Case ID: 526

Judgment:
ions Nos	 95 and 96 of 1957. 311 Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for the enforcement of Fundamental Rights. N. C. Chatterjee	 Charan Das Puri and Naunit Lal	 for the petitioners (in both the petitions). C. K. Daphtary	 Solicitor General of India	 Lachman Das Kaushal	 Deputy Advocate General for the State of Punjab and T. M. Sen	 for the respondents. September 6. The following Judgment of the Court was delivered by DAS C.J. In these two petitions under article 32 of the Constitution of India the petitioners call in question the validity of the Punjab Special Powers (Press) Act	 1956 (being Act No. 38 of 1956)	 hereinafter referred to as " the impugned Act "	 and pray for an appropriate writ or order directing the respondents to withdraw the Notifications issued by them on the two petitioners as the editors	 printers and publishers of two newspapers	 Pratap and Vir Arjun. The Daily Pratap was started about 38 years back in Lahore	 the capital of the united Punjab. It is a daily newspaper printed in the Urdu language and 	script. Since the partition of the country the Daily Pratap is being published simultaneously from Jullundur and from New Delhi Vir Arjun is a Hindi daily newspaper also published simultaneously from Jullundur and from New Delhi. Virendra	 the petitioner	 in Petition No. 95 of 1957 is the editor	 printer and publisher of the two papers published from Jullundur and K. Narendra is the editor	 printer and publisher of the two papers published from New Delhi. The petitioners allege that after the appointment of the States Reorganisation Commission on December 29	 1953	 the Akali party in the Punjab started a campaign for the partition of the State of Punjab on communal and linguistic basis. According to the petitioners this agitation soon degenerated into a campaign of hatred which threatened the peace of the State. The petitioners maintain that the Hindu inhabitants of the State belonging to all shades of opinion and also a section of the Sikh community and 312 the Congress Party were strongly opposed to that proposal. It is in the circumstances reasonable to infer that the Hindus would also indulge in a counter propaganda in the Press and from the platform against the agitation started by the Akali party. It is admitted that the policy of these two papers	 the Daily Pratap and Vir Arjun	 has been to oppose the Akali demand for partition of the State of Punjab. Obviously a good deal of tension was generated in the State by reason of the two bitterly opposing parties trying to propagate their respective ideologies. About a year back the Congress Party	 which is the ruling party	 is said to have surrendered to the communal pressure of the Akalies and accepted what has since come to be known as the regional formula. It was amidst the din and bustle of this ideological war and to prevent and combat any possible activity prejudicial to the maintenance of communal harmony that the Legislature of the State of Punjab found it necessary to pass the impugned Act which received the assent of the President on October 19	 1956	 and came into force on the 25th of the same month. The provisions of the impugned Act	 in so far as they are material	 may now be referred to. Section 2 (1) (a) runs as follows: " 2(1) The State Government or any authority so authorised in this behalf if satisfied that such action is necessary for the purpose of preventing or combating any activity prejudicial to the maintenance of communal harmony affecting or likely to affect public order	 may	 by order in writing addressed to a printer publisher or editor	 (a) prohibit the printing or publication in any document or any class of documents of any matter relating to a particular subject or class of subjects for a specified period or in a particular issue or issues of a newspaper or periodical; Provided that no such order shall remain in force for more than two months from the making thereof; Provided further that the person against whom the order has been made may within ten days of the 313 passing of this order make a representation to the State Government which may on consideration thereof modify	 confirm or rescind the order;" Section 2(1)(b) authorises the State Government or any authority so authorised in this behalf to require that any matter covering not more than two columns be published in any particular issue or issues of a newspaper or periodical on payment of adequate remuneration and to specify the period (not exceeding one week) during which and the manner in which such publication shall take place. Clause (c) of section 2(1) authorises the State Government or the delegated authority to impose pre censorship. Sub section (2) of section 2 enables the State Government or the authority issuing the order in the event of any disobedience of an order made under section 2 to order the seizure of all copies of any publication and of the printing press or other instrument or apparatus used in the publication. Section 3(1) runs as follows: " The State Government or any authority authorised by it in this behalf	 if satisfied that such action is necessary for the purpose of preventing or combating any activity prejudical to the maintenance of communal harmony affecting or likely to affect public order	 may	 by notification	 prohibit the bringing into Punjab of any newspaper	 periodical	 leaflet or other publication. " Sub section (2) of section 3 gives power to the State Government or the authority issuing the order	 in the