Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VIJAY KUMAR SHARMA & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/02/1990
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
SAWANT, P.B.
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
1990 AIR 2072 1990 SCR (1) 614
1990 SCC (2) 562 JT 1990 (2) 448
1990 SCALE (1)342
ACT:
Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act, 1976:
ss. 14, & 20--Whether repugnant to ss. 74 & 80, Motor Vehi-
cles Act, 1988--State Act whether impliedly repealed by
Parliamentary Act--State Act whether hit by Article 254 of
the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
Constitution of India, Article 254.’ Repugnancy between
the Parliamentary Act and the State Act in respect of mat-
ters, in the Concurrent List, Seventh Schedule--When
arises--Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act,
1976---Whether repugnant to the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
Statutory interpretation-Doctrine of pith and substance
or dominant purpose--Scope of--Whether applicable to find
repugnancy under Article 254 of the Constitution between
Parliamentary and State laws in respect of matters in List
111. Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
The Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act, 1976
enacted by the State Legislature by taking aid of Entry 42
List III of the Seventh Schedule and Articles 31 and 39 (b)
and (c) of the Constitution was reserved for consideration
and received the assent of the President of March 11, 1976.
Section 4 of that Act provided for vesting of contract
carriages along with the respective permits and/or certifi-
cates of registration issued under the Motor Vehicles Act,
1939 in the State absolutely free from encumbrances. Sub-
section (1) of s. 14 prohibited applications for fresh
permits or renewal of existing permits on or from the date
of vesting. Section 14(2) provided for abatement of all
applications, appeals or revisions pending before the appro-
priate authority as on the notified date. Sub-section (1) of
s. 20 provided for cancellation of, notwithstanding anything
in the 1939 Act, all contract carriage permits granted or
renewed in respect of any vehicle other than a vehicle
acquired under the Act or belonging to the State Road Trans-
port Corporation. Sub-section (2) entitled the Corporation
to the grant or renewal of contract carriage permits to the
exclusion of all other persons, while sub-section (3) re-
strained the authority concerned from
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?615
entertaining applications from persons other than the Corpo-
ration.
Section 73 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (enacted to
replace the 1939 Act) lays down the mode of application for
a contract carriage permit. Section 74(1) empowers the
Regional Transport Authority to grant such permits. Sub-
section (2) enumerates conditions that could be attached to
such permit. Sub-section (3) empowers the State Government
when directed by the Central Government to limit the number
of contract carriages on the city routes. Under s. 80(1)
such application could be made at any time. Sub-section (2)
posits that a Regional Transport Authority shall not ordi-
narily refuse to grant such application. Section 217(1)
repealed all the laws which were inconsistent with the
provisions of the Act.
The petitioners, a group of contract carriage operators
who were denied permits that they had applied for under ss.
73, 74 and 80 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 in view of the
provisions of ss. 14 and 20 of the Karnataka Contract Car-
riages (Acquisition) Act, 1976, filed writ petitions under
Article 32 of the Constitution questioning the action of the
R.T.A. It was contended that the provisions of ss. 14 and 20
of the Karnataka Act were in direct conflict with the provi-
sions of ss. 74 and 80(2) of the M.V. Act, 1988 in as much
as while the Regional Transport Authority was enjoined by
the said provisions of the 1988 Act ordinarily not to refuse
to grant an application for permit of any kind, the said
provisions of the Karnataka Act prohibited any person from
applying for, and any officer or authority from entertaining
or granting application for running any contract carriage in
the State; that since the M.V. Act, 1988 was a later legis-
lation operating in the same area, it should be deemed to
have impliedly repealed the provisions of ss. 14 and 20 of
the Karnataka Act even if the latter Act had received the
assent of the President, in view of the proviso to sub-
clause (2) of Article 254 of the Constitution; that when
there is a repugnancy under Article 254 of the Constitution,
the doctrine of pith and substance does not apply, and even
if some of the provisions of the State Legislation are in
conflict with some of the provisions of the Central legisla-
tion, the conflicting provisions of the State legislation,
will be invalid and that, therefore, their applications
under ss. 74 and 80 were maintainable without reference to
the provisions of the Karnataka Act.
For the respondents it was contended that the Acquisi-
tion Act was made in exercise of the power under a different
entry and was not on the same subject, therefore, the matter
did not come within the ambit of Art. 254 of the Constitu-
tion, and that the Acquisition Act having been
616
reserved for consideration under Art. 254(2) and having
received the assent of the President, it prevails over the
Parliamentary Act in the State of Karnataka.
On the question: Whether there is repugnancy between the
provisions of ss. 14 and 20 of the Karnataka Contract Car-
riages (Acquisition) Act, 1976 and ss. 74 and 80 of the
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and whether the doctrine of domi-
nant purpose and pith and substance is applicable while
examining the repugnancy of the two statutes?
Per Misra, J. (Concurring with Sawant, J.)
1. There is no direct inconsistency between the Karnata-
ka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act, 1976 and the Motor
Vehicles Act, 1988. [631G-H]
2.1 In cl. (1) of Art. 254 of the Constitution it has
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been clearly indicated that the competing legislations must
be in respect of one of the matters enumerated in the Con-
current List. In the instant case, the State Act was an Act
for acquisition and came within Entry 42 of The Concurrent
List. The Parliamentary Act on the other hand is a legisla-
tion coming within Entry 35 of the Concurrent List. There-
fore, the said two Acts as such do not relate to one common
head of legislation enumerated in the Concurrent List.
Clause (2) also refers to the law with respect to the same
matter. [628F; 629A]
2.2 Repugnancy between two statutes would arise if there
is direct conflict between the two provisions and if the law
made by Parliament and the law made by the State Legislature
occupy the same field. In the instant case, the State Act
intended to eliminate private operators from the State in
regard to contract carriages acquired under the existing
permits, vehicles and ancillary property and with a view to
giving effect to a monopoly situation for the State Under-
taking made provision in s. 20. The Parliamentary Act does
not purport to make any provision in regard to acquisition
of contract carriage permits which formed the dominant theme
or the core of the State Act. Nor does it in s. 73 and s. 74
indicate as to who the applicant shall be while laying down
how an application for a contract carriage permit shall be
made and how such a permit shall be granted. Section 80 of
the Parliamentary Act does contain a liberalised provision
in the matter of grant of permits but even then there again
the ancillary provision contained in s. 20 of the State Act
to effectuate acquisition does not directly run counter to
the 1988 provision. [630G; 631C]
617
There does not thus appear to be any repugnancy between
the two Acts for invoking Art. 254 of the Constitution.
