Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHNA CHANDRA GANGOPADHYAYA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/04/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1389 1975 SCR 151
1975 SCC (2) 302
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC2299 (606)
D 1976 SC 714 (74)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Seventh Schedule, List I Item 54, List
II Item 23. Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development)
Act, 1957-Section 15--Bihar Land Reforms Act 1950 [Section
10(2)]-Bihar Minor Minerals Concession Rules, 1964 [Rule
20(2)].
Interpretation of Statutes-Validation Act-Retrospective
effect-Delegated Legislation-Legislation by incorporation.
HEADNOTE:
This Court in the case of Baij Nath Kedia declared the
second proviso to section 10(2) of the Bihar Land Reforms
Act, 1950 unconstitutional on the ground that the Bihar
Legislature had no jurisdiction to enact it and that
Parliament alone was competent to legislate. This Court
also held that rule 20(2) framed by the Bihar Government as
delegate of the Parliament under section 15 of the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act of 1957 was
unconstitutional since the rule making power conferred by
section 15 of the Central Act did not contemplate alteration
of terms of leases already in existence before the Act was
passed.
Second proviso to section 10(2) of the Bihar Land Reforms
Act reads as under
"Provided further that the terms and
conditions of the said lease in regard to
minor minerals as defined in the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act,
1957 (Act LXVII of 1957) shall, in so far as
they are inconsistent with the rules of that
Act, stand substituted by the corresponding
terms and conditions by those rules and if
further ascertainment and settlement of the
terms will become necessary then necessary
proceedings for that shall be undertaken by
the Collector."
Rule 20(2) authorises the alteration of the term of leases
which were in existence before the Central Act was passed.
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After the judgment in Baij Nath Kedia’s case was delivered,
the Parliament passed a Validation Act of 1969. Section
2(1) and (2) of the Validation Act reads as under
"21(1). The laws specified in the Schedule
shall be and shall be deemed always to have
been, as valid as if the provisions contained
therein had been enacted by Parliament.
2(2). Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or
order of any court, all actions taken, things
done, rules made, notifications issued or
purported to have been taken, done, made or
issued and rents or royalties realised under
any such laws shall be deemed to have been
validly taken, done, made, issued or realised,
as the case may be, as if this section had
been in force at all material times when such
notifications, were issued, or rents or
royalties were realised, and no suit or other
proceedings shall be maintained or continued
in any court for the refund of rents or
royalties realised under any such laws."
In the Schedule to the said Validation Act, section 10 of
the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 and sub-rule (2) of Rule 20
of the Bihar Minor Mineral Concession Rules, 1964, inter
alia, have been set out.
10 SC/75-11
152
In the present petition under Article 32, validity of the
Validition Act has been challenged by the petitioner on the
grounds :
"If a law is void as being passed by an
incompetent Legislature, validation by a
subsequent Act passed by a competent
legislature can only be effected by the
subsequent law enacting the provisions of the
old Act expressly or by incorporation. It
cannot be done by a competent Legislature,
laying down in the subsequent Act that the
former Act passed by the incompetent
Legislatam is deemed to be valid.
No liability to levy rent or royalty can be
created retroactively without two clear stages
or steps: firstly, a law must be enacted
creating the liability; next, such provision
should be made retrospective. This two-stage
procedure is absent in the statute under
attack and fore the purpose, whatever it be,
has misfired."
The respondent contended that the Parliament adopted the
form of incorporation refrencially to a State Act and
subordinate legislation given in the schedule to the
Validation Act. The Validation Act was a product of the
Parliament It was not a case of Parliament simply validating
an invalid law passed by the Bihar Legislation. The
Parliament reenacted the Validation Act with retrospective
effect in its own right adding one Central Act to tin Book.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (i) Incorporation of Acts is permissible in the
absence of other disabling factors. The Bihar Act qua the
Bihar Legislature could not be resuscited by Parliament
conferring such power through a law, as far as provisions of
second proviso to section 10(2) of the Bihar Land Reforms
Act is concerned. As far as rule 20(2) is concerned, the
position is different since that is a rule framed by
Parliament through its delegate the State Government
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although rule was ultra vires being in excess of the power
conferred by section 15 of the Central Act. The Parliament
had, therefore, passed a Validation Act to validate the void
provisions of Bihar Land Reforms Act and the ultra vires
sub-rule 2 of rule 20 as well as action taken and things
done in connection therewith. The power of a Legislature to
pass a law obviously includes the power to pass it
retrospectively. Earlier, the Bihar Act or Rules framed by
the State Government under the Central Acts do not have to
be valid for sustaining the Validation Act made by the
Parliament. [162E-F, 163B]
(ii)What is the intention of Parliament is mainly to be
gathered from the language used, tested by approved cannons
of construction. Unhappy wording, infelicitous expression
of imperfect or inartistic drafting may not necessarily
defeat for that reason alone the obvious object of the
validating law and its retrospective content. The real
question is whether the Court can speculate on presumed
intent of the Parliament and rewrite that object with
implicit sense. We listen largely to the language of the
Statute but where, as here, clearing up of marginal
obscurity may make interpretation surer if light from
dependable sources were to beam in, the Court may seek such
aid. In the instant case, we are satisfied that the
Parliament desired to validate retrospectively what the
Bihar Legislation had ineffectually attempted. It has used
words plain enough to implement its object and, therefore,
the validating Act as well as the consequential levy are
good. Rule 20(2) of the Mineral Concession Rules stands on
an assured footing. This sub-rule has been made by the
Bihar Government purely as a delegate of Parliament
Therefore, Parliament could validate it and has done so.