event of any disobedience of an order made under section 3	 to order the seizure of all copies of any newspaper	 periodical	 leaflet or other publication concerned. Section 4 provides punishment for the contravention of any of the provisions of the Act by imprisonment of either description which may extend to one year or with fine up to one thousand rupees or with both. It appears that on or about May 30	 1957	 a movement known as the "save Hindi agitation " was started by a Samiti which goes by the name of Hindi Raksha Samiti. The Arya Samaj	 which claims to be a cultural and religious society	 joined this campaign 314 for changing what they conceive to be the objectionable features of the regional formula and the Sachar formula on language. According to the petitioners the Hindi Raksha Samiti	 the sponsor of the " save Hindi agitation " claims that it has the support of practically all sections of the Hindus of the State. The petitioners who are the editors	 printers and publishers of the two newspapers published simultaneously from Jullunder and New Delhi respectively consider that the objectionable clauses of those formulae are not only unjust and unfair to the cause of propagating that national language in the country	 but are also a contrivance to secure the political domination of the minority community over the majority. Admittedly the petitioners have been publishing criticisms and news concerning the agitation which	 according to them	 are quite fair and legitimate	 but they allege that newspapers like Prabhat and Ajit	 which support the Akali party in the State have been publishing articles and news couched in a strong and violent language against the " save Hindi agitation " and the Hindu community. The agitation apparently followed the usual course and pattern of all political agitation of this kind with its attendant demonstrations	 slogans and satyagraha by the volunteers and lathi charge by the police. Eventually on July 10	 1957	 the agitation culminated in the " save Hindi agitation " volunteers ' forcible entry into the Secretariat of the Punjab Government at Chandigarh. It was in these circumstances that the four Notifications complained of were issued. On July 13	 1957	 a Notification under section 2(1)(a) of the impugned Act was issued against the petitioner Virendra	 as the editor	 printer and publisher of the Daily Pratap published from Jullundar. It was in the following terms: " Whereas 1	 Ranbir Singh	 Home Secretary	 Punjab Government	 authorised by the said Government under section 2(1) of the Punjab Special Powers (Press) Act	 1956	 on examination of the publications enumerated in the annexure relating to the " save Hindi agitation " have satisfied myself that action is 315 necessary for combating the calculated and persistent propaganda carried on in the newspaper the Pratap ' published at Jullundar to disturb communal harmony in the State of Punjab; And whereas the said propaganda by making an appeal to communal sentiments has created a situation which is likely to affect public order and tranquillity in the State ; And therefore in pursuance of the powers conferred under sub clause (a) of clause (1) of section 2 of the said Act	 1 prohibit Shri Virendra	 the printer	 publisher and the editor of 'Pratap ' from printing and publishing any article	 report	 news item	 letter or any other material of any character whatso ever relating to or connected with "save Hindi agitation" for a period of two months from this date. Sd./ Rome Secretary to Government Punjab. No: 8472 C(H) 57/14679 " The annexure referred to in the Notifications sets out the headings of fifteen several articles published in this paper between May 30	 1957	 to July 8	 1957. Another Notification in identical terms with an annexure setting forth the heading of sixteen articles published during the same period in Vir Arjun was issued on the same day against Virendra as the editor	 printer and publisher of Vir Arjun published from Jullundar. On July 14	 1957	 two Notifications in identical terms were issued under section 3 of the impugned Act against K. Narendra as the editor	 printer and publisher of Daily Pratap and Vir Arjun published from New Delhi. It will suffice to set out the Notification in respect of Daily Pratap which ran as follows: Punjab Government Gazette Extraordinary Published by Authority Chandigarh	 Sunday	 July 14	 1957. Home Department Notification The 14th July	 1957	 41 316 No. 8453 C(H) 57/14580: Whereas 1	 Ranbir Singh	 Home Secretary to Government	 Punjab	 authorised by the said Government under section 3 of the Punjab Special Powers (Press) Act	 1956	 have satisfied myself that it is necessary to combat and prevent the propaganda relating to " save Hindi agitation " carried on in the Pratap with the object of disturbing communal harmony in the State of Punjab and thereby affecting public order; Now	 therefore	 in exercise of the powers conferred by section 3(1) of the said Act	 I do hereby prohibit the bringing into Punjab of the newspaper printed and published at Delhi	 from the date of publication of this notification. " The petitioners contend that both sections 2 and 3 of the impugned Act are ultra vires the State Legislature	 because they infringe the fundamental rights of the petitioners guaranteed by articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(g) of the Constitution and are not saved by the protecting provisions embodied in article 19(2) or article 19(6). In the first place it is contended that these sections