[631D-E]
Bar Council of Uttar Pradesh v. State of U.P. & Anr.,
[1973] 2 SCR 1073; Kerala State Electricity Board v. Indian
Aluminium Company, [1976] 1 SCR 552; Deep Chand v. State of
Uttar Pradesh & Ors., [1959] 2 Suppl. SCR 8; T. Barai v.
Henry Ah Hoe & Anr., [1983] 1 SCR 905; Hoechst Pharmaceuti-
cals Ltd. & Anr. v. State of Bihar & Ors., [1983] 3 SCR 130;
Zaverbhai Amaidas v. State of Bombay, [1955] 1 SCR 799; M.
Karunanidhi v. Union of India, [1979] 3 SCR 254 and State of
Karnataka & Anr. v. Ranganatha Reddy & Anr. [1978] 1 SCR
641, referred to.
Per Sawant, J:
1. There is no repugnancy in the provisions of ss. 14
and 20 of the Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition)
Act, 1976 and ss. 74 and 80 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
Hence the provisions of Article 254 of the Constitution do
not come into play. [652F; 636C]
2.1 Whenever repugnancy between the State and Central
Legislation is alleged, what has to be first examined is
whether the two legislations cover or relate to the same
subject matter. The test for determining the same is to find
out the dominant intention of the two legislations. If the
dominant intention of the two legislations is different,
they cover different subject matters. If the subject matters
covered by -’.he legislation are thus different, then merely
because the two legislations refer to some allied or cognate
subjects they do not cover the same field. The legislation
to be on the same subject matter must further cover the
entire field covered by the other. [652C-D]
A provision in one legislation to give effect to its
dominant purpose may incidentally be on the same subject as
covered by the provision of the other legislation. But such
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partial coverage of the same area in a different context and
to achieve a different purpose does not bring about the
repugnancy which is intended to be covered by Article
254(2). Both the legislations must be substantially on the
same subject to attract the Article. [652E]
Municipal Council Palai v.T.J. Joseph & Ors., [1964] 2
SCR 87; Tika Ramji & Ors. etc. v. State of U.P. & Ors.,
[1956] SCR 393 and State of Karnataka & Anr. etc. v. Ranga-
natha Reddy & Anr. etc., [1978] 1 SCR 641, referred to.
618
Ratan Lal Adukia v. Union of India, [1989] 3 SCR 537,
distinguished.
2.2 In the instant case, the objects and the subject
matters of the two enactments were materially different. The
Karnataka Act was enacted by the State Legislature for
acquisition of contract carriages under Entry 42 of the
Concurrent List read with Article 31 of the Constitution to
give effect to the provisions of Articles 39(b) and (c)
thereof. The MV Act 1988 on the other hand was enacted by
the Parliament under Entry 35 of the Concurrent List to
regulate the operation of the motor vehicles. They thus
occupy different areas. [636C, B-C]
2.3 Unlike the MV Act 1988 which was enacted to regulate
the operation of the motor vehicles, the object of the
Karnataka Act was, not only the regulation of the operation
of the motor vehicles. Nor was its object merely to prevent
the private owners from operating their vehicles with the
exclusive privilege of such operation being reserved in
favour of the State or the State Undertaking. For if that
were the only object, the same could have been achieved by
the Transport Undertakings of the State following the spe-
cial provisions relating to State Transport Undertakings in
Chapter IV-A of the Motor Vehicle Act, 1939 which was in
operation when the Karnataka Act was brought into force. The
very fact that instead the State undertook the exercise of
enacting the Karnataka Act shows that the object of the
State Legislature in enacting it was materially different
i.e. to nationalise the contract carriage services in the
State with a view to provide better transport facilities to
the public and also to prevent concentration of wealth in
the hands of the few and to utilise the resources of the
country to subserve the interests of all. [634D-F; B-C]
3.1 A comparison of the provisions of the MV Act, 1939
and MV Act, 1988 shows that the latter has merely replaced
the former. The special provisions relating to the State
Transport Undertakings which are contained in Chapter VI of
the MV Act, 1988 are pari-materia with those of Chapter IV-A
of the MV Act, 1939 with only this difference that whereas
under the old Act it was the State Transport Undertaking
which had to prepare a scheme for running and operating the
transport service by it in relation to any area or route or
portion thereof exclusively, under the new Act such a scheme
has to be prepared by the State Government itself. There is
no difference in the legal consequences of the schemes under
the two enactments. Both envisage the operation of the
services by the State Transport Undertaking to the exclusion
of the rest, and cancellation of the existing permits and
compensation only for the deprivation of the balance of the
period of the permit. No acquisi-
619
tion of the vehicles or the paraphernalia connected with
such vehicles is envisaged as is the case under the Karnata-
ka Act. [634G; 635E-G]
3.2 Section 98 of the MV Act 1988 in terms clearly
states (as did Section 68B of the MV Act 1939) that Chapter
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VI relating to the special provisions about the State Trans-
port Undertaking and the rules’ and orders made thereunder,
shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent
therewith contained in Chapter V or in any other law for the
time being in force or in any instrument having effect by
virtue of any such law. Sections 74 and 80 relating to the
grant of the contract carriage permit and the procedure in
applying for the grant of such permits respectively, are in
Chapter V. This means that when under Chapter VI, a scheme
is prepared by the State Govt. entrusting the contract
carriage services in relation to any area or route or por-
tion thereof, to a State Transport Undertaking to the exclu-
sion---complete or partial of other persons, the provisions
of ss. 74 and 80 would have no application, and the private
transport operators cannot apply for the grant of contract
carriage permits under s. 80 nor can such permits be granted
by the Transport Authority. The MV Act 1988 thus also makes
a provision for nationalisation of routes, and envisages a
denial of permits to private operators when routes are so
nationalised. Hence it cannot be said that there was a
conflict between the provisions of the Karnataka Act and the
M.V. Act, 1988. [637H; 638D]
4. When the legislative encroachment is under considera-
tion the doctrine of pith and substance comes to the aid to
validate a legislation which would otherwise be invalid for
the very want of legislative competence. When the repugnancy
between the two legislations is under consideration, what is
in issue is whether the provision of the State enactment
though otherwise constitutionally valid, has lost its valid-
ity because the Parliament has made a legislation with a
conflicting provision on allegedly the same matter. If it is
open to resolve the conflict between two entries in differ-
ent Lists, viz., the Union and the State List by examining
the dominant purpose and therefore the pith and substance of
the two legislations, there is no reason why the repugnancy
under Article 254 of the Constitution between the provisions
of the two legislations under different entries in the same
List, viz. the Concurrent List should not be resolved by
scrutinizing the same by the same touchstone. What is to be
ascertained in each case is whether the legislations are on
the same matter or not. In both cases the cause of conflict
is the apparent identity of the subject matters. The tests
for resolving it therefore cannot be different. [639E-H]
620
Meghraj & Ors. v. Allahrakhiya & Ors., AIR 1942 FC 27
distinguished.
