Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FATEHCHAND HIMMATLAL & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/01/1977
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BHAGWATI, P.N.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1977 AIR 1825 1977 SCR (2) 828
1977 SCC (2) 670
CITATOR INFO :
F 1978 SC 771 (4,29,57)
R 1978 SC1457 (56)
RF 1979 SC1459 (33)
E 1980 SC 898 (29)
R 1981 SC1744 (23)
R 1984 SC1543 (28)
R 1985 SC 389 (21,22)
RF 1986 SC1541 (9)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Article 301-304(b)--Freedom of
trade and commerce-Reasonable restrictions.
Article 252, 254(2), Seventh Schedule List 1, Entry 52, 97,
List II Entry 30
Doctrine of occupied field--State making a law on a
different topic but covering in part the same area--Wheth-
er irreconcilable conflicts necessary-Whether incidental
provisions can be struck down--Gold Control Act 1968--Con-
flict between a Central law and a State law--Effect of the
assent of the President.
Interpretation of legislative entries in the Seventh
Schedule, whether broad and liberal construction to be
adopted.--Seventh Schedule List II Entry 30, meaning of
money lending and money lenders and relief of agricul-
tural indebtedness--Whether impugned Act is covered by this
Entry.
Maharashtra Debt Relief Act 1976--Constitutional
validity of--Whether the State legislature has legislative
competence--Whether violative of Article 304(b)--Whether
the freedom of trade is absolute--Whether money-lending to
the little peasants, landless tiller, bonded labour, the
pavement tenant and the slum dweller a trade--Whether every
systematic profit oriented activity, however, sinister
suppresive or socially diabolic can be said to be
trade--Whether the test of reasonableness is to be applied
in vacuum or in the context of life’s realities.
Perspective of poverty jurisprudence--Whether differ-
ent from the canons of traditional Anglo-Indian jurispru-
dence--Whether while testing constitutionality the princi-
ples of developmental jurisprudence must come into
play--Procedural unreasonableness--Whether the burden of
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proving debtors’ financial position on the lender--Issuance
of certificate in favour of debtor having presumptive value
without hearing the creditor--Absence of appeal---Obligation
of the creditor to move the machinery--Deposit of the orna-
ments before the proceedings can commence--Whether reason-
able--Adoption of summary proceedings, whether valid.
HEADNOTE:
The Maharashtra Legislature passed the Maharashtra Debt
Relief Act. 1976. By the said Act the existing debts of some
classes of some indigents have been liquidated. The Act is
a temporary measure. The validity of the said Act was
challenged in the present writ petition and appeals on the
following grounds:
(1) Money lending was a trade covered by
Article 304 of the Constitution. The restric-
tion both substantive and procedural imposed
by the impugned Act are not reasonable within
the meaning of Article 304(b).
(2) The State legislature has no legislative
competence to enact the statute.
(3) So far as the Gold ornaments are
concerned the field is occupied by the Gold
Control Act 1968 passed by the Parliament.
Therefore, inasmuch as the said Act deals with
Gold Ornaments it is beyond the legislative
competence.
829
The respondents contended that:
(1) The money lending in the present case
was not a trade.
(2) Even if it was trade the restrictions
imposed by the statute are reasonable.
(3) The State Legislature is competent to
enact the impugned Act.
(4) The doctrine of occupied field has no
application.
(5) The Gold Control Act and the impugned
Act deal with two completely different situa-
tions.
(6) In any case, there is no inconsisten-
cy between the two Acts.
Upholding the validity of the Act,
HELD: (1) It is cruel legal like to legitimate as
trade this age and bleeding business whereby the little
peasant, the landless tiller, the bonded labour, the pave-
ment tenant and the slum dweller born and buried during the
Raj and the Republic in chili penury. [836 B-C]
Atiabari Tea Co. (1961) 1 SCR 809, 843, referred to.
(2) The topics of legislation listed in the 7th Schedule
must receive a large liberal and realistic interretation.
[836 E]
(3) The freedom while it is wide is not absolute. Every
systematic, profit oriented activity, however sinster,
suppressive or socially diabole, cannot ipso facto exalt
itself into a trade. Dealings of Banks and similar institu-
tions having some nexus with trade, actual or potential, may
itself be trade or intercourse. All modern commercial credit
and financial dealings amount 10 trade. However, village
based age old, feudal pattern of money lending to those
below the subsistence level to the village artisan, the
bonded labourer, the marginal tiller and the broken farmer,
who borrows and repays in perpetual labour, hereditary
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service, periodical delivery of grain and unvouchered usuri-
ous interest is a countryside incubus. Such debts ever
swell. never shrink, such captive debtor never become quits.
Such countryside creditors never get off the backs of the
victims. [840 D, 841 F-H]
Ibrahim (1970) 3 SCR 498, referred to.
Automobile Transport (1963) 1 SCR 491, followed.
(4) The economic literature, official and other, on
agricultural and working class indebtedness is escalating
and disturbing. Indeed the money lender is an oppressive
component of the scheme. [844 G]
(5) The test of reasonableness is not to be applied in
vacuum but in the contest of life’s realities. The Legis-
lature was confronted with the cruel species of money-lend-
ers. The life of the law is not noisis but actual experi-
ence.The perspective of poverty jurisprudence is radically
different from the canons and values of traditional Anglo-
Indian Jurisprudence. The subject matter of the impugned
legislation is indebtedness, the beneficiaries are petty
farmers,manual workers and allied categories steeped in debt
and bonded to the money lending tribe. So, in passing on
its constitutionality, the principles of Developmental
Jurisprudence must come into play. [846B, 848G-H]
(6) The exemption granted by the statute to credit
institutions and banks is reasonable because liabilities due
to Government, local authorities and other credit institu-
tions are not tainted with exploitation of the debtor.
Likewise, debts due to banking companies do not ordinary
suffer from over-reaching, unscrupulous or harsh treatment.
Financial institutions have until recently treated the
village and urban worker and petty farmer as untouchables.
[849 E-H]
(7) Maybe some stray money-lenders may be good souls but
the Legislature cannot easily make meticulous exceptions and
has to proceed on broad categorisations, not singular indi-
vidualisations. The creditors have not placed material
before the Court to contradict the presumption which must be
made
830
in favour of the legislative judgment. Since nice dis-
tinctions-to suit every kindly creditor is beyond the law-
making process, the court has to uphold the grouping as
reasonable and the restrictions as justified in the circum-
stances of the case. [850 C-E]
Australian Bank Nationalisation Case: Commonwealth of
Australia v. Bank of New South Wales: 1950 A.C. 235, 311,
approved.
(8) The Court negatived the contention of the petitioner
that there was procedural unreasonableness in the Act. The
section which imposes the obligation on the money lender to
prove the debtor’s financial position, the issuance of a
certificate in favour of the debtor having a presumptive
value without hearing the creditor, the absence of appeal,
obligation of the creditor to move the machinery and the
period of 7 days and the deposit of the ornaments before the
proceedings can commence are all reasonable in the circum-
stances of the case. Viewed in the abstract, those griev-
ances look genuine but when we get down to the reality,
nothing so exists in the so-called provision. The provision
requiring the creditor to move and not the debtor is reason-
able because between the two. the money-lender .,is sure to
be far shrewder and otherwise more capable of initiating
proceedings. To cast that obligation on the debtor when in
bulk of cases he is the village artisan, landless labourer
or industrial worker is to deny relief in effect while
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bestowing it in the book. There is nothing objection-
able in the debtor seeking a certificate of qualification
from the small officer of the area. The officer or the
Government servant possesses familiarity with the wherewith-
al and the whereabouts of the persons. Hearing the creditor
before the certificate is issued would merely prolong and
puzzle the proceedings. The creditor does not suffer because
the certificate that the applicant is a debtor raises only a
rebuttable presumption and it is idle to argue that the
creditor has no means of disproving .the income or assets of
his debtor. Ordinarily, the money-lender and the petty
borrower live in and around the same neighbourhood. As
proforma of the certificate to be issued needs mentioning
several particulars these have to be filled by the certify-
ing officer who has, therefore. to make the necessary en-
quiries from and about the debtor. Authorised Officer is
one who exercises quasi-judicial powers even otherwise on
the Revenue side. The adoption of the procedure under the
Maharashtra Land Revenue Code is a fair safeguard although
it is a summary procedure. To equate summary with arbitrary
is contrary to common experience. The obligation for the
production of the pledged article by the creditor as a
preliminary to the institution of the proceedings is also a
just measure so that when a decision is reached the article
may be returned to the debtor in the event of the verdict
going in his favour. Where the subject matter is substan-
tial and fraught with serious consequences and complicated
quest.ions are litigatively terminated summarily, without a
second look at the findings by an appellate body it may be
that unfairness is inscribed on the face of the law but
where little men with petty debts, legally illiterate and
otherwise handicapped are pitted against the money-lend-
ers. absence about appeal cannot invalidate the statute.
Where the enquiry is a travesty of justice or violation of
provisions, where the finding is a perversity of ’adjudica-
tion or fraud on power the High Court is not powerless to
grant remedy even after the recent package of constitutional
amendments. [852 A-H, 853 A-H, 854 A-B]
(9) Entry 30 in List II in the 7th Schedule is money
lending and money lenders; relief of agricultural indebted-
ness. If common sense and common English are components
of Constitutional construction relief against loans by
scaling down, discharging, reducing interest and principal,
and staying the realisation of debts will among other things
fall squarely within the topic. [854 F-H]
(10) The argument that the subject matter of the present
legislation would fall under the residuary power under Entry
97 of List I is negatived. [855 B]
(11) Where Parliament has made a law under Entry 52 of
List I and in the course of it framed incidental provisions
affecting gold loans and money lending business involving
gold ornaments. The State making a law on a different
topic but covering in part the same area of gold loans must
not go into irreconcilable conflicts. The doctrine of
occupied field does not totally
831
deprive the State Legislature from making any law inciden-
tally referable to gold. In the event of a plain conflict
the State Law must step down unless Article 252(2)’can be
invoked. In that case the State law would still prevail if
the assent of the President has been obtained. There is no
conflict between the Gold Control Act and the impugned Act.
Secondly, the subjects of both the legislations can be
traced to the Concurrent List and Article 254(2) validates
within the State the operation of the impugned Act since the
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assent of the President has been Obtained. [858 B-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals No. 632 to
646 of 1976.
(From the Judgment and Order dated the 22/23/26/27th of
April, 1976 of the Bombay High Court in S.C.A. Nos. 997,
2128, 2773, 2077, 2065, 2045, 1172, 1193, 1195, 1196, 1199,
1200, 1210/ 75 and 2050 & 2071 of 1976) and
CIVIL APPEALS NOS. 655 & 1286 of 1976
(From the Judgment and Order dated the 14-5-1976, 23rd,
24th, 27th April, 1976 of the Bombay High Court in S.C.A.
