Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 13
PETITIONER:
R.RAJAGOPAL REDDY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PADMINI CHANDRASEKHARAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/01/1995
BENCH:
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
BENCH:
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 238 1995 SCC (2) 630
JT 1995 (2) 667 1995 SCALE (1)692
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
1. In this group of matters a common question arises for
our consideration. It is to the following effect "whether
Section 4(1) of the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act,
1988 (hereinafter referred to ’Act’) can be applied to suit,
claim or action to enforce any right in property held benami
against person in whose name such property is held or any
other person, in such proceeding is initiated by or on be-
half of a person claiming to be real owner
672
thereof, prior to the coming into force of Section 4 (1) of
the Act. Section 4 with its relevant sub-sections reads as
under:
"Prohibition of the right to recover property held benami -
(1) No suit, claim or action to enforce any right in respect
of any property held benami against the person in whose name
the property is held or against any other person shall lie
by or on behalf of a person claiming to be the real owner of
such property.
(2) No defence based on any right in respect of any
property held benami, whether against the person in whose
name the property is held or against any other person shall
be allowed in any suit, claim or action by or on behalf of
a person claiming be the real owner of such property.
(3) Nothing in this section shall apply,
(a) Where the person in whose name the property is held is
a coparcener in a Hindu undivided family and the property
is held for the benefit of the coparceners in the family; or
(b) Where the person in whose name the property is held is
a trustee or other person standing in a fiduciary capacity,
and the property is held for the benefit of another person
for whom he is a trustee or towards whom he stands in such
capacity.
2. In fact the question is answered in the affirmative by
Division Bench of this Court in Mithilesh Kumari & Anr.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 13
v.Prem Behari Khare (1989 (1) S.C.R. 621). In that case two
learned judges of this Court constituting the Division Bench
have taken the aforesaid affirmative view. The correctness
of that view came up for consideration before another
Division Bench of
-------------
this Court. That, Division Bench by its order dated 10th
March, 1992 directed that these matters be placed for
hearing at the bottom of the miscellaneous list for final
hearing on 22nd March, 1992 before a three Judge Bench.
Ultimately this group of matters came to be placed for final
hearing before this Bench.
3. We have heard learned counsel for
the respective parties on this question. Learned advocates
were agreeable that though the order of the Division Bench
dated 1Oth March, 1992 has resulted in placing these matters
before threeJudge Bench for final hearing, we may after an
swerving the question canvassed before us, sent back the
matters to the Bench of two learned Judges who can dispose
of the same on merits in accordance with law, in the light
of answer given by us on the aforesaid question.
4. In order to appreciate the nature of the controversy
posed for our consideration. we may note a few relevant
facts leading to these proceedings. In most of the
proceedings various suits were filed years back before
coming into operation of Section 4(1) of the Act. These pro-
ceedings were pending either at the First Appeal stage or
Second Appeal stage or in revision before the High Court or
in civil appeals before this Court. when Section 4(1) came
into operation. The question is whether these pending
proceedings at various stages in the hierarchy can get
encompassed by the sweep of Section 4 (1) laid down by that
section.
5. Learned counsel appearing for the concerned plaintiffs
submitted before us that Sections 3, 5 and 8 of the Act came
into force on 5th September, 1988 when
673
the Act received the President’s assent and the remaining
Sections were deemed to have come into force on 19th May,
1988 and that prior to the coming into force of the Act and
the relevant provisions thereof, litigations were already
filed by the parties and they had to be governed by the then
existing law which held the field at the time of initiation
of these proceedings and that there is nothing in the Act to
indicate that any of the provisions of the Act including
Section 4 (1) has any retrospective effect. They further
contended that even the Division Bench of this Court in
Mithilesh Kumari’s case (supra) has taken the view that
Section 3(1) of the Act is prospective in operation. Under
these circumstances, they submitted that it would be
inconsistent to hold that though the Act is not
retrospective it would apply to all pending proceedings at
whatever stage they, might be and such proceedings would in-
cur dismissal under Section 4 (1). They submitted that
there was a substantive right in the plaintiff under the
existing laws which had sanction of more than a century,
under which consistently such benami transactions were
recognised and could be enforced by courts of law. That
this substantive right is sought to be taken away by Section
4 (1) and unless there is anything to suggest that it is
retrospective in, operation, it could not be treated to be
retrospective.