[166AB, 156H]
(iii)Under our scheme of distribution of the
legislative powers, particularly when subjects of national
and provincial concern are involved, an and the States a
lesser role, the present case of mines and minerals being an
instance in point. [155CD]
(iv)The impugned legislation, levy and other actions are
good. [168B]
153
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 357 to 359 of
1970.
Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India.
A. K. Sen, P. K. Chatteriee and G. S. Chatterjee for the
petitioners.
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India, S. N. Prasad, R.
N. Sachthey, and M. N. Shroff, for respondent no. 1.
S.K. Sinha and K. K. Sinha, for respondent Nos. 2-5 (in W.P.
No. 359/70).
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India and U. P. Singh,
for respondent no. 2. (in W.P. No. 357/70.
L.N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India add D. Goburdhan,
for respondent Nos. 2-4.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-The central issue in these petitions deals
with the question whether a statute and a rule earlier
declared by the Court unconstitutional or otherwise invalid,
can be retroactive through fresh validating legislation
enacted by the competent Legislature. More pointedly, the
constitutionality of. r. 20(2) framed by the Bihar
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Government under s. 15 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation
and Development) Act, 1957 (Act LXVII of 1957) (for short,
the Central Act) and the second proviso to S. 10 (2) of the
Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 (for brevity, the Bihar Act)
has been challenged on various grounds in the petitions, a
validating statute by Parliament transforming them into
Central legislation, as will be presently explained. The
subject of the litigation is minor minerals, and the right
of the petitioners adversely affected by the impugned
legislation, is-to quarry stones etc., on the strength of
leases granted to them by erstwhile proprietors whose
ownership vested in the State by virtue of the Bihar Act.
By the combined operation of the second proviso to S. 10(2)
of the Bihar Act and r. 20(2) (framed by the State Govern-
ment) of the Bihar Miner Mineral Concession Rules, 1964
(hereinafter called the Rules) the petitioners were called
upon to pay certain rents and royalties in respect of mining
operations, but the power of the State, clothed by these
provisions, was put in issue in the first round of
litigation by lessees of quarries, which culminated
disastrously against the State in Baij Nath Kedia v. State
of Bihar(1). This Court, in that case, held that the Bihar
Legislature had no jurisdiction to enact the second proviso
to S. 10(2) of the Bihar Act, because it went further to
hold that s. 15 of the Central Act, read with s. 2 thereof,
had appropriated the whole field relating to minor minerals
for Parliamentary legislation. This Court proceeded to lay
down that the second sub-rule, added by the Notification
dated December 10, 1964 to r. 20 of the rules did not affect
leases in existence prior to the enactment of the rules.
The upshot of the decision was that the
(1) [1970] 2 SCR 100.
154
action taken by the Bihar Government, in modifying the terms
and conditions of the leases which were in existence
anterior to the rules and the levy sought to be made on the
strength of the amended Bihar Act and rule were
unsustainable. Thereupon the State persuaded Parliament to
enact the validation Act of 1969 with a view to remove the
road-blorks which resulted in the decision in Kedia’s
Case(1). The preamble and the short Act (now impugned)
provide thus
"An Act to validate certain provisions
contained in the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950,
and the Bihar Minor Mineral Concession Rules,
1964, and action taken and things done in
connection therewith."
Section I gives the title of the Act.
Section 2 of the Act runs thus
"2. Validation of certain Bihar State laws and
action taken and things done connected
therewith.
(1)The laws specified in the Schedule shall
be and shall. be deemed’ always to have been,
as valid as if the provisions ID contained
therein had been enacted by Parliament.
(2)Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or
order of any court, all actions taken, things
done, rules made, notifications issued or
purported to have been taken, done, made or
issued and rents or royalties realised under
any such laws shall be deemed to have been
validly taken, done, made, issued or realised,
as the case may be, as if this section had
been in force at all material times when such
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action was taken, things were done, rules
were, made, notifications were issued, or
rents or royalties were realised, and no suit
or other proceedings shall be maintained or
continued in any court for the refund of rents
or royalties realised under any such laws.
(3)For the removal of doubts, it is hereby
declared that nothing in sub-section (2) shall
be construed as preventing any person from
claiming refund of any rents or royalties paid
by him in excess of the amount due from him
under any such laws."
In the Schedule, section 10 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act,
1950 (Bihar Act XXX of 1950), as amended by the Bihar Land
Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1964 (Bihar Act IV of 1965) and by
the Bihar Land Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1965 (Bihar Act VI
of 1965), and two other sections, namely, sections 10-A and
31, of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, as amended by the
various amending Acts, are mentioned. Sub-rule (2) of Rule
20 of the Bihar Minor Mineral Concession Rules, 1964, as
inserted by the Bihar Minor Mineral Concession (First
Amendment) Rules, 1964, published under the Bihar Government
Notification No. A/MM-109964 (pt.) 7700/M, dated the 19th
December, 1964, in the Gazette of Bihar (Pt. 11), dated the
30th December, 1964 is also mentioned therein.
(1)[1970] 2 S.C.R. 100.