No. 2985 of 1976 and Misc. Petition 4 of 1976) and
WRIT PETITIONS NOS. 98, 102-107, 110-113 & 115-120 1976
Under article 32 of the Constitution of India)
B. Sen, (in CA. 632) Y.S. Chitale, (in CA. 633) Sachin
Chowdhary, (in CA. 634) F.S. Nariman and R.N. Bennerjee,
Adv. (in CA. 637) H.P. Shah, (in CAs. 632-638) A.J. Rana,
(in CA. 635) P.H. Parekh & Miss Manju Jetly, with them, for
the appellants in CAs. 632-637
Vallabhadas Mohta, Sardar Bahadur Saharya & Vishnu
Bahadur Saharya, for the appellants in CAs. 638-644 & 644.
J.L. Nain, A.J. Rana, Janendra Lal, B.R. Agarwala and
Gagras & Co., with him for the appellants in CAs 645 & 646
except for appellant No. 52 in CA. 646
F.S. Nariman, R.N. Banerjee, J.B. Dadachanji " K.J.
John with him for the appellant No. 62 in 646/76
Madhukar Soochak, K. Rajendra Chowdhary, K.A. Shah and
(Mrs.) Veena Devi Khanna, Advocates for the Appellant in
CA. 1286/76
S.K. Dholakia, V.J. Kankaria & R.C. Bhatia, for the
petitioners in all the Writ Petitions.
Niren De, Attorney Genl. (only in CAs. 632, 638 and W.P.
No. 98/76 1. W. Adik, Adv. Genl. of Maharashtra, M.N. Shroff
for the Respondents in the appeals and Writ Petitions
M.P. Chandrakantral Urs and N. Nettar, for the interven-
er in CA. 632/76 (State of Karnataka)
832
K. Parasaran, Adv. Genl. Tamil Nadu. A. V. Rangam,
V. Sathiadev and (Miss) A. Subhashini, in the for the inter-
vener in CA. 632 (State of Tamil Nadu,
K. Rajendra Chowdhary, for the interveners/Applicants A
Ratnaabhapati and Jayalakshimi & Co.
M/s. Jeshtmal, K.R. Chowdhary, Mrs. Veena Devi Khanna,
for the intervener/applicant N. Dhanraj.
B.A. Desai, S.C. Agarwala and V.J. Francis, for Re-
spondents 4 & 5 in CA. 1286/76.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. The distance between societal reali-
ties and constitutional dilettantism often makes for the
dillemma of statutory validity and the arguments addressed
in the present batch of certificated appeals and writ
petitions evidence this forensic quandary. Likewise, the
proximity between rural-cum-clum economics and sociaL relief
legislation makes for veering away from verbal obsessions in
legal construction. A constitution is the documentation of
the rounding faiths of a nation and the fundamental direc-
tions for their fulfilment. So much so, an organic, not
pedantic, approach to interpretation, must guide the
judicial process. The healing art of harmonious construc-
tion, not the tempting game of hair-splitting, promotes the
rhythm of the rule of law. These prologuic observations
made. we proceed to deal with the common subject matter of
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the appeals and the writ petitions.
A bunch of counsel, led by Shri Nariman and seconded by
Shri B. Sen, have lashed out against the vires of the
Maharashtra Debt Relief Act, 1976 (for short, the Debt
Act). The former has focused on the fatal flaw in the Act
based on Art. 301 of the Constitution and the latter has
concentrated his fire on the incompetency of the State
Legislature to enact the Debt Act. A plurality of submis-
sions by a procession of lawyers has followed, although
the principal points have been comprehensively covered by
Shri Nariman and Shri B. Sen. To encore is not to augment,
and yet, some counsel, who had not much to supplement,
claimed the right to. be heard and exercised it ad libiem,
essaying what had already been forcefully urged and forget-
ting that a fine, fresh presentation of a case is apt to be
staled by a second version of it and pejorated by a third
repetition. While in constitutional issues of great moment
this Court is reluctant to ratio oral submission it is
important, by comity of the Bench and the Bar, to conserve
judicial time in the name of public justice so that internal
allocations avoiding over-lapping may be organised among
many counsel who may appear in several appeals, substantial-
ly dealing with the same points. A happy husbandry of advo-
cacy is helpful for judge and lawyer alike and to streamline
forensic business is the joint responsibility of both the
limbs of the institution of justice.
Back to the beginning. Art. 301 of the Constitution man-
dates
833
"301. Freedom of trade commerce and inter-
course---
Subject to the other provisions of this
Part, trade, commerce and intercourse through-
out the territory of India shall be free."
We may also read the cognate provision viz.,
Art. 304 (b):
"304 (b). Restrictions on trade, commerce
and among States.-
Notwithstanding anything in Article 301
or Article 303, the Legislature of a State may
by law--
X X X X
(b) impose such reasonable restrictions on the
freedom of trade, commerce or intercourse with
or within that State as may be required in
the public interest:
Provided that no Bill or amendment for
the purposes of clause (b) shall be introduced
or moved in the Legislature of a State without
the previous sanction of the President."
The unmincing submission of Shri Nariman is that money-
ending is very much a trade, that the Debt Act deals drasti-
cally with moneylenders in defiance of Art. 301 and, since
the manacles on moneylenders and money-lending are unreason-
ably harsh and callously indiscriminate, the ’freedom" which
belongs constitutionally to professional money-lenders is
breached by the ’statutory liquidation of their loans. Nor
can the invalidatory consequence of this violation be obvi-
ated by Art. 304(b). This latter provision salvages stat-
utes which contravene freedom of trade, commerce and inter-
course only if they possess the virtues of reasonableness
and public interest. The injustice of wiping out the
debts of marginal farmers, rural artisans, rural labour-
ers and workers as provided in the scheme of the Act was
anathematised by Shri Nariman as an unwarrantedly unrea-
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sonable annihilation of the trade and ’its capital.
We will deal with this contention presently but we may
merely mention for later discussion another short, lethal
objection to a part of the law, put forward by counsel. He
stated that there was legislative incompetency for the State
Legislature because it had forfeited the power to legislate
on money-lending where gold loans were involved, since
Parliament had occupied the field under Entry 52 of List I
by enacting the Gold Control Act, 1968, and had thereby
elbowed out the State Legislature from that field.
Considerable eclectic study of English, Australian and
American cases was displayed in the course of arguments,
reverberating in Indian precedents dealing with Part XIII of
the Constitution. Of course, we will refer to them with
pertinent brevity, although we must administer to our-
selves the caveat that the same words used in constitutional
enactments of various nations may bear different connota-
tions
834
and when Courts are called upon to interpret them they must
acclimatize the expressions to the particular conditions
prevailing in the country concerned. Different lands and
life-styles, different value systems and economic solu-
tions, different social milieus and thought-ways, different
subject matters and human categories--these vital variables
influence statutory projects and interpretations, although
lexicographic aids and understandings in alien jurisdictions
may also be looked into for light, but not beyond that.
The constitutional guarantee of the commercial mobility and
unity of the country in Art. 301 is sought to be made the
major sanctuary of ’money-lenders’ whose ’freedom’ to lend
and thereby end the lendee is, by legislative judgment,
hand-cuffed. Before unravelling the provisions of the Debt
Act, we must first found ourselves on the quintessentials of
Art. 301 and the juristic and economic basics implied in
that provision. We are not construing a petrified legal
parchment but reading the luscent lines of a human text with
a national mission. We must never forget that the life of
the suprema lex is nourished by the social setting, that
juridical abstractions and theoretical conceptions may be
fascinating forensics but jejune jurisprudence, if the raw
Indian realities are slurred over. We are expounding the
Constitution of a nation whose people hunger for a full life
for each, and therefore, a perception of the signature of
social justice writ on it is imperative. ’Nothing is more
certain in modern society’, declared the American Supreme
Court at mid-century, ’than the principle that there are
not absolutes’. Legal Einsteinism guides the Court, not
doctrinal absolutes, as we will presently discuss.
Since Art. 301 has loomed large in the debate at the
bar, it is pertinent to ask what is its object and design.
For, if the impugned legislation does violate Art. 301, it
must perish unless rescued by Art. 304(b).
This Court, in Atiabari Tea Co. C), tracing the roots of
Art. 301, observed:
"Let us first recall the political and
constitutional background of Part X/II. It is
a matter of common knowledge that, before the
Constitution was adopted, nearly two-thirds of
the territory of India was subject to British
Rule and was then known as British India,
while the remaining part of the territory of
India was governed by Indian Princes and it
consisted of several Indian States. A large
number of these States claimed sovereign
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rights within the limitations imposed by the
paramount power in that behalf, as they pur-
ported to exercise their legislative power of
imposing taxes in respect of trade and com-
merce which inevitably led to the erection of
customs barriers between themselves and the
rest of India. In the matter of such barriers
British India was governed by the provisions
of s. 297 of the Constitution Act, 1935. To
the provisions of this section we will have
occasion later to
(1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 809, 843.
835
refer during the course of this judgment.
Thus, prior to 1950 the flow of trade and
commerce was impeded at several points which
constituted the boundaries of Indian States.
After India attained political freedom in 1947
and before the Constitution was adopted the
historical process of the merger and the
integration of the several Indian States with
the rest of the country was speedily accom-
plished with the result that when the Consti-
tution was first passed the territories of
India consisted of Part A States which broadly
stated represented the Provinces in British
India, and Part B States which were made up
of Indian States. This merger or integra-
tion of Indian States with the Union of India
was preceded by the merger and consolidation
of some of the States inter se between them-
selves. It is with the knowledge of the
trade barriers which had been raised by the
Indian States in exercise of their legislative
powers that the Constitution-makers framed the
Articles in Part XIII. "The main object of
Art. 301 obviously was to allow the free flow
of the stream of trade, commerce and inter-
course throughout the territory of India."
It is fair to realise that Art. 301 springs from Indian
history and hope. We may recall the political and consti-
tutional background of Part XIII--the divided days of Brit-
ish rule, the united aspirations of Independent India, the
parochial pressures and regional pulls leading inevitably to
the erection of fiscal barriers and hampering of economic
oneness. The integration of India was not merely a histor-
ical process but a political, social and economic necessity.
