Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BABULAL PARATE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/08/1959
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 51 1960 SCR (1) 605
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1973 SC1461 (1945)
ACT:
States, Reorganisation of-Modification. of Bill by
Parliament Such modification, if must be refered to State
Legislature-Constitution of India, Art. 3, Proviso-States
Reorganisation Act, 1956 (XXXVII Of 1956), s. 8(1).
HEADNOTE:
A Bill introduced in the House of the People on the report
of the States Reorganisation Commission and as recommended
by the President under the proviso to Art. 3 Of the
Constitution, contained a proposal for the formation of
three separate units, viz., (1) Union territory of Bombay,
(2) Maharashtra, including Marathawada and Vidarbha and (3)
Gujrat, including Saurashtra and Cutch. This Bill was
referred by the President to the State Legislatures
concerned and their views obtained. The joint Select
Committee of the House of the People (Lok Sabha) and the
Council of States (Rajya Sabha) considered the -Bill and
made its report. Subsequently, Parliament amended some of
the clauses and passed the Bill which came to be known as
the States Reorganisation Act, 1956. That Act by s. 8(1)
constituted a composite State of Bombay instead of the three
separate units as originally proposed in the Bill. The
petition , out of which the present appeal has arisen, was
filed by the appellant under Art. 226 of the Constitution in
the High Court of Bombay. His contention was that the said
Act was passed in contravention of the provisions of Art. 3
of the Constitution, since the Legislature of Bombay had not
been given an opportunity of expressing its views on the
formation of the composite State. The High Court dismissed
the petition.
Held, that the proviso to Art. 3 lays down two conditions
and under the second condition therein stated, what the
President has to refer to the State Legislature for its
opinion is the proposal contained in the Bill. On a true
construction, the proviso does not contemplate that if
Parliament subsequently modifies that proposal, there must
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be a fresh bill or a fresh reference to the State
Legislature.
The word ’State’ in Art. 3 of the Constitution has obvious
reference to Art. i and the States mentioned in the First
Schedule to the Constitution, and the expression
’Legislature of the State’ means the Legislature of such a
State. There are, therefore, no reasons for the application
of any special doctrine of democratic theory or practice
prevalent in other countries in interpreting those words;
nor any justification for giving an extended meaning to the
word ’State’ in determining the true scope and effect of the
proviso.
77
606
The requirements of Art. IV, s. 3 of the American Constitu-
tion are materially different from those of the second
proviso to Art. 3 Of the Indian Constitution and,
consequently, decisions based on the former are not in
point.
State of Louisiana v. State Of Mississipi, (1905) 202 U.S. I
and State of Washington v. State of Oregon, (19O8) 2II U.S.
127, held inapplicable.
State of ’Texas v.. George W. White, (1869) 74 U.S. 700
referred to.
It is not correct to contend that the word ’Bill’ in the
proviso must be interpreted to include an amendment of any
of the clauses of the Bill or at least a substantial
amendment thereof, and that any proposal contained in such
amendment must be referred back to the State Legislature.
Such an interpretation of Art. 3 will nullify the effect of
Art. 122(1) and is untenable in view of the provisions in
Arts. 117 and 118 of the Constitution.
Although the formation of a composite State in terms of s. 8
of the Act was without doubt a substantial modification of
the proposal as originally contained in the Bill, it could
not be said that the said modification was not germane to
the subject matter of the original proposal or was a direct
negative thereof, so as to be beyond the scope of an
amendment.
T. H. Vakil v. Bombay Presidency Radio Club Ltd., (1944)
47 Bom. L.R- 428, applied.
Therefore, the Act could not be held to have been enacted in
violation of Art. 3 Of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 342 of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 14,1956,
of the Bombay High Court, in Special Civil Application No.
2496 of 1956.