6. Learned counsel appearing for the
respondents/defendants on the other hand submitted that even
though the Act may not be retrospective, at least to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 13
extent it is roping in all past transactions of benami
purchases of properties and when rights arising therefrom
arc sought to be put to an end by Section 4 (1) which covers
any or every property held benami, there is no reason why
the said Section cannot apply to such proceedings at any
stage till they get finally decided by the highest court in
the hierarchy. If there is any change in law by which any
pending litigation becomes incompetent, such change in law
can be applied to such pending proceedings at whatever stage
they might be pending before higher Courts. In short they
submitted that the decision rendered by Saikia J. in
Mithilesh Kumari’s case (supra) lays down correct law and
requires no reconsideration.
7. Having given our anxious consideration to these rival
contentions, we have reached the conclusion that the
question has to be answered in the negative, and it must be
held that the decision of the Division Bench taking a
contrary view does not lay down correct law.
8. These reasons are these. Under various legal
provisions holding the field prior to the coming into
operation of this Act, benami transactions were a recognised
specie of legal transactions pertaining to immovable
properties. Under the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 almost 113
years back the then legislature enacting the law laid down
in Section 82 as under:-
"Transfer to one for consideration paid by
another where property is transferred to one
person for a consideration paid or provided by
another person, and it appears that such
other persondid not intend to pay or
provide such consideration for the benefit of
the transferee, the transferee must hold the
property for the for the benefit of the
person paying orproviding the
consideration.
X X
Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to
affect the Code of Civil
674
Procedure, Section 317, or the Act No. XI of
1859 (to improve the law relating to sales of
land for arrears of revenue in the Lower
Provinces under the Bengal Presidency),
Section 36."
9. Therefore, it was legal right of the plaintiff to
contend in those days that even though the transfer of the
property had been effected in the name of defendant
benamidar for the plaintiff from whom the consideration had
moved the plaintiff was the real owner and, therefore, the
defendant was bound to restore such property to the real
owner. If the benamidar took up a defiant attitude then the
law provided a substantive right to the plaintiff to come to
the Court for getting appropriate declaration and ’relief of
possession on that ground. Various Courts in India over a
century used to entertain such suits and such suits on proof
of relevant facts used to be decreed. The legislature,
however, in its wisdom considered the question of enacting
an appropriate legislation for prohibiting such benami
transactions. For the purpose earlier Benami Transactions
(Prohibition of the Right to Recover Property) Ordinance,
1988, was promulgated by the President and it was followed
by the Act, the different sections of which came into force
on the respective dates as mentioned hereinabove. It may
also be kept in view that these exercises were undertaken in
the, light of India Law Commission’s 57th Report on benami
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 13
transaction. This Report was submitted on 7th August, 1973
by the Law Commission after studying benami system as
operating in India and England. He Law Commission also
examined implications of the provisions of the Indian Trusts
Act, 1882 and other statutory modifications of the benami
law as contained in the Code of Civil Procedure, the Trans-
fer of Property Act, the Indian Penal Code and the Income
Tax Act. In that Report, the Law Commission suggested
retrospective effect to be accorded to the proposed
legislation. 15 years, however, passed by and the Parliament
did not take any steps in this connection. In the meantime,
many more suits concerning benami transactions not only saw
the light of day but also got successfully disposed of.
Some of them, however, were pending in first appeals or
second appeals or revisions. Then, as not earlier, on 19th
May, 1988 the President of India promulgated the Ordinance
to prohibit the right to recover property held benami and
for matters connected therewith and incidental thereto based
on the suggestion of the Law Commission of India.
Thereafter the law Commission was requested to take up the
question of benami transactions for detailed examination and
to give its considered views as early as possible so that a
Bill to replace the Ordinance could be drafted on the basis
of its recommendations and got passed by the Parliament.
Indian Law commission by its 130th Report on August 14, 1988
recommended passing of appropriate legislation and
accordingly the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Bill 1988,
drafted after getting the Report, was introduced in the
Rajya Sabha on 31st August, 1988 and the Bill was passed.
