Source: http://www.rishabhdara.com/sc/view.php?case=3170
Timestamp: 2020-05-29 22:52:26
Document Index: 520546915

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art. 372', 'Art. 372', 'Art. 372', 'Art.\n372', 'Art.\n372', "Art'\t372", 'Art.\t372', 'art 5', 'Art.\t300', 'Art. 372', 'Art. 372', 'Art. 372', 'Art. 544', 'Art. 300', 'Art. 25', 'Art. 300', 'Art. 167', 'Art. 178', 'Art. 298', 'Art. 372', 'Art. 136']

SUPERINTENDENT & LEGAL REMEMBRANCER,STATE OF WEST BENGAL versus CORPORATION OF CALCUTTA
1967 AIR 997	1967 SCR (2) 170
SUPERINTENDENT & LEGAL REMEMBRANCER,STATE OF WEST BENGAL V. CORPORATION OF CALCUTTA [1966] RD-SC 259 (7 December 1966)
CITATION: 1967 AIR 997	1967 SCR (2) 170
R	1967 SC1643	(57) D	1967 SC1831	(7) F	1968 SC 360	(4,12) R	1969 SC 843	(11) R	1973 SC1425	(28)
Calcutta Municipal Act (W.B. 33 of 1951), ss. 218 and	541- Taking out licence to run market-State if bound by statute;
State Immunity-Rule that Crown is not bound	by statute unless	expressly named or clearly intended, if	applies to India.
Interpretation	of Statutes-State immunity from statutes- Common law rule of construction if proper rule.
The appellant-State of West Bengal was carrying on trade as owner and occupier of a market at Calcutta without obtaining a licence as required under s. 218 of the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1951. The respondent-Corporation of Calcutta filed a complaint against the State for contravention thereof.	The trial Magistrate, accepting the State's contention that	the State was not bound by the provisions of the Act acquitted the State. on appeal, theHigh Court convicted the State and sentenced it to a fine, holding thatthe State was as much bound as a private citizen to take out	a licence.
In appeal to this Court the appellant, relying	on this Court's decision inDirector of Rationing v. Corporation	of Calcutta, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 158,contended that the State was not bound by the provisions of a statute unless it	was expressly named or brought in by necessary implication	and this common law rule of construction, accepted as the law in India was "law in force" within the meaning of Art. 372 of the Constitution and	that in any event by necessary implication the State was excluded from the operation of s.
Held:Per Subba	Rao C.J., Wanchoo, Sikri, Bachawat, Ramaswami, Shelat, Bhargava and Vaidialingam, JJ. (Shah, J.
Per Subba Rao C. J. Wanchoo,	Sikri,	Ramaswami. Shelat, Bhargava and Vaidialingam, JJ. (i) The Common Law rule of construction that the Crown is not, unless expressly named or clearly intended, bound by a statute,, was not accepted as a rule of construction throughout India and even in	the Presidency Towns, it was not regarded as an inflexible	rule of construction. It was not statutorily recognized either by incorporating it in different Acts or in	any General Clauses	Act; at the most, it was relied upon as a rule of general	guidance in	some parts of	the country.	The legislative practice	establishes that the various legislatures of country provided specifically, exemptions in favour of the Crown 171 whenever they intended to do so indicating thereby that they did not rely	upon any presumption but only	on express exemptions. Even those courts that accepted it considered it only as a simple canon of construction and not as a	rule of substantive law. In the City of Calcutta there was no universal recognition of the rule of construction in favour of the Crown.	The Privy Council, in Province of Bombay v.
Corporation of the City of Bombay, (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 27 gave its approval to the rule mainly on concession made by counsel. [180 D-G; 183 H; 184 E-F; 186 D-G] The archaic rule based on the prerogative and perfection of the Crown has no 'relevance to a democratic republic it is inconsistent with the rule of law based on the, doctrine of equality and introduces conflicts and anomalies. The normal construction, namely, that an enactment applies to citizens as well as to State unless it expressly or by necessary implication exempts the State from its operation, steers clear of all	the anomalies and is consistent with	the philosophy of equality enshrined in the Constitution.	[187 F; 188 B] If a rule of	construction accepted	by this Court is inconsistent with the legal philosophy of the	Constitution it is	the duty of this Court to correct its self and	lay down the right rule. This Court must more readily do so in constitutional	matters than in other branches of law.	[176 B-C] Director of Rationing v. Corporation of Calcutta, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 158,, reversed.
Province of Bombay v. Corporation of the City	of Bombay, (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 271, held inapplicable.
Bengal Immunity Co. v. State of Bihar, [1955] 2 S.C.R.	603, referred to.
(ii)Even assuming that the common law rule of construction was accepted as a canon of interpretation throughout India the rule is not "law in force" within the meaning of Article 372 of the Constitution. There is an essential	distinction between	a law and a rule of	construction.	A rule of construction adopted to ascertain the intention of	the legislature is not -a rule of law. [187 D] (iii)The State is not excluded from the operation of s.
218 of the Act by necessary implication. The State is	not the payer as well as the receiver of the fine, or the fine, when levied goes to	the municipal	fund.	Though	the expression fine' is used, in effect and substance, section 541 is a mode of realization of the, fee payable in respect of the licence. The provision for imprisonment in default of fine is only an enabling provision and the court is	not bound to direct the imprisonment of the defaulter. [189 D-H;
190 A-B] Per Bachawat, J : (i) This Court should have in Director of Rationing and	Distribution v. Corporation of Calcutta, [1964] 1 S.C.R. 158, refused to recognise the rule that	the Crown is not bound by a statute save by express words or by necessary implication.	In India the Crown never enjoyed the general	prerogative of overriding a statute and 'standing outside	it. The doctrine of the general immunity of	the Crown from the operation of statutes so far as it is based upon the 'royal prerogative was never imported into India.
Nor is there any compelling reason why the courts in India should	not give full effect to the general	words of a statute on the basis of some artificial rule of construction prevailing in England.	The bulk of the Indian	legislation proceeds upon	the assumption that the Government will be bound unless the contrary is stated. The 172 rule,as	rule of construction, never	gained a firm foothold in untilthe Privy Council decision in	Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation for the City of Bombay, (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 271, in 1946, till which time there	was no settled course of	decisions of	the Indian courts necessitating or justifying the application of this rule to the construction of Indian statutes;	and even in	this decision the propriety of applying the rule to Indian legislation was not considered. The	imposition of	this strict	rule of construction	by the	Privy	Council	was received very	unfavourably in India	till this Court's decision in the Director of Rationing case wherein Province of Bombay was held to have laid down the correct law.	But subsequent decisions of this Court disclosed a tendency to relax and soften the rigour of the rule. Further, in a country	having	a federal system of	government it	is difficult to apply the rule	of Crown exemption	from statutes. This rule was not in force in India and therefore was not "law in force" within the meaning of Art. 372 of the Constitution. [201 D-E; 202 C; 210 A-B, C-D; 205 F; 208 C, H; 210 H; 211 F] This Court has power to reconsider its	previous decisions and this is a fit case where this power should be exercised.
[211 E] Director of Rationing v. Corporation of Calcutta, [1961] 1 S.C.R.	158, reversed.	Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation for the City of Bombay, (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 271, held inapplicable.
Shivenkata Seetararnanjaneya Rice & Oil Mills v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1964] 7 S.C.R. 456 and Bengal Immunity	Co.
(ii)On a question of construction of a statute no rational distinction can be made between the trading and	non-trading activities of the State. [210 G] (iii)There is nothing in the Act to indicate that the State should be excluded from the purview of s. 218(1) 'requiring the	taking out of a licence on payment of	the prescribed fee and s. 5441(1) providing the remedy for	the recovery of fee in face of default. If the State is to be exempt from the application of s. 541(1)(b) it would lead to the anomaly that the State is liable to pay the licence	fee but the Municipality will have no remedy for the recovery of the fee. Also, the fact that under s. 547(A) the court is competent to direct imprisonment in default of fine is no reason	why s.	5411 1) (b) should not be applied to	the State.	The special provisions of s. 541(2) indicate that- the fine realizable under s. 541 is -receivable by	the Municipality.	It follows that the State Government is	the payer but is not the receiver of the fine. The fine,	when levied, is taken by the Municipality in full satisfaction of the demand on account of the licence fee. [212 H; 213B] State of Bihar v. Rani Sonavati Kumari [1961] 1 S.C.R.	728, relied on.
Shah, J. (Dissenting); (i) The English Common Law rule	that the Crown is	not, unless expressly	named	or clearly intended, bound by a statute, is a rule of construction	and was settled law in India before the -Constitution. [197 F;
198 D] The Common Law of England was adopted in this country subject	to local variations and the personal	law of	the parties and the courts which	functioned in	the former British India territory were enjoined to cases not governed by any specific statutory rules according to equity and good conscience,, which meant rules of English Common Law 173 in so far as they were applicable to Indian society.	Them was practically a consistent course of decisions of the High Courts	in India, prior to the Constitution, in	support of the view, affirmed by the Judicial Committee in Province of Bombay	v. Municipal Corporation of the City	of Bombay, (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 271, that the rule that the Crown is not unless	expressly named or clearly intended	bound by a statute applied to India. It	was accepted as	a rule of interpretation ofstatutes applicable to	all	statutes governing state action, authority or property. A difference may have prevailed in Parts of the territories	now comprising theIndian	Union. But this is not peculiar	to this rule of interpretation adoptedby the Courts in British	India.	Where uniform statutes do not apply differences do arise and must be determined according to the law and jurisdiction inherited by the courts administering justice. The present case concerns the administration of law in	the town of Calcutta which has for more than	two centuries been governed by the English Common Law as adopted by the various Acts, Regulations and finally by the Letters Patent. [191 A-D; 192 D-E; 194 F, 195 D-F] Director of Rationing and Distribution v. The Corporation of Calcutta, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 158, followed.
State of West	Bengal	v. Union, [1964] 1	S.C.R.	371 Srivenkata Seetaramanjaneya Rice & Oil Mills v. State of Andhra	Pradesh, [1964] 7 S.C.R. 456, Builders Supply Corporation v.	Union	of India, A.I.R. 1965	S.C. 1061, referred to.
on the date on which the Constitution came into force.	The Constitution has not so fundamentally altered our concept of 'State' as to	abandon the traditional view	about State privileges, immunities	-and rights because	they had a foreign	origin	and on the supposed	theory	of equality between the State and its citizens. The guarantee of equal protection clause of the Constitution does not extend to any differential treatment which may result in the	application of a special rule of interpretation between the State	and the citizens nor has the Constitution	predicated in	all respects equality in matters of interpretation between the State and its citizens. A State can, in the	interest of public	good, select itself for special treatment.	This being so, there is no reason to suppose that a Statute which was framed on	the basis of a well settled rule of	pre- Constitution days which accorded the State	a special treatment in the matter of interpretation. of statutes	must be deemed to have a different meaning on the	supposition that the Constitution has sought to impose equality between the State and the citizens. [198 H-199 F] The fact that in the Indian federal set up sovereignty is divided	between the Union and the States,	and in	the application of	the rule that the State is not bound by a Statute, unless expressly named or clearly implied, conflict between-the State enacting a law and the Union,, or another State,	may arise, does not give rise	to any	insuperable difficulty which renders the	rule inapplicable to	the changed	circumstances, for, it is the State which enacts a legislation in terms general which alone may claim benefit of the rule of interpretation and not any other State.	[199 G] (ii)The rule of interpretation being a settled rule is "law in force" within Me meaning of Art. 372 of the Constitution.
A rule is not any 174 the less a rule of	law because it is a rule	for determination of the intention of the legislature and	for its application requires determination of	facts	and circumstances outside	the statute.	Acceptance of	the proposition that a decision of the highest judicial tribunal before	the Constitution, is law, does not involve the	view that it is immutable. A statue may be repealed,' and	even retrospectively, it would then cease to be in ,operation; a decision which in the view of this Court is erroneous may be overruled and may cease to be regarded as law, but till then it was law in force. [198 D-G] (iii)The application of the rule cannot be restricted to cases where an action of the State in its sovereign capacity is in issue.	In the context of modem	notions of the functions of a welfare State, it is difficult to regard any particular activity of the State as exclusively trading.
[200 A-B] (iv)The	State	of West Bengal was not bound by	the provisions relating to the issue of licences for occupation or conduct of a market. [200 F] There is no, express reference to the State, nor is there anything peculiar in the nature purpose and object or in the language used	in the enactment relating to the issue of licences, which may suggest that the State must by necessary implication be bound by its provision. [200 E]
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 29, 1964	,of the Calcutta High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 369 of 1962.