Gajendragadkar J., in Atiabari Tea Co. (supra) pointed out:
"In drafting the relevant Articles of Part
XIII the makers of the Constitution were fully
conscious that economic unity was absolutely
essential for the stablity and progress of the
federal polity which had been adopted by the
Constitution for the governance of the coun-
try. Political freedom which had been won,
and political unity which had been accom-
plished by the Constitution, had to be
sustained and strengthened by the bond of
economic unity." (p. 843)
"Free movement and exchange of goods
throughout the territory of India is essential
for the economy of the nation and for sustain-
ing and improving living standards of the
country. The provision contained in Art. 301
guaranteeing the freedom of trade, commerce
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and intercourse is not a declaration of a
mere platitude, or the expression of a pious
hope of a declaratory character; it is not
also a mere statement of a directive principle
of State policy; it embodies and enshrines a
principle of paramount importance that the
economic unity of the country will provide the
main sustaining force for the stability and
progress of the political and cultural unity
of the country." (p. 844)
836
Such being the perspective, the judicial sights must be
set high’ while reading Article 301. Social solidarity is a
human reality, not mere constitutional piety, and a non-
exploitative economic order outlined in Art. 38, is the
bedrock of a contented and united society. Social disorder
is the bete noire of commerce and trade. All this is non-
controversial ground but the learned Attorney General con-
tests the very applicability of Art. 301 to money-lenders
and moneylending visa vis the humble beneficiaries of the
statute, viz., the marginal farmers, rural artisans, rural
labourers, workers and small farmers. It is a cruel legal
joke to legitimate as trade this age-old bleeding business
of agrestic India whereby the little peasant. the landless
tiller, the bonded labourer, the pavement tenant and the
slum dweller have been born and buried during the Raj and
the Republic in chill penury. Is trade in human bondage to
be dignified legally, betraying the proletarian generation?
For whom do the constitutional bells of the socialist Repub-
lic toll? Therefore, argues the Attorney General, it is
juristic blasphemy to call ’unscrupulous moneylending’--a
rural spectre which stalks Maharashtra--a trade at all.
These chronic operations, socially obnoxious and economical-
ly inhuman, cannot be recognised as licit and wear the
armour of Art. 301, for this preliminary reason. Not all
systematic economic activity is trade. Sinister, socially
shocking ones, are not.
Shri Nariman has counter-asserted, backed by a profusion
of precedents, that money-lending in the modern complexities
of business life is a lubricant for the wheels of commerce
and has been treated as trade. It is the life-blood of
business. It needs no argument to say that the topics of
legislation, listed in the Seventh Schedule, must receive
a large and liberal, yet realistic, interpretation. So
understood, the expression ’trade’ in its wide import,
covers not merely ’buying and selling of goods’ but trading
facilities like advances, overdrafts, mercantile documents,
trading intelligence, telegraphic and telephonic communica-
tions, banking and insurance and many other sophisticated
operations connected with and essential for commerce and
intercourse. Even travel facilities in certain circum-
stances have a nexus with trade and commerce and are part of
them. Learned counsel referred to Ibrahim(1) wherein this
Court has referred to the corresponding provisions in the
Australian Constitution and imparted a comprehensive meaning
to ’trade’. American and Australian case law, Halsbury and
the Judicial Committee, were read with special emphasis on
the amplitude of the expression ’trade’. An inventory of
Indian statutes wherein ’money-lending’ as a business was
mentioned and licensed, was also brought to our notice.
Indeed, this wealth of legal literature may well be held to
make out that money-lending, banking, insurance and other
financial transactions, commercial credit and mercantile
advances may, conceptually, be characterised as ’busi-
ness’. Mercantile credit, money-lending, pawn-broking
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and advances on pledges are business. Otherwise, the
commerce of our country will grind to a halt. Can we con-
ceive of trade without credit, or commerce without mercan-
tile documents, discounting, lending and
(1) [1970] 3 S.C.R. 498.
837
negotiable paper? To deny to monetary dealings the status
of trade is to push India into the medieval age: Broadly
viewed, money-lending amongst the commercial community is
integral to trade and is trade.
So far we go with Shri Nariman and others who have urged
the same point with allomorphic modifications.
The learned Attorney General’s stance is radical and
rooted in the rural bondage to break which is the mission of
this legislation. If accepted, it will mean that money-
lending, in the limited statutory setting and projected on
the Indian rural-urban screen visa vis the exploited people
below-the-poverty-line, cannot be regarded as ’trade’.
It is apt to be reminded of the then famous epigram of
Frederick W. Maitland: "A woman can never be outlawed, for a
woman is never in law." Money-lending-is it in law at all?
No trade, no Art. 301, and so the baptismal certificate
that Art. 301 insists upon from the economic activity that
seeks its ’free’ blessings is that it is ’trade, commerce
or intercourse’. Thus the critical question is as to
whether money-lending and the class of money-lenders who
have been preying upon the proletarian and near-proletar-
ian segments of Indian society for generations may be legal-
ly legitimated as ’traders’ or ’businessmen’. This is not
an abstract legal question turning on semantic exercises
but a living economic question of incurable indebtedness.
Blood, sweat and tears animate amelioratory law which exiles
literal interpretation. The heartbeats of the Debt Act,
according to the State counsel, cannot be felt without
humanistic ’insight by first ostracising, in the name of
social order, the die-hard, death-grip practices which have
defied legislative policing in the past and have kept, in
chronic servitude, vast numbers of the Indian agrarian
community and working class. But if, as urged by the oppo-
sition, the law flatly flouts Art. 301, it fails.
The rule of law, for functional success, must run close
to the rule of life. Therefore, constitutional assays must
be on the touchstone of societal factors. So we cannot
embark upon a study of the working of stock-exchanges, the
dependence of industry and business on credit and key-loans,
the role of pledges in financing commercial activity, when
the challenge is to an economic legislation dealing with the
lowliest and the lost, the destitude and the desperate, far
from big business and industry, trade and commerce and high
finance and sophisticated credit. We must zero-in on the
social group the Debt Act seeks to save, the pattern of
lending the statute strikes at, the heaviness of the blow
and on whom it falls, and the raison detre of the measure.
Does this specific species of deleterious economic activity,
masked as moneylending ’trade’, qualify for the .freedom
that Art. 301 confers on trade? The specific social malady
and the legislative therapeutics suggested guide the court.
Here again, relativity, not absolutes, rules jurisprudence.
Of course, while interpreting the relevant Articles in
Part XIII and pronouncing upon the concept of ’trade’, we
must have regard to the general scheme of the Constitution
and should not truncate the
838
scope and amplitude of economic unity, free movement, pro-
tection from discrimination, unhampered financial arrange-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 32
ments and the like. Undoubtedly, the freedom, while it is
wide, is not absolute. Our Constitution, framed by those
who were sensitive to the massive poverty of the country and
determined to extirpate the social and economic backwardness
of the masses, could not have envisioned a development where
some will be ’free’ to keep many ’unfree’ [See Articles 38
and 39 (c)]. That is why, to make assurance doubly sure, a
further provision is made in Art. 304(b) by adding a rider
to the freedom of commerce subjecting it to the requirement
of reasonableness and imposition of restrictions in public
interest. Das, J., in Automobile Transport (1) struck the
true note, if we may say so with great respect, that while
the text of the Articles is a vital consideration in inter-
preting them, ’we must’ at the same time, remember that we
are dealing with the Constitution of a country and the
interconnection of the different parts of the Constitution
forming part of an integrated whole’. The learned Judge
asks: ’Even textually, we must ascertain the true meaning of
the word ’free’ occurring in Art. 301 From what burdens or
restrictions is the freedom assured? This is a question of
vital importance even in the matter of construction’.
Later, in the ’ judgment, Das J., drives home the point
that ’the conception of freedom of trade in a community
regulated by law pre-supposes some degree of restriction,
that freedom must necessarily be delimited by considerations
of social orderliness’ (underscoring supplied). Even the
Australian Case (1916 22 CLR 556, 573) conceptulizes freedom
as nothing extra legem, lest freedom should be confounded
with anarchy. ’We are the slaves of the law’, said Cicero,
’that we may be free’. Sir Samuel Griffith, C.J. in Duncan
v. State of Queensland (22 CLR.556, 573), said: "But the
word ’free’ does not mean extra legem any more than freedom
means anarchy. We boast of being an absolutely free peo-
ple, but that does not mean that we are not subject to.
law." The conscience of the commerce clause in India, as
elsewhere, is the promotion of an orderly society. social
justice is the core of the constitutional order.
Two inter-connected, but different facets of freedom of
trade and commerce fall for serious consideration in the
light of the above discussion. Is anti-social, usurious,
unscrupulous money-lending to economically weaker sec-
tions, eligible for legal recognition as ’trade’ within the
meaning of Art. 30,1 ? Secondly, assuming that even such
activities have title to be termed ’trade’ are the provi-
sions of the Debt Act reasonable, regulatory and in the
public interest ?
The learned Attorney General argued for the proposition
that the narrow, noxious category of money-lending with
which we are concerned is so oppressive and back-breaking so
far as the poorest sections of the community are concerned
that a sense of social justice forbids the court to legiti-
mate it as ’trade’. Not all systematic economic activity,
even if not formally banned by the law, can be christened
’trade’, he submits, and relies on Chamorbaughwala to.
reinforce this reason-
(1) [1963] (1) S.C.R. 491. (2) [1957] S.C.R. 930.
839
ing. In that case the impugned Act was said to offend
against Art. 301. The Court, therefore, considered whether
gambling was not ’trade, commerce or intercourse’ and took
a sky-view of the numerous decisions in various countries
bearing on this branch of sociological jurisprudence. One
of the Australian cases dealing with lotteries (Mansell
v. Beck) elicited the observation that lotteries, not
conducted under the authority of government, were validly
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 32
suppressed as pernicious. Taylor, J. made the trenchant
observation:
" .... whilst asserting the width of
the field in which s. 92 may operate it is
necessary to observe that not every transac-
tion which employs the forms of trade and
commerce will, as trade and commerce, invoke
its protection. The sale of stolen goods,
when the transaction is juristically analy-
sed, is no different from the sale of any
other goods but can it be doubted that the
Parliament of any State may prohibit the sale
of stolen goods without infringing s. 92 of
the ,Constitution ? The only feature which
distinguishes such a transaction from trade
and commerce as generally understood is to be
found in the subject of the transaction; there
is no difference in the means adopted for
carrying it out. Yet it may be said that in
essence such a transaction constitutes no part
of trade and commerce as that expression is
generally understood. Numerous examples of
other transactions may be given, such as the
sale of a forged passport, or, the sale of
counterfeit money, which provoke the same
comment and, although legislation prohibiting
such transactions may, possibly, be thought to
be legally justifiable pursuant to what has,
on occasion, been referred to as a ’police
power’, I prefer to think that the subjects of
such transactions are not, on any view, the
subjects of trade and commerce as that expres-
sion is used in s. 92 and that the protection
afforded by that section has nothing to do
with such transactions even though they may
require for their consummation, the employment
of instruments, whereby inter-State trade
and commerce is commonly carried on."