In para 3.18 of its Report. the Law Commission made the fol-
lowing recommendation in connection with the retrospective
operation of the proposed legislation:-
"3.18. Therefore viewed from either angle, the
Law Commission is of the firm opinion that the
legislation replacing the ordinance should be
retrospective in operation and that no locus
penitential need be given to the persons who
had entered into benami transactions in the
past. They had notice of one and a half
decades to set their house in order No more
indulgence is called for."
675
10. It is thereafter that the Act came to be
passed by both the Houses of Parliament and
came into force as stated above. It might be
appreciated that though the Law Commission
recommended retrospective applicability of the
proposed legislation, the Parliament did not
make the Act or any of its Sections expressly
retrospective in its wisdom. A bird’s eye
view of the Act clearly establishes this
position. The Act being Act. No. 45 of 1988
in its preamble states that it is an act to
prohibit benami transactions and the right to
recover property held benami, for matters
connected therewith or incidental thereto.
Section 3 which is the heart of the Act
imposes the required prohibition of benami
transactions. It reads as under-
"3. Prohibition of benami transactions-
(1)No person shall enter into any benami
transaction.
(2)Nothing in sub-section (1) shall apply to
the purchase of property by any person in the
name of his %,*life or unmarried daughter and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 13
it shall be presumed, unless the contrary is
proved, that the said property had been
purchased for the benefit of the wife or the
unmarried daughter.
(3)Whoever enters into any benami transaction
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to three years or with
fine or with both.
(1)Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974),
an offence under this section shall be non-
congnizable and bailable."
A mere look at the above provisions shows that the
prohibition under Section 3(1) is against persons who are to
enter into benami transactions and it has laid down that no
person shall enter into any benami transaction which
obviously means from the date on which this prohibition
comes into operation i.e. with effect from September 5,
1988. ’Mat takes care of future benami transactions. We
are not concerned with sub-section (2) but sub- section (3)
of Section 3 also throws light on this aspect. As seen
above, it states that whoever enters into any benami
transaction shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three years or with fine or with both.
Therefore, the provision creates a new offence of entering
into such benami transactions. It is made non-congnizable
and bailable as laid down under sub-section (4). It is
obvious that when a statutory provision creates new li-
ability and new offence it would naturally have prospective
operation and would cover only those offences which take
place after, section 3 (1) comes into operation. In fact
Saikia J. speaking for the Court in Mithilesh Kumari’s case
(supra) has in terms observed at page 635 of the report that
Section 3 obviously cannot have, retrospective operation.
We respectfully concur with this part of the learned Judge’s
view. The real problem centres round the effect of Section
4(1) on pending proceedings wherein claim to any property on
account of it being held benami by other side is on the
anvil and such proceeding had not been finally disposed of
by the time Section 4(1) came into operation, namely, on
19th May, 1988. Saikia J. speaking for the Division Bench
in the case of Mithilesh Kumari (supra). gave the following
reasons for taking the view that though Section 3 is
prospective and though Section 4(1) is also not expressly
made retrospective, by the legislature, by necessarily
implication, it appears to be retrospective and would apply
to all pending
676
proceedings wherein right to property allegedly held benami
is in dispute between parties and that Section 4(1) will
apply at whatever stage the litigation might be pending in
the hierarchy of the proceedings
(1) Section 4 clearly provides that no suit, claim or
action to enforce any right in respect of any property held
benami against the person in whose name the property is held
or against any other person shall lie by or on behalf of a
person claiming to be real owner of such property. This
naturally relates to past transaction as well. The
expression ’any property held benami’ is not limited to any
particular time, date or duration. Once the property is
found to have been held benami, no suit, claim, or action to
enforce any right in respect thereof shall lie.
(2) Similarly sub-section (2) of Section 4 nullifies the
defences based on any right in respect of any property held
benami whether against the person in whose name the property
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 13
is held or against any other person in any suit, claim or
action by or on behalf of a person claiming to be the real
owner of such property. It means that once a property is
found to have been held benami the real owner is deprived of
such a defence against the person in whose name the property
is held or any other person. In other words, in its sweep
Section 4 (2) engulfs past benami transactions also.
