Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6638 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Zile Singh
RESPONDENT:
State of Haryana & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/10/2004
BENCH:
CJI. R.C. Lahoti, G.P. Mathur & P.K. Balasubramanyan
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of S.L.P (c) No.459/2004)
R.C. Lahoti, CJI
Leave granted.
Haryana Municipal Act, 1973 (hereinafter, the Principal Act,
for short) is a State enactment dealing with local self-government
through the municipalities. Chapter III of the said Act deals with
composition of municipalities. The Haryana Municipal (Amendment)
Act, 1994 (Act No.3 of 1994) inserted Section 13A in Chapter III of
the Principal Act which provision reads as under :-
"13A. Disqualification for membership.
(1) A person shall be disqualified for being
chosen as and for being a member of a
municipality __
xxx xxx xxx
(c) if he has more than two living
children :
Provided that a person having more than
two children on or after the expiry of one
year of the commencement of this Act,
shall not be deemed to be disqualified".
xxx xxx xxx"
The Amendment Act received the assent of the Governor of
Haryana on the 1st April, 1994 which was published in the Haryana
Gazette, (Extraordinary), Legislative Supplement, Part I, dated April
5, 1994 and on that date the Amendment Act came into force. The
amendment spelled out a disqualification effective from 5.4.1994 on
a person for being a member of municipality either by election or by
continuing to hold the office even if elected prior to the date of
coming into force of the Amendment Act. The substantive provision
contained in clause (c) abovesaid spelling out the disqualification is
explicit and specific. However, the proviso appended to clause (c)
turned out to be a trouble-maker on account of its faulty drafting.
Anomalous consequences verging on absurdity flew from the
proviso. While a person having more than two living children on 5th
April, 1994 became disqualified for being a member of municipality
on that day and the disqualification continued to operate for a
period of one year calculated from 5th April, 1994 yet on the expiry
of the period of one year the disqualification ceased to operate.
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Meaning thereby that the legislative embargo imposed on a person
from procreating and giving birth to a third child in the context of
holding the office of a member of municipality remained in
operation for a period of one year only and thereafter it was lifted.
Even those who became disqualified on 5.4.1994, the
disqualification ceased to operate and they became qualified once
again to contest the election and hold the office of member of a
municipality on the expiry of one year from 5.4.1994. Obviously,
this is not what the Legislature intended.
It took more than six months for the State Legislature to
realize its error. The Haryana Municipal (Second Amendment) Act,
1994 (Act No.15 of 1994) was enacted by the Legislature which
received the assent of the Governor of Haryana on 3rd October,
1994 published in Haryana Gazette (Extraordinary) dated 4th
October, 1994. Section 2 of the Second Amendment reads as
under :-
"2. In the proviso to clause (c) of sub-
section (1) of section 13A of the Haryana
Municipal Act, 1973 (hereinafter called
the principal Act), for the word "after",
the word "upto" shall be substituted."
The Second Amendment brought the text of the relevant part
of Section 13A in conformity with the legislative intent which
prevailed behind the preceding amendment, that is, the First
Amendment.
Zile Singh, the appellant was married with one Om Pati in
April 1970. The couple had three living children when Om Pati died
in April 1991. The appellant then married one Sunita on 20.7.1991.
Out of the latter marriage, two children were born to the appellant
__ a daughter, Puja born in April 1992 and a son Gaurav born on
13.8.1995. The appellant was holding the office of member of
Municipality. One Nafe Singh filed a complaint against the appellant
bringing it to the notice of the State Government that on a child
having been born after 5th April, 1995, i.e., one year after the
commencement of the First Amendment Act, the appellant had
incurred disqualification for holding the office of member. Clause
(f) of sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Principal Act confers
power on the State Government to remove by notification any
member of a committee if he has, since his election or nomination
become subject to any disqualification which, if it had existed at the
time of his election or nomination, would have rendered him
ineligible under any law for the time being in force relating to the
qualifications of candidates for election or nomination or if it
appears that he was, at the time of his election or nomination
subject to any such disqualification. The factum of the birth of
Gaurav on 13.8.1995 is not disputed though the appellant
contended that Gaurav was given away in adoption on 10.9.1995.
The State Election Commission, Haryana which is the competent
authority found the appellant having incurred the disqualification
within the meaning of Section 13A(1)(c). The disqualification was
notified.