Per K. Ramaswamy, J. (Dissenting)
1. Section 14(1) of Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acqui-
sition) Act, 1976 to the extent of prohibiting to make fresh
application for grant of permits to run the contract car-
riages other than those acquired under that Act and the
embargo and prohibition created under s. 20(3) thereof on
the respective Regional Transport Authority in the State of
Karnataka to invite/receive the application to consider the
grant of permits to such contract carriages according to
law, are void. [686C-D]
2.1 The Parliament and the legislature of a State derive
their exclusive power to legislate on a subject/subjects in
List I and List II of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution
from Art. 246(1) and (3) respectively. Both derive their
power from Art. 246(2) to legislate upon a matter in the
Concurrent List III subject to Art. 254 of the Constitution.
The entries in the three lists merely demarcate the legisla-
tive field or legislative heads. Their function is not to
confer powers on either the Parliament or the State Legisla-
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ture. [682E-D]
Subrahmanyam Chettiar v. Muttuswami Goundan., AIR 1941
FC 47; Governor General in Council v. The Reliegh Investment
Co. Ltd., [1944] FCR 229; Harakchand Ratanchand Banthia v.
Union of India, [1970] 1 SCR 479 AND Union of India v.H.S.
Dhillon, [1972] 2 SCR 33, referred to.
2.2 Clause (1) of Art. 254 posits as a rule that in case
of repugnancy or inconsistency between the State Law and the
Union Law relating to the same matter in the Concurrent List
occupying the same field, the Union law shall prevail and
the State law will fail to the extent of the repugnancy or
inconsistency whether the Union law is prior or later in
point of time to the State law. To this general rule, an
exception has been engrafted in cl. (2) thereof, viz.,
provided the State law is reserved for consideration of the
President and it has received his assent, and then it will
prevail in that State notwithstanding its repugnancy or
inconsistency with the Union law. This exception again is to
be read subject to the proviso to cl. (2) thereof, which
empowers the Parliament to make law afresh or repeal or
amend, modify or vary the repugnant State law and it became
void even though it received President’s assent. [659D-F]
621
2.3 The question of repugnancy under Article 254 of the
Constitution arises when the provisions of both laws are
fully inconsistent or are absolutely irreconcilable and it
is impossible to obey without disobeying the other, or
conflicting results are produced when both the statutes
covering the same field are applied to a given set of facts.
It matters little whether the provisions fall under one or
other entry in the Concurrent List. The substance of the
same matter occupying the same field by both the pieces of
the legislation is material and not the form. The repugnancy
to be found is the repugnancy of the provisions of the two
laws and not the predominant object of the subject matter of
the two laws. The proper test is whether effect can be given
to the provisions of both the laws or whether both the laws
can stand together. If both the pieces of legislation deal
with separate and distinct matters though of cognate and
allied character repugnancy does not arise. [660A-B; 675B-C;
660C; 674H; 675A]
Tika Ramji v. State of U.P., [1956] SCR 393; A.S. Krish-
na v. Madras State, [1957] SCR 399; Prem Nath Kaul v. State
of J &K, [1952] 2 Supp. SCR 273; Bar Council of U.P.v. State
of U.P., [1973] 2 SCR 1073; Deep Chand v. State ofU. P.,
[1959] Supp. 2 SCR 8; State of Orissa v.M.A. Tulloch & Co.,
[1964] 4 SCR 461; State of Assam v. Horizon Union, [1967] 1
SCR 484; State ofJ & K v.M.S. Farooqi, [1972] 3 SCR 881;
Kerala State Electricity Board v. Indian Aluminium Co.,
[1976] I SCR 552; Basu’s Commentary on the Constitution of
India (Silver Jubilee Edition) Volume K 144; Clyde Engineer-
ing Co. v. Cowburn, [1926] 37 CLR 466; Hume v. Palmer,
[1926] 38 CLR 441; Brisbane Licensing Court, [1920] 28 CLR
23; Colvin v. Bradley Bros. Pvt. Ltd., [1943] 68 CLR 151; In
Re Ex Parte Maclean, [1930] 43 CLR 472; Wenn v. Attorney
General (Victoria), [1948] 77 CLR 84; O’ Sullivan v.
Noarlunga Meat Co. Ltd., [1954] 92 CLR 565; O’Sullivan v.
Noarlunga Meat Co. Ltd., [1957] AC 1 and Blackley v. Devon-
dale Cream (Vic.) Pvt. Ltd., [1968] 117 CLR 253, referred
to.