(3) When an Act is declaratory in nature, the presumption
against retrospectively is not applicable. A statute
declaring the benami transactions to be unenforceable
belongs to this type. The presumption against taking away
vested right will not apply in this case in as much as under
law it is the benamidar in whose name the property stands,
and law only enabled the real owner to recover the property
from him which right has now been ceased by the Act. In one
sense there was a right to recover or resist in the real
owner against the benamidar. Ubi ibi remedium. Where the
remedy is barred, the right is rendered unenforceable.
(4)When the law nullifies the defences available to the real
owners in recovering the benami property from the benamidar,
the law must apply irrespective of the time of the benami
transactions. The expression "shall be" under Section 4(1)
and "shall be allowed" in Section 4(2) are prospective and
shall apply to present (future stages) and future suits,
claims or action only.
(5)The word "suits" would include appeals and further
appeals as appeals arc in continuation of the suits. This
is an aspect of procedural law and, therefore, when
procedure is changed for deciding any such proceedings
between the parties the provisions of such procedural law
can be applied to such pending proceedings by necessary
implication.
(6)Repelling the contention that rights of the parties to a
suit would be determined on the basis of rights available to
them on the date of filling of the suit and distinguishing
the judgment of this Court in Nand Kishore Marwah v.
Samundri Devi (1987 (4) S.C.C. 382), it was observed that
the aforesaid case was for eviction where the rights of the
parties on the date of suit were material unlike in this
case where subsequent legislation has nullified for defences
of benami holders.
11. Before we deal, with these six
677
considerations which weighed with the Division Bench for
taking the view that Section 4 will apply retrospectively in
the sense that it will get telescoped into all pending
proceedings, howsoever earlier they might have been filed,
if they were pending at different stages in the hierarchy of
the proceedings even upto this Court, when Section 4 came
into operation, it would be apposite to recapitulate the
sailent feature of the Act. As seen earlier, the preamble
of the Act itself states that it is an act to prohibit
benami transactions and the right to recover property held
benami, for matters connected therewith or incidental
thereto. Thus it was enacted to efface the then existing
rights of the real owners of properties held by others
benami. Such an act was not given any retrospective effect
by the legislature. Even when we come to Section 4, it is
easy to visualise that sub section (1) of Section 4 states
that no suit, claim or action to enforce any right in
respect of any property held benami against the person in
whose name the property is held or against any other shall
lie by or on behalf of a person claiming to be real owner of
such property As per Section 4 (1) no such suit shall
henceforth lie to recover the possession of the property
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 13
held benami by the defendant. Plaintiff’s right to that
effects sought to be taken away and any suit to enforce such
a right after coming into operation of Section 4(1) that is
19th May, 1988, shall not lie, The legislature in its wisdom
has nowhere provided in Section 4(1) that no such suit,
claim or action pending on the date when Section 4 came into
force shall not be proceeded with and shall stand abated.
On the contrary, clear legislative intention is seen from
the words "no such claim, suit or action shall lie" meaning
thereby no such suit, claim or action shall be permitted to
be filed or entertained or admitted to the portals of any
Court for seeking such a relief after coining into force of
Section 4(1). In Collins English Dictionary, 1979 Edition
as reprinted subsequently, the word ’lie’ has been defined
in connection with suits and proceedings. At page 848 of
the Dictionary while dealing with topic No.9 under the
definition of term Tie’ it is stated as under
"For an action, claim appeal etc. to subsist,
be maintainable or admissible".
The word ’lie’ in connection with the suit, claim or action
is not defined by the Act, If we go by the aforesaid
dictionary meaning it would mean that such suit claim or
action to get any property declared benami will not be
admitted on behalf of such plaintiff or applicant against
the concerned defendant in whose name the property is held
on and from the date on which this prohibition against
entertaining of such suits comes into force. With respect,
the view taken by that Section 4 (1) would apply even to
such pending suits which were already filed and entertained
prior to the date when the Section came into force and which
has the effect of destroying the then existing right of
plaintiff in connection with the suit property cannot be
sustained in the face of the clear language of Section 4(1).
