Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUDHANSU MAZUMDAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/03/1971
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
RAY, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1594 1971 SCR 244
ACT:
Cession-Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act, 1960-Cession of
territory to Pakistan-If acquisition within the meaning of
Art. 31(2).
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 31(2)-Cession of territory
to foreign State if acquisition.
Constitution of India, 1950-Article 132(1)-Certificate by
Single Judge Propriety of.
HEADNOTE:
Pursuant to the Indo-Pakistan Agreement, 1958, and after
this Court’s. Advisory opinion in In re the Berubari Union
and Exchange and Enclaves, [1960] 3 S.C.R. 250, Parliament
enacted the Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act, 1960 for
cession of part of the territory of India to Pakistan. In
order to implement the provisions of the Act a physical
demarcation of the portion that had to be ceaded was
necessary. The respondents filed a petition under Art. 226
of the Constitution before the High Court challenging the
validity of the proposed demarcation principally on the
ground that they would be deprived of their property without
compensation. A single Judge of the High Court held that
the cession of the territory involved transfer of ownership
and other private property rights to Pakistan through the
Union of India, which, though outside cl 2A of Art. 31 was
compulsory acquisition within the meaning of Art. 31(2).
The single Judge granted a certificate under Art. 132(1) for
appeal to this Court.
HELD:(i) No question of acquisition within the meaning of
Article 31(2) is involved in the present case. The
Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act, 1955, makes it clear
that mere deprivation of property unless it is acquisition
or requisitioning within the meaning of cl. 2A will not
attract cl. (2) and no obligation to pay compensation will
arise thereunder and it is essential under clause (2) that
in order to constitute acquisition or requisitioning there
must be transfer of the ownership or right to possession of
the property to the State or to a corporation owned or
controlled by the State. Cession indisputably involves
transference of sovereignty from one sovereign State to
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another. But, there is no transference of ownership or
right to possession in the properties of the inhabitants of
the territory ceded to the ceding State itself. The effect
of the Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act, 1960, can by no
stretch of reasoning be regarded as transfer of the
ownership or right to possession of any property of the
respondents to the "State" within the meaning of Article 12
of the Constitution. [202C-F, H]
Charanjit Lal Chowdhury v. Union of India, [1950] S.C.R.
869, 902, State of West Bengal v. Subodh Gopal Bose & Ors.
[1954] S.C.R. 587, Dwarkadas Shrinivas of Bombay v. Sholapur
Spinning & Weaving Co. Ltd. & Ors. [1954] S.C.R. 674, Saghir
Ahmed v. State of Uttar Pradesh, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707 and
Gullapalli Nageswara Rao & Ors. v. Andhra Pradesh State Road
Transport Corporation & Anr. [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 319,
referred to.
245
(ii) This Court has on earlier occasions, observed that the
practice of single Judge deciding the case and giving a
certificate under Article 132 (1) for appeal to this Court,
although technically correct, was an improper practice and
that such a certificate should be given only in very
exceptional cases where a direct appeal was necessary. The
present case may be of an exceptional kind; but this Court
has been deprived of the benefit of the judgment of a larger
Bench of the High Court on points which are of substantial
importance. [246B]
R.D. Agarwala. & Anr. v. Union of India & Ors..
C.A. Nos. 2634/69 etc. dt. 23-2-1970 and Union of India v.
J. P. Mitter, [1971] 3 S.C.R. 483, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 974 of 1968.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated December 22, 1967
and January 3, 1968 of the Calcutta High Court in Civil Rule
No. 3369(W) of 1966.
L. M. Singhvi and S. P. Nayar, for the appellant.
A. K. Dutta and K. Rajendra Chowdhary, for respondents
Nos. 1 to 3.
Santosh Chatterjee and G. S. Chatterjee, for respondent No.4
The Judgement of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J.-This is an appeal from a judgment of a learned
single judge of the Calcutta High Court who granted a
certificate under Art. 132(1) of the Constitution. It
involves primarily the question whether the cession of a
territory by India as a result of a treaty with Pakistan
would be compulsory acquisition of the property comprised in
that territory by the Union of India and would, therefore,
attract the provisions of Art. 31 of our Constitution.