Feeling aggrieved the appellant filed a writ petition in the
High Court which has been dismissed. This is an appeal by special
leave.
At the very outset we may state that the retrospectivity in
operation of the text as amended by the Second Amendment came
up for the consideration of a two-Judges Bench of this Court in
Sunil Kumar Rana Vs. State of Haryana and Ors. \026 (2003) 2
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SCC 628. This court held that the legislative intent to compute the
period of one year under the proviso is from the "commencement of
this Act" meaning thereby from the date of coming into force of
Haryana Act 3 of 1994 and not Haryana Act 15 of 1994 which
merely substituted the word "after" by the word "upto". The result
of the substitution was to read the provision as amended by the
word ordered to be substituted. The Court held __ "The legislature
seems to have realized the need for substitution on becoming
aware of the anomalies and absurdities to which the provision
without such substitution may lead to, even resulting, at times, in
repugnancy with the main provision and virtually defeating the
intention of the legislature. The modification of the provision, as
carried out by the substitution ordered, when found to be needed
and necessitated to implement effectively the legislative intention
and to prevent a social mischief against which the provision is
directed, a purposive construction is a must and the only inevitable
solution. The right to contest to an office of a member of a
municipal body is the creature of statute and not a constitutional or
fundamental right."
In spite of the issue posed for decision before us being
squarely covered by the abovesaid decisions, the learned counsel
for the appellant does not feel satisfied. In his humble submission
Sunil Kumar Rana’s case (supra), which is two-judges Bench
decision, was not correctly decided and hence needs a
reconsideration and an over-ruling thereafter. In view of the
submission so made and forcefully pressed, we proceed to examine
and deal with the pleas raised before us independently of the
holding in Sunil Kumar Rana’s case (supra).
The constitutional validity of ’two child norm’ as legislatively
prescribed, and a departure therefrom resulting in attracting
applicability of disqualification for holding an elective office, has
been upheld by this Court as intra vires the Constitution repelling
all possible objections founded on very many grounds in Javed
and Ors. Vs. State of Haryana and Ors. \026 (2003) 8 SCC 369.
This Court has also held that the disqualification is attracted no
sooner a third child is born and is living after two living children and
merely because the couple has parted with one child by giving it
away in adoption, the disqualification does not come to an end.
However, the present case poses a different issue.
According to the appellant, the disqualification imposed by
Section 13A (1)(c) of the First Amendment remained in operation
only for a period of one year and would have in ordinary course
ceased to operate on the expiry of the period of one year from
April 5, 1994. The citizens were justified in arranging their affairs
including the enlargement of their families keeping in view the
provision of law as it stood. However, the Second Amendment Act
effective from 14.10.1994 made a difference. On that day, the
Legislature specifically provided that a person having more than
two children on or after the expiry of one year shall stand
disqualified. This period of one year, in the submission of the
appellant, should be calculated from 4.10.1994 and not 5.4.1994
and if that be done the birth of the child on 13.8.1995 would not
attract the disqualification.
This plea of the appellant raises a few interesting questions,
such as, the nature of amendment, i.e., whether it is at all
retrospective in operation, and if not, whether the provision as
amended by the Second Amendment applies to the appellant.
It is a cardinal principle of construction that every statute is
prima facie prospective unless it is expressly or by necessary
implication made to have a retrospective operation. But the rule in
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general is applicable where the object of the statute is to affect
vested rights or to impose new burdens or to impair existing
obligations. Unless there are words in the statute sufficient to show
the intention of the Legislature to affect existing rights, it is deemed
to be prospective only ’nova constitutio futuris formam imponere
debet non praeteritis’ __ a new law ought to regulate what is to
follow, not the past. (See : Principles of Statutory Interpretation by
Justice G.P. Singh, Ninth Edition, 2004 at p.438). It is not
necessary that an express provision be made to make a statute
retrospective and the presumption against retrospectivity may be
rebutted by necessary implication especially in a case where the
new law is made to cure an acknowledged evil for the benefit of the
community as a whole. (ibid, p.440)
The presumption against retrospective operation is not
applicable to declaratory statutes\005\005.In determining, therefore, the
nature of the Act, regard must be had to the substance rather than
to the form. If a new Act is ’to explain’ an earlier Act, it would be
without object unless construed retrospective. An explanatory Act
is generally passed to supply an obvious omission or to clear up
doubts as to the meaning of the previous Act. It is well settled that
if a statute is curative or merely declaratory of the previous law
retrospective operation is generally intended\005\005\005An amending Act
may be purely declaratory to clear a meaning of a provision of the
principal Act which was already implicit. A clarificatory amendment
of this nature will have retrospective effect. (ibid, pp.468-469).
