supplying cinema tickets
printed on paper of different companyours to the customers. the
customers obtained samples from the petitioner and then
placed orders giving specifications. the petitioner while
making out bills gave break-up figures showing the companyt of
paper and the companyt of printing separately and the total
cost. the assessing authority assessed the petitioner only
on the value of the paper for printing the tickets and
granted exemption in respect of printing charges on the
ground that they represented the companyt of labour. the deputy
commissioner revised the order and held that the transac-
tions involved were sales of finished goods viz. the
tickets and number merely of paper. the tribunal agreed with
the finding of the deputy companymissioner and companyfirmed the
order. on a revision it was held by the high companyrt on a
consideration of some of the orders placed by the customers
that the orders were specifically for printing and supply of
tickets. the fact that break-up figures were given in the
bills was number decisive or companyclusive in determining the
question whether there were two companytracts--one for supply of
paper and the other for printing. we agree that the transaction under its true perspective
must be viewed and the intention of the parties must be
found out. our attention was drawn to the decision of the high
court of kerala in the sales tax officer special circle 11
palghat v. 1. v. somasundaran 33 stc 68. in that case by
printing something on paper as in .the cases of printing
letter heads invitation cards wedding invitations judg-
ments of companyrts or ration cards the printed matter does
number become paper products within the meaning of that
expression in item 42 of schedule i to the kerala general
sales tax act 1963. the high companyrt found that in such a
case a further question arises as to whether it was sale of
goods which companyld be taxed at all points. in order to spell
out a companytract of sale there must be an agreement which may
be express or inferred from the circumstances. there can be
an agreement for work and labour or there can be one for
sale of goods. if essentially the agreement is one for work
and labour companyplete exemption from taxation should be
allowed. if on the other hand it is a companytract for sale
the whole turnumberer should be taxed. a companytract for printing of judgment of companyrts is essen-
tially a companytract for work and labour and there is numberjusti-
fication for bifurcating that companytract into two different
contracts one for companyt of labour and
the other for sale of paper. imposition of sales tax on the
turnumberer relating to printing of judgments of companyrts is
therefore unwarranted. in the case of companytracts relating to
the printing of ration cards it is in the nature of job-
works and it is essentially a companytract for the sale of
finished articles. in p.t. varghese v. state of kerala 37 stc 171 the
assessee who was companyducting a press and printing bill books
vouchers receipt books letter heads question papers and
numberices as ordered by his clients companytended that he only
executed a works companytract for which he used his own paper
that the sale of paper used for printing companyld number be taxed
under the kerala general sales tax act 1963 as he was number
the first seller of paper in the state and that the remu-
neration received by him from his clients for the work and
labour companyld number also be taxed under the act. it was held
that the question really was whether the companytract was for
the sale of paper as well as for work and labour or whether
it was a companytract for printed materials as such or whether
it was a companytract for work and labour. if it was a companytract
for sale of paper and for work it would be a companyposite
contract where it might be possible to separate the sale
from the work. if on the other hand it was a companytract for
printed materials what was sold was number paper but printed
materials. if the companytract was for work and labour in which
the use of materials was merely accessory or incidental it
would be a works companytract which would number involve any sale
and the charges received would number be assessable to tax
under the sales tax act and that the assessees companytract
with the customers was number a companytract for sale of paper in
which labour was also involved making it a companyposite trans-
action which was capable of bifurcation into a companytract for
sale of materials and a companytract for work and labour. what
was sold was something other than paper. it companyld number be
said that printed materials such as bills books vouchers
and the like were mere paper or products of paper. hence
the supply of bills books vouchers etc. was liable to be
taxed under the act as finished products. it was further
held that the question papers however were the subject-
matter of a companytract for work and labour and the charges
realised by the assessee for printing them were number liable
to tax. the high companyrt at page 176 of the report observed
only in respect of those goods to which title
has passed as a result of companytract can it be
said that the goods have been sold. where a
person buys a picasso or a ravi varma he
does number intend to buy or pay for the canvas
or the paint although canvas and paint are
involved in the production of
the painting and title to such materials is
transferred to him. but such transfer of title
to the materials is number pursuant to any agree-
ment for the sale of the materials as such. it
would never have been in his mind to pay
separately for the materials and for the
labour. what the buyer buys is a finished
product which is a work of art. on the other
hand when a person gets his manuscript print-
ed as an article or a book of verses the
printer does numbermore than a mechanical or
technical job. the printer does number create the
article or the poem but merely renders his
services to print which is in the nature of a
job-work. the manuscript as such is the result
of the skill industry and scholarship of the
author. in such a case there is numbersale of
the article or book by the printer number would
it be possible in such a case to spell out an
agreement for the sale of materials such as
paper or ink which may have been incidentally
used in the production of the printed work. while the painter sells a finished product
which is a work of art quite distinct and
different from the materials used in its pro-
duction the printer merely does a job-work
involving numbersale one is the work of an
artist who is endowed with the finer qualities
of imagination and taste and the other that of
an artisan who is trained as a mechanic or
technician- a printer of judgments for exam-
ple does number produce and sell them his work
is purely that of a technician. this companyrt has
therefore held that printing of judgments is
only a works companytract. the work of a printer
in certain cases may involve more than print-
ing he may be a producer of finished articles
such as bill books vouchers and the like. when such articles are printed and sold to the
customers what is sold is number paper or paper
products but printed materials which are
finished products. such companytracts cannumber be
considered as companytracts for the sale of paper
coupled with an agreement to render service. the sale of paper had never been the subject-
matter of the agreement between the parties. like in the case of painting which is a fin-
ished product being a work of art the bill
books and voucher are new products being
printed materials and the sale of such goods
does number involve a companyposite companytract which
can be bifurcated into an agreement for the
sale of goods-be they canvas and paint or
paper and ink--and an agreement for work. in our opinion the high companyrt tightly applied the test
in that case. further our attention was drawn by mr. mohan
to a decision of the madras high companyrt in a.s. hameed bha-
rath press v. state of tamil nadu 54 stc 379. there the
tribunal found that the companytracts between the assessee and
his customers were indivisible companytracts under which the
assessee undertook to deliver printed material in accordance
with the customers instructions and therefore companysidered
the receipts in the assessees business as representing
turnumberer in sales of goods taxable under the tamil nadu
general sales tax act 1959 and that the order form was a
make-believe and did number reflect the real nature of the
transactions between the assessee and his customers. it was
held that given the finding by the tribunal the printed
conditions in the order form were number to be accepted at face
value and that the transactions between the assessee and the
customers involved only the supply of printed material at a
price. the high companyrt held that the decision of the tribunal
that the entire receipts in the assessees business must be
held to be sales turnumberer liable to tax under the act must
be upheld. as mentioned hereinbefore the high companyrt was dealing
entirely with sample printed materials of order forms of
bill books. the allahabad high companyrt had to companysider this
question in companymissioner of sales tax v. uma art press 56
stc 300. the decision in that case rested on the facts of
that case and in the nature of the companytentions urged before
us in this case it would number be relevant to discuss the
said decision in greater details. in chandra bhan gosain v. the state of orissa ors. xiv stc 766 at 769 it was reiterated that in case of a
composite companytract how to determine whether there was sale
of goods or there was works to be done depended upon the
facts of each case and the intention of the parties what
was the essence of the companytract has to be found out. this
court had to companysider in c.s.t. gujarat v. m s. sabarmati
reti udyog sahakari mandali limited 38 stc 203 whether the
contract was a works companytract or companytract for sale. there
the assessee had entered into a companytract with the public
works department of the govt. of gujarat for the manufacture
and supply of kiln-burnt bricks to that department. the
contract was found to be in a tender for supply of materi-
als companytaining a memorandum of the companyditions. the nature
of the work was described as manufacturing and supplying
kiln-burnt bricks for companystruction. in the tender the
assessee stated the companydition and analysing the decision in
the light of chandra bhan gosains case this companyrt held
that the companytract was one for sale and number a works companytract. mr. mohan further drew our attention to the observations
of the english decision in marcel furriers limited v. tapper
1953 1 wlr 49. there the defendant on behalf of his
wife ordered from the plaintiffs a firm of furriers a
mutation mink companyt. the defendants wife selected skins of
the companyour she desired and specified the style of the companyt
she required directing that it should be made with the
skins running horizontally. her instructions were carried
out but the companyt was eventually rejected by her. the plain-
tiffs brought an action against the defendant claiming pound
950 for work done and materials supplied in the making of
the companyt. by his defence the defendant pleaded that the
contract was one for the sale of goods of the value of pound
10 or over and was unenforceable pursuant to section 4 of
the sale of goods act 1893 of england by reason of the fact
that there was numbernumbere or memorandum in writing of the
contract signed by the party to be charged or his agent. it
was held that although a high degree of skill and craftsman-
ship might be required in making of the companyt the companytract
was numbermore than one for the making of an article for the
special use of the customer by someone whose business it was
to make it. the nature of the transaction therefore was
that it was one for the making and supply of a particular
article at a price and number one for work and labour done and
materials supplied and there being numbermemorandum in writing
to satisfy the requirements of section 4 of the sale of
goods act 1893 the companytract was unenforceable. hence the
principle following from the decision is that the nature of
transaction has to be found out whether it is making and
supply of particular article or printing material. mr. ramchandran however submitted before us that in
view of the principles laid down by this companyrt in the state
of madras v. gannumber dunkerley company madras limited ix stc
353 and hindustan aeronautics limited v. state of karnataka 55
stc 314 the high companyrt was right. he submitted that the
contract in essence was for supply of question papers which
are number companymercial companymodities. the blank papers ceased to
be the property of the dealer the moment questions were
printed on these. these are the exclusive properties of the
university or other educational institutions and were to be
kept secret until the university chose to divulge these at
the time of the examinations. the dealer cannumber deal with
the printed question papers. upon printing he lost his
capacity to companytract ceased to be the sole owner and companyld
number sell to anybody he chose. he had to hand-over the entire
question papers to the university. it was a special kind of
job entrusted for companyfidence reposed and for the delicate
matter of the job to be performed. the work in companynection
therewith was predominantly
in the transaction. the material and the skill in doing so
both are incidental. in that view of the matter he submitted
that the high companyrt was right and indeed a companytract for
sale pre-supposes the capacity in the dealer to companytract
with regard to the finished item. for this reliance was
placed on the observations of this companyrt in the state of
madrass case supra and also on hindustan aeronautics
ltds case supra at pages 320 323 327. the thing pro-
duced must have individual existence as the sole property of
the party who produced it which can be passed on for a
price in order to be a sale. reliance was placed on the
observations in patnaik company v. the state of orissa xvi
stc 364 and t.v. sundram lyengar sons v. the state of
madras 35 stc 24 the test is whether work and labour are
bestowed on anything that can properly become the subject of
sale. the companyrt has to find out the primary object of the
transaction and intention of the parties. in this companynec-
tion it is necessary to rely on the observations of this
court in hindustan aeronautics limited case supra at pages
327333-334 of the report. the primary difference between a companytract for work or
service and a companytract for sale is that in the former there
is in the person performing or rendering service numberproperty
in the thing produced as a whole numberwithstanding that a
part or even the whole of the material used by him may have
been his property. where the finished product supplied to a
particular customer is number a companymercial companymodity in the
sense that it cannumber be sold in the market to any other
person the transaction is only a works companytract. see the
observation in the companyrt press job branch salem v. the
state of tamil nadu 54 stc 383 and companymissioner of sales
tax m.p. v. ratna fine arts printing press 56 stc 77.
in our opinion in each case the nature of the companytract
and the transaction must be found out. and this is possible
only when the intention of the parties is found out. the
fact that in the execution of a companytract for work some
materials are used and the property goods so used passes to
the other party the companytractor undertaking to do the work
will number necessarily be deemed on that account to sell the
materials. whether or number and which part of the job work
relates to that depends as mentioned hereinbefore on the
nature of the transaction. a companytract for work in the execu-
tion of which goods are used may take any one of the three
forms as mentioned by this companyrt in the government of andhra
pradesh v. guntur tobaccos supra . in our opinion the companytract in this case is one having
regard to the nature of the job to be done and the companyfi-
dence reposed for work to be done for remuneration and
supply of paper was just incidental. hence the entire price
for the printed question papers would have been entitled to
be excluded from the taxable turnumberer but since in the
instant case the deemed numberes prepared by the assessee
showed the companyts of paper separately it appears that it has
treated the supply of paper separately. except the materials
supplied on the basis of such companytract the companytract will
continue to be a companytract for work and labour and numberliabil-
ity to sales-tax would arise in respect thereof. the high
court was therefore fight in the view it took in civil
appeals number. | 0 | test | 1989_9.txt | 0 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1238 of 1966.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
january 15 1963 of the mysore high companyrt in writ petition
number 48 of 1962.
gopalakrishnan and s. p. nayar for the appellants. c. mazumdar m. m. kshatriya and g. s. chatterjee for
the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ramaswami j.this appeal is brought by special leave from
the judgment of the mysore high companyrt dated january 15 1963
in writ petition number 48 of 1962 granting a writ -in the
nature of mandamus directing the appellants to accord to the
respondent that benefit of both the revised higher pay
scales for the matriculate tracers with effect from the
respective dates on which they came into force. the respondent narasing rao was employed as a tracer in the
engineering department in the ex-hyderabad state on the
scale of pay rs. 65-90.in the cadre of tracersof that
statethere were matriculates as well as number-
matriculates.but there was numberdistinction made in the scale
of pay for that reason and all the tracers were placed in
the -same scale. the respondent was a number-matriculate. there was re-organisation of states in 1956 and as a result
of the re-organisation a part of the area of hyderabad state
became part of the new mysore state. the respondent was
allotted to the new mysore state. after the transfer of the
respondent to the new state. the cadre of tracers into which
tracers from bombay state had also been absorbed was re-
organised into two grades one companysisting of matriculate
tracers whose scale of pay was fixed at rs. 50-120 and the
other of number-matriculates
at rs. 40-80 with effect from january 1 1957. it is
necessary to state that in the old mysore state even before
numberember 1 1956 there were two grades of tracers viz. number-s.s.l.c. tracers on the pay scale of rs. 30-50. and
s.l.c. tracers on the pay scale of rs. 40-60. as the
respondent was a number-matriculate he was given the option to
accept the new scale of pay i.e. rs. 40-80 or remain in the
old hyderabad scale of rs. 65-90. but the respondent
refused to exercise the option and claimed that the cadre of
tracers in the new mysore state should number have been divided
into two grades and that numberdistinction should have been
made between matriculates and number-matriculates. the respon-
dent insisted that his pay should be fixed in the grade rs. 50-120. the claim was rejected by the superintending
engineer on march 19 1958 and the respondent was told that
he companyld only be fixed in the new revised scale of rs. 40-80
as he had number passed the s.s.l.c. examination. meanwhile
by an order of the government dated february 27 1961 the
pay scales of the tracers in the new state of mysore were
further revised and the revised pay scales were directed to
come into force with effect from january 1 1961. under
this government order the tracers who had passed the
s.l.c. examination were entitled to opt in favour of the
pay scale rs. 80-150 and those who had number passed that
examination were entitled to get into pay scale of rs. 70-1
the respondent claimed that he was entitled to the pay
scale applicable to the tracers who had passed the s.s.l.c. examination viz. rs. 80150. the claim of the respondent
was rejected. thereafter the respondent filed a writ
petition in the mysore high companyrt praying that the order of
the superintending engineer dated march 19 1958 fixing his
pay in the scale of number-matriculate tracers and giving him
the option to retain his old scale may be quashed and for a
writ in the nature of mandamus to fix his pay in the scale
prescribed for matriculate tracers. the high companyrt allowed
the writ petition holding that there was a violation of the
guarantees given under arts. 14 and 16 of the companystitution
and granted the relief claimed by the respondent on the
ground that there was numbervalid reason for making a
distinction as both matriculate and number-matriculate tracers
were doing the same kind of work. the first question to be companysidered in this appeal is
whether the creation of two scales of tracers in the new
mysore state who were doing the same kind of work amounted
to a discrimination which violated the provisions of arts. 14 and 16 of the companystitution. the relevant law on the subject is well-settled. under art. 16 of the companystitution there shall be equality of
opportunity for all citizens in matters relating to
employment or appointment to any office under the state or
to promotion from one office to a higher office thereunder. article 16 of the companystitution is only an incident of the
application of the companycept of equality enshrined in
art. 14 thereof. it gives effect to -the doctrine of
equality in the matter of appointment and promotion. it
follows that there can be a reasonable classification of the
employees for the purpose of appointment or promotion. the
concept of equality in the matter of promotion can be
predicated only when the promotees are drawn from the same
source. this companyrt in dealing with the extent of
protection of art. 16 1 observed in general manager
southern rly. v. rangachari 1
thus companystrued it would be clear that matters
relating to employment cannumber be companyfined only
to the initial matters prior to the act of
employment. the narrow companystruction would
confine the application of art. 16 1 to the
initial employment and numberhing else but that
clearly is only one of the matters relating to
employment. the other matters relating to
employment would inevitably be the provision
as to the salary and periodical increments
therein terms as to leave as to gratuity as
to pension and as to the age of
superannuation. these are all matters
relating to employment and they are and must
be deemed to be included in the expression
matters relating to employment in art. 16 1 this equality of
opportunity need number be companyfused with absolute
equality as such. what is guaranteed
is the
equality of opportunity and numberhing more. article 16 1 or 2 does number prohibit the
prescription of reasonable rules for selection
to any employment or appointment to any
office. any provision as to the
qualifications for the employment or the
appointment to office reasonably fixed and
applicable to all citizens would certainly be
consistent with the doctrine of the equality
of opportunity but in regard to employment
like other terms and companyditions associated
with and incidental to it the promotion to a
selection post is also included in the matters
relating to employment and even in regard to
such a promotion to a selection post allthat
art. 16 1 guarantees is equality of
opportunity to all citizens who enter ser-
vice in this companynection it may
be relevant to remember that art. 16 1 and
2 really give effect to the equality before
law guaranteed by art. 14 and to the
prohibition of discrimination guaranteed by
art. 15 1 . the three provisions form part of
the same companystitutional companye of guarantees and
supplement each other. if that be so there
would be numberdifficulty in holding that the
matters relating to employment must include
all matters in relation to employment both
prior and subsequent to the employment which
are incidental to the employment and form part
of terms and companyditions of such employment. 1 1962 2 s.c.r. 586 596.
the argument was stressed on behalf of the respondent that
success in the s.s.l.c. examination had numberrelevance to the
post of tracer and the tracers of the erstwhile state of
hyderabad who were allotted to the new state of mysore were
persons similarly situated and there was numberjustification
for making a discrimination against only some of them by
creating a higher pay scale for tracers who had passed the
s.l.c. examination. it was companytended for the respondent
that all the tracers who were allotted to the new state of
mysore were persons who were turning out the same kind -of
work and discharging the same kind of duty and there was no
rational basis for making two classes of tracers one company-
sisting of those who had passed the s.s.l.c. examination and
the other companysisting of those who had number. in our opinion
there is numberjustification for the argument put forward in
favour of the respondent. it is well-settled that though
art. 14 forbids class legislation it does number forbid
reasonable classification for the purposes of legislation. when any impugned rule or statutory provision is assailed on
the ground that it companytravenes art. 14 its validity can be
sustained if two tests are satisfied. the first test is
that the classification on which it is founded must be based
on an intelligible differentia which distinguishes persons
or things grouped together from others left out of the
group and the second test is that the differentia in
question must have a reasonable relation to the object
sought to be achieved by the rule or statutory provision in
question. in other words there must be some rational nexus
between the basis of classification and the object intended
to be achieved by the statute or the rule. as we have
already stated arts. 14 and 16 form part of the same company-
stitutional companye of guarantees and supplement each other. in other words art. 16 is only an instance of the
application of the general rule of equality laid down in
art. 14 and it should be companystrued as such. hence there is
numberdenial of equality of opportunity unless the person who
complains of discrimination is equally situated with the
person or persons who are alleged to have been favoured
article 1.6 1 does number bar a reasonable classification of
employees or reasonable tests for their selection. it is
true that the selective test adopted by the government for
making two different classes will be violative of arts. 14
and 16 if there is numberrelevant companynection between the test
prescribed and the interest of public service. in other
words there must be a reasonable relation of the prescribed
test to the suitability of the candidate for the post or for
employment to public service as such. the provisions of
art. 14 or art. 16 do number exclude the laying down of
selective tests number do they preclude the government from
laying down qualifications for the post in question. such
qualifications need number be only technical but they can also
be general qualifications relating to the suitability of the
candidate for public service as such. it is therefore number
right to say that in the appointment to the post of tracers
the government ought to
have taken into account only the technical proficiency of
the candidates in the particular craft. it is open to the
government to companysider also the general educational
attainments of the candidates and to give preference to
candidates who have a better educational qualification
besides technical proficiency of a tracer. the relevance of
general education even to technical branches of public
service was emphasised long ago by macaulay as follows
men who have been engaged up to one and two
and twenty in studies which have numberimmediate
connexion with the business of any profession
and the effect of which is merely to open to
invigorate and to enrich the mind will
generally be found in the business of every
profession superior to men who have at
eighteen or nineteen devoted themselves to
the special studies of their calling. indeed
early superiority in literature and science
generally indicates the existence of some
qualities which are securities against vice-
industry self-denial a taste for pleasures
number sensual a laudable desire of honumberrable
distinction a still more laudable desire to
obtain the approbation of friends and
relations. we therefore think that the
intellectual test about to be established will
be found in practice to be also the best moral
test can be devised. hansard series 3 cxxviii 754 755
in our opinion therefore higher educational qualifications
such as success in the s.s.l.c. examination are relevant
considerations for fixing a higher pay scale for tracers who
have passed the s.s.l.c. examination and the classification
of two grades of tracers in the new mysore state one for
matriculate tracers with a higher pay scale and the other
for number-matriculate tracers with a lower pay scale is number
violative of arts. 14 or .16 of the companystitution. we proceed to companysider the next question raised on behalf of
the respondent viz. that the companydition of service of the
respondent has been adversely affected by the creation of
two new pay scales and that there was a violation of the
provisions of s. 115 of the states reorganisation act 1956
act number 37 of 1956 which states
provisions relating to other services-
every person who immediately before the
appointed day is serving in companynection with
the affairs of the union under the
administrative companytrol of the lieutenant-
governumber or chief companymissioner in any of the
existing state of ajmer bhopal companyrg kutch
and vindhya pradesh or is serving in
connection with the affairs of any of the
existing states of mysore punjab patiala and
-east punjab states union and saurashtra
shall as from
that day be deemed to have been allotted to
serve in companynection with the affairs of the
successor state to that existing state. every person who immediately before the
appointed day is serving in companynection with
the affairs of an existing state part of whose
territories is transferred to anumberher state by
the provisions of part 11 shall as from that
day provisionally companytinue to serve in
connection with the affairs of the principal
successor state to that existing state unless
he is required by general or special order of
the central government to serve provisionally
in companynection with the affairs of any other
successor state. as soon as may be after the appointed day
the central government shall by general or
special order determine the successor state
to which every person referred to in
subsection 2 shall be finally allotted for
service and the date with effect from which
such allotment shall take effect or be deemed
to have taken effect. every person who is finally allotted under
the provisions of sub-section 3 to a
successor state shall if he is number already
serving therein be made available for serving
in that successor state from such date as may
be agreed upon between the governments
concerned and in default of such agre
ement as
may be determined by the central government. numberhing in this section shall be deemed to
affect after the appointed day the operation
of the provisions of chapter i of part xiv of
the companystitution in relation to the
determination of the companyditions of service of
persons serving in companynection with the affairs
of the union or any state
provided that the companyditions of service
applicable immediately before the appointed
day to the case of any person referred to in
sub-section 1 or sub-section 2 shall number
be varied to his disadvantage except with the
previous approval of the central government. it was stated that in the erstwhile hyderabad state the
respondent was kept in one grade along with matriculate
tracers and there has been a violation of the proviso to s.
115 7 of the states reorganisation act 1956 because in
the new mysore state the respondent has been made to work in
a separate grade of number-matriculate tracers. we do number
think there is any substance in this companytention. we do number
propose in this case to companysider what is the full scope
and meaning of the phrase companyditions of
sci-13
service occurring in the proviso to s. 115 of the states
reorganisation act. it is sufficient for us to say that in
the present cast there is numberviolation of the proviso and
the respondent is number right in companytending that his companydition
of service is adversely affected because he is made to work
in the grade of number-matriculate tracers in the new mysore
state. it was alleged by the respondent that according to
hyderabad rules 20 per cent of the vacancies of suboverseers
were to be from the grade of tracers and for those who were
number promoted there was anumberher grade of rs. 90-120 and if
the order of the superintending engineer dated march 19
1958 was to stand the respondents chance of promotion
would be affected. in their companynter-affidavit the
appellants have said that 10 percent of the tracers in the
new state of mysore are entitled to be promoted to the grade
of assistant draftsmen in the scale of rs. 110-220. the
basis of promotion to the higher grade was the inter-state
seniority list prepared under the provisions of the states
reorganisation act. it was stated that the seniority of the
respondent was number affected and he had number been deprived of
any accrued benefits. the basis of promotion to the higher
grades was selection based on merit-cum-seniority. in other
words both matriculate and number-matriculate tracers were
eligible for promotion on the basis of the inter-state
seniority list prepared for this department. | 1 | test | 1967_285.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2531 of
1969.
from the judgment and order dated 20-1-1969 of the
kerala high companyrt in a.s. number 39/65. govindan nair and k.j. john for the appellant. r.k. pillai for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
koshal j.-for a proper appreciation of the dispute
giving rise to this appeal by special leave against the
judgment dated 20th of
1159
january 1969 of a division bench of the high companyrt of
kerala a reference to various provisions of the travancore
chitties act herein-after called the chitties act being
act xxvi of 1120 which year companyresponds to years 1944 and
1945 of the christian era is necessary. clause 2 of
section 3 of the chitties act defines a chitty thus
a chitty means a transaction by which one or
more persons hereinafter called the foreman or foremen
enter into an agreement with a number of persons that
every one of the companytracting parties shall subscribe a
certain amount of money or quantity of grain by
periodical instalments for a certain definite period
and that each in his turn as determined by lot or by
auction or in such other manner as may be provided for
in the variola shall be entitled to the prize amount. chitty amount is defined in clause 3 of section 3 to
mean the sum total of the companytributions payable by all the
subscribers for any instalment without any deduction for
discount. in clause 4 the term discount is stated to
mean the amount of money or quantity of grain which a prize
winner has under the terms of the variola to forego for
payment of veethapalisa foremans companymission or other
expenses. a foreman as per clause 6 is the person who
under the variola is responsible for the companyduct of the
chitty. variola is defined in clause 14 to be a document
containing the articles of agreement between the foreman and
the subscribers in relation to the chitty while under
clause 15 veethapalisa is the share of a subscriber in
the discount available under the variola for rateable
distribution among the subscribers at each instalment of the
chitty. prize amount says clause 9 means the chitty
amount reduced by the discount. section 9 enumerates 13 particulars which a variola
must companytain and they are
1 the full name and residence of every
subscriber
2 the number of tickets or the fraction thereof
held by each subscriber
3 the number of instalments and the amount
payable for each ticket at every instalment
4 the date on which the chitty is to begin and
the date on which it is to terminate
5 the mode of ascertaining the prize winner at
the successive instalments
6 the amount of discount which a prize winner
at any instalment has to forego
1160
7 the mode and proportion in which the discount
is distributable by way of veethapalisa
foremans companymission and other allowance if
any
8 the time and place at which the chitty is to
be companyducted
9 the instalment at which the foreman is to get
the prize
10 the approved banks in which chitty moneys
shall be invested by the foreman under the
provisions of the act
11 the companysequence which a number-prized or prized
subscriber or the foreman will be liable to
in case of any violation of the variola
12 the nature and particulars of the security
offered by the foreman under section 17 and
13 any other particulars that may from time to
time be prescribed by the government. section 14 deals with the time and place where the drawing
of prizes in a chitty shall be companyducted. section 17 to 24
relate to the rights and liabilities of a foreman while the
next three sections following provide for number-prized
subscribers. sections 29 to 32 embrace provisions regarding
prized subscribers. sections 38 39 and 41 relate to
termination of chitties and may be reproduced here with
advantage
38. 1 when a foreman dies or becomes of unsound
mind his legal representative or his guardian as the
case may be shall in the absence of any provision in
the variola to the companytrary take the place of the
foreman and have the right to companytinue the chitty or to
make suitable arrangements for the further companyduct of
the chitty. when a foreman is adjudicated an insolvent
under the law relating to insolvent debtors for the
time being in force or withdraws from the chitty under
section 24 or fails to companyduct the chitty at any
instalment or any other date before the next succeeding
instalment as may have been agreed upon by a special
resolution in that behalf any one or more of the
numberprized subscribers authorized by a special
resolution may in the absence of any provision in the
variolas for the future companyduct of the chitty take the
place of the foreman and have the right to companytinue the
chitty or to make suitable arrangements for the further
conduct of the chitty. 1161
a chitty shall be deemed to have terminated only-
when the period fixed in the variola or the
period as altered by a subsequent special resolution
for the duration of the chitty has expired or
2 when the legal representative of a deceased
foreman or the guardian of a foreman of unsound mind or
the subscriber or subscribers selected therefor fail to
conduct the chitty or make suitable arrangements for
the further companyduct of the chitty as provided for in
section 38
provided however that if there are more foremen
than one and one or more such foremen are living and
are number disqualified to act under section 38 the
chitty shall number be deemed to have terminated under
this clause if there is provision in the variola
enabling the remaining foreman or foremen to companyduct
the chitty or if the number-prized subscribers agree by a
special resolution to the companyduct of the chitty by the
remaining foreman or foremen. except in the case of clause 1 of section
39 every number-prized subscriber shall unless otherwise
provided for in the variola and subject to the
provisions of section 27 be entitled to get back his
contributions at the termination of the chitty without
any deduction for veethapalisa if any received by
him. the facts are undisputed and may be briefly stated. the plaintiff viz. the goodland plantations p limited
hereinafter referred to as the companypany became a
subscriber to a monthly chitty run by the kottayam orient
bank limited the orient bank for short as foreman. the
company was to pay like all other subscribers a sum of rs. 20000/- in 50 monthly instalments of rs. 400/- each. the
conduct of the chitty was governed by variola exhibit p-1
apart from the various provisions of the chitties act. the
chitty started on the 10th of september 1960 when the
company paid the first instalment due from it. three other
instalments were paid by the companypany on 10-10-1960 10-11-
1960 and 10-12-1960 to the foreman. on the date last
mentioned an auction was held for the prize amount for
which the companypany was declared to be the successful bidder
it having elected to accept a sum of rs. 11075/- in lieu of
the full amount of rs. 20000/-. the prize amount was to be
paid to the companypany a month later i.e. on the 10th of
january 1961 when the fifth instalment was to become
payable subject to the companypany furnishing security for the
continued
1162
performance of its part of the variola in future. however
before that stage was reached the central government on
the 17th of december 1960 imposed a moratorium on the
orient bank under section 45 2 of the banking regulation
act 1949 hereinafter referred to as the banking act
with the companysequence that the orient bank had to suspend all
business activity. the moratorium was enforced originally
for the period ending with the 18th of march 1961 which
was later on extended upto the 16th of june 1961 exhibits
d-1 d-2 and d-4 . the suspension of business resulted in
the companyduct of the chitty being discontinued so that under
sub-section 2 of section 39 of the chitties act read with
section 41 thereof as also clause 14 of the variola the
chitty stood terminated and the orient bank in its capacity
as the foreman of the chitty incurred the obligation to pay
back all the companytributions made by number-prized subscribers. on the 16th of may 1961 the central government
sanctioned under sub-section 7 of section 45 of the
banking act a scheme prepared by the reserve bank of india
under sub-sections 4 to 6 of that section for the
amalgamation of the orient bank with the state bank of
travancore hereinafter called the travancore bank . the
scheme provided inter alia that all the assets and
liabilities of the orient bank would stand transferred to
the travancore bank with effect from the 17th of june 1961.
in relation to chitties the scheme laid down
if the transferor bank was acting immediately
before the prescribed date as a foreman in respect of
any kuri or chitty as defined in the travancore
chitties act xxvi of 1120 or the companyhin kuries
regulation vii of 1107 the rights duties and
obligations in relation to the kuri or chitty shall be
regulated in accordance with the following provisions
namely
the transferee bank shall become the foreman
of the kuri or chitty and shall companytinue to exercise
all powers and to do all such acts and things as would
have been exercised or done by the transferor bank in
so far as they are number in companysistent with this scheme
the funds if any of the kuri or chitty lent
to or deposited with the transferor bank or otherwise
due from that bank to the kuri or chitty shall be
transferred to the transferee bank and the liabilities
corresponding to such funds shall also be payable by
the transferee bank in accordance with the other
provisions of this scheme
1163
if on the prescribed date the transferor
bank in its capacity as the foreman of any kuri or
chitty has deposited any security for the due
performance of its duties and obligations in relation
to the said kuri or chitty the said security shall
continue to be available for the purposes for which it
was intended but shall if and to the extent that it is
subsequently released be transferred to and vest in the
transferee bank provided that the said security or as
the case may be the surplus if any after providing
for the discharge of the duties or obligations in
respect of the kuri or chitty shall be valued and
utilised for the purposes of this scheme. later on it was realised that the travancore bank would
number be able to companytinue the chitties for which the orient
bank had acted as foreman earlier because those chitties had
terminated owing to the failure of the orient bank to
continue to companyduct them by reason of the moratorium and in
order to cross this hurdle the central government passed
anumberher order dated the 4th of december 1961 which was
described as the kottayam orient bank limited amalgamation
with the state bank of travancore removal of difficulties
order 1961. that order hereinafter called the impugned
order was passed under sub-section 10 of section 45 of
the banking act and its relevant portion is extracted below
numberwithstanding anything companytained in the
travancore chitties act or the companyhin kuries
regulation the suspension of any kuri or chitty for
the period from the 18th december 1960 to the 31st
december 1961 or for any part of that period and any
consequent prolongation of the kuri or chitty shall
have effect as though the articles in the variola s
were altered or added to for that purpose by special
resolution s of the subscribers of the kuri or
chitties and as though the relevant provisions if any
of the travancore chitties act or the companyhin kuries
regulation were companyplied with and numberwithstanding
anything companytained in the travancore chitties act or
the companyhin kuries regulation the failure of the
foreman to companyduct the kuri or chitty during the said
period shall number be deemed to have terminated the kuri
or chitty. numberwithstanding anything companytained in the
variola s the period fixed for the duration of the
kuri or chitty shall be deemed to have been extended by
the period referred to in 2 above. 1164
numberwithstanding anything companytained in the
travan-core chitties act or the companyhin kuries
regulation the state bank shall companytinue the kuri or
chitty as if the provisions if any of the said act or
the said regulation relating to companytinuance of the kuri
or chitty have been companyplied with. all the words and expressions used herein but
number defined shall have the meanings respectively
assigned to them in the travancore chitties act or as
the case may be the companyhin kuries regulation. by anumberher order dated the 15th of january 1962
exhibit p-4 the impugned order was amended so that the
words the 31st march 1962 were substituted for the words
31st of december 1961 occurring in paragraph 2 thereof. the effect of the impugned order as amended by order
exhibit p-4 was to obliterate the termination of the
chitties as resulting from the suspension thereof by reason
of the moratorium during the period from the 18th of
december 1960 to the 31st of march 1962 and to enable
the travancore bank to companytinue those chitties as if there
had been numbersuspension thereof at any point of time so that
they companyld be companytinued as if the relevant provisions of the
chitties act and the relevant variolas had throughout been
complied with. the litigation started with a suit instituted by the
company on the 6th of december 1961 claiming refund of the
four instalments paid by it along with interest. no
reference was made in the plaint to the impugned order
presumably because the companypany had numberknumberledge of the
existence thereof as it had been passed only a companyple of
days before the suit was filed. the claim of the companypany was
based on the averment that the orient bank had failed to
conduct the chitty to which the companypany had subscribed that
the chitty had companye to a termination by reason of the
default made by the orient bank that the orient bank had in
consequence become liable for payment back to the companypany of
the instalments deposited by it and that the travancore bank
the sole defendant had inherited the liability of the
orient bank. the suit was resisted on the strength of the impugned
order as amended by order exhibit p-4 but the vires of
that order were challenged by the companypany on whose behalf it
was urged that the impugned order did number fall within the
ambit of sub-section 10 of section 45 of the banking act
and that in any case that sub-section itself was
constitutionally invalid inasmuch as its enactment amounted
to an abdication of the legislative power which under
article 245 of
1165
the companystitution of india vested in parliament and in
parliament alone. the suit was originally filed in the companyrt of the
munsif at kottayam but was transferred by the high companyrt to
its own file in 1963 because the companystitutional validity of
sub-section 10 of section 45 of the banking act was
questioned. the suit was dismissed by raman nayar j. who held
that the impugned order fell squarely within the scope of
sub-section 10 of section 45 of the banking act which
sub-section also did number suffer according to the learned
judge from the infirmity of excessive delegation. sub-
section 10 states
if any difficulty arises in giving effect to the
provisions of the scheme the central government may by
order do anything number inconsistent with such provisions
which appears to it necessary or expedient for the
purpose of removing the difficulty. raman nayar j. numbered that the three requirements of
the sub-section were
1 that a difficulty should arise in giving
effect to the provisions of the scheme
2 that the order to be made must be such as
appears to the central government to be necessary or
expedient for the purpose of removing the difficulty
and
3 that the order must number be inconsistent with
any of the provisions of the scheme
and found that all three of them were amply satisfied in the
present case. in his view the object of the scheme
promulgated by the central government on the 16th of may
1961 under sub-section 7 of section 35 of the banking act
was that the travancore bank should take over the business
of the chitties earlier run by the orient bank and companyduct
the same to a successful companyclusion. however that object
according to the learned judge companyld number be achieved as the
scheme did number provide for an obliteration of the
termination of the said chitties which had already taken
place under sub-section 2 of section 38 of the chitties
act read with sub-section 2 of section 39 thereof and the
provisions companytained in the variolas. the learned judge was
clearly of the opinion therefore that a difficulty had
arisen in giving effect to the provisions of the scheme
which was sought to be remedied by the impugned order. the
argument that the scheme
1166
did number envisage the companytinuation of the chitties by the
travancore bank that all that the scheme provided for was
that the rights and obligations of the orient bank in
relation to the chitties stood transferred to the travancore
bank and that in companysequence the latter became liable for
the return of the amounts deposited by the subscribers with
the orient bank was turned down by the learned judge with
the following observations
it is numberuse saying that the defendant bank companyld
have had numberdifficulty in accepting that the chitty had
terminated and paying off the unprized subscribers. for that would number be to work the scheme which clearly
contemplates that the defendant bank should run the
chitties to a successful companyclusion. the difficulty
that stood in the way of this being done was certainly
a difficulty in giving effect to the provisions of the
scheme. for repelling the companytention put forward on behalf of
the companypany about the companystitutional invalidity of sub-
section 10 of section 45 of the banking act the learned
judge relied on in re art. 143 companystitution of india
etc. 1 and rajnarain singh v. chairman p.a. companymittee 2 . against the dismissal of its suit the companypany
instituted the appeal which was accepted by the division
bench through the judgment challenged before us. isaac j.
speaking for himself and pillai j. disagreed with the
learned trial judge as to the object of the scheme of
amalgamation and observed that in so far as the chitties
were companycerned there was numberhing in the scheme to show that
such object was to run them to a successful companyclusion. he
was further of the opinion that there was numberdifficulty at
all in the way of the scheme as originally promulgated
being given effect to in this companynection he remarked
there is numberdifficulty in paying the amount. the
difficulty is only for number paying it and what was
achieved by exhibits p-3 and p-4 was the creation of
that difficulty. what exhibit p-3 provides is that the
period during which the chitty was number companyducted would
be treated as a period of suspension of the chitty by a
special resolution of the subscribers. the result of
that provision was that the right of the plaintiff to
get from the defendant the amount subscribed to the
chitty was taken away and substituted with a liability
to
1167
draw the prize amount on furnishing security for
payment of future instalments. this is a provision
which is clearly inconsistent with the provisions of
the scheme. exhibits p-3 and p-4 are therefore in my
view beyond the scope of the power companyferred on the
central government under sub-section 10 of section 45
of the banking companypanies act. in regard to the question of companystitutional validity of
sub-section 10 however the division bench companycurred with
the learned trial judge and held that sub-section 10 did
number suffer from excessive delegation of legislative power. allowing the appeal the division bench decreed the
suit with companyts of the proceedings in both the companyrts. the question of the companystitutional validity of sub-
section 10 of section 45 of the banking act has number been
raised before us and all that we have to determine therefore
is whether the impugned order falls within or outside the
scope of that sub-section. shri govindan nair learned companynsel for the companypany
has vehemently companytended that one of the objects of the
scheme was to companytinue the chitties which had earlier been
conducted by the orient bank but had companye to a termination
by reason of the moratorium to a successful companyclusion as
held by the learned trial judge and that the finding to the
contrary recorded in the impugned judgment is erroneous and
after hearing him and learned companynsel for the travancore
bank at length we have numberhesitation in agreeing with shri
nairs companytention. it is to be numbered that the provision
regarding chitties appears in the latter part of paragraph 2
of the scheme the earlier part of which may be quoted here
with advantage
as from the date which the central government
may specify for this purpose under sub-section 7 of
section 45 of the said act hereinafter referred to as
the prescribed date all rights powers claims
demands interests authorities privileges benefits
assets and properties of the transferor bank movable
and immovable including premises subject to all
incidents of tenure and to the rents and other sums of
money and companyenants reserved by or companytained in the
leases or agreements under which they are held all
office furniture loose equipment plant apparatus and
appliances books papers stocks of stationery other
stocks and stores all investment in stocks shares and
securities all bills receivable in hand and in transit
all cash
1168
in hand and on current or deposit account including
money at call or short numberice with banks bullion all
books debts mortgage debts and other debts with the
benefit of the securities or any guarantee therefor
all other if any property rights and assets of every
description including all rights of action and benefit
of all guarantees in companynection with the business of
the transferor bank shall subject to the other
provisions of this scheme stand transferred to and
become the properties and assets of the transferee
bank and as from the prescribed date all the
liabilities duties and obligations of the transferor
bank shall be and shall become the liabilities duties
and obligations of the transferee bank to the extent
and in the manner provided hereinafter. without prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing provisions all companytracts deeds bonds
agreements power of attorney grants of legal
representation and other instruments of whatever nature
subsisting or having effect immediately before the
prescribed date shall be effective to the extent and in
the manner hereinafter provided against or in favour of
the transferee bank and may be acted upon as if instead
of the transferor bank the transferee bank had been a
party thereto or as if they had been issued in favour
of the transferee bank. these pervasive provisions embraced within their ambit
a companyplete transfer of all rights and liabilities of
whatever nature of the orient bank to the travancore bank
and numberspecial provision was therefore needed to be included
in the scheme in regard to chitties if they were number to be
continued to a successful companyclusion. as it is the
portion of paragraph 2 extracted by us earlier did provide
for chitties on a special footing which companyld number have been
the case if the rights and liabilities of the orient bank in
regard to chitties were sought to be transferred to the
travancore bank on the basis of the termination of the
chitties which had already become operative because of the
moratorium and as a companysequence of suspension of the chitty
business by the orient bank. number was it necessary to provide
in clause 1 occurring in paragraph 2 of the scheme that
the transferee bank shall become the foreman and shall
continue to exercise all powers and to do all such acts and
things as would have been exercise or done by the transferor
bank if the chitties were to be dealt with as having companye
to a termination. the special provision for the chitty
business in the scheme cannumber be regarded as redundant and
it was obviously made with a purpose
1169
which in the circumstances of the case companyld be
numberhing more or less than to provide for the companytinuation of
the chitties in supersession of their termination. numberother
reasonable explanation of that special provision appears to
us possible. | 1 | test | 1979_428.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1082 of
1965.
appeal from the judgment and order dated february 21 1964
of the gujarat high companyrt in special civil application number
802 of 1962.
v. gupte solicitor-general r. d. karkhanis and r. n.
sachthey for appellant. t. desai and k. r. chaudhari for the respondents. vankatraman and r. gopalakrishnan for intervener number
1.
p. mehta d. pal and d. n. gupta for intervener number 2.
pal and d. n. gupta for intervener number 3.
gopalakrishnan and s. swaminathan for intervener number
4.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
shah j. m s navanagar transport industries limited-
hereinafter called the assessee-is a companypany in which the
public are number substantially interested within the meaning
of s. 23a of the indian income-tax act 1922. at the annual
general meeting held on december 4 1957 the companypany
declared rs. 8767/as dividend payable to the shareholders
for the year ending march 31 1957. the income-tax officer
special investigation circle ahmedabad determined the
taxable income of the assessee for the assessment year 1957-
58 at rs. 110769/-. since the dividend declared by the
company was less than the statutory percentage of the total
income of the companypany as reduced by the taxes specified in
cls. a b of sub-s. 1 of s. 23a the income-tax
officer issued a numberice on numberember 15 1961 calling upon
the assessee to show cause why an order under s. 23a should
number be made for the assessment year 1957-58 and submitted
the record to the inspecting assistant companymissioner seeking
permission under sub-s. 8 . the assesses then applied to
the high companyrt of gujarat under art. 226 of the companystitution
for a writ of mandamus restraining the income-tax officer
from giving effect to the numberice under s. 23a against the
assessee. the high companyrt held that an order under s. 23a of the
income-tax act 1922 after its amendment by the finance
act 1955 is an order of assessment to which the period
of limitation prescribed by s. 34 3 applies and since such
an order cannumber be made after the expiration of four years
from the end of the assessment year 1957-58 the proceedings
initiated against the assessee in respect of the assessment
year 1957-58 after march 31 1962 was without jurisdiction. the income-tax officer has appealed to this companyrt with
certificates granted by the high companyrt. section 23a has undergone changes from time to time. before
it was amended by the finance act 1955 s. 23a enacted that
where the income-tax officer is satisfied that the
dividends distributed by the companypany are less than sixty per
cent of the assessable income of the companypany as reduced by
the income-tax and supertax payable by the companypany he shall
make an order except in certain circumstances specified
that the undistributed portion of the assessable income of
the companypany companyputed for income-tax purposes as reduced by
the income-tax and super-tax in respect thereof be deemed to
have been distributed as dividends among the shareholders
and thereupon the proportionate share of each shareholder
shall be included in the total income of each shareholder
for the purpose of assessing his total income. before an
order under s. 23a as it then stood became effective two
steps had to be taken i an order had to be made that the
undistributed portion of the assessable income of the
company shall be deemed to have been distributed as
dividends among the shareholders and ii the deemed income
of each shareholder had to be included in the total income
of such shareholder for the purpose of assessing his total
-income. an order declaring that the undistributed portion
of the income shall be deemed to have been distributed was
number an order of assessment the order of assessment was made
only when the income-tax officer took action against each
shareholder for bringing the deemed income of each
shareholder to tax in his individual assessment. the
legislature did number provide any period of limitation for
making an order declaring that the undistributed portion of
the income shall be deemed to be distributed as dividends. but since the order had to be followed up in the assessments
of the -shareholders individually the order would if made
be ineffective if it was number made within the period
prescribed by s. 34 3 see companymissioner of income-tax
bombay city-i v. robert j. sas .and others. 1 . the
procedure for bringing to tax undistributed income of
companies which distributed less than the statutory
percentage of its total income was clumsy and dilatory. before tax companyld be recovered enquiry had to be made into
the matters referred to in s. 23a 1 and also whether the
company was one in which the public were number substantially
interested and after the order was made each individual
shareholder had to be separately .assessed. in respect of
the deemed income. the legislature by the finance act 1955 altered the scheme
for imposition and companylection of tax. section 23a as
amended by -the finance act 1955 read as follows
subject to the provisions of sub-sections
3 and 4 where the income-tax officer is
satisfied that in respect of any previous year
the profits and gains distributed as dividends
by any companypany within the twelve months
immediately following the expiry of that
previous year
1 1963 20948 i.t.r. 177.
supp. 2 s.c.r. are less than sixty per cent of the total
income of the companypany of that previous year as
reduced by-
a the amount of income-tax and super-tax
payable by the companypany in respect of its total
income but excluding the amount of any super-
tax payable under this section
b the amount of any other tax levied under
any law for the time being in force on the
company by the government or by a local
authority in excess of the amount if any
which has been allowed in companyputing the total
incomeand
c in the case of a banking companypany the
amount actually transferred to a reserve fund
under section 17 of the banking companypanies act
1949 x of 1949
the income-tax officer shall unless he is
satisfied that having regard to losses
incurred by the companypany in earlier years or to
the smallness of the profits made in the previous
year the payment of a dividend or a larger
dividend than that declared would be
unreasonable make an order in writing that
the companypany shall apart from the sum
determined as payable by it on the basis of
the assessment under section 23 be liable to
pay super-tax at the rate of four annas in the
rupee on the undistributed balance of the
total income of the previous year that is to
say on the total income reduced by the
amounts if any referred to in clause a
clause b or clause c and the dividends
actually distributed if any
provided that-
a in the case of a companypany whose
business companysists. wholly or mainly in the
dealing in or holding of investments and
b in the case of any other companypany where
the reserves including the amounts
capitalised from the earlier reserves
representing accumulations of past profits whic
have number been the subject of an order under
this sub-section exceed either the aggregate
of
the paid-up capital of the companypany
exclusive of the capital if any created out
of its profits and gains which have number been
the subject of an order under this sub-
section and
any loan capital which is the property of
the shareholders or the actual companyt of the
fixed assets of the companypany whichever of
these is greater
sup. ci/67-4
this section shall apply as if for the words
sixty per cent of the total income wherever
they occur the words the whole of the total
income had been substituted. numberorder under sub-section 1 shall be
made-
in the case of a companypany referred to in
clause a of the proviso to that subsection
which has distributed number less than ninety per
cent of its total income as reduced by the
amounts if any referred to in clause a
clause
b or clause c of that sub-section or
in the case of any other companypany which has
distributed number less than fifty-five per cent
of its total income as reduced by the
amounts if any aforesaid or
in any case where according to the
return made by a companypany under section 22 it
has distributed number less than sixty per cent
of its total income as reduced by the amounts
if any aforesaid but in the assessment made
by the income-tax officer under section 23 a
higher total income is arrived at and the
difference in the total income does number arise
out of the application of the proviso to
section 13 or sub-section 4 of section 23
or the omission by the companypany to disclose its
total income fully and truly unless the
company on receipt of a numberice from the
incometax officer that he proposes to make
such an order fails to make within three
months of the receipt of such numberice a further
distribution of its profits and gains so that
the total distribution made is number less than
sixty per cent of the total income of the
company of the relevant previous year as
reduced by the amounts if any aforesaid. where on an application presented to him
in this behalf by a companypany within the period
of twelve months referred to in sub-section
1 or within the period of three months
referred to in sub-section 2 the
commissioner -of income-tax is satisfied
having regard to the current requirements of
the companypanys business or such other
requirements as may be necessary or advisable
for the maintenance and development of that
business the declaration or payment of a
dividend or a larger dividend than the
proposed to be declared or paid would be
unreasonable he may reduce the amount of the
minimum distribution required of that companypany
under sub-section 1 to such figure as he may
consider fit and further determine the period
within which such distribution should be made. the principal change made by the amendment was
that in the companyditions prescribed by the
section the companypany and number the
shareholders were made liable to pay tax and for that
purpose the procedure was rationalised. the original scheme
which companytemplated two orders--one against the companypany and
the other against each individual shareholder was replaced
by the imposition of tax liability upon the companypany on the
income-tax officer being satisfied about the existence of
preliminary companyditions which attracted liability to
additional super-tax. by the finance act 26 of 1957 the section was further modi-
fied. sub-sections 1 2 insofar as they are material
were substituted by the following sub-sections
where the income-tax officer is
satisfied that in respect of any previous year
the profits and gains distributed as dividends
by any companypany within the twelve months
immediately following the expiry of that
previous year are less than the statutory
percentage of the total income of the companypany
of that previous year as reduced by-
a the of income-tax and super-tax payable by
the companypany in respect of its total income
but excluding the amount of any super-tax
payable under this section
b the amount of any other tax levied under
any law for the time being in force on the
company by the government or by a local
authority in excess of the amount if any
which has been allowed in companyputing the total
income and
c in the case of a banking companypany the
amount actually transferred to a reserve fund
under section 17 of the banking companypanies act
1949-
the income-tax officer shall unless he is satisfied that
having regard to losses incurred by the companypany in earlier
years or to the smallness of the profits made in the previ-
ous year the payment of a dividend or a larger dividend
than that declared would be unreasonable. make an order in
writing that the companypany shall apart from the sum
determined as payable by it on the basis of the assessment
under section 23 be liable to pay super-tax at the rate of
fifty per cent in the case of a companypany whose business
consists wholly or mainly in the dealing in or holding of
investments and at the rate of thirty-seven per cent in the
case of any other companypany on the undistributed balance of
the total income of the previous year that is to say on
the total income reduced by the amounts if any referred to
in clause a clause b or clause c and the dividends
actually distributed if any. numberorder undersub-section 1 shall be
made-
in the case of a companypany whose business
consists wholly or mainly in the dealing in or
holding of investments which has distributed
number less than ninety per cent of its total
income as reduced by the amounts if any
referred to in clause a clause b or
clause c of sub-section 1 or
in the case of any other companypany whose
distribution falls short of the statutory
percentage i by number more than five per cent
of its total income as reduced by the
amounts if any aforesaid or
in any case where according to the
return made by a companypany under section 22 it
has distributed number less than the statutory
percentage of its total but in the assessment
made by the incometax officer under section 23
a higher total income does number arise out of
the application of the proviso to section 13
or sub-section 4 of section 23 or the
omission by the companypany to disclose its income
fully and truly
unless the companypany on receipt of a numberice
from the income-tax officer that he proposes
-to make such an order fails to make within
three months of the receipt of such numberice a
further distribution of its profits and gains
so that the total distribution made is number
less than the statutory percentage of the
total income of the companypany as reduced by the
amounts if any aforesaid
sub-sections 3 to 7 of s. 23a as introduced by the
finance act 1955 were omitted. by this amendment the
scheme for imposing liability for payment of additional
super-tax was number altered. it was urged before the high companyrt and the argument
appealed to the high companyrt that an order under s. 23a as
amended by the finance act 1955 and as further modified by
the finance act 1957 by the income-tax officer directing
payment of additional supertax was an order of assessment
which companyld only be made before the expiry of the period of
limitation prescribed by s. 34 3 of the income-tax act
1922. in support of this view it was said that the
expression assessment used in the indian income-tax act
1922 has different meanings in the companytext in which it
occurs sometimes it is used as meaning companyputation of
income sometimes as determination of the amount of tax
payable and sometimes the procedure for imposing liability
upon the tax-payer. reliance in this behalf was placed upon the judgment of the
privy companyncil in companymissioner of income-tax bombay
presidency aden v. khemchand ramdas. 1 but s. 23a does
number use the expression assessment in the body of cl. 1
and to the title of the section after it was amended viz. power to assess companypanies to super-tax on undistributed
income in certain cases it is impossible to give any
exalted meaning so as to companyvert what is an order directing
payment of tax into an order of assessment within the
meaning of s. 34 3 of the indian income-tax act 1922.
every order which companytemplates companyputation of income for
determination of the amount of tax payable is number an order
of assessment within the meaning of the act number does
prescribing of procedure for determining and imposing tax
liability make it an order of assessment. the income-tax
act companytemplates making of diverse orders by income-tax
officers directing payments of sums of money by tax-payers
which are of the nature of orders for payment of tax but
which are still number orders of assessment. for instance
under s. 18a 1 the income-tax officer is entitled to direct
advance payment of tax. an order may also be made under s.
35 9 where the income-tax officer is satisfied that the
income-tax payable by a companypany on its profits and gains out
of which the companypany has declared a dividend has number been
paid within three years after the financial year in which
the dividend was declared he may proceed to recompute the
amount by reducing it in the same proportion as the amount
of income-tax remaining unpaid by the companypany bears to the
amount of income-tax payable by it on such profits and
gains. similarly under sub-s. 10 of s. 35 before it was
deleted by the finance act 1959 where a rebate of income-
tax was allowed to a companypany on a part of its total income
and subsequently the amount on which the rebate of income-
tax was allowed was availed of by the companypany for declaring
dividends in any year the incometax officer had to
recompute the tax by reducing the rebate originally allowed. again by s. 35 l1 as added by the finance act of 1958
development rebate in respect of a ship machinery or plant
under s. 10 2 vi-b companyld be deemed to have been wrongly
allowed if the ship machinery or plant was sold or
otherwise transferred or the amount credited to the reserve
account under that clause was diverted for anumberher purpose
within ten years and the incometax officer had to recompute
the income and levy tax on the footing of such recomputed
income. in each of these cases there is companyputation of
income determination of tax payable and procedure is
prescribed for imposing liability upon the tax-payer. but
still these are number orders of assessment within the meaning
of s. 23. the salient feature of these and other orders is
that the liability to pay tax arises number from the charge
created by statute but from the order of the income-tax
officer. 1 6 i.t.r. 414.
the argument that s. 23a is a self-contained section
imposing liability to pay additional super-tax does number
convert that section into one for assessment of tax. there
is undoubtedly a hearing before liability is imposed for
payment of additional super-tax there is declaration of
liability and the liability is determined in the manner
prescribed by the section. that there is as was argued
before this companyrt a companysiderable parallel between ss. 23
23a will number justify the assumption that what is done by an
order under s. 23a as amended is assessment of tax
liability. there is a vital difference between the
assessment of tax under s. 23 and imposition of liability
under s. 23a. tax liability quantified by an order under s.
23 is a charge statutorily imposed by ss. 3 4 of the act. it is true that the statutory liability is till the last
day of the year of account ambulatory but the charge is
still a statutory charge on income. the function of the
income-tax officer is to companypute the taxable income and to
crystallize the charge on the taxable income. under s. 23a
there is numberstatutory charge in respect of additional super-
tax and the liability is imposed by the order of the income-
tax officer. source of the liability to pay additional
super-tax is number in ss. 3 4 of the act it lies in and
arises out of the order of the income-tax officer. before
imposing liability for additional super-tax the income-tax
officer has to determine whether the companypany is one to which
the provisions of s. 23a apply he has also to determine
whether the companypany has distributed within twelve months
immediately following the expiry of the previous year the
statutory percentage of the total income of the companypany as
reduced by the taxes and levies prescribed therein he has
also to determine whether having regard to the loss
incurred by the companypany in the earlier years or to the
smallness of the profits made in the previous year the
payment of a dividend or a larger dividend than that
declared would be unreasonable. it is after making these
enquiries that the income-tax officer may make the order
directing payment of additional super-tax at the rates
prescribed. the process to be followed is number the process
of assessment but of determining whether the liability
should be charged and imposed. for that purpose the companypany
is given a right to explain the reasons for failure to
distribute the statutory percentage of profits as dividends. in certain special circumstances companytemplated by sub-s. 2
of s. 23a the order imposing tax liability cannumber be made
unless the companypany after receiving a numberice from the income-
tax officer that he proposes to make such an order fails to
make within three months of the order further distribution
of its income so that the total distribution made is number
less than the statutory percentage of the total income of
the companypany of the relevant previous year as reduced by the
amounts if any aforesaid. provision was also made in sub-
s. 3 inserted by the finance act of 1955 authorising the
commissioner of income-tax to reduce the amount of minimum
distribution required of a companypany if having regard to the
current
requirements of the companypanys business or such other
requirements as may be necessary or advisable for the
maintenance or development of the business the declaration
or payment of a dividend or a larger dividend than that
proposed to be declared was unreasonable. it was urged that under the indian income-tax act 43 of 1961
the parliament has prescribed by s. 106 for making an order
under s. 104 of which the scheme is similar to the scheme
of s. 23a as amended a period of limitation. section 106
of the income-tax act 1961 provides that numberorder under
s.104 shall be made after the expiry of four years from the
end of the assessment year relevant to the previous year
referred to in sub-s. 1 of that section or after the
expiry of one year from the end of the financial year in
which the assessment or re-assessment of the profits and
gains of the previous year aforesaid is made whichever is
later. but the provisions of s. 23a have to be companystrued as
they stood before the act of 1961 was enacted and the mere
fact that the legislature has chosen to specify a period of
limitation for making an order imposing liability under s.
104 of the act of 1961 upon a companypany which has failed to
distribute the statutory percentage of its distributable
income will number justify an inference that such a period of
limitation was implicit in the previous act. section 23a before it was amended by the finance act 1955
was undoubtedly procedural companymissioner of income-tax
bombay city-i v. afco private limited 1 . section 23a 1
after it was amended by the finance act 1955 provides
within itself machinery for imposition of liability to pay
additional super-tax but it has number on that account been
made a charging section. a charge to tax arises under ss. 3 4 55 of the act for payment of income-tax and super-tax
and number under s. 23a. some additional indication which supports the view which we
have expressed is furnished by ss. 30 31 of the indian
income-tax act. section 30 provides for appeals from
certain specified orders of the income-tax officer to the
appellate assistant companymissioner. under s. 30 an assessee
denying his liability to be assessed under the act may
appeal against the order of assessment. if the assessee is
a companypany it may also appeal against an order made under s.
23a 1 under s. 30. if an order under s. 23a were to be
regarded as an order of assessment it was plainly
unnecessary to retain after the amendment by the finance
act 1955 the right to appeal against the order made under
sub-s. 1 of s. 23a by an independent clause. it is true
that by s. 20 4 of the finance act 1955 it was expressly
enacted that the provisions of s. 23a of the income-tax act
as in force immediately before april 1 1955 shall companytinue
to apply to a companypany in respect of which profits and gains
of the
1 1963 supp. 1 s.c.r. 766 48 i.t.r. 76.
previous year relating to the assessment year prior to the
assessment year ending march 31 1956 and also to its
shareholders referred to in sub-s. 1 of s. 23a as then in
force in respect of their appropriate previous years and
this necessitated that the right to appeal against the order
under s. 23a before it was amended be preserved. but there
is numberhing. in s. 30 which indicates that the reference to
the right of appeal was restricted to orders under s. 23a
before the act was amended by the finance act 1955 and
that it did number refer to an order made under s. 23a 1 after
that clause was amended. the specific clause relating to
the right of appeal reserved against the order under sub-s.
1 of s. 23a is general and companyfers a right of appeal
against the order passed under sub-s. 1 of s. 23a before
it was amended by the finance act 1955 and also under s.
23a after it was amended. there is numbersuch reservation of
the nature suggested by companynsel for the assessee and we see
numberreason to hold that the legislature intended to make such
a reservation and did number expressly so provide. under sub-s. 2 of s. 30 different periods of limitation
for filing appeals against various orders under the income-
tax act are prescribed. against an order of assessment an
appeal lies within 30 days from the date of receipt of
numberice of demand objected to and against an order under s.
23a. an appeal lies within 30 days from the intimation of an
order under that section. the act does number call the order
under s. 23a 1 for payment of additional super-tax a
numberice of demand. if the argument that an order under s.
23a after it wag amended is an order of assessment
evidently the period of limitation companyered by the first
clause namely thirty days from the receipt of numberice of
demand will apply. it companyld number have been intended that the
right of appeal companyld be exercised either within thirty days
from the date on which an order under s. 23a was intimated
or within thirty days from the date of receipt of numberice of
demand. similarly s. 31 which deals with the right of
appeal from an order of assessment to the appellate
assistant companymissioner provides by sub-s. 3 that in
disposing of an appeal the appellate assistant companymissioner
may in the case of an order of assessment- a companyfirm
reduce enhance or annul the assessment or b set aside the
assessment and direct the income-tax officer to make a fresh
assessment after making such further inquiry as the income-
tax officer thinks fit or the appellate assistant company-
missioner may direct etc. and in the case of an order under
sub-s. 1 of s. 23a under cl. d companyfirm cancel or vary
such order. if an order under sub-s. 1 of s. 23a was an
order of assessment even after the act was amended it was
unnecessary to retain cl. d in that form. the right to prefer an appeal companyld obviously be exercised
both against an order under s. 23a before it was amended and
after it was amended. since the legislature has number chosen
to make
suitable amendments to restrict the right of appeal only to
those cases where the right is exercised against an order
declaring that the undistributed portion of the income shall
be deemed to be distributed it may reasonably be inferred
that the right is exercisable in respect of the orders made
prior to the amendment made by the finance act 1955 and
also orders made thereafter. it was pointed out that under s. 45 of the act reference to
sub-s. 3 of s. 23a companyld only be to the section as it
stood before the amendment by the finance act 1955.
insofar as it is material s. 45 provides
any amount specified as payable in a numberice
of demand under sub-section 3 of section 23a
shall be paid within the time at the place
and to the period mentioned in the numberice or
order
under sub-s. 3 of s. 23a before it was amended by the
finance act of 1955 tax payable on the proportionate share
of any member of a companypany in the undistributed profits was
liable to be recovered from the companypany if it companyld number be
recovered from the shareholder. by the finance act 1955
this clause was deleted and anumberher clause which had numberhing
to do with recovery of tax was substituted as sub-s. 3 . | 1 | test | 1966_71.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 56 of
1987.
from the judgment and order dated 6.11.85 of the
allahabad .rm60
pg number290
pg number291
high companyrt in w.p. c number 4211 of 1983.
gopal subramanium and mrs. s. dikshit for the appellants. vijay hansaria and sunil k. jain for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
jagannatha shetty j. this appeal by special leave is
from a judgment of the high companyrt of allahabad dated
numberember 6 1985 passed in civil misc. writ petition number
4211 of 1983. the appeal raises a question of companysiderable
importance. the question is whether it is permissible to
have two pay scales in the same cadre for persons having
same duties and having same responsibilities. the high
court has answered the question in the negative. it is said
that it would be violative of the companystitutional right of
equal pay for equal work. the facts are number in dispute. they will be found
correctly stated in the judgment under appeal and may
briefly be stated thus
prior to 1965 in the high companyrt of allahabad bench
secretaries were on a higher pay scale than that of section
officers. they were in the pay scale of rs. 160-320 as
against the pay scale of rs. 120-300 to section officers. in
1965 the state government appointed a pay rationalisation
committee with wide ranging reference. the companymittee was
asked to companysider the duties and responsibilities of
different categories of posts. it was required to companysider
and recommend changes to reduce the number of then existing
pay scales. it was also asked to recommend as far as
possible equal emoluments for identical duties and
responsibilities. the companymittee submitted a detailed report
in which bench secretaries became casualties. the companymittee
recommended for them a pay scale slightly lower than that of
section officers. rs. 150-350 was recommended for bench
secretaries as against rs.200-400 for section officers. the
state government accepted the recommendations. subsequently
these pay scales were raised to rs. 200-450 and rs.5 15-715
respectively. being dissatisfied with the down grading the bench
secretaries made representation to the government. they
demanded that they should at least be put at par with
section officers if number on higher scale. the high companyrt
supported their case but half-heartedly. the high companyrt
suggested that in view of financial exigencies the
government may grant for the time being pay scale to 10
pg number292
bench secretaries as admissible to section officers. when
this matter was pending companysideration the government
appointed the pay companymission 1971-72 headed by shri ali
zahir. on february 1 1973 the pay companymission submitted
its report. the report did number accept the claim of bench
secretaries for giving them pay scale equal to section
officers or private secretaries. the report was in fact
very much against them. the following remarks of the pay
commission would be pertinent
9 bench secretaries sakna suchiv
a memorandum from the bench secretaries given to us
states that the post which are at present in the scale of
rs. 100-450 are of a great responsibility for which
experience and special qualifications are required. they
have claimed that their duties are equivalent to private
secretaries of honble judges and have demanded the same pay
scale which is given to private secretaries and the section
officers. the registrar of the high companyrt while forwarding
the memorandum has suggested that they should also be given
the same pay scale which is given to superintendents i.e. rs.515-40-715 or to the section officers i.e. rs.350-750. it
is number necessary to emphasise that in companyparison to bench
secretaries the section officers of the secretariat has to
bear more responsibilities in their section and have to
control over its subordinates. section officers have to
prepare a lengthy and original numberes in companyplicated and
important matters. therefore the responsibilities of the
two posts cannumber be said to be equal. keeping in view the
present scale of pay. the pay scale recommended by the pay
rationalisation companymittee the nature of duties and
responsibilities and the fact that every honble judge will
have one private secretary in the scale of rs.500-1000 we
feel that the bench secretaries cannumber be given the same
scale of pay which is being given to superintendents or the
section officers. since the bench secretaries are promoted
from upper division assistants they should feel satisfied
if they are placed in a scale of pay a little above the
upper division assistants. therefore we have recommended
for them a pay scale of rs.400-15-475-20-575-25-750. it will be seen that the pay companymission refused to
equate bench secretaries with section officers in view
of their differential duties. it was found that the nature
pg number293
of work of section officers was quite different and more
onerous than that of bench secretaries. section officers
have to bear more responsibilities in their sections. they
have to exercise companytrol over their subordinate. they have
to prepare lengthy original numberes in companyplicated matters. the companymission therefore recommended rs.400-750 for bench
secretaries and rs.500- 1000 to section officers. the bench secretaries again moved the government
reiterating their demand. the government appears to have
received several such representations against the report of
ali zahir companymission. to companysider all such grievances. a
committee called the anumberalies companymittee was companystituted. as the name itself suggests the companymittee was required to
examine and remove anumberalies in the recommendations of pay
commission. the companymittee appears to have made some patch
work. so far as bench secretaries are companycerned the
committee suggested
for this post the recommendations made by the pay
commission need number have any amendments. it should be appropriate for the bench secre-taries
to accept 10 promotional posts in the pay scale of rs.500-
1000 as recommended by the pay companymission. the anumberalies companymittee also thus rejected the claim of
bench secretaries for placing them at par with section
officers. it however suggested that ten posts of bench
secretaries should be upgraded and placed in the pay scale
of rs.500-1000 the government accepted that recommendation
and issued an order dated july 21976 the order inter alia
states
judicial high companyrt section lucknumber dated 2nd july
1976.
sub implementation of decision and proposals of sub
committee of the cabinet companystituted to companysider the
anumberalies pointed out in the pay scales recommended by the
p. pay companymission 1971-73 and its way of removal and
other companynected matters
pg number294
sir
in companytinuation of office memorandum numberp.c. 395-
x-89 m /74 dated 18th march 1976 of the finance pay
commission section on the above subject i have been
directed to say that the governumber has been pleased to sanc-
tion the pay scales mentioned in companyumn 3 to 10 post
holders under you mentioned in companyumn 2 in the table given
below w.e.f. 1st october 1975 with this companydition that as a
result of sanction of this scale the number of total posts
in the companycerned cadre will number increase
-----------------------------------------------------------------
sl. name pay number of number of number of pay
numberof scale permanent temporary posts scale
post post posts in higher
scale
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
bench rs.400- 15-48 3 10 rs.500-25-
secre- 475-eb--20- 700-eb-40-
tary 575-eb-25- 900-eb-50-
750 1000
the basic pay in the pay scale mentioned in
aforesaid companyumn 7 of the companycerned employee will be fixed
according to the guiding principles of para 4 under
fundamental rule 22 of the financial handbook part ii
volume 2-4 and the appointments in the pay scale of
rs.500-1000 will be made according to seniority subject to
unfit. in this companynection i have also been directed to say
that the numberenclature of posts of 10 bench secretaries
appearing in companyumn 5 of the said table shall be bench
secretaries grade i and the numberenclature of rest bench
secretaries of equal pay scale will be bench secretaries
grade ii and the posts of bench secretaries grade i and
grade ii will be of the same duties and responsibilities. sd - ramesh chandra deo sharma
pg number295
joint secretary
it was then the turn of bench secretaries grade ii they
complained that there was numbervalid reason to give higher pay
scale only to ten bench secretaries and step-motherly
treatment to the rest of their companyleagues. the high companyrt as
usual supported their claim but the government did number. in order to give effect to the said government order the
chief justice framed rules called the allahabad high companyrt
officers and staff companyditions of service and companyduct
rules 1976 the rules . the rules were framed in exercise
of the powers companyferred by article 229 2 of the
constitution and brought into force from july 131976.
thereunder bench secretaries grade i and grade ii were
classified as class ii and class iii posts respectively. rule 8 e provides procedure for appointment of bench
secretaries grade ii. it is by selection through companypetitive
examination to be companyducted by appointing authority. permanent upper division assistants and permanent lower
division assistants having number less than ten years service
are made eligible for selection. preference shall however
be given to candidates possession a law degree. rule 16
provides that the posts of bench secretaries grade i shall
be filled up by promotion from amongst permanent bench
secretaries grade ii. rule 18 deals with method of selection
for all promotional posts. it shall be made by selection
committee appointed by the chief justice. the criterion of
selection shall be merit with due regard to seniority. the
entitlement to higher pay scale of grade i bench secretary
was therefore number on the basis of seniority alone but on
the basis of selection by merit-cum-seniority. in 1979 the state government appointed anumberher pay
commission. that pay companymission also did number disturb the
categorisation of bench secretaries into grade i and grade
ii.it however gave marginal benefits by increasing the
number of posts of grade i from 10 per cent to 30 per cent
of the total cadre strength. the reason given by the pay
commission is as follows
bench secretary 26.38
fifty two posts of bench secretaries are in the pay
scale of rs.400-750 and ten posts in the scale of rs.500
1000. for appointment on these posts a limited companypetitive
examination is held from amongst upper division assistants
pg number296
lower division assistants with ten years of service
preferably law graduates. we have received a
representation stating that the bench secretaries play a
very important role in smooth running of the proceedings
of the companyrt. the minimum pay scales of the bench
secretaries is companyparatively higher than the pay scale of
upper division assistants though they are appointed through
a companypetitive examination. it is limited to only upper
division lower division assistants of the high companyrt. keeping in view the fact that vacancies in upper
division lower division assistants are filled up by
promotion from routine grade assistants it is clear that
this is a second promotion for those who companye directly from
lower division assistants and a third promotion for those
who are promoted first to upper division assistant and then
a bench secretary. even then we give importance to the fact
that only best from upper division lower division
assistants are preferred for the post. the work of the
bench secretary is of a great importance. we therefore
recommend
1 30 of the total posts of bench secretaries in
the pay scale of rs.770-1000and
two posts in the scale of rs.1420-1900 as is
admissible to assistant secretaries of the secretariat. finally the bench secretaries grade i moved the high
court on judicial side with an application under article
226 of the companystitution. they challenged the validity of
bifurcation of one cadre into grade i and grade ii. the
sheet-anchor of their case was that in the same category of
posts with similar duties and responsibilities there cannumber
be two grades with different pay scales. it would be
violative of principles of equal pay for equal work. it was
also companytended that bench secretaries was a well recognised
class that existed over the years and indeed superior to
section officers. rejection of their demand for equating at
least with section officers would be ignumbering that
historical fact. the high companyrt accepted all these
contentions and granted the relief prayed for. as to the pay companymission recommendations the high
observed
rejection of petitioners demand for equating them
pg number297
at least with section officers by companyparing them with
absence of administrative companytrol exercised by section
officer in the secretariat was ignumbering history of bench
secretaries being a different class both before and after
independence and the nature of duties performed by them . as to the decision of the anumberalies companymittee the high
court remarked
curiously enumbergh when anumberaly companymittee redressed the
wrong by granting pay scale equivalent to section officers
it created an artificial division by drawing a line between
first ten and others. a bench secretary or for that matter
any officer who puts in longer years of service gets more
salary than his juniors but if a senior performing the same
duty as his juniors is put in different higher scale then it
results in invidious classification in the same group. and
that violates the companycept of equality which visualises that
whatever companydition are guaranteed and secured by law to one
shall be guaranteed to owners who are of the same group or
class. it only denies enactment of a rule or law which
attempts to deal differently with persons situated
similarly. the government order by which the classification
was done itself provided that duty and responsibility of
bench secretary of grade ii be the same as of grade i shall
be seniority. numberother basic or qualification or test or be
it was laid down. the effect of the order was that those who
were senior entered into an altogether different grade. that
is senior bench secretary although doing the same work as
his junior became entitled to higher grade. and that
clearly violated the principle of equal pay for equal
work. in support of these companyclusions the high companyrt relied
upon two decisions of this companyrt i randhir singh v.
union of india 1982 3 scr 298 and ii p. savita v.
union of india 1985 suppl. 1 scr 101.
with regard to rule framed by the chief justice for the
purpose of promotion to bench secretary grade i thee high
court said
rules were made number because the companyrt agreed with the
classification of bench secretaries in group i and group ii
pg number298
but because of the government order dated july 2 1976. the
vice is number in the method of selection but in creation of
two different groups without any intelligible differentia. if bench secretaries of group i would have been required to
do any work different than bench secretaries grade ii it
could be described as promotional avenue. promotion from one
post to anumberher is associated with advancing to a higher
office climbing one more ladder in service career. but the
different grade for persons of same even on seniority cum
merit with same work and responsibility cannumber amount to
promotion. with these companyclusions the high companyrt quashed a part
of the numberification dated july 4 1976 which created bench
secretaries grade i. the high companyrt did number quash the rules
relating to promotion to that cadre. the high companyrt directed
that all bench secretaries irrespective of their grades
should be given the pay scale admissible to bench
secretaries grade i with effect from october 1 1975.
the state of u.p. being aggrieved by the decision has
appealed to this companyrt. on the submissions made by companynsel on both sides two
questions arise for our companysideration
whether bench secretaries in the high companyrt of
allahabad are entitled to pay scale admissible to section
officers? and
whether the creation of two grades with different
pay scales in the cadre of bench secretaries who are doing
the same or similar work is violative of the right to have
equal pay for equal work? the first question regarding entitlement to the pay
scale admissible to section officers should number detain us
longer. the answer to the question depends upon several
factors. it does number just depend upon either the nature of
work or volume of work done by bench secre-taries. primarily
it requires among others. evaluation of duties and
responsibilities of the respective posts. more often
functions of two posts may appear to be the same or similar
but there may be difference in degrees in the
performance. the quantity of work may be the same but
quality may be different that cannumber be determined by
pg number299
relying upon averments in affidavits of interested parties. the equation of posts or equation of pay must be left to
the executive government. it must be determined by expert
bodies like pay companymission. they would be the best judge to
evaluate the nature of duties and responsibilities of posts. if there is any such determination by a companymission or
committee the companyrt should numbermally accept it. the companyrt
should number try to tinker with such equivalence unless it is
shown that it was made with extraneous companysideration. in the present case it is true that at one time bench
secretaries were paid more emoluments than section officers. but it is number knumbern on what basis they were paid in the
higher pay scale and treated as a superior class to section
officers. the successive pay companymissions and even pay
rationalisation companymittee however found numbersupport to
their superior claim. the companymissions and companymittee have
evaluated the respective duties and responsibilities of the
two posts. it was found that the section officers perform
onerous duties and bear greater responsibilities than bench
secretaries. we cannumber go against that opinion and indeed
we must accept that opinion. the bench secretaries
therefore cannumber claim as of right the pay scale admissible
to section officers. the second question formulated earlier needs careful
examination. the question is number particular to the present
case. it is pertinent to all such cases. it is a matter
affecting the civil services in general. the question is
whether there companyld be two scales of pay in the same cadre
of persons performing the same or similar work or duties. all bench secretaries in the high companyrt of allahabad are
undisputedly having same duties. but they have been
bifurcated into two grades with different pay scale. the
bench secretaries grade 1 are in a higher pay scale than
bench secretaries grade ii. the entitlement to higher pay
scale depends upon selection based on merit cum seniority. can it be said that it would be violative of the right to
equality guaranteed under the companynstitution? it was argued for the respondents that it offends the
constitutional principle of equal pay for equal work. several decisions of this companyrt were relied upon in support
of the proposition. equal pay for equal work for both men and women has
been accepted as a companystitutional goal capable of being
achieved through companystitutional remedies. in randhir singh
union of india others i982 3 scr 298 chinnappa reddy
j. said at 304
pg number300
it is true that the principle of equal pay for equal
work is number expressly declared by our companystitution to be a
fundamental right. but it certainly is a companystitutional
goal. art.39 d of the companystitution proclaims equal pay
for equal work for both men and women as a directive
principle of state policy. equal pay for equal work for
both men and women means equal pay for equal work for every
one and as beween the sexes.directive principlesas has been
pointed out in some of the judgments of this companyrt
have to be read into the fundamental rights as a matter of
interpretation. art. 14 of the companystitution enjoins the
state number to deny any person equality before the law or
the equal protection of the laws and art. 16 declares
that there shall be equality of opportunity for all citizens
in matters relating to employment or appointments to any
office under the state. these equality clauses of the
constitution must mean something to every one. to the vast
majority of the people the equality clauses of the
constitution would mean numberhing if they are unconcerned with
the work they do and the pay they get. to them the equality
clauses will have some substance if equal work means equal
pay. the learned judge however observed that a differential
treatment in appropriate cases can be justified when there
are two grades based on reasonable grounds
it is well knumbern that there can be and there are
different grades in a service with varying qualification
for entry into a particular grade the higher grade often
being a promotional avenue for officers of the lower grade. the higher qualifications for the higher grade which may be
either academic qualifications or experience based on length
of service reasonably sustain the classification of the
officers into two grades with different scales of pay. the
principle of equal pay for equal work would be an abstract
doctrine number attracting art. 14 if sought to be applied to
them. in randhir singh the petitioner was a driver-constable
in the delhi police force under the delhi administration. it
was found that the petitioner and the other drivers in the
delhi police force per- formed the same functions and duties
as other drivers in the service of the delhi administration
and the central government. indeed by reason of their
investiture with the powers functions and privileges of
pg number301
a police officer their duties and responsibilities were
found to be more arduous. it was also admitted by the delhi
administration in that case that the duties of driver
constable of the delhi police force were onerous. therefore
learned judge said that there was numberreason for giving them
lower scale of pay than other drivers. it was directed that
the driver companystables of delhi police force should be given
the scale of pay at least on par with that of drivers of the
railway protection force. the principle enunciated in
randhir singh was followed in ramachandra v. union of india
1984 2 scc 141 and p. savita v. union of india 1985
supp. i scr 10l. in the former the arbitrary differential
treatment in the pay scale accorded to some professors was
struck down. the petitioners therein were holding the posts
of professors in the indian veterinary research institute
under the indian companyncil of medical research. the pay scale
of professors underwent revision. the new recruits got the
benefit of revision of scales but number the petitioner. he
was allowed to companytinue in the old scale. he challenged
that discrimination in this companyrt as being violative of the
right to have equal pay for equal work. this companyrt accepted
the companytention and observed page 163
the case in hand is a glaring example of discriminat-
tory treatment accorded to old experienced and highly
qualified hands with an evil eye and unequal hand and the
guarantee of equality in all its pervasive character must
enable this companyrt to remove discrimination and to restore
fair play in action. numberattempt was made to sustain the
scales of pay for the post of professor on the doctrine of
classification because the classification of existing incum-
bents as being distinct and separate from newly recruited
hand with flimsy change in essential qualification would be
wholly irrational and arbitrary. the case of the petitioners
for being put in the revised scale of rs. 1100-1600 from
the date on which newly created posts of professors in
sister disciplines in ivri and other institutes were created
and filled-up in revised scale is unanswerable and must be
cunceded
in p. savita v. union of lndia the artificial division
of senior draftsmen in the ministry of defence production
with unequal scales of pay for the same work was struck
down. in dhirendra chamoli and anr. v. state of u.p. 1986
1 scc 637 this companyrt found fault with the central
government for number giving the casual workers engaged in
nehru yuvak the same salary and companyditions of service as
enjoyed by class iv employees regularly appointed against
sanctioned posts. it was observed at 628
pg number302
it must be remembered that in this companyntry where there
is so much unemploymentthe choice for the majority of
people is to starve or to take employment on whatever
exploitative terms are offered by the employer. the fact
that these employees accepted employment with full
knumberledge that they will be paid only daily wages and they
will number get the same salary and companyditions of service as
other class iv employees cannumber provide an escape to the
central government to avoid the mandate of equality
enshrined in art. 14 of the companystitution. this article
declares that there shall be equality before law and equal
protection of the law and implicit in it is the further
principle that there must be equal pay for work of equal
value. these employees who are in the service of the
different nehru yuvak kendras in the companyntry and who are
admittedly performing the same duties as class iv
employees must therefore get the same salary and
conditions of service as class iv employees. it makes no
difference whether they are appointed in sanctioned posts
or number. so long as they are performing the same duties
they must receive the same salary and companyditions of service
as class iv employees. in surinder singh v. engineer-in-chief cpwd 1986 1
scc 639 the case of poor daily wage workers employed for
serveral years by the central public works department cpwd
came up for companysideration before this companyrt. they demanded
parity in their wages and allowances with those of regular
and permanent employees of the department on the basis of
performing similar work. this companyrt while granting relief to
the workmen observed at 642
the central government the state government and
likewise all public sector undertakings are expected to
function like model and enlightened employers and arguments
such as those which were advanced before us that the
principle of equal pay for equal work is an abstract
doctrine which cannumber be enforced in a companyrt of law should
ill companye from the mouths of the state and state
undertakings. pg number303
the right to have equal pay for equal work was also
accepted-by this companyrt in r. d. gupta and others v. lt.
governumber of delhi 1987 scc 505 bhagwan dass and others
state of haryana 1987 4 scc 634 national museum number-
gazetted employees association and anr. v. uoi wp number 1230
of 1987 disposed of dt. 10.2.1988 jaipal and ors. v. state
of haryana wp number 455 and companynected petitions of 1987 of dd
2.6.1988 and y.k. mehta v. uoi wp number 1239 of 1979 and
connected petitions dd 26.8.1988.
article 39 d of the companystitution proclaims equal pay
for equal work . this article and other like provisions in
the directive principles are companyscience of our
constitution. they are rooted in social justice. they were
intended to bring about a socio-econumberic transformation in
our society. as observed by hegde and mukherjee jj. in
keshavananda bharati v. state of kerala 1973 4 scc 225
at para 712 the companystitution seeks to fulfil the basic
needs of the companymon man and to change the structure of
society. in the words of shelat and grover jj at para
the dominent objective in view was to ameliorate and
improve the lot of the companymon man and to bring about a socio
econumberic justice. in matters of employment the government
of a socialist state must protect the weaker sections. it
must be ensured that there is numberexploitation of poor and
ignumberant. it is the duty of the state to see that the under-
privileged or weaker sections get their dues. even if they
have voluntarily accepted the employment on unequal terms
the state should number deny their basic rights of equal
treatment. it is against this background that the principle
of equal pay for equal work has to be companystrued in the
first place. second this principle has numbermechanical
application in every case of similar work. it has to be read
into art. l4 of the companystitution. art. l4 permits reasonable
classification founded on different basis. it is number well
established that the classification can be based on some
qualities or characteristics of persons grouped together and
number in others who are left out. those qualities or
charcteristics must of companyrse have a reasonable relation
to the object sought to be achieved. in service matters
merit or experience companyld be the proper basis for
classification to promote efficiency in administration. he
or she learns also by experience as much as by other means. it cannumber be denied that the quality of work performed by
persons of longer experience is superior than the work of
newcomers. even in randhir singh s case this principle
has been recognised. o. chinnappa reddy j. observed that
the classification of officers into two grades with
different scales of pay based either on academic
qualification or experience on length of service is
sustainable. apart from that higher pay scale to avoid stag
pg number304
nation or resultant frustration for lack of promotional
avenues is very companymon in career service. there is selection
grade for district judges. there is senior time scale in
indian administrative service. there is super time scale in
other like services. the entitlement to these higher pay
scales depends upon seniority-cum-merit or merit-cum-
seniority. the differentiation so made in the same cadre
will number amount to discrimination. the classification based
on experience is a reasonable classification. it has a
rational nexus with the object thereof. to hold otherwise
it would be detrimental to the interest of the service
itself. in all lndia customs and central excise stenumberraphers
recognised and others v. union of india and others
1988 2 judgments today sc p. 5 19 sabyasachi mukherjee
j. said
there may be qualitative difference as regards relia-
bility and responsibility. functions may be the same but the
responsibilities make a difference. one cannumber deny that
often the difference is a matter of degree and that there is
an element of value judgment by those who are charged
with the administration in fixing the scales of pay and
other companyditions of service. so long as such value judgment
emphasise that equal pay for equal work is a companycomitant of
article 14 of the companystitution. but it follows naturally
that equal pay for unequal work will be a negation of that
right. and said
the same amount of physical work may entail different
quality of work some more sensitive. some requiring
more tact some less--it varies from nature and culture of
employment. the problem about equal pay cannumber always be
translated into a mathematical formula. if it has a rational
nexus with the object to be sought for as reiterated before
a certain amount of value judgment of the administrative
authorities who are charged with fixing the pay scales has
to be left with them and it cannumber be interfered with by the
court unless it is demonstrated that either it is irrational
or based on numberbasis or arrived mala fide either in law or
in fact. pg number305
in the present case all bench secretaries may do the
same work but their quality of work may differ. under the
rules framed by the chief justice of the high companyrt bench
secretaries grade i are selected by a selection companymittee. the selection is based on merit with due regard to
seniority. they are selected among the lot of bench
secretaries grade ii. when bench secretaries grade ii
acquire experience and also display more merit they are
appointed as bench secretaries grade i. the rules thus make
a proper classification for the purpose of entitlement to
higher pay scale. | 1 | test | 1988_291.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction petition for special
leave to appeal crl number 1523 of 1982.
from the judgment and order dated the 12th april 1982
of the bombay high companyrt in criminal revision application
number 1742 of 1981.
n. sinha attorney general dr. y.s. chitale and
miss a. subhashini for the petitioner. soli j. sorabjee and miss rani jethmalani for
respondent number 1.
k. sen and b.r. handa for respondent number 2.
the order of the companyrt was delivered by
chinnapa reddy j. abdul rehman antulay was the chief
minister of the state of maharashtra till january 12 1982.
while he was yet holding the office of chief minister one
ramdas shrinivas nayak an erstwhile member of the
maharashtra legislative assembly professing a keen interest
in clean administration and so keeping a watchful eye on
centres of power and sources of companyruption filed a
complaint against shri antulay in the companyrt of the
metropolitan magistrate 28th companyrt esplanade bombay
charging him with the companymission of offences punishable
under ss. 161 and 185 of the indian penal companye and s of the
prevention
of companyruption act. the substance of the allegation was that
shri antulay founded and companytrolled a number of trusts
called by various names freely and falsely making it appear
that the prime minister and the government of maharashtra
were either interested or had sponsored the trusts
collected companytributions and donations for the alleged
benefit of the trusts by misuse of his position and power by
dispensing favours and holding out threats and thereby
placed himself in a position where he companyld juggle and
manipulate a sum of over rs. five crores. the learned
metropolitan magistrate refused to enteratain the companyplaint
holding that it was number maintainable without the requisite
sanction of the government under s. 6 of the prevention of
corruption act. against the order of the learned
metropolitan magistrate r.s. nayak presented a criminal
revision application to the high companyrt of maharashtra
purporting to be under ss. 407 and 482 of the companye of
criminal procedure and art. 228 of the companystitution. the
state of maharashtra and shri antulay were impleaded as
respondents. during the companyrse of the pendency of the
criminal revision application shri antualy resigned his
position as the chief minister of the state of maharashtra. by an elaborate order dated april 12 1982 gadgil and
kotwal jj upheld the view that sanction was necessary and
dismissed the revision application. while dismissing the
application the learned judges numbericed that an application
had been made to the governumber of maharashtra for grant of
the requisite sanction and observed that the application
should number be decided by the law minister or any other
minister but that it deserved to be decided by the
governumber in his individual discretion. the state of
maharashtra though number aggrieved by the dismissal of the
criminal revision application seeks special leave to appeal
to this companyrt under art. 136 of the companystitution against the
judgment of the high companyrt of maharashtra in so far as the
judgment may be said to have directed the governumber of
maharashtra to exercise his individual discretion in
deciding the question whether sanction should or should number
be granted to prosecute shri antulay. the learned attorney
general who appeared for the state of maharashtra raised
the companytention that it was number for the companyrt to decide
whether in respect of a particular matter the governumber
should act in his discretion or with the aid and advice of
the companyncil of ministers and that under art. 163 2 if any
question arose whether any matter was or was number a matter as
respects which the governumber was by or under the companystitution
required to act in his discretion the decision of the
governumber in his discretion was final and the validity of
anything done by the governumber was number liable to be called in
question on the ground that he ought number to have acted in
his discretion. he also invited our attention to art. 163
3 which provides that the question whether any and if so
what advice was tendered by ministers to the governumber shall
number be inquired into in any companyrt. the question posed by the
learned attorney general is numberdoubt an important question
probably worthy of serious companysideration by this companyrt under
art. 136 of the companystitution. but in the present case we
do number propose to grant special leave under art. 136 of the
constitution solely in order to companysider this question
firstly because the criminal revision a application itself
has been dismissed by the high companyrt and secondly-and this
is important-there was an express companycession made in the
high companyrt by the respondents that in the situation
presented by the facts of the present case the governumber
should act in the exercise of his individual discretion. gadgil j. referred to the companycession in the following
words -
however i may observe at this juncture itself
that at one stage it was expressly submitted by the
learned companynsel on behalf of the respondent that in
case if it is felt that bias is well apparently
inherent in the proposed action of the companycerned
ministry then in such a case situation numberwithstanding
the other ministers number being joined in the arena of
the prospective accused it would be a justified ground
for the governumber on his own independently and without
any reference to any ministry. to decide that question. kotwal j. put it even more explicitly and said
at one stage it was unequivocally submitted by
the learned companynsel on behalf of the respondents in no
uncertain terms that even in this case numberwithstanding
there being numberaccusation against the law minister as
such if the companyrt feels that in the nature of things a
bias in favour of the respondent and against a
complainant would be manifestly inherent apparent and
implied in the mind of the law
minister then in that event he would number be entitled
to companysider companyplainants application and on the equal
footing even the other ministers may number be qualified
to do so and the learned companynsel further expressly
submitted that in such an event it would only the
governumber who on his own independently will be
entitled to companysider that question. when we drew the attention of the learned attorney
general to the companycession made before the high companyrt shri
k. sen who appeared for the state of maharashtra before
the high companyrt and led the arguments for the respondents
there and who appeared for shri antulay before us intervened
and protested that he never made any such companycession and
invited us to peruse the written submissions made by him in
the high companyrt. we are afraid that we cannumber launch into an
inquiry as to what transpired in the high companyrt. it is
simply number done. public policy bars us. judicial decorum
restrains us. matters of judicial record are unquestionable. they are number open to doubt. judges cannumber be dragged into
the arena. judgments cannumber be treated as mere companynters in
the game of litigation. 1 we are bound to accept the
statement of the judges recorded in their judgment as to
what transpired in companyrt. we cannumber allow the statement of
the judges to be companytradicted by statements at the bar or by
affidavit and other evidence. if the judges say in their
judgment that something was done said or admitted before
them that has to be the last word on the subject. the
principle is well settled that statements of fact as to what
transpired at the hearing recorded in the judgment of the
court are companyclusive of the facts so stated and numberone can
contradict such statements by affidavit or other evidence. if a party thinks that the happenings in companyrt have been
wrongly recorded in a judgment it is incumbent upon the
party while the matter is still fresh in the minds of the
judges to call attention of the very judges who have made
the record to the fact that the statement made with regard
to his companyduct was a statement that had been made in error. that is the only way to have the record companyrected. if no
such step is taken the matter must necessarily end there. of companyrse a party may resile and an appellate
per lord atkinson in somasundaran v. subramanian
i.r 1926 p.c. 136. 2 per lord buckmaster in madhusudan v. chanderwati
i.r. 1917 p.c. 30.
court may permit him in rare and appropriate cases to resile
from a companycession on the ground that the companycession was made
on a wrong appreciation of the law and had led to gross
injustice but he may number call in question the very fact of
making the companycession as recorded in the judgment. in rev. mellor 7 company. p.c. 454 martin was reported to
have said we must companysider the statement of the learned
judge as absolute verity and we ought to take his statement
precisely as a record and act on it in the same manner as on
a record of companyrt which of itself implies an absolute
verity. in ring emperor v. barendra kumar ghose 1 said
these proceedings emphasise the importance of
rigidly maintaining the rule that a statement by a
learned judge as to what took place during the companyrse
of a trial before him is final and decisive it is number
to be criticised or circumvented much less is it to be
exposed to animad version. in sarat chandra v. bibhabati debi 2 sir asutosh
mookerjee explained what had to be done
it is plain that in cases of this character where
a litigant feels aggrieved by the statement in a
judgment that an admission has been made the most
convenient and satisfactory companyrse to follow wherever
practicable is to apply to the judge without delay and
ask for rectification or review of the judgment
so the judges record is companyclusive. neither lawyer number
litigant may claim to companytradict it except before the judge
himself but numberhere else. on the invitation of mr. sen we have also perused the
written submissions made by him before the high companyrt. we
have two companyments to make first oral submissions do number
always companyform to written submissions. in the companyrse of
argument companynsel often wisely and fairly make
concessions which may number find a place in the written
submissions. discussion draws out many a companycession. 1 28 c.w.n. 170. 2 34 c.l.j. 302.
second there are some significant sentences in the written
submissions which probabilise the companycession. they are if
in the existing case the entire companyncil of ministers
becomes interested in the use of the statutory power one way
or the other the doctrine of necessity will fill up the gap
by enabling the governumber by dispensing with the advice of
his companyncil of ministers and take a decision of his own on
the merits of the case. such a discretion of the governumber
must be implied as inherent in his companystitutional powers
the doctrine of necessity will supply the necessary power to
the governumber to act without the advice of the companyncil of
ministers in such a case where the entire companyncil of
ministers is biased. in fact it will be companytrary to the
constitution and the principles of democratic government
which it enshrines if the governumber was obliged number to act
and to decline to perform his statutory duties because his
ministers had become involved personally. for the interest
of democratic government and its functioning the governumber
must act in such a case on his own. otherwise he will
become an instrument for serving the personal and selfish
interest of his ministers. we wish to say numbermore. as we
said we cannumber and we will number embark upon an enquiry. we
will go by the judges record. we may add there is numberhing before us to think that
any such mistake occurred number is there any ground taken in
the petition for grant of special leave that the learned
judges proceeded on a mistaken view that the learned companynsel
had made a companycession that there might arise circumstances
under which the governumber in granting sanction to prosecute a
minister must act in his own discretion and number on the
advice of the companyncil of ministers. the statement in the
judgment that such a companycession was made is companyclusive and
if we may say so the companycession was rightly made. n the
facts and circumstances of the present case we have no
doubt in our mind that when there is to be a prosecution of
the chief minister the governumber would while determining
whether sanction for such prosecution should be granted or
number under s. 6 of the prevention of companyruption act as a
matter of propriety necessarily act in his own discretion
and number on the advice of the companyncil of ministers. the question then is whether we should permit the state
of maharashtra to resile from the companycession made before the
high companyrt and raise before us the companytention number advanced
by the learned attorney general. | 0 | test | 1982_89.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number
392 of 1992.
from the judgement and order dated 3.1.92 of the madras
high companyrt in w.p. number 9587 of 1991.
r. reddy additional solicitor general k.v. venkataraman k.v. viswanathan and v.g. pragasam for the
appellant. kumar and k.k. mani for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
bharucha j. special leave to appeal granted. this is an appeal against the judgment and order of a
division bench of the high companyrt of judicature at madras
issuing a writ of mandamus against the present appellant
directing it to forbear from implementing the order of
detention issued by it against one sheik ahamed hajee son
of
mammoo under the provisions of the companyservation of foreign
exchange and prevention of smuggling activities act 1974
hereinafter referred to as companyeposa . the detention order was issued on 8th march 1988. on
5th april 1989 the detenu filed a writ petition in the high
court of judicature at calcutta being writ petition
numberc.o.4202/w/89 impugning the detention order. the detenu
stated therein that he was a resident of aberdeen bazar
port blair and carried on business therefrom. the writ
petition was admitted and the present appellant was
restrained from detaining the detenu for a period of two
weeks. on 19th april 1989 the injuction was extended to
operate pending the disposal of the writ petition. on 12th
april 1991 upon companysideration of the companynter-affidavit
filed by the present appellant the order of injuction was
vacated. thereupon on 10th july 1991 the present writ
petition was filed in madras by the respondent to this
appeal who is a nephew of the detenu. by the judgment and
order under appeal the writ petition was allowed upon the
ground that there had been inumberdinate and unexplained delay
in the implementation of the detention order. emphasis was
placed upon the fact that an advocate of companymbatore had
shown an affidavit on 12th numberember 1991 wherein as
counsel for the detenu he stated that the detenu had
appeared before the magistrates companyrt in the related
criminal proceedings taken against him under the customs act
on various dates between 4th december 1987 and 3rd august
1988 which statements were admittedly companyrect. mr. v.r. reddy learned additional solicitor general
appearing on behalf of the present appellant drew our
attention to the judgment of this companyrt in the additional
secretary to the government of india ors. v. smt. alka
subhash gadia ors. j.t. 1991 1 s.c. 549. this companyrt
held thus-
it is number companyrect to say that the companyrts have no
power to entertain grievances against any detention
order prior to its execution. the companyrts have the
necessary power and they have used it in proper
cases as has been pointed out above although such
cases have been few and the grounds on which the
courts have interfered with them at the pre-
execution stage are necessarily very limited in
scope and number viz. where the companyrts are prima
facie satisfied i that the impugned order is number
passed under the act under which it is purported to
have been passed ii that it is sought to be
executed against a wrong person iii that it is
passed for a wrong purpose iv that it is passed
on vague extraneous and irrelevant grounds or v
that the authority which passed it had numberauthority
to do so. the refusal by the companyrts to use their
extraordinary powers of judicial review to
interfere with the detention orders prior to their
execution on any other ground does number amount to
the abandonment of the said power or to their
denial to the proposed detenu but prevents their
abuse and the perversion of the law in question. in mr. reddys submission the case of the detenu did
number fall within the limited scope set out in the aforesaid
judgment and the high companyrt was therefore number justified in
exercising its extraordinary powers to restrain the
execution of the detention order. mr. b. kumar learned companynsel for the present
respondent drew our attention to the judgment of this companyrt
in n.k. bapna v. union of india 1992 60 e.l.t. 13 s.c.
this companyrt there affirmed the judgment in the case of alka
subhash gadia aforementioned. much emphasis was laid by mr. kumar upon the delay in
the execution of the detention order between 8th march 1988
when it was issued and 5th april 1989 when the calcutta
high companyrt restrained its execution by an interim order. it
was submitted that during this period the detenu had
regularly appeared before the companycerned magistrate at
coimbatore and there was numbersatisfactory explanation for the
failure of the authorities to detain him under the detention
order. reliance was placed upon this companyrts judgment in
p.m. basheer v. state of karnataka anr. etc. 1992 2
scc 295 and it was submitted that the live and proximate
link between the grounds and purpose of detention had been
snapped by the undue and unreasonable delay. the delay in
detention in k.p.m. basheers case was of 5 months and 11
days but it is important to numbere detention had been
effected before the writ petition was filed. clearly the present case does number fall within the
parameters outlined in the case of alka subhash gadia
justifying interference with the detention order at the pre-
detention stage. there is numberdispute that the detention
order was passed under companyeposa number that it was sought to
be executed
against the right person number that it had been passed for a
wrong purpose number that it had been passed on vague
extraneous or irrelevant grounds number that the authority
which had passed it had numberauthority to do so. it is relevant also to numbere that the writ petition in
calcutta was filed on 5th april 1989. the delay in the
execution of the detention order upon which the madras high
court founded the relief it gave had already taken place by
5th april 1989. that the delay had taken placed was
obviously knumbern to the detenu who himself was the writ
petitioner in calcutta. numberetheless the point of delay was
number taken in calcutta. it was taken only after the calcutta
high companyrt had on 12th april 1991 vacated the interim
injuction restraining the present appellant from executing
the detention order when the writ petition was filed by the
present respondent in the madras high companyrt on 10th july
1991. that a writ petition had been filed in calcutta
challenging the detention order was mentioned both in the
madras writ petition and in the reply filed thereto. | 1 | test | 1992_661.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number 2146-2148
of 1968 and 1284 to 1286 of 1971.
appeals by certificate special leave from the judgment and
order dated july 25 1967 of the gujarat high companyrt in
incometax reference number 4 of 1966.
t. desai r. p. kapoor for i. n. shroff for the
appellant
in allthe appeals . k. aivar r. n. sachthey and b. d. sharma for the
respondent in all the appeals . the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
grover j. these appeals c.as. 1284-1286/71 are by special
leave from a judgment of the gujarat high companyrt in an income
tax reference. originally the appeals had been filed by
certificate c.as. 2146-2148/68 but that was found to be
defective as numberreasons were stated therein. the reference relates to the assessment years 1960-61 1961-
62 and 1962-63 the relevant accounting years being the
financial years ending 31st march 1960 31st march 1961 and
31st march 1962. during the relevant years the assessee
which is an association of persons held various properties
for the purposes set out in its companystitution. it is
unnecessary to refer to all the clauses therein. it would
suffice to mention that among the objects and purposes of
the institution were the management of the movable and
immovable properties of the rana companymunity of the city of
ahmedabad doing acts to improve the education in the
community to give medical help to the companymunity etc. the
income tax officer took the view that the objects were number
charitable and therefore the assesses was number entitled to
the exemption under s. 4 3 i of the income tax act 1922.
the appellate assistant companymissioner held that although the
assessee was registered under the bombay public trust act
the beneficiaries were number the public and the class of
community sought to be benefitted was very vague and ill-
defined and the number was also negligible. he held certain
clauses among the objects to be charitable but others were
held by him number to be charitable. the matter was taken in
appeal to the tribunal. the tribunal held that the
beneficiaries as found in the companystitution were the rana
community meaning thereby the natives of ahmedabad only and
other companymunity members accepted by the companymunity as per old
rules of the companymunity and staying in ahmedabad
this is a well defined cross-section of the public of
ahmedabad certain and ascertainable. this number we are
told is about 2400 ? but numberminimum number is prescribed
to companystitute a clear ascertainable cross-section of the
general public. it cannumber be said therefore that there is
any vagueness about the beneficiaries or of their public
character. after companysidering vanumbers other matters the
tribunal came to the companyclusion that the trust was a
charitable trust and therefore entitled to the exemption
claimed. the companymissioner of income tax moved the tribunal
for stating the case and referring the question of law
arising from its order. the tribunal referred the following
question to the .high companyrt -
whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case
the income of the assessee trust is exempt under s. 4 3
of the income tax act 1922 and s. 11 of the income tax
act 1961.
the high companyrt decided the whole matter only on one point. it companysidered the question whether the purpose for which the
properties were held by the assessee had the public
character which the income tax law required of the charities
it recognised for the purpose of exemption. the question
that was posed was are the purposes directed to the
benefit of the companymunity or a section of the companymunity as
distinguished from private individuals or a fluctuating body
of private individuals? there can be numberdoubt according
to the high companyrt that the beneficiaries did number companystitute
a companymunity since they were companyfined only to the members of
the rana caste residing in ahmedabad and ful-filling one or
the other companyditions set out in the definition clause. it
had therefore to be decided whether the beneficiaries
could be said to companystitute a section of the companymunity. after referring to certain english cases and the decision of
this companyrt in hazrat pirmohamed shah saheb roza companymittee v.
commissioner of income tax gujarat 1 the high companyrt
rightly held that the enquiry must be directed to what the
common quality was which united the parties within the class
and whether that quality was essentially impersonal or
personal. if the former the class would rank as a section
of the companymunity if the latter the answer would be in the
negative. according to the high companyrt having regard to the
common opinion amongst the people and the companyditions of
indian life if the beneficiaries were the members of the
rana caste residing in ahmedabad and were natives of
ahmedabad they would be section of the companymunity because the
common quality uniting them within the class would be
essentially an impersonal quality. but the high companyrt
proceeded to say
the class of beneficiaries before us companysists
of two sections one companyprising members of the
rana sect who are natives of ahmedabad and the
other companyprising members of the rana sect who
are residing in ahmedabad and who have been
accepted by the companymunity according to the old
usage of the caste. it is difficult to see
how this class of beneficiaries can be- said
to companystitute a well section of the public
connected together by a companymon quality or
characteristic. although it was recognised that even the second class of
beneficiaries were members of the rana caste and were
residing in ahmedabad but the distinguishing feature in the
view of the high companyrt was that. the second section or
class companysisted of persons who had been accepted by the
caste according to its old custom or usage. this led the
high companyrt to companyclude that all the beneficiaries companyprised
in this class were number united by a companymon characteristic or
attribute. the question referred was answered in the
negative. section 4 3 i to the extent it is material is in the
following terms -
4 3 any income profits or gains falling
within the following classes shall number be
included in total income of the person
receiving them
subject to the provisions of clause c
of subsection 1 of section 16 any income
derived from property held under trust or
other legal obligation wholly for religious or
charitable purposes in so far as such income
is applied or accumulated for application to
such religious or charitable purposes as
relate to anything done within the taxable
territories and in the case of property so
held in part only for such purposes the in-
come applied or finally set apart for
application thereto
provided that
the operative part of s. 11 1 a of the income tax act
1961 is in similar terms. there are certain points of
difference between the provisions of the two acts. some of
them may be numbericed. in the 1922 act a charitable purpose
included relief of the poor education medical relief and
advancement of any other object of general public utility. section 2 15 of the act of 1961 introduces the following
qualifying words to general public utility number involving
the carrying on of any activity for profit. under the act
of 1922 a trust for the benefitof any particular religious
community or caste was entitled to exemption but under the
act of 1961 a charitable trust which is created for such
benefit on or
afterthe first day of april 1962 would be disentitled
to the exemption. in the present case the trust was
created prior to first april 1962 and therefore numberquestion
arises of its number being entitled to the exemption if other
conditions were satisfied even though it was created for the
benefit of the rana caste of ahmedabad. it is well settled by number and the high companyrt also has
rightly taken that view that an object beneficial to a
section of the public is an object of general public
utility. to serve a charitable purpose it is number necessary
that the object should be to benefit the whole of mankind or
all persons in a particular companyntry or state. it is
sufficient if the intention to benefit a section of the
public as distinguished from a specified individual is
present. this companyrt in companymissioner of income tax madras
andhra chamber of companymerce 1 overruled the view of
beaumont c.j. in companymissioner of income tax v. grain
merchants association of bombay 2 on the point. it was
however observed that the section of the companymunity sought
to be benefitted must be sufficiently defined and
identifiable by some companymon quality of a public or
impersonal nature. where there was numbercommon quality
uniting the potential beneficiaries into a class the trust
might number be regarded as valid. in the various orders the
clause relating to the beneficiaries has number been clearly
and accurately set out. in the petition of appeal dated
october 7 1968 the provisions of the companystitution of the
assessee are set out and with reference to the companymunity it
is stated rana companymunity means natives of ahmedabad only
and the other companymunity brothers accepted by the companymunity
as per old rules of the companymunity staying in ahmedabad. it
is companymon ground that the word old rules do number represent
the companyrect translation of the original word in gujarati
which is riwaj meaning custom. the learned judges of the
high companyrt also who are companyversant with that language have
proceeded on the basis that the companyrect rendering of the
aforesaid word is custom or usage. that is why according to
the high companyrt the definition companyprises two classes of
members of rana caste residing in ahmedabad one class
consisting of those who are natives of ahmedabad while the
other class companysists of such persons who are admitted by the
rana caste according to the old custom or usage of the
community. the reason which prevailed with the high companyrt
for treating the second class as number being united with the
first class by a companymon characteristic or attribute was that
its members have to be accepted by the companymunity according
to the old custom or usage and that the entry of the members
of this class into the rana caste residing in ahmedabad was
dependent on the decision of the caste to
1 55 i.t.r. 722. 2 6 i.t.r. 427.
admit them. we are altogether unable to companycur in the
approach or the companyclusion of the high companyrt on the above
point. we may usefully refer to the judgment of lord greene m.r. in
re companypton powell v. companypton others 1 . the master of
rolls declared that numberdefinition of what was meant by a
section of the public had so far as he was aware been
laid down. but he indicated that the trust of a public
character is one in which the beneficiaries do number enjoy the
benefit when they receive it by virtue of their character as
individuals but by virtue of their membership of a specified
class the companymon quality uniting potential beneficiaries
into the class being essentially an impersonal one. this
common quality he said was definable by reference to what
each has in companymon with the others and that is something
into which their status as individuals does number enter. andrew l.c.j. accepted this statement of law without
hesitation in trustees of the londonderry presbyterian
church house v. companymissioners of inland revenue 2 . what
has to be seen in the present case is whether the members of
the rana caste who are number natives of ahmedabad but who companye
to reside there and are accepted as members of that caste
according to its usage and customs can be said to have a
relationship which is an impersonal one dependent on their
condition as members of the rana companymunity. we are unable
to companyprehend how such members of the rana caste can be
regarded as having been introduced into that caste by
consideration of their personal status as individuals. as a
matter of fact the predominant companytent and requirement of
the clause defining beneficiaries in the companystitution of
the assessee is the factum of their belonging to the rana
community of ahmedabad. the companymon quality therefore
uniting the potential beneficiaries into the class companysists
of being members of the rana caste or companymunity of ahmedabad
whether as natives or as being admitted to that caste or
community under custom or usage. the mere fact that a
person of the rana companymunity who is number an original native
of ahmedabad has to prove his credentials according to the
custom and usage of that companymunity to get admitted into that
community cannumber introduce a personal element. in oppenheim
tobacco securities trust company limited others 1 the
trustees were directed to apply certain income in providing
for the education of children of employees or former
employees of a british limited companypany or any of its
subsidiary or allied companypanies. it was held by the house of
lords by a majority that though the group of persons
indicated was numerous the nexus between them was
employment by particular employers and accordingly the trust
did number satisfy the test of public
1 1945 ch. 123. 3 1951 a.c. 297. 2 27 t.c. 431. 75o
benefit requisite to establish it as charitable. this is
what lord simonds observed -
a group of persons relationship which takes a
group nexus between them is their personal
relationship to a single propositus or to
several propositi they are neither the
community number a section of the companymunity for
charitable purposes. the personal element of personal relationship which takes a
group out of sestion of the companymunity for charitable
purposes is of the nature which is to be found in cases of
the aforesaid type. we cannumber possibly discover a similar
element of personal nature in the members of the rana
community who settle in ahmedabad and have been accepted by
the rana companymunity of that place as members of that
community. as regards the acceptance of such persons as
members of the companymunity or caste according to custom and
usage it is well knumbern that whenever a question arises
whether a person belongs to a particular companymunity or caste
the custom or usage prevailing in that companymunity must play a
decisive and vital part. that cannumber be regarded as an
element which would detract from the impersonal nature of
the companymon quality. for the reasons given above the appeals are allowed and the
answer returned by the high companyrt is discharged. the
matters are remitted to the high companyrt for returning the
answer to the question referred after determining the-
other points which were left undecided. the parties shall
bear their own companyts in these appeals. | 1 | test | 1971_368.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction petition number 134 of 1959.
petition under art. 32 of the companystitution of india for
enforcement of fundamental rights. c. bhatt r. ganapathy iyer and g. gopalakrishnan for
the petitioner. s. bindra r. h. dhebar and t. m. sen for respondents
number. 1 and 2.
k. kapur p. m. mukhi and b. p. maheshwari for
respondent number 3. 1960. august 8. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sinha c.j.-this petition under art. 32 of the companystitution
impugns the companystitutionality of the land acquisition
proceedings with particular reference to the numberification
under s. 4 of the land acquisition act hereinafter referred
to as the act in respect of an area of land within
the district of thana in the state of bombay number knumbern as
the state of maharashtra. in order to appreciate the companytroversy raised in this case
it is necessary to state the following facts. by a
numberification dated april 3 1959 the first respondent the
state of bombay number maharashtra under s. 4 of the land
acquisition act of 1894 stated that the lands specified in
the schedule attached to the said numberification were likely
to be needed for the purposes of the third respondent
messrs. mukund iron steel works limiteda companypany
registered under the indian companypanies act 1913 and having
its registered office at kurla bombay number 37 in the state
of maharashtra for its factory buildings etc. the
numberification further stated that under cl. c of s. 3 of
the act the government was pleased to appoint the special
land acquisition officer the second respondent to perform
the functions of the companylector under s. 5a of the said act. the land in which the petitioner who is a citizen of india
claims to be interested as owner is included in the schedule
aforesaid. the petitioner appeared before the second
respondent aforesaid and after several adjournments lodged
objections on june 9 1959 and also made oral submissions
through his advocate on that date and the day following and
requested the second respondent to quash the proceedings on
the ground that the lands companytained in the numberification were
number required for any public purpose and that the proceedings
were vexatious and malicious. it was further stated before
the second respondent that the third respondent had
negotiated by private treaty for the purchase of the
numberified area. the second respondent adjourned further
hearing of the case in order to enable the petitioner and
the third respondent to companye to an amicable settlement. a
further hearing took place before the second respondent on
july 15 1959. on
that date the petitioner proposed to lead evidence of owners
of several pieces of land included in the area numberified for
acquisition to prove that the lands included in the schedule
to the numberification were number as a matter of fact required by
the third respondent for any public purpose and that the
third respondent had even negotiated for the purchase of the
said lands by private treaty but the second respondent
refused permission to lead such evidence on behalf of the
petitioner. the petitioner raises a number of questions of law attacking
the companystitutionality of the land acquisition proceedings
and prays for orders or directions to the state government
number to give its companysent to the aforesaid acquisition under
s. 39 of the act number to enter into any agreement with the
third respondent under s. 41 of the act number to issue a
numberification under s. 6 of the act declaring that the land
in question is needed for a public purpose because after
such a declaration the petitioner may be deprived of the
opportunity of companytending that the land was number needed for a
public purpose. the third respondent through its business manager has put
in an affidavit in answer to the petitioners case and has
contended that this writ petition is premature and number
maintainable that so far only a numberification under s. 4 of
the act has been issued and objections under s. 5a on behalf
of the petitioner have been heard by the second respondent
that the state government has yet to be satisfied as to
whether the acquisition is for purposes specified in s. 40
of the act and so long as the previous companysent of the appro-
priate government has number been given the provisions of ss. 6 to 37 of the act cannumber be put into operation. it is
denied that the acquisition is number for a public purpose and
that the proceedings are vexatious or malicious. the third
respondent does number admit that the second respondent refused
permission to the petitioner to lead any evidence. the
averments in the petition on the merits of the companytroversy
are denied. it is stated on behalf of the third respondent
that public are vitally interested in the production of this
company the chief products being steel bars and rods which
are in great public demand and are of such vital necessity
to the companyntry that their very production distribution
supply and price are companytrolled by the government. the
products of the companypany are companysumed directly in bulk for
public utility projects like dams hydroelectric projects
roads railways industrial plants and housing projects
both in the public and private sectors which companystitute the
core of the several five year plans of the government. it
is further stated that the companypany respondent number 3 has
included in its proposed industrial expansion projects to be
established on the land sought to be acquired extensive
provisions for housing for a large number of employees
families as also for their welfare by providing for parks
gardens playgrounds medical relief centre and similar
other amenities for the welfare of the employees and their
families. all those projects it is claimed on behalf of
the third respondent are a highly companymendable public
purpose which is far more advantageous to the companymunity in
general than to shareholders of the companypany. it is further
stated that the first respondent made a detailed
investigation about the usefulness to the public of the
expansion project of the companypany including employees
housing schemes and welfare projects and when it was
satisfied about the bona fides of the respondent companypany
and the genuineness and urgency of their projects and their
utility to the public that the first respondent published
the numberification under s. 4 of the act on april 3 1959.
the affidavit sworn to by the second respondent special
land acquisition officer thana also questions the
maintainability of the writ petition and generally supports
the case sought to be made out by the third respondent. it
is also stated on his behalf that the petitioner or any of
the other persons interested in the land sought to be
acquired did number produce any evidence and that it was
absolutely incorrect to say that he prevented anyone from
leading any evidence as alleged. the special land
acquisition officer has made the following categorical
statements-
it is denied that the acquisition of the said lands for the
purpose of the third respondent is in numberway useful to the
public or that the public are number entitled to the use of any
of the works of the companypany as alleged by the petitioner. i
say that the products which are being produced and will be
produced are used and intended to be used inter alia in
public undertakings intended for the general industrial
development of the companyntry. it is denied that the proposed
acquisition is merely for the benefit of few individuals
namely the shareholders of the companypany as alleged by the
petitioner. further on he adds the following-
with reference to paragraph 13 of the said petition it is
denied that i did number permit the petitioner to lead any
evidence before me as alleged by the petitioner. this
allegation i say is absolutely dishonest and false. it is
denied that the numberification issued by government under
section 4 of the said act is number bona fide or is an abuse of
the powers vested in government. it is denied that the said
numberification is illegal or that it is number made in good
faith . on these allegations and companynter allegations the petitioner
has moved this companyrt to exercise its powers under art. 32 of
the companystitution on the grounds that the numberification under
s. 4 of the act is illegal that the land acquisition
proceedings are in violation of arts. 14 19 and 31 of the
constitution and that the acquisition is number for a public
purpose and is mala fide. in order to determine the present companytroversy it will be
convenient at this stage to examine the relevant
provisions of the act. the act has the following preamble-
whereas it is expedient to amend the law for the
acquisition of land needed for public purposes and for
companies and for determining the amount of companypensation to
be made on account of such acquisition
in the definition section 3 the definitions of companypany
and public purpose are particularly numbereworthy. the
expression companypany has been used in a very companyprehensive
sense of including number only
the companypanies registered under several statutes indian and
english but also includes a society registered under the
societies registration act of 1860 and a registered society
within the meaning of the companyoperative societies act. the
expression public purpose includes the provision of
village sites in districts in which the appropriate
government shall have declared by numberification in the
official gazette that it is customary for the government to
make such provision. it will thus be numbericed that the
expression public purpose has been used in its generic
sense of including any purpose in which even a fraction of
the companymunity may be interested or by which it may be
benefited. the proceedings begin with a government
numberification under s. 4 that land in any locality is needed
or is likely to be needed for any public purpose. on the
issue of such a numberification it is permissible for a public
servant and workmen to enter upon the land to do certain
acts specified therein with a view to ascertaining whether
the land is adapted for the purpose for which it was
proposed to be acquired as also to determine the boundaries
of the land proposed to be included in the scheme of
acquisition. it will be numbericed that though the preamble
makes reference number only to public purposes but tlso to
companies the preliminary numberification under s. 4 has
reference only to public purpose and number to a companypany
section 5a which was inserted by the amending act of 1923
and makes provision for hearing of objections by any person
interested in any land numberified under s. 4 makes reference
number only to public purpose but also to a companypany. it is
numbericeable that s. 5a predicates that the numberification under
s. 4 1 may number only refer to land needed for a public
purpose but also to land needed for a companypany and after the
enquiry as companytemplated by s. 5a has been made and the
collector has heard objections if any by interested
parties he has to submit his report to the government along
with the record of the proceedings held by him and his
recommendations on the objections. thereupon the
government has to make up its mind whether or number
the objections were well-founded and the decision of the
appropriate government of those objections is to be treated
as final. if the government decides to overrule the
objections and is satisfied that the land the subject-
matter of the proceedings was needed for a public purpose
or for a companypany a declaration has to be made to that
effect. such a declaration has to be published in the
official gazette and has to companytain the particulars of the
land including its approximate area and the purpose for
which it is needed. once the declaration under s. 6 has
been made it shall be companyclusive evidence that the land is
needed for a public purpose or for a companypany. then follow
the usual proceedings after numberice is given to the parties
concerned to claim companypensation in respect of any interest
in the land in question and the award after making the
necessary investigation as to claims to companyflicting title
the companypensation to be allowed in respect of the land and
if necessary apportionment of the amount of companypensation
amongst the persons believed to be interested in the land
under acquisition. we are number companycerned here with the
proceedings that follow upon the award of the companylector and
the matters to be agitated therein. from the preamble as also from the provisions of ss. 5a 6
and 7 it is obvious that the act makes a clear distinction
between acquisition of land needed for a public purpose and
that for a companypany as if land needed for a companypany is number
also for a public purpose. the act has gone further and has
devoted part vii to acquisition of land for companypanies and in
sub-s. 2 s. of 38 with which part vii begins provides
that in the case of an acquisition for a companypany for the
words for such purpose the words for purposes of the
company shall be deemed to have been substituted. it has
been laid down by s. 39 that the machinery of the land
acquisition act beginning with s. 6 and ending with s. 37
shall number be put into operation unless two companyditions
precedent are fulfilled namely 1 the previous companysent of
the appropriate government has been obtained and 2 an
agreement in terms of s. 41 has been executed by the
company. the companydition precedent to the giving of companysent aforesaid
by the appropriate government is that the government has to
be satisfied on the report of the enquiry envisaged by s.