impose not merely restrictions on but total prohibition against the exercise of the said fundamental rights	 for in the case of the Notifications under section 2 there is a total prohibition against the publication of all matters ' relating to or in connection with the " save Hindi agitation " and in the case of the Notifications made under section 3 there is a complete prohibition against the entry and the circulation of the papers published from New Delhi in the whole of Punjab. There is and can be no dispute that the right to freedom of speech and expression carries with it the right to propagate and circulate one 's views and opinions subject to reasonable restrictions. The point to be kept in view is that the several rights of freedom guaranteed to the citizens by article 19(1) are exercisable by them throughout and in all parts of the territory of India. The Notifications under section 2(1)(a) prohibiting the printing and publishing of any article	 report	 news item	 letter or any other material of any character whatsoever relating to or connected with " save Hindi agitation " or those under section 3(1) imposing a ban against the entry 317 and the circulation of the said papers published from New Delhi in the State of Punjab do not obviously take away the entire right	 for the petitioners are yet at liberty to print and publish all other matters and are free to circulate the papers in all other parts of the territory of India. The restrictions	 so far as they extend	 are certainly complete but whether they amount to a total prohibition of the exercise of the fundamental rights must be judged by reference to the ambit of the rights and	 so judged	 there can be no question that the entire rights under articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(g) have not been completely taken away	 but restrictions have been imposed upon the exercise of those rights with reference to the publication of only articles etc.relating to a particular topic and with reference to the circulation of the papers only in a particular territory and	 therefore	 it is not right to say that these sections have imposed a total prohibition upon the exercise of those fundamental rights. Learned counsel then urges that assuming these sections impose only restrictions they are	 nevertheless	 void as being repugnant to the Constitution	 because the restrictions are not reasonable. As regards the right to freedom of speech and expression guaranteed by article 19(1)(a) it is qualified by article 19(2) which protects a law in so far as it imposes reasonable restriction on the exercise of the right conferred by article 19(1)(a) "in the interests of. . . . . . . public order. . . Likewise the right to carry on any occupation	 trade or business guaranteed by article 19(1)(g) is out down by article 19(6) which protects a law imposing "in the interests of the general public" reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the right conferred by article 19(1)(g). As has been explained by this Court in Ramji Lal Modi vs The State of U. P. (1) the words " in the interests of " are words of great amplitude and are much wider than the words " for the maintenance of ". The expression " in the interest of " makes the ambit of the protection very wide	 for a law may not have been designed to directly maintain the public order or to directly protect the general public against any particular evil and yet it (1) Petition No. 252 of 1955 decided on April 5	 1957. 318 may have been enacted "in the interests of " the public order or the general public as the case may be. It is against this background	 therefore	 that we are to see whether the restrictions imposed by sections 2 and 3 can be said to be reasonable restrictions within the meaning of articles 19(2) and 19(6). The test of reasonableness has been laid down by this Court in The State of Madras vs V. G. Row (1) in the following words: " It is important in this context to bear in mind that the test of reasonableness	 wherever prescribed	 should be applied to each individual statute impugned	 and no abstract standard or general pattern	 of reason ableness 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 conditions at the time	 should all enter into the judicial verdict. This dictum has been adopted and applied by this Court in several subsequent cases. The surrounding circumstances in which the impugned law came to be enacted	 the underlying purpose of the enactment and the extent and the urgency of the evil sought to be remedied have already been adverted to. It cannot be overlooked that the Press is a mighty institution wielding enormous powers which are expected to be exercised for the protection and the good of the people but which may conceivably be abused and exercised for anti social purposes by exciting the passions and prejudices of a section of the people against another section and thereby disturbing the public order and tranquillity or in support of a policy which may be of a subversive character. The powerful influence of the newspapers	 for good or evil	 on the minds of the readers	 the wide sweep of their reach	 the modern facilities for their swift circulation to territories	 distant and near	 must all enter into the judicial verdict and the reasonableness of the restrictions imposed upon (1) ; 	607. 