Though retrospectivity is not to be presumed and rather there
is presumption against retrospectivity, according to Craies (Statute
Law, Seventh Edition), it is open for the legislature to enact laws
having retrospective operation. This can be achieved by express
enactment or by necessary implication from the language
employed. If it is a necessary implication from the language
employed that the legislature intended a particular section to have
a retrospective operation, the Courts will give it such an operation.
In the absence of a retrospective operation having been expressly
given, the Courts may be called upon to construe the provisions
and answer the question whether the legislature had sufficiently
expressed that intention giving the Statute retrospectivity. Four
factors are suggested as relevant: (i) general scope and purview of
the statute; (ii) the remedy sought to be applied; (iii) the former
state of the law; and (iv) what it was the legislature contemplated
(p.388). The rule against retrospectivity does not extend to protect
from the effect of a repeal, a privilege which did not amount to
accrued right (p.392).
Where a Statute is passed for the purpose of supplying an
obvious omission in a former statute or to ’explain’ a former
statute, the subsequent statute has relation back to the time when
the prior Act was passed. The rule against retrospectivity is
inapplicable to such legislations as are explanatory and declaratory
in nature. The classic illustration is the case of Att. Gen. Vs.
Pougett ([1816] 2 Price 381, 392). By a Customs Act of 1873 (53
Geo. 3, c. 33) a duty was imposed upon hides of 9s. 4d., but the
Act omitted to state that it was to be 9s. 4d. per cwt., and to
remedy this omission another Customs Act (53 Geo. 3, c. 105) was
passed later in the same year. Between the passing of these two
Acts some hides were exported, and it was contended that they
were not liable to pay the duty of 9s. 4d. per cwt., but Thomson
C.B., in giving judgment for the Attorney-General, said: "The duty
in this instance was in fact imposed by the first Act, but the gross
mistake of the omission of the weight for which the sum expressed
was to have been payable occasioned the amendment made by the
subsequent Act, but that had reference to the former statute as
soon as it passed, and they must be taken together as if they were
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one and the same Act." (p.395).
Maxwell states in his work on Interpretation of Statutes,
(Twelfth Edition) that the rule against retrospective operation is a
presumption only, and as such it "may be overcome, not only by
express words in the Act but also by circumstances sufficiently
strong to displace it." (p.225). If the dominant intention of the
legislature can be clearly and doubtlessly spelt out, the inhibition
contained in the rule against perpetuity becomes of doubtful
applicability as the "inhibition of the rule" is a matter of degree
which would "vary secundum materiam" (p.226). Sometimes,
where the sense of the statute demands it or where there has been
an obvious mistake in drafting, a court will be prepared to
substitute another word or phrase for that which actually appears in
the text of the Act (p.231).
In a recent decision of this Court in National Agricultural
Cooperative Marketing Federation of India Ltd. And Another
Vs. Union of India and Others, (2003) 5 SCC 23, it has been
held that there is no fixed formula for the expression of legislative
intent to give retrospectivity to an enactment. Every legislation
whether prospective or retrospective has to be subjected to the
question of legislative competence. The retrospectivity is liable to
be decided on a few touchstones such as : (i) the words used must
expressly provide or clearly imply retrospective operation; (ii) the
retrospectivity must be reasonable and not excessive or harsh,
otherwise it runs the risk of being struck down as unconstitutional;
(iii) where the legislation is introduced to overcome a judicial
decision, the power cannot be used to subvert the decision without
removing the statutory basis of the decision. There is no fixed
formula for the expression of legislative intent to give
retrospectivity to an enactment. A validating clause coupled with a
substantive statutory change is only one of the methods to leave
actions unsustainable under the unamended statute, undisturbed.
Consequently, the absence of a validating clause would not by itself
affect the retrospective operation of the statutory provision, if such
retrospectivity is otherwise apparent.
