Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHYABUDDINSAB MOHIDINSAB AKKI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE GADAG-BETGERI MUNICIPAL BOROUGHAND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/02/1955
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BOSE, VIVIAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 314 1955 SCR (1)1268
ACT:
Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925 (Bombay Act XVIII of
1925), s. 19 as amended by Bombay Act LIV of 1954-Legal
effect thereof-Validity of election-S. 35(3)(6)-Notice of
meeting-Provisions of s. 35(3)-Whether directory or
mandatory-S. 35(6)-Presence or absence of public-Whether
affects the validity of meeting.
1269
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent-Municipality-governed by the Municipal
Boroughs Act, 1925 (Bombay Act XVIII of 1925) consists of 32
councillors, S, (the appellant) being one of them. The last
general election to the Municipality took place on the 7th
May 1951. The term of the councillors was three years
computed from the first meeting held on 10th July 1951 after
the general election. In that meeting the 4th and 5th
respondents were elected President and Vice-President
respectively for a term of three years. Act XVIII of 1925
was amended by Bombay Act XXXV of 1954 under which the term
of office of the councillors was extended from 3 to 4 years
ending on 9th July 1955. As the term of respondents 4 and 5
was to expire at the end of three years from the 10th July
1951 and as the term of the Municipality was extended by one
year under the Amending Act XXXV of 1954 a fresh election of
President and VicePresident was necessary to fill up the
vacancies thus occurring. The Collector called a special
general meeting for the 30th July 1954 to elect a President
and Vice-President for the remaining period of the
quadrennium and nominated the Prant Official (the District
Deputy Collector) to preside over that meeting. On the 30th
July 1954 the Prant Officer adjourned the meeting to the 3rd
August 1954 under instructions from the Collector without
transacting any business. The objection raised by
respondent No. 3 against the adjournment was overruled by
the presiding Officer. The special general meeting was held
on the 3rd August 1954. An objection raised by S (the
appellant) that under the provisions of the Act a President
could not be elected for a term less than a year was
overruled by the presiding Officer. On this 13 councillors
(including S) out of the 32 who were present walked out on
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the ground that the President was to be elected for a term
less than a year contrary to the provisions of the Act. The
remaining 19 councillors elected the 2nd respondent as the
President for the remaining period of the quadrennium.
Immediately after that another meeting presided over by the
newly elected President elected respondent No. 3 as Vice-
President. The same point of order raised by S as in the
case of the President was overruled, on which 6 councillors
walked out and the meeting was held by the remaining
councillors. All the 32 councillors were present both on
the 30th July 1954 and the 3rd August 1954. An application
under Art. 226 of the Constitution presented by S
questioning the validity of the meeting of the 3rd August,
1954, and consequently the validity of the election of
respondents Nos. 2 and 3 as President and Vice-President for
the remaining period of the quadrennium was dismissed by the
High Court.
Held, (1) that the meeting of the 3rd August 1954, in
substance though not in form, complied with the requirements
of the law for holding a valid special meeting and therefore
the meeting was not invalid because the record of
proceedings would show that whatever had been done on the
30th July 1954 and the 3rd August 1954 had been done under
the orders of the Collector. The notice to the councillors
required under s. 35(3) of the Act satisfied the
requirements of three clear days, that the provisions of s.
35(3) regarding the ser-
1270
vice of notice are directory and not mandatory; and that any
omissions in the manner of service of the notice are more
irregularities which would not vitiate the proceedings
unless it is shown that those irregularities had
prejudicially affected the proceedings which had not been
alleged or proved in the present case. All the councillors
constituting the Municipality were present on both the
occasions namely the 30th July 1954 and the 3rd August 1954
and thus had ample notice of the meeting to be held on the
3rd August 1954, the time and place of the meeting and the
business to be transacted. That under the provisions of s.
35(3) of the Act the presence at or the absence from the
meeting of the members of the public has no legal
consequence so far as the validity of the election is
concerned;
(2) that as s. 19 of the Bombay Boroughs Act, (Bombay Act
XVIII of 1925) had been amended by the Bombay Municipal
Boroughs Act, 1954 (Bombay Act LIV of 1954) and was
retrospective in its operation, it had the effect of curing
any illegality or irregularity-in the election with
reference to the provisions of S. 19 of the Act and
therefore respondents Nos. 2 and 3 had been validly elected
as President and, Vice-President respectively.