319 the Press has to be tested against this background. It is certainly a serious encroachment on the valuable and cherished right to freedom of speech and expression if a newspaper is prevented from publishing its own views or the views of its correspondent& relating to or concerning what may be the burning topic of the day. Our social interest ordinarily demands the free propagation and interchange of views but circumstances may arise when the social interest in public order may require a reasonable subordination of the social interest in free speech and expression to the needs of our social interest in public order. Our Constitution recognises this necessity and has attempted to strike a balance between the two social interests. It permits the imposition of reasonable restrictions on the freedom of speech and expression in the interest of public order and on the freedom of carrying on trade or business in the interest of the general public. Therefore	 the crucial question must always be : Are the restrictions imposed on the exercise of the rights under articles 19 (1) (a) and 19 (1) (g) reasonable in view of all the surrounding circumstances ? In other words are the restrictions reasonably necessary in the interest of public order under article 19(2) or in the interest of the general public under article 19(6) ? It is conceded that a serious tension had arisen between the Hindus and the Akalis over the question of the partition of the State on linguistic and communal basis. The people were divided into two warring groups	 one supporting the agitation and the other opposing it. The agitation and the counter agitation were being carried on in the Press and from the platforms. Quite conceivably this agitation might at any time assume a nasty communal turn and flare up into a communal frenzy and factious fight disturbing the public order of the State which is on the border of a foreign State and where consequently the public order and tranquillity were and are essential in the interest of the safety of the State. It was for preserving the safety of the State and for maintaining the public order that the Legislature enacted this impugned Statute. Legislature had to ask itself the question	 who will be 320 the appropriate authority to determine at any given point of time as to whether the prevailing cicumstances require some restriction to be placed on the right to freedom of speech and expression and the right to carry on any occupation	 trade or business and to what extent? The answer was obvious	 namely	 that as the State Government was charged with the preservation of law and order in the State	 as it alone was in possession of all material facts it would be the beat authority to investigate the circumstances and assess the urgency of the situation that might arise and to make up its mind whether any and	 if so. 	 what anticipatory action must be taken for the prevention of the threatened or anticipated breach of the peace The court is wholly unsuited to gauge the seriousness of the situation	 for it cannot be in possession of materials which are available only to the executive Government. Therefore	 the determination of the time when and the extent to which restrictions should be imposed on the Press must of necessity be left to the judgment and discretion of the State Government and that is exactly what the Legislature did by passing the statute. It gave wide powers to the State Government	 or the authority to whom it might delegate the same	 to be exercised only if it were satisfied as to the things mentioned in the two sections. The conferment of such wide powers to be exercised on the subjective satisfaction of the Government or its delegate as to the necessity for its exercise for the purpose of preventing or combating any activity prejudicial to the maintenance of communal harmony affecting or likely to affect public order cannot	 in view of the surrounding circumstances and tension brought about or aided by the agitation in the Press	 be regarded as anything but the imposition of permissible reasonable restrictions on the two fundamental rights. Quick decision and swift and effective action must be of the essence of those powers and the exercise of it must	 therefore	 be left to the subjective satisfaction of the Government charged with the duty of maintaining law and order. To make the exercise of these powers justiciable and subject to the judicial scrutiny will defeat the very purpose of the enactment. Even in his dissenting judgment in Dr. N. B. Khare vs The State of Delhi (1) Mukherjea	 J.	 conceded that in cases of this description certain authorities could be invested with power to make initial orders on their own satisfaction and not on materials which satisfy certain objective tests. It is said that the sections give unfettered and uncontrolled discretion to the State Government or to the officer authorised by it in the exercise of the drastic powers given by the sections. We are referred to the observations of Mukherjea	 J.	 in Dwarka Prasad Laxmi Narain vs The State of Uttar Pradesh (2). That case does not seem to us to have any application to the facts of this case. ' In the first place	 the discretion is given in the first instance to the State Government itself and not to a very subordinate officer like the licensing officer as was done in Dwaraka Prasad 's case (supra). It is true that the State Government may delegate the power to any officer or person but the fact that the power of delegation is to be exercised by the State Government itself is some safeguard against the abuse of this power of delegation. That apart	 it will be remembered that the Uttar Pradesh Coal Control Order	 1953	 with reference to which the