The Constitution Bench in Shyam Sunder & Ors. Vs. Ram
Kumar & Anr., (2001) 8 SCC 24, has held ___ "Ordinarily when an
enactment declares the previous law, it requires to be given
retroactive effect. The function of a declaratory statute is to supply
an omission or explain previous statute and when such an Act is
passed, it comes into effect when the previous enactment was
passed. The legislative power to enact law includes the power to
declare what was the previous law and when such a declaratory Act
is passed invariably it has been held to be retrospective. Mere
absence of use of word ’declaration’ in an Act explaining what was
the law before may not appear to be a declaratory Act but if the
Court finds an Act as declaratory or explanatory it has to be
construed as retrospective." (p. 2487).
In The Bengal Immunity Company Ltd. Vs. The State of
Bihar & Ors., [1955] 2 SCR 603, Heydon’s case (3 Co. Rep.7a;
76 E.R.637) was cited with approval. Their Lordships have said ___
"It is a sound rule of construction of a
statute firmly established in England as far
back as 1584 when Heydon’s case was decided
that ___"\005\005for the sure and true interpretation
of all Statutes in general (be they penal or
beneficial, restrictive or enlarging of the
common law) four things are to be discerned
and considered:-
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1st. What was the common law before
the making of the Act.
2nd. What was the mischief and defect
for which the common law did not provide.,
3rd. What remedy the Parliament hath
resolved and appointed to cure the disease of
the Commonwealth., and
4th. The true reason of the remedy;
and then the office of all the judges is always
to make such construction as shall suppress
the mischief, and advance the remedy, and to
suppress subtle inventions and evasions for
continuance of the mischief, and pro privato
commodo, and to add force and life to the cure
and remedy, according to the true intent of the
makers of the Act, pro bono publico"."
In Allied Motors (P) Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Delhi, (1997) 3 SCC 472, certain unintended consequences
flew from a provision enacted by the Parliament. There was an
obvious omission. In order to cure the defect, a proviso was sought
to be introduced through an amendment. The Court held that
literal construction was liable to be avoided if it defeated the
manifest object and purpose of the Act. The rule of reasonable
interpretation should apply. "A proviso which is inserted to remedy
unintended consequences and to make the provision workable, a
proviso which supplies an obvious omission in the section and is
required to be read into the section to give the section a reasonable
interpretation, requires to be treated as retrospective in operation
so that a reasonable interpretation can be given to the section as a
whole."
The State Legislature of Haryana intended to impose a
disqualification with effect from 5.4.1994 and that was done. Any
person having more than two living children was disqualified on and
from that day for being a member of municipality. However, while
enacting a proviso by way of an exception carving out a fact-
situation from the operation of the newly introduced disqualification
the draftsman’s folly caused the creation of trouble. A simplistic
reading of the text of the proviso spelled out a consequence which
the Legislature had never intended and could not have intended. It
is true that the Second Amendment does not expressly give the
amendment a retrospective operation. The absence of a provision
expressly giving a retrospective operation to the legislation is not
determinative of its prospectivity or retrospectivity. Intrinsic
evidence may be available to show that the amendment was
necessarily intended to have the retrospective effect and if the
Court can unhesitatingly conclude in favour of retrospectivity, the
Court would not hesitate in giving the Act that operation unless
prevented from doing so by any mandate contained in law or an
established principle of interpretation of statutes.
The text of Section 2 of the Second Amendment Act provides
for the word "upto" being substituted for the word "after". What is
the meaning and effect of the expression employed therein \026 "shall
be substituted".
The substitution of one text for the other pre-existing text is
one of the known and well-recognised practices employed in
legislative drafting. ’Substitution’ has to be distinguished from
’supersession’ or a mere repeal of an existing provision.
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Substitution of a provision results in repeal of the earlier
provision and its replacement by the new provision (See Principles
of Statutory Interpretation, ibid, p.565). If any authority is needed
in support of the proposition, it is to be found in West U.P. Sugar
Mills Assn. and Ors. Vs. State of U.P. and Ors. \026(2002) 2 SCC
645, State of Rajasthan Vs. Mangilal Pindwal \026 (1996) 5 SCC
60, Koteswar Vittal Kamath Vs. K. Rangappa Baliga and Co. \026
(1969) 1 SCC 255 and A.L.V.R.S.T. Veerappa Chettiar Vs. S.