King v. The General Commissioners of Income-tax for South-
ampton, Ex parte W.M. Singer ([1916] 2 K.B. 249) and
Mukerjee, Offcial Receiver v. Ramratan Kuer ([1935] L. R. 63
I. A. 47), referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CiviL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 215 of 1954.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 23rd day of August 1954 of the High Court of Judicature
at Bombay in Special Civil Application No. 1665 of 1954
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India.
R. B. Kotwal, J. B. Dadachanji and Rajinder Narain, for
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the appellant.
Naunit Lal, for respondents Nos. 1 to 3.
1955. February 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SINHA J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment and order dated the 23rd August 1954 of the High
Court of Judicature at Bombay, dismissing the appellant’s
petition for a writ of quo warranto or any other appropriate
writ directed against the election of the 2nd and 3rd
respondents as President and Vice-President respectively of
the Gadag-Betgeri
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The facts of this case are not in dispute and may shortly be
stated as follows: The 1st respondent is a municipality
governed by the provisions of the Municipal Boroughs Act
(Bombay Act XVIII of 1925) which 7 hereinafter shall be
referred to as the Act for the sake of brevity. The
appellant is one of the 32 councillors constituting the
municipality. The last general election to the municipality
took place on the 7th May 1951. The term of the councillors
was three years computed from the date of the first general
meetinog held after the general election aforesaid-in this
case the 10th July 1951. In that meeting the 4th and 5th
respondents were elected President and Vice-President
respectively of the municipality for a term of three years.
The Act was amended by Bombay Act XXXV of 1954, under which
the term of office of the councillors was extended from 3 to
4 years ending on the 9th July 1955. As the term of
respondents 4 and 5 aforesaid was to expire at the end of
three years from the 10th July 1951 and as the term of the
municipality was extended by one year under the amending Act
aforesaid, the vacancies thus occurring bad to be filled up
by a fresh election of President and Vice-President. The
Collector therefore called a special general meeting of the
municipality to be held on the 30th July 1954 to elect a
President and Vice-President for the remaining period of the
quadrennium. The Collector had nominated the Prant Officer
(the District Deputy Collector) to preside over that special
general meeting. On the 30th July 1954 the Prant Officer
under instructions from the Collector adjourned the meeting
to the 3rd August 1954 without transacting any business, the
only item on the agenda being the election of the President
and Vice-President. The 3rd respondent raised a point of
order against the adjournment but the presiding officer
aforesaid overruled that objection. Hence the special
general meeting was held on the 3rd August 1954. At that
meeting the appellant raised a point of order that under the
provisions of the " Act a President could not be elected for
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1272
a term less than a year and that therefore the proposed
election would be in the teeth of those provisions. The
presiding officer who was the same person who had adjourned
the meeting on the 30th July 1954 overruled that objection
too. Thereupon 13 out of the 32 councillors who were
present walked out on the ground that they did not propose
to participate in a meeting in which the proposal was to
elect a President for less than a year contrary to the
provisions of the Act. The appellant was one of those 13
councillors who walked out. It may be added that the full
strength of the municipality is 32 councillors all of whom
were present both on the 30th July 1954 and the 3rd August
1954. The remaining 19 councillors proceeded to transact
business and elected the 2nd respondent as the President,
the proposal being that he "should be President of the
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municipality for the remaining period of the quadrennium"
and that was the proposal which was carried. Immediately
after the election of the President another meeting was held
for the election of the Vice-President under the presidency
of the newly elected President (the 2nd respondent). The
appellant raised the same point of order as he had done in
the case of the election of the President and that was also
overruled. Thereupon six of the councillors present
including the appellant walked out and the remaining
councillors elected the 3rd respondent as the Vice-
President.
The appellant moved the High Court of Bombay under art. 226
of the Constitution for a writ of quo warranto or any other
appropriate writ or order or direction against the 2nd and
3rd respondents "restraining them from usurping the office
of the President and Vice-President respectively of the
opponent No. I Municipality and restraining them from
performing any duties and from exercising any powers as
President and Vice-President respectively". The High Court
held that the election of the 2nd and 3rd respondents was
not illegal and dismissed the application. It held that on
a proper construction of the relevant provisions of the Act
it was not correct to say that the term of office of the
councillors or of the newly
1273
elected President and Vice-President shall end with the 9th
July 1955; that the intention was to elect the President and
the Vice-President for the remaining term of the
municipality which was not only a period of four years
certain but an additional period up to 7 the date when new
President and Vice-President A would be elected and take
over after a fresh general election; that the adjournment of
the meeting of the 30th July was not beyond the powers of
the presiding officer; and that consequently the meeting of
the 3rd August was not vitiated by any illegality. It was
also pointed out by the High Court that all the councillors
constituting the municipality had notice of the adjourned
meeting and did as a matter of fact attend that meeting and
that even if there was any irregularity in the adjournment
on the 30th July 1954 that did not affect the illegality of
the adjourned meeting and the business transacted therein.