2.4 Section 14 read with s. 20 of the Acquisition Act
freezed the right of a citizen to apply for and to obtain
permit or special permit to run a contract carriage in terms
of the permit and monopoly to run a contract carriage was
conferred on the S.T.U., Karnataka. But the M.V. Act, 1988
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evinces its intention to liberalise the grant of contract
carriage permit by saying in s. 80(2) that the Regional
Transport Authority "shall not ordinarily refuse to grant
the permit". It also confers the right on an applicant to
apply for and authorises the Regional Transport Authority to
grant liberally contract carriage permit except in the area
covered by s. 80(3) and refusal appears to be an exception,
that too, obviously for reasons to be recorded. It may be
622
rejected if the permit applied for relate to an approved or
notified route. The M.V. Act accords the right, while the
Acquisition Act, negates and freezes the self-same right to
obtain a permit and to run a contract carriage and prohibits
the authorities to invite or entertain an application and to
grant a permit to run contract carriage. The Act and the
relevant rules cover the entire field of making an applica-
tion in the prescribed manner and directs the Regional
Transport Authority to grant permit with condition attached
thereto to run contract carriages vide ss. 66(1), 73, 74 and
80. Thus the existence of two sets of provisions in the
Motor Vehicles Act 59 of 1988 and Acquisition Act 21 of 1976
is sufficient to produce conflicting results in their opera-
tion in the same occupied filed. The two sets of provisions
run on collision course, though an applicant may waive to
make an application for a permit. Thereby there exists the
operational incompatibility and irreconcilability of the two
sets of provisions. Sections 14(1) and 20(3) of the Acquisi-
tion Act are repugnant and inconsistent to ss. 73, 74 and 80
of the Act. By operation of proviso to Art. 254(2) of the
Constitution, the embargo created by ss. 14(1) and 20(3) of
the Acquisition Act to make or invite an application and
injuction issued to Regional Transport Authority prohibiting
to grant contract carriage permit to anyone except to
S.T.U., Karnataka within the State of Karnataka became void.
[682H; 683E]
3.1 The Parliament with a view to lay down general prin-
ciples makes law or amends the existing law. The State
Legislature still may feel that its local conditions may
demand amendment or modification of the Central Law. Their
reserve power is Art. 254(2). After making the Act 59 of
1988 the power of the State Legislature under Art. 254(2) is
not exhausted and is still available to be invoked from time
to time. But unless it again enacts law and reserves it for
consideration and obtains the assent of the President
afresh, there is no prohibition for the petitioners to make
applications for the grant of contract carriage permits
under the Act and consideration and grant or refusal thereof
according to law by the concerned Regional Transport Author-
ity. [685E; 686B]
3.2 The Karnataka State Legislature is, therefore, at
liberty to make afresh the law similar to ss. 14(1) and
20(3) of the Acquisition Act with appropriate phraseology
and to obtain the assent of the President. [686B]
4. Parliament may repeal the State law either expressly
or by necessary implication but Courts would not always
favour repeal by implication. Repeal by implication may be
found when the State law is repugnant or inconsistent with
the Union law in its scheme or opera:ion. The principle
would be equally applicable to a question under
623
Article 254(2) of the Constitution. In the instant case, s.
217(1) of the Union law does not expressly repeal ss. 14(1)
and 20(3) of the State law. They are repugnant with the
Union law. [676C-D; 670E-F; 669F]
Zaveribhai v. State of Bombay, [1955] 1 SCR 799; M.
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Karunanidhi v. Union of India, [1979] 3 SCR 254; T. Barai v.
Henry Ah Hoe, [1983] 1 SCR 905 and M/s Hoechst Pharmaceuti-
cals Ltd. v. State of Bihar, [1983] 3 SCR 130, referred to.
5. For the applicability of the principle that special
law prevails over the general law, the special law must be
valid law in operation. Voidity of law obliterates it from
the statute from its very inception. In the instant case,
since ss. 14(1) and 20(3) are void the said principle is not
applicable. [683F]
Justiniano Augusto De Peidada Barreto v. Antonia Vicente
De Fonseca & Ors., [ 1979] 3 SCR 494, distinguished.
6.1 The doctrine of pith and substance or the predomi-
nant purpose or true nature and character of law is applied
to determine whether the impugned legislation is within the
legislative competence under Arts. 246(1) and 246(3) of the
Constitution, and to resolve the conflict of jurisdiction.
If the Act in its pith and substance fails in one List it
must be deemed not to fail in another List, despite inciden-
tal encroachment and its validity should be determined
accordingly. The pith and substance rule, thereby, resolves
the problem of overlapping of "any two entries of two dif-
ferent Lists vis-a-vis the Act" on the basis of an inquiry
into the "true nature and character" of the legislation as a
whole and tries to find whether the impugned law is substan-
tially within the competence of the Legislature which enact-
ed it, even if it incidentally trespasses into the legisla-
tive field of another Legislature. [680C; 677F; 678A1
6.2 The doctrine has no application when the matter in
question is covered by an entry or entries in the Concurrent
List and has occupied the same field both in the Union and
the State Law. It matters little as in which entry or en-
tries in the Concurrent List the subject-matter falls or in
exercise whereof the Act/provision or provisions therein was
made. The Parliament and Legislature of the State have
exclusive power to legislate upon any subject or subjects in
the Concurrent List. The question of incidental or ancillary
encroachment or to trench into forbidden field does not
arise. The determination of its ’true nature and character
also is immaterial. [680C-D]
624
Prafulla Kumar v. Bank of Commerce, Khulna, AIR 1947 PC 60;
State of Bombay v.F.N. Balsara, [1951] SCR 682; Atiabari Tea
Co.Ltd. v. State of Assam, [1961] 1 SCR 809 and Meghraj &
Ors. v. Allaharakhiya & Ors., AIR 1942 FC 27, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 723 of 1989
etc.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
G. Ramaswamy, Additional Solicitor General (N.P.), F.S.
Nariman, G.L. Sanghi, G.Prabhakar, M. Rangaswamy, N.D.B.
Raju, Ms. C.K. Sucharita, S.K. Agnihotri, P.R. Ramashesh,
K.R. Nagaraja and Ms. Anita Sanghi for the appearing par-
ties.
The following Judgments of the Court were delivered:
RANGANATH MISRA, J. I have the benefit of reading the
judgment prepared by my esteemed brethren Sawant and K.
Ramaswamy, JJ. Brother Sawant has taken the view that s. 20
of the Karnataka Act has not become void with the enforce-
ment of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, while Brother K.
Ramaswamy has come to the contrary conclusion. Agreeing with
the conclusion of Sawant, J., I have not found it possible
to concur with Ramaswamy, J. Since an interesting question
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has arisen and in looking to the two judgments I have found
additional reasons to support the conclusion of Sawant. J.,
I proceed to indicate the same in my separate judgment.