(RMDC Case, pp. 915-916)
In the United States of America, operators of gambling
sought the protection of the commerce clause. But
the .Court upheld the power of the Congress to regulate and
control the same. Likewise, the Pure Food Act which prohib-
ited the importation of adulterated food was upheld. The
prohibition of transportation of women for immoral purposes
from one State to another or to a foreign land was held
valid. Gambling itself was held in great disfavour by the
Supreme Court which roundly stated that ’there is no consti-
tutional right to gamble’.
Das, C. 1., after making a survey of judicial thought,
here and abroad, opined that freedom was unfree when society
was exposed to grave risk or held in ransom by the operation
of the impugned
840
activities. The contrary argument that all economic activi-
ties were entitled to freedom as ’trade’ subject to reasona-
ble restrictions which the Legislature might impose, was
dealt with by the learned Chief Justice in a sharp and
forceful presentation:
"On this argument it will follow that
criminal activities undertaken and carried on
with a view to earning profit will be pro-
tected as fundamental rights until they are
restricted .by law. Thus there will be a
guaranteed right to carry on a business of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 32
hiring out goondas to commit assault or even
murder, of housebreaking, of selling obscene
pictures, of trafficking in women and so on
until the law curbs or stops such activities.
This appears to us to be completely unrealis-
tic and incongruous. We have no doubt that
there are certain activities which can under
no circumstance be regarded as trade or busi-
ness or commerce although the usual forms
and instruments are employed therein. To
exclude those activities from the meaning of
those words is not to cut down their meaning
at all but to say only that they are not
within the true meaning of those words.
Learned counsel has to concede that there can
be no ’trade’ or ’business’ in crime but
submits that this principle should not be
extended .... "
We have no hesitation, in our hearts and our heads, to
hold that every systematic, profit-oriented activity,
however sinister, suppressive or socially diabolic, cannot,
ipso facto, exalt itself into a trade. Incorporation of
Directive Principles of State Policy casting the high duty
upon the State to strive to promote the welfare of the
people by securing and protecting as effectively as it may a
social order in which justice---social, economic and politi-
cal--shall inform all the institutions of the national life,
is not idle print but command to action. We can never
forget, except at our peril, that the Constitution obligates
the State to ensure an adequate means of livelihood to its
citizens and to see that the health and strength of workers,
men and women, are not abused, that exploitation, moral
and material, shall be extradited. In short, State action
defending the weaker sections from social injustice and all
forms of exploitation and raising the standard of living of
the people, necessarily imply that economic. activities,
attired as trade or business or commerce, can be de-recog-
nized as trade or business. At this point, the legal cul-
ture and the public morals of a nation may merge, economic
justice and taboo of traumatic. trade may meet and jurispru-
dence may frown upon dark and deadly dealings. The consti-
tutional refusal to consecrate exploitation as ’trade’ in a
socialist Republic like ours argues itself.
The next question then is whether rural and allied money-
lending is so abominable as to be ’bastardized’ by the law
for which the Attorney General pleaded. Shri Nariman
controverted the vulgar generalisation that all money-lend-
ers are vampirish as unveracious imagery. He argued that
many of them were not only licenced but had complied with
the conditions of their licences in doing honest lending
business and supplying rural credit to those in need. He
841
pointed out that institutional credit had hardly penetrated
rural India and the non-institutionalised money-lenders had
done economic service to a primitive peasantry although
several of them had abused. the situation of helplessness in
which the weaker denizens of backward regions found them-
selves..His contention was that there was no justification
for castigating money-lending as non-trade not was there
valid material to condemn wholesale all those who had served
as the financial backbone of agricultural communities in the
past. Reasonable restrictions to obviate abuse were permis-
sible legislation, but obdurate refusal to treat what in
fact was trade as trade was injustice born of hostile
hunches. He had separate arguments on the unreasonableness
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of the provisions of the Debt Act which we will deal with
later. The bone of contention between the parties, there-
fore, is as to whether money-lenders as a class and money-
lending as a systematic traditional activity in the special
context of the weakest sections of agrarian humanity and the
working class, can be called ’trade’. The legal principles
have already been explained by us which we may sum up brief-
ly by stating that, generally speaking, the systematic
business of lending is trade, as understood in the commer-
cial world and in ordinary monetary dealings. Moreover,
trade cannot be confined to the movement of goods but may
extend to transactions linked with merchandise or the flow
of goods, the promotion of buying and selling, advances,
borrowings, discounting bills and mercantile documents,
banking and other forms of supply of funds.
It is possible, however, to project a different view
point and this is precisely what the learned Attorney Gener-
al has done. Free flow, understood in Article 301, implies
some movement from place to place. Freedom of trade,
subject to reasonable restrictions, is guaranteed under Art.
19. The special advantage derived by the Trade by virtue of
Art. 301 consists in the interdict on impeding, directly and
immediately, movement of goods or money transactions con-
nected with movement of merchandize or commercial inter-
course. In short, the Attorney General considers the
element of movement as essential to Pat. 301 in contrast
with Art. 19. We see the force of the submission but are
inclined to the view that dealings of Banks and similar
institutions having some nexus with trade, actual or poten-
tial, may itself be trade or intercourse. All modern com-
mercial credit and financial dealings, covered by the
various rulings cited at the bar, come under this heading.
Even so, the village-based, age-old, feudal pattern of
money-lending to those below the subsistence level, to the
village artisan, the bonded labourer, the .marginal tiller
and the broken farmer, who borrows and repays in perpetual
labour, hereditary service, periodical delivery of grain and
unvouchered usurious interest, is a countryside incubus.
This is not an isolated evil but a ubiquitous agrarian
bondage. Such debts ever swell, never shrink. such captive
debtors never become quits, such countryside creditors never
get off the backs of the victims. The worker and peasant of
India whose lot is to be ’born to Endless Night’ is symbol-
ized by Jawaharlal Nehru, an architect of the Constitution,
as the Man with the Hoe:
842
"Bowed by the weight of centuries he leans
Upon his hoe and gazes on the ground, The
emptiness of ages on his face, And on his back
the burden of the world.
X X X
X
"Through this dread shape the suffering ages
look, Time’s tragedy is in that aching stoop,
Through this dread shape humanity betrayed,
Plundered, profaned and disinherited, Cries
protest to the powers that made the world, A
protest that is also prophecy."
All this painful poetry and prose is borne out
by the record in the case and by studies by
economists.
A recent issue of the Eastern Economist reads:
"The problem of rural indebtedness is
as old as Indian agriculture itself. It
is the net result of usurious money lending,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 32
improvident spending and adversities in agri-
culture. The heavy burden of debt not only
continues to cripple our rural economy, but it
also grows in alarming magnitude. Several
attempts have been made by expert bodies from
time to time for a realistic estimation of
rural indebtedness. Nevertheless, the fact
remains that the rural indebtedness in physi-
cal terms is mounting up and the nightmare of
indebtedness continues to haunt the Indian
peasants...
Quite recently the report published by
the All India Rural Debt and Investment Survey
relating to 1971-72 also depicts an increasing
trend in rural indebtedness. It has been
estimated that the aggregate borrowings of all
rural households on June 30, 1971 was Rs.3921
crores, while the average per rural household
being Rs.503/-. Fortythree per cent of the
rural families had reported borrowings ....
If the problem of rural indebtedness is
to be kept within meaningful limits and man-
ageable proportions, following legislative
and non-legislative measures should be taken:
1. At present the institutional agen-
cies provide only 50 per cent of the total
rural credit needs. Increased efforts by all
the institutional agencies are called for
especially in the context of the declaration
of moratorium on rural debt which may affect
the flow of non-institutional finance.
2. There are about 75 million marginal
farmers with less than one hectare of opera-
tional holding, 20 million artisans and 47
million agricultural labourers in rural sec-
tor, who constitute the rural poor. Liquida-
tion of existing debt is an essential step in
order to give relief to these weaker sec-
tions. The Debt Relief Acts passed in differ-
ent states should be effectively implemented.
843
3. Institutionalisation of rural savings
and inculcation of saving habits amongst rural
folk is a positive step to mitigate this
problem. Massive propaganda and education on
economising expenditure may discourage ex-
travagant spending by certain categories of
rural .households. If necessary, certain
legislative measures such as abolishing dowry
system and imposing austere marriages may also
be resorted to.
4. Attempts must also be made to bring the
money lenders under some form of monetary
regulation and control on the lines suggested
by the Banking Commission. Though at present
legislations exist in several states for the
regulation of money lenders they lack enforce-
ment which render the ineffective."
(emphasis, added)
(’Current Trends in Rural Indebtedness--by M.
Gopalan & V. Kulandaiswamy--Eastern Economist
d/April 23, 1976 Vol. 66, No. 17, pp. 826-829)
Professor Panikar, referring to the nightmare
of debt has this to say:
"Perhaps, it may be that the need for
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borrowing is taken for granted. But the
undisguised fear that the oppressive burden of
debt on Indian farmers is the main hindrance
to progress is unanimous. There are many
writers who depict indebtedness of Indian
farmers as an unmixed evil. Thus, Alak Ghosh
quotes with approbation on the French proverb
that ’Credit supports the farmer as the hang-
man’s rope the hanged’."
(Rural Savings in India--P. G.K.
Panikar--Somaiya Publications Pvt. Ltd.,
Bombay, 1970)
Dr. Bhattacharya, in his book ’Social Security
Measures in India’ (Metropolitan Book Co.,
Delhi, 1970) dwells on the problem of agri-
cultural indebtedness:
"A sample survey conducted by Second
Agricultural Commission revealed the grim
condition of rural indebtedness. The Survey
observes, ’Of the estimated total number of
16.3 million agricultural labour households
in the country, 63.9 per cent were indebted
and debt per indebted household was Rs.138 per
annum’. This is indeed a danger signal par-
ticularly for a country whose entire economy
is dependent on the prosperity .of rural
population. The same source sums up the total
volume of rural indebtedness in the following
words, ’Thus the total volume of debt of the
indebted agricultural labour households may be
estimated at about Rs.143 crores in 1956-57.
A similar estimate was made on the basis of
the results of the 1950-51 Enquiry (i.e., the
First Agricultural Commission Report) and it
worked out to about Rs.80 crores, Even though
the estimated number of agriculture labour
households in 3---206SCI/77
844
1956-57 was lower by 1.6 million, as,com-
pared with 1950-51, the total debt of indebted
agriculture labour.household had considerably
increased in 1956-57." (pp. 1.64-165)
Dhires Bhattacharya in his ’Concise History of
the Indian Economy’ (Progressive Publishers,
Calcutta, 1972) refers to the Indian rural
drama and the role of the anti-hero played by
the_ money-lender:
"Money-lending thus became an easy
method of earning an income and subsequently
of acquiring valuable title to land in the
event of default by the debtor. Throughout
the nineteenth century ownership rights in
land were being lost by the ryot and acquired
by moneyed interests, both rural and urban."