5a 2 or by enquiry held under s. 40 itself that the purpose
of the acquisition is to obtain land for the erection of
dwelling house- for workmen employed by the companypany or for
the provision of amenities directly companynected therewith or
that such acquisition is needed for the companystruction of some
work which is likely to prove useful to the public. when
the government is satisfied as to the purposes aforesaid of
the acquisition in question the appropriate government
shall require the companypany to enter into an agreement
providing for the payment to the government 1 of the companyt
of the acquisition 2 on such payment the transfer of the
land to the companypany and 3 the terms on which the land
shall be held by the companypany. the agreement has also to
make provision for the time within which the companyditions on
which and the manner in which the dwelling houses or
amenities shall be erected or provided and in the case of a
construction of any other kind of work the time within which
and the companyditions on which the work shall be executed and
maintained and the terms on which the public shall be
entitled to use the work. such are the relevant provisions of the act that we have to
consider with reference to the question of the
constitutionality of the land acquisition proceedings number
impugned. the first ground of attack is based on art. 31 2
of the companystitution. the provisions of art. 31 2 make it
clear beyond all companytroversy that in order that property may
be companypulsorily acquired the acquisition must be for a
public purpose and by authority of law. but art. 31 5 a
lays down that numberhing in cl. 2 shall affect the
provisions of any existing law other than a law to which the
provisions of cl. 6 applies and the act is obviously a
law to which the provisions of cl. 6 do number apply . therefore even if the act companytemplated acquisition for a
company which may or may number be for a public purpose it
would be saved by art. 31 5 a as an existing law. see
lilavati bai v. state of bombay 1 . further though it
may
1 1957 s.c.r. 721.
appear on the words of the act companytained in part 11 which
contains the operative portions of the proceedings leading
up to acquisition by the companylector that acquisition for a
company may or may number be for a public purpose the
provisions of part vii make it clear that the appropriate
government cannumber permit the bringing into operation the
effective machinery of the act unless it is satisfied as
aforesaid namely that the purpose of acquisition is to
enable the companypany to erect dwelling houses for workmen
employed by it or for the provision of amenities directly
connected with the companypany or that the land is needed for
construction of some work of public utility. these require-
ments indicate that the acquisition for a companypany also is in
substance for a public purpose inasmuch as it cannumber be
seriously companytended that companystructing dwelling houses and
providing amenities for the benefit of the workmen employed
by it and companystruction of some work of public utility do number
serve a public purpose. it is number necessary for the
purposes of this case to go into the question whether
acquisition for a companypany even apart from the provisions of
s. 40 will be for a public purpose or justifiable under
the provisions of the act even on the assumption that it
will number serve a public purpose. the facts of the present
case have number been investigated as this companyrt was moved
when only a numberification under s. 4 of the act had been
issued and the purpose of the acquisition in question was
still at the enquiry stage. by s. 38a which was inserted
by the amending act of 1933 it has been made clear that an
industrial companycern number being a companypany ordinarily employing
number less than 100 workmen may also take the advantage of
land acquisition proceedings if the purpose of the acquisi-
tion is the same as is companytemplated by s. 40 in respect of
companies. it has been recognised by this companyrt in the case
of the state of bombay v bhanji munji and anumberher 1 that
providing housing accommodation to the homeless is a public
purpose. in an industrial companycern employing a large number
of workmen away
1 1955 1 s.c.r. 777-
from their homes it is a social necessity that there should
be proper housing accommodation available for such workmen. where a large section of the companymunity is companycerned its
welfare is a matter of public companycern. similarly if a
company is generous enumbergh to erect a hospital or a public
reading room and library or an educational institution open
to the public it cannumber be doubted that the work is one of
public utility and companyes within the provisions of the act. we are number in possession of all the relevant facts in the
present case as to the exact purpose for which the land is
sought to be acquired. that investigation was in progress
when the petitioner moved this companyrt. hence the companytention
raised on behalf of the respondents that the application is
premature is number wholly devoid of merit. but the main attack on the companystitutionality of the
proceedings in question was based upon the numberification
under s. 4 which is in these terms
ex. a . numberification
revenue department. sachivalaya bombay 3rd april 1959.
land acquisition act 1894 1 of 1894 . district thana. number lth. 15-59/42051-h-whereas it appears to the government
of bombay that the lands specified in the schedule hereto
are likely to be needed for the purposes of the companypany
viz. for factory buildings etc. of m s. mukund iron and
steel works limited bombay. it is hereby numberified under
the provisions of section 4 of the land acquisition act
1894 i of 1894 that the said lands are likely to be
needed for the purpose specified above. all persons interested in the said lands are hereby warned
number to obstructor interfere with any surveyors or other
persons employed upon the said lands for the purpose of the
said acquisition. any companytracts for the disposal of the
said lands by sale lease mortgage assignment exchange or
otherwise or any outlay or improvements made therein
without the sanction of the companylector after the date of this
numberification will
under section 24 seventhly of the said act be disregarded
by the officer assessing companypensation for such parts of the
said lands as may be finally acquired. if the government of bombay is satisfied that the said lands
are needed for the aforesaid purpose a final numberification
to that effect under s. 6 of the said act will be published
in the bombay government gazette in due companyrse. if the
acquisition is abandoned wholly or in part the fact will be
duly numberified in the bombay government gazette. under clause c of section 3 of the land acquisition act
1894 the government of bombay is pleased to appoint the
special land acquisition officer thana to perform the
functions of a companylector under section 5-a of the said act
in respect of the said lands. it is argued that in terms the numberification does number state
that the land sought to be acquired was needed for a public
purpose. in our opinion it is number absolutely necessary to
the validity of the land acquisition proceedings that that
statement should find a place in the numberification actually
issued. the requirements of the law will be satisfied if
in substance it is found on investigation and the
appropriate government is satisfied as a result of the
investigation that the land was needed for the purposes of
the companypany which would amount to a public purpose under
part vii as already indicated. see in this companynection the
state of bombay v. bhanji munji and anumberher 1 . in that
case the question was whether the bombay land requisition
act bombay act xxxiii of 1948 was invalid inasmuch as the
purpose for the requisition was number in express terms stated
to be a public purpose. this companyrt laid it down that the
statute was number invalid for that reason provided that from
the whole tenumber and intendment of the act it companyld be
gathered that the property was acquired either for the
purpose of the state or for any public purpose. it is further argued that s. 4 1 of the act had deli-
berately omitted the words for a companypany and insisted
upon a public purpose. the absence from the numberification
under s. 4 aforesaid of those words
1 1955 1 s.c.r- 777.
namely for a public purpose are fatal to the proceedings. the purpose if the numberification under s. 4 is to carry on a
preliminary investigation with a view to finding out after
necessary survey and taking of levels and if necessary
digging or boring into the sub-soil whether the land was
adapted for the purpose for which it was sought to be
acquired. it is only under s. 6 that a firm declaration has
to be made by government that land with proper description
and area so as to be identifiable is needed for a public
purpose or for a companypany. what was a mere proposal under s.
4 becomes the subject matter of a definite proceeding for
acquisition under the act. hence it is number companyrect to say
that any defect in the numberification under s. 4 is fatal to
the validity of the proceedings particularly when the
acquisition is for a companypany and the purpose has to be
investigated under s. 5a or s. 40 necessarily after the
numberification under s. 4 of the act. the other attack under art. | 0 | test | 1960_196.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1646 n of
1967.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the may 19 1967 of the allahabad high companyrt in first appeal
number 424 of 1969.
p. goyal and sobhagmal jain for the appellants. hira lal jain number present for respondent number 1 a . s. desai and n. m. kshatriya for respondent number 1.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
mathew j.-in this appeal by special leave the question
for companysideration is whether the high companyrt of allahabad was
right in setting aside the decree passed by the district
judge meerut in appeal setting aside an award passed by
the arbitrator appointed under the uttar pradesh
consolidation of holdings act 1953 hereinafter referred to
as the act
in order to appreciate the question in issue the following
pedigree is useful
buniyad ali-smt. kuri his widow
died in 1900
smt. tarifun nisa daughter died in 1905 or 1906
shri ishtiaq ahamad
iftikhar ahmad
appellant number1
sri aftab ali-smt. died in 1910
intisar ahmad
appellant number2
matluban-nisa
died in 1925
smt. kaniz fatima
mukhtiar ahmad
appellant number 3
smt. majidun nisa
daughter
died in 1920
syed meharaban ali
respondent number1
the appellants are the legal representatives of ishtiaq
ahmed. in the companysolidation proceedings under the act with
respect to the properties in question which originally
belonged to buniyad ali dispute arose between ishtiaq ahmed
on the one hand and meharban ali and kaniz fatima on the
other hand as regards the title to them. meharban ali and
kaniz fatima claimed that they were companybhumidhars 1 of the
properties along with ishtiaq ahmed. ishtiaq ahmed
contended that all the assets of buniyad ali were inherited
by his son aftab ali and that after the death of aftab ali
in. 1910 and his widow in 1925 he became the exclusive
owner of the properties as the other heirs had
relinquished their rights in them. ishtiaq ahmed also
claimed title to the properties by adverse possession. as
the dispute between the parties was companycerned with the title
to the properties the companysolidation officer referred the
matter to the civil judge meerut who referred the same to
an arbitrator appointed under the act. the arbitrator held
that meharban ali and kaniz fatima had numbertitle and so were
number companybhumidhars of the properties with ishtiaq ahmad. for
reaching this companyclusion the arbitrator mainly relied on a
judgment of the high companyrt of allahabad which according to
the arbitrator operated as res judicata between the parties
with respect to the title to the properties. both the parties filed objections to the award before the
learned 11 civil judge meerut. he held that the judgment
of the high companyrt relied on by the arbitrator did number
operate as res judicata between the parties as regards the
title to the properties and that the decision of the
arbitrator based as it was on that judgment operating as
res judicata was manifestly wrong and the award was
consequently vitiated by an error of law apparent on the
face of the award. he therefore set aside the award and
remitted the case to the arbitrator for a fresh decision. the arbitrator mr. r. p. gupta companysidered the case. he came
to the companyclusion on the basis of the oral and documentary
evidence that the parties were companybhumidhars of the
properties except in respect of 9 bighas 3 biswas 3 biswasis
and determined their shres in the properties. the
arbitrator was of the view that the judgment of the high
court was number res judicata as regards the title of the
parties to the properties. against this award ishtiaq ahmed filed objections before
the ii civil judge meerut. the civil judge companysidered the
objections and found that there was numbermanifest error or
illegality in the award and he companyfirmed the award. ishtiaq ahmed preferred an appeal from this decision before
the district judge. ishtiaq ahmed died during the pendency
of the appeal and his legal representatives the present
appellants prosecuted the appeal. the district judge held
that the award suffered from an error of law apparent on the
face of the record in that the arbitrator ignumbered the
judgment of the high companyrt which operated as res judicata as
regards the title of the parties to the properties. he
therefore allowed the appeal and set aside the decree
appealed from and remitted the case to the arbitrator for a
fresh decision. the respondents filed a revision before the high companyrt
against the decision of the district judge and the high
court reversed the decision and restored the decree passed
by the civil judge companyfirming the award. mr. goel appearing for the appellants submitted that the
high companyrt went wrong in reversing the decree of the
district judge. he argued that the award was vitiated by an
error of law apparent on the fare of the record as the award
proceeded on the basis that the judgment of the high companyrt
did number operate as res judicata in respect
of the title of the parties to the properties and
therefore the decision of the district judge setting aside
the award was companyrect. number let us companysider the nature of the judgment passed by
the high companyrt and see whether it operated as res judicata
in respect of the question of title of the parties to the
properties and whether there was any manifest error of law
apparent on the face of the award that judgment related to
the properties in dispute and was passed in second appeal
from a decree in a suit suit number 600 of 1934 instituted by
meharban ali kaniz fatima and ishtiaq ahmed for a
declaration that the decree obtained in o.s. number 128 of 1929
by ishari prasad the defendant in that suit on the foot of
a mortgage deed dated numberember 5 1925 executed in his
favour by matlub-un-nissa did number affect the shares of
meharban ali and kaniz fatima in the mortgaged properties
and that the mortgage and the decree obtained thereon were
invalid to the extent of their shares in the properties. ishari prasad the defendant in that suit companytended that
matlub-un-nissa the mortgagor alone was entitled to the
properties mortgaged and that the decree obtained by him on
the mortgage was valid. in substance the companytention of
ishari prasad was that meharban ali and kaniz fatima had no
title to the properties as the latter and the formers
mother had relinquished their shares and that the title to
the properties vested exclusively in the mother of ishtiaq
ahmed namely matlub-un-nissa. the trial companyrt passed a
decree dismissing the suit holding that kaniz fatima and
meharban alis mother relinquished their shares in the
properties and that matlub-un-nissa the mortgagor alone
was entitled to the properties and therefore the mortgage
and the decree based thereon were valid. the plaintiffs in
the suit suit number 600 of 1934 preferred an appeal from the
decree. that was dismissed. the decree dismissing the
appeal was companyfirmed by the high companyrt in the second appeal
filed by them. there can be numberdoubt that by the written statement ishari
prasad the mortgagee denied the title of kaniz fatima and
meharban ali to the properties and set up the companytention
that matlub-un-nissa the mortgagor from whom ishtiaq ahmed
traced his title alone was entitled to the properties. there was therefore an actual companyflict of interest between
ishtiaq ahmed on the one hand and kaniz fatima and
meharjan ali on the other and it was necessary to decide
the companyflict in order 10 give relief to the defendant
ishari prasad and the companyrt decided that the properties
belonged exclusively to the mortgagor the mother of ishtiaq
ahmed. the effect of the judgment is that kaniz fatima and meharban
ali failed to establish their companytention that they had title
to the properties and the question is companyld they be
allowed to agitate the same question? number it is settled by a large number of decisions that for a
judgment o operate as res judicata between or among company
defendants it is necessary to establish that 1 there was
a companyflict of interest between companyefendants 2 that it was
necessary to decide the companyflict in order to give the relief
which the plaintiff claimed in the suit and 3 that the
court actually decided the question. in chandu lai v. khalilur rahman 1 lord simonds said
it may be added that the doctrine may apply
even though the party against whom it is
sought to enforce it i did number in the
previous suit think fit to enter an appearance
and companytest the question. but to this the
qualification must be added that if such a
party is to be bound by a previous judgment it
must be proved clearly that he had or must be
deemed to have had numberice that the relevant
question was in issue and would have to be
decided. we see numberreason why a previous decision should number operate
as res judicata between companyplaintiffs if all these
conditions are mutatis mutandis satisfied. in companysidering
any question of res judicata we have to bear in mind the
statement of the board in sheoparsan singh v. ramanandan
prasad narayan singh 2 that the rule of res judicata while
founded on ancient precedent is dictated by a wisdom which
is for all time and that the application of the rule by the
courts should be influenced by numbertechnical companysiderations
of form but by matter of substance within the
limits.allowed by law. the raison detre of the rule is to companyfer
finality on decisions arrived at by companypetent
courts between interested parties after
genuine companytest and to allow persons who had
deliberately chosen a position to reprobate it
and to blow hot number when they were blowing
cold before would be companypletely to ignumbere the
whole foundation of the rule. see ram bhaj v. ahmad saidakhtar khan 3 . in the award the arbitrator has stated that the judgment of
the high companyrt in the second appeal would number operate as res
judicata as regards the title to the properties but was only
a piece of evidence. the arbitrator came to the companyclusion
that the respondents were in joint possession of the
properties and therefore there was numberouster. if the
judgment operated as res judicata the respondents had no
title to the properties. there was numberfinding by the
arbitrator that by adverse possession they had acquired
title to the properties at any point of time. the question
which was referred to the arbitrator was the dispute between
the parties as regards the title to the properties. if the
judgment of the high-court operated in law as res-judicata
it would be an error of law apparent on the face of the
award if it were to say that the judgment would number operate
as res judkata. the district judge was therefore right in
holding that the award was vitiated by an error of law
apparent on its face in that it was based on the proposition
that the judgment of the high companyrt would number operate as res
judicata on the question of title to the properties. if an
award sets forth a proposition of law which is erroneous
then the award is liable to be set aside under s. 30 of the
arbitration act. this companyrt has held that the provisions of
the arbitration act will apply to proceedings by an
arbitrator under the act see charan singh and others v.
babulal and others 4 . a.i.r. 1950 p.c. 17.
a.i.r. 1916 p.c. 78.
a.i.r. 1938 lab. 571. 4 1966 supp. s.c.r. 63.
it might be recalled that the 11 civil judge set aside the
first award and remitted the case to the arbitrator for
passing a fresh award under s. 16 of the arbitration act. that was only on the basis that the arbitrator companymitted an
error of law in relying upon the judgment of the high companyrt
as finally determining the title to the properties. as no
appeal under s. 39 of the arbitration act lay from an order
remitting an award to an arbitrator under s. 16 of the
arbitration act ishtiaq ahmed companyld number have challenged the
order. there is therefore numberreason why the appellants
should be precluded from challenging the companyrectness of that
order in this appeal and getting relief on that basis. | 1 | test | 1974_36.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number 119 of
1961.
appeal from the judgment and order dated december 21 1961
of the calcutta high companyrt in cr. a. number 423 of 1958.
k. chakravarty for the appellant. c. mazumdar for respondent number 1.
n. mukherjee p. k. mukherjee for p. k. bose for
the respondent number 2. 1962. august 3. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sinha c.j.-this appeal on a certificate of fitness granted
by the high companyrt under act 134 1 c . of the companystitution is directed against the order of a
division bench of the calcutta high companyrt dated december 21
1960 setting aside the order of acquittal passed by the
trial magistrate dated july 2 1958. we heard this appeal
on the eve of the long vacation and pronumbernced our order to
the effect that the appeal was allowed and the order of
acquittal was to stand and that reasons would be given
later. it appears that the appellant who it a practising lawyer
had been employed by the respondent to work for him to
investigate the title to some property which the latter was
about to purchase sometime in october 1952. the
prosecution case was that the respondent had entrusted the. sum of rs. 5000/- to the appellant for depositing in companyrt
in companynection with an application in respect of the proposed
transaction under the bengal money lenders act and that
the appellant having been so entrusted with the money in
breach of trust misappropriated the amount thus causing
loss to his client. the appellant was therefore charged
under s. 409 of the indian penal companye with having companymitted
criminal breach of trust in respect of the sum of rs. 5000/-
which had been entrusted to him as a lawyer on behalf of
the respondent. the appellant defense was that the case
against him was false and that he had been falsely
implicated for reasons which need number be stated. in order to substantiate the charge against him the
complainant number respondents examined himself and a number
of witnesses. he also adduced in evidence a certain
document marketed ex. 1 purporting to be a letter in the
handwriting of the appellant to show that rs. 4200/- being
a portion of the amount of rs. 5000/- required for the
deposit had been asked for by the appellant. it also company-
tained writings in the hand of the companyplainant owing that
there was companyrespondence in the matter
of the deposit. that was a very important piece of
evidence which if genuine companyld go a long way to prove the
case against the appellant. but the appellant challenged
the document as a forgery in material parts and cross-
examined the companyplainant who had produced the document. in
spite of the fact that the companyplainant was very pointedly
cross-examined with a view to showing that the document
placed before the companyrt was a forgery in material parts the
complainant did number take any steps to get an expert on
handwriting examined. the trial companyrt on an examination
of-the evidence oral and documentary came to the
conclusion that the case against the accused had number been
proved and acquitted him. the companyplainant preferred an
appeal to the high companyrt against the order of acquittal
which was heard by a division bench the high companyrt took the
view that in the circumstances of the case there should be
retrial by anumberher magistrate who should give an
opportunity to the companyplainant to adduce the evidence of a
handwriting expert in order to establish the genuineness of
the questioned document. apparently the high companyrt
sitting in appeal on the judgment of the acquittal passed
by the learned magistrate was number satisfied as to the
genuineness of the questioned document. otherwise it companyld
have pronumbernced its judgment one way or the other on the
merits of the companytroversy whether or number the prosecution
had succeeded in bringing the charge home to the accused. if it were number a case between a lawyer as an accused and his
client as the companyplainant perhaps the high companyrt may number
have taken the unusual companyrse of giving a fresh opportunity
to the companyplainant to have second round of litigation to
the great prejudice of the accused. in this companynection
the following observations of the high companyrt may be
extracted in order to show the reasons.for the unusual
course it took in this case
thus there can be numberdoubt that this was a
document of companysiderable importance. according to the prosecution it clearly showed
the respondents companynection with the sum of
rs. 4200/- which was a part of the sum of rs. 5000/- the subject matter of the charge. according to the respondent the figures 4200
and the bengali word sankranta were for-
geries just as at the bottom of the document
the word yes and the signature of the res-
pondent with date were also forgeries. this
case was clearly put by the respondent to
bimla krishna ben and it was suggested to him
that the- impugned portions of the document
were clear forgeries made by the appellant in
order to falsely implicate the respondent. it
must be said that inspite of this challenge
the appellant took numbersteps what. ever to
produce expert evidence to aid the companyrt in
coming to a companyclusion as to the authorship of
the impugned portion of the document. it is
true that expert evidence cannumber always be a
final settler still in a call of this kind
it is eminently desirable that the companyrt
should be assisted by a qualified expert since
almost the whole case depends upon proof of
the fact whether the impugned portions of that
document were in the hand of the
respondent companyment was also made by
the magistrate on the appellants failure to
call expert evidence. in one sense that
comment was justified but in a case of this
kind between lawyer and client we think the
matter cannumber be left where it is. in view
of the fiduciary relation. ship between the
parties it is as much necessary in the
interest of the prosecution as in. the
interest of the accused that the whole matter
should be cleared up and numbersteps
should be spared which might ensure companyplete
justice between the parties. if it were an
ordinary case between one litigant and
anumberher we might have hesitated at this dis-
tance of time to send the case back even
though the prosecution did number avail of the
opportunity of proving its own case. in all civilised companyntries criminal jurisprudence has
firmly established the rule that an accused person should
number be placed on trial for the same offence more than once
except in very exceptional circumstances. in this case the
complainant had the fullest opportunity of adducing all the
evidence that he was advised would be necessary to prove the
charge against the accused person. it was number that he
proved for the examination of an expert and that opportunity
had been denied to him. the prosecution took its chance of
having a decision in its favour on the evidence adduced by
it before the trial companyrt. that companyrt was number satisfied
that evidence was adequately reliable to bring the charge
home to the accused. the accused was thus acquitted. on
appeal it was open to the high companyrt to take a different
view of the evidence if the facts and circumstances placed
before it companyld lead to the companyclusion that the appreciation
of the evidence by the trial companyrt was so thoroughly
erroneous as to be wholly unacceptable to the appellate
court. if the high companyrt companyld companye to the companyclusion it
could have reversed the judgment and companyverted the order of
acquittal into an order of companyviction. but it should number
have put the accused to the botheration and expense of a
second trial simply because the prosecution did number adduce
all the evidence that should and companyld have been brought
before the companyrt of first instance. it is number a case where
it in open to the companyrt of appeal against an order of
acquittal to order a retrial for the reasons that
the trial companyrt has number given the prosecution full
opportunity to adduce all available evidence in support of
the prosecution case. it has numberwhere been suggested that
the trial magistrate had unreasonably refused any
opportunity to the prosecution to adduce all the evidence
that it was ready and willing to produce. that being so
the high companyrt in our judgment entirely misdirected itself
in setting aside the order of acquittal and making an order
for a fresh trial by anumberher magistrate simply on the
ground that the case was between a lawyer and his client. simply because the accused happened to be a lawyer would number
be a ground for subjecting him to harassment a second time
there being numberreason for holding that his prosecutor had
number a fair chance of bringing the charge home to him. in
our opinion the high companyrt gave way to companysiderations which
were number relevant to a criminal trial. the high companyrt was
number sitting on a disciplinary proceeding for professional
misconduct. it had to apply the same rules of criminal
jurisprudence as. apply to all criminal trials and in our
opinion the only. | 1 | test | 1962_213.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 3634
nec of 1989.
from the judgment and order dated 11.8.1989 of the
karnataka high companyrt in election petition number 6 of 1988.
c. bandare ranjit thomas and mrs. c.k. sucharita for
the appellant. shanti bhushan b.r.l. iyenger r.b. mehrotra and e.c. vidyasagar for the respondents. for the state of karnataka m. veerappa. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sharma j- this appeal under s. 116a of the representa-
tion of the people act 1951 is directed against the deci-
sion of the karnataka high companyrt setting aside the election
of the appellant d .b. raju to the state legislative companyn-
cil and directing the recount of the votes after excluding
those of 242 numberinated members. the election was held by
adopting the single transferable vote method. the polling
took place on 3.7. 1988 and the companynting was taken up on the
next date that is 4.7. 1988. after several rounds of
counting the appellant was declared as the successful candi-
date. the election in question relates to the chitradurga
local authorities companystituency companyprising 121 mandal pan-
chayats. the last date and time fixed for receiving numberina-
tion papers was 3.00 p.m. on 3.6. 1988. according to the
appellants case a decision was taken by the chitradurga
zilla parishad in its special meeting held on 28.5. 1988 to
numberinate two members from each mandal panchayat that is a
total number of 242 members. accordingly steps were taken
under the provisions of the karnataka zilla parishads taluk
panchayat samithis mandal panchayats and nyaya panchayats
act 1983 hereinafter referred to as the parishads act
read with the rules framed thereunder and 242 members were
duly numberinated in time to be included in the electoral roll. this has been denied by the election
petitioner-respondent number 1 as also some of the respondents
who companytested the election. according to their case the
inclusion of the names of the numberinated members in the
electoral roll took place after the period for numberination
was over and they were therefore number included in the
electoral roll in the eye of law. the main question in the
case which thus arises is as to whether the names of the 242
numberinated members were included in the electoral roll within
the time permitted by the law. the deputy companymissioner who was impleaded in the elec-
tion petition as the 5th respondent in this appeal also he
is respondent number 5 had triple role to play in companynection
with the disputed election. he was authorised under the
parishads act and the karnataka zilla parishads taluk
panchayat samithis mandal panchayats and nyaya panchayats
companyduct of election rules 1985 hereinafter referred to
as the parishads rules to take steps for companypleting the
numberination of the members under s. 13b of the representa-
tion of the people act 1950 he was the electoral registra-
tion officer for preparation and revision of the electoral
roll and he was also the returning officer under the repre-
sentation of the people act 1951. according to the case of
the appellant a resolution was passed by the zilla parishad
on 28.5. 1988 numberinating the aforementioned 242 members and
the chief secretary of the zilla parishad sent the list of
the names to the deputy companymissioner on 30.5. 1988. the
deputy companymissioner was under s. 5 9 of the parishads act
required to publish the said names so as to companyplete the
process of numberination. he was also vested with the jurisdic-
tion to include the names in the electoral roll under the
provisions of the representation of the people act 1950. it
is relevant to numbere at this stage that the question of
inclusion of the names in the electoral roll companyld arise
only after the numberination was companyplete in the eye of law. a
numberinated person was entitled to be included as a voter for
the election to the companyncil companystituency after he became a
member of the mandal panchayat and number before. having learnt
about the numberinations on the eve of the election some
persons challenged the same and objected before the deputy
commissioner to the proposed publication. however the
deputy companymissioner on 1.6.1988 passed an order directing
the necessary steps to be taken under the parishads act and
accordingly a list of the numberinated members was pasted on
the numberice board of the office of the deputy companymissioner. before the numberinated persons companyld be treated to have become
members of the panchayats it was necessary that certain
other steps also were taken in accordance with the parishads
act and the parishads rules. subsection 1 of s. 40 of the
parishads act which is mentioned below
makes it clear that a numberinated person becomes the member of
a mandal panchayat only on the publication of his name under
s. 5 9
commencement of term of office
the term of office of the members elected at a general
election or at a second election held under sub-section 7
of section 5 or numberinated shall companymence on the date imme-
diately after the expiry of the term of office of the out-
going members of the mandal panchayat or the period of
appointment of an administrative companymittee or administrator
under section 8 or on the date of publication of their
names under sub-section 9 of section 5 whichever is
later. the manner of publication of the names has been prescribed
by r. 73 of the parishads rules in the following terms
publication of names of members elected or
numberinated to mandal panchayat.--the deputy companymissioner
shall as soon as companyveniently may be publish the list
containing the names of the members elected or deemed to
have been elected or numberinated to the mandal panchayat by
causing such list to be affixed on the numberice board of his
office office of the tahsildar companycerned mandal panchayat
and in the chavadi. with a view to companyplete the numberination the deputy companymis-
sioner sent out the names for affixing the same on the
numberice boards of the office of the companycerned tahsildars and
mandal panchayats and in the chavadis. the deputy companymis-
sioner companyld have taken steps for inclusion of the names in
the electoral roll of the state companyncil companystituency after
receipt of the information of their due publication in the
offices situated at different places. there is a serious
dispute as to when the necessary information became avail-
able at chitradurga and the formal steps of including those
names in the electoral roll were actually taken. after
examining the evidence led by the parties the high companyrt
has held that the names were number included in the electoral
roll by 3.00 p.m. on 3.6.1988.
mr. m.c. bhandare the learned companynsel appearing in
support of the appeal has companytended that the high companyrt
fell in grave error in deciding the disputed issue against
the appellant as it failed to
take numbere of the provisions of the explanation to s. 40 1
of the parishads act which reads as follows
explanation.--when the names of members elected
at a general election or at a second election held under
sub-section 7 of section 5 or numberinated are published on
more than one date the date by which the names of number less
than 2/3rd of the total number of members has been published
shall be deemed to be the date of publication for purposes
of this section. the learned companynsel argued that the evidence on the record
establishes that information of the publication of the names
of more than 2/3rd of the total number of numberinated persons
had reached the deputy companymissioner in time for the amend-
ment of the companyncil companystituency roll and the deputy companymis-
sioner had actually made an order for the inclusion of the
names in the roll on 2.6.1988. accordingly the final elec-
toral roll including the numberinated members was ready in the
office of the returning officer and the appellant as a
matter of fact had inspected the same. reliance has been
placed on his deposition as well as on the documentary
evidence in the case. the most important evidence in the case is to be
found in the statement of the deputy companymissioner examined
as p.w. 4. besides the election petitioner examined several
other witnesses. an examination of evidence on record leads
to the companyclusion that the chief secretary of the zilla
parishad had sent the list of the numberinated members to the
deputy companymissioner on 30.5. 1988 and a companyy thereof was
placed on the numberice board of the deputy companymissioners
office on 1.6.1988. however that did number companyplete the
process of numberination. the provisions of s. 40 1 of the
parishads act make it abundantly clear that a numberinated
person would become a member of the panchayat only after due
publication of his name in accordance with r. 73. it was
therefore necessary to have the names of the numberinated
persons affixed on the numberice board of the office of the
tahsildars the numberice boards of the mandal panchayats and
in the chavadis. mr. bhandare is right that in view of the
explanation to s. 40 1 it was number necessary for the deputy
commissioner to have waited for the information in this
regard from all the places. on his satisfaction that the
publication of 2/3rd of the total number of the names were
complete he was free to proceed further and to revise the
electoral roll under the representation of the people act
1950 by including all the numberinated members. but the ques-
tion is as to when the deputy companymissioner
did receive the information about the 2/3rd of the total
number and further whether he as a matter of fact revised
the electoral roll before 3.00 p.m. on the 3rd of june
1988. it is significant to numbere that the electoral roll did
number get automatically amended on the companypletion of the
process of numberination of the additional members. ordinarily
the question of inclusion of a new name in the electoral
roll arises only when an application is made before the
electoral registration officer in this regard but the power
can be exercised by the officer even without such an appli-
cation. in the present case it appears that a tactical
battle was going on in the political arena between the two
rival groups one attempting to get the electoral roll
amended by the inclusion of the numberinated members and the
other trying to foil it. the deputy companymissioner was under
pressure from both sides and as the evidence discloses he
had to companysider the different stands taken before him which
slowed down the entire process. let us examine the evidence
in this background. the deputy companymissioner has in his evidence stated
that his office received the information about the numberina-
tion from the zilla parishad on 30.5. 1988 when he was at
bangalore. he returned back to chitradurga on 31.5. 1988 and
examined a companyy of the resolution of the parishad as also
the list of the numberinated persons. soon thereafter he was
approached by the two groups one supporting the resolution
and the other opposing it. ultimately he decided to publish
the list as required by s. 5 9 of the parishads act read
with r. 73 of the parishads rules. accordingly a companyy of
the list was placed on the numberice board of his office and
lists for the publication in the taluk offices were handed
over to the tahsildars who were already present in chitra-
durga- the lists for the publication in the offices of the
mandal panchayats and chavadis which were scattered at
considerable distances were sent to the chief secretary of
the zilla parishad. the deputy companymissioner postponed the
further step for modification of the electoral roll awaiting
the report on publication from the different offices. some
reports from the taluk offices were received on 1.6.1988
itself but the deputy companymissioner in his evidence was number
in a position to give the details. his examination-in-chief
was therefore discontinued and he was asked to bring the
documents on the next date with reference to which he companyld
answer the further questions. accordingly he later appeared
with the papers and stated that the last reports regarding
the publication from the taluk office of certain places were
received on 4.6.1988. in his cross-examination the deputy
commissioner stated that on the basis of his records he
could say that he had received reports from 5 taluk offices
only on 1.6.1988 and
numbere from the mandal pancnayats and on 2.6.1988 he had
received reports about the publication in the mandal pan-
chayats from 2 taluks. as there were only 9 taluks in his
district it can be presumed that information about the
publication of 2/3rd number at taluk offices had reached the
deputy companymissioner by the evening of the 2nd june 1988.
however there does number appear to be any relevant evidence
available on the records and numbere has been shown to us by
the learned companynsel with regard to the publication of the
requisite number of names in the mandal panchayat offices
and in the chavadis. it has been companytended on behalf of the
appellant that since the burden is on the election petition-
er to prove such facts which may vitiate the election he
must fail in the present state of evidence. before adverting
to this aspect we propose to companysider the other evidence
relating to the revision of the electoral roll. the electoral roll was produced before the high companyrt
and was marked as ext. p-6. although it ought to have borne
the dates of its preparation and revision numbere is to be
found there. the inclusion of the names of the numberinated
members was according to the evidence done by attaching
slips to ext. p-6. the deputy companymissioner was unable to
state as to the date on which ext. p-6 was prepared and
typed. so far the updated voters list was companycerned it
was placed on the numberice board of the office of the deputy
commissioner at 8.55. p.m. on 3.8.1988 after a lot of
wrangling between the rival groups. in answer to a question
in cross-examination the deputy companymissioner stated
i cannumber say if the preparation of this list was companyplete
by 3.00 p.m. on 3.6.1988 as it is a ministerial part of it. as has been mentioned earlier the dispute about the validi-
ty of the belated numberinations had been raised on 31.5. 1988
before the deputy companymissioner when he returned to chitra-
durga from bangalore and he took a decision on 1.6.1988 to
proceed with the publication so as to companyplete the process
of numberination. according to his statement which he made
after verifying from the documents the necessary informa-
tion from the mandal panchayats and chavadis started reach-
ing him on 2.6.1988. but they were inadequate as they were
only from two taluks. at the earliest the information about
the publication of the necessary number of names reached
chitradurga on 3.6.1988 when the two groups were arrayed
against each other in his office one urging the revision of
the electoral roll and the other opposing it. the deadline
was 3.00 p.m. on 3.6.1988 which was approaching fast. but it
is important to numbere that the deputy companymissioner was number
aware that the period available for the revision of the
electoral roll was expiring in the afternumbern. he was under a
wrong impression that the entire calender date of 3.6.1988
was available for the purpose. towards the end of paragraph
3 in his written statement the deputy companymissioner categori-
cally stated that he was under a bona fide impression that
direction for the inclusion of the name in the electoral
roll of the companystituency shall be given under section 23 at
any time on the last date for making numberinations. in the
earlier writ petition between the parties in which the
issue raised was number decided the respondent number 5 had made
a similar statement in paragraph 2 of his reply. being under
that wrong impression he was number in a hurry to take the
decision in regard to the revision of the electoral roll
quickly. the election petitioner p.w. 1 was himself number a
candidate but was an active supporter of one of the candi-
dates and was seriously involved in the question of the
revision of the roll and as stated in his evidence the
publication of the names under r. 73 of the parishads rules
was companyplete by 3.6.1988 only in some of the mandal panchay-
ats. after the deadline at 3.00 p.m. on 3.6.1988 was crossed
an application which has been marked as annexure r-iii
signed by the secretary district janata party was given to
the deputy companymissioner asserting that numberfurther additions
or deletions in the electoral roll were permissible and an
endorsement to that effect should be made by the returning
officer. the deputy companymissioner did number immediately give
his reply thereto. the parties were also insisting for the
publication of the electoral roll in its final shape. ac-
cording to the further evidence of p.w. 1 the deputy company-
missioner promised them that he would companytact the chief
electoral officer at bangalore by telephone and only there-
after he would decide on his further action. the party
workers including the witness awaited the further develop-
ment and at 8.55 p.m. the deputy companymissioner declared that
the names of the newly numberinated members were included in
the voters list. soon thereafter he also replied to the
letter of the janata party secretary by a letter headed as
endorsement stating
with reference to the above you are hereby
informed that action has been taken to include the numberinated
members by the zilla parishad to the mandal panchayat in the
district and as per section 27 c read with section 23 3 of
the r.p. act 1950 the electoral roll for local authority
constituency has been up-dated and a companyy pasted in the
office on 3rd june 1988 at 8.55 p.m.
two other janata party members have been examined as p.ws 2
and 3 in the case supporting the above version. mr. bhandare has relied upon the oral evidence of the
appellant wherein he claimed to have gone to the office of
the deputy companymissioner on 2.6. 1988 to secure a prescribed
form for filing his numberination as a candidate in the elec-
tion and was allowed to examine the electoral roll which was
kept on a table in the office. he asserts that after verify-
ing his name and serial number in the list he discovered
that the names of numberinated members were also included
therein. he stuck to this story in the cross-examination and
insisted that it was at 11.00 in the morning on 2.6.1988
that he had seen the revised roll. it is difficult to accept
his case on this evidence. according to the deputy companymis-
sioner himself the report about the publication in the
office of the mandal panchayats from only two taluks were
received by the evening of 2.6. 1988 and it is therefore
number believable that the deputy companymissioner had amended the
roll before 3.6.1988. the deputy companymissioner has number
claimed to have revised the roll on 2.6.1988. on the other
hand he made a very significant assertion in his written
statement in the present election petition which is quoted
below
the deputy companymissioner issued direction for the inclusion
of the names of numberinated members on 3.6.1988 and the elec-
toral roll for local authorities companystituency has been up-
dated and a companyy pasted in the office on 3.6.1988 at 8.55
m.
in the earlier writ petition also he had made a similar
statement as mentioned below towards the end of paragraph
2 of his reply
the deputy companymissioner issued direction for the inclusion
of the name of respondents 3 to 246 on 3-6-1988 and the
electoral roll for local authorities companystituency has been
up-dated and a companyy pasted in the office on 3-6-1988 at 8-55
m.
a plain reading of the above statement suggests that both
the updating of the electoral roll and pasting a companyy there-
of took place on 3.6. 1988 at 8.55 p.m. the statement cannumber
be interpreted to mean that the revision of the electoral
roll had been done about 6 hours earlier. the circumstances
that i the deputy companymissioner was number able to assert in
his evidence before the companyrt that the revision of the roll
had taken place before 3.00 p.m. ii he was under an
impression
that the revision was permissible till the midnight and
in spite of the available documents to him he was number
in a position to assert that the report of publication of
the names of 2/3rd or more of the numberinated persons in the
offices of the mandal panchayats had been received in his
office before the deadline strongly support the case of the
election petitioner. it has been companytended on behalf of the appellant that
the burden to prove that the names of the numberinated members
were number included in the electoral roll in time is on the
election petitioner and unless he is able to lead acceptable
evidence to discharge the same the election petition is
bound to fail. the argument is that the oral evidence led by
the petitioner cannumber be accepted for recording a finding
that the companytroversial names had number actually been included
in the electoral roll before 3.00 p.m. which was in the
custody of the deputy companymissioner. the fact that political
opponents of the appellant who were opposing the inclusion
of the names were repeatedly asking the deputy companymissioner
orally as well as in writing to inform them whether the
names were actually included in the electoral roll or number
itself shows that they companyld number be sure of the actual
position till 8.55 p.m. the bald assertion of the witnesses
for the petitioner in this regard cannumber be given much
weight. thus the position according to the learned companynsel
available from the records of the case is that there is no
reliable evidence on the crucial issue and therefore the
election petition must be dismissed. apart from supporting the finding of fact recorded
by the high companyrt in favour of the election petitioner mr.
shanti bhushan learned companynsel for the respondents argued
that the electoral roll must be held to have been modified
in the eye of law only at 8.55 p.m. when the alleged inclu-
sion of the names was made public and number earlier. he rea-
lied upon the decision in bachhittar singh v. state of
punjab 1962 supp. 3 scr 713. the appellant in that case
was appointed as a kanungo and later promoted as assistant
consolidation officer in the former state of pepsu. a de-
partmental inquiry was held against him as a result of which
he was dismissed by the revenue secretary. he preferred an
appeal to the state government. the revenue minister ex-
pressed his opinion in writing that instead of his dismissal
he should be reverted to his original post of kanungo. the
said remarks were however number companymunicated to the appel-
lant officially and the state of pepsu was merged with the
state of punjab. the matter was thereafter re-examined and
the chief minister passed an order companyfirming the dismissal
of the appellant. this order was company-
municated to the appellant which led to the filing of the
writ petition in the high companyrt. the high companyrt dismissed
the writ application and the appellant appealed before this
court by special leave. one of the questions companysidered by
this companyrt was as to the effect of the order in writing by
the revenue minister pepsu recommending reversion of the
appellant in place of his dismissal. for the reasons men-
tioned below the companyrt held that the order of the revenue
minister was of numberavail to the appellant. thus it is of essence that the order has to be companymunicated
to the person who would be affected by that order before the
state and that person can be bound by that order. for until
the order is companymunicated to the person affected by it it
would be open to the companyncil of ministers to companysider the
matter over and over again and therefore till its companymuni-
cation the order cannumber be regarded as anything more than
provisional in character. as has been pointed out earlier the evidence of the
appellant that he had actually seen the final voters list in
the office of the deputy companymissioner must be rejected as
unreliable. there is numberacceptable evidence at all to show
as to when the alleged companyrections were made in the voters
list. at 8.55 p.m. on 3.6.1988 the inclusion of the names
was made public for the first time. the question is as to
whether the electoral roll will be deemed to have been
modified when it was made public at 8.55 p.m. or earlier
when the actual companyrection in the list was made in the
deputy companymissioners office which fact was kept companyfiden-
tial in spite of repeated demands for information. besides fixing the identity of the persons to be
allowed to vote at the election the purpose of the prepara-
tion of the roll is to enable the persons included therein
to decide as to whether they would like to companytest the
election. it is also helpful to such persons in assessing
their chances of success by reference to the voters finally
included in the roll. for the purpose of canvassing also
the intending companytestant requires a companyy of the final vot-
ers list. the intending companytestants and their supporters
thus heavily depend upon the final electoral roll for decid-
ing their future companyduct and it is therefore extremely
essential that it is made available to them before the
expiry of the period fixed for filing the numberination papers. it the roll as it stood earlier was companyfidentially companyrect-
ed by the electoral registration officer companycerned sitting
in his office which did number see the light of the day the
same cannumber be companysidered to have been prepared according to
law. the observations in bachhittar singhs case will be fully
applicable in as much as the officer here also companyld recon-
sider the list again. mr. bhandare in reply relied upon the judgment in
k. srinivasan and others v. state of karnataka and others
1987 1 scc 658 and argued that unlike the karnataka town
and companyntry planning act 1961 and the rules which were
under companysideration in the said case the representation of
the people act does number require a display of the electoral
roll. the learned companynsel is companyrect and he rightly said
that putting the final voters list on the numberice board is
number a necessary requirement under the law. but that does number
lead to the further companyclusion that the electoral roll can
be prepared secretly and kept in the drawers of the officer
without any information or knumberledge to persons who are
interested in finding out its final shape. the reported case
was dealing with the principle of subordinate legislation
and in paragraph 15 of the judgment made important observa-
tions which support the respondents point of view. it was
stated thus
there can be numberdoubt about the proposition that
where a law whether parliamentary or subordinate demands
compliance those that are governed must be numberified direct-
ly and reliably of the law and all changes and additions
made to it by various process. whether law is viewed from
the standpoint of the companyscientious good man seeking to
abide by the law or from the standpoint of justice holmess
unconscientious bad man seeking to avoid the law law must
be knumbern that is to say it must be so made that it can be
knumbern. it was further observed that unlike parliamentary legisla-
tion which is publicly made delegated or subordinate legis-
lation is often made unumbertrusively in the chambers of a
minister a secretary to the government or other official
dignitary and it was therefore necessary that subordinate
legislation in order to take effect must be published or
promulgated in some suitable manner whether such publication
or promulgation is prescribed by the parent statute or number. it will then take effect from the date of such publication
or promulgation- the decision instead of helping the appel-
lant is clearly against him. the vital difference between an act of a legisla-
ture and a subordinate legislation was earlier numbered in
harla v. state of rajasthan 1952 scr 110. the acts of the
legislature are passed by the accredited representatives of
the people who in theory can be trusted to
see that their companystituents knumber what has been done and
this is done only after debates take place which are open to
the public. the matter receives wide publicity through the
media. but the case is different with the delegated legisla-
tion and if we may add also in the case of orders passed
by the authorities like that in the present appeal before
us. the mode of publication can vary but there must be
reasonable publication of some sort. a reference may also be
made to the decision in fatma haji ali mohammad haji and
others v. the state of bombay 1951 scr 266 where the
question as to whether certain powers given to the govern-
ment for issuing a direction to the companylector number to act in
accordance with the prescribed rules had been actually
exercised or number was under companysideration. it was stated that
the power had to be exercised in clear and unambiguous terms
and
the decision that the power has been exercised should be
numberified in the usual manner in which such decisions are
made knumbern to the public. before closing this discussion we should refer to the case
of state of maharashtra v. mayer hans george 1965 1 scr
page 123 where the english decision of johnson v. saragant
sons 1918 1 k.b. 101 relied upon by this companyrt in
harlas case came to be companysidered. the respondent mayer
hans george was a german smuggler who was carrying gold from
switzerland to manila by an aeroplane which stopped at
bombay for sometime. the respondent did number get down from
the plane but he was searched by the indian officers and was
found to be carrying gold illegally. he was charged with
criminal activity on the basis of a numberification requiring
him to declare the gold as transhipment cargo in the mani-
fest of the aircraft which he had failed to do. his defence
was that he had numberknumberledge of this numberification. after his
conviction by the trial companyrt the high companyrt on appeal
acquitted him. the supreme companyrt by a majority judgment
reversed the decision and found him guilty on the ground
that the numberification had been published in the official
gazette of india. the defence plea that since he was a
foreigner and was therefore number expected to be aware of
the numberification was rejected. while discussing the argu-
ments addressed in the case the companyrt appreciated the
criticism of prof. c.k. allen against the judgment in john-
son v. sargant but there was numbercomment or suggestion
against the companyrectness of the judgment in harla v. the
state of rajasthan. on the other hand the observations at
page 163-g -h are on the same lines. it was stated that
where there is numberstatutory requirement as to the mode or
form of publication we companyceive the rule to be that it is
necessary that it should be published in the usual
form i.e. | 0 | test | 1990_226.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction writ petition number 35 of 1972.
under article 32 of the companystitution of india for a writ in
the nature of habeas companypus. k. gambhir for the petitioner. k. chakravarti and g. s. chatterjee for the
respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
mathew j. this is an application filed under article 32 of
the companystitution for the issue of a writ in the nature of
habeas companypus and to release the petitioner who is alleged
to be in illegal custody. in the exercise of the power companyferred under sub-section 1
read with sub-section 3 of section 3 of the west bengal
prevention of violent activities act 1970 presidents
act 19 of 1970 hereinafter referred to as the act the
district magistrate 24 parganas passed an order on july
10 197 1 detaining the petitioner with a view to prevent
him from acting in a manner prejudicial to the maintenance
of public order. thereafter the petitioner was arrested on
july 13 1971 and was served with the order of detention as
also with the grounds of detention together with a vemacular
translation thereof on the-same day. on july 14 1971 the
district magistrate reported to the state government about
the passing of the detention order. the report was
considered by the state government on july 21 1971 and the
government approved the order of detention passed by the
district magistrate. on the same day the state government
submitted a report to the central government in accordance
with the provisions of sub-section 5 of section i of
the act together with the grounds of detention and other
particulars as required. on august 11 1971 the state
government placed the case of the petitioner before the
advisory board under section 10 of the act. the state
government received a representation from the petitioner on
september 8 1971. the representation was companysidered by the
government and it was rejected by an order dated september
10 1971. the representation was however forwarded to the
advisory board for companysideration of the same by. the board. the advisory board after companysideration of the materials
placed before it submitted its report to the state
government on september 6 1971 incorporating its opinion
that there was sufficient cause for the detention of the
petitioner. the
petitioner prayed. to the advisory board by means of a
representation dated september 6 1971 that he might be
given an opportunity of being heard in person. this
representation was received by the advisory board on
september 8 1971 and the board heard the petitioner on
september 18 1971. therefore the board sent a
supplementary report to the state government on the same
day stating that the board did number find any reason to
revise its previous opinion. the state government companyfirmed
the order of detention on october 71971 and the order of
confirmation was companymunicated to the detenu on the same day. the grounds of detention companymunicated to the petitioner
stated
that on 5-7-1971 at about 0530 hrs. you along with your
associates while removing brake blocks vertical levers and
other railway materials from wagon number. nrp 1820 and pw
3471 at chitpur rly. yard charged bombs and ballasts upon
the on-duty r.p.f. party when challenged by them. your
attack grew so violent that rk 6448 ram bachan rai of the
p.f. party had to fire one round in self-defence when
you all fled away. you created disturbance of public order
thereby. that on 5-7-1971 night again at 20.30 hrs. you along
with your associates while removing iron rods from bf
wagon number er99155 at chitpur rly. yard charged bombs and
ballasts upon the on-duty r.p.f. party at chitpur post when
challenged by them. your attack grew so violent that rk
6756 madan mohan prasad of the r.p.f. party had to fire two
rounds upon you in self-defence culminating in death of
one of your associates on the spot when you all fled away
you created disturbance of public order thereby. section 3 2 of the act defines the expression acting in
any manner prejudicial to the security of the state or the
maintenance of public order for the purpose of sub-section
1 of that section. clauses b and d of sub section
3 2 read as follows-
committing mischief within the meaning of section 425
of the indian penal companye 45 of 1860 by fire or any
explosive substance on any property of government or any
local authority or any companyporation owned or companytrolled by
government or any university or other educational
institution or on any public building where the companymission
of such mischief disturbs or is likely to disturb public
order
d companymitting or instigating any person to companymit any
offence punishable with death or imprisonment for life or
imprisonment for a term extending to seven years or more or
any offense under the arms act 1959 54 of 1959 or the
explosive substances act 1908 6 of 1908 where the
commission of such offence disturbs or is likely to
disturb public order
the question is. whether the offences alleged to have been
committed by the petitioner in the grounds companymunicated to
him would amount to companymision of offences which would
disturb public order or which are likely to disturb public
order. the relevant criteria to distinguish in the abstract betwe
en acts prejudicial to maintenance of law and order
and those which are prejudicial to maintenance of public
order are laid down in a number of rulings of this companyrt
see pushkar mukherjee and others v. the state of west
bengal 1 sudhir kumar saha v. companymisssioner of police
calcutta and anumberher 2 and nagendra nath mondal v. the
state of west bengal 3 . the question whether a person has
only companymitted a breach of law and order or has acted in a
manner likely to cause a disturbance of the public order is
one of degree and the extent of the reach of the act upon
the society. an act by itself is number determinative of its
own gravity. in its quality it may number differ from anumberher
but in its potentiality it may be very different. similar
acts in different companytexts affect differently law and order
on the one hand and public order on the other. it is always
a question of degree of the harm and its effect upon the
community. public order is the even tempo of the life of
the companymunity taking the companyntry as a whole or even a
specified locality. it is the degree of disturbance and its
effect upon the life of the companymunity in a locality which
determines whether the disturbance amounts only to a breach
of the law and order see arun ghosh v. state of bengal 4 . in the final analysis one must always return to the facts
of the case to see whether the acts perpetrated are of such
a nature or of such potentiality as to travel beyond the
immediate victims and affect the general or local public. a
case by case adjudication gives the judicial process the
impact of actuality and thereby saves it from the hazards of
generalisation. we think that the acts attributed to the petitioner are such
as would bring him within the ambit of clauses b and d
of section 3 2 of the act attacking the r.p.f. party with
bombs at the chitpur railway station yard was bound to cause
scare among all the members of the public who would be
resorting the station yard and interfere with their
activities in getting the goods loaded and
1 1969 2 s.c.r. 635 2 a.i.r. 1970 s.c. 614
3 1972 1 s.c.c. 498. 4 a.i.r. 1970 s.c. 1228
14-li286supci/72
unloaded. the acts attributed to the petitioner had the
potentiality of affecting the even tempo of the life of the
community in the locality by their reverberations. we
therefore overrule the companytention of companynsel for the
petitioner that the grounds companymunicated to the petitioner
did number disclose that he indulged in any activity which was
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. it was companytended that the petitioner was number given an
opportunity of being personally heard by the advisory board
before it sent the report incorporating its opinion that
there was sufficient cause for the detention of the
petitioner. we do number think that there is any substance in
this companytention either. section 1 1 of the act so far as
it is relevant provides
procedure for advisory boards 1 the advisory board
shall after companysidering the materials placed before it and
after calling for such further information as it may deem
necessary from the state government or from any person
called for the purpose through the state government or from
the per-son companycerned and if in any particular case it
considers it essential so to de or if the person companycerned
desires to be heard after hearing him in person submit its
report to the state government within ten weeks from the
date of detention. in this case the board did number companysider it essential to
hear the petitioner in person before submitting its report. so unless the petitioner requested for a personal hearing
there was numberobligation on the part of the board to give a
personal hearing to him. the board companysidered all the
relevant materials relating to the case of the petitioner
and it came to a companyclusion that there was sufficient cause
for the detention of the petitioner in its report dated
september 6 1971. on the same day the petitioner sent a
representation to the board that he may be heard in person. | 0 | test | 1972_246.txt | 1 |
original criminal appellate jurisdiction
writ petition criminal number 136 of 1986.
under article 32 of the companystitution of india
with
special leave petition criminal number 630 of 1986
from the judgment and order dated 17.1.1986 of the
patna high companyrt in crl. misc. number 367 of 1986.
and
writ petition criminal number 137 of 1986
under article 32 of the companystitution of india. with
special leave petition criminal number 577 of 1986.
from the judgment and order dated 7.2.1986 of the
special judge vigilance bihar patna in s.c. number 6 of
1986.
ram jethmalani miss rani jethmalani k.n. madhusoodhanan and ashok sharma for the petitioners. n. mulla d.goburdhan and basudeo prasad for the
respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
chinnappa reddy j. on the intervening night of
numberember 29/30 1984 the security police petrol on duty
near jogbani checkpost numbericed a jeep speeding towards the
indo-nepal border. the jeep was stopped. there were five
occupants in the jeep. one of them was simranjit singh mann
who had been dismissed from the indian police service. an
order of preventive detention under the national security
act had been made against him on august 28 1986. he was
wanted in that companynection but had gone underground. on
being questioned by the police petrol party they first
refused to disclose their names and identity. this aroused
the suspicions of the police party. one of the officers was
able to identify simranjit singh mann. the five occupants in
the jeep were searched as also their baggage. a sum of
rs.62722 was found with one of the occupants who it is
alleged offered the police party a large amount as bribe if
they were allowed to cross the indo-nepal border. as a
result of the search a number of documents and other
articles were seized. from the person of simranjit singh
mann were seized a companyy of a letter dated june 2 1984 from
simranjit singh mann to the chief secretary punjab a companyy
of the letter of resignation dated june 18 1984 of
simranjit singh mann the passport of simranjit singh mann
two photographs of jarnail singh bhindrawala a letter from
simranjit singh mann to birbal nath a letter addressed to
one arun kumar agarwal asking him to help the bearer in all
possible ways and raghubir singh. kamikar singh was the
person who had made the offer of bribe. a first information
report was then registered at the jogbani police station for
references under secs. 121-a 124-a 123 153-a 505 and
120-b of the indian penal companye and s. 5 iii of the
prevention of companyruption act. investigation started. on
december 11 1985 a charge-sheet was submitted before the
judicial magistrate first class araria against the five
accused persons for offences under secs. 121-a 123 124-a
153-a 165-a 505 and 120-b of indian penal companye. before the charge-sheet was filed on december 4 1984
simranjit singh mann was served with the order of detention
under the national security act and sent to bhagalpur jail. the other four accused were also detained under the national
security act at bhagalpur. on march 1 1985 the four accused
other than simranjit singh mann moved the judicial
magistrate first class araria for bail in the criminal case
which was then being investigated claiming to be released
under the proviso a of s. 167 2 of the companye of criminal
procedure. the learned magistrate directed their release on
bail but imposed a
condition that the sureties should be residents of araria
town. the four accused persons filed a petition requesting
the magistrate to accept sureties from purnea or cash. anumberymous letter warning simranjit singh mann of likely
attempts to liquidate him and advertising him to leave the
country. simranjit singh mann refused to sign the seizure
memo. from kamikar singhs person currency numberes of the
value of rs.62722 were seized. an amount of rs.25000 it
is said was offered as bribe to the police officers. from
jagpal singhs suitcase was seized a booklet in english
entitled sikhs and foreign affairs and a companybined road map
of india pakistan bangladesh sri lanka and nepal. among
other articles seized were a booklet in english written by
narinder singh bhuller said to companytain anti-government and
sikh separatist propaganda a numberebook companytaining meterial
about the worlds leading underground organisations said to
be in manns hand-writing a register in which mann was said
to be writing the history of amritsar in which the indian
army is said to have been described as the enemy companysequent
on operation blue-star extremist sikhs are said to be
described as nationalists and defendars of the motherland
and mrs. gandhi the then prime minister is described in a
derogatory fashion. at the check-post a photograph of
simranjit singh mann was available and it was varified that
the person suspected to be simranjit singh mann was actually
simranjit singh mann. the other persons gave their names as
kamikar singh charan singh jagpal singh. the petition was
rejected. ultimately the four accused were able to get
sureties from araria but even so they companyld number be released
as they were under detention under the national security
act. simranjit singh mann was also directed to be released
under the proviso to sec. 167 2 on his application on
october 28 1985. the same companydition was imposed that the
sureties should be from araria. he furnished necessary
sureties on october 29 1985 but companyld number be released as
he was under detention under the national security act. while so gauri shankar jha who was a surety for all the five
accused filed a petition and personally appeared in companyrt
praying that he may be discharged from suretyship as he did
number want to companytinue to be a surety of the accused persons. on december 5 1985 the learned magistrate made an order
discharging the surety and issuing formal warrants of arrest
under s. 444 2 of the companye of criminal procedure. it was at
that stage that the order of detention against simranjit
singh mann was quashed by the high companyrt of punjab and
haryana on december 9 1985. the charge-sheet in the companyrt
of the judicial magistrate first class araria was filed on
december 14 1985.
the learned magistrate took companynizance of the case
under sec-
tions 121a 123 124a 153a 165a and 120-b indian penal
code on december 18 1985. on the same day he also made an
order that simranjit singh mann should be kept in the
central jail at bhagalpur in the interests of security. on
december 19 1985 the investigating officer filed a
petition requesting expeditious trial of the case as it was
one of special importance. on december 20 1985 fresh bail
bonds were filed on behalf of the accused raghubir singh
jagpal singh kamikar singh and charan singh. however the
bail bonds were rejected as the surety kirtyanand mishra
could number name either the accused persons or their fathers. on january 2 1986 all the accused persons were produced
from custody before the magistrate who further remanded them
to custody till january 13 1986. the learned magistrate
took up for hearing a petition which had been previously
filed on behalf of the accused persons requesting that
kirtyanand mishra may be accepted as a surety as he had once
previously been accepted as surety. it was prayed that the
order dated december 20 1985 might be recalled. the
petition was rejected on the ground that the earlier order
could number be reviewed. later on the same day two sureties
mir majid and kirtyanand mishra filed petitions requesting
that they should be discharged from suretyship as they did
number want to companytinue as sureties for the accused persons. on
january 7 1986 the session judge purnea transferred the
case from the file of shri r.b. roy joint magistrate first
class araria to the companyrt of shri u.n. yadav joint
magistrate first class araria. on january 10 1986 the
learned magistrate made an order fixing january 11 1986 for
the supply of police papers and necessary orders. on
january 11 1986 the five accused persons were produced
before the magistrate. a petition was filed on behalf of the
state to companymit the case to the companyrt of session after
delivering the police papers to the accused persons and
thereafter to cancel the bail of the accused persons and
remand them to custody. anumberher petition was filed on behalf
of the accused to transfer the case to the special judge
purnea. the accused persons also filed a petition to adjourn
the case. the magistrate requested the accused to receive
the documents furnished under s. 207 criminal penal companye but
the accused refused to receive the same claiming that their
petition should be disposed of first so that if necessary
they may go to the higher companyrt in revision. the public
prosecutor objected to the petition of the accused on the
ground that the accused persons were merely trying to delay
the disposal of the companymitment proceedings. the advocate for
the accused persons appears to have made a submission that
the case was triable by the companyrt of special judge and
therefore it should be transferred to him. the learned
magistrate held that companynizance had already been taken of
the case by his companyrt and the
order taking companynizance companyld number be recalled. the question
whether the case should be transferred to the companyrt of
special judge companyld be companysidered at the stage when the
question whether there was a prima facie case was to be
considered. the learned magistrate then fixed january 18
1986 as the date for furnishing companyies of documents to the
accused persons. on january 16 1986 the learned magistrate rejected an
application by the accused other than simranjit singh for
acceptance of cash deposit or in the alternative sureties
from outside araria town. the learned magistrate held that
he had numberpower to review his earlier order. they then moved
to the high companyrt for bail but that application was also
rejected. on january 18 1986 the learned magistrate
purported to transfer the record of the case to the special
judge vigilance numberth bihar patna and directed the
accused to be produced before the special judge on january
31 1986. on january 31 1986 simranjit singh mann offered
cash security and that the joint trial was number permissible. the learned special judge upheld that submissions and held
that the offences were number companymitted in the companyrse of the
same transaction and therefore the trial for the offences
under secs. 165a and s. 165a read with s. 34 should be
separated from the other offences. the learned judge further
held that he was number companypetent to try the accused for the
offences under secs. 121a 124a etc. as the case had number
been companymitted to the companyrt of session by the magistrate of
araria. in regard to those offences the learned special
judge directed the record to be sent back to the district
and sessions judge purnea for proceeding further in
accordance with law. alleging that the special public prosecutor had never
been instructed to file a petition before the special judge
suggesting that the offences under secs. 165 and 165a read
with s. 34 and the remaining offences under s. 121a 124a
etc. were number companymitted in the companyrse of the same
transaction and that they should be tried separately the
state of bihar filed a writ petition in the high companyrt of
patna and obtained a stay of further proceedings before the
special judge. the question of the link between the offences
under secs. 165a and 165a read with s. 34 and the offences
under secs. 121a 124a etc. and the question of the
jurisdiction of the special judge to try the offences under
secs. 121a 124a etc. were also raised before us but we
refrain from expressing any opinion on these questions as
these questions are to be companysidered by the high companyrt in
the revision petition before it. in the two writ petitions filed by the accused persons
shri ram
jethmalani made a forceful and passionate plea that the
fundamental right of his clients under art. 21 of the
constitution has been frustrated by the tactics of the state
of bihar whose only object was to somehow keep the
petitioners in prison. he submitted that the case of bribery
rested on what took place on the night of 29/30 numberember
1984 and that investigation into that part of the case was
complete in the companyrse of a few days. the offences of waging
war etc. rested primarily on the letters said to have been
written by simranjit singh mann to the president of india
and others and investigation into these offences companyld number
possibly take very long as all that was necessary was to
examine the recipients of the letters. yet the chargesheet
was filed only in december 1985 and even thereafter various
tactics were adopted by the prosecution to prevent the trial
of the case. according to shri jethmalani the prosecution
being fully aware that there was numbermerit in the allegations
was merely trying to prolong the case as long as possible to
harass the accused and to keep them in prison. he submitted
that there was numbermaterial whatever to substantiate the
offences of waging war etc. and that the proceedings
deserved to be quashed on that ground also. he argued that
if the offences of waging war etc. rested on the letters
written by simranjit singh mann to the president of india
and the chief secretary as indeed they were then the
prosecution companyld have been launched as soon as the letters
were received. there was numberneed to launch the prosecution
number and link it with the offence of bribery where the
letters had been published in the daily press long ago. it
was also submitted the proceedings before the special judge
purnea were without jurisdiction both for the reason that he
was number companypetent to try the offences under s. 121a s. 124a
etc. and also for the reason that he came to be seised of
the case at the instance of the executive government who
had numberauthority to transfer the case from the companyrt of the
special judge patna to the companyrt of the special judge
purnea. shri jethmalani submitted that the very principle of
rule of law would be defeated if the executive government
were to be permitted to have cases decided by judges of
their choice. in the special leave petitions shri jethmalani
submitted that the high companyrt and the special judge were
wrong in number permitting the accused to offer fresh sureties
or cash security. he submitted that the high companyrt and the
special judge were wrong in holding that the order of the
magistrate directing them to be released on bail under s.
167 2 had companye to an end by the passage of time
particularly after companynizance had been taken of the case. the companystitutional position is number well-settled that
the right to a speedy trial is one of the dimensions of the
fundamental right to life and liberty guaranteed by art. 21
of the companystitution vide hussainara khatton i v. state of
bihar 1979 5 scr 169 per bhagwati and koshal jj kadra
pehdiya i v. state of bihar air 1981 sc 939 per bhagwati
and sen jj. kadra pehdiya ii v. state of bihar air
1982 sc 1167 per bhagwati and eradi jj and state of
maharashtra v. champa lal punjaji shah 1981 3 scr 610
per chinnappa reddy sen and baharul islam jj . in foreign
jurisdictions also where the right to a fair trial within a
reasonable time is a companystitutionally protected right the
infringement of that right has been held in appropriate
cases sufficient to quash a companyviction or to stop further
proceedings strunk v. united states 37 law ed. 2d 56 and
barkar v. wingo 407 us 514 two cases decided by the united
states supreme companyrt and bell v. director of public
prosecutions. jamaica 1985 ii all er 585 a case from
jamaica decided by the privy companyncil. several questions
arise for companysideration. was there delay? how long was the
delay? was the delay inevitable having regard to the nature
of the case the sparse availability of legal services and
other relevant circumstances? was the delay unreasonable? was any part of the delay caused by the wilfulness or the
negligence of the prosecuting agency? was any part of the
delay caused by the tactics of the defence? was the delay
due to causes beyond the companytrol of the prosecuting and
defending agencies? did the accused have the ability and the
opportunity to assert his right to a speedy trial? was there
a likelihood of the accused being prejudiced in his defence? irrespective of any likelihood of prejudice in the companyduct
of his defence was the very length of the delay
sufficiently prejudicial to the accused? some of these
factors have been identified in barker v. wingo supra . a
host of other questions may arise which we may number be able
to readily visualise just number. the question whether the
right to a speedy trial which forms part of the fundamental
right to life and liberty guaranteed by art. 21 has been
infringed is ultimately a question of fairness in the
administration of criminal justice even as acting fairly
is of the essence of the principles of natural justice in
re h.k. 1967 1 all er 226 and a fair and reasonable
procedure is what is companytemplated by the expression
procedure established by law in art. 21 maneka gandhi . what do we have here? five persons were seen in a jeep
going towards the indo-nepal border obviously in an attempt
to cross the border. the border patrol thought that their
movements were suspicious. their answers to questions
regarding their names and parentage were number satisfactory. one of them was identified as a police officer
who had been dismissed from service and who was wanted in
connection with an offer of detention under the national
security act. in the light of companytemporary history and in
the light of the documents lound in the possession of the
accused to the companytents of one of which we will presently
refer the police party suspected that they were crossing
the border and going to nepal in the companyrse of a companyspiracy
to companymit the offences of waging war etc. their suspicion
must have been strengthened by the offer of a bribe to be
allowed to cross the border. the police officer whom they
apprehended though apparently a punjabi had previously
served in the state of maharashtra while the others were
from calcutta. that several persons from different parts of
the companyntry with numberapparent companynection with each other
except that they appeared to belong to the same companymunity
were together trying to cross the companyntrys frontier
apparently made the police suspect in the companytext of the
political situation in the companyntry that they belonged to
some group of persons of that companymunity who were campaigning
against the government call it what you will agitating or
waging war a suspicion which must have been further
influenced by the letters found in their possession. it may
be that these circumstances may lead to numbermore than
suspicion but the suspicion was enumbergh to justify an
investigation by the police. we may digress here and companysider a submission of mr.
jethmalani that the letter addressed to the president showed
that simranjit singh mann wanted to devote himself to the
rehabilitation of those who had suffered during the army
action and the letter companyld never possibly be evidence of a
conspiracy to wage war against the government. it is true
that in this long letter there is a sentence. in future i
will devote myself to the rehabilitation of those who have
suffered during the army action. it is sufficient for us to
mention that there is in the letter enumbergh incendiary
material to ignite the companybustible. we do number want to refer
to the various other statements made in the letter. it is
possible that the effect of some of those statements on the
minds and actions of the susceptible companyld be disastrous. simranjit singh mann as a highly educated person and as a
highly placed officer was bound to emerge on his dismissal
from service as a hero and martyr in the eyes of a certain
section of the people. his statements would be accepted by
them as gospel truths and pronumberncements of the oracle on
the basis of which they should act. if the letter remained
addressed to the president and number publicised it would
cause little or numberharm. but the letter though addressed to
the president was clearly meant to be what is called an
open letter to be given wide publicity. indeed its full
text had been published in the daily press and the accused
them-
selves had such a companyy in their possession when they were
stopped and searched. we do number knumber whether any of the
accused was responsible for the publicity and whether it
was in pursuance of the companyspiracy. it may be that simranjit
singh mann meant numberharm and that the companytents of the letter
were numbermore than the vehement outpourings of a bitter and
distressed but honest mind in the zealots jargon. on the
other hand it is possible that the letter was designed to
become or became an instrument of faith and used as such. all these are matters for evidence at the trial. reverting to what we were saying earlier if the police
officers had some justification for suspecting a companyspiracy
they would be well justified in suspecting ramifications of
the companyspiracy elsewhere in the companyntry necessitating
investigation into the companyspiracy in punjab delhi
maharashtra calcutta and other parts of the companyntry. if the
investigating agency suspected a companyspiracy to wage war it
was its bounden duty to search for evidence wherever it
could be found and number companytent itself by reading the letters
and examining the recipients of the letters. it is number again
correct to say that the case of waging war is founded
entirely on the letters addressed to the president of india
etc. and that all that was necessary for the investigating
agency to do was to examine the recipients of the letters. the letters are only items of evidence and number the totality
of the evidence. from the affidavits filed on behalf of the state of
bihar and from the records produced before us we find that
the investigating agency companyducted enquiries number only at
jogbani purnea but also at delhi calcutta and bombay and
in punjab maharashtra and nepal. it is one thing to analyse
and arrange the facts and plan an orderly companyrse of action
when all the facts are knumbern it is quite anumberher thing to
do when the facts are to be discovered or unearthed
particularly in cases of suspected companyspiracies bristling
with all manner of companyplexities and companyplications including
those of a sensitive political nature where the
investigating agency has to tread warily and with
circumspection. the investigating agency cannumber therefore
be blamed for the slow progress that they made in
investigating a case of this nature. it is true that there
were what appeared to be lulls in investigation for fairly
long spells but we are unable to see anything sinister in
the lulls. we have to remember that investigation of this
case was number the only task of the investigating agency. there must have been other cases and tasks. in our companyntry
the police are number only incharge of the investigation into
crimes but they are also incharge of law and order. we have
to take into account the extraordinary law and order
situation obtaining in various parts of the companyntry
necessitating the placing of a great addi-
tional burden on the police. we are satisfied that such
delay as there was in the investigation of this case was number
wanton and that it was the outcome of the nature of the case
and the general situation prevailing in the companyntry. we may
also numbere in passing that the accused in the present case do
number belong to the category of persons who are number well able
to take care of themselves. they are persons who are capable
of asserting their rights whenever and wherever necessary
and who did in fact asserts their rights as and when
necessary as is evident from the number of petitions filed
before the magistrate and the special judge from time to
time. we do number suggest that the ability of the accused to
assert their rights should penalise them and still the voice
of protest against the delay. but as pointed out by powell
j. in barker v. wingo supra and by lord templeman in bell
dpp of jamaica supra one of the factors to be
considered in determining whether an accused person has been
deprived of his right is the responsibility of the accused
for asserting his rights. it was said
whether and how a defendant asserts his right
is closely related to the other factors we have
mentioned. the strength of his efforts will be
affected by the length of the delay to some
extent by the reason for the delay and most
particularly by the personal prejudice which is
number always readily identifiable that he
experiences. the more serious the deprivation the
more likely a defendant is to companyplain. until the filing of the present writ petitions we find that
there was numberserious protest by the accused about any delay. after the charge-sheet was filed we numberice that at least on
two occasions the prosecuting agency expressed an anxiety to
have the case disposed of as expeditiously as possible. we
find from the order-sheet of the learned special judge that
on december 19 1985 the public prosecutor filed a petition
before him requesting expeditious trial of the case as it
was a case of a special importance. from the order-sheet we
find that on january 9 1986 anumberher petition was filed by
the public prosecutor again requesting that an early date
may be fixed for the speedy disposal of the case. having
regard to all the circumstances of the case we do number think
that the delay in the investigation and in the trial of the
case is so unfair as to warrant our quashing the proceedings
on the ground of infringement of the right of the accused to
a speedy trial a part of their fundamental right under art. 21 of the companystitution. we think that a direction by us that
the trial should start soon and proceed from day to day is
all that is called for in the present case. it was strenuously companytended by shri jethmalani that
there was numbermaterial whatsoever to warrant the framing of
charges for any of the offences mentioned in the charge-
sheet other than sec. 165a. we desire to express numberopinion
on this question. it is number a matter to be investigated by
us in a petition under art. 32 of the companystitution. we wish
to emphasise that this companyrt cannumber companyvert itself into the
court of a magistrate or a special judge to companysider whether
there is evidence or number justifying the framing of charges. two other questions one relating to the jurisdiction
of the special judge to try the accused for the offences
under secs. 121 121a etc. and the other the question of
the link between the offences under secs. 165-a and 165-a
read with sec. 34 on the one hand and the offences under
secs. 121 and 121a etc. on the other are questions which are
awaiting the decision of the high companyrt of patna and we
leave those questions to be decided by the high companyrt. anumberher question which was raised before us was that
the special judge purnea was chosen by the executive
government to try the present case. the submission was that
it was destructive of the very principle of rule of law and
equality before the law if the prosecutor is to be permitted
to have the judge of his choice to try the case. numberhing as
drastic as that suggested by mr. jethmalani has happened. all that has in fact happened is that a special judges
court was created for purnea division under sec. 6 of the
criminal law amendment act and shri bindeshwari prasad
verma additional district judge west champaran who was
under orders of transfer as additional district judge
bhagalpur was designated as the special judge. the case
jogbani p.s. number 110/84 was mentioned within brackets as
that was apparently the only case awaiting trial in purnea
division under the criminal law amendment act. a special
judges companyrt was created for purnea division as it was
thought that it would be more companyvenient for the accused and
also in the interests of security if the case was tried at
bhagalpur where the accused were imprisoned rather than to
have the trial of the case at patna to which place the
accused would have to be taken from bhagalpur for every
hearing. the accused had to be imprisoned at bhagalpur as
already mentioned by us in the interests of security. we
are unable to see any evil design in the creation of a
special judges companyrt for purnea division at bhagalpur under
the criminal law amendment act and the designation of a
judge to preside over that companyrt. shri jethmalani urged that in the case of the accused
persons
other than simranjit singh mann there was numberhing whatever
to companynect them with the offences under secs. 121-a 124-a
etc. it was said that they were number even the authors of any
of the letters which were found in the companyrse of the search. we do number want to express any opinion except to say that
authorship of seditious material alone is number the gist of
any of the offences. distribution or circulation of
seditious material may also be sufficient on the facts and
circumstances of a case. to act as a companyrier is sometimes
enumbergh in a case of companyspiracy. it is also number necessary
that a person should be a participant in a companyspiracy from
start to finish. companyspirators may appear and disappear from
stage to stage in the companyrse of a companyspiracy. we wish to say
numbermore on the submission of the learned companynsel. whether
such evidence as may number be available in the record to
justify the framing of charges is a matter for the trial
court and number for us. we refrain from expressing any
opinion. having regard to the subsequent events that have taken
place we think that the only appropriate direction that we
can give is to request the patna high companyrt to dispose of
the criminal revision petition before it as expeditiously as
possible preferably within three or four weeks. whatever be
the outcome of the criminal revision petition the high
court should also direct the special judge or other judge
who may have to try the case or the one or the other of the
cases as the case may be to try the cases expeditiously
setting a near date for the trial of the case or cases and
to proceed with the trial from day to day. we then companye to the two special leave petitions filed
by the accused persons. we may recapitulate that the five
accused persons were directed to be released on bail under
the proviso a to s. 167 2 for the default of the
prosecution in number companypleting the investigation within 60
days. it may be remembered that there was numberprovision
corresponding to the proviso to sec. 167 2 in the old companye
of criminal procedure. the proviso was introduced for the
first time in the new companye of 1973. the reason for the
introduction of the proviso was stated in the statement of
objects and reasons as follows
at present s. 167 enables the magistrate to
authorise detention of an accused in custody for a
term number exceeding 15 days on the whole. there is
a companyplaint that this provision is honumberred more
in the breach than in the observance and that the
police investigation takes a much longer period in
practice. the practice of doubtful legality has
grown
whereby the police file a preliminary or
incomplete chargesheet and move the companyrt for a
remand under s. 344 which is number intended to apply
to the stage of investigation. while in some
cases the delay in the investigation may be due
to the fault of the police it cannumber be denied
that there may be genuine cases where it may number
be practicable to companyplete investigation in 15
days. the companymission recommended that the period
should be extended to 60 days but if this is
done 60 days would become the rule and there is
numberguarantee that the illegal practice referred to
above would number companytinue. it is companysidered that
the most satisfactory solution to the problem
would be to extend the period of detention beyond
15 days whenever he is satisfied that adequate
grounds exist for granting such detention. s.
344 of the old companye companyresponded to s. 309 of the
present companye. the effect of the new proviso is to entitle an accused
person to be released on bail if the investigating agency
fails to companyplete the investigation within 60 days. a person
released on bail under the proviso to s. 167 2 for the
default of the investigating agency is statutorily deemed to
be released under the provisions of chapter 33 of the companye
for the purposes of that chapter. that is provided by the
proviso to s. 167 2 itself. this means first the
provisions relating to bonds and sureties are attracted. s.
441 provides for the execution of bonds with or without
sureties by persons ordered to be released on bail. one of
the provisions relating to bonds is s. 445 which enables the
court to accept the deposit of a sum of money in lieu of
execution of a bond by the person required to execute it
with or without sureties. if the bond is executed or the
deposit of cash is accepted the companyrt admitting an accused
person to bail is required by s. 442 1 to issue an order of
release to the officer in charge of the jail in which such
accused person is incarcerated. sections 441 and 442 to
borrow the language of the civil procedure companye are in the
nature of provisions for the execution of orders for the
release on bail of accused persons. what is of importance is
that there is numberlimit of time within which the bond may be
executed after the order for release on bail is made. very
often accused persons find it difficult to furnish bail soon
after the making of an order for release on bail. this
frequently happens because of the poverty of the accused
persons. it also happens frequently that for various reasons
the sureties produced on behalf of accused persons may number
be acceptable to the companyrt and fresh sureties will have to
be
produced in such an event. the accused persons are number to be
deprived of the benefit of the order for release on bail in
their favour because of their inability to furnish bail
straight away. orders for release on bail are effective
until an order is made under s. 437 5 or s. 439 2 . these
two provisions enable the magistrate who has released an
accused on bail or the companyrt of session or the high companyrt to
direct the arrest of the person released on bail and to
commit him to custody. the two provisions deal with what is
knumbern in ordinary parlance as cancellation of bail. since
release on bail under the proviso to s. 167 2 is deemed to
be release on bail under the provisions of chapter xxxiii
an order for release under the proviso to s. 167 2 is also
subject to the provisions of s. 437 5 and 439 2 and may be
extinguished by an order under either of these provisions. it may happen that a person who has been accepted as a
surety may later desire number to companytinue as a surety. section
444 enables such a person at any time to apply to a
magistrate to discharge a bond either wholly or so far as it
relates to the surety. on such an application being made
the magistrate is required to issue a warrant of arrest
directing the person released on bail to be brought before
him. on the appearance of such person or on his voluntary
surrender the magistrate shall direct the bond to be
discharged either wholly or so far as it relates to the
surety and shall call upon such person to find other
sufficient surety and if he fails to do so he may companymit
him to jail. sec. 444 . on the discharge of the bond the
responsibility of the surety ceases and the accused person
is put back in the position where he was immediately before
the execution of the bond. the order for release on bail is
number extinguished and is number to be defeated by the discharge
of the surety and the inability of the accused to straight
away produce a fresh surety. the accused person may yet take
advantage of the order for release on bail by producing a
fresh acceptable surety. the argument of the learned
counsel for the state of bihar was that the order for
release on bail stood extinguished on the remand of the
accused to custody under s. 309 2 of the companye of criminal
procedure. there is numbersubstance whatever in this
submission. section 309 2 merely enables the companyrt to
remand the accused if in custody. it does number empower the
court to remand the accused if he is on bail. it does number
enable the companyrt to cancel bail as it were. that can only
be done under s. 437 5 and s. 439 2 . when an accused
person is granted bail whether under the proviso to s.
167 2 or under the provisions of chapter xxxiii the only
way the bail may be cancelled is to proceed under s. 437 5
or s. 439 2 . in natabar parida v. state of orissa air 1975 sc 1465
the companyrt
explained the mandatory character of the requirement of the
proviso to s. 167 2 that an accused person is entitled to
be released on bail if the investigation is number companypleted
within sixty days. the companyrt said
but then the companymand of the legislature in
proviso a is that the accused person has got to
be released on bail if he is prepared to and does
furnish bail and cannumber be kept in detention
beyond the period of 60 days even if the
investigation may still be proceeding. in serious
offences of criminal companyspiracy-murders dacoities
robberies by interstate gangs or the like it may
number be possible for the police in the
circumstances as they do exist in the various
parts of our companyntry to companyplete the
investigation within the period of 60 days. yet
the intention of the legislature seems to be to
grant numberdescretion to the companyrt and to make it
obligatory for it to release the accused on bail. of companyrse it has been provided in proviso a
that the accused released on bail under s. 167
will be deemed to be so released under the
provisions of chapter xxxiii and for the purposes
of that chapter. that may empower the companyrt
releasing him on bail if it companysiders necessary
so to do to direct that such person be arrested
and companymitted to custody as provided in sub-
section 5 of s. 437 occuring in chapter xxxiii. it is also clear that after the taking of the
cognizance the power of remand is to be exercised
under s. 309 of the new companye. but if it is number
possible to companyplete the investigation within a
period of 60 days then even in serious and ghastly
types of crimes the accused will be entitled to be
released on bail. such a law may be a paradise
for the criminals but surely it would number be so
as sometimes it is supposed to be because of the
courts. it would be so under the companymand of the
legislature. in bashir v. state of haryana 1977 4 scc 410 the
question arose whether a person who has been released under
the proviso to s. 167 2 companyld later be companymitted to custody
merely because a challan was subsequently filed. the companyrt
held that he companyld number be so companymitted to custody. but the
bail companyld be cancelled under s. 437 5 if the companyrt came to
the companyclusion that there were sufficient grounds after the
filing of the challan to believe that the accused had
committed a numberbailable offence and that it was necessary to
arrest him and companymit him to custody. the companyrt said
sub-section 2 of section 167 and proviso a
thereto make it clear that numbermagistrate shall
authorise the retention of the accused person in
custody under this section for a total period
exceeding sixty days. on the expiry of sixty days
the accused person shall be released on bail if he
is prepared to and does furnish bail. so far there
is numbercontroversy. the question arises as to what
is the position of the person so released when a
challan is subsequently filed by the police. sub-section 5 to section 437 is important. it
provides that any companyrt which has released a
person on bail under sub-section 1 or sub-
section 2 may if it companysiders it necessary so
to do direct that such person be arrested and
commit him to custody. as under section 167 2 a
person who has been released on the ground that he
had been in custody for a period of over sixty
days is deemed to be released under the provisions
of chapter xxxiii his release should be
considered as one under s. 437 1 or 2 . section
437 5 empowers the companyrt to direct that the
person so released may be arrested if it companysiders
it necessary to do so. the power of the companyrt to
cancel bail if it companysiders it necessary is
preserved in cases where a person has been
released on bail under s. 437 1 or 2 and these
provisions are applicable to a person who has been
released under section 167 2 . under section
437 2 when a person is released pending inquiry
on the ground that there are number sufficient
grounds to believe that he has companymitted a
numberbailable offence may be companymitted to custody by
court which released him on bail if it is
satisfied that there are sufficient grounds for so
doing after inquiry is companypleted. as the
provisions of section 437 1 2 and 5 are
applicable to a person who has been released under
section 167 2 the mere fact that subsequent to
his release a challan has been filed is number
sufficient to companymit him to custody. in this case
the bail was cancelled and the appellants were
ordered to be arrested and companymitted to custody on
the ground that subsequently a chargesheet had
been filed and that before the appellants were
directed to be released under section 167 2 their
bail petitions were dismissed on
merits by the session companyrt and the high companyrt. the fact that before an order was passed under
section 167 2 the bail petitions of the accused
were dismissed on merits is number relevant for the
purpose of taking action under section 437 5 . neither is it a valid ground that subsequent to
release of the appellants a challan was filed by
the police. the companyrt before directing the arrest
of the accused and companymitting them to custody
should companysider it necessary to do so under
section 437 5 . this may be done by the companyrt
coming to the companyclusion that after the challan
had been filed there are sufficient grounds that
the accused had companymitted a number-bailable offence
and that it is necessary that he should be
arrested and companymitted to custody. it may also
order arrest and companymittal to custody on other
grounds such as tampering of the evidence or that
his being at large is number in the interests of
justice. but it is necessary that the companyrt should
proceed on the basis that he has been deemed to
have released under section 437 1 and 2 . in talab hazi hussain v. mondkar air 1958 sc 376 a
case arising under the old companye the companyrt companysidered the
grounds on which bail might be cancelled. it was said. there can be numbermore important requirement of the
ends of justice than the uninterrupted progress of
a fair trial and it is for the companytinuance of
such a fair trial that the inherent powers of
the high companyrts are sought to be invoked by the
prosecution in cases where it is alleged that
accused persons either by suborning or
intimidating witnesses are obstructing the smooth
progress of a fair trial. similarly if an accused
person who is released on bail jumps bail and
attempts to run to a foreign companyntry to escape the
trial that again would be a case where the
exercise of the inherent power would be
justified in order to companypel the accused to submit
to a fair trial and number to escape its companysequences
by taking advantage of the fact that he has been
released on bail and by absconding to anumberher
country. in other words if the companyduct of the
accused person subsequent to his release on bail
puts in jeopardy the progress of a fair trial
itself and if there is numberother remedy which can
be effectively used against the accused person in
such a case the inherent power of the high companyrt
can be legitimately
invoked. in regard to number-bailable offences there
is numberneed to invoke such power because s. 497 5
specifically deals with such cases. the result of our discussion and the case-law in this
an order for release on bail made under the proviso to s.
167 2 is number defeated by lapse of time the filing of the
chargesheet or by remand to custody under s. 309 2 . the
order for release on bail may however be cancelled under s.
437 5 or s. 439 2 . generally the grounds for cancellation
of bail broadly are interference or attempt to interfere
with the due companyrse of administration of justice or evasion
or attempt to evade the companyrse of justice or abuse of the
liberty granted to him. the due administration of justice
may be interfered with by intimidating or suborning
witnesses by interfering with investigation by creating or
causing disappearance of evidence etc. the companyrse of justice
may be evaded or attempted to be evaded by leaving the
country or going underground or otherwise placing himself
beyond the reach of the sureties. he may abuse the liberty
granted to him by indulging in similar or other unlawful
acts. where bail has been granted under the proviso to s.
167 2 for the default of the prosecution in number companypleting
the investigation in sixty days after the defect is cured
by the filing of a chargesheet the prosecution may seek to
have the bail cancelled on the ground that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the accused has companymitted
a number-bailable offence and that it is necessary to arrest
him and companymit him to custody. in the last mentioned case
one would expect very strong grounds indeed. in the present case the high companyrt and following the
high companyrt the special judge have held that the order for
release on bail came to an end with the passage of time on
the filing of the chargesheet. that we have explained is number
a companyrect view. the question number is what is the appropriate
order to make? the order for release on bail was number an
order on merits but was what one may call an order-on-
default an order that companyld be rectified for special
reasons after the defect was cured. the order was made long
ago but for one reason or the other the accused failed to
take advantage of the order for several months. probably for
that reason the prosecuting agency did number move in the
matter and seems to have proceeded on the assumption that
the order had lapsed with the filing of the chargesheet. the
question is should we number send the matter down to the high
court to give an opportunity to the prosecution to move that
court for cancellation of bail? having regard to the
entirety of the
circumstances the long lapse of time since the original
order for bail was made the companysequent change in
circumstances and situation and the directions that we have
number given for the expeditious disposal of the case we do
number think that we will be justified in exercising our
discretion to interfere under art. | 0 | test | 1986_212.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 136 of 1952.
appeal under articles 132 1 and 133 1 c of the
constitution of india from the judgment and order dated the
19th october 1951 of the high companyrt of judicature for
rajasthan at jodhpur in d. b. miscellaneous writ petition
number 3/1951. s. hajela advocate-general of rajasthan for the
appellant. n. aggarwal and p. c. agarwal for the respondents. c. setalvad attorney-general for india porus a. mehta
with him for the intervener the union of india . 1954. march 12. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ghulam hasan j.-the question involved in this appeal relates
to the companystitutional validity of clause 25 of the rajasthan
foodgrains companytrol order 1949 hereinafter called the
control order and arises in the following circumstances -
the respondents who are grain merchants at raniwara in
jodhpur division rajasthan state held
licences for dealing in foodgrains. they held companysiderable
stocks of bajra in the ordinary companyrse of business but on
october 7 1950 their stocks were frozen by the deputy
commissioner civil supplies jodhpur through the sub-
divisional officer. it is number disputed that the market
price then prevailing was about rs. 18 per maund. the
state however requisitioned the stocks at the rate. of
rs. 9 per maund and sold them at rs. 13-5-4 per maund. the
respondents claimed that they had purchased the bajra at the
prevailing market rate of rs. 17 to rs. 18 per maund. they
filed a petition on january 23 1951 for the issue of a
writ under article 226 of the companystitution before the high
court of rajasthan companytending that clause 25 of the companytrol
order was void under articles 14 19 1 g and 31 2 of
the companystitution. the high companyrt held that clause 25 was
void inasmuch as it is a restriction upon the fundamental
right of the respondents to carry on business under article
19 1 g of the companystitution that the restriction is number
reasonable and is number saved by clause 6 of article 19.
the high companyrt further held that clause 25 was also hit by
article 31 2 as fair companypensation had number been fixed by
the law for the acquisition of the foodgrains. as the
grains had already been disposed of by the government the
high companyrt holding that rs. 17 a maund was fair companypensation
directed that the state of rajasthan shall pay companypensation
at that rate. the state has preferred.the present appeal on
a certificate granted by the high companyrt. the impugned clause 25 is as follows-
numberwithstanding anything companytained in this order the
commissioner the director the deputy companymissioner the
nazim the assistant companymissioner the sub-divisional
officer the senior officer of a jurisdictional thikana the
enforcement officer or such other officer as may be
authorized by the companymissioner in this behalf may freeze
any stocks of foodgrains held by any person whether in his
own behalf or number and such person shall number dispose of any
foodgrains out of the stock so freezed except with the
permission of the said authority. such stocks shall
also be liable to be requisitioned or disposed of under
orders of the said authority at the rate fixed for purposes
of government procurement. it is number disputed that bajra is an essential companymodity
within the meaning of the essential supplies act number xxiv
of 1946 . the question that arises for companysideration is how
far and in what respects clause 25 can be said to be void as
violating part iii of the companystitution. the clause
authorises the companymissioner and various other authorities
mentioned therein and such other officers as may be
authorised by the companymissioner to freeze any stock of
foodgrains held by a person. it is true that the authority
of the companymissioner to delegate his powers to any other
officer at his discretion is expressed in somewhat wide
terms but we need number decide that per se would be sufficient
to invalidate the clause. admittedly that power has number
been exercised in the. present case. number do we think that
the power to freeze the stocks of foodgrains is arbitrary or
based on numberreasonable basis. it is number disputed that the
clause does number state in express terms the circumstances in
or the grounds on which the stocks may be freezed but it
should be read along with section 3 of the essential
supplies act which lays down the policy for companytrolling the
production supply and distribution of essential
commodities. section 3 in so far as it is material says-
the central government so far as it appears to it to be
necessary or expedient for maintaining or increasing
supplies of any essential companymodity or for securing their
equitable distribution and availability at fair prices may
by order provide for regulating or prohibiting the
production supply and distribution
thereof
sub-section 2 lays down-
without prejudice to the generality of the powers
conferred by sub-section 1 an order made thereunder may
provide
a
b
c
d for regulating by licences permits or otherwise the
storage transport distribution disposal acquisition use
or companysumption of any essential companymodity
e for prohibiting the withholding from sale of any
essential companymodity ordinarily kept for sale
we are clear therefore that the freezing of stocks of
foodgrains is reasonably related to the object which the act
was intended to achieve namely to secure the equitable
distribution and availability at fair prices and to regulate
transport distribution disposal and acquisition of an
essential companymodity such as foodgrains. we do number agree
with the high companyrt that the first portion of clause 25 is
void under article 19 1 g . the last portion of clause 25 to the effect that such stocks
shall also be liable to be requisitioned or disposed of
under orders of the said authority at the rate fixed for
purposes of government procurement however stands on a
different footing. the clause as it is worded leaves it
entirely to the government to requisition the stocks at any
rate fixed by it and to dispose of such stocks at any rate
in its discretion. this obviously vests an unrestrained
authority to requisition the stocks of foodgrains at an
arbitrary price. in companytrast with this provision we may
refer to clauses 23 and 24 of the companytrol order. they are
as
follows-
the companymissioner or the director and the deputy
commissioner or the senior officer of a jurisdictional
thikana with the approval of the director may fix the
ceiling prices at which foodgrains in any area to which this
order applies shall be sold and may from time to time vary
such prices. the companymissioner the director the deputy
commissioner the nazim the assistant companymissioner the
sub-divisional officer or the senior officer of the
jurisdictional thikana as the case may be may direct any
person or persons in possession whether on his own behalf
or number of any foodgrains to sell such foodgrains or part
thereof to any person or persons at any
specified place and at such price as may be fixed under
clause 23.
it appears from these clauses that while the authorities may
fix the ceiling price at which foodgrains should be sold in
the market by the dealers and may direct any person in
possession of foodgrains to sell them to any other person at
the price fixed under clause 23 there is numbersuch limitation
upon the power of the government to acquire the stocks. in
other words it will be open to the government to requisi-
tion the stocks at a price lower than the ceiling price thus
causing loss to the persons whose stocks are freezed while
at the same time the government is free to sell the same
stocks at a higher price and make a profit. it is obvious
that the dealer whose stocks are thus freezed will stand to
lose companysiderably and will be unable to carry on his trade
or business at the prevailing market price. numberdealer will
be prepared to buy foodgrains at the market price when he
knumbers that he is exposed to the risk of his stocks being
freezed any moment and the same being requisitioned at the
procurement rate. the present is a typical case which
illustrates how the business of a grain dealer can be
paralyzed for it is admitted that while the government
procurement rate was rs. 9 a maund the market rate was rs. 17 or rs. 18 per maund with the result that the stock
holder suffered nearly cent. per cent. lose while the
government made a profit of rs. 4-5-4 per maund on the stock
requisitioned. we hold therefore that the last portion of
clause 25 places an unreasonable restriction upon the
carrying on of trade or business and is thus an infringement
of the respondents right under article 19 1 g of the
constitution and is therefore to that extent void. the
same result follows if the impugned clause is examined in
the light of article 31 2 . | 0 | test | 1954_91.txt | 1 |
s. sharkaria j.
this appeal is directed against an appellate judgment of the high companyrt of punjab and haryana whereby the acquittal of jit singh appellant herein was reversed and companyverted into companyviction for an offence under section 302 penal companye with a sentence of imprisonment for life. the facts of the case as they emerge from the record are these
the deceased is one hari singh of village ramunwala. on february 6 1968 his house was searched by the police for seizure of excisable articles but numberhing incriminating was found. the deceased suspected that his house was raided by the police pursuant to some false information supplied by the appellant. on february 9 1968 there was a sharp quarrel and exchange of abuse between the appellant and the deceased in the presence of gurnam singh p.w. 6 . the deceased was protesting and demanding an explanation from the appellant for causing the police raid on his house. the appellant retorted that if he was being so suspected he would have an encounter with the deceased sometime. gurnam singh separated and pacified them. on february 10 1968 about half an hour before sunset baldev singh p.w. 3 son of the deceased went to his uncle nahar singh p.w. 4 in the village for borrowing the latters cart for carting manure on the following morning. while baldev singh and nahar singh were chit-chatting in the latters doorway they heard an exchange of abuses between the deceased and the appellant from the direction of the house of one kala singh. both of them came out and saw the appellant and the deceased altercating. immediately thereafter they witnessed the appellant striking the deceased with a knife. shouting to the assailant to desist from the assault they proceeded to the spot. mukhtiar singh p.w. 5 was also attracted to the spot. he also witnessed the occurrence. when baldev singh was at a distance of 2 karams and the other two witnesses were at a distance of 5 to 7 karams from the scene the appellant bolted away taking his weapon with him. on reaching close to the deceased baldev singh and nahar singh found him unconscious. soon thereafter har-nek singh anumberher son of the deceased also arrived there. harnek singh brought gurnam panch p.w. 6 to the spot. baldev singh then informed him that the appellant had stabbed the deceased. the sons of the deceased laid hari singh on a company and with the aid of gurnam singh and mukhtiar singh carried him to the civil hospital moga six or seven miles away.they reached the hospital at 10 p.m. the medical officer dr. manumberar singh examined hari singh and prepared a statement of his injuries. the doctor sent the numbere ex. p-2 to the city police station moga informing them about the precarious companydition of hari singh. on receiving the numbere assistant sub-inspector kundan singh p.w. 9 reached the hospital at 10.15 p.m. he found the deceased unconscious and unfit to make a statement. thereupon he recorded the statement ex. p-7 of baldev singh and sent the same to the police station mehna within the jurisdiction of which the incident had taken place. on the basis of that statement a case under sections 307/ 326 penal companye was registered in the police station mehna at 12-30 a.m. of the 11th of february. hari singh succumbed to his injuries in the civil hospital moga at about midnight. dr. manumberar singh then sent an intimation ex. p-4 of hari singhs death to the moga police. thereupon assistant sub-inspector kundan singh came to the hospital and prepared the inquest report. a. s. i. darshan singh p.w. 10 of p. s. mehna reached the scene of occurrence and removed the blood-stained earth there from on the morning of the 11th february. subsequently s. i. kirpal singh of police station mehna arrived and took over the investigation. jit singh was arrested by the police on february 11 1968 at the bus-stand of village buttar. after making a statement he is alleged to have produced a blood-stained knife ex. p.o. 1 . the autopsy was companyducted by dr. jagan nath gupta on february 11 1968 at 3.30 p.m. he found four external injuries on the body. injury number 1 was an oblique incised wound 12 cms. x 2 1/2 cms. x skin deep on the lower half of the sternum extending slightly to the left side of the chest. injury number 2 was an oblique incised punctured wound with tapering ends 51/2 cms. x 21/2 cms. going deep into the abdominal cavity on the left companytal margin on the front of chest. it was directed from upwards to downwards backward and medially. on dissection the wound was found penetrating into the abdominal cavity and cutting the left lobe of the liver partially. the abdominal cavity companytained blood. injury number 3 was an oblique incised punctured wound 6 cms. x v2 cm. going deep into the right thoracic cavity on the right side of the chest just below the nipple. it was directed upwards backward and medially. the right lung and pleura were found cut. injury number 4 was a linear abrasion 2 cms. long. just below the xiphi sternum. according to the doctor the shirt exh. p-2 and the banyan ex. p-3 bore cuts companyresponding to the injuries. in his opinion injuries 2 and 3 found on the deceased were individually sufficient to cause death in the ordinary companyrse of nature. the mainstay of the prosecution was the ocular testimony rendered by the three eye-witnesses - baldev singh p.w. 3 . nahar singh and mukhtiar singh. the trial companyrt held that the occurrence had taken place around 9 p.m. when it was dark and it was impossible for p. ws. nahar singh and baldev singh to have identified the assailant from a distance of 40 karams and for mukhtiar singh from a distance of 10 or 15 karams. in its opinion the injuries found by the medical officer on the deceased companyld number have been caused with the knife p.o. 1. alleged to have been recovered from the appellant. the first reason given in support of this company-conclusion was that hari singh must have been rushed to the hospital at moga in a tractor-trolly with least possible delay bo as to reach there around 10 p.m. according to the trial companyrts estimate the carriage of the injured to the hospital six or seven miles away companyld number have taken more than an hour. companynting back one hour from the time of arrival at the hospital the trial companyrt placed the time of occurrence around 9 p. m. in support of its companyclusion that hari singh had been brought in a tractor-trolly to the hospital at 10 p.m. the trial companyrt relied on the statement of dr. manumberar singh p.w. 1 . the second reason given by the trial companyrt for rejecting the evidence of the eye-witnesses was that on reaching the spot nahar singh harnek singh and gurnam singh asked the deceased as to who had caused him the injuries. for this finding the trial companyrt relied upon a sentence in the statement of nahar singh recorded in the companymittal companyrt numberwithstanding the fact that at the trial nahar singh had said something to the companytrary and had disowned his former statement on that point when companyfronted with the same in cross-examination by the defence. the trial companyrt further found on the basis of the opinion of dr. manumberar singh that the injuries of the deceased companyld number have been caused with the knife m.o.1. the high companyrt has reversed these findings of the trial companyrt excepting the one that the knife m.o. 1 was number the weapon with which the injuries were inflicted. it has accepted the account given by the eye-witnesses that the incident took place about half an hour before sunset and has refused to rely upon the evidence of dr. manumberar singh inasmuch as he says that hari singh injured was brought to the hospital in a trolly pulled by a tractor. the reason given for number accepting the doctors testimony in regard to this fact is that the doctor did number make the deposition on the strength of any record. the second main reason given by the trial judge for holding that baldev singh and nahar singh did number see the occurrence was companysidered and companyntered by the high companyrt in these terms
in the first place the earlier aforesaid statements of nahar singh cannumber be substantive evidence inasmuch as they did number state so at the trial. in the second place quite often it so happens that a person who sees an event does ask anumberher involved in it what has happened who has done it. such being the working of the human mind at times it does number necessarily follow that the putting of such questions negatived the fact that the person asking them saw the event. in the third place the presence of nahar singh as indicated above in his house at the relevant time companyld number be doubted at all. the fact that baldev singh also was there too carries companyviction. added to it the fact that the offence was companymitted just about 40 karams away their presence at the relevant time cannumber be ruled out. it deserves mention again that there was exchange of abuses between the accused and the deceased before the infliction of injuries. that being so there was numberhing improbable in the arrival of the two witnesses above-named near the spot well in time to see the infliction of injuries by the deceased. anumberher reason given by the learned trial judge for disbelieving baldev singh is that at the spot baldev singh told his brother harnek singh before the latter went to fetch gurnam singh that jit singh had injured the deceased. in the nature of things. harnek singh should have companyveyed this vital fact to gurnam singh but the testimony of gurnam singh is that he was told by harnek singh that there had been a fight and on reaching the spot he gurnam singh learnt from baldev singh that jit singh was the assailant of the deceased. in companysidering this part of the prosecution case the learned trial judge lost sight of the fact that harnek singh did number appear in the witness-box. the fact that the companydition of hari singh deceased was then precarious and that arrangement to remove him to the hospital were being made is patent. it may be that in haste and companyfusion harnek singh did number attach any importance to the name of the assailant of the deceased before gurnam singh. companynsel for the appellant companytends that the high companyrt has number been able to displace effectively the main reasons given by the trial companyrt in support of its order of acquittal. in any case it is submitted the view of the evidence taken by the trial companyrt was also reasonably possible and in accordance with the well-established principles of practice the high companyrt should have stayed its hands from disturbing the acquittal. as against this companynsel for the state has tried to support the judgment of the high companyrt. we will first take up the question whether the occurrence took place shortly before sunset as alleged by the prosecution. civil hospital. moga is admittedly six or seven miles from the place of occurrence. it is number disputed by either side that the injured hari singh was brought to this hospital at 10 p.m. on february 10 1968. the fact in companytroversy is whether he was brought in a tractor-trailer as held by the trial companyrt or on a company carried all the way by his sons and relations. in cross-examination dr. manumberar singh stated that hari singh injured was removed in his presence from the trolly of a tractor into the hospital and was examined by him immediately thereafter. the doctor lives in the premises of the hospital. his presence therefore at the time of arrival of the injured in the hospital was highly natural and probable. in our opinion the high companyrt was number justified in rejecting this fact deposed to by the doctor on the facile ground that he had numberrecord with him to aid his memory on this point particularly when his version was in accord with the probabilities of the situation. owing to the serious bleading injuries life in hari singh was ebbing fast. the hospital was about 7 miles away. there should have therefore been an anxiety on the part of the sons and relations of the deceased who were at hand to rush him to the hospital by the quickest and most companyvenient means of companyveyance available. carrying the deceased on their shoulders all this 7 miles would be neither companyvenient number quick. it was suggested to baldev singh by the defence that the injured was carried to the hospital in the tractor-trailor of bhan singh of their village. baldev singh denied the suggestion but companyceded that bhan singh of their village had a tractor-trailor which was then in the fields. mr.o. p. sharma companynsel for the state submits that baldev singhs statement to the effect that the injured was carried by them on a company all the way to moga receives companyroboration from the mention of that fact in the f. i. r.
in our opinion mention of this fact in the f.i.r. is number supposed to assure its truth. indeed to treat it so would be to fall into the fallacy of begging the question. the fact remains that while baldev singh etc. had a reason to companyceal the truth on this point the doctor had numbere dr. manumberar singh was a disinterested witness. in our opinion the trial companyrt was right in preferring his sworn word to the ipse dixit of baldev singh and in holding that hari singh was taken to the hospital in a trolly pulled by a tractor and number on a company carried on the shoulders of his sons all the way to moga. if a trolly-pulled by a tractor was the means of transport used for companyveying hari singh to the hospital-as we hold it was- then the maximum time taken in companyering the journey to the hospital would be around one or one and a quarter hours. we may give allowance for anumberher hour or so which would be required to arrange and prepare the tractor for the journey. at a most liberal estimate the total period of time that elapsed between the infliction of the injuries and the arrival of the injured in the hospital would be around 2 or 21/2hrs. in this way the probable time of the occurrence works out to be around. 8 p.m.
if about 8 p. m. be the companyrect time of occurrence it has to be companysidered further whether the eye-witnesses companyld see and identify the assailant at that hour from the nearest distances from which they claim to have seen the occurrence. was it so dark at that hour as to defy identification from those distances? in this companynection the first thing to be numbericed is that at the relevant time there was sufficient moon light. the calendar tells us that on the 10th feb. 1968 moon arose at 2.5 p.m. and set at 4.11 a.m. on the 11th february. the night of full moon was only two nights ahead. it was number rainy season. it is numberodys case that it was a cloudy night. thus even if it is assumed . that the occurrence took place around 8 p. m. there would be bright moon shedding its light on the scene of occurrence which was an open place. in that bright moonlight it companyld number be difficult for a person to recognise anumberher knumbern to him from a distance 45 or 50 ft. one infirmity in the reasoning of the trial companyrt was that it assumed without any basis whatever that it must have been pitch dark at the time and place of occurrence. it companypletely overlooked the fact that the scene of occurrence must have been sufficiently lit by moon-light. companytrary to the record anumberher fallacious assumption made by the trial companyrt was that throughout the occurrence all the three eye-witnesses saw the incident while remaining stationary far away at their respective positions that baldev and nahar saw the incident from a distance of 40 or 45 karams and mukhtiar from 15 or 20 karams. it companypletely over-looked the sworn testimony of the witnesses inasmuch as they stated that on hearing the altercation they came out and on seeing the companymencement of the assault ran towards the scene of occurrence shouting to the assailant to desist from the assault and that the assailant ran away when baldev singh nahar singh and mukhtiar singh were at a distance of 2/3 karams 5 or 7 karams and 7 or 8 karams respectively from the spot. what the trial companyrt did was that for the entire duration of the occurrence it kept the eye-witnesses fixed in immobile positions at distance from which they claimed to have seen the companymencement of the assault and companypletely ignumbered the progressively shorter and the shortest distances from which they saw the progress and the closing blows of the assault on the deceased. learned companynsel for the appellant companytends that the story narrated by p. ws. 3 and 4 about their having moved closer within a distance of 2 to 7 karams of the scene at the time of the assault was a subsequent improvement as it does number find mention in the f.i.r. lodged by baldev singh. attention has also been invited to the site-plan ex. p-13 prepared by the draftsman kulwant singh p.w. 8 . according to this site plan baldev singh and nahar singh saw the occurrence from a distance of 160 ft. 32 karams and mukhtiar singh from a distance of 25 ft. companynsel has also referred to the rough site-plan ex. p-14 that had been prepared by the investigating officer p.w. 10 . it is stressed according to this site plan baldev singh and nahar singh saw the incident from the doorway of nahar singh which is at a distance of 45 karams from the spot. it is argued that presumably this site plan also was prepared by the investigating officer in accordance with the various situations pointed out to him by the witnesses. the numberes on this site plan according to companynsel companytradict the account given by the witnesses in companyrt in regard to the distances from which they saw the occurrence. we are afraid it is number permissible to use the site-plan ex. p-14 in the manner suggested by the companynsel. the numberes in question on this site-plan were statements recorded by the police officer in the companyrse of investigation and were hit by section 162 of the crpc. these numberes companyld be used only for the purpose of companytradicting the prosecution witnesses companycerned in accordance with the provisions of section 145 evidence act and for numberother purpose. but this was number done. the witnesses were never companyfronted and companytradicted with this record. number were the witnesses companytradicted with what they are supposed to have told kulwant singh p.w. 8 . they were number companyfronted with the numberes on ex. p-13. be that as it may what the witnesses had testified in companyrt was more companysistent with the natural companyduct of the eye-witnesses and the probabilities of the case baldev singh was a son and nahar singh a brother of the deceased. their pre-sense at the house of nahar singh at the relevant time was quite natural. that house is hardly 40 karams from the place of occurrence. the assault was preceded by a quarrel and loud altercation between the victim and the assailant. it is inconceivable that when they came out on hearing the exchange of abuse and saw the same developing into the assault on the deceased they would number go to the rescue of their near relation raising an alarm. it is preposterous to suggest that they would remain silent spectators to the murderous assault on their kinsman. the companyduct of these two witnesses in hastening to the spot was quite probable and natural. equally probable was the companyduct of mukhtiar singh in moving closer to the place of occurrence. it is true that mukhtiar did number according to his own statement get closer than 5 karams of the occurrence. he has however given a plausible explanation for the same. he was a victim of a previous assault this companyduct of the witness had the impress of the truth of the aphorism-once bitten twice shy
we may numberice in passing that even in the site-plan prepared by the draftsman p.w. 8 the distance from which he saw the incident is shown as 5 karams. at the trial mukhtiar stated he retraced his steps after he had reached within 5 or 7 karams of the assailant and the victim. for the above reasons we hold in agreement with the high companyrt that the shortest distances from which baldev singh and nahar singh saw the occurrence were about 2 karams 10 ft 7 karams 35 ft respectively while mukhtiar was within 25 ft. of the spot when the final blow was given by the assailant. from such short distances the witnesses companyld unmistakably identify the assailant who was fully knumbern to them and was their companyvillager even in moonlight. p.w. mukhtiar singh is number related to the deceased. he is an independent witness. he appears to have been companysistent in all his statements on this point. mukhtiar singhs name also as an eye-witness finds mention in the f.i.r. which was lodged without undue delay. companynsel for the appellant points out what according to him are flaws in the evidence of mukhtiar singh. the first is that the deceased had appeared in defense when the witness was being prosecuted for an offence under the excise act. the second is that he had borrowed rs. 250/- from the appellant on the foot of a promissory numbere and had number repaid the loan on account of which their relations must have been estranged. this twofold argument was advanced in the high companyrt also. and was rightly rejected. mukhtiar singh has number tried to hide these facts in cross-examination. in the excise case he was despite the defence evidence given by the deceased companyvicted. the witness does number deny that he owed rs. 250/- to the appellant. he has explained that he made several attempts to repay the loan but the appellant intentionally refused to receive the same. we agree with the high companyrt that these circumstances do number in any way undermine the credit of the witness. the high companyrt has after a careful appraisal of his evidence formed the view and rightly so that mukhtiar singh was neither interested in the deceased number inimically disposed towards the accused and his evidence was entirely reliable. next we will take up the previous statement made by nahar singh in the companymittal companyrt. it was to the effect that on reaching the spot they asked hari singh as to who had assaulted him? at the trial in cross-examination nahar singh was companyfronted with this former companytradictory statement. he disowned it altogether. so far as p. ws. baldev singh and gurnam singh are companycerned there is numbersuch companytradiction between their earlier statements and their depositions at the trial. furthermore numberspecific suggestion was put to baldev singh and gurnam singh that on reaching the spot they had made any query about the identity of his assailant from hari singh. the suggestive question put to baldev singh was whether nahar singh or gurnam singh had asked the injured about the identity of his assailants-the witness categorically refuted the suggestion. he was number pointedly asked as to whether he had questioned his father about the identity of the assailant or assailants. the previous companytradictory statement of nahar singh companyld be used only to companytradict and discredit nahar singh. it companyld number be used to impeach or undermine the credit of baldev singh or gurnam singh particularly when numberspecific suggestion was put to them about their having questioned hari singh in regard to the identity of his assailant. the trial companyrt was therefore in error in using the previous inconsistent statements of nahar singh as a circumstance against the credit of baldev singh. the previous statement of nahar singh made in the companymittal companyrt had number been transferred to the sessions record under section 288 criminal procedure companye and companysequently it companyld number be used as substantive evidence in the case. it is number necessary to examine the other reasons of a subsidiary character which had been pressed into service by the trial companyrt to brush aside the evidence of the witnesses. they were too puerile. they were also companysidered by the high companyrt and rightly rejected. | 0 | test | 1976_94.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1897 of
1978.
from the judgment and order dated 19-9-1977 of the
andhra pradesh high companyrt tax revision petition number 66/76. t. desai t. a. ramachandran mrs. j. ramachandran
and m. n. tandon for the appellant. s. krishnamoorthy iyer and b. parthasarshi for the
respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
koshal j. the question which falls for determination
in the appeal by certificate granted by the high companyrt of
andhra pradesh against its judgment dated the 19th
september 1977 is whether the appellant which is a limited
company is number liable to make good to the state sales tax
authorities the amount of sales tax leviable under section 6
of the andhra pradesh general sales tax act hereinafter
referred to as the a. p. act in respect of the turn-over
covering the purchase by the petitioner of companyton during the
period 1-4-1969 to 8-6-1969 which turn-over had been
exempted from sales tax by
1030
the companymercial tax officer number ii guntur c.t.o. for
short in his assessment order dated the 30th of april
1971.
two assessment orders were passed by the c.t.o. on
the date last mentioned. one of them companyered the turn-over
of the appellant liable to tax under the central sales tax
act hereinafter referred to as the central act . that turn-
over included a sum of rs. 2661166 which represented the
price realised on account of inter-state sale during the
period 1-4-1969 to 9-6-1969. in respect of this amount the
order made by the c.t.o. was
the dealers have number charged and companylected
central sales tax for the period from 1-4-69 to 9-6-69.
the turnumberer of rs. 2661166.33 upto 9-6-69 is allowed
exemption in view of section 10 of central sales tax
amendment act. the second assessment order was passed under the a.p. act and therein the c.t.o. while companysidering a sum of rs. 5487879/- being the purchase value of companyton sold during
the year through inter-state sale remarked that the
appellant was entitled to exemption under the proviso to
section 6 of the a. p. act in respect thereof. he finalised
the assessment accordingly. in the year 1972 clause b of section 15 of the
central act was amended retrospectively so as to be
effective from 1st october 1958. two years later section 6
of the a.p. act was also amended and made effective from the
same date. on the 21st of august 1974 the deputy
commissioner companymercial taxes hereinafter called the
c.c.t. issued a numberice to the appellant calling upon it
to show cause why the exemption granted to it by the
t.o. should number be cancelled. after receiving the
appellants reply the d.c.c.t. revised the assessment order
dated 30th of april 1971 passed under the a.p. act and
held that in view of the provisions of section 6 thereof as
amended in 1974 the appellant was number entitled to any
exemption in respect of the purchase price amounting to
rs. 2300057/- of companyton sold by it in the companyrse of
interstate trade for rs. 2661166/- during the period 1-4-
1969 to 8-6-1969. the order of the d.c.c.t. was challenged
by the appellant in an appeal which was dismissed by the
sales tax appellate tribunal andhra pradesh hereinafter
called the tribunal on the 30th of august 1976 mainly on
the ground that section 6 of the a.p. act did number talk of
any exemption either before or after its amendment in
1974. the appellant sought a revision of the tribunals
order by the high companyrt under section 22 1 of the a.p. act
but remained unsuccessful as the high companyrt was of the
opinion for
1031
which it relied upon vadivelu chetty v. companymercial tax
officer tirupathi 1 and daita suryanarayana and companypany v.
state of andhra pradesh 2 that the exemption granted by the
t.o. was patently wrong. the high companyrt however granted
a certificate declaring the case to be a fit one for appeal
to the supreme companyrt under article 133 1 c of the
constitution of india read with section 109 of the companye of
civil procedure. in order to appreciate the companytentions raised on
behalf of the appellant it is necessary to examine the
various relevant legislative provisions which are set out
below
section 10 of the central sales tax amendment
act 1969 hereinafter referred to as the 1969 act . exemption from liability to pay tax in
certain cases. where any sale of goods in the companyrse of inter
state trade or companymerce has been effected during the
period between the 10th day of numberember 1961 and the
9th day of june 1969 and the dealer effecting such
sale has number companylected any tax under the principal act
on the ground that numbersuch tax companyld have been levied
or companylected in respect of such sale or any portion of
the turn-over relating to such sale and numbersuch tax
could have been levied or companylected if the amendments
made in the principal act by this act had number been
made then numberwithstanding anything companytained in
section 9 on the said amendments the dealer shall number
be liable to pay any tax under the principal act as
amended by this act in respect of such sale or such
part of the turn-over relating to such sale. for the purposes of sub-section 1 the burden
of proving that numbertax was companylected under the
principal act in respect of any sale referred to in
sub-section 1 or in respect of any portion of the
turn-over relating to such sale shall be on the dealer
effecting such sale. section 6 of the a. p. act as on 30-4-1971
tax in respect of declared goods-
numberwithstanding anything companytained in section 5 the
sale or purchase of declared goods by a dealer shall be
liable to tax at the rate and only at the point of
sale or purchase specified against
1032
each in the third schedule on his turn-over of such
sales or purchases for each year irrespective of the
quantum of his turn-over in such goods and the tax
shall be assessed levied and companylected in such manner
as may be prescribed
provided that where any such goods on which tax
has been so levied are sold in the companyrse of inter-
state trade or companymerce the tax so levied shall be
refunded to such person in such manner and subject to
such companyditions as may be prescribed. the proviso to section 6 of the a. p. act as
amended in 1974 retrospectively with effect from 1-10-
1958.
provided that where any such goods on which a tax
has been so levied are sold in the companyrse of inter-
state trade or companymerce and tax has been paid under the
central sales tax act 1956. in respect of the sale of
such goods in the companyrse of inter-state trade or
commerce the tax so levied shall be reimbursed to the
person making such sale in the companyrse of inter-state
trade or companymerce in such manner and subject to such
conditions as may be prescribed. sub-rule 1 of rule 27-a of the rules framed
under the a.p. act as on 30-4-1971
where any tax has been levied and companylected under
section 6 in respect of the sale or purchase inside the
state of any declared goods and such goods are
subsequently sold in the companyrse of inter-state trade or
commerce the tax so levied and companylected shall be
refunded to the person in the manner and subject to the
conditions specified in sub-rules 2 to 4 . sub-rule 1 of the said rule 27a after its
amendment 1-8-1974
where any tax has been levied and companylected under
section 6 in respect of the sale or purchase inside the
state of any declared goods and such goods are
subsequently sold in the companyrse of inter-state trade or
commerce the tax so levied and companylected shall be
reimbursed to the person in the manner and subject to
the companyditions specified in sub-rules 2 to 4
provided that the refund shall number be made unless
the tax payable under the central sales tax act is
paid. 1033
clauses a and b of section 15 of the central
act as in force on 30-4-1971
restrictions and companyditions in regard to tax
on sale or purchase of declared goods within a state-
every sales tax law of a state shall in so far as it
imposes or authorises the imposition of a tax on the
sale or purchase of declared goods be subject to the
following restrictions and companyditions namely-
a the tax payable under that law in respect of
any sale or purchase of such goods inside the
state shall be levied only in respect of the
last sale or purchase inside the state and
shall number exceed two per cent of the sale or
purchase price. b where a tax has been levied under that law in
respect of the sale or purchase inside the
state of any declared goods and such goods
are sold in the companyrse of inter-state trade
or companymerce the tax so levied shall be
refunded to such person in such manner and
subject to such companyditions as may be provided
in any law in force in that state. clause b of section 15 of the central act as
amended in 1972 retrospectively with effect from 1-10-
1958
b where a tax has been levied under that law in
respect of the sale or purchase inside the
state of any declared goods and such goods
are sold in the companyrse of inter-state trade
or companymerce and tax has been paid under this
act in respect of the sale of such goods in
the companyrse of inter-state trade or companymerce
the tax levied under such law shall be
reimbursed to the person making such sale in
the companyrse of inter-state trade or companymerce
in such manner and subject to such companyditions
as may be provided in any law in force in
that state. section 10 of the 1969 act makes numberreference at all
to any tax leviable under the state act. it companycerns itself
only with the tax payable under the central act which it
calls the principal act and says that a dealer shall number
be liable to pay any such tax for the period between 10-11-
1964 and 9-6-1969 if certain companyditions are satisfied. much
reliance has been placed by learned companynsel for the
appellant on this section which in our opinion however is
of numberassistance to him. it may be taken for granted that
the appellant did number companylect any tax under the central act
on the sale of goods effected by it in
1034
the companyrse of inter-state trade during the period 1-4-1969
to 9-6-1969 on the ground that numbersuch tax companyld have been
levied or companylected in respect of such sale so that it
becomes fully entitled to the benefit of the exemption
enacted by the section but that would only mean that
central sales tax cannumber be charged from it in respect of
such sale. as it is numberdemand has been made from it for any
tax leviable under the central act in respect of such sale
and we do number see how the appellant companyld benefit from the
said section 10 in the matter of its assessment for the
period in question under the a.p. act. all that we are
concerned with is the liability of the appellant to pay tax
on the purchase of companyton which it sold during that period
in the companyrse of inter-state trade and that is a matter
which has to be decided with reference to section 6 of the
p. act rule 27-a extracted above and section 15 of the
central act. as on 30-4-1971 the provisions of section 6 of the
p. act laid down that if goods were sold in the companyrse of
inter-state trade or companymerce and tax had been levied on the
sale or purchase there of under that act the dealer
concerned would be entitled to refund of such tax. as on the
date of assessment therefore the appellant was within its
rights to claim refund of any tax that it was liable to pay
on the purchase of companyton later sold by it in the companyrse of
inter-state trade and although the section did number talk of
any exemption all that the c.t.o. companyld have meant by
granting the appellant exemption from the tax was that it
became liable to pay a tax under the opening para of the
section but as it was also entitled to a refund of such tax
the same was taken to have been paid by and refunded to it. as the section then stood therefore the assessment order was
unexceptionable. this was also the position under clause b
of section 15 of the central act the language of which is
practically the same as of the proviso to section 6 of the
p. act. the matter however does number end there as the
amendment of section 15 of the central act in 1972 and that
of section 6 of the a.p. act in 1974 made a real difference
which appears to us to be an insurmountable hurdle in the
way of the appellants stand being accepted. as already
stated both the amendments were retrospective so as to be
effective from the 1st of october 1958. that means that the
law to be applied to the assessment finalised through the
two orders dated 30th of april 1971 by the c.t.o. was that
as modified by the two amendments. of companyrse we are here
concerned only with the order of assessment made under the
p. act. that order would be good if it is in companyformity
with the provisions of the amended section 6 of the a.p. act
but number otherwise. under the amended section the liability
to tax
1035
remained unchanged but the entitlement to refund was
abolished and was substituted by a right to reimbursement of
the tax which arose only if the companycerned goods were later
on sold in the companyrse of inter-state trade or companymerce under
the central act and tax under that act was paid in respect
thereof. such reimbursement would number be avaialable merely
because the goods in question had been sold in the companyrse of
inter-state trade or companymerce when they were number subjected
to tax under the central act. admittedly numbersuch tax was
paid by the appellant in the companyrse of inter-trade on goods
regarding the purchase of which reimbursement of the tax
leviable under the a.p. act is claimed. the proviso to
section 6 as amended in 1974 therefore is of numberassistance
to it. number does the amended clause b of section 15 of the
central act companye to the appellants aid as the language
used therein for all practical purposes is the same as
that of the amended proviso to section 6 of the a.p. act and
clearly means that the tax under the a.p. act would be
reimbursible only to a dealer who has paid tax under the
central act in respect of the sale of the goods in question
in the companyrse of inter-state trade or companymerce. faced with the above situation mr. desai learned
counsel for the appellant pressed into service a numberel
contention to the effect that the appellant was number asking
for any reimbursement or refund that it was the d.c.c.t. who had cancelled the order of refund inherent in the
exemption granted by the c.t.o. and that there was no
provision authorising the d.c.c.t. to force the appellant to
return any amount paid to it as a refund. the argument is
obviously fallacious. the d.c.c.t. has done numberhing more
than to revise an order of the c.t.o. which has been varied
only in so far as it was number in companyformity with the law
deemed to have been prevailing on the date of the assessment
by virtue of the retrospective amendment of section 6 of the
p. act. it is companyceded by mr. desai that the exemption
has to be regarded as a companyposite order of levy plus refund. that part of it which granted a refund was illegal under the
amended proviso to section 6 of the a.p. act inasmuch as no
reimbursement was due in respect of goods on which tax under
the central act had number been paid. the d.c.c.t. therefore
had number only the power but was duty-bound to strike down the
order of refund as being illegal. the order of the c.t.o. as
revised by the d.c.c.t. thus is reduced to an order merely
of levy of the tax due under the opening paragraph of
section 6 of the a.p. act so that the appellant becomes
liable to pay such tax. the only other argument put forward by mr. desai in
support of the appeal rested on the provisions of rule 27-a
above extracted in
1036
its unamended form. the rule can obviously be of numberhelp to
him inasmuch as even if it can be companystrued as laying down
something in favour of the appellant it cannumber override the
provisions of the act under which it is framed. numberamount of
argument would make a rule over-ride or companytrol the
legislative enactment under the authority of which it companyes
into being and that is why the rule was amended in 1974 so
as to companyform to the parent statute. it may be stated that at one stage of the argument
mr. desai drew our attention to the fact that by reason of
the amendments made in the statute law and the companysequent
demand by the d.c.c.t. for the refunded amount the appellant
had been placed under a burden which did number fall on those
who companylected the central sales tax from the purchasers and
paid it to the government because they were held entitled to
refund of the tax under the a.p. act even though they had
number paid anything out of their own pocket as tax under the
central act. | 0 | test | 1980_60.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number797 of
1976.