observations were made	 prescribed no principles and gave no guidance in the matter of the exercise of the power. There was nothing in that order to indicate the purpose for which and the circumstances under which the licensing authority could grant or refuse to grant	 renew or refuse to renew	 or suspend	 revoke	 cancel or modify any license under that order and	 therefore	 the power could be exercised by any person to whom the State Coal Controller might have chosen to delegate the same. No rules had been framed and no directions had been given on the relevant matters to regulate or to guide the exercise of the discretion of the licensing officer. That cannot	 in our judgment	 be said about section 2 or section 3 of the impugned Act	 for the exercise of the power under either of these two sections is conditioned by the State Government or the authority authorised by the said Government being satisfied that such (1) (2) ; 	813. 322 action was necessary for the purpose of preventing or combating any activity prejudicial to the maintenance of communal harmony affecting or likely to affect the public order. As explained by this Court in Harishankar Bagla vs The State of Madhya Pradesh(1)	 the dictum of Mukherjea	 J.	 can have no application to a law which sets out its underlying policy so that the order to be made under the law is to be governed by that policy and the discretion given to the authority is to be exercised in such a way as to effectuate that policy	 and the conferment of such a discretion so regulated cannot be called invalid. The two sections before us lay down the principle that the State Government or the delegated authority can exercise the power only if it is satisfied that its exercise is necessary for the purposes mentioned in the sections. It cannot	 be exercised for any other purposes. In this view of the matter neither of these sections can be questioned on the ground that they give unfettered and uncontrolled discretion to the State Government or one executive officer in the exercise of discretionary powers given by the section. It is next said that an executive officer may untruthfully say	 as a matter of form	 that he has been satisfied and there is nothing in the section which may prevent him from abusing the power so conferred by these sections. But	 as pointed out in Khare 's case (supra)	 the	 exercise of a discretionary preventive power to be exercised in anticipation for preventing a breach of public order must necessarily be left to the State Government or its officers to whom the State Government may delegate the authority. No assumption ought to be made that the State Government or the authority will abuse its power. To make the exercise of the power justiciable will defeat the very purpose for which the power is given. Further	 even if the officer may conceivably abuse the power	 what will be struck down is not the statute but the abuse of power. Reference has been made to the principles enunciated by this Court in Ramesh Thappar vs The	 State Of (1) 	 386	 387. 323 Madras (1)	 and applied in Chintaman Rao vs The State of Madhya Pradesh(2)	 namely	 that if the language employed in the impugned law is wide enough to cover restriction both within and outside the limits of constitutionally permissible legislative action affecting the guaranteed fundamental rights and so long as the possibility of the statute being applied for purposes not sanctioned by the Constitution cannot be ruled out	 the sections must be struck down as ultra vires the Constitution. We do not think those principles have any applications the instant case. It will be remembered that Art.19(2)	 as it was then worded	 gave protection to a law relating to any matter which under mined the security of or tended to overthrow the State. Section 9(1 A) of the Madras Maintenance of Public Order was made "for the purpose of securing public safety and the maintenance of public order". It was pointed out that whatever end the impugned Act might have been intended to subserve and whatever aim its framers might have had in view	 its application and scope could not	 in the absence of limiting words in the statute itself	 be restricted to the aggravated form of activities which were calculated to endanger the security of the State. Nor was there any guarantee that those officers who exercised the power under the Act would	 in using them	 discriminate between those who acted prejudicially to the security of the State and those who did not. This consideration cannot apply to the case now under consideration. Article 19(2) has been amended so as to extend its protection to a law imposing reasonable restrictions in the interests of public order and the language used in the two sections of the impugned Act quite clearly and explicitly limits the exercise of the powers conferred by them to the purposes specifically mentioned in the sections and to no other purpose. Apart from the limitations and conditions for the exercise of the powers contained in the body of the two sections as hereinbefore mentioned	 there are two provisos to section 2(1)(a) which are important. Under the first proviso the orders made under section 2(1)(a) can only remain (1) ; 42 (2) ; 324 in force for two months from the making thereof. Further	 there is another proviso permitting the aggrieved person to make a representation to the State Government which may	 on consideration thereof	 modify	 confirm or rescind the order. A power the exercise of which is conditioned by the positive requirement of the existence of the satisfaction of the authority as to the necessity for making the order for the specific purposes mentioned in the section and the effect of the exercise of which is to remain in operation for a limited period only and is liable to be modified or rescinded upon a representation being made cannot	 in our opinion	 in view of the attending circumstances	 be characterised as unreasonable and outside the protection given by article 19(2) or article 19(6). Under el.