At the outset it may be mentioned with reference to a preli-
minary objection which has been raised by the respondents
that the judgment under appeal was delivered by the learned
single Judge in a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution and it appears that on an oral prayer made to
him he granted a certificate under Art. 132(1) even though
under the Letters Patent of the High Court an appeal lay to
a division bench of that court. This Court has said on an
earlier occasion in clear and unequivocal terms that the
practice of a single Judge deciding the case and giving a
certificate under Art. 132(1) for appeal to this Court, al-
though technically correct, was an improper practice. The
right of the parties to file an appeal in the High Court
itself against the decision of the single Judge should not
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be short-circuited. Indeed
246
in R. D. Agarwala & Another etc. v. Union of India & Ors.(1)
the certificate was cancelled. In Union of India v. J. P.
Mitter(2) it was observed that a certificate by a single
judge under Art. 132(1) should be given in very exceptional
cases where a direct appeal was necessary. Even though the
present case may be of an exceptional kind we have been
deprived of the benefit of the judgment of a larger bench of
the High Court on points which are of substantial
importance. Presumably a number of matters which had no
bearing on the real questions to be determined and which
have been dealt with by the learned single judge would have
been either satisfactorily disposed of or would not have
been the subject matter of discussion by the court, being
irrelevant and unnecessary, if the decision had been given
by a larger Bench.
The facts may be shortly stated. On September 10,
1958, an agreement was entered into between the Government
of India and Pakistan called the Indo-Pakistan Agreement.
Item No. 3 of the agreement related to Berabari Union No. 12
which was a group of, villages lying within the territory of
India. This territory was to be so divided as to give one
half area to Pakistan. The other half adjacent to India was
to be retained by India. Subsequently a doubt arose whether
the implementation of the agreement relating to Berubari
Union required Legislative action either by way of an Act of
Parliament relatable to Art. 3 of the Constitution or by
way, of a suitable amendment of the Constitution in
accordance with the provisions of Art. 368 or both. A
similar doubt had also arisen in respect of another item of
the agreement which related to the exchange of certain
enclaves but with which we are not concerned. The President
of India made a reference to this Court under Art. 143(1),
of the Constitution for its advisory opinion. The opinion
was deliverted on March 14, 1960. (In Re’: The Berubari
Union and Exchange of Enclaves Reference Under Article 143
(1) of the Constitution of India(3). As mentioned in the
advisory opinion Berubari Union No. 12 had an area of 8-75
Sq. Miles and a, population of 10 to 12 thousand residents.
It was situated in the district, of Jalpaiguri. This Court
expressed the view that since the agreement between India
and Pakistan a mounted to cession of a part of the territory
of India in favour of Pakistan its implementation would
naturally involve the alteration of the content of and the
consequent amendment of Article and of the relevant part of
the First Schedule to the Constitution which could be made
only under Article 368. Pursuant to the opinion delivered
by this Court the Parliament enacted
(1) C. As. 2634/69 & 63/70 decided on 23-2-70.
(2) [1971] 3 S.C.R. 483.
(3) [1960] 3 S. C. R. 250.
247
the Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act 1960 on December 28,
1960. In order to implement the provisions of the above Act
a physical division of the Berubari Union in accordance with
the agreement and demarcation of the portion that was to go
to Pakistan was necessary. Some of the, inhabitants of the
Berubari Union filed a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution challenging its proposed partition with the
object of transferring its southern part to Pakistan. The
Writ petition was dismissed and an appeal was brought to
this Court which was disposed of on August 11, 1965. (Ram
Kishore Sen & Others v. Union of India & Ors.)(1). It was
held that the Ninth Constitution Amendment Act had been
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passed by the Parliament in the manner indicated in the
advisory opinion of this Court. No merit was found on the
other points which were agitated. The appeal was dismissed.
On June 11, 1965, the respondents filed another petition
under Article 226 of the Constitution before the High Court
challenging the validity of the proposed demarcation
principally on the ground right of citizenship conferred by
also of their property without payment of compensation. D.