155
The legal question canvassed before us is as to whether the
Amending Act in question has been an exercise in futility
because of an unconstitutional essay and foggy drafting or
has achieved the purpose I set by Parliament which is
transparent from the legislative history Shri A. K. Sen,
counsel for the petitioner, has turned the focus mainly on
one or two deficiencies in the enactment of the Act by
Parliament. Shri Sen’s submission is that notwithstanding
the validating measure the right claimed by the State to
alter the terms of the lease or to impose a new levy has not
validly acquired.
Case History
Mines and minerals, as topics of legislation, fall under the
Union and the State Lists. Under our scheme of distribution
of legislative powers, particularly when subjects of
national and provincial concern ,arc involved, an inter-
locking arrangement is provided whereby the Union has a
dominant say and the States a lesser role, the present case
of mines and minerals being an instance in point. The
relevant entries in the VII Schedule are item 54 of List I
and item 23 of List II. The latter is expressly made
subject to the provisions of List I with respect to
regulation and development under the control of the Union
arid the Union’s powers extend to regulation and development
of mines and minerals ’to the extent to which such
regulation and development under the control of the Union is
declared by Parliament by law to be expedient in the public
interest’. In the exercise of the above power, the Union
Parliament passed the Central Act which covered not merely
the field of major minerals but also occupied the area of
minor minerals, as is evident from ss. 15 and 16 of the Act.
(The necessary declaration visualised in Entry 54 of List I
is made by sec. 2 of the Central Act). Although the
legislation was made by Parliament, 15 conferred power on
the State Government as its delegate to make rules in
respect of minor minerals.
The Bihar State which had on its statute book a land reforms
law, sought to acquire control over mines and minerals and
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in that behalf added a second proviso to s. 10(2) which
reads thus (Bihar Act 4/65)
"Provided further that the terms and
conditions of the said lease in regard to
minor minerals as defined in the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act,
1957 (Act LXVII of 1957) shall, in so far as
they are inconsistent with the rules of that
Act, stand substituted by the corresponding
terms and conditions by those rules and if
further ascertainment and settlement of the
terms will become necessary then necessary
proceedings for that, purpose shall be
undertaken by the Collector."
The apparent legal result was that the State Government
could ’shape the terms and conditions of the leases granted
by the quondam proprietors and this was done by framing
rules under s. 15 of the Central Act as the delegate of
Parliament. Faced with a demand for
156
higher levyput forward by the State which had been armed
by the amendmentof the Land Reforms law and the rules
under s. 15 of the CentralAct, mineral prospectors and
quarries moved petitions under Art. 226 of the Constitution
in the Patna High Court, Although those petitions were
dismissed, appeals were carried to this Court which, as
earlier stated, ended in success. It is important to note
the reasons which weighed with this Court in striking down
the two pieces of legislation, one amending the Bihar Act
and the other, adding a sub-rule under the Central Act, so
that an insight into the infirmities of the said
legislations may be gained and the need and object of the
validation appreciated.
Hidayatullah, C. J. in Baij Nath Kedia(1), speaking for the
Court, pointed out that the declaration contemplated by
Entry 54 of List I was contained in s. 2 of Act 67/57 and
thus the Central Government assumed control over regulation
of mines and mineral development to the extent provided in
the Central Act. Since s. 15 of the Central Act went on to
state that the State Government may make rules for
regulating the grant of prospecting licences and mining
leases in respect of minor minerals and for purposes
connected therewith, the whole subject of legislation
regarding minor mineral was also covered by the Central Act
and, to that extent, the powers of the State Legislature
stood excluded. No scope was therefore left for the
enactment of the second proviso to s. 10(2) of the Bihar Act
which related to mining and minerals and was for that reason
ultra vires. The fate of sub-rule 20(2) was no better,
according to the learned Chief Justice. Vested interests
cannot be taken away except by law made by a competent
Legislature. Since the Bihar Legislature had lost power to
legislate about minor minerals, Parliament was the sole
source of power in this behalf. Rule 20(2) of the Bihar
Minor Minerals Concession Rules, 1964 was ineffective for
modifying leases granted earlier. It could not derive
sustenance on the second proviso to s. 10(2) of the Bihar
Act which had been held ultra vires not could legislative
support be derived from s. 15 of the Central Act since the
rulemaking power conferred by that provision did not
contemplate alteration of terms of leases already in
existence before the Act was passed.
The direct lessons from Kedia(1) were drawn by Parliament
and suitable legislative action taken, according to the
Solicitor General, resulting in the present validation Act.
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So much so the purpose of the enactment was obvious, the law
laid down by this Court was obeyed and the resultant
referential legislation must therefore be interpreted to
further and fulfil-not to frustrate or foil-the intendment
of retroactive validation of earlier inoperative legislative
and executive action taken by the Bihar State.
Statutory conspectus and meaning
Substantially this history of the impugned Act is not under
serious challenge. The vital conflict is as to whether,
whatever may have been in the mind of Parliament, the Court
can speculate on presumed intent
(1) [1970] 2 S.C.R.100.
157
and read that object with implicit sense, According to Sri
Sen, what has been legislated has to be judged on the
language used which, in his view, was hardy adequate to
create power to vary the leases or cast liability to pay
largr and royalties retrospectively.