S. D.	Banerjee, Advocate-General for the State of	West Bengal, B. Sen, P. K. Chatterjee, M. K. Banerjee and P. K. Bose, for the appellant.
M.C. Setalvad,	A. N. Sinha and Sukumar Ghose,	for the respondent, N.S. Bindra, R. H. Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey, for inter- vener No. 1.
V. A.	Seyid	Muhamad, Advocate-General for the State of Kerala and A. G. Puddisery, for intervener No. 3.
The Judgment of SUBBA RAO, C.J., WANCHOO, SIKRI, RAMASWAMI, SHELAT,	BHARGAVA and VAIDIALINGAM, JJ. was delivered by SBBBA	RAO, C. J. BACHAWAT	J., delivered	a separate concurring Judgment.	SHAH, J. delivered a	dissenting Opinion.
Subbarao, C.J. This Full Bench of 9 Judges has	been cons- tituted to consider the correctness of the decision of	this Court 175 in Director of Rationing and Distribution v. The Corporation of Calcutta(1).
The relevant facts are simple and are not in dispute.	The State of West Bengal was carrying on the trade of a daily market at 1, Orphanganj Road, Calcutta, without obtaining a licence	as required under s. 218 of the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1951 (West Bengal Act 33 of 1951)	hereinafter called the Act. The Corporation of Calcutta	filed	a complaint against	the State of	West Bengal in	the Court of	the Presidency and Municipal Magistrate, Calcutta, under s.	541 of the	Act for contravening the provisions	of s.	218 thereof. Under s. 218 of the Act, every	person	who exercises or carries on in Calcutta any trade,	shall	take out a	licence and shall pay for the same such	fee as is mentioned in that behalf in	Schedule IV to the	Act.
Admittedly for	the year 1960-61, the	Government of	West Bengal did not take out a licence under the said section but carried	on the said trade. The main	contention of	the Government was	that the State was not bound by the	pro- visions	of the Act. The learned Magistrate, accepting	the said contention, acquitted the State.	On appeal, the	High Court of Calcutta held that the State was carrying on	the business of running a market and, therefore, it was as	much bound as a private citizen to take out a licence.	It distinguished the decision of this Court in	Director of Rationing and Distribution v. The Corporation of Calcutta(1) on the ground that the said decision was concerned with	the sovereign activity of the State. In the result the State of West Bengal was convicted under s. 537 of the	Act-s.	537 appears	to be a mistake for s. 541-and sentenced to pay a fine of Rs. 250, with the direction that when realized, it should	be paid to the Corporation.	Hence	the present appeal.
Learned Advocate General of West Bengal raised before us the following points: (1)	The State is	not bound by	the provisions of	a statute unless it is	expressly named or brought in by necessary implication; (2) the said principle equally applies to sovereign and non-sovereign activities of a State; and Mr. N. S. Bindra, learned counsel appearing for the Attorney General	raised before us the third point, namely,	this Court has no power under the Constitution to review its earlier judgment.
While the learned Advocate General contended that the	rule of construction in favour of the State was part of	the common	law of England accepted as the law of this country and, therefore, was law in force within the meaning of	Art.
372 of the Constitution, Mr. N. S. Bindra argued that	the said rule of construction was law of the land in that it was declared to be so by the Judicial Committee in Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of (1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 158.
The third contention need not detain us, for it has	been rejected by this Court in The Bengal Immunity Company Limited v. The State of Bihar(2). There a Bench of 7 Judges unanimously held that there was nothing in the	Constitution which prevented the Supreme Court from departing from a previous decision of its own if it was satisfied of	its error and of its baneful effect on the general interests of the public. If the aforesaid rule of construction accepted by this Court is inconsistent with the legal philosophy of our Constitution, it is our duty to correct ourselves	and lay down the right rule. In constitutional matters which affect the evolution of our polity, we must more readily do so than in other branches of law, as	perpetuation of a mistake	will	be harmful to	public	interests. While continuity and	consistency are conducive to	the smooth evolution of the rule of law, hesitancy to set right deviations will retard its growth. In this case, as we	are satisfied that the said rule of construction is inconsistent with our republican polity and, if accepted, bristles	with anomalies, we -have no hesitation to reconsider our earlier decision.
At the outset it will be convenient to notice the facts of the decision of this Court in Director of Rationing	and' Distribution v. The Corporation of Calcutta(3) and	the reasons	given by this Court for applying the said rule of construction to an Indian statute. There, the Director of Rationing and	Distribution was using certain	premises in Calcutta for storing rice flour, etc. without taking out any licence	under s. 385 (1)(a) of the Calcutta Municipal	Act, 1923.	The Corporation of, Calcutta	filed a complaint against the said Director in the Magistrate's Court for	the contravention of the said provision. This Court held that the State was not bound by the provisions of s. 386 (1)(a) of the	said Act and that the appellant was not liable to prosecution for the contravention of	the said section.
Sinha,	C. J., speaking for Imam and Shah, JJ., gave	one judgment, Sarkar, J.,	gave a separate but	concurrent judgment, and	Wanchoo, J., recorded	his dissent.	The reasoning of Sinha, C.J., is found in the following passage :
"It is well-established that the common law of England is that the King's prerogative is illustrated by the rule that the Sovereign is not necessarily bound by a statutory law which binds the subject. This is further enforced by the rule that the King is not bound by a statute unless he is expressly named or unless he is bound by	necessary implication	or unless, the statute being for the public good, it would be absurd to exclude the King	from it." (at page 170).
(1) [1946] L.H. 73 I.R. 271.	(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 603.
(3 [1961] 1 S.C.R. 158 177 "That was law applicable to India also, as authoritatively laid down by the Privy Council in the case referred to above [(1946) L. R. 73 I.A. 271)]...... it (law in force under	Art.
372 of the Constitution) must be	interpreted as including the common law of England which was adopted as the law of this country before the Constitution	came into force." (At p.
Sinha,	C.J.,	therefore, held that	the said rule	of construction was, part of the common law of England, that it was adopted by this, country and that Art'	372 of	the Constitution continued it. Sarkar, J., on the other hand, agreed with the conclusion arrived at by Sinha, C.J., but on a different ground. He based his conclusion	not on	any common law doctrine, but simply on the ground that the	said rule of construction of statutory provisions was accepted and followed in England, America and India. Wanchoo, J., in his dissent, put the case in a different perspective.	The following, passage brings out his line of thought :
"Two things are clear	from this modern conception of royal prerogative,	namely	(1) that there must be a Crown or King to whom the royal prerogative attaches, and (2) that	the prerogative must be part of the common law of England.	Both these conditions existed	when the Privy Council decision in Province1 of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay(1) was given in October 1946; the	King was still there and the Privy Council	held that the English common law rule of construc- tion applied to Indian legislation as much as to English ,statutes." (At p. 184).
"In our country the Rule of Law prevails	and our Constitution	has guaranteed	it by	the provisions contained in Part III	thereof as well as	by other provisions	in other Parts...... It is to my mind inherent in	the conception of the Rule of Law that the State, no less than its citizens and others, is bound by the laws of the land.	When the King as the embodiment of all power-executive, legislative and judicial-has disappeared and in	our republican Constitution, sovereign power	has been distributed among various organs created 'thereby, it seems, to	me that there is neither	justification nor necessity	for continuing the rule of construction based on the royal, prerogative." (At p. 185).
"But where the royal prerogative is merely a rule of construction of statutes based on	the existence	of the Crown in England and	for historical reasons, I fail to see why in a democratic republic, the courts	should	not follow the ordinary principle of	construction that no one (1) [1946] L.R. 73 I.A. 271.
178 is exempt from the operation of a statute unless the statute expressly	grants	the exemption or the exemption arises by necessary implication." (At pp. 188-189).
The conflict between the two views expressed by the learned Judges	in the earlier decision mainly rests on the meaning of the expression "law in force" in Art.	372 of	the Constitution.	While Sinha, C.J., took the view that	the common	law of England, including the rule of construction, was accepted as the law of this country and was, therefore, the law in force within the meaning of the said Article, Wanchoo, J., took the view that whatever might be said of the substantive laws, 'a rule of construction adopted by the common law of England and accepted by the Privy Council at a time when the Crown was functioning in India, was not the law in force within the meaning of the said Article.
We shall now consider the validity of the conflicting views The common law of England is clear on the subject.	In Halsbury's Laws of England, 3rd Edn., Vol. 7, in Part 5 of the Chapter on "Constitutional Law" under the heading	"The Royal Prerogative", the Royal prerogatives are enumerated and their limitations are given. In para 464 it is stated :
"The general rule is that prerogatives cannot be affected or	parted with by	the Crown, except by express statutory authority." The prerogative right can be taken away by law because	the law is made by the Crown with the assent of the Lords	and the Commons. It can be taken away only by law to which	the Crown is a party. Whether a particular statute has taken away such right pertains to the domain of the rule of construction. The relevant rule of construction evolved by judicial decisions in England may be stated thus :
"At all	events,	the Crown is	not reached except by express words or by necessary implication in any case where it would be ousted of an	existing prerogative	or interest." (See Perry v. Eames) (1).
It is	said	much to the same effect in Maxwell's Interpretation of Statutes, 11th Edn., at page 129, thus :
"It is presumed that the legislature does	not intend to deprive the Crown of	any prerogative, right or property, unless it expresses	its intention to do so in explicit terms, or makes the inference irresistible." The same rule is given in Bacon's Abridgment 7th Edn., 9.462. The legal position in England may be summarised thus :
(1) [1891] 1 179 "The substantive	rule of law is that	the prerogative of the Crown can only be taken away by law. The rule of construction evolved by the courts to ascertain the	legislative intention is, that it is presumed that a statute has not taken away the	prescriptive right unless it has expressly or by necessary implication done so." There is an essential distinction between a substantive	law and a	rule of construction and that is well expressed by Craies	in his book "On Statute Law", 6th Edn., at p.	10, thus :
"A rule	of law, e.g.,	the Rule against Perpetuities or	the Rule in Shelley's	case (abolished in 1925), exists independently of the circumstances of the parties to a deed, and is	inflexible and	paramount to	the intention	expressed in the deed.	A rule of law cannot be said to control the construction of a statute, inasmuch as a British statute is itself part of the supreme law of the land and overrides any pre-existing rules with which it is inconsistent. A rule or	canon	of construction, whether of will, deed	or statute, is not inflexible, but is merely a presumption in favour of a particular meaning in case of ambiguity. This was well expressed by Bowen, L.J. in L. N. W. Ry. v. Evans:(1) 'These canons do not override the language of a	statute where the language is clear :	they are only	guides to enable us to understand what is inferential. In each case the Act of Parliament is all powerful, and when	its meaning	is unequivocally expressed	the necessity for rules of construction disappears and reaches its vanishing point." The same principle was stated by Bhashyam Ayyangar, J., in Bell v. The Municipal Commissioners	for the City	of Madras(2) thus :
"These compendious canons of interpretation which are in the nature of maxims can only be regarded as mere guides to the interpretation of Statutes and ought not to be applied as if they were statutory clauses, enacted with all the precision	and	provisos of	an Interpretation Act." Franfurter, J.,	said to the same effect in United States v. United Mine	Workers	of America thus : (3) "At best, this canon, like other	generalities about statutory construction, is not a rule of law. Whatever persuasiveness it may have in construing a particular (1) [1893] I Ch. 16, 27.	(2) I.L.R. [1902] 25 Mad.
180 statute derives from the subject-matter and the terms of the enactment in its total environment." Even in England this rule of interpretation has not	been treated	as inflexible. It is gradually losing ground in many branches	of law. The incongruity of the rule of discrimination	in favour of the Crown was pointed out by Glanville L.	Williams in	his treatise	on "Crown Proceedings", at p. 53 :
"The rule originated in the Middle Ages,	when it perhaps had	some justification.	Its survival,	however, is due to little but	the vis inertiae." The author continues at p. 54 :
"With the great extension in the activities of the State -and the number of servants employed by it, and with the modern idea, expressed in the Crown Proceedings Act, [compare in	this connection Art.	300 of	our Constitution], "that the State should be accountable in	wide measure to the law, the presumption should be that a statute binds the Crown rather than it does not." The next question is, how far and to what extent the common law of England relating to the prerogatives of the Crown has been accepted as the law of our country? Nothing has	been placed before us to show that the entire body of the common law pertaining	to prerogatives was accepted	as the	law throughout India. India at the relevant time comprised Provinces and	Native States.	As Bhashyam Ayyangar,	J., pointed	out in Bell v. The Municipal Commissioners for the City of Madras() "the prerogatives of the Crown in India-a country in which the title of the British Crown is of a very mixed character-may vary in different provinces, as also in the Presidency	towns as distinguished from the mofussil.