R. V. S. Mani, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, B. Sen, and R.
H. Dhebar, for the respondents.
1959. August 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
S. K. DAS J.-This is an appeal on a certificate granted by
the High Court of Bombay under Art. 132 (1) of the
Constitution, and the question involved in the appeal is the
true scope and effect of Art. 3 of the Constitution,
particularly of the proviso thereto as it stands after the
Constitution (Fifth Amendment) Act, 1955,
607
On December 22, 1953, the Prime Minister of India made a
statement in Parliament to the effect that a Commission
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would be appointed to examine " objectively and
dispassionately’-’ the question of the reorganisation of the
States of the Indian Union " so that the welfare of the
people of each constituent unit as well as the nation as a
whole is promoted ". This was followed by the appointment of
a Commission under a resolution of the Union Government in.
the Ministry of Home Affairs, dated December 29, 1953. The
Commission submitted its report in due course and on April
18, 1956; a Bill was introduced in the House of the People
(Lok Sabha) entitled The States Reorganisation Bill (No. 30
of 1956). Clauses 8, 9 and 10 of the said Bill contained a
proposal for the formation of three separate units, namely,
(1) Union territory of Bombay ; (2) State of Maharashtra
including Marathawada and Vidharbha; and (3) State of
Gujurat including Saurashtra and Cutch. The Bill was
introduced in the House of the People on the recommendation
of the President, as required by the proviso to art. 3 of
the Constitution. It was then referred to a Joint Select
Committee of the House of the People (Lok Sabha) and the
Council of State (Rajya Sabha). The Joint Select Committee
made its report on July 16, 1956. Some of the clauses of
the Bill were amended in Parliament and on being passed by
both Houses, it received the President’s assent on August
31, 1956, and became known as the States Reorganisation Act,
1956 (37 of 1956) hereinafter called the Act.
It is necessary to read here s. 8(1) of the Act which
instead of constituting three separate units as originally
proposed in the Bill constituted a composite State of Bombay
as stated therein.
" S.8 (1): As from the appointed day, there shall be formed
a new Part A State to be known as the State of Bombay
comprising the following territories, namely :- -
(a) the territories of the existing State of Bombay,
excluding-
608
(i) Bijapur, Dharwar and Kanara districts and. Belgaum
district except Chandgad taluka; and
(ii) Abu Road taluka of Banaskantha district;
(b) Aurangabad, Parbhani, Bhir and Osmanabad districts,
Ahmadpur, Nilanga, and Udgir taluks of Bidar district,
Nanded district (except Bichkonda and Jukkal circles of
Deglur taluk and Modhol, Bhiansa and Kuber circles of Modhol
taluk) and Islapur circle of Boath taluk, Kinwat taluk and
Rajura taluk of Adilabad district, in the existing State of
Hyderabad,
(c) Buldana, Akola, Amaravati, Yeotmal, Wardha, Nagpur,
Bhandara and Chanda districts in the existing State of
Madhya Pradesh;
(d) the territories of the existing State of Saurashtra;
and
(e) the territories of the existing State of Kutch; and
thereupon the said territories shall cease to form part of
the existing States of Bombay, Hyderabad, Madhya Pradesh,
Saurashtra and Kutch, respectively."
The appointed day from which the new State of Bombay came
into existence was defined in the Act as meaning November 1,
1956. But before that date, to wit, on September 12, 1956,
the appellant herein filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court of Judicature at Bombay in
which he alleged, in substance, that the formation of the
composite State of Bombay as one unit instead of the three
separate units as originally proposed in the Bill
contravened Art. 3 of the Constitution, inasmuch as the
Legislature of the State of Bombay had no opportunity of
expressing its views on the formation of such a composite
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State. The appellant asked for a declaration that s. 8 and
other consequential provisions of the Act were null and void
and prayed for an appropriate writ directing the State
Government of Bombay and the Union Government not to enforce
and implement the same. This writ petition was heard by the
Bombay High Court on September 14, 1956, and by its judgment
of even date, the High
609
Court dismissed the petition, holding that there was no
violation or contravention of Art. 3 of the Constitution.
The appellant then obtained the necessary certificate under
Art. 132(1) of the Constitution, and filed his appeal in
this Court on October 18, 1956 on the strength of that
certificate.
Now, it is both convenient and advisable to read at this
stage Art. 3 of the Constitution, as amended by the
Constitution (Fifth Amendment) Act, 1955, the alleged
violation of which is the main ground of attack by learned
counsel for the appellant.