These applications under Article 32 of the Constitution
by a group of disgruntled applicants for contract carriage
permits call in question action of the concerned transport
authorities in not entertaining their applications under the
provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
Motor Vehicles Act (4 of 1939) made provision for grant
of contract carriage permits. The Karnataka Contract Car-
riages (Acquisition) Act (Karnataka Act 21 of 1976) received
assent of the President on 11th of March. 1976. but was
declared to have come into force from 30th of January, 1976,
when the corresponding Karnataka Ordinance 7 of 1976 had
come into force. The long title of the Act indicated that it
was an Act to provide for the acquisition of contract car-
riages and for matters incidental. ancillary or subservient
thereto, and the preamble stated:
625
"Whereas contract carriages and certain other
categories of public service vehicles are being operated in
the State in a matter highly detrimental and prejudicial to
public interest;
And whereas with a view to prevent such misuse and
also to provide better facilities for the transport of
passengers by road and to give effect to the policy of the
State towards securing that the ownership and control of the
material resources of the community are so distributed as
best to subserve the common good and that the operation of
the economic system does not result in the concentration of
wealth and means of production to the common detriment;
And whereas for the aforesaid purposes it is
considered necessary to provide for the acquisition of
contract carriages and certain other categories of public
service vehicles in the State and for matters incidental,
ancillary or subservient thereto ...... "
Section 2 contains the declaration to the following effect:
"It is hereby declared that this Act is for giving effect to
the policy of the State towards securing the principles
specified in clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the Con-
stitution of India and the acquisition therefore of the
contract carriages and other property referred to in section
4."
Under ss 4 contract carriages owned or operated by
contract carriage operators along with the respective per-
mits and/or certificates of registration, as the case may
be, vested in the State absolutely free from encumbrances,
and compensation for such acquisition was provided under the
scheme of the Act. Section 14 prohibited application for any
permit or fresh permit or renewal of existing permits for
running of any contract carriage in the State by any private
operator and all pending proceedings in relation to grant or
renewal abated. Consequential provisions were made in ss. 15
and 16 of the Act. Section 20 gave the Corporation the
exclusive privilege of running contract carriages within the
State to the exclusion of any provision under the 1939 Act.
The vires of the Act was the subject-matter of the decision
of this
626
Court in a group of appeals in the case of the State of
Karnataka & Anr. v. Shri Ranganatha Reddy & Anr., [1978] 1
SCR 641. A Seven Judge Bench upheld the validity of the
statute holding that the impugned statute was an ’acquisi-
tion Act’ within the ambit of Entry 42 of the Concurrent
List under Schedule VII of the Constitution. The Court took
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note of the fact that even though it may have had some
incidental impact on inter-State trade or commerce it did
not suffer from any lacuna on that count. Since the Act had
been reserved for Presidential assent, to the extent s. 20
made provisions contrary to those in the Motor Vehicles Act
of 1939, was taken to be valid under Art. 254(2) of the
Constitution.
The Motor Vehicles Act (59 of 1988) being a Parliamen-
tary legislation was brought into force with effect from
1.7. 1989. Under s. 1(2), the Act extended to the whole of
India and, therefore, the Act became applicable to the State
of Karnataka by the notification appointing the date of
commencement of the Act.
The 1988 Act has admittedly liberalised the provisions
relating to grant of permits of every class including con-
tract carriages. Sections 73, 74 and 80 contain the relevant
provisions in this regard. While s. 73 provides for an
application for such permit, s. 74 contains the procedure
for the consideration of the grant and s. 80 contains a
general provision that the transport authority shall not
ordinarily refuse to grant an application for permit of any
kind made at any time under the Act. It is the contention of
the petitioners that with the enforcement of the Motor
Vehicles Act of 1988 as a piece of central legislation, the
provisions of s. 20 of the Karnataka Act became void to the
extent the state law was inconsistent with the provisions of
the 1988 Act and, therefore, by operation of the provisions
contained in Art. 254 of the Constitution, s. 20 stood
abrogated and the scheme of the 1988 Act became operative.
The applications of the petitioners for grant of contract
carriage permits were maintainable and should have been
entertained and disposed of in accordance with the provi-
sions of the 1988 Act.
It is the stand of the respondents, in particular of the
Karnataka State Transport Undertaking, that the State Act is
a legislation under a different entry and was not on the
same subject. Therefore, the matter did not come within the
ambit of Art. 254 of the Constitution. The State Act contin-
ues to hold the field and the transport authorities had
rightly refused to entertain the petitioners’ applications.
627
The question for consideration is: Whether Art. 254( I)
of the Constitution applies to the situation in hand and
whether s. 20 of the Karnataka Act being inconsistent with
the provisions of ss. 73, 74 and 80 of the 1988 Motor Vehi-
cles Act became void. It would be convenient to extract the
provisions of Art. 254 of the Constitution at this stage and
recount the background in which such provision was warrant-
ed. It is the common case of the parties that with the
introduction of federalism and distribution of legislative
powers and accepting a Concurrent List wherein in regard to
specified subjects the Federal and the Federating State
Legislatures had power to legislate, a provision of ration-
alisation became necessary. Section 107 of the Government of
India Act, 1935, contained the provision to deal with such a
situation. The Constituent Assembly accepted a similar
mechanism and added a proviso to clause (2) of Art. 254 to
meet the difficulties experienced in the intervening years.
The Article reads thus:
"254(1) If any provision of a law made by the
Legislature of a State is repugnant to any provision of a
law made by Parliament which Parliament is competent to
enact, or to any provision of any existing law with respect
to one of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List,
then, subject to the provisions of clause (2), the law made
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by Parliament, whether passed before or after the law made
by the Legislature of such State, or, as the case may be,
the existing law, shall prevail and the law made by the
Legislature of the State shall, to the extent of the repug-
nancy, be void.
(2) Where a law made by the Legislature of a State
with respect to one of the matters enumerated in the Concur-
rent List contains any provision repugnant to the provisions
of an earlier law made by Parliament or an existing law with
respect to that matter, then, the law so made by the Legis-
lature of such State shall, if it has been reserved for the
consideration of the President and has received his assent,
prevail in that State:
Provided that nothing in this clause shall prevent
Parliament from enacting at any time any law with respect to
the same matter including a law adding to, amending, varying
or repealing the law so made by the Legislature of the
State."