'The determination, with anything like legal precision, of all the prerogatives of the British Crown in India is by no means an easy task." It is well-known that the Common law of England	was applied as such in the original sides of	the High Courts of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras, and that in	the mofussil courts the principles embodied in the	common	law were invoked in appropriate cases on the ground of justice, equity	and good conscience.	It cannot, therefore, be posited that either the entire body of common law of England relating to prerogatives of the King or even the rule of construction as forming part of that law was accepted as law in every part of the country.	It has	to be	established whenever a question arises as to what part of the common law was accepted as the law in a particular part of the country.
Learned	Advocate General of West Bengal referred us to	the decision of the Privy Council in Province of Bombay v.
181 Corporation of	the City of Bomhay(1) in support of	his contention that the common law of England was	accepted as the law of our country in that regard. In that case	the question was whether the Crown was not bound by s. 222(1) and s. 265 of the City of Bombay Municipal Act, 1888 which gave the Municipality power to carry water-mains for	the purposes of water supply through across or under any street and into, through or under any land "whatsoever within	the city."	When the Municipal Corporation wanted to lay water- mains through	the land belonging to	the Government of Bombay,	the Government did not agree except on some condi- tions.	Thereafter, the dispute between the	parties	was referred to the High Court. Ultimately, setting aside	the order of the High Court, the Privy Council held that	the rule that no statute bound the Crown unless the Crown	was expressly or by necessary implication made bound thereunder applied	to the Crown in India and that there was no	such express	intention or	necessary implication in the	said section. Indeed, the High	Court also accepted	that principle, but on the construction of the relevant provisions it came to the conclusion that there was such a necessary implication thereunder. On the application of the principle there was no contest before the Privy Council.
The Privy Council expressly stated so at p. 274, when it observed :
"The High Court	held,	following previous decisions of its own, that the principle to be applied for the decision of the question whether or not the Crown is bound by a statute is no different in the case	of Indian Legislation from	that which has long	been applied in England. The parties concurred in accepting this view, and their Lordships regard it as correct." The decision made on a concession made by the parties	even though the principle conceded was accepted by the Privy Council	without discussion, cannot be given the same value as one given upon a careful consideration of the pros	and cons of the question raised.	Further, no argument	was raised	before	the Privy Council that the Common law of England	had legal force only in the said three Presidency towns and not in the rest of the country, for that	case happened to be one that arose in the City of Bombay.	The observations of the Privy Council that the principles obtaining in England also governed the Crown in India	are, rather	wide. Nor any argument was raised before the Privy Counsel making a distinction between substantive branches of common	law and mere rules of	construction.	It is	not possible to predicate what the Privy Council would have said if that distinction had been placed before it.	Be that as it may, this decision cannot be taken as finally deciding the question that is raised before us.
It was held in The Secretary of State in Council of India v.
The Bombay Landing and Shipping Company (Limited)(1) that in a winding up proceedings the Crown was entitled to the	same precedence in regard to the debts due to it, in England, in Ganpat	Putava v. Collector of Kanara(2) that the Crown	was entitled to the same precedence in regard to fees payable to it by	a pauper plaintiff, in The Secretary of State	for India v. Mathura Bhai() that section 26 of the Limitation Act, 1877 being a branch of substantive law did not affect the Crown's right, in Motilal Virchand v. The Collector of Ahmedabad(4) that the Mamlatdars' Courts could not entertain and decide a suit to which the collector was a party in	The Government of Bombay v. Esufali Salebhai(5) that the Crown had a prerogative right to intervene and claim	compensation in Land Acquisition proceedings, in Hiranand Khushiram v.
Secretary of State(6), that the Crown was not bound by	the provision of the Bombay Municipality Act, in The Secretary of State for India v. The Municipal Corporation of Bombay (No. 1)(7) that the Crown was subject to a charge under s.
212 of the Bombay City Municipal Act.	A careful study of these decisions discloses that all of them	related to particular prerogatives of the Crown and that the Court held either	that the prerogative of the Crown Was taken away by the statute or not, having regard to the construction placed by it on the relevant statute.	It is true that in some of the decisions the said rule of construction was noticed, but as the	decisions turned upon the construction of	the relevant provisions, it could not be said that the said rule had been accepted as an inflexible rule of construction by the Bombay High Court. In one of the judgments even	the applicability of the rule of construction was doubted.
A learned thesis on the subject is found in the judgment of Bhashyam Ayyangar, J., in	Bell	v. The Municipal Commissioners for the City of Madras(8). The Superintendent of the	Government Gun-carriage Factory, Madras, having brought timber belonging to the Government into the City of Madras	without taking out a licence and paying the licence fees prescribed by s. 341 of the City of Madras Municipal Act, was prosecuted. There was no mention of Government in the said section. A Division Bench of the Madras High Court (1) [1868] 5 Ho H. C. Rep. 23,27.
183 Indian legislation, statutes imposing duties or taxes bound the Government unless the very nature of the duty or tax was such is to be inapplicable to it. Bhashyam Ayyangar, J., in his judgment, after considering all the relevant material on the subject statutes and English and Indian decisions-came to the conclusion that exemption from the payment of tolls, rates and taxes was not in reality a	prerogative of	the Crown, but depended solely upon the right construction to be put on the Crown grant or the statute in question. Though the learned Judge noticed the rule of construction	and affirmed its application both to English and Indian statutes vis-a-vis the Crown, he pointed out that the said rule, like every cognate	rule of construction was not really a	pre- rogative of the Crown but only a canon of interpretation and a mere guide to the interpretation of statutes. That	case arose in the Madras City. In Madras the_ position was	that non-liability of the Crown to taxes was not treated as	its prerogative and the aforesaid rule of construction was	only treated	as a	guide in interpreting the provisions of a statute.
Now coming to Calcutta, a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Corporation of Calcutta	v. Bhupal Chandra Sinha(1) held	that the Crown was bound by s.	421 of	the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923 and that the unwholesome barley found in the Government stores was liable to be destroyed.
No doubt, the Court re-stated the said rule of	construction and came to the conclusion that by necessary implication the State was bound by the said provision.
A Division Bench of the same High Court in Corporation of Calcutta v. Director of Rationing and Distribution(2)	held that the State Government which was carrying on a trade at premises No. 259, Upper Chitpur Road,	Calcutta, and	was using or permitting the use of the said premises for	the purpose	of storing rice etc. without licence was liable to be convicted under s. 386(1)(a) of the	Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923, read with s. 488 thereof When the said rule of construction was pressed upon the learned Judges, they	held that the law, even after coming into force of the Government of India Act, 1935, was that the Crown or the Government was bound by the	statute	unless it was	exempted from	its operation either expressly or	by necessary	implication.
They did not, therefore, accept the rule of	construction laid down by the Privy Council. It cannot, therefore, be said that in the City of Calcutta there was	a universal recognition of	the rule of construction in favour of	the Crown.
The legislative practice in India establishes that	the various	Legislatures of the country provided	specifically exemptions in (1 ) A.I.R 1950 Cal. 421. (2)A.I.R. 1955 Cal.282.
184 favour	of the	Crown	whenever they	intended to do so indicating thereby that they did not rely upon	any presumption but only	on express exemptions, see,	for instance, s. 74 of the Contract Act, s. 9 of the Specific Relief	Act, s. 90 of the Indian Registration Act, s.	2(a) and (b) of the Indian Easements Act, The Crown Grants Act XV of 1895, ss. 295 (proviso), 356(b) and 411 and 616 (a) of the Code of Civil Procedure (old), s. 212 (proviso) of	the Indian	Companies Act, s. 20 (proviso) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878, s. 1(4)(i) of the Indian Ports Act, s. 3, proviso (1) of the Indian Stamps Act, 1899, and s. 3 of the India Act XI of 1881 etc. What is more, Act XI of 1881 empowered the Governor-General in Council by order to prohibit	the levy by a Municipal Corporation of any specified tax payable by the	Secretary of State for India	and to	direct	the Secretary of State for India to pay to the Municipal Corporation in lieu of such tax some definite amounts.	This Act was a pointer against the contention that there was a presumption in favour of the Crown that a statute was	not binding	on it.	It is true that there are other Acts where there are specific provisions to the effect that	the provisions of the Acts shall be binding on the	Government:
see s. 10 of the Arbitration Act (Act X of 1940), s. 116 of the Oil Field Regulation and Development Act (Act LIII of 1948). Subsequent to the making of the Constitution	also there were Acts where such a provision was found. There is no firm legislative practice based upon the said presumptive rule of construction. Different statutes adopted different devices	to achieve their desired results. The	legislative practice, therefore, does not support the contention that in India the said rule of construction was accepted. It	only shows that wherever an exemption was intended to be given to the Government it was expressly mentioned and wherever there might	have been any	doubt	of the	liability of	the Government, it	was expressly made liable. The rule of construction was not	statutorily recognised	either	by incorporating it in different Acts or in any General Clauses Act; at the most, it was relied upon as a rule	of general guidance in some parts of the country.
Some of the American decisions may usefully be referred to at this stage.	It was said that in America where the Crown did not exist, the same rule of construction was adopted in that country as law of the land and therefore by analogy the same legal position must be accepted in India.
The decision in H. Snowden Marshall v. People of the State of New York(1) only lays down that the State of New York has the common law prerogative right of priority over unsecured creditors. This case has nothing to do with the rule of construction but was based upon the common law	prerogative of the (1) (1920) 65 L.cd. 315.
185 Crown expressly embodied in the State's Constitution.	The decision in Guarantee Trust Company of New York v. United States of America(1) accepted the immunity of the sovereign from he operation of statutes of limitation. That decision was based upon the doctrine of public	policy	evolved by courts,	though in evolving the said policy the	courts	had been influenced, to some extent, by the doctrine of	the pregrogative of the Crown. This decision also does	not express any opinion on the rule of construction.
The decision in United States of America v.	United	Mine Workers	of America(2) ruled that statutes which in general terms, divested pre-existing rights and privileges would not be applied to the sovereign without express words to	that effect.	But Frankfurter, J., after citing the	said rule, pointed out that "At best, this canon, like	other	generalities about statutory construction, is not a rule of law." The same rule	was again re-stated in United States of America	v. Reginald P. Wittek.(3) The	question there	was whether the District of Columbia Emergency Rent Act did	not apply to Government-owned defence houses in the District such as Bellevue Houses. The Court relied not only upon the said rule of construction but also on other circumstances in support of the conclusion that the United States was exempt from the operation of that Act by necessary implication. In Jess Larson, as War	Assets	Administrator and Surplus Property Administrator v. Domestic and	Foreign,, Commerce Corporation,(4)	the purchaser of surplus coal from the	War Assets	Administration	filed	a suit	against the	said Administration for an injunction prohibiting the latter from selling	or delivering the coal to any other person.	The suit was dismissed on the ground that the sovereign immunity in suits for injunction or for specific performance	was based upon public policy. But it was argued that	the principle of sovereign immunity was an archaic hangover	not consonant with modern morality; the majority conceded	that there was substance in such a viewpoint as applied to suits for damages. Mr. Justice Frankfurter in his dissent	went further	and pointed out that the doctrine of sovereign immunity was	in disfavour.	The American	decisions, therefore, were mainly based either on the provisions of the constitution of the State or on. the ground of public policy evolved	by Courts. The founding fathers carried with	them the English doctrine	of the	Crown	Prerogative and it continued to influence some of the principles of public policy evolved in that country.	Even so, the decisions made it clear that the rule of construction was relied upon	only as one of the guides to arrive at the intention of a particular statute. That apart, the fact that	the common law of England pertaining to 2,1.4 (1)(1938) 82 L. ed. 1224.
186 prerogatives influenced some of the decisions of the Supreme Court ,of the United States cannot help us in coming to a conclusion whether the said rule had become part of the	Law in India.
Mr. Bindra, the learned counsel appearing for the Attorney- General	sought to reach at the same result by	a different process. He argued that the decision of the Privy Council in Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the	city of Bombay and another(1) is a law of the country. We	have already	noticed the decision	in another context.	It accepted the rule of construction on a concession made by the counsel. Even if it was a considered decision on	the point, it was nothing more than an application of a rule of construction with which it was familiar for ascertaining the intention of statutory provisions applicable to the Bombay city.