We listen largely to the language of the statute but where,
as here,, clearing up of marginal obscurity may make
interpretation surer if light from dependable sources were
to beam in, the Court may seek such aid. What has been
described as the sound system of construction, excluding all
but the language of the text and the dictionary ad the key,
hardly holds the field especially if the enactment has a
fiscal or other mission, its surrounding circumstances speak
and its history unfolds the mischief to be remedied. The
Court, in its comings with the Legislature, strives
reasonably to give meaningful life and avoid cadaverous
consequence We have set out the story of the rebirth, as it
were, of the law of minor mineral royalty levy to drive
home, the propriety of this method of approach. No doubt,
there is some remissness in the drawing up of what professes
to be a validating law and the neglected art of drafting
bills is in part the reason for subtle length of submissions
where better skill could have make the sense of the statute
luscious and its validity above-board. Informed by a
realistic idea of shortfalls in legislative drafting and of
the social perspective of the statute but guided primarily
by what the Act has said explicitly or by necessary
implication we will examine the meaning and its impact on
counsel’s contentions.
The main Propositions of law
Kedia’s Case(1) has held void both proviso 2 to s. 10 of the
Bihar Act and Rule 20 (2) made under the Central Act. Shri
A. K. Sen did not dispute the legislative competence of
Parliament, by specific enactment, to validate retroactively
otherwise invalid legislation or incorporate into a Central
Act a void State legislation since mines and minerals, minor
and major, had been taken over by the Centre. His chief
submission was that the well-known legislative mechanics to
resurrect statutorily earlier Acts or rules declared dead by
Court had not been adopted here, so much so the fiction
introduced by the deeming provision has failed to achieve
what is being claimed by the State as the legislative
object. Mr. Sen’s proposition, shortly stated, is
"If a law is void as being passed by an
incompetent Legislature, validation by a
subsequent Act passed by a competent
Legislature can only be effected by the subse-
quent law enacting the provisions of the old
Act expressly or by incorporation. It cannot
be done by a competent Legislature laying down
in the subsequent Act that the former Act
passed by the incompetent Legislature is
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deemed to be
What is moot is not the proposition but its application to
our legislative situation.
(1)[1970] 2 S.C.R. 100.
158
Relaince for this proposition was placed, inter alia on
Jaora Sugar Mills v. State(1) ; Jawaharmal v. State of
Rajasthan(2) ; Shama Rao v. Pandicherry(3) and Gwalior Rayon
Mills v. Asstt. Commissioner, S.T.(1). To take the last
case first, we may state that the problem tackled there
related to excessive delegation and abdication of legis-
lative power and did not bear upon the issue of legislation
by reference or incorporation. Of course, there is
consideration of Shama Rao(3) in the judgment of Mathew J.,
but it is difficult to make out how the observations to
which our attention was invited bear upon the issue before
us.
The learned Judge’s containment of the principle in Shama
Rao(:’) with which we respectfully concur, may be set out
here (p. 1679)
"We think that the principle of the ruling in
[1967] 2 SCR 650 (viz., Shama Rao) must be
confined to the facts of the case., It is
doubtful whether there is any general
principle which precludes either Parliament or
a State legislature from adopting a law and
the future amendments to the law passed
respectively by a State legislature or
Parliament and incorporating them in its
legislation. At any rate, there can be no
such prohibition when the adoption is not of
the entire corpus of law on a subject but only
of a provision and its future amendments and
that for a special reason or purpose.
The kernel of Gwalior Rayon (4) is the ambit of delegation
by Legislatures, and the reference to legislation by
adoption or incorporation supports the competence and does
not contradict the vires of such a process-not an unusual
phenomenon in legislative systems nor counter to the
plenitude of powers constitutional law has in many
jurisdictions conceded to such instrumentalities clothed
with plenary authority. The Indian legislatures and courts
have never accepted any inhibition against or limitation
upon enactment by incorporation, as such.
The dispute is not whether Parliament can legislate
into validity State Act which is outside the State List.
If s. 2 of the impugned Act merely validates invalid State
law by Parliament’s action, it is doomed to fail.
It is for the Constitution, not Parliament, to confer
competence on State Legislatures. The observations in Jaora
Sugar Mills(1) on which Shri A. K. Sen laid great stress,
silence the question
"... . . . If it is shown that the impugned
Act purports to do nothing more than validate
the invalid State statutes’, then of course,
such a validating Act would be outside the
legis-
(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 523, 531.
(2)[1966] 1 S.C.R. 890, 901, 904.
(3)[1967] 2 S.C.R. 650, 662.
(4)A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 1660, 1681.
159
lative competence of Parliament itself Where a
topic is not included within the relevant List
dealing with the legislative competence of the
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State Legislatures, Parliament, by making a
law, cannot attempt to confer such legislative
competence on the State Legislatures."