628
Though for some time there was difference of judicial
opinion as to in what situation Art. 254 applies, decisions
of this Court by overruling the contrary opinion have now
concluded the position that the question of repugnancy can
arise only with reference to a legislation falling under the
Concurrent List: Bar Council of Uttar Pradesh v. State of
U.P. & Anr., [1973] 2 SCR 1073 and Kerala State Electricity
Board v. Indian Aluminium Company, [1976] 1 SCR 552.
This Court in Deep Chand v. State of Uttar Pradesh &
Ors., [1959] 2 Suppl. SCR 8; T. Barai v. Henry Ah Hoe &
Anr., [1983] 1 SCR 905 and Hoechst Pharmaceuticals Ltd. &
Anr. v. State of Bihar & Ors., [1983] 3 SCR 130 has laid
down that cl. (1) of Art. 254 lays down the general rule and
cl. (2) is an exception thereto; the proviso qualifies the
exception. Therefore, while interpreting Art. 254 this
position has to be kept in view. The situation of the 1939
Motor Vehicles Act being existing law and the Karnataka Act
containing provision repugnant to that Act with Presidential
assent for the State Act squarely came within the ambit of
cl. (2) of the Article. That is how the State Act had over-
riding effect.
The consideration of the present question has to be
within the ambit of cl. (1) as the State law is the earlier
legislation and the Parliamentary Act of 1988 came later and
it is contended that the State legislation has provisions
repugnant to provisions made in the 1988 Act. There can be
no controversy that if there is repugnancy, the Parliamen-
tary legislation has to prevail and the law made by the
State Legislature to the extent of repugnancy becomes void.
In cl. (1) of Art. 254 it has been clearly indicated
that the competing legislations must be in respect of one of
the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List. The seven-
Judge Bench examining the vires of the Karnataka Act did
hold that the State Act was an Act for acquisition and came
within Entry 42 of the Concurrent List. That position is not
disputed before us. There is unanimity at the Bar that the
Motor Vehicles Act is a legislation coming within Entry 35
of the Concurrent List. Therefore, the Acquisition Act and
the 1988 Act as such do not relate to one common head of
legislation enumerated in the Concurrent List and the State
Act and the Parliamentary statute deal with different mat-
ters of legislation.
The language of cl. (2) is also similar though applica-
ble in a different situation. Apparently in one sense both
the clauses operate on a similar level though in dissimilar
context. In cl. (2) what is rele-
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629
vant is the words: ’with respect to that matter’. A Consti-
tution Bench of this court in Zaverbhai Amaidas v. State of
Bombay, [1955] 1 SCR 799 emphasised that aspect. Venkatarama
Ayyar, J. pointed out:
"The important thing to consider with reference to
this provision is whether the legislation is ’in respect of
the same matter’. If the later legislation deals not with
the matters which formed the subject of the earlier legisla-
tion but with other and distinct matters though of a cognate
and allied character, then Art. 254(2) will have no applica-
tion."
A lot of light relevant to the aspect under considera-
tion is available from another decision of a Constitution
Bench of this Court: (M. Karunanidhi v. Union of India,
[1979] 3 SCR 254) Atp. 263 of the Reports, it has been said:
"It would be seen that so far as clause (1) of Article 54 is
concerned it clearly lays down that where there is a direct
collision between a provision of a law made by the State and
that made by Parliament with respect of one of the matters
enumerated in the Concurrent List, then, subject to the
provisions of clause (2), the State law would be void to the
extent of the repugnancy. This naturally means that where
both the State and Parliament occupy the field contemplated
by the Concurrent List then the Act passed by Parliament
being prior in point of time will prevail and consequently
the State Act will have to yield to the Central Act. In
fact, the scheme of the Constitution is a scientific and
equitable distribution of legislative powers between Parlia-
ment and the State Legislatures. First, regarding the mat-
ters contained in List I, i.e., the Union List to the Sev-
enth Schedule, Parliament alone is empowered to legislate
and the State Legislatures have no authority to make any law
in respect of the Entries contained in List I. Secondly, so
far as the Concurrent List is concerned. both Parliament and
the State Legislatures are entitled to legislate in regard
to any of the Entries appearing therein, but that is subject
to the condition laid down by Article 254(1) discussed
above. Thirdly, so far as the matters in List II, i.e., the
State List are concerned, the State Legislatures alone are
competent to legislate on them and only under certain condi-
tions Parliament can do so. It is, therefore, obvious that
in such matters repugnancy may result from the following
circumstances:
630
1. Where the provisions of a Central Act and a State Act in
the Concurrent List are full.v inconsistent (Emphasis added)
and are absolutely irreconcilable, the Central Act will
prevail and the State Act will become void in view of the
repugnancy.
2. Where, however, a law passed by the State comes into
collision with a law passed by Parliament on an Entry in the
Concurrent List, the State Act shall prevail to the extent
of the repugnancy and the provisions of the Central Act
would become void provided the State Act has been passed in
accordance with clause (2) or Article 254.
3. Where a law passed by the State Legislature while being
substantially within the scope of the entries in the State
List entrenches upon any of the Entries in the Central List
the constitutionality of the law may be upheld by invoking
the doctrine of pith and substance if on an analysis of the
provisions of the Act it appears that by and large the law
fails within the four corners of the State List and en-
trenchment, if any, is purely incidental or inconsequential.
4. Where, however, a law made by the State Legislature on a
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subject covered by the Concurrent List is inconsistent with
and repugnant to a previous law made by Parliament, then
such a law can be protected by obtaining the assent of the
President under Article 254(2) of the Constitution. The
result of obtaining the assent of the President would be
that so far as the State Act is concerned, it will prevail
in the State and overrule the provisions of the Central Act
in its applicability to the State only. Such a state of
affairs will exist only until Parliament may at any time
make a law adding to, or amending, varying or repealing the
law made by the State Legislature under the provision to
Article 254."
In Deep Chand v. State of Uttar Pradesh, supra, this
court had pointed out that repugnancy between two statutes
would arise if there was direct conflict between the two
provisions and if the law made by Parliament and the law
made by the State Legislature occupied the same field.