The appellant moved the High Court for leave to appeal to
this court but that application was rejected. The appellant
then applied to this court for special leave to appeal which
was granted on the 3rd September 1954.
It has been argued on behalf of the appellant that the
meeting held on 3rd August 1954 as aforesaid was invalid for
the reasons:
1. that it was not an adjourned meeting inasmuch as the
meeting of the 30th July 1954 had not been validly
adjourned,
2. that it had not been called by the Collector,
and
3. that the written notice required by section 35(3) had
not been given and in any event, had not been served and
published as required by law.
Secondly it was urged that the meeting of the 3rd August
being thus invalid., the business transacted at that
meeting, namely, the election of the President was equally
invalid. Thirdly it was urged that the election of the
President being invalid, the meeting held that very day
under the presidency of the President thus elected was also
invalid and the election of the Vice-President consequently
was illegal. It was
1274
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further argued that the election of the President and the
Vice-President being in violation of section 19 of the Act
was invalid on that ground also; and finally, that the
amendment of section 19 by the amending Act LIV of 1954
after leave to appeal had been granted by this court could
not affect the present proceedings which were then pending
even though the amending Act purported to make it
retrospective.
On behalf of respondents 1, 2 and 3 who only have appeared
in this court, it has been urged that a President and Vice-
President could be elected for a term of less than one year
as section 19 of the Act was subject to section 23 (1) (A);
that in any view of the matter, section 19 as amended by the
amending Act LIV of 1954 rendered the election beyond
question as the Act in terms was meant to validate all
elections held between the passing of the amending Act XXXV
of 1954 and the amending Act LIV of 1954; that the presiding
officer had inherent, if not statutory power to adjourn the
meeting of the 30th July 1954 and that in any event the
meeting held on the 3rd August 1954 could be treated as a
fresh meeting called by the Collector and that any
irregularity in serving the notice or in the appointment of
the presiding officer was cured by the provisions of section
57 of the Act. It was also argued that the appellant was
not the councillor who had objected to the adjournment of
the meeting of the 30th July and could not therefore object
to it at a later stage. Finally it was argued that the
appellant had no right to a writ or order prayed for as he
had not been injured in any sense.
It would thus appear that there are two main questions in
controversy between the parties, namely,
(1) whether the meeting of the 3rd August, 1954 had been validly
held; and
(2) whether the president and the vice-president
having been elected "for the remaining period of the
quadrennium" had been validly elected.
There are a number of subsidiary questions bearing upon
these two main questions which have been canvassed before
us,
1275
A good deal of argument was addressed to us contending that
the presiding officer had no power to adjourn the meeting of
the 30th July 1954 in view of the provisions of section
35(11) of the Act. In this connection reference was also
made to the proviso to section 19-A(2). Those provisions,
it was argued,, point to the conclusion that the powers of
the presiding officer are the same as those of the president
of a municipality when presiding over an ordinary meeting of
the municipality except that section 35(11) relating to
adjournments had been qualified only to this extent by the
proviso aforesaid, that the Collector or the officer
presiding over the meeting for the purpose of holding an
election of the president or vice-president may refuse to
adjourn such a meeting in spite of the wishes of the
majority of the members present to the contrary. It was
also argued that the High Court had wrongly taken the view
that the presiding officer had the inherent right to adjourn
the meeting. Reference was made to certain passages in "The
Law of Meetings" by Head, "The Law on the Practice of
Meetings" by Shackleton, and "Company Meetings" by Talbot.
In our opinion, it is unnecessary for the purpose of this
case to pronounce upon the merits of that controversy in the
view we take of the meeting of the 3rd August, 1954,
assuming that the meeting of the 30th July, 1954 had been
adjourned without authority.
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It is common ground that it was the Collector who called the
meeting of the 30th July 1954 and that it was under
instructions from the Collector that meeting was adjourned.
Under the provisions of section 23(1) (A), on the expiry of
the term of office of the president or vice-president as
determined by the municipality under section 19(1) of the
Act, a new president or vice-president shall be elected
within 25 days from the date of such expiry. The provisions
of section 19-A which relate to the procedure for calling a
meeting of a newly constituted municipality for the election
of a president and vice-president have been made applicable
to the calling of a meeting and the procedure to be followed
at such meeting for the
1276
election of a president. Section 19-A requires the
Collector to call a meeting for holding such an election.