It is a far constitutional cry from this position to the
other proposition that where Parliament has power to enact
on a topic actually legislates within its competence but, as
an abbreviation of drafting, borrows into the statute by
reference the words of a State Act not qua State Act but as
a convenient shorthand, as against a longhand writing of all
the sections into the Central Act, such legislation stands
or falls on Parliament’s legislative power, vis -a-vis the
subject viz., mines and minerals. The distinction between
the two legal lines may sometimes be fine but always is
real. Jaora Sugar Mills (supra) illumined this basic
difference with reference to s. 3 of the Act challenged
there, by observing :
"...... What Parliament has done by enacting
the said section is not to validate the
invalid State statutes, but to make a law
concerning the cess covered by the said Statu-
tes and to provide that the said law shall
come into operation retrospectively. There is
a radical difference between the two
positions. Where the Legislature wants to
validate an earlier Act which has been
declared to be invalid for one reason or
another, it proceeds to remove the infirmity
from the said Act and validates its provisions
which are free from any infirmity. That is
not what Parliament has done in enacting the
present Act. Parliament knew that the
relevant Statutes were invalid, because the
State Legislatures did not possess legislative
competence to enact them. Parliament also
knew that it was fully competent to make an
Act in respect of the subject-matter covered
by the said invalid State Statutes.
Parliament, however, decided that rather than
make elaborate and long provisions in respect
of the recovery of the, cess, it would be more
convenient to make a compendious provision
such as is contained in S. 3. The plain
meaning of Section 3 is that the material and
relevant provisions of notifications, orders
and rules issued or made thereunder are
included in Section 3 and shall be deemed to
have been included at all material times in
it. In other words, what section 3 provides
is that by its order and force, the respective
cesses will be deemed to have been recovered
because the provisions in relation to the
recovery of the said cesses have been
incorporated in the Act itself. The command
under which the cesses would be deemed to have
been recovered would, therefore, be the
command of Parliament, because all the
relevant sections, notifications, orders and
rules have been adopted by the Parliamentary
statute itself."
No Parliamentary , omnipotence to re-draw. Legislative
Lists in the VII Schedule can be arrogated to confer on the
State compe-
160
tence to enact on a topic where it is outside its Lists.
But if parliament has the power to legislate on the topic,
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it can make an Act on the topic by any drafting means,
including by referential legislation.
The learned Solicitor General, in the course of his
submissions made it clear that he did not want to vindicate
the levy by any validation of the invalidated portion of s.
10 of the Bihar Act. He based his case on the success with
which Parliament had legislated for itself, although
adopting a shorthand form of incorporation referentially of
a State Act and subordinate legislation given in the Sche-
dule to the validation Act. He also made it clear that
r.20(2) had nothing to do with the Bihar Legislature but was
the product of Parliamentary legislation by delegation in
favour of State Government. Thus, in his view, the
Parliament legislated for itself and statutorily adopted for
itself the second proviso to s. 10 of the Bihar Act and the
otherwise ultra vires sub-rule (2) of r. 20. If the re-
enacting technique adopted for the referential or
incorporating legislation was insufficient in law, he
failed. Otherwise, the Act and rules referred to in the
Schedule to the validation Act revived and became
operational, retroactively. There is force in the submis-
sion that taking a total view of the circumstances of the
validation Act Parliament did more than simply validate an
invalid law passed by the Bihar Legislature but did reenact
it with retrospective effect in its own right adding an
amending Central Act to the statute book.
Shri A. K. Sen pressed passages from Jawaharmal (supra), but
some care in scrutiny will reveal that Jawaharmal (supra)
does not clash with Jaora Sugar Mills (supra).
We may briefly deal with that decision and explain it. Art,
255 of the Constitution insists on Presidential assent for
certain Acts of the State Legislature, although subsequent
assent is curative of the infirmity caused by absence of
previous assent. In Jawaharmal (supra), one of the points
that fell for decision was the efficacy of a Legislative
declaration that an earlier invalid Act (for want of
Presidential assent) be deemed to be valid by reenactment
and subsequent assent of the President to the second Act.
This would virtually mean that by the re-enacting device,
Presidential assent could be by-passed by the Legislature,
Negativing this submission, the Court observed, with
reference to the Rajasthan Act which attempted this
unconstitutional exercise :
"In other words, the Legislature seems ’to say
by Section 4 that even though Article 255 may
not have been complied with by the earlier
Finance Acts, it is competent to pass Section
4 whereby it win prescribe that the failure to
comply with Article 255 does not really
matter. and the assent of the President to the
Act amounts to this that the President also
agrees that the Legislature is empowered to
say that the infirmity resulting from non-
compliance with Article 255 does not matter.
In our opinion, the Legislature is incompetent
to declare that the failure to comply with
Article 255 is of no consequence; and, with
respect, the
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assent of the President to such declaration
also does not serve the purpose which
subsequent assent by the President can serve
under Article 255 . . ."
x x x x
we have tried s.4 as favourably as we can
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while appreciating the argument of the learned
Advocate General; but the words used in all
the three parts of Section 4 are clear and
unambiguous; they indicate that the
Legislature thought that it was competent to
it to cure, by its own legislative process,
the infirmity resulting from the non-
compliance with Article 255 when it passed the
earlier Finance Acts in question, and it was
probably advised that such a legislative
declaration would be valid and effective
provided it received the assent of the
President.In our opinion, the approach
adopted by the Legislaturein this case
is entirely misconceived. The Legislature,no
doubt, can validate an earlier Act which is
invalid byreason of non-compliance with
Article 255 and such an Act may receive the
assent of the President which will make the
Act effective. The Legislature cannot,
however, itself declare by a statutory
provision that the failure to comply with
Article 255 can be cured by its own enactment
even if the said enactment received the assent
of the President. In our opinion, even the
assent of the President cannot alter the true
constitutional position under Art. 255. The
assent of the President cannot, by any
legislative process, be deemed to have been
given to an earlier Act at a time when in fact
it was not so given. In this context there is
no scope for a retrospective deeming in regard
to the assent of the President. It is
somewhat
unfortunate that the casual drafting of
Section 2 leaves the period covered by Act 11
of 1962 and the notification issued thereunder
as unenforceable as before, and the omnibus
and general provisions of Section 4 are of no
help in regard to the said period."