It has already been stated that the State Act intended to
eli-
631
minate private operators from the State in regard to con-
tract carriages acquired under the existing permits, vehi-
cles and ancillary property and with a view to giving effect
to a monopoly situation for the State undertaking made
provision in s. 20 for excluding the private operators. The
1988 Act does not purport to make any provision in regard to
acquisition of contract carriage permits which formed the
dominant theme or the core of the State Act. Nor does it in
s. 73 or s. 74 indicate as to who the applicant shall be
while laying down how an application for a contract carriage
permit shall be made and how such a permit shall be granted.
Section 80 of the 1988 Act does contain a liberalised provi-
sion in the matter of grant of permits but here again it has
to be pointed out that the ancillary provision contained in
s. 20 of the Acquisition Act to effectuate acquisition does
not directly run counter to the 1988 provision.
Section 20 of the State Act creates a monopoly situation
in favour of the State undertaking qua contract carriages by
keeping all private operators out of the filed. Since ss.
73, 74 and 80 of the 1988 Act do not contain any provision
relating to who the applicants for contract carriages can or
should be, and those sections can be applied without any
difficulty to the applications of the State undertaking, and
there does not appear to be any repugnancy between the two
Acts for invoking Art. 254 of the Constitution. A provision
in the State Act excluding a particular class of people for
operating contract carriages or laying down qualifications
for them would not run counter to the relevant provisions of
the 1988 Act.
A number of precedents have been cited at the hearing
and those have been examined and even some which were not
referred to at the bar. There is no clear authority in
support of the stand of the petitioners--where the State law
is under one head of legislation in the Concurrent List; the
subsequent Parliamentary legislation is under another head
of legislation in the same List and in the working of the
two it is said to give rise to a question of repugnancy.
The State Act had done away with the private operators
qua contract carriages within the State. It is true that the
1988 Act is applicable to the whole of India and, therefore,
is also applicable to the State of Karnataka in the absence
of exclusion of the State of Karnataka from its operation.
But as has been pointed out already, there is no direct
inconsistency between the two and on the facts placed in the
case there is no necessary invitation to the application of
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cl. (1) of Art. 254 of the Constitution.
632
The writ petitions fail and are dismissed.
SAWANT, J. This group of petitions raises a common
question of law viz. whether the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988
(hereinafter referred to as the MV Act 1988) has impliedly
repealed the Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act,
1976 (hereinafter referred to as the Karnataka Act).
2. The petitioners claim a declaration that the provisions
of Sec. 14 and 20 of the Karnataka Act are invalid because
of their repugnancy with the provisions of the MV Act, 1988,
and a direction to respondent nos. 2 and 3, namely the
Karnataka State Transport Authority and the Karnataka Re-
gional Transport Authority respectively, to consider their
applications for the grant of contract carriage permits
under Sec. 74 and 80 of the MV Act, 1988, without reference
to the provisions of the Karnataka Act. The precise question
that falls for consideration, therefore, is whether there is
a repugnancy between the two legislations.
3. The Karnataka Act, as its title shows, was enacted to
provide for the acquisition of contract carriages and for
matters incidental, ancillary and subservient thereto. It
was enacted under Entry 42 of the Concurrent List read with
Article 31 of the Constitution, in furtherance of Article
39(b) and (c) thereof. This is evident from the preamble,
and Section 2 of the Act. The preamble states that since the
contract carriages and certain other categories of public
service vehicles were being operated in the State in a
manner highly detrimental and prejudicial to public inter-
est, it was necessary to prevent the misuse, and to provide
better facility for the transport of the passengers by road.
It was also necessary to give effect to the policy of the
State towards securing that the ownership and control of the
material resources of the community were so distributed as
best to subserve the common good and that the operation of
the economic system did not result in the concentration of
wealth and means of production to the common detriment. To
effectuate the said intention it was considered necessary to
enact the legislation. Section 2 of the Act makes a declara-
tion in the following words:
"It is hereby declared that this Act is for giving effect to
the policy of the State towards securing the principles
specified in Clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the Con-
stitution of India and the acquisition therefor of the
contract carriages and other property referred to in Section
4."
633
Under Section 4 of the Act every contract carriage owned
or operated by contract carriage operator along with the
permit or the certificate of registration or both as the
case may be, vested in the State Government absolutely and
free from all encumbrances. Further, a11 rights, title and
interest of the contract carriage operators in the lands,
buildings, workshops and other places and all stores, in-
struments, machinery, tools, plants, apparatus and other
equipments used for the maintenance, repair of, or otherwise
in connection with the service of the contract carriage as
the State Government may specify in that behalf and all
books of accounts, registers, records and all other docu-
ments of whatever nature relating to the contract carriages
vested in the State Government absolutely and free from all
encumbrances, and all the said property was deemed to have
been acquired for public purpose. Section 6 provided for
payment of compensation for the acquisition of all the said
property.
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Since the avowed object of the Act was two fold, namely
(i) to prevent the misuse of the operation of the contract
carriages and to provide better facilities for the transport
of passengers, and (ii) to give effect to the policy under-
lying Clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the Constitution,
it was also necessary to prevent the issue of fresh permits
or renewal of the existing permits for running the contract
carriages in the State to any private individual. Hence,
Section 14 provided for a prohibition of the issue of fresh
permit or renewal of the existing permit to any individual
or the transfer of such permit to anyone except to the State
Government or the Corporation which it may establish under
the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation Act, 1950. To
make an alternative arrangement for running the contract
carriages and to prevent both the misuse of the permits as
well as concentration of wealth in the hands of a few indi-
viduals, Section 20 of the Act provided that all contract
carriage-permits granted or renewed till then would stand
cancelled and the Corporation alone would be entitled to the
grant or renewal of the said permits to the exclusion of all
other persons, and that applications from persons other than
the Corporation for the grant of such permit shall not be
entertained.