(b) of sub section(1) of section 2 also there are several conditions	 namely	 that the matter required to be published must not be more than two columns	 that adquate remuneration must be paid for such publication and that such requirement cannot prevail for more than one week. A consideration of these safeguards must	 in our opinion	 have an important bearing in determining the reasonableness of the restrictions imposed by section 2. The prevailing circumstances which led to the passing of the statute	 the urgency and extent of the evil of communal antagonism and hatred which must be combated and prevented	 the facility with which the evil might be aggravated by partisan news and views published in daily newspapers having large circulation and the conditions imposed by the section itself on the exercise of the power conferred by it must all be taken into consideration in judging the reasonableness or otherwise of the law and	 so judged	 section 2 must be held to have imposed reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the rights guaranteed by articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(g) in the interest of public order and of the general public and is protected by articles 19(2) and 19(6). Learned counsel appearing for the petitioner Virendra also maintains that assuming that section 2(1)(a) is valid	 the Notifications actually issued thereunder are much too wide in language and cannot be supported. The 325 operative part of the Notification prevents the petitioner from publishing any article	 news item	 letter or any other matter of any character whatsoever relating to or connected with the "save Hindi agitation". It is said that the petitioner cannot even publish a report or a letter from a correspondent against the it save Hindi agitation ". It cannot publish a report of the statement made on the floor of the House by the Prime Minister deprecating the " save Hindi agitation ". This argument appears to us to have no real substance. If the section is good and that is what we hold it to be and that is what	 for the purposes of this part of the argument	 learned counsel is prepared to assume then the section has conferred on the State Government this power to be exercised if it is satisfied as to the necessity for its exercise for the purposes mentioned in the section. In other words the exercise of the power is made dependent on the subjective satisfaction of the State Government or its delegate. If the State Government or its delegate is satisfied that for the purposes of achieving the specified objects it is necessary to prohibit the publication of any matter relating to the " save Hindi agitation " then for the court to say that so much restriction is not necessary to achieve those objects is only to substitute its own satisfaction for that of the State Government or its delegate. The authority before making the order had applied its mind and had made its estimate of the general trend of the policy of these papers and their possible reactions and had formed its satisfaction as to the necessity for making the orders founded on the several articles published in these papers between May 30	 1957	 and July 8	 1957	 wherein the petitioner had systematically published matters in support of the agitation and its disapproval of everything which might run counter to that agitation. It is admitted that the policy of the papers is to support the " save Hindi agitation ". Therefore	 a grievance that the papers are not allowed even to publish anything against the agitation sounds hollow	 wholly unconvincing and of no substance at all. It may not be unreasonable for the Government to hold the opinion	 in 326 view of the antecedents and policy of these papers that they will not publish any news or views running counter to their policy without adverse comments. Further	 if there happens to be a change in their policy there will be nothing to prevent the petitioner from making a representation to the State Government asking it to modify its Notifications. In our view	 having regard to the body of section 2(1)(a) and the two provisos thereto	 namely	 the conditions as to the satisfaction of the authority in respect of certain matters specified in the section	 the time limit as to the efficacy of the Notifications and the right to make a representation given to the aggrieved party makes this grievance wholly illusory. It is said that the Notifications should have been qualified so as to prohibit the publication of any matter relating to the " save Hindi agitation " which was likely to prejudicially affect the public order. Suppose such a qualification had been super added	 then there should be somebody who would have to judge whether any given publication did or did not affect the public order. If the editor claimed that it did not but the State held that it did who would decide and when ? It would obviously be the court then which would have to decide whether the publication was likely to prejudicially affect the public order. If the Government