" Art. 3: Parliament may by law-
(a) form a new State by separation of territory from any
State or by uniting two or more States or parts of States or
by uniting any territory to a part of any State ;
(b) increase the area of any State;
(c) diminish the area of any State;
(d) alter the boundaries of any State; and
(e) alter the name of any State ;
Provided that no Bill for the purpose shall be introduced in
either House of Parliament except on the recommendation of
the President and unless, where the proposal contained in
the Bill affects the area, boundaries or name of any of the
States the Bill has been referred by the President to the
Legislature of that State for expressing its views thereon
within such period as may be specified in the reference or
within such further period as the President may allow and
the period so specified or allowed has expired. "
It is clear that by its substantive part the Article gives a
certain power to Parliament, viz., the power to make a law
in respect of any of the five matters mentioned in cls. (a)
to (e) thereof. This power includes the making of a law to
increase the area of any State; diminish the area of any
State; and alter the name of any State. The substantive
part is followed by a proviso, which lays down certain
conditions for the exercise of the Power. It states that no
Bill for the purpose (the word " purpose " obviously has
reference
610
to the power of making law in respect of the matters
mentioned in the substantive part) shall be introduced in
either House of Parliament except on the recommendation of
the President and unless, where the proposal contained in
the Bill affects the area, boundaries or name of any of the
States, the Bill has been referred by the President to the
Legislature of that State for expressing its views thereon.
Thus, the proviso lays down two conditions: one is that no
Bill shall be introduced except on the recommendation of the
President, and the second condition is that where the
proposal contained in the Bill affects the area, boundaries
or name of any of the States, the Bill has to be referred by
the President to the Legislature of the State for expressing
its views thereon. The period within which the State
Legislature must express its views has to be specified by
the President; but the President may extend the period so
specified. If, however, the period specified or extended
expires and no views of the State Legislature are received,
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the second condition laid down in the proviso is fulfilled
in spite of the fact that the views of the State Legislature
have not been expressed. The intention seems to be to give
an opportunity to the State Legislature to express its views
within the time allowed; if the State Legislature fails to
avail itself of that opportunity, such failure does not
invalidate the introduction of the Bill. Nor is there
anything in the proviso to indicate that Parliament must
accept or act upon the views of the State Legislature.
Indeed, two State Legislatures may express totally divergent
views. All that is contemplated is that Parliament should
have before it the views of the State Legislatures as to the
proposals contained in the Bill and then be free to deal
with the Bill in any manner it thinks fit, following the
usual practice and procedure prescribed by and under the
rules of business. Thus the essential content of the second
condition is a reference by the President of the proposal
contained in the bill to the State Legislature to express
its views. thereon within the time allowed. It is worthy of
note, and this has been properly emphasised in the judgment
of the High
611
Court, that what has to be referred to the State Legislature
by the President is the proposal contained in the Bill. The
proviso does not say that if and when a proposal contained
in the Bill is modified subsequently by an amendment
properly moved and accepted in Parliament, there must be a
fresh reference to the State Legislature and a fresh bill
must be introduced. It was pointed out in the course of
arguments that if the second condition required a fresh
reference and a fresh bill for every amendment, it might
result in an interminable process; because any and every
amendment of the original proposal contained in the Bill
would then necessitate a fresh Bill and a fresh reference to
the State Legislature. Other difficulties might also arise
if such a construction were put on the proviso; for example,
in a case where two or three States were involved, different
views might be expressed by the Legislatures of different
States. If Parliament were to accept the views of one of
the Legislatures and not of the other, a fresh reference
would still be necessary by reason of any amendment in the
original proposal contained in the Bill.
We are referring to these difficulties not because we think
that a forced meaning should be given to the words of the
proviso to avoid certain difficulties which may arise. We
are of the view that the words of the proviso are clear
enough and bear their ordinary plain meaning. According to
the accepted connotation of the words used in the proviso,
the second condition means what it states and what has to be
referred to the State Legislature is the proposal contained
in the Bill; it has no such drastic effect as to require a
fresh reference every time an amendment of the proposal
contained in the Bill is moved and accepted in accordance
with the rules of procedure of Parliament.