In dismissing a similar contention based on Jawaharmal
(supra), to challenge the identical statute with which we
are here concerned, the Patna High Court observed, in
Dhabhum T & I Ltd. v. Union of India (1) ;
"In that case, the validating law merely
declared that the original invalid legislation
was valid in spite of the contravention of
Article 255 of the Constitution. In the
instant case, Parliament has not sought to
declare that the failure to comply with the
requirements of Article 255 of the
Constitution is of no consequence."
The crucial demarcation between Jaora Sugar Mills (supra)
and Jawaharmal (supra) is important and cannot be
overlooked. The latter
(1) AIR 1972 Pat. 364, 373
162
case dealt with a State Legislature ineffectually overcoming
invalidity caused by absence of Presidential assent.
Validation by a legislature must necessarily be of what it
could validly have done and not of what someone else had to
do. The assent of the President could not be made up for by
the validating process adopted by the legislature. So it
was that Jawaharmal (supra) suffered from legislative
incompetence a second time.
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It is important to notice, however, that the alleged vice of
the legislation in the present case relates to a radically
different area. What is within the competence of Parliament
it seeks to do-validation by incorporation of a legislation
on a topic within its purview. The device adopted of re-
enacting by validation is familiar to the Indian draftsman
as to his Anglo-American counterpart. We have no doubt that
incorporation of Acts is permissible in the absence of other
disabling factors. It is one thing to say that retroactive
validation by a competent legislature is impermeable; it is
another to contend that there has not been a valid execution
of this process or rather Parliament has not, in the present
case, done what the draftsman ought to have done to
effectuate the ostensible purpose of creating a new power to
levy royalty and to alter the terms of the mining cases and-
then to give such newly created liability anterior effect.
The controversy now shifts to the effectiveness or otherwise
of the legislative device in achieving retroactive
validation. We have already noticed that the second proviso
to s.10(2) of the Bihar Act and sub-r.(2) of r.20 of the
Mineral Concession Rules, 1964 were void, as held by this
Court. We have therefore to treat them as non est. We have
already held that the Bihar Act qua Bihar nation could not
be resuscitated by Parliament conferring such power through
a law. The position may be different so far as rule 20(2)
is concerned since that is a rule framed by Parliament
through its delegate, the State Government, although the
rule itself being in excess of the power conferred by s.15
of the Central Act was ultra vires. In this invalidatory
situation, Parliament passed an Act to validate the void
provision of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 and the ultra
vires sub-rule of r.20 of the Mineral Concession Rules as
well as the action taken and things done in connection
therewith. ’The Act is itself short and consists of two
sections, of which the ,latter is the only important one.
It validates the laws specified in the schedule by a deeming
device. Secondly, it brings into force, back-dating it, all
action taken, rents and royalties realised and rules made
’notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of any
Court’. The problem before us is whether the Act has
achieved its purpose of creating retrospective liability for
rents, royalties etc., and validating retrospectively the
impugned provisions of the Bihar Act and the Mineral
Concession Rules.
Shri A. K. Sen’s criticism has to be noticed in this
background; for he urges that in the light of the rulings of
this Court no liability to levy rent or royalty can be
created retroactively without two clear stages or steps :
firstly, a law must be enacted creating the liability-,
next, such provision should be made retrospective. This
two-stage procedure is absent in the statute tinder attack
and therefore the pur-
163
pose, whatever it be, has misfired,. argues Mr. Sen. In
plain terms the present case raises the question of
enactment by reference and incorporation. It is correct to
contend that curative-statutes and validating exercises,
unless the process is explicit enough and permissible
otherwise, cannot be given ex post facto effect by courts.
What is the intention of Parliament is mainly to be gathered
from the language used, tested by approved canons of
construction.
The profusion of precedents touched upon at the Bar leaves
us with a few which were stressed as having direct
pertinence to the points in debate. The power of a
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legislature to pass a law obviously includes the power to
pass it retrospectively. Minor minerals, as explained
already, being a topic withdrawn and confided to Parliament
for legislation, the validating Act cannot fail for
incompetence. But before a levy expost facto is made, the
legislation must first create the fiscal liability and then
project it retrospectively. This is the broad trend of Sri
A. K. Sen’s submission. He relies heavily on Kamrap(1) to
urge that a legislation cannot by a simple ’deeming’ device
render valid what is unconstitutional.
The following observations were emphasized by counsel (p.
580 of the report) :
"It is to be seen that the core of Assam Act
21 of 1960 is the deeming provision of s.2
under which certain lands are deemed to be
acquired under the earlier Act. As this
deeming provision is invalid, all the other
ancillary provisions fall to the ground along
with it. The later Act is entirely dependent
upon the continuing existence and validity of
the earlier Act. As the earlier Act is
unconstitutional and has no legal existence,
the provisions of Act No. 21 of 1960 are
incapable of enforcement and are invalid."