"The situation created by such extensive
loss of perry by the cultivating classes
exploded into riots against money-lenders and
usurpers of land in several parts of the
country. The agricultural riots in Poona
and Ahmednagar in Bombay Presidency in 1875
are most widely known because they were
followed by the appointment of a Commission of
Inquiry." (pp. 77-78)
The author recounts the series of legislation
made during the British Indian period and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 32
concludes:
"These laws also failed in their purpose
because no restrictions had been imposed on
the transfer of land between members of the
agricultural classes. Money-lenders could,
therefore, operate through a benamidar
(fictitious agent) belonging to an agricultur-
al class and acquire land almost as easily as
before. At the same time the bigger agricul-
turists had no difficulty in swallowing up the
smaller ones by giving loans at exorbitant
rates of interest to the latter. (p. 78)
The economic literature, official and other, on agri-
cultural and working class indebtedness is escalating and
disturbing. Indeed, the ’money-lender’ is an oppressive
component of the scheme. A.N. Agrawal, in his book
’Indian Economy’ (Vikas Publishing House) indicates that
’money-lenders charge heavy interest ranging. from 15% 50%
and often more. In addition to .high interest, these
people take advantage of illiteracy of agriculturists and
manipulate the accounts regarding loans to their advantage.
The conditions of loan repayment are so designed that the
debtor is forced to sell his produce to the mahajan at low
prices and purchase goods for consumption and production at
high prices. In many other ways take advantage of the
poverty and the helplessness of farmers and exploit
them .... Unable to pay high interest and the principal,
845
the farmers even lose their land or live from generation to
generation under heavy debt...Unless viable alternatives are
made available, the mahajan will continue to hold, an impor-
tant, harmful and enervating place m this sphere’. The
harmful consequences of indebtedness are economic and affect
efficient farming, social in that the ’relations between the
loan givers and loan receivers take on the form of relations
of hatred, poisoning the social life’. The money-lenders,
few in number, belong to poor class. There are often dis-
putes between the two classes which get sharpened... on the
exploitation of the poor. In fact the social groups get
split into two broad classes. The exploiting class and the
exploited class. Apart from losing land and leading to
tension in the villages their evil effect is rampant... the
heavily indebted farmers lose even their human existence.
They not only render bonded labour to money-lenders, their
very self-respect and even respect of their women folk do
not remain safe.. They are forced to live the life of
slaves. Of course, laws have now been enacted which protect
these debtors. But these laws are difficult to be enforced
either because farmers are illiterate, or they do not have
enough resources to go to the courts, or the money-lenders
prove too clever for them."
Dr. C.B. Mamoria in his book ’Agricultural Problems of
India’ (Kitab Mahal) has stressed that rural indebtedness
has long been one of the most pressing problems of India.
"Rural people have been under heavy indebtedness of the
average money-lenders and sahukars. The burden of this debt
has been passed on from generation to generation inasmuch as
the principal and interest went on increasing for most of
them..According to Wold. The country has been in the grip of
Mahajans. It is the bond of debt that has shackled agricul-
ture."
Very convincing and compelling, with special reference
to Maharashtra, is the Report of a high-powered Committee
appointed by the Government of Maharashtra to make recommen-
dations for the relief of rural and urban indebtedness. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 32
study is at once revealing and ’grim. Rural artisans,
industrial workers, marginal farmers and indigent agricul-
turists have been steeped in debt despite statutory meas-
ures and ineffective credit institutions. These human areas
have been the happy hunting ground of money-lenders. The
Bombay Moneylenders’ Act, according to the Committee, hardly
helped bail out the weaker sections. Despite the Act,
licensed and unlicensed moneylenders pursued their exploita-
tive profession. The Debt .Act implements some of the
recommendations of this Committee although positive institu-
tional finance to save the sunken segments from the grip of
the moneylenders remains to go into action. Even enforce-
ment of the Bombay Moneylenders’ Act appears to be lukewarm
according to the Committee. Be that as it may, the economic
distress, for which moneylenders dealing with the weaker
sections are mainly responsible, is clearly brought out in
the Report. Nor is there anything in this Report or in any
other literary material on rural economics (particularly
relating to artisans, workers and collapsing cultivators) to
substantiate the dichotomy of scrupulous and unscrupulous
moneylenders, vehemently pressed before us by Shri
846
Nariman. The former species are more a pious wish and the
latter tribe a spectre on the increase, if statistical
economic studies are to be trusted. The gravestone on the
old ’moneylender’ system and the cornerstone of the new
liberated order .are thus the programme for the Administra-
tion. The Debt Act is part of the package.
There was much argument about the reasonableness of the
restriction on moneylenders, not the general category as
such but the cruel species the Legislature had to
confront--and we have at great length gone into the gruesome
background of economic illequities, since the test of
reasonableness is not to be applied in vacuo but in the
context of life’s realities. Patanjali Sastri C.J., in
State of Madras v.V.G. Rao(1) observed:
"It is important in this context to bear
in mind that the test of reasonableness wher-
ever prescribed, should be applied_ to each
individual statute impugned, and no abstract
standard, or general pattern of reasonableness
can be laid down as applicable to all cases.
The nature of the right alleged to have been
infringed, the underlying purpose of the
restrictions imposed, the extent and urgency
of the evil sought to be remedied thereby, the
disproportion of the imposition, the prevail-
ing conditions at the time, should all enter
into the judicial verdict."
Money-lending and trade-financing are indubitably ’trade’ in
the broad rubric, but our concern here is blinkered by a
specific pattern of tragic operations with no heroes but
only anti-heroes and victims.
Many Conferences, Commissions and resultant enactments
before and after Independence provided but marginal protec-
tion for the rural debtor. Even licensing was evaded by
the money-lender successfully and concilliation machinery
proved a mirage. Statutes made of sterner stuff became the
desideratum.
In the counter affidavit filed on behalf of the State of
Maharashtra, a lurid presentation of the lender-borrower
scenario is found. The deponent states:
"...that it was a common sight around
the secretariat, Government Offices, Textile
Mills, factories and elsewhere in Bombay to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 32
find moneylenders waiting at the gates to
catch workers to collect their dues."
There is also reference to a number of Official Committees
which have examined the question of indebtedness in the
urban and rural areas and have recommended measures of
relief. The affidavit goes on to state:
"I say that in Maharashtra and its
predecessors the State of Bombay there have
been several legislations on this subject
including the Deccan Agricultural Debt Relief
Act, 1879, Bombay Agricultural Debtors Relief
Act, 1939, 1946
(1)[1952] S.C.R. 597.
847
and in the Vidarbha areas of the State, the
Madhya Pradesh Postponement of Execution of
Decree Act, 1956. I say that there is a well-
established history of dealing with indebted-
ness in the State by means of legislation. I
say that .the Reserve Bank carried out an
inquiry in the matter of indebtedness in 1971
which is referred to as All India Debt and
Investment Survey during 1971-72. The Reserve
Bank of India survey established that the
total debt liabilities in the rural areas in
Maharashtra was Rs.358 crores in 1971-72. A
preliminary analysis made by the Reserve Bank
of India also indicated weaker sections of the
community thereby showing the extent of the
burden of debt on the weaker sections of the
community. I crave leave to refer to and rely
upon the statistical tables prepared by the
Reserve Bank of India in this connection when
produced. I say that the extent of indebted-
ness may be much more than what is indicated
by the statistical survey of the Reserve Bank
of India. The licensed moneylenders alone in
the State are known by themselves to have
disbursed during 1972-73 a sum of about 74.37
crores and the information gathered by the
respondents indicates that the known indebted-
ness in the city of Bombay alone would be of
the order of Rs.45 crores. I say that in
addition to the licensed moneylenders unli-
censed money lending is also carried on in the
State.."
The Statement of Objects and Reasons of
the Maharashtra Ordinance VII of 1975 which
was the precursor to the impugned Act contains
the following statement:
"The problem of urban and rural in-
debtedness has assumed enormous proportions in
recent times.. The noninstitutional sources
of credit, namely, unscrupulous. money-
lenders, have been charging usurious rates of
interest, indulging in malpractices and taking
undue advantage of the weak position of the
economically weaker sections of the people
both in rural and urban areas. The Ordinance,
therefore, seeks to give relief to certain
sections of people from indebtedness."
Even the ’whereas’ vocabulary of the draftsman of the Act
refers to the need for immediate action to provide for
relief from indebtedness to certain farmers, rural artisans,
rural labourers and workers in the State of Maharashtra.
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The judgment under appeal also makes reference to the
continual legislative effort made in the past to save the
agricultural community from chronic indebtedness. The
learned Judges. observe:
"Indeed, agricultural indebtedness has
always been the bane of Indian economy ever
since the beginning of the twentieth cen-
tury. Any elementary book on. Indian econom-
ics will disclose that even the British
Government had
848
thought it necessary to make an enquiry into
agricultural indebtedness. That was one of
the terms of Royal Commission on Agriculture,
and from time to time enquiry committees were
set up including the Banking Enquiry Committee
to go into the question of agricultural
indebtedness with a view to find out how
alternative sources of credit to be made
available to the agriculturists could be
brought into existence. In a sense, the phrase
’agricultural indebtedness’ has earned a
connotation over the passage of years to
indicate the unhappy position in which an
Indian agriculturist has always found ever
since the phenomenal fall of prices in 1929.
It has become proverbial that an Indian
agriculturist is born in debt, he lives in
debt and he dies in debt."
Eminent economists and their studies have been adverted
to by the High Court and reliance has been placed on a
Report of a Committee which went into the question of relief
from rural and urban indebtedness which shows the dismal
economic situation of the rural farmer and the labourer. It
is not merely the problem of agricultural’ and kindred
indebtedness, but the menacing proportions of the moneylend-
ers’ activities that have’ attracted the attention of the
Committee. Giving facts and figures, which are alarming,
bearing on the indebtedness amongst industrial workers and
small holders, the Committee has highlighted the exploita-
tive role of money-lenders and the high proportion/on of
non-institutional borrowings.
We have made this extensive tour of the economic scene,
with special reference to agricultural indebtedness and the
lot of industrial labour, only to present vividly how the
predatory money-lender has had a stranglehold on rural and
urban proletarians, by resort to methods which are scan-
dalizingly calamitous and unshakably resistant to legisla-
tive policing. The learned Attorney General contends that
the courts must have a sense of history .and sociology
informing their judicial perspective and then it is easy to_
understand the syndrome of village and working class indebt-
edness. There are commercial lendings, banking loans and
institutional finances. There are friendly loans, and
occasional accommodations. There are liabilities arising
from various circumstances between citizen and citizen and
citizen and State. But the pernicious species of money-
lending stubbornly flourishing in the rural and industrial
areas of our country, with the weakest sections as their
bled-white clientele, cannot be regarded as ’trade" because
of the painful pages of economic history to which this
country is witness.