That in the present case the States Reorganisation Bill was
introduced on the recommendation of the President has not
been disputed; nor has it been disputed that the proposal
contained in the Bill was referred to the State Legislatures
concerned and their views were received, According to
learned counsel for
612
the appellant, however, this was not enough compliance with
the second condition of the proviso. He has put his
argument in several ways. Firstly, he has contended that
the word " State " in Art. 3 should be given a larger
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connotation so as to mean and include not merely the
geographical entity called the State, but its people as
well: this, according to learned counsel for the appellant,
is the " democratic process " incorporated in Art. 3 and
according to this democratic process, so learned counsel has
argued, the representatives of the people of the State of
Bombay assembled in the State Legislature should have been
given an opportunity of expressing their views not merely on
the proposal originally contained in the Bill, but on any
substantial modification thereof. Secondly and following
the same line of argument, he has contended that the word "
Bill " should be given an extended meaning so as to include
any amendment, at least any substantial amendment, of the
proposal contained in the Bill; and thirdly, he has
contended that in the present case the formation of a new
Bombay State as one unit was so different from the three
units originally proposed in the Bill that it was not really
an amendment of the original proposal but a new I proposal
altogether for which a fresh Bill and a fresh reference were
necessary.
We proceed now to consider these contentions. It is
necessary to state at the outset that our task is to
determine on a proper construction the true scope and effect
of Art. 3 of the Constitution, with particular reference to
the second condition laid down by the proviso thereto. We
bring to our task such considerations as are germane to the
interpretation of an organic instrument like the
Constitution; but it will be improper to import into the
question of construction doctrines of democratic theory and
practice obtaining in other countries, unrelated to the
tenor, scheme and words of the provisions which we have to
construe. In plain and unambiguous language, the proviso to
Art. 3 of the Constitution states that where the proposal
contained in the Bill affects the area, boundaries or name
of any of the States, the Bill must be referred by the
613
President to the Legislature of the State for expressing its
views. It does not appear to us that any special or
recondite doctrine of " democratic process " is involved
therein. Learned counsel for the appellant has invited our
attention to Art. IV, s. 3, of the American Constitution
which says inter alia that " no new State shall be formed or
erected within the jurisdiction of any other State, nor any
State be formed by the junction of two or more States or
parts of States without the consent of the Legislatures of
the State concerned as well as of the Congress." That
provision is quite different from the proviso we are
considering: the former requires the consent of the State
Legislature whereas the essential requirement of our proviso
is a, reference by the President of the proposal contained
in the Bill for the expression of its views by the State
Legislature. For this reason we do not think that the
decisions relied on by learned counsel for the appellant
(State of Louisiana v. State of Mississipi (1), and State of
Washington v. State of Oregon(1)) are in point. The
expression I State’ occurs in Art. 3, and as has been
observed in the State of Texas v. George W. White (3), that
expression may have different meanings: it may mean a
territorial region, or people united in political relation
living in that region or it may refer to the government
under which the people live or it may even convey the
combined idea of territory, people and government. Article
1 of our Constitution says that India is a Union of States
and the States and the territories thereof are specified in
a Schedule. There is, therefore, no difficulty in
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understanding what is meant by the expression ’State’ in
Art. 3. It obviously refers to the States in the First
Schedule and the I Legislature of the State’ refers to the
Legislature which each State has under the Constitution.
That being the position we see no reasons for importing into
the Construction of Art. 3 any doctrinaire consideration of
the sanctity of the rights of States or even for giving an
extended meaning to the expression I State’ occurring
therein. None of the constituent units of the
(1) (1905) 202 U.S. 1. (2) (1908) 211 U.S. 127.
(3) (i869) 74 U.S. 700.