D. Basu J. called for an affidavit in opposition and after
hearing lengthy arguments delivered an elaborate judgment
A.I.R. 1967 Cal. 216) directing the issue of rule nisi
limited to ground No. 3 of the writ petition. This ground
was:
"For that no Act of the State is involved in
the transfer of Berubari Union No. 12 to
Pakistan and as such your petitioners are
entitle to compensation in terms of Art. 31(2)
of the Constitution inasmuch as the operation
of transfer involves deprivation of their
right to property for which no provision has
been made in the Constitution 9th Amendment
Act, 1960."
According to the allegation in the writ petition respondent
Dhanoswar Roy had 2 acres 64 decimals of khas land in the
area in question. It was also claimed that the respondents
had their household property, ancestral homes and cultivated
lands in the Berubari Union No. 12.
The constitutional question formulated by the learned judge
was whether compensation under Article 31(2) of the
Constitution was to be provided for the respondents before
the demarcation in implementation of the Constitution (Ninth
Amendment) Act took place,. We may mention some of the
material conclusions of the learned judge out of the
numerous matters dealt with by
(1) [1966] 1 S. C. R. 430.
248
him. These are: (1) the treaty making power must be
exercised subject to the fundamental rights guaranteed by
the Constitution. (2) Once it is established that a treaty
making law involves a transfer which attracts Art. 31(2) it
cannot be exempted from the requirements of that Article on
the ground that it is a treaty of "cession". (3) Although
under the International Law the private rights of the
inhabitants of the ceded territory are not instantly
affected they shall have no legal right to assert against
the new State under its own municipal law to which such
inhabitants shall be subject from the moment the cession is
complete. (4) As a result of cession it would be competent
for the Government of Pakistan to deal with the disputed
territory as absolute owner in complete disregard of the
existing rights of the respondents. "The rights of the
Government of Pakistan under its municipal law would in no
way be less than what would have happened if the lands were
vested in that Government by a direct Act of the Government
of India. Such vesting the Government of India could
arrange for only after acquiring the disputed lands". (5)
The present case will not be covered by clause 2(A) of
Article 31 of the Constitution as so far all the cases which
have been held to fall within its purview have been those in
which there was exercise of the regulatory power of the
State. (6) The cession of the disputed properties sought to
be implemented by the impugned demarcation involved
compulsory acquisition of those properties by the Union of
India within the meaning of Art. 31(2) and unless competent
legislation is enacted to provide for compensation the Union
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cannot announce the appointed day within the meaning of S.
2(A) of the Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act 1960 and for
constructing pillars to demarcate Berubari Union No. 12 for
the purpose of effecting the transfer of the specified
portion to Pakistan.
According to Dr. Singhvi learned counsel for the appellant
the High Court has fallen into serious errors inasmuch as it
has proceeded on many assumptions, reasoned on a priori
theories and has founded its judgment on certain premises
which do not exist either in fact or in law. Stress has
been laid on the true import of "cession". According to all
authorities on International Law "cession" is the transfer
of sovereignty over the State territory by the owner State
to another State"(1). Under the International Law two of
the essential attributes of sovereignty are the power to ac-
quire foreign territory as well as the power to cede
national territory in favour of foreign State(2) (supra at
p. 281). Hardship is certainly involved in the fact that in
all cases of cession the inhabitants of the territory ceded
lose their old citizenship and have to submit to a new
sovereign whether they like it or not. As the object of
cession is sovereignty over the ceded territory all such
(1) Oppenheim’s International Law Vol. 1, 8th Edn. at pp.
547, 551.
(2) [1960] 3 S.C.R 250.
249
individuals domiciled thereon as are subjects of the ceding
State become ipso facto, by the cession, subjects of the
acquiring .,State(1) (supra at p. 551).
Dr. Singhvi says that the first premise on which the High
Court has proceeded is that as a result of cession it would
be ,competent for the Government of Pakistan to deal with
the disputed territory as an absolute owner in complete
disregard of the .existing rights of the respondents. In
other words it has been assumed that the Government of
Pakistan will not recognise owner-ship or other similar
rights of the respondents in the lands and properties which
belong to them. This, Dr. Singhvi claims, is contrary to
the rule enunciated by Chief Justice Marshall in United
States v. Juan Perchman(2) in the following words :
"The modern usage of nations, which has become
law, would be violated; that sense of justice
and of right which is acknowledged and felt by
the whole civilised world would be outraged,
if private property should be generally
confiscated and private rights annulled. The
people change their allegiance; their relation
to their ancient sovereign is dissolved; but
their relations to each other and their rights
of property, remain undisturbed."