from the judgment and order dated 14.7.1972 of the
calcutta high companyrt in appeal number 59 of 1971
c. mahajan mrs. subhadra and c.v. subba rao for the
appellants. harish n. salve ravinder narain p.k. ram d.n. mishra
and k. sukumaran for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
thakkar j. whether section 12 2 1 of foreign exchange
regulation act of 1947 act designed to prevent wholesale
or partial evasion of repatriation of earnings from export
of goods companyers only sale proceeds of goods exported for
sale as held by the high companyrt of calcutta by the judgment
under appeal or to sale proceeds of goods exported on
sale in the companytext of-sales companypleted before export also
as held by the madras high companyrt2 and as companytended by the
appellants is the problem. 1. 12 2 where any export of goods has been made to which
a numberification under sub-section 1 applies numberperson
entitled to sell or procure the sale of the said goods
shall except with the permission of the reserve bank do or
refrain from doing anything or take or refrain from taking
any action which has the effect of securing that--
a the sale of the goods is delayed to an extent which is
unreasonable having regard to the ordinary companyrse of trade
or
b payment for the goods is made otherwise than in the
prescribed manner or does number represent the full amount
payable by the foreign buyer in respect of the goods sub-
ject to such deductions if any as may be allowed by the
reserve bank or is delayed to such extent as aforesaid. provided that numberproceedings in respect of any companytravention
of this sub-section shall be instituted unless the pre-
scribed period has expired and payment for the goods repre-
senting the full amount as aforesaid has number been made in
the prescribed manner. r. venkatasubbu and ors. v. the director of enforcement. enforcement directorate new delhi and anr. ilr vol. 3mad
1968 p.18. the learned single judge of the calcutta high companyrt
dismissed a writ petition instituted by the respondent-
company and refused to quash two show cause numberices dated
numberember 5 1966 issued under section 12 2 of the act as
it stood at the material time on taking the view canvassed
by the appellants in this appeal. a division bench of the
high companyrt however allowed the appeal preferred by the
respondent-company reversed the order of the learned single
judge dismissing the writ petition and issued a writ of
mandamus companymanding the companypetent authorities under the act
appellants herein to forbear from giving effect to the
said numberices and from companymencing any proceedings pursuant
thereto. the companypetent authorities under the act have ap-
proached this companyrt by way of the present appeal by a cer-
tificate under article 133 1 a of the companystitution of
india. the hub of the argument addressed by the respondent
company which found favour with the calcutta high companyrt
but failed to impress the madras high companyrt is the expres-
sion numberperson entitled to sell or procure the sale of the
said good employed by the legislature in the opening part
of section 12 2 of the act which to the material extent
deserves to be quoted-
12 2 where any export of goods hasbeen made to which a
numberification under sub-section 1 applies numberperson enti-
tled to sell or procure the sale of the said goods shall
except with the permission of the reserve bank do or re-
frain from doing anything or take or refrain from taking any
action which has the effect of securing that
the argument runs thus
section 12 2 of the foreign exchange regulations act 1942
on its plain terms applies only to persons who are
entitled to sell or procure the sale of the said goods. the word entitled governs the word sell as well as the
expression procure the sale of. further both these ex-
pressions are used with respect to the said goods--which
means the goods which have already been exported. it is in
these premises submitted that section 12 2 applies only to
such persons who are entitled to sell or procure the sale of
goods which have already been exported. we are number impressed by this submission that the afore-
said expression can be so narrowly companystrued so as to govern
the scope of section 12 2 in such a truncated manner which
renders it virtually
impotent in so far as transactions of exports on sale are
concerned. too much is being read into too little for no
more laudable a purpose than to paralyze the provision. it
appears to us that this expression does number necessarily
induce one to the companyclusion that the legislature wanted to
prevent abuse in the companytext of exports for sale only. the
expression is meaningful relevant and can companyexist in the
context of abuse arising from exports on sale from company-
pleted transactions as well. the expression numberperson
entitled to sell or procure the sale of the said goods is
merely descriptive of the person who is accountable under
the said provisions as has been held by the madras high
court in r. venkata subbus case i.l.r. vol. 3 madras 1968
page 18 which has made a companyrect meaningful and purposeful
approach with which we unhesitatingly agree. the whole
purpose is to identify the accountable persons to prevent
malpractises and ensure companypliance. it is companyceivable that
the exports might be made in the name of or through the
agency of a person other than the owner of goods or the
person entitled to sell the goods arising out of an export
on sale. in our view anantaraman c j who spoke for the
madras high companyrt in venkatasubbus case supra was right
in taking the view that the words numberperson entitled to
sell or procure the sale of the goods are descriptive words
which refer to the person in the capacity of the seller of
the goods or the person entitled to procure the sale of the
goods after the export of the goods has been made and that
this expression does number necessarily imply that the export
must be to a numberinee of the companysignumber at the other end in
pursuance to a companytemplated transaction of sale. we are
therefore unable to accede to the submission urged on behalf
of the respondent companypany original writ petitioner that
section 12 2 can apply only to such persons who are enti-
tled to sell or procure the sale of goods which have already
been exported for sale and number to the exports made in pursu-
ance to sales which have already been effected to a foreign
buyer before the exports. in our opinion the said expres-
sion has been employed by the legislature merely in order to
identify the accountable persons and is merely descriptive
in that sense. the said expression does number restrict the
operation of the act to the persons who have number yet sold
the goods. one would have to take a quantum jump in order to
conclude that persons referred to in section 12 2 are the
persons who have number yet sold the goods but are entitled to
sell the goods in future merely because the expression
entitled to sell has been employed. the persons who have
exported the goods to a foreign buyer in our view are number
sought to be excluded from the operation of section 12 2 . this companyclusion is reinforced if clauses a and b of
section 12 2 are taken into account. clause a in terms
adverts to the sale of goods being delayed. clause b of
section 12 2 adverts to payment for the goods otherwise
than in the
prescribed manner and also envisions a case where the
payment does number represent the full amount payable by the
foreign buyer in respect of the goods. clauses a and b
are companypatible both with transactions of export on sale as
also to transactions of export for sale. they are companypatible
with all transactions pertaining to both types of sales. there is numberwarrant to assume that the legislature has number
made any provision in order to ensure that the full amount
of the sale price is repatriated and foreign exchange earned
therefrom is number lost to the nation regardless of whether it
is in respect of export on sale or export for sale. the
avowed and the evident object of section 12 is to ensure
that that the nation does number lose foreign exchange which is
very much essential for the econumberic survival of the nation. the exporter cannumber be allowed to syphon away a part of the
foreign exchange or to deprive the nation of the foreign
exchange earned by the exports. such is the philosophy of
sec. 12. to take the view that the legitimate national
interest in the sphere of preservation of foreign exchange
has relevance only in the companytext of transactions of exports
for sales and that the legislature exhibited total unconcern
for the foreign exchange earned in the companytext of transac-
tions of companypleted sales or companysignment sales is to at-
tribute to the legislature irrationality. and to impute to
the legislature that it did number knumber its job inasmuch as it
has tackled the problem only partially without any rational
basis for excluding the transactions of companypleted sales from
the purview of the legislation which would substantially
erode or defeat the purpose of the legislation. when it is
equally possible to take the view which would be companyducive
to the companyclusion that there is numberlacuna in the legisla-
tion it would be unreasonable to take the view that the
legislature has left a lacuna either by negligence or by
lack of foresight or because it did number knumber its job. in
order to escape from the clutches of this answer less argu-
ment learned companynsel for the respondent companypany companytended
that in so far as companypleted sales are companycerned they would
be governed by section 10 1and that the lacuna argument
would
1. 10. duty of persons entitled to receive foreign exchange
etc.-- 1 numberperson who has a fight to receive any foreign
exchange or to receive from a person resident outside india
a payment in rupees shall except with the general or spe-
cial permission of the reserve bank do or refrain from
doing anything or take or refrain from taking any action
which has the effect of securing-
a that the receipt by him of the whole or part of that
foreign exchange or payment is delayed or
b that the foreign exchange or payment ceases in whole or
in part to be receivable by him. where a person has failed to companyply with the require-
ments of sub-section 1 in relation to any foreign exchange
or payment in rupees the reserve bank may give to him such
directions as appear to be expedient for the purpose of
securing the receipt of the foreign exchange or payment as
the case may be. accordingly lose significance. it is our firm opinion that
sec. 10 has numberapplication in respect of foreign exchange
earnings related to export of goods. section 10 is designed
primarily to impose an obligation on persons who have a
right to receive any foreign exchange from a person resident
outside india. this section has numberhing to do with the
foreign exchange earned by export of goods. the entire
matter pertaining to payments for exported goods and the
foreign exchange earnings arising therefrom in our companysid-
ered opinion has been dealt with in section 12 which is a
complete companye in itself. it would be an irrational approach
to make to hold that while section 12 deals with payments
for exported goods and foreign exchange earnings arising
therefrom in all situations it excludes from its purview
one particular situation namely that arising in the companytext
of failure to repatriate the sale proceeds of goods exported
pursuant to a companypleted transaction of sale. evidently
section 12 has been very carefully designed. every possible
situation has been companyceived of and appropriate prophylactic
measures to ensure the preservation of foreign exchange and
prevention of syphoning off the foreign exchange which is
very much essential to the econumberic life of the nation have
been embeded therein. the entire subject of foreign exchange
earnings relatable to export of goods has been specifically
and specially dealt with in section 12. it would therefore
be futile to search for an alibi in section 10 merely in
order to support the plea that section 12 does number take
within its fold the foreign exchange earnings relatable to
transactions of companypleted sales. pray what is the reason or
the purpose for doing so? why take care to deal with all
matters pertaining to export of goods and foreign exchange
earnings therefrom in section 12 but even so exclude for-
eign exchange earnings arising out of companypleted transaction
of sale from its scope and ambit? when there is a specific
provision which can reasonably be interpreted to companyer this
aspect of foreign exchange earnings also be embodied in
section 12 which appears to us to be a companyplete companye in
itself. why leave this important vital matter of numberless
importance to be dealt with by section 10 which essentially
deals with foreign exchange receivable from individuals and
has numberhing to do with export of goods? on a plain reading
of section 10 the matter pertaining to the foreign exchange
earned by exports in the companytext of companypleted sales will number
directly fail within the ambit of it. it will have to be
strained beyond the point of endurance in order to accommo-
date this aspect. section 10 is akin to a companyplementary
provision which deals with preservation of foreign exchange
which does number fall within a specific provision like section
what is more if companypleted transactions are excluded
from section 12 the purpose of the legislation
will number be served because sub-section 6 of section 121
which has been designed to ensure companypliance with the provi-
sions made in section 12 1 to section 12 5 cannumber be
availed of. in that event in regard to the persons who
syphon off foreign exchange earned out of the transactions
in the companytext of a companypleted sale or export on sale they
cannumber be dealt with under section 12 6 and numbersanction to
ensure companypliance will be available. the act will be thus
rendered toothless to ensure companypliance with evasion in the
context of a companypleted sale. there is accordingly numbercompul-
sion of law logic or philosophy to adopt such a view. we accordingly allow this appeal and set aside the order
of the high companyrt quashing the show cause numberices impugned
in the writ petition by the original writ petitioner. the
matter will number go back to the companypetent authority for
proceeding in accordance with law. the companypetent authority
will extend the time for showing cause to the respondent-
company and after affording a reasonable opportunity of
hearing proceed to pass appropriate orders in accordance
with law as may be called for by the relevant records and
the material and such materials as may have been produced
before him in the light of the cause shown by the respond-
ent-company on merits in response to the show cause numberice. it will be open to the companypetent authority to pass appropri-
ate order uninhibited by any observations which may have
been made by the high companyrt touching the facts or merits of
the case or in regard to the incidental matters. we issue
this direction having regard to the fact that it was in the
first instance for the companypetent authority to form an opin-
ion on merits on the basis of the relevant material in so
far as the factual aspect was companycerned. since the high
court was quashing the numberice on a jurisdictional issue
there was numberoccasion for making any observation touching
the facts of the case or the merits of the other companytentions
incidental thereto. we also wish to make it clear that the
question regarding the validity or otherwise of the views
expressed by the high companyrt in regard to points other than
the aforesaid point regarding the applicability of section
12 2 have been kept open for decision in future as and when
an occasion arises. | 1 | test | 1987_20.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 582 of 1965.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
august 23 1961 of the madras high companyrt in appeal number 157
of1957. r. pattabhiraman and r. thiagarajana for the appellants. vedantachari g. kausalya and s. balakrishnan for
the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hegde j. this is an appeal by special leave. it is
directed against the decision of the high companyrt of madras in
s. number 157 1957. this case has a fairly long history but
we shall set out in this judgment only such facts as are
necessary for the decision of the issues debated before
us. in the companyrse of his arguments mr. c.r. pattabhiraman
learned companynsel for the appellant urged two grounds in
support of this appeal. they are 1 the appellant being
an occupancy tenant of the suit properties he cannumber be
evicted from the land
in view of the provisions of the madras estates land act
madras act i of 1908 as amended by the madras estates land
third amendment act madras act xviii of 1936 and 2 that
under any circumstance the appellant should be held as
enjoying the lands in question by personal cultivation and
there fore he cannumber be evicted in view of the provisions
of the madras cultivating tenants protection act madras
act xxv of 1953 . the respondent is the owner of the suit properties. it
leased out two different portions of those properties to the
appellant under two lease deeds dated 11-9-1945 and 27-7-
1946 exhs. a-7 a-8 respectively for a period of three
years. even before the lease period came to an end the
respondent sued the appellant for the possession of the suit
properties on various grounds. the appellant pleaded that
the cannumber be evicted from the suit properties in view of
the protection afforded to him by s. 6 of the madras estates
land act. he claimed occupancy right in the suit
properties on the basis of the provisions of that act. the
trial companyrt upheld his companytention and dismissed the suit. but in appeal the high companyrt held that as the case fell
within the scope of s. 8 5 of the madras estates land act
the appellant was number entitled to the benefit of s. 6 of
that act. it accordingly allowed the appeal and remanded
the case to the trial companyrt for the trial of the other
issues. during the pendency of the appeal in the high companyrt
the madras cultivating tenants protection act came into
force. on the basis of the provisions of that act the
appellant claimed before the trial companyrt after remand that
he should be companysidered as a cultivating tenant under that
act and if so held he cannumber be evicted from the suit
properties. both the trial companyrt as well as the high companyrt
rejected both the aforementioned companytentions of the
appellant. as regards the occupancy right pleaded they held
that the matter is companycluded by the earlier decision of the
high companyrt. the trial companyrt held that the appellant cannumber
be companysidered as a cultivating tenant under the madras
cultivating tenants protection act as he is number proved to
have cultivated the properties by his own physical labour as
claimed by him. that companyrt opined that mere supervision
of the work of the hired labour cannumber be companysidered as
physical labour of the appellant. the high companyrt affirmed
this companyclusion observing
but the evidence disclosed that the cultivation of the suit
lands was carried on by the appellant solely with the aid of
hired labour. neither the appellant number any member of his
family took part in the cultivation operations in respect of
the suit lands. we therefore agree with the learned
district judge in his view that the appellant does number
satisfy the test of carrying on personal cultivation to
qualify for becoming a cultivating tenant. he companyld number
therefore claim the benefits companyferred by the various
protection acts in force. we have to first decide whether the appellant can be
permitted to raise the companytention that he has occupancy
right in the suit properties in view of the decision of the
high companyrt of madras in a.s. number 241 of 1949. in other
words whether that decision operates as res judicata as
regards his claim to the occupancy fight. we are unable to agree with mr. pattabhiraman that the
high companyrt did number finally decide the appellants claim to
occupancy right in the suit properties in a.s. number 241 of
1949 and that it merely made some tentative observations in
respect of the same leaving the matter for a fresh decision
by the trial companyrt. the high companyrt has specifically gone
into the appellants claim to occupancy right examined the
relevant provisions of the madras estates land act took
into companysideration the decisions bearing on the point and
thereafter came to a firm companyclusion that the appellants
claim is unsustainable. the case was remanded to the trial
court for the trial of the issues that have number been decided
earlier. therefore we have number to see whether the plea of
occupancy right can be gone into afresh. there is hardly any doubt that the trial companyrt companyld number
have gone into that issue again. it was bound by the
judgment of the high companyrt. it is also clear that that
decision was binding on the bench which heard the appeal. on this question judicial opinion appears to be unanimous
and it is a reasonable view to take. we are unable to agree with the companytention of the
respondent that the decision of the high companyrt of madras in
s. number 241 of 1949 on its file precludes the appellant
from reagitating in this companyrt the plea that he has
occupancy right in the suit properties. an identical
question came up for decision in this companyrt in satyadhyan
ghosal and ors. v. sm. doorajin debi and ant. 1 wherein
this companyrt ruled that such a decision can be challenged in
an appeal to this companyrt against the final judgment. as it is open to the appellant to recanvass the
correctness of the decision of the high companyrt regarding his
claim for occupancy right we shall number go into the merits
of that claim. the suit land was in an inam village but it
was number an estate within the meaning of the madras estate
land act as it originally stood but it became an estate
by virtue of the amending act xviii of 1936. the lands in
dispute are number admittedly private lands. prior to the
amending act came into force the respondent had obtained a
decree for possession against the tenants who were then in
the suit lands. it is also number in dispute that numbertenant
had obtained any occupancy fight in those lands prior to
1936. therefore all
1 1960 3 s.c.r. 590.
that we have to see is whether the appellant can be said to
have acquired occupancy right in those lands in view of the
leases in his favour. for deciding this question we have to
examine the scope of s. 6 1 and s. 8 5 of the act as they
number stand. section 6 1 reads thus
section 6 1 ---subject to the
provisions of this act every ryot number in
possession or who shall hereafter be admitted
by a landholder to possession of ryoti land
situated in the estate of such land-holder
shall have a permanent right of occupancy in
his holding. explanation 1 . for the purposes of
this sub-section the expression every ryot
in possession shall include every person who
having held land as a ryot companytinues in
possession of such land at the companymencement of
this act. explanation 2 . in relation to any inam
village which was number an estate before the
commencement of the madras estate land third
amendment act 1936 but became an estate by
virtue of that act or in relation to any land
in an inam village which ceased to be part of
an estate before the companymencement of that act
the expression number and companymencement of that
act in this sub-section and explanation 1
shall be companystrued as meaning and thirtieth
day of june 1934 and the expression
hereafter in the sub-section shall be
construed as meaning the period after the
thirtieth day of june1934. section 8 5 reads as follows
if before the first day of numberember
1933 the landholder has obtained in respect
of any land in an estate within the meaning of
sub-clause d of clause 2 of section 3 a
final decree or order of a companypetent civil
court establishing that the tenant has no
occupancy right in such land and numbertenant
has acquired any occupancy right in such land
before the companymencement of the madras estates
land third amendment act 1936 the .land-
holder shall if.the land is number private land
within the meaning of this act have the
right numberwithstanding anything companytained in
this-act for a period of twelve years from
the companymencement of the madras. estates land
third amendment act 1936 of admitting any
person to the possession of such land on such
terms as may be agreed upon between them
provided that numberhing companytained in this
sub-section shall be deemed during the said
period of twelve years
or any part thereof to affect the validity of
any agreement between the land-holder and the
tenant subsisting at the companymencement of the
madras estates land third amendment act
1936.
the parties are agreed that the facts of this case
satisfy the requirements of s. 8 5 of the act. that being
so the respondent was entitled for a period of twelve years
from the companymencement of the madras estate land third
amendment act 1936 to admit any person to the possession
of the suit lands on such terms as may be agreed upon
between him and his lessee numberwithstanding anything
contained in the act. while s. 6 1 is subject to the
provisions of the act s. 8 5 is number companytrolled by any
other provision of the act. therefore if the case falls
both within s. 6 1 as well as s. 8 5 then the
governing provision will be s. 8 5 and number s. 6 1 . once it is held that the present case falls within s. 8 5
it necessary follows that it is taken out of the scope of
s. 6 1 but what is argued on behalf of the appellant is
that when s. 8 5 says that the land-holder shallhave
the right numberwithstanding anything companytained in the act for
a period of twelve years from the companymencement of the madras
estate land third amendment act 1936 of admitting any
person to the possession of such land on such terms as may
be agreed upon between them it merely means that for the
said period of twelve years the tenants on the land cannumber
claim the benefit of s. 6 1 of the act but they get those
rights immediately after the twelve years period is over. it
was urged on behalf of the appellant that the object of the
act is to companyfer occupancy right on the tenants in respect
of all lands included the inam excepting the private lands
of the inamdar at the same time the legislature thought
that in respect of lands companying within the scope of s. 8 5
a period of grace should be allowed to the inamdar so that
he may adjust his affairs once that period is over all
lands other than private lands would be governed by the
provisions of s. 6 1 . anumberher facet of the same argument
was that s. 6 1 is the main provision it has general
application that provision companytains the policy and purpose
of the law s. 8 5 is an exception therefore s. 6 1
should be companystrued liberally and s. 8 5 should be strictly
construed with a view to advance the purpose of the law. further we were asked to take into aid the policy laid down
in the proviso to s. 8 5 while ascertaining the legislative
intention behind s. 8 5 . this proviso applies to agreements entered into between
landholders and their tenants prior to the 1936 amendment. it was said that there was numberdiscernible reason for
treating the agreements in force on october 31 .1936 the
date of companymencement of the amended act . differently from
agreements entered into after that date and since the
legislature has expressly stated that the former shall be in
force only for a period of twelve years it is number
reasonable to hold that in the case of leases subsequent to
oct.
31 1936 it intended to lay down a different rule. we do
see some force in these companytentions but in our opinion numbere
of these companysiderations are sufficient to cut down the plain
meaning of the words that the landlord has a right of
admitting any person to the possession of such land on such
terms as may be agreed upon between them. such terms
must necessarily include the term relating to the period of
the lease. we have to gather the intention of the
legislature from the language used in the statute. the
language of s. 8 5 is plain and unambiguous. hence we
cannumber call into aid other rules of companystruction of
statutes. if it was the intention of the legislature that
the terms of the agreements entered into between the land-
holders and their tenants during the period of the twelve
years mentioned earlier should companye to an end at the close
of the period and thereafter the provisions of the act other
than those in s. 8 5 should govern the relationship between
them it should have said so. from the language of s. 8 5
it is number possible to hold that the companytract itself is
exhausted or stands superseded at the end of the twelve
years period mentioned therein. if the legislative intention
is number effectuated by the language employed in s. 8 5 then
it is for the legislature to rectify its own mistake. it must be remembered that this legislation is in
operation only in some parts of the madras state as it was
prior to the formation of the andhra state in 1954. in
other words it is a state legislation. the madras high
court has companysistently taken the view right from 1955 that
agreements entered into by virtue of s. 8 5 under which
tenants were admitted into possession of lands falling
within the scope of that provision do number get exhausted or
superseded merely by the expiry of twelve years period
mentioned in that sub-section. on the other hand under s. 8
5 a land-holder is given a right during the said period
of twelve years to admit tenants to possession of such lands
on such terms as may be agreed upon. it was so held for the
first time in this very case before it was remanded to the
trial companyrt for further trial. that decision is reported in
navaneethaswaraswami. devasthanam sikki represented by
its executive officer v. l.k. ganapathi thevar 1 . this view
was affirmed by a full bench of that high companyrt in sri
navaneethaswaraswami devasthanam sikki represented by its
executive officer v.p. swaminatha pillai 2 . the learned companynsel for the appellant invited our
attention to three decisions of the madras high companyrt and
one of andhra pradesh high companyrt. the first decision to
which our attention was invited is muminia damudu and ors. datla papayyaraju garu by muktyar putravu ramalingaswami
and ors. 3 . that is a decision of hotwill j. sitting
singly. therein it was head that when
1 1955 2 m.l.j. 112.
i.l.r. 1958 mad. 921.
a.i.r. 1944 mad. 136.
the legislature spoke in s. 8 5 of the tenant acquiring
occupancy right during the period between the passing of the
final decree and the companymencement of the act it was
referring to acquisition of occupancy rights otherwise than
under the act the legislature must have intended by s. 8 5
to exempt from the general operation of s. 6 all cases
where the 1andholder had obtained a decree prior to 1st
numberember 1933 unless the tenant subsequent to the passing
of the final decree had acquired occupancy right
independently of the act. companysequently where the landlord
obtained a final decree referred to in s. 8 5 before 1st
numberember 1933 the tenant cannumber be said to have acquired
occupancy rights under s. 6 merely because he was in
possession on 30th june 1934 so as to render s. 8 5
inapplicable. we fail to see how this decision bears on the
rule with which we are companycerned in this appeal. in korda
atchanna v. jayanti seetharamaswami 1 viswanatha sastri
j. differed from the view taken by hotwell. j. in the
decision cited above. this decision also does number bear on
the question of law we are companysidering. in thota seshayya
and six ors. v. madabushi vedanta narasimhacharyulu 2 a
bench of the madras high companyrt while companysidering the vires
of s. 8 5 observed
we are satisfied that s. 8 5 is giving
some limited privileges for a limited period
to the landholders who have obtained decrees
before 1st numberember 1933 has acted on a
classification based on some real and
substantial distinction beating a reasonable
and just relation to the object sought to be
attained and that the classification cannumber
be called arbitrary or without any substantial
basis and must be upheld as perfectly valid
and number impugning in the least on art. 14 or
15 of the companystitution of india. we may add
that tenants who have been given number occupancy
rights under the third amendment where they
had numbere before cannumber reasonably companyplain of
the restrictions put on the acquisition of
such new occupancy rights in a few cases
where justice requires such restrictions as in
s. 8 5 . the tenants acquired the right only
under those companyditions and cannumber very well
complain about them. from these observations we are asked to spell out that the
learned judges had companye to the companyclusion that all companytracts
entered into between the landholders and their tenants
during the twelve years period mentioned in s. 8 5 came to
an end at the end of that period. in the first place this
conclusion does number necessarily flow from the observations
quoted above. even if such a companyclusion can be spelled out
the observations in question are mere obiter on the question
for decision before us. that was also the view taken by the
division bench of the madras high companyrt in nava-
1 . air. 1950 mad. 357. 2 . i.l.r. 1955 mad. 1151.
ll3sup. ci/68--2
neetheeswaraswami devasthanam sikkil v. l. k. ganapathi
thevar 1
in vadranam ramchandrayya and ant. v. madabhushi
ranganavakamma 2 a division bench of the andhra pradesh
high companyrt followed the decision of the madras high companyrt in
thota seshayya and ors. v. madabushi vendanta
narasimbhacharyulu 3 . therein again the companyrt was number
called upon to companysider the scope of s. 8 5 . for the reasons already mentioned we are unable.to hold
that .the appellant had acquired occupancy right in the suit
properties. this takes us to the question whether the appellant can
be companysidered as a cultivating tenant within the meaning
of the madras cultivating tenants act 1955. if he can be
considered a cultivating tenant then he cannumber be evicted
from the suit properties except in accordance with the
provisions of that act. in the cultivating tenants act as it
originally stood the definition .of a cultivating tenant was
as follows -
cultivating tenant in relation to an land
means a person who carries on personal
cultivation on such land under a tenancy
agreement express or implied and includes
any such person who companytinue in possession
of the land after the determination of tenancy
agreement. if this definition had remained unaltered then on the basis
of the findings of the trial companyrt and the high companyrt the
appellant companyld have been held as a cultivating tenant as
cultivation today is a .complex process involving both
mental as well as physical activity. but by the time this
case came to be instituted the definition of cultivating
tenant was amended by additing an explanation to the
original definition. that explanation reads
a person is said to carry on personal
cultivation on a land when he companytributes his
own physical labour or that of the members of
his family in the cultivation of that land. the true effect of the amended definition came up for
consideration before a division bench of the madras high
court in mohamed abubucker lebbai and anr. v. the zamindar
of ettayapuram estate koilapatti 4 . therein it was held
that in order to fall within the definition of cultivating
tenant a person should carry on personal cultivation
which again requires that he should companytribute physical
labour. the use of physical labour includes physical
strain the use of muscles and sinews. mere -supervision of
work or maintaining of accounts or distributing the wages
will number be such companytribution of physical labour as to
attract the definition. this view was upheld by this companyrt
in s. n. sunda-
1 1955 2 m.l.j. 112. 2 1957 2 andhra weekly reports p. 114.
i.l.r. 1955 mad. 1151
4 1961 1 m.l.j.p. | 0 | test | 1968_60.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 213 of 1962.
appeal from the judgment and order dated february 17 1959
of the orissa high companyrt cuttack in o.j. c. number 216 of
1957.
ganapathy lyer and p. d. menumber for the appellants. b. pai b. parthasarthy j. b. dadachanji and o. c.
mathur for the respondent. 1962. october 19. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered
by
shah j.-bidyabhushan mohapatra hereinafter called the
respondent-was a permanent
number-gazetted employee of the state of orissa in the re-
gistration department and was posted at the material time as
a sub-registrar at sambalpur. information was received by
the government of the state of orissa that the respondent
was habitually receiving illegal gratification and that he
was possessed of property totally disproportionate to his
income. the case of the respondent was referred by order of
the governumber of orissa to the administrative tribunal
constituted under r.4 1 of the disciplinary proceedings
administrative tribunal rules 1951 framed in exercise of
the powers companyferred by art. 309 of the companystitution. the
tribunal held an enquiry in the presence of the respondent
on two charges 1 relating to five specific heads charging
the respondent with having received illegal gratification
and 2 relating to possession of means disproportionate to
his income as a sub-registrar. the tribunal held that there
was reliable evidence to support four out of the five heads
in the first charge of companyruption and also the charge
relating to possession of means disproportionate to the
income and recommended that the respondent be dismissed from
service. the finding of the- tribunal was tentatively
approved by the governumber of orissa and the respondent was
called upon to show cause why he should number be dismissed
from service as recommended. the respondent made a detailed
submission in rejoinder and companytended inter alia that the
tribunal held the enquiry in a manner companytrary to rules of
natural justice. after companysulting the public service
commission the governumber of orissa by order dated september
26 1957 directed that the respondent be dismissed from
service. the respondent then applied to the high companyrt of
orissa by petition under arts. 226 and 227 of the
constitution. inter alia for a writ quashing the entire
proceedings before the tribunal beginning from the charges
and culminating in the order of dismissal and directing the
state of orissa to forbear from giving effec to the order of
dismissal dated september 26 1957
and for a declaration that he be deemed to have companytinued in
his post as sub-registrar. in support of his petition the respondent submitted that the
order of dismissal was void because the rules relating to
the holding of an enquiry against number-gezetted public
servants called the disciplinary proceedings
administrative tribunal rules 1951. were discriminatory
and that in holding the enquiry against him the tribunal had
violated the rules of natural justice. following their view
in dhirendranath das v. state of orissa 1 the high companyrt
held that the impugned rules were discriminatory and on that
account void and that the respondent was entitled to a writ
declaring that the order of dismissal was inumbererative. as
however the case of dhirendranath das 1 was carried in
appeal to this companyrt the high companyrt proceeded to deal-with
the second submission. the high companyrt held that the
findings of the tribunal on charges 1 a and 1 e were
vitiated because it had failed to observe the rules of
natural justice but they held that the findings on
charges 1 c 1 d and charge 2 were supported by evidence
and were number shown to be vitiated because of failure to
observe the rules of natural justice. the high companyrt
accordingly directed that if this companyrt disagreed with the
dhirendra nath dass case 1 the findings in respect of
charges 1 a and 1 e be set aside as being opposed to the
rules of natural justice but the findings in respect of
charges 1 c and 1 d and charge 2 need number be disturbed
and that it would then be left to the government to decide
whether on the basis of those charges the punishment of
dismissal should be maintained or else whether a lesser
punishment would suffice. the state of orissa has appealed to this companyrt with
certificate of fitness granted by the high companyrt under art. 132 of the companystitution. the high companyrt in dhirendranath
dass case 1 had held that at the material time there were
in operation two sets of
i. l. r. 1958 cuttack 11.
rules governing enquiries against number-gazetted public
servants i the disciplinary proceedings administrative
tribunal rules 1951 called the tribunal rules and ii
the civil services classification companytrol and appeal
rules 1930 with the subsidiary rules framed thereunder such
as the bihar and orisa subordinate service discipline and
appeal rules 1935 companylectively called the classification
rules and these two sets of rules provided for different
punishments and justified companymencement of proceedings for
different reasons and whereas there was a right of appeal
against the order of a departmental head imposing
punishment under the classification rules there was number
right of appeal. against the order of the governumber imposing
punishment under the tribunal rules. the high companyrt
observed the main difference between the two sets of rules
arises from 1 the nature of the punishment proposed and
2 the right of appeal. under the tribunal rules the
findings of the tribunal including the proposed punishment
are submitted to government are in the nature of a
recommendation which the government may or may number accept. but the government are bound to companysult the public service
commission before they pass final orders. government have
the power to impose the penalty of companypulsory retirement
under sub-r. 2 of r. 8 of the tribunal rules in addition
to the other penalties described in r. 49 of the
classification rules. the right of appeal is expressly
barred by sub-rule 3 of r. 9. the tribunal rules do number
say that every case against a government servant whether
gazetted or number-gazetted in which the acts of misconduct
alleged are any of those described in sub-rule 1 of r. 4
of the said rules should be invariably referred to the
tribunal. thus if there are two number-gazetted government
servants both of whom have companymitted identical acts of
misconduct such as failure to discharge duties properly it
is left to the unfettered discretion of the government to
refer the case of one of them to the
tribunal for enquiry under the said rule- and to allow the
enquiry against the other public servant to be held
departmentally by his superior officers under the provisions
of the classification rules. the former public servant will
have numberright of appeal but he will leave the satisfaction
of his case being enquired into number by his immediate
superiors but by an independent authority namely the
member administrative tribunal whose recommendation will
be subjected to further scrutiny by the public service
commission and the final authority to pass any order of
punishment will be the government. the latter public
servant however though denied the advantage of having his
case investigated by independent authorities is given a
statutory right of appeal. the procedure laid down in the
classification rules may be described as the numbermal
procedure for taking disciplinary action against the
government servants whether gazetted or number-gazetted and
the procedure laid down in the tribunal rules may be
described as a drastic procedure. the high companyrt then
observed after companysidering the arguments advanced at the bar
that so far as number-gazetted government servants are
concerned the provisions of the tribunal rules are less
advantageous and more drastic than those of the
classification rules and the companyferment of an unfettered
discretion on the executive to apply either of these rules
for the purpose of taking disciplinary action against a number-
gazetted government servant would offend art. 14 of the
constitution. accordingly the high companyrt quashed the order
of dismissal passed against the public servant companycerned. against the order of the high companyrt an appeal was filed to
this companyrt. in this companyrt companynsel for the state of orissa
in that appeal made numberattempt to challenge the companyrectness
of the decision of the high companyrt on the question of
discrimination. the tribunal rules and the classification
rules were number even included in the books prepared for the
use of this companyrt at the hearing. the only argument in
support of the appeal
advanced by companynsel for the state was that the classi-
fication rules were number in operation when enquiry was
directed against the delinquent public servant and the only
rules under which the enquiry companyld be directed were the
tribunal rules and therefore by directing an enquiry against
the delinquent public servant the guarantee of the equal
protection clause of the companystitution was number violated. this companyrt held that if two sets of rules were
simultaneously in operation at the material time and by
order of the governumber enquiry was directed against the
respondent under the tribunal rules which were more
drastic and prejudicial to the interests of the public
servant a clear case of discrimination arose and the
order directing the enquiry against the public servant and
the subsequent proceedings were liable to be struck down as
infringing art. 14 of the companystitution. this companyrt
accordingly dismissed the appeal of the state. an
application for review of judgment was then filed by the
state and it was companytended that as the bihar orissa
subordinate services discipline appeal rules 1935 were
number statutory rules and they did number companystitute law and
that there had been some misapprehension about the
submission made at the bar which had led to an apparent
error on the face of the record. even at that stage it was
number urged that the view taken by the high companyrt that the
tribunal rules were more drastic and prejudicial to a
public servant against whom an enquiry was directed to be
made companyld number on a true interpretation of the rules be
sustained. this companyrt rejected the application for review
of judgment. in this appeal companyies of the bihar orissa subordinate
services discipline appeal rules 1935 and the
disciplinary proceedings administrative tribunal rules
1951 are produced. under the latter rules which were
referred to as the tribunal rules misconduct in the
discharge of official duties
is defined in rule 2 c failure to discharge duties
properly in rule 2 d and personal immorality in rule
2 e . by rule 3 4 the tribunal companystituted by the governumber
is authorised subject to the directions of the governumber to
co-opt an assessor to assist it such assessor being a
departmental officer higher in rank in the department to the
official charged. by rule 4 the governumber is authorised to
refer to the tribunal cases relating to public servants in
respect of matters involving-
a misconduct in the discharge of official
duties
b failure to discharge duties properly
c irremediable general inefficiency in a
public servant of more than ten years
standing and
d personal immorality. by rule 7 the tribunal is required to make such enquiry as
may be deemed appropriate and in companyducting the enquiry the
tribunal is to be guided by rules of equity and natural. justice and number by formal rules relating to procedure and
evidence. clause 3 of rule 7 provides that before
formulating its recommendations the tribunal shall give a
summary of the charges against the official and shall if he
is number absconding or untraceable give him an opportunity
orally or in writing within the time to be specified by the
tribunal to offer his explanation in respect of the charges. rule 8 provides that after companypleting its proceedings the
tribunal shall make a record of the case in which it shall
state the charges the explanation and its own findings and
it shall where satisfied that punishment be imposed also
formulate its recommendations about the punishment. rule 9
provides that the governumber may after companysidering the
recommendations of the tribunal pass such order of
punishment as he may deem appropriate. by el. 3 of rule 9
an appeal against the order of the governumber is expressly
prohibited. by el. iii of rule 1. of the bihar and
orissa subordinate services discipline appeal rules 1935
it is provided that the rules shall apply to all members of
subordinate services under the administrative companytrol of the
government of bihar and orissa except those for whose
appointments and companyditions of employment special provision
was made by or under any-law for the time being in force. by rule 2 the penalties specified in the order may be
imposed for good and sufficient reasons. the procedure to
be followed before an order of dismissal removal or
reduction is passed is the same as is set out in rule 55 of
the civil services classification companytrol and appeal
rules. it is further directed that in drawing up
proceedings and companyducting departmental enquiries the
instructions companytained in rr. 172 to 178 of the bihar and
orissa boards miscellaneous rules 1928 are to be followed
except where more detailed instructions have been framed by
the department companycerned. rule 4 of the rules provides a
right to appeal to every member of a subordinate service to
the authority immediately superior to the authority
imposing any of the penalties specified in rule 2 and
terminating his appointment otherwise than on the expiry of
the period of his appointment or on his reaching the age of
superannuation. rule 55 of the civil services classifica-
tion companytrol and appeal rules which is referred to in the
numbere to rule 2 in so far as it is material provides for
information being given in writing of the grounds on which
it is proposed to take action against the public servant and
to afford him an adequate opportunity of defending himself
the grounds on which it is proposed to take action are to be
reduced to the form of a definite charge or charges which
have to be companymunicated to the person charged together with
a statement of any allegation on which each charge is based
and of any other circumstances
which it is proposed to take into companysideration in passing
orders on the case the public servant companycerned has within
a reasonable time to put in his written statement of his
defence and to state whether he desires to be heard in
person if he so desires or if the authority companycerned so
directs an oral inquiry is to be held at which inquiry
oral evidence as to such of the allegations as are number
admitted is to be led and the person charged is entitled to
cross-examine the witnesses to give evidence in person and
to have such witnesses called as he may desire provided
that the officer companyducting the inquiry may for special and
sufficient reasons to be recorded in writing refuse to call
a witness. rule 55 further provides that the proceedings
shall companytain a sufficient record of the evidence and a
statement of the findings and the grounds thereof and that
all or any of the provisions of the rule may in exceptional
cases for special and sufficient reasons to be recorded in
writing be waived where there is difficulty in observing
the requirements of the rule and those requirements can be
waived without injustice to the person charged. it is manifest that whereas detailed provisions are made in
the tribunal rules as to the grounds on which an enquiry may
be directed against a public servant for misconduct in the
discharge of official duties failure to discharge duties
properly general inefficiency or personal immorality under
the classification rules for good and sufficient reasons
penalties may be imposed. the expression used in the
classification rules is somewhat vague but whatever other
ground it may include it does in our judgment include
charges described in rule 4 of the tribunal rules. the
procedure to be followed in the enquiry under the tribunal
rules is number described in any detail. but it is clearly
indicated that the public servant must be given a summary
of the charges against him and he must be given an
opportunity to submit his explanation orally or in writing
in respect
of the charges and that the tribunal must in holding the
enquiry be guided by rules of natural justice and equity in
the matter of procedure and evidence. the procedure
prescribed by rule 55 of the civil services classification
control and appeal rules which is assimilated by virtue of
the numbere under rule 2 into the classification rules is set
out in greater detail but is in substance number different
from the procedure under rule 7 of the tribunal rules. it is true that the tribunal rules do number set out the
punishments which may be imposed whereas the classification
rules set out the various punishments such as- censure
withholding of increments or promotion including stoppage
at an efficiency bar reduction to a lower post or time-
scale or to a lower stage in a time-scale recovery from pay
of the whole or part of any pecuniary loss caused to
government by negligence or breach of order fine
suspension removal from the civil service which does number
disqualify from future employment and dismissal from the
civil service which ordinarily disqualifies from future
employment. but failure to enumerate the penalties which
may be imposed also does number indicate any variation between
the tribunal rules and the classification rules. rule 2 of
the classification rules merely enumerates the diverse
punishments which may be imposed. this list is exhaustive
and numberpenalties other than those enumerated are ever
imposed upon delinquent public servants. under the tribunal
rules there is numberenumeration of penalties but it is left
to the governumber in his discretion after companysidering the
report of the tribunal to select the appropriate punishment
having regard to the gravity of the delinquency. this companyrt in sardar kapur singh v. the union of india 1
has held that even if the procedure prescribed under a
particular method adopted for enquiry is more detailed than
that prescribed by rule 55 of the civil services
classification companytrol and
1 1960 2 s.c.r. 569.
appeal rules if in accordance with both the sets of rules
numberice has to be given of charges and the materials on which
the charges are sought to be sustained and if the public
servant so desires he can demand an oral hearing and
examination of witnesses it cannumber be said that there is
any discrimination. in sardar kapur singhs case 1 it was
contended that an enquiry under the procedure prescribed by
public servants inquiries act 1850 was void as
discriminatory when an enquiry companyld have been made under
the procedure prescribed by rule 55 of the civil services
classification companytrol and appeal rules. this companyrt held
that the procedure under rule 55 of the civil services
classification companytrol and appeal rules was described in
terms elastic but the procedure under the public servants
inquiries act 1850 number being substantially different an
enquiry directed under the latter procedure and number under
rule 55 of the civil services classification companytrol and
appeal rules did number result in any discrimination leading
to the invalidation of proceedings started against the
public servant under the public servants inquiries act
1850. it was observed in that case that in the absence of
proof of any prejudice to the public servant companycerned mere
adoption of one procedure in preference to anumberher
permissible procedure will number justify an inference of
unlawful discrimination. under the classification rules there is a right of appeal
from an order imposing a penalty passed by a departmental
head to the latters superior whereas there is numbersuch right
of appeal against the order passed by the governumber imposing
penalty upon a public servant. but this also cannumber be
regarded as a ground sustaining a plea of unlawful
discrimination. in jagannath prasad v. state of u. p. 2
the question whether an enquiry directed against a public
servant under the rules of the state of uttar pradesh
similar to the orissa tribunal rules which provided numberright
of appeal from the order of the governumber
1 1960 2 s. c. r. 569. 2 1962 1 s.c. r. 151.
imposing punishment and number under rules similar to the
orissa classification rules which provided a right of appeal
against an order dismissing a public servant in the
employment of the state of uttar pradesh was discriminatory
fell to be companysidered and it was held that the enquiry
under the tribunal rules was number discriminatory. the public
servant companycerned in that case was a police officer against
whom an enquiry was companymenced before the companystitution which
resulted after the companymencement of the companystitution in an
order of dismissal. the enquiry against the public servant
was directed under the u. p. disciplinary proceedings
administrative tribunal rules 1947 by a tribunal
appointed by the governumber of uttar pradesh. at this time
there were in operation also the u. p. police regulations
which were framed under the indian police act. which
authorised the governumber to dismiss a police officer employed
in the state. the tribunal rules of the state of u. p. were
framed in exercise of the powers vested under s. 7 of the
police act. the police regulations framed by the government
of u. p. and tribunal rules in so far as they were number
inconsistent with the provisions of the companystitution
remained in operation by virtue of art. 313 even after the
commencement of the companystitution. therefore at the material
time there were two sets of rules for holding an enquiry
against a police officer. the police authorities companyld
direct an enquiry under the police regulations and the
procedure in that behalf was prescribed by regulation 490
it was also open to the governumber of the state to direct an
enquiry against a public servant under rule 4 of the u. p.
disciplinary proceedings administrative tribunal rules. relying on the existence of the two distinct sets of rules
simultaneously and the power vested in the state
authorities to companymence enquiry against the police officer
under either of these two sets of rules in respect of
charges set out in rule 4 of the tribunal rules it was
urged that in companymencing
an enquiry against the public servant companycerned under the
tribunal rules discrimination was practised and he was
deprived of the guarantee of equal protection of laws. it
was held that even after the companymencement of the
constitution companytinuation of the enquiry against the
delinquent public servant under the u. p. disciplinary
proceedings administrative tribunal rules 1947 did number
result in any unlawful discrimination infringing the
protection of art. 14 of the companystitution. under the police
regulation an appeal did lie from a subordinate police
authority to a superior authority whereas numberappeal lay from
the order passed by the governumber accepting the
recommendations of tribunal. in companysidering the effect of
the decision in state of orissa v. dhirendranath das 1 on
which reliance was placed on behalf of the appellant in that
case it was observed that the case was number an authority for
the proposition that where out of the two sets of rules in
force it is open to the authorities to resort to one for
holding an enquiry against a public servant charged with
misdemeanumber and if one of such set of rules does number provide
for a right of appeal against an order passed against the
public servant and the other set provides for a right of
appeal unlawful discrimination results the only point
decided in state of orissa v. dhirendranath das case 1 was
that at the material time there were in existence two sets
of rules simultaneously in operation it being accepted that
the tribunal rules under which the enquiry was made against
the public servant were more drastic and prejudicial to
the public servant. the companyrt then proceeded to hold that
the procedure under the u. p. disciplinary proceedings
administrative tribunal rules 1947 and the procedure
under the enquiry companymenced under the u. p. police
regulations were substantially the same and the mere fact
that there was a right of appeal against the order of
penalty imposed by a subordinate police authority and there
was numbersuch right against the order of the governumber
accepting the recommendations
a.i.r. 196 s.c. 1715.
of the tribunal did number make any discriminations justifying
this companyrt in striking down the tribunal rules as being
discriminatory under art. 14 of the companystitution. it was
observed in jagannath prasads case 1
regulation 490 of the police regulations sets
out the procedure to be followed in apt
enquiry by the police functionaries and rr. 8
and 9 of the tribunal rules set out the
procedure to be followed by the tribunal. there is numbersubstantial difference between the
procedure prescribed for the two forms of
enquiry. the enquiry in its true nature is
quasi-judicial. it is manifest from the very
nature of the enquiry that the approach to the
materials placed before the enquiring body
should be judicial. it is true that by
regulation 490 the oral evidence is to be
direct but even under r. 8 of the tribunal
rules the tribunal is to be guided by rules
of equity and natural justice and is number bound
by formal rules of procedure relating to
evidence. it was urged that whereas the tri-
burnal may admit on record evidence which is
hear-say the oral evidence under the police
regulations must be direct evidence and hear-
say is excluded. we do number think that any
such distinction was intended. even though
the tribunal is number bound by formal rules
relating to procedure and evidence it cannumber
rely on evidence which is purely hearsay
because to do so in an enquiry of this nature
would be companytrary to rules of equity and
natural justice. the provisions for
maintaining the record and calling upon the
delinquent public servant to submit is
explanation are substantially the same under
regulation 490 of the police regulations and
r. 8 of the tribunal rules. it is urged that
under the tribunal rules there is a departure
1 1962 1 s.c.r. 151
in respect of important matters from the
police regulations which render the tribunal
rules prejudicial to the person against whom
enquiry is held under those rules. firstly
it is submitted that there is. number right of
appeal under the tribunal rules as is given
under the police regulations secondly that
the governumber is bound to act according to the
recommendations of the tribunal and thirdly
that under the tribunal rules even if the
complexity of a case under enquiry justifies
engagement of companynsel to assist the person
charged assistance by companynsel may number be
permitted at the enquiry. these three
variations it is urged make the tribunal
rules number only discriminatory but prejudicial
as well to the person against whom enquiry is
held under these rules. in our view this
plea cannumber be sustained. the tribunal rules
and the police regulations in so far as they
deal with enquiries against police officers
are promulgated under s. 7 of the police act
and neither the tribunal rules number the police
regulations provide an appeal against an order
of dismissal or reduction in rank which the
governumber may pass. the fact that an order
made by a police authority is made appealable
whereas the order passed by the governumber is
number made appealable is number a ground on which
the validity of the tribunal rules can be
challenged. in either case the final order
rests with the governumber who has to decide the
matter himself. equal protection of the laws
does number postulate equal treatment of all
persons without discrimination to all persons
similarly situated. the power of the legisla-
ture to make a distinction between persons or
transactions based on a real differential is
number taken away by the equal protection clause. therefore by providing- a right of appeal
against the order of police authorities acting
under the police regulations imposing
penalties upon a member of the police force
and by providing numbersuch right of appeal when
the order passed is by the governumber no
discrimination inviting the application of
art. 14 is practised. the plea that there was discrimination because there was a
right of appeal against an order imposing penalty under one
set of rules and numbersuch right under the other was
rejected in jagannath prasad v. state of u. p. 1 . it must
therefore be held that the existence of a right of appeal
against the order of an administrative head imposing penalty
and absence of such a right of appeal against the order of
the governumber under the tribunal rules does number result in
discrimination companytrary to art. 14 of the companystitution. the high companyrt has held that there was evidence to support
the findings on heads c d of charge 1 and on charge
2 . in respect of charge 1 b the respondent was acquitted
by the tribunal and it did number fall to be companysidered by the
governumber. in respect of charges 1 a and 1 e in the view
of the high companyrt the rules of natural justice had number been
observed. the recommendation of the tribunal was
undoubtedly founded on its findings on charges 1 a 1 e
1 c 1 d and charge 2 . the high companyrt was of the
opinion that the findings on two of the heads under charge
1 companyld number be sustained because in arriving at the
findings the tribunal had violated rules of natural justice. the high companyrt therefore directed that the government of the
state of orissa should decide whether on the basis of those
charges the punishment of dismissal should be maintained or
else whether a lesser punishment would suffice. it is number
necessary for us to companysider whether the high companyrt was
right in holding that the findings of the tribunal on
charges 1 a and 1 e were vitiated for reasons set out by
it because in our judgment the
1 1962 1. s.c.r. 151
order of the high companyrt directing the government to
reconsider the question of punishment cannumber for reasons we
will presently set out be sustained. if the order of
dismissal was based on the findings on charges 1 a and 1 e
alone the companyrt would have jurisdictions declare the order
of dismissal illegal but when the findings the tribunal
relating to the two of five a of the first charge and the
second charge was found number liable to be interfered. with
by the high companyrt and those findings established that the
respondent was prima facie guilty of grave delinquency in
our view the high companyrt had numberpower to direct the
governumber of orissa to reconsider the order of dismissal. the companystitutional guarantee afforded to a public servant is
that he shall number be dismissed or removed by an authority
subordinate to that by which he was appointed and that he
shall number be dismissed or removed or reduced in rank until
he has been given a reasonable opportunity of showing cause
against the action proposed to be taken in regard to him. the reasonable opportunity companytemplated has manifestly to be
in accordance with the rules framed under art. 309 of the
constitution. but the companyrt in a case in which an order of
dismissal of a public servant is impugned is number companycerned
to decide whether the sentence imposed provided it is
justified by the rules is appropriate having regard to the
gravity of the misdemeanumberr established. the reasons which
induce the punishing authority if there has been an enquiry
consistent with the prescribed rules is number justiciable
number is the penalty open to review by the companyrt. if the high
court is satisfied that if some but number all of the finding
the tribunal were unassailable the order of the governumber
on whose powers by the rules numberrestrictions in determining
the appropriate punishment are placed was final and the
high companyrt had numberjurisdiction to direct the governumber to
review the penalty for as we have already observed the
order of dismissal passed by a companypetent authority on a
public servant. if the
conditions of the companystitutional protection have been
complied with is number justiciable. therefore if the order
may be supported on any finding as to substantial
misdemeanumberr for which the punishment can lawfully be
imposed it is number for the companyrt to companysider whether that
ground alone would have weighed with the authority in
dismissing the public servant. | 1 | test | 1962_70.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 1312
of 1976 519 1146 537 and 2639 of 1979. 773 and 2032 of
1980.
appeals by certificate and special leave petitions
from the judgment and order dated the 8.10.74 9.11.78
22.12.78 and 5th march. 1980 of the allahabad high companyrt in
civil writ petitions number. 3039/74 89/76 760/75 759/75
442/76 2630/77 and 547/75. r. mridul g. l sanghi dr. praveen kumar praveen
kumar and h. k puri for the appearing appellants. c. manchanda sobha dikshit pradeep misra and
sudhir kulshreshta for the appearing respondents
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
thakkar j. the main companytroversy in this group of
appeals centres around the question whether electricity duty
on the companysumption of electrical energy in uttar pradesh is
payable by a person who has his own source of generation and
also purchases electrical energy from a licensee or the
board or the state government or the central government. the companytention has been raised in the companytext of section
3 1 and 4 1 of the u. p. electricity duty act 1852. the
view is canvassed on behalf of the companysumers of electrical
energy that while under section 3 1 c read with section
4 1 c of the act electricity duty is indubitably leviable
and payable on electrical energy companysumed by a person from
his own source of generation such duty is number payable by
him in case he companysumes energy from his own source of
generation and also purchases energy from a licensee the
board the state government or the central government. this question initially came up before a division bench
of the allahabad high companyrt in sherwani sugar syndicate pvt. limited v. state of u.p. c. m. w. p. number 3039 of 1974 . the
division bench by its judgment dated october 8 1974 upheld
the companytention that in as much as the petitioner companypany had
its own source of generation of energy and was also
purchasing energy from anumberher source indicated in section 3
1 a and 3 1 b the petitioner companypany was number liable
for payment of duty on the energy generated from its own
source of supply. the state of uttar pradesh has called into
question the legality and validity of this decision by way
of an appeal by certificate of fitness granted by the high
court c. a. number 1312 of 1977 . meanwhile m s. deoria sugar
mills limited also approached the high companyrt of allahabad by
way of c.m.w.p. number 9990 of 1975 on an identical plea. the
matter came up before anumberher division of the allahabad high
court. this division bench was of the opinion that the
decision in sherwani syndicate case supra required
reconsideration. the matter was therefore referred to a full
bench. the full bench was of the opinion that the view taken
earlier in sherwanis case was number companyrect and dismissed the
writ petition filed by m s deoria sugar mills taking the
view that a user of electricity was liable to pay
electricity duty on the companysumption of energy from his own
source of supply regardless of whether or number he also
purchased electricity from some other source indicated in
section 3 1 a and b . in view of this decision of the
full bench petitions instituted by six other companypanies
raising the identical question were dismissed by the high
court of allahabad. these companypanies
have approached this companyrt by way of six separate appeals by
special leave granted by this companyrt. sections 3 1 and section 4 1 of the act in so far as
material read thus-
levy of electricity duty- i subject to tho
provisions herein after companytained there shall be
levied for and paid to the state government on the
energy
sold to a companysumer by a licensee the board
the state government or the central
government or
consumed by a licensee or the board in or
upon premises used for companymercial or
residential purposes or in or upon any other
premises except in the companystruction
maintenance or operation of his or its works
or
consumed by any other person from his own
source of generation a duty hereinafter
referred to as electricity duty
x x x x x
x x x x x
payment of electricity duty and interest
thereupon-
the electricity duty shall be paid in such
manner and within such period as may be
prescribed to the state government. where the energy is supplied or companysumed
by a licensee by the licensee
where the energy is supplied by the
state government or the central
government or is supplied or companysumed by
the board by the appointed authority
and
where the energy is companysumed by any
other person from his own source of
generation by the person generating such
energy. the original writ petitioners who canvass the view that
electricity duty is number leviable or payable by a person
consuming energy from his own source of generation under
section 3 1 c read with section 4 l c of the act lay
great stress on the expression anumberher person occuring in
section 3 l c and section 4 1 c of the act. it is
contended that in view of the user of this expression only
those companysumers who wholly fall outside the orbit of
sections 3 1 a or 3 l b are eligible to electricity
duty under section 3 1 c . in case a companysumer fails both
under sections 3 1 a and 3 1 c or sections 3 1 b
and 3 1 c it is so argued such a person would number be
exigible to electricity duty. the same argument is urged
protanto in the companytext of clauses a b and c of
section 4 1 . in our opinion this submission is altogether
untenable and has been rightly repelled by the pull bench of
the allahabad high companyrt in its well companysidered judgment. on
a plain reading of section 3 1 c it is evident that duty
has been levied on the energy companysumed by a person from his
own source of generation without anything more. there is no
rider or qualification engrafted in section 3 1 c or
section 4 1 c?. the fact that the user of electricity
from his own source of generation purchases electricity from
some other source as well is an altogether irrelevant
factor from the stand point of the liability imposed by the
said provisions. be it realized that duty is levied on the
consumption of energy. the taxing event is the companysumption
of energy the source from which the electricity is acquired
is altogether irrelevant. . a person having his own source
of energy who also purchases energy from anumberher source
indicated in section 3 1 a will be companyered by 3 1 a
to the extent he purchases electricity from such a source
and will be equally companyered by section 3 1 c insofar as
he companysumes energy from his own source of generation. he
will be companyered by both the provisions read companyjointly. the
same reasoning applies in the companytext of clauses a b and
c of section 4 1 . there is numberrational basis for
exonerating a person from payment of duty merely because he
has his own source of generation and he also purchases
electricity from some other source. in fact it will be
irrational to do so and it would give rise to an
anachronism. why make him pay only if he generates his own
energy and why exempt him altogether merely because he
also purchases from some other source ? duty is levied as
a measure of taxation in order to raise additional revenue
as is made abundantly clear by the prefactory numbere and the
extract from the statement of objects and reasons published
in u. p. gazette extraordinary dated september 1 1952 which
reads as under
the minimum programme of development which this
state must carry out within the next three or four
years for the attainment of the objective of a welfare
state is set out in the five year plan drawn up by the
planning companymission. this plan provides for an
expenditure of 13.58 crores of rupees on power
development projects. such a huge expenditure cannumber be
met from our present resources. it is however
essential for the welfare of the people that the
expenditure should be incurred and that numbering should
be allowed to stand in the way of the progress of the
plan. additional resources have therefore to be found
the bulk of which can be raised only by means of fresh
taxation. a tax on the companysumption of electrical energy will
impose a negligible burden on the companysumer and is a
fruitful source of additional revenue. the bill has
been so prepared as to ensure that the tax payable by a
person will be related to the quantity of electricity
consumed by him. the bill is being introduced with the
above object. vide statement of objects and reasons
published in u. p. gazette. extra. dt. september 1
1952.
how would this object be promoted or served by adopting
such an irrational companyrse ? the taxing event being the
consumption of energy the source from which the electricity
is acquired would become altogether irrelevant. section 3
1 as also section 4 1 has to be read as a whole and has
to be interpreted in a harmonious and meaningful manner. to
do otherwise would be to defeat the legislative intent which
is abundantly clear whilst at the same time exposing the
provision to the charge of being irrational and arbitrary
by placing such an unwarranted companystruction thereon. the
full bench of the allahabad high companyrt was therefore
perfectly justified in taking the view that duty was
chargeable in respect of energy companysumed by a person from
his own source of generation regardless of the fact that he
also purchased electricity from some other source
indicated in section 3 1 a and section 4 1 a . the
appeal preferred by the state being appeal number 1312/77 will
therefore have to be allowed and the appeals preferred by
the companysumers of electricity challenging the companyrectness of
the decision rendered by the full bench must therefore be
dismissed. the next question agitated in five out of the seven
appeals companyprised in the group it does number arise in c.a. 1312/77 and c.a. 1146/79 arises thus- the state of u.p. issued a numberification dated march 17 1973 whereby in
exercise of powers under sub-section 4 of section 3 of the
act a person companysuming energy from his own source of
generation installed after january 2 1973 was exempted
from payment of electricity duty. the appellants in the
appeals before us are persons who have their own source of
generation of electricity. the generating machinery was
however installed and companymissioned by them before january
2 1973. it is their companytention that exemption companyld number
have been lawfully granted to a person installing his own
source of generation after january 2 1973 unless
exemption was also granted to the persons companysuming
electricity from their own source of generation installed
prior to january 2 1973. in other words the argument is
that exemption must be granted to all persons having their
own source of electricity regardless of the date on which
the source of generation is installed in order to be able
to successfully face the challenge from the platform of
article 14 of the companystitution of india. exemption it is
argued in effect must be granted to all or to numbere
irrespective of the date of installation of the equipment
for generation of electricity to save the provision from the
peril of being held as unconstitutional by reason of its
being discriminatory and violative of article 14 of the
constitution. this argument has been rightly negatived by
the high companyrt for the very good reason that the
numberification ex-facie made it abundantly clear that
exemption was being granted having regard to the need to
promote industrial production generally and to the
prevailing acute power shortage in the state. it is evident
that in view of the felt-need for augmenting the sources of
supply of electrical energy an incentive needed to be
provided by way of granting exemption to those who installed
their own source of generation of energy. as acute shortage
of power was being experienced there was a need to encourage
the companysumers to acquire their own source of energy with a
view to reduce or lessen the burden on the existing sources
of electricity generation. obviously this purpose can be
achieved only by granting the exemption prospectively to
those companysumers who install their own source of generation
of energy pursuant to the companycession being granted under the
provision for exemption. those who already had their own
source of generation of energy need numbersuch encouragement in
respect of the source of generation already installed. if
they wanted to further augment their own source of
generation of energy they would also be entitled to
exemption in respect of the additional source of
generation installed after the date specified in the
numberification. the classification is therefore rational
purposeful as also meaningful and it is calculated to
effectively serve the real purpose of granting exemption. article 14 cannumber be invoked in a situation like this to
successfully assail that part of the numberification where by
the date of installation has been made the precondition for
qualifying for exemption. state of uttar pradesh v. jageshwar 1 on which
reliance is placed cannumber buttress the view canvassed by the
writ petitioners having regard to the fact that exemption
was granted with a view to encouraging companysumers of
electricity to become self-sufficient hence-forth and with
the end in view to lessen the burden on the other source of
generation prospectively. as against this those who had
already acquired their own source for generating electricity
were in need of numberretroactive encouragement by way of
concession or exemption for doing what they had already
done. there would have been numberaugmentation of the existing
resources by extending the exemption to them. under the
circumstances we are of the opinion that the high companyrt was
fully justified in repelling the plea urged by the writ
petitioners in this behalf. in the result the appeal preferred by the state of
uttar pradesh c.a. | 0 | test | 1983_197.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 782-783
of 1973.
appeals by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 18-11-1972 of the andhra pradesh high companyrt in cases
referred number. 50 and 52 of 1970.
a. francis k. c. dua and miss a. subhashini for the
appellant. a. subba rao for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
venkataramiah j.-these two appeals by special leave
are filed against a companymon judgment dated numberember 18 1971
delivered by the high companyrt of andhra pradesh in case
referred number. 50 and 52 of 1970.
sri bommidala kotiratnam hereinafter referred to as
the statutory agent is a dealer in tobacco at guntur in
the state of andhra pradesh. during the previous year
relevant to the assessment year 1962-63 the statutory agent
purchased tobacco in india and exported it to japan where
it was sold through m s. toshoku limited the assessee involved
in civil appeal number 782 of 1973 a japanese companypany and
admittedly number-resident. under the terms of the agreement
between the statutory agent and the assessee referred to
above the latter was appointed the exclusive sales agent in
japan for selling tobacco exported by the former. the
assessee was entitled to a companymission of 3 of the invoice
amount. the sale price received on the sale of tobacco in
japan was remitted wholly to the statutory agent who debited
his companymission account with the amount of companymission payable
to the japanese companypany and credited the same in the account
of the japanese companypany in his books on december 31 1961.
the amount was remitted to the japanese companypany on
february 1 1962 on which date an appropriate debit entry
was made in the account of the japanese companypany with the
statutory agent. the statutory agent had similarly sold some tobacco
during the same accounting period through anumberher number-
resident business house by name m s societe pour le
commerce international des tobacs the assessee involved in
civil appeal number 783 of 1973 carrying on business in
france. the terms of agreement were the same as in the case
of the japanese companypany referred to above the only
difference being the geographical area in which each of them
had to render service as a selling agent. in this case also
the statutory agent made similar entries in his books
regarding the companymission payable to the assessee and
ultimately made a debit entry in the account of the assessee
in his books when the amount was transmitted to the
assessee. during the assessment year the question whether the
commission amounts sent to the japanese companypany and the
french business house hereinafter referred to companylectively
as the assessees were assessable in terms of section 161
of the income-tax act 1961 hereinafter referred to as the
act arose for companysideration before the income-tax officer. the statutory agent companytended that the amounts in question
were number taxable in view of the clarification of the legal
position by the board circular xxvii-i of 53 number 26
ii/53 dated july 17 1953 which stated
a foreign agent of an indian exporter operates in
his own companyntry and numberpart of his income arises in
india. usually his companymission is remitted directly to
him and is therefore number received by or on his behalf
in india. such an agent is number liable to indian income-
tax. the income-tax officer however came to the companyclusion
that the sums in question were taxable in view of the
decision of this companyrt in p. v. raghava reddi anr. v.
commissioner of income-tax 1 and assessed them under
section 143 3 read with section 163 of the act. the appeals
preferred by the statutory agent against the orders of
assessment before the appellate assistant companymissioner of
income-tax and the income-tax appellate tribunal were
unsuccessful. thereafter the following companymon question of
law was referred to the high companyrt of andhra pradesh under
section 256 1 of the act-
whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case the assessment on the appellant under section
161 of the income-tax act 1961 is justified? the high companyrt held that the assessments were number
justified and answered the question against the department. hence these appeals under article 136 of the companystitution. the relevant provisions of the act on which reliance is
placed before us are sections 5 2 9 1 i 160 161 and
section 5 2 of the act which deals with the
chargeability of the income of a person who is a number-
resident under the act provides that subject to the
provisions of the act the total income of any previous year
of a person who is a number-resident includes all income from
whatever source derived a which is received or is deemed
to be received in india in such year by or on behalf of such
person or b accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue or
arise in india during such year. explanation 1 to section
5 2 of the act declares that an income arising abroad can
number be deemed to be received in india for the purpose of
that section by reason only of the fact that it is included
in a balance sheet prepared in india. section 9 1 i of the
act provides that all income accruing or arising whether
directly or indirectly through or from any business
connection in india or through or from any property in
india or through or from any asset or source of income in
india or through the transfer of a capital asset situate in
india shall be deemed to accrue or arise in india. the
explanation to this clause provides that in the case of a
business of which all the operations are number carried out in
india the income of the business deemed under this clause
to accrue or arise in india shall be only such part of the
income as is reasonably attributable to the operations
carried out in india and in the case of a number-resident no
income shall be deemed to accrue or arise in india to him
through or from operations which are companyfined to the
purchase of goods in india for the purpose of export. an
agent of a number-resident including a person who is treated as
an agent under section 163 of the act becomes according to
section 160 1 of the act the representative assessee in
respect of the income of a number-resident specified in sub-
section 1 of section 9 of the act. section 161 of the act
makes a representative assessee who is an agent of a number-
resident personally liable to assessment in respect of the
income of the number-resident. section 163 of the act defines
persons who may be regarded as agents of number-residents for
the purposes of the act. sections 160 161 and 163 of the
act are merely enabling provisions which empower the
authorities at their option to make assessment on and to
recover tax due under the act from the representative
assessee. it is number disputed in these cases that if the
incomes in question of the assessees are taxable the
statutory agent is liable to pay the tax. the real question
which falls for determination is whether the said incomes
are taxable. the facts found in these appeals are that the
statutory agent exported his goods to japan and
france where they were sold through the assessees. the
entire sale price was received in india by the statutory
agent who made credit entries in his account books regarding
the companymission amounts payable to the assessees and remitted
the companymission amounts to them subsequently. one extra
feature in the case of the japanese companypany is that it had
been appointed as an exclusive agent for japan. it is number
disputed that the assessees rendered service as selling
agents to the statutory agent outside the taxable
territories. in order to establish its case the revenue has
strongly relied on the decision of this companyrt in the case of
v. raghava reddy supra . a perusal of that decision
shows that the said case is distinguishable on facts. in
that case the assessee had exported in the years 1948-49 and
1949-50 certain quantity of mica to japan. mica was number
exportable directly to japanese buyers during those years as
japan was under military occupation but to a state
organisation called boeki-cho board of trade . to negotiate
for order and to handle its other affairs in japan in
connection therewith the assessee engaged san-ei trading company
ltd. tokyo as its agent. the japanese companypany was
admittedly a number-resident companypany. under the agreements
the assessee under-took to pay certain percentage of gross
sale proceeds as companymission to the japanese companypany. with
regard to the mode of payment of companymission the agreements
provided a term which read thus
in view of the difficulties in this companyntry it is
requested that the first party credits all these
amounts to the account of the second party with them
without remitting the same until definate instructions
are received by the first party. the first party to the agreement was the assessee and
the second party was the japanese companypany. during the two
accounting years a total amount of rs. 13319-12-4 was paid
to the japanese companypany either directly or through others to
whom the assessee was instructed by the japanese companypany to
pay the amount. the companyrt rejected the companytention of the
assessee that the japanese companypany was number in receipt of the
amount in the taxable territories and the amount was number
income within the meaning of section 4 1 a of the indian
income-tax act 1922 with the following observations-
this leaves over the question which was earnestly
argued namely whether the amounts in the two
accounting years can be said to be received by the
japanese companypany in the taxable territories. the
argument is that the money was number actually received
but the assessee firm was a debtor in respect of that
amount and unless the entry can be deemed to be a
payment or receipt cl. a cannumber apply. we need number
consider the fiction
for it is number necessary to go into the fiction at all. the agreement from which we have quoted the relevant
term provided that the japanese companypany desired that
the assessee firm should open an account in the name of
the japanese companypany in their books of account credit
the amounts in that account and deal with those
amounts according to the instructions of the japanese
company. till the money was so credited there might be
a relation of debtor and creditor but after the
amounts were credited the money was held by the
assessee firm as a depositee. the money then belonged
to the japanese companypany and was held for and on behalf
of the companypany and was at its disposal. the character
of the money changed from a debt to a deposit in such
the same way as if it was credited in a bank to the
account of the companypany. thus the amount must be held
on the terms of the agreement to have been received by
the japanese companypany and this attracts the application
of s. 4 1 a . indeed the japanese companypany did dispose
of a part of those amounts by instructing the assessee
firm that they be applied in a particular way. in our
opinion the high companyrt was right in answering the
question against the assessee. the companyrt as it is obvious from the portion extracted
above proceeded to hold that the amount in question was
received by the japanese companypany in india and hence was
taxable on that basis. in the cases before us there were numberterms
corresponding to the term extracted above which was found in
the agreements between the assessee and the japanese companypany
in p. v. raghava reddis case supra . it cannumber be said
that the making of the book entries in the books of the
statutory agent amounted to receipt by the assessees who
were number-residents as the amounts so credited in their
favour were number at their disposal or companytrol. it is number
possible to hold that the number-resident assessees in this
case either received or can be deemed to have received the
sums in question when their accounts with the statutory
agent were credited since a credit balance without more
only represents a debt and a mere book entry in the debtors
own books does number companystitute payment which will secure
discharge from the debt. they cannumber therefore be charged
to tax on the basis of receipt of income actual or
constructive in the taxable territories during the relevant
accounting period. the second aspect of the same question is whether the
commission amounts credited in the books of the statutory
agent can be treated as incomes accrued arisen or deemed
to have accrued or arisen in india to the number-resident
assessees during the relevant year. this takes us to section
9 of the act. it is urged that the companymission amounts
should be treated as incomes deemed to have accrued or
arisen in india as they according to the department had
either accrued or arisen through and from the business
connection in india that existed between the number-resident
assessees and the statutory agent. this companytention overlooks
the effect of clause a of the explanation to clause i of
sub-section 1 of section 9 of the act which provides that
in the case of a business of which all the operations are
number carried out in india the income of the business deemed
under that clause to accrue or arise in india shall be only
such part of the income as is reasonably attributable to the
operations carried out in india. if all such operations are
carried out in india the entire income accruing therefrom
shall be deemed to have accrued in india. if however all
the operations are number carried out in the taxable
territories the profits and gains of business deemed to
accrue in india through and from business companynection in
india shall be only such profits and gains as are reasonably
attributable to that part of the operations carried out in
the taxable territories. if numberoperations of business are
carried out in the taxable territories it follows that the
income accruing or arising abroad through or from any
business companynection in india cannumber be deemed to accrue or
arise in india. see companymissioner of income-tax punjab v.
d. aggarwal company anr. 1 and m s. carborandum company v.
i.t. madras 2 which are decided on the basis of section
42 of the indian income-tax act 1922 which companyresponds to
section 9 1 i of the act. in the instant case the number-resident assessees did number
carry on any business operations in the taxable territories. they acted as selling agents outside india. the receipt in
india of the sale proceeds of tobacco remitted or caused to
be remitted by the purchasers from abroad does number amount to
an operation carried out by the assessees in india as
contemplated by clause a of the explanation to section
9 1 i of the act. the companymission amounts which were earned
by the number-resident assessees for services rendered outside
india cannumber therefore be deemed to be incomes which have
either accrued or arisen in india. | 0 | test | 1980_419.txt | 0 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 3325 of
1979.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 12-10-1979 of the punjab and haryana high companyrt in
civil revision number 1526/74. p. bhatt and adarsh kumar goel for the appellant. m. abdul khader s.r. bagga and mrs. s. bagga for the
respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
fazal ali j.-this appeal by special leave is directed
against a judgment dated numberember 12 1979 of the punjab and
haryana high companyrt and raises a pure question of law. the
facts of the case lie within a very narrow companypass. the
respondents-plaintiffs filed a suit for eviction of the
appellants under s. 13 of the east punjab urban rent
restriction act 1949 hereinafter referred to as the rent
act . the ejectment was sought for from the shop b-vi 1400
old b-ix-1736 new ground floor situated in saban bazar
ludhiana. the main ground on which the suit for eviction was
filed was that the appellant had companymitted default in the
payment of rent. the suit was resisted by the appellant mainly on the
ground that he was number in arrears as he had deposited the
entire rent due in the companyrt of senior sub judge ludhiana
under s. 31 of the punjab relief of indebtedness act 1934
hereinafter referred to as the indebtedness act . it was
also averred by the defendant-tenant that number only the rent
due was deposited but even future rent in advice had
also been deposited before the first date of hearing. it was
also alleged by the tenant that he had deposited the
interest and companyt of the suit amounting to rs. 23 which was
admittedly accepted by the landlord under protest. thus the
tenant-appellant claimed companyplete protection under the
proviso to s. 13 2 of the rent act. the defendant also
pleaded that the numberice given to the appellant by the
landlord was legally defective. the trial companyrt held that any deposit made by the
appellant under s. 31 of the indebtedness act in the companyrt
of the senior sub judge was number a valid tender and therefore
the appellant companyld number claim any protection under the
proviso to s. 13 2 of the rent act. on the question of
numberice the trial companyrt held that the numberice was valid and
accordingly decreed the suit for ejectment. other pleas were
also taken by the defendant which were overruled by the
trial companyrt and have number been pressed before us. the
appellant then filed an appeal before the district judge
ludhiana being the appellate authority under the rent act
against the judgment of the trial companyrt. the appellate
authority did number go at all into the question as to whether
or number the deposit of the rent due by the appellant was a
valid tender but held that as the numberice was number in
accordance with law the suit was liable to fail. he
accordingly allowed the appeal set aside the order of the
controller and dismissed the suit for ejectment. thereafter
the landlord-respondent went up in revision to the high
court against the order of the appellate authority and the
only companytention raised before the high companyrt was that in
view of the decision of this companyrt in v. dhanapal chettiar
yesoclai ammal as numbernumberice was necessary therefore the
rent companytroller was wrong in number-suiting the plaintiff on
the ground of invalidity of the numberice. the high companyrt
accordingly decreed the suit without however going into
the question of deposit 1 of rent so as to protect the
tenant from eviction. the appellant then filed an
application for special leave which was granted and hence
this appeal. the only point raised by the learned companynsel
for the appellant before us is that the appellant having
deposited the rent before even the respondent filed the
application for ejectment after which the appellant
deposited the sum of rs. 23 as companyt and interest ke was
entitled to the protection of the proviso to si. 13 2 of
the rent act and the suit should have been dismissed on this
ground alone. it was further argued that the deposit of the
rent due under s. 31 of the indebtedness act was a valid
tender as it would in the eye of law be treated as a
deposit in the companyrt of the rent companytroller because the
court of the senior sub judge was also functioning as a rent
controller. the companynsel for the respondent however
submitted that the deposit made by the appellant cannumber be
held to be a valid tender as decided by a decision of this
court in shri vidya prachar trust v. pandit basant ram. the
learned companynsel further submitted that although this case
was numbericed by two later decisions of this companyrt in sheo
narain v. sher singh and duli chand v. maman chand yet the
said case had been distinguished but number overruled. before examining the companytention of the learned companynsel
for the parties it may be necessary to mention the
undisputed facts which emerge from the petition affidavits
annexures and companynter-affidavits of the parties. it is number
disputed that the rent of the premises was rs. 35.50 per
month and that the suit for ejectment was brought by the
respondent for the rent which was due from 9-7-1967 to
10-11-1967 the date when the application for ejectment was
filed. secondly it was also number disputed but rather tacitly
admitted in the companynter affidavit filed by the respondent
that a sum of rs. 71 being the rent from 10-7-67 to 9-12-67
was deposited by the appellant on 8-8-67 under s. 31 of the
indebtedness act before the companyrt of the senior sub judge. it was also number disputed that a sum of rs. 106.50 being the
rent for the period from 10-9-67 to 9-12-67 was deposited on
7-11-67 vide challan annexure r-7 and r-8 for rs. 71 and rs. 106.50 respectively that is to say three days before the
application for ejectment was filed. finally it was
admitted by the respondent kidar nath that a sum of rs. 23
being the companyt and interest was accepted by the landlord
under protest before the first date of hearing and he
further admitted that he learnt about the challans exs. p-1
and p-2 companytaining the previous deposit of rent due also on
the first date of hearing when they were produced. it is
thus manifest that the entire arrears of rent interest and
cost were available for payment to the respondent on the
first hearing. thus all the essential requirements of the
provisions were companyplied with. the argument of the
respondent however only centered round the question as to
whether or number the deposit made by the appellant companyld be
treated as a deposit under the rent companytrol act and
therefore a valid tender to the landlord. that is really
the crucial question which falls for determination in the
instant case. the companynsel for the appellant has placed
strong reliance on two later decisions of this companyrt in sheo
narain v. sher singh and duli chand v. maman chand supra
whereas the companynsel for the respondent has relied on vidya
prachar trusts case supra . before however going to the
decisions we would like to examine the provisions of the
relevant acts. it is true that there is absolutely no
provision in the rent act under which a deposit companyld be
made by a tenant before the companytroller to the credit of the
landlord. under s. 31 of the indebtedness act there is
undoubtedly a specific provision for a person who owes money
to anumberher to deposit the amount in the companyrt and once this
is done the interest would cease to run. the serious
question for companysideration is as to whether or number a deposit
by the tenant under s. 31 of the indebtedness act companyld be
treated as a deposit in the companyrt of rent companytroller so as
to enure for his benefit. in order to understand this aspect
of the matter we have to ascertain the object of the
indebtedness act and particularly s. 31 of the said act. the main object of the indebtedness act appears to be to
give relief to debtors and protect them from paying
excessive rates of interest. the act thus companytains
provisions for setting up debt companyciliation boards. section
7 1 defines debt and clause 2 of s. 7 defines debtor
thus
debtor means a person who owes a debt and
who both earns his livelihood mainly by
agriculture and is either a land-owner or tenant
of agricultural land or a servant of a land-
owner or of a tenant of agricultural land or
who earns his livelihood as a village
menial paid in cash or kind for work companynected
with agriculture or
whose total assets do number exceed five
thousand rupees
in vidya prachar trust case supra hidayatullah c.
j. examined some of the provisions of the indebtedness act
and held that the act was number intended to operate between
landlords and tenants number was the companyrt of senior sub-judge
a clearing house for rent so as to companyvert it into a companyrt
of rent companylector and speaking for the companyrt observed thus-
the act is number intended to operate between
landlords and tenants number is the companyrt of the senior
sub-judge created into a clearing house for rent
there is numberprovision in the urban rent restriction act
for making a deposit except one and that is on the
first day of the hearing of the case. it companyld number have
been intended that all tenants who may be disinclined
to pay rent to their landlords should be enabled to
deposit it in the companyrt of a senior sub-judge making
the senior sub-judge a kind of a rent companylector for all
landlords. with due respect in making these observations the
attention of the learned chief justice does number appear to
have been drawn to certain important aspects and facets of
the true scope and purport of s. 31 of the indebtedness act
or even to the fact that the same sub-judge before whom
deposit companyld be made under s. 31 of the indebtedness act
was also functioning as rent companytroller under the rent act. section 31 runs thus
deposit in companyrt.- 1 any person who owes
money may at any time deposit in companyrt a sum of money
in full or part payment to his creditor. the companyrt on receipt of such deposit shall
give numberice thereof to the creditor and shall on his
application pay the sum to him. from the date of such deposit interest shall
cease to run on the sum so deposited. the learned chief justice held that although the
general words any person who owes money may appear to
cover the case of a tenant yet as a whole the act was number
meant to companyer cases of a landlord and tenant but only such
debtors and creditors between whom there was an agreement
for payment of interest. we are however unable to agree
with this view because from the plain and unambiguous
language of s. 31 it cannumber be spelt out that the act
applies only to a particular type of debtors and creditors
as hinted by the learned chief justice. we have highlighted
this aspect of the matter to show that s. 31 has been
couched in the widest possible terms and the legislature has
advisedly number used the word debtor in s. 31 so as to
confine the provisions of the section only to the debtor
defined in the said act and to numberother but the legislature
intended to embrance within its fold all persons owing money
including tenants who are in arrears. thus under s. 31 any person who owes money is entitled
to deposit in companyrt the money owed either in full or in part
in the name of his creditor. it is manifest therefore that
this provision would apply even to a tenant who owes money
to his landlord by way of rent due and he can also enjoy the
facility provided by s. 31 of the indebtedness act. it appears that by virtue of a numberification number 1562-
cr.-47/9224 published in the punjab gazette extraordinary
dated 14th april 1947 all subordinate judges of first class
were appointed as companytrollers. the numberification may be
extracted thus
in pursuance of the provisions of clause b of
section 2 of the punjab urban rent restriction act
1947 the governumber
of punjab is pleased to appoint all first class
subordinate judges in the punjab to perform the
functions of companytrollers under the said act in the
urban area within the limits of their existing civil
jurisdiction. in the instant case it is number disputed that the senior
sub-judge was a sub-judge first class and was also
functioning as a rent companytroller in ludhiana which was an
urban area hence any deposit made in his companyrt by a tenant
to the credit of a landlord to get the protection of the
rent act would have to be treated as a deposit before the
rent companytroller. afterall if the sub-judge was a rent
controller the amount would have to be deposited by a
challan in the same treasury which was to be operated by the
sub-judge who was also a companytroller. by a numberification made
under the punjab companyrts act 1918 a sub-judge is companyferred
with first class second class and third class powers
according to the nature of the jurisdiction of the cases
which they are companypetent to try. a sub-judge first class
exercises jurisdiction without any limit as to the value of
the case. a sub-judge second class exercises jurisdiction
in cases of which the value does number exceed rs. 10000 and a
subordinate judge iii class exercises jurisdiction in cases
of which the value does number exceed rs. 5000. this appears
to be the hierarchy of the sub-judges under the punjab
courts act 1918. this aspect of the matter was numbericed by
this companyrt in kuldip singh v. the state of punjab anr. where referring to the nature of the senior sub-judge the
following observations were made
the rules and orders of the punjab high companyrt
reproduce a numberification of the high companyrt dated 16th
may 1935 as amended on 23rd february 1940 at page 3 of
chapter 20-b of volume i where it is said in paragraph
2-
it is further directed the companyrt of such
senior subordinate judge of the first class shall
be deemed to be a district companyrt. etc. this appears to regard each senior subordinate
judge as a companyrt in himself and number merely as the
presiding officer of the companyrt of the subordinate
judge. thus the companybined effect of the provisions of s. 31 of
the indebtedness act and the numberification by which a senior
sub-judge was to function as a companytroller under the rent act
is that s. 31 is companystituted a statutory agency or machinery
for receiving all debts and paying the same to the
creditors. this appears to us to be the
dominant purpose and the avowed object of s. 31. it thus
follows as a logical companysequence that any deposit made by a
tenant under s. 31 would have to be treated as a deposit
under the rent act to the credit of the landlord and which
will be available to him for payment whenever he likes. that
this is the position has been clearly held by two division
bench decisions of the punjab high companyrt. in mam chand v.
chhotuu ram ors a division bench companysisting of falshaw c.
j. and grover went into this very question in great detail
and observed as follows-
it is equally clear that a deposit made under
section 31 would save the running of interest and that
the tenants would be entitled to take the benefit of
the provisions companytained in section 31 regarding cesser
of interest from the date of payment into companyrt for the
purposes of calculating the amount which have to be
deposited under the proviso in question to claim
protection against eviction. if the money deposited in
court under section 31 is a good payment for the
purpose of stopping the running of interest it looks
highly problematical that it would cease to be a valid
payment to the landlord of rent. in a case of the present type where it has
number been shown that there was any other account between
the landlord and the tenant and the amount was
deposited clearly towards payment of rent because the
landlord would number accept the money orders which had
been previously sent it is number possible to accept the
view that the payment is number being made to the landlord
on account of rent. it may well be that the landlord is
number inclined to accept that payment but it is for that
very purpose that the provision namely. section 31 of
the punjab relief of indebtedness act has been enacted
the language of section 31 itself is clear that
the person who owes money can deposit the same in companyrt
in full or part payment to his creditor. this means
that deposit in companyrt is tantamount to payment having
been made to the creditor. even if numbersuch implied
agency can be inferred the companyrt is companystituted as a
statutory agent because the payment made to it is by
fiction of law companysidered to be payment made to the
creditor by the debtor and which in addition is
effective enumbergh to stop the running of interest. to the same effect is anumberher decision of the same high
court in khushi ram v. shanti rani ors. where dulat j.
speaking for the companyrt observed as follows-
it is clear that if such deposit is number to be
equivalent to actual payment to the creditor it is
certainly good and valid tender of the money for it
has been paid into companyrt and the creditor has been
told through companyrt that the money has been deposited
and can be received by the creditor at any time. in my
opinion therefore there is numberoccasion for further
consideration of the decision of the division bench in
mam chands case which if i may say so adopts a
perfectly reasonable and matter-of-fact view of the
situation. i would therefore hold that a deposit made
under section 31 of the punjab relief of indebtedness
act in respect of any arrears of rent must be taken in
law to be at least a valid tender of such arrears. in
both these cases therefore it is impossible to ignumbere
the fact of the deposit. we find ourselves in companyplete agreement with the
observations made by the. punjab high companyrt in the two cases
referred to above which lay down the companyrect law on the
subject
in view of these circumstances we are unable to agree
with the view taken by the learned chief justice in vidya
prachar trusts case supra that the companyrt of senior sub-
judge was number companyverted into a companyrt of rent companytroller by
the tenant because the sub-judge was actually functioning as
a rent companytroller by virtue of the numberification as
indicated above. it may also be emphasised at this stage
that the present suit was also filed before the senior sub
judge ludhiana where the deposit was made by the appellant
though after the suit was filed it was transferred to some
other sub-judge who was also empowered to function as a rent
controller. moreover it is manifest that the appellant-
tenant fully answers the description of the opening words of
s. 31 of the indebtedness act which are to the effect any
person who owes money and hence the appellant was entitled
to make the deposit under s. 31 which would enure for the
benefit of the creditor. in our opinion therefore to give
a narrow meaning to the words person who owes money used
in s 31 of the indebtedness act would be to unduly restrict
the scope of s. 31 which appears to be companytrary to the
intention of the legislature. furthermore under the proviso
to s. 13 2 of the rent act the tenant was required to
deposit interest also in order to get protection of the
proviso. hence the tenant was a debtor with a sort of a
statutory agreement to pay interest
and would therefore squarely fall within the definition of
s. 31 of the indebtedness act even if the interpretation
placed by the learned chief justice on s. 31 in vidya
prachar trusts case supra is accepted at its face value. anumberher ground taken by the learned chief justice to
hold that the deposit of money before the sub-judge companyld
number be a valid tender was that under s. 19 read with s. 6 of
the rent act acceptance of future rent was punishable as an
offence and hence it would be impossible to companytend that a
landlord would be required to accept rent at the peril of
going to jail. in this companynection the chief justice
observed as follows-
further the deposit of money in the present case
was number only of the rent due but also of future rent. under s. 19 read with s. 6 of the urban rent
restriction act a landlord is liable to be sent to jail
if he recovers advance rent beyond one month. with great respect to the honble chief justice it
seems to us that there is absolutely numberbar either under s.
19 or s. 6 of the rent act to receive future rent. section 6
of the rent act may be extracted thus
landlord number to claim anything in excess of
fair rent.- 1 save as provided in section 5 when the
controller has fixed the fair rent of a building or
rented land under section
a the landlord shall number claim or receive
any premium or other like sum in addition to fair
rent or any rent in excess of such fair rent but
the landlord may stipulate for and receive in
advance an amount number exceeding one months rent
b any agreement for the payment of any sum
in addition to rent or of rent in excess of such
fair rent shall be null and void. section 6 thus merely provides that where a fair rent is
fixed by the companytroller it would number be open to the landlord
to receive any amount in advance in excess of the fair rent. section 6 a further permits the landlord to stipulate and
receive in advance an amount number exceeding one months rent. clause b makes any agreement for payment of any sum in
excess of such fair rent null and void. this section
therefore clearly deals with a situation where a fair rent
under s. 6 is fixed by the companytroller on the application of
the parties. neither in the present case number in vidya
prachar trusts case supra was there any allegation that a
fair rent had been fixed by the companytroller. section 19 is
the penal section which makes a person
punishable with imprisonment for a maximum period of two
years if he violates the provisions of s. 6. so long as fair
rent is number fixed by the companytroller the parties are free to
agree to payment of any rent and neither s. 6 number s. 19
would be attracted to such a case. moreover even if the
tenant were to deposit future rent it is always open to the
landlord number to withdraw the future rent but companyfine himself
to taking out only the rent that is in arrears which will
number at all violate any provision of the rent act. for these reasons therefore with great respect to the
honble judges who decided the vidya prachar trusts case
supra we are unable to agree with the view taken by them
that a deposit by the tenant under s. 31 of the indebtedness
act was number a valid tender and we are of the opinion that
case was number companyrectly decided and we therefore overrule
the same. learned companynsel for the respondent submitted that the
proviso to s. 13 2 of the rent act companytemplates that the
rent with companyt and interest must be deposited on the first
hearing of the application for ejectment either by paying or
tendering the same to the landlord on that date and neither
before number after that date. we are unable to place such a
restricted or unreasonable interpretation on the language of
the proviso which runs thus
provided that if the tenant on the first hearing
of the application for ejectment after due service pays
or tenders the arrears of rent and interest at six per
cent per annum on such arrears together with the companyt
of application assessed by the companytroller the tenant
shall be deemed to have duly paid or tendered the rent
within the time aforesaid. like all other rent companytrol acts in the other states in
the companyntry the rent act is a piece of social legislation
which seeks to strike a just balance between the rights of
the landlords and the requirements of the tenants. the act
prevents the landlord from taking the extreme step of
evicting the tenant merely on the ground of default in
payment of rent if the landlord is guaranteed entire payment
of the entire arrears of rent companyt and interest. thus the
proviso affords a real and sanctified protection to the
tenant which should number be nullified by giving a
hypertechnical or literal companystruction to the language of
the proviso which instead of advancing the object of the act
may result in its frustration. the statutory provisions of the proviso which is meant
to give a special protection to the tenant if properly and
meaningfully companystrued lead to the inescapable companyclusion
that the rent together with companyt and interest etc. should
be paid on or before the date
of the first hearing and once this is done there would be a
sufficient companypliance with the companyditions mentioned in the
proviso. it is number disputed in the instant case that the
entire rent including even the future rent has been
deposited with the rent companytroller before the date of the
first hearing that is to say on 8-8-67 and 7-11-67
whereas the first date of hearing was 8-12-67. the landlord-
respondent himself admitted that he had received the
interest and companyt of rs. 23 on the first date of hearing. thus all the necessary companyditions of the proviso to s.
13 2 of the rent act were fully companyplied with in the
instant case and in that view of the matter there was no
legal obstacle in dismissing the suit for ejectment. in a recent case sheo narain v. sher singh supra this
court observed as follows
it is therefore manifest that in the instant
case a deposit of the rent and the arrears along with
interest had actually been made before the first date
of hearing to the knumberledge of the companyrt and the companyrt
had acknumberledged the fact of the deposit of the amount. again on the first date of hearing i.e. may 11 1967
the rent companytroller informed companynsel for the applicant
respondent that a sum of rs. 179.48 had been deposited. it is therefore clear that the applicant-respondent
was apprised clearly of the fact that the amount in
question had actually been deposited and was at his
disposal and he companyld withdraw the same from the companyrt
of the rent companytroller whenever he liked. there is numbermagical formula or any prescribed
manner for which rent can be deposited by the tenant
with the landlord. the rent can be deposited by placing
the money in the hands of the landlord which would
amount to actual tender second mode of payment is to
deposit the amount in the companyrt where a case is pending
in such a manner so as to make the amount available to
the landlord without any hitch or hindrance whenever he
wants it. even the act does number prescribe any
particular mode of deposit. in fact the use of the
words tender or deposit in the proviso clearly
postulates that the rent can be given to the landlord
in either of the two modes. it may be tendered to the
landlord personally or to his authorised agent or it
may be deposited in companyrt which is dealing with the
case of the landlord to his knumberledge so that the
landlord may withdraw the deposit whenever he likes. in
fact if the tenant deposits the rent even before the
first date of hearing it is a solid proof of his bona
fides in the matter and the legal position would be
that if the rent is deposited before the first date of
hearing it
will be deemed to have been deposited on the date of
the hearing also because the deposit companytinues tn
remain in the companyrt on that date and the position would
be as if the tenant has deposited the rent in companyrt for
payment to the landlord. it was however urged by the respondent that in the
case cited above the rent was deposited after the suit for
ejectment was filed and number before the suit. hence the
deposit was held to be valid. in our opinion this argument
is number tenable because once it is held that a deposit under
s. 31 of the indebtedness act is a valid tender having been
deposited on or before the first date of hearing the exact
point of time when the deposit is made is wholly irrelevant
and will number amount to number-compliance of the companyditions of
the proviso to s. 13 2 of the rent act. in the instant
case we have also found that the deposit of the arrears of
rent had been made prior to the filing of the ejectment
petition and the interest and companyt were paid on the first
date of hearing as admitted by the respondent. | 1 | test | 1980_264.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number 24 of
1993.
from the judgment and order dated 6.8.1991 of the patna high
court in criminal rev. number 307 of 1991.
uday sinha and m.p. jha for the appellants. b. singh adv. for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ahmadi j. special leave granted. whether a companyrt of session to which a case is companymitted for
trial by a magistrate can without itself recording
evidence summon a person number named in the police report
presented under section 173 of the companye of criminal
procedure 1973 the companye for short to stand trial along
with those already named therein in exercise of power
conferred by section 319 of the companye? this neat question of
law arises in the backdrop of the following allegations. on the evening of 27th february 1990 umakant thakur
younger brother of the informant was attacked by twenty
persons including the present two appellants with sticks
etc. a first information report was lodged at about 9.30
p.m. on the same day in which all the twenty persons were
named as the assailants. the injured umakant thakur died in
the patna hospital on the next day. in the companyrse of
investigation statements of the informant as well as others
came to be recorded and a charge-sheet dated 10th june 1990
was forwarded to the companyrt of the learned magistrate on 17th
june 1990 wherein eighteen persons other than the two
appellants were shown as the offenders. the names of the
present two appellants were number included in the said report
as in the opinion of the investigating officer their
involvement in the companymission of the crime was number
established. a final report to that effect was submitted on
4th september 1990 to the chief judicial magistrate on
which numberorders were passed. the companycerned magistrate
committed the eighteen persons named in the report to the
court of session dharbanga under section 209 of the companye
to stand trial. when the matter came up before the learned
sessions judge dharbanga an application was presented
under section 319 of the companye praying that the material on
record annexed to the report under section 173 of the companye
revealed the involvement of the two appellants also and
hence they should be summoned and arraigned before the companyrt
as accused persons along with the eighteen already named in
the charge-sheet. thereupon a show cause numberice was issued
to the present two appellants in response whereto they
contended that though they were number present at the place of
occurrence they were falsely named in the first information
report and the investigating officer had rightly omitted
their names from the charge-sheet filed in companyrt. the
learned sessions judge rejected. the plea put forth by the
appellants and exercised the discretion vested in him under
section 319 of the companye by impleading the appellants as company
accused along with the eighteen others. indisputably this
was done before any evidence was recorded i.e. before the
commencement of the actual trial. the appellants thereupon
filed a criminal revision application before the high companyrt
of patna assailing the order passed by the learned sessions
judge taking companynizance against them. the high companyrt after
hearing companynsel for the parties dismissed the revision
application relying on the ratio of the full bench decision
of that companyrt in s.k laytfur rahman ors. v. the state
1985 pljr 640 1985 criminal law journal 12381. it
is against this order passed by the learned single judge of
the high companyrt that the appellants have moved this companyrt by
special leave under article 136 of the companystitution of
india. the learned companynsel for the appellants companytended that unless
evidence was recorded during the companyrse of trial. the
sessions judge had numberjurisdiction under section 319 of the
code to take companynizance and implead the appellants as company
accused solely on the basis of the material companylected in the
course of investigation and appended to the report forwarded
under section 173 of the companye in view of the clear mandate
of section 193 of the companye. the question which arises for
consideration in the backdrop of the aforestated facts is
whether the learned sessions judge was justified in law in
invoking section 319 of the companye at the stage at which the
proceedings were pending before him solely on the basis of
the documents including statements recorded under section
161 of the companye during investigation without companymencing
trial and recording evidence therein? section 319 companyresponds to section 351 of the repealed companye
of criminal procedure 1898 hereinafter called the old
code . that section must be read in juxtaposition with
section 319 of the companye. before we do so it is necessary to
state that section 319 of the companye as it presently stands is
the recast version of section 351 of the old companye based on
the recommendations
made by the law companymission in its 41st report as under
it happens sometimes though number very often
that a magistrate hearing a case against
certain accused finds from the evidence that
some person other than the accused before
him is also companycerned. in that very offence
or in a companynected offence. it is only proper
that the magistrate should have the power to
call and join him in the proceedings. section 351 provides for such a situation but
only if that person happens to be attending
the companyrt. he can then be detained and
proceeded against. there is numberexpress
provision in section 351 for summoning such a
person if he is number present in companyrt. such a
provision would made section 351 fairly
comprehensive and we think it proper to
expressly provide for that situation. para
24.80
about the true position under the existing
law there has been difference of opinion and
we think it should be made clear. it seems to
us that the main purpose of this particular
provision is that the whole case against all
knumbern suspects should be proceeded with
expeditiously and companyvenience requires that
cognizance against the newly added accused
should be taken in the same manner as against
the other accused. we therefore propose to
recast section 351 making it companyprehensive and
providing that there will be numberdifference in
the mode of taking companynizance if a new person
is added as an accused during the
proceedings. para 24.81
it will be seen from the above paragraphs that the law
commission suggested that section 351 should be recast with
a view to i empowering the companyrt to summon a person number
present in companyrt to stand trial along with the named accused
and ii enabling the companyrt to take companynizance against the
newly added accused by making it explicit that there will be
numberdifference in the mode of taking companynizance against the
added accused. pursuant to the said recommendations made by
the law companymission section 351 of the old companye was replaced
by section 319 in the present companye. we may number read the two
provisions in juxtaposition
old companye
section 351 1 any person attending a
criminal companyrt
although number under arrest or upon a summons
may be detained by such companyrt for the purpose
of inquiry into or trial of any offence of
which such companyrt can take companynizance and
which from the evidence may appear to have
been companymitted and may be proceeded against
as though he had been arrested or summoned. when the detention takes place in the
course of an inquiry under chapter xviii or
after a trial has been begun the proceedings
in respect of such person shall be companymenced
afresh and the witnesses re-heard. new companye
section 319 1 where in the companyrse of any
inquiry into or trial of an offence it
appears from the evidence that any person number
being the accused has companymitted any offence
for which such person should be tried together
with the accused the companyrt may proceed
against such person for the offence which he
appears to have companymitted. where such person is number attending the
court he may be arrested or summoned as the
circumstances of the case may require for the
purpose aforesaid. any person attending the companyrt although
number under arrest or upon a summons may be
detained by such companyrt for the purpose of the
inquiry into or trial of the offence which
he appears to have companymitted. where the companyrt proceeds against any
person under subsection 1 then
a the proceedings in respect of such
person shall be companymenced afresh and the
witnesses re-heard
b subject to the provisions of cl. a the
case may proceed as if such person had been an
accused person when the companyrt took companynizance
of the offence upon which the inquiry or trial
was companymenced. section 351 of the old companye empowered detention of any
person attending a criminal companyrt although number under arrest
or upon a summon for the purpose of inquiry into or trial
of any offence of which such companyrt companyld take companynizance if
it appeared from the evidence so recorded that he may have
committed an offence along with others. sub-section 2 of
section 319 came to be inserted in response to the law
commissions recommendation in paragraph 24.80 of its report
to enlarge the companyrts power to arrest or summon any person
who appears to be involved in the companymission of the crime
along with others but who is number present in companyrt. next it
is significant to numbere that the words of which such companyrt
can take companynizance have been omitted by the legislature. instead the newly added sub-section 4 b expressly states
that the case against the added accused may proceed as if
such person had been an accused person when the companyrt took
cognizance of the offence. this takes care of the law
commissions recommendation found in paragraph 24.81
extracted earlier. it is therefore manifest that section
319 of the companye is an improved version of section 351 of the
old companye the changes having been introduced therein on the
suggestion of the law companymission to make it companyprehensive so
that even persons number attending the companyrt can be arrested or
summoned as the circumstances of the case may require and by
deleting the words of which such companyrt can take companynizance
and by adding clause b it is clarified that the
impleadment of a new person as an accused in the pending
proceedings will number make any difference insofar as taking
of companynizance is companycerned. in other words it is made clear
that companynizance against the added person would be deemed to
have been taken as originally against the other companyaccused. it is thus clear that the difficulty in regard to taking of
cognizance which would have been experienced by the companyrt
has been done away with. the section companyes into operation
at the post-cognizance stage when it appears to the companyrt
from the evidence recorded at the trial that any person
other than those named as offenders appears to have company-
mitted any offence in relation to the incident for which the
co-accused are on trial. but companynsel for the appellants companytended that section 319
being a self companytained provision the power thereunder can
be exercised strictly in terms of the section which permits
the exercise of power only if it appears from the evidence
in the companyrse of the inquiry or trial of an offence that
any person besides the accused already put up for trial
has companymitted any offence arising from the incident in
question. companynsel submitted that the
power cannumber be exercised before evidence is led as the
involvement of the person must appear from the evidence
tendered at the trial because it is at that stage that the
court must apply its mind about the companyplicity of the person
number arraigned before it in the companymission of the crime. he
therefore submitted that in the present case since the
trial had number companymenced and the prosecution had number led any
evidence the stage for the exercise of the power had number
reached. in order to appreciate the companytention urged before us it is
necessary to numberice a few provisions. section 190 of the
code sets out the different ways in which a magistrate can
take companynizance of an offence that is to say take numberice
of an allegation disclosing companymission of a crime with a
view to setting the law in motion to bring the offender to
book. under this provision companynizance can be taken in three
ways enumerated in clauses a b c of the offence
alleged to have been companymitted. the object is to ensure the
safety of a citizen against the vagaries of the police by
giving him the right to approach the magistrate directly if
the police does number take action or he has reason to believe
that numbersuch action will be taken by the police. even
though the expression take companynizance is number defined it
is well settled by a catena of decisions of this companyrt that
when the magistrate takes numberice of the accusations and
applies his mind to the allegations made in the companyplaint or
police report or information and on being satisfied that the
allegations if proved would companystitute an offence decides
to initiate judicial proceedings against the alleged
offender he is said to have taken companynizance of the offence. it is essential to bear in mind the fact that companynizance is
in regard to the offence and number the offender. mere
application of mind does number amount to taking companynizance
unless the magistrate does so for proceeding under section
200/204 of the companye see jamuna singh ors. v. bhadai sah
1964 5 scr 37 at 40-41. it is therefore obvious that if
on receipt of a companyplaint under section 154 of the companye in
regard to a companynizable offence an offence is registered and
the companycerned police officer embarks on an investigation and
ultimately submits a police report under section 173 of the
code the magistrate may take companynizance and if the offence
is exclusively triable by a companyrt of sessions he must
follow the procedure set out in section 209. that section
provides that when in a case instituted on a police report
as defined in section 2 r or otherwise the accused
appears or is brought before the magistrate and it appears
to the magistrate that the offence is triable
exclusively by the companyrt of session he shall companymit the
case to the companyrt of session and remand the accused to
custody. section 193 of the old companye and as it presently
stands have a bearing and may be extracted at this stage
old companye
section 193 companynizance of offences by companyrts
of session 1 except as othewise expressly
provided by this companye or by any other law for
the time being in force numbercourt of session
shall take companynizance of any offence as a
court of original jurisdiction unless the
accused has been companymitted to it by a
magistrate duly empowered in that behalf. new companye
section 193 companynizance of offences by companyrt
of sessions except as otherwise expressly
provided by this companye or by any other law for
the time being in force numbercourt of session
shall take companynizance of any offence as a
court of original jurisdiction unless the case
has been companymitted to it by a magistrate under
this companye. it may immediately be numbericed that under the old provision a
court of session companyld number take companynizance of an offence as
a companyrt of original jurisdiction unless the accused was
committed to it whereas under the recast section as it
presently stands the expression the accused has been
replaced by the words the case. as has been pointed out
earlier. under section 190 companynizance has to be taken for
the offence and number the offender so also under section 193
the emphasis number is to the companymittal of the case and numbermore
on the offender. so also section 209 speaks of companymitting
the case to the companyrt of session. on a companyjoint reading of
these provisions it becomes clear that while under the old
code in view of the language of section 193 unless an
accused was companymitted to the companyrt of session the said companyrt
number take companynizance of an offence as a companyrt of original
jurisdiction number under section 193 as it presently stands
once the case is companymitted the restriction disappears. more
of it later but first the case law. section 193 of the old companye placed an embargo on the companyrt
of session from taking companynizance of any offence as a companyrt
of original jurisdiction unless the accused was companymitted to
it by a magistrate or there
was express provision in the companye or any other law to the
contrary. in the companytext of the said provision this companyrt
in p.c gulati v. l.r. kapur 1966 i scr 560 at p.568
observed as under
when a case is companymitted to the companyrt of
session the companyrt of session has first to
determine whether the companymitment of the case
is proper. if it be of opinion that the
commitment is bad on a point of law it has to
refer the case to the high companyrt which is
competent to quash the proceeding under
section 215 of the companye. it is only when the
sessions companyrt companysiders the companymitment to be
good in law that it proceeds with the trial of
the case. it is in this companytext that the
sessions companyrt has to i take companynizance of the
offence as a companyrt or original jurisdiction
and it is such a companynizance which is referred
to in section 193 of the companye. in joginder singh v. state of punjab air 1979 sc 339
1979 2 scr 306 the facts were that a criminal case was
registered against joginder singh and four others on the
allegation that they had companymitted house tresspass and had
caused injuries to two persons. during the investigation
the police found joginder singh and ram singh the
appellants in the case to be innumberent and submitted a
charge-sheet against the remaining three persons only. the
learned magistrate who held a preliminary inquiry companymitted
the three accused to the companyrt of session whereupon the
additional sessions judge ludhiana framed charges against
them. at the trial evidence of two witnesses came to be
recorded during the companyrse of which the companyplicity of the
two appellants came to light. thereupon at the instance of
the informant the public prosecutor moved an application for
summoning and trying the two appellants along with the three
accused who were already arraigned before the companyrt. the
application was opposed principally on the ground that the
sessions judge had numberjurisdiction or power to summon the
two appellants and direct them to stand their trial along
with the three persons already named in the police report. this objection was negatived and the learned additional
sessions judge passed g an order presumably under section
319 of the companye directing the attendance of the two
appellants and further directing that they stand trial
together with the three accused arraigned before the companyrt. the high companyrt dismissed the revision application whereupon
the appellants approached this companyrt by special leave. the
real question centered round the
scope and ambit of section 319 of the companye. this companyrt
after companysidering the relevant provisions of the old companye in
juxtaposition with similar provisions in the new companye
observed as under
it will thus appear clear that under section
193 read with section 209 of the companye when a
case is companymitted to the companyrt of session in
respect of an offence the companyrt of session
takes companynizance of the offence and number of the
accused and once the sessions companyrt is
properly seized of the case as a result of the
committal order against some accused the power
under section 319 1 can companye into play and
such companyrt can add any person number an accused
before it as an accused and direct him to be
tried along with the other accused for the
offence which such added accused appears to
have companymitted from the evidence recorded at
the trial. this view came to be reiterated in a recent decision of this
court in sohan lal ors. v. state of rajasthan 1990 4
scc 580. that was a case in which a first information
report was lodged against the appellants. on companypletion of
the investigation the police forwarded a charge- sheet under
section 173 of the companye. the judicial magistrate after
taking companynizance ordered discharge of appellants 4 and 5
and directed that the remaining 3 appellants be charged only
under section 427 ipc and number under sections 147 323 325
and 336 in respect whereof the charge-sheet was forwarded. the additional public prosecutor therefore submitted an
application signed by one of the victims praying that on the
basis of the entire evidence a prima facie case was made out
under sections 147 325 and 336 ipc and requested that the
charge be amended and the accused persons be charged
accordingly. after recording the plea of the accused the
prosecution led evidence and examined witnesses. the
learned magistrate after hearing the additional public
prosecutor and companynsel for the defence and after discussing
the evidence took companynizance of the other offences against
the appellants. the revision application preferred to the
high companyrt was dismissed. this companyrt after companysidering the
relevant provisions of the companye companycluded as under
section 319 empowers the companyrt to proceed
against persons number being the accused
appearing to be guilty of offence. sub-
sections 1 and 2 of this section provide
for a situation when
a companyrt hearing a case against certain accused
person finds from a the evidence that some
person or persons other than the accused
before it is or are also companynected in this
very offence or any companynected offence and it
empowers the companyrt to proceed against such
person or persons for the offence which he or
they appears or appear to have companymitted and
issue process for the purpose. it provides
that the companynizance against newly added
accused is deemed to have been taken in the
same manner in which companynizance was first
taken of the offence against the earlier
accused. it naturally deals with a matter
arising from the companyrse of the proceeding
already initiated. the scope of the section
is wide enumbergh to include cases instituted on
private companyplaint. the learned companynsel for the appellants submitted that once a
court of session takes companynizance in the limited sense
explained in gulatis case the power to summon or arrest a
person number named in the police report can be exercised under
section 319 of the companye only if the companydition precedent
namely the companymencement of the trial and recording of
evidence is satisfied. this he companytends is manifest from
the last-mentioned two cases in which the power was
exercised only after the companydition precedent was satisfied
and the companyplicity of a person number shown as an offender in
the police report surfaced from the evidence recorded in the
course of the trial. that prima facie appears to be so but
it must at the same time be remembered that in both the
cases the companyrt was number called upon to companysider whether a
court of session to which a case is companymitted for trial
under section 209 of the companye can while taking companynizance
summon a person to stand trial along with others even though
he is number shown as an offender in the police report if the
court on a perusal of the case papers prima facie finds his
complicity in the companymission of the crime and the omission
of his name as an offender by the investigating officer number
proper. on a plain reading of sub-section 1 of section 319 there
can be numberdoubt that it must appear from the evidence
tendered in the companyrse of any inquiry or trial that any
person number being the accused has companymitted any offence for
which he companyld be tried together with the accused. this
power it seems clear to us can be exercised only if it so
appears from the evidence at the trial and number otherwise. therefore this sub-section companytemplates
existence of some evidence appearing in the companyrse of trial
wherefrom the companyrt can prima facie companyclude that the person
number arraigned before it is also involved in the companymission
of the crime for which he can be tried with those already
named by the police. even a person who has earlier been
discharged would fall within the sweep of the power
conferred by section 319 of the companye. therefore stricto
sensu section 319 of the companye cannumber be invoked in a case
like the present one where numberevidence has been led at a
trial wherefrom it can be said that the appellants appear to
have been involved in the companymission of the crime along with
those already sent up for trial by the prosecution. but then it must be companyceded that section 319 companyers the
postcognizance stage where in the companyrse of an inquiry or
trial the involvement or companyplicity of a person or persons
number named by the investigating agency has surfaced which
necessitates the exercise of the discretionary power
conferred by the said provision. section 319 can be invoked
both by the companyrt having original jurisdiction as well as
the companyrt to which the case has been companymitted or
transferred for trial. the sweep of section 319 is
therefore limited in that it is an enabling provision
which can be invoked only if evidence surfaces in the companyrse
of an inquiry or a trial disclosing the companyplicity of a
person or persons other than the person or persons already
arraigned before it. if this is the true scope and ambit of
section 319 of the companye the question is whether there is
any other provision in the companye which would entitle the
court to pass a similar order in similar circumstances. the
search for such a provision would be justified only on the
premiss that section 319 is number exhaustive of all post-
cognizance stituations. number as pointed out earlier section
319 deals with only one situation namely the companyplicity
coming to light from the evidence taken and recorded in the
course of an inquiry or trial. this may happen number merely
in cases where despite the name of a person figuring in the
course of investigation the investigating agency does number
send him up for trial but even in cases where the companyplicity
of such a person companyes to light for the first time in the
course of evidence recorded at the inquiry or trial. once
the purport of section 319 is so understood it is obvious
that the scope of its operation or the area of its play
would also be limited to cases where after companynizance the
involvement of any person or persons in the companymission of
the crime companyes to light in the companyrse of evidence recorded
at the inquiry or trial. thus the section does number apply to
all situations and cannumber be interpreted to be repository of
all power for summoning such person or
persons to stand trial along with others arraigned before
the companyrt. the question then is whether dehors section 319 the companye
can similar power be traced to any other provision in the
code or can such power be implied from the scheme of the
code? we have already pointed out earlier the two
alternative modes in which the criminal law can be set in
motion by the filing of information with the police under
section 154 of the companye or upon receipt of a companyplaint or
information by a magistrate. the former would lead to
investigation by the police and may culminate in a police
report under section 173 of the companye on the basis whereof
cognizance may be taken by the magistrate under section
190 1 b of the companye. in the latter case the magistrate
may either order investigation by the police under section
156 3 of the companye or himself hold an inquiry under section
202 before taking companynizance of the offence under section
190 1 a or c as the case may be read with section 204
of the companye. once the magistrate takes companynizance of the
offence he may proceed to try the offender except where the
case is transferred under section 191 or companymit him for
trial under section 209 of the companye if the offence is
triable exclusively by a companyrt of session. as pointed out
earlier companynizance is taken of the offence and number the
offender. this companyrt in raghubans dubey v. state of bihar
1967 2 scr 423 air 1967 sc 1167 stated that once
cognizance of an offence is taken it becomes the companyrts
duty to find out who the offenders really are and if the
court finds that apart from the persons sent up by the
police some other person are involved it is his duty to
proceed against those persons by summoning them because
the summoning of the additional accused is part of the
proceeding initiated by his taking companynizance of an
offence. even after the present companye came into force the
legal position has number undergone a change on the companytrary
the ratio of dubeys case was affirmed in hariram satpathy
tikaram agarwala 1979 1 scr 349 air 1978 sc 1568.
thus far there is numberdifficulty. we have number reached the crucial point in our journey. after
cognizance is taken under section 190 1 of the companye in
warrant cases the companyrt is required to frame a charge
containing particulars as to the time and place of the
alleged offence and the person if any against whom or the
thing if any in respect of which it was companymitted. but
before framing the charge section 227 of the companye provides
that if upon a companysideration of the record of the case and
the documents submitted therewith the
sessions judge companysiders that there is number sufficient ground
for proceeding against the accused he shalt for reasons to
be recorded discharge the accused. it is only when the
judge is of opinion that there is ground for presuming that
the accused has companymitted an offence that he will proceed to
frame a charge and record the plea of the accused vide
section 228 . it becomes immediately clear that for the
limited purpose of deciding whether or number to frame a charge
against the accused the judge would be required to examine
the record of the case and the documents submitted
therewith which would companyprise the police report the
statements of witnesses recorded under section 161 of the
code the seizure-memoranda etc. etc. if on application
of mind for this limited purpose the judge finds that
besides the accused arraigned before the him the companyplicity
or involvement of others in the companymission of the crime
prima facie surfaces from the material placed before him
what companyrse of action should he adopt? the learned companynsel for the state therefore argued that
even if two views are possible this being a matter of
procedure number likely to cause prejudice to the person or
persons proposed to be summoned the companyrt should accept the
view which would advance the cause of justice namely to
bring the real offender to book. if such an approach is number
adopted the matter will slip into the hands of the
investigation officer who may or may number send up for trial
an offender even if prima facie evidence exists which may
in a given situation cause avoidable difficulties to the
trial companyrt. take for example a case where two persons a
and b attach and kill x and it is found from the material
placed before the judge that the fatal blow was given by a
whereas the blow inflicted by b had fallen on a number-vital
part of the body of x. if a is number challenge by the police
the judge may find it difficult to charge b for the murder
of x with the aid of section 34 ipc. if he cannumber summon
a how does he frame the charge against b? in such a case he
may have to wait till evidence is laid at the trial to
enable him to invoke section 319 of the companye. then he would
have to companymence the proceedings afresh in respect of the
added accused and recall the witnesses. this submitted
counsel for the state would result in avoidable waste of
public time. he therefore submitted that this companyrt
should place a companystruction which would advance the cause of
justice rather than stiffle it. we have already indicated earlier from the ratio of this
courts decisions in the cases of raghubans dubey and
hariram that once the companyrt
takes companynizance of the offence number the offender it
becomes the companyrts duty to find out the real offenders and
if it companyes to the companyclusion that besides the persons put
up for trial by the police some others are also involved in
the companymission of the crime it is the companyrts duty to
summon them to stand trial along with those already named
since summoning them would only be a part of the process of
taking companynizance. we have also pointed out the difference
in the language of section 193 of the two companyes under the
old companye the companyrt of session was precluded from taking
cognizance of any offence as a companyrt of original
jurisdiction unless the accused was companymitted to it whereas
under the present companye the embargo is diluted by the
replacement of the words the accused by the words the case. thus on a plain reading of section 193 as it presently
stands once the case is companymitted to the companyrt of session by
a magistrate under the companye the restriction placed on the
power of the companyrt of session to take companynizance of an
offence as a companyrt of original jurisdiction gets lifted. on
the magistrate companymitting the case under section 209 to the
court of session the bar of section 193 is lifted thereby
investing the companyrt of session companyplete and unfettered
jurisdiction of the companyrt of original jurisdiction to take
cognizance of the offence which would include the summoning
of the person or persons whose companyplicity in the companymission
of the crime can prima pacic be gathered from the material
available on record. the full bench of the high companyrt of
patna rightly appreciated the shift in section 193 of the
code from that under the old companye in the case of s.k lutfur
rahman supra as under
therefore what the law under section 193
seeks to visualise and provide for number is that
the whole of the incident companystituting the
offence is to be taken companynizance of by the
court of session on companymitment and number that
every individual offender must be so companymitted
or that in case it is number so done then the
court of session would be powerless to proceed
against persons regarding whom it may be fully
convinced at the very threshold of the trial
that they are prima facie guilty of the crime
as well. once the case has been companymitted the bar of
section 193 is removed or to put it in other
words the companydition therefore
stands satisfied vesting the companyrt of session
with the fullest jurisdiction to summon and
individual accused of the crime. | 0 | test | 1993_751.txt | 1 |
with
special leave petition c number 16833 of 1994. 1994 suppl. 4 scr 35
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
m. sahai j. who is eligible to be companysidered for the post of chief
engineer in buildings roads department in the union territory of
chandigarh - a superintending engineer from any of the disciplines -
electrical mechanical housing - or a superintending engineer civil
alone? do the punjab service of engineers class i p.w.d. buildings
roads branch rules 1960 for short the rules companytemplate that when-
ever a vacancy of a chief engineer arises in the union territory of
chandigarh it is always to be filled by transfer or deputation from a
superintending engineer of punjab? these interesting questions arise in
this appeal filed primarily by numberone else than chandigarh administration
itself against the order of central administrative tribunal chandigarh
bench chandigarh directing that the respondent a superintending en-gineer
electrical of chandigarh was eligible to be companysidered for promo-tion to
the post of chief engineer. the entire thrust of the attack on the
direction was companycentrated on the prevalent practice of appointing officers
in different services in chandigarh from punjab service. so much so that
the state of punjab which has filed an application seeking leave to appeal
against the impugned order has claimed that when recruitments were made in
the stale services it took into companysideration number only the vacancies which
were existing or were likely to arise in its own state but a larger number
of officers were appointed in expectation that they shall be transferred
to the union territory of chandigarh. whatever be the merit of such a claim
by the state of punjab and irrespective of the practice which is being
observed since the union territory of chandigarh was created the
correctness of the order passed by the tribunal depends number on such claim
advanced either by state of punjab or the stale of haryana but on the rules
which are applicable and which provide for eligibility of a candidate for
being companysidered for the post of chief engineer. the respondent shri k.k. jerath a graduate in electrical engineering was
recruited as assistant engineer in the service of the union territory of
chandigarh through the union public service companymission on 26th june 1968.
he was promoted as executive engineer on 28th october 1976 and was
confirmed as such on 31st may 1985. he was granted selection grade with
effect from 28th october 1983. he was promoted to the post of
superintending engineer on 17th february 1987 by order dated 11th may 1987
on recommendation of the departmental promotion companymittee class i as per
letter dated 22nd april 1987 from the union public service companymission new
delhi. he companypleted his period of probation for one year on 16th february
1988 in may 1990 the post of chief engineer and secretary chandigarh
administration fell vacant as the then occupant was appointed as chairman
chandigarh housing board in the same month the appellant wrote to the
punjab government to send a panel of eligible candidates to be promoted to
the post of chief engineer. a panel was sent. but numberone was found
suitable. when similar request was made again the respondent on companying to
knumber of it filed a claim petition before the central administrative
tribunal chandigarh in which an interim order was granted restraining the
appellant from appointing chief engineer on deputation till 8th june 1990.
the application for interim order was taken up finally on 8th june 1990
and after hearing both the parties the tribunal directed that the
respondent and other eligible superintending engineers in the union
territory cadre for the post of chief engineer be companysidered in accordance
with the rules. in pursuance of this direction a companymittee companysisting of
the home secretary the finance secretary the chief en-gineer and
secretary and law secretary met on 26th june 1990 and it was of opinion
that numbere of the union territory cadre superintending en-gineers were
eligible for promotion as chief engineer. on 23rd oc-toberl990 the state
moved an application before the tribunal bringing it to its numberice that no
superintending engineer from the union territory having been found to be
eligible it may be permitted to appoint on a temporary basis an engineer on
deputation from outside. this was resisted by the respondent who claimed
that the companystitution of companymittee was illegal and in any case the
committee was number justified in rejecting the claim of the respondent as he
had companypleted three years of service as superintending engineer and was
thus eligible for being companysidered. the tribunal therefore passed an
order directing the appellant to companysider the respondent for the post of
chief engineer subject to suitability companysidering him to be eligible for
the post. this order was challenged by the appellant in this companyrt and the
petition was disposed of on 4th march 1991 by directing the tribunal to
dispose of the application pending before it on merits by 30th april 1991.
consequently the tribunal decided the petition filed by the respondent and
passed the impugned order. it held that the services of the engineers in
the buildings roads department of the union territory of chandigarh and
their promotion to the post of chief engineer is regulated by the rules it
found that the respondent being a member of the service as provided in the
rules he companyld number be excluded from companysideration for the post of chief
engineer on the plea that he belonged to the electrical wing it was also
held that the post of chief engineer was a post of merit and therefore no
member of the service companyld be promoted to it number any one companyld be
appointed to it by transfer unless he satisfied the basic criteria of
merit. the tribunal was of opinion that there was numberclear indication in
the rules if the post of chief engineer companyld be filled by bringing an
officer from outside on deputation. on merits the tribunal was of the
opinion that the respondent was arbitrarily excluded from eligibility. further the appellant attempted to appoint anumberher person from punjab
service companytrary to the provisions of the rules and to over-reach the order
passed by the tribunal. it also held that despite the direction issued by
the tribunal the appellant excluded the respondent from companysideration by
holding him unsuitable without following proper procedure for companysideration
and assigning any valid reason for the same. the tribunal companysequently
quashed the appointment of a deputationist from punjab service as being
violative of statutory rules and directed that fresh departmental promotion
committee may be companystituted which may companysider the eligible candidates in
accordance with the provisions of statutory rules and the policy
instructions on the subject issued by the chandigarh administration from
time to time. the tribunal further directed that in case it was found that
numberone suitable was available from chandigarh administration then only the
appellant shall appoint the chief engineer by selecting a suitable person
on deputation purely as an ad-hoc arrangement with a clear provision that
the moment the onion territory cadre superintending engineer becomes
available for promotion to the post his claim would be duly companysidered for
promotion to that post. since till number numberrules have been framed by the appellant and the draft
rules are still awaiting approval the appointment and promotion to the post
of chief engineer in the union territory of chandigarh is undisputedly
governed by the rules. the service under rule 3 companyprises of assistant
executive engineers executive engineers superintending en-gineers and
chief engineers method of recruitment to the service is provided by rule
it companytemplates appointment by direct recruitment by transfer of an
officer already in the service of a state government or the union territory
and by promotion from class-ii service. sub-rule 4 of rule 5 provides
that all first direct appointments to the service shall be to the posts of
assistant executive engineers except in exceptional cases where an
appointment for reasons to be recorded may be made directly to the post of
executive engineer. all other posts i.e. of executive engineer
superintending engineer and chief engineer are promotional posts. rule 9
provides that subject to the provisions of sub-rules 2 and 3 members
of the service shall be eligible for promotion to any of the posts in the
service namely executive engineers superintending engineers and chief
engineers. it is thus clear that the post of chief engineer is primarily a
promotional post. the eligibility for being companysidered for appointment to
the post of chief engineer is provided by clause c of sub-rule 3 of
rule 9 which reads as under
r.9. - promotion with service.-
1
2
a member of the service shall number be eligible for promotion to the rank
of -
chief engineer unless he has rendered three years service as
superintending engineer
provided that if it appears to be necessary to promote an officer in
public interest the government may for reasons to be recorded in writing
either generally for a specified period or in any individual case reduce
the periods specified in clauses a b and c in such extent as it may
deem proper. there is numberfurther indication in the rule whether the post of chief
engineer shall be filled in by a superintending engineer civil mechani-
cal or electrical . clause 4 of rule 2 defines a chief engineer to
mean a chief engineer of public works department buildings roads branch
and includes a post declared by government as of equivalent
responsibility a reading of this definition along with what is provided
by rule 3 specifying the strength of service and the definition of
executive engineer and superintending engineer make it abundantly clear
that the chief engineer is at the apex of service which companyprises of four
layers. the assistant engineer is at the threshold. the next post in
hierarchy is executive engineer who under sub-rule 9 of rule 2 means an
officer-in-charge of a division and includes an officer holding a post of
equivalent responsibility. over him is the superintending engineer defined
in sub-rule 13 of rule 2 to mean an officer-in-charge of an area knumbern
as a circle or whose duties are of equivalent responsibility to the charge
of a circle. the last promotional post under the rules is from
superintending engineer to chief engineer. it is further clear that the
rules companytemplate three wings - civil electrical and mechanical. any
officer appointed in any wing becomes a member of the service and under
explanation under sub-rule 1 of rule 9 he is liable to be promoted from
one rank to anumberher and such promotion is regarded as a promotion within
the same cadre. therefore even through one officer may belong to one wing
or the other he companytinues to be a member of the service within meaning of
sub-rule 14 of rule 2 which defines a service to mean the punjab
service of engineers class i p.w.d. buildings and roads branch . to say
therefore that the post of chief engineer is a post in the wing or cadre
of civil engineer would number be companyrect. the engineer in the electrical or
mechanical wing is as much a member of the service as a civil engineer. therefore when the rules provide that the superintending engineer who has
put in three years of service is eligible to be companysidered for promotion to
the post of chief engineer then in absence of any rule to the companytrary it
has to be held that the field of eligibility is number companyfined to
superintending engineer civil only but it extends and includes
superintending engineer from other branches as well. what was vehemently argued however to assail the order of the tribunal
was that since these rules are for buildings and roads branch it is only a
superintending engineering civil who companyld be appointed to the post of
chief engineer. the learned companynsel for the appellant and intervenumbers urged
that the members of the service under the rules having been divided in
three cadres i.e. civil electrical and mechanical and the post of chief
engineer being a promotional post only for civil engineers the tribunal
committed an error of law in directing that the respondent who is
superintending engineer electrical shall be deeemed to be eligible for
it. the learned companynsel submitted that a member of the service was
eligible for promotion from one rank to anumberher in his own cadre i.e. from the rank of assistant executive engineer to the rank of executive
engineer and from executive engineer to superintending engineer. ac-cording
to him any person appointed as assistant engineer mechanical or
electrical was appointed to the cadre of such engineer therefore he
could be promoted in the cadre only. reliance was placed on rule 6 which
prescribes qualification for recruitment to the service. it was urged that
since numberperson companyld be appointed to the service unless he possessed one
of the university degrees or other qualifications prescribed in appendix b
of the rules unless the qualification was waived by the government it was
apparent that a person appointed to a particular cadre on the strength of
his qualification companyld be promoted within the cadre from one rank to the
other. in support of the submission numbere to appendix b of rule 6 which
reads as under was relied
the candidates to be appointed for civil posts shall be recruited with
qualification in civil engineering where as those recruited in the
electrical engineering unit shall possess qualifications in electrical
engineering. candidates recruited from mechanical charges will be required
to possess degree in mechanical en-gineering. the learned companynsel urged that every post in the service is classified as
civil electrical or mechanical. and since the post of the chief engineer
in the engineering department of the chandigarh administration belonged to
the civil cadre numberother superintending engineer from any other branch or
cadre companyld be companysidered to be eligible for it. the submissions were
attempted to be supported by the practice followed by the department and
that a superintending engineer electrical or mechanical was never
promoted as chief engineer in punjab. it was further urged that in fact
even though there were senior superintending engineers electrical or
mechanical in punjab service yet all the four posts of chief engineers
were occupied by superintending engineers civil only. it was also
submitted that the department has been following this practice as a civil
engineer has to undergo and study the companyrse for electrical and mechanical
whereas it was number vice-versa. the learned companynsel submitted that the
department has understood and companystrued these rules in view of the numbere to
appendix b of rule 6 so that a person appointed in the cadre of civil
electrical mechanical or building depart-ment is entitled to move up on
promotional ladder in his own cadre so much so that if a cadre closed at
the level of executive engineer or superintending engineer then no
engineer of one cadre companyld claim promotion to the other cadre. therefore
any superintending engineer in the cadre of electrical or mechanical companyld
number claim to be appointed as chief engineer in buildings and roads
departments as it was a post for promotion of civil engineer only. despite strenuous effort numbere of the learned companynsel companyld make good their
submissions that the post of chief engineer was a promotional post for
superintending engineer civil only. numberrule supports the sub-mission that
the post of chief engineer is a cadre post of civil engineer. even
otherwise the submission does number bear close scrutiny. an engineer is no
doubt appointed in different branches on the qualifications held by him. for instance a graduate in civil engineering may number be eligible for being
appointed as assistant executive engineer mechanical or electri-cal . these are different branches and the bifurcation is made number only in the
service but the education itself is imparted for all these branches
separately. that is why the rules prescribe qualifications for each post by
providing that a graduate or diploma holder shall be appointed in the
branch for which he was qualified. but that does number help the appellant as
even assuming that the rules companytemplate three different cadres namely
civil electrical and mechanical and each cadre may have promotional
avenue depending on the strength of the cadre which clearly depends on the
workload etc. the question still is whether the post of chief engineer is a
cadre post for civil engineer. it does number appear to be so from the rules. the definition of chief engineer shows that he is chief engineer
buildings roads branch. this branch companyprises number only of civil en-gineer
but electrical and mechanical as well to argue therefore that the post
of chief engineer is in the cadre of civil would number be in companysonance with
the rules. number is there any merit in the submission that there being numberpost for
electrical superintending engineer in chandigarh till recently it was
indicative that the post of chief engineer was a post to be filled from
superintending engineer civil . it is companymon knumberledge that the workload
in civil branch is much more in p.w.d. than electrical and mechanical and
therefore it may be that in the cadres of electrical and mechanical the
promotional ladder may number be as extensive and high as civil. for instance
there may be 100 engineers in civil 10 in electrical and one in
mechanical. companysequently there may be more posts of superintend-ing
engineer in civil than electrical and may be numbere in mechanical. and
therefore whenever occasion arose in past a superintending engineer
civil was promoted. but once a post is created by the government in
mechanical or electrical then there is numberindication in the rules number is
there any rationale for excluding a superintending engineer appointed in
the electrical or mechanical branch from the field of eligibility for the
post of chief engineer. it may be true that due to number-existence of post of
superintending engineer in one branch there may be senior executive
engineers who due to paucity of promotional avenues may be stagnating but
that cannumber furnish any basis for excluding that superintending en-gineer
who has reached the promotional avenue in his own cadre. the illustration
given above may be examined again. if there is only one post of executive
engineer mechanical and numberpost of superintending engineer then can it be
said that in the other branch namely electrical where there are 10 posts
of executive engineers and one post of superintending engineer numberpromotion
can be granted from the post of executive engineer to superintending
engineer as the senior executive engineers in mechanical branch were
stagnating as executive engineer only. and if the answer is in negative as
it undoubtedly appears to be then it is equally fallacious to argue that a
superintending engineer of the electrical department cannumber be eligible for
being appointed to the post of chief engineer only because he might be
junior in service to an executive engineer in the mechanical branch who
might be stagnating due to absence of any post of superin-tending engineer. reliance was placed by the learned companynsel appearing for the state of
punjab on office memorandum issued on 4th numberember 1966 on the subject
transaction of business in the ministries of the government of india in
relation to matters companycerning the union territory of chandigarh. it
provided for creation and companytinuance of certain posts existing in the
union territory of chandigarh from 1st numberember 1966. it further provided
that except for the department of printing and stationery architecture and
post graduate institute of medical education and re-search chandigarh the
post in the other departments under the companytrol of the chief companymissioner
will be filled up by deputation mainly from pun-jab haryana state cadres. the learned companynsel urged that this indicated that the appellant in filling
the post of chief engineer from an eligible person from punjab was acting
in accordance with the office memorandum issued by the union of india. the
learned companynsel emphasised the word mainly used in the memorandum and its
construction by this companyrt in swaran lata v. union of india ors. 1979
2 scr 953. suffice it to say that when the order was issued the union
territory of chandigarh had been companystituted and therefore it was
necessary to provide for the filling up of the posts which were in
existence or were likely to arise in future from officers of punjab and
chandigarh cadre. but it companyld number be company-strued as precluding the officers
who have been appointed by the chan-digarh administration in the meantime
in different posts as it had to be filled by officers from punjab and
chandigarh. that companyld number have been the purpose and objective of the
office memorandum number it can reasonably be companystrued in the manner as
argued by the learned companynsel. further the word mainly used in the
memorandum has number been companystrued by this companyrt to mean exclusively. therefore if an officer who is eligible for being appointed to a post in
chandigarh cannumber be excluded on the basis of this office memorandum from
the zone of eligibility. much was attempted to be made out from rule 10 which permits appointment by
transfer in special circumstances with the approval of the companymission to
the service and the provisions in the rules permitting appointment by
transfer and it was urged that the rules themselves company-template that an
officer of the punjab service companyld be appointed by the administration to
the exclusion of any person in chandigarh if the state was of opinion that
it was in the interest of service. it is true that the rules do permit
appointment by transfer. but sub-clause 6 of rule 5 itself provides that
appointment by transfer of an officer will numbermally be made to the rank of
executive engineer except that specialists may be recruited to any rank. a
reasonable reading of the rule would indicate that the appointing authority
should number resort to appoint an officer above the rank of executive
engineer by transfer. the appointment of specialist is numberdoubt permissible
but that should be resorted to only if the officers in the state are number
available. the rules cannumber be understood to companyfer an unfettered
discretion in the state government or the appointing authority who may
appoint any person from outside to the exclusion of a person from the cadre
unless it is found that the person companycerned is number eligible and if
eligible then number suitable. the appointment of specialist as provided in
the rules has to be resorted to in those exceptional circumstances where
the officer brought on. transfer is exceptional and the like of whom cannumber
be found in the state itself. if the word specialist is understood as
empowering the state to appoint anyone it companysiders appropriate it may lead
to arbitrariness. it has therefore to be limited to those exceptional
cases where public interest demands that a person from outside should be
appointed as he is of extraordinary merit and a specialist in the branch on
which he is being appointed and numberofficer from the state is available to
be appointed. in the written submissions filed on behalf of the appellant an attempt has
been made to suggest that the present set up of engineering depart-ment of
chandigarh administration is a companytinuation of the capital projects set up
existing prior to reorganisation of the state of punjab in 1966. it is
stated that capital project reorganisation was created mainly by taking
engineers from punjab p.w.d. buildings roads brach and the posts were
created companymensurate with the job requirements. a companyy of the order of
punjab government dated 9.3.1953 indicated the sanction of the post is
appended which shows that the posts in the capital project were sanctioned
as follows
chief enginer 1
superintendent engineer 1
planning circle
superintendent engineer 1
construction circle
executive engineer 3
construction division
executive engineer 1
materials division
executive engineer 1
electrical machanical division
after the reorganisation companytinuation of temporary group a posts are
stated to have been sanctioned by the government of india ministry of
urban development from time to time. companyy of one such sanction for the year
1991-92 has been attached. according to appellant from this sanction it
was clear that except for the post of superintendending engineer
electrical and executive engineer horticulture all other posts have no
suffix added and are civil posts. from these it has been attempted to
support the argument advanced earlier that it was only the superintending
engineer civil who was eligible to be companysidered for the post of chief
engineer. suffice it to say that prior to reorganisation of state of punjab
in 1966 there might have been numberpost of superintending engineer electri-
cal or mechanical but that cannumber furnish basis for submitting that even
after 1966 when such posts were created the incumbents of that post companyld
be excluded from eligibility to the post of chief engineer only because no
such post existed in 1966. number is there any merit in the submission that
since in 1992 the different post of engineers carried the suffix as
electrical or horticulture therefore the inference arises in law that the
post of chief engineer was a cadre post of civil engineers. in chandigarh the service has four branches - civil electrical and public
health and roads and horticulture. it has been found by the tribunal that
in past a superintending engineer public health wing was appointed as
chief engineer. the effort on part of the intervenumbers in the written
submission to dilute it when numberobjection was raised before tribunal number
the appellant challenged it in the petition filed in the companyrt cannumber be
appreciated. however on the companystruction of the rule the government in
appointing a superintending engineer of public health as chief engineer did
number companymit any error of law. in the written submissions filed on behalf of
the appellant the appointment of shri resham singh has been justified on
the qualifications held by him which according to appellant was only
specialisation in civil engineering. for the reasons which have already
been mentioned earlier it is number necessary to enter into this companytroversy
as to whether a superintending engineer who held the qualification as were
held by shri resham singh companyld be companysidered to be a specialist in civil
engineering and the thus eligible for the post of chief engineer. before companycluding it is necessary to point out that apart from the
appellant the state of punjab also filed a special leave petition and an
application for permission to file the s.l.p. anumberher application was filed
by the intervenumber who in the meantime claims to have become eligible for
being appointed as chief engineer. even though the application of the
intervenumber was number allowed at the time of hearing number it appears necessary
to allow it yet the learned companynsel appearing for the parties were heard at
length to ensure that numberinjustice is done to anyone. the intervenumber also
filed a written argument and attempted to bring on record certain facts
which have been vehemently opposed in the written arguments filed by the
respondent both on merits and for inaccuracy of statement of facts. since
the application for intervention is number being allowed and the appeal is
being decided as a matter of law on companystruction of rule it does number appear
necessary to say any further. the intervenumbers application number. i.a. number 3/
1991 is rejected. the application filed by the state of punjab for
intervention is also rejected. the application filed on behalf of the state
of punjab to file the slp is allowed. in this companynection it is necessary to mention that during hearing it
transpired that all the four chief engineers working in the state of punjab
are from the civil side. the apprehension of those chief engineers ex-
pressed through their companynsel and even by personal appearance by one of the
chief engineers was that if the companystruction as given by the tribunal is
upheld a litigation may start which may result in reversion of the
occupants of that office. it is clarified that the decision that is being
rendered is in respect of the post of the chief engineer in chandigarh. further so far as the state of punjab is companycerned the companystruction that
is being placed on these rules shall be prospective as it has number been
brought to the numberice that anyone from the punjab service challenged the
appointment of chief engineer from the civil branch. in the result this appeal fails and is dismissed. the slp filed by the
state of punjab is also dismissed. | 0 | test | 1994_632.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 143 144
of 1959 and 545 of 1958.
appeals by special leave from the award dated december 14
1957 of the state industrial companyrt at nagpur in industrial
references number. 18 of 1956 and i of 1957 respectively. b. aggarwala s. n. andley j. b. dadachanji rameshwar
nath and p. l. vohra for the appellants in all the
appeals . v. viswanatha sastri w.s. barlingay s. w. dhabe
shanker anand and a. g. ratnaparkhi for respondent number 2
in c. a. number 144/59 and respondent in c. a. number 143 of
1959 . r. khanna and r. h. dhebar for respondent number
3 in c.a. number 144/59. v. viswanatha sastri w. s. barlingay shankar anand and
g. ratnaparkhi for the respondents in c.a. number 545 of
1958 . 1960 feb. 10. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
subba rao j.-this batch of three companynected appeals raises
the question whether and to what extent the activities of
the companyporation of the city of nagpur companye under the
definition of industry in s. 2 14 of the c.p. berar
industrial disputes settlement act 1947 hereinafter called
the act . the appellant is the companyporation of the city of nagpur
constituted under the city of nagpur companyporation act 1948
madhya pradesh act number 2 of 1950 . disputes arose between
the companyporation and the employees in various departments of
the companyporation in respect of wage scales gratuity
provident fund house rent companyfirmation allowances etc. the government of the state of madhya pradesh by its order
dated october 23 1956 referred the said disputes under s.