The life of the law is not neat noesis but actual expe-
rience. The perspective of Poverty Jurisprudence is radi-
cally different from the canons and values of traditional
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Anglo-Indian jurisprudence. The subject matter of the
impugned legislation is indebtedness, the beneficiaries are
petty farmers, manual workers and allied categories steeped
in debt and bonded to the money-lending tribe. So, in
passing on its constitutionality, the principles of Develop-
mental Jurisprudence’ must come into play.
849
We agree with Shri Nariman that the intimate unity of
national life sought to be sustained by Part XIII cannot be
invidiously breached against the money-lenders provided they
qualify to be traders. If a law cuts into the flesh of the
commercial unity and integrity of the country,’ unreasona-
bly or against public interest, Part XIII electrocutes it.
A meaningful, yet minimal analysis of the Debt Act, read
in the light of the times and circumstances which compelled
its enactment, will bring out the human ;setting of the
statute. The bulk of the beneficiaries are rural indi-
gents and the rest urban workers. These are weaker sections
for whom constitutional concern is shown because institu-
tional credit instrumentalities have ignored them.
Moneylending may be ancilliary to commercial activity and
benignant in its effects, but money-lending may also be
ghastly when it facilitates no flow of trade, no movement of
commerce, no promotion of intercourse, no servicing of
business, but merely stagnates rural economy, strangulates
the borrowing community and turns malignant in its reper-
cussions. The former may surely be trade, but the
latter--the law may well say--is not trade. In this view,
we are more inclined to the view that this narrow, deleteri-
ous pattern of moneylending cannot be classed as ’trade.’
No other question then arises, since the petitioners and
appellants cannot summon Art. 301 to their service.
Assuming that all money-lending is ’trade’, can it be
contended that this relief measure is invulnerable to attack
on the ground that the texture of the restrictions is rea-
sonable and regulatory ?
Article 304(b) relaxes in favour of the State the prohi-
bition in Art. 301 provided the law imposes only such re-
strictions as are reasonable and in public interest. Shri
Nariman’s submission is that the Debt Act is too draconic
to fair, processually and substantively, and so it cannot
be rescued by Art. 304(b). With persuasive pressure he
invited us to look at the horror of procrustean infliction
of equal hostility by the legislature in dealing with the
asuric Shylock and the dharmic lender. The law which
brands the good and the bad alike and indiscriminately
discharges all debts, just and unjust, lacks sense, con-
science and reasonableness. Secondly ’How is it fair,’
asks Shri Nariman, ’that, if the object of the legislation
is to save the victims of rural indebtendness and working
class burdens that credit institutions should be exempted
while non-institutionalised lenders should be picked out for
hostile treatment ?’
There is no merit in the plea. Liabilities due to
government to local authorities are not tainted with exploi-
tation of the debtor. Likewise, debts due to banking compa-
nies do not ordinarily suffer from overreaching, unscrupu-
lousness or harsh treatment. Moreover, financial insti-
tutions have, until recently, treated the village and urban
worker and petty farmer as untouchables and so do not figure
in the picture. To exempt the categories above referred to
is reasonable. Many debt relief laws adopt this classifica-
tion and those familiar with the lowest layers of economic
life will agree that this is as it should be. Money-lenders
of the type we are concerned with in the Debt Act are,
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850
by and large, heartless in their lending tactics, and the
borrowers are anaemic--mostly members of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes, nomadic groups, artisans,
workers and the like. Section 13 of the Debt Act is illu-
minating, regarding the handicapped humans the statute is
concerned with. We quote that provision:
"13. Aggreement for labour in lieu of
debt to become void.--
Any custom or tradition or any agreement
(whether made before or after the appointed
day), whereunder or by virtue of which a
debtor or any member of his family is required
to work as labourer or otherwise for the
creditor shall be void and of no effect and
shall never be enforceable in any civil
court."
Maybe, some stray money-lenders may be good souls and
to stigmatize the lovely and unlovely is simplistic betise.
But the legislature. cannot easily make meticulous excep-
tions and ’has to proceed on broad categorisations, not
singular individualisations. So viewed, pragmatics overrule
punctilious and unconscionable money-lenders fall into a
defined group. Nor have the creditors placed material
before the Court to contradict the presumption which must be
made in favour of the legislative judgment. After all, the
law-makers, representatives of the people, are expected to
know the socio-economic Conditions and customers. Since
nice distinctions to suit every kindly creditor is beyond
the law-making process, we have to uphold the grouping as
reasonable and the restrictions as justified in the circum-
stances of the case. In this branch, there are no finali-
ties. The observations of the Privy Council in the Austra-
lian Bank Nationalisation Case(1) are apposite:
"Yet about this, as about every other
proposition in this field, a reservation must
be made. For their Lordships do not intend
to lay it down that in no circumstances could
the exclusion of competition so as to create a
monopoly either in a State or Commonwealth
agency or in some other body be justified.
Every case must be judged on its own facts and
in its own setting of time and circumstance,
and it may be that in regard to some economic
activities and at some state of social devel-
opment it might be maintained that prohibition
with a view to State. monopoly was the only
practical and reasonable manner or regulation,
and that inter-State trade, commerce and
intercourse thus prohibited and thus monopo-
lized remained absolutely free."
We do not downright denounce all money-lenders but the
lawmakers have, based on socio-economic facts, picked out a
special class of money-lenders whom they describe as unscru-
pulous.
(1) Commonwealth of Australia v. Bank of New South Wales
[1950] A.C. 235, 311.
851
Every cause claims its martyr and if the law, necessi-
tated by practical considerations, makes generalisations
which hurt a few, it cannot be helped by the Court. Other-
wise, the enforcement of the Debt Relief Act will turn into
an enquiry into scrupulous and unscrupulous creditors,
frustrating, through endless litigation, the instant relief
to the indebted which is the promise of the legislature.
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In this perspective, we see no constitutional flaw in
the Act on the score that the sheep have not been divided
from the goats. Realism in the legislature is a component of
reasonableness.. It was urged by Shri Chitale that the
definitional deficiency in ignoring the movable wealth of
debtors makes the scheme arbitrary and unreasonable. A
romantic view of the debtors being considerable owners of
costly art pieces and sophisticated gadgets and yet eligible
for relief is good rhetoric but unrealistic. A pathetic
picture of the money-lender being deprived of his loan
assets while being forced to repay his lender was drawn
but that cannot affect the reasonableness of the relief to
the grass-roots borrower. Nor is it value to attack the Act
on the score that the whole debt i.e., the very capital of
the business, has been dissolved. More often than not, the
money-lender would have, over the Iong-lived debts and
repeated renewals, realized more than the principal if
economic studies tell the tale truly. The injustice of
today is often the hangover of the injustice of yesterday,
as spelt out by history. The business of money-lending has
not been prohibited. The Act is a temporary measure limit-
ed to grimy levels of society. Existing debts of some
classes of indigents alone have been liquidated. If impos-
sible burdens on huge human numbers are not lifted, social
orderliness will be threatened and as a regulatory measure
this limited step has been taken by the Legislature.
Regulation, of the situation is necessitous, may reach the
limit of prohibition. Disorder may break out if the law
does not step in to grant some relief. Trade cannot flour-
ish where social orderliness is not secure. H the ten-
sions and unrests and violence spawned by the desperation of
debtors are not dissolved by State action, no moneylending
trade can survive. It follows that for the very survival
of Trade the regulatory measure of relief of indebtedness is
required. That form this relief should take is ordinarily
for the legislature to decide. It is not ordinarily for
the Court to play the role of ’Economic Adviser to the
Administration. Here amelioratory measures have been laid
down by the Legislature so that the socio-economic scene may
become more contented, just and orderly. Obviously, this
is regulatory in the interest of Trade itself. This policy
decision of the House cannot be struck down as perverse by
the Court. The restrictions under the Debt Act are reason-
able. Equally clearly, if the steps of liquidation of
current debts and moratorium. are regulatory, Art. 301 does
not hit them.
Even so, argues Shri Nariman, procedural presumptions
grossly unreasonable, vitiate the measure. Of course,
reasonableness has a processual facet and if the law is
lawless in its modalities, it becomes unlaw constitutional-
ly. We may illustratively advert to some of the criticisms
but, at the threshold, we confess we are not impressed with
the submissions.
852
Shri Nariman itemised the mischievous provisions in the
Debt Act from the processual angle. Others too reiterated
with consternation that the provision whereby every debt of
every debtor of the specified category stood wholly dis-
charged was improvident, especially because it did not even
require the debtor to move the authorities in that behalf.
On the other hand, the burden was on the creditor to raise
the question by instituting a proceeding as to the disquali-
fication of his debtor for the benefit of the Debt Act. On
top of this obligation to institute proceedings was the
precarious prospect of the order being against the creditor
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because the ’authorised officer’ had to hold in favour of
the debtor if he merely produced a certificate under s. 7(5)
from one of those officials enumerated therein--all minor
minions of government at the local level. Once the certif-
icate was produced by the debtor the onus was shifted to the
creditor to make out the contrary. ’How could the money-
lender prove the debtor’s financial position ?’ asked
Shri Nariman. Moreover, the issuance of a certificate by
the local little official was a unilateral process where the
creditor was not entitled to be heard as to the means or
eligibility of the debtor. There were two further unreason-
able procedural impositions on the creditor, argued Shri
Nariman. The lender had to make his application with all
the facts within 7 days from the date of receipt of the
application from the debtor intimating that the debt stood
released. The 7-day period was too short even to make
enquiries about the assets of the debtor, And worse, the
application by the creditor shall be entertained by the
authorised officer only on the creditor depositing the
pledged property of its value. Thus the dice was 80 heavi-
ly loaded against the money-lender that even persons who
were not petty debtors intended to be beneficiaries might,
with illegitimate success, claim the bonus of the Debt Act.
Viewed in the abstract, these grievances may look genu-
ine. but when we get down to the reality, nothing so re-
volting exists in these provisions. It is true that the
creditor has to move, and not the, debtor, before the
authorised officer. As between the two, the moneylender is
sure to be far shrewder and otherwise more capable of
initiating proceedings. To cast that obligation on the
debtor--remember, in the bull of cases he is the village
artisan, landless labourer or industrial worker is to deny
relief in effect while bestowing it in the book. Likewise,
there is nothing horrendous in the debtor seeking a certifi-
cate of qualification from the small officer of the area.