It has to be visualised that the legislature in its wisdom
has not expressly made Section 4 retrospective. Then to
imply by necessary implication that Section 4 would have
retrospective effect and would cover pending litigations
filed prior to coming into force of the Section would
amount to taking a view which would run counter to the
legislative scheme and intent projected by various
provisions of the Act to which we have referred earlier. it
678
is, however, true as held by the Division Bench that on the
express language of Section 4 (1) any right inhering in the
real owner in respect of any property held benami would get
effaced once Section 4 (1) operated, even if such
transaction had been entered into prior to the coming into
operation of Section 4(1), and hence-after Section 4(1)
applied no suit can lie in respect to such a past benami
transaction. To that extent the Section may be retro-
spective. To highlight this aspect we may take an
illustration. If a benami transaction has taken place in
1980 and a suit is filed in June 1988 by the plaintiff
claiming that he is the real owner of the property and
defendant is merely a benamidar and the consideration has
flown from him then such a suit would not lie on account of
the provisions of Section 4(1). Bar against filling,
entertaining and admission of such suits would have become
operative by June, 1988 and to that extent Section 4 (1)
would take in its sweep even past benami transactions which
were sought to be litigated upon after coming into force of
the prohibitory provision of Section 4(1); but that is the
only effect of the retrospectivity of Section 4(1) and
nothing more than that. From the conclusion that Section 4
(1) shall apply even to past benami transactions to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 13
aforesaid extent, the next step taken by the Division Bench
that therefore, the then existing rights got destroyed and
even though suits by real owners were filed prior to coming
into operation of Section 4 (1) they would not survive, does
not logically follow.
12. So far as Section 4 (2) is concerned, all that is
provided is that if a suit is filed by a plaintiff who
claims to be the owner of the property under the document in
his favour and holds the property in his name, once Section
4(2) applies, no defence will be permitted or allowed in any
such suit, claim or action by or on behalf of a person
claiming to be the real owner of such property held benami.
The disallowing of such a defence which earlier was
available, itself suggests that a new liability or restric-
tion is imposed by Section 4 (2) on a preexisting right of
the defendant. Such a provision also cannot be said to be
retrospective or retrospective by necessary implication. It
is also pertinent, to note that Section 4(2) does not
expressly seek to apply retrospectively. So far as such a
suit which is covered by the sweep of Section 4(2) is
concerned, the prohibition of Section 4 (2) cannot apply to
it as it is not a claim or action filed by the plaintiff to
enforce right in respect of any property held benami. On
the contrary, it is a suit, claim or action flowing from the
sale deed or title deed in the name of the plaintiff. Even
though such a suit might have been filed prior to 19.5.1988,
if before the stage of filling of defence by the real owner
is reached, Section 4(2) becomes operative from 19th May.
1988, then such a defence, as laid down by Section 4(2) will
not be allowed to such a defendant. However, that would not
mean that Section 4(1) and 4 (2) only on that score can be
treated to be impliedly retrospective so as to cover all the
pending litigations in connection with enforcement of such
rights of real owners who are parties to benami transactions
entered into prior to the coming into operation of the Act
and specially Section 4 thereof. It is also pertinent to
note that Section 4(2) enjoins that no such defence ’shall
be allowed’ in any claim, suit or action by or on behalf of
a person claiming to be the real owner of such property.
That is to say no such defence shall be allowed for the
first time after coming into
679
operation of Section 4(2). If such a defence is already
allowed in a pending suit prior to the coming into operation
of Section 4(2), enabling an issue to be raised on such a
defence, then the Court is bound to decide the issue arising
from such an already allowed defence as at the relevant time
when such defence was allowed Section 4(2) was out of
picture. Section 4 (2) nowhere uses the words "No defence
based on any right in respect of any property held benami
whether against the person in whose name the property is
held or against any other person, shall be allowed to be
raised or continued to be raised in any suit." With respect,
it was wrongly assumed by the Division Bench that such an
already allowed defence in a pending suit would-also get
destroyed after coming into operation of Section 4(2). We
may at this stage refer to one difficulty projected by
learned advocate for the respondents in his written
submissions, on the applicability of Section 4 (2). These
submissions read as under
"Section 4(1) places a bar on a plaintiff
pleading ’benami’, while Section 4 (2) places
a bar on a defendant pleading ’benami’ after
the coming into force of the Act. In this
context, it would be anamolous if the bar in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 13
Section 4 is not applicable if a suit pleading
’benami’ is already filed prior to the
prescribed date, and it is treated as
applicable only to suit which he filed
thereafter. It would have the effect of
classifying the so-called’real’ owners into
two classes those who stand in the position
of plaintiffs and those who stand in the
position of defendants. This may be clarified
by means of an illustration. A and B are
’real’ owners who have both purchased
properties in say 1970, in the names of C and
D respectively who, are ostensible owners viz.