To sum up : some of the doctrines of common law of England were administered as the law in the Presidency Towns of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras. The Common Law of England	was not adopted in the rest of India. Doubtless some of	its principles were embodied in the statute law of our country.
That apart, in the mofussil, some principles of Common	Law were invoked 'by courts on the ground of justice, equity and good conscience. It is, therefore, a question of fact in each case whether any particular branch of the	Common	Law became a part of the law of India or in any particular	part thereof. The aforesaid rule of construction is only a canon of interpretation, it is not a rule of substantive	law.
Though it was noticed in some of the judgments of the Bombay High Court, the decisions therein mainly turned upon	the relevant statutory provisions.	One decision even questioned its correctness. There is nothing to show that it	was applied	in other parts of the country on the ground of justice, good con.science and equity. In Madras, it was not considered to be a binding rule of law, but only as a simple canon of construction.	In Calcutta there was a conflict :
one Bench accepted the construction and the other rejected it. The Privy Council gave its approval to the rule mainly on the concession of Advocates and that decision related to Bombay City. It is, therefore, clear that the said rule of construction was not accepted as a rule of	construction throughout India and even in the Presidency towns it was not regarded as inflexible rule of construction. In short it has not become a law* of the land.
Let us	now proceed on the assumption	that it has	been accepted as a rule of construction throughout India.	This leads	us to	the question whether	the said rule	of construction is the law of the land after the	Constitution came into force. Under Article 372, (1)73 I.A. 271.
187 all the laws in force in the territory of India	immediately before the commencement of this Constitution shall continue in force, therein until altered or repealed or amended by a competent Legislature or other competent authority. Can it be said that the said canon of construction was a 'law in force'	which can only be amended by a	Legislature? Under Explanation (1) to the said Article, the expression 'law in force' shall include a law passed or,. made by a Legislature or other competent authority in the	territory of India before	the commencement of the Constitution. it has	been held by this court that the said expression includes	not only enactments of the Indian Legislatures but also	the Common	Law of the land which was being administered by the Courts in India. (See Director of Rationing and Distribution v. The Corporation of Calcutta and others() and V. S.	Rice and Oil Mills & others v. State of Andhra Pradesh(2).	But it is not possible to hold. that a mere rule of construction adopted	by English Courts, and also by some of	the Indian Courts	to ascertain the intention of the Legislature was a law in force within the meaning of this term.	There is an essential distinction	between a law and a canon	of construction. This distinction between law and the canon of construction has been noticed by us earlier and we have held that a canon of construction is not a rule of law. We	are not concerned	here.	with	the statutory	rules	of interpretation.	We are,- therefore, of the opinion that a rule of construction is not a 'law in	force'	within	the meaning of Article 372.
The next question is whether this Court should adopt	the rule of construction	accepted by the Privy	Council in interpreting statute vis-a-vis the Crown. There are	many reasons	why the said rule of construction is	inconsistent with and incongruous in the present set-up we have no Crown, the archaic rule based on the prerogative and perfection of the Crown has no relevance to a democratic republic; it is inconsistent with the rule of law based on the dictrine of equality. It introduces conflicts and discrimination. To illustrates: (1) State "A" made a general	Act without expressly making the Act binding on the said State. In	the same State States "B", "C" and "D" and the	Union	have properties. Would the rule of construction apply only to the properties of State "A?' or to the properties of all the States	and the Union ? (2) The Central Act	operated in different States; the rule of construction was accepted in some States- and rejected in other States. Is the Central Act to be construed in different States in different ways ? (3) Acts in general terms might be made in different States- States where the said rule of construction was accepted	and the States where it was not so accepted.. 'Should different States construe (1) [1961] 1.S.C.R. 158.	(2) [1965] 3 S.C.R. 289 188 the General Acts in different ways,	some applying	the presumption and some ignoring it ? There is, therefore, no justification for this Court to accept	the English canon of construction, for it brings about diverse	results and conflicting decisions. On	the other hand, the normal construction, namely, that	the general	Act applies to citizens as well as to State unless it expressly or by necessary implication exempts the State from its operation, steers clear of all the said anomalies.
'It prima facie applies to all States and subjects alike, a construction consistent with the philosophy of equality	en- shrined in our Constitution. This natural approach avoids the archaic rule and moves with the modern trends. This win not cause any hardship to the State. The State can make an Act, if it chooses, providing for its exemption from	its operation. Though the State is not expressly exempted	from the operation of an Act, under certain circumstances such an exemption may necessarily be implied. Such an Act, provided it does not infringe fundamental rights, will give	the necessary relief to the State.	We, therefore, hold that the said canon of construction was not 'the law in force' within the meaning of Art. 372 of the Constitution and that in	any event having regard to the foregoing reasons the said canon of construction should not be applied for	construing statutes in India. In this view it is not necessary to express	our opinion on the question whether the aforesaid rule of construction would not apply to the trade activities of the State, even	if it	applied	to its sovereign activities.
Even so, it was contended that by necessary implication	the State was excluded from the operation of s. 218 of the	Act.
It was	contended that, as the infringement of the	said provision entailed a	prosecution and, on	conviction, imposition of fine and imprisonment, and that as the State could not obviously be put in prison and as the fine imposed on the	State would merge in the consolidated fund of	the State,	it should necessarily be implied that the State	was outside	the scope of the section. This argument was based upon the reasoning of Wanchoo, J.,	in his dissenting judgment in Director	of Rationing and Distribution v.
Corporation of Calcutta(1). To appreciate the argument it is necessary to notice the relevant provisions of the	Act.
Under s. 218(1) every person who exercises or carries on in Calcutta any of the trades indicated in Schedule IV shall annually take out a licence before the prescribed date	and pay the prescribed fee.	Section 218 is in Ch.	XIII. Under s. 541(1)(b) if any person exercises on or after the first day of	July in any year any profession, trade	or calling referred to in Chapter XIII without	having	the licence prescribed by that chapter, he shall be punished with fine;
189 such fine, when levied, shall be taken in full	satisfaction of the	demand on account of the said	licence. Under s.
547A, which was inserted in the Act by s. 96 of the Calcutta Municipal (Amendment)	Act, 1953 (West Bengal	Act XIX of 1953),	in every case of an offence punishable	with imprisonment or fine,	or with fine only, in which	the offender is sentenced to pay an fine, it shall be competent to the Court to direct that in default of payment of the	fine the offender shall suffer imprisonment for such term or further term not exceeding six months as may be fixed by the Court. Under the Act there is a	distinction between fines imposed under s. 537 and under s. 541 of the Act.	The fines under s. 537 are in respect of	offences enumerated therein and they certainly go to the coffers of the States.
In respect of such offences it may be contended that, as the fines paid reach the State itself, there is an	implication' that the State is not bound	by the	sections mentioned therein, for a person who receives the fine cannot be	the same person who pays it. This incongruity may lead to	the said necessary implication. But the same cannot be said in respect of the provisions covered by s. 541. Under the said section the -fine recovered for the infringement of the said provisions, when levied, shall be taken in full satisfaction of the demand on account of the	licence	not taken thereunder. Though the expression "fine" is -used, in effect and substance, s. 541 is a mode of realization of the fee payable in respect of the licence: it goes to	the municipal fund and forms part of it. In this	context, s.
115 of the Act is relevant. Under that section, there shall be one Municipal Fund held by the Corporation in trust	for the purposes of the Act to which the	moneys	realised or realisable under the	Act (other than fine	levied	by Magistrates) and all	moneys otherwise received by	the corporation shall be credited.	Reliance is placed upon	the words within the brackets, viz., "other than fine levied by Magistrates" and an argument is raised that the fine levied under s. 541 will not be credited to the Municipal Fund.
That interpretation brings that section into conflict	with s. 512. On the other hand, a harmonious construction of these two provisions makes it clear that the fine mentioned in s. 115 is the fine imposed under s. 537, for s. 541(2) in terms directs that the fine shall be credited to the demand.
All amounts credited towards demands, it cannot be denied, necessarily have to be credited in the Municipal Fund.	Nor s. 547A detracts from our conclusion. Under that section in every case of an offence where the offender is sentenced to pay a	fine, it shall be competent to the court to direct that in default of payment of the fine the offender shall suffer	imprisonment.	It was said	that this section necessarily implied that the State could not be, hit by s.
218, as it could not obviously be imprisoned for default of payment	of fine. But it will be noticed that this section only confers a discretionary power on the court and	the court is not bound to 190 direct	the imprisonment of the defaulter. It is only an enabling provision. There are other ways of collecting	the money from ]persons against whom an order under s. 547A is not made. This enabling provision does not	necessarily imply an exemption in favour of the State.
For all the aforesaid reasons we hold that the State is	not exempt from the operation of s. 218 of the Act.
In the result we hold that the conclusion arrived at by	the High Court is correct.	The appeal fails and is dismissed.
Shah, J. The High Court of Calcutta convicted the State of West Bengal of the offence of carrying on trade as owner and occupier of a market at Calcutta without obtaining a license under s. 218	of the Calcutta	Municipal Act, 1951,	and imposed a sentence of fine of Rs. 250/-. In this appeal, it is urged that the State not being by express enactment or clear intendment bound by the provisions of the Act relating to the obtaining of a license for carrying on trade as owner or occupier of a market, the order of	conviction is	not sustainable, and reliance is placed upon the	judgment of this Court in Director of Rationing & Distribution v.	The Corporation of Calcutta & Ors.(1) The Corporation contends that since India became a Republic, the rule that "Crown is not bound by statute unless specially	named,	or clearly intended" has no application to the interpretation of	the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1951. The argument is urged on	two grounds	: (i) since India has ceased to be governed in	the name of the British Crown, the rule in terms has no application; and (ii) even if it be assumed that the	rule applies to the State as the sovereign authority, it must be deemed	to be	superseded, for to accept it would be to countenance unequal treatment between the State and	the citizens.
The origin of the rule in England that the Crown is	not bound by a statute unless expressly named	or clearly intended lay undoubtedly in the prerogative of the British Crown.	In Bacon's Abridgement, 7th	Edn., p. 462,	the general	rule is stated thus: "where a statute	is general, and thereby any prerogative, right, title or	interest is divested or taken away from the King, in such case the	King shall not be bound, unless the statute is made	by express terms to extend to him." But the Crown is bound where it is expressly named or by clear implication intended to be bound.	An inference that the Crown was intended to be bound by implication is, however, not to be raised merely because the Crown assented to the statute, for as stated by Plowden "when the King gives	his assent he	does not mean to prejudice himself or to bar himself of his liberty and	his privilege, but he assents that it shall be a law among	his subjects." (1) [1961]1 S.C.R. 158.
191 The common law of England was adopted in this country subject	to local variations and the personal	law of	the parties, within the Presidency towns by the establishment of Mayors'	Courts	in the, 18th	century	with the express, injunction to apply that law. In the mufassal of the three Presidencies the common law was adopted by the	Regulations constituting tribunals for administration	of justice enjoining them	to decide disputes according	to justice, equity	and good conscience', and elsewhere by	the diverse Civil Courts Acts imposing similar injunctions. In	the three Presidency towns of Calcutta, Madras and	Bombay the charters of 1726 which established	the Mayors' Courts introduced within their jurisdiction the English common	and statute law in force at the time so far as it was applicable to Indian circumstances. By the statute of 1781 (21	Geo.
III c. 70, s. 17) the Supreme Court at Calcutta was enjoined to apply in the determination of actions against the Indian inhabitants of the town in matters of succession and inheri- tance to lands, rents, goods, and in all matters of contract and dealing between party and party, their personal law if both parties belonged to the same community, and by the	law and usages of the defendant if they belonged to different communities. The English common law in its application to Hindus	and Mahomedans	in the matters enumerated in	the statute was to that extent superseded, but in other matters the English common law unless it was inconsistent with statute	or Indian conditions continued to apply. Similar statutes were passed enjoining the Courts in the Presidency towns of Madras and Bombay in 1797 (37 Geo. III c. 142, s.