The rule set forth in the Perchman case has been followed in
over forty American cases and has been accepted as the rule
of Inter,national law in English, French, German and Italian
law(3).
This Court has had occasion to consider fully the Perchman’s
case as also the English law apart from several other autho-
rities on International law and the decisions of the
Permanent Court of International Justice. In State of
Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali Badruddin Mithibarwala(4) the
following passage from the judgment of Mudholkar J., at
pages 590, 591 gives tersely the position which obtains in
our country :--
"Thus while according to one view there is a
State succession in so far as private rights
are concerned according to the other which we
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might say is reflected in our laws, it is not
so. Two concepts underline our law; one is
that the inhabitants of acquired territories
bring with them no rights enforceable against
the new sovereign. The other is that the
municipal courts have
(1) Oppenheim’s International Law Vol. 1,8th Edn. at pp.
547, 551.
(2) 8 L. ed. 604.
(3)Extracts from the Law of Nations (2nd Edn. 1953 P. 237
of. F. B. Sayre, "Change of Sovereignty and Private
Ownership of Land," 12 XIXL A. J. I. L. (1918), 475, 481,
495-497.
(4) [1964] 6 S C. R. 461.
250
no jurisdiction to enforce, any rights claimed
by them, even by virtue of the provisions of a
treaty or other transaction internationally
binding on the new sovereign unless their
rights have been recognised by the new
sovereign."
The above case related to rights pertaining to the
exploitation of the forests which were claimed under a
Tharao which was held by the ’majority to be a grant to the
jagirdars by the ruler of the erstwhile Sant State which
merged in the )Dominion of India as from June 10, 1948. It
wag thus held that the rights derived by the inhabitants of
’the ’ceded territory from its former rulers could not be
enforced by them against the new sovereign in the courts of
that sovereign unless they had been recognised by the 2,1
new sovereign. It is altogether unnecessary to discuss the
principles established by. the decisions of this Court
further because they can afford no Assistance in deciding no
question arises of how the private a particular territory
would be affected ceaded to India. The session involved
the present case in which rights of the inhabitants of if
the same Were to be is of territory to Pakistan and no
evidence was placed before the High Court from which it
could be concluded that inder the Pakistan laws the private
rights of the inhabitants therein would not be respected in
accordance with the ordinary principles of International
law. In this situation it would be a wholly wrong approach
to conclude that the respondents are bound to loge all their
property rights in the territory which is being ceded by
India to Pakistan. Even on the assumption that the
respondents will not be entitled to enforce their private
rights in the municipal courts of Pakistan unless they are
recognised by the new sovereign it is incomprehensible how
such a prospect or possibility can attract the applicability
of Art. 31(2) of our Constitution so as to entitle the
respondens to compensation as provided thereby. Nor can we
understand the process of reasoning by which the High Court
has reached the result that cession would be tantamount to
vesting by the direct act of the Government of India of the
properties of the respondents in Pakistan.
ln order to determine whether the case of the respondent,%
would fill within Art. 3.1(2) ,it is necessary to set out
that provision as also para 2A of that, Article which was
added by the Constitution (4th Amendment) Act 1955:
(2)"No property shall be compulsorily
acquired or requisitioned save. for a public
purpose and save by authority of a law which
provides for compensation for the property so
aquired or requisitioned and either fixes the
amount of the compensation or specifies the
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principles on which, and the manner in which,
the compensa-
251
tion is to be determined and given; and no
such law shall be called in question in any
court on the ground that the compensation
provided by that law is not adequate."
(2A) Where a law does not provide for the
transfer of the ownership or right to
possession of any property to the State or to
a corporation owned or controlled by the State
it shall not be deemed to provide for the
compulsory acquisition or requisitioning of
property, notwithstanding that it deprives any
person of his property."
As far back as 1950 Mukherjea J. (as he then was) gave the
meaning of "acquisition ’ in Charanjit Lal Chowdhury v.