benamidars. A files a suit in February 1988
i.e. before the coming into force of the Act
against C, for declaration of his title saying
that C is actually holding it as his
benamidar. According to the petitioner’s
argument, such a plea would be open to A even
after coming into force of the Act, since the
suit has already been laid. On the other
hand, if D file a suit against B at the same
for declaration and injunction, claiming
himself to be the owner but B’s opportunity to
file a written statement comes in say November
1988 when the Act has already come into force,
he in his written statement pleaded that D is
a benamidar and that he, B is the real owner.
Thus A and B, both ’real’ owners, would stand
on a different footing, depending upon whether
they would stand in the position of plaintiff
or defendant. It is respectively submitted
that such a differential treatment would not
be rational or logical."
13. According to us this difficulty is inbuilt in Section
4(2) and does not provide the rationale to hold that this
Section applies retrospectively. The legislature itself
thought it fit to do so and there is no challenge to the
vires on the ground of violation of Article 14 of the
Constitution. It is not open to us to re-write the section
also. Even otherwise, in the operation of Section 4 (1) and
(2), no discrimination can be said to have been made amongst
different real owners of property, as tried to be pointed
out in the written objections. In fact, those cases in
which suits are filed by real owners or defences are allowed
prior to coming into operation of Section 4(2), would form
a separate class as compared to those cases where a state
for filling such suits or defences has still not reached by
the time Section 4(1) and (2) starts operating.
Consequently, latter type of cases would form a distinct
category of cases There is no question of discrimina
680
tion being meted out while dealing with these two classes of
cases differently. A real owner who has already been
allowed defence on that ground prior to coming into
operation of Section 4(2) cannot be said to have been given
a better treatment as compared to the real owner who has
still to take up such a defence and in the meantime he is
hit by the prohibition of Section 4(2). Equally there
cannot be any comparison between a real owner who has filed
such suit earlier and one who does not file such suit till
Section 4 (1) comes into operation. All real owners who
stake their claims regarding benami transactions after
Section 4(1) and (2) came into operation are given uniform
treatment by these provisions, whether they come as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 13
plaintiffs or as defendants. Consequently, the grievances
raised in this connection cannot be sustained.
14. At this stage, we may also usefully refer to Section
7(1) of the Act which lays down that Sections 81, 82 and 94
of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 (2 of 1882), Section 66 of
the, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), and Section
281-A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (43 of 1961,), are thereby
revealed. We have already seen Section 82 if the Indian
Trusts Act which gave almost for a period of a century or
more a legal right to the real owner to claim against the
purported owner that the consideration paid was by the
real owner and the transferee held the property for the
benefit of the person paying consideration for supporting
the transaction It is this right which got destroyed by
section 7 of the Act with effect from 19th
May, 1988. If any suits or proceedings were pending prior
to that date, invoking, Section 82 of,the Indian in Trusts
Act, what is to happen to such suits is not answered
by Section 4(1) of the Act or by any other provisions of the
Act. We have, therefore, to turn the General Clauses Act,
1897 for finding out an answer, Section 6 of the General
Clauses Act lays down. "Where this Act, or any (Central
Act) or Regulation made after the commencement of this Act,
repeals any enactment hitherto made or hereafter to be made,
then, unless a different intention appears the repeal shall
not-
(a) revive anything not in force or existing at the time at
which the repeal takes effect; or
(b) affect the previous operation of any enactment so
repealed or anything duly done or suffered there under; or
(c) affect any right, privileges obligation or liability
acquired, accrued, or incurred under any enactment so
repealed’ or
(d) affect any penalty, forfeiture or punishment incurred
in respect of any offence committed against any enactment so
repealed; or
(e) affect any investigation, legal proceeding or remedy
in respect of any such right, privilege, obligation,
liability, penalty, forfeiture or punishment as aforesaid
and any such investigation, legal proceeding or remedy may
be instituted, continued or enforced, and any such penalty,
for feature or punishment may be imposed as if the repealing
Act or Regulation had not been passed".