13), to apply in the enumerated matters the personal law of the parties. it may however be observed that by the Supreme Court charters, English law, not in its entirety but as nearly	as the	circumstances	of the	place	and of	the inhabitants admit, was applied: Advocate General of Bengal v. Ranee Surnomove Dossee.(1) In the	mufassal Courts by Bengal	Regulation III	of 1793 in respect of	Bengal, by Regulation 11 of 1802 in respect of Madras, it was ordained that where no specific rule existed the Courts were to	act according to "justice, equity and good conscience" which expression was	interpreted to mean the rules of English common	law in	so far as they were applicable to Indian society	and circumstances: Waghela	Rajsanji v. Shekh Masludin(2). The Bombay Regulation IV -of 1827 provided by s. 26	that the law to be observed in the trial of suits shall be Acts of Parliament and Regulations of	Government;
in the absence of such acts and regulations the usage of the country	in which the suit arose; if none such appears,	the law of the defendant, and in the absence of specific law and usage equity and good conscience. By the Letters Patents of the High Courts of the three principal Courts of Calcutta, Madras	and Bombay by cls. 19 in exercise of the original jurisdiction law or equity to be applied (1) (1864) 9 M. 1. A. 387.
192 was such law or equity which would have been applied if	the Letters	Patents had not been issued. By cl. 20 in respect of suits tried in exercise of the extraordinary original jurisdiction, and by cl. 21 in respect of the appellate jurisdiction, the High Courts were directed to apply law or equity	and the rule of good conscience which the Court in which the proceeding was originally instituted	would	have applied. Similar provisions	were made in	the Letters Patents	of the Allahabad, Patna, Lahore and	Nagpur	High Courts	by cls. 13 & 14 and in respect of Jammu & Kashmir High Court by cls. 14 & 15, and in respect of Rajasthan by cls. 33 & 34 of the Rajasthan High Court Ordinance, 1949.
The jurisdiction of the Assam and Orissa High	Courts	was derived	from	their respective parent High	Courts-the Calcutta High Court and the Patna High Court. In the Courts in the mufassal, the Civil Courts Acts e.g. Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887 s. 37; the Punjab Laws	Act, 1872, s. 5; the Central Provinces Laws Act, 1875, ss. 5, 6;
the Oudh Laws Act, 1876, S. 3. require the Courts to decide cases according to justice, equity and good	conscience.
There can therefore be no doubt that the Courts which functioned in	the former British India territory	were enjoined to decide cases not	governed by any specific statutory rules according to	justice, equity and	good conscience, which meant rules of English common law in so far as they	were applicable to Indian society	and circumstances.
By a long course of decisions of the High Courts in India the rule of the English common law that the Crown is	not, unless	expressly named or clearly intended,	bound by a statute was applied in India. In The Secretary of State in Council of India v. Bombay Landing and Shipping Co. Ltd.(1) the Secretary	of State for India claimed priority in	the payment	of a debt in the course of winding up of a company and it was held by the High Court of Bombay that a judgment debt due to the Crown is in Bombay entitled to the	same precedence in execution as a like judgment debt in England, if there be no special legislative provision affecting that right in -the particular case.	The Court held that as	the Crown is not, either expressly or by implication, bound by the Indian Companies' Act (X of 1866), and as an order	made under that Act for the winding up of a Company does not work any alteration of property against	which execution is sought, such an order does not enable the Court to stay	the execution of a judgment debt due to the Crown, or to	the Secretary of State in Council for India. Westropp, J.,	who delivered the	judgment of the Court after an exhaustive review of the earlier authorities observed "The King, by his prerogative, regularly is to be preferred, in payment of his duty or debt, before any subject although the King's debt or duty be the latter." (1) 5 Bom. H.C.R O.CJ. 23.
193 The learned Judge also observed that the rule was recognised by the laws of many countries as applicable to the claims of the Sovereign or the State, e.g. France, Spain, America	and Scotland and that principle was no novelty in India, because at an	earlier	date it was promulgated by Hindu jurists Yajnavalkya and others.
In The	Secretary of State for India	v. Mathurahbai	and Ors.(1)	the rule was held to apply to India as a rule of construction of statutes. In that case the inhabitants of a village	sued to establish their right of grazing their cattle	on certain Government land and	for an injunction restraining the Government from interfering	with their right.	It was held by the High Court of Bombay that	the right of free pasturage which the plaintiffs enjoyed did not necessarily confer that right on any particular piece of land, and that s. 26 of the Limitation Act 15 of 1877	did not bind the Secretary of State. It was also	applied in three later decisions of the Bombay High Court: Hiranand Khushiram Kirpalani v. Secretary of State; (2) Secretary of State v. Municipal Corporation Bombay (No.	1)(3)	and Province of Bombay v. The	Municipal Corporation	of Bombay(4). In the first case the Secretary of State	was held not bound by ss. 305, 489 and 491 of the	Bombay	City Municipal Act, 1888, which deal with levelling, metalling or paving,	sewering, draining, channelling and	lighting of private	streets and with execution of that work to	the satisfaction of the Commissioner, if the work be not done in accordance with the requisition and for recovery of	the expenses incurred in that behalf. In the second case,	the Court held that the Crown was bound by necessary implication in respect of the charge which arises under s. 212 of	the Bombay	City Municipal Act 3 of 1888, that section being an integral part of the general scheme of the Act imposing	tax on land in Bombay including Government land. In the third case the Bombay High	Court	observed that	the general principle is that the Crown is not bound by legislation in which it is not named expressly or by necessary implication.
But reading the relevant sections in the Act relating to the water supply it appeared that it would be impossible to carry them out with reasonable efficiency, unless Government was bound by them. The view of the High Court in the	last judgment that the Province was bound by the statute by	imp- lication was overruled by the Judicial Committee in Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay and Another(5) to which I will presently refer. The Madras High Court in Bell v. The Municipal Commissioners for the City of Madras(6) also upheld the rule which prevailed in the Bombay High Court that the Crown is not bound by a statute unless expressly named or clearly intended.	In that case	the Superintendent of the Gun 2,1.5 (1) 1. L. R. 14 Bom. 213.
194 Carriage Factory in Madras brought timber belonging to Government into Madras without taking out a licence,	and paying the license fee prescribed by s. 341 of the' City of , Madras Municipal Act. The Court held that	the timber brought into Madras by or on behalf of Government was liable to the	duty imposed	by s. 341 of the City of Madras Municipal Act,	although Government was not named in	the section. Bhashyam Ayyangar, J., entered upon	a detailed analysis of the case law and set out certain principles at p. 500. The learned Judge was of the view that "the canon of interpretation of Statutes that the prerogative or rights of the Crown cannot be taken away except by express words or necessary implication,	is As applicable to the Statutes passed	by the Indian Legislatures as to Parliamentary	and Colonial Statutes". But he held that "the English law as to the exemption of the Crown and Crown property from payment of tolls, poor-rates and other taxes, local or imperial, imposed by statutes rests partly upon historical reasons and principally upon judicial decisions which do	not proceed upon a	course	of reasoning or principle which will be binding	on Indian Courts". It is not necessary to express any opinion on the question whether the general exception engrafted by the learned Judge on the rule in so far as it relates	to taxing statute is wholly correct and applied to all taxing statutes in India.
The Municipal	Corporation of	Calcutta is,	it may	be recalled, seeking to collect the license fee by	prosecuting the State of West Bengal, but the primary purpose of	the prosecution is to enforce compliance with the	pro-visions relating to the conduct of a market by compelling the State to take out a license, and paying a fee in lieu of services rendered to the owners of the markets.
These decisions were affirmed by the Judicial Committee in Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay and Another(1). The question	which	fell to be determined was whether by s. 222(1) and s. 265 of the	City of Bombay Municipal Act, 1888, which invested	the Municipality with power to carry water-mains through, across or under any street and "into,, through or under any	land whatsoever within the city" bound the Crown in whom	the lands	were vested either expressly	or by necessary implication. The Judicial Committee	observed that	the general principle applicable in England in deciding whether the Crown is bound by a statute-that it must be expressly named or be bound by necessary implication-applies to Indian legislation. The Board observed at p. 274 :
"The maxim of the law in early times was	that no statute bound the Crown unless the Crown was expressly named therein, "Roy n'est	lie per ascun statute si il ne soit	expressment nosme." But the rule so laid down is subject (1) L.A. 73 I.A. 271.
195 to at least one exception. The Crown may be bound, as has often been said, "by necessary implication". If, that	is to	say, it is manifest	from the very terms of the statute, that it was the intention of the	legislature that the	Crown	should be bound, then	the result is the same as if the Crown had	been expressly	named. It must then	be inferred that the	Crown,	by assenting to the	law, agreed to be bound by its provisions." It is	true that counsel appearing before the Judicial Committee accepted the correctness of the rule "that	the question whether or not the Crown is bound by a statute is no different in the case of Indian legislation from	that which has long been applied in England." But the judgment of the Judicial Committee did not proceed upon a	concession:
The Union of India now includes territory of	the former Indian	States in which the law as originally existing	and which the Courts are	enjoined to apply may have	been somewhat different. But that is not peculiar to	the application of the rule of interpretation which was adopted by the Courts in British India that the State shall not be deemed	to be bound by an enactment unless it is expressly named or by clear intendment included in the statute.	Even in respect of	matters of personal	law, procedure	and jurisdiction of the Courts and in other matters where uniform statutes do not apply differences do arise and must be determined	according to	the law and	jurisdiction inherited by the Courts administering	justice. But	the present case concerns the administration of the law in	the town of Calcutta which has for nearly 250	years	been governed by the English common law as adopted by the various Acts, Regulations and finally by the Letters Patents.	It may also be necessary to observe that we are not called upon to decide whether all the prerogatives of the British Crown have been incorporated in our system of law. Some of those are so wholly inconsistent with the system of	law-personal and common-in	India,	that they have not been	held applicable, e.g. the rule of	English	law incapacitating aliens	from holding real property to their own use,	and transmitting it by descent or devise has never been	in- troduced in India so as to create forfeiture of lands	held in Calcutta or the mofussil by an alien and devised by	will for charitable purposes. Mayor of the City of Lyons v.	The East India Company(1): the English law of felo de se	and forfeiture of goods does not extend to a Hindu committing suicide: Advocate General of Bengal	v. Ranee Surnomoye Dossee(2). But the rule that the Crown debt is entitled to priority in payment of debts due to it has been adopted,.
196 The Secretary of State for India in Council v.	The Bombay Landing	A Shipping Co. Ltd.(1) and M/s. Builders Supply Corporation v. The 'Union of India(2).	As I have already stated	the adoption of the English law was	not in	its entirety, but as nearly as the circumstances of the case and of the	inhabitants of the place admit. It would be confusing the issue to hold that because some	prerogatives have not been adopted, no prerogative of the State may	have any place in our system of law. Again in considering	the limited	question as to the application of the rule of interpretation	under discussion, it	would be an idle exercise to enter upon a detailed	discussion of	the prerogatives which have and which have not been	assimilated in our system of law.
In Director of Rationing & Distribution v. The	Corporation of Calcutta & Ors.(3) this Court regarded the rule as one of interpretation, and it is so expressly stated in State of West Bengal	v. Union of	India(4); Sri Vankata Seetaramanjaneva Rice	and Oil Mills v. State of Andhra Pradesh(5) and M/s. Builders Supply Corporation v. Union of India(2).
In England and the Colonies the rule has not been restricted to common Crown actions or the personal prerogatives of	the Crown. It excludes from the operation of statutes	all public servants acting under the authority of the Crown. It is well-settled that	in the Colonies the executive government represents the Crown as it does in England,	and therefore the Executive Government of the Commonwealth of Australia or of a State in Australia is not	bound by a statute	unless	the intention that it shall be bound is apparent : Roberts v. Ahern(6).	Again because of the origin of the	rule,	its protection is not	restricted to	the property and rights of the Crown alone, and applies to State property, actions and rights.
When a statute expressly includes	the State in	its operation, no	difficulty arises in giving effect to	the statute. Even if there be no express provision, the State may be	bound by clear intendment of the statute, having regard	to the nature of the legislation, if the beneficent purpose	intended to be served thereby would be wholly frustrated unless the State is bound. The rule of interpre- tation applies only when the Court has no indication either by express reference or by clear intendment in the statute:
a presumption arises in such a case that the words of	the statute	even though general are not intended to bind	the State. The question is one of presumed intention where	the language, purpose and the -nature of the statute give no clear indication and mere general words .ire used.
It was urged that in the Act there are	certain provisions which ,expressly refer to the liability of the State and the binding character 5 Bom.	H.C.R. O.C.J. 23.	(2) A.I.R. [1965] S.C. 1061.
(3)	4	[1964] 1 S.C.R. 371.
(5) [1964]7 S.C.R. 456.	(6) [1904] 1 C.L.R. 406.