exercised the power of seizure to stop the circulation of the offending issue then it would do so at the risk of having to satisfy the court that for preventing the public order being prejudicially affected it was necessary to stop such circulation. That would be the issue before the court. Likewise if the Government launched a prosecution under section 4 then also the issue would be the same. That would obviously defeat the very purpose of the section itself which	 for this argument	 is accepted as valid. Thequestion of the necessity for the exercise of the power for the purpose of achieving the specified objects is	 having regard to the very nature of the thing and the surrounding circumstances	 left by the section entirely to the subjective satisfaction of the Government and if the Government exercises that power after being 327 satisfied that it is necessary so to do for the purposes mentioned in the section and if the Notification is within the section	 in the sense that it directs or prohibits the doing of something which the section itself authorises the Government to direct or prohibit	 then nothing further remains to be considered. The ' only issue that can then arise will be whether the Notification has been complied with and the court will only have to decide whether there has been a contravention of the Notification. To introduce the suggested qualification in the Notification will be to make the exercise of the power which is by the section left to the subjective satisfaction of the Government dependent on an objective test subject to judicial scrutiny. That	 as we have explained	 will defeat the very purpose of the section itself. It is lastly contended that the impugned Notifications have been made mala fide in order only to suppress legitimate criticisms and fair comments on public affairs. We have perused the articles annexed to the affidavit in opposition and referred to in the Notifications themselves and we are not satisfied that no reasonable person reading those articles could entertain the opinion and feel satisfied that it was necessary to make the order for the purposes mentioned in the section. We are unable to hold	 on the materials before us	 that the Notifications issued under s.2 were mala fide. The observations hereinbefore made as to the safeguards set forth in the provisions of section 2(1)(a) and (b) cannot	 however	 apply to the provisions of section 3. Although the exercise of the powers under section 3(1) is subject to the same condition as to the satisfaction of the State Government or its delegate as is mentioned in section 2(1)(a)	 there is	 however	 no time limit for the operation of an order made under this section nor is there any provision made for any representation being made to the State Government. The absence of these safeguards in section 3 clearly makes its provisions unreasonable and the learned Solicitor General obviously felt some difficulty in supporting the validity of this 328 section. It is surprising how in the same statute the two sections came to be worded differently. For reasons stated above petition No. 95 of 1957 (Virendra vs The State of Punjab) which impugns the Notifications issued under section 2(1)(a) must be dismissed and petition No. 96 of 1957 (K. Narendra vs The State of Pun ab) which challenges section 3 must be allowed. In the circumstances of these cases we make no order as to the costs of these applications. Petition No. 95 of 1957 dismissed. Petition No. 96 of 1957 allowed.

Summary:
These two petitions challenged the constitutional validity of the Punjab Special Powers (Press) Act	 1956 (No. 38 of 1956) passed by the State Legislature in the wake of the serious communal tension that had arisen between the Hindus and the Akali Sikhs over the question of the partition of the State on a linguistic and communal basis. The petitioners were the editors	 printers and publishers	 respectively	 of the two daily newspapers	 Pratap and Vir Arjun	 printed and published simultaneously from jullundur and New Delhi	 whose admitted policy was to support the "Save Hindi agitation". Two notifications under section 2(1)(a) of the impugned Act were issued against the editor	 printer and publisher of the two papers published from Jullundur by the Home Secretary prohibiting him from printing and publishing any matter relating to the 'Save Hindi agitation ' in the two papers for a period of two months. Two other notifications in identical terms were issued under section 3(1) of the impugned Act against the other petitioner	 the editor	 printer and publisher of the two papers in New Delhi prohibiting him from bringing into the Punjab the newspapers printed and published in. New Delhi from the date of the publication of the notifications. Unlike section 2(1) of the impugned Act which provided a time limit for the operation of an order made thereunder as also for a representation to be made by the aggrieved person	 section 3 of the Act made no such provision. It was contended on behalf of the petitioners that both the sections were ultra vires the State Legislature inasmuch as they infringed articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(g) of the Constitution and were not saved by articles 19(2) and 19(6) of the Constitution. It was urged that the sections imposed not merely restrictions but a total prohibition against the exercise of the said fundamental rights by prohibiting the publication of all matters relating to the 'Save Hindi agitation ' under section 2(1)(a) and by a complete