It becomes, therefore, obvious that the Act by Section 7
has effected a repeal of
681
Section 82 of the Indian Trusts Act and while repealing this
provision no different intention appears from the Act to
affect any right privilege or liability acquired under
Section 82 by either side or any pending proceedings
regarding such obligation or liability. Therefore, such
pending proceedings will have to be continued or enforced as
if the repealing Act had not been passed. A conjoint
reading of Section 82 of the Indian Trusts Act and Section
6(b), (d) and (e) of the General Clauses Act clearly enjoins
that if suits are pending wherein the plaintiff have put
forward claims under the then existing Section 82 of the
Indian Trusts Act such proceedings are to be continued by
assuming that the repealing of Section 82 of the Indian
Trusts Act has not been effected in connection with such
pending proceedings. Unfortunately, this aspect was not
pressed for consideration before the Division Bench and,
therefore, the view taken by Division Bench is likely to
result in an incongruous situation. If a view is to taken
that a pending suit wherein plaintiff might have contended
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 13
that the real consideration flowed from him and the
defendant was not the real owner and held the property
benami as per Section 82 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882, has
to be continued by ignoring the present Act, it will be
inconsistent with the conclusion reached by the Division
Bench; As per the Division Bench, such suits must
necessarily be dismissed at whatever stage they might be
pending between the parties. Therefore, interpretation of
Section 4(1) by the Division Bench would directly conflict,
with the legislative scheme emanating from Section 82 of the
Indian Trusts Act, 1882 read with Section 6 of the General
Clauses Act discussed above. Even otherwise, it is now
well-settled that where a statutory provision which is not
expressly made retrospective by the legislature seeks to
affect vested rights and corresponding obligations of
parties, such provision cannot be said to have any retro-
spective effect by necessary implication. In Maxwell on the
Interpretation of Statutes 12 the Edition (1969), the
learned. auther has made the following observations based on
various decisions of different Court, specially in Re
Athlumney (1898)2Q.B.551,at pp.551,552
"Perhaps no rule of construction is more
firmly established than this that a
retrospective operation is not to be given to
a statute so as to impair an casting right or
obligation, otherwise than as regards matters
of procedure, unless that effect cannot be
avoided without doing violence to the languag
e
of the enactment. If the enactment is
expressed in language which is fairly capable
of either interpretation, it ought to be
construed as prospective, only." The rule has,
infact, two aspects, for it, "involves another
and subordinate rule, to the effect that a
statute is not to be construed so as to have a
greater retrospective operation than its
language renders necessary."
15. In the case of Garikapati v. N. Sibbiah
Choudhary (A.I.R. 1957 SC 540, P.553) in para
25 of the report Chief Justice S.R. Das
speaking for this Court has made the following
pertinent observations in this connection
"The golden rule of construction is that, in
the absence of anything in the enactment to
show that it is to have retrospective
operation, it cannot be so construed as to
have the effect of altering the law applicable
to a claim in litigation at the time when the
Act was passed."
16. We have already discussed earlier
682
that there is nothing in the Act to show that Section 4(1)
and 4(2) have to apply retrospectively to all pending
proceedings wherein such a right is sought to be exercised
by the plaintiff or such a defence has already got allowed
to the concerned defendant. As a result of the aforesaid
discussion, it must be held that reasons nos. 1 and 2 which
weighed with the Division Bench are not well sustained.
17. As regards, reason no.3, we are of the considered view
that the Act cannot be treated to be declaratory in nature.