Such a meeting shall be presided over by the Collector or
such officer as the Collector may by order in writing
appoint in this behalf. The Collector or his nominee, when
presiding over such a meeting, shall have the same powers as
the president of a municipalit by when presiding over a
meeting of the municipality has, but shall not have the
right to vote. On the 30th July, 1954 a special general
meeting had been called by the Collector for the election of
the President. In the proceedings of that meeting it has
been recorded that "Under instructions from the Collector of
Dharwar the presiding authority adjourns the meeting to 3rd
August 1954 at 3 P.m.". At that meeting all the 32
councillors were present and admittedly in their presence
the presiding officer declared openly that the meeting will
be held on the 3rd August 1954 under instructions from the
Collector concerned. When the meeting was held on the 3rd
August 1954 at 3 P.m. as previously notified, again the 32
councillors were present. The proceedings show that the
same Prant Officer "occupied the chair as authorised by the
Collector". The presiding authority read out and explained
to the members present the following telegraphic message
from the Collector:
"Government have directed to bold election of President of
Gadag Municipality on 3rd August as already arranged. Hold
election accordingly today without fail".
At this meeting the appellant raised two points of order,
(1) that the election of the president for the remaining
period of the quadrennium as mentioned in the agenda was
illegal, and (2) that the meeting was not an adjourned
meeting of the municipality and was also illegal because it
-was under the instructions of the Collector that the
adjourned meeting was being held and that the Collector had
no such power. The minutes of the proceedings further show
that "the presiding authority ruled out the points of order
on the ground that this was a special meeting called by the
Collector for the election of the President and
1277
the election has to be held as already fixed". After the
ruling given by the presiding authority, 13 members
including the appellant expressed a desire to walk out and
walked out with the permission of the presiding authority.
The remaining members, as already indicated, continued the
business of the meeting and the proposal that the 2nd
respondent should be elected president of the municipality
for the remaining period of the quadrennium after having
been duly made and seconded was carried unanimously and the
meeting terminated.
It would thus appear that the meeting of the 3rd August 1954
for the election of the president had been called by the
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Collector who had authorized the Prant Officer to preside
over that meeting and that the 2nd respondent was duly
elected president. Under section 35(3) of the Act, for such
a special general meeting three clear days’ notice has to be
given "specifying the time and place at -which such meeting
is to be held and the business to be transacted thereat
shall be served upon the councillors, and posted up at the
municipal office or the kacheri or some other public
building in the municipal borough and also published in a
local vernacular newspaper having a large circulation if
such exists".
It has been contended on behalf of the appellant that the
notice required by section 35 (3) contemplates a written
notice to be served and published in the manner specified,
and that the meeting of the 3rd August 1954 could not be
said to have been held after complying with the terms of
sub-section (3) of section 35. It was also contended that
the requirements of section 19-A(1) and (2) have also not
been complied with because there is no evidence that the
Collector had called that meeting or that he had made an
order in writing that the presiding authority had been
authorized to preside over that meeting. In our opinion,
there is no substance in any one of these contentions. From
the record of the proceedings of the proposed meeting of the
30th July 1954 and the actual meeting on the 3rd August 1954
it is clear that whatever had been done had been done under
the orders of
1278
the Collector. He had called the meeting of the 30th July
as also of the 3rd August 1954. It was he who had appointed
the Prant Officer as the presiding officer for both those
meetings. It is true that the notice of the meeting of the
3rd August 1954 had not been given in writing but had only
been intimated to all the councillors who were present at
the meeting of the 30th July 1954. The notice amply
satisfies the requirement of three days’ clear notice,
though it was not in writing. It had indicated the time of
the meeting and the business to be transacted. Under
section 35(4) the ordinary venue of a meeting is the
municipal office unless otherwise indicated in the notice.
It is also true that the notice was not served in the manner
indicated in sub-section (3) of section 35 of the Act.
There is no evidence that there existed a local vernacular
newspaper with large circulation, in which the notice of the
meeting could be published. The question is, do those
omissions render the notice ineffective in law. That could
only be so if those provisions were held to be mandatory.
The following provisions (omitting the words not material to
this case) would show that those provisions of section 35(3)
are directory and not mandatory and that any omissions in
the manner of service of the notice are mere irregularities
which would not vitiate the proceedings unless it was shown
that those irregularities bad prejudicially affected the
proceedings:-
"No resolution of a municipality deemed invalid on account
of any irregularity in the service of notice upon any
councillor or member provided that the proceedings of the
municipality ................ were not prejudicially
affected by such irregularity".