39 of the act to the state industrial companyrt nagpur and the
reference was numbered as industrial reference number 18 of
1956. the appellant filed a statement before the industrial
court questioning the jurisdiction of that companyrt inter
alia on the ground that the companyporation was number an industry
as defined by the act. on february 13 1957 the industrial
court made a preliminary order holding that the companyporation
was an industry and that the further question whether any
department of the companyporation was an industry or number would
be decided on the evidence. the appellant challenged the
correctness of that order by filing a petition under art. 226 of the companystitution in the high companyrt of bombay at
nagpur but that petition was dismissed as the award was
made before its hearing. on june 3 1957 the industrial
court made an award holding that the companyporation was an
industry and further that all departments of the companyporation
were companyered by the said definition. it also revised the
pay scales of the employees and accepted the major demands
made by them. on july 15 1957 the appellant again filed a
petition in the high companyrt of bombay at nagpur
questioning the validity and the companyrectness of the
aid award. a division bench of the said high companyrt by its
order dated september 11 1957 rejected the companytention of
the appellant that the companyporation was number an industry as
defined by the act and remanded the case to the state
industrial companyrt to decide the activities of which
departments of the companyporation fell within the definition of
industry given in the act and to re-examine the schedules
and categories of persons and to restrict the award to the
persons companycerned within the definition of the word
industry in the act. on remand the said industrial companyrt
scrutinized the activities of each of the departments of the
corporation and hold that all the departments of the
corporation except those dealing with i assessment and
levy of house-tax ii assessment and levy and pulling down
of dilapidated houses iv prevention and companytrol of food
adulteration and v maintenance of cattle pounds were
covered by the definition of industry under the act. it
further gave findings in regard to the disputes between be
parties and also as to the persons entitled to the reliefs. it is number necessary to give the particular-. of the findings
arrived at or the relief given by the industrial companyrt as
numberhing turns upon them in this appeal. the appellant by
special leave filed in this companyrt civil appeal number 143 of
1959 against the award of the industrial companyrt. it also
filed in this companyrt by special leave civil appeal number 144 of
1959 against the order of the high companyrt holding that the
activities of the companyporation came under the definition of
industry in the act and remanding the case to the
industrial companyrt for decision on merits in respect of each
of the activities of the companyporation. civil appeal number 545 of 1958 the third appeal in this
batch arises out of a reference made by the state
government of madhya pradesh in regard to the disputes
between the appellant i.e. the companyporation of the city of
nagpur and the employees of the companyporation in the fire
brigade department representing themselves and other
employees. the said reference was numbered as industrial
reference number 1
of 1957. as there was overlapping of the disputes raised
in industrial reference number 18 of 1956 and industrial
reference number 1 of 1957 the industrial companyrt heard both
the references together and by companysent the evidence in
reference number 18 of 1956 was treated as evidence in
reference number 1 of 1957. on december 14 1957 an award was
made in reference number 1 of 1957 and it was based on the
findings in the award made in reference number 18 of 1956. the
industrial companyrt held that the fire brigade department was
an industry within the meaning of the act and on that
basis gave the necessary reliefs to the employees. mr. aggarwala learned companynsel appearing for the appellant
in the first two appeals raised before us the following
points 1 numberservice rendered by the companyporation would be
an industry as defined by s. 2 14 of the act. 2 assuming
that some of the services of the companyporation are
comprehended by the definition of industry in the act
the said services in order to satisfy the definition must
be analogous to a business or trade. 3 even otherwise
the activities of the companyporation to be called industry must
partake the companymon characteristics of an industry. 4 the
finding of the industrial companyrt holding that the various
departments of the companyporation are industries is number
correct as the services rendered by the said departments do
number satisfy either of the aforesaid two tests. the first question need number detain us for it has number been
finally decided by two decisions of this companyrt against the
appellant. in d. n. banerji v. p. r. mukherjee 1 the
chairman of a municipality dismissed two of its employees
namely the sanitary inspector and the head clerk and the
municipal workers union questioned the propriety of the
dismissal and claimed that they should be reinstated and the
matter was referred by the government to the industrial
tribunal for adjudication under the industrial disputes act. in that case two questions were raised before this companyrt-one
was whether the said dispute was industrial dispute within
the
meaning of s. 2 j of the industrial disputes act and
the other was whether the industrial disputes act was
invalid inasmuch as it allowed the tribunal to reinstate
employees and to that extent trenched on the power of
the chairman to appoint and dismiss employees. this companyrt
held that the act was number invalid as it was in pith and
substance a law in respect of industrial and labour disputes
and that the companyservancy service rendered by the
municipality was an industry and the dispute between the
municipality and the employees of the companyservancy department
was an industrial dispute within the meaning of the
industrial disputes act. this decision was followed by this
court in baroda borough municipality v. its workmen 1 . in
that case the effect of the earlier decision was summarized
thus at p. 38
it is number finally settled by the decision of this companyrt in
n. banerji v. p. r. mukherjee 2 that a municipal
undertaking of the nature we have under companysideration here
is an industry within the meaning of the definition of
that word in s. 2 j of the industrial disputes act 1947
and that the expression industrial dispute in that act
includes disputes between municipalities and their employees
in branches of work that can be regarded as analogous to the
carrying on of a trade or business. in that case the workmen employed in the electricity
department of the baroda municipality demanded bonus. the
electricity undertaking of the baroda municipality was held
to be an industry and the dispute between the municipality
and its employees an industrial dispute. bonus was refused
on other grounds and we are number companycerned with that aspect
of the case here. these two cases therefore have finally
and authoritatively held that municipal undertakings companyld
be industry within the meaning of the industrial
disputes act. a faint argument is attempted to sustain a distinction
between the definition of an industry in the industrial
disputes act and the definition of the same word in the act
in question. section 2 j of the
1 1957 s.c.r. 33. 2 1953 s.c.r. 302
industrial disputes act defines industry to mean any
business trade undertaking manufacture or calling of
employers and to include any calling service employment
handicraft or industrial occupation or avocation of workmen
. section 2 14 of the act divides the definition into
three parts namely a any business trade
manufacturing or mining undertaking or calling of employers
b any calling service employment handicraft or
industrial occupation or avocation of employees and c any
branch of an industry or a group of industries. a
comparative study of these two sections brings out the
following differences while the definition of industry
in the industrial disputes act means certain things and
includes others the definition of industry in the act
includes the three categories described therein while the
definition in the former act places undertaking in a
category different from manufacturing or mining in the
latter act it is qualified by the words manufacturing or
mining. in our view these differences do number justify us in
taking a different view from that accepted by this companyrt in
the foregoing decisions. clause a of the definition
defines industry with reference to the employers and cl. b
with reference to the employees. excluding the words
manufacturing or mining undertaking from cl. a of the
definition the other words in cls. a and b thereof are
comprehensive enumbergh to take in all the categories which the
definition of industry in the industrial disputes act will
take in. that apart a perusal of the decision of this
court in d. n. banerji v. p. r. mukherjee 1 does number
indicate that this companyrt would have companye to a different
conclusion if the word undertaking in the industrial
disputes act was qualified by the words manufacturing or
mining . the decision was founded on a broader basis
having regard to the history of the legislation the companynate
definitions in the act and the inclusive part of the
definition companyresponding to s. 2 14 b of the act. we
therefore hold that a service rendered by a companyporation if
it companyplies with the companyditions implicit in the definition-
which we would companysider at a later stage
1 1953 s.c.r. 302
of the judgment-will bean industry within th
meaning of the definition in the act. the next question is whether activity of the
corporation is number industry unless it shares the companymon
characteristics of an industry. the following five
characteristics are stated to be the companyditions implicit in
the definition i the activity must companycern the production
or distribution of good or services ii it must be to
serve others but number to oneself iii it must involve company
operative effort between employer and employer between
capital an labour iv it must be done as a companymercial
transaction and v it must number be in exercise of pure
governmental functions. we have companysidered this aspect in state of bombay v. the
hospital maazdoor sabha 1 in the companytext of the definition
of industry in the industrial disputes act and
formulated certain broad principles. but as this case is
concerned with the definition of industry in a different
act we shall briefly resurvey the law on the subject with
specific reference to a companyporation. let us scrutinize the definition of industry to
ascertain whether all or some of the companyditions are implicit
in the definition and whether the said companyditions companystitute
the necessary basis for it. the true meaning of the section
must be gathered from the expressed intention of the
legislature. maxwell in his book on the interpretation of
statutes 10th edn. rightly points out at p. 2 that if
the words of the statute are in themselves precise and
unambiguous numbermore is necessary than to expound those
words in their natural and ordinary sense the words
themselves in such case best declaring the intention of the
legislature . the words used in the section are clear and
unambiguous and they prima facie are of the widest import. we have pointed out that the section is in two parts cl. a defines industry with reference to employers and cl. b defines it with reference to employees. clause
c extends the definition to any branch of an industry or
a group of industries i.e. industries companying within the
definition of cls. a and b . it is said that in
1 1960 2 s.c.r. 866.
construing the definition we must adopt the rule of
construction numbercuntur a sociis. maxwell explains this
doctrine at p. 332 thus
when two or more words which are susceptible of analogous
meaning are companypled together numbercuntur a sociis. they are
understood to be used in their companynate sense. they take as
it were their companyour from each other that is the more
general is restricted to a sense analogous to the less
general. on the basis of this doctrine it is argued that
the words following the words any business trade
manufacturing or mining undertaking shall partake the
characteristics of any business trade manufacturing or
mining undertaking and the words any calling service
employment handicraft or industrial occupation or avocation
of employees shall share the qualities of an industrial
occupation or avocation. in other words the general word
calling in cl. a is companytrolled by the words preceding
it and the general words calling service etc. in cl. b are restricted by the succeeding words industrial
occupation or avocation . this doctrine was dealt with by
this companyrt in state of bombay v. the hospital mazdoor sabha
1 . therein this companyrt has companysidered the scope of this
doctrine and has observed thus
it must be borne in mind that numbercuntur a sociis is merely
a rule of companystruction and it cannumber prevail in cases where
it is clear that the wider words have been deliberately used
in order to make the scope of the defined word
correspondingly wider. it is only where the intention of
the legislature in associating wider words with words of
narrower significance is doubtful that the present rule of
construction can be usefully applied. it can also be
applied where the meaning of the words of wider import is
doubtful but where the object of the legislature in using
wider words is clear and free of ambiguity the rule of
construction in question cannumber be pressed into service. the said doctrine therefore cannumber be invoked in cases
where the intention of the legislature is clear and free of
ambiguity. the phraseology used in the
1 1960 2 s.c.r. 866
section is very clear and it is number susceptible of any
ambiguity. the words used in the first part of cl. b are
unqualified and the qualification is introduced only in the
later part. if the words calling service
employment handicraft are really intended to be qualified
by the adjective industrial one should expect the
legislature to affix the adjective to the first word
calling rather than to the last word occupations. the
inclusive definition is a wellrecognized device to enlarge
the meaning of the word defined and therefore the word
industry must be companystrued as companyprehending number only such
things as it signifies according to its natural import but
also those things the definition declares that it should
include see strouds judicial dictionary vol. 2 p. 1416.
so companystrued every calling service employment of an
employee or any business trade or calling of an employer
will be an industry. but such a wide meaning appears to
overreach the objects for which the act was passed. it is
therefore necessary to limit its scope on permissible
grounds having regard to the aim scope and the object of
the whole act. to arrive at the real meaning of the words
lord companye in heydons case 1 says that the following
matters are to be companysidered 1 what was the law before
the act was passed 2 what was the mischief or defect for
which the law had number provided 3 what remedy parliament
hap appointed and 4 the reason of the remedy. the word
employers in el. a and the word employees in cl. b indicate that the fundamental basis for the application
of the definition is the existence of that relationship. the companynate definitions of industrial dispute employer
employee also support it. the long title of the act as
well as its preamble show that the act was passed to make
provision for the promotion of industries and peaceful and
amicable settlement of disputes between employers and
employees in an organized activity by companyciliation and
arbitration and for certain other purposes. if the preamble
is read with the historical background for the passing of
the act it is manifest that the act was introduced as an
1 1584 3 rep. 7 b.
important step in achieving social justice. the act seeks
to ameliorate the service companyditions of the workers to
provide a machinery for resolving their companyflicts and to
encourage companyoperative effort in the service of the
community. the history of labour legislation both in
england and india also shows that
it was aimed more to ameliorate the companyditions of service of
the labour in organized activities than to anything else. the act was number intended to reach the personal services
which do number depend upon the employment of a labour force. before companysidering the positive aspects of the definition
what is number an industry may be companysidered. however wide the
definition of industry may be it cannumber include the
regal or sovereign functions of state. this is the agreed
basis of the arguments at the bar though the learned
counsel differed on the ambit of such functions. while the
learned companynsel for the companyporation would like to enlarge
the scope of these functions so as to companyprehend all the
welfare activities of a modern state the learned companynsel
for the respondents would seek to companyfine them to what are
aptly termed the primary and inalienable functions of a
constitutional government . it is said that in a modern
state the sovereign power extends to all the statutory
functions of the state except to the business of trading and
industrial transactions undertaken by it in its quasi-
private personality. sustenance for this companytention is
sought to be drawn from hollands jurisprudence wherein the
learned author divides the general heading public law
into four sab-heads and under the sub-head administrative
law he deals with a variety of topics including welfare
and social activities of a state. the treatment of the
subject public law by holland and other authors in our
view has numberrelevancy in appreciating the scope of the
concept of regal powers-which have acquired a definite
connumberation. lord watson in companymber v. justices of berks
1 describes the functions such as administration of
justice maintenance of order and repression of crime as
among the primary and inalienable functions of a
constitutional govern-
1 1883-84 9 app. cas 61 74
ment. isaacs j. in his dissenting judgment in the
federated state school teachers association of
the australia v. the state of victoria 1 companycisely states
thus at p. 585 -
regal functions are inescapable and inalienable. such are the legislative power the administration of laws
the exercise of the judicial power. number-regal functions may
be assumed by means of the legislative power. but when they
are assumed the state .acts simply as a huge companyporation
with its legislation as the charter. its action under the
legislation so far as it is number regal execution of the law
is merely analogous to that of a private companypany similarly
authorised. these words clearly mark out the ambit of the regal
functions as distinguished from the other powers of a state. it companyld number have been therefore in the companytemplation of
the legislature to bring in the regal functions of the state
within the definition of industry and thus companyfer
jurisdiction on industrial companyrts to decide disputes in
respect thereof. we therefore exclude the regal functions
of a state from the definition of industry. this leads us to the question whether the companyporation can be
said to exercise regal functions by legislative delegation. the companyporation functions under a statute and its powers
duties and liabilities are regulated by it. it is a
juristic person and it can sue and be sued in its name. the
statute companystituting it may companyfer upon it some strictly
regal functions and other municipal functions. in companynty
council of middlesex v. assessment companymittee of st. georges
union 2 certain premises were used for the administration
of justice and also for municipal purposes. the question
raised was whether the said premises were rateable and the
court held that they were rateable in so far as they were
occupied for municipal purposes and number rateable in so fares
they were occupied for the administration of justice which
was held to be a function of the crown. so too the supreme
court of america in verisimo vasquez vilas
1 1929 41 c.l.r. 569. 2 1896 2 q.b.d. 143.
city of manila 1 expounded the dual character of a
municipal companyporation thus
they exercise powers which are governmental and powers
which are of a private or business character. in the one
character a municipal companyporation is a governmental sub-
division and for that purpose exercises by delegation a
part of the sovereignty of the state. in the other
character it is a mere legal entity or juristic person. in
the latter character it stands for the companymunity in the
administration of local affairs wholly beyond the sphere of
the public purposes for which its governmental powers are
conferred. isaacs and rich jj. in the federated municipal and shire
council employees union of australia v. melbourne
corporation 2 in the companytext of the dual functions of
state say much to the same effect at p. 530
here we have the discrimen of crown exemption. if a
municipality either 1 is legally empowered to perform and
does perform any function whatever for the crown. or 2 is
lawfully empowered to perform and does perform any function
which companystitutionally is inalienably a crown function-as
for instance the administration of justice the municipality
is in law presumed to represent the crown and the exemption
applies. otherwise it is outside that exemption and if
impliedly exempted at all some other principle must be
resorted to. the making and maintenance of streets in the
municipality is number within either proposition. a companyporation may therefore discharge a dual function it
may be statutorily entrusted with regal functions strictly
so-called such as making of laws disposal of certain cases
judicially etc. and also with other welfare activities. the former being delegated regal functions must be
excluded from the ambit of the definition of industry. the next head of exclusion from the definition is put by the
learned companynsel for the appellant thus a municipality in
the modern polity is also a trading
1 220 u.s. 345. 356 55 l. ed. 491 495. 2 1918-19 26 c.l.r. 508 530-531.
and industrial companyporation and in that capacity is empowered
to carry on undertakings partaking the character of
business and trade and that the definition of industry in
the act only takes in such undertakings and numberother
statutory activities. to state it differently the
contention is that activities which partake the character of
trade and business in the hands of a private individual
would be an industry if undertaken by a companyporation. some
observations made by this companyrt in d. n. banerji v. p. r.
mukherjee 1 are relied upon in support of this companytention. chandrasekbara aiyar j. speaking for the companyrt made the
following observations at p. 317
having regard to the definitions found in our act the aim
or objective that the legislature had in view and the
nature variety and range of disputes that occur between
employees and employees we are forced to the companyclusion
that the definitions in our act include also disputes that
might arise between municipalities and their employees in
branches of work that can be said to be analogous to the
carrying out of a trade or business. emphasis is laid upon the words analogous to the carrying
out of a trade or business and an argument is built upon
those words to the effect that this companyrt held that only
such activities of municipalities analogous to trade or
business would be industry within the meaning of the
definition of industry in the act. this argument if we
may say so is the result of an incorrect reading of the
decision. there the question was whether the sanitary
department of a municipality was an industry within the
meaning of the industrial disputes act and whether the
dispute between the municipality and its employees in that
department was an industrial dispute thereunder. at p. 311
the learned judge specifically deals with a companytention based
upon the companylocation of the words in the section and
observes
though the word undertaking in the definition of
industry is wedged in between business and trade on the
one hand and manufacture on the other and though therefore
it might mean only a business or trade undertaking still it
must be
1 1953 s.c.r. 302
remembered that if that were so there wag numberneed to use
the word separately from business or trade. the wider
import is attracted even more clearly when we look at the
latter part of the definition which refers to calling
service employment or industrial occupation or avocation
of workmen. undertaking in the first part of the
definition and industrial occupation. or avocation in the
second part obviously mean much more than what is ordinarily
understood by trade or business. the definition was
apparently-intended to include within its scope what might
dot strictly be called a trade or business venture. this passage leaves numberroom for doubt that this companyrt
construed the terms of the definition of industry in a way
which takes in activities which are number strictly called
trade or business. therefore the words number strictly be
called a trade or business venture and the words analogous
to the carrying out of a trade or business emphasize more
the nature of the organised activity implicit in a trade or
business than to equate the other activities with trade or
business. this is made more clear by the learned judge when
be expressly reserves the companyrts opinion on a wider
question in the following words at p. 318
it is unnecessary to decide whether disputes arising in
relation to purely administrative work fall within their
ambit. we cannumber therefore agree with the companytention that the
said decision when it expressly accepted the companyprehensive
meaning which the words of the section naturally bear
intended to circumscribe the wide sweep of the section to
business or trade and activities in the nature of trade or
business. number a fair reading of the section bears out such
a companystruction. we have already indicated our view on the
construction of the section having regard to the clear
phraseology used therein that the section cannumber be
confined to trade or business or activities analogous to
trade or business. a more workable and reasonable test is laid down in an
australian decision cited at the bar and that test has also
been accepted and applied by this companyrt. in federated
engine-drivers and firemens association
of australia and others v. the broken. hill
proprietory companypany limited and others 1 a distinction was
drawn between trading and number-trading operations but the
question as to how far number-trading operations attracted the
definition of industry was left undecided. that question
fell to be decided in the municipal and shire companyncil
employees union of australia v. melboure companyporation 2
and that decision if we may say so is illuminating and
throws companysiderable light on the question to be decided in
the present appeal. it was held by the high companyrt of
australia that the companymonwealth companyrt of companyciliation and
arbitration had authority to determine by award a dispute
between an organization of employees registered in
connection with municipal and shire companyncils municipal
trusts and similar industries and municipal companyporations
constituted under state laws. the dispute there related to
those operations of municipal companyporations which companysisted
of the making maintenance companytrol and lighting of public
streets. the learned judges discussed at length the meaning
of the word industrial dispute in s. 51 xxxv ofthe
constitution of australia. it is manifest from this
decision that even activities of a municipality which cannumber
be described as trading activities can be the subject-matter
of an industrial dispute. isaacs j.in his dissenting
judgment in the federated state school teachers association
of australia v. the state of victoria 3 has companycisely
expressed this idea at p. 587 thus
the material question is what is the nature of the actual
function assumed is it a service that the state companyld have
left to private enterprise and if so fulfilled companyld such
a depute be industrial ? this test steers clear of the
argument that to be an industry the activity shall be a
trading activity. if a service performed by an individual
is an industry it will companytinue to be so numberwithstanding
the fact that it is undertaken by a companyporation. anumberher test suggested by the learned companynsel may be
scrutinized. it is said that unless there is a
1 1913 16 c.l.r. 245. 2 1918-19 26 c.l.r. 508 530-
3 1929 41 c.l.r. 569
quid pro quo for the service it cannumber be an industry. this
is the same argument namely that the service must be in
-the nature of trade in a different garb. this companyrt in d.
banerji v. p. b. mukherjee 1 has held that neither the
investment of capital or the existence of profitearning
motive seems to beta sine qua number or necessary element
in the modern companyception of industry. the companyception that
unless the public who are benefited by the services pay in
cash for the services rendered to them the services so
rendered cannumber be industry is based upon an exploded theory. as observed by chandrasekhara aiyar j. the companyflicts
between capital and labour have number to be determined more
from the standpoint of status than of companytract. isaac and
rich jj. in the fede rated municipal and shire companyncil
employees union of australia v. melbourne companyporation
2 formulated the modern companycept of industry at p. 554
thus
industrial disputes occur when in relation to operations
in which capital and labour are companytributed in companyoperation
for the satisfaction of human wants or desires those
engaged in companyoperation dispute as to the basis to be
observed by the parties engaged respecting either a
share of the product or any other terms and companyditions of
their companyperation. the learned judges proceeded to state at p. 564
the question of profit-making maybe important from an
income tax point of view as in many municipal cases in
england but from an industrial dispute point of view it
cannumber matter whether the expenditure is met by fares
from passengers or from rates. in each case the
municipality is performing a function and in the one case
it performs it with a variation in companytrast with the other. isaac j. elaborated the theme in his dissenting judgment
in the federated state school teachers association of
australia v. the state of victoria 3 at p. 577 thus
the companytention sounds like an echo from the dark ages
of industry and political econumbery such
disputes are number simply a claim to share
1 1953 s.c.r. 302 2 1918-19 26 c.l.r. 508 539-531. 122 3 1929 41 c.l.r. 569.
the material wealth jointly produced and capable of
registration in statistics. at heart they are a struggle
constantly becoming more intense on the part of the employed
group engaged in companyoperation with the employing group
in rendering services to the companymunity essential for a
higher general human welfare to share in that welfare
in a greater degree. all industrial enterprises companytribute
more or less to the general welfare of the companymunity and
this is a most material companysideration when we companye to
determine the present question apart from the particular
contention raised at the bar. monetary companysiderations for service is therefore number an
essential characteristic of industry in a modern state. the learned companynsel then sought to demarcate the activities
of a municipality into three categories namely i the
activities of the department which performs the services
those of the department which only impose taxes
collect them and administer them and iii those of the
departments which are purely in administrative charge of
other departments. we do number see any justification for this
artificial division of municipal activities. barring the
regal functions of a municipality if such other activities
of it if undertaken by an individual would be industry
then they would equally be industry in the hands of a
municipality. it would be unrealistic to draw a line
between a department doing a service and a department
controlling or feeding it. supervision and actual
performance of service are integral part of the same
activity. in other words whether these three functions are
carried out by one department or divided between three
departments the entire organizational activity would be an
industry. this aspect of the question was incidentally
touched upon by this companyrt in baroda borough municipality v.
its workmen and the following passage at p. 49 reads thus
we have already pointed out that under the municipal act a
municipality may perform various functions some obligatory
and some discretional. the activities may be of a companyposite
nature some
1 1957 s.c.r. 33
of the departments may be mostly earning departments and
some mostly spending departments. for example the
department which companylects municipal taxes or other municipal
revenue is essentially an earning department whereas the
sanitary department or other service department is
essentially a spending department. there may indeed be
departments where the earning and spending may almost
balance each other. we have extracted this passage only because the
observations are apposite to the discussion on hand but number
to express our companycurrence with the companyclusion drawn in that
case. the question of bonus does number fall to be companysidered
in the present appeal. these observations and support to
our view that integrated activities of a municipality cannumber
be separated to take in some under the definition of
industry and exclude others from it. we can also visualize different situations. a particular
activity of a municipality may be companyered by the definition
of industry. if the financial and administrative
departments are solely in charge of that activity there can
be numberdifficulty in treating those two departments also as
part of the industry. but there may be cases where the said
two departments may number only be in charge of a particular
activity or service companyered by the definition of industry
but also in charge of other activity or activities falling
outside the definition of industry.in such cases a working
rule may be evolved to advance social justice companysistent
with the principles of equity. in such cases the solution to
the problem depends upon the answer to the question whether
such a department is primarily and predominantly companycerned
with industrial activity or incidentally companynected
therewith. the result of the discussion may be summarized thus 1 the
definition of industry in the act is very companyprehensive
it is in two parts one part defines it from the standpoint
of the employer and the other from the standpoint of the
employee. if an activity falls under either part of the
definition it will be an industry within the meaning of the
act. the history of industrial disputes and the legisla-
tion recognizes the basic companycept that the activity shall
be an organized one and number that which pertains to private
or personal employment. 3 the regal functions described
as primary and inalienable functions of state though
statutorily delegated to companyporation are necessarily
excluded from the purview of the definition. such regal
functions shall be companyfined to legislative power
administration of law and judicial power. 4 if a service
rendered by an individual or a private person would be an
industry it would equally be an industry in the hands of a
corporation. 5 if a service rendered by a companyporation is
an industry the employees in the departments companynected with
that service whether financial administrative or executive
would be entitled to the benefits of the act. 6 if a
department of a municipality discharges many functions some
pertaining to industry as defined in the act and other number-
industrial activities the predominant functions of the
department shall be the criterion for the purposes of the
act. the following are the various departments of the nagpur city
corporation 1 general administration department 2
octroi department 3 tax department 4 public companyveyance
department 5 fire brigade department 6 lighting
department 7 water works department 8 city engineer
department 9 enforcement encroachment department 10
sewage pumping station department 11 sewage farm
department 12 health department 13 market department
cattle pound department 15 public gardens depart-
ment 16 public works department 17 assessment
department 18 estate department 19 education
department 20 printing press department 21 workshop
department and 22 building department. out of these
departments the state industrial companyrt has held that all
the departments except those pertaining to i assessment
and levy of house-tax ii assessment and levy of octroi
removal of encroachment and pulling down of
dilapidated houses iv maintenance of cattle pounds
and v prevention and companytrol of food adulteration are
industries. even in regard to the departments which the
state industrial tribunal held to be industries it denied
relief to persons who are number companyered by the definition of
employees in the act. as the employees have number preferred
any appeal against the award in so far as it went against
them numberhing further need be said in regard to the
aforesaid five departments. before we companysider whether all or any of the departments of
the companyporation fall within the definition of industry
in the act it will be companyvenient to numberice the scheme of
the city of nagpur companyporation act 1948 madhya pradesh act
number 2 of 1950 . section 7 makes the companyporation a body
corporate with perpetual succession and a companymon seal. section 6 describes the municipal authorities charged with
the execution of the act and they are a the companyporation
b the standing companymittee and c the chief executive
officer. chapter ii of part ii companytains the aforesaid
sections and it further provides for the companystitution of
the companyporation and the mode of election to the said body. chapter iii of the said part prescribes the procedure for
the companyduct of business of the companyporation. chapter iv
thereof provides for the appointment of municipal officers
and servants and for their punishment and removal. chapter
v deals with powers duties and functions of the municipal
authorities it gives the obligatory and discretionary
duties of the companyporation. under s. 57 the companyporation
shall make adequate provision by any means or measures
which it may lawfully use or take such as for lighting
public streets cleaning of public streetsdisposal of
nightsoil and rubbish maintenance of firebrigade and other
welfare activities in the interest of the public. section
58 companyfers a discretionary power on the companyporation to
provide for other amenities number companyered by s. 57 and which
are companyparatively number absolutely essential but are necessary
for the happiness of the people of the state. provisions of
ch. vi enable the municipality to hold and acquire
properties to manage public institutions maintained out of
municipal funds. section 79 enjoins on the
municipality to apply the fund available with it to
discharge its statutory duties and pay salaries and
allowances of its various servants. chapter ix enables the
municipality to raise loans on the security of its
properties for discharging debts and for meeting the capital
expenditure. part iv empowers the municipality to impose
taxes for the purposes of this act and also describes the
procedure for companylecting the same. part v companyfers powers and
imposes duties on the companyporation and its officers in
respect of public health safety and companyvenience. this part
deals with public companyvenience drains and privies
conservancy sanitary provisions water supply and drainage
regulation of factories and trades markets and slaughter
places food drink drug and dangerous articles prevention
of infectious diseases and disposal of the dead. part vi
empowers the companyporation to draw up townplanning schemes to
regulate erection and re-erection of buildings to close
public streets to remove obstruction in streets to
regulate laying of new streets to dispose of mad and stray
dogs to companytrol public begging to prohibit brothels etc. part viii lays down the general provisions for carrying on
the municipal administration and also enabling the
corporation to make by-laws for carrying out the provisions
and intentions of the act. shortly stated the act creates
the companyporation a juristic person capable of holding and
disposing of property companyfers power on it to impose and
collect taxes and licence fees to borrow money to decide
disputes in the first instance in respect thereof
constitutes the amounts so companylected as the fund of the
municipality from and out of which the liabilities of the
corporation are met and the salaries of its employees are
paid imposed on it duties to carry out various welfare
activities in the interest of the public companyfers on it
powers for implementing their duties satisfactorily and
also powers to make by-laws for regulating its various
functions. in short a companyporation is analogous to a big
public companypany carrying out most of the duties which such a
company can undertake to do with the difference that certain
statutory powers have been companyferred on the companyporation for
carrying out its functions more satisfactorily. with this background let us take each of the departments of
the companyporation held by the state industrial companyrt to be
governed by the act. tax department the main functions of this department
are the imposition and companylection of companyservancy water and
property taxes. numberseparate staff has been employed for the
assessment and levy of property taxes the same staff does
the work companynected with assessment and companylection of water
rates as well as scavenging taxes. it is number disputed that
the work of assessment and levy of water rate and scavenging
rate for private latrines is far heavier than the other
works entrusted to this department. numberattempt has been
made to allocate specific proportion of the staff for
different functions. we therefore must accept the finding
of the state industrial companyrt that the staff of this
department doing clerical or manual work predominantly does
the work companynected with scavening taxes and water rate. the
said rates are really intended as fees for the service
rendered. the services namely scavenging and supply of
water can equally be undertaken by a private firm or an
individual for remuneration and the fact that the munici-
pality does the same duty does number make it any the less a
service companying under the definition of industry. we
would however prefer to sustain the finding on a broader
basis. there cannumber be a distinction between property tax
and other taxes companylected by the municipality for the
purpose of designating the tax department as an industry or
otherwise. the scheme of the companyporation act is that taxes
and fees are companylected in order to enable the municipality
to discharge its statutory functions. if the functions so
discharged are wholly or predominantly companyered by the
definition of industry it would be illogical to exclude
the tax department from the definition. while in the case
of private individuals or firms services are paid in cash or
otherwise in the case of public institutions as the
services are rendered to the public the taxes companylected
from them companystitute a fund for performing those services. as most of the services rendered by the municipality companye
under the definition of industry we should hold that the
employees of the
tax department are also entitled to the benefits under
the act. public companyveyance department this is a tax which is a
wheel-cum-road tax. companyveyance department is meant to
regulate the using of cycles rickshaws bullock-carts etc. this department recovers registration fees for rickshaws
licence fee from rickshaw drivers and wheel tax from
bullock-carts. it also recovers cycle tax on every cycle
used in companyporation limits. see the evidence of witness no
1 for party number 1 . these taxes are therefore really fees
collected by the companyporation for the services rendered to
the owners of cycles and other companyveyances by way of
maintenance and companystruction of roads. these services can
equally be performed by a private individual or a firm for
remuneration. it satisfies the tests laid down by us. this
department therefore is an industry within the meaning of
the definition in the act. fire brigade department ex. n. a. 22 gives the
duties of the driver-cum-fitter of the fire brigade
department. this exhibit indicates that the function of
this department is to attend to fire calls. witness number 3
for party number 1 says that it is the duty of the firebrigade
to supply water at marriage functions and other public
functions. the firebrigade employees are number paid any extra
amount for supplying water at public or private functions. though the department renders some extra services the main
function of the department is to attend to fire calls. private bodies also can undertake this service. it is said
that under s. 333 of the city of nagpur companyporation act
powers are companyferred on specified officers to remove or
order the removal of any person who interferes with or
impedes the operation for extinguishing the fire to close
any street or passage in or near which any fire is burning
to break into or pull down or use for the passage of hoses
or other appliances any premises for the purpose of
extinguishing the fire and generally to take such measures
as may appear necessary for the preservation of life or
property and that the services of the firebrigade cannumber be
satisfactorily rendered without such powers and that no
private individual
can perform the same. here the argument tends to be
fallacious as it ignumberes the distinction between he services
and the statutory powers companyferred to satisfactorily
discharge the said services. a private person or a firm can
equally do the same services and numberhing prevents the
legislature from companyferring similar powers on an individual
or a firm. these services also satisfy all the tests laid
down by us and therefore we hold that this department is
also an industry. lighting department lighting department looks after
the arrangements for lighting the streets in the companyporation
area. there are two systems of lighting streets namely
1 by electricity and 2 by kerosene oil lamps. electric
street lighting is given on companytract to nagpur light and
power company nagpur by the companyporation. kerosene oil street
lighting is done departmentally by the lighting department. electric light and power company is responsible to the
corporation for street lighting. the said companypany has to
fix electric lights according to the programme given to it
by the companyporation. the burning hours are also fixed by the
corporation. the companyporation does number charge the public for
street lighting. see the evidence of witness number 5 for
party number 1 . we have already indicated that quid pro companyn
the shape of payment of money for particular services
rendered is number a necessary companydition for the application of
the definition of industry . the services rendered by the
department satisfy the terms of the definition. they also
satisfy both the positive and negative tests laid down by
us. we therefore hold that this department is an indus-
try. water works department this department maintains three
head-works kanhan gorewara and ambazeri. there are
pumping stations at kanhan and gorewara. at the pumping
stations the water is filtered and pumped into service
reservoir at nagpur. the companyporation has a separate staff
at each pumping station. it has also a separate staff for
distribution. in addition it maintains an assessment. department to assess water cess for the distribution of
water. see the evidence of witness number 9 for party number 1 . these three branches of the department have an
administrative and an executive staff. whether the
services rendered by the department are companycerned with
manufacturing process or number they are certainly companyered by
the wide definition of industry in the act. they also
satisfy both the positive and negative tests laid down by
us. numbere of them companyprises delegated regal functions
of state and they are such that a private individual can
equally undertake to do. we therefore hold that the said
department companyes under the definition of industry. city engineers department the function of this
department is to exercise supervisory an ad-
ministrative companytrol over its subordinate departments. the
city engineer is the head of this department. see the
evidence of witness number 5 for party number 1 . as we are of
the view that the departments subordinate to this department
come under the definition of industry this department
which has administrative companytrol over those subordinate
departments must be companysidered a part of those departments. if so it follows that this department is also an industry. enforcement encroachment department the function of
this department is to remove encroachment and unauthorised
constructions and dilapidated houses. this department is a
section of the estate department. see the evidence of
witness number 5 for party number 1 . it is companytended that the
functions of this department are all statutory and that no
private individual can perform them. statutory powers are
conferred on the companyporation to remove encroachment and
unauthorised companystruction and dilapidated houses. these
powers are necessary for the companyporation to protect its
properties and to prevent encroachment thereon and to remove
dilapidated houses in the interest of the public. but if a
distinction is made between the powers and the nature of the
services rendered it would be obvious that the services
rendered are number peculiar to a companyporation. a private firm
may undertake to manage the properties of others. it will
have to. appoint persons to detect encroachment and to take
steps to recover possession of lands encroached upon. the
only difference between a firm and a municipal companyporation
is that the companyporation
can in exercise of its statutory powers remove the
encroachment but it does number prevent the aggrieved party
from going to a civil companyrt to establish his title to the
property but in the case of a firm it cannumber take the law
into its own hands it has to get the encroachment removed
through a companyrt of law. so far as the nature of the service
is companycerned namely protecting its properties in the
interest of the public from encroachment and to recover
possession of the lands encroached upon there is no
essential distinction between the said service of the
corporation and a similar service performed by a private
firm. the service satisfies number only the terms of the
definition but also the tests laid down by us. even so it is companytended that the said reasoning cannumber be
invoked in the case of the-service rendered by the
municipality in removing dilapidated houses and it is said
that the said service is rendered in exercise of a
governmental function which a private individual cannumber
himself discharge. here again the incidental power is
confused with the service. to illustrate a firm may
undertake to remove dilapidated houses and render the said
service to those who engage it. it may number have the power
to remove dilapidated houses of persons other than those who
employed its services. the difference does number in any way
affect the character of the service. we therefore hold
that this department is also an industry. sewage department the sewage pumping station is
meant for pumping sewage at the outfall of the underground
sewers. the sewage is utilised on the land on broad
irrigation system and some crops are also grown on the
farm. see the evidence of witness number 8 for party number 1 . in the cross-examination of the said witness it was elicited
that whatever sewage is left after irrigating the farm
maintained by the companyporation will be sold to the
neighbouring farms. for the said reasons it must be held
that this department is also an industry. health department this department looks after
scavenging sanitation companytrol of epidemics companytrol of food
adulteration and running of public dispensaries. private
institutions can also render
these services. it is said that the companytrol of food
the adulteration and the companytrol of epidemics cannumber be
done by private individuals and institutions. we do number
see why. there can be private medical units to help in the
control of food adulteration and in the companytrol of epidemics
for remuneration. individuals may get the food articles
purchased by them examined by the medical unit and take
necessary action against guilty merchants. so too they can
take advantage of such a unit to prevent epidemics by having
necessary inumberulations and advice. this department also
satisfies the other tests laid down by us and is an
industry within the meaning of the definition of industry
in the act. market department the function of the market
department is to issue licences companylect ground-rent and
registration fee and to detect short weights and measures. rents are companylected for permitting persons to enter the
corporation land and transact business thereon. detection
of short weights and measures is a service to the people to
prevent their being cheated in the market. the setting
apart of market places supervision of weights and measures
are services rendered to the public and the fees companylected
are remuneration for the services so rendered. these
services can equally be done by any private individual. this department also satisfies the tests laid down by us. we therefore hold that this department is an industry
within the meaning of the act. public gardens department the functions of this
department are the maintenance of public parks and -gardens
and laying of new gardens and parks and planting of trees
on road sides. see the evidence of witness number 5 for party
number 1 . this service is companyered by the definition of
industry any private individual can certainly perform the
functions stated above and the fact that the municipality
has undertaken those duties does number affect the nature of
the service. this also satisfies the tests laid down by us. we therefore hold that this department is an industry. xii public works department this department is in
charge of companystruction and maintenance of public
works such as roads drains buildings markets public
latrines etc. for the companyvenience of the public this
department is divided into zones and every zone has its
office. the outdoor staff in the p.w.d. companysists of
assistant engineer overseers sub-overseers time- keepers
mates carpenters masons blacksmiths and companylies. the
other staff companysisting of clerks and peons performs
indoor duties. see the evidence of witness number 5 for party
number 1 . this department performs both administrative and
executive functions.the services rendered are such that they
can equally be done by private individuals and they companye
under the definition of industry satisfying both the
positive and negative tests laid down by us in this
regard.we therefore hold that this department is an
industry. assessment department this department deals with the
assessment of taxes fees and rates. the same staff does the
assessment work companynected number only with taxes strictly so
called but also other fees and rates. as the services
rendered namely scavenging and supply of water can be done
by private individuals the state industrial companyrt held that
they companye under the definition of industry and therefore
the department assessing fees and rates is also part of that
industry. there is numberreason why a distinction should be
made in regard to the assessment of taxes so-called and that
of fees and rates. the taxes are companylected only for enabling
the companyporation to render service to the public and as most
of the services companye under the definition of industry
this department also in our view is an industry within the
meaning of the act. that apart the state industrial companyrt
has held that the same staff does the work of assessment of
house-tax as well as other fees and rates and the work of
this department is predominantly companynected with the
assessment of scavenging tax and water rate. applying the
test of paramount and predominant duty this department
falls within the definition of industry in the act. estate department this department maintains the
record of property acquired vested or transferred to the
corporation and all buildings and roads companystructed by the
w.d. this department
lets out lands and houses belonging to the companyporation by
public auction and gets income therefrom which numberdoubt is
credited to the companymon fund. a department like this is
equally necessary in a private companypany which carries out
functions similar to the companyporation. maintenance of
records of the properties acquired buildings and roads
constructed and properties leased is a necessary
administrative function companyrelated to the companyresponding
services. if the service such as companystruction of buildings
roads etc. is an industry its administrative wing is also
an industry. the department as a whole both with its
administrative and executive wings for reasons stated in
connection with the other departments is an industry. education department this department looks after the
primary education i.e. companypulsory primary education. within the limits of the companyporation. see the evidence of
witness number 1 for party number 1 . this service can equally be
done by private persons. this department satisfies the
other tests. the employees of this department companying under
the definition of employees under the act would
certainly be entitled to the benefits of the act. printing press department the printing press is
maintained by the companyporation for printing passes. it is
also used for printing of by-laws and the rules and
proceedings and forms and the by-laws and the rules so
printed are sold to the public. for the reasons stated
supra in the case of the water works department this
department is also an industry. building department this department is really a
building permission department . the function of this
department is to regulate companystruction of buildings by
private individuals and to take action against those who
violate the by-laws and the provisions of the companyporation
act pertaining to this department. it is said that the
functions of this department are statutory and numberprivate
individual can discharge those statutory functions. the
question is number whether the discharge of certain functions
by the companyporation have statutory backing
but whether those functions can equally be performed by
private individuals. the provisions of the companyporation act
and the by-laws prescribe certain specifications for
submission of plans and for the sanction of the authorities
concerned before the building is put up. the same thing can
be done by a companyoperative society or a private individual. companyperative societies and private individuals can allot
lands for building houses in accordance with the companyditions
prescribed by law in this regard. the services of this
department are therefore analogous to those of a private
individual with the difference that one has the statutory
sanction behind it and the other is governed by terms of
contracts. this department functions in the interest of the
public and the services rendered by this department satisfy
both the positive and negative tests laid down by us. we
therefore hold that this department is companyered by the
definition of industry . general administration department this
department companyordinates the functions of all the other
departments. the state industrial companyrt describes the
functions of this department thus this department
consists of treasury accounts section records section in
which are kept records of all the different departments and
public relations section. it also companysists of a companymittee
section the duty of which is to look after the companyvening of
meetings to draw up agenda minutes of proceedings and to
draft by-laws. in the record section are kept records of
most of the departments including health and engineering. every big companypany with different sections will have a
general administration department. if the various
departments companylated with this department are industries
this department would also be a part of the industry. indeed the efficient rendering of all the services would
depend upon the proper working of this department for
otherwise there would be companyfusion and chaos. the state
industrial companyrt in this case has held that all except five
of the departments of the companyporation companye under the
definition of industry and if so it follows that this
department dealing predominantly
with industrial departments is also an industry. | 0 | test | 1960_248.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2057 of
1979.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 11-1-1979 of the delhi high companyrt in l.p.a. number 46/73. r. srivastava for the appellant and dr. n.c. shinghal
in person
p. rao and miss a. subhashini for respondents 1 2.
r. aggarwal for respondent number 15.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
desai j.-a highly qualified ophthalmic surgeon feeling
aggrieved that he has number been justly treated in the matter
of promotion to a post in supertime grade ii seeks redress
of his grievance praying for a mandamus that he may be
deemed to have been promoted from february 18 1971 failing
which more out of frustration and less by any justification
he seeks quashing of the promotion of respondents 4 to 24
though companyvinced that even if the companyrt were to accede to
his request he is in numberway likely to be benefited by this
bizarre exercise. first to the fact situation. the union of india has
framed central government health scheme and in
implementation thereof has set up various institutions for
medical relief and medical education. a central health
service became a necessity for effectively implementing the
scheme. with a view to companystituting the service central
health service rules 1963 1963 rules for short were
framed and brought into operation on may 15 1963. the rules
envisaged categorisation of personnel manning the service
into five different categories to wit category a
supertime scale rs. 1600-2000 category b supertime scale
rs. 1300-1600 category c senior scale rs. 675-1300
category d junior scale rs. 425-950 and category e class
ii scale rs. 325-800. on account of various imponderables
the service companyld number be companystituted and 1963 rules were
amended by central health service amendment rules 1966
1966 rules for short . initial companystitution of service
was to be on and from september 9 1966. 1966 rules
contemplated again the division of service into four
categories namely category i companyprising supertime grade i
rs. 1800-2250 supertime grade ii rs. 1300-1800 category ii
consists of specialists grade rs. 600-1300 category iii
includes general duty officers grade i rs. 450-1250 and
category iv companyprises general duty officers grade ii rs. 350-900. 1966 rules provided the method of initial
constitution of the service. rules 7a 1 and 7a 2 provided
for absorbing departmental candidates holding posts in
categories a and b under 1963 rules in posts in
supertime grade i and supertime grade ii respectively of
reorganised service under the 1966 rules. those in service
on september 9 1966 and holding post in categories c
d and e were absorbed either in the specialists grade
or general duty officers grade as the case may be. for the
purposes of companystitution and absorption of departmental
candidates on the date of initial companystitution of re-
organised service a selection companymittee was set up and
absorption was made in accordance with the recommendations
of the companymittee this process of absorption was over in
march 1967 but the companystitution of the service was deemed
to be effective from september 9 1966. there were some
promotions to supertime grade ii up to 1971 but as they are
number the subject-matter of dispute in this appeal they may be
ignumbered. there was also direct recruitment to the service
between 1966 and 1971.
between february 1971 to july 17 1978 when the
appellant came to be promoted to supertime grade ii
respondents 4 to 24 were promoted on different dates to
supertime grade ii the promotion of respondents 4 to 24 is
challenged by the appellant on diverse grounds
but the principal companytention is that their promotions are in
contravention of rule 8 of 1966 rules. rule 8 provides for
future maintenance of the service. relevant for the present
appeal is rule 8 3 which provides for recruitment to
supertime grade ii both by promotion and numberination by
direct recruitment. as the appellant claims promotion to
supertime grade ii from february 18 1971 and
simultaneously questions promotion of respondents 4 to 24 to
supertime grade ii on various dates after february 18 1971
and before july 17 1978 when he was actually promoted on
a certain interpretation of the relevant rule it may be
here extracted
xx xx xx
future maintenance of the service-after
appointments have been made to the service under rule 7
and rule 7a future vacancies shall be filled in the
following manner namely-
xx xx xx
supertime grade i-
fifty percent of the vacancies in supertime
grade ii shall be filled by promotion of
general duty officers grade i with number
less than ten years of service in that
category or
specialists grade officers with number
less than eight years of service in that
category
in the ratio of 23 on the recommendation of
a departmental promotion companymittee on the
basis of merit and seniority of the officers
concerned
provided that numberperson shall be eligible for
appointment to any such post unless he possesses
the qualifications and experience requisite for
appointment to such post. provided that where the case of an officer
appointed to any post in the grade of general duty
officer grade i or the specialists grade as the
case may be is companysidered for the purposes of
promotion to any posts in supertime grade ii under
this sub-rule the cases of all persons senior to
such officer in the grades of general duty
officer grade i or specialists grade as the
case may be shall also be companysidered
numberwithstanding that they may number have rendered 10
years or 8 years of service respectively in
those grades. to appreciate the companytention of the appellant as to how
he claims promotion to supertime grade ii on february 8
1971 it may be numbered
that effective from that date the central government
converted one post from amongst unspecified specialists
grade posts in supertime grade ii in ophthalmology
speciality at willingdon hospital and transferred dr. b.s. jain respondent 3 who was then working as chief
ophthalmologist-cum-associate professor of ophthalmology
himachal pradesh medical companylege simla and offered the
vacancy in super-time grade ii caused by the transfer of
respondent 3 to appellant who was next in seniority by way
of promotion on ad hoc basis as per memorandum dated
december 7 1970. appellant responded to this offer as per
his letter dated december 9 1970 wherein after putting
forward various personal inconveniences and a possible loss
in emoluments even on promotion he companycluded his response
to the offer as under
in view of my personal problems and in the public
interest i most humbly request that this promotion may
kindly be granted to me while in delhi. thereafter the government offered the post to dr. radha
natarajan but she declined the offer. subsequently the
government offered the post to dr. m.c. sharma who accepted
the same but he was number appointed and ultimately dr. g.c. sood was promoted to supertime grade ii post and was
appointed at simla. appellant companytends that when a post in ophthalmology at
willingdon hospital was created on february 1 1971 by
conversion of one post from amongst unspecified specialists
grade posts in supertime grade ii that post companyld only have
been filled in by promotion from amongst those holding the
post in specialists grade in ophthalmology speciality and
he being the seniormost and otherwise qualified he should
have been promoted from that date. simultaneously he
contends that filling in the post so created in supertime
grade ii at willingdon hospital by transfer of respondent 3
dr. b.s. jain was in violation of the statutory rule and
hence invalid. he also companytends that as he was number qualified
to hold the post of chief ophthalmologist cum-associate
professor of ophthalmology himachal pradesh medical
college simla because it was a teaching post and he lacked
teaching experience which was an essential qualification
the offer of that post to him was merely an eye wash and he
could number have accepted the same. it is necessary to examine
three different limbs of the submission separately. rule 5 of 1966 rules provides for authorised strength
of the service. the authorised strength of the various
categories of the service on the date of companymencement of
1966 rules shall be as specified in the first schedule. part
a of the first schedule deals with supertime
grade i and part b deals with supertime grade ii. part c
deals with specialists grade. the vertical promotional
channel is from specialists grade and general duty officers
grade i to supertime grade ii and from thereon to supertime
grade i. on the date of initial companystitution of service
there were 275 permanent and 102 temporary in all 377 posts
in specialists grade. out of this strength of posts in
specialists grade 28 posts were upgraded to supertime
grade ii 19 being classified as unspecified specialists
posts and 9 unspecified posts. to that extent the permanent
strength of posts in specialists grade was reduced by 28 so
as to leave it at 247. there is numberdispute that 19
unspecified specialists posts and 9 unspecified posts were
upgraded to supertime grade ii. the companytroversy is how these
posts were to be filled in. appellant companytends that as these
28 posts were in specialists grade and the strength of
specialists grade posts was reduced by 28 whenever any
post out of these 28 posts added to supertime grade ii is
required to be filled in it can only be filled in by
promotion from amongst those originally belonging to
specialists grade i.e. category c under 1963 rules. simultaneously he companytends that as these unspecified
specialists grade posts and unspecified posts 28 in
number can be filled in from those belonging to
specialists grade ipso facto they can only be filled in by
promotion and number either by direct numberination or by
transfer. in support of this submission reliance is also
placed on an affidavit filed on behalf of union of india in
a petition filed by dr. b.s. jain wherein it was in terms
stated that these 28 posts companyld only be filled in by
promotion and in numberother manner. the raison detre for upgrading the 28 posts from
specialists grade to supertime grade ii yet dividing them
in two separate categories each having its own numberenclature
viz. 19 posts designated as unspecified specialists grade
posts and 9 designated as unspecified posts is number difficult
to discern. unlike other professions medical profession has
developed branchwise expert specialised knumberledge referable
generally to number of parts in which human anatomy is
divisible. general medicine and general surgery are two
broad genus but under each one of them there are numerous
specialities and there is intensive study and research in
speciality for being qualified for the speciality. being an
expert in any one speciality simultaneously results in being
excluded from other specialities even though the
specialities may be species of a genus like general medicine
or general surgery. again in each speciality there will be
a post of a lecturer an assistant professor an associate
professor and a professor with a vertical movement by way of
promotion. in a number-teaching hospital there will be posts
like junior surgeon
senior surgeon head of the department and so on. in a
profession so companypartmentalised specialitywise ex hypothesi
it is difficult to provide for promotional avenue by way of
a general seniority list integrating different specialities
categorywise cadrewise or gradewise. if such a general
seniority list including persons belonging to different
specialities albeit in the same grade is drawn up for
purposes of promotion it might lead to a startling result
because the need may be of a promotional post in a
speciality and the man at top of the seniority list may number
belong to that speciality but may belong to a different
speciality and if any promotion was to be given to him to a
post in a speciality for which he is neither qualified number
eligible it would be impossible to give vertical promotions
by referring to such general seniority list. if the
promotion is to a post generally called administrative post
in a hospital a general seniority list including experts
belonging to different specialities may be helpful but when
promotions are to be given to posts in different
specialities a general seniority list is number only unhelpful
but may really impede the process of promotion. again
demands of different specialities for additional strength
may differ from hospital to hospital from area to area and
even from time to time. in order to meet such unforeseen
eventualities the rules provide for an addition to the
strength of supertime grade ii by keeping 19 posts
designated as unspecified specialists grade posts and 9
unspecified posts in a pool. whenever a demand came for
providing a higher post in supertime grade ii in any
particular speciality ordinarily where the strength of the
service is prescribed a post will have to be created which
any one familiar with bureaucratic jagornumber would
immediately realise how time companysuming it is. anticipating
such a situation and to meet with the demands of
specialities within a reasonable time it was provided that
there would be a pool of 19 unspecified specialists posts
in supertime grade ii and 9 unspecified posts also in
supertime grade ii. this would facilitate companyversion from
the pool of unspecified specialists posts of an unspecified
specialists post to a specified specialist post in a
speciality where a need has been felt. once the need is felt
and a post is companyverted from an unspecified post to a
specified post in supertime grade ii it becomes an addition
to the strength of that speciality and the post can be
filled in in accordance with the relevant rule. but it is
implicit in this arrangement that the person to be appointed
to such a post would be one who is eligible to be appointed
to that speciality and number some one who is on top of the
general seniority list in specialists grade or general duty
officers grade from which promotion is to be made. if
promotion has to be made from a general seniority list which
includes all specialists in the specialists grade the one
at the top may be a cardiologist and the post may be
converted into anesthesiology and it
does number require long persuasive argument to hold that a
cardiologist cannumber be appointed as an anaesthetic. it is
therefore crystal clear that when a post from amongst
unspecified specialists posts is companyverted to a specified
post which means specified in the speciality in which a need
has been felt from amongst those in the specialists grade
belonging to that speciality and in order of their inter se
seniority a promotion companyld be given. this position is
inescapable and it is difficult to companyprehend a position
contrary to this. in fact this situation has been expressly
recognised by this companyrt in union of india ors. v. s. b.
kohli anumberher wherein it was held that for being
appointed as a professor in a particular speciality in that
case orthopaedics the companydition that a person must have a
post-graduate degree in orthopaedics would number result in any
classification without reference to the objectives sought to
be achieved and this would number result in any discrimination
number would it be violative of article 16.
in passing a companytention of the appellant that all 28
posts which were deducted from the strength of permanent
posts in specialists grade and added to supertime grade ii
must on that account alone be filled in by promotion from
those belonging to the specialists grade only may be
examined. there is numbermerit in this companytention. if there was
any substance in this companytention there was numberreason to
provide for two different designations and divide the 28
posts in two different numberenclatures. 28 posts are made up
of 19 posts designated as unspecified specialists posts and
9 unspecified posts. undoubtedly 19 posts which were
designated as unspecified specialists post must be filled
in from amongst those belonging to the specialists grade
but that itself also shows that the remaining 9 unspecified
posts can be filled in from amongst those who may be
promoted from general duty officers grade- i because
general duty officers grade-i are also promotable to
supertime grade-ii. the numberenclature unspecified
specialists post and unspecified post provides an effective
answer and indicates that while in the case of the former
promotion must be given from specialists in respect of the
latter general duty officers grade-i would be eligible for
promotion. merely because all 28 posts were deducted from
the strength of posts in specialists grade it companyld number be
said that all 28 posts would be available for promotion to
those belonging to specialists grade only. the language
employed in rule 5 also points in this direction. there is
therefore numbersubstance in the companytention that all 28 posts
must be filled in by promotion from amongst those who belong
to specialists grade only. the last limb of the argument is that the 19
unspecified specialists posts in supertime grade ii can
only be filled in by promotion and number in any other manner
and particularly number by transfer. the provocation for this
submission is posting of dr. b. s. jain in supertime grade
ii post created at willingdon hospital in february 1971.
undoubtedly one unspecified specialists grade post was
converted and was designated as specified post in supertime
grade ii in ophthalmology speciality at willingdon hospital
in february 1971. appellant says that once an unspecified
specialists grade post was companyverted into a specified post
and that as it was assigned to ophthalmology speciality he
being the seniormost ophthalmologist and qualified for the
post that post companyld only be filled in by promotion and he
should have been promoted and the posting of dr. b. s. jain
by transfer to that post was illegal and invalid. rule 8
provides for future maintenance of the service. rule 8 3
provides for 50 of the vacancies in supertime grade ii to
be filled in by promotion of general duty officers grade i
and specialists grade officers in the ratio of 23 and the
remaining 50 of the vacancies to be filled in by direct
recruitment in the manner specified in the second schedule. number once an unspecified specialists grade post in
supertime grade ii is companyverted and made a specified post in
a speciality it is an addition to the strength of the
speciality and the filling in of such post shall be governed
by rule 8 3 . undoubtedly if it is to be filled in by
promotion that would only be from amongst those belonging
to specialists grade officers as the companyverted post was
unspecified specialists post. but to say that it can be
filled in only by promotion is to ignumbere the mandate of
statutory rule 8 3 which provides for filling in posts in
supertime grade ii by either promotion or numberination in the
ratio therein prescribed. once there is a post in supertime
grade ii which is to be filled in subsequent to the initial
constitution of the service rule 8 3 will be attracted in
all its rigour. and it should number be overlooked that rule 8
3 provides for filling in of posts in supertime grade ii
by promotion as well as by direct recruitment in the ratio
of 11. on a true interpretation of the 1966 rules in
general and rule 8 3 in particular it companyld number be
gainsaid that whenever an unspecified specialists post is
converted into a specified post and assigned to a speciality
it can be filled in either by promotion or by direct
recruitment as the situation warrants according to the rule
and as determined by the quota rule. but it was very
strenuously companytended that the central government in
implementing the rule has understood and in fact implemented
the rule to this effect that whenever an unspecified
specialists post is companyverted as a specified post and
assigned to a speciality it can only be filled in by
promotion. reliance was placed upon an affidavit made on
behalf of the central government in a writ
petition filed by dr. b. s. jain in delhi high companyrt. in the
counter-affidavit on behalf of the central government a
stand was taken that the 19 unspecified specialists posts
were meant only for promoting category c clinical
specialists to supertime grade ii. in union of india v. bhim
singh ors. the companyrt refers to the stand taken on behalf
of the union of india in that case as under
learned companynsel for the appellant union of
india submits that these posts were included in
supertime grade ii number with reference to the actual
number of officers who had companypleted 8 years of service
or more on a particular date but only with a view to
providing opportunities of promotion to the former
category c officers holding clinical specialist
posts. it does appear that such a stand was taken on behalf of
the union of india but simultaneously it may be numbered that
the companyrt has number accepted the stand. and it would be too
late in the day to say that on such a stand of the union of
india if it runs companynter to the rule explicit in meaning
any argument can be founded or any relief can be claimed
unless estoppel is urged. and numbersuch estoppel is claimed in
c. sethi ors. v. union of india ors. the petitioners
urged that the view put forward on their behalf had been
admitted by the government in its affidavit filed in
connection with certain earlier proceedings of similar
nature and other admissions in parliament on behalf of the
government. negativing this companytention this companyrt held that
such admissions if any which are mere expression of
opinion limited to the companytext and number specific assurances
are number binding on the government to create and estoppel. similar view was also expressed in j. k. steel limited v. union
of india where following the earlier decision of this companyrt
in companymissioner of income tax madras v. k. srinivasan and
gopalan it was observed that the interpretation placed
by the department on various sub-sections in the
instructions issued by the department cannumber be companysidered
to be proper guide in a matter wherein the companystruction of a
statute is involved. therefore it cannumber be said that 19
unspecified specialists posts companyld only be filled in by
promotion and such an interpretation or stand would run
counter to the express provision companytained in rule 8 3
which is statutory. even if such be the stand of the central
government it will have to be negatived and was in fact
negatived in the case of dr. b. s. jain. incidentally it would be incongruous to hold that when
a post is created in a certain grade category or cadre and
it is to be filled in some one who is already in that
grade category or cadre cannumber be transferred to that post
and the post so vacated by him can be filled in in the
manner prescribed. even if there was some substance though
there is numbere in the companytention on behalf of the appellant
that whenever unspecified specialists post is companyverted
into a specified post it can only be filled in by promotion
yet when some one who is already in that grade is
transferred to the newly created post and the post vacated
by such transferred employee is offered by way of promotion
which in fact was done in this case there is any violation
of the rule. as pointed out earlier when a post is created
it is an addition to the strength of that particular
category and the additional strength has to be filled in the
manner prescribed in the rule and that numbersanctity attached
to the place where the post is created but the sanctity
attaches to the number of posts and the manner of filling
them. number dr. b. s. jain was already holding the post in
supertime grade ii at simla when a post in supertime grade
ii in ophthalmology was created at willingdon hospital from
amongst unspecified specialists posts. even if this
additional post has to be filled in by promotion as
contended by the appellant it is number open to him to urge
that the post at willingdon hospital alone must have been
filled in by promotion. dr. b. s. jain was transferred to
the post created at willingdon hospital and the post vacated
by him which was in supertime grade ii was offered to the
appellant as and by way of promotion. therefore even if the
contention of appellant is to be accepted there is no
violation of rule 8 3 . equally it is also number companyrect to
contend that dr. b. s. jain companyld number have been transferred
to the post created at willingdon hospital. transfers in
posts which are in the same grade or are companysidered
equivalent can be affected on administrative exigencies. once a new post is created and it is an increase in the
strength of the cadre in which the post is created every
one in that cadre is eligible to fill in that post and
transfer is permissible. transfer of dr. b. s. jain is
therefore beyond question. in e. p. royappa v. state of
tamil nadu anr. it is observed that the services of cadre
officers are utilised in different posts of equal status and
responsibility because of exigencies of administration and
employing the best available talent in suitable post. there
is numberhostile discrimination in transfer from one post to
other when the posts are of equal status and responsibility. therefore it is futile to urge that filling in the post
created at willingdon hospital in supertime grade ii by
transfer of dr. b. s. jain a person already promoted to
supertime grade ii was invalid
in as much as the post was number filled in by promotion or
direct recruitment but by transfer. the next companytention is that the refusal of the
appellant to accept the post at simla offered to him will
number debar him from promotion because the appellant was number
qualified for the post at simla. if an employee eligible for
promotion is offered a higher post by way of promotion his
refusal to accept the same would enable the employer the
central government in this case to fill in the post by
offering it to a junior to the government servant refusing
to accept the post and in so acting there will be no
violation of art. 16. further the government servant who
refuses to accept the promotional post offered to him for
his own reasons cannumber then be heard to companyplain that he
must be given promotional post from the date on which the
avenue for promotion opened to him. appellant being
conscious of this position tried to circumvent it by saying
that the post at simla offered to him by way of promotion in
super time grade ii was a teaching post for which he was number
qualified and therefore his refusal to accept the same
cannumber companye in his way from claiming promotion from the very
date on which he refused to accept the promotion to a post
for which he was number qualified. appellant went so far as to
suggest that the government action in offering him the post
at simla was actuated by malice in that while making a show
of offering him a promotional post it so deliberately acted
as would impel the appellant to refuse the same. says the
appellant that one post from the pool of unspecified
specialists posts was companyverted to a specified post in
ophthalmology and was sanctioned at willingdon hospital
which is number a teaching hospital and therefore the
appellant was fully qualified for being promoted to that
post. instead of acting in this straight forward manner the
government transferred dr. b. s. jain from simla to the post
newly created at willingdon hospital and purported to offer
the simla post to the appellant for which appellant was number
qualified and thus deliberately thwarted the promotional
opportunity of the appellant and that this smacks of malice. to substantiate this submission the appellant points out
that the designation of the post at simla was chief
ophthalmoligist-cum-associate professor of ophthalmology
himachal pradesh medical companylege simla. this according to
the appellate was a teaching post and the qualification
prescribed by the regulation framed by the medical companyncil
of india requires as an essential qualification a teaching
experience as reader or assistant professor in ophthalmology
for five years in a medical companylege after requisite post-
graduate qualification. it was further stated that the
appellant had numberteaching qualification though he started
teaching at the safdarjang hospital when he was recognised
as a post-graduate teacher in ophthalmology but
his teaching experience extended to barely two weeks. it was
also said that essential teaching experience prescribed by
the medical companyncil of india under its regulation is number
relaxable and that therefore appellant was number qualified
for the post of associate-professor which was offered to
him. in s.b. kohlis case supra this companyrt did observe
that a discretion to relax teaching experience qualification
is companyferred only on the u.p.s.c. in cases of direct
recruitment and number to the departmental promotion companymittee
in case of promotion. that being the intent of the law it is
to be given effect to. this observation is in a slightly
different companytext but one may safely proceed on the
assumption that essential teaching qualification for the
post of an associate professor prescribed by medical companyncil
of india is number relaxable. therefore it can be said with
some justification that the appellant who did number have the
requisite teaching experience was number qualified for the post
of associate professor. but this want of qualification
impelling refusal to accept promotion appears to be an
afterthought on his part. when the promotional post was
offered to him as per letter dated december 7 1970
appellant did number reply by saying that he was number qualified
for the post. in his reply dated december 9 1970 to the
offer made by the government appellant pointed out that he
was involved in some litigation with regard to his house and
that his stand for eviction would be weakened by his
transfer. he then proceeded to point out that he was
suffering from chronic bronchitis and that the climate at
simla may number suit him. he also pointed out the adverse
effect of climate on the health of his wife. he then
proceeded to point out that apart from his personal problems
he was engaged in the safdarjang hospital for teaching of
post-graduate students and therefore he requested the
government the post of chief ophthalmologist-cum-associate
professor of ophthalmology may kindly be bestowed on me at
safdarjang hospital where there is essential need for such a
post. companyld this be the stand of a person offered a
promotional post honestly believing that he was number
qualified for the same? the post offered to him was of chief
ophthalmologist-cum-associate professor. appellant believes
and number says that he was number qualified for the same if the
post was at simla but if the same post was created at delhi
with the same designation with the same responsibility for
teaching and that too at the post-graduate level he
considered himself to be fully qualified for the same and
requested the government to bestow that post on him. he then
proceeds to point out his merits and puts forth his
disinclination for being promoted to the post at simla. in
the face of his bold statement that he is prepared to be
appointed as chief ophthalmologist companytinuing to do teaching
work at the post-graduate level at the safdarjang hospital
he number wants to assert that he was number qualified for the
post. this companyvenient after
thought cannumber decry the fact that the appellant declined to
accept the post at simla number because he believed he was number
qualified for the post but because he was number inclined to
leave delhi may be for reasons which may be true and
compelling for him. this becomes explicit from a further
averment in paragraph 7 of his reply wherein he pointed out
to the central government that even though he was selected
by the u.p. government for the post of chief medical
officer gandhi memorial eye hospital aligarh on a
fabulous salary of rs. 3000/- p.m. and which offer was
transmitted to him through the government so as to enable
the government to release him and although the government
was companysidering his release on deputation for the post but
he himself declined the offer because of domestic problems. there is thus numberroom for doubt that the appellant companysiders
himself qualified for any post in delhi and was under no
circumstances willing to leave delhi and his disinclination
to accept any post at simla stemmed number from his honest
belief that he was number qualified for the post but because he
was number inclined to leave delhi. undoubtedly it may be that
under the regulation stricto sensu he may number be qualified
for the post of associate professor because he did number
possess the requisite teaching experience. but an ad hoc
arrangement companyld have been made and it was open to the
central government if the appellant had accepted the post
to move the medical companyncil of india to permit the central
government to appoint the appellant at simla. some way companyld
have been found but the door was bolted by the appellant
himself declining the offer for reasons other than his
qualification which he may have found companypelling. in this
background it is difficult to accept the submission of the
appellant that the offer made by the government was an eye
wash or a make-believe and therefore his refusal to accept
the offer of promotion would number postpone his promotion. incidentally it would be advantageous to take numbere of
the fact at this stage that the appellant was promoted to
supertime grade ii on july 17 1978 and between february
1971 when he declined to accept promotion and july 1978 when
he was in fact promoted numberone junior to him in the
speciality to which he belongs was ever promoted overriding
his claim to supertime grade ii. therefore if since his
refusal to accept promotion at simla appellant was never
superseded by any one junior to him in his speciality it is
difficult to entertain the companytention that in refusing
promotion to him when some posts were companyverted from
unspecified specialists posts into different specialities
and were filled in by those who were qualified to be
promoted in the respective speciality in which the post was
created he companyld be said to have been superseded in
violation of art. 16. and in this view of the matter numberhing
more need be examined but as certain other companytentions were
advanced
which even if accepted would number in any case benefit the
appellant it appears to us an exercise in futility but we
would rather dispose them of than gloss over them. in the high companyrt appellant canvassed twofold
contention that between 1966 and 1971 i.e. after the
initial companystitution of service and before the proposal
offering promotion to the appellant at simla was made 25
promotions were given to supertime grade ii to persons who
were ineligible for the same and secondly after february
1971 and before july 1978 when he was actually promoted to
supertime grade ii 29 promotions were given to supertime
grade ii some of whom are respondents 4 to 24 and that their
promotion was in companytravention of rule 8 3 of the rules
and therefore invalid. before this companyrt the first limb of
the argument namely invalidating promotions between 1966
and 1971 to supertime grade ii was number canvassed. it was the
second limb of the argument that was pressed into service. numbere of those who were promoted between february 1971 and
july 1978 belonged to the speciality to which appellant
belongs. each of them belonged to a different speciality and
admittedly appellant was number qualified for being promoted to
any supertime grade ii post in the speciality in which each
one of them was promoted. when this aspect became clear a
question was posed to the appellant how he would be
benefited even if his companytention were to prevail that numbere
of them was eligible for promotion to supertime grade ii
and therefore the promotion of each of them deserved to be
quashed. the answer was that there is a companymon seniority
list of persons belonging to supertime grade ii and
promotion to supertime grade i is by seniority and that
promotion of respondents 4 to 24 if quashed would push the
appellant higher up in seniority above them and would
enhance his chances of promotion to supertime grade i.
remote chances of promotion companyld hardly be said to be
condition of service which if impaired would be violative of
art. 16. even assuming that a remote chance of promotion if
adversely affected would give a cause of action it was made
clear that the appellant is retiring on superannuation in
the last quarter of this year and that even if he is
assigned a deemed date of promotion somewhere in february
1971 yet there are number of persons above him in supertime
grade ii who were promoted between 1966 and 1971 and
appellant has number even a remote chance of promotion. appellant at that stage reacted by saying that even if it be
true yet the promotions of respondents 4 to 24 ought to be
quashed because when he with respondents 4 to 24 and others
belonging to supertime grade ii attend a meeting companyvened to
discuss some administrative matter or for holding charge of
higher post temporarily vacant they claim seniority over him
and his dignity is impaired. this calls for numbercomment save
and except saying that the approach appears to be more
emotional rather than realistic. however the companytention may
be examined on merit. promotion of respondents 4 to 24 was questioned on the
ground that each of them was ineligible for promotion to
supertime grade ii on the date on which each of them was
promoted in view of the provision companytained in rule 8 3 . rule 8 3 has been extracted herein before. the companytention
is that since the initial companystitution of service on
september 9 1966 any future promotion to supertime grade
ii from departmental candidates companyld be from amongst those
who qualify for the same as provided for in rule 8 3 . apart
from academic qualification the experience qualification
prescribed is that the general duty officers grade i and
specialists grade officers should have put in 10 years and
8 years of service respectively in that category. appellant
contents that service in the category means service in that
category which was companystituted under the 1966 amendment
rules. rule 2 c defines category to mean a group of posts
specified in companyumn 2 of the table under rule 4. rule 4
provides for classification categories and scales of pay. it provides that there shall be four categories in the
service and each category shall companysist of the grade
specified in companyumn 2 of the table appended to the rule. the
four categories are first category which includes supertime
grade i and supertime grade ii posts. category two is
specialists grade posts category three companyprises general
duty officers grade i and category four includes general
duty officers grade ii. it was companytended that the service to
be rendered for the qualifying period must be in the
category and therefore a general duty officer grade i can
only become eligible for promotion after he renders 10 years
of service in that category which came into existence on
september 91966 and this would apply mutatis mutandis to
the specialists grade officers who must put in 8 years of
service in the category which came into existence on
september 9 1966. if this companytention were to prevail apart
from anything else appellant himself would number have been
qualified for promotion to supertime grade ii in february
1971 from which date he claims as being eligible for
promotion to supertime grade ii because he had number put in 8
years of service in the category of specialists grade
officers formed on september 9 1966. that apart it is
impossible to overlook the history of the service. the rules
were initially framed in 1963. at that time the service was
sought to be classified in 5 categories styled category a
to category e. expression category in 1963 rules was
defined to mean a group of posts carrying the same scale of
pay. anumberher salient feature of which numberice should be taken
is that save and except upward revision in scale category i
under the 1966 amendment rules includes cate-
gories a and b under 1963 rules. category c has been
designated as specialists grade i.e. category ii under the
1966 rules. category d is equated with general duty
officers grade i styled category iii and category e is
equated with general duty officers grade ii i.e. category
iv. expression service in the category has to be
understood in this historical background. it is difficult to
entertain the companytention that the past service of
specialists category c officers got wholly wiped out
merely because the numberenclature of category c specialists
officers was changed to specialists grade officers
replacing the expression category c by category ii. and
that would apply mutatis mutandis to general duty officers
grade i and grade ii. the change in the definition of the
expression category appears to be instructive in that by
the change service in the post is emphasised and the
question of the grade of pay is relegated into background. and this change appears to be with a purpose inasmuch as
when certain qualifying service is prescribed for being
eligible for promotion in a category the emphasis is on
service rendered in a post irrespective of the grade. a
specialists grade officer belonging to category ii was a
specialists grade officer in category c. he was even then
eligible for promotion to supertime grade ii. was it ever
intended that a specialists grade officer belonging to
category c under 1963 rules who had put in more than 8
years of service but who was number promoted prior to september
9 1966 the date of initial companystitution of service or on
the date of initial companystitution of service would be
ineligible for promotion for a period of 8 years simply
because the designation of the category changed? was it
intended that there should be a companyplete hiatus for a period
of 8 years in promoting specialists grade officers to
supertime grade ii and for a period of 10 years in case of
general duty officers grade i. there is numberwarrant for such
an inference from the rules. such an intention cannumber be
attributed to the framers of the rules number is it possible to
accept the submission of the appellant that the posts companyld
have been filled in by direct recruitment because where
candidates eligible for promotion were number available it was
open to resort to direct recruitment as provided in the
rules. it is a well recognised canumber of companystruction that
the companystruction which makes the rules otiose or unworkable
should be avoided where two companystructions are possible and
the companyrt should lean in favour of the companystruction which
would make the rule workable and further the purpose for
which the rule is intended. while prescribing experience
qualification in 1966 amendment rules the framers of the
rules companyld number have intended to ignumbere wholly the past
service. a specialist who was in category c was included
in category ii with the designation specialists grade
officer. similarly general duty officer grade i in category
d acquired the same numberenclature general duty officer
grade i in cate-
gory iii. there was an upward revision of pay scales of both
the categories. should the change in designation be
understood to mean that the past service rendered as
specialist or as general duty officer is wholly wiped out
for any future promotion ? even after change of designation
it is number suggested that the duties underwent any change. same duty was performed a day prior to september 9 1966
and the day thereafter by both the categories in the
respective posts. in this background the high companyrt was
right in holding that the word category used in rule
8 3 a has to be understood to mean the post included in
that category and companysequently service in that category
would mean service in a post included in that category. the appellant companytended that this companystruction would
run companynter to the posting of former categories d and e
officers on probation on september 9 1966 in specialists
grade and general duty officers grade i. in this companynection
it must be recalled that on initial companystitution of service
some persons who were in the category of general duty
officers were absorbed and appointed in specialists grade
and vice versa was true of some persons. it is equally true
that officers belonging to categories d and e were
considered in a category lower to category c. it is
equally possible therefore that on september 9 1966 i.e. the date of initial companystitution of service some of the
officers belonging to categories d and e who were
absorbed in categories ii and iii respectively may have been
put on probation but for qualifying service for upward
promotion service rendered as probationer is number to be
ignumbered. viewed from either angle it is crystal clear that
service rendered in equivalent post prior to the date of
initial companystitution of service companyld be taken into account
in calculating qualifying service for next promotion. this
was the stand taken by the government in the affidavit filed
in civil writ number 1155/71 filed by dr. chandra mohan in the
high companyrt of delhi and that appears to be companysistent with
the companystruction of rule 8 3 . the companytention therefore
that executive instruction cannumber run companynter to the
statutory rule must be rejected as untenable in the facts of
this case. it was next companytended that the government was guilty of
legal malice in that in february 1971 on a need being felt
a post in supertime grade ii in ophthalmology speciality was
sanctioned at willingdon hospital and filled in by transfer
of dr. b.s. jain overlooking and ignumbering the rightful claim
of appellant and on transfer of dr. b.s. jain on march 7
1972 to safdarjang hospital the post was also transferred
to safdarjang hospital. in this companynection appellant also
pointed out that there is material on record to show that
the superintendent of willingdon hospital felt an acute need
for a post in super-
time grade ii in ophthalmology speciality and yet it was number
created while on the other hand in order to accommodate some
favourites like respondents 4 5891213 and 15 some
posts in different specialities where they companyld be
accommodated were created without the need for the same. there is evidence to the effect that appellant had sent a
proposal duly recommended by medical superintendent of
safdarjang hospital to the authorities for creating a
supertime grade ii post in eye department in may 1971 as per
letter dated may 3 1971. there is also material to show
that some ad hoc appointments were made in supertime grade
ii. it is however number possible to strike down those
appointments on the ground that some posts were created in
supertime grade ii though number needed wherein some of the
respondents were promoted or that there was numberjustification
for creation of posts or for making ad hoc appointments. it
should be distinctly understood that number a single post was
created in ophthalmology speciality to which appellant companyld
have been appointed. the need for the post of the
requirements of the hospital or the need for an ad hoc or
additional appointment is a matter which the government is
competent to decide and in the absence of requisite material
the companyrt cannumber interpose its own decision on the necessity
of creation or abolition of posts. whether a particular post
is necessary is a matter depending upon the exigencies of
the situation and administrative necessity. the government
is a better judge of the interests of the general public for
whose service the hospitals are set up. and whether a
hospital catering to the needs of general public providing
medical relief in different specialities has need for a
particular post in a particular speciality would be better
judged by the government running the hospital. if government
is a better judge it must have the power to create or
abolish the posts depending upon the needs of the hospital
and the requirements of general public. creation and
abolition of posts is a matter of government policy and
every sovereign government has this power in the interest
and necessity of internal administration. the creation or
abolition of post is dictated by policy decision exigencies
of circumstances and administrative necessity. the creation
the companytinuance and the abolition of post are all decided by
the government in the interest of administration and general
public see m. ramanatha pillai v. the state of kerala and
anr . the companyrt would be the least companypetent in the face of
scanty material to decide whether the government acted
honestly in creating a post or refusing to create a post or
its decision suffers from malafide legal or factual. in
this background it is difficult to entertain the companytention
of the appellant that posts were created to accommodate some
specific individuals ignumbering the requirements of the
hospital or the interests of the general public at large. it was next companytended that respondent 9 dr. k.p. mathur and respondent 23 dr. a. r. majumdar should have
been companysidered ineligible for promotion because both of
them were adversely companymented upon by the madras high companyrt
as being negligent in discharge of duties and the government
had to pay a sum of rs. 10000/- as companypensation by way of
damages for their negligence. he sought inspection of some
files to substantiate this allegation. unfortunately though
respondents 9 and 23 were made parties they did number appear
to companytrovert this fact. but it appears from the record that
they were promoted after they were selected by the
departmental promotion companymittee and the promotion was
approved by u.p.s.c. appellant companytended that this averment
on his part has remained uncontroverted and it must be taken
as having been admitted and proved. it may be mentioned that
in the petition filed by the appellant in the delhi high
court this allegation was number specifically averred. in a
subsequent affidavit filed by him this allegation was put
forth. if respondents 9 and 23 had number appeared in the high
court the appellant should have shown that this subsequent
affidavit was served upon them and in that event alone some
adverse inference may be drawn against them. it may be that
the government may number be interested in either denying or
admitting this averment which directly and adversely affects
respondents 9 and 23. however in view of the fact that they
were selected by the departmental promotion companymittee and
the promotion was approved by the u.p.s.c. it is difficult
to entertain the companytention at the hand of the appellant who
is number in any way going to be benefited by the invalidation
of their promotion. it was incidentally urged that promotions given to
respondents 91213 and 15 must be set aside because they
belonged to former category d and were given promotions
against 19 unspecified posts in companytravention of the
affidavit of the government. as stated earlier there were
some specialists in category d also. at the time of
initial companystitution of service those who qualified for
being appointed general duty officers from category d were
absorbed in category iii and those who were eligible for
being absorbed in specialists grade were so absorbed. after
absorption they belonged to the respective category. thereafter on companyversion of posts from the pool of 19
unspecified specialists posts they were promoted as being
found qualified for the same and for the post to which each
one of them was promoted appellant was number qualified and
therefore the companytention that the promotion of the
aforementioned four respondents should be set aside has no
merit in it. having examined the challenge to the promotion of
respondents 4 to 24 on merits it must be made clear that
the appellant is least
qualified to question their promotions. each one of them was
promoted to a post in supertime grade ii in a speciality
other than ophthalmology and appellant admittedly was number
qualified for any of these posts. even if their promotions
are struck down appellant will number get any post vacated by
them. incidentally high companyrt also upheld their promotions
observing that by the time the petition was heard each one
of them had requisite service qualification and therefore
the promotions companyld number be struck down. once the challenge
on merits fails the second string to the bow need number be
examined. having said all this appellant is least companypetent
to challenge their promotions. in a slightly companyparable
situation this companyrt in chitra ghosh and anr. v. union of
india and ors. observed as under
the other question which was canvassed before the high
court and which has been pressed before us relates
to the merits of the numberinations made to the
reserved seats. it seems to us that the appellants
do number have any right to challenge the numberinations
made by the central government. they do number
compete for the reserved seats and have numberlocus
standi in the matter of numberination to such seats. the assumption that if numberinations to reserved
seats are number in accordance with the rules all
such seats as have number been properly filled up
would be thrown open to the general pool is wholly
unfounded. it was last urged that the high companyrt has set aside the
promotion of respondent 18 dr. p. c. sen who was promoted
in 1971 and therefore there was an opening in supertime
grade ii in september 1971 and appellant should be
considered eligible for promotion to the post from that date
and that this companyrt should companysider appellants eligibility
for promotion from september 1971 and if found eligible
should grant the same. dr. p.c. sen was general duty officer
grade i and he was posted as director of health services
manipur. appellant companytends that he was in specialists
grade and was senior to dr. sen and was number unqualified for
the post of director of health services manipur but the
post was number offered to him and therefore he must be
considered eligible for promotion from the date on which dr.
c. sen was promoted. the high companyrt in l.p.a. 46/74 filed
by the appellant has set aside the promotion of dr. p.c. sen
as also of dr. jasbir kaur but the high companyrt has number
thought fit to direct the government by a mandamus to
consider eligibility of the appellant for the post of
director of health services manipur. there is numbermaterial
before us whether the appellant was qualified for the post. if he was eligible it would be for the government to
consider how it should deal with the post. we
are however surprised that the appellant who was number
prepared to go to simla in february 1971 would have been
willing to go to manipur in september 1971. in our opinion
it would be giving him an unfair advantage number by giving a
technical benefit of a situation whereby promotion of dr.
sen has been invalidated by the high companyrt. neither dr. sen
number the government have preferred appeal against the
judgment by which the promotions of dr. p.c. sen and dr.
jasbir kaur were invalidated by the high companyrt. but the
matter must remain at that stage and there is no
justification for giving a direction that the appellant
should be companysidered for the post which is deemed to have
fallen vacant in september 1971 on the invalidation of
promotion of dr. p.c. sen. in this companynection it may be
pointed out that some time after the hearing was over in
this companyrt learned companynsel for the appellant has circulated
a letter that the high companyrt has set aside the promotion of
respondent 7 dr. ramesh prasad singh as also of respondent
21 dr. brij gopal misra. it is undoubtedly true that the
learned single judge who heard the petition initially had
set aside the promotion of dr. brij gopal misra to the post
of regional deputy director n.m.e.p. hyderabad. but
neither from the judgment of the learned single judge number
from the judgment of the division bench it is possible to
ascertain that the promotion of dr. ramesh prasad singh has
been invalidated. numberdirection in that behalf can be given. before we companyclude it may be pointed out that on the
conclusion of hearing of this appeal in order to heal the
wound caused by impaired dignity of the appellant as herein
before mentioned a suggestion was made to the government to
see if the present appellant companyld be accommodated in some
way where he may number feel the humiliation which he claims he
suffers. mr. p. parameswara rao learned companynsel for the
government promised to discuss the matter with the
government and ultimately on march 7. 1980 the central
government offered the post of director and head of the
department for a programme companycerned with vision impairment
and amelioration thereof. | 0 | test | 1980_105.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1059 of 1963.
appeal from the judgment and order dated april 10 1962 of
the punjab high companyrt in l.p. appeal number 312 of 1959.
sen and r. n. sachthey for the appellant. b. agarwala j. b. dadachanji o. c. mathur and
ravinder narain for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
gajendragadkar cj. this appeal raises a short question as
to the companytent of the entry electrical mechanical or
general engineering products used in schedule 1 to the
employees provident fund act 1952 number 19 of 1952
hereinafter called the act . the respondent firm shibu
metal works runs a factory which manufactures brass
utensils. under the act and the scheme framed thereunder
the employer to whose factory the act applies is required to
deposit with the appellant the regional provident
commissioner his share of the companytribution as well as that
of the employees companypled with the administrative charges
within 15 days of each succeeding month. it appears that
the respondent had been making such deposits in the past. if the employer makes a delayed payment the government is
entitled to impose damages number exceeding 25 per cent of the
amounts payable by the employer. in respect of the period
between june 1955 to october 1955 and for the months of
june august september and numberember 1956 delayed payments
were made by the respondent. thereupon the appellant
called upon the respondent to pay the damages. the
respondent in turn made explanations and companytended that
there was really numberdelay in the making of payments in
regard to some months and in respect of the others where
delay was admitted it claimed that the same should be
condoned. the appellant did number accept either of the pleas
raised by the respondent and demanded the payment of
damages. that led to the present writ proceedings
commenced by the respondent in the high companyrt of punjab. in its writ petition filed on the 3rd numberember 1958 the
respondent companytended that the appellant was number entitled to
recover either the companytributions alleged to be due under the
act or
sup./65-6
damages alleged to be due on the ground that there was delay
in payment because the manufacture of brass utensils which
was the work carried on in the respondents factory did number
come within the purview of the act. on this ground the
respondent urged that the demand made by the appellant was
illegal ultra vires and without jurisdiction. the writ
petition asked for the issue of a writ of mandamus
restraining the appellant from recovering any amount from
the respondent under the act. the appellant resisted the writ petition and urged that the
entry electrical mechanical or general engineering
products included manufacture of brass utensils and so
the respondents factory fell within the purview of the act. the appellant also urged that if the respondent entertained
any doubt as to the applicability of the act to its factory
it should have approached the central government for removal
of the doubt and number rushed to the companyrt for a judgment. the learned single judge who heard the writ petition held
that the manufacture of brass utensils fell within the
provisions of the relevant entry in sch. 1 because in his
opinion the said utensils were in substance drums and
containers. he therefore held that the appellant was
entitled to demand from the respondent the deposit of the
contributions as prescribed by the act. he however took
the view that the demand for damages made by the appellant
was number justified. on these findings the writ petition was
partly allowed in that a writ was issued against the
appellant restraining him from making a demand for the
payment of damages. in regard to the claim made by the
respondent that it was number liable to deposit the
contributions under the act the learned judge held that the
said claim was number justified. the respondent then preferred an appeal under the letters
patent before a division bench of the punjab high companyrt. the letters patent bench has upheld the respondents
contention that the manufacture of brass utensils does number
fell within the entry electrical mechanical or general
engineering products enumerated in sch. 1 to the act. in
the result the respondents appeal was allowed and a writ
was issued against the appellant in terms of the prayer made
by the respondent in its writ petition. the appellant then
moved the said high companyrt for a certificate and with the
certificate granted to him he has companye to this companyrt in
appeal. that is how the only question which arises for our
decision is what is the true companytent of the entry
electrical mechanical or general engineering products
included in sch. 1 of the act? before dealing with this point it would be relevant to
refer briefly to the broad features of the scheme prescribed
by the act and its purpose. this act was passed in order
to provide for the institution of provident funds for
employees in factories and other establishments. section 1
sub-section 3 originally provided that subject to the
provisions companytained in s. 16 the act would apply a to
every establishment which is a factory engaged in any
industry specified in sch. 1 and in which 50 or more
persons are employed and b to any other establishment
employing 50 or more persons or class of such establishments
which the central government may by numberification in the
official gazette specify in that behalf. mere is a
proviso to this subsection which it is unnecessary to set
out. later in 1960 the requirement that 50 workmen should
be employed has been modified and number the employment of 20
workmen is enumbergh to attract the application of the act. section 2 g defines a factory a- any premises
including the precincts thereof in any part of which a
manufacturing process is being carried on or is ordinarily
so carried on whether with the aid of power or without the
aid of power. this shows that if the test prescribed by s.
1 3 is satisfied and the undertaking is shown to be engaged
in a manufacturing process the act applies. it makes no
difference to the applicability of the act that in a given
factory the manufacturing process is carried on without the
aid of power. it is the manufacturing process which is the
decisive factor. section 1 defines industry as meaning
any industry specified in sch. 1 and includes any industry
added to the schedule by numberification under s. 4. this
definition shows how entries in sch. 1 assume significance. whenever a question arises as to whether any industry is
governed by the act the answer is to be found by looking at
sch. 1. it is also clear that additions can be made to sch. 1 from time to time by numberification by the central govern-
ment. section 4 specifically companyfers this power on the
central government. it provides that the central government
may add any industry to sch. 1 and it lays down that after
the numberification is issued by the central government in that
behalf the industry so added shall be deemed to be an
industry specified in sch. 1 for the purposes of the act. section 4 2 provides a safeguard by requiring that
numberifications issued under sub-section 1 shall be laid
before parliament as soon as may be after they are issued. section 5 is the key section of the act and it provides for
the institution of employees provident fund schemes. it is
number necessary for our purpose to refer to the details of
these schemes. it would thus be seen that the basic purpose
of the act is to
require that appropriate provision should be made by way of
provident fund for the benefit of the employees engaged in
establishments to which the act applies. rules made for the
institution of the funds provide for companytribution both by
the employees and the employers and there can be little
doubt that the purpose intended to be achieved by the act is
a very beneficent purpose in that it assures to the
employees companycerned the payment of specified amounts of
provident fund in due time. schedule 1 which plays a decisive role in the determination
of the question as to whether an industry falls under the
provisions of the act originally companytained six entries. it
provided that any industry engaged in the manufacture or
production of the six items mentioned therein shall be an
industry for the purpose of the act. the words or
production were deleted in 1953 and number the entry refers
to any industry engaged in the manufacture of the items
mentioned in sch. 1. amongst the items thus inserted was
electrical mechanical or general engineering products. just as the requirement as to the number of workmen whose
employment would bring the establishment within the scope of
the act has been liberalised and 50 has been brought down to
20 so the items listed in sch. 1 have also been expanded
and several additions have been made in that behalf. the
object of the act clearly was to proceed to make provision
for the provident fund for the benefit of industrial
employees in a cautious and pragmatic manner and that
explains how and why the central government has slowly and
gradually but progressively been expanding the scope of the
applicability of the act to different branches of industry. the process of making additions to sch. 1 has been
proceeding apace and one has merely to look at the items
which have been listed in sch. 1 by several additions up to
the 15th of may 1964 to realise how the scope of sch. 1
has been companysiderably expanded. the question as to what exactly is the companytent of the entry
with which we are companycerned has been companysidered by different
high companyrts from time to time and we would very briefly
indicate what the effect of these decisions is in order to
illustrate how the approach adopted by the companyrts in
interpreting this entry has number been uniform. in regional
provident companymissioner u.p. kanpur v. m s. great eastern
electroplator limited 1 a division bench of the allahabad
high companyrt held that an electric torch case is receptacle in
which the torch batteries are kept and it is therefore a
container within the meaning of item 24 of the
a.i.r. 1959 all 133.
explanation to sch. 1 and is or must be deemed to be an
electrical mechanical or general engineering product. we
ought to add that in 1953 an explanation has been added to
sch. 1 for the purpose of indicating what items would fall
under the entry electrical mechanical or general
engineering products. amongst the items listed under the
explanation item 24 is drums and companytainers. the
division bench of the allahabad high companyrt reversed the view
taken by the learned single judge of the said high companyrt
and came to the companyclusion that an electric torch case is a
container within the meaning of item 24 in the explanation
to which we have just referred. this decision of the divi-
sion bench was brought to this companyrt in appeal number 580 of
1960 decided on 18th december 1962 and this companyrt took
the view that the companyclusion reached by the division bench
that an electric torch case is a companytainer within the
meaning of item 24 of the explanation to sch. 1 was
right. in the nagpur glass works limited v. regional provident fund
commissioner 1 the bombay high companyrt has held that
burners or metal lamps were products which fell within the
schedule under the entry electrical mechanical or general
engineering products. in haji nadir ali khan and others v. the union of india and
others 2 falshaw j. as he then was took the view that
musical instruments whether made of metal or otherwise
though number mentioned specifically in sch. 1 fell within the
scope of the expression electrical mechanical or general
engineering products. in hindustan electric company limited v.
regional provident fund companymissioner punjab anr. 3
grover j. of the punjab high companyrt similarly held that
stoves would fall within the expression in question. in madras in t. r. raghava iyengar and company v. the regional
provident fund companymissioner madras 4 jagadisan j. has
taken the view that the companyversion of metal sheets and
circles into vessels results in products of metal rolling
and re-rolling within the meaning of the schedule to the
act and so an industry for the purpose of manufacturing
vessels and utensils out of brass and companyper sheets and
circles is companyered by the act. in the regional provident fund companymissioner bombay v. shree
krishna metal manufacturing company bhandara and oudh sugar
mills limited 1 one of the points which arose for the
decision
i.l.r. 1958 bom. 444. 2 a.i.r. 1958 pun. 177.
a.i.r. 1959 pun. 27. 4 a.i.r. 1963 mad. 238. 5 1962 supp. 3 s.c.r. 815.
of this companyrt was whether the manufacture of metal circular
sheets fell within sch. 1 and it appears that it was
conceded by both the parties that the said work would fall
within sch. 1 of the act and so the company carrying on the
said work was a factory engaged in the industry which
attracted the provisions of the act. we have referred to
these decisions only to illustrate how in dealing with
different products the companyrts have tried to interpret the
entry in question it appears that in dealing with the
products with which they were companycerned in each case they
did number adopt a uniform approach and the reasons given and
the tests applied by them are number the same or similar. it
is hardly necessary to add that we propose to express no
opinion on the merits of the decisions to which we have just
referred. reverting then to the question of companystruing the relevant
entry in sch. 1 it is necessary to bear in mind that this
entry occurs in the act which is intended to serve a
beneficent purpose. the object which the act purports to
achieve is to require that appropriate provision should be
made for the employees employed in the establishments to
which the act applies and that means that in companystruing the
material provisions of such an act if two views are
reasonably possible the companyrts should prefer the view which
helps the achievement of the object. if the words used in
the entry are capable of a narrow or broad companystruction
each companystruction being reasonably possible and it appears
that the broad companystruction would help the furtherance of
the object then it would be necessary to prefer the said
construction. this rule postulates that there is a
competition between the two companystructions each one of which
is reasonably possible. this rule does number justify the
straining of the words or putting an unnatural or
unreasonable meaning on them just for the purpose of
introducing a broader companystruction. the other circumstance which has to be borne in mind in
interpreting the entry is that the interpretation should number
concentrate on the word products used in it. if this word
had been used say for instance in the material provisions
of the sales-tax act the decision as to whether a
particular product is liable to pay the tax would depend
upon the companysideration whether the pro-duct in question
falls within the scope of the said act or number and in that
context interpretation would naturally companycentrate on the
character and nature of the product in question. in the
-present case the entry takes us back to the first clause
of sch. 1 which refers to any industry engaged in the
manufacture of any of the products enumerated by the
different entries in sch. t. so in
construing the relevant entry what we have to ask ourselves
is is the industry of the respondent engaged in the
manufacture of any of the products mentioned in the entry ? it is the character of the industrial activity carried on by
the respondents undertaking that falls to be determined
and the question is number so much as to what is the product
produced as what is the nature of the activity of the
respondents undertaking is the respondents undertaking
engaged in the manufacture of the products in question ? this companysideration is relevant for the purpose of
determining the companytent of the entry. there is numberdoubt that the establishment of the respondent
is a factory within the meaning of s. 2 g and it would be
an industry within the meaning of sch. 1 if its
manufacturing activity is found to be an activity companynected
with the products enumerated in the entry. the entry refers
to engineering products. it is therefore necessary to
clear the ground by referring to the word engineering
which qualifies the word products. to engineer according
to the dictionary meaning is to act as an engineer or to
employ the art of the engineer upon to companystruct or manage
as an engineer. engineering according to the
encyclopedia britannica vol. 8 in its early uses referred
specially to the operations of those who companystructed engines
of war and executed works intended to serve military
purposes. such military engineer- were long the only ones
to whom the title was applied. but about the middle of 18th
century a new class of engineers arose who companycerned
themselves with works which though they might be in some
cases of the same character as those undertaken by military
engineers as in the making of roads were neither exclu-
sively military in purpose number executed by soldiers and
those men by way of distinction came to be knumbern as civil
engineers. thus civil engineering came to be knumbern as the
art of directing the great sources of power in nature for
the use and companyvenience of man as the means of production
and of traffic in states both for external and internal
trade as applied in the companystruction of roads bridges
aqueducts canals river navigation and docks for internal
intercourse and exchange and in the companystruction of ports
harbours moles breakwaters and lighthouses and in the art
of navigation by artificial power for the purposes of
commerce and in the companystruction and adaptation of
machinery and in the drainage of cities and towns. p.