78
614
Indian Union was sovereign and independent in the sense the
American colonies or the Swiss Cantons were before they
formed their federal unions. The Constituent Assembly of
India, deriving its power from the sovereign people, was
unfettered by any previous commitment in evolving a
constitutional pattern suitable to the genius and
requirements of the Indian people as a whole. Unlike some
other federal legislatures, Parliament, representing the
people of India as a whole, has been vested with the
exclusive power of admitting or establishing new States,
increasing or diminishing the area of an existing State or
altering its boundaries, the Legislature or Legislatures of
the States concerned having only the right to an expression
of views on the proposals. It is significant that for
making such territorial adjustments it is not necessary even
to invoke the provisions governing constitutional
amendments.
The second line of argument presented on behalf of the
appellant is that the word I Bill’ in the proviso must be
interpreted to include an amendment of any of the clauses of
the Bill, at least any substantial amendment thereof, and
any proposal contained in such amendment must be referred to
the State Legislature for expression of its views. We do
not think that this interpretation is correct. Wherever the
introduction of an amendment is subject to a condition
precedent, as in the case of financial bills, the Consti-
tution has used the expression I A bill or amendments’, e.g.
in Art. 117. No such expression occurs in art 3. Secondly,
under Art. 118 Parliament has power to make rules of its own
procedure and conduct of business, including the moving of
amendments etc. Rule 80 of the rules of procedure of the
House of the People (Lok Sabha) lays down the conditions
which govern the admissibility of amendments to clauses or
schedules of a Bill, and one of the conditions is that an
amendment shall be within the scope of the Bill and relevant
to the subject matter of the clause to which it relates.
Article 122 (1) of the Constitution says that the validity
of any proceedings in Parliament shall not be called in
question on the ground of any alleged
615
irregularity of procedure. In view of these provisions, we
cannot accept an interpretation of Art. 3 which may nullify
the effect of Art. 122, an interpretation moreover which is
based not on the words used therein but on certain abstract
and somewhat illusory ideas of what learned counsel for the
appellant has characterised as the democratic process.
We recognise that the formation of a new composite State of
Bombay as in s. 8 of the Act was a substantial modification
of the original proposal of three units contained in the
Bill. That, however, does not mean that it was not a proper
amendment of the original proposal or that the State
Legislature had no opportunity of expressing its views on
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all aspects of the subject matter of the proposal. The High
Court rightly pointed out that in the debates in the State
Legislature several members spoke in favour of a composite
State of Bombay. The point to note is that many different
views were expressed in respect of the subject matter of the
original proposal of three units, and as a matter of fact it
cannot be said that-the State Legislature had no opportunity
of expressing its views in favour of one composite unit
instead of three units if it so desired. It cannot be said
that the proposal of one unit instead of three was not
relevant or pertinent to the subject matter of the original
proposal. ID T. H. Vakil v. Bombay Presidency Radio Club
Ltd. (1), a decision on which learned counsel for the
appellant has relied, the question arose of the power of the
chairman of a club to rule an amendment out of order. It
was said therein that (1) an amendment must be germane to
the subject-matter of the original proposition and (2) it
must not be a direct negative thereof. Judged by these two
conditions, it cannot be said that the proposal of one unit
instead of three was not germane to the subject-matter of
the original proposal or was a direct negative thereof. We
are unable, therefore, to accept the third contention of
learned counsel for the appellant to the effect that the
formation of a new Bombay State as envisaged in s. 8 of the
Act was so completely divorced from the proposal contained
in
(1) (1944) 47 Bom. L.R. 428.
616
the Bill that it was in reality a new bill and therefore a
fresh reference was necessary.
It is advisable, perhaps, to add a few more words about Art.
122(1) of the Constitution. Learned counsel for the
appellant has posed before us the question as to what would
be the effect of that Article. if in any Bill completely
unrelated to any of the matters referred to in Cls. (a) to
(e) of Art. 3 an amendment was to be proposed and accepted
changing (for example) the name of a State. We do not think
that we need answer such a hypothetical question except
merely to say that if an amendment is of such a character
that it is not really an amendment and is clearly violative
of Art. the question then will be not the validity of
proceedings in Parliament but the violation of a
constitutional provision. That, however, is not the
position in the present case.
For these reasons, we hold that there was no violation of
Art. 3 and the Act or any of its provisions are not invalid
on that ground.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.