197 of those provisions against the State is not in doubt.	But that cannot be a ground for holding	that the remaining provisions apply to the State. , The Judicial Committee in Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay and Another() observed :
"They (the Judicial Committee) were pressed with the argument that such an inference might be drawn from certain express references to the Crown in other parts of the	Act itself, and from	the fact that	by the Government Building	Act, 1899, the legislature	had provided	for the exemption of	Government buildings	from certain municipal	laws.	The argument was that no express provisions saving the rights of the Crown would be necessary if the Crown were already immune. This is not an unfamiliar argument, but, as has been	said many times, such provisions may often be inserted in one part of an Act, or in a later general Act, ex abundanti cautela, and, so far as the Act of	1899 is concerned, it is fallacious to argue that the legislature which passed it must have had in mind the particular sections	of the Act of 1888 which are	not under review, or that	it was impliedly interpreting those sections." The argument that the rule had not received recognition in the High Courts in India, before the judgment of	the Judicial Committee reported in Province of	Bombay	v.
Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay and Anr.(1)	was pronounced, is belied by the course of	authorities summarised earlier. There was practically a consistent course	of authorities prior to the Constitution in support of the	principle which was	affirmed by the Judicial Committee in Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay and Another(1).
The origin of the rule undoubtedly was in the	prerogative of the Crown, but there is even in the country of its origin authority for the view that the rule is regarded primarily as one of construction. In Madras Electric Supply Corporation Ltd. v. Boarland(2), in	dealing with	the question whether "the immunity" of the Crown "from taxation depends	on the construction of the statute or arises,	from the prerogative in some other way", Lord MacDermott observed :
"Whatever ideas may once have prevailed on the subject it is, in my opinion, today impossible to uphold the view that the Crown can find in the prerogative an immunity from tax if	the statute in question, according to its	true construction, includes the Crown amongst those made liable to	the tax it imposes.	The appropriate rule as I under- (1) L.R. 73 I.A. 271.
(2) [1955] A.C. 667 H.L.- 198 stand it	is that, in an Act of	Parliament, general words shall not bind the Crown to	its prejudice	unless	by express provision	or necessary implication. That, however, is, and has long been,	regarded as a rule	of construction.
Lord Reid concurred in the view that the immunity depends upon construction of	the statute rather than on royal prerogative. Lord Keith of Avonholm appeared to express a different view. In India the rule has been accepted as a rule of interpretation of statutes and applicable to	all statutes which governed State actions, authority	or property.
Is there any reason then to hold that on January 26, 1950, the rule which previously applied to interpretation of statutes ceased to apply thereto on the date on which	the Constitution came into force ? The rule of interpretation was, as already stated, a settled rule and was law in force in the territory of India within the meaning of Art. 372 of the Constitution. I am unable to agree with the contention that a rule of interpretation is not "law in force" within the meaning of Art. 372. There is no warrant for holding that a rule of interpretation which is incorporated in a statute e.g. The Indian Succession Act, or the General Clauses Act is law in force, and not a	rule which was enunciated by the highest Court in the realm.	The circumstance that a rule of interpretation is a rule	for determination of intention of the legislature and for	its application requires	determination of	facts	and circumstances outside the statute will not make it any	the less a rule of law. Acceptance of the proposition that a decision of the highest judicial tribunal	before	the Constitution is law does not involve the view that it is immutable. A	statute may	be repealed,	and	even retrospectively, it would- then cease to be in operation : a decision which in the view of this Court is erroneous may be overruled and	may cease -to be regarded as law, but	till then it is law in force. It may be pertinent to bear in mind that it was never seriously argued before us that	the judgment of the Judicial Committee which affirmed the	view expressed in a long course of decisions was erroneous in the circumstances then prevailing.
It was said by counsel for the Corporation that it is one of the fundamental principles of our Constitution that there is equality between the State and	the citizens	and discrimination	is not permissible in the application of a law generally	expressed. it was claimed that if other occupiers of markets take out licenses, and comply with	the regulatory provisions	of the Act, and the State is	not obliged	to abide by the rules, there would	be unequal treatment between owners similarly situate and that	the State may ignore 199 the rules regulating the markets, and on that	account	the public interest would suffer. There is no reason however to assume that the State under a democratic Constitution would be impervious to public opinion, and would merely because it is not bound by a regulatory Act perpetuate 'a nuisance. If it be assumed that such be the attitude of the State there would be nothing to prevent the State from enacting express legislation excluding	itself	from the operation of	the regulatory laws relating to markets. I do not	think	that the guarantee	of the	equal	protection clause of	the Constitution extends to any differential treatment which may result	in the application	of a	special rule	of interpretation between the State and the citizens. Nor	can it be said that under our Constitution equality in matters of interpretation between the State and the	citizens is predicated in all respects. It must be remembered that	our Constitutional	set-up	is built up not anew,	but on	the foundations of our old institutions. The political set up is indisputably changed, but can it be said that our concept of a State is so fundamentally altered that the	traditional view about State privileges, immunities and rights must be abandoned because they had a foreign origin,	an on	the supposed theory of equality between	the State and	the citizens a theory which seeks to equate common good of	the people	represented by	the State with the	rights	and obligations of the individual-the Court should	decline to give effect to the State privileges and immunities ? If it be granted that the State in making laws is	entitled to select	itself	for special treatment	different from	the treatment accorded to the citizen-and it is not denied that in order to achieve public good it can do so even if there is a differential treatment between	the State and	the citizen-is there any reason to suppose that a statute which evidently was framed on the basis of the well-settled	rule of the pre-Constitution days which accorded to the State a special	treatment in	the matter of	interpretation	of statutes must be deemed to have a different meaning on	the supposition that the	Constitution has sought to impose equality between the State and the citizen ? The fact	that in our	federal set-up sovereignty is divided	between	the Union and the States, and in the application of the rule that the State is not bound by a statute, unless expressly named or clearly implied, conflicts	between the State enacting a law and the Union, or another State may arise does not give	rise to any insuperable difficulty which renders the rule in applicable to the changed circumstances, for it	is the State which enacts a legislation in terms general	which	alone may claim benefit of the rule of interpretation, and not any other State.
It was urged that even if the rule that the State is	not, unless expressly named or by necessary implication intended, to be bound, applies, its application must be restricted to cases where an action of the State in its sovereign capacity is in issue. Where, however, 200 the State is following a commercial or trading activity, the rule can have no application.	But in the context of modem notions of the functions of a welfare State, it is difficult to regard any particular activity	of the	State	as exclusively trading. The State was originally regarded as merely concerned with the maintenance of law and order,	and was not concerned with any trading activity. But that is now an exploded doctrine. For the welfare of the people the State does and is required in modern times to	enter	into many trading activities, e.g. to effectuate	control of prices, prevent hoarding and distribute commodities in short supply,	besides maintenance of departments	like Posts, Telegraphs, Railways, Telephones etc., activities which	may have been regarded as -trading activities in the past.	But if initiation and completion of schemes for social welfare of the people be regarded as an attribute of the exercise of sovereign authority, it is difficult to regard activities undertaken by the State for setting up markets for effective distribution of goods as merely trading. Assuming	that conducting a market in a metropolitan town may be regarded in a sense as a trading activity there is, in my judgment, no sufficient	reason	to justify any	distinction in	the application of	the rule of	interpretation	to statutes concerning sovereign authority and trading activity.
But there is no express reference to the State: nor is there anything peculiar in the nature, purpose and object or in the language used in the enactment relating to the issue of licenses which may suggest that the State must by necessary implication be bound by its provisions.	I am, therefore, of the view that the High Court was in error in holding	that the State of	West Bengal was bound	by the provisions relating to the issue of licenses for occupation or conduct of a market.
I do not deem it necessary to consider the argument	that since the State cannot be imprisoned in enforcement of	the general provisions, and imposing a fine upon the State would be futile because the hand which pays and the	hand which receives the fine is the same, an implication arises that it was not intended that the State should be bound by s. 218 of the Calcutta Municipal Act. in my view the penal provision of s.541 is, though in form a provision creating an offence, intended to enable the Corporation to collect	the license fee. The offender and the recipient of fine are therefore not the same bodies.
Bachawat, J. By the common law of England, the Crown is	not bound by a statute save by express provision or necessary implication. This rule was applied to Indian legislation in 201 Province of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay(1). In The Director of Rationing and Distribution v.
On the subject of	the royal prerogative regarding statutes Chitty in his book on "Prerogatives of the Crown at P. 382 said "The general rule clearly is, that	though	the King may avail himself of the provisions of any Acts of Parliament, he is not bound by such as do not	particularly and expressly	mention	him'.	It has been said that	the reason of the rule is that "it is inferred prima facie, that the law made by the Crown, with the assent of the Lords	and the Commons, is made for the subjects, and not for	the Crown" per Alderson, B. in A.G. v. Bonaldson (3). Two rules follow from the proposition that the law is prima facie made for subjects and not for the Crown: (i) the Crown is	not bound by a statute save by express words or by necessary implication, (ii) that the Crown may take advantage of a statute, though not bound by it, unless expressly or impliedly prohibited	from	doing	so. This Court categorically rejected the second rule in V. S. Rice and Oil Mills v. State of Andhra Pradesh(4) and held that the State cannot	be permitted to rely upon the artificial rule	that the State can take advantage of a statute though not bound by it.	I think that this Court should have	refused to recognise the first rule also.
The exception of the Crown from the operation of statutes is based sometimes on the royal prerogative, and sometimes on a rule of construction. Originally, the exemption	was claimed	and allowed on the ground of the prerogative.	The King by virtue of his prerogative could claim that a statute was made for subjects only and he stood outside it.	He waived	this prerogative right by assenting to a statute which bound him expressly or by necessary implication.	The immunity of the Crown is now couched in the form of a	rule of construction. In spite of this modem disguise, there is high authority	for the view that this	immunity is still based upon the prerogative.	In Madras Electric Supply Corporation Ltd v. Boarland(5) Lord Keith said:
"The true explanation, easily understandable on his torical and legal grounds, is	that words in a statute capable of applying to	the Crown may be overridden in the exercise of the prerogative. That is necessarily involved in the oft-repeated phrase that the King is	not bound by a statute (1) [1946] L.R. 73 I.A. 271.	(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 158.
(3) 10 M. & W. 117,124.	(4) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 456, 463, 463-4.
sup. CI/66-14 202 unless	by express words or	by clear implication. If the statute does not apply to him there can be no question of his being bound by it. It is only because it can apply to him that appeal to	the prerogative is necessary. The conception of the prerogative, in my view, is	of something	that stands outside the statute, on which the Crown	can rely, to control the operation of the statute so far as it prejudices the Crown".
But the prerogative right of overriding statutes did	not extend to India. When the Crown of England became sovereign in India, it	acquired such prerogative rights as	were enjoyed	by the former Indian sovereigns and	such other prerogative rights as	may be said to inhere in every sovereign power. But	the common law was never bodily imported into India and the Crown never possessed in India all the prerogatives allowed to the Crown by	the law of England. In The Mayor of the City of Lyons v. Hon.	East India Company(1), the Privy Council held that the common law as to alienage and the royal prerogative of forfeiture of the lands held by a deceased alien on the ground of	the incapacity of the alien to hold real property and transmit it by	devise	or descent was	never'	introduced in	the Presidency town of Calcutta or the mofussil. Such a right was not enjoyed by the Indian sovereign, nor was it a necessary incident of sovereignty. Lord Brougham said at pp. 280, 281, 282 and 286 of the Report:
"But it seems to be contended both here	and below, that there is something	in the	law incapacitating aliens, which makes it, so to speak, of necessary application	wheresoever the sovereignty of the Crown is	established, as if it were inherent	in the nature of sovereign power.	To this a sufficient answer has been already afforded, if the acts of	the sovereign	power	to which we have referred, show that no such application to Bengal ever was contemplated, unless direct authority	can be produced to	show that the right	is inseparable from the sovereignty, and, as it were, an essential	part	of	it.
It certainly is not	an incident	to sovereignty; in	several countries	the sovereign	has no such right...........
Besides,	if reference	be made to	the prerogative of	the English Crown,	that prerogative in other particulars is of as high a nature, being given for the same purpose of protecting the State; and it is not contended that these branches are extended	to Bengal.
Mines of precious metals, treasuretrove, royal fish, are all vested in the Crown, for	the purpose of maintaining its power, and enabling it to defend the State. They are not enjoyed by the sovereign in all or even in most (1) [1837] 1 M.I.A. 173.
203 countries, and	no one has said that	they extend to the East Indian possessions of	the British Crown...........