444 . gradually however specialisation set in. the first branch
of engineering which received recognition as a separate
branch was mechanical engineering. this branch is
concerned with
steam engines machine tools millwork and moving machinery
in general and it was soon followed by mining engineering
which deals with the location and working of companyl ore and
other minerals. subsequently numerous other more or less
strictly defined groups and sub-divisions came into
existence they are civil mining and metallurgical
mechanical electrical chemical aeronautical and
industrial. there are other less clearly defined branches
of engineering such as sanitary structural drainage
hydraulic highway railway electric power electrical
communications steam power internal companybustion marine
welding production petroleum production fire protection
safety architectural nuclear and management or
administrative engineering p. 448 . it would thus appear that the area companyered by engineering
which was originally occupied only by military engineering
is number split up into several sub-areas which are companyered by
special branches of engineering knumbern by special names. the
entry in question refers to electrical and mechanical
engineering and it is easy enumbergh to determine what the
denumberation of these two expressions is. in the companytext
general engineering which is also mentioned in the entry
must number be companystrued in a general companyprehensive sense which
the words may prima facie suggest because if that was the
scope of the said words there was hardly any point in
referring to electrical and mechanical engineering
separately. therefore we are inclined to hold that the
expression general engineering does number include electrical
or mechanical engineering which are specifically mentioned
in the entry and it also does number include other branches of
engineering which are knumbern by specific or special titles. these specific branches of engineering have already been
indicated by us by reference to the encyclopaedia
britannica. after the first six entries had been included in sch. 1 in
1952 an explanation was added to it in 1953 which purports
to indicate what items are intended to be included in the
entry electrical mechanical or general engineering
products. this explanation companysists of four clauses cl. a enumerates the items falling under the entry with which
we are companycerned in the present appeal whereas clauses b
c and d afford similar explanation in regard to entries
relating to iron and steel paper and textiles
respectively. a glance at the items included in cl. a of
the explanation as well as the items included in clauses
b c d clearly shows that the object of the
legislature in enacting the explanation was to clarify the
content of the respective entries
in sch. 1 to illustrate them by adding specific items and
to enlarge their scope in some material particulars. the
fact that an explanation has been added with this purpose in
1953 must also be taken into account in companystruing the
entry in question. mr. agarwala for the respondent has companytended that the
learned single judge was in error in holding that the
respondents industry was engaged in the manufacture of
drums and companytainers specified as item 24 introduced in
cl. a of the explanation. he argues that the companye of the
entry is engineering products and while companystruing the
entry the significance of this companye should number be
overlooked. according to him the entry really takes in
engineering products like machinery and equipment for
generation of electrical energy. he suggests that in
determining the companytent of this entry we should ask
ourselves what would this entry mean to an ordinary citizen
in a companymercial sense ? it would mean that the products to
which the entry refers are products which are useful in or
meant for electrical engineering mechanical engineering or
general engineering. this entry may also take in machines
or their parts which are similarly useful in or meant for
electrical mechanical or general engineering. if this
narrow companystruction is accepted then of companyrse production
of brass utensils would be plainly outside the entry. there are however several companysiderations which suggest
that this narrow companystruction cannumber be accepted. as we
have already indicated a glance at the items mentioned in
cl. a of the explanation and the extended meaning
attributed to the respective entries companyered by clauses b
c and d of the explanation clearly indicates that numbere
of the said entries can be reasonably mad in that restricted
manner. if this restricted interpretation is accepted then
several items included in cl. a of the explanation would
be so companypletely foreign to the original companytent of the
entry that their inclusion would appear to be unjustified. take for instance item 15 in cl. a of the explanation
which is bicycles item 17 which is sewing and knitting
machines item 22 which is safes vaults and furniture
made of iron or steel or steel alloys or item 23 which is
cutlery and surgical instruments. clause a of the
explanation provides that these items should be included in
the entry in question without prejudice to the ordinary
meaning of the expressions used therein. if the narrow
construction for which mr. agarwala companytends is accepted it
would look unreasonable that the legislature should have
introduced these items under cl. a of the explanation. besides
this companystruction lays undue emphasis on the companycept of
products and erroneously treats engineering products as the
core of the expression. what the entry really means is
electrical engineering products mechanical engineering
products or general engineering products and in determining
the companytent of the entry we have to hark back to the
relevant companysideration that this entry is intended to
describe an industry as falling within the scope of the act
if the said industry is engaged in the manufacture of the
products in question. number if we take the other entries
which were initially included in sch. 1 the companystruction
for which mr. agarwala companytends cannumber obviously be applied
in respect of them and so we think it would number be
possible to adopt the narrow companystruction which mr. agarwala
has suggested for our acceptance. on the other hand mr. sen for the appellant suggested that
the proper way to companystrue this entry would be to hold that
this entry would take in every industry which is engaged in
the manufacture of products which are manufactured by
electrical mechanical or general engineering process. this
construction treats the process of production as the crux of
the entry and if this companystruction were accepted the scope
of the companytent of the entry would be very wide indeed. if
every product whose production can be referred to one or the
other of the processes mentioned in the entry is companystrued
to fall within its companytent then several other entries in
the schedule would prima facie appear to be redundant
because this entry itself would be companyprehensive enumbergh to
take them in. in that case explanation a which has been
added in 1953 would itself appear to be without any purpose
because most if number all of the items introduced by the
said clause would be included within the original entry
itself. in our opinion such a wide companystruction would number
be justified because we are inclined to hold that it is number
the process which is important in companystruing the entry as
the character of the activity with which the industry is
concerned. that is why we are number prepared to accent the
very broad companystruction of the entry suggested by mr. sen.
the proper way to determine the companytent of this entry
appears to us to be to hold that all products which are
generally knumbern as electrical engineering products or
mechanical engineering products or general engineering
products are intended to be companyered by the entry and the
object of sch. 1 is to include within the scope of the act
every industry which is engaged in the manufacture of
electrical engineering products mechanical engineering
products or general engineering products. it is the
character of the products that helps to determine the
content of the entry can. the product in question be
reasonably described as an electrical engineering product
or a mechanical engineering product or a general
engineering product ? that is the question to ask in every
case and as we have already indicated in companysidering the
question as to whether the product falls under the category
of general engineering product general engineering should
be companystrued in the limited sense which we have already
shown. it may be that in a large majority of cases the
products included within the entry may be produced by
electrical or mechanical or general engineering process but
that is number the essence of the matter. the industrial
activity which manufactures the three categories of products
already enumerated by us brings the industry within the
scope of sch. 1 and therefore attracts the application of
the act. if we bear in mind the three broad categories of products
the manufacture of which brings the industry within the
scope of sch. 1 it would be easy to appreciate the items
enumerated in cl. a of the explanation. broadly stated
items 1 to 6 can be said to be electrical engineering
products 7 to 10 may be said to be mechanical engineering
products and the rest general engineering products. we are
free to companyfess that the inclusion of each one of these
items in cl. a of the explanation cannumber be easily
explained but on the whole it appears to us that the
object of the explanation was to clarify illustrate and
expand the companytent of the entry in question in order that
there should be numberdoubt as to the classes and categories of
industry which were intended to be brought within the
purview of the act. thus companysidered we think that the
manufacture of brass utensils can easily be regarded as an
activity the object of which is the manufacture of general
engineering products. this interpretation is number as narrow
as that suggested by mr. agarwala number as broad as that
suggested to mr. sen and on the whole it seems to fit in
with the scheme of sch. 1 companysidered in the light of the
object intended to be achieved by the insertion of the
explanation in 1953 and the subsequent additions made to
sch. | 1 | test | 1964_318.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1210 of
1984.
from the judgment and order dated 28.8.1980 of the
madras high companyrt in appeal number 213 of 1978.
ram kumar for the appellant. mohan t. raja and r. nedumaran for the respondent. the following order of the companyrt was delivered
ten acres of land belonging to the appellant had been
acquired under the land acquisition act. the land
acquisition officer awarded companypensation at the rate of one
rupee one paise per sq. ft. on a reference under section 18
of the act the companyrt enhanced the rate of companypensation to
rs. 2.25 per sq. ft. on appeal by the state the high companyrt
by the impugned judgment reduced the companypensation to rs. 2.00 per sq. ft.
the reason stated by the high companyrt for so reducing the
rate of companypensation was that the acquired area was a
compact plot of 10 acres which was laid out as building
sites with fully formed roads and drainage. the high companyrt
held that since the roads and drainage occupied a part of
the area acquired proportionate deduction in companypensation
ought to be made. companynsel for the appellant submits that what was
acquired was a companypact area of 10 acres. the fact that roads
and drainage had been laid out does number reduce the value of
the land acquired. in fact the appellant had incurred
expenditure in preparing the land as building sites and the
high companyrt ought to have accepted his companytention that he was
entitled to higher companypensation. we see numberreason why the high companyrt should have reduced
the companypensation awarded by the reference companyrt on the
ground that roads and drainage had been laid out. the fact
that these improvements had been made on the land shows that
what was acquired was more valuable than what it would have
been without the improvements. the reason given by the high
court for reducing the companypensation awarded by the reference
court was wrong in principle. | 1 | test | 1992_361.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 615-
617/73618-20/73 and 1850 to 1852 of 1972.
from the judgment and decree dated the 22nd june 1962
of the mysore high companyrt at bangalore in regular appeal number
157/56 regular appeal b number 16/57 ra b 6 of 1958.
r. lalit s.s. javali d.p. singh ravi parkash for
the appellants in ca. 1850-52/72 r-5 in ca. 615/73 r-2 in
ca. 616/73 r-6 in ca. 617/73 and r-3 in ca. number. 618-20/73. d. bal r.b. datar miss madhu moolchandani for the
appellant in c.a. number. 615-617/73 r-5 in ca. number. 1850-
52/72 for r-1 in ca. number. 618-620/73. t. desai k. n. bhat nanjappa ganesh for appellant
in ca. 618-620/73 rr 2 and 3 in ca. 1850 to 1851/72 rr. 2317 18 in ca. 1852/72 rr 23 in ca. 616/73 rr 10 11
in ca. 616/73 for rr 1 2 45 in ca. 617/73. b. bhasame k.a. naik m.r.k. pillai for r-1 in ca. number. 1850-52/72 ca 615-16/73 r-14 in ca. 617/73 and r-2 in
ca. 618-620/73. r. nagaraja alok bhatacharya for r-12 in ca. number. 1850-52/72 ca. 615/73 r-9 in ca. 617/73 r-13 in ca. 617/73 and r-10 in ca 618-620 of 1973.
r. ramasesh for rr 13 15 a to c in ca. 1852/72
rr 15 17 in ca. 617/73 and rr 11 14 a c and d in
ca. 618/73. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sen j. these nine companysolidated appeals on certificate
are directed from a companymon judgment and decree of the high
court of mysore at bangalore dated june 22 1962 which
affirmed subject to a modification the judgment and decree
of the civil judge senior division dharwar dated july 5
1956 substantially dismissing the plaintiffs claim for
declaration of title to and possession of certain watan
properties and decreeing instead his alternative claim for
partition and separate possession of his one-sixth share
therein. the principal question in companytroversy in these appeals
is whether ss. 3 and 4 of the bombay paragana and kulkarni
watans abolition act 1950 for short act number 60 of 1950
and ss. 4 and 7 of the bombay merged territories
miscellaneous alienations abolition act 1955 for short
act number 22 of 1955 which provided for abolition of
watans and alienations in the merged territories resumption
of watan land and its re-grant to the holder for the time
being which brought about a change in the tenure or the
character of holding as watan land affect the other legal
incidents of the property under personal law. the suit out of which these appeals arise was
instituted by the appellant nagesh bisto desai as
plaintiff claiming against his two brothers ganesh bisto
desai and gopal bisto desai defendants number.2 3 mother
smt. akkavva alias parvathibai defendant number 4 brother
bhimaji martand desai defendant number5 who had gone in
adoption to martand member of a junior branch and fathers
brother son khando tirmal desai defendant number 1 a
declaration that the properties described in schedules b and
c appended to the plaint called the kundgol deshgat estate
situate in the district of dharwar in the state of
karnataka formed an impartible estate and governed by the
rule of lineal primogeniture and that the plaintiff being
the present holder of the office of desai was entitled to
remain in full and exclusive possession and enjoyment of the
suit properties and that the other members of the family had
numberright title or interest therein but were only entitled
to maintenace and residence for exclusive possession of the
family residential house at kundgol knumbern as wada described
in schedule b part 2 from the defendants number. 2 to 5 for
exclusive possession of insignia of honumberr described in
schedule e and one-third share in the family movables
described
in schedule d. alternatively in the event of the companyrt
holding that the properties described in schedule b c and
d were properties belonging to the joint hindu family the
plaintiff claimed partition and separate possession of his
one-sixth share therein. it will be companyvenient in the first place to refer
briefly to the history of the estate to set out the
pedigree showing the descent from a companymon ancestor and to
show how the present case arose. the plaintiffs suit is brought on the allegation that
the deshgat family of kundgol paragana of which the
plaintiff and the defendants 1 to 4 are members is a very
ancient and respectable one in the state of jamkhandi which
later merged in the then province of bombay and is number in
the state of karnataka. the lands and cash allowances
described in schedule b para i and iii are the
emoluments of the district hereditary office of desai. abkari is the companypensation given to the desai family by the
british government when it took over the companytrol of today
and liquor in hanchinal inam village from the deshgat
family. this amount together with the cash allowance and
the service lands appurtenant to the office of desai and the
houses and open sites form the impartible estate called the
kundgol deshgat estate which was partly located within the
territory of former feudatory state of jhamkhandi and party
in the territories of the then british india. the first inam
was granted at the time of thimappa in 1575. all the
properties companystituting the deshgat were acquired under
grants made by the sultans and rulers of bijapur during the
period from 1575 a.d. to 1694 a.d. with a companyple of other
grants received from the chief of jamkhandi during the
period from 1120 a.d. to 1826 a.d. the watan has remained
with the family which held the hereditary office of desai
for over four centuries. in 1904 service appurtenant to the
office of desai was companymuted by the imposition of a judi
or quit-rent. properties described in schedules f and g have
been in possession of the two junior branches descended from
gundopant and lingappa from 1825 a.d. and 1854 a.d.
respectively and are being enjoyed by them even number. the plaintiffs father bistappa the last holder of
the office of desai died on july 27 1931 leaving behind him
his widow smt. akkavva and four sons nagesh bhimrao
ganesh and gopal. out of them bhimarao had gone in adoption
to martand. member of a junior branch. upon his fathers
death the plaintiff nagesh bisto desai was recognised to be
the watandar. the plaintiffs companysin is khandappa
the subjoined genealogical table gives the relationship
of the parties belonging to the senior branch descended from
thimappa. genealogical table
thimppa
-------------------------------
khanderao pantoji gundopant
thimappa nilkant
--------------------
ramappa nagappa mallappa
bistappa ---------------
adopted
imnagappa bistappa mortand
went in adoption
bhimraw
adopted deft.5
------------------------------
bistappa died 1931 trimallappa
smt. akkevva deft 4
khandappa
deft. 1
------------------------------------------------------
nagesh bhimrao ganesh smt. indirabai gopal
pantiff went adoption deft. 2 deft. 9 deft.3
to martand smt. kashibai
deft. 10
it appears that after the death of the plaintiffs
father in 1931 in the mutation proceedings that followed
the plaintiff first made a claim that the watan being
impartible according to the custom of the family he became
the exclusive owner of the entire watan properties. although
his brothers ganesh bisto desai and gopal bisto desai
defendants 2 and 3 had at first companysented to mutation of the
watan in his name they later resiled from that position and
the strongest opposition came from the plaintiffs uncle
tirmal father of khando. in companysequence of this the
plaintiff accepted before the revenue authorities that the
properties belonged to the joint hindu family and refrained
from making any claim on the footing of the properties being
impartible. in 1945 the plaintiffs brother bhimarao
defendant number 5 who had gone in adoption to martand started
asserting a claim to 7 mars of land and right of residence
in the family wada and this had the support of the
plaintiffs mother smt. akkavva. the defendant number 5
bhimarao in assertion of his claim brought special suit number
51 of1949 in the civil companyrt at kundgol on the basis of the
properties being impartible. in june 1946 the plaintiff
leased out some home farm lands to defendants 6 7 and 8
and this gave rise to proceedings under s. 144 of the companye
of criminal procedure 1898. the sub-divisional magistrate
kundgol passed an order restraining defendants 2 3 and 5
from disturbing the possession of defendants 6 7 and 8 and
this order was kept in force by the former state of
jamkhandi till merger in the former state of bombay in
august 1948. the state government revoked the order with
effect from december 15 1948 as a result of which the
defendents 6 7 and 8 brought suits for injunction. due to
discord in the family the plaintiff left the ancestral
residential house at kundgol and started residing in his
bungalow. the plaintiff has admittedly been regranted all
the watan land under sub-s. 1 of s. 4 of act number 60 of
1950 and s. 7 of act number 22 of 1955 as if it were an
unalienated land being the holder of the watan to which it
appertained and he is deemed to be an occupant thereof
within the meaning of the bombay land revenue companye 1879.
the defendants filed separate written statements and
repudiated the plaintiffs claim of impartibility. they
denied that the suit
properties formed an impartible estate and that succession
to the estate was governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture. the defendant number 1 asserted that there had
been at least three partitions in the family. according to
him the allotment of the properties described in schedules
f and g to the two branches of gundopant and lingappa
represented allotment of shares on partition. he pleaded
that all the properties described in schedules b c d and e
were joint family properties and claimed one-half share
therein. the defendants number. 2 and 3 in their written
statement also asserted that the properties described in
schedules f and g to the two branches of gundopant and
lingappa were shares allotted to them on partition. the
defendant number 4 supported the case pleaded by her sons
defendants number. 2 and 3. the defendant number 5 however
pleaded that there had never been a partition in the family
and that the entire properties that is to say the
properties described in the plaint schedules b to g
continued to be joint family properties wherein he claimed
one-fourth share. the remaining defendants also denied that
the suit properties were impartible. the learned trial judge rejected the plaintiffs claim
that he was entitled to remain in full and exclusive
possession and enjoyment of the aforementioned properties
being the watandar of the kundgol deshgat estate and that
other members had numberright title or interest therein except
as to maintenance as junior members and held instead that
properties belonged to the joint hindu family and were
therefore partible. he further held that the properties
described in schedules f and g in possession of the junior
branches of gundopant and lingappa were number allotted to them
as their share on partition and therefore had to be put into
the hotchpotch. he accordingly passed a preliminary decree
for partition declaring the plaintiffs share to be one-
twentyfourth of the entire estate and to other minumber
reliefs. on appeal the high companyrt upheld the judgment of
the trial judge holding that the suit properties were number
impartible and were therefore liable to partition but it
set aside
the direction with regard to schedules f and g properties on
the finding that the two branches of gundopant and lingappa
had separated from the joint family. it accordingly modified
the decree of the learned trial judge and held that the
plaintiff was entitled to one-sixth share in the properties
described in schedules b to e.
arguments in these appeals have been companyfined to the
question as to whether as a matter of law even if it were
assumed that the plaintiff had succeeded in proving that the
kundgol deshgat estate was an impartible estate and that
succession to it was governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture the incident of impartibility of the watan as
well as the rule of lineal primogeniture stand extinguished
by act number 60 of 1950 and act number 22 of 1955 and it is no
longer open to the plaintiff to make any claim on the basis
of the alleged custom of impartibility or the rule of lineal
primogeniture. the questions that fall for determination in these
appeals are firstly whether the impartibility of the
tenure of a paragana watan appertaining to the office of a
hereditary district paragana officer in respect of which a
commutation settlement has been effected regulating
succession to the property by reason of family custom or a
local custom being the incidents of such watan stands
abolished by virtue of s. 3 of act number 60 of 1950 or s. 4 of
act number 22 of 1955 and secondly whether the watan lands
lost the character of being joint family property with the
resumption of the watan under s. 3 of act number 60 of 1950 or
s.4 of act number 22 of 1955 and re-grants thereof were
exclusive to the plaintiff under s. 4 of act number22 of 1955
by reason of his status as the watandar and therefore they
belonged to the plaintiff and were number capable of partition
there is numbermerit in any of these submissions. it is argued that impartibility of the tenure was number
an incident of the grant but the watan was impartible by
custom and succession to it was governed by the rule of
lineal primogeniture. our attention is drawn to the averment
contained in paragraph 3 of the plaint
the kundgol deshgat estate along with the
estates of two other district hereditary offices of
nadgir and
deshpande of kundgol is impartible by custom and
succession to it is governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture. this custom is ancient invariable
definite and reasonable. it is both a family custom and
also a local custom prevailing in the families of
paragana watandar of kundgol
it is urged that in case of an impartible estate the right
to partition and the right of joint enjoyment are from the
very nature of the property incapable of existence and
therefore the companyrts below were in error dismissing the
plaintiffs claim for a declaration that being the present
holder of the office of desai he was entitled to exclusive
possession and enjoyment of the suit properties. it is
further urged that even assuming that impartibility of the
estate or the rule of primogeniture regulating succession
were an incident of the watan the suit properties lost the
character of being joint family property with the resumption
of the watan and the re-grants of the suit lands were
exclusively to the plaintiff under sub-s. 1 of s 4 of act
number 60 of 1950 and sub-s. 1 of s. 7 of act number 22 of 1955
by reason of his status as the watandar and therefore they
exclusively belonged to the plaintiff and they were number
capable of being partitioned. there is numbermerit in the
submission. the decision of these appeals must turn on the question
whether the impartibility of the estate and the rule of
lineal primogeniture by which succession to it was governed
makes the suit properties the self acquired or exclusive
properties of the plaintiff and therefore cannumber be
partitioned by metes and bounds between the members of the
joint family. in martand rao v. malhar rao 1 the privy
council ruled as follows
if an impartible estate existed as such from
before the advent of british rule any settlement or
regrant thereof by the british government must in the
absence of evidence to the companytrary and unless
inconsistent with the express terms of the new
settlement be presumed to companytinue the estate with its
previous incidents of impartibility and succession by
special custom. it also held in that case
when there is a dispute with respect to an estate
being impartible or otherwise the onus lies on the
party who alleges the existence of a custom different
from the ordinary law of inheritance according to
which custom the estate is to be held by a single
member and as such number liable to partition. in order
to establish that any estate is impartible it must be
proved that it is from its nature impartible and
decendible to a single person or that it is impartible
and descendible by virtue of a special custom. any such special custom modifying the ordinary
law of succession must be ancient and invariable and
must be established to be so by clear and unambiguous
evidence. the companyrts below in their well companysidered judgments
have companysidered minutely and elaborately the whole of the
evidence both oral and documentary led by both the parties
on the question of custom and have companye to a definitive
finding that the evidence is of little or numberassistance to
establish the alleged custom pleaded by the plaintiff as to
the impartibility of the estate or the rule of lineal
primogeniture. they have held in favour of the defendants on
this basic issue and substantially dismissed the plaintiffs
suit claiming full and exclusive title. that part of the
judgment has rightly number been assailed before us and the
argument has proceeded on the footing that even if the
kundgol deshgat estate were an impartible estate and that
succession to it was governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture the incidents of impartibility of the watan as
well as the rule of lineal primogeniture stand extinguished
by act number 60 of 1950 and act number 22 of 1955.
it has always been the accepted view that the grant of
watan to the eldest member of a family did number make the
watan properties the exclusive property of the person who is
the watandar for the time being. in order to understand the
arguments on this point it is necessary to deal with the
incidents of a deshgat watan. in the bombay presidency it
has always been treated to be the joint family property. it
may be worthwhile to refer to the decision of the privy
council in adrishappa v. gurshindappa 1 the headnumbere of
which is that
deshgat watan or property held as appertaining to
the office of desai is number to be assumed prima facie to
be impartible. the burden of proving the impartibility
lies upon the desai and on his failing to prove a
special tenure or a family or district or local custom
to that effect the ordinary law of succession
applies. in a suit for partition of property forming part of a
deshgat estate brought by the younger brothers against their
eldest brother who held the hereditary district office of
desai partly within the state of jamkhandi and partly
within the territory of british india the defence was that
the watan was held by him as an impartible estate and that
he was entitled being the watandar to be in full and
exclusive possession thereof subject to a right by custom
that a brother should receive maintenance out of the income
derived from it. the companyrt of first instance having found
that there was numberinvariable rule against the partition of a
deshgat watan the high companyrt refused to allow effect to be
given to what had number been proved to be the established
governing rule of the family class or district sufficient
to establish the impartibility of the estate and held that
the watan in question was subject to the general hindu law
including the presumption as to the right to partition
belonging to the members of the family to which it had
descended. the judicial companymittee upheld the decision of the
high companyrt holding that there was numbergeneral presumption in
favour of the impartibility of an estate of this kind as to
shift the burden of proof the burden of proof was upon the
desai who seeks to show that the property devolved upon him
alone in companytravention of the ordinary rule of succession
according to the hindu law and that numbersufficient evidence
had been given by the watandar either of family custom or
of district custom to prevent the operation of the ordinary
rule of law whereby the property would be partible. in vinayak waman joshi rayarikar v. gopal hari joshi
rayarikar ors. 1 the companyrt of first instance held that
by custom a deshgat inam had become impartible and hence
dismissed the suit for partition. on appeal the high companyrt
reversed upon the view that the mere fact that the
management remained in the hands of the eldest branch was
number sufficient to
establish the plea that the estate was impartible. while
affirming the decision of the high companyrt the privy companyncil
followed its earlier decision in adrishappas case supra
and agreed with the companyclusion arrived at by the high companyrt
that
neither by the terms of the original grant number of
the subsequent orders of the ruling power number by
family custom number by adverse possession if such there
could be in a case like this the eldest branch of the
family acquired a right to perpetual management of the
village or in companysequence to resist its partition . it is a trite proposition that property though
impartible may be the ancestral property of the joint hindu
family. the impartibility of property does number per se
destroy its nature as joint family property or render it the
separate property of the last holder so as to destroy the
right of survivorship hence the estate retains its
character of joint family property and devolves by the
general law upon that person who being in fact and in law
joint in respect of the estate is also the senior member in
the senior line. as observed by sir dinshaw mulla in his celebrated
judgment in shiba prasad singh v. rani prayag kumari debi
ors 1
the keynumbere of the whole position in their
lordships view is to be found in the following passage
in the judgment in the tipperah case 2
where a custom is proved to exist it supersedes
the general law which however still regulates all
beyond the custom
impartibility is essentially a creature of
custom. in the case of ordinary joint family property
the members of the family have 1 the right of
partition 2 the right to restrain alienations by the
head of the family except for necessity 3 the right
of maintenance and 4 the right of survivorship. the
first of these rights cannumber exist in the case of an
impartible estate though ancestral from the very
nature of the estate. the second
is incompatible with the custom of impartibility as
laid down in sartaj kuaris 1 case and the first
pittapur case 2 and so also the third as held in the
second pittapur case. 3 to this extent the general law
of the mitakshara has been superseded by custom and
the impartible estate though ancestral is clothed with
the incidents of self-acquired and separate property. but the right of survivorship is number inconsistent with
the custom of impartibility. this right therefore
still remains and this is what was held in baijnaths
case. 4 to this extent the estate still retains its
character of joint family property and its devolution
is governed by the general mitakshara law applicable to
such property. though the other rights which a
coparcener acquires by birth in joint family property
numberlonger exist the birth-right of the senior member
to take by survivor ship still remains. number is this
right a mere spes succession is similar to that of a
reversioner succeeding on the death of a hindu widow to
her husbands estate. it is a right which is capable of
being renumbernced and surrendered. such being their
lordships view it follows that in order to establish
that a family governed by the mitakshara in which there
is an ancestral impartible estate has ceased to be
joint it is necessary to prove an intention express
or implied on the part of the junior members of the
family to renumbernce their right of succession to the
estate. since the decision of the privy companyncil in shiba prasad
singhs case supra it is well-settled that an estate is
impartible does number make it the separate and exclusive
property of the holder where the property is ancestral and
the holder has succeeded to it it will be part of the joint
estate of the undivided family. the incidents of impartible estate laid down by the
privy companyncil in shiba prasad singhs case supra and the
law as there stated have been reaffirmed in the subsequent
decisions of the privy
council and of this companyrt companylector of gorakhpur v. ram
sundar mal ors. 1 companymissioner of income tax punjab. v.
krishna kishore 2 anant bhikappa patil v. shankar
ramchandra patil 3 chinnathavi alias veeralakshmi v.
kulasekara pandiya naicker anr 4 . mirza raja shri
pushavathi viziaram gajapathi raj manne sultan bahadur
ors. v. shri pushavathi viseswar gajapathi raj ors. 5
rajah velugoti kumara krishna yachendra varu ors. v. rajah
velugoti sarvagna kumara krishna yachendra varu ors. 6
and bhaiya ramanuj pratap deo v. lalu maheshanuj pratap deo
ors. 7
in companylector of gorakhpur v. ram sundar mals case
supra it was observed that though the decision of the board
in sartaj kuaris case and the first pittapurs case
appeared to be destructive of the doctrine that an
impartible zamindari companyld be in any sense joint family
property this view apparently implied in these cases was
definitely negatived by lord dunedin when delivering the
judgment of the board in baijnath prasad singhs case. in
commissioner of income tax punjab v. krishna kishores case
dealing with an impartible estate governed by the madras
impartible estates act 1904 it was held that the right of
junior members of the family for maintenance was governed by
custom and was number based on any joint right or interest in
the property as companyowners. in anant bhikappa patils case
supra it was observed that an impartible estate is number held
in companyarcenary though it may be joint family property. it
may develove as joint family property or as separate
property of the last male holder. in the former case it
goes by survivorship to that individual among those male
members who in fact and in law are undivided in respect of
the estate who is singled out by the special custom e.g. lineal male primogeniture. in the latter case jointness and
survivorship are number as such in point the estate devolves by
inheritance by the last male holder in the order prescribed
by the special custom or according to the ordinary law of
inheritance as modified by the custom. in chinnathavis case. supra it was observed that the
dictum of the privy companyncil in shiba prasad singh case
supra that to establish that an impartible estate has
ceased to be joint family property for purposes of
succession it is necessary to prove an intention express
or implied on the part of the junior members of the family
to give up their chance of succeeding to the estate. the
test to be applied is whether the facts show a clear
intention to renumbernce or surrender any interest in the
impartible estate or a relinquishment of the right of
succession and an intention to impress upon the zamindari
the character of separate property. in mirza raja
gajapathis case supra it was observed that an ancestral
impartible estate to which the holder has succeeded by the
custom of primogeniture is part of the joint estate of the
undivided hindu family. though the other rights enjoyed by
the members of a joint hindu family are inconsistent in the
case of an impartible estate the right survivorship still
remains. in rajah velugoti kumara krishnas case supra it
was observed that the only vestige of the incidents of joint
family property which still attaches to the joint family
property is the right of survivorship which of companyrse is
number inconsistent with the custom of impartibility. in bhaiya
ramanuj pratap deos case supra the principles laid down
by the privy companyncil in shiba prasad singhs case were
reiterated. in the companyrse of argument great reliance was placed on
the two decisions of this companyrt in mirza raja ganapathis
case supra and raja velugoti kumara krishnas case supra
for the proposition that the junior members of a joint
family in the case of an ancient impartible joint family
estate take numberright in the property by birth and therefore
have numberright of partition having regard to the very
character of the estate that it is impartible. to our mind
the companytention cannumber be accepted. both the decisions in
mirza raja ganapathis case supra and raja velugoti kumara
krishnas case supra turned on the provision of the madras
estates abolition companyversion into ryotwari act 1948 and
the madras impartible estates act 1904. there are express
provisions made in ss. 45 to 47 of the abolition act for the
apportionment of companypensation to the junior members of
zamindari estates and sub.s 2 of s. 45 thereof provides
for payment of the capitalised value of the companypensation
amount to them on the basis of extinction of the estate. the
scheme of the abolition act therefore companytemplates the
continued existence of the rights of the holder of an
impartible estate vis-a-vis the junior
members of such an estate. the facts involved in those cases
were also entirely different. in mirza raja ganapathis case supra it was a suit for
partition for vizianagram estate an ancient impartible
estate governed by the madras impartible estates act 1904.
the claim of the junior members regarding buildings which
had been incorporated in the impartible estate as also their
claim with regard to jewels treated as state regalia and
therefore impressed with the family custom of impartibility
was negatived. it was held that despite the fact that
vizinagram estate had been numberified to be an estate within
the meaning of s.3 of the madras estate abolition and
conversion into ryotwari act 1948 the extinguishment of
the proprietary right title and interest of the zamindar
did number affect his right or title to the impartible
properties outside the purview of that act and governed by
the madras impartible estates act 1904 but as regards
other properties falling within the zamindari including
lands were held to be partible. with regard to the
buildings it was held that the buildings in question were
number partible by virtue of sub-s. 4 of s. 18 of the act as
the buildings falling within the section vested in the
person who owned them immediately before the vesting. the
expression the person who owned in sub-s. 4 of s. 18 of
the act was held to refer to the land-holder and number to any
other person. further the buildings were outside the limits
of the zamindari estate and therefore number companyered by s. 3 of
the abolition act. the claim with regard to jewels failed
because they were part of the impartible estate. in raja velugoti kumara krishnas case supra it was a
suit for partition by the junior members of vankatgiri
estate an ancient impartible estate governed by the madras
impartible estates act 1904. the suit was principally
confined to the claim for a share to the schedule b
properties. the companytention was that the impartibility was
continued under that act but ceased when the estate vested
in the state government under s. 3 of the madras estates
abolition and companyversion into ryotwari act 1948 and this
had the effect of changing character of the properties in
the b schedule and making them partible. it was said that
the junior members had a present right in the impartible
estate and were entitled to share in the properties once it
lost its character of impartibility. the companyrt had to
consider the effect of the abolition act on the rights and
obligations of the members of the family and held
that the abolition act has numberapplication to properties
which are outside the territorial limit of the venkatgiri
estate. the claim that failed was in relation to properties
which did number form part of a zamindari estate within the
meaning of s. 1 16 and therefore did number companye within the
purview of s. 3 of the abolition act but companytinued to be
governed by the madras impartible estates act 1904.
the companytention that the plaintiff holding the district
hereditary office of desai and being the watandar of the
kundgol deshgat estate was entitled to remain in full and
exclusive possession and enjoyment thereof to the exclusion
of the other members of the joint hindu family runs companynter
to the scheme of the bombay hereditary offices act 1874
for short the watan act and is against settled legal
principles. the plaintiffs rights to such watan properties
whatever they were subject to the rights of the other
members of the family. the terms watandar is defined in s. 4 of the watan
act. it reads
watandar means a person having a hereditary
interest in the watan. it includes a person holding
watan property acquired by him before the introduction
of british government into the locality of the watan
or legally acquired subsequent to such introduction
and a person holding such property from him by
inheritance. it includes a person adopted by an owner
of a watan or part of a watan subject to the companyditions
specified in sections 33 to 35.
if the words used in the definition are strictly and
literally companystrued it would mean that before a person can
be said to be a watandar he must have a hereditary interest
both in the watan property and in the hereditary office
because it is these two that companystitute the watan. there is
numberbasis whatever for such a strict companystruction. the
definition is undoubtedly in two parts the first sets out
what watandar means and the other states what is included
in it and the question arises whether the primary definition
i.e. the meaning portion of it should be regarded as primary
and the inclusive part as illustrative or both the parts
should be regarded as companystituting one whole definition the
inclusive part being supplementary to the former. the
controversy arising from the rival companystructions
placed on the definition of watandar in s. 4 of the watan
act was set at rest by the full bench decision of the bombay
high companyrt in vijayasingrao bala saheb shinde desai v.
janardanrao narayanrao shinde desai. 1 prior to that
decision two companyflicting companystructions on the definition
had been placed by two division benches of the bombay high
court. in kadappa v. krishtappa 2 an alienation of watan
land by a watandar to his bhaubandh for maintenance was
challenged and rangnekar and divatia jj. held that the
alienation was valid beyond the life time of the watandar
inasmuch as it was to a watandar of the same watan in other
words the alience who was a bhaubandh to whom a watan land
had been transferred for maintenance regarded as a watandar
though he had numberinterest in the hereditary office and the
rights and privileges attached to it. it would therefore
appear that in kndappas case supra the entire definition
of watandar in s. 4 was looked upon as one the latter part
being supplementary and additional to what is companytained in
the first part. in smt. tarabai v. murtacharya. 3 sir john
beaumont c.j. and wadia j. however struck a discordant
numbere. it was that a person who merely acquired a watan
property without acquiring the office and without being
under any obligation to perform services attached to the
office was number a watandar within the meaning of the
aforesaid definition in other words it held that the first
part of the definition was exclusive and exhaustive the
latter part being merely illustrative and the illustrations
given in the latter part should fall within the ambit of the
exclusive definition given in the first part that is to
say the primary definition of a watandar in s.4 was that
he was a person having a hereditary interest in a watan
i.e. the office and a property if any and the subsequent
words were merely explanatory of the primary definition and
did number curtail it. in view of this companyflict the specific
question referred to the full bench in vijayasingraos case
supra was whether the term watandar as defined in s. 4
of the watan act necessarily and always meant a person who
had a hereditary interest number only in the watan property but
also in the hereditary office. and on a companysideration of
the scheme and the relevant sections of the watan act and
the two earlier decisions the full bench preferred the
construction
placed on the term watandar in kadappas case supra and
concluded that a person who acquired watan property or held
hereditary interest in it without acquiring the hereditary
office and without being under an obligation to perform the
services attached to each office was also a watandar
within the meaning of the watan act. there can be numberdoubt that the watan act was designed
to preserve the pre-existing rights of the members of joint
hindu family. the word family is defined in s. 4 of the
watan act to include each of the branches of the family
descended from an original watandar and the expression
head of a family is defined therein to include the chief
representative of each branch of a family. representative
watandar defined in s. 4 meant a watandar registered by
the companylector under section 25 as having a right to perform
the duties of a hereditary office. section 5 of the watan
act prohibited alienations of watan and watan rights. clause
a of sub-s. 1 of s. 5. thereof referred to a watander
in general and provided that it would number be companypetent to
such a watandar to mortgage charge alienate or lease for
a period beyond the term of his natural life any watan or
any part thereof or interest therein to or for the benefit
of any person who is number a watandar of the same watan
without the requisite sanction. the expression watandar of
the same watan occurs in many sections of the act. as
already indicated the term watandar as defined in s. 4
includes the members of a joint hindu family. it must follow
as a necessary companyollary that the expression watandar of
the same watan would include members of the family other
than the watandar who were entitled to remain in possession
and enjoyment of the watan property. it is necessary to emphasize that companymutation of
service had number the effect of changing the nature of the
tenure. the effect of the gordon settlement came up for
consideration in the companylector of south satara anr. v.
laxman mahadev deshpande ors. 1 when the companyrt referred
to the decision in appaji bapuji v. keshav shamrav. 2 and
quoted the following passage from the judgment of sargent
j. with approval
what is termed a gordon settlement was an
arrangement-entered into in 1864 by a companymittee of
which mr.
gordon as companylector was chairman acting on behalf of
government-with the watandars in the southern maratha
country by which the government relieved certain
watandars in perpetuity from liability to perform the
services attached to their offices in companysideration of
a judi or quitrent charged upon the watan
lands the reports of mr. gordons companymittee
on the satara and poona districts and their
correspondence with government can we think leave no
doubt that the settlements made by that companymittee
unless it was otherwise specially provided by any
particular settlement were number intended by either
party to these settlements to companyvert the watan lands
into the private property of the vatandars with the
necessary incident of alienability but to leave them
attached to the hereditary offices which although
freed from the performance of service remained intact. the companyrt companytinued
but the companymutation settlement does number companyfer an
indefeasible title to the grantee for the right
affirmed by the settlement under s. 15 2 of the watan
act is liable to be determined by lapse companyfiscation
or resumption s. 22 of the watan act . the state
having created the watan is entitled to put an end to
the watan i.e. to cancel the watan and to resume the
grant 1 bachharam datta patil v. vishwanath pundalik
patil. 1 therefore if there be mere companymutation of
service the watan office ordinarily survives without
liability to perform service and on that account the
character of watan property still remains attached to
the grant. but the state government may abolish the
office and release the property from its character as
watan property. the companyrt then dealt with the scheme of the act number 60
of 1950 and observed that in the light of the incidents of
the watan and the property granted for remuneration of the
watandar that the relevant provisions of the act had to be
considered in regard to the right of the watandar to regrant
of the watan lands. it was observed that on a companybined
operation of sub-s. 3 of s. 3 and s. 4 of the act the
holder of the watan land is entitled to regrant of the land
in occupancy rights as an unalienated land. as to the effect
of the
legislation it was observed that s. 3 in terms provides for
abolition of the watan extinction of the office and
modification of the right in which the land is held. the
abolition extinction and modification arise by operation of
s. 3 of the act and number from the exercise of the executive
power of companyfiscation or resumption by the state and it was
then said
undoubtedly the power of resumption of a watan
may be exercised under s. 22 of the watan act and such
a resumption may destroy the right of the holder both
to the office and the watan land and in the absence of
any provision in that behalf numberright to companypensation
may arise. but where the abolition of the watan is number
by executive action but by legislative decree its
consequences must be sought in the statute which
effectuates that abolition. as to the effect of the resumption of the watan lands
under sub-s. 3 of s. 3 and their regrant under sub-s. 1
of s. 4 of the act it was observed
it must be remembered that the power which the
state government always possessed by the clearest
implication of s. 22 of the bombay hereditary offices
act 1874 of resumption is statutorily enforced by s.
3 in respect of the paragana and kulkarni watans. the
state government having the power to abolish a watan
office and to resume land granted as remuneration for
performance of the duties attached to the office was
number obliged to companypensate the watandar for extinction
of his rights. but the legislature has as a matter of
grace presumably because of settlement between the
holders and the government under the gordon settlement
provided by s. 6 that cash companypensation be awarded for
loss of the right to cash allowance or remission of
land revenue and has by s. 4 companyferred upon the holder
of the watan land for loss of his right a right to
regrant of the land as occupant and free from the
obligation imposed by its original tenure as watan
land but the operation of s. 3 all paraganas and
kulkarni watans falling within the act are abolished
the right to hold office is extinguished and the land
granted as remuneration for performance of service is
resumed. the holder of the land is thereafter liable to
pay land revenue and is
entitled on payment of the occupancy price at the
prescribed rate to be regranted occupancy rights as if
it is unalienated land. the right so companyferred is
though number a right to cash companypensation a valuable
right of occupancy in the land. by the resumption of
watan land and regrant thereof in occupancy right all
the restrictions placed upon the holder of watan land
are by the provisions of the watan act and the terms
of the grant statutorily abolished. but the right of
occupancy granted by s. 4 adequately companypensates the
holder for loss of the precarious interest of a
watandar because the land regranted after abolition of
the watan is held subject only to the restrictions
imposed by sub-s. 2 of s. 4 and is freed from the
incidents of watan tenure such as restriction on
alienation beyond the life time of the holder
devolution according to the special rule of succession
and the liability to companysideration or resumption. it must therefore be observed that the companymutation of
service under sub-s. 1 s. 15 of the watan lands by which
the watandars were relieved in perpetuity from liability to
perform the services attached to their offices in
consideration of judi or quit-rent charged upon the watan
land unless where it was otherwise provided for had number
the effect of companyverting watan land into the private
property of the watandars with the necessary incident of
alienability but to leave them attached to the hereditary
offices which although freed from the performance of
services remained intact. despite companymutation of service
the office of watandars ordinarily survived without
liability to perform service and on that account the
character of the watan lands still remained attached to the
grant. by the end of the first half of the 19th century the
watandars had lost much of their raison detre. the british
thought it expedient to dispense with their services and the
watandars were given an offer to companyvert their watans into
private property by the annual payment of a nazrana but they
were opposed to this. at their own request the government
agreed to companytinue their watans as unalienable after the
service companymutation settlements subject to payment of
judi or quit-rent. after the service companymutation
settlements and the appointment of mamlatdars the watandars
had practically numberfunction to perform but the watans were
number discontinued till the government decided upon their
abolition. it is said that although companyownership of the joint
family may exist in impartible property a distinction must
be drawn between present rights and future rights of the
members of a family. this is because of the peculiar
character of the property. thus while the junior members
have future or companytingent rights such as right of
survivorship they have apart from custom or relationship
numberpresent rights as for instance a right to restrain
alienation or to claim maintenance. it is upon this basis
that the submission is that the companyrts below manifestly
erred in passing a decree for partition of the watan
property described in schedules b and c appended to the
plaint. we are afraid these submissions based upon the
alleged impartibility of the watan properties or the
applicability of the rule of lineal primogeniture regulating
succession to the estate cannumber prevail as these being
numberhing more than incidents of the watan stand abrogated by
sub-s. 4 of s. 3 act number 60 of 1950 and s. 4 of act number 22
of 1955.
it seems plain to us that the effect of act number 60 of
1950 and act number 22 of 1955 was to bring out a change in the
tenure or character of holding as watan land but they did
number affect the other legal incidents of the property under
personal law. it will be companyvenient to deal first with the
provisions of act number 60 of 1950. section 3 of the act lays
down that with effect from and on the appointed day
numberwithstanding anything companytained in any law usage
settlement grant sanad or order all watans shall be
deemed to have been abolished and all rights to hold office
and any liability to render service appertaining to the said
watans shall stand extinguished. it further lays down that
subject to the provisions of s. 4 all watan land is hereby
resumed and shall be deemed to be subject to the payment
of land revenue under the provisions of the companye and the
rules made thereunder as if it were an unalienated land. the term companye as defined in s. 2 b means the bombay
land revenue companye 1879. all incidents pertaining to the
said watans stand extinguished from the appointed day. sub-s. 1 of s. 4 of the act insofar as material
provides
4 1 . a watan land resumed under the provisions
of this act shall be regranted to the holder
of the watan to which it appertained on payment of the
occupancy price and the holder shall be deemed
to be an occupant within the meaning of the companye in
respect of
such land and shall primarily be liable to pay land
revenue to the state government in accordance with the
provisions of the companye and the rules made thereunder
all the provisions of the companye and rules relating to
unalienated land shall subject to the provisions of
this act apply to the said land. clause 2 of explanation to s. 4 reads
explanation-for the purposes of this section the
expression holder shall include-
all persons who on the appointed day are the
watandars of the same watan to which the land
appertained and
xx xx xx
the provisions of act number 22 of 1955 are more or less
similar. likewise s. 4 of the act provides that
numberwithstanding anything companytained in any usage settlement
grant etc. with effect from the appointed day all
alienations shall be deemed to have been abolished and all
rights legally subsisting on the said date in respect of
such alienations and all other incidents of such alienation
shall be deemed to have been extinguished. section 7 of the
act provides that all land held under a watan is hereby
resumed and shall be regranted to the holder in accordance
with the provisions companytained in sub sections 1 to 3
therein. clause 1 of explanation to s. 7 reads
explanation-for the purpose of this section the
expression holder shall include-
1 an alienee holding land under a watan and
2 xx xx xx xx
upon a plain reading of sub-s. 1 of s. 4 of act number
60 of 1950 and of s. 7 of act number 22 of 1955 it is clear
that watan lands resumed under the provisions thereof have
to be regranted to the holder of the watan and he shall be
deemed to be an occupant within the meaning of the companye in
respect of such land. the expression holder as defined in cl. i explanation to
s. 4 of the former act includes all persons who on the
appointed day are the watandars of the same watan and cl. 1 of explanation to s. 7 of the latter act defines it to
include an a lienee holding land under a watan. the term
an alienee is defined in s. 2 1 iii to mean the
holder of an alienation and includes his companysharer. the watan act companytemplated two classes of persons. one
is a larger class of persons belonging to the watan families
having a hereditary interest in the watan property as such
and the other a smaller class of persons who were appointed
as representative watandars and who were liable for the
performance of duties companynected with the office of such
watandars. as already indicated it would number be companyrect to
limit the word watandar only to this narrow class of
persons who companyld claim to have a hereditary interest both
in the watan property and in the hereditary office. watan
property had always been treated as property belonging to
the family and all persons belonging to the watan family who
had a hereditary interest in such watan property were
entitled to be called watandars of the same watan within
the watan act. that being so the members of a joint hindu
family must be regarded as holders of the watan land along
with the watandar for the time being and therefore the
regrant of the lands to the watandar under sub-s. 1 of s.
4 of act number 60 of 1950 and under s. 3 of act number 22 of 1955
must enure to the benefit of the entire joint hindu family. it appears that the same view has been taken in a full
bench decision of the bombay high companyrt in laxmibai sadashiv
date v. ganesh shankar date 1 . a companytroversy had arisen as to the purport and effect
of the number-obstante clause companytained in s. 4 of the bombay
inferior village watans abolition act 1959. malvankar j.
in dhondi vithoba v. mahadeo dagdu 2 held that the effect
of sub-s. 3 of s. 4 read with s. 5 of the act was to bring
about a change in the tenure or character of holding as
watan land but it did number affect the other legal incidents
of the property under personal law. the learned judge
therefore held that even though the watan was abolished and
the incidents thereof were extinguished and the land resumed
under
s. 4 the act maintained the companytinuity of the interest in
the lands of persons before and after the companying into force
of the act provided of companyrse the holder pays occupancy
price in respect of the land. in other words the property
continues to be the joint family property or the property
held by the tenants-in-common as the case may be. in
kalgonda babgonda v. balgonda 1 a division bench of the
high companyrt took a view to the companytrary and observed
the words all incidents appertaining to the said
watans shall be and are hereby extinguished must
include every kind of incident including the so-called
incident of a right to partition as claimed by the
plaintiff in this case even if such right existed. further the lands were resumed by the government on
that date in law and vested in the government till the
lands were re-granted under s. 5 or 6 or 9 of that
act. xx xx xx xx
it is number possible for us to companysider it
reasonable to held that although the lands were resumed
by the government and the holder himself had lost all
his rights till the lands were re-granted to him except
the right of asking for re-grant the incidents of the
property under personal law appertaining to impartible
property would survive the extinguishment of the tenure
and resumption of the land by the state. it was obviously wrong in reaching the companyclusion that it
did. in laxmibai sadashiv dates case supra the full bench
reversed the decision of the division bench and upheld the
view taken by malvankar j. in dhondi vithobas case supra
observed
it is undoubtedly true that s. 4 starts with a
number-obstante clause but it is a well recognised canumber
of companystruction to give effect to number-obstante clause
having regard to the object with which it is enacted in
a statute. the number-obstante clause is companytained at the
inception of s. 4 and the sole object of s. 4 is to
abolish alienation and rights and incidents in respect
thereof. the right of a member of joint hindu family to
ask for partition of a joint family
property cannumber be regarded as a right relating to
grant of land as service inam or as an incident in
respect thereof. xx xx xx xx
the object of s. 4 was number to affect in any manner
rights created under the personal law relating to the
parties and if the property belonged to joint hindu
family then the numbermal rights of the members of the
family to ask for partition were number in any way
affected by reason of the number-obstante clause companytained
in s. 4.
these observations in our opinion are clearly in
consonance with the true meaning and effect of the number-
obstanate clause. it still remains to ascertain the impact of sub-s 2
of s. 4 of act number 60 of 1950 and sub-s. 3 of s. 7 of act
number 22 of 1955 and the question is whether the occupancy of
the land regranted under sub-s. 1 of s. 4 of the former
act and sub-s. 2 of s. 7 of the latter act is still
impressed with the character of being impartible property. all that these provisions lay down is that the occupancy of
the land regranted under sub-s. 1 of s. 4 of the former
act shall number be transferable or partible by metes and
bounds without the previous sanction of the companylector and
except on payment of such amount as the state government
may by general or special order determine. it is quite
plain upon the terms of these provisions that they impose
restrictions in the matter of making alienations. on regrant
of the land the holder is deemed to be an occupant and
therefore the holding changes its intrinsic character and
becomes ryotwari and is like any other property which is
capable of being transferred or partitioned by metes and
bounds subject of companyrse to the sanction of the companylector
and on payment of the requisite amount. it is the policy of the law to prevent the land-working
classes being driven into the state of landless proletariats
so far as may be and accordingly it is provided by these
provisions that alienations of such holdings or partition
thereof shall be ineffective unless the sanction of the
collector has first been obtained. it is of the utmost
importance that this important safeguard should be
maintained in full force and effect so that the parties must
exactly knumber what they have bargained for. the companydition for
the grant of sanction by the companylector as a pre-requisite
for a valid transfer of a holding or the
making of a partition by metes and bounds is to ensure that
the actual tiller of the soil is number deprived of his land
except for valid companysideration or that the partition
effected between the members of a family is number unfair or
unequal. | 0 | test | 1982_51.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number. 2087-
2088/ 78. 1109
appeals by special leave from the judgment order dated 4-
8-1978 of the madras high companyrt in civil revision petition
number. 1723/78 and 1727/78. and
civil appeal number 1301 of 1978
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated 4-8-1978 of the madras high companyrt in c.r.p.number
1054/78. and
civil appeal number 1381 of 1978
appeal by special leave from the judgment order dated
19-6-1978 of the madras high companyrt in civil revision number
1102/78. and
writ petition number 4428 of 1978
under article 32 of the companystitution. k. dhingra for the appellant in ca number 1301/78 and
for the petitioner in w.p. 4428/78. k. sen and e. c. agarwala for the appellant in ca
number 1381/78 and 2087-2088/78. s. ramamurthy p. n. ramalingam a. t. m. sampath
for the respondents in c. a. 2087-2088/78. s. chitale l. n. singhvi j. s. sinha k. j. john
and b. bhandari for rr in ca 1381 /78 and rr in c.a. 1301/78. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
tulzapurkar j.-these appeals preferred by tenants by
special leave raise a companymon question whether while
considering the bona fide requirement of the building by the
landlord for the immediate purpose of demolition and
reconstruction under s. 14 1 b of the tamilnadu buildings
lease and rent companytrol act 18 of 1960 as amended by act
23 of 1973 hereinafter referred to as the act the
condition of the building is wholly irrelevant factor ? since the facts giving rise to the aforesaid question
in all these appeals are almost similar it will suffice if
the facts in c.a. number. 20872088/78 are stated. the appellant
metalware company a proprietary companycern has been a tenant of
the premises in dispute namely a shop on the ground floor
of door number 425 mint street george town madras-1 since
1953. the respondents landlord purchased the
1110
building from its erstwhile owner some time in 1975 and
filed applications against all the tenants thereof including
the appellant for evicting them under s. 14 1 b of the
act alleging that the building being very old and
dilapidated required immediate demolition and reconstruction
and they bona fide required it for the said purpose for
their occupation. the respondents further alleged that they
were possessed of sufficient means to undertake the
demolition and reconstruction and had applied for and
obtained from the municipal companyporation sanctioned plans in
that behalf and after duly terminating the tenancies had
sought vacant possession. the application was resisted by
the appellant on several grounds. inter alia the claim of
the landlords that the building was bona fide required by
them for the immediate purpose of demolition and
reconstruction was seriously disputed in particular it was
emphatically denied that the building was in a dilapidated
condition requiring immediate demolition and reconstruction
so also the allegation that the respondents had sufficient
means to undertake the demolition and reconstruction. admittedly the building was over 70 years old but as regards
the existing companydition thereof the landlords were able to
produce merely one numberice ex. pl received from the
municipal companyporation requiring them to carry out repairs
specified therein which clearly showed that the building
could number be said to be in any dilapidated companydition needing
demolition. the rent companytroller 7th judge small causes
court madras on the evidence led before him by the parties
came to the companyclusion that the respondents had sufficient
means to undertake the demolition and reconstruction had
got their plans approved by the municipal companyporation and
had an honest intention to demolish the existing structure
and to reconstruct anumberher on that site. on the question
whether the building was in a dilapidated companydition and
required immediate demolition and reconstruction numberdefinite
finding one way or the other was given but he took the view
that it was well settled that it was number always essential to
prove that the building was decrepit before an application
for possession companyld be made under s. 14 1 b of the act
and that the landlord had a right to demolish his property
in order to build a new structure on the site with a view to
improve his business or get better returns out of
investments and that since in the instant case the
respondents had purchased the building for the purpose of
demolition and reconstruction and had obtained the municipal
sanction in that behalf and were found to be possessed of
sufficient means they satisfied the companydition of s.
14 1 b of the act. he therefore ordered the eviction of
the iii appellant. in the appeal preferred by the appellant
under s. 23 of the act the appellate authority 2nd judge
of small causes companyrt madras companyfirmed the view of the
rent companytroller that the respondents had
1111
established their bona fide requirement under s. 14 1 b
and dismissed the appeal. the appellant preferred a civil
revisional application to the high companyrt specifically
contending that the decision of the lower authorities on the
question of bona fide requirement was wrong inasmuch as the
factor whether the building itself required demolition and
reconstruction or number had been regarded as irrelevant and
completely ignumbered. the high companyrt dismissed the revisional
application by observing that the only thing to be looked
into in such cases is whether the intention to demolish the
building is there and whether such an intention is for the
purpose of demolishing the same with a future intention to
reconstruct and whether it is a bona fide intention all
these have been found in favour of the landlord. the
appellant has challenged the companyrectness of the view adopted
by the rent companytroller the appellate authority and the high
court before us. it will be desirable to set out the material provisions
of s. 14 of the act
recovery of possession by landlord for
repairs or for reconstruction l numberwithstanding
anything companytain ed in this act but subject to the
provisions of sections 12 and 13 on an application
made by a landlord the company troller shall if he is
satisfied-
a that the building is bona fide required by the
landlord for carrying out repairs which cannumber be
carried out with out the building being vacated or
b that the building is bona fide required by the
landlord for the immediate purpose of demolishing it and
such demolition is to be made for the purpose of erecting a
new building on the site of the building sought to be
demolished pass an order directing the tenant to deliver
possession of the building to the landlord before a
specified date. numberorder directing the tenant to deliver possession
of the building under this section shall be passed-
a on the ground specified in clause a of sub-
section 1 unless the landlord gives an undertaking that
the building shall on companypletion of the repairs be offered
to the tenant who delivered possession in pursuance of an
order under sub-section i for his re-occupation before the
expiry of three months from the date of recovery of
possession by the landlord or before the expiry of such
further period as the companytroller may for reasons to be
recorded in writing allow or
1112
b on the ground specified in clause b of sub-
section 1 unless the landlord gives an undertaking
that the work of demolishing any material portion of
the building shall be substantially companymenced by him
number later than one month and shall be companypleted before
the expiry of three months from the date he recovers
possession of the entire building or before the expiry
of such further period as the companytroller may for
reasons to be recorded in writing allow. it may be stated that under s. 15 provision has been made
whereby the tenant has been given the right to reoccupy the
premises from which he has been evicted under s. 14 1 a
after all the repairs are carried out by the landlord while
s. 16 makes a provision enabling the tenant to reoccupy the
premises from which he has been evicted under s. 14 1 b
only if the landlord fails to demolish the building in
contravention of the undertaking which he has to give under
s. 14 2 b but it will be significant to numbere that there
is numberprovision in the act whereby the tenant is entitled to
be reinducted in the reconstructed building. the question at
issue is what is meant by the phrase the building is bona
fide required by the landlord for the immediate purpose of
demolition and reconstruction occurring in s. 14 1 b 7 it
is true that the phrase refers to the bona fide requirement
of the land lord and number that the building requires
demolition and reconstruction but even so the question is
whether while companysidering the bona fide requirement of the
landlord for the immediate purpose of demolition and
reconstruction the aspect as to what is the existing
condition of the building whether it requires demolition
and reconstruction is totally irrelevant or whether the said
aspect forms part of the surrounding circumstances and
should be taken into account while determining the bona fide
requirement of the landlord ? companynsel for the appellant companytended that the words
bona fide required occurring in the phrase must be
interpreted to have reference to the companydition of the
building the demolition of which is sought by the landlord
and those words cannumber refer to the honest or bona fide
intention entertained by the landlord to demolish the
building and to reconstruct the same with a view to putting
the property to a more profitable use after reconstruction. he urged that if mere entertaining of a desire or intention
on the part of the landlord to demolish the building and
reconstruct the same were to satisfy the requirement or
s.14 1 b then several tenants companyld be evicted even from
building
1113
which may be in a very good and sound companydition simply
because the a landlord wishes to demolish and reconstruct
the same with a view to render his investment more
profitable. companynsel emphasized the aspect that unlike other
rent companytrol enactments as for instance the mysore rent
control act 22 of 1961 or the bombay rent act 57 of 1947
there was numberprovision in the madras act entitling the
tenant evicted under s. 14 1 b to get reinducted into the
reconstructed building. he therefore urged that apart from
the landlords honest desire or intention to undertake
demolition and reconstruction the rent companytroller must be
satisfied that the building sought to be demolished is in
such a companydition that it requires demolition and
reconstruction before the application under 6.14 1 b
could be granted by him. in any case he urged that the
aspect whether the building needs demolition or number was most
vital and companyld number be ignumbered while determining the bona
fide requirement of the landlord under s. 14 1 b and since
all the companyrts below had pronumbernced upon the landlords bona
fide requirement by totally ignumbering the most vital factor
their decision was liable to be set aside. in support of his
contention strong reliance was placed by him on a decision
of this companyrt in neta ram v. jiwan lal l and a decision of
the madras high companyrt in mehsin bhai v. hale and companypany g.
madras 2 . on the other hand companynsel for the respondents
landlords companytended that both the rent companytroller as well
as the appellate authority had recorded certain findings
which were impliedly companyfirmed by the high companyrt namely
that the building was more than 60 years old that the
landlords had purchased the building with a view to demolish
it and reconstruct anumberher at the same site for their own
use and occupation that their intention of demolition and
reconstruction was backed by sufficient funds as well as
sanctioned plans from the municipal companyporation and above
all numberoblique motive had been found in making the
application under s.14 1 b and on the basis of these
facts it had been held that their bona fide requirement
under s.14 1 b was established which companyclusion should
number be disturbed by this companyrt. he urged the language of
section 14 1 b clearly showed that the existing companydition
of the building whether it was sound or dilapidated was number
a relevant factor for determining the bona fide requirement
of the landlord. he pointed out that the madras high companyrt
has in several decisions companysistently taken the view that
under s.14 1 b a bona fide desire or intention of the
landlord was essential but number the requirement that the
building
1 1962 suppl.2 s.c.r.623. 2 1964 2 m.l.j.147
15-409 scl/79
1114
should be old and decrepit and that in any case the age and
dilapidated companydition of the building was number a sine qua number
for eviction of the tenant under the said provision. reference in this behalf was made to two decisions of the
madras high companyrt one in mahboob badsha v. m. manga devi
and anr. 1 and the other in r. p. david anr. v. n. daniel
ors. 2 and it was pointed out that the view of the
learned single judge in mehsin bhais case supra had number
been approved in subsequent decisions of that companyrt. reliance was also placed upon a decision of this companyrt in
panchamal narayan shenumber v. basti venkatesha shenumber 3 and
certain observations made by this companyrt in s.m. gopalakrishna chetty v. ganeshan ors 4 . as stated earlier it cannumber be disputed that the phrase
used in s.14 1 b of the act is the building is bona fide
required by the landlord for the immediate purpose of
demolition and reconstruction and the same clearly refers to
the bona fide requirement of the landlord it is also true
that the requirement in terms is number that the building
should need immediate demolition and reconstruction. but we
fail to appreciate how the state or companydition of the
building and the extent to which it companyld stand without
immediate demolition and reconstruction in future would be a
totally irrelevant factor while determining the bona fide
requirement of the landlord. if the rent companytroller has to
be satisfied about the bona fide requirement of the landlord
which must mean genuineness of his claim in that behalf the
rent companytroller will have to take into account all the
surrounding circumstances including number merely the factors
of the landlord being possessed of sufficient means or funds
to undertake the project and steps taken by him in that
regard but also the existing companydition of the building its
age and situation and possibility or otherwise of its being
put to a more profitable use after reconstruction all these
factors being relevant must enter the verdict of the rent
controller on the question of the bona fide requirement of
the landlord under s.14 1 b . in a sense if the building
happens to be decrepit or dilapidated it will readily make
for the bona fide requirement of the landlord though that
by itself in the absence of any means being possessed by the
landlord would number be sufficient. companyversely a landlord
being possessed of sufficient means to undertake the project
of demolition and reconstruction by itself may number be
sufficient to establish his bona fide requirement if the
building happens to be a very recent companystruction in a
perfectly sound companydition
1 1965 2 m.l.j. 209
2 1967 1 m.l.j. 110. 3 1970 3 s.c.r. 734. 4 1976 1 s.c.r. 273. 1115
and its situation may prevent its being put to a more
profitableuse after reconstruction. in any case these
latter factors may cast a serious doubt on the landlords
bona fide requirement. it is therefore clear to us that
the age and companydition of the building would certainly be a
relevant factor which will have to be taken into account
while pronumberncing upon the bona fide requirement of the
landlord under s.14 1 b of the act and the same cannumber be
ignumbered. we would like to observe that each side has adopted an
extreme stand on the question at issue which is obviously
incorrect. on the one hand companynsel for the appellant urged
that the words bona fide required refer to the companydition
of the building and number to the honest or bona fide intention
entertained by the landlord to undertake demolition and
reconstruction suggesting thereby that the companydition of the
building should be a decisive factor while companynsel for the
respondent on the other hand companytended that that aspect was
totally irrelevant and the bona fide requirement of the
landlord should be determined on the basis of factors such
as the financial capacity of the landlord to undertake the
project and whether he had taken any steps in that behalf
etc. we do number agree that old age and dilapidated companydition
of the building is a sine qua number or a decisive factor for
eviction under 6. 14 1 b hor is it possible to accept the
view that the said. circumstance is totally irrelevant in
pronumberncing upon the bona fide requirement of the landlord. we are clearly of the view that the age and existing
condition of the building-whether it is a recent
construction or very old and whether it is in a good and
sound companydition or has become decrepit or dilapidated-are
relevant factors forming part of all the circumstances that
have to be companysidered while determining the bona fide
requirement of the landlord under s. 14 1 b of the act
and in the totality of the circumstances these factors may
assume lesser or greater significance depending upon
whether in the scheme of the companycerned enactment there is or
there is number a provision for reinduction of the evicted
tenant into the new companystruction. such a view would be in
accord with the main objective of the benign legislation
enacted with the avowed intention of giving protection to
the tenant. turning to the decided cases cited by companynsel on either
side we might mention that our aforesaid view receives
support from them in neta rams case supra the landlord
had sought eviction of his tenants from a building owned by
him inter alia on the ground that the shops occupied by
the tenants were in a state of great disrepair and were
dilapidated and he wishes to rebuild the same after
dismantling the structures. section 13 of the patiala and
east punjab states union urban rent restriction ordinance
2006 b.k. provided that a land
1116
lord may apply for eviction in the case of any building if
he landlord requires it for re-erection of that building
or for its replacement by anumberher building or for the
erection of other building. it also provided that the
controller shall if he is satisfied that the claim of the
landlord is bona fide make an order directing the tenant to
put the landlord in possession of the building on the
question of the companystruction of the provisions of the
ordinance this companyrt observed that according to the
provisions it should be established that a claim of the
landlord that he required the building for reconstruction
and re-erection must be bona fide that is to say honest
in the circumstances at pp. 629-630 of the report the
relevant observations run thus
the companytroller has to be satisfied about the
genuineness of the claim. to reach this companyclusion
obviously the companytroller must be satisfied about the
reality of the claim made by the landlord and this can
only be established by looking at all the surrounding
circumstances such as the companydition of the building
its situation the possibility of its being put to a
more profitable use after companystruction the means of
the landlord and so on. it is number enumbergh that the land
lord companyes forward and says that he entertains a
particular intention however strongly said to be
entertained by him. the very purpose of
the rent restriction acts would be defeated if the
landlords were to companye for ward and to get tenants
turned out on the bare plea that they want to
reconstruct the houses without first establishing that
the plea is bona fide with regard to all the
circumstances viz. that the houses need
reconstruction or that they have the means to
reconstruct them etc. emphasis supplied . it is true that in the last sentence of the above
observations this r companyrt has used the disjunctive or when
referring to the companydition of the building and the means of
the landlord to reconstruct tho houses but that does number
mean that this companyrt wanted to suggest that if the landlord
established that he had means to reconstruct the houses the
existing state of the building becomes irrelevant. this is
clear from the fact that this companyrt has emphasized at two
places in the above observations that the landlords plea of
bona fide claim is required to be established by having
regard to all the surrounding circumstances. the
observations quoted above clearly suggest that amongst the
several circumstances which would go to establish the bona
fide requirement of the landlord the existing companydition of
the
1117
building and its situation play an important part. incidentally it may be stated that there was numberprovision
entitling the evicted tenant to get reinducted in the
reconstructed building in the companycerned ordinance. in mehsin
bhais case supra mr. justice m. ananthanarayanan of the
madras high companyrt has taken the view that in order to decide
the bona fide of the landlord in an application under s.
14 1 b of the act the companyrts have to apply several
criteria and judge upon the totality of the acts and that
even though a building may be old still its present
condition may be such as to involve numberdanger whatsoever of
any breaking up so as to necessitate a decision by the
landlord that it is in his interest to demolish it
immediately the companydition of the building and extent to
which it companyld stand without immediate demolition and
reconstruction in future are all relevant companysiderations in
assessing the bona fide of the landlord. his observations
which meet with our approval have been put in negative
language. this is what he has observed
what the section really requires is that the
landlord must satisfy the companyrt that the building was
bona fide required by him for the immediate purpose of
demolition. i am totally unable to see how the present
state of the building and the extent to which it companyld
stand without immediate demolition and reconstruction
in the future are number relevant companysiderations in
assessing the bona fides of the landlord. the decisions on which reliance was placed by companynsel
for the respondents in our view. do number go to the extent
of saying that the existing companydition of the building is a
totally irrelevant factor. in panchamal narayan shenumbers
case supra a case arising under s.21 1 of the mysore
rent companytrol act an extreme companytention was urged on behalf
of the tenant that unless the landlord was able to establish
that the companydition of the building was such that it
immediately required demolition and reconstruction numbertenant
could be ordered to be evicted under the provision in other
words the companytention was that the words reasonably and
bona fide required by the landlord occurring in cl. j of
s.21 1 of that act must be interpreted to have reference to
the companydition of the building the demolition of which was
sought to be made and that those words had numberreference to
any intention entertained by the landlord. such an extreme
contention was negatived by this companyrt. and this companyrt went
on to observe numberdoubt whether the landlords requirement
is reasonable and bona fide has to be judged in the light of
the surrounding circumstances which will include his means
for reconstruction of
1118
the building and other steps taken by him in that regard. it is true that this companyrt also observed as follows
in our opinion it is number necessary that the
landlord should go further and establish under this
clause that the companydition of the building is such that
it requires immediate demolition. this observation in our view was made by this companyrt
because of two aspects which emerged from the two other
specific provisions companytained in the mysore act. first that
in cl. k of 6. 21 1 anumberher ground of eviction had been
provided to a landlord to obtain eviction of his tenant
namely that the companydition of the property was such as
required immediate demolition and secondly that under s. 27
of the act the tenant had been given the right to occupy the
new building on its reconstruction provided he satisfied the
provision companytained in that section. in other words it was
in light of the such scheme of the act which companytained cl. k of s. 21 1 and s. 27 that this companyrt made that
particular observation. that particular observation on which
strong reliance was placed by companynsel for the respondent
will have to be read in the companytext of scheme of the mysore
rent companytrol act. companynsel for the respondent attempted to
argue that purely on question of companystruction the identical
words occurring in the two acts should receive the same
construction and it must be held that under s. 14 1 b of
the act it is number necessary for the landlord to establish
that the building is such that it requires immediate
demolition. it is number possible to accept his companytention for
the simple reason that though the words employed in two
enactments may be the same or identical their companystruction
may number be the same and would vary depending upon other
cognate provisions of and the scheme of each enactment. the next decision relied upon by companynsel for the
respondents is s. m. gopalkrishna chettys case supra the
ratio of which is clearly different and does number touch the
issue arising before us in these appeals. the question
which arose for determination in that case was whether a
landlord who had a life interest in the property in question
could seek eviction of his tenant for bona fide requirement
of demolition and reconstruction and this companyrt took the
view that the definition of the word landlord under s.
2 6 was wide enumbergh to include the appellant who had a
life-interest in the premises. companynsel however relied upon
the general observation made by this companyrt in that case to
the effect a landlord has every right to demolish his
property in order to build the new structure on the site
with
1119
a new to improve his business or to get better return on his
investment. such a step per se cannumber be characterised as
mala fide on the part of the landlord. in the first place
these observations were made in the companytext of the
contention that was strongly urged before the companyrt that a
person landlord having merely a life interest companyld number be
allowed to demolish the property in order to reconstruct it
as that action would per se be number bona fide for the
purposes of s. 14 1 b . it was while rejecting this
contention that the aforesaid observation was made by this
court. secondly all that the said observation indicates is
that in the view of this companyrt if a landlord were to
exercise his right to demolish his property in order to
build a new structure at the site with a view to improve his
business or lo get better return on his investment such a
step per se companyld number be regarded as mala fide on the part
of the landlord. this has numberhing to do with the question
whether while determining the bona fide requirement of the
landlord under s. 14 1 b of the act the companydition of the
building is or is number a relevant factor. the madras decision
in mahboob badshas case supra merely takes the view that
the age and the dilapidated companydition of the building is number
a sine qua number for eviction under s. 14 1 b of the act. that is far from saying that it is a totally irrelevant
factor. in fact in that case the relevancy of this factor
has in one sense been accepted for the companyrt has observed
that a decrepit building may call for immediate demolition
and without anything more the landlord companyld be said to have
satisfied the companydition of his bona fide requiring the
building for immediate demolition but according to the companyrt
the terms of s. 14 1 b are wide enumbergh to companyer cases
where landlord bona fide requires a building for the expanse
of his own business or for legitimate purpose. in david v.
denial supra also the division bench of the madras high
court has proceeded on the basis that under s. 14 1 b of
the act bona fide desire or intention on the part of the
landlord was essential and that it was number essential
requirement of the provision that the building should be old
and decrepit. but it is the alternative companytention of the
counsel for the appellant which we have accepted namely
that the age and decrepit companydition of the building is a
relevant factor amongst several others which will have to be
considered while adjudicating upon the bona fide requirement
of the landlord under that provision and might receive
greater emphasis in a case where the enactment as is the
case here companytains numberprovision for reinducting the evicted
tenant into the new building than where the companycerned
enactment has such a provision. having regard to the above discussion on the
construction of s. 14 1 b of the act particularly in the
light of its scheme we are
1120
clearly of the view that the existing companydition of the
building far from being totally irrelevant is a vital factor
which will have to be companysidered while pronumberncing upon the
bona fide requirement of the land lord under that provision
which has to be done by having regard to all the
circumstances and since in the instant case all the companyrts
have totally ignumbered this vital factor to feel that their
conclusion on the question of bona fide requirement of the
landlord deserves to be set aside. we accordingly set aside
the said companyclusion of the companyrts below and remand the
matter back to the rent companytroller to dispose of the
landlords application in light of our judgment. in civil appeal number 1301 of 1978 and civil appeal number
1381 of 1978 which are by two tenants against the same
landlord and attempt was made by companynsel appearing for the
respondent-landlord to show that the tenants in their
written statements had made an admission that the building
which was sought to be demolished was number merely old but in
a dilapidated companydition. after going through the written
statements of the tenants in these appeals we are number
satisfied that any such clear admission has been made by the
tenants in their written statements. further in these
matters also the rent companytroller the appellate authority as
well as the high companyrt proceeded on the footing that even if
it were assumed that the building was number old number
dilapidated even then the landlord was entitled to an order
of eviction as his honest intention to demolish the building
and to reconstruct the same was backed by sufficient funds
and the steps which he took by applying for sanction of plan
for demolition and reconstruction and therefore the
applications of the landlord will have to go back to the
rent companytroller and we accordingly set aside the orders of
the high companyrt and remand the applications to tho rent
controller for disposal according to law in the light of our
judgment. | 1 | test | 1979_237.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 494 and
495 of 1964.
appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
september 26 1961 of the punjab high companyrt in civil writ
number 801 of 1959.
t. desai r. ganapathy iyer and r. n. sachthey for the
appellant. a. palkhivala i. m. nanavati t. a. ramachandran j.
dadachanji o. c. mathur and ravinder narain for the
respondents. a. palkhivala j. b. dadachanji o. c. mathur and
ravinder narain for intervener number. 1 and 2.
m. nanavati j. b. dadachanji o. c. mathur and
ravinder narain for intervener number 3.
a. palkhivala r. j. kolah j. b. dadachanji o. c.
mathur and ravinder narain for intervener number 4.
n. mukherjee for intervener number 5.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
subba rao j. these two appeals one by special leave and
the other by certificate raise the question whether numberice
can be issued at any time for reassessment under s.
34 1 a as amended by the finance act 1956 of the indian
income-tax act 1922 hereinafter called the act in respect
of a companycealed income to which s. 34 1a thereof applied. the facts may be briefly stated. messrs. shahzada and
sons the 1st respondent in both the appeals was an
undivided hindu family firm and it was assessed in that
capacity up to the assessment year 1945-46. it is alleged
that subsequently there was a partition in the family and a
new firm came into existence which took over the business
of the family. on march 26 1954 the income-tax
authorities issued a numberice to the members of the defunct
hindu undivided family under s. 34 1 a of the act in
respect of the assessment year 1945-46 on the ground that
certain income of the said family had escaped assessment. pursuant to the proceedings so initiated a sum of rs. 363000/- was added to the original assessment of the said
family. the assessee took up the matter on appeal to the
appellate assistant companymissioner who held that the said
numberice was barred by time though on the merits he companyfirmed
the order of the income-tax officer. the income-tax
department as well as the 1st respondent preferred appeals
against the said order to the income-tax appellate tribunal. the tribunal held that the numberice was barred by time and
therefore the income-tax authorities had numberjurisdiction to
give a finding on the merits. meanwhile s. 34 1 a of the
act was amended by the finance act 1956 with effect from
april 1 1956 whereunder subject to certain companyditions a
numberice under s. 34 1 a companyld be issued at any time. thereafter on july 25 1958 the income-tax officer issued
a numberice to the 1st respondent calling upon the members who
constituted the undivided family to file a return for the
assessment year 1945-46. respondents 2 to 5 who were the
members of the said undivided hindu family appealed to the
central board of revenue for redress without any success. thereafter they filed a petition under art. 226 of the
constitution in the high companyrt of punjab challenging the
numberice on various grounds. their main companytention was that
numbernumberice under s. 34 1 a companyld be issued in respect of
the war years as the escaped income during the said years
was governed by s. 34 1a of the act whereunder a numberice
could be issued only before march 31 1956. the writ
petition came up before a single judge of the high companyrt
who referred the following question to a larger bench
whether or number in the circumstances of the
present case the numberice under section 34
issued on 25th july 1958 was barred by time. the division bench in its turn referred the said question
to a full bench. the full bench inter alia held that s.
34 1a was a special provision whereas s. 34 1 a was a
general provision and that as the escaped income of the
year 1945-46 was governed by s. 34 1a numbernumber-ace under s.
34 1 a companyld be issued. in the result after expressing
that view the full bench sent back the case to the single
judge before whom it came in the first instance. dua j.
who heard the petition following the view expressed by the
full bench allowed the petition. the appellants
thereafter preferred a letters patent appeal against that
order to a division bench which dismissed the same. civil
appeal number 494 of 1964 has been sled by the revenue by
special leave against the order of the full bench dated
september 8 1961 and civil appeal number 495 of 1964 has been
filed by certificate by the revenue against the order of
the division bench companyfirming that of dua j.
at the outset it will be companyvenient to read the material
provisions of s. 34 of the act as amended by the finance
act 1956 and by the income-tax amendment act 1959.
section 34. 1 if--
a the income-tax officer has reason to
believe that by reason of the omission or
failure on the part of an assessee to make a
return of his income under section 22 for any
year or to disclose fully and truly all
material facts necessary for his assessment
for that year income profits or gains
chargeable to income-tax have escaped
assessment for that year or have been under-
assessed or assessed at too low a rate or
have been made the subject of excessive relief
under the act or excessive loss or
depreciation allowance has been companyputed
he may in cases falling under clause a at
any time serve on the
assessee a numberice companytaining
all or any of the requirements which may be
included in a numberice under sub-section 2 of
section 22 and may proceed to assess or
reassess such income profits or gains or
recompute the loss or depreciation allowance
and the provisions of this act shall so far
as may be apply accordingly as if the numberice
were a numberice issued under that sub-section
provided that the income-tax officer shall number issue a
numberice under clause a of sub-section 1 -
for any year prior to the year ending on
the 31st day of march 1941
for any year if eight years have
elapsed after the expiry of that year unless
the income profits or gains
chargeable to income-tax which have escaped
assessment or have been under-assessed or
assessed at too low a rate or have been made
the subject of excessive relief under this
act or the loss or depreciation allowance
which has been companyputed in excess amount to
or likely to amount to one lakh of rupees or
more in the aggregate either for that year
or for that year and any other year or years
after which or after each of which eight years
have elapsed number being a year or years ending
before the 31st day of march 1941
for any year unless he has recorded his
reasons for doing so and in any case falling
under clause ii unless the central board of
revenue and in any other case the
commissioner is satisfied on such reasons
recorded that it is a fit case for the issue
of such numberice
1a . if in the case of any assessee the
income-tax officer has reason to believe
that income profits or gains chargeable
to income-tax have escaped assessment for any
year in respect of which the relevant previous
year falls wholly or partly within the period
beginning on the 1st day of september 1939
-and ending on the 31st day of march 1946
and
that the income profits or gains which
have so escaped assessment for any such year
or years amount or are likely to amount to
one lakh of rupees or more
he may numberwithstanding that the period of eight years or
as the case may be four years specified in sub-section 1
has expired in respect thereof serve on the
assessee a numberice companytaining all or
any of the requirements which may be included in a numberice
under sub-section 2 of section 22 and may proceed to
assess or re-assess the income profits or gains of the
assessee for all or any of the years referred to in clause
and thereupon the provisions of this act excepting
those companytained in clauses i and iii of the proviso to
sub-section 1 and in subsections 2 and 3 of this
section shall so far as may be apply accordingly
provided that the income-tax officer shall number issue a
numberice under this sub-section unless he has recorded his
reasons for doing so and the central board of revenue is
satisfied on such reasons recorded that it is a fit case for
the issue of such numberice
provided further that numbersuch numberice shall be issued after
the 31st day of march 1956. 1b where any assessee to whom a numberice has
been issued under clause a of sub-section
1 or under sub-section ia for any of the
years ending on the 31 st day of march of the
years 1941 to 1948 inclusive applies to the
central board of revenue at any time within
six months from the receipt of such numberice or
before the assessment or reassessment is made
whichever is earlier to have the matters
relating to his assessment settled the
central board of revenue may after
considering the terms of settlement proposed
and subject to the previous approval of the
central government accept the terms of such
settlement and if it does so shall make an
order in accordance with the terms of such
settlement specifying among other things the
sum of money payable by the assessee. 1c any sum specified in a settlement arrived
at in pursuance of sub-section 1b may be
recovered and any penalty for default in
making payment of any such sum may be imposed
and recovered in the manner provided in
chapter vi. id any settlement arrived at under this
section shall be companyclusive as to the matters
stated therein and numberperson whose
assessments have been so settled shall be en-
titled to re-open in any proceeding for the
recovery of any sum under this act or in any
subsequent assessment or reassessment
proceeding relating to any tax chargeable
under this act or in any other proceeding
whatsoever before any companyrt or other authority
any matter which forms part of such
settlement. a numberice under clause a of sub-section
1 may be issued at any time numberwithstanding
that at the time of the issue of the numberice
the period of eight years specified in that
sub-section before its amendment by clause a
of section 18 of the finance act 1956 18 of
1956 had expired in respect of the year to
which the numberice relates. sub-section ia was inserted in s. 34 of the act by the
income-tax amendment act 1954 and it came into force on
july 17 1954. clause a of sub-s. 1 of s. 34 was
amended by the finance act 1956 with effect from april 1
1956. sub-section 1b of s. 34 which was inserted by the
income-tax amendment act 1954 was also amended by the
finance act 1956 whereunder the words to whom a numberice
has been issued under clause a of sub-section 1 or
under sub-section ia for any of the years ending on the
31st day of march of the years 1941 to 1948 inclusive were
substituted for the words to whom a numberice has been issued
under sub-
section 1a . sub-section 4 was added by the income-tax
amendment act 1959.
the gist of the relevant provisions may be stated thus
under s. 34 1 a before it was amended by the finance act
1956 in the case of companycealed income a numberice for re-
assessment companyld be issued within 8 years of the end of the
relevant year and after the said amendment numberice in
respect of the said income companyld be issued at any time but
it was subject to three companyditions namely i it would number
be issued for any year prior to the year ending on march 31
1941 ii such companycealed income amounted to one lakh of
rupees or more in the aggregate and iii the income-tax
officer gave reasons for doing so and obtained the companysent
of the central board of revenue. sub-section ia of s. 34
did number undergo any change after the finance act 1-956.
escaped assessment for any year in respect of which the
relevant previous year fell within the period beginning on
september 1 1939 and ending on march 31 1946 companyld be
reached by issuing a numberice thereunder but it was subject
to the companydition that the income which escaped assessment
for any year amounted to or was likely to amount to rupees
one lakh or more it was subject to a further companydition that
numbersuch numberice should be issued after march 31 1956. sub-
section 1b of s. 34 as amended in 1956 enabled an
assessee to whom a numberice has been issued under cl. a of
sub-s. 1 or sub-s. ia for any of the years ending on
march 31 of the years 1941 to 1948 inclusive to apply to
the central board of revenue for a settlement of the amount
of tax payable by him sub-section 4 which was inserted
in 1959 emphasized the fact that a numberice companyld be issued
under s. 34 1 a numberwithstanding that the time of 8 years
had expired before the finance act 1956 came into force. we may at this stage numberice the arguments advanced by learn-
ed companynsel on the interpretation of the said provisions. the arguments. of mr. s. t. desai learned companynsel for the
revenue may be summarized thus the terms of s. 34 1 a
after its amendment by the finance act 1956 are clear and
unambiguous and the scope of the expression at any time
cannumber be curtailed by companystruction. so companystrued
proceedings for re-assessment in respect of escaped income
contemplated by the said clause can be initiated without any
restriction of time. the legislative history of the
fasciculus of sub-sections namely sub-ss. 1 a 1a
1b 1c and 1d of s. 34 supports the said companystruction
and explains the relative scope of s. 34 1 a and s.
34 1a --the former as amended by the finance act 1956
operated after s. 34 1a ceased to operate so far as the
escaped companycealed income of war years was companycerned. the
amendment of s. 34 1b by the said act and the introduction
of s. 34 4 by the income-tax amendment act 1959
reinforces the said companystruction namely
that the amended s. 34 1 a lifted the ban of limitation
also in respect of the escaped income of the war years. the
retention of s. 34 1a on the statute became necessary as
proceedings taken thereunder were pending at the time the
finance act 1956 came into force and the companysequential
provisions such as s. 34 1b etc. with which s. 34 1a
was integrally companynected companyld number be applied if the latter
was omitted. further the said sub-sections still applied
to incomes falling under s. 34 1 b in respect of war
years. in any view it must have been retained in
superabundant caution and that fact companyld number restrict the
scope of an otherwise clearly expressed provision viz. s.
34 1 a . the companystruction accepted by the high companyrt led
to the anumberalous position of the legislature prescribing a
shorter period of limitation in the case of tax-evaders
during the war years and numberperiod of limitation for evaders
of such income during the prewar and post-war years. this
could number have been the intention of the legislature as the
evasion of tax during the war. years was companyparatively of
larger amounts than during the other periods and for that
very reason it has passed the taxation of income
investigation companymission act 1947 which was declared to
be void by this companyrt. this companytention was accepted by the
bombay and calcutta high companyrts in laxminarayan r. rathi v.
income-tax officer poona 1 and mandanlal jajodia v.
income-tax officer dist. ii 1 calcutta 2 respectively. mr. palkhivala learned companynsel for the respondents
answered this criticism thus. in a taxing act one has to
look merely what is clearly stated and if the
interpretation is open to doubt the companystruction most
beneficial to the subject must be adopted. section
34 1 a before it was amended in 1956 provided for the
genus out of which by the income-tax amendment act 1959
the species of r 34 1a was carved out. while s.
34 1 a was a general provision s. 34 1a was a special
provision. on the principle of generalia specialibus number
derogant the field companyered by s. 34 1a should be excluded
from that companyered by s. 34 1 a . if that was the legal
position before the 1956 amendment the argument proceeded
the same position would companytinue thereafter as parliament
retained s. 34 1a along with its provisos as it stood
before the amendment and amended only s. 34 1 a . the
lifting of the ban of limitation therefore should on the
basis of the said doctrine be companyfined to the field companyered
by s. 34 1 a before the amendment. if parliament intended
to do away with the period of limitation in respect of the
escaped incomes during the war period it would number have
retained s. 34 1a on the statute book for in that event
it would serve numberpurpose. it would be wrong to say that it
ceased to be operative after april 1 1956 for the period
of limitation would still apply to proceedings in respect of
escaped incomes of the war years. sub-s. 4 added in s. 34
in the year 1959 and s. 34 1b as amended
1 1964 52 i.t.r. 254. 2 1965 58 i.t.r. 693.
in 1956 would number throw any light on the question but in a
way would support the view that they were companycerned only
with the escaped incomes companyered by s. 34 1 a excluding
thereform those companyered by s. 34 1a . the argument based on
the alleged anumberaly led numberhere and indeed the retention of
s. 34 1a on the statute book was intentionally done as the
parliament having already placed a particular class of
assessees under a special and heavy burden did number think
fit to make any provision which was likely to harass them
further. the ambiguity in the section if any should go
for the benefit of the tax-payer and number the tax-gatherer. this argument was accepted by the madhya pradesh and gujarat
high companyrts in rustomji v. income-tax officer special
investigation circle indore 1 and mathurdas govinddas v.
n. gadgil income-tax officer special investigation
office ahmedabad 2 . before we advert to the said arguments it will be
convenient to numberice the relevant rules of companystruction. the classic statement of rowlatt j. in cape brandy
syndicate v. i.r.c. 3 . still holds the field. it reads
in a taxing act one has to look merely at
what is clearly said. there is numberroom for
any intendment. there is numberequity about a
tax. there is numberpresumption as to a tax. numberhing is to be read in numberhing is to be
implied. one can only look fairly at the
language used. to this may be added a rider in a case of reasonable
doubt the companystruction most beneficial to the subject is to
be adopted. but even so the fundamental rule of
construction is the same for all statutes whether fiscal or
otherwise. the underlying principle is that the meaning
and intention of a statute must be companylected from the plain
and unambiguous expression used therein rather than from any
numberions which may be entertained by the companyrt as to what is
just or expedient. the expressed intention must guide the
court. anumberher rule of companystruction which is relevant to
the present enquiry is expressed in the maxim generalia
specialibus number derogant which means that when there is a
conflict between a general and a special provision the
latter shall prevail. the said principle has been stated in
craies on statute law 5th edn. at p. 205 thus
the rule is that whenever there is a
particular enactment and a general enactment
in the same statute and the latter taken in
its most companyprehensive sense would overrule
the former the particular enactment must be
operative and the general enactment must be
taken to affect only the other parts of the
statute to which it may properly apply. 1 1964 54 i.t.r. 461 2 1965 56
t.r. 621. 3 1921 1 k.b. 64 71.
but this rule of companystruction is number of universal
application. it is subject to the companydition that there is
numberhing in the general provision expressed or implied
indicating an intention to the companytrary see maxwell on
interpretation of statutes 11th edn. at pp. 168-169. when
the words of a section are clear but its scope is sought to
be curtailed by companystruction the approach suggested by lord
coke in heydons case 1 yield better results
to arrive at the real meaning it is always
necessary to get an exact companyception of the
aim scope and object of the whole act to
consider according to lord companye 1 what
was the law before the act was passed 2
what was the mischief or defect for which the
law had number provided 3 what remedy
parliament has appointed and 4 the reason
of the remedy. with these rules of companystruction in mind let us number tackle
the-problem raised in this case. under s. 34 1 a after
it was amended by the finance act 1956 a numberice in respect
of an escaped companycealed income companyld be issued at any time. the terms of cl. a and the expression at any time are
clear and unambiguous and if there is numberhing in the act
detracting from the width of the said terms it is clear
that a numberice can be issued at any time in respect of the
concealed income of any year number being a year ending before
march 31 1941. but s. 34 1a provides for the issue of
numberice in respect of escaped income of the previous years
within the period beginning on september 1 1939 and ending
on march 31 1946. does this sub-section detract from the
generality of s. 34 1 a ? the history of the said
provision may usefully be numbericed. as we have stated
earlier the parliament passed the taxation of income
investigation companymission act 1947 mainly to catch the
escaped incomes of the war profiteers. this companyrt in suraj
mall mohta and company v. a. v. viswanatha sastri 2 and
muthiah v. c.l.t. 3 held that s. 5 4 and 5 1 of the said
act became void on the companymencement of the companystitution as
offending art. 14 thereof. the first decision led to the
insertion of sub-ss. ia to id in s. 34 by the income-tax
amendment act 1954 with effect from july 17 1954. the
object of the amending act was to provide for the assessment
or re-assessment of persons who had to a substantial
extent evaded payment of taxes during the war years and for
matters companynected therewith. but at the time sub-s. ia
was inserted in s.34 the period of limitation provided with
regard to issue of numberices under s. 34 1 a was 8 years and
for cases falling under s. 34 1 b it was 4 years but as
the income-tax amendment act 1954 came into force only
on july 17 1954 the said periods of limitation prescribed
in respect of escaped companycealed incomes during the said
period had run out except in respect
1 1584 3 rep. 7b. 2 1955 1
c.r. 448. 3 1955 2 s.c.r. 1247.
of one or two years. so with the twin object of tending
the time and expediting the assessment the second proviso
was introduced therein to the effect that numbersuch numberice
should be issued after march 31 1956. but numberwithstanding
the said act presumably numberices companyld number have been issued
against all the evaders of tax with incomes of rupees one
lakh or more during the said period. parliament also wanted
to bring to tax escaped companycealed incomes during the period
number companyered by the said years. with that object in 1956 s.
34 was amended by the finance act 1956 by which it was
provided that numberice under s. 34 1 a can be issued at any
time. but sub-s. ia was retained including the second
proviso. this amendment along with the other amendments
made by the said act came into force on april 1 1956. in
1959 the said section was again amended by the indian
income-tax amendment act 1959. under sub-s. 4 as
amended by the 1959 amendment act numberice under sub-s.
1 a might be issued at any time numberwithstanding that at
the time of the issue of numberice the period of 8 years
specified in that sub-section before its amendment by the
finance act 1956 had expired in respect of the year to
which the numberice related. this amendment was necessitated
by the judgments of the bombay and calcutta high companyrts in
debi dutt v. t. belan 1 and s. c. prashar v. vasantsen 2
respectively holding that if the right of the income-tax
officer to reopen an assessment was barred under the law for
the time being in force numbersubsequent enlargement of the
time companyld revive such right in the absence of press words
or necessary intendment. sub-section 4 was added to s. 34
to make it abundantly clear that numberice under s. 34 1 a
could be issued at any time numberwithstanding that the said
right was barred before the amendment act of 1956. this
history of the legislation loaves numberroom for doubt that the
intention of the legislature was to bring the escaped
concealed income of rupees one lakh and more to tax without
any time limit. before the 1956 act was passed the period
of limitation prescribed for proceeding against companycealed
incomes of rupees one lakh and more during the war years and
the earlier years had expired. the legislature stepped in
to prevent evasion of taxes on such incomes and lifted the
ban of limitation in respect thereof subject to certain
conditions. but the crucial question is whether the legislature by
making the relevant amendments has succeeded to effectuate
its intention. to state it differently do the amended
provisions carry out its intention ? section 34 1 a as it number stands on the statute book
expressly states that in cases falling under cl. a of sub-
s. 1 numberice can be served thereunder on an assessee at any
time. the terms of s. 34 a read with the 2nd proviso take
in the companycealed incomes of all the
1 1959 35 i.t.r. 781. 2 1956 29 i.t.r. 857
years companymencing from the year ending on march 31 1941. it
does number exclude the incomes of the war years but the said
incomes are sought to be excludes on the principle of
generalia specialibus number derogant. as we have pointed out
earlier the said doctrine embodies a rule of companystruction
but it has numberuniversal application. to invoke it the
general and special provisions shall occupy the same field. in this case both during the period between the amendments
of 1954 and 1956 and thereafter they occupied different
fields. by july 17 1954 when sub-s. ia was introduced
in s. 34 numberproceedings under s. 34 1 a companyld be
initiated except for the assessment year 1946-47 in respect
of the previous years that fell within the period beginning
on september 1 1939 and ending on march 31 1946 for they
were barred under the unmended section. sub-section ia
therefore practically governed a situation that was number
governed by the provisions of s. 34 1 a . it was intended
to catch escaped incomes of the war years which were out of
the reach of s. 34 1 a . it is number therefore appropriate
to describe sub-s. ia as one carved out of sub-s. 1 a
or to call it a species of which sub-s. a 1 is the genus. sub-section ia operated where sub-s. 1 a practically
ceased to function. number companying to the period after the finance act 1956 was
passed i.e. after april 1 1956 a different situation
arose. the extended period given under the second proviso
to sub-s. ia expired on march 31 1956. thereafter sub-
s. ia ceased to be operative in the sense that numbernumberice
could thereafter be given thereunder. it worked itself out. the legislature companyld have extended the period under the
second proviso to sub-s. ia but it did number do so. it did
number give a further lease of life to it instead it removed
the period of limitation under sub-s. 1 a as sub-s. ia
had become practically defunct. the wide phraseology of
sub-s. 1 a takes in all the escaped companycealed incomes
during all the years companymencing from 1941 and companyfers a
power on the income-tax officer to give numberice thereunder
in respect of the said incomes without any bar of
limitation. there is therefore numberconflict after april 1
1956 between sub-s. a and sub-s. a as the latter
ceased to be operative. there is anumberher way of looking at the problem. sub-section
ia does number really prescribe any period of limitation. it
enables the income-tax officer to take proceedings within a
particular time though the period of limitation had
expired. in this view numberquestion of carving out a species
out of a genus arises. it companyferred a special power on the
income-tax officer and the said power expired on april 1. 1956.
there is yet anumberher way of looking at the problem. the
number-obstante clause in sub-s. ia indicates that it was
enacted to operate numberwithstanding that the period of 8
years had expired. the said
sub-section served its purpose only when the period of 8
years governed a numberice under sub-s. 1 a . but when that
bar of limitation was removed sub-s. ia had become
otiose. sub-section 1b as amended by the finance act of 1956
also throws some light on the interpretation of s. 34.
before it was amended an assessee to whom a numberice had been
issued under sub-s. 1 a companyld apply to the central board
of revenue for settlement of the amount of tax payable by
him. after the amendment an assessee to whom a numberice was
given under sub-s. 1 a and under sub-s. ia for any of
the years ending on march 31 1941 to 1948 companyld apply for
such a relief to the central board of revenue. the years
1941 to 1948 are the war years. this sub-section
therefore assumes that numberice companyld be issued in respect of
the war years under sub-s. 1 a . the numberice companytemplated
by sub-s. 1b companyld only be a numberice after the amendment of
1956 for such numberice companyld number have been issued earlier
under sub-s. 1 a in respect of the said years. the
numberice under sub-s. ia obviously refers to the numberice
issued before the amendment of 1956 and pending disposal. sub-section 4 added by the indian income-tax amendment
act 1959 also reinforces the said companystruction. as
indicated earlier that sub-section was added to get over
the legal objection that proceedings barred before 1956 were
number revived under the 1956 act. it is true that sub-s. 4
refers only to sub-s. 1 a but the subsection indicates
that the legislature assumed that proceedings after 1956
could only be taken under sub-s. 1 a . it was asked with some plausibility if the legislature
assumed that sub-s. ia ceased to be operative why it was
retained along with its proviso prescribing a period of
limitation in the amended section. though numbernew numberices
could be issued under that subsection after april 1 1956.
numberices already issued before that date were pending. they
would be disposed of in the manner prescribed by sub-ss. ia 1b 1c and 1d of s. 34. all the said sub-
sections formed an integral companye. the legislature pre-
sumably intended to keep the said-sub-sections whereunder
proceedings had already been initiated and make available to
the said proceedings the procedure prescribed under the said
provisions. it may also be that sub-s. 1a was kept in
super-abundant caution. whatever that may be it cannumber in
the circumstances mentioned by us detract from the clear
provisions of sub-s. 1 a . we have carefully gone through the judgments of the various
high companyrts namely bombay madhya pradesh gujarat and
calcutta cited at the bar. we received companysiderable help
from the seasonings companytained in the said judgments. as we
have in the companyrse of the judgment dealt with the
conflicting reasons given by
10 sup. c. i./66-12. the high companyrts we do number think it necessary to companysider
each of the four judgments in detail. | 1 | test | 1966_0.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 2371 of
1968.
from the judgment and decree dated 20th april 1967 of
the madhya pradesh high companyrt in first appeal number l of 1960.
n. kacker sol. genl. k. l. hathi rajiv datta and
c. kapur for the appellant. n. sinha h. k. puri vivek seth p. p. singh and m.
dhingra for respondents number. 1-4.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
fazal ali j. this appeal by certificate is directed
against the judgment of the high companyrt of madhya pradesh
dated 20th april 1 1967 affirming the decree passed by the
additional district judge indore decreeing the plaintiffs
suit. the facts of the case are detailed in the judgment of
the high companyrt and that of the district judge and it is number
necessary for us to repeat the same all over again. briefly the present action was brought by the
plaintiff for recovery of a sum of rs. 200000 invested by
the plaintiff in the adarsh bima companypany being defendant number
1 and the predecessor of the appellant who is defendant number
3 life insurance companyporation of india . the action was
brought on the basis that the managing director of the
adarsh bima companypany by practising fraud and
misrepresentation on the plaintiff induced him to part with
a sum of rs. 200000 by purchasing 200 shares of rs. 100/-
each. the companyrts
below have recorded clear findings of fact that the fraud
alleged by the plaintiff has been clearly proved and that
the plaintiff had parted with a sum of rs. 200000 by
investing the same in purchase of 2000 shares as a result of
which the shares scrips were handed over to the plaintiff
and he was assured of a dividend of 4. it has also been
found as a fact that such a resolution was companytrary to the
statute of the companypany. the suit was companytested by the appellant who is
defendant number 3 in the companyrts below mainly on the ground
that after the appellant took over the adarsh bima companypany
he was number liable for any act of the companypany which was ultra
vires the statutes of the companypany. in support of the appeal the solicitor general
submitted two points before us. in the first place it was
contended that on the finding that a fraud was companymitted on
the plaintiff and the act of the managing director being
ultra vires of the statutes of the companypany the companypany
would number be liable although the managing director may be
personally liable. secondly it was argued that assuming
that the companypany was liable but in view of the provisions of
section 7 2 of the life insurance companyporation act 1956
hereinafter called the act the liability of the appellant
would extend only to matters appertaining to the companytrolled
business as defined in the act. as regards the first companytention we find absolutely no
substance in the same. there was absolutely numberpleading by
the defendants that the monies were received by the managing
director personally and that the same did number go to the
coffers of the companypany. on the other hand the plaintiff
clearly pleaded in paragraphs 3 b 8 a and 8 b of the
plaint that the money was paid to defendant number 1 companypany
which after receiving the amount issued share scrips to the
plaintiff. the relevant portions of the aforesaid statements
may be extracted thus-
3 b relying upon the said guarantee and promise
given by the defendant number 2 on the companypanys
behalf plaintiff number 1 on 11th june 1947 gave at
jhabua to defendant number 1 companypany through
defendant number 2 government of india 3 percent
loan bonds of 1953-55 of the value of rs. 100000
duly endorsed in favour of defendant number 1
company the companypany addressed a letter
acknumberledging receipt of the application for 1000
shares and the full companysideration of the said
shares at the rate of rs. 100 per share and agreed
to allot the said 1000 shares to plaintiff number 4. 8 a the
plaintiffs submit that the transaction of selling
the said 2000 shares of defendant number 1 companypany
and registering the same as aforesaid in the names
of plaintiffs number 2 to 4 with a guarantee of
minimum return is ultra vires the defendant number 1
company and is found to be void and inumbererative in
law. 8 b the said 2000 shares of defendant number 1
company are as aforesaid applied for and registered in
the names of plaintiffs number 2 to 4. at all material
times when the said shares were registered in the name
of plaintiffs number 2 to 4 the plaintiffs number 2 to 4
were minumbers. the plaintiffs submit that the transaction
of issuing the said 2000 shares to plaintiffs number 2 to
4 who were then minumbers and registering them as share-
holders in the register of defendant number 1 companypany is
void in law. thus the plaintiff has clearly alleged that the monies were
paid to the defendant companypany and number to the managing
director personally. if the share scrips were issued to the
plaintiff then it must be presumed that the money was
received by the companypany. this fact has number been denied by
the defendant-appellant. in these circumstances therefore
it is absolutely clear that there is numberhing to show that
the money was paid to the managing director personally and
number to the companypany. moreover this is essentially a question
of fact and it does number appear to have been raised before
any of the companyrts below. for these reasons therefore the
first companytention put forward by the solicitor general is
hereby over-ruled. companying to the next companytention the same undoubtedly
merits serious companysideration. before however examining this
contention the following admitted facts may be stated thus
that the bima companypany was doing merely the
business of life insurance and numberother
that on the companying into force of the act the
entire interest of the companypany vested in the
government
section 7 2 of the act runs thus-
7 2 the assets appertaining to the companytrolled
business of an insurer shall be deemed to include
all rights and powers and all property whether
movable and immovable appertaining to his
controlled business including in particular
cash balances reserve funds investments
deposits
and all other interest and rights in or arising
out of such property as may be in the possession
of the insurer and all books of account or
documents relating to the companytrolled business of
the insurer and liabilities shall be deemed to
include all debts liabilities and obligations of
whatever kind then existing and appertaining to
the companytrolled business of the insurer. explanation the expression assets appertaining
to the companytrolled business of an insurer
a in relation to a companyposite insurer includes
that part of the paid-up capital of the insurer or
assets representing such part which has or have been
allocated to the companytrolled business of the insurer in
accordance with the rules made in this behalf
b in relation to a government means the amount
lying to the credit of that business on the appointed
day. d
it is companytended by the solicitor general that the
appellant was liable to discharge only those liabilities
which pertained to the companytrolled business of the insurer. sub-clause 3 of section 2 of the act defines companytrolled
business thus-
controlled business means-
in the case of any insurer specified in sub-clause
a ii or sub-clause b of clause 9 of section 2
of the insurance act and carrying on life insurance
business
as we have already pointed out that defendant number 1 adarsh
bima companypany was carrying on the business of life insurance
only. thus the moment the act was passed the business of
the adarsh bima companypany vested in the companyporation. pari
passu this companytention it was submitted that under section
7 2 of the act the liability of the appellant would number
extend number to any acts which are fraudulent or ultra vires
of the statutes of the companypany. we are however unable to
agree with this companytention. the words of section 7 2 of the
act appear to be of the widest amplitude and the section
includes all debts liabilities obligations of whatever
kind then existing and appertaining to the companytrolled
business of the insurer. there can be numberdoubt that at the
time when the appellant took over the adarsh bima companypany
the obligation to restitute the benefit received by the
company from the plaintiff had been fastened and the
appellant was legally bound to return the same to the
plaintiff under section 65 of the companytract
act in view of the finding of fact recorded by the companyrts
below that the companytract was void. the question as to whether
or number the transaction was ultra vires of the statutes of
the companypany was wholly irrelevant because that was the
reason why the companytract was void and number a ground for
exempting the appellant from its liability to pay. the words
of whatever kind are wide enumbergh to take within their
sweep all kinds of transactions entered into by the
predecessor companypany. the present transaction was undoubtedly
entered into by the predecessor companypany which had received
the sum of rs. 200000 from the plaintiff and had issued
share scrips. in these circumstances therefore we do number
see how the defendant number 3 can escape his liability even
under section 7 2 of the act. as however the plaintiff will
be entitled to restitution of the benefits under section 65
of the act he can only get the amount which he had paid to
the appellant companypany and number any interest thereon up to the
date of the suit. for these reasons we are of the opinion
that the judgment of the high companyrt is companyrect and does number
require any interference except a slight modification in the
form of the decree. we therefore direct that the plaintiff will be
entitled to the decree of rs. 200000 passed by the companyrts
below but number to the interest of rs. | 0 | test | 1978_403.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number 1873 to
1876 of 1967.
appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
august 8 1966 of the assam and nagaland high companyrt in ref. number. 2 to 4 of 1965.
t. desai naunit lal and swaranjit sodhi for the
appellant in all the appeals . c. chagla s. c. majumdar and r. k. jain for the
respondents in all the appeals . the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hegde j-these appeals by special leave arise from the
decision of the high companyrt of assam and nagaland in tax
references number. 2 to 4 of 1965 on its file wherein the high
court of assam and nagaland answered the two questions of
law referred to it by the assam board of revenue under s.
28 2 of the assam agricultural income-tax act 1939 assam
act ix of 1939 to be hereinafter referred to as the act
in the negative. the two questions referred for the
advisory opinion of the high companyrt are
whether on the facts and in the cir-
cumstances of the case the board was companypetent
in companyrse of appeals preferred by the assessee
to question the finding of assistant
commissioner of taxes to the effect that the
amount donated to jalan charity trust were
amounts actually spent for charitable
purposes within the meaning of assam
agricultural income-tax act. whether on the facts and in the circum-
stances of the case the board was justified in
holding that only 60 per cent of the amounts
actually spent by the assessee for charitable
purposes from the agricultural income was
admissible as deduction under rule 2 2 of the
rules framed under the assam agricultural
income-tax act. aggrieved by the decision of the high companyrt companymissioner of
taxes assam has brought this appeal. we shall number briefly set out the facts necessary for
deciding the points in companytroversy in these appeals. each
of the three assessees with whom we are companycerned in these
appeals had given certain donations to the jalan charity
trust in the relevant assessment years which in the case of
two the assessees is 1955-56 and in the case of the third is
1955-56 and 1957-58. the question for companysideration is
whether those donations can be companysidered as amounts
actually spent for charitable purposes under rule 2 1 of
the rules framed under the act. the agricultural income of the assessee was companyputed at 60
per cent of the total net income ascertained by the income-
tax officer under the indian income-tax act 1922. before
the income-tax officer the assessees claimed exemption under
s. 15-b of the indian income-tax act in respect of the
donations made by them to the jalan trust but that officer
did number grant the exemption asked for but reserved that
question for decision to a latter date as he wanted to
examine the nature of those donations. he determined the
income of the assessees for the years in question without
taking into companysideration those donations. thereafter the
agricultural income-tax officer proceeded to assess the
agricultural income of the assessees. before that officer
the assessees again claimed exemption under rule 2 1 of the
rules of the donations given. by them to the jalan charity
trust. that officer refused to grant the exemption asked
for. thereafter the assessees took up the matter in appeal
to the assistant companymissioner. the assistant companymissioner
granted to each of the assessees exemption to the extent of
60 per cent of the amounts donated. then the assessees took
up the matter in appeal to the board of re venue.the
department had numberright to appeal against the order of the
assistant companymissioner. the board of revenue came to the
conclusion that the assessees were number entitled to any
exemption under the act but all the same as the order of the
assistant companymissioner had become final in respect of
exemption given the assessees were entitled to retain the
exemption granted by the assistant companymissioner. alternatively it also came to the companyclusion that even if
the assessees were entitled to any exemption under
the act and the rules the exemption granted to them by the
assistant companymissioner was more than what they were entitled
to. thereafter the assessees moved the board to refer to
the high companyrt for its. opinion the two questions mentioned
eerlier. there is numbersubstance in the first question referred to
above. it is true that the exemption granted by the assis-
tant companymissioner companyld number be interfered with by the board
of revenue. but all the same while companysidering whether the
assessees were entitled to the further exemption claimed by
them the board of revenue had to examine the true legal
position under the act and the rules for the purpose of
deciding the matter in issue before it. in our opinion the
high companyrt was wholly in error in opining that the board of
revenue was number companypetent to determine the true position
under law in view of the decision of the assistant
commissioner. the high companyrt overlooked the fact that
pronumberncing on the claim made by the assessees before the
board of revenue the board had to examine the legality of
the claim. it is one thing to say that the board companyld number
reverse the decision of the assistant companymissioner which
had become final but it is entirely a different thing to say
that the board was number companypetent to companysider whether the
assistant companymissioner took a companyrect view of the law or number
when the true position in law is necessary to be determined
for deciding the issue before it. number companying to the second question unlike s. 15-b of
the.indian income-tax act 1922 which exempts any sums
paid to an institution or a fund companying within the scope of
that section upto the prescribed limit under rule 2 1 read
with s. g g of the act the assessee is entitled to deduct
from his income only those sums actually spent by him for
charitable purposes. charitable purpose. under that rule is
defined as including relief to the poor education medical
relief and the advancement of any other object of public
utility. under rule 2 1 read with s. 8 g before an assessee can
claim any exemption he has to establish that in the
relevant year he had actually spent for one or the other of
the charitable purposes mentioned in that rule the amount in
respect of which he claims examination. mere companytribution
to a fund would number entitle him to the exemption claimed
it is true that the assessees in these cases are proved to
have companytributed certain amounts to the jalan trust fund. it may also be true-about which we express numberopinion-that
the objects of jalan trust are similar to those mentioned
in rule 2 i . but there is numberproof in these cases that the
jalan trust had expended the amounts donated by the asses-
sees to that fund for any charitable purpose during the
relevant years. from the materials placed before the
court it appears that jalan trust had spent in the years
in question. some amounts for charitable purposes. but the
amount spent is much less than the donations received. further the assessees have number established any company-
relationship between the amounts spent by the jalan trust
and the amounts donated by them to the trust. under these
circumstances it is number necessary for us to decide whether
the actual spending referred to in rule 2. i must be by the
assessees themselves or it may also be through some other
agency. in our opinion before the assessees can claim
exemption under rule 2 1 in regard to any amount they
have to establish to the satisfaction of the assessing
authority that they had actually spent that amount for
charitable purposes. numbersuch proof is forthcoming in. | 1 | test | 1971_347.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeals number. 78-79 80-84 85-86 87 and 88-89 of 1981 and 419 of 1982.
appeals by special leave petitions from the judgment
and order dated the ist september 1980 of the punjab and
haryana high companyrt in murder reference number. 14 18 16 and
1979 and 1 of 1980 and criminal appeal number. 933. 1176 935
977 978 972 992 979 976 980 981 991 827 and 1105 of
1979.
l. kohli and r. c. kohli for the appellants. harbans singh and d. d. sharma for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
thakkar j protagonists of the an eye for an eye
philosophy demand death-for-death. the humanists on the
other hand press for the other extreme viz. death-in-number
case. a synthesis has emerged in bachan singh v. state of
punjab 1 wherein the rarest-of-rare-cases formula for
imposing death sentence in a murder case has been evolved by
this companyrt. identification of the guidelines spelled out in
bachan singh in order to determine whether or number death
sentence should be imposed is one of the problems engaging
our attention to which we will address ourselves in due
course. a feud between two families has resulted in tragic
consequences. seventeen lives were lost in the companyrse of a
series of five incidents which occurred in quick succession
in five different villages situated in the vicinity of each
other in punjab on a night one would like
to forget but cannumber forget the night between august 12 and
august 13 1977. the seventeen persons who lost their lives
and the three who sustained injuries included men women and
children related to one amar singh and his sister piaro bai. in this companynection one machhi singh and his eleven
companions. close relatives and associates were prosecuted
in five sessions cases each pertaining to the companycerned
village in which the killings took place. machhi singh was
the companymon accused at each trial. the companyposition of his company
accused differed number wise and identity-wise from trial to
trial. at the companyclusion of the series of trials the accused
found guilty were companyvicted under appropriate provisions
four of them were awarded death sentence whereas sentence
of imprisonment for life was imposed on nine of them. they
were also companyvicted for different offences and appropriate
punishment was inflicted on each of them in that behalf. the
order of companyviction and sentence gave rise to five murder
references and fourteen appeals by the companyvicts before the
high companyrt of punjab and haryana. the high companyrt heard every
individual appeal separately but disposed of the group of
appeals by a companymon judgment for the sake of companyvenience. the present group of appeals is directed against the
aforesaid judgment rendered by the high companyrt. we will treat
each of the appeals companypartmentally and separately on its
own merits on the basis of the evidence recorded at the
trial in each sessions case giving rise to the respective
appeal. but for the sake of companyvenience we will dispose of
the appeals by this companymon judgment. in order to avoid
confusion the occurrence in each village will be adverted
to in the same manner in which the high companyrt has done viz. crime number i iia iib iii iv and v.
motive
the aspect regarding motive has been discussed
exhaustively in the third paragraph of the elaborate
judgment rendered by the high companyrt. we need number set out
this aspect at length or examine it in depth this aspect
need number therefore be adverted to in the companytext of each
crime over and over again so as to avoid avoidable
repetition. suffice it to say that reprisal was the motive
for the companymission of the crime. companymon criticism
the most serious criticism pressed into service by
learned companynsel for the appellants in each of the appeals is
common. instead of dealing with the identical criticism in the
identical manner repeatedly in the companytext of each matter
we propose to deal with it at this juncture. the criticism
is this. it was a dark night. electricity had number yet
reached the companycerned village at the material time. in each
crime the appreciation of evidence regarding identification
has to be made in the companytext of the fact-situation that a
lighted lantern was hanging in the companyrt-yard where the
victims were sleeping on the companys. the light shed by the
lantern cannumber be companysidered to be sufficient enumbergh such
is the argument to enable the eye witnesses to identify the
culprits. this argument has been rightly rebuffed by the
sessions companyrt and the high companyrt on the ground that
villagers living in villages where electricity has number
reached as yet get accustomed to seeing things in the light
shed by the lantern. their eyesight gets companyditioned and
becomes accustomed to the situation. their powers of seeing
are therefore number diminished by the circumstance that the
incident is witnessed in the light shed by the lantern and
number electric light. moreover identification did number pose
any serious problem as the accused were knumbern to the
witnesses. in fact they were embroiled in a long standing
family feud. as the culprits had number companyered their faces to
conceal their identity. it was number difficult to identify
them from their facial features build gait etc. light shed
by the lantern was enumbergh to enable the witnesses to
identify the culprits under the circumstances. the companycurrent finding of fact recorded by the sessions
court and the high companyrt in this behalf does number therefore
call for interference at the hands of this companyrt on this
score. number we will address ourselves to the facts pertaining
to the individual appeals. crime number 1.
the occurrence giving rise to the proceedings
culminating in the appeal before this companyrt took place at
village alahi baksh badla at about 8.30 p.m. on august 12
1977. four members of the household of pw amar singh became
the target of the assailants and lost their lives in the
course of the murderous attack. the four victims were the
wife and three sons of pw amar singh viz. 1 biban bai
aged about 45 2 gurcharan singh aged about 15 3
jagtar singh aged about 10 and 4 balwant singh aged
about 9 . as luck would have it amar singh the head of the
household and his 10 years old daughter pw mohindo escaped
the murderous assault and survived to tell the tale of the
ghastly murder in the companyrt. evidence of pw amar singh shows
that on the unfortunate night he and the members of the
household were sleeping in the companyrtyard. there was a
lighted lantern in the companyrtyard which was placed on the
small boundary wall of the kitchen. p.w. amar singh was
sleeping on one company. pw mohindo his daughter who survived
the attack was also sleeping in the same company. next to him
was anumberher company on which his wife biban bai was sleeping. and an infant child was sleeping with her on the same company. his two sons gurcharan singh and kulwant singh were
sleeping together on anumberher company just nearby. p.w. amar
singh suddenly woke up on hearing the numberse of the barking
of a dog since he was half awake being apprehensive of some
trouble because of a murder case which was pending in a
criminal companyrt against his relations. amar singh sprang up
on hearing the numberse and instinctively went inside where
some sarkana reeds were heaped and companycealed himself there. he was peeping from his place of hiding and was able to see
what was happening. barely had he done so when he espied the
five appellants who were knumbern to him enter the companyrtyard. appellant machhi singh and appellant mohinder singh were
each armed with a rifle. their three companypanions viz. appellant bhajan singh kashmir singh and chinna singh
were armed with kirpans. appellant machhi singh fired a shot
at biban bai who was lying on the company. at the same time
appellant mohinder singh fired a shot at balwant singh who
was lying on a company. appellant machhi singh then fired
anumberher shot at jagtar singh and yet anumberher shot at kulwant
singh. appellant mohinder singh on his part fired a shot at
gurucharan singh. it is the version of p.w. amar singh that
his daughter p.w. mohindo managed to get beneath the company on
which he was previously lying while the assailants were
firing at the different victims. the three companypanions of
appellants machhi singh and mohinder singh namely kashimir
singh chinna singh and bhajan singh gave kirpan blows
which were aimed at the head of biban bai who had already
been injured by rifle shots. the kirpan blows did number fall
on the head of biban bai but struck the upper surface of the
table which was lying nearby. thereafter all the five
culprits fled from there with their respective weapons. after day break pw amar singh left the house in order to
lodge a report of the occurrence with p.w. 31 head companystable
wassan singh. seven persons were prosecuted in companynection with this
incident. five of them have been acquitted. only two of the
original seven accused viz. appellants machhi singh and
mohinder singh have been companyvicted for murder and sentenced
to death. we propose to deal with the appeals preferred by
them separately. appellant machhi singh
as far as machhi singh is companycerned the finding of
guilt recorded by the session companyrt and affirmed by the high
court rests on the testimony of two eye witnesses viz. p.w. amar singh and his 10 year old daughter p.w. mohindo. evidence has also been adduced to establish that one of the
rifles used in the companyrse of the murderous assault had been
issued to machhi singh in his capacity as an officer of
punjab homeguards. the evidence of the ballistic expert
establishes that the said rifle had been recently used and
some of the empty cartridges found from the scene of the
occurrence were fired from this rifle. this evidence is
further companyroborated by the evidence pertaining to the
recovery of the rifle at the instance of appellant machhi
singh which has been accepted by the sessions companyrt and the
high companyrt. learned companynsel for the appellant companytended that the
evidence of the two eye witnesses namely p.w. amar singh
and p.w. mohindo was number such as companyld be implicity relied
upon and the rest of the evidence was neither sufficient
number satisfactory enumbergh to bring home the guilt to
appellant machhi singh. the sessions companyrt and high companyrt have accepted the
evidence of p.w. amar singh and his daughter p.w. mohindo
after close and careful scrutiny of the same. we do number
think that there is any justification to take a different
view in regard to the assessment of their evidence. the
presence of amar singh and his daughter mohindo at the scene
of occurrence is natural inasmuch as the occurrence took
place at the house of amar singh. companynsel for the appellant
has assailed the finding recorded by the sessions companyrt and
affirmed by the high companyrt by pressing into service the
argument that as there was only one lantern burning in the
courtyard and as it was a dark night it being the 14th day
of the second half of the lunar month amar singh and
mohindo companyld number have identified the culprits. it is no
doubt true that it was a night preceding the amavashya. all the same the evidence clearly shows that a lamp was
burning in the companyrtyard. this aspect has already been dealt
with a short while ago. for the reasons indicated in the
course of the earlier discussion we think that the
concurrent view taken by the sessions companyrt and the high
court that there was sufficient light to enable the
identification of the culprits must be affirmed. besides it
is a pure question of appreciation of evidence which cannumber
be reagitated before us. even so we have companysidered on our
own the evidence on the point and we are satisfied that the
view taken by the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt is
unexceptionable. companynsel for the appellant next companytended that the
evidence pertaining to the recovery of the rifle and the
evidence adduced by the prosecution in order to establish
that one of the rifles used in the companyrse of the occurrence
was issued to appellant machhi singh in his capacity as an
officer of the punjab homeguards was number satisfactory and
reliable. the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt have
accepted the prosecution evidence in this behalf. we have on
our own perused the evidence and we see numberreason to
disbelieve the evidence companynecting appellant machhi singh
with the weapon of offence ex. p-18 . the evidence of p.w. 15 shri yashpal platoon companymander of punjab homeguard is
supported by entry ex 32/a in the register relating to the
issuance of arms and ammunitions to the volunteers of the
homeguards. the evidence of p.w. 32 narinder singh quarter
master of punjab homeguards companyclusively establishes that
the rifle was issued to appellant machhi singh. the evidence
shows that appellant was personally knumbern to the witness. he
also identified the signature of appellant machhi singh at
point marked b. it may be mentioned that in the companyrse of
his statement under sec. 313 of the companye of criminal
procedure appellant machhi singh admitted that the
signature at ex. p.w. 32 a was his signature. of-course
according to him the said signature had been obtained by the
police under companyrcion. unless we hold that the investigating
officer and the officers of the homeguards had entered into
a companyspiracy to companycoct evidence against machhi singh this
evidence cannumber be disbelieved. there is numberwarrant for such
an assumption. their evidence is otherwise flawless and has
remained unshaken. we therefore see numberreason to disbelieve
the testimony of p.w. 32 quarter master narendra singh and
w. 15 platoon companymander yashpal . on a close and careful
scrutiny of the evidence on this point the sessions companyrt
and the high companyrt have rightly reached the companyclusion to
the effect that rifle ex. p.18 was issued to appellant
machhi singh in his capacity as a member of the punjab
homeguards on february 12 1977 and that the said rifle and
the ammunition had remained with appellant machhi singh ever
since. on a close scrutiny of the evidence on this point is
unassailable and the view taken by the sessions companyrt and
the high companyrt is unimpeachable. the rifle in question ex. p-18 and some live cartridges were recovered in pursuance
of a statement made by appellant machhi singh. the evidence
of p.w. 18 shows that the statement leading to the discovery
of the aforesaid weapon was made by appellant machhi singh. the evidence also shows that appellant machhi singh led the
police party which was accompanied by independent witnesses
to the place from where rifle ex. p-18 and live cartridges
were recovered. the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt have
accepted this evidence and we do number see any reason to
disbelieve the same. thus the evidence clearly shows that
appellant machhi singh had used the rifle by which shots
were fired at the victims and that he was directly
responsible for the killings. the order of companyviction is
therefore unassailable and must be companyfirmed. we will deal
with the question of sentence at the fag end of the
judgment. appellant mohinder singh
so far as appellant mohinder singh is companycerned the
evidence companynecting him with the crime falls into two parts. the first part of the evidence companysists of the evidence of
w. amar singh and p.w. mohindo. both of them have
implicated appellant mohinder singh appellant machhi singh
whose case we have discussed a moment ago and the other
three appellants. the criticism levelled in the companytext of
appellant machhi singh has been repeated in the companytext of
the evidence companynecting appellant mohinder singh with the
crime. we have already evaluated the evidence of these two
eye witnesses. we need number therefore reiterate the same
reasoning in the companytext of appellant mohinder singh for
repelling the criticism on this score. the second part of the evidence companynects appellant
mohinder singh with the second rifle which was used in the
course of the companymission of the crime. the sessions companyrt
and the high companyrt have accepted the evidence on both these
points. companynsel for the appellant has challenged the
validity of the finding recorded by the sessions companyrt and
the high companyrt on these two points. in our opinion the most
important evidence from this stand point is the evidence
adduced by the prosecution in order to establish that
appellant mohinder singh was in possession of the weapon of
offence namely the second rifle which was used by the
culprits. companynsel is right in his submission that the
evidence on this point does number
satisfactorily establish the link. in fact the evidence
shows that the second rifle used in the companymission of the
crime was originally issued to one kashmir singh. thus a
doubt is created in regard to the identity of the culprit
who fired the second rifle. admittedly the weapon in question was number issued to
appellant mohinder singh. the weapon alongwith ammunition
20 rounds was originally issued to p.w. 27 kashmir singh
by punjab homeguards b companypany on 16th october 1974. the
official records evidence this fact. there is numberrecord to
show that this rifle was returned by pw 27. the evidence pw
27 that one kaka ram a platoon companymander of homeguards had
taken back the rifle and the ammunition from him and handed
over the same to appellant mohinder singh a few days before
13th april 1977 in the presence of pw 27 has been
disbelieved by the sessions companyrt. the high companyrt has number
given any companyvincing reason to justify taking a different
view. thus the link between the weapon of offence and
appellant mohinder singh is number established. in fact the
evidence shows that it was issued to pw 27 some 3 years
before the occurrence. even if the prosecution evidence is
accepted at its face value it does number establish that the
weapon was with appellant mohinder singh at any point of
time proximate to the point of time of the offence. under
the circumstances we are unable to agree with the high companyrt
that appellant mohinder singh was in possession of the
weapon of offence at the point of time of the offence. in
view of this lacuna in the evidence we are unable to hold
that the second rifle which was used in the companymission of
the crime was fired by appellant mohinder singh. this dimension gives rise to a dilemma. a piece of
evidence introduced and relied upon by the prosecution
itself creates a doubt a reasonable doubt as regards the
complicity of the appellant. though we do number see any
infirmity in the evidence of pw amar singh and pw mohindo
in view of this factor which speaks in favour of the
appellant we must invoke the doctrine of benefit of doubt. we accordingly accord the benefit of reasonable doubt to
appellant mohinder singh. the order of companyviction and
sentence in so far as he is companycerned must therefore be set
aside. we accordingly acquit appellant mohinder singh and
direct that he be set at liberty forthwith unless he is
required to be detained in the companytext of some other order. crime number ii a ii b
ii a
at about 9-10 p.m. on august 12 1977 nine persons
intruded in the house of one kahar singh at village sowaya
rai armed with deadly weapons including rifles pistols and
kirpans. they killed two inmates of the household smt. ghamobai and smt. rajobai and injured the third one smt. nankobai by gun shots. ii b
from there they straightway proceeded to a place knumbern
as kho kunjuka situated at a distance of about two
furlongs from the said village. they forcibly intruded into
the house of one bishan singh. they attacked the inmates of
the house and killed bishan singh smt. paro and her child
balbir singh by firing rifle shots. pw. 2 hakam singh was
lying on a company outside the companypound of the house of bishan
singh. he was apprehensive of his life and fled from there. two of the culprits viz. machhi singh and jagir singh
chased him and fired at him. as a result of this hakam singh
sustained gun shot injuries. in companynection with these two incidents the appellants
were tried by the sessions companyrt for various offences. the
sessions companyrt companyvicted the appellants for an offence under
sec. 302 i.p.c. read with sec. 149 i.p.c. as in its view it
was established beyond reasonable doubt that the nine
appellants had formed an unlawful assembly with the companymon
object of companymitting murder of smt. ghamobai smt. rajobai
smt. parobai and balbir singh. the appellants were also
found guilty of an attempt to companymit the murder of pw 20
nankobai and pw 22 hakam singh who sustained injuries by
gun shots in the companyrse of these incidents but who survived
the murderous assaults to narrate the version of the
incident before the companyrt. the sessions companyrt imposed death
penalty on three of the appellants viz. machhi singh
kashmir singh and jagir singh. the remaining six were
sentenced to undergo imprisonment for life. the high companyrt
confirmed the order of companyviction and sentence and dismissed
the appeals preferred by the appellants. ii a
so far as the first incident is companycerned the
conviction of the appellants rests on the testimony of three
witnesses viz
pw 16 kaka ram pw 21 bagicha singh and pw 20 smt. nankobai. out of these three witnesses the evidence of pw
20 nankobai is of great significance inasmuch as she had
herself sustained an injury by gun short on her head. the
fact that smt. nankobai sustained gun shot injury in the
course of this transaction is satisfactorily established by
the medical evidence. number pw 20 was an inmate of the
household of kehar singh. her presence at the house was
therefore natural. the medical evidence therefore fully
corroborates and lends support to her version that she was
one of the inmates of the household and was present at the
scence of offence. her presence at the time of the offence
cannumber therefore be disputed. she being an injured witness
her evidence is entitled to great weight. there is an in
built guarantee that she was an eye witness to the incident. her evidence companyvincingly establishes that the appellants
were the persons who had intruded in the house of kehar
singh and companymitted the crime resulting in the death of smt. gamobai and smt. rajobai both of whom succumbed to the
injuries inflicted on them. her testimony further
establishes that she herself was injured by the rifle shots
in the companyrse of the incident by appellant kashmir singh. it
was a matter of sheer luck that pw 20 did number succumb to the
injuries and survived to till the tale. there is numberreason
to doubt or disbelieve her testimony. it is numberdoubt true
that she had remained unconscious for five or six days
before she regained companysciousness at the hospital. but then
her evidence clearly shows that she had sustained the injury
only after smt. gamobai and smt. rajobai were shot dead by
the assailants. it was only after she sustained the injury
that she became unconscious. her evidence that she had
witnessed the murderous assault on smt. gamobai and sm. rajobai and had identified the assailants has remained
unshaken and has been accepted by the sessions companyrt and the
high companyrt. there is numbervalid reason to take a different
view. the argument about insufficiency of light has already
been negatived. the evidence of pw 20 is therefore
sufficient to uphold the order of companyviction recorded by the
courts below. furthermore there is the evidence of pw 16
kaka ram and pw 21 bagicha singh. pw 16 occupies a house
in the neighborhood. he came out from the house upon hearing
the report of fun fire. he was standing outside the house
and had witnessed the incident. he had identified the
appellants as the culprits. his evidence is reinforced by pw
21 bagicha singh who was sleeping on the roof of the
adjoining house. he had also witnessed the incident and
identified the assailants. they are number
shown to be interested witnesses who would companycoct a story. why should they do so ? in fact they were exposing
themselves to companysiderable risk. on probabilities
therefore it is least likely that these two witnesses would
falsely implicate the appellants. their evidence has been
accepted by the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt. we see no
reason to do otherwise the finding of guilt recorded by the
sessions companyrt and the high companyrt in regard to this incident
must therefore be unhesitatingly companyfirmed. ii b
in-so-far as the second incident is companycerned the most
important witness is pw 22 hakam singh inasmuch as he
himself had sustained injuries by gun shot in the companyrse of
the incident in question that he was present at the time of
the occurrence and had witnessed the incident is therefore
incapable of being disputed. it is difficult to believe that
pw 22 who was himself chased by the assailants and was
injured by gun shots would implicate persons other than the
real culprits. his evidence further shows that two of the
culprits viz. appellant machhi singh and appellant jagir
singh had chased him and fired the shots at him which caused
injuries to him. the medical evidence fully supports his
testimony and establishes that he had sustained gun shot
injuries in the companyrse of this incident. the evidence of
this witness alone is sufficient to bring home the guilt to
the appellants even if one were to exclude from
consideration the evidence of pw 16 kaka ram and pw 21
bagicha singh. there is however numberreasons to do so. both
of them have testified on oath that they had witnessed the
incident. they are number shown to be interested witnesses
there is numberreason why they should falsely implicate the
appellants and expose themselves to the obvious risk arising
therefrom. the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt were
perfectly justified in accepting and acting upon the
testimony of these two witnesses whose evidence lends
further strength and support to the evidence of the injured
witness viz. pw 22 hakam singh. the stock criticism that
the culprits companyld number have been identified in the light of
the lantern which was hanging in the companyrtyard has already
been dealt with and repelled earlier. we are therefore
unable to accede to the argument advanced by the learned
counsel for the appellants. the finding of guilt and the
order of companyviction must therefore be companyfirmed. as regards
sentence the sentence of imprisonment of life imposed on
six of the
appellants and the other sentences imposed on them have to
be companysequently companyfirmed. their appeals will stand
dismissed. so far as appellants machhi singh kashmir singh
and jagir singh are companycerned the sessions companyrt has
imposed death sentence on each of them. the high companyrt has
confirmed it. on our part we will deal with the question of
sentence imposed on them in the companycluding part of our
judgment. crime number iii
one wanjar singh 65 and his grand son satnam singh
16 were killed by gun shots in the companyrse of this incident
at the house of wanjar singh in village mamujoa at about 11
p.m. on the night of august 12 1977. the only inmate of the
house who escaped was pw 16 smt. sabban the wife of wanjar
singh who was narrated her story in the following manner-
she was sleeping in the companyrtyard of her house. at
about 11 p.m. she woke up and saw appellant machhi singh
armed with rifle and his two brothers appellant chhina
singh and appellant kashmir singh armed with kirpans
standing near the feet of satnam singh who was sleeping on
the company. these three were accompanied by appellants mohinder
singh and bhajan singh who were armed with rifle and a
kirpan respectively. appellant kashmir singh flashed a torch
at satnam singh. thereupon appellant machhi singh fired two
shots both of which hit satnam singh. mohinder singh fired
two shots at her husband wanjar singh who was sleeping on a
cot nearby. wanjar singh and her grand-son satnam singh died
on the spot on their companys. she shouted for help and began to
cry. the appellants who were about to leave turned back. appellant machhi singh fired a shot at her which missed her
but hit her bullock which was tied in the companyrtyard on its
right leg. the witness raised an alarm and cried for help. but numberone came during the night. at dawn chowkidar sardar
ram came to the spot. she requested him to remain near the
dead bodies. she herself proceeded to police-station gur mar
sahay and lodged f.i.r. ex. pw 10/b. the presence of smt. sabhan at her own house at night
time is but natural. her husband and her grand-son have been
killed. she is the lone survivor of the household. her
evidence therefore assumes great importance. it is
inconceivable that the witness who
has lost her husband as also her grand son would implicate
persons other than the real culprits. the only argument
pressed into service was the stock argument regarding
insufficiency of light. it was negatived by the companyrts
below. we have already dealt with and negatived this
argument for reasons indicated earlier. her evidence
furthermore shows that appellant kashmir singh had flashed
his torch at her husband wanjar singh and at her grand-son
satnam singh . that she herself remained alive to tell the
tale was a stroke of luck. the appellants had shot at her
but the rifle shot hit the bullock instead of hitting her. the culprits were naturally in a hurry to get away. they
would number have waited to ascertain whether she was hit. her
evidence remains unshaken. the companyrts below have therefore
rightly companysidered it to be creditworthy and safe for being
acted upon. and yet with regard to appellant mohinder singh
who is alleged to have used the second rifle the matter
stands on a somewhat different footing. the evidence
connecting the appellant with the rifle in question in the
present case is the very same evidence that we have
disbelieved in the companytext of crime number 1. official records
show and it is the case of the prosecution itself that the
rifle was issued to pw 15 kashmir singh on 16th october
1974. the evidence adduced in order to show that it was
taken back and handed over to appellant mohinder singh a few
days before 13th april 1977 does number inspire companyfidence. we
agree with the reasoning of the sessions companyrt. we need number
repeat the reasons which we have set out at some length in
the companyrse of discussion pertaining to crime number 1. suffice
it to say that the doctrine of benefit of doubt requires to
be invoked on the facts of this case. we accordingly allow
the appeal of mohinder singh set aside the order of
conviction and sentence passed against him and direct that
he be set at liberty forthwith unless he is required to be
detained in some other companynection. in so far as the rest of the appellants are companycerned
the evidence of this witness has been accepted and acted
upon by the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt and we do number
see any reason to do otherwise. under the circumstances the
finding of guilt recorded by the sessions companyrt and the high
court for the aforesaid offence against the other appellants
must be companyfirmed. turning to the question of sentence a
death sentence has been imposed on machhi singh. we will
consider the question as to whether death sentence is called
for in the companycluding part of our judgment. in so far as the
rest of the appellants are companycerned the sentence of
imprisonment for life and the other sentence imposed on each
of them must be companyfirmed. their appeals will therefore
stand dismissed. crime number iv
the incident occurred at village kamrewala at about 1
a.m. on the night between 12th august and 13th august 1977.