The ratio is apt to be misunderstood for, in its essence,
the judgment merely holds that where the later Act is-
entirely dependent upon the valid continuance of the earlier
Act, which has been held unconstitutional, the deeming
provision cannot produce the desired effect. The learned
Solicitor General, however, argues that the situation in the
present case is altogether different. The earlier Bihar Act
or the rules framed by the State Government under the Act do
not have to be valid for sustaining the amending Act made by
Parliament. The constitutionality of the earlier law has
not to be posited for the survival of the Central amending
Act. In this submission the learned Solicitor General is
right and so the proposition in Kamrup(1) is inapplicable
here.
In Hari Singh(2), Kamrup(1) was approved but there is no
quarrel over the correctness of the proposition there, its
application being inept in the context of the present case.
However, Ray J. (as he then was), made certain observations
which were pressed before us by Mr. Sen
(1) [1968] 1 SCR 561.
(2) [1973] 1 SCR 515.
164
"The ratio is that the 1960 Act has no power
to enact that an acquisition made under a
constitutionally invalid Act was valid. The
1960 Act did not stand independent of the 1955
Act. The deeming provision of the 1960 Act
was that land was deemed to be acquired under
the 1955 Act. If the 1955 Act was
unconstitutional, the 1960 Act could not make
the 1955 Act constitutional."
With great respect we agree with the position but, as
earlier stated, the statutory complex confronting us is
something different. In the present case, the Bihar
Legislature is not legislating into validity, by a deeming
provision, what has been declared ultra vires by the Court.
It is Parliament, whose competency to legislate on the topic
in question is beyond doubt, that is enacting the ’deeming’
provision. It follows that Hari Singh (supra) also cannot
salvage the appellant.
We reach the twilight of legislative area when we move into
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West Ramnad Electric Distribution Co. Case(1) which also
dealt with a validating Act. The Madras Electricity Supply
Undertakings Act. 1949 clothed the State with power to
acquire Electricity Supply Undertakings. The validity of
the said Act was challenged and this Court held the law
ultra vires. In consequence, the Madras Legislature passed
Madras Act 29/54 which incorporated the impugned provisions
of the earlier Act of 1949 and purported to validate the
action taken under the earlier Act. The affected appellant
assailed the new Act to the extent to which it purported to
validate acts done under the earlier Act of 1949 which had
been declared inoperative by the Court. The facet of that
decision which relates to the point under discussion before
us establishes that validation, with retrospectively super-
added, is perfectly competent for the Legislature.
Gajendragadkar, J. (as he then was), observed :
"The argument is that there is no specific or
express provision in the Act which makes the
Act retrospective and so, s.24, even if it is
valid, is ineffective for the purpose of
sustaining the impugned order by which
possession of the appellant concern was
obtained by the respondent."
x x x x
"Before dealing with this argument, it would
be necessary to examine the broad features of
the Act and understand its general scheme.
The Act was passed because the Madras
Legislature thought it expedient to provide
for the acquisition of undertakings other than
those belonging to and under the control of
the State Electricity Board constituted under
section 5 of the Electricity (Supply) Act,
1948 in the State of Madras engaged in the
business of supplying electricity to the
public. It is with that object that appro-
priate provisions have been made by the Act to
provide for the acquisition of undertakings
and to lay down the principles for paying
compensation for them. It is quite clear that
the scheme of the Act was to bring within the
purview of its material provisions
undertakings in respect
(1) [1963] 2 S C.R. 747.
165
of which no action had been taken under the
earlier Act and those in respect of which
action had been so taken."
x x x x
"It is thus clear that the Act, in terms, is
intended to apply to undertakings of which
possession had already been taken, and that
obviously means that its material and opera-
tive provisions are retrospective. Actions
taken under the provisions of the earlier Act
are deemed to have been taken under the
provisions of the Act and possession taken
under the said earlier provisions is deemed to
have been taken under the relevant provisions
of the Act. This retrospective operation of
the material provisions of the Act is thus
writ large in all the relevant provisions and
is an essential part of the scheme of the Act.
Therefore, Mr. Nambiar is not right when he
assumes that the rest of the Act is intended
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to be prospective and so, section 24 should be
construed in the light of the said prospective
character of the Act. On the contrary, in
construing s.24, we have to bear in mind the
fact that the Act is retrospective in
operation and is intended to bring within the
scope of its material provisions undertakings
of which possession had already been taken."
x x x x
"The third part of the section provides that
the statutory declaration about the validity
of the issue of the notification would be
subject to this exception that the said
notification should not be inconsistent with
or repugnant to the provisions of the Act. In
other words, the effect of this section is
that if a notification had been issued
properly under the provisions of the earlier
Act and its validity could not have been
impeached if the said provisions
were themselves valid, it would be deemed to
have been validly issued under the provisions
of the Act, provided, of course, it is not
inconsistent with the other provisions of the
Act. The section is not very happily worded,
but on its fair and reasonable construction,
there can be no doubt about its meaning or
effect. It is a saving and validating
provision and it clearly intends to validate
actions taken under the relevant provisions of
the earlier Act which was invalid from the
start. The fact that s. 24 does not use the
usual phraseology that the notifications
issued under the earlier Act shall be deemed
to have been issued under the Act, does not
alter the position. that the second part of
the section has and is intended to have the
same effect."
x x x x
"We have no doubt that s.24 was intended to
validate actions taken under the earlier Act
and on its fair and reasonable construction,
it must be held that the intention has been
166
carried out by the legislature by enacting
the said section. Therefore, the argument
that s.24 even if valid, cannot effectively
validate the impugned notification, cannot
succeed."