Union of India(1) in the following words:
"Acquisition means and implies the acquiring,
of the entire title of the expropriated owner,
whatever the nature or extent of that title
might be. The entire bundle of rights which
were vested in the original holder would pass
on acquisition to the acquirer leaving nothing
in the former".
But in the State of West Bengal v. Subodh Gopal Bose &
others(2) the view taken in the judgment of the majority was
that clauses 1 and 2 of Article 31 were not mutually
exclusive in scope and content but should be read together
and understood as dealing with the same subject. Thus a
wider meaning was given to acquisition, deprivation
contemplated in clause being no other than the acquisition
or taking possession of the property referred to in
clause(2). In Dwarkadas Shrinivasa of Bombay v. The
Sholapur Spinning & Weaving Co. Ltd. & Others(3) this Court,
While confirming the above principle, held that the word
"acquisition" had quite a wide concept, meaning the
procuring of property or taking of it permanently or
temporarily and it was not confined only to the acquisition
of a legal title, by the State in the property taken
possession of. This was the position relating to Art. 31 as
it stood before the Constitution (4th Amendment) Act, Clause
2A was inserted in 1955 with the object of superseding the
majority decision in Subodh Gopal’s(2) case as also in
Saghir Ahmed v. The State of Uttar Pradesh(4) in which
the earlier decisions were followed. It was pointed out in
Gultapalli Nageswdra Rao & other v. Andhra Pradesh State
Road Transport Corporation & Another(5)
"The Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act,
1955 Amended clause (2) of Art. 31 and
inserted clause 2A in
(1) [1950] S. C. R. 869 At p. 902. (2) [1954] S. C. R. 587.
(3) [1954] S. C. R. 674. (4) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 707.
(5) [1959] Suppl. 1 S. C. R. 319.
252
that article. The amendments, in so far as
they are relevant to the present purpose,
substitute in place of the words ’taken
possession or acquired’ the words ‘
compulsorily acquired or requisitioned’ and
provide an explanation of the words ’acquired
and requisitioned’ in clause (2A). The result
is that unless the law depriving any person of
his property provides for the transfer of the
ownership or right to the possession of any
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property to the State, the law does not relate
to acquisition or requisition’ of property and
therefore the limitations placed upon the
legislature under cl. (2) will not apply to
such law."
It is therefore essential that in order to constitute
acquisition or requisitioning there must be, transfer of the
ownership or right to possession of any property to the
State or to a corporation owned or controlled by the State.
Article 12 provides that in Part III (in which Article 31
appears) unless the context otherwise requires the State
"includes the Government and Parliament of India and the
Government and the legislature of each of the States and all
local or other authorities within the territory of India or
under the control of the Government of India. The effect of
the Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act 1960 by which part of
the Berubari Union No. 12 shall be ceded to Pakistan can by
no stretch of reasoning be regarded as a transfer of the
ownership or right to possession of any property of the
respondents to the State within the meaning of Art. 12 of
the Constitution. The amendment of 1955 makes it clear that
mere deprivation of property unless it is acquisition or
requisitioning within the meaning of clause (2A) will not
attract clause (2) and no obligation to pay compensation
will arise thereunder.
Cession indisputably involves transference of sovereignty
from one sovereign State to another. There is no
transference of ownership or right to possession in the
properties of the inhabitants of the territory ceded to the
ceding State itself. The Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act
having been enacted in accordance with the Advisory opinion
of this court(1) there can be no impediment in the way of
ceding part of Berubari Union No. 12 pursuant to the Indo-
Pakistan Treaty 1958. The view of the High Court that the
cession of the said territory involves transfer of the
ownership and other private property rights to Pakistan
through the Union of India which was outside clause(2A) of
Article 31 and was covered by clause(2) of that Article is
to say the least wholly untenable and cannot be sustained.
In our judgment no question of acquisition within Art. 31(2)
is involved in the present case and even though a good deal
of hardship may result to the respondents owing to the
change of sovereignty they
(1) [1960] 3 S. C. R. 250.
253
cannot claim compensation for the simple reason that there
has been no transfer of the ownership of their property to
the State namely the Union of India which would attract the
applicability of Art. 31(2).
The appeal, therefore, succeeds and it is hereby allowed.
In view of the nature of the points decided there will be no
order as to costs.
K.B.N. Appeal allowed.
254