Fortunately for the respondents, all the councillors
constituting the municipality were present on both the
occasions, namely, 30th July and 3rd August, 1954. Hence
they had ample notice of the meeting to be held on the 3rd
August, 1954, the time and place of the meeting and the
business to be transacted. It has not been either alleged
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or proved that the irregularities in the service of the
notice or the omissions com-
1279
plained of had prejudicially affected the proceedings. But
it was contended that as the notice had not been posted up
at the municipal office or the local kacheri or some other
public building and had also not been published in a local
vernacular newspaper, if there were one, though all the
councillors were present on 3rd August, 1954, the members of
the public had no such notice and naturally therefore could
not be present at that meeting. In this connection it was
pointed out that sub-section (6) of section 35 provides that
every such meeting shall be open to the public, unless the
presiding authority directs to the contrary. It is evident
from the provisions of that sub-section that though the
presence of the public at such meetings may be desirable, it
is not obligatory. The presence at or the absence from such
a meeting of the members of the public has no legal
consequence so far as the validity of the election is
concerned. It must therefore be held that the meeting of
the 3rd August, 1954 in substance, though not in form,
complied with the requirements of the law for holding a
valid special general meeting and that therefore that
meeting was not invalid, assuming, as already said, that the
order of the presiding authority adjourning the meeting of
the 30th July, 1954 was not authorized. It has to be
remembered in this connection that such a special general
meeting can be presided over only by the Collector or the
person authorized by him and if either the Collector or his
nominee does not hold the meeting, it is not competent for
councillors present to elect their own chairman for
presiding over such a meeting. Therefore if the presiding
authority admittedly under instructions from the Collector
refused to proceed with the elections on the 30th July 1954,
the councillors present could not hold a meeting of their
own with a president of their own choice and transact the
only business on the agenda, namely, the election of
president. Hence, rightly or wrongly, if the meeting called
for the 30th July was not held, another meeting had to be
held for the purpose within 25 days of the occurrence of the
vacancy. In this case, as a
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result of the expiry of the original term of office of the
president and vice-president, another meeting giving the
required three days statutory notice had to be held. The
meeting held on the 3rd August 1954 was such a meeting.
Indeed, there were some omissions in the manner of
publication or service of the notice but those in law were
mere irregularities which do not have the effect of
vitiating the election held at that meeting. The election
of the president therefore, if not otherwise invalid, could
not be assailed on the ground of the irregularity in the
service or publication of the notice, in the special circum-
stances of this case. If all the councillors had not been
present on the 30th July or had not been informed of the
proposed meeting of the 3rd August 1954, other
considerations may have arisen but in this case it is clear
that there was absolutely no prejudice to any party or
individual or the municipality as a whole. But it was
further contended that the walking out of the 13 councillors
rendered the meeting infructuous. In our opinion, such a
result does not follow from the voluntary act of the 13
councillors who chose to walk out. It was not even
suggested that there was no quorum for the special general
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meeting after the 13 councillors walked out.
The next question is whether the provisions of section 19
(1) as they stood on the 3rd August 1954 render the election
of the president and the vice-president on the 3rd August
1954 invalid as it was "for the remaining period of the
quadrennium". The High Court has taken the view that the
remaining period of the quadrennium would not necessarily
end on the 9th July 1955, in view of the proviso to section
19(1) "that the term of office of such president or vice-
president shall be deemed to extend to and expire with the
date on which his successor is elected". In view of the
events that have happened it is not necessary for us to
pronounce on the correctness or otherwise of that decision.
After the judgment of the High Court and after the grant of
special leave by this court, the Bombay Legislature enacted
Act LIV of 1954 which was published in the Bombay Gazette on
the 14th
1281
October 1954. Sections 2 and 3 of the amending Act are in
these terms:
"2. In section 19 of the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act,
1925, in sub-section (I),-
(1)after the words ’not less than one year’ the words ’or
not less than the residue of the term of office of the
municipality, whichever is less’ shall be inserted;
(2)for the words ’three years’ the words ’four years’ shall
be substituted.