Upon the whole, their	Lordships are	of opinion that the law, incapacitating aliens from holding real property to their own	use, and transmitting it by descent or devise,	has never been introduced into Calcutta." The common law of attainder or corruption of blood and	the prerogative right of forfeiture or escheat on conviction of treason or felony now abolished by the Forfeiture Act,	1870 (33 & 34 Vict. c. 23) did not prevail in India, see Papamma v. Appa Rau(1)' Nor did the English law as felo de se	and the forfeiture of goods and chattels consequent upon suicide apply to a Hindu, though a British	subject, committing suicide	at Calcutta, see Advocate-General of	Calcutta v.
Ranee Surnomoye Dossee(2).
At Common law, no proceedings, civil	or criminal,	were maintainable against the Sovereign in person for, it	was said, that as the Courts were her own they could have no jurisdiction over her, see Halsbury's Law of England,	Vol.
7, Art. 544, p. 249. In India, the government did not enjoy a general immunity from suits and legal proceedings, see The Peninsular and	Oriental Steam Navigation Company v.	The Secretary of State for India.(1) The	subjection of	the Government to suits where it was liable to be	sued before the Constitution is preserved by Art. 300 of	the Consti- tution.	Though orders of mandamus and injunction cannot issue to the	Crown in England, see	Halsbury's Laws of England, 3rd Edn. Vol. II, Art. 25 and 184 pages 16 and 98, such orders can issue to Government under Arts. 32 and	226 of the Constitution. See also State of Bihar	v. Sonavati Kumari(4). Province of Bombay v. Khusaldas Advani(5).	In England the King by his prerogative may sue in what Court he pleases, see Craies on Statute law, 6th Edn., p. 435.	The prerogative of choice of Courts by the Crown never applied in India. The State can sue only in a Court competent to entertain the suit under the general law. In England it was the prerogative of the Crown not to	pay costs in	any judicial proceeding, see Craies on Statute Law, 6th edn, p.
The Indian law did not deny that the Crown had certain	pre- rogatives. The Crown inherited the prerogatives enjoyed by the former Indian Sovereigns and had	other	prerogatives inherent in the nature of	sovereignty. It was	the prerogative of	the King in Council to hear	appeals	and petitions from his Indian subjects, (1) 1. L. R. 16 Mad. 384,396.	(2) 9 M.I.A. 387.
(3) 5 Bom. H.C.R. Appendix 1.	(4) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 728.
204 see Modee Kai Khocscroo Hormusjee	v. Cooverbhaee(1).
prerogative was taken away by the Abolition of Privy Council Jurisdiction Act 1949.	When there is a failure of heirs on a person dying intestate, the Crown had the	prerogative right to take his property by escheat, and this right	was said to rest on grounds of general or universal law, see the Collector of Masulipatam v. Cavaly Vencata Narrainapa(2), Sonet Koor v. Himmut Bahadoor(3) Mussammat Khursaidi Begun v. Secretary of State for India(4).	The right of	the Government to take the property by escheat or lapse on	the failure of heirs or as bona vacantia for want of a rightful owner is recognised by Art. 300 of the	Constitution. The prerogative right of the Crown to priority in payment of its claims was recognised on the ground that this right did	not arise out of any peculiar quality in the writ of extent	and the Hindu, Muhammadan and Poituguese Sovereigns had enjoyed a similar right, see Secretary of State for India v. Bombay Landing	and Shipping	company(5). The extent of	this prerogative right may be limited by a statutory scheme of administration, see GrovernorGeneral in Council v. Shiromani Sugar Mills Ltd. (in liquidation)(6). It has been held that the Government continues to enjoy this prerogative right of precedence after the	Constitution came into	force, see Builders Supply Corporation v. Union of India (7), Bank of India v. J. Boman(8).	The Crown as parens partriae	had other prerogative rights. The Crown may have also enjoyed in India certain prerogative rights which were not allowed to the	Crown of England by	the common law and those prerogatives might vary in different parts of	India,	see Bell	v.Municipal Commissioners for the	City	of Madras(9).Gopalan v. State of Madras (10). But in India the Crown never enjoyed the general prerogative of overriding a statute	and standing	outside it. Such a right is	not indigenous to	India, nor is it a necessary	incident of sovereignty.
In The	Secretary of State for India in Council v. Bombay Landing	and Shipping Company(5), Ganpat Putava v. The	Col- lector	of Canars (11) the Bombay High Court held that a prerogative of	the Crown cannot be taken away except by express	words or by necessary implication. To appreciate these rulings, it is necessary to remember that until	1861 there were constitutional restrictions on the power of	the Indian	legislature to affect the prerogative of the Crown, see Statutes 3 and 4 William cap. LXXV S. 43 and 16 and 17 Vict. cap XCV	S. 43, which	were swept away by later statutes, see	the Indian Councils Act, 1861 s. 24,	the Government of India Act 1915, s. 84 (1) (A), the Government of (1) 6 M.I.A. 448,455.
205 India (Amendment) Act, 1917, s. 2 as	interpreted in	The Secretary of State v. Bombay	Municipality(1), with	one exception introduced by the Government of India Act, 1935, s. 1	10(b)(ii). Having regard to this	historical background, it was considered that the prerogative of	the Crown was a very special subject matter and in the absence of express words or necessary implication, it should be presumed that	general	words of an Indian Act were	not intended to affect the prerogative. In Bells	case(2)	Sir Bhashyam Ayyangar J.therefore pointed out that the doctrine that the prerogative could not be taken away save by express words or by necessary implication could be based on	the maxim generalia specialibus non derogant. This maxim	does not exempt the Crown	from the operation of statutes generally whenever a statute prejudicially affects it.	In order to invoke this doctrine, the Crown must, establish that it has some prerogative right which it claims to be outside the purview of the statute.
As pointed out already under the Indian law the Crown could not claim a general exemption from statutes on the ground of the prerogative. But there is high authority for the	view that such an exemption is allowed to the Crown in England on the basis of a rule of construction. In Madras Electric Supply Corporation v. Boarland(3) at p. 685 Lord Macdermott said that the rule that in an Act of	Parliament general words shall not bind the Crown to its prejudice unless by express	words	or by necessary implication has long	been regarded as a rule of construction. This rule has a	wide sweep,	and is not limited to cases where the	prerogative right or property of the Crown is in question.	It protects the Crown whenever general words in a statute	may operate to, its prejudice. See Broom' s Legal Maxims,	10th Edn., pp. 39-40, Glanville L. Willams' Crown Proceedings, p. 48 (f. n.). A review of the decided cases shows that until	the decision of the Privy Council in the Province	of Bombays case(4)	this wide rule of construction had not	obtained a firm foothold	in India. In Verubai v. The Collector of Nasik(5), the Bombay High Court held that the Government was bound by Art. 167 of Schedule 11 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877. Westropp, C.J. said:
"The legislature in passing the Limitation Act of 1871, which is applicable to this case, where it intends that Government should have a longer period than the	subject, has	been careful expressly to say so, as for instance, in article 150	of Schedule II, where	the period assigned	to suits brought by	the Secretary	of State is sixty years from	the time of the accruer of the cause	of action;
but the	Legislature makes no	difference between Government and its subjects (1) 37 Bom. L.R. 499.	(2) I.L.R. 25 Mad. 457.
(3)[1955] A.C. 667,685.	(4) [1946] L.R. 73 I.A. 271.
206 in the case of appeals	or applications-see Govind Lakshman v. Narayan Moreshvar(1)".
In Appava v. The Collector of Vizagapatam (2), the Madras High Court held that the Government was bound by Art. 178 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877.	Turner, C.J. and Muttusami Ayyar, J.said:
"If the maxim on which the counsel for	the Crown relies applies to this country-and	the Crown is not bound by the provisions of	any Act unless they are expressly declared binding on the Crown-it	may be	inferred from	the circumstance that this Act contains provisions prescribing a Limitation to the Government for the institution of suits and presentation of criminal	appeals that	the	Legislature contemplated that the Crown should be subject to the provisions of the Act and should enjoy a	privilege to the extent expressed and no further-expressum facit cessare tacitum" In the last two cases, the Courts did not apply the strict English	rule that the Crown under the prerogative was	not bound by the statute of limitation, see Bank Voor Handel v.
Hungarian Administrator(3). In The Secretary of State	for India v. Mathurabhai(4) Sargent, C. J. was inclined to apply the English rule that the Crown is not included in an	Act unless	there are words to that effect and to hold that	the Government was not bound by S. 26 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877. But he observed that it was not necessary to express	a decided opinion on	the question.	In Bells, case(5), the Madras High Court held that the Government	was bound by the taxing provisions of s. 341 of the City of Madras	Municipal Act,	1884,	though	not named in	that section. Sir	Bhashyam Ayyangar, J. reviewed	the earlier cases and decisively rejected the general claim of immunity of the Crown from a statute imposing a tax on the basis of any prerogative right or supposed rule of construction. In Motilal v. The Collector of Ahmedabad(6). Russel, Acting C.
J. and	Beaman, J. doubted the application of	the English rule of construction in this country. They said:
"It is contended that the maxim	of English law that	the Crown cannot be bound by	any statute	unless expressly named therein applies, and reference is made to the cases of Ganpat Putaya v. The Collector of Kanara(7) The Secretary	of State for	India	v.
Mathurabhai(8). Without in any way wishing to prejudge	the question	or fetter future argument, (1) 11 Bom H.C.R. 1 1 1.
207 we may	say that as at	present	advised we entertain some doubt whether an exact analogy exists between the privileges and immunities of the Crown under the Constitutional Law of England and those of servants of	the Indian Government." The full Bench left the question open.	In The Secretary of State v. Mohammed Yysuf(1), Pratt J. held that ss. 17(2) (vii) and 90 of the Indian Registration Act, 1908 contained an implication	that the Crown was bound by the Act.	In Hiranand Khushiram v.	Secretary of State for India(2), Beaumont, C. J. and Rangnekar, J. applied the strict English rule of construction and held that since the Crown was	not named either expressly or by necessary implication in	ss.
305, 489 and 491 of the City of Bombay Municipal Act, 1888, the Crown was not bound by those sections. Soon thereafter, the same learned Judges held in Secretary of State for India v. The Municipal Corporation of Bombay(3), that the Crown was bound by s. 212 of the City of Bombay Municipal	Act, 1888 by necessary implication, though not expressly named therein. In Province of Bombay v. The Municipal Corporation for the City of Bombay(4), Beaumont, C. J.	and Rajadhayaksha,	J. held that ss. 222(1) and 265 of the	City of Bombay Municipal Act, 1888 by necessary implication bound the Crown. They refused to follow the dictum of Day, J. in Corton	Local Board v. Prison Commissioner(5) that the	test of necessary implication binding the Crown involves that the legislation is unmeaning unless the Crown is bound.	They said:
".......... if	it can be	shown	that legislation cannot operate with reasonable efficiency, unless the Crown is	bound,	that would be a sufficient reason for saying	that the Crown is bound by necessary	implication.
" This decision was reversed by the Privy Council on appeal in Province of Bombay's case(6).	The Privy Council rejected the test laid down by the Bombay High Court. They held that the strict English rule of construction exempting the Crown from the operation of statutes applied in the case of Indian legislation. The parties appearing before the Privy Council concurred in accepting this view. The attention of	the Privy Council	was not drawn to Bell's case(7) and	the propriety of applying the English rule to Indian legislation was not considered. Lord Du Parcq said:
"If it can be affirmed that, at the time when the statute was passed and received the royal sanction, it was apparent from its terms	that its beneficient	purpose must	be wholly frustrated unless the Crown were bound, then it may be inferred that the Crown has agreed to be bound." (1) [1919] 21	Bom. L.R. 1120, 1136.(2) [1934] I.L.R. 58 Bom. 635.
(3) 37 Bom. L.R. 499.	(4) I.L.R. 1944 Dom.
(5) [1904] 2 K.B. 165.	(6) (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 271.