Michael & Ors. \026 AIR 1963 SC 933. In West U.P. Sugar Mills
Association and Ors.’s case (supra) a three-Judges Bench of this
Court held that the State Government by substituting the new rule
in place of the old one never intended to keep alive the old rule.
Having regard to the totality of the circumstances centering around
the issue the Court held that the substitution had the effect of just
deleting the old rule and making the new rule operative. In
Mangilal Pindwal’s case (supra) this Court upheld the legislative
practice of an amendment by substitution being incorporated in the
text of a statute which had ceased to exist and held that the
substitution would have the effect of amending the operation of law
during the period in which it was in force. In Koteswar’s case
(supra) a three-Judges Bench of this Court emphasized the
distinction between ’supersession’ of a rule and ’substitution’ of a
rule and held that the process of substitution consists of two steps :
first, the old rule is made to cease to exist and, next, the new rule
is brought into existence in its place.
In Javed (supra) it was held that the right to contest an
election is neither a fundamental right nor a common law right. It
is a right conferred by a statute. The statute which confers the
right to contest an election can also provide for the necessary
qualifications and disqualifications for holding an elective office.
The bar by way of disqualification created against holding the office
of a member of a municipality by clause (c) of sub-section (1) of
Section 13A was absolute. Merely because a disqualification is
imposed by reference to certain facts which are referable to a date
prior to the enactment of disqualification, the Act does not become
retrospective in operation. No vested right was taken away. The
First Amendment was not a piece of legislation having any
retrospectivity. However, the legislature thought that it would be
more reasonable if the disqualification was not applied by reference
to a child born within a period of one year from the date of
commencement of the Act. The period of one year was appointed
keeping in view the period of gestation which is two hundred and
eighty days as incorporated in Section 112 of the Indian Evidence
Act of 1872 and added to it a little more margin of eighty five days.
The proviso spells out this meaning but for the error in drafting.
Even if there would have been no amendment (as introduced by the
Second Amendment Act) the proviso as it originally stood, if
subjected to judicial scrutiny, would have been so interpreted and
the word ’after’ would have been read as ’upto’ or assigned that
meaning so as to carry out the legislative intent and not to make a
capital out of the draftsman’s folly. Or, the proviso \026 if not read
down \026 would have been declared void and struck down as being
arbitrary and discriminatory inasmuch as the persons having more
than two living children on the date of enactment of the Act and
within one year thereafter and the persons having more than two
living children after the date of one year could not have formed two
classes capable of being distinguished on a well defined criterion so
as to fulfill the purpose sought to be achieved by the legislature.
However, the legislature got wiser by realizing its draftsman’s
mistake and stepped in by substituting the mistaken word ’after’ by
the correct word ’upto’ which should have been there since very
beginning. In our opinion the Second Amendment is declaratory in
nature. It alters the text of the First Amendment in such manner
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as to remove the obvious absurdity therefrom and brings it in
conformity with what the Legislature had really intended to provide.
It explains and removes the obvious error and clarifies what the law
always was and shall remain to be. The Second Amendment would
operate retrospectively from the date of the First Amendment and
in giving such operation no mandate of any law or principle is
violated. Else, the evil sought to be curbed continues to exist for
some period contrary to legislative intent. The application of rule
against retrospectivity stands excepted from Second Amendment
Act.
In Javed (supra) the Court has been at pains to point out
how the growth of population of India was alarming and posed a
menace to be checked. It was in national interest to check the
growth of population by casting disincentives even through
legislation. The First Amendment Act targets the evil and seeks to
cure it. The legislative competence of the State is not disputed.
Thus, keeping in view the general scope and purview of the statute,
the remedy sought to be applied, the former state of law, the
legislative intent and the employment of the expression \026 "for the
word ’after’ the word ’upto’ shall be substituted" in the text of the
Second Amendment, we have no doubt in our mind that the Second
Amendment has the effect of amending the text of First
Amendment ever since the date of commencement of the First
Amendment, i.e., April 5, 1994.
We hold that Sunil Kumar Rana’s case has been correctly
decided. It does not call for any reconsideration. The appeal is
wholly devoid of any merit and the same is dismissed. The decision
by the High Court is maintained.