After all, the officials enumerated in s. 7(5) are govern-
ment servants, local officials, possess familiarity with the
wherewithal and the whereabouts of persons within their area
and are therefore accessible and competent. There is no
reason whatever for allowing the creditor to be heard at the
certificate stage except to prolong and puzzle the proceed-
ings and by dilatory tactics, deny the relief to be debtor.
The creditor does not suffer because the certificate that
the applicant is a debtor raises only a rebuttable pre-
sumption and it is idle to argue that the creditor has no
means of disproving the income or assets of his debtor.
Ordinarily, the mahajan, the sowcar or money-lender and
the petty borrower live in and around the same neighbourhood
the, former knows the circumstances of the latter and often
these are not
853
isolated transactions between strangers. So much so the
debtor’s financial horoscope or impecunious kismet is nor-
mally within the ken of the creditor. Moreover, a perusal
of the pro-forma of the certificate to be issued needs
mention-of several particulars which have to be. filled up
by the certifying officer who has therefore to make the
necessary enquiries from and about the debtor. Assurance
about the credibility of the certifying officer’s entries is
lent by the personal responsibility cast on him for the
correctness of the particulars mentioned in the certificate.
This is a protection for the creditor that routine and
reckless entries will not be made and that the certifying
officer will take care, prima facie, to be satisfied by
proper enquiry before issuing the certificate. Such a
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safeguard warrants the raising of a rebuttable presumption
of correctness and reduces the possibility of injustice to
the creditor for not being allowed an opportunity for
being heard at this stage. In this view also we see noth-
ing unreasonable in the presumptive evidence of the certifi-
cate without the hearing of the creditor.
Fairplay is also afforded in the proceeding not only
because the creditor can rebut the certificate but also
because under s. 8 (6) the authorized officer has the power
and duty to determine all questions in dispute. Section
7(7) expressly provides for an opportunity to the creditor
and the debtor to be heard. After all, the authorised
officer is one who exercises quasi-judicial powers even
otherwise on the Revenue side. While the enquiry is sum-
mary, the procedure under the Maharashtra Land Revenue Code
will be adopted which is a fair safeguard. Summary trial
does not dispense with evidence. or sound judgment but
merely relieves the adjudicator from maintaining elaborate
records. The enquiring officer, may, in appropriate cases,
examine the Debtor or others who can throw light. To
equate ’summary’ with ’arbitrary’ is contrary to common
experience. The obligation for the production of the
pledged article by the creditor as a preliminary to the
institution of the preceedings is also a just measure so
that when a decision is reached the article may be returned
to the. debtor in the vent of the verdict going in his
favour.
The negation of a right of appeal against an order under
s. 7(6) of the Debt Act is another circumstance. Shri
Nariman has pressed before us. He cited other debt relief
measures where a single appeal had been provided for. Does
the absence of a right of appeal render the procedure unrea-
sonable ? It depends. Where the subject-matter is substan-
tial and fraught with serious consequences and complicated
questions are litigatively terminated summarily. Without a
second look at the findings by an appellate body, it may
well be that unfairness is inscribed on the face of the law,
but where little men, with petty debts, legally illiterate
and otherwise handicapped, are pitted against money-lenders
with stamina, astuteness, awareness of legal rights and
other superiority, if the purpose of instant relief is to be
accomplished, the provision of an appeal may, in many cases,
prove abult-in booby trap that frustrates and ruins the
hand-to-mouth debtor. No surer method of baulking the object
can be devised’ than enticing
854
the debtor into an appellate bout! Daughter gone and ducate
too will be the sequel. Of course, where the enquiry is a
travesty of justice or violaion of provisions, where the
finding is a perversity of adjudication or fraud on power,
the High Court is not powerless to grant remedy, even after
the recent package of Constitutional amendments
It is true that in several cases this Court has held that
a right of appeal is a gesture of statutory fairness in the
disposal of cases. Our attention was drawn to the
rulings reported as Jyoti Pershad (1); Mohd Faruk (1) and
Ganesh Beedi Works(2) and other cases hearing on the
necessity of a right of appeal, as an incident of fair
hearing. We cannot dogmatise, generalize or pontificate on
questions of law whose application depends sensitively on
the nature of the subject matter, the total circumstances,
the urgency of the relief and what not. ’We have adduced
sufficient reason to hold that the Debt Act is not bad for
processual perniciousness or jurisprudence of remedies.
The next constitutional missile aimed at the Debt Act
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was the incompetency of the State Legislature to enact this
law, for reasons more than one. The main ground was covered
by Shri Nariman, but yet others made their
contributions--sometimes overlapping, sometimes overflowing.
Shri B. Sen also challenged the legislative competency, but
on a different basis.
Several citations, home-spun and foreign, finely woven
theories and subtle punditry, gave a grave mein to the
argument on this branch. But the point in issue, in our
view, admits of straight solution, by-passing the heavy
learning and jurisprudential finery. When Courts are co-
cooned by case-law or caught in the skein of scholarly
doctrines, simple questions become complex. However, prob-
lems of constitutional law can be well left alone where they
do not directly demand a solution in the case on hand.
Enough unto the day is the evil thereof:
What then is the incompetence of the State Legislature ?
Shri B. Sen urged that the wiping out of private debts which
formed the capital assets of the money-lenders---one of the
main things .done by the Debt Act--was not in any of the
legislative Lists and even if Parliament had residuary power
under Entry 97 of List I, the State had none. Entry 30 in
List II is ’money-lending and moneylenders; relief of agri-
cultural indebtedness’. If common sense and common Eng-
lish are components of constitutional construction, relief
against loans by scaling down, discharging, reducing inter-
est and principal, and staying the real isation of debts
will, among other things, fall squarely within the topic.
And that, in a country of hereditary
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 125.
(2) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 156.
(3) [1974] 3 SC.R. 221.
855
indebtedness on a colossal scale! It is commonplace to
state that legislative heads must receive large and liberal
meanings and the sweep of the sense of the rubrics must
embrace the widest range. Even incidental and cognate
matters come within their purview. The whole gamut of
money-lending and debt liquidation is thus us within the
State’s legislative competence. The reference to the Rajah-
mundry Electricity Case(1) is of no relevance. Nor is the
absence of the expression ’relief in Entry 30, List II, of
any moment when relief from moneylenders is eloquently
implicit in the topic. Sometimes, arguments have only
stated to be rejected.
The next ground of attack, in its multi-form presenta-
tion, is that the ’gold loan’ part of the Debt Act is void
because Parliament has occupied file field. It has also
been urged that there is inconsistency between the Debt Act
and the Gold Control Act, and pro tanto the former fails to
have effect.
Let us look at the basics of the legal situation before
us, before examining the wealth of learning counsel has
accumulated. Article 24-6 vests exclusive power in Parlia-
ment over matters enumerated in List I (Seventh Schedule)
and the State Legislature enjoys like power over topics in
List II, subject to clauses (1) and. (2) of the Article.
Plainly, therefore, the State can legislate upon any Entry
in the State .List. We may visualize situations where
Parliamentary occupation may exclude the State Legislature.
Where, for instance, Parliament while enacting on a matter
in the Union List, makes as it is entitled to make, neces-
sary incidental provisions to effectuate the principal
legislation, such ancillary expansions may trench upon the
State field in List II. In such a case, if the State makes
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a law on an Entry in its exclusive List, and such law covers
and runs counter to what has already been occupied by Par-
liament, through incidental provisions, it may be argued
that the State law stands pushed out on account of the
superior potency of Parliament’s power in our constitutional
scheme. Again, there are certain telltale heads of legisla-
tion in the Lists where one may plausibly invoke the, doc-
trine of occupied field. Examples may, perhaps, be fur-
nished by Entries 52 and 54- of List I, Entries 23 and 24 of
List Ii and Entry 33 of List III. Without fear of contra-
diction, we may assert that Art. 246(3) read with Entry 30
in List 11, empowers the State to make the impugned law.
Why then is it incompetent? Because, says Mr. Nariman,
the field of gold industry is already occupied by Parliament
and the State Legislature therefore stands excluded. Entry
52 in List I reads:
"Industries, the control of which by the
Union is declared by Parliament by law to be
expedient in the public interest."
Parliament, in the Industries (Development and Regula-
tion) Act, 1951 (Act 65 of 1951) has made the necessary
declaration contemplated in Entry 52 and has occupied the
field of gold industry’, as is
(1)[1954] S.C.R. 770.
856
evident from reading s. 2 and item 1.B(2) of tile First
schedule therein. This expression of Parliamentary intent
to legislate upon the gold industry is enough to expel from
that’ field the State Legislature. This is Shri Nariman’s
contention. But what is the sequitur ? Assuming the ap-
proprlation by Parliament of the power to legislate on gold,
what follows? It can make laws directly on that industry
and ancillarily on every allied area where effective exer-
cise of the parliamentary power necessitates it. So much
so ’business in gold’, licensing of gold merchants, regula-
tion of making or pledging of gold ornaments, keeping of
jewellery, disclosure of gold possessions and the like are
incidental to the parliamentary power and purpose and the
Gold Control Act, 1968 and the Rules made thereunder are
valid (vide, for example, Bantha’s Case: 1970 I SCR 4-79).
Several sections of the Act, some rules and a few rulings
were read before us to drive home the point that gold loans
are already within the ken of the law made under Entry 52,
List I. If so, what ? Does it spell death sentence on the
Debt Act ? Or maim it ? Or leave it intact ?
Here we turn to Entry 24 of List II which runs: "Indus-
tries subject" to the provisions of entries 7 and 52 of List
I". This means that the State Legislature loses its power
to make laws regarding ’gold industry since Entry 24’.
List II is expressly subject to the provisions of Entry
52 of List I. This does not mean that other entries in the
State List become impotent even regarding ’gold’. The
State Legislature can make laws regarding money-lending even
where gold is involved under Entry 30, List II, even as it
can regulate ’gambling in gold’ under Entry 34-, impose
sales tax on gold sales under Entry 54, regulate by munici-
pal law under Entry 5 and by trade restrictions under Entry
26, the type of buildings for gold shops and the kind of
receipts for purchase or sale of precious metal. To multiply
instances is easy, but the core of the matter is that where
under its this power Parliament has made a law which over-
rides an entry in the State List, that area is abstracted
from the State List. Nothing more.
In the Kannan Devan Mills Case(1) this Court put the
point tersely ’while dealing with Entry 52 of the Union
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List:
"Once it is declared by Parliament by
law to be expedient -"in the public interest
to control the industry, Parliament can legis-
late on that particular industry and the
States I would lose their power to legislate
on that industry. But this would not prevent
the States from legislating on subjects other
than that particular industry". (underscor-
ing, ours).