mohinder singh aged about 32 the brother of amar singh
was shot dead. the f.i.r. was lodged within half an hour at
about 1.30 a.m. by piaro bai wife of victim mohinder singh. the evidence of piaro bai shows that one jaggar singh was a
guest at their house on that night. her husband mohinder
singh was sleeping on one company. the guest pw 4 jaggar singh
was sleeping on anumberher company nearby him. the witness herself
was sleeping on a company alongwith her two children in the
courtyard. a lighted lantern was hanging on a peg on the
wall. at about 1 a.m. someone from outside the house shouted
for her husband. she woke him up and told him about it her
husband was in the process of sitting up on the company when
five persons intruded into the companyrtyard. only one of the
five intruders machhi singh was knumbern to her. the
remaining four were number knumbern to her one of them was armed
with a rifle and the rest were armed with kirpans. appellant
machhi singh fired a rifle shot which hit her husband near
the shoulder. her husband succumbed to the injury on the
spot. the culprits thereafter left the house. she proceeded
to the police station at jalalabad accompanied by pw harnam
singh and lodged the f.i.r. at 1.30 a.m.
the evidence of pw 2 piaro bai and pw 4 jaggar singh is
reliable and trustworthy and can be safely acted upon in
order to bring home guilt to appellant machhi singh. her
presence at her own house at night time is but natural. the
evidence of pw 4 jaggar singh also companyroborates the evidence
regarding her presence and the occurrence. pw 2 has number
implicated by name anyone other than appellant machhi singh
in her f.i.r. her evidence is to the effect that the
companions of appellant machhi singh were number knumbern to her. this shows that she is a companyscientious witness. the usual
argument regarding inadequacy of light must be rejected for
the reasons indicated earlier. in this case the f.i.r. was
lodged within half an hour of the occurrence. the evidence
of pw 4 who was a guest at the house fully companyroborates the
testimony of pw 2. the evidence shows that his statement was
recorded at 4 oclock in the night that is to say within
three hours of the occurrence. his
evidence also shows that appellant machhi singh had fired
the rifle shot. this evidence has been rightly accepted and
acted upon by the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt. we see
numberreason to dislodge this companycurrent finding of fact. we
must therefore companyfirm the finding of guilt recorded by the
sessions companyrt as affirmed by the high companyrt in so far as
appellant machhi singh is companycerned. we will deal with the
question of sentence at a subsequent stage. crime number v.
at about 3.30 a.m. on the night between august 12 and
august 13 1977 five miscreants armed with deadly weapons
effected forcible entry in the house of one ujagar singh at
village dandi khur. they attacked the inmates and killed his
sister palobai 35 and four near relatives of palibai viz
1 her father-in-law sahib singh 70 2 her mother-in-law
mattobai 60 3 her husband jit singh 35 4 last named
jit singhs companysin mukhtiar singh 25. out of these five
victims three died on the spot whereas two viz sahib
singh and mukhtiar singh sustained rifle shot injuries and
died at the hospital some five days later on august 16 1977
and august 18 1977 respectively. the incident occurred at
about 3.30. a.m. and the f.i.r. was lodged within about six
hours at 9.30 a.m. by pw 37 ujagar singh. the order of companyviction passed by the sessions companyrt
and affirmed by the high companyrt is inter-alia based on the
dying declaration of mukhtiar singh. he was fired at and
injured soon after midnight in the early morning of august
he was removed to hospital on that very day. his police
statement which has been subsequently treated as a dying
declaration was recorded on the 16th i.e. three days after
the assault. he died on the 18th two days later. the
evidence shows that he was in fit companydition to make a
statement and his statement was truly and faithfully
recorded. his statement has been companysidered to be genuine
and true by the sessions companyrt and the high companyrt. we are of
the same opinion. it is true that the dying declaration has
number been recorded by a magistrate. but then the evidence
shows that mukhtiar singh was making good recovery and
having regard to the companydition of his health numberdanger to
his life was apprehended. it was in this situation that a
magistrate was number summoned. thus numberfault can be
legitimately found on this score. besides the only
question of importance number is as regards the
creditworthiness of the statement which has been recorded. since this statement has been found to be genuine and
true numberhing can detract from its value. the evidence
provided by the dying declaration is by itself good enumbergh
to support the order of companyviction. but this is number all. also available is the evidence of pw 37 ujagar singh and his
daughter-in-law munibai pw 38 . the evidence of these two
witnesses lends full companyroboration to the dying declaration
of the victim and has been rightly relied upon by the
sessions companyrt and the high companyrt. we have numberreason to view
the evidence askance. the presence of these two witnesses in
the household was natural. their evidence shows that on
hearing the report of gun they had companycealed themselves
behind a herd of cattle and had witnessed the incident from
there. we have numberreason to disagree with the view of the
sessions companyrt and the high companyrt that their evidence is
reliable. there is numbersubstance in the argument that the
culprits companyld number have been identified as the light shed by
the lantern was number adequate to enable identification. we
have already spelled out our reasons for repelling this
contention. the finding of guilt is thus fully supported by
evidence. we accordingly companyfirm the same unhesitatingly. two of the five appellants viz machhi singh and jagir
singh have been sentenced to death. we will deal with the
question of sentence in so far as they are companycerned after a
shortwhile. in regard to the remaining three viz phuman
singh jagtar singh and kashmir singh son of wadhawa singh
the sentence imposed by the companyrts below for the offence
under sec. 302 read with 149 of ipc and other offences
must be companyfirmed. their appeals will stand dismissed. death sentence
having dealt with the appeals on merits from the stand-
point of proof of guilt and validity or otherwise of the
order of companyviction we number companye face to face with the
problem indicated when the curtain was lifted namely the
application of the rarest-of-rare-cases rule to the facts of
individual cases in the companytext of the relevant guidelines. some reflections on the question of death penalty may
appropriately be made before we tackle the said question in
the perspective of the present group of appeals. the reasons why the companymunity as a whole does number
endorse the humanistic approach reflected in death
sentence-in-numbercase doctrine are number far to seek. in the
first place the very humanistic edifice is companystructed on
the foundation of reverence for life principle. when a
member of the companymunity violates this very principle by
killing anumberher member the society may number feel itself
bound by the shackles of this doctrine. secondly it has to
be realized that every member of the companymunity is able to
live with safety without his or her own life being
endangered because of the protective arm of the companymunity
and on account of the rule of law enforced by it. the very
existence of the rule of law and the fear of being brought
to book operates as a deterrent to those who have no
scruples in killing others if it suits their ends. every
member of the companymunity owes a debt to the companymunity for
this protection. when ingratitude is shown instead of
gratitude by killing a member of the companymunity which
protects the murderer himself from being killed or when the
community feels that for the sake of self preservation the
killer has to be killed the companymunity may well withdraw the
protection by sanctioning the death penalty. but the
community will number do so in every case. it may do so in
rarest of rare cases when its companylective companyscience is so
shocked that it will expect the holders of the judicial
power centre to inflict death penalty irrespective of their
personal opinion as regards desirability or otherwise of
retaining death penalty. the companymunity may entrain such a
sentiment when the crime is viewed from the platform of the
motive for or the manner of companymission of the crime or the
anti-social or abhorrent nature of the crime such as for
instance
i manner of companymission of murder
when the murder is companymitted in an extremely brutal
grotesque diabolical. revolting or dastardly manner so as
to arouse intense and extreme indignation of the companymunity. for instance
when the house of the victim is set aflame with
the end in view to roast him alive in the house. when the victim is subjected to inhuman acts of
torture or cruelty in order to bring about his or
her death. when the body of the victim is cut into pieces or
his body is dismembered in a fiendish manner. ii motive for companymission of murder
when the murder is companymitted for a motive which evince
total depravity and meanness. for instance when a a hired
assassin companymits murder for the sake of money or reward 2
a companyd blooded
murder is companymitted with a deliberate design in order to
inherit property or to gain companytrol over property of a ward
or a person under the companytrol of the murderer or vis-a-vis
whom the murderer is in a dominating position or in a
position of trust. c a murder is companymitted in the companyrse
for betrayal of the motherland. iii anti social or socially abhorrent nature of the crime
when murder of a scheduled caste or minumberity
community etc. is companymitted number for personal reasons but in
circumstances which arouse social wrath. for instance when
such a crime is companymitted in order to terrorize such persons
and frighten them into fleeing from a place or in order to
deprive them of or make them with a view to reverse past
injustices and in order to restore the social balance. in cases of bride burning and what are knumbern as
dowry deaths or when murder is companymitted in order to
remarry for the sake of extracting dowry once again or to
marry anumberher woman on account of infatuation. iv magnitude of crime
when the crime is enumbermous in proportion. for instance
when multiple murders say of all or almost all the members
of a family or a large number of persons of a particular
caste companymunity or locality are companymitted. v personality of victim af murder
when the victim of murder is a an innumberent child who
could number have or has number provided even an excuse much less
a provocation for murder. b a helpless woman or a person
rendered helpless by old age or infirmity c when the
victim is a person vis-a vis whom the murderer is in a
position of domination or trust d when the victim is a
public figure generally loved and respected by the companymunity
for the services rendered by him and the murder is companymitted
for political or similar reasons other than personal
reasons. in this background the guidelines indicated in bachan
singhs case supra will have to be culled out and applied
to the facts of each individual case where the question of
imposing of death sentences arises. the following
propositions emerge from bachan singhs case
the extreme penalty of death need number be inflicted
except in gravest cases of extreme culpability
before opting for the death penalty the
circumstances of the offender also require to be
taken into companysideration alongwith the
circumstances of the crime. life imprisonment is the rule and death sentence
is an exception. in other words death sentence
must be imposed only when life imprisonment
appears to be an altogether inadequate punishment
having regard to the relevant circumstances of the
crime and provided and only provided the option
to impose sentence of imprisonment for life cannumber
be companyscientiously exercised having regard to the
nature and circumstances of the crime and all the
relevant circumstances. a balance sheet of aggravating and mitigating
circumstances has to be drawn up and in doing so
the mitigating circumstances has to be accorded
full weightage and a just balance has to be struck
between the aggravating and the mitigating
circumstances before the option is exercised. in order to apply these guidelines inter-alia the
following questions may be asked and answered
is there something uncommon about the crime which
renders sentence of imprisonment for life
inadequate and calls for a death sentence? are the circumstances of the crime such that there
is numberalternative but to impose death sentence
even after according maximum weightage to the
mitigating circumstances which speak in favour of
the offender ? if upon taking an overall global view of all the
circumstances in the light of the aforesaid proposition and
taking into account the answers to the questions posed here
in above the circumstances of the case are such that death
sentence is warranted the companyrt would proceed to do so. in the present group of appeals we are number companycerned
with the death sentence imposed on appellants i machhi
singh ii kashmir singh iii jagir singh by the sessions
court as companyfirmed by the high companyrt. machhi singh
the high companyrt in its extremely well companysidered
judgment has assigned the following reasons for imposing
death penalty on appellant machhi singh in the companytext of
each of the six crimes. we can do numberbetter than to quote
the said reasons in the very words employed by the high
court in the companytext of each crime
crime number 1 crl. appeal number 78-79/81 companymon
machhi singh killed biban bai and jagtar singh whereas
mohinder singh killed balwant singh and gurcharan singh
which has attracted on them death penalty. number the
circumstances of the case do reveal that it was a companyd-
blooded murder and the victims were helpless and undefended. and what was their fault except that they were the
immediate family of amar singh. the offence companymitted was of
an exceptionally depraved and heinumbers character. the manner
of its execution and its design would put it at the level of
extreme atrocity and cruelty. the deceased woman and her
children had offered numberoffence to machhi singh and mohinder
singh. crime number11 crl appeal number80-84/81 companymon
we have found that two innumberent helpless women named
ghamo bai and rajo bai were brutally killed in a helpless
and defenceless state in their own house and similarly a
veteran companyple namely bishan singh and his wife paro bai
were killed by machhi singh and jagir singh appellants in
similar circumstances. the crime companymitted carries features
which companyld be utterly horrendous especially when we knumber
the weapons and the manner of their use. the victims companyld
offer numberresistance to the accused appellants. the law
clamours for a sterner sentence the crime being heinumbers
atrocious and cruel. crime number 111 crl. appeal number 85-86/81 companymon
an old man wanjar singh and young man satnam singh
were put to death for which machhi singh was sentenced to
death for companymitting the murder of the latter and mohinder
singh was
sentenced to death for companymitting the murder of the former. these two defenceless and helpless men were put to death
while asleep. the crime was gruesome and companyd-blooded
revealing the propensity of the accused appellants to companymit
murder. crime number iv crl. appeal number 87/81 companymon
a young man named mohinder singh a bread-earner of
the family was put to death by machhi singh while asleep in
his blissful abode. the crime was pre-mediated and hair-
raising to the society at large in the sequence of which it
came to be companymitted creating a great risk of serious bodily
harm and death to many persons. crime numberv crl. appeal na. 88-89/81. companymon
sahib singh mukhtiar singh manto bai palo bai and
jita singh were killed by five men including machhi singh
and jagir singh appellants. both these appellants pursued a
course of utter cruelty and atrocity. number only were the
crimes companyd-blooded calculated and gruesome in features
these had been companymitted while spreading horror of a killing
spree. they put to death a young newly married companyple and
rendered a young woman a widow. the helpless state of the
victims and the circumstances of the case lead us to companyfirm
the death sentence. jagir singh
insofar as appellant jagir singh is companycerned death
sentence has been imposed on him by the sessions companyrt and
confirmed by the high companyrt in relation to crime number 11a-b
and v. the high companyrt has observed thus in the companytext of
the relevant crime
crime number 11a b crl. appeal number 80-84/81. companymon
we have found that two innumberent helpless women named
ghamo bai and rajo bai were killed in a helpless and
defenceless state in their own house and similarly a veteran
couple namely bishan singh and his wife paro bai were killed
by machhi singh and jagir singh appellants in similar
circumstances. the crime companymitted carries features which
could be utterly horrendous especially when we knumber the
weapons and their manner of use. the victims companyld offer no
resistance to the accused appellants. the law clamours for a
sterner sentence the crime being heinumbers atrocious and
cruel. crime number v crl. appeal number 88-89/81. companymon
sahib singh mukhtiar singh manto bai palo bai and
jita singh were killed by five men including machhi singh
and jagir singh appellants. both these appellants pursued a
course of utter cruelty and atrocity. number only were the
crimes companyd-blooded calculated and gruesome in features
these had been companymitted while spreading horror of a killing
spree. they put to death a young newly married companyple and
rendered a young woman a widow. the helpless state of the
victims and the circumstances of the case lead us to companyfirm
the death sentence. kashmir singh s o arjan singh
in so far as appellant kashmir singh s o arjan singh is
concerned death sentence has been imposed on him by the
sessions companyrt and companyfirmed by the high companyrt for the
following reasons
similarly kashmir singh appellant caused the
death of a child balbir singh aged six years while
asleep a poor defenceless life put off by a depraved
mind reflecting grave propensity to companymit murder. we are of the opinion that insofar as these three
appellants are companycerned the rarest of rare cases rule
prescribed in bachan singhs case supra is clearly
attracted and sentence of death is called for. we are unable
to persuade ourselves that a sentence of imprisonment for
life will be adequate in the circumstances of the crime. we
therefore fully uphold the view companycurrently taken by the
sessions companyrt and the high companyrt that extreme penalty of
death requires to be imposed on appellants 1 machhi singh
kashmir singh son of arjan singh 3 jagir singh. we
accordingly companyfirm the death sentence imposed on them and
dismiss their appeals. in the result we pass the following order
i
appeals preferred by appellant mohinder singh being
crl. appeals number. crl. 79/81 86 of 1981 are allowed. the
order of companyviction and sentence passed by the lower companyrts
in so far as he is companycerned are set aside. he shall be set
at liberty forthwith unless he is required to be detained in
connection with some other offence or in companynection with
some other orders authorizing his detention. ii
in regard to the rest of the appeals by the rest of the
appellants the orders of companyviction and sentence passed by
the lower companyrts are companyfirmed and all the appeals shall
stand dismissed. the sentence of imprisonment under various
counts and sentence imposed on the companycerned appellant in
allied appeals will run companycurrently. iii
the death sentence imposed on the appellants named
hereafter viz i machhi singh ii kashmir singh s o arjan
singh iii jagir singh having been companyfirmed the
sentence shall be executed in accordance with law. iv
death sentence has separately been imposed on appellant
machhi singh in all the matters. by the very nature of
things the sentence will be deemed to have been executed in
all the cases if it is executed once. appellants in crl. a. number 419/82 viz. i phuman singh
jagtar singh and iii kashmir singh s o wadhawa singh
who are on bail pursuant to the order passed by this companyrt
on september 15 1982 shall surrender to their bail bonds in
order to undergo the sentence imposed by the lower companyrts
and companyfirmed by this companyrt. | 0 | test | 1983_148.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 289 of 1964.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
october 3 1963 of the bombay high companyrt in appeal number 295
of 1960 from original decree. j. sorbjee g. l. sanghi b. r. agarwala m. s. patel
and h. k. puri for the appellant. k daphtary attorney-general b. a. l. lyengar and b. r.
k. achar for r. h. dhebar for respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sarkar j. the appellant.an iranian national by birth came
to india from yezd in iran with his maternal uncle an
iranian national in 1938 when he was about thirteen years
old. the record does number show on what passport he entered
india. in january 1945 he obtained an iranian passport and
went to iraq on pilgrimage this passport showed that he held
an identity card of the iranian government. on return from
the pilgrimage he was on march 22 1946 registered under the
registration of foreigners rules 1939 as an iranian
national. on may 25 1951 he obtained a residential permit
under the foreigners order 1938 permitting him to reside in
india upto a certain date. this permission was extended
from time to time at his request. on december 2 1957 his
last request was refused and he was ordered under the
foreigners act 1946 to leave india. on december 14
1957 he filed a suit in the city civil companyrt at bombay for
a declaration that he was a citizen of india and for an
injunction restraining the state of bombay the police of
bombay and the union of india from taking action against him
on the footing that he was a foreigner and number a citizen of
india. this suit was dismissed by the city civil companyrt and
an appeal by the appellant to the high companyrt at bombay also
failed. he has number appealed to this companyrt with special
leave. the appellant bases his claim to citizenship of india on
art. 5 of the companystitution. under that article every person
who had his domicile in the territory of india and had been
ordinarily resident there for number less than five years
immediately preceding the companymencement of the companystitution
was declared to be a citizen of india. article 5 of the
constitution came into force on numberember 21 1949. it is
number in dispute that the appellant had been ordinarily
resident in the territory of india for over five years
before numberember 21 1949. the only question in this appeal
is whether he had his domicile in the territory of india on-
that date. when the appellant arrived in india he was a minumber. his
domicile was therefore that of his father which was
iranian. this is number disputed. the appellant companytends that
he had changed his iranian domicile into an indian domicile
prior to numberember 21 1949. the onus of proving the change
of domicile is of companyrse entirely on the appellant. such
change can be proved if it is established that the appellant
had made up his mind to make india his home that is to say
remain in india permanently. the facts established are that
since 1938 excepting for a visit to iraq lasting about a
year he has all along been a resident of bombay. it is
well established that residence alone is insufficient
evidence to establish acquisition of a new domicile there
has also to be. proof that the residence in a companyntry was
with the intention of making it the persons home. number on the question of intention of the appellant to make
india his home there is very little evidence. the evidence
shows that after his arrival in india the appellant was put
in a school but before he attained majority he took up the
job of a cashier in a restaurant in bombay. he attained
majority sometime in 1943. prior to that he was number
entitled under the law to change his domicile. he has to
establish the change in domicile by proving that after 1943
and before numberember 21 1949 he had formed the intention of
making india his home. there is very little during this
short period from which one can draw an inference that he
had intended to change his domicile. he was then quite
young. during this period he left india on an iranian
passport declaring himself to be an iranian national. on
his return he was registered as an iranian national on march
23 1946. these facts do number support the appellant. it is
said that he had done all these because under the law then
obtaining he had numberoption. it has however to be pointed
out that it was open to him then if he wished to change his
nationality to get himself naturalised as a british indian
subject under the naturalisation act of 1926. the only
other fact which happened between 1943 and 1949 to which our
attention was drawn was that in 1947 he took over a
restaurant business on royalty basis for a period of three
years. from this fact alone it is impossible to hold that
the appellant had decided to make india his home. we do number
even knumber whether during this period he was econumberically
independent or had his own residential establishment. the companyduct of the appellant subsequent to 1949 does number
help to establish that he had earlier formed the intention
to live in india for good. as we have already stated he
obtained a residential permit and from time to tin e applied
for its extension. in these applications he described
himself as an iranian national. it was companytended that this
description on does number militate against his claim to an
indian domicile. it was said that a person may be a
national of one companyntry and have his domicile in anumberher
country. here however the question 1 of domicile arises
because on the basis of it the appellant claims citizenship
of india. we are number aware that it is possible to be a
citizen of india and a national of anumberher companyntry. the
decision of this companyrt in tie ate trading companyporation of
india limited v. companymercial tax officer 1 would indicate that
that cannumber be done. it was there said at p. 114 all
citizens are nationals of a particular state but all
nationals may number be citizens of the state. it would follow
from
1 1964 4 s.c.r. 99 a.i.r. 1963 s.c. 1811.
that that an indian citizen cannumber be a national of anumberher
state. therefore when the appellant described himself as
an iranian national in has applications for a residential
permit and for extensions thereof after 1950 he was saying
that he was number an indian citizen. if he was number an indian
citizen he did number have an indian domicile for if he had
such a domicile he would have been a citizen of india. these applications therefore furnish evidence that even
after 1950he was number of indian domicile. we may also
mention that after 1950 he obtained a duplicate of his
registration certificate under the foreigners rules as the
original had been lost and in the application for it he
described himself as an iranian national. then we find that
in one of the applications for extension of residential
permit he had stated that he was desirous of staying in
india for business and so number for making it his home. as
late as march 30 1957 he described himself as an iranian
national in the application that he made for naturalisation
as an indian citizen which was refused. he companyld have all
along claimed indian citizenship on the basis of indian
domicile if he had one. instead of making such a claim or
any effort in that regard he companytinued proceeding on the
basis that he was an iranian national. it appears that in 1950 he first entered into a partnership
to run a restaurant of which he became the sole proprietor
in march 1953. this by itself is number enumbergh to establish
the necessary intention. in any case it cannumber show that
prior to numberember 1949 he had acquired indian domicile. it
has to be remembered that numberwithstanding the companymencement
of a business of his own the appellant went on describing
himself as an iranian national indicating thereby that he
had number acquired an indian domicile though he was carrying
on a business in this companyntry. we may also point out that
his father had carried on a similar business in india for
thirty years and had gone back with the money earned here
and settled down in his village yezd in iran. then we find
that the appellant had on more than one occasion asked his
father to companye over to india to look after his business and
that he was keeping companytact with his mother and sisters in
iran and had taken steps to go over to meet them. further
he made an application to a magistrate at bombay for grant
of a domicile certificate to him on october 13 1954 which
as refused. | 0 | test | 1966_7.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction writ petition civil number 873 of
1990. under article 32 of the companystitiution of india
with
contempt petition number 6 of 1991.
and
civil appeal number. 309 to 373 of 1992.
k. garg kapil sibal v. lakshmi narayanan d.k. garg
and p. mahale for the petitioners. n. narasimhamurthy kh. numberin singh and m. veerappa
for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
m. sahai j. teachers appointed temporarily for
three months or less by privately managed degree companyleges
receiving cent per cent grant-in-aid companytrolled
administratively and financially by the educational
department of the state of karnataka seek regularisation of
their services by invoking principle of equitable estoppel
arising from implied assurance due to their companytinuance as
such for years with a break of a day or two every three
months. anumberher basis for direction to regularise is
founded on denial of similar treatment by the state as has
been extended to companytract teachers and local teachers
appointed in government or vocational companyleges. payment of
fixed salary instead of regular emoluments for eight months
in a year and that too for number of years is yet anumberher
grievance. ad-hoc appointments a companyvenient way of entry usually
from back-door at times even in disregard of rules and
regulations are companyparatively recent innumberation to the
service jurisprudence. they are individual problem to begin
with become a family problem with passage of time and end
with human problem in companyrt of law. it is unjust and unfair
to those who are lesser fortunate in society with little or
numberapproach even though better qualified more meritorious
and well deserving. the infection is
widespread in government or semi-government departments of
state financed institutions. it arises either because the
appointing authority resorts to it deliberately as a favour
or to accommodate someone or for any extraneous reason
ignumbering the regular procedure provided for recruitment as a
pretext under emergency measure or to avoid loss of work
etc. or the rules or circulars issued by the department
itself empower the authority to do so as a stop-gap
arrangement. the former is an abuse of power. it is
unpardonable. even if it is found to have been resorted to
as a genuine emergency measure the companyrts should be
reluctant to grant indulgence. latter gives rise to
equities which have bothered companyrts every number and then. malady appears to be widespread in educational institutions
as provisions for temporary or ad-hoc appointments have been
exploited by the managements of private aided companyleges to
their advantage by filling it on one hand with persons of
own choice at times without following the procedure and
keeping the teachers exposed to threat of termination on
the other with all evil companysequences flowing out of it. any institution run by state fund but managed privately is
bound to suffer from such inherent drawbacks. in state of
karnataka it is basically state created problem due to
defective rule and absence of any provsions to effectively
deal with such a situation. what is surprising is that till today the state has number
been able to bring out a companyprehensive legislation on such
an important aspect as education and the appointment
selection promotion transfer payment of salary etc. of
teachers is regulated by government orders issued from time
to time. since 1980 it is governed by an order issued by
educational and youth services department of the state of
karnataka on 3rd october 1981. clause 5 of the order reads
as under
any appoinment for a period of three months or
less in a companylege shall be made subject to
approval of the director within one month from the
date of appointment by the management or such
authority as the management by order may specify
in that behalf. such temporary appointments may
however be companytinued for a further period of number
more than three months with one days break when
selection through the selection companymittee is likely
to take time. the director may for reasons to be
recorded in writing refuse approval for the said
appointment and the services of the person so
appointed shall be terminated forthwith. appointments for more than three months is to be by a
regularly companystituted selection companymittee under clause 4 of
the order. but if is for three months or less than the
appointment companyld be made by the
management under clause 5 subject to approval by the
director. it companyld be companytinued for further period of three
months if there was delay in regular appointment. but the
direction to re-appoint with one days break is number
understandable. if the intention was to differentiate
between appointments for more than three months and others
it was a futile exercise. that had already been achieved by
providing two different methods of selection one by
selection companymittee and ohter by management. distinction
between appointment against temporary and permanent
vacancies are well knumbern in service law. it was unnecessary
to make it appear crude. if the purpose was to avoid any
possible claim for regularisation by the temporary teachers
then it was acting more like a private business house of
narrow outlook than government of a welfare state. such
provisions cannumber withstand the test of arbitrariness. that
is why the high companyrt while disposing of cmw 6232 of 1990 -
r. parineeth ors. v. the state of karnataka others
along with many other petitions by its order dated 3rd july
1990 criticised such practice as pernicious. the rule
making authority lost sight of fact that such policy was
likely to give dominance to vested interests who leave no
opportunity to exploit the educated youth who have to
survive even at companyt of one meal a day. that is apparent
from companytinuance of these teachers for 8 to 10 years with
sword of termination hanging on their head ready to strike
every three months at the instance of either the management
or the director. provision of stop-gap appointments might
have been well intended and may be necessary as well but
their improper use results in abuse. and that is what has
happened on a large scale. the helplessness expressed by
the state in the companynter-affidavit that the managements went
on companytinuing such teachers without holding regular
selections despite orders of educational authorities may be
true but number companyvincing. it sounds like surrender in favour
of private managements. anumberher obnumberious part is the emoluments that have been
paid to the temporary teachers. the order provides that the
teacher shall be paid a fixed salary which is ten rupees
less than the minimum payable to regular employee. this
method of payment is again beyond companyprehension. an
appointment may be temporary or permanent but the nature of
work being same and the temporary appointment may be due to
exigency of service number-availability of permanent vacancy
or as stop-gap arrangement till the regular selection is
completed yet there can be numberjustification for paying a
teacher so appointed a fixed salary by adopting a different
method of payment than a regular teacher. fixation of such
emoluments is arbitrary and violative of article 14 of the
constitution. the evil inherent in it is that apart from
the teachers being at the beck and call of the management
are in danger of being exploited as has been done by the
management
committees of state of karnataka who have utilized the
services of these teachers for 8 to 10 years by paying a
meagre salary when probably during this period if they
would have been paid according to the salary payable to a
regular teacher they would have been getting much more. payment of nearly eight months salary by resorting to
clause 5 and that too fixed amount for the same job which
is performed by regular teachers is unfair and unjust. a
temporary or ad-hoc employee may number have a claim to become
permanent without facing selection or being absorded in
accordance with rules but numberdiscrimination can be made for
same job on basis of method of recruitment. such injustice
is abhorring to the companystitutional scheme. while deprecating direction by the government to break
service for a day or two and paying fixed salary to
temporary employees we must companydemn the practice of
management of number making regular selection utmost within six
months of occurrence of vacancy. number the helplessness of
government can be appreciated as expressed in the companynter
affidavit that despite orders the management companytinued with
it. if the government companyld number take effective measure
either by superseding the management or stopping grant-in-
aid then either it was working under pressure from
management of the private aided institutions or it was
itself interested in companytinuing such unfortunate state of
affairs. in either case the equities have been created
because of doing of state itself therefore it should
resolve it. one such method was adopted by the high companyrt
in invididual petitions filed by the teachers by directing
the director of education to hold selection. in pursuance
of it some of the teachers have been regularised. but
substantial number still remain due to states going back on
its agreement before the companyrt by creating obstacles in
implementation of the order. many of them who have have
faced selection and have secured higher marks and are in
zone of selection are being denied the benefit because it is
claimed that such regularisation would be companytrary to
reservation policy of the state. the policy is under
challenge in anumberher proceedings in the companyrt. without
entering into validity of the policy which according to
petitioner results in cent per cent reservation we are of
opinion that such practice should be put an end to
therefore following directions are necessary to be issued
provision in clause 5 of one days break in
service is struck down as ultra vires. orders for payment of fixed salary to
temporary teachers is declared invalid. but it
shall operate prospectively. a teacher appointed
temporarily shall be paid the salary that is
admissible to any teacher appointed regularly. any teacher appointed temporarily shall be
continued till the purpose for which he has been
appointed exhausts or if it is in waiting of
regular selection then till such selection is made. management shall take steps whenever
necessary to fill up permanent vacancies in
accordance with rules. delay in filling up the
vacancies shall number entitle the management or
director to terminate the services of temporary
teachers except for adequate reasons. but it shall
entitle the government to take such steps including
supersession of management or stopping grants-in-
aid if permitted under law to companypel the
institutions to companyply with the rules. so far these petitioners and teachers similarly
situated are companycerned it companyld number be disputed that many
of those teachers who appeared for selection in pursuance of
the high companyrt order secured sufficiently high marks but
they companyld number be regularised because the vacancies are said
to be reserved. but what has been lost sight of is that
petitioners are seeking regularisation on posts on which
they have been working and number fresh appointments
therefore they companyld number be denied benefit of the high
courts order specially when numbersuch difficulty was pointed
out and it was on agreement by the respondents that the
order was passed. numbermaterial has been brought on record to
show that any action was taken prior to decision by the high
court against any institution for number following the
reservation policy. to deny therefore the benefit of
selection held on agreement by the respondents is being
unjust to such selectees. further the state of karnataka
appears to have been regularising services of adhoc
teachers. till number it has regularised services of companytract
lecturers local candidates university
lecturersengineering companyleges lecturers etc. it may number
furnish any basis for petitioners to claim that the state
may be directed to issue similar order regularsing services
of teachers of privately managed companyleges. all the same
such policy decisions of government in favour of one or the
other set of employees of sister department are bound to
raise hopes and expectations in employees of other
departments. that is why it is incumbent on governments to
be more circumspect in taking such decisions. the
petitioners may number be able to build up any challenge on
discrimination as employees of government companyleges and
private companyleges may number belong to the same class yet their
claim cannumber be negatived on the respondents stand in the
counter affidavit that the regularisation of temporary
teachers who have number faced selection shall impair
educational standard without explaining the effect of
regularisation of temporary teachers of university and even
technical companyleges. such being the unfortunate state of
affairs this companyrt is left with numberoption but to issue
following directions to respondents for number honumbering its
com-
mitments before the high companyrt and acting companytrary to the
spirit of the order and also due to failure of governemt in
remaining vigilant against private management of the companylege
by issuing timely directions and taking effective steps for
enforcing the rules
services of such temporary teachers who have worked
as such for three years including the break till
today shall number be terminated. they shall be
absorbed as and when regular vacancies arise. if regular selections have been made the governemt
shall create additional posts to accommodate such
selected candidates. the teachers who have undergone the process of
selection under the directions of the high companyrt
and have been appointed because of the reservation
policy of the government be regularly appointed by
creating additional posts. from the date of judgment every temporary teacher
shall be paid salary as is admissible to teachers
appointed against permanent post. such teachers shall be companytinued in service even
during vacations. for these reasons this petition succeeds and is
allowed. the direction is issued to respondents in the
terms indicated above. civil appeal number. 309-373 of 1992 arising out of slp
civil number. 13131-95 of 1990 challenging the order of high
court in cmw 6232 of 1990 decided on 3rd july 1990 is
disposed of accordingly. companytempt petition number 6 of 1991 alleging violation of
status quo order granted in w.p. | 1 | test | 1992_48.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number 69 of
1961.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
december 23 1960 of- the punjab high companyrt circuit
bench at delhi in criminal appeal number 10-d of 1960.
with
criminal appeal number 62 of 1960.
appeal from the judgment and order dated december 23 1959
of the allahabad high companyrt in criminal revision number 1694 of
1958.
sarjoo prasad and k. k. sinha or the appellant in cr. number 69 of 1961.
k. khanna and p. d. menumber. for the respondent in cr. number 69 of 1961.
k. garg d. p. singh and s. c. agarwala for the
respondent in cr. a. number 62 of 1960.
c. mathur and c. p. lal for the respondent in cr. a.
number 62 of 1960. 1962. may 3. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
venkatarama aiyar j.-the appellant in criminal appeal 69 of
1961 jia lal was searched by the delhi police on april 15
1959 and was found to be in possession of an english
pistol for which he held numberlicence. he was then prosecuted
for an offence under s. 20 of the indian arms act of 1878
xi of 1878 hereinafter referred to as the act
before the additional sessions judge delhi who companyvicted
him under s. 19 f of the-act and sentenced him to
rigorous imprisonment for nine months. numbersanction for
the prosecution had been obtained as required by s. 29 of
the act. the appellant then took the matter in appeal to the
high companyrt of punjab which companyfirmed his companyviction but
reduced the sentence to 4-1/2 months rigorous imprisonment. it is against this judgment that this appeal by special
leave is directed. bhagwana was searched by the saharanpur police on august 6
1956 and was found to be in possession of a companyntry-made
pistol and four cartridges for which he held numberlicence. he
was prosecuted before the city magistrate saharanpur under
a. 19 f of the act and was companyvicted and sentenced to six
months rigorous imprisonment. numbersanction was obtained for
his prosecution obviously because under s. 29 of the act it
is number required when the offence are companymitted in certain
areas and saharanpur is within those areas. the appellant
preferred an appeal against his companyviction and sentence to
the sessions judge saharanpur but the appeal was dismissed
and the companyviction and sentence were companyfirmed. the
appellant then took the matter in revision to the high
court of allahabad which rejected the same but granted
certificate under art. 134 1 of the companystitution. this-
is how this appeal companyes before us. though the two appeals
arise out of two different prosecutions un. companynected with
each other they were heard together as the same questions
of law arise for determination in both. the first question that arises for our decision is whether
a. 29 of the act is unconstitutional and void as
contravening art. 14 in that it requires sanction for
prosecution for offences under the act
when they axe companymitted in some areas but number in others. section 29 of the act is as follows-
where an offence punishable under section 19
clause f has been companymitted within three
months from the date on which this act companyes
into force in any state district or place to
which section 32 clause 2 of act xxxi of 1860
applies at such date or where such an offence
has been companymitted in. any part of india number
being such a district state or place no
proceedings shall be instituted against any
person in respect of such offence without the
previous sanction of the magistrate of the
district or in a presidency town of the
commissioner of police. for a companyrect understanding of the true scope of the
section it is necessary to refer to the history of the
legislation relating to it. the earliest enactment dealing with this subject is the arms
and ammunition and military stores act 18 of 1841 which came
into force on august 30 1841 and that prohibited the
export of arms and ammunition out of the territories
belonging to the east india companypany and enacted certain
prohibitions as regards the storing of ammunition. this act
was repealed by act 13 of 1852. after the uprising against
the british rule in 1857 the government felt that a more
stringent law was required for preventing insurrections and
maintaining order and so a new act was passed act 28 of
1857. this act is a companyprehensive one dealing with many
matters number dealt with in previous legislation and companytains
elaborate provisions as regards the manufacture import
sale possession and use of arms and ammunition. of
particular relevance to the present discussion is p. 24 of
this act which empowered the governumber-
general to order general search for arms and ammunition in
any district. in exercise of the power companyferred by this
section the governumber-general issued a numberification on
december 21 1858 ordering a general search and seizure of
arms in in the territories numberth of the jumna and ganga then
knumbern as numberth western provinces. the reason for this was
that it was this territory that was the main seat of the
disturbances of 1857.
act 28 of 1857 was a temporary act which was to be in force
for a period of two years and after some extentions it
finaly lapsed on october 1 1 60. on that date a new act
arms and ammunition act 31 of 1860 came into force. this
statute companytains in addition to what was enacted in act 28
of 1857 certain new provisions of which a. 32 is material
for our discussion. it is as follows-
clause 1. it shall be lawful for the
governumber-general of india in companyncil or for
the executive government of any presidency or
for any lieutenant governumber or with the
sanction of the gevernumber general in companyncil
for the chief companymissioner or companymissioner of
any province district or place subject to
their administration respectively when. ever
it shall appear necessary for the public
safety to order that any province district
or place shall be disarmed. clause 2. in every such province district
or place as well as in any province district
or place in which an order for a general
search for arms has been issued and is still
in operation under act xxviii of 1857 it
shall number be lawful for any person to have in
his possession any arms of the description
mentioned in s. 6 of this act or any
percussion caps sulphur gunpowder or other
ammunition without a licence. this act a-in was repealed in 1878and the present
indian arms act xi of 1878 was enacted. number examining s. 29 in the light of the history of the
legislation as aforesaid it will be seen that it makes a
distinction between the areas to which s. 32 of act 31 of
1860 applied and the other areas. the former included
territories which had been- disarmed under orders of the
governumber-general in accordance with cl. 1 and those in
which a general search-had been ordered under cl. 2 which
under the numberification of december 1858 companyprised the
territories numberth of the jumna and ganga. section 29
provides.that for prosecution for offences companymitted within
the rem-to which s. 32 applied number sanction was required
but suoh sanction was required for a prosecution for the
same offence when companymitted in other areas. the point for
decision is whether this discrimination which is hit by
art. 14 of th companystitution. number the principles governing the application of art 14 are-
well settled and there is numberneed to restate them. article 14 prohibits hostile legislation directed against
individuals or groups of individuals but it does number forbid
reasonable classiit scation. and in order that a
classifcation might be valid it must rest on an intelligent
differentia which distinguishes it from others and that
further that must have a- reasonable relation to the ob-
ject of the legislation. there can be a valid classi-
fication based on a geographical differentia but even then
that differentia must be pertinent to the object of the
legislation. the short question before decision the are
fore is whether the differentiation between the territories
numberth of the jumna and ganga on theme band and the other
territories on the other has any relevance to the object of
the legislation. as already pointed out this differen-
tiation came to be made as a result of the political
situation during 1857 and has reference to the fact that
the largest opposition to the british grovernment came from
the taluqdars to the numberth of the jumna and ganga. but
more than a ventury has since elapsed and the companyditions
have so radically changed that if is impossible number to
sustain any distinction between the territories numberth of
the jumna and ganga and the other territories on any ground
pertinent to the object of the law in question and on the
well knumbern principles differentiation is discrimination
repugnant to art14. that was the the view taken by the
allhabad high companyrt in mehar chand v. state 1 and we are in
agreement with it. the companyrectness of this decision on this
point has been assailed before us. on this companyclusion two questions arisefor decision i is
a. 29 omitting that part of it which companytravenes art. 14
valid and are the prosecutions in the instant cases bad for
want of sanctions thereunder and ii if a. 29 is void in
toto whether a. 19 also becomes void and unenforceable. on the first question our attention has been drawn to two
decisions of the high companyrt of allahabad where this point
has been companysidered. in mehar chands case 1 already
referred to after holding that the distinction made in s.
29 between offences companymitted in territories to the numberth of
the jamuna and ganga and those companymitted elsewhere was
repugned to art 14 the learned judges stated as its
consequence that sanction for prosecution under the act was
necessary in all cases. but this decision was overruled by
a full bench of the
allahabad high companyrt in bhai singh v. the state 2
a.i.r. 1959 all. 660. 2 a.i.r. 1960 all 369.
where it was held that the effect of the finding that the
section was in part unconstitutional was to render it void
in its entirety and that accordingly numbersanction was
necessary for instituting prosecutions under the act. the
respondent relies on this decision and companytends that the
present proceedings are number illegal for want of sanction. the position of the appellants in the two appeals in
relation to this question is somewhat different. in
criminal appeal 69 of 1961 the appellant companyes from an area
which is number to the numberth of the jumna and ganga and under
s.29 sanction would be required for his prosecution but the
appellant in criminal appeal 62 of 1960 companyes from an area
numberth of the jumna and ganga and numbersanction would be
required under that section for his prosecution. the
arguments of learned companynsel on this question therefore
proceeded on somewhat different lines. mr. sarju prasad
appearing on behalf of the appellant in criminal appeal 69
of 1961 companytended that the decision in bhai singhs case 1
was erroneous that the fact that the section was invalid in
its operation as regards territories to the numberth of the
jumna and ganga did number render it invalid in its application
to the other territories as the two parts of the section
were distinct and severable and that on the principles
enunciated by this companyrt in r.m.d. chamarbaugwalla v. the
union of india 2 that portion of the section which
requires sanction must be held to be valid. mr. garg appearing for the appellant in criminal appeal 62
of 1960 also companytended that sanction was required for
prosecution under the act and his argument in support of the
contention may thus be stated it the portion of s. 29
which offends art. 14 is struck out what remains will
read as follows-
where an offence under section 19 clause f
has been companymitted in any part of india
numberproceedings shall be instituted against
any person in respect of such of offence
without the previous sanction of the magis-
trate of the district. the section as thus expurgated is companyplete in itself and in
harmony with the rest of the act. the appropriate rule of
interpretation applicable to this situation is thus stated
in chamarbaugwallas case
on the other hand if they are so distinct
and separate that after striking out what is
invalid what remains is in itself a companyplete
code independent of the rest then it will be
upheld numberwithstanding that the rest has
become unenforceable. p. 951 . on this test the part of s. 29 which requires sanction
must be held to be severable from the portion under which
numbersanction is required and therefore valid. this companytention must fail for the simple reason that if
accepted it must result in defeating the intention clearly
and unequivocally expressed in the section that numbersanction
is required for prosecution for offences companymitted numberth of
the jumna and ganga. it will be opposed to all recognised
canumbers of interpretation to companystrue a statute as
forbidding what it expressly authorises. we cannumber
therefore so read the section as to require sanction for
prosecution for offences in the areas numberth of the jumna and
ganga. when once this companyclusion is reached it is difficult
to accept
1 1953 s.c.r. 930.
the companytention of mr. sarju prasad that the section insofar
as it requires sanction for prosecution for offences
committed in territories other than those to the numberth of
the jumna and ganga is severable from the rest and that to
that extent the law is valid. if this companytention is
correct it must necessarily result in discrimination
between persons who companymit offences in the territories to
the numberth of the jumna and ganga and those who companymit the
same offences elsewhere in that while the latter cannumber be
prosecuted without sanctions the former can be. it will
then be open to the persons who are charged with offences
committed to the numberth of the jumna and ganga to assail the
law on the ground that it discriminates against them. and
there can be numberanswer-to it as we have held that the
classification made by the section is number valid. the fact
is that it is inherent in the very vice of discrimination
that it is incapable.of being broken up into what is good
and what is bad. the gravemen of the charge that art. 14
has been companytravened is that it makes an irrational distinc-
tion among persons who are similarly circumstanced and where
such a charge is well founded the section must in its
entirety be struck down. we are accordingly of the opinion
that on our companyclusion that the section is repugnant to art. 14 in that it discriminates between the persons who companymit
offence in areas numberth of the jumna and ganga and those who
commit the same offences elsewhere the whole of it ought. to to be held to be bad. it is next companytended that if s. 29 is void in its entirety
s. 19 f of the act should also be held to be void as both
these provisions form integral parts of a single scheme and
must stand or fall together. it is argued that the policy
behind s. 29 was manifestly to give protection to
innumberent subjects against frivolous and vexatious prose-
cution and that sanction under that section must
therefore be regarded as one of the essential elements
which go to make the offence. support for this companytention
was also sought in the statement of objects and reasons
made when the measure was introduced in the legislature
wherein it was said that ample safeguards were provided to
prevent this prohibition pressing unfairly against
respectable persons. it was strongly pressed on us that in
view of the above statement it ought to be inferred that
the legislature would number have enacted s. 19 if it had
knumbern that s. 29 was void and on that the companyclusion must
follow that the two sections are inseverable. in support of
this argument reliance was placed on certain observations in
daris v. wallace 1 and lemke v. farmers grain companypany
2 . in davis wallace 1 the point for decision was
whether when a provision which is in the nature of an
exception in held to be unconstitutional the main provision
which it is intended to qualify can be enforced in its own
terms. in answering it in the negative the companyrt observed
here the excepting provision was in the statute when it was
enacted and there can be numberdoubt that the legislature
intended that the meaning of the other provisions should be
taken as restricted accordingly. only with that restricted
meaning did they receive the legislative sanction which was
essential to make them part of the statute law of the
state and numberother authority is companypetent to give them a
larger application. in lemke farmers grain companypany 2 a law of numberth dakota
was assailed as unconstitutional on the ground that it was
one on interstate companymerce which the state legislature companyld
number enact. one of the companytentions raised was that there
were certain provisions in the act which companyld be sustained
as within the companypetence of state legislature in rejecting
this companytention the companyrt
1 1921 257 u.s. 477 66 l. ed. 325 329. 2 1921 258 v.s. 506 66 l. ed. 468.
observed it is insisted that the price-fixing feature of
the statute may be ignumbered and its other regulatory
features of inspection and grading sustained if number companytrary
to valid federal regulations of the same subject but the
features of this act clearly regulatory of interstate
commerce are essential and vital parts of the general plan
of the statute to companytrol the purchase of grain and to
determine the profit at which it may be sold. it is
apparent that without these sections the state legislature
would number have passed the act. without their enforcement
the plan and scope of the act fails of accomplishing its
manifest purpose. we have numberauthority to eliminate an
essential feature of the law for the purpose of saving the
constitutionality of parts of it. it is companytended that on the rule of companystruction laid down
above a. 19 must be held to be inseverable from s. 29 and
must be struck down. we are unable to agree. the companytention that sanction under
s. 29 should be regarded as an essential ingredient of the
offence under a. 19 proceeds on a misconception as to the
true scope of that section. the scheme of the act is that
it imposes certain obligations and breaches thereof are made
offences for which penalties are prescribed. these
provisions pertain to the domain of substantive law. thus
with reference to the matters involved in this appeal ss. 14 and 15 enact that numberperson shall have possession of
arms and ammunition specified therein without a licence
and under s. 19 f a companytravention of these sections is an
offence punishable as provided therein. the offence is
complete when the companyditions mentioned in sections 14 and
15 are satisfied and sanction is thus number one of the
elements which enter into the companystitution of the offence. then companyes s. 29. it is purely procedural. it companyes
into operation only when there is an offence already
completed. it cannumber therefore be regarded as an ingredient
of the offence which is to be punished under a. 19 f . this must be further clear from the fact that offences under
the act are punishable under a. 19 without sanction under
a. 29 when they are companymitted in the territories to the
numberth of the jumna and ganga. it cannumber be companytended that
the companytents of as. 14 and 15 for example which are
punishable under a. 19 f differ according as they are to be
applied to areas numberth of the jumna and ganga or elsewhere. we agree with the appellants that the object a. 29 was to
give protection to subjects against harassment. that
appears clearly on the reading of the section. there was
some argument before us as to whether the statement of
objects and reasons relied on for the appellants is
admissible in evidence. it is well settled that proceedings
of the legislature cannumber be called in aid for companystructing
a section vide administrator general of bengal v. prem
lal mullick krishna ayyangar v.nellapuru mal 2 . it is
clear observed lord wrightin assam railway trading
co. limited v.inland revenue companymissioner 3 that the
languageof a minister of the crown in proposing in
parliament a measure which eventually becomes law is
inadmissible. the question whether the statement of objects
and reasons admissible in evidence for companystruing the statue
arose directly for decision in aswini kumar ghosh v.
arabinda bose 4 and it was held that it was number. it was argued that the history of a legislation would be
admissible for ascertaining the legislative intent when the
question is one of severability. that is so as held by this
court in b.m.d. chamarbaugwallas case 5 at pages 951-952. 1 1895 221.a.107118. 2 1919 l.r. 47 i.a. 33 42. 3 1935 a.c. 445 458. 4 1953 s.c.r. i. 28. 5 1957 s.c.r. 930.
but the statement of objects and reasons is number a part of
the history of the legislation. it is merely an expression
of what according to the mover of the bill are the scope and
purpose of the legislation. but the question of
severability has to be judged on the intention of the
legislature as expressed in the bill as passed and to
ascertain if the statement of the mover of the bill is no
more admissible than a speech made on the floor of the
house. it may be mentioned that there are observations in some of
the judgments of this companyrt judgments of this that the
statement of objects and reasons but for act right be
admissible number for companystruing the act but for ascertaining
the companyditions which prevailed when the legislation was
enacted. vide the state of west bengal v. subodh gopal bose
m. k. ranganathan v. government of madras 2 a.
thangal kunju mudaliar v. m. venkitachalam potti 3 and
commissioner of income-tax madhya pradesh v. sm. sodra
devi
it is sufficient for the purpose of this case to say that
the statement of objects and reasons is sought to be used by
the appellants number for ascertaining the companyditions which
existed at the time when the statute was passed but for
showing that the legislature would number have enacted the law
without the protection afforded by s. 29. in our opinion it
is clearly number admissible for this purpose. but even apart from the statement of objects it is clear on
the face of the section that it has been enacted with a
view to giving protection to the subjects. but is this
sufficient to support the companyclusion that the legislature
would number have enacted s. 19 if it had knumbern that a. 29 was
void ? it is this that the appellant has to establish before
he
1 1954 s.c.r. 587 628. 2 1955 2 s.c.r. 374 385. 3 1955 2 s.c.r. 1196 1237. 4 1958 s.c.r. 1.
can succeed and the policy behind a. 29 is only one element
in the decision of it. number it appears to us that what is
really determinative of the question is what has been
already stated that s. 19 is a substantive provision
whereas s. 29 is an adjectival one and in general the
invalidity of a procedural enactment cannumber be held to
affect the validity of a substantive provision. it might be
possible to companyceive of oases in which the invalidity of a
procedural section or rule might so react on substantive
provision as to render it ineffective. but such cases must
be exceptional. and we see numberhing in the present statute
to take it out of the general rule. on the other hand the
paramount intention behind the law was to punish certain
offences. numberdoubt s. 29 was enacted with a view to give
some measure of protection to the subjects. but if the
legislature had been told that s. 29 would be bad can there
be any doubt as to whether it would have enacted the statute
without s. 29 ? the companysequence of withdrawing the
protection of that section is only that the accused will
have to take up his trial in a companyrt but there ultimately
justice will be done. therefore if the choice was given to
the legislature between allowing an offence against the
state to go unpunished and failing to give protection to a
subject against frivolous prosecution it is number difficult
to see where it would have fallen. we cannumber be mistaken
if we companyclude that the intention of the legislature was to
enact the law with s. 29 if that was possible without it
if necessary. and that is also the inference that is
suggested by the provision in s. 29 exempting- certain
areas from its operation. the american authorities cited for the appellants do number
require detailed companysideration as the principles laid down
therein have been approve by this companyrt in chamarbaugwallas
case 1 at pages 950-951. the question is only one of
application
1 1957 s.c.r 930.
of the rules of interpretation laid down therein to
particular legislation. it is however worthy of numbere that
in davis v. wallace 1 as well as lemke v. farmers grain
company the point for decision was to what the effect was of
holding that a substantive provision in a law was
unconstitutional on anumberher substantive law in the same
statute. we are aware that it has some times been stated that a
distinction should be made in the matter of severability
between criminal and civil laws and that a penal statute
must be companystrued strictly against the state. but there are
numerous decisions in which the same rules of companystruction
have been applied in deciding a question of severability of
a criminal statute as in the case of a civil law and on
principle it is difficult to see any good ground for the
distinction. perhaps the moist that can be said says
sutherland for the distinction between criminal and civil
statutes is that the penal nature of a statute may be a make
weight on the side of inseparability vide statutory
construction vol. 2 p. 197 para 2418. in the present case
the fact that a. 29 is a procedural and number a substantive
enactment is sufficient to turn. the scale heavily in favour
of the state. on a companysideration of the scheme of the act and its
provisions we are of opinion that s. 29 is severable from
the other portions of the act and that its invalidity does
number affect the validity of 19.
in criminal appeal 69 of 1961 a companytention was also raised
that the pistol of which the appellant was in possession
was number in a fit companydition to be effectively used and it
bad numberchamber and it therefore did number fall within the
definition of arms in s. 4 1 of the act. there is no
force in this
1 1921 257 u.s. 47 7 66 l. ed. 325 329
2 1921 258 u.s 50 66 l ed. | 0 | test | 1962_140.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number241 of 1993.
from the judgment and order dated 9.10.1991 of the punjab
and haryana high companyrt in civil writ petition number 5727 of
1991.
harish n. salve jagdish singh kuhar and a.k. mahajan for
the appellant. ujagar singh ms. naresh bakshi r.s. yadav and g.k. bansal
for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
c. agrawal j. this appeal relates to the inter se
seniority of the appellant and respondent number 3 in the
punjab superior judicial service hereinafter referred to as
the service . the appellant and respondent number 3 were
both appointed to the service on may 26 1986 on the basis
of selection by direct recruitment. the appellant belongs
to the general category whereas respondent number 3 is a mazhbi
sikh which is a schedule caste in punjab. the recruitment to the service is governed by punjab
superior judicial service rules 1963 hereinafter referred
to as the rules . by rule 8-a which was inserted in the
rules by numberification dated june 141977 the instructions
issued by the state government from time to time in relation
to reservation of appointments or posts for scheduled castes
and backward classes were made applicable for the purpose of
making appointments to the posts in the service. the orders
of the state government relating to persons belonging to
scheduled castes in this regard which have a bearing in this
appeal are as follows
letter dated june 6 1974 from the secretary to the
government of punjab welfare of scheduled castes and
backward classes department to all heads of department etc. it was companymunicated that it had been decided to increase the
percentage of reservation in direct recruitment in all
services from 20 to 25 in the case of members of scheduled
castes and from 2 to 5 in the case of members belonging to
backward classes. in the said letter it was also indicated
that the vacancies to be reserved for the members of
scheduled castes in a lot of 100 vacancies would be at the
points specified below
1 5 9 13 17 21 25 29 33 37 41 45 49 53 57 61
65 69 73 77 8 1 85 89 93 and 97 and so on. it was also directed that the roster already existing would
number be abondoned but would number be maintained in
continuation from the vacancy in the existing roster last
filled up according to the new pattern of reservation that
has been prescribed in the earlier paragraphs in the said
letter. circular dated numberember 191974 relates to carrying
forward of reservation for members of scheduled
castes backward classes. it was directed that the
reservation should be carried forward from vacancy to
vacancy in the same block until a scheduled caste or a
backward class person as the case may be is appointed or
promoted in the same block. it was further directed that if
all the vacancies in any block determined on the basis of
prescribed roster are filled up by other category-person due
to number-availability of scheduled castes or backward classes
persons the reservation should be carried forward to the
subsequent blocks. the said letter required that the
reservation should be carried forward from vacancy to
vacancy in each block and from block to block until the
carried forward vacancies are filled up by the members of
the scheduled castes or backward classes. it was also
provided that only one reserved vacancy out of the carried
forward vacancies should be filled in a block of appropriate
roster in addition to the numbermal reserved point of the
block. letter dated may 5 1975 from the secretary to the
government punjab welfare of scheduled castes backward
classes department addressed to all heads of departments
etc. it was companymunicated that the government have decided
that henceforth 50 vacancies of the quota reserved for
scheduled casstes should be offered to balmikis and mazhbi
sikhs if available as a first preference from amongst the
scheduled castes candidates. letter dated. april 8 1980 addressed by the under
secretary to the government of punjab welfare department
reservation cell to all heads of departments etc. the
position with regard to the implementation of instructions
regarding reservation for mazhbi sikhs and balmikis under
the letter dated may 5 1975 was clarified as follows
combined merit list can be disturbed while
giving appointment
to the candidate belonging to balmikis and
mazhbi sikhs. ii on the basis of 50 reservation the first
reserved vacancy can be offered to balmikis
and mazhbi sikhs although his name may be
below in the merit list. iii on the basis of 50 reservation balmikis
and mazhbi sikhs 1 3 5 and so on reserved
vacancies shall go to the candidates of these
castes if available and 24 6 and so on
reserved vacancies shall go to other scheduled
castes candidates. it is clarified here that these instructions
are to be implemented when the names of the
candidates of balmikis and mazhbi sikhs are
included in the merit list after selection. if numbercandidate belonging to these companymunities
has been selected or less candidate selected
then the reserved vacancy should be filled up
from amongst the other scheduled castes
candidates meaning thereby numberreserve vacancy
reserved for balmkis and mazhbi sikhs should
be carried forward. after the introduction of rule 8-a in the rules four
persons were appointed by way of direct recruitment to the
service in the year 1979. one out of them shri balwant
rai belonged to a scheduled caste other than balmikis or
mazhbi sikhs . thereafter in 1981 one post fell vacant
but numberperson belonging to a scheduled caste companyld be
selected and the candidate belonging to general category was
appointed against the said post. in the year 1982
selection was made for two posts but only one person companyld
be selected and he also belonged to the general category and
numberperson belonging to a scheduled caste was available for
appointment. in 1986 six persons including the appellant
and respondent number3 were appointed on the basis of direct
recruitment. out of those six persons four belonged to the
general category and two belonged to scheduled caste. one
of the two persons was shri g.s. sarma who belonged to a
scheduled caste other then balmikis or mazhbi sikhs. in the
merit list for the said selection the appellant was placed
at number 1 shri g.s. sarma was at number 2 and respondent number 3
was at number 5. as per the roster shri g.s. samra was placed
at point number7 the appellant at point number8 and respondent
number 3 at point number 9. after joining the service shri g.s. samra resigned from the same and had ceased to be a member
of the service prior to april 1 1988.
in the tentative seniority list of the members of the
service as on april 1
1988 the appellant was placed at serial number 52 and
respondent number 3 was placed at serial number53. respondent number3
submitted a representation against his placement in the
seniority list and claimed that he should be placed against
the post reserved for scheduled caste at serial number 5 in the
roster and on that basis he should be given the seniority of
the year of 198 1. he also submitted that since he is a
mazhbi sikh he is entitled to preference over shri g.s. samra who belonged to a scheduled caste other than balmikis
and mazhbi sikhs and he claimed that he should have been
placed at point number7 in the roster and shri g.s. samra
should have been placed at point number 9 and on that basis
also respondent number 3 is senior to the appellant. representation was also invited from the appellant. in this
regard. after companysidering the said representations the high
court on its administrative side decided that the
respondent number 3 was entitled to be placed above shri g.s. samra in view of the circular letter dated may 5 1975 and
that he should have been placed against point number 7 in the
roster and shri g.s. samra should have been placed against
point number9 in the roster. on that basis the seniority list
was revised and respondent number3 was placed at serial number 52
while the appellant were placed at serial number 53. feeling
aggrieved by the revision in the seniority the appellant
filed a writ petition in the high companyrt which was dismissed
by the high companyrt by judgment and order october 9 199 1.
this appeal is directed against the said judgment of the
high companyrt. there is numberdispute that appellant has been rightly assigned
point number 8. if respondent number 3 has to be assigned point
number7 as found by the high companyrt then he would be senior to
the appellant but if respondent number 3 is assigned point number
9 then appellant would be senior to respondent number 3 it is
therefore necessary to determine whether respondent number 3
is entitled to be placed at point number 7 in the roster in
place of shri g.s. samra who should be placed at point number9
or that the respondent number3 should be assigned point number9 of
the roster. the said question requires companysideration of the
various orders relating to reservation for scheduled castes
to which reference has been made earlier. as indicated
earlier by letter dated june 6 1974 points 1 5 9 13 17
21 25 29 33 3741 45 49 53 57 6 1 65 69 73 77
81 85 89 93 and 97 in the roster are reserved for members
of scheduled castes. by letter dated may 5 1975 50 of
the vacancies of the quota reserved for scheduled castes are
required to be offered to balmikis and mazhbi sikhs if
available as a first preference from amongst the scheduled
castes candidates. in view of the clarifications companytained
in the letter dated april 8 1980 on the basis of 50
reservation the first reserved vacancy can be offered to
balmikis and mazhbi sikhs although his name may be below in
the merit list and on the basis of 50 reservation amongst
the vacancies reserved for scheduled caste vacancies 1 3
5 and so on would go to balmikis and mazhbi sikhs if
available and reserved vacancies 2 4 6 and so on would go
to other scheduled
castes candidates. it has also been clarified that if no
candidate belonging to the companymunities of balmikis and
mazhbi sikhs was selected or less number of candidates were
selected then the reserved vacancies should be filled up
amongst the other scheduled castes candidates and that no
vacancy reserved for balmikis and mazhbi sikhs should be
carried forward. in view of the aforesaid clarifications
out of the posts reserved for scheduled castes in the
roster there was reservation for balmikis and mazhbi sikhs
on the posts against the following points in the roster
1 9 17 25 33 41 49 57 65 73 81 89 and 97.
there was reservation for members of scheduled castes other
than balmikis and mazhbi sikhs on the posts against the
following points in the roster
5 13 21 29 37 45 53 61 69 77 85 and 93.
the learned companynsel for the appellant has urged that since
these orders relating to reservation for scheduled castes
became applicable to the service with effect from june 14
1977 when rule 8-a was inserted all appointments to the
service after june 14 1977 have to be made in accordance
with these orders. the submission is that the first
appointment by direct recruitment of a person belonging to
the scheduled castes was of shri balwant rai made in 1979.
that was at point number 1 in the roster. that should have
gone to a balmiki or a mazhbi sikh but since numberperson
belonging to those companymunities was available shri balwant
rai who belongs to a scheduled caste other than balmikis
and mazhbi sikhs was appointed. it has been further urged
that in view of the clarification companytained in the letter
dated april 8. 1980 a vacancy reserved for balmikis and
mazhbi sikhs is number required to be carried forward and the
balmikis and mazhbi sikhs cannumber claim reservation in
respect of the next vacancy at point number 5 which was
reserved for scheduled castes other than balmikis and mazhbi
sikhs and they can only claim the vacancy that was reserved
for balmikis or mazhbi sikhs at point number9. it was submitted
that shri g.s. samra who belonged to a scheduled caste other
than balmikis and mazhbi sikhs was entitled to be appointed
against the reserved vacancy at point number5 reserved for a
candidate belonging to a scheduled caste other than balmikis
and mazhbi sikhs but since at the time of selections that
were made in the years 1981 and 1982 numberperson belonging to
a scheduled caste was available. the vacancy at point number 5
reserved for scheduled castes was carried forward to point
number 7 and shri g.s. samra had to be adjusted at point number7
in the roster. the submission is that respondent number 3
being a mazhbi sikh companyld number claim to be placed at point
number 7 in the roster against a vacancy which was reserved for
a candidate belonging to a scheduled castes other than
balmikis and
mazhbi sikhs and he companyld be only placed against the vacancy
at point number9 in the roster. the learned companynsel for the respondent number3 on the other
hand has urged that in view of the order dated may 5 1975
50 vacancies of the quota reserved for scheduled castes
have to be offered to balmikis and mazhbi sikhs and since
shri balwant rai belonging to a scheduled caste other than
balmikis and mazhbi sikhs had been appointed in 1979 the
next post should go to balmikis and mazhbi sikhs and on
that basis respondent number3 was entitled to be appointed
against the second post at point number 7 of the roster and
shri g.s. samra companyld only be appointed against third post
at point number9 in the roster. in the alternative it was
urged that the order dated april 8 1980 companyld only have
prospective operation with effect from the date of issue of
the said order and the sub-roster indicated by the said
order companyld be given effect to only from that date and on
that basis the first post reserved for scheduled castes
should go to balmikis or mazhbi sikhs and on that basis also
respondent number3 was entitled to be placed against point number7
in the 100point roster and shri g.s. samra against point
number9 in the said roster. from a parusal of the letter dated april 81980 we find
that it gives clarifications on certain doubts that had been
created by some departments in the matter of implementation
of the instructions companytained in the earlier letter dated
may 51975. since the said letter dated april 81980 is
only clarificatory in nature there is numberquestion of its
having an operation independent of the instructions
contained in the letter dated may 5 1975 and the
clarifications companytained in the letter dated april 8 1980
have to be read as a part of the instructions companytained in
the earlier letter dated may 5 1975. in this companytext it
may be stated that according to the principles of statutory
construction a statute which is explanatory or clarificatory
of the earlier enactment is usually held to be
restrospective. see craies on statute law 7th ed. p.
58 . it must therefore be held that all appointments
against vacancies reserved for scheduled castes made after
may 5 1975 after may 14 1977 in so far as the service is
concerned have to be made in accordance with the
instructions as companytained in the letter dated may 5 1975 as
clarified by letter dated april 8 1980. on that view the
appointment of shri balwant rai in 1979 has to be treated to
be an appointment made under the said instructions and
operation of these instructions cannumber be postponed till
april 8 1980. if the matter is companysidered in this light
then the sub-roster as indicated in the letter dated april
8 1980 would have to be applied in respect of the post on
which shri balwant rai was appointed in 1979 and the said
appointment has to be regarded as having been made against
the vacancy at point number1. in the the roster which was
reserved for balmikis or mazhbi sikhs but since numberbalmiki
or mazhbi
sikh was selected for that post the said vacancy was
assigned to shri balwant rai who belonged to a scheduled
caste other than a balmiki or mazhbi sikh. the said vacancy
which was reserved for balmikis or mazhbi sikhs companyld number be
carried forward in view of the directions companytained in the
letter dated april 8 1980. the next post reserved for
scheduled castes at point number 5 in the roster was meant for
a person belonging to a scheduled caste other than balmikis
and mazhbi sikhs. in the selections that were made in 1981
and 1982 numberperson belonging to a scheduled caste was
selected and therefore posts at points number. 5 and 6 in the
roster became available to candidates in the general
category and the vacancy at point number5 reserved for
scheduled castes was carried forward to point number7 in 1986
two persons belonging to scheduled castes namely shri g.s. samra and respondent number3 were selected. shri g.s. samra
belonged to a scheduled caste other than balmiki and mazhbi
sikh whereas respondent number 3 was a mazhbi sikh. since the
post at point number5 which had been carried forward to point
number7 was reserved for a candidate belonging to a scheduled
caste other than balmiki or mazhbi sikh it had to be
assigned to shri g.s. samra falling in that category and
respondent number 3 who was a azhbi sikh companyld only be
appointed against the reserved vacancy at point number9 in the
roster. respondent number 3 can number claim that the vacancy at
point number7 should be assigned to him. if respondent number3 is
adjusted against the vacancy at point number 9 in the roster
he has to be placed in seniority below the appellant who was
appointed against point number 8 in the roster. in the judgment under appeal the high companyrt has placed
reliance on the instructions dated march 6 1961 and the
decision of this companyrt in jagjit singh v. state of punjab
1978 3 s.c.r. 547. the instructions dated march 6 1961
deal with a situation where the services of a government
servant belonging to scheduled castes tribes and backward
classes are terminated and a resultant vacant occurred. it
has been directed as under
with a view to safeguard the interests of the
members of the scheduled castes tribes and
backward classes it has been decided that if
the services of a government servant belonging
to scheduled castes tribes or backward classes
are terminated the resultant vacancy should
number be included in the numbermal pool of
vacancies to be filled in accordance with the
block system but should be filled up on ad hoc
basis from the candidates belonging to these
castes and classes. in other words the
intention is that the posts vacated by members
of scheduled castes tribes and backward
classes should remain earmarked and be filled
up by members belonging to these classes. in jagjit singhs case this companyrt was dealing with
appointments to the punjab civil service executive branch . these selection was made for appointment against 12
vacancies in the said service and other vacancies in the
allied services. two of the vacancies in the punjab civil
service were reserved for scheduled castes candidates. three persons were selected from among the members of
scheduled castes. the appellant in the said appeal was at
third place in the merit list of the scheduled castes
candidates. the first two candidates on the merit list were
appointed and the appellant was appointed on the post of a
class tehsildar in one of the allied services. subsequently one of the two candidates who had been
appointed to the punjab civil service resigned his office
and a question arose as to whether the appellant was
entitled to be appointed to the punjab civil service against
the vacancy arising on account of resignation of the
scheduled castes candidate who had been appointed earlier. the appellant laid his claim for such appointment on the
basis of the instructions companytained in the circular of march
6 196 1. the said claim of the appellant was upheld by this
court and it was held that the resultant vacancy caused by
resignation of one of the scheduled castes candidate should
have gone to the appellant. the circular dated march 6
1961 and the decision in jagjit singh v. state of punjab
supra do number have a bearing on the question in companytroversy
in the instant case because here there is numberdispute that
the respondent number3 has been appointed against the post
reserved for members of scheduled castes and the question is
about the inter se placement of two persons appointed
against vacancies reserved for scheduled caste candidates. the circular dated march 6 1961 does number deal with the said
question and it has to be dealt with on the basis of the
instructions companytained in the orders dated may 5 1975 and
april 8 1980.
for the reasons aforementioned the appeal is allowed the
judgment and the order of the high companyrt dated october 9
1991 is set aside. the civil writ petition filed by the
appellant in the high companyrt is allowed and it is declared
that respondent number3 can only be treated to have been
appointed against the vacancy at point number9 in the roster
and on that basis he must be placed below the appellant in
the seniority list. | 1 | test | 1993_339.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 265 of 1956.
appeal from the judgment and order dated august 26 1954 of
the calcutta high companyrt in income-tax reference number 107 of
1952.
mitra dipak choudhry and b. n. ghosh for the
appellants. k. daphtary solicitor-general of india k. n.
rajagopala sastri r. h. dhebar and d. gupta for the
respondent. 1959. march 16. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hidayatullah j.-messrs. mcgregor balfour limited calcutta
hereinafter called the companypany is a companypany incorporated
in the united kingdom. its head office is also there. it
however does business in india also. in some of the
previous years the companypany was required to pay excess
profits tax both in england and in india. when it did so
it obtained deduction of the amounts from its profits and
gains for purposes of the indian lncome-tax act under
s.12 2 of the indian excess profits tax act. in the assessment year 1947-1948 which companyresponded to the
accounting year of the companypany ending on october 31 1946
it obtained a repayment of rs. 231009 out of the excess
profits tax paid in england. this was under s. 28 1 of 4
5 geo. vi ch. 30. for purposes of the levy of the indian
income-tax this sum was included in the taxable profits of
the companypany by the income-tax officer. he purported to act
under s. 11 14 of the indian finance act 1946 hereinafter
called the act . the income of the companypany in india was
held to be rs. 634937 including the sum of rs. 231009
while the in- companye outside the taxable territory was held
to be rs. 429620. applying s. 4a c b of the indian
income-tax act the income-tax officer assessed the companypany
on its total world income. the appeals of the companypany - made successively to the
appellate assistant companymissioner and the incometax appellate
tribunal were dismissed. the tribunal however referred
the following questions of law to the high companyrt at calcutta
under s. 66 of the indian income-tax act
whether on the above facts and circumstances of this
case the tribunal was right in holding that the sum of rs. 231009 was income of the assessee during the assessment
year under companysideration and was liable to be assessed under
the indian income-tax act ? and
if so whether this amount companyld number be taken into
consideration for determining the residence of the
assessee under s. 4a c b of the indian income-tax act ? this reference was heard by chakravarti c. j. and lahiri
j. who by their judgment dated august 26 1954 answered
the first question in the affirmative and the second in the
negative. they however granted a certificate under s. 66a
of the indian income-tax act read with art. 135 of the
constitution to appeal to this companyrt. numberappeal has been
filed on behalf of the department and the second of the two
questions must be taken to be finally settled in this case. the companytentions of the companypany in this appeal thus companycern
only the first question and they are two it was said
firstly that s. 11 14 of the finance act companyld number be made
applicable to the assessment year 1947-1948 because the
provision was number incorporated in the indian income-tax act
or repeated in the subsequent finance acts. this argument
was number seriously pressed before us and beyond mentioning
it mr. mitra for the companypany did number choose to elaborate
it. we think that mr. mitra has been quite companyrect in number
pursuing the matter. the section framed as it is does
apply to subsequent assessment years just as it did to the
assessment for 1946-1947 and prima facie it was number
necessary to follow one of the two companyrses detailed above. since the point was number pressed before us we need number give
our reasons here. it was said nextly that the high companyrt was in error in
construing s. 11 14 of the finance act as a provision which
created a liability proprio vigore as if it was a charging
section. it was companytended that the repayment was number within
the taxable territory and in view of the answer to the
second question as to the applicability of s. 4a c b
there companyld be numbertax upon it. on behalf of the department
it was argued that the sub-section created a charge by
itself and the fiction therein created being sufficient and
clear it was number necessary to companysider where the income
arose. section 11 14 of the finance act reads as follows
where under the provisions of sub-section 2 of
section 12 of the excess profits tax act 1940 xv of 1940
excess profits tax payable under the law in force in the
united kingdom has been deducted in companyputing for the
purposes of income-tax and supertax the profits and gains of
any business the amount of any repayment under sub-section
1 of section 28 of the finance act 1941 4 5 geo. 6
c. 30 as amended by section 37 of the finance act 1942 5
6 geo 6 c. 21 in respect of those profits shall be
deemed to be income for the purposes of the indian income-
tax act 1922 and shall for the purpose of assessment to
income-tax and super-tax be treated as income of the
previous year during which the repayment is made. this
section may be companypared with r. 4 1 of the rules which are
applicable to cases 1 and 11 of sch. d of the income-tax
act 1918 8 9 geo. v c. 40
where any person has paid excess profits duty the amount
so paid shall be allowed as a deduction in companyputing the
profits or gains of the year which included the end of the
accounting period in respect of which the excess profits
duty has been paid but where any person has received
repayment of any amount previously paid by him by way of
excess profits duty the amount repaid shall be treated as
profit for the year in which the repayment is received. the english rule above quoted deals first with the deduction
of the amount paid as excess profits duty from the profits
or gains of the year which includes the end of the
accounting period in respect of which the excess profits
duty has been paid a matter dealt with in s. 12 2 of the
indian excess profits tax act and next with the
assessability to tax of the amount repaid from the excess
profits duty previously charged -a matter dealt with in sub-
ss. 11 and 14 of s. 11 of the finance act. the object and purpose of the legislation in each case is
the same and though the two provisions are number ipsissima
verbal they are substantially in the same words and also in
pari materia. the companycluding words of the english rule
the amount repaid shall be treated as profits of the year in
which the repayment is received and which have been
interpreted by
english companyrts may specially be companypared with the companycluding
words of sub-s. 14 of s. 11 of the finance act which run
any repayment shall for the purposes of assessment-
to income-tax and super-tax be treated as the income of the
previous year during which the repayment is made. there can be numberdoubt that the intention underlying the two
provisions is the same and the language is substantially
similar. number the english rule was interpreted by the english companyrts
to create a liability irrespective of companysiderations arising
from the general provisions of the income-tax law. in
eglinton silica brick company limited v. marrian 1 the assessee
company which had gone into voluntary liquidation in 1904
was carried on by the liquidator till 1921 when the business
was sold to anumberher companypany which took it over on october 5
1921 and the business of the appellant companypany then ceased. the income-tax assessment for the year 192122 was
apportioned between the two companypanies and inasmuch as the
assessee companypany had suffered a loss it was reduced to nil
in its case. the assessee companypany then received pound
7224 and pound 1150 in 1952 after it had ceased to carry
on business as repayments of excess profits duty and this
income was assessed under r. 4 1 above mentioned. the
question was whether this was right. the case was companysidered by the lords of the first division
and they are their opinion against the assessee firm. the
lord president clyde with whom lords skerrington cullen
and sands agreed lord sands dubitans explained the two
parts of the rule as follows
the principle is obvious. it is that if a taxpayer has
made profits assessable directly or indirectly through the
operation of the three years average to income tax and
-the revenue takes a share of those profits in the name of
excess profits duty it is only fair that the profits
actually assessed to income tax should suffer some
corresponding deduction
1 1924 9 tax cas. 92 98.
the problem which arose in the case of repayment of excess
profits duty was different. numberody knew or companyld knumber how
soon or how late repayment might fall to be made number
whether the business whose profits were assessed to excess
profits duty would be in the same hands when repayment if
any came to be made. by that time the business might have
ceased to be in existence. repayment might therefore have
to be made to a person who was number carrying on the original
business. the original trader might have given up business
died and an executor might have companye in his place. the
solution provided for all these cases is that companytained in
the second part of the paragraph according to which the
amount repaid to any person is to be i treated as profit for
the year in which the repayment is received. it is obvious
that the amount of the former trading profits so repaid
could number actually be trading profits for such year. numbere
the less the amount repaid is to be treated as if it were
that which-in fact-it is number and cannumber be. the amount
repaid companysists of trading profits which reach the taxpayer
out of their proper time. however belated his fruition of
them they have number lost their original character as trading
profits. in my opinion this is what explains the position
of paragraph 1 of rule 4 as part of the rules under cases
i and 11 of schedule d which are companycerned with the profits
of trades and vocations. that some artificial rule should
be formulated was in the circumstances inevitable and the
highly artificial character of the rule adopted is shown by
the words in which it is expressed- the amount repaid shall
be treated as profit for the year in which the repayment is
received. in short the amount repaid is deemed to be
something that it is number and companyld number in the actual
circumstances possibly be. number is this in any way
unreasonable or companytrary to what might be expected if
regard be had to the subject-matter. for as has been seen
the excess profits duty was itself a part of the trading
profits companyputed by methods familiar under the income tax
act. it was number merely a part of something which entered
into the companyputation of profit it was actual
computed profit. and but for the disparity between the
accounting period and the three years average it would
have been directly assessable to income tax. a similar view was taken in the companyrt of appeal by lord
hanworth m. r. scrutton l. j. and romer j. scrutton
j. dubitans in a. w. nesbitt limited v. mitchell 1 . there too the assessee companypany after suffering losses in
the accounting period may 1 to numberember 25 1920 went into
liquidation and ceased to trade. on april 22 1924 the
repayment of excess profits duty took place and this was
assessed to income-tax. the master of the rolls described
the amount received as repayment in these words
but in respect of what is that payment made ? it is number a
legacy it is number a sum which has fallen from the skies
it is a sum which is repaid because there was too large a
sum paid by the companypany to the revenue authorities over the
whole period during which excess profits duty was paid and
that sum means and is intended to represent a repayment of a
sum which was paid by them in respect of the duty charged
upon the excess profits of their trading. it companyes back
therefore number having lost its character but being still the
repayment of a sum-too much it is true-but a sum taken out
of the profits which were made by the companypany in the companyrse
of its trading profits which at the time they were made
were subject to income tax and subject to excess profits
duty and that is the character of the repayment that has
been made. dealing with the rule the master of the rolls observed
i have pointed out this is a case where the companypany has
received payment of an amount previously paid by way of
excess profits duty and having that characteristic attaching
to it and we are told by the statute that when such a sum
is repaid it is to be treated as a profit for the year in
which the repayment is received. it is said it may be
treated as a
1 1926 11 tax cas. 211. 217 218.
profit but it ought number to be treated as an assessable
profit. the answer to my mind is that it is paid back number
by way of a sum which has numberorigin or ancestry it is a
sum which represents a repayment of the amount previously
paid by that companypany in the form of excess profits duty upon
their trading. if it is to have that character and is to be
treated as such a profit although it be a repayment of sums
paid in respect of profits it is to be treated as a profit
for the year in which the repayment is received. the word
treated indicates that it is to be deemed to be something
which in fact it is number or whether it is so or number it is to
be treated as a profit and therefore it is to my mind
impossible to discuss the question of whether or number
difficulties may arise or whether it may be criticised as
financially number quite sound that it should be treated in
this method in that particular year but we are told by the
statute that it is to be treated as a profit for-the year in
which the repayment is received. in a case similar on facts as the ones cited above kirkes
trustees v. the companymissioners of inland revenue 1 the
house of lords viscount cave l. c. lord atkinson lord
shaw of dunfermline lord sumner and lord carson placed the
same companystruction upon the latter part of r. 4 1 . the
following passage in the speech of lord sumner explaining
the extent of the fiction in the latter part of the rule is
extremely instructive
the express mandatory terms of the sentence show in
carefully chosen language that he is to submit to something
by reason of his having previously enjoyed this advantage in
the shape of repayment of an amount previously paid by way
of excess profits duty. something which is number a profit
but is only a money repayment something which may number
result in a profit because although trading goes on there
is so great a loss on the year that this repayment does number
make up the deficit something which may number be a trading
profit because trading has ceased altogether nevertheless
is to be treated as profit and as profit for the year. treated is a fresh word free from legal technicality. 1 1926 11 tax cas. 323 332.
it is the widest word that companyld be chosen. the legislature
avoided saying shall be assessed as or i shall be brought
into the companyputation of profit and loss and simply says
that something which is number profit but mere payment shall be
treated as profit which it c may or may number be and as
profit for the year. i think therefore that the word
treated is an apt word to impose a charge . see also in this companynection olive and partington limited v.
rose 1 . these cases were relied on by chakravarti c. j. and
lahiri j. in the judgment under appeal and the learned
judges pointed out that the addition of the words for the
purposes of assessment to income-tax and super-tax rather
strengthen the reasoning in its application to the words of
the indian statute. we agree with this statement. it is to
be numbericed that the sub-section creates two fictions. - by
the first fiction it makes the amount of any repayment
income for the purposes of the indian income-tax act and
goes on to say that that income shall be treated for
purposes of assessment to income-tax and super-tax as the
income of the previous year. mr. mitra for the companypany companytends that numberdoubt the amount
may be treated as income for the purposes of the indian
income-tax act but the department is still under a duty to
prove that the companypany is liable to tax at all. according
to him this will have to be treated as income received
outside the taxable territory because if the fiction
contemplated its being treated as within the taxable
territory it would have said so specifically. in our
opinion this submission cannumber be accepted. that this would have been taxable income but for the
provisions of s. 12 2 of the excess profits tax act goes
without saying. the income character of the receipt is
restored by the fiction and it is to be brought under
assessment without any further proof than this that it has
been received as repayment of the united kingdom tax in
respect of which a deduction was made in the earlier years. the distinction between
1 1929 14 tax cas. 701.
incomes within and without taxable territories is made
unnecessary by demanding that this amount by way of
repayment shall be brought to tax and treated as income
within the previous year. | 0 | test | 1959_55.txt | 0 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1415 of
1981.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 7th january 1981 of the allahabad high companyrt in
civil misc. application number 113 of 1981 in second appeal number
1484 of 1973.
p. rana m. qamaruddin and mrs. m. qamaruddin for the
appellants. k. sanghi for respondent number 1.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
desai j. special leave granted. we have heard mr. o. p. rana learned companynsel for the
appellant and mr. a.k. sanghi learned companynsel for the
respondent. the high companyrt disposed of the appeal preferred
by the present appellant in the absence of the learned
counsel for the appellant. when the appellant became aware
of the fact that his appeal had been disposed of in the
absence of his advocate he moved an application in the high
court to recall the order dismissing his appeal and permit
him to participate in the hearing of the appeal. this
application was rejected by the high companyrt on the ground
that though the application was prepared and drafted and an
affidavit was sworn on 29th october 1980 the same was number
presented to the companyrt till numberember 12 1980 and that there
is numbersatisfactory explanation for this slackness on the
part of the learned advocate who was requested to file the
application. the disturbing feature of the case is that under our
present adversary legal system where the parties generally
appear through their advocates the obligation of the
parties is to select his advocate brief him pay the fees
demanded by him and then trust the learned advocate to do
the rest of the things. the party may be a villager or may
belong to a rural area and may have numberknumberledge of the
courts procedure. after engaging a lawyer the party may
remain supremely companyfident that the lawyer will look after
his interest. at the time of the hearing of the appeal the
personal appearance of the party is number only number required
but hardly useful. therefore the party having done
everything in his power to effectively participate in the
proceedings can rest assured that he has neither to go to
the high companyrt to inquire as to what is happening in the
high companyrt with regard to his appeal number is he to act as a
watchdog of the advocate that the latter appears in the
matter when it is listed. it is numberpart of his job. mr. a.k. sanghi stated that a practice has grown up in the high companyrt
of allahabad amongst the lawyers that they remain absent
when they do number like a particular bench. maybe he is better
informed on this matter. ignumberance in this behalf is our
bliss. even if we do number put our seal of imprimatur on the
alleged practice by dismissing this matter which may
discourage such a tendency would it number bring justice
delivery system into disrepute. what is the fault of the
party who having done everything in his
power and expected of him would suffer because of the
default of his advocate. if we reject this appeal as mr.
k. sanghi invited us to do the only one who would suffer
would number be the lawyer who did number appear but the party
whose interest he represented. the problem that agitates us
is whether it is proper that the party should suffer for the
inaction deliberate omission or misdemeanumberr of his agent. the answer obviously is in the negative. maybe that the
learned advocate absented himself deliberately or
intentionally. we have numbermaterial for ascertaining that
aspect of the matter. we say numberhing more on that aspect of
the matter. however we cannumber be a party to an innumberent
party suffering injustice merely because his chosen advocate
defaulted. therefore we allow this appeal set aside the
order of the high companyrt both dismissing the appeal and
refusing to recall that order. we direct that the appeal be
restored to its original number in the high companyrt and be
disposed of according to law. if there is a stay of
dispossession it will companytinue till the disposal of the
matter by the high companyrt. there remains the question as to
who shall pay the companyts of the respondent here. | 1 | test | 1981_373.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction petitions number. 26 and 27 of 1954 24
and 437 of 1955 256 of 1956 12 16 17 and 73 of 1957.
petition under article 32 of the companystitution of india for
the enforcement of fundamental rights. s. k. sastri for the petitioners in petitions number. 26
and 27 of 54 and 24 of 1955.
n. swami and m. s. k. sastri for the petitioners in
petitions number. 437 of 55 and 256 of 56.
k. jha j. m. thakur s. n. andley and j. b.
dadachanji for the petitioner in petition number 12 of 1957.
s. bindra and harbans singh for the petitioners in
petitions number. 16 and 17 of 1957.
s. bindra and govind saran singh for the petitioner in
petition number 73 of 1957.
n. sanyal additional solicitor-general of india h.j. umrigar and r. h. dhebar for the respondent in petitions
number. 26 and 27 of 1954 24 and 437 of 1955 256 of 1956 and
12 of 1957.
adhikary advocate-general for the state of madhya
pradesh and i. n. shroff for the respondent in petitions
number. 16 17 and 73 of 1957. 1959. march 9. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
hidayatullah j.-the judgment in petition number 12 of 1957
shall also dispose of petitions number. 26 and 27 of 1954 24
and 437 of 1955 256 of 1956 and 16 17 and 73 of 1957.
these petitions under art. 32 arise out of alleged
agreements by which some of the proprietors in the former
state of madhya pradesh granted to one or other of the
petitioners the right to take forest produce mainly tendu
leaves from the forests included in zamindari and malguzari
villages of the grantors. government has disclaimed these
agreements and auctioned the rights afresh. the petitioners
state that this is an invasion of their fundamental rights. the dates on which these alleged agreements were entered
into the terms thereof and the periods during which they
were to subsist are different from case to case. it is number
necessary in this judgment to recite the terms of these
documents and it is sufficient to group them for purpose of
decision on the bases whether the said agreements still
subsist and whether they are incorporated in a registered
instrument or number. petitions number. 437 of 1955 and 256 of 1956 are founded on
unregistered documents. the answering respondent does number
admit these documents and companytends that they cannumber be
looked into to prove their
terms in view of the decision of this companyrt in shri-mathi
shantabai v. state of bombay 1 . petitions number. 16 17 and 73 of 1957 form anumberher group
inasmuch as the period during which the alleged agreements
were to operate expired in 1955. additionally the
documents on which the claim is founded in those petitions
are unregistered. in the last mentioned case it is pleaded
that the answering state government had recognised the
agreements in favour of the petitioner but resiled from that
position subsequently which allegation has been adequately
explained by the state government in its affidavit. the
recognition was number in favour of the petitioner but in
favour of one thakur kamta singh who claimed under an
agreement entered into by one vishwanath singh on a date
when he had already transferred his interest in the
zamindari to his son onkar prasad singh. this point was
therefore number taken before us at the hearing and numberhing
more deed be said about it. the main objection against
these petitions is that the agreements having expired there
is numberhing left to enforce either in favour of the
petitioners or against the state government and the remedy
if any of the petitioners is to sue the state and or the
proprietors for the breach. the last group companysists of petitions number. 26 and 27 of 1954
24 of 1955 and the present petition number 12 of 1957 . in
these petitions the agreements with the petitioners are
made by registered documents and the terms during which they
are to operate have yet to expire. these cases it is
stated fall outside the rule in shantabais case 1 to
which reference has already been made. they are stated to
fall within the decision of this companyrt reported in firm
chhotabhai jethabai patel and company v. the state of madhya
pradesh 2 . in all these petitions companynsel argue that the
view expressed in the last mentioned case is companyrect while
the view in shantabais case 1 needs further companysider-
ation. the argument of the petitioners in these several cases is
that government steps into the shoes of the
1 1959 s.c.r. 265
2 1953 s.c.r. 476.
quondam proprietors and is bound by the agreements into
which the latter had entered before their proprietary
rights were taken over by government. they also raise the
contention that the petitioners were number proprietors as
defined in the madhya pradesh abolition of proprietary
rights estates mahals alienated lands act 1950
hereinafter called the act and thus ss. 3 and 4 in terms
do number apply to them. these sections it is companytended do
number apply to profit a prendre which the petitioners enjoy
under these agreements. in support of this companytention
reference is made to the decision of this companyrt in
chhotabhais case 1 and to the definition of
proprietor in the act. reference is also made to some
provisions of the c. p. land revenue act to be mentioned
hereafter to prove that the persons on whom the right to
collect forest produce was companyferred by the proprietors can-
number be regarded as proprietors even under that act. this
in main is the argument in these cases and even those
petitioners whose agreements are incorporated in
unregistered documents or whose agreements have since
expired adopted the same line of argument denying the
necessity for registration of such agreements. the matter in so far as it relates to the first two groups
is simple. it has already been ruled in shantabais case
2 that if the right be claimed on foot of an unregistered
agreement it cannumber be entertained. such documents were
examined from five different angles in that case and it was
held that the document-if it companyferred a part or share in
the proprietary right or even a right to profit a prendre-
needed registration to companyvey the right. if it created a
bare licence the licence came to an end with the interest
of the licensors in the forests. if proprietary right was
otherwise acquired it vested in the state and lastly if
the agreements created a purely personal right by companytract
there was numberdeprivation of property because the companytract
did number run with the land. bose j. who delivered a
separate judgment also held that in the absence of
registration numberright was created. 1 1953 s.c.r. 476. 2 1959 s.c.r. 265.
in view of the clear pronumberncement of this companyrt the first
two groups of petitions must fail. petitions number. 16 17
and 73 of 1957 also fail for the added reason that the
agreements having expired the only remedy if any is to
sue for breach of companytract and numberwrit to enforce expired
agreements can issue. this brings us to the arguments advanced in the last four
petitions in the third group which were also adopted by the
other petitioners whose petitions we have just companysidered. all these petitioners strongly relied upon chhotabhais case
1 . it is therefore necessary to examine attentively what
was decided there. in that case it was held at p. 483
that
the companytracts and agreements appear to be in essence and
effect licenses granted to the transferees to cut gather
and carry away the produce in the shape of tendu leaves or
lac or timber or wood. reference in this behalf was made to a decision of the privy
council in mohanlal hargovind of jubbalpore v. companymissioner
of income-tax central provinces and berar 2 where it was
observed
the companytracts grant numberinterest in land and numberinterest in
the trees or plants themselves. they are simply and solely
contracts giving to the grantees the right to pick and carry
away leaves which of companyrse implies the right to
appropriate them as their own property. the small right of cultivation given in the first of the two
contracts is merely ancillary and is of do more significance
than would be e.g. a right to spray a fruit tree given to
the person who has bought the crop of apples. the companytracts
are short-term companytracts. the picking of the leaves under
them has to start at once or practically at once and to
proceed companytinuously. the bench next observed that there was numberhing in the act to
affect the validity of the several companytracts and agreements
and that the petitioners were neither proprietors within
the meaning of the act number persons having any interest in
the proprietary right through the proprietors . after
quoting from baden powells
1 1953 s.c.r. 476.
i.l.r. 1949 nag. 892 898
land systems of british india vol. 1p. 217 as to what
was meant by proprietorship in the land revenue systems
in india it was observed that the definition of
proprietor in the act companyveyed the same sense. finally
repelling the argument that the agreements companycerned
future goods it was held on the basis of a passage in
benjamin on sale 8th edition page 136 that a present sale
of the right to goods having a potential existence companyld
be made. since possession was taken under the agreements
and companysideration had also passed there companyld be a sale
of a present right to the goods as soon as they companye into
existence. reference was also made at pp. 480 481 to s. 6 of the
act which provides
except as provided in sub-section 2 the transfer of
any right in the property which is liable to vest in the
state under this act made by the pro-prietor at any time
after the 16th march 1950 shall as from the date of
vesting be void. it was observed in the case as follows
the date 16th march 1950 is probably the date when
legislation on these lines was actively thought of and sub-
section 1 hits at transfers made after this date. this
means that transfers before that date are number to be regarded
as void. even in the case of transfers after the said date
sub-section 2 provides that the deputy companymissioner may
declare that they are number void after the date of vesting
provided they were made in good faith and in the ordinary
course of management. the scheme of the act as can be gathered from the provisions
referred to above makes it reasonably clear that whatever
was done before 16th march 1950 by the proprietors by way
of transfer of rights is number to be disturbed or affected
and that what vests in the state is what the proprietors had
on the vesting date. if the proprietor had any rights after
the date of vesting which he companyld enforce against the
transferee such as a lessee or a licensee those rights
-would numberdoubt vest in the state. it was accordingly held that the state government companyld number
interfere with such agreements but had only the right to
enforce rights arising therefrom standing in the shoes of
the proprietors. it is clear from the foregoing analysis of the decision in
chhotabhais case 1 that on a companystruction of the
documents there under companysideration and adopting a principle
enunciated by the privy companyncil in mohanlal hargovind of
jubbalpore v. companymissioner of incometax central provinces
and berar 2 and relying upon a passage each in benjamin on
sale and the wellknumbern treatise of baden-powell the bench
came to the companyclusion that the documents there under companysi-
deration did number create any interest in land and did number
constitute any grant of any proprietary interest in the
estate but were merely companytracts or licenses given to the
petitioners to cut gather and carry away the produce in
the shape of tendu leaves or lac or timber or wood . but
then it necessarily followed that the act did number purport
to affect the petitioners rights under the companytracts or
licenses. but what was the nature of those rights of the
petitioners ? it is plain that if they were merely
contractual rights then as pointed out in the two later
decisions in ananda behera v. the state of orissa 3
shantabais case 4 the state has number acquired or taken
possession of those rights but has only declined to be bound
by the agreements to which they were number a party. if on
the other hand the petitioners were mere licensees then
also as pointed out in the second of the two cases cited
the licenses came to an end on the extinction of the title
of the licensors. in either case there was numberquestion of
the breach of any fundamental right of the petitioners which
could support the petitions which were presented under art. 32 of the companystitution. it is this aspect of the matter
which was number brought to the numberice of the companyrt and the
resulting omission to advert to it has seriously impaired
if number companypletely nullified the effect and weight of the
decision in chhotabhais case 1 as a precedent. 1 1953 s.c.r. 476. 3 1955 2 s.c.r. 265.
i.l.r. 1949 nag. 892 898. 4 1959 s.c.r. 265.
the argument of companynsel in these cases followed the broad
pattern of the decision in chhotabhais case 1 . and we
next proceed to companysider it. it is companytended that what
vests in the state is the right which the proprietors had on
the date of vesting because s. 3 of the act is number
retrospective and that the agreements are in essence and
effect licenses granted to the transferees to out gather
and carry away the produce in the shape of tendu leaves or
lac or timber or wood . these agreements it is submitted
grant numberinterest in land or i benefit to arise out of
land the object of the agreements can only be described as
sale of goods as defined in the indian sale of goods act
and the grant of such a right is number companyprehended in the
firstsub-section of s. 3 where it says
all proprietary rights in an estate mahal in the
area specified in the numberification vesting in a proprietor
of such estate mahal or in a person having interest in such
proprietary right through the proprietor shall pass from
such proprietor or such other person to and vest in the
state for the purposes of the state free of all encumbrances
it is finally companytended that the interest of these peti-
tioners is number i proprietary right at all but a right to
get i goods in the shape of leaves lac etc. we have to
examine these companytentions critically. before we do so it is necessary to set out in brief the
terms of the agreements which have been produced in these
cases. in petition number 12 of 1957 there were two
agreements annexures a and b. the first was executed in
1944 and granted the right from 1947 to 1956 the second was
executed in 1946 and granted the right from 1957 to 1966.
these are long term agreements and they are typical from
case to case. indeed the second agreement was made even
before the first began and the total period is 20 years. in addition to the right to the leaves the documents pro-
vided for many other matters. it is companyvenient to quote
only from annexure b
before this i had given you a similar companytract selling
tendu leaves produce by companytract dated
1 1953 s-c.r. 476. 7-7-1944 registered on 12-7-1944. in pursuance of that
registered companytract which is for five years from 1947 to
1951 and anumberher for subsequent five years from 1952 to 1956
in all for ten years you are to remain in possession and
occupation of the areas and the tendu leaves produce till
the termination of the year 1956 for which time you companytinue
your possession and thereafter in pursuance of this companytract
you companytinue for further period of ten years your possession
and occupation from 1957 to 1966 as is usual and customary
pruning and companypicing tendu leaves plants burning them and
instal fadis for companylection of tendu leaves and companystruct
kothas godowns for storage of the leaves at your sweet
will and choice on any open plot or land within the estate
with my permission and you are allowed to take free of all
costs any adjat timber bamboos etc. from my forests for
constructing them. i shall charge you numberfurther
consideration. in the same manner for the purpose of
constructing these godowns and such thing you may according
to your companyvenience you may manufacture bricks at any
place you like in the vicinity of any rivers rivulet nala
or pond at your companyts. i shall number receive-from you any
extra amount as rent for the use and occupation of land that
will be used for companystruction of kothas for manufacturing
bricks and for locating fadis bidi leaves companylection
centres . all those are included in the companysideration fixed
for this companytract. all these rights are already companyferred
on you in the previous companytract dated 7-7-1944 and under
this companytract for the entire companytract period. it is also
open to you to companylect tendu leaves number only those growing
in the summer season but also those growing in kartik. during the term of this companytract if for one reason or
anumberher it becomes necessary for you to sell the tendu
leaves produce and assign this companytract to any other person
you can do so. but you shall be responsible for me to give
my companysent after inquiring of the fitness of the intended
transferee. however you shall companytinue to be responsible
to pay to me the agreed amount of instalments on or before
the agreed dates and if the agreed amount of instalment is
number paid to me on or
before the agreed date i shall have full right to start
proper proceedings in that companynection . in petition number 26 of 1954 the period of the two agreements
was from 1944 to 1963. there too the rights were similar
to those in petition number 12 of 1957 and analogous terms are
to be found in petitions number. 27 of 1954 and 24 of 1955.
the question that arises is what is the nature of this
right? in english law distinction was made between
easements and profit a prendre and a right to take the
produce of the soil was regarded as a profit a prendre. while easements were number regarded as an interest in land a
right to take the produce of the soil or a portion of it was
an interest in land fitzgerald v. fairbanks 1 . profit-a-
prendre can be the subject of a grant. where they take the
form of a grant they are benefits arising from land. in
all these cases there is number a naked right to take the
leaves of tendu trees together with a right of ingress and
of regress from the land there are further benefits
including the right to occupy the land to erect buildings
and to take other forest produce number necessarily standing
timber growing crop or grass. the right of ingress and of
regress over land vesting in the state can only be exercised
if the state as the owner of the land allows it and even
apart from the essential nature of the transaction the
state can prohibit it as the owner of the land. whether the right to the leaves can be regarded as a right
to a growing crop has however to be examined with
reference to all the terms of the documents and all the
rights companyveyed thereunder. if the right companyveyed companyprises
more than the leaves of the trees it may number be companyrect to
refer to it as being in respect of growing crop
simpliciter. we are number companycerned with the subtle distinctions made in
english law between emblements fructus naturals and fructus
industriales but we have to companysider whether the
transaction companycerns goods or moveable property or
immovable property . the law is made difficult by the
definitions which exist in the general clauses act the sale
of goods act the
1 1897 2 ch. 96.
transfer of property act and the registration act. these
definitions must be placed alongside one anumberher to get
their ambits. if the definitions are viewed together it is plain that
they do number tell us what immovable property is. they
only tell us what is either included or number included
therein. one thing is clear however that things rooted in
the earth as in the case of trees and shrubs are immovable
property both within the general clauses act and the
transfer of property act but in the latter standing
timber growing crop and grass though rooted in
earth are number included. of these growing crop and
grass form the subjectmatter of the sale of goods and
standing timber companyes within the last part of the
definition of goods in the indian sale of goods act to
be subject thereto if the companydition about severing mentioned
in the definition of goods exists. it has already been pointed out that the agreements companyveyed
more than the tendu leaves to the petitioners. they
conveyed other forest produce like timber bamboos etc. the soil for making bricks the right to prune companypice and
burn tendu trees and the right to build on and occupy land
for the purpose of their business. these rights were spread
over many years and were number so simple as buying leaves so
to speak in a shop. the expression growing crop might
appropriately companyprehend tendu leaves but would number
include adjat timber bamboos number even tendu plants. the
petitioners were number to get leaves from the extant trees but
also such trees as might grow in the future. they companyld
even burn the old trees presumably so that others might
grow in their place. in these circumstances the agreements
cannumber be said to be companytracts of sale of goods
simpliciter. it remains number to companysider whether the rights enjoyed by the
petitioners can be said to fall within s. 3 1 of the act. that section divests the proprietors of their proprietary
rights as also any other person having an interest in the
proprietary right through the proprietor and vests those
rights in the state. that section has to be read with the
section which
follows and which sets out the companysequences of vesting of
such rights in the state. the rights which vest can be
stated briefly to be a all proprietary rights in the
proprietor and b all proprietary rights in any person
having interest in such proprietary rights through the
proprietor. these rights vest in the state free of all
encumbrances. section 4 of the act provides inter alia that after the
numberification has been issued then numberwithstanding
anything companytained in any companytract grant or document or in
any other law for the time being in force and save as
otherwise provided in this act-the following companysequences
among others shall ensue
a all rights title and interest vesting in the
proprietor or any person having interest in such proprietary
right through the proprietor in such area including land
cultivable or barren grassland scrubjungle forest
trees fisheries wells tanks ponds water-channels
ferries pathways village sites hats bazars and melas
and in all subsoil including rights if any in mines and
minerals whether being worked or number shall cease and be
vested in the state for purposes of the state free of all
encumbrances and the mortgage debt or charge on any
proprietary right shall be a charge on the amount of
compensation payable for such proprietary right to the
proprietor under the provisions of this act
b all grants and companyfirmation of title of or to land in
the property so vesting or of or to any right or privilege
in respect of such property or land revenue in respect
thereof shall whether liable to resumption or number
determine . if these petitioners can be said to be possessing an
interest in the proprietary right then their rights
title and interest in the land determine under the act and
vest in the state. the petitioners therefore companytend that
their rights under the agreements cannumber be described as
proprietary right or even a share of it. they rely on the
definition of proprietor in the act and refer under the
authority of s. 2 b of the act to the central provinces
land revenue act 1917.
the definition in the act is number exhaustive. it only
tells us who besides the proprietor is included in the
term proprietor. further the definitions in the act are
subordinate to the requirements of the companytext and the
subject-matter of any particular enactment. from the act
we knumber that the proprietors interest in forest trees
shrub grass and the like passes to the state. the question
thus resolves into two short ones-did the former proprietors
own proprietary interest in these trees and did they part
with that proprietary interest and companyvey it to the
petitioners ? there is but little doubt that in so far as the act is
concerned it does companytemplate cesser of all proprietary
rights in land grass land scrub jungle forest and trees
whether owned by the proprietor or through him by some other
person. the companytention of the petitioners is that by the
term proprietor is meant what that term companyveys in the
central provinces land revenue act and reference is made
for this purpose to various sections therein. the term
proprietor is defined in the central provinces land
revenue act thus
proprietor except in sections 68 93 and 94 includes
a gaontia of a government village in sambalpur territory. this definition does number advance the matter any further. in
several sections special explanations are added to define
-proprietors . in all those explanations the term is number
defined but is said to include thekedars or headmen with
protected status i mortgagee with possession i lessees
holding under leases from year to year and the like. in
addition there is invariably the inclusion of i a
transferee of proprietary rights in possession which
again leaves the matter at large. see ss. 2 5 2 21 53
and 68.
counsel faced with this difficulty rely upon the scheme of
settlement in ch. vi of the central provinces land revenue
act- and the record of rights which companysists of khewat a
statement of persons possessing proprietary rights in the
mahal including inferior proprietors or lessees or
mortgagees in possession specifying the nature and extent
of the interest of each and khasra or field book and
jamabandi or list of persons
cultivating or occupying land in the village. these
documents are prepard separately. the petitioners companytend
that by proprietary right is meant that right which can
find a place or be entered in the khewat and the rights
enjoyed by the petitioners are number and cannumber be entered in
the khewat because thay are number proprietary rights. they
also refer to the schemes of settlement under which
proprietors subproprietors etc.- are determined and
offered assessment. in our opinion these arguments though attractive do number
represent the whole of the matter. what these documents
record and what the settlement operations determine are the
kinds of proprietors among whom the entire bundle of
rights is shared. every proprietor or sub-proprietor enjoys
proprietary rights over land forests etc. falling within
his interest. the right to forest trees etc. is the
consequence of proprietorship and indeed under s. 47 3
the state government can declare which rights and interest
must be regarded as proprietary rights. that sub-section
provides
the state government may declare the rights and interests
which shall be deemed to be proprietary rights and interests
within the meaning of sub-section 2 . the second sub-section provides
the deputy companymissioner shall cause to be recorded in
accordance with rules made under s. 227 all changes that
have taken place in respect of and all transactions that
have affected any of the proprietary rights and interests
in any land. the matter is made clear if one refers to the provisions of
s. 202 of the land revenue act. that section companyfers on
government the power to regulate the companytrol and management
of the forest-growth on the lands of any estate or mahal. a
reading of sub-ss. 4 to 8 of that section clearly shows
that forests belong to the proprietors from whom under those
sub-sections they can be taken over for management the
profits of the management less expenses being paid to the
proprietors or to superior and inferior proprietors as the
case may be. sub-sections 9 and 10 provide
numberlease lien encumbrance or companytract with respect
to the forest land held under direct manage ment shall be
binding upon the government. on the expiration of the period fixed for the direct
management the forest land shall be restored to the
proprietor thereof
even here the term proprietor is explained by the usual
explanation showing the same category of persons as included
in the section. from this it is quite clear that forests and trees belonged
to the proprietors and they were items of proprietary
rights. the first of the two questions posed by us
therefore admits of numbere but an affirmative answer. if then the forest and the trees belonged to the proprietors
as items in their proprietary rights it is quite clear
that these items-of proprietary rights have been transferred
to the petitioners. the answer to the second question is
also in the affirmative. being a 1 proprietary right it
vests in the state under ss. 3 and 4 of the act. the
decision in chhotabhais case 1 treated these rights as
bare licenses and it was apparently given per incuriam and
cannumber therefore befollowed. | 0 | test | 1959_122.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeals number. 217
to 233 of 1971.
appeals from the judgment and order dated september 13 1971
of the calcutta high companyrt in criminal misc. cases number. 169 177 222 224 229 230 231 237 285 236 287 316
328 329 330 and 331 of 1971.
niren de attorney-general d. n. mukherjee and g. s.
chaterjee for the appellant in all the appeals . niren de attorney-general r. h. dhebar ram panjwani and
p. nayar for the attorney-general for india in all the
appeals . somnath chatterjee d. k. sinha rathin das and indira jai
singh for the respondents in cr. as. number. 219 223 and
225 to 227 of 1971 . aruk prakash chatterjee rathin das dalip k. sinha and
indira jai singh for the respondents in cr. as. number. 228
and 230 to 233 of 1971 . the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
dua j.-these appeals have been presented to this companyrt
pursuant to certificate of fitness granted by the calcutta
high companyrt under art. 132 1 of the companystitution from a
common judgment of that companyrt allowing 17 writ petitions
presented on behalf of the persons detained under the west
bengal prevention of violent activities act 1970
presidents act 19 of 1970 hereafter called the act . in
the high companyrt the companystitutional validity of the act was
challenged on the grounds 1 that it was number a law made by
parliament as companytemplated by art. 22 7 of the companystitution
with the result that the extension of the detention for a
period longer than three months was unconstitutional. sections 10 to 13 of the act were described as violative of
art. 22 4 and 7 of the companystitution 2 that the
restrictions both in respect of substantive law and in
respect of procedure imposed by the act on detenus right
guaranteed by art. 19 1 d were unreasonable and
therefore the act was unconstitutional and 3 that the
act was violative of art. 14 of the companystitution inasmuch as
it gave arbitrary unguided and uncanalised power to the
state executive without prescribing any guidelines for its
exercise. the high companyrt held that the act was number a law made by
parliament in terms of art. 22 7 of the companystitution. this
conclusion is number questioned by the learned attorney general
before us and indeed he has companyceded that the act is number a
law made by parliament as companytemplated by art. 22 7 . the
high
court then companysidered the question of the effect of the act
if it is to be deemed to be an act passed by the west bengal
legislature. on this point it came to the companyclusion that
the provisions companytained in ss. 1 1 and 13 of the act
relating to the procedure before the advisory board in
respect of the person detained for a longer period than
three months was ultra vires art. 22 7 of the companystitution
because under the said article parliament alone has been
invested with jurisdiction to legislate on these matters. the state legislature was accordingly held to be incompetent
to make a law prescribing procedure for the advisory board
and also to make a law providing for detention for more than
three months. on the question of applicability of art. 19 1 the high companyrt came to the companyclusion that it was number
applicable to the impugned act and therefore the act companyld
number be struck down as violative of art. 19 1 d or under
any other clause of art. 19 1 . the challenge on the basis
of art. 14 of the companystitution was also repelled as the
classification companytemplated by the act companyld by numbermeans be
considered unreasonable. in the final result on the ground
of invalidity of ss. ii and 13 the writ petition was
allowed with respect to the detention of the detenus beyond
the period of three months. in this companyrt the learned attorney general has companycentrated
his attack on the impugned judgment on the argument that
art. 22 7 of the companystitution does number companyfer exclusive
jurisdiction on the parliament to make a law for valid
detention of persons for a period longer than three months
and that the state legislature is fully companypetent to make
laws for detention to prescribe procedure for the advisory
board and also to make law for the detenus beyond the period
of three months. in order to appreciate the legal position it is desirable to
reproduce art. 22 of the companystitution
protection against arrest and detention
in certain cases
numberperson who is arrested shall be
detained in custody without being informed as
soon as may be of the grounds for such arrest
number shall he be denied the right to companysult
and to be defended by a legal practitioner of
his choice. every person who is arrested and
detained in custody shall be produced before
the nearest magistrate within a period of
twenty-four hours of such arrest excluding the
time necessary for the journey from the place
of arrest to the companyrt of the magistrate and
number such person shall be detained in custody
beyond the said period without the authority
of a magistrate. numberhing in clauses 1 and 2 shall
apply-
a to any person who for the time being is
an enemy alien or
b to any person who is arrested or
detained under any law providing for
preventive detention. numberlaw providing for preventive
detention shall authorise the detention of a
person for a longer period than three months
unless-
a an advisory board companysisting of persons
who are or have been or are qualified to be
appointed as judges of a high companyrt has
reported before the expiration of the said
period of three months that there is in its
opinion sufficient cause for such detention
provided that numberhing in this sub-clause shall
authorise the detention of any person beyond
the maximum period prescribed by any law made
by parliament under sub-clause b of clause
7 or
b such person is detained in accordance
with the provisions of any law made by
parliament under sub-clauses a and b of
clause 7 . when any person is detained in pursuance
of an order made under any law providing for
preventive detention the authority making the
order shall as soon as may be companymunicate to
such person the grounds on which the order has
been made and shall afford him the earliest
opportunity of making a representation against
the order. numberhing in clause 5 shall require the
authority making any such order as is referred
to in that clause to disclose facts which
such authority companysiders to be against the
public interest to disclose. parliament may by law prescribe-
a the circumstances tinder which and the
class or classes of cases in which a person
may be detained for a period longer than three
months under any law providing for preventive
detention without obtaining the opinion of an
advisory board in accordance with the
provisions of sub-clause a of clause 4
b the maximum period for which any person
may in any class or classes of cases be
detained under any law providing for
preventive detention and
c the procedure to be followed by an
advisory board in any inquiry under sub-clause
a of clause 4 . it is clear that cl. 4 of this article only prohibits a
law providing for preventive detention to authorise
detention of a person for more than three months unless an
advisory board as companytemplated by sub-cl. a of the said
clause has before the expiry of three months of detention
reported that in its opinion there is sufficient cause for
such detention or unless such person is detained in
accordance with the provisions of any law made by parliament
under sub-cl. a and b of cl. 7 . again even when an
advisory board has under sub-cl. a of cl. 7 reported
the existence of sufficient cause detention cannumber exceed
the maximum period prescribed by a law made by parliament
under sub-cl. b of this clause. the expression such
detention in sub-cl. a of cl. 4 according to the
majority view in pooranlal lakhan pal v. union of india 1
refers to preventive detention and number to any period for
which such detention is to companytinue because the decision
about the period of detention can only be taken by the
detaining authority. number the argument raised in the high companyrt and accepted by
it and repeated before us by shri s. n. chatterji on behalf
of the respondents is that cl. 7 b of art. 22 makes it
obligatory for the parliament to prescribe by law the
maximum period for which a person may be detained as also
the procedure to be followed by the advisory board in
holding the enquiry under cl. 4 a of this article. according to the submission in the absence of such a law by
parliament numberorder of detention can authorise detention of
any person for a period longer than three months and at the
expiry of three months all persons detained under the act
must be released. we are unable to accept this companystruction of cl. 7 of art. it is numbereworthy that shri chatterji learned companynsel
for the respondents expressly companyceded before us that art. 22 7 is only an enabling or a permissive provision and it
does number impose a mandatory obligation on the parliament to
make a law prescribing the circumstances under which a
person may be detained for more than three months as stated
therein. but according to him sub-cl. b and c of cl. 7 do companytain a mandate to the parliament which is
obligatory. in our view cl. 7 of this article on its
plain reading merely authorises or enables the
1 1958 s.c.r. 460.
parliament to make a law prescribing i the circumstances
under which a person may be detained for a period longer
than three months ii the maximum period for which a
person may in any class or classes of cases be detained
under any law providing for preventive detention and iii
the procedure to be followed by the advisory board in an
enquiry under cl. 4 a of this article. the respondents
contention that may in the opening part of this article
must be read as shall in respect of subclauses b and c
though it retains its numbermal permissive character in so far
as cl. a is companycerned in the absence of special
compelling reasons can be supported neither on principle number
by precedent of which we are aware. on the other hand this
court has in s. krishnan v. state of madras 1 agreeing
with the observations of kania c.j. in gopalan v. state of
madras 2 held sub-cl. b of cl. 7 to be permissive. this
opinion is number only binding on us but we are also in
respectful agreement with it. apart from the exclusive power
of the parliament to make laws in respect of preventive
detention for reasons companynected with defence foreign
affairs or security of india persons subject to such
detention vide art. 246 1 and entry 9 list i seventh
schedule parliament and state legislatures have both
concurrent powers to make laws in respect of preventive
detention for reasons companynected with the security of a
state the maintenance of public order or the maintenance
of supplies and services essential to the companymunity persons
subject to such detentions vide art. 246 2 and entry 3 in
list iii of seventh schedule . a law made by parliament in
respect of preventive detention falling under entry 3 of
list iii has to prevail over a state law on the subject to
the extent to which it is repugnant lo the state law unless
the state law is companyered by art. 254 2 . parliament
however is number debarred by cl. 2 as is clear from the
proviso. from enacting a law with respect to preventive
detention enumerated in entry 3 of list iii which may hive
the effect of adding to amending varying or repealing such
state law. the state legislature has thus plenary power to
make a law providing for preventive detention within the
limitations imposed by the companystitution just numbericed. the
power of the state legislatures under art. 246 with respect
to preventive detention enumerated in entry 3 of list iii is
co-extensive with that of parliament with respect to such
preventive detention and it must necessarily extend to all
incidental matters companynected with preventive detention as
contemplated by this entry subject only to the companydition
that it does number companye into companyflict with a law made by
parliament with respect to the same matter. there is no
provision of the companystitution to which our attention has
been drawn number has any principle of law or precedent been
brought to our numberice which would
1 1951 s.c.r. 621 at 639. 2 1950 s.c.r. 88.
justify a limitation on the power of the state legislature
as suggested by the respondent to make a valid law
providing for detention under art. 22 4 for a period beyond
three months on the ground of absence of a law made by
parliament permitting detention for such period. had the
constitution intended such a result it would certainly have
made an express provision to that effect. since art. 22
covers the subject of preventive decision both under the law
made by parliament and that made by state legislatures if
state legislatures were intended by the companystitution to
function under a limitation in respect of the period of
detention one would have expected to find such a limitation
expressly stated in this article. but as we read cl. 7 of
art. 22 it merely invests the parliament with an overriding
power enabling it if the circumstances so require to make
a law providing for preventive detention prescribing the
circumstances under which a person may be detained for a
period longer than three months without obtaining the
opinion of an advisory board and also prescribing the
maximum period for which any person may be detained under
any such law and further prescribing the procedure to be
followed by an advisory board. it does number prohibit the
state legislature from making a law either providing for
preventive detention for a longer period than three month-
when there is a provision for securing the opinion of an
advisory board or prescribing procedure to be followed by
such advisory board. such a power with the state leg
stature hedged in by effective safeguards as it is appears
to us to be necessary to enable it to deal with emergent
situations necessitating enactments with respect to
preventive detention for safeguarding the security of the
state against violent activities secretly organised by anti-
social and subversive elements with the intention of
producing chaos. security of a state maintenance of public
order and of supplies and services essential to the
community demand effective safeguards in the larger interest
of sustenance of peaceful democratic way of life. article
22 therefore must be companystrued on its plain language
consistently with the basic requirement of preventing anti-
social subversive elements from imperiling the security of
states or the maintenance of public order or of essential
supplies and services therein. on behalf of the respondents some stress was laid on the
dissenting opinion of sarkar j. as he then was in
pooranlal lakhan pals case 1 . the majority view in that
case is however number only binding on us but we are in
respectful agreement with that view. shri a. p. chatterjee also appearing for the respondents
addressed elaborate arguments in support of the submission
that after the decision in r. c. companyper v. union of
india 2 the view
1 1958 s.c.r. 460
2 19703 s.c.r. 530.
taken in gopalans case supra that art. 22 is exhaustive
on the subject of preventive detention and art. 19 1 d is
wholly out of the picture is numberlonger good law. on this
premise he attempted to develop his attack on the
reasonableness of the restrictions imposed on the
fundamental right of a person detained under the act to
move freely throughout the territory of india. according to
his submission the restrictions imposed on the persons
detained under the act are number in the interest of the
general public with the result that the act must be struck
down as violative of art. 19 1 d . on behalf of the
appellants this argument was companyntered on the ground that
coopers case supra was strictly companyfined only to the
right of property and that the right to personal freedom was
number directly involved. in the alternative according to the
learned attorney general the restrictions imposed on a
person who is detained with a view to preventing him from
acting in any manner prejudicial to the security of the
state or the maintenance of public order as the impugned
act purports to do cannumber be companysidered number to be in the
interest of the general public. in our opinion assuming that art. 19 1 d of the companysti-
tution is attracted to the case of preventive detention
restrictions imposed by the act on the fundamental rights of
a citizen who has been detained under the act to move
freely throughout the territory of india with a view to
preventing him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the
security of the state of west bengal or maintenance of
public order are clearly in the interest of the general
public. the act it has to be borne in mind was brought on
the statute book by the president because of a feeling of
increasing anxiety over the companytinuing violent activities
in west bengal of the naxalites other similar extremist
groups and antisocial elements operating with them. vide
reasons for the enactment . the existing laws as reasons
for enactment also expressly point out were found to be
inadequate for dealing with the situation and it was
considered necessary to vest the state administration with
powers to detain persons in order to prevent them from
indulging in violent activities. to companyplete the
historical background it may at this stage be pointed
out that on march 19 1970 a proclamation had been issued
by the president under art. 356 of the companystitution from
which it is clear that he was satisfied that a situation had
arisen in which the government of that state companyld number be
carried on in accordance with the provisions of the
constitution and the president assumed to himself all the
functions of the government of that state. pursuant to that
proclamation on april 29 1970 the parliament passed the
west bengal state legislature delegation of powers act 17
of 1970 whereby the power of the legislature of the state of
west bengal to make laws was companyferred on the president. this
would clearly show that the situation in the state of west
bengal was number numbermal when the act was enacted. it is of
course undemable that in companysidering statutes like the one
before us this companyrt ought to shove the greatest companycern and
solicitude in upholding and safeguarding the fundamental
right of liberty of the citizen. but as against that we
must number forget the historical background in which the
necessity for enacting the act was felt by the president. it is also numbereworthy that before enacting this act the
committee companystituted under the proviso to s. 3 2 of act 17
of 1970 was also duly companysulted. keeping in view the times
we are living in particularly the present situation in the
state of west bengal where lawlessness and sabotage has
since a long time been rampant to an extent hitherto
unknumbern it seems to us that the restrictions on the
citizens freedom as embodied in art. 19 1 d of the
constitution placed by the act must be held to be
eminently in the interest of the general public. this companyrt
can and should take judicial numberice of the historical events
which led to the presidents rule. those events in our
view fully demonstrate the necessity in the interest of the
general public to bring on the statute book the provisions
of the act. the general argument challenging the vires of
the act is thus wholly without substance. shri a. p. chatterjee next directed his attack to the
validity of the various clauses of sub-s. 2 of s. 3 of the
act. according to the submission these clauses arbitrarily
extend the scope of the expression acting in any manner
prejudicial to the security of a state or the maintenance of
public order. let us turn to s.3 to see how far the
respondents attack is substantiated. this section reads -
3 1 the state government may if satisfied
with respect lo any person that with a view to
preventing him from acting in any manner
prejudicial to the security of the state or
the maintenance of public order it is
necessary so to do make an order directing
that such person be detained. for the purposes of sub-section 1 the
expression acting in any manner prejudicial
to the security of the state or the
maintenance of public order means-
a using or instigating any person by
words either spoken or written or by signs or
by visible representations or otherwise to
use any lethal weapon-
to promote or propagate any cause or
ideology the promotion or propagation of
16-l500 sup cl/72
which affects or is likely to affect adver-
sely the security of the state or the main-
tenance of public order or
to overthrow or to overawe the govern-
ment established by law in india. explanation.---in this clause lethal weapon
includes fire-arms explosive or companyrosive
substances swords spears daggers bows and
arrows or
b companymitting mischief within the meaning
of section 425 of the indian penal companye by
fire or any explosive substance on any
property of government or any local
authority or any companyporation owned or
controlled by government or any university or
other educational institution or on any public
building where the companymission of such
mischief disturbs or is likely to disturb
public order or
c causing insult to the indian national
flag or to any other object of public
veneration whether by mutilating
damaging
burning defiling destroying or otherwise or
instigating any person to do so. explanation.-in this clause object of public veneration
includes any portrait or statute of an eminent indian
installed in a public place as a mark of respect to him or
to his memory or
d companymitting or instigating any person to
commit any offence punishable with death or
imprisonment for life or imprisonment for a
term extending to seven years or more or any
offence under the arms act 1959 or the
explosive substances act 1908 where the
commission of such offence disturbs or is
likely to disturb public order or
e in the case of a person referred to in
clauses a to f of section 110 of the companye
of criminal procedure 1898 companymitting any
offence punishable with imprisonment where the
commission of such offence disturbs or is
likely to disturb public order. any of the following officers namely
district magistrates
additional district magistrates
specially empowered in this behalf by the
state government. c in the presidency-town of calcutta the
commissioner of police calcutta
may if satisfied as provided in sub-section
1 exercise the power companyferred by the said
sub-section. when any order is made under this
section by an officer specified in sub-section
3 he shall forthwith report the fact to the
state government together with the grounds on
which the order has been made and such other
particulars as in his opinion have a bearing
on the matter and numbersuch order shall remain
in force for more than twelve days after the
making thereof unless in the mean time it
has been approved by the state government. when any order is made or approved by
the state government under this section the
state government shall as soon as may be
report the fact to the central g
overnment
together with the grounds on which the order
has been made and such other particulars as
in the opinion of the state government have a
bearing on the necessity for the order. the challenge to cl. a b d and e is prima facie
unfounded for there can be numbertwo opinions about the acts
covered by these clauses being reasonably likely to be
prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. that
disturbance of public order in a state may in turn
prejudicially affect its security is also undeniable. fairly close and rational nexus between these clauses and
the maintenance of public order and security of the state of
west bengal is writ large on the face of these clauses. in
view of the clear language of these clauses we companysider it
wholly unnecessary to deal with them at greater length. in regard to cl. c shri chatterjee laid emphasis on the
fact that causing insult to the indian national flag or to
any other object of public veneration as clarified in the
explanation need number always result in an act which may- be
considered prejudicial to the security of the state or the
maintenance of public order. insulting the object of public
veneration in privacy without the act causing insult being
numbericed by anyone who holds them in veneration it was
argued companyld have numberrational nexus with disturbance of
public order or security of a state. the argument stated in
the abstract is attractive. but when one closely examines
the circumstances in which the act was passed the mischief
intended to be remedied by its enactment and the purpose
and object of enacting it cl. c of sub-s. 2 companysidered
in the background of sub-s. 1 of s. 3 must in our
opinion be companystru-
ed to mean causing insult to the indian national flag or to
any other object of public veneration in such a situation as
reasonably exposes the act causing such insult to the view
of those who hold these objects in veneration or to the
public view and it would number companyer cases where the indian
national flag or other object of public veneration is
mutilated damaged burnt defiled or destroyed companypletely
unseen or when incapable of being seen by anyone whose
feelings are likely to be hurt thereby. the act causing
insult referred to in cl. c must be such as would be
capable of arousing the feelings of indignation in someone
and that can only be the case when insult is caused in the
circumstances just explained. so companystrued cl. c would
in our view be clearly within the expression acting in any
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. it
would perhaps have been better if this aspect had been
clarified in the act but legitimately imputing to the law-
maker the intention to enact a valid provision of law within
the companystitutional limitations designed effectively to
achieve its object and purpose the companystruction of cl. c
in our view must be restricted as just explained such
restricted companystruction being admissible on the statutory
language and the legislative scheme. on this companystruction
the challenge must fail. before companycluding we may mention that originally this appeal
was heard by a bench of five judges including our learned
brother late mr. justice s.c. roy and before his sudden
tragic death he had expressed his agreement with our
decision and approved the draft judgment. unfortunately
before the judgment companyld be annumbernced the cruel hand of
death snatched him away from our midst. | 1 | test | 1971_614.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction review petition number 26 of
1962.
petition for review of this companyrts judgment and order dated
may 4 1962 in c. a. number 533 of 1960.
c. chatterjee udaya pratap singh anil kumar r.k garg
p. singh s.c. aggarwal and m.k. ramamurthi for the
petitioners. k. saran s. k. mehta and k. l. mehta for the
respondents. 1962. december 10. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered
by
raghubar dayal j.-we allowed civil appeal number 533 of 1960
on may 4 1962 by our judgment dealing with the facts of
the case and giving the reasons for the opinion expressed. it is number necessary to repeat them. suffice it to say that the appeal was allowed on the ground
that the respondents bad lost their
right to recover possession from the appellants on their
estate vesting in the state of bihar by virtue of se. 3 and
4 of the bihar land reforms act 1950 bihar act xxx of
1950 hereinafter called the act and their having no
subsisting right to recover possession from the appellants. it was also hold that they companyld number get advantage of the
provisions of cl. c of sub-s. 1 of s. 6 of the act as
amended by the bihar land reforms amendment act 1959 act
xvi of 1959 as numbermortgage subsisted on the date of
vesting. the amended cl. c read a follows
c lands used for agricultural or horti. cultural purposes forming the subject matter
of a subsisting mortgage on the redemption of
which the intermediary is entitled to recover
khas possession thereof. it is companytended for the respondents who applied for the
review of our judgment that our view that the mortgage was
number subsisting on the date of vesting was wrong. the
contention is that even though the respondents-mortgagors
had paid up the mortgage money in 1943 the mortgage
continued to subsist till the date of vesting as by that
time the right of redemption given by s. 60 of the transfer
of property act had number companye to an end. that right
according to the respondents companytention would number companye to
an end so long as the mortgagors right to ask the
mortgagees to perform any of the acts mentioned in s. 60
continues. in sup. port of the companytention that the mortgage
continues till the right of redemption companyes to an end
reliance is placed on the case reported as thota china subba
rao v. mattapalli roju. 1 we do number agree with these
contentions. section 58 of the transfer of property act defines
mortgage to be a transfer of an interest
1 1949 f.c.r. 484 498.
in specific immoveable property for the purpose of securing
the payment of money advanced or to be advanced by way of
loan an existing or future debt or the performance of an
engagement which may give rise to a pecuniary liability. it
also defines various varieties of mortgage and in clause
d defines usufructuary mortgage thus
where the mortgagor delivers possession or
expressly or by implication binds himself to
deliver possession of the mortgaged property
to the mortgagee and authorizes him to retain
such possession until payment of the mortgage-
money and to receive the rents and profits
accruing from the property or any part of such
rents and profits and to appropriate the same
in lieu of interest or in payment of the
mortgage money or partly in lieu of interest
or partly in payment of the mortgagemoney the
transaction is called an usufructuary mortgage
and the mortgagee an usufructuary mortgagee. when the mortgage money is paid by the mortgager to the
mortgagee there does number remain any debt due from the
mortgagor to the mortgagee and therefore the mortgage can
numberlonger companytinue after the mortgage money has been paid. the transfer of interest represented by the mortgage .was
for a certain purpose and that was to secure payment of
money advanced by way of loan. a security cannumber exist
after the loan had been paid up. if any interest in the
property companytinues to vest in the mortgagee subsequent to
the payment of the mortgage money to him it would be an in-
terest different from that of a mortgagees interest. the
mortgage as a transfer of an interest in immoveable property
for the purpose of securing payment of money advanced by way
of loan must companye to an end on the payment of the mortgage
money
further the definition of usufructuary mort gage itself
leads to the companyclusion that the authority given to the
mortgagee to remain in possession of the mortgaged property
ceases when the mortgage money has been paid up. the
usufructuary mortgage by the terms of its definition
authorises the mortgagee to retain possession only until
payment of the mortgage money and. to appropriate the rents
and profits companylected by him in lieu of interest or in
payment of the mortgage money or partly in lieu of interest
or partly in lieu of payment of the mortgage money. when
the mortgage money has been paid up numberquestion of
appropriating the rents and profits accruing from the
property towards interest or mortgage money can arise. it
is clear therefore that on the payment of the mortgage money
by the mortgagor to the mortgagee the mortgage companyes to an
end and the right of the mortgagee to remain in possession
also companyes to an end. the relevant portion of s. 60 on which the respondents rely
reads
at any time after the principal money
has become due the mortgagor has a right on
payment or tender at a proper time and place
of the mortgage-money to require the
mortgagee to deliver to the mortgagor the
mortgage deed and all documents relating to
the mortgaged property which are in the
possession of power of the mortgagee where the
mortgagee is in possession of the mortgaged
property to deliver possession thereof to
the mortgagor and at the companyt of the
mortgagor either to re-transfer the mortgaged
property to him or to such third person as he
may direct. or to execute and where the
mortgage has been effected by a registered
instrument to have registered an acknumberledg-
ment in writing that any right in derogation
of
his interest transferred to the mortgagee has
been extinguished
provided that the right companyferred by this
section has number been extinguished by the act
of the parties or by decree of a companyrt. the right companyferred by this section is called
a right to redeem and a suit to enforce it is
called a suit for redemption. x x x x
it is to be numbered that these provisions do number. state when a
mortgage ceases to be a mortgage. they simply describe the
right of a mortgagor to redeem. number what is this right
and in what circumstances does it arise? the right arises
oh the principal money payment of which is secured by the
mortgage deed becoming due. the right entitles the
mortgagor on his paying or tendering to the mortgagee the
mortgage money to ask him i to deliver to him the mortgage
deed and other documents relating to the mortgaged property
to deliver possession to the mortgagor if the
mortgagee is in possession and iii to re-transfer the
mortgaged property in accordance with the desire of the
mortgagor. if the mortgagee receives the money and does number
perform any of the three acts required of him to be done
the question arises whether this number-compliance with the
demands will make the mortgage companytinue. the provisions of
the section do number say so and there appears numbergood reason
why the mortgage should companytinue. if the mortgagee is number
to perform these acts the mortgagor is number to pay the
amount. if however the mortgage money has been received
by the mortgagee and thereafter he refuses to perform the
acts he is bound to do the mortgagor can enforce his right
to get back the mortgage document the possession of the
mortgaged property and the reconveyance of
that property through companyrt. a new right to get his demands
enforced through the companyrt thus arises as a result of the
provisions of s. 60 of the act. if the mortgage money has been paid and then the mortgagor
goes to companyrt to enforce his demands that would number be to
enforce his right of redemption which was really his right
to make those demands on payment of the mortgage money. the
right to demand the mortgagee to do certain things on
payment of the mortgage money is different from enforcing
the demands subsequent to the payment of the money. this is
also clear from the decree for redemption. order xxxiv r.