Declaratory enactment declares and clarifies the real
intention of the legislature in connection with an earlier
existing transaction or enactment, it does not create new
rights or obligations. On the express language of Section
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 13
3, the Act cannot be said to be declaratory but in substance
it is prohibitory in nature and seeks to destroy the rights
of the real owner qua properties held benami and in this
connection it has taken away the right of the real owner
both for filing a suit or for taking such a defence in a
suit by benamidar. Such an Act which prohibites benami
transactions and destroys rights flowing from such
transactions as existing earlier is really not a declaratory
enactment. With respect, we disagree with the line of
reasoning which commanded to the Division Bench. In this
connection, we may refer to the following observations in
’Principles of Statutory Interpretation’, 5th Edition 1992,
by Shri G.P.Singh, at page 315 under the caption ’Declara-
tory statutes’
The presumption against retrospective
operation is not applicable to declaratory
statues. As states in CRAIES and approved b
y
the Supreme Court: "For modern purposes a
declaratory Act may be defined as an Act to
remove doubts
existing as to the common law, or the meaning or effect of
any statute. Such Acts are usually held to be
retrospective. The usual reason for passing a declaratory
Act is to set aside what Parliament deems to have been a
judicial error whether in the Statement of common law or in
the interpretation of the statutes. Usually, if not
invariably, such an Act contains a preamble, and also the
word declared’ as well as the word enacted". But the use of
the words ’it is declared’ is not conclusive that the Act is
declaratory for these words may, at times be used to
introduce new rules of law and the Act in the later case
will only be amending the law and will not necessarily be
retrospective. hi determining, therefore, the nature of the
Act, regard must be had to the substance rather the 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. The language
shall be deemed always to have meant’ is declaratory , and
is in plain terms retrospective. In the absence of clear
words indicating that the amending Act is declaratory, it
would not be so when the pre-amended provision was clear and
unambiguous. And amending Act may be purely clarificatory
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 are therefore if the
principal Act was existing law when the constitution came
into force the amending Act also will be part of the law.In
Mithilesh Kumari v. Prem Bihari Khare, Section 4 of the
Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988 was it is
submitted wrongly held to be an Act declaratory in nature
for it was not passed
683
to clear any doubt existing as to the common law or the
meaning or effect of any statute. The conclusion however
that Section 4 applied also to past benami transactions may
be supportable on the language used in the Section.
18. No exception can be taken to the aforesaid observations
of learned author which in our view can certainly be pressed
in service for judging whether the impugned section is
declaratory in nature or not. Accordingly it must be held
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 13
that Section 4 or for that matter the Act as a whole is not
a piece of declaratory or curative legislation. It creates
substantive rights in favour of benamidars and destroys sub-
stantive rights of real owners who are parties to such
transactions and for whom new liabilities are created by the
Act.
19. Qua reason No.4, we may refer to our discussion earlier
that the words ’no suit shall lie’ as found in Section 4(1)
and ‘ no defence based on rights in respect of property
shall be allowed’ as found in Section 4(2) have limited
scope and operation and consequently this consideration also
cannot have any effect on the conclusion which can be
reached in this case. As to reason No.5, it is observed
that even though suit may include appeal and further appeals
in the hierarchy, at different stages of the litigation,
Section 4(1) and 4(2) cannot be made applicable to these
subsequent stages as already seen by us earlier. Otherwise,
they would cut across the very scheme of the Act.
20. As to reason No.6 relating to nullification of all the
defences of benami holders, we say with respect that
according to us, as already discussed future defences of
real owners against benamidars holders have been nullified
as are covered by the sweep of Section 4(2) and not
others.
21.As a result of the aforesaid discussion it must be held,
with respect, that the Division Bench erred in taking the
view that Section 4(1) of the Act could be pressed in
service in connection with suits filed prior to coming into
operation of that Section. Similarly the view that under
Section 4(2) in all suits filed by persons in whose names
properties are held no defence can be allowed at any future
stage of the proceedings that the properties are held
benami, cannot be sustained. As discussed earlier Section
4(2) will have a limited operation even in cases of pending
suits after Section 4(2) came into force if such defences
are not already allowed earlier. It must, therefore, be
held, with respect, that the decision of this Court in
Mithilesh Kumari’s case does not lay down correct law so far
as the applicability of Section 4(1) and Section 4(2) to the
extent hereinabove indicated, to pending proceedings when
these Sections came into force, is concerned. Accordingly,
the question for consideration is answered in the negative.
Registry will now place all these matters before an
appropriate Division Bench for disposing them of on merits
in the light of the answer given by us.
684