The ratio of West Ramnad (supra) is clear. The Legislature
can retrospectively validate what otherwise was inoperative
law or action. Unhappy wording, infelicitous expression
or imperfect or inartistic drafting may not necessarily
defeat, for that reason alone, the obvious object of the
validating law and its retrospective content.
In fairness to counsel for the appellant, we must state that
the proposition in Jadao Bahuji’s Case(1) about the powers
of the Legislature, including within itself the power to
make retrospective laws, was not canvassed. Indeed, to
urge that Indian Legislatures were subject to strange
and unsual prohibition against retrospective legislation’
is as late as it is presumptuous. However, Jadao Bahuji(1)
itself contained some valuable observations of relevance for
this case which we may here extract (p. 640) :
"Retrospective laws, it has been held, can
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validate an Act, which contains some
defect in its enactment. Examples of
Validating Acts which rendered inoperative,
decrees or orders of the Court or
alternatively made them valid and effective,
are many. In Atiqux Begum’s Case [(1940) FCR
110], the power of validating defective law
who held to be ancillary and subsidiary to
the powers conferred by the En tries and to be
included in those powers."
We have said enough to establish that no substantial
objection to the Act in question can be pressed on the
strength of incompetence of inoperative retroactivity. That
is why the appellant’s submission was switched largely on
the gross inadequacy of the language of s. 2 of the impugned
Act to confer power on the State Government to validate the
rule 20(2) or s.10 of the Bihar Act. To be precise, the
highlight of Sri Sen’s arguments runs thus:
" The core of the Act on which the State
Government might issue rules is s. 15 of the
Central Act, 1957. Section 15 of the 1957 Act
did not authorise the State Government to
enact r.20 for modifying the existing leases
as was found in the earlier case. The present
s.2 does not confer any such power nor does it
enact the provisions of the Bihar Act to this
effect. It only provides that the Bihar Act
shall be considered to be valid as if it were
passed by Parliament. Section 2 being a core
of the present Act and that being invalid and
being found not to amount to any incorporation
of the Bihar Act, action taken under r.20 or
r.20 itself passed under the old Act would
still remain void and inoperative."
In this connection, considerable emphasis was placed on
Jawaharmal (supra) and on Shama Rao (supra).
(1)[1962] 1 S.C.R. 631.
167
Passing reference was also made to Jagannath v. Authorized
officer Land Reforms (1).
The first of these decisions Jawaharmal (supra) seemingly
supports Mr. Sen’s proposition, although the others fall
wide off the mark. In West Ramnad (supra), referred to by
counsel this Court made some observations which have
relevance to the topic under discussion. There a
legislative validation, retrospective in operation, was
challenged. The latter legislation used the expression
Thereby declared’. The observations made by this Court in
that connection are instructive and may be extracted:
"The second part of the section provides that
the notifications covered by the first part
are declared by this Act to have been validly
issued ; the expression Thereby declared’
clearly means ’declared by this Act’ and that
shows that the notifications covered by the
first part would be treated as issued under
the relevant provisions of the Act and would
be treated as validly issued under the said
provisions. The third part of the section
provides that the statutory declaration about
the validity of the issue of the notification
would be subject to this exception that the
said notification should not be inconsistent
with or repugnant to the provisions of the
Act. In other words, the effect of this
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section is that if a notification had been
issued properly under the provisions of the
earlier Act and its validity could not have
been impeached if the said provisions were
themselves valid, it would be deemed to have
been validly issued under the provisions of
the Act, provided, of course, it is not
inconsistent with the other provisions of the
Act. The section is not very happily worded,
but on its fair and reasonable construction,
there can be no doubt about its meaning or
effect. It is a saving and validating
provision and it clearly intends to validate
actions taken under the relevant provisions of
the earlier Act which was invalid from the
start. The fact that s.24 does not use the
usual phraseology that the notification issued
under the earlier Act shall be deemed to have
been issued under the Act, does not alter the
position that the second part of the section
has and is intended to have the same effect."
It follows that, variant phraseology apart, the meaning and
intent must be unmistakable. In the present case we are
fully satisfied that Parliament desired to validate
retrospectively what the Bihar legislation bad ineffectually
attempted. It has used words plain enough to implement its
object and therefore the validating Act as well as the
consequential levy are good.
Rule 20(2) of the Mineral Concession Rules, which has been
validated by s.2 of sub-s. (1) and figures as item 4 of the
Schedule to the :Impugned enactment, stands on an assured
footing. This
(1) (1971) 2 SCR 893.
10 SC/75-12
168
sub-rule is made by the Bihar Government purely as a
delegate of Parliament, though beyond the scope of the
delegation. Therefore Parliament could validate it and has
done so. The source of the authority for rule-making being
of Parliament, it is indubitable that the power to give it
life retrospective exists. Thus the impugned legislation,
levy and other actions are good.
For the reasons set out above, we dismiss the writ
petitions, but in the circumstances, without costs.
Petitions dismissed.
P.H.P.
169