This is authority for the proposition that while Entry
23 of List II, in the light of the fact that under Entry 52
of List I Parliament has made the Gold’ Control Act has
become inoperative to legislate on industry, there’ is no
inhibition whatever on State legislation on
(1) [1973] 1 S.C.R. 356.
857
subjects other than that particular industry. Money.lending
is one such subject and the power to legislate thereon
remains intact.
We are free to agree that the word ’industry’ as a
legislative topic has to be interpreted in the widest ampli-
tude. We also find, as a fact, that dealings in gold,
including pledging, have been covered in part by the Gold
Control Act, 1958; even so nothing prevents the State from
making the impugned Act. In Paresh Chandra Chatterice(1)
Subba Rao J (as he then was ) dealt with an apparent con-
flict between the Central Act (The Tea Act) and a State
legislation [The Assam Land (Requisition and Acquisition)
Act, 1948]. After examining the scheme of the two Laws, the
learned Judge concluded:
"A comparative study of both the Acts
makes it clear that the two Acts deal with
different matters and were passed for differ-
ent purposes."
Unreal and imaginary conflicts between the
Central and the State Acts cannot be the
foundation for invalidation of the latter.
In Kanan Devan (Supra) it was further pointed
out:
"If the Act (the Tea Act) is within the
competence of Parliament and the impugned Act
is within the competence of the State,
the’ petitioners must show that the im-
pugned Act is repugnant to the Tea Act but we
can see no conflict between the provisions of
the impugned Act and the Tea Act."
Banthia(2) was referred to in the course of the arguments
and various passages were stressed by different counsel.
The essential question there was as to whether manufacture
of gold ornaments. by goldsmiths fell within the connotation
of the word ’industry’. It did. It was further pointed out
by Ramaswami J in that case that some of the entries overlap
and seem to be in direct conflict but the duty of the Court
is to reconcile and harmonize while giving the widest ampli-
tude to the language of the Entries. We see nothing in that
decision which contradicts the position that while the Gold
Control Act fell within Entry 52 of List I, the State List
was not totally suspended for that reason for purposes of
legislating on subjects which fell within that List, but
incidentally referred also to gold transactions. Nobody
disputes the paramountcy of parliamentary power. We have to
reconciIe the paramountcy principle with the ’trenching’
doctrine.
In the Canadian Constitution, the question of conflict
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and coincidence in the domain in which provincial and domin-
ion legislation overlap has been considered. If both may
overlap and co-exist without conflict, neither legislation
is ultra vires. But if there is confrontation and conflict
the question of paramountcy and occupied field may crop up.
It has been held that the rule as to predominance of domin-
ion legislation can only be invoked in case of absolutely
conflicting legislation in pari materia when it will be an
impossibility to give effect to both
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 88.
(2) [1970] 1 S.C.R. 479.
858
the dominion and provincial enactments. There must be a real
conflict between the two Acts i.e. the two enactments must
come into collision. The doctrine of Dominion paramountey
does not operate merely because the Dominion has legislated
on the same subject matter. The doctrine of ’occupied field’
applies only where there is a clash between Dominion Legis-
latic and Provincial Legislation within an area common to
both. Where both can co-exist peacefully, both reap their
respective harvests (Please see; Canadian Constitutional
Law by Laskin--pp. 52-54-, 1951 Edn).
We may sum up the legal position to the extent necessary
for our case. Where Parliament has made a law under Entry
52 of List I and in the course of it framed incidental
provisions affecting gold loans and money-lending business
involving gold ornaments, the State, making a law on a
different topic but covering in part the same area of gold
loans’, must not go into irreconcilable conflicts. Of
course, if Art. 254(2) can be invoked--We will presently
examine it--then the State law may stir prevail since the
assent of the. President has been obtained for the Debt
Act. Thirdly, the doctrine of ’occupied field’ does not
totally deprive the State Legislature from making any law
incidentally referable to gold. In the event of a plain
conflict, the State law must step down unless, as. pointed
out earlier in the previous passage, Art. 254(2) comes to
the rescue.
Many more decisions were brought to our notice, bearing
on paramountcy, ’occupied field,’ repugnancy and inconsist-
ency. They were elaborated by counsel sufficiently to
convince us that lawyer’s law is divorced from plain seman-
tics and common understanding of Constitutional provisions
becomes a casualty when doctrinal complexities are injected.
May be every profession has a vested interest in the learned
art of incomprehensibility for the laity. Law, in the
administration of which the Bench and the Bar are partners,
probably lives up to this reputation.
All these questions become academic for two reasons.
Firstly, there is no conflict between the Gold Control Act
and the Debt .Act. Secondly, the subjects of both the legis-
lations can be traced to the Concurrent List and Art.
254(2) validates within the State the operation of the Debt
Act.
We are of the view, as earlier discussed, and without
citing further cases on the point, that the State’s legisla-
tive power, save under the, Entry 24 of List II, is not
denuded. Nor is there any conflict between the two Acts.
A detailed study, section by section, of both the legisla-
tions, has convinced us that they can stand together and
that the two authorities and modalities do not contradict
each other and that, by elementary comity, a modus vivendi
between the Gold Act and the Debt Act can be worked out.
The provisions in the Gold Act for declarations and other
formalities may not collide with the obligations and appli-
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cations under the Debt Act. We have no doubt that the
authorities charged with enforcement under the two statutes
will understand the sense and spirit of the provisions and
859
see that the object of the Debt Act is not frustrated or its
processes paralysed. Indeed, the learned Attorney General
showed how by reading together the two Acts and remember-
ing their respective purposes a viable resolution of possi-
ble imbroglios is simple, although officialdom is not unfa-
miliar with the art of embroilment where artless customers
are involved or ulterior ends are to be served. The State,
through an effective programme of legal aid and advice and
other prompt instructions-to the agencies involved, should
avoid harassments, hold-ups and red-tapes which are the bane
of processual justice. The jurisprudence of remedies is
still a Cinderella of our system. The Advocate General of
Maharashtra assured the Court that in the fair enforcement
of the law and the follow-up of creating alternative credit
agencies his client will take quick and impartial care.
The learned Attorney General, it may be mentioned before
winding up this part of the discussion, did draw our atten-
tion to Art. 254(2) which is self-explanatory. The State
law will prevail in the State, even if there be repugnancy
with a Central or existing law, given Presidential
assent--provided both the legislations fall under the
Concurrent List. Do they ? He says, yes; and points,
inter alia, to Entry 6 (transfer of property) and Entry 7
(contracts). Of course, the law of contracts deals with
pledges; so does the Gold Control Act. The latter does not
prohibit pawns where gold is involved, but policies it to
prevent evils by prescribing special modalities. The Debt
Act relates to contracts and has fulfilled the requirement
in Art.254(2).
We have nearly come to the end of the judicatory journey
and have reached the constitutional conclusion that the
guarantee that Trade and Commerce and Intercourse shall be
free does not necessitate that the little lendee shall
remain unfree. Article. 301 does permit, in our view,
legislative action to break agrarian indebtedness and urban
usurious bondage lest social disorder disruptive of Trade,
break out.
The impugned Act is a partial implementation of the
economic thesis of Adam Smith when he wrote, two hundred
obsolescent.years ago:
"No society can surely be flourishing
and happy, of which by far the greater part of
the numbers are poor and miserable."
We are in a Republic with social justice as its indeli-
ble signature. And the measure under challenge. promotes
social justice, social order and better conditions for the
business of healthy money lending.
The appalling indebtness which cripples our people is an
unhappy heritage of our economic system. The bonded yes-
terday, the yoke today, and the hope of tomorrow obligate
the State to spell out the future tense of the rural human
order and to focus on the legislative strategies of allevia-
tion before the backlash of social confusion begins, and to
administer, through working mechanisms, and direct,
7--206SCI/77
860
through social cybernetics, our disenchanted society into
fresh formulations of a free future. Without such govern-
mental measures of rural regeneration even the good money-
lenders may have to fold up and the better businessmen wind
up. The larger interests of Trade, Commerce and Intercourse
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whose. freedom is a constitutional norm demand that social
order shall be preserved through legislative methodolo-
gy, now radical, now reformatory but always motivated and
moderated by the felt necessities of the times. To come to
humane terms with harsh realities by subjecting itself to
the reasonable, though unpalatable, regulations of the Debt
Act and like measures or to face the adaptational break-
down where law ,may fail to keep order against those who
have nothing to lose except their chains--this is the sort-
of sociological Hobson’s choice before the ’money-lenders’
of Maharashtra. The option is obviously the former and
that is the constitutional vindication of the impugned
legislation. All these laws, in themselves marginal, are
part of the programschrift for a New Deal which is the
cornerstone of the Constitution.
We have been addressed many minor criticisms which
have chopped little logic and made out small discriminations
but serious constitutional decisions go on major considera-
tions, not gossamer-web flimsiness. We have listened to
these meticulous submissions but are not persuaded that we
should even mention them in our longish judgment.
A concluding caveat. The poignant purpose of ending
exploitatire rural-urban lending to the weaker members of
society is the validating virtue of this legislation,
viewed from the constitutional angle. But, as Shri Nariman
at some stage mentioned--and the learned Attorney General
also concurred--mere farewell to existing debts is prone to
prove a teasing illusion or promise of unreality unless the
Administration fills the credit gap by an easy, accessible
and needbased network of humane credit agencies, coupled
with employment opportunities for the small man. The
experience of the. past has not inspired adequate confi-
dence. Authoritative official pronouncement, however, owns
that
"Arrangements so far made to. give
credit and inputs (for rural credit) have had
only limited impact. The problem is a vast
one and seems to be growing in size. Rural
banks, credit societies, farmers’ service
societies--all these have to be strengthened
and their activities expanded. To give pur-
poseful direction to, this task and to ensure
that the interests of agriculturists and
farmers, especially the small farmer, are
looked after, there is need for an Apex Agri-
cultural Development Bank in India."
The legislation we uphold is an added responsibility on
the State. it shall be vigorously enforced with sympathy for
the victim class, lest the progressive measure. prove a
paper tiger. The cadres charged with enforcement must have
right orientation correct grasp and social activism, if this
law is not to leave a yawning implementation
861
gap. Hercics in court and hortation in the House must be
followed by effective enforcement in the field. We state
this not because the State is not in great earnest--it
is--but because many a welfare legislation in the country
reportedly remains a cloistered virtue or slumbrous in
effect. The finest hour of the rule of law is when law
disciplines life and matches promise with performance. On
this note of hopeful valediction we wind up.
We dismiss the appeals and the writ petitions, leaving.
the parties to bear their costs, although we had at least on
one occasion, sufficient provocation to make a different
direction.
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P.H.P. Appeals dismissed
862