208 They held that the Crown was not bound by ss. 222(1) and 265 of the City of Bombay Municipal Act, 1888 and an inference of necessary implication binding the Crown could not be drawn from certain express references to the Crown in other parts of the same Act and from the exemption of the Crown in a later general Act since such provisions are often inserted ex abundanti cautela. It is to be noticed that in several earlier	decisions the	Bombay	High Court had drawn an inference of necessary implication binding the Crown in other sections of the same Act.	Moreover, except the Bombay High Court, no other High Court held that the English c of Crown exemption from statutes applied to India. Even in Bombay, some of the Judges doubted the applicability of the rule to Indian conditions. The imposition of	the strict rule of construction	by the Privy Council decision	was received very	unfavourably in India.	In Corporation of Calcutta v. Sub Postmaster, Dharamtala(1), the Calcutta High Court felt bound to follow the Privy Council decision,	and held that the Government was not bound by the provisions of the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923. Mookerjee, J., however, said:
"Had the question been res integra and had it been open ,-to us to consider the question untrammelled by	a decision of the Judicial Committee	we might have considered	the reasonableness and propriety of applying the principles as enunciated by the English Courts and also	how far they should be	applied to Indian conditions. For some years past	the position of the Crown with regard to liability and procedure has been	considered by the lawyers in England as being antiquated	and absurd as contrasted with that	of ordinary individuals and	reform in this	respect	has been considered to be long overdue." In The Corporation of Calcutta v. Director of Rationing and Distribution(2), the Calcutta High Court refused to follow the Privy Council decision and held that the State was bound by s. 386(1) (a) of the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923.	This decision was reversed	in The Director of Rationing	and Distribution's case (3) and a majority of a Bench of	this Court held that the law was correctly laid down in	the Province of Bombay's case(4) and continued to apply in	this country even after the Constitution came into force, and the State was not	bound	by s. 386(1) (a) of the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1923. Wanchoo, J. dissented and held	that the rule laid down by the Privy Council did not apply to the construction of Indian statutes after the Constitution-came into force. Later decisions of this Court	disclose a tendency to relax and soften the rigour of (1) [1948]54 C. W. N. 429.	(3)	[1961] 1 S.C.R. 158.
209 this rule. In Sri Venkata Seetaramanjaneya Rice and	Oil Mills and others v. State of Andhra Pradesh(1)	this Court held that an inference of necessary implication binding	the State may be drawn if "the conclusion that the State is	not bound by the specific provision of a given statute would hamper	the working of the statute, or would lead to	the anomalous position that the statute may lose its efficacy".
With regard to this rule of exemption of the	Crown	from statutes, Glanville L. Williams in his book on "Crown Proceedings", 1948, pp. 53 and 54 said:
"The rule originated in the Middle Ages, when it perhaps had	some justification.	Its survival,	however, is due to little but	the vis inertiae. The chief objection to the rule is its difficulty of application .... With the great extension in the activities of the State and the number of servants employed by it, and with the modern idea, expressed in the Crown Proceedings Act,	that the State should be accountable in wide measure to the law,	the presumption should be that a statute binds the Crown rather than that it does not." Thus, the artificial rule of construction has	not escaped criticism even	in England. This rule of construction is unsuitable to Indian conditions and should never have	been applied	to India. Before 1946 there was no settled course of decisions	of the	Indian	Courts	necessitating	or justifying the application of this rule to the	construction of Indian statutes. Rules of English law which could	not suitably be applied to Indian conditions were not introduced even in the Presidency Town of Calcutta by 13 Geo HI c 63 or 21 Geo	III c 70 or any other cognate statute	or by	the Charter	of Charles II in 1661 see The Mayor of the City of Lyons v. The	Hon. East India Company(2) The Advocate General	of Calcutta	v. Ranee Surnomoyee	Dossee(3).
Technical rules of English common law were not applied	even in the Presidency Towns if they clashed with principles of justice, equity and good conscience, see Abdul Kawder v.
Mahomed	Mera (4) Mool Chand v. Alwar Chetty (5). In	the mofussil, common law had no force proprio vigore but	the Judges were free to adopt and apply any rule of common	law if it was consonant with principles of justice, equity	and good conscience. Artificial rules of Common Law based on feudal notions had no application in India. In Mithibai v.
Limii Nowroji Benaji(6), the Bombay High Court	refused to apply the rule in Shelley's case in a case arising between Parsis in the mofussil. In The State of Rajasthan v.	Mst.
210 this Court refused to apply rules of immunity of the Crown based on old,	feudalistic notions.	In interpreting a statute, it is the duty of the Court to give effect to	the expressed intentions of the	legislature. There is no compelling reason why the Courts in India should not	give full effect to the general words of a statute on the basis of some artificial rule of	construction prevailing in England.
No doubt, there are many Indian Acts which expressly provide that the Crown or the Government shall be bound by their provisions. See the Indian Arbitration Act No. 10 of 1940, s. 43, Trades and Merchandise Marks Act No. 43 of 1958, s.
130, the Factories Act No. 63 of 1948, s. 116, the	Oil Fields (Regulation and Development) Act No. 53 of 1948,	the Mines Act, 1952, s. 85.	Some of these Acts are modelled on English statutes which contain similar provisions. In	some Acts, the express provision binding	the Government is inserted by way of abundant caution. But the bulk of	the Indian	legislation proceeds upon the assumption that	the Government will be bound unless the contrary	is stated.
Many Acts like the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 and	the Indian	Contract Act 1872 make special provisions for	the Government in	respect of particular matters on	the assumption that in respect of all	other matters	the Government will be bound by the general provisions of	the Act. The Indian Limitation Act 1882	provided a special period	of limitation for suits by the	Government on	the assumption that the Government like the subjects will be bound by its	other general	provisions. To apply	the technical rule of construction exempting the Crown from	the operation of Indian statutes	will be to stultify	the intention of the legislature in most cases.	The English Courts have gone to the length of deciding that the Crown is not bound even by general regulations as to public safety, see Cooper v. Hawkins(1). Such a result has	not escaped criticism even	in England. In India, no one	has doubted that general regulations as to public safety bind	the Government equally like the citizens.
The Director of Rationing and Distribution's case(2)	left open the question whether the State could claim immunity from the provisions of a statute with regard to its trading or commercial activities. But the executive power of	the State extends to the carrying on of a trade or business, see Art. 298 of the Constitution. On a question of construction of a statute, no rational distinction can be made between the trading and non-trading activities of the State. If the State is not bound by a statute, it would seem that it is not so bound in respect of all its activities.
in a country having a federal system of government, it is difficult to apply the rule	of Crown exemption	from statutes. In (1) [1904] 2 K.B. 164.
211 R v. Sutton(1), the High Court of Australia held that	this presumption should not, be applied so as to	bring about either State	exemption from	federal laws	or federal exemption from	State statutes. But the contrary opinion seems to have prevailed in later cases, see	Minister of Works (W.A.) v. Gulson(2). The Commonwealth of Australia v.
Bogle(3). This branch of Australian law is discussed in detail	by Dr. Wynes in his book on Legislative, Executive and Judicial Powers, 3rd Edition pp. 518 to 544. We should not import in	this country either the English rule of implied	exception of the Crown or the	subtle	distinctions engrafted on it by the Australian Courts. Our system of Government is	federal in character. The taxing power is vested both in the Union and the States. Subject to certain constitutional restrictions, the Union can tax the State and the State can	tax the Union. There	is no	ground	for presuming that the States are excluded from the scope of a general	taxing	statute enacted by Parliament or that	the Union is outside the purview of the general	words of a taxing statute enacted by a State legislature.
I am therefore of the opinion that the rule that the Govern- ment is not bound by a statute unless it is expressly named or bound by necessary implication does not prevail in	this country	and the decisions in	the Province	of Bombay's case(4)	and The Director of Rationing	and Distribution's case(s)	and the subsequent decisions applying the rule to the construction of Indian Acts should not be followed.	The imposition of this artificial rule has been harmful to	our body politic.	We have power to reconsider our previous decisions, see The Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. v. The State of Bihar(6). This is a fit case where we should exercise this power. If the rule of common law controlling	the operation of a statute on the ground	of the	prerogative applied to India, it would be a law in force	before	the Constitution and would continue to be in force by virtue of Art. 372 of the Constitution. It would be the law in force because	it would limit and control the operation of	the existing Indian Acts. But we have ample power to say	that this rule was not in force in India and the Indian law	was not correctly laid down by the Privy Council in the Province of Bombay's case(4) and the decisions which followed it.
There is no presumption that the provisions of an Act do not bind the State (using the	expression "State" in a compendious sense as including the Union and the States).
In each case, it is a question of fair construction of	the Act whether or not any particular provision of the Act binds the State. The intention of the legislature	has to be gathered on a	careful scrutiny of the Act in question.
Particular care should be taken in scrutinising the	pro- visions	of a taxing or a penal Act. If the application of the Act (1) [1908] 5 C. L. R. 789.
212 leads to some absurdity, that may be a ground	for holding that the State is excluded from its operation by necessary implication. If the	only penalty for an	offence	is imprisonment, the State cannot be convicted of the offence, for the State cannot be locked up in prison. If the penalty for the offence is	fine and the	fine goes to	the consolidated fund of the State, it may be presumed that	the penal provision does not bind the State, for the legislature could not have intended that the State will be the payer as well as the receiver of the fine. Presumably, the Union is not bound by the Central Income-tax Act because if it	paid income-tax, it	will be both the payer	and the receiver.
Likewise, a State is prima facie not	bound	by a State Agricultural Income-tax Act where the tax is receivable by it. Moreover cases may conceivably	arise where "press provisions in	a statute binding the State in	respect of certain	specific matters may give rise to the necessary implication that the State is not bound in respect of other matters.
The Calcutta Municipal Act, 1951 contains special provisions exempting the	Government from some	of its	provisions.
Section	167(2) exempts from the consolidated rate certain open spaces and parade grounds which are the property of the Government. Section 208(1)(b) exempts certain carriages and animals	belonging to the Government from payment of tax on carriages and animals. Section 225(1) (c) proviso exempts carts which are the property of the Government from payment of registration fees.	Sections 218(1) and 541(1)(b)	are however framed in general terms and do not expressly exempt the Government from their operation. Under s. 218(1) it is the duty of every person carrying on any of	the trades mentioned in schedule TV to take out a licence and to	pay the prescribed fee. Under s. 541(1) (b) any person carrying on such a trade without taking out the licence is punishable with fine. Prima facie, the two provisions apply to	all persons	including the State Government. Section 218 is a taxing section	and its object is to levy revenue for	the municipality.	There is no reason why the State Government like any other person should not take out a license and	pay the prescribed fee if it chooses to exercise or carry on a trade and why it should not be punished with fine under S.
541(1)(b) if it chooses to carry on a trade without taking a license. By S. 541(2), such fine, when levied, is taken by the Municipality in full satisfaction of the demand on account	of the license Fee. Section II 5 of	the Act no doubt provides that all monies realised or realisable under the Act (other than fine levied by magistrates) shall be credited to the municipal fund. Reading sections 115	and 541(2)	together it appears that the excepting words "other than fine levied by magistrates" in s. 115 do not refer to the fine levied under s. 541. The general provisions of s.
115 must be read subject to the special provisions of s.
541(2) and the fine realisable under s. 541 is receivby	the Municipality. It follows that the State Government is 213 the payer but is not the receiver of the fine. There is nothing	to indicate that the State Government should be excluded from the purview of s. 218(1) and s. 541(1)(b).
Section	541(1) provides the remedy for the recovery of	the fee in case of default in taking out the license and payment of the fee. If we are to hold that s. 218 (1)	applies to the State but s. 541(1) (b) does not, the result would be that though the State is liable to pay the license fee,	the Municipality will have no remedy against the State for	the recovery of the fee. The legislature could not	have contemplated such a result.
Section	541 (1)(b) is a penal provision. But the State is not necessarily exempt from the operation of a statute having a punitive aspect. No doubt, under s.	547(A)	the Court is competent to direct imprisonment of the offender in default	of the payment of	fine under s.	547(1)(b).
Obviously, this provision cannot be applied to	the State, because	the State cannot be detained in prison. But there is no reason why s. 541(1) (b) should not be applied to	the State.	In Rani Sonavati Kumari v. The State	of Bihar(') this Court held that under the punitive provisions of	0 - 39, r. 2(3) of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, the Court could direct attachment of the property of the State	for breach of an order of injunction, though the Court could not direct detention of the State in civil prison.
The High Court found that the State of West	Bengal	was carrying on a	trade referred to in schedule	IV of	the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1951, and was bound to take out a license	under s. 218(1). It is common case that the State did not take	out a license for 1960-61. The State	was therefore rightly convicted by the High Court under s.
541(1).	In the judgment of the High Court it is stated by inadvertence that the conviction was under s. 537, but	from the materials on the record it is clear that the High Court intended to pass the order of conviction under s. 541. It was argued that the State was the owner of a market and	did not carry on any business. it was suggested that the trades, if any, in the market were carried on by the stall-holders and not by the Government. But the High Court has recorded the finding that the Government carried on a trade. In this appeal under Art. 136 of the Constitution, I do not propose to interfere with this finding Of fact.	This judgment will not preclude the Government from proving in any future	case that it is not carrying on any trade or business at 1, Orphanage Road, Calcutta, The appeal is dismissed.