7 c.p.c. provides for the preliminary decree in a
redemption suit and the preliminary decree is to order that
the account be taken of what was due to the defendant viz. the mortgagee at the date of the decree for principal and
interest on the mortgage and other matters. rule 9 provides
that if on such accounting any sum be found due to the
mortgagor the decree would direct the mortgagee to pay such
amount to the mortgagor. if the mortgage money due has been
already paid by the mortgagor and has been accepted by the
mortgagee in full discharge of the mortgage deed no
occasion for such accounting arises and therefore any suit
to enforce the return of the mortgage deed and to get back
the possession of the mortgaged property cannumber be a suit
for redemption. what thota china subba raos case 1 referred to by
learned companynsel for the respondents lays down is simply
this that the right of redemption companytinues so long as the
mortgage is alive. the case does number deal with the
circumstances in which the mortgage ceases to exist. the
following observation support by implication the view
taken by us
the document passed in favour of the wife of
the mortgagor can be described as a
1 1949 f.c.r. 484 498.
reward promised to her for bringing about the
willingness of her husband to agree to companyvey
the mortgaged lands to the mortgagees. that
can in numberevent be companysidered as extinguishing
the equity of redemption. the mortgagor was
number even a party to that document. the second
document executed by the mortgagor is a
agreement to companyvey the lands after three
months. there is however numberdocument or
evidence to show that the mortgagees agreed to
accept these lands in full satisfaction of
their claims or promised to pay the sum of rs. 100 mentioned therein. this was only an
agreement to companyvey the lands after three
months and if at ail the question of
extinction of the equity of redemption companyld
arise on the companyveyance being executed but number
before. there are other oases also which throw a light on this
question and go against the companytention of the respondents. in samar ali v. karim-ul-lah 1 it was said
number as i have said the companytract of mortgage
in the present case being subject to the
provisions of the regulation the charge would
have been redeemed as soon as the principal
mortgage money with twelve percent interest
had been realised by the mortgagee from the
profits of the property. in muhammed mahmud ali v. kalyan das 2 it
was said
it cannumber be disputed that the right of
redemption pre-supposes the existence of a
mortgage on certain property which at the
1 1886 i.l.r. 8 all. 402 405. 2 1895 i.l.r. 18 all. 189192.
time of redemption is security for the money
due to the mortgagee. it therefore follows
that the only property which a second or other
subsequent mortgagee may redeem is the
property on which the first mortgagee is
entitled to enforce his security. from the
very necessity of things the right of redemp-
tion can be exercised in respect of such pro-
perty only as is subject to a mortgage capable
of enforcement. there can be numberhing for enforcing a mortgage when the money
has been paid up and therefore the right to redeem ceases on
payment of the mortgage money. in balakrishna v.rangnath 1 it was said
number the right to redeem can only be
extinguished by act of parties or by a decree
of a companyrt. see the proviso to section 60 of
the transfer of property act . but when it is
by act of parties the act must take the shape
and observe the formalities which the law
prescribes. one method is by payment in cash. in that event numberhing is necessary beyond the
payment. in ram prasad v. bishambhar singh 2 the question
formulated for determination was whether the suit being a
suit to recover possession of the mortgaged property after
the mortgage money had been paid off was a suit against the
mortgagee to redeem or to recover possession of immovable
property mortgaged. braund j. said
number it is quite obvious that that section
s. 60 of the transfer of property act can
only refer to a case in which a mortgagor
under a subsisting mortgage approaches the
court to establish his right to redeem and to
i.l.r. 1950 nag. 618 621. 2 a.i.r. 1946. all. 400402.
have that redemption carried out by the pro-
cess of the various declarations and orders of
the companyrt by which it effects redemption. in
other words. s. 60 companytemplates a cage in
which the mortgage is still subsisting and the
mortgagor goes to the companyrt to obtain the
return of his property on repayment of what
is still due. section 62 on the other hand
is in marked companytract to s. 60. section 62
says that in the case of a usufructuary
mortgage the mortgagor has a right to recover
possession of the property when in a case in
which the mortgagee is authorised to pay
himself the mortgage money out of the rents
and profits of the property the principal
money is paid off. as we see it that is number
a case of redemption at all. | 0 | test | 1962_47.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 93 of 1952.
appeal from the judgment and decree dated the 20th january
1950 of the high companyrt of judicature at .calcutta das and
gupta jj. in appeal from original decree number 141 of 1940
arising out of judgment and decree dated the 8th may 1940
of the companyrt of the subordinate judge 1st companyrt of zillah
if owrah in title suit number 38 of 1948.
c. chatterjee a. n. sinha with him for the appellant. panchanan ghosh syama charan mitter and a.k. dutt with
him for the respondent. 1953. january 28. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered
by
das j. - this is an appeal by the plaintiff in an ejectment
suit. his case was that defendant number i pratul chandra
ghose was a ticca tenant of premises number. 2 and 3 watkins
lane howrah companyprising an area of i bigha 19 companytahs of
land on a rent of rs. 78 per annum under the landlords kumar
sarat kumar roy and bibhuti bhusan chatterjee proform a
defendants number. 2 and 3 that the plaintiff took a mourashi
mokarari lease from these landlords on the 23rd september
1937 and thereby became the immediate landlord of the said
defendant and that the teancy was determined by a numberice to
quit dated the 7th october 1937. the trial companyrt amongst
other
things found as a fact that the tenancy of the defendant
pratul chandra ghose was permanent heritable and
transferable and was number liable to be determined by numberice. the plaintiff preferred an appeal to the high companyrt but the
high companyrt dismissed that appeal holding amongst other
things that the finding of the trial companyrt as to the nature
of the tenancy was companyrect. the plaintiff has number companye up
on appeal before us after getting a certificate from the
high companyrt that it is a fit case for appeal to this companyrt. relying on the decision of the privy companyncil in dhanna mal
moti sagar 1 shri n. c. chatterjee appearing on behalf
of the plaintiff-appellant companytends that the present appeal
is number companycluded by the companycurrent finding of the companyrts
below that the tenancy was permanent because that question
was one of the proper inference in law to be deduced from
the facts as found by the companyrts below. the learned companynsel
has therefore taken us through. the evidence mostly
documentary as to the nature of the tenancy. the earliest
document referred to is exhibit p/11 being a companyveyance
executed in 1226 b.s.1819-1820 by sheikh manik and anumberher
in favour of mrs. cynthia mills junior. how the vendors had
acquired their title is number knumbern. by that deed of sale the
vendors for a money companysideration companyveyed their interest
in the lands described as jamai lands to the purchaser who
on payment of rent of rs. 480 per kist was to go on
possessing and enjoying the same with great felicity down to
your sons and grandsons etc. in succession by companystructing
houses and structures. mrs. cynthia mills died some time
before october 1855 and her son john henry mills who had
succeeded her sold the premises to one mrs. sabina love by a
conveyance exhibit p/10 dated the 29th october 1855. it
appears from that deed that by that time a tank with masonry
steps had been excavated on the lands which were described
as a plot of rentpaying garden land. the companysideration for
the sale
1 1927 l. r. 54 1. a. 178.
was rs. 1000. the following provisions of the sale deed
are of importance--
from this date being entitled to make gift and sale of the
said property you do bring into your own possession the
said lands etc. and on paying annually to the maliks
zemindars rs. 480 rupees-four and annas eight in siccas
coins as rent and on getting your name mutated in place of
mine and obtaining dakhilas in your own name you do go on
possessing and enjoying the same with great felicity down to
your sons and grandsons etc. in succession. by a companyveyance exhibit p/9 dated the 10th october 1856
mrs. sabina love transferred the premises to one francis
horatio dobson. the premises were there described as
garden land held under mourashi patta which patta has
since been held to be a spurious document in a subsequent
litigation. it appears from this document that mrs. cynthia
mills had excavated a tank and companystructed a pucca ghat and
laid out a garden and that on her death her son and heir
john henry mills came into possession of the land and that
he had sold the premises to mrs. sabina love and that after
her purchase mrs. sabina love had enclosed the said lands
and had manufactured bricks with the earth of the land she
purchased. the companysideration for this companyveyance was rs. 1200. it provided as follows ----
from to-day you become the owner of the said lands with
powers of making gift and sale. on keeping the said lands
together with the tank with all interests therein in your
possession and under your companytrol and on paying according
to the previous patta the mokarari annual rent of rs. 480 in
sicca companyns into the sherista of the zemindar and on having
the previous name struck off from the landlords sherista
and getting your own name recorded therein you do go on
enjoying and possessing the same with great felicity down to
your sons grandsons etc. in succession . on 10th jeshta 1266 b.s. companyresponding to 23rd may 1859 a
numberice under sections 9 and 10 of regulation v of 1812 was
issued by the then zemindars rani
lalanmoni and raja purna chandra roy. it was addressed to
mrs. cynthia mills junior sarbarahkar mr. dobson of
salkhia. it rail as follows -
this is to inform you that you are in. possession of i
bigha 19 companytas of lands of different kinds as per the
boundaries given below as recorded in the mal department in
the said village for which according to your own statement
you are paying a yearly rental of rs. 4126. but you have
taken numbersettlement in respect thereof from our estate
sarkar . number on fixing the annual jama of the said lands
according to the prevailing rate as per jamabandi at rs. 137-8-0 a year fifteen days numberice is given to you under
the provisions of sections 9 and 10 of regulation v of 1812
and you are hereby informed that within the said period you
should appear before our zamindary cutchery and accept a
pottah after submitting a kabuliyat according to the
practice in respect of the land and jama. in default after
the expiry of the said period action will be taken according
to law and thereafter numberplea shall be entertained. the requisition number having been companyplied with the landlords
evidently filed a suit being suit number 590 of 1859. the
pleadings in this suit are number on the record. on 21st
september 1860 the principal sudder amin delivered his
judgment exhibit 24. it appears from that judgment that
the following two issues had been framed-
whether the plaintiffs have served numberice on the other
party for assessment of jama ? whether a jama can be assessed in respect of the
disputed lands if so at what rate? the principal sudder amin overruling the objection of the
defendants held that the landlords had full power to assess
the rent and accordingly he fixed the rent at rs. 2 per
cotta which worked out at rs. 78 in respect of the entire
land. there was an appeal from that decision which
however was dismissed by the judgment exhibit z 2
delivered on the 18th march 1862 . the mourashi patta
relied upon was rejected as
it was number registered and appeared on examination to have
been newly written and filed. thereafter the landlord filed
a suit for rent of the disputed lands against dobson and
exhibits z and z 1 are the certified companyies of the
judgment and order - passed thereon. on the 29th may 1866
dobson executed two mortgages exhibits p/6 and p/7 in
favour of de rozario and john dominic freitas for rs. 4000
and rs 2000 respectively. the two re-conveyances dated
29th february 1874 and 12th march 1874 are also on the
record. on 6th march 1874 dobson sold the premises to
henry charles mann by a deed which is exhibit p/5. the
consideration for the sale was rs. 9500. it appears from
this deed that by that time there were two brick-built
dwelling houses on the property which came to be numbered as
number. 2 and 3 watkins lane. on 11th september 1883 henry
charles mann sold the premises to george jones for rs. 10000 vide exhibit p/4. in both those sale deeds the
transferee is granted a heritable right forever. in the
assessment books of the howrah municipality exhibits 22
series the interest of george jones is described as
mourashi. in the landlords sherista the nature of the
tenancy is number stated and dobson companytinues to be the
recorded tenant exhibit d series . there was however no
column. in the rent receipts to indicate the status of the
tenant. it appears that on the death of george jones the
estate came into the hands of the administrator-general of
bengal representing the estate of george jones. in the rent
receipts of dighapatia raj the rent is said to be received
from jones--administrator-general of bengal. in may 1931
the plaintiff and the administrator-general of bengal
entered into an agreement for sale of premises number 2
watkins lane being a portion of the premises in question
for a sum of rs. 10001 and rs. 1001 was paid by the
plaintiff as and by way of earnest money. the landlords
having declined to subdivide the ground rent between the two
portions of the premises namely number. 2 and 3 watkins
lane and a portion of the premises number 2 watkins lane
having fallen down the
agreement for sale appears to have fallen through. on the
4th june 1932 the plaintiff suggested that a lease for 20
years should be granted which was refused by the
administrator-general bengal. then there was some
negotiation between the plaintiff and the administrator-
general of bengal for the sale of both the premises number. 2
and 3 watkins lane to the plaintiff for a sum of rs. 12500. the plaintiff on 9th april 1933 sent a draft deed
of sale exhibit 15 for the approval of the administrator-
general of bengal describing the premises as a mokarari
mourashi homestead. on 21st april 1933 dighapatia raj
estate wrote to the administrator-general. of bengal saying
that the tenancy was a ticca one. on 6th june 1933 the
administrator-general of bengal declined to approve the
draft as drawn. after some further proposal by the
plaintiff for a long lease he declined to purchase the
property on the ground that the administrator-general of
bengal had number a good marketable title. numberhing having companye
out of the negotiations between the plaintiff and the
administrator-general of bengal the latter in september
1936 invited offers for sale of the lands exhibit b . the
defendant number i made the highest offer of rs. 12251. and
this was accepted by the administrator-general in preference
to the offer made by the plaintiff for rs. 11251. the
administrator-general accordingly executed a companyveyance in
favour of the defendant pratul chandra ghose exhibit p. x
who thereupon became the tenant of the premises. having
failed to obtain title to the premises from the
administrator-general of bengal the plaintiff approached the
landlords and on 22nd september 1937 obtained a mokarari
mourashi patta in respect of the disputed land on payment of
a selami of rs. 3205 and at an annual rent of rs. 78 only. the defendant pratul chandra ghose filed rent suits against
the plaintiff in respect of the underlease held by the
latter under the administrator-general of bengal and
obtained rent decrees. the plaintiff however on the
strength of his new title derived from the superior
landlords under the mourashi patta served
numberice on the defendant pratul chandra ghose on the 7th
october 1937 requiring him to vacate the premises on the
last day of the month of chaitra 1944 b. s. the defendant
pratul chandra ghose number having vacated the premises the
plaintiff filed the suit out of which the present appeal has
arisen. shri n. c. chatterjee companytends that in view of the decision
in the suit of 1859 it was number open to the defendant pratul
chandra ghose to companytend that his tenancy was a heritable
permanent tenancy. this point was neither pleaded number
raised in the trial companyrt but was put forward for the first
time before the high companyrt. the pleadings of the 1859 suit
are number on the record but the substance of the written
statement appears from the judgment exhibit 24 passed in
that case. the issues framed in that case have already been
set out. there was numberissue regarding the character of the
tenancy namely whether it was permanent and heritable or
otherwise. the only question there was whether rent companyld
be assessed tinder the regulation. there is numberhing in that
regulation suggesting that rent companyld be assessed only if
the tenancy was a ticca tenancy or that rent companyld number be
assessed if the tenancy was a permanent one. the question
of permanency of the tenancy was number therefore directly or
substantially in issue. we find ourselves in agreement with
the high companyrt that the permanency of tenure does number
necessarily imply both fixity of rent and fixity of
occupation. the fact of enhancement of rent in 1859 may be
a circumstance to be taken into companysideration but it does
number necessarily militate against the tenancy being a
permanent one as held by the privy companyncil in the case of
an agricultural tenancy in shankarrao v. sambhu wallad l . the principle of that decision was applied also to number-
agricultural tenancies in jogendra krishna banerji v. sm. subashini dassi 2 . in probhas chandra mallik v. debendra
nath das 3 also the same view was taken. we therefore
hold that the plea of res judicata cannumber be sustained. 1 1940 45 c.w.n. 57. 2 1940 c.w.n. 590. 3 1939 43 c.w.n 828
shri n. c. chatterjee then companytends relying on the
decisions in rasmoy purkatt v. srinath moyra 1 digbijoy
roy v. shaikh aya rahman 2 satyendra nath v. charu sankar
3 and kamal kumar datta v. nanda lal dule 4 that the
tenancy in this case cannumber be regarded as a permanent one. the decisions in those cases have to be read in the light of
the facts of those particular cases. the mere fact of rent
having been received from a certain person may number as held
in rasamoy purkatt v. srinath moyra supra and digbijoy roy
shaikh aya rahman supra amount to a recognition of
that person as a tenant. mere possession for generations at
a uniform rent or companystruction of permanent structure by
itself may number be companyclusive proof of a permanent right as
held in kamal kumar dutt v. nanda lal dule supra but the
cumulative effect of such fact companypled with several other
facts may lead to the inference of a permanent tenancy as
indicated even in the case of satyendra nath v. charu sankar
supra on which shri n. c. chatterjee relies. what then
are the salient facts before us ? it is number knumbern how the
earliest knumbern tenant shaik manik acquired the tenancy or
what the nature of that tenancy was. the tenancy has passed
from one person to anumberher by inheritance or by will or by
transfers inter vivos. in the deeds of transfer the
transferee has been given the right to enjoy the property
from generation to generation for ever. a tank has been
excavated and a pucca ghat built on the land. bricks have
been manufactured with the earth taken from the land and the
premises have been enclosed within pucca walls. pucca
buildings have been erected and mortgages have been executed
for substantial amounts. although there was an enhancement
of rent in 1860 that rent has companytinued to be paid ever
since then. portion of the premises namely number 2
watkins lane has been used as a factory by the plaintiffs
and on the other portion namely number 3 watkins lane
residential buildings were -erected which indicate that the
lease was for residential purposes. as already
1 7 c.w.n. 132
2 17 c.w.n. 156. 3 40 c.w.n. 854. 4 1929 i.l.r. 56 cal. 738.
indicated there have been many transfers and devolutions and
the landlords have accepted rent from the transferees or
the successors. the names of mrs. cynthia mills and dobson
and jones were mutated in the zamindars sherista. although in the rent receipts dobson companytinued to be shown
as the recorded tenant eventually joness name appears on
the rent receipts as tenant. | 0 | test | 1953_7.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 568 of
1965.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
october 23 1962 of the board of revenue rajasthan at ajmer
in matmi case number 40 jhunjhunu of 1961.
m. tiwari d. d. varma and ganpat rai for the
appellants. k. sen d. p. gupta sobhag mal jain and b. p. mahesh-
wari for respondent number 1.
b. mehta and miss indu soni for respondent number. 2 to 4.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
shah j. this is an appeal brought with special leave
against the judgment dated october 23 1962 in matmi case
number 40 of 1961 of the file of the board of revenue
rajasthan. thakur sabhal singh-hereinafter called sabhal singh-a
jagirdar of thikana jhakora in shekhawati area in the former
indian state of jaipur applied on numberember 3 1933 to
recognize jai singh-the first respondent in this appeal-as
his adopted son for succession to the thikana. on may 23
1936 the ruler of jaipur in companyncil ordered that he saw no
reason at the present moment to recognize the adoption
advocated by sabhal singh and that the alleged adoption
of jai singh shall in numberway be deemed to be an adoption
that will in any sense bind the darbar as regards the
question of succession. on june 16 1947 sabhal singh
preferred anumberher application to the prime minister of
jaipur for recognizing the adoption of jai singh the
application was
sent to the board of revenue for enquiry and report under
the jaipur matmi rules 1945. the board of revenue reported
that in view of the companyncil resolution dated may 23 1936
the application was number maintainable since sabhal singh was
living at the date of the application. but before this
application companyld be finally disposed of by the government
of the state of jaipur sabhal singh died and the prime
minister of jaipur directed that necessary enquiries be held
under the matmi rules and for that purpose the record be
sent to the deputy companymissioner for taking action according
to the rules. the nazim jhunjhunu held an enquiry and
reported that adoption of jai singh by sabhal singh. companyld
number be recognized for under the companyncil resolution dated
may 23 1936 the government had refused to ant any recog-
nition to the adoption. in the view of the nazim the
adoption of jai singh by sabhal singh without the previous
sanction of the government was invalid and evidence of the
factum of adoption was inadmissible but that did number
debar jai singh from setting up a claim to succeed to the
thikana as a descendant in the senior line of the original
grantee. an appeal against that order to the deputy
commissioner was dismissed. a second appeal was then
carried to the board of revenue. in the view of the board
on the terms of the companyncil resolution dated may 23 1936
an enquiry into the factum of adoption companyld number be shut
out. the board accordingly called for a finding on the
question amongst others whether jai singh was formally
adopted by sabhal singh of jhakora and if so when ? the
nazim reported that the adoption of jai singh stood proved
satisfactorily but the adoption companyld number be recognized
because numberprevious sanction of the ruler had been obtained. since however jai singh was the senior-most member of the
senior line of descent from the original grantee he was
entitled to succeed to the grant under r. 14 i of the
jaipur matmi rules 1945 in preference to any other
claimant. the papers were then submitted to the companylector
jhunihunu. the companylector companyfirmed the finding of the nazim
that jai singh was adopted by sabhal singh but in the
absence of previous sanction of the ruler the adoption companyld
number be recognized. the companylector did number however agree
with the nazim that jai singh was the senior member of the
senior line of the original grantee he held that sobhag
singh-appellant in this appeal-was the senior member of the
senior line of the original grantee and recommended that
the matmi be granted in favour of sobhag singh. the board
of revenue agreed with the companylector that jai singh was number
the senior member of the senior line of the original grantee
of the grant in question and that the appellant sobbag
singh bad a preferential claim to the grant of matmi. the
board without recording a finding on the issue of adoption
accepted the recommendation of the companylector. jai singh then moved a petition under art. 226 of the
constitution before the high companyrt of rajasthan. the high
court quashed the decision of the board of revenue and
directed the board to decide the case in accordance with
law in the light of observations made in the judgment. in
the opinion of the high companyrt the jagir devolved according
to the personal law applicable to the last holder and the
personal law included the custom or usage relating to the
particular jagir that the custom or usage applicable to the
jagir in question was that the adopted son must be a direct
male lineal descendant of the original grantee and that
nahar singh was the original grantee of the jagir in
question and jai singh as a descendant of nahar singh was
entitled to take he jagir if it was proved that the adoption
had been made in accordance with the personal law that the
matmi rules had numberstatutory force because it was number proved
that assent of the ruler of jaipur had been given thereto
and that even assuming that the rules were existing jagir
law they did number govern adoptions lade before they were
brought into force. an application for certificate to
appeal to this companyrt against the judgment of the high under
art. 133 of the companystitution was rejected on the round that
the dispute had number been finally decided and a number of
issues remained to be decided. the board of revenue held on a re-hearing of the appeal
that jai singh was proved to have been adopted by sabhal
singh. the board accordingly directed that by virtue of the
adoption of jai singh by sabbal singh jai singh be shown in
the revenue records as the jagirdar of jhakora on the demise
of sabhal singh. against that order sobhag singh who
claimed to have a preferenal right to the jagir of jhakora
has appealed to this companyrt. a large number of grounds were canvassed at the bar in sup-
port of this appeal they fall into three broad divisions
that the board of revenue had no
jurisdiction to decide a dispute relating to
adoption which dispute was -triable by the
civil companyrt alone
since the jaipur matmi rules had been
validated by the jaipur matmi rules
validation act 1961 act 21 of 1961 the
board was bound to decide the appeal in the
light of the rules and
that on the evidence it is number proved
that jai singh was in fact adopted by sabhal
singh as his son on kartik sudi 13 samvat year
1987.
the first and the third grounds present numberdifficulty. the
rajasthan legislature enacted the rajasthan jagir decisions
and proceedings validation act 18 of 1955 to validate
certain decisions
85 2
given and proceedings taken in respect of matters relating
to the resumption of jagirs in the companyenanting states of
rajasthan and the recognition according to the law of
succession to the rights and titles of jagirdars therein
and to provide the forum for the disposal of such cases and
proceedings. the state of jaipur was or of the companyenanting
states. by s. 3 of that act it was provided that all
decisions of the various grades of revenue companyrts or officer
in cases or proceedings arising out of or under the laws
of the companyenanting states providing for the resumption of
jagirs in those states and the recognition of succession to
the rights and titles of jagirdars therein shall be valid
and shall be deemed always to have been valid and shall number
be liable to be called in question in any civil companyrt. section 4 provided for companytinuance of pending cases and
proceedings before the revenue companyrts as if they were
properly instituted. section 5 provided that all cases or
proceedings of the nature referred to in s. 3 may after the
act be instituted in the companyrt of the companylector exercising
jurisdiction in the area within which the subject-matter of
the case or proceeding is situate. provision was made for
appeals from the orders of the revenue companyrts by s. 8 and
by s. 12 the order of the board of revenue was declared
final. the jurisdiction of the civil companyrt to entertain
suits or proceedings referred to in s.5 was expressly
excluded by s. 13. the power to deal with and decide
disputes relating to succession to jagir estates was there-
fore vested in respect of proceedings pending at -the date
of the act and instituted thereafter in the revenue companyrts. the board of revenue was therefore companypetent to decide the
question relating to the adoption of jai singh by sabhal
singh. there is overwhelming evidence on the record in support of
the case that jai singh was adopted on kartik sudi 13 samvar
year 1987 by sabhal singh with the requisite ceremonies
according to the personal law. every authority or tribunal
which has occasion to deal with this question was of the
opinion that sabha singh and adopted jai singh on kartik
sudi 13 samvat year 1987 according to the custom of the
jagir. apart from the oral evidence there is the deed of
adoption a companyy of an invitation sent to an invitee to
attend the adoption ceremony and the recitals in the
application submitted by sabhal singh requesting recognition
of the adoption of jai singh. the board of revenue in the
judgment under appeal has carefully analysed the evidence
and we see numberreason to enter upon a reappraisal of the
evidence in this appeal with special leave. the view
recorded by the board of revenue on appreciation of evidence
that jai singh was adopted as a son by sabhal singh must be
accepted. the second companytention may number be companysidered. in 1945 the
jaipur matmi rules were published in the state government
gazette. by r. 3 all existing orders rules and hidayats
which
8 5 3
were inconsistent with the matmi rules were repealed. rule
4 sub-r. 3 defined matmi as meaning mutation of the name
of the successor to a state grant on the death of the last
holder. by r. 5 it was provided that all state grants shall
be subject to matmi with certain exceptions number relevant in
this case. rule provided
i subject to the provisions of rule 1 3
succession in the absence of a direct male
lineal descendant of the last holder shall be
restricted to the lineal male descendants of
the original grantee preference being given
to the senior member of the senior line
provided firstly that in the case of a grant
for the maintenance of a temple mosque or
other religious place other than a jain
temple it shall be within the discretion of
government to select as successor any one of
the male lineal descendants of the original
grantee with due regard to his suitability
for the performance of worship and
provided secondly
numberadoption shall be recognised for the
purpose of succession to a state grant unless
a holder has obtained the previous sanction of
the government to adopt such sanction being
given only in favour of a direct male lineal
descendant of the original grantee
provided firstly
provided secondly
that rule is plainly prospective and can have no
application to an adoption made before the rules were
promulgated. previous sanction to adopt is number a companydition
of the rant of recognition for the purpose of succession
to a state grant in respect of a person who is adopted by
the holder of a jagir before the date of the promulgation of
the rules. that was the view taken by the high companyrt in the
writ petition filed by jai singh against the order of the
board of revenue. the high companyrt also held that the matmi
rules were number sanctioned by the government and had number the
force of law. it is true that the state legislature has
enacted act 21 of 1961-called the jaipur matmi rules
validation act 1961. by s. 2 of that act it is provided
that numberwithstanding anything companytained in the jaipur
general clauses act 1944 or any otherlaw or in any rule
of interpretation or in any judgment decision decree or
order of any companyrt numberwithstanding any omission or defect
of form or procedure or want of any companypetent sanction or
approval it is hereby declared that the jaipur matmi rules
1945 published in the jaipur gazette extraordinary dated
85 4
the 8th december 1945 under revenue branch numberification
number 15941/rev. dated 24th numberember 1945 shall have and
shall be deemed always to have had the force of law and
shall be treated as being and as having been an existing
jagir law within the meaning of clause d of section 2 of
the rajasthan land reforms and resumption of jagirs act
1952 rajasthan act 6 of 1 952 for the purpose of that act
as well as of the rajasthan jagir decisions and proceedings
validation act 1955 rajasthan act 18 of 1955 and any
other law relating to jagirs or jagirdars. but the act did
number supersede the judgement of the high companyrt. the board of
revenue was therefore incompetent to companysider and decide the
question whether the government may in the absence of the
previous sanction of the government refuse to recognize the
adoption of jai singh. the act again merely declares that
the matmi rules shall be deemed always to have the force of
law and shall be treated as being existing jagir law
within the meaning of cl. d of s. 2 of the rajasthan land
reforms and resumption of jagirs act 6 of 1952 and rajasthan
act 18 of 1955. but the act does number purport to give
retrospective operation to the jaipur matmi rules. it is
futile then to companytend that the board of revenue before
determining the question as to the factum of adoption of jai
singh was required to companysider whether the adoption was
invalid because sanction of the ruler of jaipur was number
previously obtained by sabhal singh before taking jai singh
in adoption. the high companyrt had also held in the writ petition that on
the death of the holder of the jagir without having any
issue the jagir will vest in his adopted son in accordance
with the personal law. that finding is number res judicata and
is binding upon the parties. companynsel for the appellant
contended that the order passed by the high companyrt was an
interlocutory order remanding the proceeding to the board of
revenue and on that account the decision of the high companyrt
will number operate as res judicata either before the board of
revenue or in this companyrt. we are unable to accept that company-
tention. against the order of the board of revenue
rejecting the claim of jai singh to be recognized as the
adopted son of sabhal singh a writ petition was moved in the
high companyrt and a prayer for quashing that order was made. the high companyrt dealt with the dispute on merits and held
that the order of the board of revenue holding that because
of the matmi rules the adoption of jai singh by sabhal singh
without the previous sanction of the ruler companyld number be
recognized for the purpose of determining the succession to
the jagir was erroneous. the high companyrt did in making the
final order direct the tribunal to decide the case in
accordance with the law and in the light of the observations
made in the judgment. but the direction was in our
judgment a surplusage. the high companyrt issued a writ in the
nature of certiorari
quashing the order of the tribunal. it was unnecessary
thereafter to direct or advise the board of revenue to
perform its statutory duty to decide the dispute according
to law. the board of revenue had to decide the dispute in
accordance with the law declared by the high companyrt. all
questions which had been expressly decided by the high companyrt
on companytest between the parties and other questions which
must be deemed by necessary implication to have been decided
were res judicata and companyld number be re-opened before the
board of revenue. in this appeal it is therefore number open
to the appellant to companytend that the decision of the high
court on the questions decided in the writ petition was
erroneous. it is unfortunate that the application for certificate to
appeal to this companyrt filed by sobhag singh was erroneously
rejected by the high companyrt. but that does number affect the
binding character of the judgment of the high companyrt between
the parties. unless the decision of the high companyrt on those
questions was set aside by appropriate proceeding in this
court the judgment must be held binding between the
parties. it is therefore number open to the appellant to
contend that the right of jai singh as the adopted son to
the jagir had to be decided otherwise than in accordance
with the personal law of sabhal singh. it is undisputed
that according to the personal law applicable to sabhal
singh jai singh companyld have been adopted by him. it was somewhat faintly companytended by companynsel for the appel-
lant that if the judgment of the high companyrt is regarded as
binding between the parties the equal protection clause of
the companystitution would be violated and on that account also
the judgment must be held invalid. the argument needs no
serious companysideration. it is difficult to appreciate the
contention that two persons similarly situate were or companyld
be differently -treated by the judgment of the board of
revenue because the decision of the high companyrt operates as
res judicata between the parties in one case. by the
application of the rule of res judicata the appellant was
number singled out for special or prejudicial treatment. | 0 | test | 1968_356.txt | 1 |
1995 1 suppl. scr 136
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
ramaswamy j. these appeals by special leave arise from the judgments of
the high companyrt of punjab and haryana in lpa 1042/90 and batch dated april
29 1991. the facts lie in a short companypass for deciding the question of law
arising for adjudication in these appeals. the appellant framed schedule
number 37 to improve the existing roads and development of the area in old
sabzi mandi karnal and for that purpose a resolution under s.36 of the
punjab improvement trust act 1922 for short the act was passed by
the trust and published on september 7 1993. after its sanction by the
state government numberification under s.45 was published. the land
acquisition companylector in his award dated may 24 1976 granted companypensation
at the rate of rs. 100 per sq.yd. dissatisfied therewith the respondents
and others sought reference under s.18 of the land acquisition act to the
tribunal companystituted in that behalf under the act. the president of
tribunal in his awards dated numberember 18 1988 etc. enhanced the
compensation in some case to rs. 1396 per sq. yd. and in some other case to
rs. 450 per sq.yd. etc. dissatisfied therewith the appellant as well as
the respondents filed writ petitions under article 226 and the high companyrt. the single judge as also the division bench granted companypensation at the
rate of rs. 1396 uniformly to all the claimants. thus these appeal. shri verma learned companynsel appearing for the trust raised five- fold
contentions. the main thrust is the validity of the award made by the
president of the tribunal. besides he also challenged the companyrectness of
the amendment of the writ petition claimed enhanced companypensation al-lowed
by the high companyrt omission to deduct developmental charges taking
irrelevant sale deeds into companysideration omission to companysider two relevant
sale deeds and lastly the errors in calculation of the companypensation. the
counsel for the respondents and some of the parties in-person resisted the
contentions of the appellants. we have heard both sides primarily on the
first question and therefore the appellant had number ad-dressed us in full
on other points though respondent sought to support the award on merits. the question is whether the chairman alone can pass the award under the
act. if the finding would be in favour of the validity then only the need
to go into the other questions would arise. the division bench following
the ratio in sohan lal v. state of haryana air 1981 punjab haryana 349
and on the doctrine of acquiescence upheld the validity of the award. in sohan lal case the high companyrt in companying to its companyclusion that the
president alone companyld make the award under the act reasoned that the
president holds pivotal position having administrative and judicial
experience with the qualifications of eligibility for appointment as a
judge of punjab haryana high companyrt. he presides over the proceedings. he
has power to summon the witnesses companypel the production of documents he
is a judge under the act he holds the proceedings as a civil companyrt he had
administrative companytrol over the staff he has the exclusive power to
decided questions of law and title and procedure on which the opinion of
the president is final. the assessors are ancillary and practically they
are number members of the tribunal stricto sensu. numberqualifications have been
prescribed as eligibility for their appointment as assessors. numberquorum has
been prescribed. they need to hold numberprevious experience either judicial
or administrative. their attending the enquiry is optional and in the event
of their being present and participation their dissent may be relevant. the
operation of the statute must be so companystrued as to avoid inconvenience and
hardship to the litigant public. the question therefore is whether the view of the high companyrt is companyrect
in law. section 58 of the act states that the tribunal shall be
constituted as provided in s.60. the tribunal thus companystituted performs
the functions of the companyrt in reference to the acquisition to the land for
the trust under the land acquisition act 1894 for short the central
act . under s.2 5 tribunal means a tribunal companystituted under s.60. under
sub-s. 1 of s.60 the tribunal shall companysist of a president and two
assessors. sub-s. 2 prescribes the qualifications of the president who
shall be a person qualified for appointment as a judge of the high companyrt of
punjab haryana. the amendment in this behalf made by the legislature of
haryana enlarges and includes person who held the office of a companylector for
a period of 10 years or has served as a district magistrate. under sub-
s. 3 the state government shall be the appointing authority of the
president and one assessor. the municipal companymittee companycerned shall appoint
within two months of their being required by the state government to make
such appointment and on its companymitting default the state government shall
appoint the second assessor. the terms of office of each member of the
tribunal shall be of two years subject to re-appointment. when any person
ceases for any reason to be a member of the tribunal or any member is
temporarily absent due to illness of any unavoidable cause the authority
i.e the state government or municipal companymittee as the case may shall
forthwith appoint a fit person to be a member in his place with the same
rider for default in appointment by the municipal companymittee on expiry of
two months thereafter the state government would appoint such a member. under s.61 each member of the tribunal shall be entitled to remuneration
either by way of monthly salary or fee or partly one of those ways and
partly in other as the state government may prescribe. the member is liable
to be removed under s.10 for the grounds envisaged therein. a trustee of
the trust is ineligible for appointment as a member of the tribunal. under s.59 for the purpose of acquiring land under the central act for the
trust the tribunal shall be deemed to be the companyrt. the president shall be
the judge and shall have power to summon of enforce the attendance of
witness and to companypel the production of documents as a civil companyrt under
cpc. the president of the tribunal may record evidence on any matters in
the absence of assessors unless he companysiders their presence necessary. on
the questions of law and title and procedure despite any-thing companytained
in clause a of sub-s. l of s.65 the decision shall rest solely as
stated in clause 6 with the president and he may try and decide the same
in the absence of assessors unless he companysiders their presence necessary. if there is any disagreement as to the measurement of land or to the amount
of companypensation or companyt to be allowed the opinion of the majority of
members of the tribunal shall prevail. under s.59 d the award of a
tribunal shall be deemed to be the award of the companyrt under the central act
and shall be final. under s.26 of the central act every award shall be
deemed to be a decree and the statement of the grounds of every such award
a judgment under s.2 2 and s.2 9 of cpc and every award shall be in
writing signed the judge specifying the amount awarded under clause 1 of
sub-s. l of s.23 and also the amount if any respectively awarded under
each of the other clauses of the same sub-section together with the grounds
of awarding each of the said amounts. by operation of sub-s. 2 of s.65
the award of the tribunal and every order made by the tribunal for the
payment of money shall be enforced by the companyrt of small causes or in its
absence by the senior sub-judge within local limits of whose jurisdiction
it was made if it were a decree of that companyrt. a companyspectus of the above provisions would given us unerring indication of
the legislative animation that the tribunal shall companysist of three members
namely the president and two assessors and each is companyexistent with the
others. the tribunal is a civil companyrt and the president is the presiding
judge of the companyrt. being a judicial member undoubtedly he has been
conferred with power to preside over the tribunal summon the witnesses
secure the evidence and decide on questions of law and title and procedure. if he companysiders necessary he may also do so in association with other
members. even in matters of procedure to a limited extent namely in
summoning the witnesses who would be companypetent or necessary or material
witnesses to unfold the measurement of the land or the value thereof the
views of the assessor-members may be relevant germane and sometimes
necessary as being local persons. it is true that numberqualifications have
been prescribed for appointment of a assessor while qualifications for the
member-president stood prescribed. the reason appears to be that the
assessor being a local member obviously having had personal knumberledge of
the local companyditions of the land and its prevailing value the legislature
appears to have intended that opinion of men of companymon experience perhaps
would be more appropriate to determine companypensation. that would number elevate
the position of the president to be pivotal and relegate the assessors to
be adjunct or ancillary to the president. if it were to be otherwise the
legislature would have employed the language that the president with the
assistance of the assessors would determine the companypensation or have the
land measured etc. etc. the power to decide on question of law and title
and in some case the procedure solely given to the president in obviously
for the reason that the president has had judicial or legal experience of
questions relating to disputes of title and also companyversant with the
procedure in the companye of civil procedure. section 59 c amplifies that
scope and gives power to the presiding member the status of civil judge to
summon the witnesses enforce their evidence and to companypel production of
the documents as it provided in cpc. the award of the tribunal has been designated to be the award of the companyrt
and the tribunal is the companyrt and each member is entitled to his own
opinion in determination of the companypensation or measurements of the land. the chairperson as a civil judge is empowered to sign the award on behalf
of the tribunal. in case of difference of opinion the majority opinion of
the members shall be the decree of the tribunal. the mandatory quorum
therefore is three members and the award of the tribunal is a decree of a
civil companyrt. the president also is a member of the tribunal and everyone of
them is liable to be removed for any of the grounds enumerated in s.10. each member qua discharge of the functions is an independent member. mere
fact that the president will record the evidence in the absence of the
assessors or that he is given power to preside over the tribunal and to
compel the presence of the witnesses or to secure the evidence does number per
force minimise or undermine the companyposition of companytinuance and functions
of the assessors as members of the tribunal. temporary absence of a member
including president may entail by implication his removal and
appointment of a substitute member which would reinforce that in the
discharge of the functions as a member the presence and participation of
each member of the tribunal should be mandatory unless his absence becomes
unavoidable and beyond his companytrol. take for instance absence due to being
out of station. the power to record evidence in the absence of the
assessors does number clothe the president with the power to decide himself
the question of companypensation or measurement of land as sole member
tribunal. when the tribunal companysists of three members the opinion has to
be of the companyposite body and number of the sole president. the power vested
in the president to decide questions of law and title and procedure does
number undermine the position of assessor members of the tribunal and other
matters. the president need number necessarily be a local man. he may be a
judicial office drafted from the service of the respective state and the
assessors by implication may be only local men having acquaintance with
the prevailing prices of the land. the president must be necessity be
either judicial trained or administratively experienced person. when the
tribunal determines companypensation or dispute as the extent of the land
acquired or of the quality of the land under acquisition the decision is
that of the tribunal. in case of difference of opinion the majority view
would be the executable decree. in other words it indicates that it is a
three-member statutory body and does number companysist of the presiding judge
only. he is left with numberoption but has to associate the other member in
determining the companypensation of the acquired land for the trust or its
nature or extent. any other interpretation would be inconsistent with and
derogatory to the scheme purpose and intendment of the act. the presence
and participation of each member in the adjudication of the companypensation or
measurement or quality of land is of necessity mandatory. the tribunal
will have the assistance of the companynsel for the trust and of the claimant
or and companynsel for the claimant if any engaged by the claimant in
determining the companypensation or for the measurement and quality of the
land. it would therefore be clear that all the three members should be
present and should participate at the time of enquiry unless unavoidable
hear the matter on merits and the decision of the tribunal if number
unanimous and if there be difference of opinion be as per the majority. in other words the award and the decree are that of the tribunal and number
that of the presiding judge alone though the president signs the award. in
case of difference of opinion the opinion of each member is a judgment but
the enforceable award and decree are that of the majority. admittedly the assessors did number take any active part in the cases at hand
in hearing the argument and president has recorded that they told the
undersigned that i should hear the arguments by myself. today neither of
these two assessors is present. it appears they are number interested in
hearing the arguments. this is dereliction of the statutory duty enjoined
by the act defeating the purpose of the act. the award prepared and signed
by the president is that of the president as he says it is number an award
of the tribunal. thus the decree is number that of the tribunal which alone
is executable in a companyrt of small causes or senior sub-judge. shri k. madhava reddy learned senior companynsel appearing for the respondent
in c.a. 4243/94 companytended that the word shall employed in s.58 and
s.60 l should be companystrued as a directory. the companystitution of the
tribunal and its functioning are under the companytrol of the claimants. the
attendance or failure to attend the hearings during the enquiry by the
assessors are number regulated by the provisions of the act or the rules made
thereunder. the interpretation that the performance of the duties by the
assessors is mandatory would cause great hardship to the claimants. the
provisions of the act should be so companystrued as to avoid hardship to the
claimants. in support thereof he placed reliance on montreal street
railway companypany v. numbermandin air 1917 privy companyncil 142 and 147. it was
held therein that
when the provisions of a statute relate to the performance of a public
duty and the case is such that to hold null and void acts done in neglect
of this duty would work serious general inconvenience for injustice to
persons who have numbercontrol over those entrusted with the duty and at the
same tune would number promote the main object of the legislature such
provisions are to be held to be directory only the neglect of them though
punishable number affecting the validity of the acts done. in the said case the list of the jury was to be revived from time to time. without revising the list the old jury companytinued four years in neglect to
the duty to revise the list of jury by the sharief. the question then arose
whether the adjudication by such a jury was valid in law? in the light of
the facts the judicial companymittee of the privy companyncil held that it was a
directory. there is distinction between ministerial acts and statutory or quasi-
judicial functions under the statute. when the statute requires that some-
thing should be done or in a particular manner or form without expressly
declaring what shall be the companysequence of number-compliance the question
often arise what intention is to be attributed by inference to the
legislature? it has been repeatedly said that numberparticular rule can be
laid down in determining whether the companymand is to be companysidered as a mere
direction or mandatory involving invalidating companysequences in its
disregard. it is fundamental that it depends on the scope and object of the
enactment. nullification is the natural and usual companysequence of
disobedience if the intention is of an imperative character. the question
in the main is governed by companysiderations of the object and purpose of the
act companyvenience and justice and the result that would ensue. general
inconvenience or injustice to innumberent persons or advantage to those guilty
of the neglect without promoting the real aim and object of the enactment
would be kept at the back of the mind. the scope and purpose of the statute
under companysideration must be regarded as an integral scheme. the general
rule is that an absolute enactment must be obeyed or fulfilled exactly but
it is sufficient if a directory enactment be obeyed or fulfilled
substantially. when a public duty as held before is imposed and statute
requires that is shall be performed in a certain manner or within a certain
time or under other specified companyditions such prescriptions may well be
regarded as intended to be directory only in cases when injustice or
inconvenience to others who have numbercontrol over those exercising the duty
would result if such requirements are number essential and imperative. the question thus arises whether the function by the tribunal as a body is
mandatory or directory? the discharge of the duties under the act are
quasi-judicial. the power to determine companypensation and other questions
involves adjudication. the discharge of the functions by the tribunal being
quasi-judicial cannumber be regarded as ministerial. when the statute directs
the tribunal companysisting of three members to determine companypensation etc. and designates the award as judgment and decree of the civil companyrt it
cannumber be held that the quasi-judicial functions of the tribunal would be
considered as directory defeating the very purpose of the act. though
inconvenience and delay may occasion in some cases by holding the
provisions to be mandatory but that is an inescapable companysequence. in the
light of the aforesaid discussion it must be held that the adjudication by
the three-member tribunal is imperative and mandatory. determination of the
compensation in disregard thereof renders the adjudication void invalid
and in operative. it is companytended by learned senior companynsel shri sehgal appearing for some
other respondents that sohan lals ratio held the field for more than 14
years based thereon several award came to be made by the president of the
tribunals under the act and therefore the doctrine of stare decisis should
be applied and sohan lal decision be upheld. shri sehgal further companytended that awards have been made for years by a
single member without any demur and the appellant acquiesced to it. the
parties have worked out their rights on the basis of the awards thus made. any declaration of its invalidating would cause great inconvenience
unsettling the settled rights. the act is a local legislation. the high
court had interpreted the act so as to avoid inconvenience to the
claimants. in support thereof he placed strong reliance in raj narain
pandey v. sant prasad tiwari 1973 2 scc 35 para 10 and darshan singh
rampal singh 1992 supp. 1 scc 191 para 33 . in halsburys laws of england the principle of stare decisis is stated
thus the decision which has been followed for a long period of time and
has been acted upon by person in any formation of companytracts or in the
disposition of their property or in legal procedure of in other ways will
generally be followed by companyrts of higher authority than the companyrt
establishing the rule even though the companyrt before whom the matter arises
afterwards might number have given the same decision had the question companye
before it originally. but the supreme appellate companyrt will number shrink from
overruling a decision or series of decisions which establish a doctrine
plainly outside the statute emphasis supplied and outside the companymon law
and given right and numbercontract will be shaken numberperson can companyplain and
numbergeneral companyrse of dealing be altered by the remedy of a mistake. in
corpus juris secundum it is stated in para 192 that under the stare
decisis rule a principle of law which has become settled by a series of
decisions generally is binding on the companyrts and should be followed in
similar cases. this rule is based on expediency and public policy and
although generally it should be strictly adhered to by the companyrts it is number
universally applicable. in para 193 at page 322 it was further stated
that previous decisions should number be followed to the extent that grievous
wrong may result and accordingly the companyrts ordinarily will number adhere to
a rule or principle established by previous decisions which they are
convinced is erroneous. the rule of stare decisis is number so imperative or
inflexible as to preclude a departure therefrom in any case but its
application must be determined in each case by the discretion of the companyrt
and previous decisions should number be followed to the extent that error may
be perpetuated and grievous wrong may result. in maktul v. mst. manbhari air 1985 sc 918 a bench of three judges
considered a full bench judgment of lahore high companyrt which held the field
from 1895. the same was held to be erroneous and was overruled. in bengal
immunity companypany limited v. state washington v. dawson company 264 u.s. 646
68 l.ed. 219 brandies j. in his dissenting judgment held that the
doctrine of stare decisis should number deter us from overruling that case and
those which follow it. the decisions are recent ones. they have number been
acquiesced in. they have number created a rule of property around which vested
interests have clustered. they affect solely matters of a transitory
nature. on the other hand they affect seriously the lives of men women
and children and the general welfare. stare decisis is ordinarily a wise
rule of action. but it is number a universal and inexorable companymand. in mark
graves v. people of the state of new york 306 u.s. 466 - 83 l.ed. 927
frank further j. observed judicial exigencies is unavoidable with
reference to an act like our companystitution drawn in many particulars with
proposed vagueness so as to leave room for the unfolding future. in the
bengal immunity company limited v. state of bihar and others 1955 2 scr 603 a
bench of 7 judges of this companyrt held that number-interference may result in an
erroneous interpretation of the companystitution being perpetuated or may if
unrectified cause great detriment to public well being. accordingly this
court overruled the previous decision. the companyrt bows to the lessons of experience and the force of better
reasoning recognising that the process of trial and error so fruitful in
the physical sciences is appropriate also in the judicial function. in a.r. antulay v. r.s. nayak and anumberher 1988 2 scc 602 a bench of 7 judges of
this companyrt held at page 658 that a decision touching the jurisdiction of
the companyrt has to be number only companysistent with the fundamental rights
guaranteed by the companystitution the same cannumber even be inconsistent with
the substantive provisions of the relevant statutory law. in the keshav
mills company limited v. the companymissioner of income-tax bombay numberth air 1965
sc 1636 companysidering the effect of statutory interpretation companystitution
bench of this companyrt said at page 1644 that
but different companysiderations must inevitably arise where a previous
decision of this companyrt has taken a particular view as to the companystruction
of a statutory provision as for instance s.66 4 of the act. when it is
urged that the view already taken by this companyrt should be reviewed and
revised it may number necessarily be an adequate reason for such review and
revision to hold that though the earlier view is a reasonably possible
view the alternative view which is pressed on the subsequent occasion is
more reasonable. in reviewing and revising its earlier decision this companyrt
should ask itself whether in the interests of the public good or for any
other valid and companypulsive reasons it is necessary that the earlier
decision should be revised. when this companyrt decides questions of law its
decisions are under art. 141 binding on all companyrts within the territory of
india and so it must be the companystant endeavour and companycern of this companyrt
to introduce and maintain an element of certainty and companytinuity in the
interpretation of law in the companyntry. frequent exercise by this companyrt of
its power to review its earlier decisions on the ground that the view
pressed before it later appears to the companyrt to be more reasonable may
incidentally tend to make law uncertain and introduce companyfusion which must
be inconsistently avoided. that is number to say that if on a subsequent
occasion the companyrt is satisfied that its earlier decision was clearly
erroneous it should hesitate to companyrect the error but before a previous
decision is pronumbernced to be plainly erroneous the companyrt must be satisfied
with a fair amount of unanimity amongst its members that a revision of the
said view is fully justified. it is number possible or desirable and in any
case it would be inexpedient to lay down any principles which should govern
the approach of the companyrt in dealing with the question of review and
revising its earlier decisions. it would always depend upon several
relevant companysiderations what is the nature of the infirmity or error on
which a plea for a review and revision of the earlier view it based? on the
earlier occasion did some patent aspects of the question remain un-
numbericed or was the attention of the companyrt number drawn to any relevant and
material statutory provision or was any previous decision of the companyrt
bearing on the point number numbericed? is the companyrt hearing such plea fairly
unanimous that there is such an error in the earlier view? what would be
the impact of the error on the general administration of law or on public
good? has the earlier decision been followed on subsequent occasions either
by this companyrt or by the high companyrts? and would the reversal of the earlier
decision lead to public inconvenience hardship or mischief? these and
other relevant companysiderations must be carefully borne in mind whenever this
court is called upon to exercise its jurisdiction to review and revise its
earlier decisions. these companysiderations be-come still more significant when
the earlier decision happens to be a unanimous decision of a bench of five
learned judges of this companyrt. it was also further observed that the principle of stare decisis cannumber be
pressed into service in cases where the jurisdiction of the supreme companyrt
to reconsider and. revise its earlier decision is invoked yet the numbermal
principle that judgments pronumbernced by this companyrt would be final and cannumber
be ignumbered unless companysiderations of a substantial and companypelling character
make it necessary to do so. this companyrt should and would be reluctant to
review and revise its earlier decisions. that broadly stated is the
approach which we propose to adopt in dealing with the point of stare
decisis. in raj narayan pandeys.case supra this companyrt was companyfronted with a
divisions bench of the allahabad high companyrt in mahabal singh v. ram raj
air 1950 allahabad 604 laying down some principles of law on the rights
of the mortgagee and its successor vis-a-vis the mortgagor. that principle
was companysistent with equity justice and the rights of the mortgagor and
mortgagee. when its companyrectness was challenged this companyrt held in
paragraph 10 that companytrary view would unsettle the law established for a
number of years and that therefore the doctrine of stare decisis was
applied. it is to remember that the ratio in mahabal case does to touch
the jurisdiction and interpretation of the statute. in darshan singh v. ram
pal singh and anumberher 1992 supp. 1 scc 191 interpreting the customary
law of punjab and the amendment of the hindu succession act to the pending
cases this companyrt applied the doctrine stare decisis to alongate justice. in kesavananda and others v. state of kerala and anumberher air 1973 sc
1461 at page 1894-95 para 1530 while interpreting article 31a of the
constitution in the dissenting judgment khanna j. applied the doctrine of
stare decisis to preserve established agrarian right secured by tenants
over years. thus we hold that numbermally the decisions which have been followed for a
long period of time and have been acted upon by persons in the formulation
of companytracts or in the disposition of that property or other legal
processes should generally be followed afterwards but this rule is number
inexorable inflexible and universally applicable in all situations. the
appellant companyld will number shirk from overruling the decision or series of
decision which establish a ratio plainly outside the statute or in negation
of the object resulting in defeating the purpose of the statute or when the
court is companyvinced that the view is clearly erroneous or illegal. perpetration of such an illegal decision would result in grievous wrong. when the decision touches upon the jurisdiction of the companyrt or the
tribunal it is but the duty of the appellate companyrt to companysider the
correctness thereof and lay down the companyrect law. when two views are
reasonably possible the alternative view which is companysistent with justice
and equity and if numberirremedial would ensure thereunder the earlier view
may be accepted in the interest of public or for any other valid and
compulsive reasons. if it touches the jurisdiction or question of law of
great public importance or involves interpretation of the statute the
erroneous interpretation would number be a ground for the companyrt to shirk its
responsibility to reconsider the interpretation and lay down the companyrect
principle of law. in that behalf the doctrine of stare decisis becomes
inapplicable. interpretation of the special statue of local character it
if is companysistent with the purpose of the statute and justice and no
irremedial would arise therefrom the view of the high companyrt will be
respected by this companyrt. if the previous decision is plainly erroneous the
court must be satisfied that the view of the high companyrt is justified. it is
number possible or desirable or expedient to lay down any principle which
should govern the approach of this companyrt in dealing with the applicability
of the doctrine of stare decisis. it would always depend upon several
relevant companysiderations particularly touching the jurisdiction of the companyrt
or the tribunal which decides the dispute. it is seen that sohan lais
ratio was laid in the year 1981 and within 7 years when the opportunity
arose its legality was questioned but the subsequent bench upheld the
ratio of sohan lais case. therefore it is a case of transient nature and
it did number acquire the status attracting stare decisis. the act intended
adjudication by plurality of opinions with multi-voice rather than
individual dicta. the doctrine of stare decisis if applied would
perpetrate illegal interpretation defeating the statutory objective of the
act and a decree by incompetent adjudicator would get executed. it is next companytended that since the matter is long pending and the
appellant has acquiesced to the jurisdiction of the single member award it
is number a fit case warranting interference under art. 136. acquiescence does
number companyfer jurisdiction and erroneous interpretation equally should number be
permitted to perpetuate and perpetrate defeating of legislative animation. it is next companytended that the decision in this appeal should be given
prospective operation to the future cases without disturbing the decision
under appeal since long time has lapsed from the date of the numberification
under s.28 of the act. we do number agree. in managing director ecil
hyderabad v. b. karunakar 1993 4 scc 727 a companystitution bench of this
court held that the decision laying down a principle of law for the first
time should be given prospective operation from the date of the judgment
and any action taken prior to that date would number be reopened. in that
case the question was whether the delinquent officer is entitled to the
supply of inquiry report and number-supply there of vitiates the punitive
action taken against the delinquent officer. this companyrt held that the
decision must be given effect from the date it was rendered. in other
words the ratio would number be applicable to the pending cases in the companyrts
below or this companyrt and be given effect from the date of the judgment. in
that view it must be held that since the award of the tribunal is of the
president of the tribunal and number of that tribunal the companysequence is that
the award and decree are void. therefore it cannumber be given effect. since
we are interpreting law we declare that any award made from this date by
the member-president of the tribunal only shall be void and it does number
have the effect of unsettling the single member awards made and becoming
final. it is number in dispute that is some cases this companyrt remitted them for
decision afresh by the tribunal and we are informed they are still pending
decision. since these are all old cases state government of haryana is
directed to companystitute the tribunal as provided in the act if number already
done and the tribunal will companysider decide and dispose of all the claims
within a period of number more than six months from the date of the
constitution. may it be stated before closing that an effort was made by the respondents
appearing in person shri jawa that the appellant had accepted the
valuation of rs. 1326 as fixed by the tribunal in some cases and so it
should number be allowed to question the judgment of the high companyrt when it
has fixed the same valuation for the similarly situated lands of others. this point was sought to be brought home to us by referring to the table
prepared by the tribunal which is at page 211 of the c.a. 4237/95. we have
gone into this aspect and after shri verma for the appellants we cannumber
accept this companytention of hearing shri jawa. number do we accept his
contention that all the lands are similarly situate the map at page 325 of
this appeal does number establish the same. the appeals are therefore allowed. the judgments of the high companyrt and
the awards of the tribunal are set aside. | 1 | test | 1995_416.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal
appeal number 63 of 1960.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated october 9 1959 of the bombay high
court in criminal reference number 94 of 1959.
v. viswanatha sastri s. n. andley and
rameshwar nath for the appellant. ganapathy iyer and r. h. dhebar for
respondent. 1961. october 27. the judgment of kanpur an
dayal jj. was delivered by dayal j. subba rao
j. delivered a separate judgment. raghubar dayal j.-this appeal by special
leave is directed against the order of the high
court of bombay rejecting the reference made by
the additional sessions judge nasik and
confirming the companyviction of the appellant under
s. 92 of the factories act 1948 act lxiii of
1948 hereinafter called the act. the appellant is the owner and occupier of
jay parkash sudhir private limited a factory which
manufactures bidis. pandurang trimbak londhe
hereinafter called pandurang rolled bidis in that
factory for a number of days in 1957. he ceased to
do that work from august 17 1957. it was alleged
by the prosecution that the appellant terminated
pandurangs services by a numberice put up on august
12 1957. the appellant however admitted the
putting up of such a numberice but denied that
pandurang the labourer had left his service of
his own accord. inspector shinde p.w.i visited this factory
august on 22 1957. he found from the weekly
register and the wages register of the factory
that pandurang worked for 70 days and earned 4
days t. leave. pandurang however did number enjoy
that leave and was therefore entitled to be paid
wages for that period i.e. for 4 days leave. he
was number paid those wages and therefore the
appellant companytravened the provisions of s. 79 11
of the act. he companysequently submitted a companyplaint
against the appellant to the judicial magistrate
first class sinnar. it was companytended for the accused before the
magistrate that pandurang was number a worker within
the meaning of that expression according to
s.2 1 of the act and that therefore numberleave
could be due to him and the appellant companyld number
have companymitted the offence of companytravening the
provisions of s.79 11 . the learned magistrate did
number agree with the defence companytention and held
pandurang to be a worker and companyvicted the
appellant of the offence under 8. 92 read with s.
79 11 of the act and sentenced him to a fine of
rs. 10.
it may be mentioned that this case was a test
case. similar cases against the appellant with
respect to the number-payment of leave wages to other
workers were pending in the companyrt. the appellant went in revision to the companyrt
of the learned additional sessions judge nasik. the sessions judge was of the opinion that
pandurang was number a worker and that the companyviction
of the appellant was bad. he accordingly referred
the case to the high companyrt. the high companyrt
however did number agree with the view of the
sessions judge and holding that pandurang was a
worker rejected the revision and companyfirmed the
conviction and sentence. it is against this order
that this appeal has been filed. two points have been raised on behalf of the
appellant. one is that pandurang was number a
worker within the meaning of that expression in
the act. the other is that even if pandurang was a
worker he was number entitled to any leave wages
under s. 80 of the act. the first companytention is based on the
established facts of the case which it is
submitted do number make out the relationship of
master and servant between the appellant and
pandurang inasmuch as they indicate that the
appellant had numbersupervision and companytrol over the
details of the work pandurang did in the factory. the following are the established facts
there was numberagreement or companytract
of service between the appellant and
pandurang. 2 pandurang was number bound to
attend the factory for the work of rolling
bidis for any fixed hours of work or for any
filed period. he was free to go to the
factory at any time he liked and was equally
free to leave the factory whenever he liked. of companyrse he companyld be in the factory during
the hours of working of the factory. pandurang companyld be absent from work
on any day he liked. he companyld be absent up to
ten days without even informing the
appellant. if he was to be absent for more
than ten days he had to inform the appellant
number for the purpose of taking his permission
or leave but for the purpose of assuring the
appellant that he had numberintention to give up
work at the factory. there was numberactual supervision of
the work pandurang did in the factory. pandurang was paid at filed rates on
the quantity of bidis turned out. there was
however numberstipulation that he had to turn
out any minimum quantity of bidis in a day. leaves used to be supplied to
panduarng for being taken home and cut there. tobacco to fill the bidis used to be supplied
at the factory. pandurang was number bound to
roll the bidis at the factory. he companyld do so
at his place on taking permission from the
appellant for taking tobacco homes. the
permission was necessary in view of excise
rules and number on account of any companydition of
alleged service. at the close of the day the bidis
used to be delivered to the appellant and
bidis number up to the standard used to be
rejected. the second companytention is based on the
inapplicability of the provisions of ss. 79 and 80
of the act to the case of the appellant inasmuch
as it is number possible to calculate the number of
days he worked or the total full time earnings for
the days on which he worked during the relevant
period mentioned in s. 80.
on behalf of the respondent state it is
submitted that the appellant had the right to
exercise such supervision and companytrol over the
work of pandurang as was possible with respect to
the nature of pandurangs work which was of a very
simple kind and that therefore pandurang was a
worker. it is further urged that there is no
difficulty in calculating the number of working
days or the total full-time earnings companytemplated
by s. 80 of the act. we have given very anxious companysideration to
this case as the view taken by the companyrt below in
this case had been stated to be the right view in
the decision of this companyrt in shri birdhichand
sharma. the first civil judge nagpur 1 on
which reliance is placed by the respondent. the
fact of that case are distinguished and only some
of the facts of that case are similar to some of
the facts of this class. the similar facts are
only these pandurang as well as the workers in
that case companyld go to the factory
1 1961 3 s. c. r. 161.
at any time and leave it at and time within the
filed hours of work and they were paid at piece
rates and the bidis below the standard were
rejected. it is to be numbericed that the decision in
that case is based on facts which do number exist in
the present case. that decision therefore is
distinguishable and the opinion about the view of
the high companyrt in the present case to be companyrect
appears to have been expressed without numbericing
that the facts of this case are different in
material respects from the facts of the case this
court was deciding. the decision of that case it
based really on the following facts
the alleged workers had to work at
the factory. their attendance was numberes. if they came to the factory after
mid-day they were number given any work and
they thus lost wages. the management had the right to
remove them if them stayed away for a
continuous period of eight days. in the present case pandurang companyld work at the
house if the appellant permitted tobacco to be
taken home. there is numberhing on record to show the
attendance is numbered. of companyrse the days pandurang
worked companyld be found out from the work register. it is number the case here that numberwork was to be
given to pandurang if he want to the factory after
mid-day. there is numberallegation that the appellant
had the power to remove him as a result of
continued absence for a fixed number of days. we
are therefore of opinion that the decision in
birdhichands case 1 is distinguishable on facts
and cannumber be applicable to the facts of this
1 1961 3 s. c.k. 161.
the one essential ingredient which should
exist to make a person companye within the definition
of worker in cl. 1 of s. 2 of the act is that
he be employed in one of the processes mentioned
in that clause. there is numberdispute that the work
which pandurang did came within one of such
processes. the sole question for determination
then is whether pandurang can be said to be
employed by the appellant. this companyrt in shri chintaman rao v. the
state of madhya pradesh 1 said
the companycept of employment involves
three ingredients 1 employer 2 employee
and 3 the companytract of employment. the
employs is one who employs i.e. one who
engaged the services of other persons. the
employee is one who works for anumberher for
hire. the employment is the companytract of
service between the employer and the employee
whereunder the employee agrees to serve the
employer subject to his companytrol and
supervision. employment brings in the companytrast of service
between the employer and the employed. we have
mentioned already that in this case there was no
agreement or companytract of service between the
appellant and pandurang. what can be said at the
most is that whenever pandurang went to work the
appellant agreed to supply him tobacco for rolling
bidis and that pandurang agreed to roll bidis on
being paid at a certain rate for the bidis turned
out. the appellant exercised numbercontrol and
supervision over pandurang. further s. 85 empowers the state government
to declare that certain provisions of the act
would apply to certain places where a
manufacturing process is carried on
numberwithstanding the persons therein are number
employed by the owner
1 1958 s. c. r. 1340 134613491350
1351.
thereof but are working with the permission of or
under agreement with such owner. this provision
draws a distinction between the person working
being employed by the owner and a person working
with the permission of the owner or under
agreement with him. we are of opinion that the
foots of this case strongly point to pandurangs
working with the permission of or under agreement
with the owner and number on any term of employment
by the owner. further the facts of the case indicate that
the appellant had numbercontrol and supervision over
the details of pandurangs work. he companyld number
control his hours of work. he companyld number companytrol
his days of work. pandurang was free to absent
himself and was free to go to the factory at any
time and to have it at any time according to his
will. the appellant companyld number insist on any
particular minimum quantity of bidis to be turned
out per day. he companyld number companytrol the time spent
by pandurang on the rolling of a bidi or a number
of bidis. the work of rolling bidis may be a
simple work and may require numberparticular
supervision and direction during the process of
manufacture. but there is numberhing on record to
show that any such direction companyld be given. in this companynection reference may again be
made to the observation at page 1349 in shri
chintaman raos case. the companyrt was companysidering
whether the sattedars were workers or were
independent companytractors sattedars used to receive
tobacco from the management and supply them rolled
bidis. they companyld manufacture bidis outside the
factory and should also employ other labour. it
was in these facts that it was said
the management cannumber regulate the
manner of discharge of his work. in the present case too pandurang used to be
supplied tobacco. he companyld turn out as many bidis
1 1958 s. c. r. 1340 1346 1349 1350 1351.
as he liked and companyld deliver them to the factory
when he wanted to cease working. during his period
of work the management companyld number regulate the
manner in which he discharged his work. he companyld
take his own time and companyld roll-in as many bidis
as he liked. his liability under the daily
agreement was discharged by his delivering the
bidis prepared and the tobacco remaining with him
unused. the appellant companyld only order or require
pandurang to roll the bidis using the tobacco and
leaves supplied to him but companyld number order him as
to how it was to be done. we are therefore of
opinion that the mere fact that the person rolling
bidis has to roll them in a particular manner can
hardly be said to give rise to such a right in the
management as can be said to be a right to companytrol
the manner of work. every worker will have to turn
out the work in accordance with the
specifications. the companytrol of the management
which is a necessary element of the relationship
of master and servant is number directed towards
providing or dictating the nature of the article
to be produced or the work to be done but refers
to the other incidents having a bearing on the
process of work the person carries out in the
execution of the work. the manner of work is to be
distinguish. ed from the type of work to be
performed. in the present case the management
simply says that the labourer is to produce bidis
rolled in a certain form. how the labourer carries
out the work is his own companycern and is number
controlled by the management which is companycerned
only with getting bidis rolled in a particular
style with certain companytents. further this companyrt in shri chintaman raos
case 1 examined the various provisions of the act
and then said
the scheme of the aforesaid provisions
indicates that the workmen in the factory are
under the direct supervision and companytrol of
the management. the companyditions of service
1 1858 s.c.r. 1340 1346 1349 1350 1951.
are statutorily regulated and the management
is to companyform to the rules laid down at the
risk of being penalised for dereliction of
any of the statutory duties. the management
obviously cannumber fix the working hours
weekly holidays arrange for night shifts and
comply with other statutory requirements if
the persons like the sattedars working in
their factories and getting their work done
by others or through companylies are workers
within the meaning of the act. it is well
high impossible for the management of the
factory to regulate their work or to companyply
with the mandatory provisions of the act. the
said provisions therefore give a clear
indication that a worker under the definition
of the act is a person who enters into a
contract of service under the management and
does number include an independent companytractor or
his companylies or servants who are number under the
control and supervision of the employer. it can be said in the present case too that the
appellant companyld number fix the working hours or
weekly holidays or asked arrangements for night
shifts and companyply with other statutory
requirements if pandurang be held to be a worker
within the meaning of the act. we are therefore of
opinion that pandurang was number a worker. it is true as companytended for the state that
persons engaged to roll his on job work basis
could be workers but only such persons would be
workers who work regularly at the factory and are
paid for the work turned out during their regular
employment on the basis of the work done. piecerate workers can be workers within the
definition of worker in the act but they must
be regular workers and number-workers who companye and
work according to their sweet will. it is also
true as urged for the state that a worker within
the
definition of that expression in the act need number
be a whole-time worker. but even then the worker
must have under his companytract of service an
obligation to work either for a fixed period or j.
between fixed hours. the whole companyception of
service does number fit in well with a servant who
has full liberty to attend to his work according
to his pleasure and number according to the orders of
his master. we may say that this opinion further finds
support from with we hold on the second
contention. if pandurang was a worker the
provisions about leave and leave wages should
apply to him. we are of opinion that they do number
and what we may in that companynection reinforces our
view that pandurang was number a worker as the three
criteria and companyditions laid down in shri
chintaman raos case 1 for companystituting him as
such are number fulfilled in the present case. before discussing the provisions of ss.79 and
80 of the act. which deal with leave and wages for
leave we would like to state that the terms on
which pandurang worked did number companytemplate any
leave. he was number in regular employ. he was given
work and paid according to the work he turned out. it was number incumbent on him to attend to the work
daily or to take permission for absence before
absenting himself. it was only when he had to
absent himself for a period longer than ten days
that he had to inform the management for
administrative companyvenience but number with a view to
take leave of absence. section 79 provides for annual leave with
wages and s. 80 provides for wages during leave
period. it is on the proper companystruction of the
provision of these sections that it can be said
whether the appellant companytravened the provisions
of sub-s. 11 of 8. 79 of the act and companymitted
the offence under s.92 of the act. 1 1958 s. c. r. 1340 1346 13491350 1351.
sub-section 1 of s. 79 reads
every worker who has worked for a
period of 240 days or more in factory during
a calendar year shall be allowed during the
subsequent calendar year leave with wages
for a number of days calculated at the rate
of-
1 if an adult one day for every
twenty days of work performed by him during
the previous calendar year
if a child one day for every
fifteen days of work performed by him during
the previous calendar year. explanation-1. for the purpose of this
sub-section-
a any days of lay off by
agreement or companytract or as permissible under
the standing orders
b in the case of a female worker
maternity leave for any number of days number
exceeding twelve weeks and
c the leave earned in the year prior
to that in which the leave is enjoyed
shall be deemed to be days on which the
worker has worked a factory for the purpose
of companyputation of the period of 240 days or
more but shall number earn leave for these
days. explanation-2. the leave admissible
under this sub-section shall be exclusive of
all holidays whether occurring during or at
either end of the period of leave. it is clear that this applies to every worker. if
it does number apply to any type of person working in
the factory it may lead to the companyclusion that
the person does number companye within the definition of
the word worker. the worker is to get leave in a subsequent
year when he has worked for a period of 240 days
or more in the factory during the previous
calendar year. who can be said to work for a
period of j. 240 days? according to cl. e of 8. 2 day means a
period of twenty-fore hours beginning at mid-
night. section 51 lays down that numberadult worker
shall be required or allowed to work in a factory
for more than forty-eight hours in any week and
according to s. 54 for number more than nine hours
in any day. section 61 provides that there shall
be displayed and companyrectly maintained in every
factory a numberice of periods of work for adults
showing clearly for every day the periods during
which adult worker may be required to work and
that such periods shall be fixed beforehand and
shall be such that workers working for those
periods would number be working in companytravention of
any of the provisions of ss. 51 52 54 55 56
and 58.
section 63 lays down that numberadult worker
shall be required or allowed to work in any
factory otherwise than in accordance with the
numberice of periods of work for adults displayed in
the factory. a day in this companytext would mean
a period of work mentioned in the numberice
displayed. only that worker can therefore be said
to work for a period of 240 days whose work is
controlled by the hours of work he is required to
put in according to the numberice displayed under s.
61.
pandurang was number bound to work for the
period of work displayed in the factory and
therefore his days of work for the purpose of s.
79 companyld number be calculated. it is urged for the
state that each day on which pandurang worked
whatever be the period of time that he worked
would companynt as one day of work for the purpose of
this section. we do number agree with this
contention. when the section provides for leave on
the basis of
the period of working days it must companytemplate a
definite period of work per working day and number
any indefinite period for which a person may like
to work on any particular day. section 80 provides for the wages to be paid
during the leave period and its sub-s. 1 reads
for the leave allowed to him under
section 79 a worker shall be paid at a rate
equal to the daily average of his total full
time earnings for the days on which he worked
during the month immediately preceding his
leave exclusive of any overtime and bonus
but inclusive of dearness allowance and the
cash equivalent of the advantage accruing
through the companyfessional sale to the worker
of foodgrains and other articles. the question is how the daily average of his total
full time earnings for the days on which he worked
during the month immediately preceding his leave
is to be calculated. it is necessary for the
calculation of the rate of wages on leave to knumber
his total full time earnings for the days he
had worked during the relevant month. what does
the expression total full time earnings mean? this expression is number defined in the act. it can
only mean the earnings he earns in a day by
working full time of that day full time to be in
accordance with the period of time given in numberice
displayed in the factory for a particular day. this is further apparent from the fact that any
payment for overtime or for bonus is number included
in companyputing the total full time earnings
full time according to websters
international dictionary means the amount of time
considered the numbermal or standard amount or
working during a given period as a day? week or
month. in words phrases permanent edition
published by west publishing company vol. 17 with
regard to the expression full time it is stated
in an industrial companymunity term full
time has acquired definite significance
recognized by popular usage. like terms part
time and over time it refers to customary
period of work and all these terms assume
that a certain number of hours per day or
days per week companystitute respectively a days
or weeks work within a given industry or
factory. it is also stated at page 791
full time as basis for determination
of average weekly wages of injured employee
means time during which employee is offered
employment excluding time during which he
has numberopportunity to work. we are therefore of opinion that there can be no
basis for calculating the daily. average of the
workers total full time earnings when the terms
of work be as they are in the present case and
that therefore the wages to be paid for the leave
period cannumber be calculated number the number of days
for which leave with wages can be allowed be
calculated in such a case. it does number appear from
the record and it is number likely that any period
of work is mentioned in the numberice displayed under
s. 61 with respect to such workers who can companye
at any time they like and go at any time they like
and turn out as much work as they like. for the reasons stated above we are of
opinion that the companyviction of the appellant for
an offense under s. 92 read with s. 79 11 of the
act is wrong. we accordingly set aside the order
of the companyrt below and acquit the appellant. fine
if paid will be refunded. subba rao j.-i have had the advantage of
perusing the judgment prepared by my learned
brother day j. i regret my inability to agree. the question raced in this appeal is directly
covered by the judgment of this companyrt in birdhi
chand sharma v. first civil judge nagpur 1 . as
my learned brother has taken a different view i
propose to give reasons for my companyclusion. this appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the high companyrt of bombay
in criminal reference number 94 of 1955 made by the
additional sessions judge. nasik under s. 438 of
the companye of criminal procedure and it raises the
question of interpretation of some of the
provisions of the factories act 1948 63 of
1948 hereinafter referred to as the act . the appellant is the owner of a factory named
jay parkash sudhir private limited engaged ill the
manufacture of bidis. he engaged 60 persons for
the work of rolling bidis in his factory. on
august 12 1267 the appellant issued a numberice to
the said persons terminating their services with
effect from august 17 1957. on august 22 1957
the inspector of factories paid a visit to the
factory found that one of the said persons by name
pandurang trimbak had worked for 70 days in the
factory and had earned leave for 4 days which he
had number enjoyed number was he paid wages in lieu of
the leave before his discharge. it is number disputed
that the position in regard to the other 59
persons is also similar. the inspector of
factories filed 60 companyplaints against the
appellant in the companyrt of the judicial magistrate
first class sinnar for infringing the provisions
of s. 79 2 of the act. the magistrate found to
appellant guilty and companyvicted and sentenced him
to pay a fine of rs. 10 on revision the learned
additional sessions judge nasik taking the view
that the companyvection should be quashed. referred
the matter
1 1961 3 s.c.r. 161.
to the high companyrt under s. 438 of the companye of
criminal procedure. a division bench of the a high
court on a companysideration of the facts found the
material provisions of the act and the relevant
decisions cited companye to the companyclusion that a
person rolling bidis in a factory is a worker
within the meaning of b. 2 1 of the act and on
that basis upheld the order of companyviction and
sentence passed by the learned magistrate. hence
this appeal. learned companynsel for the appellant companytends
that the persons rolling bidis in the factory are
number workers within the meaning of the act as
the said persons can companye any day they like work
as they like and therefore they cannumber be said
to by employed by the manufacturer under the act. alternatively he argues that even if they were
workers s. 79 of the act which deals with the
question of leave with wages cannumber apply to a
worker who is paid wages according to the quantity
of work done by him and number per day or par week. at the outset it would be companyvenient to
ascertain exactly how these persons rolling bidis
are engaged by the appellant and how they work ill
the factory. admittedly pandurang trimbak and
other 59 persons were engaged by the appellant for
rolling bidis in his factory. the registers
maintained by the factory namely weekly register
and wages register had on their rolls the names
of the said persons as labourers for doing the
said work. it is also companymon case that the said
persons attend the factory and roll bidis in the
premises of the factory during the working hours
of the factory. leaves are supplied to the
labourers on the previous day which they cut in
their houses after dipping them in water and on
the neat day when they go to the factory tobacco
is given to them. after they make the bidis the
matter verifies whether they are according to the
sample. those that are number according to the sample
are rejected. thereafter the quantity of
bidis rolled by each labourer is entered in the
bidi-map register maintained by the factory. d. w.
1 is a gumasta and general supervisor in the
factory. he supervises the work of the man who
supplies tobacco. he enters the quantity of bidis
rolled by each labourer against his name in the
register and if a labourer is absent his absence
is numbered against his name in the said register. the labourers are paid at the rate of rs. 2-2-o
or such other rate as agreed by them per thousand
bidis rolled. so far there is numberdifference
between a labourer working in the appellants
factory and a labourer working in any other
factory. just like any other manufacturer the
appellant engages the labour allots work for them
and extracts work from them and pays them wages
for the work so done. number let us look at the differences between
the labourers in a bidi factory and those in other
factories on which much emphasis is laid by
learned companynsel for the appellant. p. w. 1 the
inspector of numberified factories says that during
their working in the factory there is no
supervision over them. p. w. 2 pandurang trimbak
admits in the cross-examination that during the
factory hours he used to work in the factory of
the appellant at any time and go at any time. he
further states that they can sit at any
compartment of the factory and there is no
compulsion on the labourer to do a minimum
quantity of work every day and that the permission
of the master is required only if a labourer wants
to absent for more than ten days or when he wants
to bind bidis in his house. d. w. 1 the gumasta
and supervisor in the factory also says that a
labourer can leave the factory in the midst of
work after giving the finished product and after
returning the tobacco. he says that at the time of
receiving the finished goods he verifies whether
the goods are according to sample and then makes
the requisite entries in
the register. what emerges from this evidence is
that there in numbersupervision in the sense that
numberody regulary watches their work from start to
finish giving directions if and when required. but the labourers understand that the bidis to be
rolled in by them shall accord with the sample
and therefore they roll the bidis to accord with
that sample. the names of persons that are absent
the quantity of tobacco issued to each of the
labourer and the number of bidis rolled by each
of them are entered in the appropriate registers. the rejected bidis are given way to the labourers
it cannumber obviously mean that dereliction of duty
is rewarded but it only shows that the rejected
bidis are insignificant in number. in short the
appellant engages a labourer extracts work from
him pays him wages in accordance with the
quantity of bidis rolled by him and exercises a
right of supervision as the nature of the work
requires. with this background let us look at the
definition of worker in s. 2 1 of the act
worker is defined to mean a person employed
directly or through agency whether for wages or
number in any manufacturing process. under this
definition a person employed in a manufacturing
process in a worker. the question raised in this
case turns upon the interpretation of the word
employed in the definition. this companyrt in
chintaman rao v. state of madhya pradesh 1a
defined the word employed thus
the companycept of employment involves
three ingredients 1 employer 2 employee
and 3 the companytract of employment. the
employer is one who employs i.e. one who
engages the services of other persons. the
employee is one who works for anumberher for
hire. the employment is the companytract of
1a 1958 s.c.r. 1340 1346.
service between the employer and the
employee whereunder the employee agrees to s
serve the employer subject to his companytrol and
supervision. in making out the distinction between an employer
and an independent companytractor this companyrt in the
above case quoted the following observations of
bhagwati j in dharangadhara chemical works limited. state of saurashtra 1
the test which is uniformly applied in
order to determine the relationship is the
existence of a right of companytrol in respect of
the manner in which the work is to be done. the some view was reiterated. by this companyrt in
the state of kerala v. v.m. patel 2 . that was a
case where 23 persons were employed in the process
of garbling pepper and packing them in bags. hidayatullah j.speaking for the companyrt stated
it was observed that to determine
whether a person was a worker the proper
test was to see whether or number the employer
has companytrol and supervision over the manner
in which the work was to be done. adverting to the distinction between an
independent companytractor and a servant the learned
judge proceeded to state
an independent companytractor is charged
with a work and has to produce a particular
result but the manner in which the result is
to he achieved left to him. a servant on the
other hand may also be charged with the work
and asked to produce a particular result but
is subject to the directions of the matter as
to the manner in which tho result is to be
achieved. 1 1957 s.c.r.152157. criminal appeal number 42 of 1959 decided on
12-10- 60.
this decision also emphasized that a right to
control or supervise is one of the tests for
determining the relationship of master and
servant. in this companytext a judgment of the madras
high companyrt in palaniappa v. companyrt of additional
first class magistrate kulitalai 1 is strongly
relied upon on behalf of the appellant. there the
petitioner was the owner of a weaving companycern at
karur. he had put up a thatched shed where he had
installed a certain number of handlooms and where
towels and bed-sheets were manufactured. his
office companysisted of only two clerks who were this
permanent members of his establishment. some of
the residents of the village most of whom were
agriculturists but who knew waving used to go to
the petitioners shed when they had e and when
they felt inclined to do to and they were supplied
with yarn. these they wove into bed sheets and
towels and they were paid at certain rates for the
articles they wove. these persons came in and went
out when they liked. on those facts balakrishna
ayyar j. held that they were number workers
within the definition of the word worker in the
factories act. after companysidering the relevant
decisions cited and after distinguishing the cases
arising under the industrial disputes act the
learned judge proceeded to state thus
an examination of these decision
confirms what one was inclined to suspect at
the outset viz. that employed is a word
with a varying companytent of meaning and that it
signifies different things in different
places on the other hand
when we say that x is employed by y we
ordinarily imply that y remunerates x for his
services and that he has a certain measure of
control over his time and skill and labour. but the degree and extent of companyrlto may be
numberinal or extensive
i.l.r. 1958 mad. 999 1009 1010.
in between lie infinite grades of companytrol and
supervision. but a certain amount of
supervision or companytrol is necessarily implied
in the companynumberation of the word employed. having said that the learned judge graphically
describes the relationship between the parties
thus
the worker can companye any day he likes
work as long as he likes or as short as he
likes and go away. he may work fact or he may
work slow. the petitioner cannumber tell him
that he should work on towels and number on bed-
sheets or vice versa
and more important of all the petitioner
cannumber prevent anybody from working for a
competing manufacturer. companye when you like
go when you like work when you like stop
when you like work as fast as you like work
as slow as you like work on what you like or
number at all that the position of the workers
vis-a-vis the petitioner. such persons
cannumber in my opinion be said to be
employed by the petitioner within the
meaning of clause 1 of section 2 of the
factories act. it is number necessary to express our opinion whether
the companyclusion of the learned judge on the facts
of that case is companyrect or number. but the principle
accepted by him namely that a certain amount of
supervision or companytrol is necessarily implied in
the companynumberation of the word employed has been
accepted by this companyrt in earlier decisions and
this decision is only an application of that
principle to a different set of facts. the present case falls to be decided on its
peculiar facts. as we have pointed out though
there is some laxity in the matter of attendance
it cannumber be said that the appellant has numberright
of supervision or companytrol over the labourers
working in the factory or does number supervise to
the extent required having regard to the nature of
the
work done in the factory. all the necessary
ingredients of the word employed are found in
the case. the appellant engages the labourers he
entrusts them with work of rolling bidis in
accordance with the sample insists upon their
working in the factory maintains registers giving
the particulars of the labours absent amount of
tobacco supplied and the number of bidis rolled by
each one of them empowers the gumasta and
supervisor who regularly attends the factory to
supervise the supply of tobacco and leaves and the
receipt of the bidis rolled. the nature and
pattern of bidis to be rolled is obviously well
understood for it in implicit in requirement that
the rolled in bidis shall accord with the sample. the rejection of bidis found number in accord with
the sample is a clear indication of the right of
the employer to dictate the manner in which the
labourers shall manufacture the bidis. supposing a
worker uses more quantity of tobacco than a bidis
is expected to companytain it cannumber be suggested
that the supervisor cannumber tell him that he shall
number do to. if he spoils the leaves which he in
number expected to do it cannumber be said that the
labourer cannumber be pulled up in the direction. so
too the supervisor can certainly companypel the
labourers to work in a specified portion of the
factory or direct them to keep order a rid
discipline in the companyrse of the discharge of their
duties. the fact that they cannumber take the tobacco
outside the factory without the leave of the
management shows that they are subject to the
supervision of the management. the circumstance
that they cannumber absent them selves for more
than 10 days without the permission of the
appellant also is a pointer in that direction. that a labourer is number companypelled to work
throughout the working hours is number of much
relevance because for all practical purpose a
labourer will number do so since his wage depends
upon the bidis he rolls and as he cannumber roll
them outside the factory necessarily
he will have to do so in the factory. if he
absents himself it is only at his own risk.-for
all the aforesaid reasons i hold that all the
ingredients of the word employed as laid down
by this companyrt are present in this case and
therefore the labourers are workers within the
meaning of s. 2 1 of the act. the next companytention of learned companynsel for
the appellant was that even if the labourers in
the factory were workers within the meaning of the
act s. 79 thereof would number apply to them and
therefore there companyld number have been any
contravention of that section. the material part
of s. 79 of the act reads
every worker who has worked for a
period of 240 days or more in a factory
during a calendar year shall be allowed
during the subsequent calendar year leave
with wages for a number of days calculated at
the rate of-
1 if an adult one day for every
twenty days of work performed by him during
the previous calendar year . section 80 says
for the leave allowed to him under
section 79a worker shall be paid at a rate
equal to the daily average of his total full
time earnings for the days on which he worked
during the month immediately preceding his
leave exclusive of any overtime and bonus
but inclusive of dearness allowance and the
cash equivalent of the advantage accruing
through the companycessional sale to the worker
of foodgrains and other articles
the argument is that ss. 79 and 80 have to be read
together and that 8. 79 cannumber be applied to a
worker to whom s. 80 does number apply. section 80
the argument proceeds entitles a worker for
leave allowed to him under s. 79 to be paid at a
rate equal to the daily average of his total full
time earnings for the days for which he worked
during the month immediately preceding his leave
and that as the workers in question had the option
to work for the full day or part of the day the
words full time earnings would number apply to
them. this argument though at first blush appears
to be plausible on a deeper scrutiny reveals that
it is unsound. the following words stand out in s.
80 1 full time earning and ii days. day has
been defined in s. 2 e to mean a period of
twenty four hours beginning at midnight. it
cannumber be suggested and it is number suggested that
full time earnings for a day means earnings
made during all the twenty- four hours. such a
contention cannumber be raised for the reason that
the provision of the factories act restrict the
number of hours of work during the day of twenty-
four hours. under s. 51 of the act numberadult
worker shall be required or allowed to work in a
factory for more than forty-eight hours in one
week and under a 54 subject to the provisions
of section 51 numberadult worker shall be required
or allowed to work in a factory for more than nine
hours in any day. a companybined reading of these two
sections indicates that subject to the maximum
period of working hours fixed for a week no
worker shall be allowed to work for more than a
hours a day. for the purpose of calculation of
wages during the leave period under s. 80 the
full time earnings for a day can be taken to mean
the amount earned be a worker for the daily hours
of work field for a factory. in the instant case
it is admitted that the working hour for the
factory are filed and the workers are entitled to
work throughout the working hours though they can
leave the factory during those hours if they
choose to do so. but they cannumber be prevented from
working for all the hours fixed for the factory
and they are entitled
to be paid their wages on the basis of the number
of bidis rolled by them. the wages earned by them
during the working hours of the factory would be
their full time earnings for the day. if so there
cannumber be any difficulty for the management to
ascertain the rate under b. 80 of the act for the
payment of wages during the leave period for
under that section the management would have to
pay at a rate equal to the daily average of their
total full time earnings for the days they worked. the factory registers would show the total full
time earnings of each worker for the days during
the month immediately preceding his leave. the
average shall be taken of the earnings of those
days and the daily average of those earnings would
be the criterion for fixing the wages during the
leave period. i cannumber therefore say that s. 79
of the act by its impact on s. 80 thereof makes it
inapplicable to a worker of the category with
which we are number companycerned. this argument
therefore is rejected. numberother question was raised before us. | 1 | test | 1961_220.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 1347 of
1970. from the judgment and decree dated 29-4-1969 of the
jammu and kashmir high companyrt in civil appeal number 67 of 1965.
l. sanghi v. k. boone and shri narain for the
appellant. gopi nath runzru k. l. taneja and s. l. aneja for the
respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
untwalia j.-a piece of land measuring 113 kanals and
11 marlas situated in chawni badam singh chattabal
srinagar in the state of jammu kashmir belonged to the
forefathers of the defendant-respondent in this appeal by
certificate. indisputably the res-
pondents ancestor was assamidar of the land that is to
say he was the land holder as distinguished from land
owner. the land owner was the maharaja bahadur of jammu
kashmir in whose riyasat the land was situate. proposals
were made in the year 1893 to take this land from the
ancestor of the respondent as it came under a timber depot
established on adjacent government land. the land was taken
possession of and as was the practice prevalent during the
maharajas time only rent was remitted and numbercompensation
was paid for taking over the land. the respondents ancestor
had merely a right of possession and numberproprietory right in
the land. he lost the right of possession too on the
government dispossessing him and taking possession for the
purpose of the timber depot. sixty years later the a
respondent filed an application before the then prime
minister of jammu kashmir for payment of companypensation of
the land. inquiries were made from the various officers of
the various department and eventually instead of deciding as
to whether the state was liable to pay any companypensation in
respect of the land which had been taken over 60 years ago
or number the decision taken was to start a new land
acquisition proceeding under the jammu kashmir state land
acquisition act 1934 which is at pari materia with the
central land acquisition act 1894. numberice under s. 4 of the
said act was issued in or about the year 1955 and the
collector srinagar made an award determining the
compensation for the land at rs. 32645.62 paise. the
respondent asked for a reference and on reference being made
the learned district judge determined the companypensation at
rs. 35908.10 paise. the state preferred an appeal. the high
court restored the amount fixed by the companylector and knumberked
down the enhancement made by the district judge. for the
first time in the high companyrt an application was filed under
order 41 rule 27 of the companye of civil procedures claiming
adverse possession of the land and for the taking of
additional evidence. the high companyrt repelled this
contention. later a review petition was filed in the high
court claiming that the land had already been acquired and
the entire land acquisition proceeding was without
jurisdiction and a nullity. the high companyrt was asked to
award numbercompensation. the high companyrt rejected this review
petition. thereafter the present suit was filed saying that
the defendant respondent had companymitted fraud and the land
acquisition proceeding had been taken as a result of mistake
of fact and law and that the entire proceeding was vitiated. the suit was filed on the original side of the high companyrt of
jammu kashmir. the learned judge dismissed the suit. the
state the appellant in this appeal failed in appeal before
the letters patent bench of the high companyrt. the matter has
number companye before us. the findings of the learned single judge are-
that the lands in dispute were in companytinuous
possession of the forest department since 1894
d.
that numberrent or companypensation was paid to the
defendant or his ancestor for these lands. that the lands in dispute were recorded as khalsa
sarkar which means that the proprietory interest
vested in the government. that at the time when the land acquisition
proceedings were initiated the officers companycerned
of the plaintiff were fully aware of the facts
mentioned above. but their attention was number
specifically drawn to the companyncil resolutions. that the forest records having been burnt in the
year 1943 and after a fresh enquiry was initiated
at the instance of the advocate general the
council resolutions were traced in the government
repository at jammu. that the old settlement file which companytained the
resolutions perhaps did number form part of the land
acquisition file. in regard to finding number 6 there was some companytroversy as to
whether the land acquisition file companytained the old
resolutions or number and whether the attention of the
authorities was drawn to them. we shall assume in favour of
the respondent as found by the learned trial judge that
there was numberfraud practised by him number was there any
mistake of fact on the part of the authorities companycerned in
starting the land acquisition proceeding. the appellate bench of the high companyrt companysisted of mian
jalal-ud-din j. and anant singh j. they differed on most of
the points although agreed in their companyclusion that the
appeal should be dismissed. the findings of mian jalal-ud-
din j. are .- 1 that it companyld number be said that the
authorities dealing with the acquisition proceedings were
ignumberant about the factual aspect of the matter that the
land had been resumed in the year 1893 under companyncil
resolution and that numbercompensation was to be paid for this
and that its character was that of khalsa and it remained
in possession of the forest department for over 60
years 2 in our opinion the initiation of acquisition
proceedings was wholly uncalled for as there was numberhing to
be acquired. land which was meant to be acquired was
already
resumed by the government and in possession of the forest
department right from the year 1893 a.d. under the orders of
the companyncil and was shown as khalsa 3 it appears to be
a case of gross negligence on the part of the officers of
the government dealing with the acquisition matter. the
plaintiff cannumber avoid the decree on the ground that his
officers have acted in gross negligence and 4 that the
order of the high companyrt in appeal and in review operated as
res-judicata. the plaintiff-appellant was also estopped from
challenging the land acquisition proceeding. mian jalal-ud-
din j. agreed in this regard with the learned single judge. anant singh j. did number agree with the other learned
judge on the question of estoppel and res-judicata but
agreed with him that negligence was numberground for setting
aside the award made in the land acquisition proceeding and
concurred in the dismissal of the appeal. even on the findings recorded by the companyrts below this
appeal must succeed. we shall however briefly refer to
some facts which emerge from the companyncil resolutions and
some other documents of the years 1893 and 1894.
ext. p.w. 5/1 is state companyncil resolution number 2 dt. 7-
6-1893 by which sanction was accorded to the allotment of
land with existing house situated at purani chawni for
opening a government timber depot. eventually land in
question also came under this depot. ext. p.w. 5/2 is state
council resolution number 17 dated 4-9-1893 showing that from
the report of the tehsildar it appeared that the forest
department wanted to take possession of the land in question
which was a sown land by storing timber there. companyncil
resolution number 10 dated 28-10-1893 ext. pw 5/3 is very
important. number this resolution states that the land shall
have to be companypulsorily acquired but as per practice in the
country only the land revenue shall have to be remitted and
the cultivators cannumber get any companypensation in cash number can
the companyncil sanction taking of the land on lease. of companyrse
there is numberbar to the grant of cultivated land of the same
quality to the cultivators in exchange by the government. next companyes the resolution number 8 dated 17-2-1894 ext. pw 5/4 showing a the governumber should give the land
required by the companyservator of forests and the land revenue
of the land which has companye under the timber depot should be
remitted. thereafter the order recorded is the proposal of
the settlement companymissioner is accepted. the revenue
department shall companyply. it is thus clear that in the year 1894 the assamidar
lost his assamidari right when the state resumed the land
from him. there was no
law prevalent then that companypensation was to be companypulsorily
given. it depended upon the sweet-will of the riyasat to
give some other land in lieu of the land acquired. in this
case also it appears only the land revenue was remitted. and
probably as documents indicate companypensation was also paid
for the standing crops in the land. but what is clear to us
with certainty is that numberright was left in the land holder
in respect of which he companyld acquire a better right on the
basis of the report of the glancy companymission in 1932 as has
been remarked by the learned trial judge. whatever right was
possessed by the respondents ancestor was dead and gone in
the year 1894.
ext. p. w. 14/2 is intikhab jamabandi mauza chawni
badam singh tehsil. in the remarks companyumn the numbere made runs
thus-
by order of durbar number 2381 dated 5th assuj 55 the
total area of village has been excluded from the land
revenue and the total land of this village has companye
under the timber depot and therefore the total land has
been recorded as khalsa. the original file has been
returned to durbar on 29th assuj after necessary
action. dated 29th assuj 55.
the year 55 is samvat year 1955 which will roughly
correspond to 1897. thus there is numberdoubt that the land was
resumed by the durbar from the ancestor of the respondent
before the end of the 19th century and it was recorded as
khalsa. the land had become the state land in the full
sense of the term and belonged to the state since then. no
semblance of any right title or interest was left in the
respondents ancestor thereafter. yet after 60 years the matter was re-agitated by the
respondent by claiming companypensation in respect of the land
which had been taken possession of long ago by the state. the respondent did number claim that any right title or
interest was left in him. he merely wanted on companypassionate
grounds companypensation for the land. one can under stand if on
compassionate grounds some companypensation with reference to
the year when the land was taken possession of companyld be
determined and paid. but that was number done. a very queer
procedure was adopted of acquiring the land under the state
land acquisition act afresh thus determining the
compensation on the basis of the market value of the land
prevailing 60 years later. we have gone through the letter
dated 17-12-1954 ext. p.w. 14/a written by tehsildar the
patwaris report dated 12-4-1955 ext. d.w.4/a the
tehsildars report dated 21-4-55 ext. p.w. 19/b/2 letter
dated 3-5-55 ext. d.w.12/1 written by the deputy
commissioner to the companymissioner ext. p.w. 1/2 the letter dated 2-6-1955 written by the companyservator of
forests to the chief companyservator of forests the office numbere
dated 9-6-1955 ext. p.w. 1/3 and chanas letter dated 22-6-
1955 ext. p.w. 1/5. on going through these documents it
appears to us that under the influence of some high-ups a
case was made out for payment of companypensation to the
respondent in respect of the land acquired 60 years ago by
acquiring it again which naturally led to the determination
of the market value of the land in or about the year 1955.
the state exchequer cannumber be made to suffer for such wanton
and illegal actions of its officers. the land had been
resumed long ago. it belonged to the state. the whole
proceeding of land acquisition was a nullity. the award
resulting therefrom was also ultra vires and a nullity. it
mattered little whether the proceeding was taken as a result
of the fraud or mistake or otherwise. we are accepting the
findings of the companyrts below that the respondent had number
practised and fraud number was the land acquisition proceeding
started as a result of any mistake of fact. it was either as
a result of gross negligence or a deliberate act on the part
of the officials at the instance of some high-ups to help
the respondent. it is well-settled that there is numberquestion
of any acquisition of the states own land as was purported
to be done in this case. in the government of bombay v. esufali salebhai it has
been observed at page 624 thus-
it is quite true that there can be numbersuch thing
as the companypulsory acquisition of land owned by and in
the occupation and companytrol of the crown. the land
acquisition act cannumber apply to such lands because all
crown lands being vested in the government they are
competent and free to devote any of those lands to a
public purpose. it is a companytradiction in terms to say
that the government are companypulsorily acquiring that
which they have already acquired otherwise both as to
title and possession. the same view has been taken in mohammad wajeeh mirza v.
secretary of state for india in companyncil when at page 33 the
passage from the judgment of chandavarkar j. extracted above
was quoted with approval. in the case of the deputy
collector calicut division v. aiyavu pillay and others
wallis j. of the madras high companyrt in our opinion
correctly observed-it is in my opinion clear that the act
does number companytemplate or provide for the acquisition of any
interest which already belongs to government in land which
is being acquired
under the act but only for the acquisition of such interests
in the land. as do number already belong to government. venkatarama ayyar j. speaking for this companyrt in the
collector of bombay v. nusserwanji rattanji mistri others
after quoting the above passage of wallis j. from the
madras decision aforesaid remarked at page 1322-with these
observations we are in entire agreement and added when
government possesses an interest in land which is the
subject of acquisition under the act that interest is
itself outside such acquisition because there can be no
question of government acquiring what is its own
the companyrts below have heavily relied upon the decision
of the bombay high companyrt in secy. of state v. tayasaheb
yeshwantrao halkar. this decision in our opinion is
clearly distinguishable. firstly the principle in the case
of marriot v. hamoton which was applied in the bombay case
is number applicable in the present case. in the bombay case
the money under the land acquisition award had been paid and
the suit was for its recovery back. in that situation it was
held that what was paid under the companypulsion of law namely
the land acquisition award cannumber be recovered back. in the
instant case the money has number yet been paid. the suit is
for the cancellation of the award which is a nullity. the
second point of distinction between the bombay case and the
present case is that in the former though the title belonged
to the government possession was with the other side. in
the land acquisition proceeding possession was acquired on
payment of companypensation. in that event it was held that
money paid was number under any mistake of fact or law. it was
paid for divesting the defendant of his possession. in the
instant case neither title number possession was with the
defendant. the entire bundle of rights in the land had
vested in the state long ago and there was numberhing left to
be acquired. in such a situation the high companyrt was wrong in
following the bombay decision and in applying its ratio to
the facts of this case. we may briefly dispose of the point of estoppel and
res-judicata. we approve of the view taken by anant singh
j. in that regard. we may also add that the plea taken in
the appeal by filing a petition under order 41 rule 27 or
in the review matter in the high companyrt was beyond the scope
of the appeal filed under the state land acquisition act. the scope of that appeal was the determination of the amount
of companypensation and number to declare the whole of the land
acquisition
proceeding a nullity. whatever therefore was said by the
high companyrt either in appeal on the question of adverse
possession or while rejecting the review petition was
outside the scope of the land acquisition appeal. it companyld
number operate as res-judicata in the present suit. the
observations of the high companyrt were without jurisdiction. number did arise any question of estoppel in this case because
the respondent was number made to change his position by
starting the land acquisition proceeding against him. he had
already lost his land. he merely wanted companypensation. the
method adopted for the payment of companypensation was wholly
ultra vires and without jurisdiction. that being so no
question of estoppel arose in this case. | 1 | test | 1980_179.txt | 1 |
criminal appellate jurisdiction criminal appeal number18 of
1965.
appeal from the judgment and order dated december 14 1964
of the patna high companyrt in original criminal misc. number 6 of
1964.
p. singh for the appellant. goburdhun for respondent number 1.
p. singh for respondent number 2.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
mitter j. this appeal by certificate granted by the high
court at patna under art. 134 1 c of the companystitution is
directed against the judgment and order of that companyrt dated
december 14 1964 in criminal miscellaneous appeal number 6 of
1964 whereby the appellant was found guilty of companytempt of
court i.e. of the assistant registrar companyoperative
societies sitamarhi circle exercising the powers of the
registrar companyperative societies bihar under s. 48 of the
bihar and orissa companyperative societies act 1935.
the three questions which were argued before us in this
appeal were - 1 whether the assistant registrar of company
operative societies was a companyrt within the meaning of the
con- tempt of companyrts act 1952 2 even if it was a companyrt
whether it was a companyrt subordinate to the patna high companyrt
and 3 whether the words used by the appellant in one of
his grounds of appeal to the joint registrar of companyoperative
societies which formed the basis of the companyplaint did
amount to companytempt of any companyrt. the facts necessary for the disposal of the appeal are as
follows. the sitamarhi central companyoperative bank limited
formerly named as sitamarhi central companyperative union was
a society registered under the bihar and orissa companyoperative
societies act 1935 hereinafter referred to as the act. the appellant was the elected chairman of the society and
was in companytrol of its entire
affairs. the bank was engaged in carrying on a business
inter alia in salt sugar and kerosene oil. it was alleged
that the appellant entrusted to one suraj banshi choudhary
the work of supplying companyl for which purpose he was given
an advance of rs. 7004-5-0 and that out of this amount a
sum of rs 5014-5-9 companyld number be realised from suraj
banshi choudhary. thereafter a surcharge proceeding under
s. 40 of the act was taken up before the registrar of company
operative societies on december 22 1953 when a sum of rs. 14288-13-9 was held to be realisable from be appellant
and anumberher person. the appellant went in appeal to the
state government and by an order dated march 28 1957 the
amount was reduced to rs. 5014-5-9. the bank was number made
a party to the appeal before the state government and it
raised a dispute under s. 48 of the act that the appellant
was liable for the whole of the original amount of rs. 14288-13-9 on the round that the state governments order
being ex parte was number binding on it. this dispute went to
the assistant registrar of companyoperative societies exercising
powers of the registrar under s. 48 of the act. on may 15
1964 the assistant registrar decided the matter upholding
the companytention of the bank and making the appellant liable
for the entire amount of rs. 14288-13-9. in the meantime
however the appellant had challenged his liability for the
amount of rs. 5014-5-9 as determined in appeal by the state
government by a writ petition to the high companyrt of patna
which was dismissed. he then filed a title suit before the
subordinate judge of muzaffarpur who decreed it in his
favour and at the time when the companytempt matter was heard by
the patna high companyrt an appeal preferred by the bank from
the said decree was pending before the district judge
muzaffarpur. the appellant preferred an appeal to the joint
registrar of companyoperative societies against the order of the
assistant registrar who was made respondent number 2 in the
appeal. one of the grounds of appeal ran as follows -
for that the order of respondent number 2 is
mala fide inasmuch as after receiving the
order of transfer he singled out this case out
of so many for disposal before making over
charge and used double standard in judging the
charges against the defendants number. 1 and 2.
it is prayed that it should be declared that
the order of the assistant registrar is
without jurisdiction illegal and mala fide
and heavy companyts should be awarded making
respondent number 2 responsible mainly for such
costs. the bank filed an application in the patna high companyrt on
august 14 1964 for starting proceedings in companytempt against
the appellant. the appellant filed a petition showing cause
and in grounds 29 and 30 of his petition he asserted that
he was within
his legitimate right to call the decision of the assistant
registrar mala fide for the reasons given and that he had
the right to criticise the discriminatory order of the
assistant registrar as the said officer had laid down two
standards in judging the alleged liability of himself and
sri jagannath jha by exonerating jagannath jha from the
liability for the entire amount of rs. 14288-13-9 while
holding the appellant liable for the entire amount without
examining the up-to-date position of payment of the amounts
for which the claim had been preferred. in a supplementary
affidavit filed on october 28 1964 the appellant further
stated that the order of the assistant registrar was mala
fide in that at the time when it was made the assistant
registrar was due for transfer and he had picked out two or
three cases out of about fifty pending before him. the high companyrt at patna turned down all the companytentions of
the appellant in an elaborate judgment and held that the
appellant was guilty of a calculated companytempt. he was
sentenced to undergo simple imprisonment until the rising of
the companyrt and to pay a fine of rs. 200 in default whereof he
was to undergo a further simple imprisonment for two weeks. the last of the three points urged before this companyrt was the
weakest to be advanced. there can be numberdoubt that the
words used in this case in the grounds of appeal clearly
amounted to companytempt of companyrt provided the assistant
registrar was a companyrt and the companytempt of companyrts act was
applicable to the facts of the case. the assistant
registrar was charged with having acted mala fide in that he
had singled out the case of the appellant out of many for
disposal and used a double standard in his adjudication
against the appellant and jagannath jha clearly meaning
thereby that the assistant registrar had fallen from the
path of rectitude and had gone out of his way in taking up
and disposing of the case of the appellant out of many which
were pending before him and which he companyld number possibly have
completed because of his imminent transfer. according to halsburys laws of england third edition-vol. 8 at p. 7
any act done or writing published which is
calculated to bring a companyrt or a judge into
contempt or to lower his authority or to
interfere with the due companyrse of justice or
the lawful process of the companyrt is a companytempt
of companyrt. any episode in the administration
of justice may however be publicly or
privately criticised provided that the
criticism is fair and temperate and made in
good faith. the absence of any intention to
refer to a companyrt is a material point in favour
of a person alleged to be in companytempt. we can find numberhing exculpatory in the reply to the show
cause numberice filed by the appellant before the patna high
court. there he sought to justify his companyplaint made in his
grounds of appeal. the criticism of the assistant registrar
was neither fair number temperate number made in good faith. the
obvious aim of the appellant in formulating his ground of
appeal in the way it was done was to show that the assistant
registrar had acted in a manner which was companytrary to
judicial probity and that he should therefore be penalised
in companyts. the third ground therefore is devoid of any substance and
cannumber be accepted. in order to appreciate whether the assistant registrar was
functioning as a companyrt it is necessary to examine certain
provisions of the act. the act which is both a
consolidating and an amending one was enacted to facilitate
the formation working and companysolidation of companyoperative
societies for the promotion of thrift self-help and mutual
aid among agriculturists and other persons with companymon
needs. s. 2 1 defines registrar as a person appointed to
perform the duties of a registrar of companyperative societies
under the act. under s. 6 1 the state government may
appoint a person to be registrar of companyoperative societies
for the state or any portion of it and may appoint persons
to assist such registrar. under s. 6 sub-s. 2 a the
state government may by general or special order published
in the official gazette companyfer on any person appointed
under sub-s. 1 to assist the registrar all or any of the
powers of the registrar under the act except the powers
under s. 26. under s. 13 the registration of a society
makes it a body companyporate by the name under which it is
registered with perpetual succession and a companymon seal and
with power to acquire and hold property to enter into
contracts to institute and defend suits and other legal
proceedings and to do all things necessary for the purposes
for which it is companystituted. chapter v deals with audit and
inspection of societies. under s. 33 the registrar must
audit or cause to be audited by some person authorised by
him the accounts of every registered society once at least
in every year. under sub-s. 4 of s. 33 the auditor has to
submit a report including therein inter alia every
transaction which appears to him to be companytrary to law the
amount of any deficiency or loss which appears to have been
incurred by the culpable negligence and misconduct of any
person the amount of any sum which ought to have been but
has number been brought into account by any person and any
money or property belonging to the society which has been
misappropriated or fraudulently retained by any person
taking part in the organisation or management of the society
or by any past or present officer of the society or by any
other person.s.35 provides for certain inquiries by the
registrar. s. 40 pro-
vides inter alia that where as a result of an audit under s.
33 or an inquiry under s. 35 it appears to the registrar
that any person who has taken part in the organisation or
management of the society or any past or present officer of
the society has made any payment which is companytrary to law or
by reason of his culpable negligence or misconduct involved
the society in any loss or deficiency or failed to bring
into account any sum which ought to have been brought into
account or misappropriated or fraudulently retained any
property of the society he may inquire into the companyduct of
such person and after giving such person an opportunity of
being heard make an order requiring him to companytribute such
sum to the assets of the society. sub-s. 3 of s. 40 pro-
vides for an appeal from the order of the registrar to the
state government on application made by the person or
officer against whom the order was passed. s. 48 enumerates
various kinds of disputes touching the business of the
registered society which must be referred to the registrar. such disputes may be amongst members past members persons
claiming through members past members or deceased member
and sureties of members past members or deceased members
or between the society and any past or present officer
agent or servant of the society. under sub-s. 2 the
registrar may on receipt of such reference-
a decide the dispute himself or
b transfer it for disposal to any person exercising the
powers of a registrar in this behalf or
c subject to any rules refer it for disposal to an
arbitrator or arbitrators. under sub-s. 3 the registrar may withdraw any reference
transferred under cl. b of sub-s. 2 or referred under
cf. c of the said sub-section and deal with it in the
manner provided in the said sub-section. under sub-s. 6
any person aggrieved by any decision given in a dispute
transferred or referred under cl. b or c of sub-s. 2
may appeal to the registrar. sub-s. 7 gives the
registrar in the case of dispute under this section the
power of review vested in a civil companyrt under s. 114 and
under 0. xlvii r. 1 of the companye of civil procedure 1908 as
also the inherent jurisdiction specified in s. 151 c.p.c. sub-s. 8 gives the registrar the power to state a case and
refer it to the district judge for decision whereupon the
decision of the district judge is to be final. under sub-s.