3.(1) The amendments made by this Act shall be deemed to
have come into force on the date on which the Bombay
District Muncipal and Municipal Boroughs (Amendment) Act,
1954, came into force (hereinafter in this section referred
to as ’the said date’) and all elections to the office of
the president or vice-president, held on or after the said
date and before the coming into force of this Act, shall be
deemed to be valid as if this Act bad been in force on the
said date; and any person elected to the office of the
president or vice-president at any of such elections shall
not be deemed to have been illegally elected merely on the
ground that the residue of the term of office of the
municipality being less than one year at the time of such
election, he would hold his office for a term less than one
year in contravention of section 19 of the Bombay Municipal
Boroughs Act, 1925, as it was in operation before the coming
into force of this Act.
(2)Nothing contained in this section shall affect the
judgment, decree or order of any competent court, passed
before the coming into force of this Act, holding any of
such elections invalid on the ground specified in sub-
section (1)".
It has not been contended that section 19 as amended by Act
LIV of 1954 does not in terms cover the elections now
impugned, nor that section 3 of the amending Act quoted
above is not retrospective; but it has been urged on behalf
of the appellant that it is not retrospective to the extent
of affecting pending proceedings. In terms the amendment in
question is deemed to have come into force on the II the May
1954
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on which date the amending Act XXXV of 1954 had come into
force. Section 3 in terms also declares that all elections
to the office of president and vice-president held on or
after the 11th May 1954 and before the coming into force of
the amending Act shall be deemed to have been valid. The
section also declares in unequivocal terms that such an
election shall not be questioned simply on the ground of
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contravention of section 19 on which the election of the 2nd
and 3rd respondents bad been questioned before the High
Court. The legislature apparently thought fit to declare
beyond all controversy that an election of president or
vice-president for the unexpired portion of the term of a
municipality could not be questioned on the ground that the
provisions of section 19 as it stood before the amendment
had been contravened.But it was argued on behalf of the
appellant that in terms the amendment had not been made
applicable to pending litigation and that therefore this
court should hold that the amendment did not have the effect
of validating the elections which were already under
challenge in a court. No authority has been cited before us
in support of the contention that unless there are express
words in the amending statute to the effect that the
amendment shall apply to pending proceedings also, it cannot
affect such proceedings. There is clear authority to the
contrary in-the following dictum of Lord Reading, C.J. in
the case of The King v. The General Commissioners of Income-
tax for Southampton; Ex parte W. M. Singer (1),-
"I cannot accept the contention of the applicant that an
enactment can only take away vested rights of action for
which legal proceedings have been commenced if there are in
the enactment express words to that effect. There is no
authority for this proposition, and I do not see why in
principle it should be the law. But it is necessary that
clear language should be used to make the retrospective
effect applicable to proceedings commenced before the
passing of the statute".
That was a case in which the Act in question had
(1) [1916] 2 K.B. 249, 259,
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validated assessments made by commissioners for wrong
parishes. It was held by the court that the retrospective
effect of the relevant section extended to proceedings for a
prohibition commenced before the Act came into force and the
rule nisi for a prohibition was therefore discharged. In
every case the language of the amending statute has to be
examined to find out whether the legislature clearly
intended even pending proceedings to be affected by such
statute. A number of authorities were cited before us but
it is only necessary to refer to the decision of their Lord-
ships of the Judicial Committee in Mukerjee, Official
Receiver v. Ramratan Kuer(1), which is clearly in point. In
that case while an appeal had been pending before the
Judicial Committee the amending Act had been passed clearly
showing that the Act was retrospective in the sense that it
applied to all cases of a particular description, without
reference to pending litigation. In those circumstances
their Lordships pointed out that if any saving were to be
implied in favour of pending proceedings, then the
provisions of the statute would largely be rendered
nugatory. Those observations apply with full force to the
present case, inasmuch as if any saving were to be implied
in favour of cases pending on the date of the amendment, the
words "all elections to the office of the president or vice-
president, held on or after the said date and before the
coming into force of this Act, shall be deemed to be valid"
could not be given their full effect. As there are no such
saving clauses in express or implied terms, it must be held
that the amendment was clearly intended by the legislature
to apply to all cases of election of president or vice-
president, whether or not the matter had been taken to
court. it is the duty of courts to give full effect to the
intentions of the legislature as expressed in a statute.
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That being so, it must be held that the amending Act had the
effect of curing any illegality or irregularity in the
elections in question with reference to the provisions of
section 19 of the Act.
For the reasons aforesaid it must be held that the
(1) [1935] L.R. 63 I.A. 47.
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meeting of the 3rd August 1954 had been validly held and
that there is no illegality in the election of the 2nd and
3rd respondents as president and vice-president
respectively. We accordingly affirm the orders of the High
Court, though not for the same reasons. The appeal fails
and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.