prohibition of the entry of the two papers into the whole of the Punjab under section 3(1) of the Act	 that even supposing 309 that the sections merely imposed restrictions and not a total prohibition	 the restrictions were not reasonable	 that the sections gave unfettered and uncontrolled discretion to the State Government and its delegate	 that the Act did not provide for any safeguard against an abuse of the power	 that the language of the sections being wide enough to cover restrictions both within and cutside the limits of constitutionally permissible legislative action they were ultra vires the Constitution and that the notification under section 2(1)(a) of the Act as made would prevent even the publication of anything against the 'Save Hindi agitation ' and should have been restricted to such matters alone as were likely to prejudicially affect the public order. Held	 that the restrictions imposed by section 2(1)(a) of the impugned Act were reasonable restrictions within the meaning of article 19(2) of the Constitution and the petition directed against the notifications issued thereunder must fail	 but since section 3 Of the Act did not provide for any time limit for the operation of an order made thereunder nor for a representation by the aggrieved party to the State Government	 the restrictions imposed by it were not reasonable restrictions under article 19(6) of the Constitution and the petition directed against the notifications made thereunder must succeed. Held further	 that there can be no doubt that the right of freedom of speech and expression carries with it the right to propagate one 's views and the several rights of freedom guaranteed by article 19(1) of the Constitution are exercisable throughout India but whether or not any restrictions put on those rights amount to a total prohibition of the exercise of such rights must be judged by reference to their ambit. So judged	 the restrictions imposed in the instant cases with regard to the publications relating to only one topic and the circulation of the papers only in a particular territory could not amount to a total prohibition of the exercise of the fundamental rights. The expression "in the interest of" in articles 19(2) and 19(6) of the Constitution makes the protection they afford very wide and although free propagation and interchange of views are ordinarily in social interest	 circumstances may arise when social interest in public order is greater and the imposition of reasonable restrictions on the freedom of speech and expression and on the freedom of carrying on trade or business becomes imperative. Regard being had to the surrounding circumstances in which the impugned Act was passed	 its object	 the extent and urgency of the evil it sought to remedy	 and the enormous power wielded by the Press	 with modern facilities of quick circulation	 and the consequence that any abuse of it might lead to	 the restrictions imposed by the impugned Act must be held to be reasonable restrictions under the Articles. The State of Madras vs V. G. Row	 ; 	 followed. 310 It was only in the fitness of things that the State Legislature should have left the wide preventive powers under the sections to the discretion of the State Government	 charged with the maintenance of law and order	 or to its delegate	 to be exercised on their subjective satisfaction. To make the exercise of these powers justiciable and subject to judicial scrutiny would be to defeat the purpose of the enactment. Dr. N. B. Khare vs The State of Delhi	 ; 	 referred to. But such discretion was by no means unfettered and uncontrolled. The two sections laid down the principle that the State Government or its delegate could exercise such powers only if they were satisfied that such exercise was necessary for the purpose mentioned in the sections and not otherwise. Where there was any abuse of such powers	 therefore	 what could be struck down was the abuse itself but not the statute. Dwaraka Prasad Laxmi Nayain vs The State of Uttar Pradesh	 ; 	 held inapplicable. Harishankar Bagla vs The State of Madhya Pradesh	 	 relied on. In view of the amended provisions of article 19(2) of the Constitution and the language of the two sections limiting the exercise of the powers to the purposes specifically mentioned therein	 the principles enunciated by this Court in Ramesh Thappay 's case and applied to Chintaman Rao 's case could have no application to the instant cases. Ramesh Thappay vs The State of Madras	 ; and Chintaman Rao vs The State of Madhya Pradesh	 (1950) S.C. R. 759	 held inapplicable. The two provisos to section 2(1)(a) and cl. (b) of section 2(1) clearly show that the restrictions imposed by section 2 are reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the rights guaranteed by articles 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(g) and are	 therefore	 protected by articles 9(2) and 19(6) of the Constitution. There could be no basis for the grievance that the notifica tion under section 2(1)(a) prevented the publication even of matters against the 'Save Hindi agitation '. If there was a change in the policy of the papers	 the time limit provided for the operation of the notifications and the right to make a representation provided ample remedies for the petitioner. To introduce into the notifications the suggested qualification would be to make the exercise of the powers conferred by the section dependent on an objective test subject to judicial scrutiny and defeat the very purpose of the section.