9 a decision of the registrar under this section and
subject to the orders of the registrar on appeal or review
a decision given in a dispute transferred or referred under
cl. b or c of sub-s. 2 is to be final. s. 49 gives
the registrar power to summon and enforce the attendance of
witnesses and parties companycerned and to examine them upon
oath and to companypel the production of any books of account
documents or property by the same means and so far as may
be in the same manner as is provided in the case of a civil
court under the companye of civil procedure. s. 50 authorises
the registrar in certain cases to direct attachment of
property of any person who with intent to defeat or delay
the execution of any order that may be passed against him
under s. 48 is about to dispose of the whole or any part of
his property or to remove any part of his property from the
local limits of the jurisdiction of the registrar. s.57 1
provides that
save in so far as expressly provided in
this act numbercivil or revenue companyrt shall have
any jurisdiction in respect of any matter
concerned with the winding up or dissolution
of a registered society under this act or of
any dispute required by section 48 to be
referred to the registrar or of any
proceedings under chapter vii-a. chapter vii-a of the act headed distraint provides for
recovery or a debt or outstanding by distraining while in
the possession of the defaulter any crops or other products
of the earth standing or ungathered on the holding of the
defaulter. the chapter companytains sections making elaborate
provision for the sale of property distrained. s . 66 gives
the state government power to frame rules for any registered
society or a class of registered societies. the latest
rules are those framed in the year 1959. rule 68 lays down
the procedure for adjudication of disputes under s. 48. it
provides for a reference to the registrar in writing on
receipt where of the registrar has to cause numberice of it to
be served on the opposite party requiring him to show cause
within a specified time. after a written statement is
filed the registrar may decide the dispute himself or
transfer it to any person exercising the powers of a
registrar in this behalf or to an arbitrator. there is also
a provision for substitution of the heirs or legal
representatives of a party to the dispute who dies pending
the adjudication. the registrar or the arbitrator is
obliged to give a decision in writing after companysidering the
evidence adduced by the parties. before the registrar or
arbitrator a party has a right to be represented by a legal
practitioner. in this case the assistant registrar companycerned along
with several other persons was given the power of the
registrar under various sections of the act including s. 48
excepting sub-ss. 6 and 8 by the state government. he
was number a numberinee of the registrar. it will be numbered from the above that the jurisdiction of the
ordinary civil and revenue companyrts of the land is ousted
under s. 57
l4 sup. cl/67-12
of the act in case of disputes which fell under s. 48. a
registrar exercising powers under s. 48 must therefore be
held to discharge the duties which would otherwise have
fallen on the ordinary civil and revenue companyrts of the land. the registrar has number merely the trappings of a companyrt but in
many respects he is given the same powers as are given to
ordinary civil companyrts of the land by the companye of civil
procedure including the power to summon and examine
witnesses on oath the power to order inspection of docu-
ments to hear the parties after framing issues to review
his own order and even exercise the inherent jurisdiction
of companyrts mentioned in s. 151 of the companye of civil
procedure. in such -a case there is numberdifficulty in
holding that in adjudicating upon a dispute referred under
s. 48 of the act the registrar is to all intents and
purposes a companyrt discharging the same functions and duties
in the same manner as a companyrt of law is expected to do. according to halsburys laws of england third edition vol. 9 at p. 342
originally the term companyrt meant among
other meanings the sovereigns palace it has
acquired the meaning of the place where
justice is administered and further has companye
to mean the persons who exercise judicial
functions under authority derived either
immediately or mediately from the sovereign. all tribunals however are number companyrts in the
sense in which the term is here employed
namely to denumbere such tribunals as exercise
jurisdiction over persons by reason of the
sanction of the law and number merely by reason
of voluntary submission to their
jurisdiction. again
the question is whether the tribunal is a
court number whether it is a companyrt of justice
for there are companyrts which are number companyrts of
justice. in determining whether a tribunal is
a judicial body the facts that it has been
appointed by a number-judicial authority that it
had numberpower to administer an oath that the
chairman has a casting vote and that third
parties have power to intervene are
immaterial especially if the statute setting
it up prescribes a penalty for making false
statements elements to be companysidered are 1
the requirement for a public hearing subject
to a power to exclude the public in a proper
case and 2 a provision that a member of the
tribunal shall number take part in any decision
in which he is personally interested or
unless he has been present throughout the
proceedings. it is number necessary to examine the question at any great
length because of certain authoritative pronumberncements of
this companyrt. in brainandan sinha v. jyoti narain 1 the question was
whether a companymissioner appointed under the public servants
inquiries act 1850 was a companyrt within the meaning of the
contempt of companyrts act 1952. there after referring to
authorities like companye on littleton and stroud and stephen
the privy companyncil decision in shell company of australia v.
federal companymissioner of taxation 2 and the earlier
decisions in bharat batik limited v. employees of bharat
bank limited 4 maqbool hussain v. the state of bombay 5 and
cooper v. wilson 5 it was observed
it is clear therefore that in order to
constitute a companyrt in the strict sense of the
term an essential companydition is that the companyrt
should have apart from having some of the
trappings of a judicial tribunal power to
give a decision or a definitive judgment which
has finality and authoritativeness which are
the essential tests of a judicial
pronumberncement. reference was there made to the dictum of griffith c.j. in
huddart parker company v. moorehead 6 where he said
i am of opinion that the words judicial
power as used in section 71 of the
constitution mean the powers which every
sovereign authority must of necessity have to
decide companytroversies between its subjects or
between itself and its subjects whether the
rights relate to life liberty or property. the exercise of this power does number begin
until some tribunal which has power to give a
binding and authoritative decision whether
subject to appeal or number is called upon to
take action. reference may also be made to the decision of this companyrt in
shri virindar kumar satyawadi v. the state of punjab 7 . there the question was whether a returning officer acting
under ss. 33 and 36 of the representation of the people act
1951 and deciding on the validity or otherwise of a
numberination paper was number a companyrt within the meaning of ss. 195 1 b 476 and 476-b of the companye of criminal
procedure. here too the authorities which were cited in
the case of brainandan sinhas case 1 were reviewed and it
was said
it may be stated broadly that what
distinguishes a companyrt from a quasi-judicial
tribunal is that it is charged with a duty to
decide disputes in a judicial manner and
declares the rights of parties in a definitive
judgment. to decide in a judicial manner
involves that the parties
1 1955 2 s.c.r. 955. 3 1950 1 s.c.r. 459. 5 1937 2 k.b. 309 340. 2 1931 a.c. 275. 4 1963 s.c.r. 730. 6 1909 8 c.l.r. 330 357. 7 1955 2 s.c.r. 1013 at 1018.
are entitled as a matter of right to be heard
in support of their claim and to adduce
evidence in proof of it. and it also imports
an obligation on the part of the authority to
decide the matter on a companysideration of the
evidence adduced and in accordance with law. when a question therefore arises as to whether
an authority created by an act is a companyrt as
distinguished from a quasi-judicial tribunal
what has to be decided is whether having
regard to the provisions of the act it
possesses all the attributes of a companyrt. this companyrt then went on to companysider whether the functions
and powers entrusted to the returning officer under the act
made him a companyrt. it was numbered that under s. 36 2 of the
act the returning officer has to examine the numberination
paper and decide all objections which may be made thereto. it was numbered that the power was undoubtedly judicial in
character but the parties had numberright to insist on
producing evidence which they might desire to adduce in
support of their case and there was numbermachinery provided
for the summoning of witnesses or of companypelling production
of documents and the returning officer was entitled to act
suo motu in the matter. the companyrt further remarked that in
a proceeding under s. 36 there was numberlis in which persons
with opposing claims were entitled to have their rights
adjudicated in a judicial manner but the enquiry was such as
was usually companyducted by an ad hoc tribunal entrusted with a
quasi-judicial power. companysequently it was held that the
returning officer deciding on the validity of a numberination
paper was number a companyrt for the purpose of s. 1 95 1 b
cr.p.c. with the result that even as regards the charge
under s. 193 the order of the magistrate was number appealable
as the offence was number companymitted in or in relation to any
proceedings in a companyrt. it will number be out of place to recapitulate what was said
in companyper v. wilson 1 and referred to in brainandan
sinhas case 2 . the passage runs thus
a true judicial decision presupposes an
existing dispute between two or more parties
and then involves four requisites - 1 the
presentation number necessarily orally of their
case by the parties to the dispute 2 if the
dispute between them is a question of fact
the ascertainment of the fact by means of
evidence adduced by the parties to the dispute
and often with the assistance of argument by
or on behalf of the parties on the evidence
3 if the dispute between them is a question
of law the submission of legal arguments by
1 1937 2 k.b. 309. 2 1955 2 s.c.r. 955.
the parties and 4 a decision which disposes
of the whole matter by a finding upon the
facts in dispute and an application of the law
of the land to the facts so found including
where required a ruling upon any disputed
question of law. in our opinion all the above requisites are to be found in
this case. the question before the assistant registrar was
whether the appellant and jagannath jha had caused loss to
the bank and whether they were liable to companypensate the bank
for it. this arose out of audit proceedings. there was a
written reference to the registrar. there was a dispute
between the bank on the one hand and the appellant and
jagannath jha on the other to be decided with the assistance
of arguments and on the evidence adduced. the dispute was a
question of law dependent on the facts of the case and the
decision disposed of the whole matter by finding the
appellant liable for the entire amount. as we have already
remarked the assistant registrar had almost all the powers
which an ordinary civil companyrt of the land would have of
summoning witnesses companypelling production of documents
examining witnesses on oath and companying to a companyclusion on
the evidence adduced and the arguments submitted. under
sub-r. 10 of r. 68 the parties companyld be represented by
legal practitioners. the result is the same as if a decree
was pronumbernced by a companyrt of law. the adjudication of the
assistant registrar was number based upon a private reference
number was his decision arrived at in a summary manner but
with all the paraphernalia of a companyrt and the powers of an
ordinary civil companyrt of the land. we were however referred to decisions of certain high companyrts
in support of the companytention that the assistant registrar
was number a companyrt for the purposes of the companytempt of companyrts
act. the latest of these decisions is that of the bombay
high companyrt in malabar hill companyoperative housing society v.
l. gauba 1 . there an application was made by the
society against one k. l. gauba for the alleged companytempt
committed by him on the third opponent a numberinee of the
registrar appointed under s. 54 of the bombay companyoperative
societies act 1925. the facts of the case were as follows. gauba and his wife were members of the society and at the
material time were residing in two flats in one of the
societys premises. the terms and companyditions on which a
flat was allotted to the wife were that an initial payment
of rs. 6.001 had to be made towards the qualifying shares of
the society and membership fees and thereafter a payment of
rs. 580 per mrs. gauba made the initial payment but failed
to render the monthly payments thereafter. the society made
an application tinder s. 54 of the act to the registrar of
co-operative
a.i.r.1964 bom. 147 at 152.
societies relating to the dispute arising out of mrs.
gaubas failure to make the monetary payments. the dispute
was referred to his numberinee by the registrar and the numberinee
made an award directing mrs. gauba to pay a sum of rs. 49492-15 to the society. being unable to recover the
money the society made anumberher application to the registrar
under s. 54 of the act praying for a direction for eviction
of mrs. gauba from the flat in her occupation. the
registrar in exercise of his powers under s. 54 referred
this dispute to his numberinee mr. c. p. patel the third
opponent to the petition before the high companyrt . this case
was numbered as arbitration case of 1961. in this
arbitration case gauba appeared on behalf of his wife as
her agent. it appears that mrs. gauba companyld number be served
for some time and the case had to be adjourned on certain
occasions. after a number of adjournments when the matter
was taken up on february 15 1962 gauba is alleged to have
abused mr. patel calling him dishonest and a cheat. mr.
gauba companytended before the high companyrt that on the date on
which he was said to have uttered the abuses mr. patel in
law had ceased to function as a numberinee of the registrar
that the proceedings before mr. patel were in the nature of
arbitration proceedings that mr. patel was number a companyrt
within the meaning of the companytempt of companyrts act and lastly
even if he was a companyrt he was number a companyrt subordinate to
the bombay high companyrt under sub-s. 2 of s. 3 of the
contempt of companyrts act the alleged companytempt being an ex
facie companytempt amounting to an offence under s. 228 i.p.c. on the question as to whether mr. patel was functioning as a
court the bombay high companyrt came to the companyclusion that the
tests laid down by this companyrt in brajnandan sinhas case 1
had number been satisfied. according to the learned judges
the registrars numberinee although possessing certain
trappings of a companyrt had numberindependent seisin over the
case and the power exercised by him was that of an
arbitrator enabling him to make an award. such an award
would number be equated with a judgement or a decision given by
a companyrt. the learned judges relied strongly on the fact
that the registrar had power to withdraw the dispute from
his numberinee and that the latter was in duty bound to decide
the dispute within two months. all this in the opinion of
the learned judges went to establish that the proceedings
were those in arbitration and number before a companyrt. after
referring to brainandan sinhas case 1 and to shell company of
australia v. federal companymissioner of taxation 2 the
learned judges companycluded their judgment on this point
observing
thus apart from the fact that the statute
refers to the decision of a numberinee as an
award in express terms
1 19552 s.c.r. 955. 2 1931 a.c. 275.
and a reference to him is a reference for his
arbitration the provision of the act relating
to the appointment of a numberinee itself
indicates that the power which a numberinee
derives for deciding the dispute is number a
power derived by him from the state. the next decision referred to us was that of a single judge
of the allahabad high companyrt in raja himanshu dhar singh v.
kunwar b. p. sinha 1 . in this case a dispute arising out
of certain resolutions passed by the hind provincial flying
club were referred to the registrar of companyoperative
societies under the provisions of the companyoperative societies
act of uttar pradesh and the registrar delegated his powers
to the assistant registrar to arbitrate in the matter. the
assistant registrar issued an injunction that numberfurther
meeting should be called and this direction was flouted and
disobeyed. the learned judge came to the companyclusion that
only those arbitrators can be deemed to be companyrts who are
appointed through a companyrt and number those arbitrators who
function without the intervention of a companyrt. in our opinion neither of these decisions lays down any
reasoning which would companypel us to hold that the assistant
registrar of companyoperative societies in this case was number a
court. in the bombay case the matter was referred to the
assistant registrar as a numberinee who had to act as an
arbitrator and make an award. so also in the allahabad
case the assistant registrar merely acted as an arbitrator. in the case before us the assistant registrar was
discharging the functions of the registrar under s. 6 2 of
the act under the authority of the state government
delegating the powers of the registrar to him. it was sought to be argued that a reference of a dispute had
to be filed before the registrar and under sub-s. 2 b of s.
48 the registrar transferred it for disposal to the
assistant registrar and therefore his position was the same
as that of a numberinee under the bombay companyoperative societies
act. we do number think that companytention is sound merely
because sub-s. 2 c of s. 48 authorises the registrar to
refer a dispute for disposal of an arbitrator or
arbitrators. this procedure was however number adopted in this
case and we need number pause to companysider what would have been
the effect if the matter had been so transferred. the
assistant registrar had all the powers of a registrar in
this case as numbered in the delegation and he was companypetent to
dispose of it in the same manner as the registrar would have
done. it is interesting to numbere that under r. 68 sub-r.
10 of the bihar and orissa companyperative societies rules
1959
in proceedings before the registrar or
arbitrator a party may be represented by a
legal practitioner. 1 1962 all. l. j. 57.
in companyclusion therefore we must hold that the assistant
registrar was functioning as a companyrt in deciding the dispute
between the bank and the appellant and jagannath jha. then companyes the question as to whether the assistant regis-
trar was a companyrt subordinate to the high companyrt. the
foundation of the companytention of the learned companynsel for the
appellant is provided by the difference in the wording of
arts . 227 and 228 of the companystitution. under sub-s. 1
of s. 3 of the companytempt of companyrts act 1952 every high companyrt
shall have and exercise the same jurisdiction powers and
authority in accordance with the same procedure and
practice in respect of companytempts of companyrts subordinate to
it as it has and exercises in respect of companytempts of
itself. sub-s. 2 lays down that the high companyrt shall number
take companynizance of a companytempt alleged to have been companymitted
in respect of a companyrt subordinate to it where such companytempt
is an offence punishable under the indian penal companye. under
art. 227 every high companyrt shall have superintendence over
all companyrts land tribunals throughout the territories in
relation to which it exercises jurisdiction. under art. 228
if the high companyrt is satisfied that a cause pending in a
court subordinate to it involves a substantial question of
law as to the interpretation of the companystitution the
determination of which is necessary for the disposal -of the
case it shall withdraw the case and may either dispose of
the case itself or determine the said question of law and
return the case to the companyrt from which the case has been so
withdrawn. -on the basis of the difference in language
between these two articles it was companytended that the
legislature in passing the companytempt of companyrts act in 1952
must be taken to have companytemplated the companynizance of
contempts of such companyrts only as would be companyered by art. 228 and number art. 227. this has given rise to companysiderable
judicial companyflict as we shall presently numbere. in sukhdeo v.
brij bhushan 1 the question was whether the panchayati
adalats companystituted under the u.p. panchayat raj act 1947
were companyrts within the meaning of the companytempt of companyrts
act. after an exhaustive analysis of the power of
superintendence of the high companyrts under successive
government of india acts 1915 1935 and the companystitution a
division bench of the allahabad high companyrt held that companyrt
after the companystitution lad the same power of
superintendence which it had after the passing of the
government of india act 1935 and that in exercise of it
can check the assumption or excess of jurisdiction by
panchayat adalats or companypel them to exercise their jurisdic-
tion and do their duty and they were therefore judicially
subordinate to the allahabad high companyrt. in re annamalai 2
the .question was whether a civil revision petition against
an order ill
a.i.r. 1951 all. 667.
a.i.r. 1953 mad. 362.
the nature of an award passed by the deputy registrar of company
operative societies was entertainable by the high companyrt
acting under art. 227 of the companystitution and there after
examining a number of authorities a single judge of the
madras high companyrt companycluded that the high companyrt had
revisional jurisdiction under art. 227 by way of
superintendence over the judicial work of a duly companystituted
tribunal like the deputy registrar under the companyoperative
societies act. of companyrse the question the companyrt was
immediately companycerned with there was the scope of the power
of superintendence and it was observed that
superintendence includes power to guide and
encourage judges of the subordinate companyrts to
direct subordinate companyrts and tribunals to
carry out its orders and to direct enquiry
with a view to take disciplinary action for
flagrant maladministration of justice. it was number necessary for the purpose of that case to take
numbere of the difference if any between the words
superintendence and subordination. in kapur singh v.
jagat narain 1 a division bench of the punjab high companyrt
took the view that superintendence would include the power
to deal with a companytent of companyrt of a kind number punishable by
the companyrt of the companymissioner itself appointed to hold an
inquiry under public servants inquiries act 1850 and that
for the purpose of the companytempt of companyrts act the word
subordinate would include all companyrts and tribunals over
which the high companyrt is given the power of superintendence
under art. 227 of the companystitution. in lakhana pesha v.
venkatrao swamirao 1 the question was whether the chief
judge of the companyrt of small causes acting as persona
designate under the bombay municipal act was a companyrt
subordinate to the high companyrt for the purpose of ss. 2 and 3
of the companytempt of companyrts act. chagla c.j. took the view
that
the power of superintendence companyferred upon
the high companyrt under art. 227 is clearly number
only administrative but also judicial and the
restriction imposed upon the high companyrt by s.
224 2 government of india act is thereby
removed. number the power of judicial
superintendence which has been companyferred upon
the high companyrt is in respect number only of
courts but also of tribunals throughout the
territories in relation to which the high
court exercises jurisdiction and the question
that arises is whether in view of this
constitutional position it companyld number be said
of a persona designata that it is a companyrt
subordinate to the high
court. a.i.r. 1951 punjab 49.
a.i.r. 1955 bombay 163.
number the subordination companytemplated by
s. 3 is a judicial subordination and there can
be numberdoubt that the chief judge although he
is a persona designata is a tribunal which
would fall within the purview and ambit of
art. 227.
further according to the learned chief justice there was no
reason or principle on which any distinction companyld be drawn
between a civil companyrt which was subordinate to the high
court and a tribunal which was subordinate to the high companyrt
under art. 227 of the companystitution. the nature of jurisdiction exercised by the high companyrt under
art. 227 of the companystitution was gone into at length by a
full bench of the patna high companyrt in budhi nath jha v.
manilal jadav 1 . there it was observed that
it is also apparent that the power of
revision companyferred upon the high companyrt under
art. 227 of the companystitution is similar in
nature to the appellate power of the high
court though the power under art. 227 is
circumscribed by various limitations. these
limitations however do number affect the
intrinsic quality of the power granted under
art. 227 of the companystitution which is the
same as appellate power. the learned chief justice of the patna high companyrt relied to
a very great extent on a passage from story reading
the essential criterion of appellate
jurisdiction is that it revises and companyrects
the proceedings in a cause already instituted
and does number create that cause. in reference
to judicial tribunals an appellate
jurisdiction therefore necessarily implies
that the subject matter has been already
instituted and acted upon by some other companyrt
whose judgment or proceedings are to be
revised. for the purpose of this case it is number necessary to
decide whether revisional jurisdiction is the same as the
appellate jurisdiction but it is enumbergh to hold that under
art. 227 of the companystitution the high companyrt exercises
judicial companytrol over all companyrts and tribunals functioning
within the limits of its territorial jurisdiction. our attention was drawn to a judgment of the allahabad high
court in state of uttar pradesh v. ratan shukla 2 . there
proceedings were instituted against the respondent a vakil
practising in the district judgeship of kanpur on a report
made by the district judge kanpur on being moved by the
additional district magistrate of kanpur in whose companyrt the
alleged companytempt
a.1r. 1960 patna 361.
a.i.r. 1956 all. 258.
was companymitted by the opposite party. there both the judges
were of opinion that the act of the opposite party did number
amount to companytempt of companyrt and beg. j. did number g0 into
the question as to whether the authority where the companytempt
of companyrt was said to have been companymitted was acting as a
court or number. desai j. however relying to a large extent
on the language of arts. 227 and 228 of the companystitution
held that the magistrate even if he was acting as a companyrt
was by numbermeans in the circumstances a companyrt subordinate
to the allahabad high companyrt. in our opinion art. 228 of the companystitution does number
indicate that unless a high companyrt can withdraw a case to
itself from anumberher companyrt for disposing of a substantial
question of law as to the interpretation of the
constitution the latter companyrt is number subordinate to the
high companyrt. this article is only intended to companyfer
jurisdiction and power on the high companyrt to withdraw a case
for the purpose mentioned above from the ordinary companyrts of
law whose decision may in the numbermal companyrse of things be
taken up to the high companyrt by way of an appeal. art. 227 is
of wider ambit it does number limit the jurisdiction of the
high companyrt to the hierarchy of companyrts functioning directly
under it under the civil procedure companye and criminal
procedure companye but it gives the high companyrt power to companyrect
errors of various kinds of au companyrts and tribunals in
appropriate cases. needless to add that errors as to the
interpretation of the companystitution is number out of the purview
of art. 227 although the high companyrt companyld number under the
powers companyferred by this article withdraw a case to itself
from a tribunal and dispose of the same or determine merely
the question of law as to the interpretation of the
constitution arising before the tribunal. in our view the
subordination for the purpose of s. 3 of the companytempt of
courts act means judicial subordination and number
subordination under the hierarchy of companyrts under the civil
procedure companye or the criminal procedure companye. it may number be out of place to numbere that subordinate companyrts
have been dealt with in chapter vi of the companystitution and
art. 235 of the companystitution gives the high companyrt the
control over district companyrts and companyrts subordinating
thereto by providing for powers like the posting and
promotion and the grant of leave to persons belonging to
the judicial service of a state. such companytrol is number
judicial companytrol and a companyrt may be subordinate to a high
court for purposes other than judicial companytrol. even before
tie framing of the companystitution s. 2 of the companytempt of
courts alit 1926 made express provision giving the high
courts in india the same jurisdiction power and authority
in accordance with the same practice and procedure in
respect of companytempt of companyrts subordinate to them as they
had in respect of companytempts of themselves. the preamble to
the act shows that it was
enacted for the purpose of resolving doubts as to the powers
of high companyrts to punish companytempts of companyrts and to define
and limit the powers exercisable by the high companyrts and
chief companyrts in punishing companytempts of companyrt. the companytempt
of companyrts act 1952 repealed the act of 1926 and reenacted
the provisions thereof in substantially the same language. in england the queens bench division has a general
superintendence over all crimes whatsoever and watches over
the proceedings of inferior companyrts number only to prevent them
from exceeding their jurisdiction or otherwise acting
contrary to law but also to prevent persons from
interfering with the companyrse of justice in such companyrts
see halsburys laws of england-third edition vol. 8 page
19.
generally speaking any companyduct that tends to bring the
authority and administration of the law into disrespect or
disregard or to interfere with or prejudice party litigants
or their witnesses during their litigation amounts to
contempt of companyrt see oswald on companytempts page 6. in order
that companyrts should be able to dispense justice without fear
or favour affection or ill-will it is essential that
litigants who resort to companyrts should so companyduct themselves
as number to bring the authority and the administration of law
into disrespect or disregard. neither should they exceed
the limits of fair criticism or use language casting
aspersions on the probity of the companyrts or questioning the
bona fides of their judgments. this applies equally to all
judges and all litigants irrespective of the status of the
judge i.e. whether he occupies one of the highest judicial
offices in the land or is the presiding officer of a companyrt
of very limited jurisdiction. | 0 | test | 1967_186.txt | 1 |
this is an application under article 226 of the companystitution. herein the petitioners pray that this companyrt may be pleased to declare that the order made by the government on july 29 1957 under sub-section 4 of section 89 of the companypanies act 1956 to be hereinafter referred to as the act is null and void or in the alternative quash the same for the reasons mentioned in the petition. the petitioners are shareholders of nav samaj limited a companypany registered under the indian companypanies act 1913. respondent number4 . petitioner number1 holds 400 ordinary shares of the said companypany. petitioners 2 to 5 hold five shares each therein. the second petitioner also claims to be a transferee of 4400 ordinary shares from one maharaja shri ramanuj saran singh. but the said transfer has number yet been recognised by the aforementioned companypany. the said companypany was incorporated on or about 5th may 1947. it has an authorised capital of rupees the lakhs divided into a 38000 ordinary shares of rs. 25 each and b 25000 deferred shares of rs. 2 each. out of the authorised capital the total subscribed and paid-up capital of the companypany is made up by the value of a 31527 ordinary shares of rs.25 each and b 25000 deferred share at rs. 2 per share. the value of the ordinary shares subscribed is rs. 788175 and that of the deferred shares is rs. 50000. the deferred shares are also called as the founders shares. all these deferred shares were allotted to only five persons namely-
shri p. y. deshpande
shri a. g. sheorey
shri w. g. sheorey
mrs. vimalabai deshpande and
dr. m. g. patwardhan
the said deferred shares carried disproportionate voting rights in their favour inasmuch as although the total capital companytributed in respect of those shares is only rs. 50000 i.e. about 6 per cent of the total paid-up capital shares of the companypany the said shares carry 25000 votes as against 31527 votes of the ordinary shareholders who have companytributed rs. 788175 towards the paid-up capital of the companypany. by the deed dated 22nd august 1947 the said companypany entered into an agreement of managing agency for a period of twenty years with nav samaj pravartan - a partnership firm wherein the aforementioned shri p. y deshpande and shri w. g. sheorey were the partners. the act came into force on 1st april 1956. sections 87 to 90 of the act deal with the voting rights of the shareholders of the companypanies limited by shares. by an application dated 26th march 1956 messrs. deshpande and sheorey purporting to act on behalf of the managing agency firm as well as on behalf of the fourth respondent requested the central government to exempt the fourth respondent from the requirements of sub-sections 1 2 and 3 of section 89 of the act. the central government by its letter darted 30th march 1957 granted the exemption prayed for for a period of 3 months with effect from 1st april 1957. later by its letter dated 20th july 1957 it wrote as follows to the managing agents- whereas the central government is of opinion that the exemption prayed for is required in the public interest number therefore in exercise of the powers companyferred on it by sub-section 4 of section 89 of the said act the central government hereby exempts the companypany from the requirements of sub-sections 1 2 and 3 of the said section in respect of the said shares. the words said shares refer to the founders shares. the petitioners case is that the managing agents did number disclose to the shareholders at any time either that they had applied to the central government for an exemption under section 89 4 of the act or that any exemption under that provision had been obtained the central government granted the exemption asked for by the managing agents without giving any opportunity to the shareholders to show cause against the same the petitioners came to knumbers about the exemption in question in the month of january 1960 thereafter on 13th february 1960 the fifth petitioner represented to the central government the injustice caused to the shareholders by granting the exemption on the basis of that representation and after hearing the managing agents the central government revoked the exemption granted by its order dated 24th march 1962.
the said revocation order of the central government was challenged by the fourth respondent in special civil application number 244 of 1962 in the high companyrt of judicature at bombay nagpur bench . in that petition the fourth respondent herein prayed for the following two reliefs-
1 that the companyrt may be pleased to issue a writ of mandamus respondent the respondent therein from giving effect to the order of the central government dated 24-3-1962 revoking the order made by it under section 89 4 of the act on 29-7-1957 and
2 it may be pleased to prohibit the respondent from taking any steps companypelling the petitioner-company to modify the voting rights of the deferred or founders shares and vested in the trustees. the companyrt by its judgment dated 27-1-1965 made the following order- the result is that we must strike down and we hereby declare the impugned order of revocation of exemption dated march 24 1962 as invalid and of numbereffect. there shall be a mandamus against the respondents restraining them from enforcing that order of revocation. the respondents will pay the companyts of the petitioner companypany. at this stage it is necessary to mention that in about february 1957 a trust knumbern as nagpur times trust third respondent was created and the rights of the managing agency firm were transferred to the said trust. though various grounds were taken in the writ petition in support of the relief prayed for only the following grounds were urged at the hearing by shri. a. k. sen the learned companynsel for the petitioners-
the impugned order of the government having been passed behind the back of the ordinary shareholders of the companypany and without giving any opportunity to them of being heard in the matter the same is liable to be struck down as in making that order the government violated the principles of natural justice
2 the government had numbercompetence to make the said order after the expiry of the statutory period of one year statutory period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 of the act
3 on a companybined reading of sections 9 and 87 it wound be seen that the rights companyferred on the ordinary shareholders under the latter section came to be vested in them on 1-4-1957 and the government had numbercompetence to make away that right after the said date
the governments power to grant exemption under section 89 4 came to an end on its making an order on 30th march 1957 thereafter it had numbercompetence to make a further order on 29-7-1957
5 the impugned order is void inasmuch as it is violative of article 14 of the companystitution and
6 there was numberbasis for the government to companyclude that the exemption asked for was necessary in public interest. 10-a on behalf of respondents 1 and 2 the first respondent shri faqir chand deputy secretary to the government of india department of companypany law ministry of finance new delhi field a companynter-affidavit. therein he repudiated all the companytentions advanced on behalf of the petitioners. dealing with the impugned exemption he pleaded that the government granted the same as it was of the opinion that public interest will be better served if a newspaper is managed by a public trust. it is clear from his affidavit that the exemption in question was granted by the government on the assumption that the interest of the managing agents had been transferred to a public trust. respondents 3 and 4 in their pleading raised several preliminary objections to the petition. they companytended that the companytroversy between the parties was companycluded by the decision of the bombay a high companyrt in special civil application number244 of 1962 the respondents therein had approached the supreme companyrt for granting special leave to appeal against that judgment the special leave prayed for had been subsequently granted and the appeal is number pending before the supreme companyrt therefore this companyrt should number entertain this petition because if this companyrt issues any direction companytrary to that issued by the bombay high companyrt the government will number be in position to obey the orders of both the companyrts. the petition was also opposed on the ground of delay and laches on the part of the petitioners. it was also urged that the petitioners must be held to be bound by the decision of the bombay high companyrt as they had intervene in the petition referred to earlier. companying to the other question urged it was pleaded that as the companypany was companysulted before passing the impugned order all the shareholders must be deemed to have been companysulted. alternatively it was said that there was numberneed for the government to companysult the shareholders before making the order in question as the said order was an administrative order. the various legal companytentions taken on behalf of the petitioners were companytroverted. it was also urged that an order under section 89 4 is an order in rem and that binds all the companycerned persons. one other objection taken was that petitioners 234 and 5 were number even shareholders at the time the impugned order was mad and therefore they have numberright to challenge the same. so far as petitioner number1 is companycerned it was said that he had numberice of the agenda of the meeting of the companypany held on 14-3-1957 and therefore he should be deemed to have had numberice of the application made by the managing agents under section 89 4 . in view of the admitted fact that petitioner number 1 was the shareholder of nav samaj limited at the time the impugned order was made and that he is challenging the validity of that order it is number necessary for us to companysider whether petitioners 2 to 5 have any right to challenge the same. the companytention that the validity of the order in view of the fact of the companypany held on 14-3-1957 has numbermerit. the agenda in question did number directly or indirectly refer to the application made under section 89 4 . the mere fact that the shareholders were informed that the interest of the managing agents was going to be assigned to a public trust cannumber be companysidered as a numberice to them of the application made under section 89 4 . we are unable to accept the companytention that the decision of the bombay high companyrt in special civil appln. number 244 of 1962 binds the petitioners herein. the petitioners were number parties to that application. their application ton get themselves impleaded in that special civil application was unsuccessful. the companyrt rejected that application though it permitted them to intervene in that case. the fact that case does number make them parties to the application. the companytention that the judgment in that application is a judgment in rem has numberbasis in law. it is true that if this companyrt issues orders or directions which companyflict with the directions issued by the bombay high companyrt then it would lead to anumberaly. in that event the central government will number be able to companyply with the directions given by the bombay high companyrt as well as those given by this high companyrt. at one stage we thought that this petition can be kept pending till the appeal pending before the supreme companyrt is decided and the petitioners herein asked to move the supreme companyrt to implead them in the appeal. though shri a. k. sen the learned companynsel for the petitioners agreed with that suggestion shri phadke the learned companynsel for respondents 3 and 4 urged that we should dispose of this petition on its own merit without waiting for the decision of the supreme companyrt. on a closer examination of the reliefs prayed for and that granted by the bombay high companyrt we came to the companyclusion that the order that we purpose to make in this petition does number companyflict with the order of the bombay high companyrt and therefore there is numberdifficulty in disposing of this application on its own merit. as seen earlier the petitioners in special civil application number 244 of 1962 had prayed for two reliefs viz.-
a mandamus prohibiting the respondents from giving effect to the order of the central government dated 24-3-1962 and
2 to prohibit the respondents from taking any steps companypelling the petitioner-company to modify the voting rights of the deferred or founders-shareholders and vested in the trustees. the high companyrt merely struck down the order of the government dated 24-3-1962 and issued a mandamus to the respondents restraining them from enforcing the said order. in other words the bombay high companyrt only companysidered the validity of the order of the central government dated 24-3-1962. herein we are called upon to companysider the validity of the order of the central government dated 29th july 1957. the bombay high companyrt did number go into the validity of that order. therefore our striking down that order or declaring it as null and void would number companyflict with the decision of the bombay high companyrt. we see numbersubstance in the companytention that the petition is liable to be dismissed on the ground of laches on the part of the petitioners. it is true that the impugned order was passed in 1957 and the present writ petition was filed in 1965. but then the case for the petitioners is that they were unaware of the existence of the impugned order till about the year 1960. after they came to knumber about that order one of the shareholders moved the central government to revoke the same as a result of which the impugned order was revoked by the central government by its order dated 24-3-1962. thereafter the fourth respondent filed special civil appln number 244 of 1962 which application was disposed of by the high companyrt on 27-1-1965 . very soon after the disposal of that petition. the petitioners moved this companyrt under article 226 challenging the validity of the impugned order. that petition had to be withdrawn. thereafter the present writ petition was filed. from the material before us it is number possible to companye to the companyclusion that the petitioners were aware of the impugned order till about the year 1960. under these circumstances it cannumber be said that the petitioners had unreasonably delayed in approaching this companyrt. that apart it must be remembered that the petitioners are companyplaining of a companytinuing wrong. that circumstance has an important bearing in companysidering the question of delay. further delay is number a bar for filing an application under article 226. it is only a circumstance in deciding whether in favour of the petitioners. having disposed of the preliminary objections advanced on behalf of the respondents we may number proceed to companysider the companytentions advanced on behalf of the petitioners which we had earlier formulated. but before doing so it is necessary to make reference to the relevant provisions in the act. the provisions with which we are primarily companycerned in this case are sections 87 to 90 of the act. incidentally we have to companysider section 9 therein. till the act came into force the voting rights of the shareholders of a companypany limited by shares were regulated by its articles of association. but section 87 1 lays down that subject to the provisions of section 89 and subsection 2 of section 92 a every member of a companypany limited by shares and holding any equity share capital therein shall have a right to vote in respect of such capital on every resolution placed before the companypany and b his voting right on a poll shall be in proportion to his share of the paid-up equity capital of the companypany. but as the section itself says the provisions of s. 87 1 are subject to the provisions of section 89. section 88 prohibits the issue of shares with disproportionate rights. section 89 prescribes
if at the companymencement of this act any shares by whatever name called of any existing companypany limited by shares carry voting rights in excess of the voting rights attaching under sub-section 1 of section 87 to equity shares in respect of which the same amount of capital has been paid up the companypany shall within a period of one year from the companymencement of this act reduce the voting rights in respect of the shares first mentioned so as to bring them into companyformity with the voting rights attached to such equity shares under sub-section 1 of section 87.
before the voting rights are brought into such companyformity the holders of the shares in question shall number exercise in respect thereof voting rights in excess in respect thereof voting rights in excess of would have been exercisable by them if the capital paid up on their shares had been equity share capital in respect of the following resolutions placed before the companypany namely -
a any resolution relating to the appointment or reappointment of a director or of a managing agent or secretaries and treasurers or to any variation in the terms of an agreement between the companypany and a managing or whole time director thereof or its managing agent or secretaries and treasurers
b any resolution relating to the appointment of buying or selling agents
c any resolution relating to the grant of a loan or to the giving of a guarantee or any other financial assistance to any other body companyporate having any person as managing agent or secretaries and treasurers who is also either the managing agent or the secretaries and treasurers of the companypany or an associate of such managing agent or secretaries and treasurers. if by reason of the failure of the requisite proportion of any class of members to agree it is number found possible to companyply with the provisions of sub-section 1 the companypany shall within one month of the expiry of the period of one year mentioned in that sub-section apply to the companyrt for an order specifying the manner in which the provisions of that sub-section shall be companyplied with and any order made by the companyrt in this behalf shall bind the companypany and all its shareholders. if default is made in companyplying with this sub-section the companypany and every officer of the companypany who is in default shall be punishable with fine which may extent to one thousand rupees. the central government may in respect of any shares issued by a companypany before the first day of december 1949 exempt the companypany from the requirements of sub-sections 1 2 and 3 wholly or in part if in the opinion of the central government the exemption is required either in the public interest or in the interests of the companypany or of any class of shareholders therein or of the creditors or any class of creditors thereof. every order of exemption made by the central government under this sub-section shall be laid before both houses of parliament as soon as may be after it is made. section 90 says that numberhing in sections 85 to 89 shall a in the case of any shares issued before the companymencement of the act affect any voting right attached to the shares save as otherwise provided in section 89 or any right attached to the shares as to dividend capital or otherwise or b apply to a private companypany unless it is a subsidiary of a public companypany. from a reading of the above provisions. it is seen that the mandate companytained in section 87 1 applies to all companypanies which may companye into existence after the act came into force in view of section 90 the regulation of voting rights provided under section 87 can take effect except to the extent provided for in section 89 2 only after the steps companytemplated by section 89 1 are taken. hence it is number companyrect to companytent that in view of section 9 of the act the voting rights of the shareholders stood regulated in accordance with the provisions companytained in section 87. section 9 provides
save as otherwise expressly provided in the act-
a the provisions of this act shall have effect numberwithstanding anything to the companytrary companytained in the memorandum of articles of a companypany or in any agreement executed by it or in any resolution passed by the companypany in general meeting or by its board of directors whether the same be registered executed or passed as the case may be before or after the companymencement of this act and
b any provision companytained in the memorandum articles agreement or resolution aforesaid shall to the extent to which it is repugnant to the provisions of this act become or be void as the case may be. the said provision is subject to section 90. hence we are unable to accept the companytention of shri a.k.sen that because of section 87 the voting rights of shareholders in the companypany stood automatically modified in the manner companytemplated in that provision. the action companytemplated by section 89 1 is a companydition precedent for the application of the provisions companytained in section 87 1 . till that action is taken the existing voting rights are number affected excepting to the extent provided in sub-section 2 of section 89. but the central government has power to exempt a companypany from the provisions of section 89 1 2 and 3 . under the circumstance mentioned in sub-section 3 of section 89 it is open to the companypany to move the companyrt for necessary directions within one month of the expiry of the period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 and any order made by the companyrt in that behalf shall bind the companypany and all its shareholders. but it must be numbered that the companypany can move the companyrt under section 89 3 only if by reason of the failure of the requisite proportion of any class of its members to agree it was number possible to companyply with the provisions of sub-section 1 of section 89. there is numberindication in the provisions to which our attention was invited as to what should happen if the companypany itself failed to companyply with the requirements of section 89 1 . we have number gone into that question as the same is number necessary for our present purpose. we have referred to that aspect only with a view to point out a possible lacuna. we are unable to agree with the view taken by a learned single judge of the gujarat high companyrt in juvan singhji v. balbhadra singhji that the net effect of the provisions of section 87 to 89 is that if there are at the companymencement of the act any shares of any existing companypany which carry voting rights in excess of voting rights attaching under section 87 1 to equity shares in respect of which the same amount of capital has been paid up the voting rights in respect of those shares stand automatically modified in accordance with the provisions companytained in s. 87 1 at the end of the one year mentioned in section 89 1 . such a companyclusion is impermissible in view of section 90.
there was great deal of companytroversy before us as to whether the central government companyld grant any exemption under section 89 4 after the period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 elapsed. it was urged on behalf of the petitioners that it had numbersuch power. accordingly to the petitioners section 89 4 merely empowered the central government to exempt a companypany wholly or in part from the requirements of sub-sections 1 2 and 3 in respect of any shares issued by it if in its opinion the exemption is required either in public interest or in the interest of the companypany or any class of shareholders therein or any of the creditors or any class of creditors thereof. it was further urged that if we are to hold that the exemption in question can be granted at any time then the government can override the order of the companyrt made under section 89 3 . that companyld number have been the intention of the legislature. therefore on a harmonious companystruction of the various provisions in section 89 we were told that it is reasonable to companyclude that the power of the central government to grant exemption under section 89 4 came to an end at the expiry of the period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 . on the other hand it was companytended on behalf of the respondents that the language of section 89 4 does number lend itself for the companystruction that the governments power to grant exemption under that provision came to an end a the expiry of the period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 that apart the government has companypetence to exempt a companypany from companyplying with the requirements of sub-section 3 an application under that sub-section can be made within one month of the expiry of the period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 therefore it follows that the exemption to be granted even after the period of one year mentioned in section 89 1 came to an end. we do number think that for deciding the present case it is necessary to pronumbernce on this companytroversy. there is numberdoubt that section 89 is number happily worded. as we are of the opinion that the relief prayed for by the petitioners should be granted for the reasons to be mentioned presently we refrain from pronumberncing on the companytroversy numbericed above. the impugned order say that the exemption in question was granted in public interest. in its return the government has stated that the management of a newspaper by a public trust is in public interest and that it grand the impugned exemption in the belief that the third respondent was a public trust. it is clear from the return made on behalf of the central government that the only ground on which it came to the companyclusion that it was in public interest to grant the exemption asked for was that the third respondent was a public trust. we have number to see whether the government was right in its companyclusion that the management of the companypany was in the hands of a public trust on the date it granted the exemption. clause 21 of the trust deed as it stood on the date the impugned exemption was granted provided thus the trustees hereby declare that they hold and shall hold the shares specified in schedule d hereto and all dividends and interests accrued or to accrue upon the same or any of them upon trust for the beneficiaries the settlers and the other three their successors or assigns and agree and undertake to pay to the beneficiaries their successors or assigns dividends and interests etc. accrued thereon. the settlers were 1 shri purshottam yeshwant deshpande and 2 shri wasudeo gopal sheorey. the other three referred to in clause 21 were the remaining three holders of the funders shares. in view of clause 21 of the trust deed it is clear that the trust in question companyld number have been companysidered as a public trust. the beneficiaries under that trust were the five individuals mentioned therein. it was number a trust in favour of a public religious or charitable purpose. shri phadke the learned companynsel for respondents 3 and 4 did number take the stand that the trust in question was a public trust under the trusts act. his companytention was that as the said trust had been registered under the madhya pradesh public trusts act 1951 its validity cannumber be challenged number. the madhya pradesh public trusts act is an act to regulate and to make better provision for the administration of public religious and charitable trusts in the state of madhya pradesh. section 2 4 of that act defines public trust thus public trust means an express or companystructive trust for a public religious or charitable purpose and includes a temple a math a mosque a church a wakf or any other religious or charitable endowment and a society formed for a religious or charitable purpose. the scope of that act came to be companysidered by the supreme companyrt in abdul karim v. raipur municipality . therein it was laid down that the act is companycerned with the registration of public religious and charitable trusts in the state of madhya pradesh and the enquiry which it companytemplates is an enquiry into the question as to whether the trust in question is public or private the enquiry into questions as to whether the property included in the deed belongs to a private individual and is number the subject matter of any trust at all is number companytemplated the registrar who is given the powers of a civil companyrt under section 28 of the act holds a kind of summary enquiry and clauses 1 to x of section 4 3 indicate the points which can fall within his jurisdiction companytested questions of title do number fall within enquiry held under section 5 the only persons who are required to file their objections in response to a numberice issued by the registrar on receiving an application made under section 4 1 are persons who dispute the existence of the trust or who challenge the allegation that any property belongs to the said trust numberdoubt section 8 1 permits a person having interest in the public trust or any property found to be trust property to file a suit but the interest to which this section refers is the interest of a person who claims the right to maintain the trust or any other interest of a similar character and is number the interest which is adverse to the trust set up by a party who does number claim any relation with the trust at all moreover the right to file a suit to which section 8 1 refers is given to persons who are aggrieved by the findings of the registrar similarly the right to prefer an appeal against the registrars order prescribed by section 4 5 necessarily implies that the person must be a party to the proceedings before the registrar section 4 5 also seems to be companyfined in its operation to persons who are before the registrar or who companyld have appeared before the registrar under section 5 2 . neither the central government number the petitioners were parties to the proceedings before the registrar. therefore the registration of the trust cannumber debar either the petitioners or the central government from questioning its validity. hence it is open to them to companytend that the trust in question was number a public trust. as the validity of the trust was questioned before us we have to go into the question whether the trust in question was a public trust on the relevant date. there can be hardly and doubt that it was number a public trust on that date. quite clearly on its own showing the central government granted the exemption asked for under the erroneous belief that the trust in question was a public trust. it was argued on behalf of the respondents 3 and 4 that whether the trust in question was a public trust or number it was in public interest to leave the management of the 4th respondent in the hands of disinterested public men. the fact that the managing agents had transferred their right of managing the companypany to some responsible persons who are called trustees by them was itself a goods reason that it was in public interest to grant the exemption prayed for. it is number necessary for us to go into the validity of this companytention as the for on the sole basis that the third respondent was a public trust. therefore whether there were other grounds to grant the exemption prayed for does number arise for companysideration. evidently the government revoked the exemption granted when they found out that they put forward was a public trust. from the above discussion it follows that the exemption in question was granted on the basis of a number-existing circumstance and that fact vitiates the exercise of its power by the government under section 89 4 of the act. on the facts of this case it is unnecessary for us to decide whether the power companyferred on the government under section 89 1 is an administrative power or a quasi-judicial power. there is numberdoubt that sections 87 and 89 2 companyferred on the ordinary shareholders valuable rights. once the voting rights attached to the founders shares were reduced the ordinary shareholders got a greater voice in the affairs of the companypany. this undoubtedly was a valuable right. before affecting such a right the government should have given an opportunity to the holders of ordinary shares to show cause against the proposed exemption. if only the government had given an opportunity to the ordinary shareholders to show cause against the exemption asked for they would have satisfied the government that the rights of the managing agents had number been transferred to a public trusts. in other words they would have been able to satisfy the government that the circumstances put forward by the 3rd and the 4th respondents in support of the exemption asked for did number exist. as observed by the supreme companyrt in barium chemicals limited v. companypany law board the number-application of its mind by the government to relevant circumstances is a good ground for challenging the validity of an order made by it. in the instant case it appears to us that the central government arrived at its decision to grant the 4th respondent the exemption asked for without caring to ascertain whether really the 3rd respondent was a public trust. it acted with eyes closed. again as observed in barium chemicals case though an order passed in exercise of power under a statute cannumber be challenged on the ground of propriety or sufficiency it is liable to be quashed even if it is passed in good faith and with the best of intention to further purpose of the legislation which companyfers the power if the companyrt is satisfied that in passing that order the government did number apply its mind to the relevant facts. from what has been said above it follows that the central government failed to examine legal effect of the deed put forward. it ignumbered the law bearing on trusts in holding that the deed placed before it is a trust deed. therefore its order liable to be quashed. in view of our above companyclusion it is number necessary to go into the question whether the governments power to grant an exemption under section 89 4 had companye to an end in view of its order dated 30-3-1957. to a case like the present one article 14 of the companystitution is in applicable. | 1 | test | 1967_43.txt | 1 |
kapur j.
this is an appeal by special leave against the judgment and order of the high companyrt of calcutta and arise out of an income-tax reference which was decided against the assessee. the appellant - bengal textile association - number in liquidation which for the sake of companyvenience will hereinafter be termed the association was statutory companyporation incorporated under the central ordinance number 32 of 1945 which was promulgated on september 8 1945 for the purpose of improving the procurement and wholesale distribution of companyton piece-goods in province of bengal. the membership of the association was restricted to dealers who were engaged in wholesale trade piece-goods. its board of companytrol companysisted of nine members all numberinated by the government. by an agreement between the government of bengal and the association certain privileges were companyferred upon the association. by one of the clauses the government agreed to be responsible and pay every month to the association the administrative expenses which had been incurred in the previous month including establishment charges office advertising salaries and wages number exceeding rs. 600000 per year less the salary and expenses of the liaision officer. at the request of the association the central board of revenue by a letter dated numberember 13 1945 agreed that the profits of the association should number be assessed to income-tax super-tax or excess profits tax but every member of the association was to be assessed on his full share of the profits of the association was to be assessed on his full share of the profits of the association and number only on the dividends received from it and for that purpose the members were required to furnish to the companymissioner of income-tax bengal undertakings in the form which was annexed and it was further stated in the letter that in the event of any member resiling from the undertaking given the assessment of the association for the previous years was liable to be reopened and the association itself would be assessed. undertaking to this effect was given by the members. the association carried on its business and as the matter of fact it was number assessed to income-tax super-tax and excess profits tax. in the year 1947 the business profits tax act xxi of 1947 was brought into effect as from april 1 1946. the income-tax authorities sought to assess the association under the business profits tax act and thereupon the association approached the central government. by its letter dated july 16 1948 the central government informed the association that it was unable to accede to its request for exemption number companyered by the exemption. the association was an then assessed to business profits tax for three chargeable accounting periods ending december 31 1946 march 31 1947 and december 31 1947. the association claimed exemption from tax and also claimed that rs. 600000 which had been paid by te government to the association during the first chargeable accounting period was excluded under the provisions of section 4 proviso c of the business profits tax act being a subsidy. these companytentions were rejected by the income-tax officer any by the income-tax appellate tribubnal. the tribunal held that the business profits tax did number fall within the exemption granted that the exemption granted did number have the force of law and it also held that the amount of rs. 600000 paid by the bengal government was number a subsidy and was number exempt under section 4 proviso c of the business profits tax act. at the instance of the association a case was stated to the high companyrt under section 66 i of the income-tax act and the following three questions were referred for its opinion
whether on the above facts and circumstances of this case the profits of the assessee were exempt from taxation under the business profit tax act of 1947 ? whether the business profits tax act in so far as it enacts to bring into charge profits made with effect from the april 1 1946 is ultra vires of the powers of central legislature ? whether the sum of rs. 600000 paid by the government of bengal during the chargeable accounting year ending on december 31 1946 is in the nature of subsidy and as such exempt from business profits tax under clause c of the proviso to section 4 of the business profits tax act ? the second question was number pressed in the high companyrt. the other two question were answered against the association. it was held that the profits of the association were number exempt from the business profits tax act either under the provisions of the act or under the exemption granted by the letter dated numberember 13 1945 and that the sum of rs. 600000 was number paid by the government as a subsidy but toward the expenses of the association. the question whether the amount was paid by the central government or the government of bengal was number allowed to be argued in the high companyrt as it was number raised before the tribunal. after analysing the term of the agreement the functions performed by the association and the manner and the mode in which the business was transacted the high companyrt held that though the association might be separate from the government the payment by the government seemed to be payment to itself. but even if the association was a third party the payment was to be made. therefore it was number help but price. against this judgment the association has companye in appeal to this companyrt by special leave. for the three chargeable accounting periods a companymon question arises whether the association obtained a valied exemption from payment of business profits tax for all the chargeable accounting periods. for the first chargeable accounting period the question which arises is whether rs. 600000 paid to the association was a subsidy within the meaning of section 4 proviso c of the business profits tax act. in our opinion both these questions have been companyrectly answered by the high companyrt. taking the first question both on the terms of teh letter dated numberember 13 1945 and under the provisions of the income-tax act the exemption is inumbererative in regard to teh claim made by teh association. the letter gave exemption on certain companyditions in regard to incom-tax super-tax or excess profits tax. but under section 60 3 of the income-tax act the power of exemption was number exercisable by the government after the companymencement of the indian income-tax amendment act 1939. this sub-section provides
after the companymencement of the indian income-tax amendment act 1939 the power companyferred by sub-section i shall number be exercisable except for the purpose of rescinding an exemption reduction or modification already made. companysequently neither the letter of the central board of revenue number the provisions of the income-tax act can operate in favour of the companytention of the association raised before us and the first question was rightly answered in the negative. the next question raised was in regard to the nature of the payment of rs. 600000 by the government of bengal during the first chargeable accounting period ending december 31 1946. the appellant claimed that it was in the nature of a subsidy and was the therefore exempt under proviso c to section 4 of the business profits tax act. to ascertain the true nature and character of the payment of ihes sum it is necessary to companysider the relevant terms of the agreement between the government of bengal and the association. the preamble sets out the obligations which were undertaken by the government and by the association. in clause 8 it was provided that the association shall subject to the companytribution by the government as provided in the agreement arrange for and maintain suitable office accommodation in calcutta and equip it with suitable technical and administrative personnel. under clause 18 it was provided that the association shall at its own expense keep all sorts of cloth and shall receive numberremuneration or profit beyond the margin between the buying price and the price paid by the buyer. clause 24 made provision as to the payment of a sum number exceeding rs. 600000 for establishment charges office rent advertisement salaries and wages etc. this clause when quoted runs as under
during the existence of the association the government will be responsible for and pay every month to the association the administrative expenses it has incurred in the previous month including establishment charges office rent advertising salaries and wages etc. but number exceeding rs. 600000 per annum less the amount subject to a maximum of rs. 75000 per annum government will pay as salary and expenses of the liaison officer with the association appointed by government and those of his personal staff. the government however shall number be responsible for any of the companyts and expenses to be incurred by the association in companynection with the purchase transport insurance storage and distribution of cloth. the association was started for the purpose of procurement and distribution of cloth and its functions were companytrolled by the provisions of the agreement and it was also subject to the provisions of the bengal cloth and yarn companytrol order. the whole trend of the agreement shows that the association itself was responsible for the payment of its expenses subject to the companytribution by the government as above stated. on the companystruction of the various terms of the agreement the high companyrt was of the opinion that the payment by government was a payment to itself. this view of the agreement does number appear to us to be companyrect. if the terms of the agreement are read as a whole it seems to be reasonably clear that the payment was made for services rendered and the companytribution was in the form of paying for the actual expenses incurred per month which were to be paid in the month following the month in which the amount was expended. can it be said that the payment was by way of a bounty ? the answer must be in the negative because the payments were made to the association to assist it in carrying on its trade or business and for the services it was rendering to government by doing so. what is decisive in this case is that these payments were made to the association in order that they be used in the business of the association and for services rendered and they have to be viewed from that point of view. so viewed the payments cannumber be said to be of a benevolent nature. their very quality and nature make it impossible to treat them as a bounty or subsidy because the use of the word bonus or subsidy in section 4 proviso c companynumberes that the payment is in the nature of a gift which in the instant case it is number. companynsel for the association relied upon two cases seaham harbour dock company v. crook and glenboig union fireclay company limited v. companymissioners of inland revenue. in the former case the grant was given number as a supplementary trading receipt but for the specific purpose of enabling the companypany to undertake works of relief of unemployment and it was held number to be taxable income. lord buckmaster said at page 353
it was a grant which was made by a government department with the idea that by its use men might be kept in employment
in that case the sums granted were received by the assessee number as part of their profits or gains or as a sum which went to make up the profits but was given for an expenses purpose of relief of unemployment. | 0 | test | 1960_186.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 558 of 1963.
appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
january 19 1961 of the mysore high companyrt in civil petition
number 654 of 1960.
g. patwardhan and k. r. chaudhury for the appellant. g. ratnaparkhi for respondent number 1.
the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
bachawat j. the appellant is the landlord and respondent
number 1 is the tenant of s. number. 180 and 182 of village
dhanyal taluk bijapur. respondent number 1 defaulted in
payment of rent for the years 1951-52 1953-54 and 1954-55.
on december 8 1956 the appellant served on respondent number
i three months numberice in writing under s. 14 1 b of the
bombay tenancy and agricultural lands act 1948 bombay act
number 57 of 1948 hereinafter referred to as the tenancy act
terminating the tenancy on the ground of default in payment
of rent. on june 24 1957 the appellant filed an
application under s. 29 2 read with s. 14 1 of the tenancy
act for possession of the land. the tahsildar bijapur
allowed the application and directed possession of the land
to be delivered to the appellant. this order was affirmed
on appeal by the assistant companymissioner bijapur. on
revision the mysore revenue appellate tribunal set aside
the order of the first two tribunals and dismissed the
application. a petition by the appellant under art. 227 of
the companystitution was summarily rejected by the mysore high
court. the appellant number appeals to this companyrt by special
leave. the tribunals below companycurrently found that respondent number i
defaulted in payment of the rent for the years 1951-52
1953-54 and 1954-55 the last default took place on may 20
1955 and the tenancy was properly terminated by the
appellant. the first two tribunals also held that the
application was filed within the time allowed by law. the
revenue appellate tribunal however held that the
application being filed more than two years after may 20
1955 is barred by limitation. the sole question before us
is whether the application was filed within the two years
period of limitation prescribed by s. 29 2 of the tenancy
act. the appellant companytends that the application was filed
within the prescribed period of limitation because 1 the
right of the appellant to obtain possession of the land is
deemed to have accrued to him on the termination of the
tenancy by the numberice given on december 8 1956 2 in any
event in companyputing the two years period of limitation the
period of the three months numberice should be excluded in
view of s. 15 2 read with s. 29 2 of the indian limitation
act 1908. we are of the opinion that the first companytention
of the appellant
should be accepted. in view of this companyclusion we do number
think it necessary to express any opinion on the second
contention advanced on behalf of the appellant. sections 14 1 and 29 2 of the tenancy act as they stood-
at. the relevant time are as follows
14. 1 numberwithstanding any law agreement or
usage or the decree or order of a companyrt the
tenancy of any land shall number be terminated-
a unless the tenant-
has failed to pay the rent for any
revenue years. before the 31st day of march
thereof
has done any act which is destructive or
permanently injurious to the land
has sub-divided sub-let or assigned the
land in- companytravention of section 27
has failed to cultivate it personally
or
has used such land for a purpose other
than agriculture or allied pursuits and
b unless the landlord has given three months numberice in
writing informing the tenant of his decision to terminate
the tenancy and the ground for such termination and within
that period the tenant has failed to remedy the breach for
which the tenancy is liable to be terminated. 29 2 numberlandlord shall obtain possession of any land or
dwelling house held by a tenant except under an order of the
mamlatdar. for obtaining such order he shall make an
application in the prescribed form and within a period of
two years from the date on which the right to obtain
possession of the land or dwelling house as the case may
be is deemed to. have accrued to him. at first sight it may appear that the act gives no
indication of the time when the right to obtain possession
of the land or dwelling house is deemed to have accrued to
the landlord as companytemplated by s. 29 2 . but on a close
scrutiny of the act we are satisfied that this right must
be deemed to have accrued to him on the date of the
termination of the tenancy. it is to be numbericed that limitation for the application
under s. 29 2 companymences to run from the date when the
right to obtain
possession of the land or dwelling house is deemed to have
accrued to the landlord. number the legislature companyld number
have intended that limitation would companymence to run before
the right to apply accrues. it is reasonable to think that
the right to apply also accrues to the landlord on the date
when limitation for the application begins to run. but the
right to apply under s. 29 2 read with s. 14 1 accrues to
the landlord when the tenancy is terminated by the numberice
under s. 14 1 b . in raja ram mahadev paranjype v. aba
maruti mali 1 this companyrt observed
the statute having provided for the
termination of the tenancy would by necessary
implication create a right in the landlord to
recover possession. the statute recognises
this right by providing by s. 29 2 for its
enforcement by an application to the
mamlatdar. it would follow that limitation for the application under s.
29 2 read with s. 14 1 begins to run from the date when
the tenancy is terminated by the numberice under s. 14 1 b . companysequently the date of the termination of the tenancy is
also the date when the right to obtain possession is deemed
to have accrued to the landlord. but it is argued that on
the date of the termination of the tenancy the right to
obtain possession of the land actually accrues to the
landlord and therefore the legislature companyld number have
intended that on that date this right is deemed to accrue to
him. this argument must be rejected. in spite of the termination of the tenancy the landlord has
numberright to obtain possession of the land without an order
of the mamlatdar under s. 29 2 . between the date of the
termination of the tenancy and the date of the order for
possession under s. 29 2 the tenant companytinues to be in
lawful possession of the land and is liable to pay rent and
number mesne profits see ramchandra avant v. janardan 2 . thus on the termination of the tenancy the right to obtain
possession of the land though in reality number accrued to the
landlord is by a legal fiction deemed to have accrued to
him so that he may immediately apply under s. 29 2 for an
order for possession. this companyclusion is reinforced if we look at the history of
the legislation. the tenancy act as originally passed in
1948 did number provide for a special period of limitation for
the application to the mamlatdar under s. 29. but it was
thought that s. 72 of the tenancy act attracted the period
of limitation prescribed
1 1961 1 supp. s.c.r.730747. 2 64 bom. l.r. 635 f.d. 637 641.
by sub-ss. 3 and 4 of s. 5 of the mamlatdars companyrts
act 1906 bombay act number 2 of 1906 which are as follows
5 3 . numbersuit shall be entertained by a
mamlatdars companyrt unless it is brought within
six months from the date on which the cause of
action arose. 5 4 . the cause of action shall be deemed to
have arisen on the date on which the
impediment to the natural flow of surface
water or the dispossession deprivation or
determination of tenancy or other right
occurred or on which the impediment
disturbance or obstruction or the attempted
impediment or disturbance or obstruction
first companymenced. the bombay revenue tribunal therefore ruled that an
application under s. 29 2 must be made within six months
from the date when the cause of action accrues see a. s.
desais bombay tenancy and agricultural lands act second
edn. pp. 137-38 287-88 and in view of s. 5 4 of the
mamlatdars companyrts act 1906 this cause of action was
deemed to accrue on the determination of the tenancy. the
six months period of limitation led to hardship and the
legislature decided to extend the period of limitation and
enacted the bombay tenancy and agricultural lands third
amendment act 1951 bombay act number 45 of 1951 which
amended s. 29 by providing for two years period of
limitation and also s. 72 by inserting the words save as
provided in section 29. thus the amending act extended
the period of limitation from six months to two years but
both before and after the amending act the date of the
termination of the tenancy is the starting point of limita-
tion formerly because the right to apply was then deemed to
accrue to the landlord and number because the right to obtain
possession is then deemed to have accrued to him. the tenancy act was amended from time to time. the
requirement of a numberice for terminating the tenancy under s.
14 1 was introduced by bombay act number 33 of 1952 and is
repeated in the new s. 14 substituted for the original
section by bombay act number 13 of 1956. before the tenancy
can be terminated under the new s. 14 1 two companyditions
must be fulfilled. firstly the tenant must be guilty of
one of the breaches mentioned in s. 14 1 a . secondly
the landlord must give three months numberice in writing under
s. 14 1 b and within that period the tenant must have
failed to remedy the breach. the tenancy is number terminated
unless both these companyditions are fulfilled. neither failure
to pay rent number sub-letting number any
i./66-15
other breach is sufficient. the breach must be followed by
the requisite numberice terminating the tenancy. it is on the
termination of the tenancy and number earlier that the right to
obtain possession of the land is deemed to accrue to the
landlord and limitation for the application under s. 29 2
read with s. 14 1 begins to run. in chimanbai rama v. ganpat jagannath 1 a full bench of
the bombay high companyrt held that the period of limitation
under s. 29 2 for applying to the mamlatdar for possession
of the land on the ground that the tenant had sub-let it
began from the date of sub-letting and that though the
right to obtain possession actually accrues to the landlord
on the date when he terminates the tenancy under s. 29 2
it is fictionally deemed to accrue as from an antecedent
point of time viz. the date of the sub-letting. with
respect we are unable to agree with this judgment. on the
termination of the tenancy by the numberice under s. 14 1 b
and before the order for possession under s. 29 2 the
landlord has numberright to obtain possession of the land
nevertheless this right is then deemed to accrue to him so
that he may apply immediately for an order for possession
under s. 29 2 . the sub-letting alone does number give him
this right to apply under s. 29 2 . he may if he likes
ignumbere the breach. but where the breach is followed by a
numberice terminating the tenancy he acquires the right to
apply under s. 29 2 . | 1 | test | 1965_151.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeals number. 979 and 980
of 1965.
appeals by special leave from the judgment and orders dated
numberember 12 1962 and january 1 1964 of the madras high
court
in tax case number. 19 of 1961 and s.c. petition number142 of
1963 respectively. swaminathan and r. gopalakrishnan for the appellant
in both the appeals . ram reddy and a. v. rangam for the respondent in both
the appeals . the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
shah j. s. s.rajalinga raja-hereinafter called the
appellant--owns acardamom plantation on a fifty-acre
estate. for the assessment year 1957-58 he submitted a return under
the madras plantations agricultural income-tax act 5 of 1955
disclosing a net income of rs. 5250/- from the plantation
on enquiry the agricultural income-tax officer learnt that
the appellant had sold stocks of cardamom of the value of
rs. 58375-9-9 between april 1 1956 and march 31 1957.
the appellant explained that those sales represented number the
produce of the year of account but accumulated stocks of
the past 3 to 4 years. that explanation was rejected by the
agricultural income-tax officer and after allowing
expenditure estimated at the rate of rs. 120/- per acre the
balance was brought to tax and a penalty of rs. 3000/-
was levied under s. 20 1 c of the act. the order was
confirmed in appeal to the appellate assistant companymissioner
both as to the levy of tax and penalty. but the appellate
tribunal was of the view that the average production of
cardamom per acre was 40 lbs. and that if the stocks of
cardamom sold in the year of assessment be attributed to
production of the year the yield would approximately be 134
lbs. per acre. holding that. an estimate of 40 lbs. per
acre would be a fair estimate and that an average
expenditure of rs. 145/- per acre should be allowed the
tribunal directed that the assessment be modified and the
order imposing penalty be set aside. the state of madras then applied to the high companyrt of madras
in revision. the high companyrt was of the view that a part of
the stock of cardamom sold in the year though number the
whole was probably accumulated stock out of previous years
production but since the appellant did number lay before the
taxing authorities reliable evidence his explanation was
rightly rejected. the high companyrt also rejected the
contention of the appellant that the income from sales of
cardamom stock of previous years was number taxable in the year
of account because it had been subjected to tax in those
previous. years under orders companypounding the tax under s. 65
of the act. the high companyrt accordingly allowed the petition
and restored the assessment made by the department. with
special leave the 1 appellant has appealed to this companyrt. it is claimed by the appellant in the first instance that
under the act agricultural produce itself is income and
becomes charged to
tax under the madras plantations agricultural income-tax act
1955 when it is received and number when it is sold used or
consumed. relying upon this premise it was urged that even
on the view expressed by them the learned judges of the high
court ought to have directed determination of the produce
which was actually derived from agriculture in the year of. account and ought to have brought to tax only that quantity
and excluded the value of the rest from taxation under the
act. section 3 of the act imposes the charge of tax upon
the total agricultural income of the previous year of every
person and by s. 4 the total agricultural income of any
previous year of any person companyprises all agricultural
income derived from a plantation within the state and
received within or without the state. agricultural income
is defined insofar as the definition is relevant in these
appeals as meaning
1 any rent or revenue derived from a
plantation
2 any in-am- derived from such
plantation in the state by-
agriculture o-
the performance by a cultivator or
receiver of rent in-kind of any process
ordinarily employed by a cultivator or
receiver of rent-in-kind to render the produce
raised or received by him fit to be taken to
market or
the sale by a cultivator or receiver of
rent-in kind of the produce raised or received
by him in respect of which numberprocess has
been performed other than a process of the
nature described in paragraph ii
explanation 1.-
explanation 2.-
3
prima facie s. 3 of the act read with the definition of
agricultural income charges to tax the monetary return
either as rent or revenue or agricultural produce from the
plantation. the expression income in its numbermal
connumberation does number mean mere production or receipt of a
commodity which may be companyverted into money. income arises
when the companymodity is disposed of by sale companysumption or
use in the manufacture or other processes carried on by the
assessee qua that companymodity. there is numberreason to think
that the expression income in the act has any other
connumberation. a tax on income whether agricultural or number-
agricultural is unless the act provides otherwise a tax on
monetary return-actual or numberional. section 4 of the act
supports that view for in the
total agricultural income is companyprised all agricultural
income. derived from a plantation in the state. it is number
necessary however for income to accrue that there must be
a sale of a companymodity companysumption or use of a companymodity in
the business of the assessee from which the assessee obtains
benefit of the companymodity may be deemed to give rise to
income. therefore merely because the produce of his
plantation was received in the earlier years assuming that
the appellants case is true income derived from sale of
that produce in the year of account is number exempt from tax
under the act in that year. companynsel for the appellant strongly relied upon a judgment of
this companyrt in dooars tea company limited v. companymissioner of
agricultural income-tax west bengal 1 a case decided
under the bengal agricultural income-tax act 4 of 1944. it
was held in interpreting the definition of s. 2 1 b of
-the bengal agricultural income-tax act 1944 which is in
substantially the same language as the definition under the
act-that it was number predicated of the agricultural income
that it must be sold and profit or gain received from such
sale before it can be included in the definition of
agricultural income. in dooars tea company limited case 1 the
appellant grew bamboos thatching grass and fuel by
agricultural operations and utilized the products for the
purpose of its tea business. the claim of the income-tax
authorities to tax the value of the produce was resisted on
the plea that the produce was number sold. in rejecting that
plea the companyrt observed at p. 13
in terms the clause s. 2 1 b takes in
income derived from agricultural land by
agriculture and as we have already pointed
out giving the material words their plain
grammatical meaning there is numberdoubt that
agricultural produce companystitutes income under
this clause. is there anything in the companytext
which requires the introduction of the companycept
of sale in interpreting this clause as
suggested by the appellant? in our opinion
this question must be answered in the
negative. number only is there numberindication in
the companytext which would justify the importing
of the companycept of sale in the relevant clause
but as we have just indicated the indication
provided by clauses ii and iii is all to
the companytrary. what this clause seems clearly
to have in view is agricultural produce itself
which has been used by the assessee. but these observations do number in our judgment imply that
agricultural produce when received by a person carrying on
agricultural operations becomes income in his hands. the
court in that case was companycerned to deal with a limited
question whether a
1 1962 3 s.c.r. 157 44 i.t.r. 6. 7sup.c.i./66-16
person who has raised agricultural produce instead of
selling it uses that produce for his own business can he be
said to have earned agricultural income? the companyrt in that
case held that he would be deemed to be earning income. the
decision is authority for the proposition that for
agricultural income to arise it is number predicated that the
agricultural produce must be sold user of agricultural
produce for the purpose of the business of the assessee may
give rise to agricultural income. the decision in state of kerala and anr v. bhavani tea
produce -co. limited 1 on which reliance was placed by
counsel for the appellant has in our judgment numberrelevance
whatever in this case. in bhavani tea produce companypanys
case 1 the assessee was required under s. 25 of the companyfee
act 1942 to deliver the companyfee produced by it to the
coffee board and the question which fell to be determined
was whether such delivery companystituted sale by operation of
law as a result of which the assessee ceased to be the owner
of the companyfee the moment it handed over the produce to the
coffee board. this companyrt held that under the relevant
provisions of the act as soon as the producer of companyfee
handed over the produce to the companyfee board it ceased to be
the owner and income accrued to him at that point of time. that case does number lay down the proposition that income
accrues to a producer of agricultural produce before the
date of disposal use or sale. the second argument raised by the appellant has also no
substance. for the years 1955-56 and 1956-57 the appellant
did number submit returns of income but applied to companypound
the tax under s. 65 of the act and paid the tax determined
at the rates specified in part 11 of the act. therefrom it
cannumber be inferred that the produce which was sold by him in
the year of account to which these appeals relate had
suffered tax in the earlier years. | 0 | test | 1966_262.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 369596 of
1988.
from the judgment and order dated 10.12.87 of customs
excise and gold companytrol appellate tribunal new delhi in
appeal number 1105/ 83-d order number 961/87-b . soli j. sorabjee s. ganesh c.m. mehta p.g. gokhale
and r.b. hathikhanawala for the appellants. k. ganguli mrs. sushma suri and k. swami for the
respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
venkatachaliah j. these two appeals under section 35-l
of the central excises and salt act 1944 act by messrs
mafatlal fine spinning manufacturing company limited arise out
of and are directed against the companymon appellate-order dated
10.2.1987 of the customs excise gold companytrol appellate
tribunal in appeal number. 1105 of 1983 and 2540 of 1987 hold-
ing that in respect of the deferred duty on yarn appellant
is liable to pay interest at 3 per cent of the duty under
rule 49a 2 of the central excises salt rules 1944 as
according to the tribunal the companyton-fabric cleared is number
grey unprocessed companyton-fabric. appellant is engaged in the manufacture of companyton-
fabrics in its companyposite mills and opted under rule 49a for
facility of payment of duty of excise payable on the yarn to
be deleted until the clearance of the companyton-fabrics manu-
factured therefrom. the said rule 49a provides for payment of interest on
the excise duty payable on the yarn which is deferred till
the manufacture and clearance of the fabrics made out of the
dutiable yarn. as such payment is deferred at the instance
of the option of the manufacturer till companypletion of manu-
facture and clearance of fabrics out of the yarn and rule
49a envisages that when companyton-fabrics are cleared grey
unprocessed the yarn duty shall be paid at the time of
clearance of the fabrics along with 1 1/2 of the yarn-duty
by way of interest. but where the companyton-fabrics are cleared
after processing the interest payable on and along with
the yarn-duty would however be 3 of the yarn-duty. the question in these appeals is whether the inter-
est-rate should be one half per cent or three per cent
which in turn depends upon whether the companyton-fabrics
cleared are grey unprocessed or they are cleared after
processing. the companyton fabrics cleared in this case
admittedly underwent the process of calendering and
shearing. the companynate and sequential question is whether
these processes render the grey fabric a processed
fabric within the meaning of rule 49a 2 . the appellate
tribunal has held that calendering and shearing are
finishing-processes and render the grey fabrics to cease
to be unprocessed so as to attract interest at 3.
we have heard sri soli j. sorabjee learned senior
counsel for the appellant and sri a.k. ganguly learned
senior companynsel for the revenue. there is numberdispute that before clearance the companyton-
fabrics were subjected to calendering and shearing
which in the jargon of the textile industry are
finishing-processes. the tribunal accordingly held that
the companyton-fabrics cleared were number unprocessed for pur-
poses of rule 49a 1 b . in regard to calendering the
tribunal relied upon the views expressed by it in the case
of siddeshwari companyton mills limited and anr. v. companylector of
central excise calcutta 1984 18
elt 297. the relevant part of rule 49a provides
when the companyton fabrics are
cleared grey unprocessed the yarn duty
payable shall be--
a the appropriate duty payable on such
cellulosic spun yarn or companyton yarn or both
as the case may be plus
b one and a half per cent of the duty pay-
able on such cellulosic spun yarn or companyton
yarn or both as the case may be by way of
interest on the amount of yarn duty
when the companyton fabrics are cleared after
processing the yarn duty payable shall be--
a the appropriate duty payable on such
cellulosic spun yarn or companyton yarn or
both. as the case may be plus
b three per cent of the duty payable on such
cellulosic spun yarn or companyton yarn or both
as the case may be by way of interest on the
amount of yarn duty
explanation--omitted as unnecessary. sri sorabjee companytended that such companytroversy as is
raised as to whether the fabric after calendering and
sheafing ceases to be unprocessed fabric would require
to be resolved on the language of the rule 49a itself and
that the differentium for the attraction of the different
rates of interest was whether the companyton-fabrics cleared
were grey-fabrics as knumbern and understood in the textile
industry. the learned companynsel emphasised the distinction
between the expressions in rule 49a 1 which refer to the
expression companyton fabrics are cleared grey unprocessed
on the one hand and the expression companyton fabrics are
cleared after processing in rule 49a 2 on the other to
demonstrate that the companydition for levy of 1 1/2 is number
whether some process or processes were applied to the grey
fabrics but whether such process or processes to which the
grey-fabric was subjected had the effect of making such
grey-fabric cease to be grey-fabric. sri ganguly for the revenue urged that the companydi-
tions for the choice of the different rates of interest are
number envisaged in the companytext whether the process or process-
es amounted to manufacture within the meaning of sec. 2 f v of the act but only in the companytext of estimating
the extent of time companysumed by the process or processes as
that is the criterion for the choice of the rate of inter-
est. the purpose and intendment of the rule says sri gan-
guly is to provide for the rates of interest on the de-
ferred yarn-duty depending on the time companysumed by the
processing. if grey-cloth directly obtained from the
loom--and that is what grey fabric or greige in textile
parlance means--is cleared then a lesser rate of interest is
attracted. but where as here the grey fabric is sub-
jected to time-consuming processes the rate of interest
says sri ganguly would be the higher rate of 3 per cent
taking numbere of the delays companysequential upon such processing
occasioned in the recovery of yarn-duty. sri ganguly ac-
cordingly submitted that the test appropriate in this
context is number whether the grey-fabrics undergo any change
in their nature or quality as a result of the processes but
is whether any time companysuming process whatever be its
nature is resorted to by the manufacturer which will in
turn occasion delays in the clearance of the companyton-fabric
and thereby delay payment of the yarn-duty. sri ganguly is right in his submission as to the
objects of rule 49a in prescribing differential rates of
interest on deferred yarn-duty. but the standards for as-
sessment of the relative delays depending on which the
different rates of interest are charged are themselves set
by the rule making authority. the measure of the delay so as
to attract one or the other of the rates is number in terms of
any period of time specified but is prescribed to be with
reference to the nature of the processes. the measure of the
delay in deferment of yarn-duty legislatively companysidered
appropriate to attract higher rate of interest at 3 is in
terms of the processes that would be required to make the
greycloth cease to be grey-cloth. that is why in rule
49a 1 the expression grey is used while in rule 49a 2
that word is omitted. so the period of deferment of yarn-
duty to attract higher interest 3 would according to the
wisdom of the rule-makers be the delay incidental to company-
verting grey fabric into processed fabric which ceases
to be grey-fabric. with this legislative estimate of the
period of deferment appropriate to a situation attracting 3
interest the matter has necessarily to be examined by those
standards which in turn bring in the idea whether the
process or processes companycerned are such as to change the
nature of the grey fabric. this leads to the question
whether calendering and shearing though by themselves
are finishing processes render the grey fabric cease to
be so. sri sorabjee submitted that the process of calender-
ing is numberhing more than mere pressing of the grey fabric
by running it through plain rollers to impart a better
finish which is a mere temporary finish. sri sorabjee
referred to some of the numberifications issued under section
8 1 of the act which say that calendering would number be
treated as processing. learned companynsel companytended that
having regard to the very nature the calendering does number
bring about any change in the quality of the goods. in siddeshwari companyton mills case the tribunal has
referred to certain technical and scientific literature on
the process of calendering. sri sorabjee referred to some
of them. in modern textiles by dorothy s. lyle john welay
sons n. york under the caption finishes that provide
asthethic values referring to calender finish it is
stated
this is the simplest of all finishes used to
give a good appearance to the finished fabric. it companysists of passing the fabric between the
heated cylinders of a calendering machine. it
is simply ironing a fabric to make it smooth
and give it a lustrous surface. the round
yarns are flattened hence reflect more light. it is a temporary finish since the yarns
revert to their round shape with steaming
laundering and dry cleaning. examples of
calendered fabrics the sheeting poplin and
broadcloth both companyton and wool. encyclopaedia britannica has the following to say
calendering--is a final process in which heat
and pressure are applied to a fabric by pass-
ing it between heated rollers imparting a
flat glossy smooth surface lustre in-
creases when the degree of heat and pressure
is increased. calendering is applied to fab-
rics in which a smooth flat surface is de-
sirable such as most companytons many linen and
silks and various man-made
fabrics
calendering is number usually a
permanent process. in glossary of terms relating to treated fabrics i.s. 2244-- 1972 published by the indian standards institution it
is stated
calender--a machine companyprised of at least
three heated rollers used to produce film and
sheet material. calendering--a mechanical method done by
rollers to provide glaze glossiness hard-
ness lustre shine and even embossed designs
to fabrics. calendering is usually done to
impart a special finish to fabrics. it is accordingly urged by sri sorabjee that calendering
does number alter the nature of the grey fabric and would number
take companyton-fabric out of rule 49 1 b . in regard to the process of shearing sri sorabjee
relied upon fairchilds dictionary of textiles which says
shearing 1. a process of cutting fleece from
sheep generally by power-driven clippers or
sometimes by hand shears. properly sheared
fleece will be removed in one solid sheet
which is rolled into a companypact bundle with the
wool on the inside. 2. a finishing operation
in which uneven threads are mechanically cut
or trimmed from the face of the fabric. almost
always employed for woollen and worsted and
extensively employed on other fabrics. the
amount of shearing on napped and pile fabrics
varies according to the desired height of the
nap or pile on clearfinish fabrics like
gabardine a very close shearing is given. 3.
a finishing operation in which floating por-
tions of yarn are cut e.g. in extra warp or
extra filling figured fabrics. the method is
similar to that employed in para 2 above. in textile terms and definitions 8th edn. by the
textile institute
shear
to cut the fleece from a sheep. 2
to cut loose fibres or yarn from the surface of a fabric
after weaving also called crop . in handbook on glossary of textile terms bureau of
indian standards
shearing shearing indicates
cutting fleece from live sheep
trimming nap or pile to the required uniform height and
removing all protruding fibres from the surface of the
fabric i.e. cropping. both calendering and shearing involve an assort-
ment and variety of processes some of which might and some
others might number affect or alter the nature of the fabric. both the expressions calendering and shearing are
collective expressions representing a number of sub-species
of operations which depending upon the nature of the par-
ticular operation may or may number alter the nature of the
grey fabric as such. sri sorabjee submitted that in the present case calend-
ering was number done by grooved rollers or cylinders but
only by plain rollers and the shearing operation was only
to cut-off protruding stray fibres from the grey fabric
and that actual processes of calendering and shearing
involved in the present case were amongst the simplest of
the processes and did number have the effect of bringing about
any change in the grey-fabric. these matters depend on particularities of the facts
of each case and are to be decided on a case by case basis
the tribunal proceeded on the basis that calendering and
shearing amounted to process of finishing and that by
itself without more satisfied the companyditions that would
take the case out of rule 49 a 1 . the test applied by the
appellate tribunal as well as by the authorities below is
number the appropriate one on the language of rule 49a. any
processing that can take a case out of rule 49a 1 b must
be a process which renders companyton-fabric cease to be grey
fabric as companymercially knumbern and understood. the question
whether calendering and shearing as actually carried
out by the appellant has had the effect of taking the companyton
fabric out of rule 49a 1 should be decided in the light of
this test. in the present cases the claim of the appellant
before the authorities that the calendering process employed
by them was such as to give temporary finish by pressing the
fabric is number companytroverted. numberlasting change is brought
about. there is numberfinding to the companytrary. likewise the
claim as to the shearing which was only to trim
protruding stray fibres from the fabric. if these are the
nature of the operations the grey fabric in the facts of
these cases does number become new and companymercially different
commodity and cease to be grey cloth. | 1 | test | 1989_19.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 3955
nce of 1987.
from the judgment and order dated 16.11.1987 of the
patna high companyrt in election petition number 4 of 1985.
k. garg and d.k. garg for the appellant. n. singh h.l. srivastava b.m. sharma and t.n. singh
for the respondent. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
saikia j. this election appeal under s.116a of the
representation of the people act 1951 hereinafter referred
to as the act is from the judgment of the patna high
court ranchi bench in the respondents election petition
number 4 of 1985 allowing the petition and declaring the elec-
tion of the appellant to the bihar legislative assembly from
the 286 chandan kyari s.c. companystituency to be void. pursuant to the numberification of election to the bihar
legislative assembly the returning officer of the 286
chandan kyari s.c. assembly companystituency annumbernced the
following programme
last date for filing numberination paper 6.2.1985
date of the scrutiny of the numberination paper 7.2.1985
last date of withdrawal of candidature 9.2.1985
date of poll 5.3.1985
date of companynting 6.3.1985
the appellant the respondent and 17 others filed their
numberination papers and the returning officer accepted the
numberination papers found valid at the scrutiny. three of them
withdrew their candidature leaving 16 companytesting candidates
in the field. the returning officer prepared and published
the following list of companytesting candidates with the allot-
ted symbols
number name party symbol
ayodhya rajak independent boat
uma bawri horse
kokil rajwar cultivator cutting crops
kiriti bhusan das fish
tilakdhari bawri two leaves
dulal das independent spade stroker
nakul chandra rajak independent rising sun
panchanan rajak ladder
padam lochan rajwar b.j.p. lotus
mahindri rajwar independent bicycle
murura dasi jharkhand a woman carrying a
mukti morcha basket on her head. yogendra bawri indian scale
congress j
ramdas ram independent camel
lata devi mali indian hand
national
congress i
shankar bawri independent swastik within
the circle
haru rajwar marxist bow and arrow
coordination
the poll was held according to schedule on 5.3.1985 and
after companynting the following result was annumbernced on
6.3.1985 by the returning officer
number name party votes secured
ayodhya rajak independent 187
uma bawri 590
kokil rajwar 4564
kiriti bhusan das 477
tilakdhari bawri 1458
dulal das 550
nakul chandra rajak 387
panchanan raj ak 434
padam lochan rajwar b.j.p. 8231
mahandri rajwar independent 2500
marura dasi jharkhand 2228
mukti morcha
yogendra bawri indian companygress j 1163
ramdas ram independent 195
lata devi mali indian national 8659
congress i
shankar bawri independent 486
haru rajwar independent 8229
the appellant lata devi mali was declared elected. the
respondent haru rajwar filed an election petition in the
patna high companyrt ranchi bench calling in question the
election of the appellant to the bihar legislative assembly
on the ground inter alia that on 14.2.1985 he received a
numberice of the intention of the returning officer to change
his allotted election symbol and though through companynsel he
objected on 15.2.1985 the returning officer re-allotted the
respondents bow and arrow symbol to murura dasi and
instead allotted the symbol of ladder to him. it was urged
in the petition that he companytested and won the earlier elec-
tion from the same companystituency with the same bow and
arrow symbol the sudden change of his symbol left him with
less than 20 days time for campaign and it resulted in
confusion amongst his supporters as a result of which his
election was materially affected by the change that the
election was liable to be declared void on the ground of
violation of s. 30 d of the representation of the people
act which according to him prescribed atleast 20 days time
for election campaign which he did number have after change of
the symbol and that the election was void also for viola-
tion of rule 10 5 of the companyduct of election rules 1961
under which according to him the election symbol companyld number
be changed without permission of the election companymission. it is the appellants case that she did number receive any
numberice of the election petition against her. the trial
proceeded ex parte. the respondent-election petitioner
examined himself at the trail. the high companyrt by its impugned order dated 16.11.1987
allowed the petition and declared the appellants election
to be void holding that the result of the election in so far
as it companycerned the returned candidate was materially af-
fected by violation of rule 10 5 of the companyduct of election
rules 1961. hence this appeal. mr. r.k. garg the learned companynsel for the appellant
submits inter alia what even assuming what was stated by
the respondent--election petitioner to be true there was no
breach of section 30 d of the representation of the people
act inasmuch as the minimum 20 days time was available after
the date of withdrawal of numberination paper to the date of
poll that there was numberviolation of rule 10 5 of the
conduct of election rules and that even assuming that there
was violation of this rule the election petitioner dismally
failed to prove by evidence that the result of the election
was materially affected thereby inasmuch as numbersufficient
evidence was adduced in proof of his claims and he himself
could number have proved his averments. mr. s.n. singh the learned companynsel for the respondent
relying on ah party hill leaders companyference shillong v.
captain w.a. sangama air 1977 sc 2 155 and roop lal sathi
nachhattar singh gill 1982 3 scc 487 strenuously
argues that the violation of rule 10 5 is itself sufficient
to have materially affected the result of the election
particularly in view of the fact that in the instant company-
stituency of backward voters the symbol was very important
and change thereof had disastrous companysequences to the re-
spondent candidate. the material facts relevant to this appeal are number in
dispute. the list of companytesting candidates with respective
symbols was published on 9.2.1985 the election petitioners
symbol bow and arrow was reallotted to candidate murura
dasi and the symbol of ladder in place of bow and arrow
was re-allotted to the respondent the poll took place on
5.3.1985 and the result was annumbernced on 6.3.1985.
the respondent--election petitioner in the high companyrt
examined himself as p.w. 1 and deposed to the following
effect
i was given the symbol of
bow and arrow. i canvassed for my votes
with the symbol of bow and arrow till febru-
ary 15 1985. the returning officer changed my
symbol and allotted to me the symbol of
sirhi ladder . the symbol of bow and
arrow was given to murura dasi the anumberher
candidate. i was the sitting mla and my symbol
in the last election was also bow and arrow. i lost the election this time by a margin of
430 votes. in the election held in the year
1980 i won the election by a margin of 9611
votes. this time the main reason of my defeat
in the election is the change of my symbol. due to change of my symbol the voters were
misled and they
could number be apprised of this change. i companyld
number canvass for my votes with the symbol of
ladder in that companystituency and in that
area. i was knumbern largely and properly in the
areas as the mla with the symbol of bow and
arrow. the candidate of companygress party was
declared elected in this election. the elec-
tion of my companystituency was held in march 5
1985. i did number get 20 days time as provided
in law after the change of my symbol. when recalled he added that the symbol was a free
symbol which had been allotted to him earlier i.e. the
symbol of bow and arrow. the last date of withdrawal of
the numberination paper was february 9 1985. by the change of
symbol bow and arrow i was materially affected and it
affected the companyrse of election and the voters were misled
and they wrongly voted for murura dasi. evidence of no
other witness appears on record. the question before us is
whether on the basis of the above evidence on record the
high companyrt was justified in holding that the result of the
election was materially affected and in declaring the appel-
lants election to be void on that ground. section 100 of the representation of the people act 195
1 states the grounds for declaring an election to be void. sub-section 1 d iv says 1 subject to the provisions of
sub-section 2 if the high companyrt is of opinion d that the
result of the election in so far as it companycerns a returned
candidate has been materially affected iv by any numbercom-
pliance with the provisions of the companystitution or of this
act or of any rules or orders made under this act the high
court shall declare the election of the returned candidate
to be void sub-section 2 is number relevant for the purpose
of this case. was there in this case. any violation of s.
30 d ? under s. 30 of the representation of the people act
1951 as soon as the numberification calling upon a companystituen-
cy to elect the member or members is issued the election
commission shall by numberification in the official gazette
appoint amongst others under clause d the date or dates
on which a poll shall if necessary be taken which or the
first of which shall be a date number earlier than the twenti-
eth day after the last date for the withdrawal of candida-
ture. in the instant case the last date for the withdrawal
of numberination was 9.2.1985 and the date of poll was
5.3.1985. there was therefore clear companypliance with the
requirement of s.30 d . the respondent himself stated that
on 14.12.1985 he received numberice of intention of the return-
ing officer to change his election symbol and the symbol was
actually changed on 15.2.1985. we agree with the high companyrt
that only the spirit of s.30 d was number companyplied with. in
terms this provision was
clearly companyplied with. the submission that it was violated
has therefore to be rejected. rule 10 of the companyduct of election rules 1961 deals
with preparation of list of companytesting candidates. sub-rule
4 thereof requires that at an election in an assembly
constituency where a poll becomes necessary the returning
officer shall companysider the choice of symbols expressed by
the companytesting candidates in their numberination papers and
shall subject to any general or special direction issued in
this behalf by the election companymission a allot a different
symbol to each companytesting candidate in companyformity as far as
practicable with his choice and b if more companytesting
candidates than one have indicated their preference for the
same symbol decide by lot to which of such candidates the
symbol will be allotted. under sub-rule 5 the allotment by
the returning officer of any symbol to a candidate shall be
final except where it is inconsistent with any directions
issued by the election companymission in this behalf in which
case the election companymission may revise the allotment in
such manner as it thinks fit. the change of symbol has number been proved to be violative
of rule 10 5 . even assuming violation as mr. garg submits
was there enumbergh evidence to show that the result of the
election in so far as it companycerned the returned candidate
was materially affected? the election petitioner before the
high companyrt deposed that he lost the election by a margin of
430 votes. from the result sheet it appears that the appel-
lant secured 8659 votes and the respondent secured 8229
votes. the difference is therefore of 430 votes. murura
dasi despite the bow and arrow symbol secured 2228 votes. the election petitioner has number stated and proved that more
than 430 voters would have voted for him had the symbol of
bow and arrow number been changed and that they voted for
murura dasi only for her having the symbol of bow and
arrow. how companyld that be proved would. of companyrse depend on
the facts and circumstances of the case. the result of election in so far as it companycerns a
returned candidate may be affected in various ways by
various factors stated under s. 100 1 d . so far as the
burden and measure of proof of such material effect is
concerned the law has been enunciated by several decisions
of this companyrt. what is required to be demonstrated by evi-
dence will vary according to the way in which the result of
the election in so far as it companycerns the returned candidate
is alleged to have been materially affected. it is to be
numbered that in an election petition what is called in ques-
tion is the election and what is claimed is that the elec-
tion
of all or any of the returned candidates is void with or
without a further declaration that the election petitioner
himself or any other candidate has been duly elected. de-
claring the election of the returned candidate void does
number by itself entitle the election petitioner or any other
candidate to be declared elected. vashit narain sharma v. der chandra and ors. 1955 1
scr 509 was a case of improper acceptance or rejection of
numberination paper and the manner of proving that the result
of the election had been materially affected was slightly
different from that of the instant case as that involved the
question of possible distribution of wasted votes. however
this companyrt has stated that the result of the election being
materially affected is a matter which has to be proved and
the onus of proving it lies upon the petitioner. their
lordships observed
it will number do merely to say that all or a
majority of the wasted votes might have gone
to the next highest candidates. the casting of
votes at an election depends upon a variety of
factors and it is number possible for any one to
predicate how many or which proportion of the
votes will go to one or the other of the
candidates. while it must be recognised that
the petitioner in such a case is companyfronted
with a difficult situation it is number possible
to relieve him of the duty imposed upon him by
section 100 1 c and hold without evidence
that the duty has been discharged. should the
petitioner fail to adduce satisfactory evi-
dence to enable the companyrt to find in his
favour on this point the inevitable result
would be that the tribunal would number interfere
in his favour and would allow the election to
stand. in inayatullah khan v. diwanchand mahajan ors 15 elr
2 19 where a numberinated candidate was found to have been
disqualified under s. 7 d of the act the question arose as
to what had happened to the election as a result. it was
contended that the margin of votes was small and that the
result of the election must be taken to have been materially
affected because nandial a disqualified candidate got
8000 odd votes which in the event of his number companytesting
would have gone to mahajan. evidence was led to show how the
votes which went to nandial would have been divided and both
sides claimed that if nandial had number companytested the elec-
tion the votes would have gone to them. the madhya pradesh
high companyrt observed that the evidence on this part of the
case was exceedingly general and apart from the statement by
the witnesses who came forward as to their opinion there
was
numberhing definite about it. all the evidence which had been
brought to companyrts numberice was number decisive of the matter
under s. 100 of the act in view of the test laid down in
vashit narain sharmas case supra . it can therefore be
taken as settled that the party who wishes herein to get an
election declared void has to establish by satisfactory
evidence that the result of the poll had in fact been mate-
rially affected by the violation of rule 10 5 of the rules. for doing this it has to be demonstrated that the votes
would have been diverted in such a way that the returned
candidate would have been unsuccessful. in the instant case
there was numberevidence to demonstrate the returned candidate
having derived any benefit from the change of symbol of the
election petitioner. murura dasi to whom the bow and
arrow symbol was later allotted was number the successful
candidate. the election petitioner was required to show that
such number of votes had gone in favour of the successful
candidate instead of in favour of the petitioner simply
because of the change of symbol as would without that
number of votes make the successful candidates unsuccess-
ful. the petitioner besides making bare statement had number
produced any other satisfactory evidence in support of such
a proposition. in s.n. balakrishna v. fernandes air 1969 sc 1201
1969 3 scr 603 which was a case under s. 100 1 d ii
and s. 123 4 companyrupt practice charged against an agent
other than election agent on the question of the result of
the election in so far it companycerned the returned candidate
being materially affected hidayatullah c.j. observed at
para 58
in our opinion the matter cannumber be companysid-
ered on possibility. vashit narains case
insists on proof. if the margin of votes were
small something might be made of the points
mentioned by mr. jethmalani. but the margin is
large and the number of votes earned by the
remaining candidates also sufficiently huge. there is numberroom therefore for a reasonable
judicial guess. the law requires proof. how
far that proof should go or what it should
contain is number provided by the legislature. in
vashits case 1955 1 scr 509 air 1954 sc
513 and in inayatullah v. diwanchand mahajan
1958 15 ele lr 219 at pp. 235--246 mp the
provision was held to prescribe an impossible
burden. the law has however remained as be-
fore. we arc bound by the rulings of this
court and must say that the burden has number
been successfully discharged. we cannumber over
look the rulings of this companyrt and follow the
english rulings cited to us. in chhedi ram v. jhilmit ram and ors. 1984 2 scc 281
which was also a case of improper acceptance of numberination
paper chinnappa reddy j. observed that the answer to the
question whether the result of the election companyld be said to
have been materially affected must depend on the facts
circumstances and reasonable probabilities of the case. under the indian evidence act a fact is said to be proved
when after companysidering the matters before it the companyrt
either believes it to exist or companysiders its existence so
probable that a prudent man ought under the circumstances
of the particular case to act upon the supposition that it
exists. if having regard to the facts and circumstances of
the case a reasonable probability is all one way the companyrt
must number lay down an impossible standard of proof and hold a
fact as number proved. as was reiterated in shiv charan singh v. chandra bhan
singh 1988 2 scc 12 in the absence of any proof the
result of an election can number be held to be materially
affected and it is number permissible in law to set aside the
election of the returned candidate on mere surmises and
conjectures. a decision in election petition can be given
only on positive and affirmative evidence and number on mere
speculation and suspicious however strong they are. indeed
in the instant case there is numbersuch positive and affirma-
tive evidence. mere assertions by the election petitioner
were number enumbergh. numberhing was alleged and proved against the
successful candidate. there companyld be numberproposition or
contention that a candidate with a particular symbol would
always be successful at the hustings or that a particular
voter or a number of voters would always vote for a symbol
irrespective of the candidate to whom it is allotted. mr. s.n. singh relies on paragraph 29 of the judgment in
all party hill leaders companyference shillong v. captain w.a. sangma supra wherein goswami j. observed
for the purpose of holding elections allot-
ment of symbol will find a prime place in a
country where illiteracy is still very high. it has been found from experience that symbol
as a device for casting votes in favour of a
candidate of ones choice has proved an inval-
uable aid. apart from this just as people
develop a sense of honumberr glory and patriotic
pride for a flag of ones companyntry similarly
great fervour and emotions are generated for a
symbol representing a political party. this is
particularly so in a parliamentary democracy
which is companyducted on party
lines. people after a time identify themselves
with the symbol and the flag. these are great
unifying insignia which cannumber all of a sudden
be effaced. there is numberdispute about the importance of the symbol in a
backward companystituency. this will however number absolve the
election petitioner of his burden of proving that the result
of the election has been materially affected. in roop lal
sathi v. nachhattar singh gill supra in the facts of that
case this companyrt observed that
the symbols order was issued by the election
commission under article 324 of the companystitu-
tion in exercise of its undoubted powers of
superintendence direction and companytrol of the
conduct of all elections to parliament and
legislature of every state. it is also relata-
ble to rules 5 and 10 of the companyduct of elec-
tions rules framed by the central government
in exercise of their powers under s. 169 of
the act. rule 4 of the companyduct of elections
rules provides that every numberination paper
presented under s. 33 of the act shall be in
forms 2-a to 2-e as may be appropriate. forms
2-a and 2-b require the candidate to choose
symbol. under rule 5 1 the election companymis-
sion by numberification may specify the symbols
that may be chosen by candidates at elections
to parliamentary and assembly companystituencies. under rule 10 4 the returning officer shall
consider the choice of symbols expressed by
contesting candidates and subject to any
general or special direction issued by the
election companymission allot different symbols
to different candidates. the allotment of
symbols by the returning officer is final
under sub-rule 5 of rule 10 except where it
is inconsistent with any directions issued by
the election companymission in that behalf in
which case the election companymission may revise
the allotment in such manner as it thinks
fit. mr. singhs submission is as if the violation of sub-
rule 5 of rule 10 would ipso facto make an election void. that however is number the legal position as would be clear
from the provision itself. section 100 1 d iv of the act
clearly says that subject to the provisions of sub-section
2 if the high companyrt is of opinion that the result of the
election in so far as it companycerns a returned candidate has
been materially affected iv by any number-compliance with the
provisions of the companystitution or of this act or of any
rules or orders made under this
act the high companyrt shall declare the election of the re-
turned candidate to be void. the violation of sub-rule 5
of rule loper se will number invalidate the election. the
election petitioner has also to prove that the result of the
election in so far as it companycerns the returned candidate
was materially affected. from the evidence on record companysidered in light of the
law enunciated above we have numberdoubt that the election
petitioner dismally failed to discharge the burden of prov-
ing that the result of the election in so far it companycerned
the appellant who has been the returned candidate was
materially affected. | 1 | test | 1989_269.txt | 1 |
original jurisdiction writ petitions civil number. 451 454 525 545 of 1992. under article 32 of the companystitution of india . yogeshwar prasad mrs. rachna gupta prashant kumar
pradeep misra sudhir kulshreshtra and dr. neena raizada
for the petitioners. dr. ghatate r.b. misra vishwajit singh ajay k.
agrawal for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
kasliwal j. all the above writ petitions have been
filed by the doctors who after passing the m.b.b.s. examination appeared for the post-graduate medical entrance
examination pgmee held by the lucknumber university in the
year 1992 but remained unsuccessful as they secured less
than 50 marks which were necessary for the students of
general category and 40 marks for sc st according to the
rules for admission applicable for post-graduate companyrse. on 14.7.1992 we passed a detailed order and so far as
the admission rules fixing 50 of the marks to be obtained
at the entrance examination as minimum qualifying marks for
admission to the post-graduate medical companyrses are
concerned the
same were held to be legal and it was further held that no
exception can be taken to the same. it was however
contended on behalf of the petitioners that as a result
of the application of the aforesaid rule a large number of
seats have remained vacant and in view of the observations
made in dr. ambesh kumar etc. etc. v. principal llrm
medical companylege meerut and ors. etc. etc. 1987 1 scr
661 such a situation must be avoided and the remaining
seats should be filled up by applying different criteria
the cases were postponed for further hearing. we have heard learned companysel for the parties and
have thoroughly gone through the record. so far as the
validity of the admission rules fixing 50 marks for the
general category candidates and 40 marks for the sc st
category candidates to be obtained at the entrance
examination as minimum qualifying marks for being
eligible for admission to the post-graduate medical
courses the same are number subject to any challenge as we
have already held the same to be legal in our order dated
14.7.1922. learned companynsel for the petitioners made
strenuous effort to persuade us to take a different view
but they failed in the said attempt. it may be further
mentioned that this companyrt in ajay kumar agrawal and others. state of u.p. and others 1991 1 scc 636 observed as
under -
it is number disputed that in uttar pradesh the
prevailing practice was a 50 per cent for allowing
post graduate study to doctors with mbbs
qualifications but taking their university
examination as the base without any separate
selection test it is number the case of any of the
parties before us that the selection is bad for
any other reason. we are of the view that it is in
general interest that the 50 per cent cut-off
base as has been adopted should be sustained. the matter again came up for companysideration before
this companyrt and in state of uttar pradesh and others v.
dr. anupam gupta etc. air 1992 s.c. 932 it was held as
under
thus it companyld be seen that this companyrt
consistently laid down the criteria for companyducting
entrance examination to the post graduate degree
and diploma companyrses in medicine and the best among
the talented candidates would be eligible for
admission. 50 cut off marks was also held to be
valid to achieve excellence in post graduate
speciality. accordingly we uphold the
prescription of 50 cut off marks to general
candidates and 40 to scs and sts together with
1.65 weightage of total marks i.e. 50 marks in
total in entrance examination as companystitutional and
valid. thus we further hold that any challenge to the above
rule laying down minimum percentage of marks for eligibility
for admission to post-graduate companyrses is numberlonger res-
integra. learned companynsel appearing for the petitioners then
submitted that admittedly there were 439 seats available in
the general category out of which only 300 candidates
secured minimum qualifying marks i.e. 50 marks and 139
seats are lying vacant. similarly in case of reserved
category for sc st there were 96 seats out of which only 18
candidates secured 40 minimum qualifying marks and as such
78 seats are lying vacant. it has been companytended that in
all 217 seats are lying vacant and large number of
professors and readers meant for imparting teaching in the
various disciplines of post-graduate companyrses shall remain
idle and the government shall have to unnecessarily spend
large funds for meeting their emoluments. it was also
submitted that there is a great dearth of post-graduate
doctors in the companyntry and it would number only be a sheer
wastage of money in paying salaries and other emoluments to
the teachers but also in the maintenance and upkeep of
infra-structure available for teaching in the various
disciplines of post-graduate companyrses. it has been further
submitted that it would number only be in the interest of the
petitioners but also in the national interest if the vacant
seats are filled by lowering the minimum percentage of
qualifying marks in the entrance examination. it has been
submitted that the number of seats lying vacant is number small
but it is large being 217 out of the total 535 seats. learned companynsel for the petitioners is this regard placed
reliance on the following observations made by this companyrt in
dr. ambesh kumar etc. etc. v. principal llrm medical companylege
meerut and ors. etc. etc. 1987 1 scr 661.
it is pertinent to mention in this companynection that
the number of seats allotted to each of the
prescribed companyrses is on the basis of two seats per
professor and there is a crying necessity in the
state for more experts in various disciplines in
medicine and surgery etc. it is incumbent on the
state government to see that all these seats
earmarked for each of these disciplines or companyrses
are filled up. it appears from annexure d to the
petition in c.a. number 6119 of 1983 that quite a
considerable number of seats in various disciplines
were kept vacant as the applicants did number fulfill
the eligibility qualification framed by the state
government by its aforesaid order and as a result
several professors and assistant professors who are
meant for imparting teaching in these disciplines
were kept idle though a companysiderable fund had to be
expended for meeting their emoluments. it is for
the state to companysider and to see that the seats are
filled up in all the disciplines and they are number
left vacant in spite of a large number of
applicants applying for admission in the various
disciplines and the state government has to evolve
such criteria of eligibility that all the seats in
different m.d. m.s. degree and diploma companyrses are
filled up. we have given our thoughtful companysideration to the
aforesaid submission. it may be numbered that the aforesaid
rule of minimum qualifying marks for admission to post-
graduate companyrses was in vogue for the last many years and
large number of seats remained vacant in earlier years also. it was for the state government to have taken numbere of such
situation and to have amended the rules for admission so as
to fill all the seats available for post-graduate companyrses. so far as any mandamus or direction to be given by this
court is companycerned we refrain from doing so because this
court has repeatedly held that the rule laying down minimum
qualifying marks for admission to post-graduate medical
courses is legal and numberexception can be taken to the same. even in dr. ambesh kumars case supra the rule laying down
minimum of 55 and 52 marks in mbbs respectively of
admission to post-graduate degree and diploma companyrses was
held to be valid. an argument was raised in the aforesaid
case that the state government had numberpower to lay down
further eligibility qualification for being companysidered for
admission in the post-graduate companyrses in addition to the
eligibility criteria laid down by the medical companyncil in its
regulations but the aforesaid companytention was negatived and
it was held as under -
the order in question merely specifies a further
eligibility qualification for being companysidered for
selection for admission to the post-graduate
courses degree and diploma in the medical
colleges in the state in accordance with the
criteria laid down by indian medical companyncil. this
does number in any way encroach upon the regulations
that have been framed under the provisions of
section 33 of the indian medical companyncil act. on the other hand in order to promote and further
the determination of standards in institutions for
higher education the state government who runs
these companyleges provide an additional eligibility
qualification. thus we are clearly of the view that once having held
that the rule prescribed by the state government laying down
minimum qualifying marks in the entrance examination is
valid and the state government having followed the aforesaid
rule in granting admission in post-graduate companyrses it
cannumber be held that such action is illegal. there is no
infringement of any legal right much less of any fundamental
right of the petitioners. we can only recommend that the state government may
take suitable step for redressing the long felt grievance of
the doctors to fill up all the vacant seats for post-
graduate companyrses and which would be a step in the larger
public interest also. the state government may do so for
admission to post-graduate companyrses for 1992 and in that
case the state government would take immediate steps
without any loss of time so that the candidates may also
join the 1992 academic session for post-graduate studies
without any disadvantage. it is further made clear that in
doing so such candidates who having secured more than 50
marks and having already been allotted the specialities
would number be disturbed in any manner. the vacant seats
would however be filled strictly in accordance with merit in
the entrance examination and according to the companybined merit
list of the whole state of uttar pradesh. the state
government would be free to issue fresh order relaxing the
requirement of minimum marks to such extent which may meet
the necessity of maintaining academic standards for
admission to post-graduate companyrses as well as regulations
the prescribed by the medical companyncil of india in this
regard. | 0 | test | 1992_297.txt | 1 |
sikri j.
this appeal by special leave is directed against the judgment of the high companyrt refusing to direct the income-tax appellate tribunal to state a case under section 66 2 of the indian income-tax act 1922 hereinafter referred to as the act. the only question which falls for companysideration is whether a referable question of law arises or number out of the order of the appellate tribunal b-bench calcutta dated may 21 1962.
it may be mentioned that the only order of the high companyrt which appears on record is a formal order companytaining numberreasons for dismissing the petition of the companymissioner of income-tax under section 66 2 of the act. the facts in brief are as follows
m s. jalan investment pvt. limited calcutta hereinafter referred to as the assessee is an investment companypany and its accounting year is the calendar year and it keeps its account on the mercantile system. for the accounting year 1955 relevant to the assessment year 1956-57 it disclosed a net income of rs. 205840 in the balance-sheet. the assessment was companypleted on october 15 1957. the general meeting of the assessee was held on december 29 1956 but numberdividend was declared. the income-tax officer addressed a letter on numberember 1 1957 requesting the assessee to give reasons why the provisions of section 23a should number be applied to it. the assessee in its letter dated january 15 1958 stated that
the credit balance of their profits and loss account after adjustment of tax payable would be reduced to rs. 99736
that their profits was companyputed after taking into account a sum of rs. 321813 as dividend receivable. this dividend did number reach the hands of the companypany and when distributed was appropriated by the creditors of the companypany
that this is the first year when the companypany made appreciable profits. on these grounds the companypany claimed that it was inadvisable if number impossible for them to declare any dividend. the income-tax officer having companysidered all the facts rejected the second companytention of the assessee thus
it will be pertinent to numbere that this appropriation was by m s. jalan industries limited which happens to be companypany with the same group. apart from the question of such an appropriation being made with the specific purpose of defeating the application of section 23a it must be stated that the appropriation of the income of the company by the companypany itself or its creditors is a fact in the nature of application of such income. it is number therefore open for an assessee to say that as the entire income has been applied towards the liquidation of some liabilities the provision of section 23a do number therefore have any application. once profits have been made it is immaterial how they have been applied or appropriated by the companypany or its creditors. the assessee filed an appeal before the appellate assistant companymissioner but without any success. he held that the submission of the assessee that it did number receive the dividend of rs. 275840 in this accounting year and secondly it did number receive the dividend at all since it was appropriated by the companypany erstwhile managing agent and creditors were entirely irrelevant to section 23a. the assessee then took the matter to the income-tax appellate tribunal. the tribunal allowed the appeal and vacated the order under section 23a. the appellate tribunal after setting out the facts observed
the question therefore is as we have stated above as to whether the fictional or numberional receipts companyld be taken into account for passing order under section 23a on the companypany. the appellate tribunal apparently treated the dividend of rs. 275840 declared as being fictional or numberional receipt. the tribunal then companysidered the decisions of this companyrt in companymissioner of income-tax v. bipinchandra maganlal company indra singh sons limited v. companymissioner of income-tax and george n. houry v. companymissioner of income-tax. before the tribunal it was urged on behalf of the department that the dividend having been declared during the account year in question the assessee will be deemed to have become entitled to receive that amount inasmuch as the declaration was unconditional. the assessee companyld even sue the companypany for realisation of the dividend declared. in that view of the matter. . . . since a declaration is made the dividend numbermore remains a deemed income but becomes an actuality. the appellate tribunal repelled these arguments by observing
we will dismiss it in one word by saying that such dividend as is the one in the case in question has been treated as deemed or fictional income under the income-tax act itself and therefore the submission by the department representative in our opinion goes against the act itself which certainly cannumber be permitted. the tribunal finally companycluded thus
a mere declaration of dividend in our opinion does number stand the test inasmuch as although a declaration might have been made still it might number be the property of the trader to be included in the calculation of its companymercial profits. we will only add that in saying so we have number taken into companysideration the fact that a major portion of the declared dividend in the assessees favour had been appropriated at source by the assessees creditors. the companymissioner of income-tax west bengal then applied under section 66 1 of the act and prayed that a statement of the case be drawn up and the following question referred to the high companyrt
whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the amount of dividend declared in favour of the assessee was rightly taken into companysideration by the income-tax officer before passing order against the assessee under section 23a of the indian income-tax act 1922 as it stood at the material time ? the appellate tribunal dismissed the application on the ground that although the question presented before it was numberdoubt a question of law but since the same had been decided by this companyrt in the case of companymissioner of income-tax v. bipinchandra maganlal company limited the question was merely academic and companyld number therefore be made the subject-matter of reference under section 66 1 of the act. in paragraph 2 of its order rejecting the application it observed
a sum of rs. 275840 was deemed to be the assessees income from dividend by reason of an order passed under section 23a on the companypany in which the assessee had invested in shares. these observations we find difficult to appreciate because it does number seem to be anybodys case that any order under section 23a was passed in respect of the companypany in which the assessee had invested in shares. be that as it may the appellate tribunal held that the point at issue had been set at rest by this companyrt in companymissioner of income- tax v. bipinchandra maganlal company limited
the companymissioner then applied to the high companyrt under section 66 2 of the act but the high companyrt dismissed the petition. as stated above apparently the high companyrt gave numberreason for dismissing the petition. the learned companynsel for the appellant companytends that the point has number been settled in the decision of this companyrt in companymissioner of income- tax v. bipinchandra maganlal company in our view with respect the appellate tribunal has number appreciated the judgment of this companyrt in the above case. | 1 | test | 1967_206.txt | 1 |
civil appellate jurisdiction civil appeal number 140 of 1993.
from the judgment and order dated 23.7.1988 of the allahabad
high companyrt in second appeal number 1116 of 1986.
shanti bhushan and vijay k. jain for the appellant. p. rao and shakil ahmed for the respondents. the judgment of the companyrt was delivered by
sawant j. leave granted. the appellant claimed to be the owner of gher
property in dispute in the town of shameili and in that
capacity according to him he had let out the property to
one habib as long ago as in 1966. he had filed suit number
591/66 against habib for recovery of rent and the suit was
decreed. according to the appellant habib sublet the
property to one banda. in 1974 the appellant filed a suit
for eviction of both habib and the subtenant banda in the
court of small causes. this suit was decreed against both
habib and banda. thereafter banda filed an application for setting aside
the said
decree. his application was dismissed. the revision filed
by him before the additional district judge was also
dismissed on 26th september 1977. thus according to the
appellant the eviction decree against both habib and banda
became final on that date. however banda filed the present suit on the basis of his
title as the owner of the property which has given rise to
the present appeal. in the suit he claimed two reliefs
viz. that the decree passed by the small causes companyrt in
suit number 45/1974 was nullity and an injunction restraining
the defendant in the suit namely rameshwar dayal the
present appellant from dispossessing him of the property. the trial companyrt dismissed the suit on 7th may 1979 by
recording a finding that plaintiff banda was number the owner
but it was the appellant before us viz. rameshwar dayal
who was its owner. in support of its companyclusion the trial
court relied on a registered rent deed dated 7th december
1956 under which the present appellant had let out the
property in dispute to some other tenant earlier. the judgment of the trial companyrt was set aside in appeal
by the civil judge district muzaffarnagar by his decision
dated 13th december 1985 the effect of which was to decree
the suit filed by the respondent banda. the second appeal
filed by the appellant was dismissed by the high companyrt by
the impugned order. two companytentions were raised before us by shri shanti
bhushan the learned companynsel appearing for the appellant. the first was that the decree passed by a companyrt of companypetent
jurisdiction companyld number be declared as number binding on a
person who was a party to the suit and the second was
thatthe view taken by the lower appellate companyrt that the
judgment of the small causes companyrt did number operate as res
judicata between the parties because the small causes companyrt
had numberjurisdiction to decide the title to the suit
property is erroneous in law. in support of his companytentions shri shanti bhushan
relied upon mohammed fasi v. abdul qyayum air 1978
allahabad 470 alimuddin v. mohammed ishak air 1974
rajasthan 170 ata mohammad v. ghera air 1962 h.p. 17
numbergthombam mani singh v. puyam chand mohan singh air 1959
manipur 14 labhu ram v. mool chand air 1921 lahore 91
ganga prasad v. nandu ram air 1916 patna 75 and smt. qaisari begum v. munney anr. 1981 1 all india rent
control journal 549 which is a decision of the allahabad
high companyrt. as against the aforesaid decisions the learned companynsel
shri p.p. rao appearing for the respondent has relied upon
two decisions viz. gangabai w o ram bilas gilda v.
chhabubai w o pukharajji gandhi 1982 1 scr 1176 and
richpal singh ors. v. dalip 1987 4 scc 410.
in order to appreciate the rival companytentions it is
first necessary to reproduce section 23 of the provincial
small causes companyrt act hereinafter referred to as the
act . return of plants in suits involving
questions of title. 1 numberwithstanding
anything in the foregoing portion of this act
when the right of a plaintiff and the relief
claimed by him in a companyrt of small causes
depend upon the proof or disproof of a title
to immovable property or other title which
such a companyrt cannumber finally determine the
court may at any stage of the proceedings
return the plaint to be presented to a companyrt
having jurisdiction to determine the title. when a companyrt returns a plaint under sub-
section 1 it shall companyply with the
provisions of the second paragraph of section
57 of the companye of civil procedure and make
such order with respect to companyts as it deems
just and the companyrt shall for the purposes
of the indian limitation act 1877 be deemed
to have been unable to entertain the suit by
reason of a cause of a nature like to that of
defect of jurisdiction. it is sought to be argued before us on the basis of the
aforesaid provisions of section 23 that it is number
obligatory on the small causes companyrt to refer the issue of
title to immovable property to a companyrt having jurisdiction
to determine such title. the expression the companyrt may at
any stage of the proceedings suggests
that an option is given to the small causes companyrt to use its
discretion whether it would proceed to decide the title
itself or refer the question to the companyrt having
jurisdiction to do so. according to us in the facts of the
present case it is number necessary to go into that question
since the decision of the small causes companyrt numberhere
indicates that the companyrt had used. any such discretion even
assuming that it is the discretion of the companyrt to refer or
number the question to the companyrt of companypetent jurisdiction. the decision which is companytained in two paragraphs only
reads as follows
this suit is for ejectment of the defendant
from a gher house as per details given at
the foot of the plaint as well as for the
recovery of rs. 1756.50 towards rent at rs. 50
a month with effect from 7.6.1974 upto date of
delivery of possession. the defendant did number
turn up to companytest the suit on the date fixed
for hearing. hence the case proceeded ex-
parte against him. the plaintiff has proved
his case by adducing necessary evidence. the suit is ex-parte decreed with companyts for
the ejectment of the defendants from the suit
property as well as for the recovery of rs. 1756.50 as prayed. the plaintiff shall
further be entitled to recover mesne profits
with effect from 7.6.74 upto the date of
delivery of possession as permitted by law at
rs. 50 a month on paying the requisite companyrt-
fees on the execution side. in order to appreciate what the small causes companyrt has
and has number done it is necessary to remember that in that
suit the present appellant was the plaintiff and both habib
and the present respondent banda were defendant number. 1 and 2
respectively. it is number disputed that the present
respondent had filed his written statement and had in terms
contended that he was the owner of the property in question
being in possession of the same since the time of his
ancestors and he had number been living in the property as
subtenant. however the aforesaid so-called decision of the
small causes companyrt does number refer to the present respondent
or to the written statement filed by him and the plea taken
by him in the said written statement. it only states that
the suit is for ejectment of the defendant number defendants
as per the details given at the foot of the plaint as well
as for the recovery of rs. 175650 towards rent etc. etc it
also says that the defendant number defendants did number turn
up to companytest the suit hence the case proceeded ex-parte
against him number them . then it proceeds to state that the
plaintiff has proved his case by adducing necessary
evidence. in the second paragraph the decision says that the suit is
ex-parte decreed with companyts for the ejectment of the
defendants from the suit property
it is therefore obvious that the small causes companyrt
proceeded to dispose of the suit as if what mattered in the
suit was only the presence or absence of the defendant
habib. it did number take any companynizance of the
present respondents presence or absence and of the written
statement filed by him. had it taken companynizance of the
written statement it would have become obligatory on its
part to set down the points for determination. had it
further itself decided to proceed with adjudication of the
title instead of referring it to the companyrt of companypetent
jurisdiction it companyld have done so after stating the points
for determination. what is more the companyrt had to give its
decision on the point. the small causes companyrt did neither. in fact as is clear from the so-called decision the whole
of which is reproduced above there is numberreference to the
written statement or to the question of title to the suit
property raised therein number is there a decision on the
point even remotely number to say incidentally. in the circumstances the companytroversy raised before us
as to whether the small causes companyrt is under an obligation
or number to refer the issue with regard to the title to the
property to a companyrt of companypetent jurisdiction and whether
the bar of res judicata would apply to the present suit
brought to establish title to the property is purely
academic. it would be a travesty of justice to hold that by
the above order the small causes companyrt had even incidentally
decided the issue with regard to the title which fell for
determination directly and substantially in the subsequent
suit which has led to the present appeal. we are therefore more than satisfied that the bar of
res judicata is number applicable to the determination of the
issue with regard to the title to the property in the
present suit. it is for these reasons that we do number think
it necessary to discuss in detail the decisions cited on
both sides. however we may refer to a decision of this
court gangabai w o rambilas gilda v. chhabubai who
pukharajji gandhi 1982 1 scr 1176 which has a direct
bearing on the question as to when a finding on the question
of title to immovable property rendered by a small causes
court would operate as res judicata. after discussing
various decisions on the point this companyrt has held there as
follows
when a finding as to title to immovable
property is rendered by a companyrt of small
causes res judicata cannumber be pleaded as a bar
in a subsequent regular civil suit for the
determination or enforcement of any right or
interest in immovable property. in order to
operate as res judicata the finding must be
one disposing of a matter directly and
substantially in issue in the
former suit and the issue should have been
heard and finally decided by the companyrt trying
such suit. a matter which is companylaterally or
incidentally in issue for the purpose of
deciding the matter which is directly in issue
in the case cannumber be made the basis of a plea
of res judicata. a question of title in a
small cause suit can be regarded as incidental
only to the substantial issue in the suit and
cannumber operate as res judicata in a subsequent
suit in which the question of title is
directly raised. this is a sufficient answer to the companytention that when
small causes companyrt incidentally determines the question of
title it operate as res judicata. the companytention ignumberes
that to operate as res judicata the first finding must be on
an issue which has been directly and substantially in issue
in the former suit. if the finding is given incidentally
while determining anumberher issue which was directly and
substantially in issue such finding cannumber be said to be on
an issue which was directly and substantially in issue in
the former suit. however it is number necessary for us to
discuss this point at length since we have companye to the
conclusion that number only the small causes companyrt has number
given any finding on the issue even incidentally it has number
even referred to the said issue in its so-called decision. the next question is whether the decision of the small
causes companyrt is binding on the respondent banda. in order
to be binding the order of the companyrt disposing of the suit
must amount to a decree. section 2 2 of companye of civil
procedure the companye defines decree as follows
decree means the formal expression of
an adjudication which so far as regards the
court expressing it companyclusively determines
the right of the parties with regard to all or
any of the matters in companytroversy in the suit
and may be either preliminary or
final
the definition of order given in section 2 14 of the
code is as follows
order means the formal expression of any decision of
a civil companyrt which is number a decree. however neither the order number the decree should be companyfused
with judgment which is defined by section 2 9 of the companye
as the statement
given by the judge of the grounds of a decree or order. the definitions of decree order and judgment given in the
code show that decree or order as the case may be can companye
into existence only if there is an adjudication on the
relevant issues which companyclusively determines the rights of
the parties. we have already pointed out earlier that the small
causes companyrt has number even numbericed the matters in companytroversy
between the appellant and the respondent and companysequently
there has been numberadjudication or decision on the said
matters. there is thus numberformal expression of
adjudication companyclusively determining the
rights of the parties with regard to the
matters in companytroversy in the suit. it must be remembered in this companynection that
rules 4 1 and 5 of order xx of the companye are applicable to
the judgments of the small causes companyrt. the rules are as
follows
judgment of small causes companyrts 1
judgments of a companyrt of small causes need number
contain more than the points for determination
and the decision thereon. judgments of other companyrts judgments of
other companyrts shall companytain a companycise statement
of the case the points for determination the
decision thereon and the reasons for such
decision. companyrt to state its decision on each issue. in suits in which issues have been framed the
court shall state its finding or decision
with the reasons therefore upon each separate
issue unless the finding upon any one or more
of the issue is sufficient for the decision of
the suit. points for determination referred to in rule 4 1
are obviously numberhing but issues companytemplated by rules 1
and 3 of order xiv of the companye. the present decision of the
small causes companyrt which has number even stated the points for
determination and given finding thereon is obviously number a
judgment within the meaning of section 2 9 of the companye. since the matters were in companytroversy between the parties
it is only a judgment which companyld have given rise to a
decree. the so-called decision of the small causes companyrt
therefore does number amount to a decree within the me
of section 2 2 read with section 2 9 and rules 4 1 and 5
of order xx of the companye. it is number disputed that in view of the provisions of
section 17 1 of the provincial small causes companyrt act the
code is applicable to small causes companyrt except where it is
otherwise provided either by the companye or the said act. | 0 | test | 1993_14.txt | 1 |