In State of Karntaka & Anr. etc. v. Shri Ranganatha
Reddy & Anr. etc., [1978] 1 SCR 641 this Court upheld the
validity of the said Act holding, among other things, that
the Act was for acquisition of property and was in the
public interest and for a public purpose. The Act, according
to the Court, had nationalised the contract transport serv-
ice in the State and that was also for a public purpose as
declared in the Act. It was also observed that if Articles
38 and 39 are to be given
634
effect to, then the State has progressively to assume the
predominant and direct responsibility for setting up new
industrial undertakings which would also include development
of transport facilities. The State has also to become agency
for planned national development, and the socialistic pat-
tern of society as the national objective required that
public utility services should be in the public sector. The
acquisition of road transport undertaking by the State,
therefore, undoubtedly served the public purpose.
4. It is thus clear from the provisions of the Karnataka
Act that the whole object of the Act is to nationalise the
contract carriage service in the State with a view to put an
end to the abuse of the contract carriage services by the
private operators and to provide better transport facilities
to the public, and also to prevent concentration of the
wealth in the hands of the few and to utilise the resources
of the country to subserve the interests of all. To secure
the objective of the Act, it was also necessary to prohibit
the grant of the contract carriage permits to private indi-
viduals and to reserve them exclusively to the State Under-
taking which was done by Sections 14 and 20 of the Act.
Unlike the MV Act 1988, which is admittedly enacted by the
Parliament under Entry 35 of the Concurrent List, to regu-
late the operation of the motor vehicles, the object of the
Karnataka Act is not only the regulation of the operation of
the motor vehicles. Nor is its object merely to prevent the
private owners from operating their vehicles with the exclu-
sive privilege of such operation being reserved in favour of
the State or the State Undertaking. For if that were the
only object, the same could have been achieved by the Trans-
port Undertakings of the State following the special provi-
sions relating to State Transport Undertakings in Chapter
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IV-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939 which was in operation
when the Karnataka Act was brought into force. The very fact
that instead, the State undertook the exercise of enacting
the Karnataka Act shows that the object of the State Legis-
lature in enacting it was materially different. This is also
obvious from the various provisions of the enactment pointed
out above.
5. It is for this reason that the contention advanced by
the petitioners that the object of the Karnataka Act and
that of the MV Act, 1988 is the same and that both of them
occupy the same field, cannot be accepted. A comparison of
the provisions of the MV Act, 1939 (Old Act) and MV Act,
1988 (New Act) further shows that the latter has merely
replaced the former. All that it has done is to update,
simplify and rationalize the law on the subject. For this
purpose it has made important provisions in the following
matters, namely:
635
"(a) rationalisation of certain definitions with additions
of certain new definitions of new types of vehicles;
(b) Stricter procedures relating to grant of driving li-
cences and the period of validity thereof;
(c) laying down of standards for the components and parts of
motor vehicles;
(d) standards for anti-pollution control devices;
(e) provision for issuing fitness certificates or vehicles
also by the authorised testing stations;
(f) enabling provision for updating the system of registra-
tion marks;
(g) liberalised schemes for grant of stage carriage permits
on non-nationalised routes, all India Tourist permits and
also national permits for goods carriages;
(h), (i), (j), (k), (l) ..........
6. The special provisions relating to the State Trans-
port Undertakings which are contained in Chapter VI of the
new Act are pari materia with those of Chapter IV-A of the
old Act, with only this difference that whereas under the
old Act it was the State Transport Undertaking which had to
prepare a scheme for running and operating the transport
service by it in relation to any area or route or portion
thereof exclusively, under the new Act such a scheme has to
be prepared by the State Government itself. There is no
difference in the legal consequences of the schemes under
the two enactments. Both envisage the operation of the
services by the State Transport Undertaking to the exclusion
of the rest, and cancellation of the existing permits and
compensation only for the deprivation of the balance of the
period of the permit. No acquisition of the vehicles or the
paraphernalia connected with such vehicles is envisaged as
is the case under the Karnataka Act.
It is also not correct to say that the new Act, i.e. MV
Act 1988 incorporates a special policy of liberalisation for
private sector operations in the transport field. We see no
such provision in the Act nor was any pointed out to us. The
provisions with regard to the grant of
636
permits under both the old and the new Act are the same. In
any case there is no provision for liberalisation of the
grant of contract carriage permits in favour of the private
individuals or institutions so as to come in conflict with
the Karnataka Act.
7. Thus the Karnataka Act and the MV Act, 1988 deal with
two different subject matters. As stated earlier the Karna-
taka Act is enacted by the State Legislature for acquisition
of contract carriages under entry 42 of the Concurrent list
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read with Article 31 of the Constitution to give effect to
the provisions of Articles 39(b) and (c) thereof. The MV Act
1988 on the other hand is enacted by the Parliament under
entry 35 of the Concurrent list to regulate the operation of
the motor vehicles. The objects and the subject matters of
the two enactments are materially different. Hence the
provisions of Article 254 do not come into play in the
present case and hence there is no question of repugnancy
between the two legislations.
8. Shri Nariman, the learned counsel for the petitioners
however, contended that the provisions of Section 14 and 20
of the Karnataka Act were in direct conflict with the provi-
sions of Sections 74 and 80(2) of the MV Act 1988. According
to him while the Regional Transport Authority (RTA) is
enjoined by the provisions of Section 74 read with Section
80(2) of the MV Act 1988, ordinarily not to refuse to grant
an application for permit of any kind, the provisions of
Section 14 and 20 of the Karnataka Act prohibit any person
from applying for, and any officer or authority from enter-
taining or granting, application for running any contract
carriage in the State. Thus there is a direct conflict
between the two legislations, and since the MV Act 1988 is a
later legislation, operating in the same area, it should be
deemed to have impliedly repealed the provisions of Section
14 and 20 of the Karnataka Act, even if the latter Act had
received the assent of the President. This is so because of
the proviso to sub-clause (2) of Article 254 of the Consti-
tution.
This contention proceeds on the footing that the two
legislations occupy the same field. As has been pointed out
earlier, the objects of the two legislations are materially
different. The provisions of Sections 51 and 57 of the old
Act further correspond to provisions of Sections 74 and 80
of the new Act. The Karnataka Act had received the assent of
the President inspite of the provisions of Sections 51 and
57 of the old Act. The assent of the President, further as
stated by the respondents, was taken by way of abundant
precaution, although the subject matters of the two Acts
were different. The provisions of Sections 14 and
637
20 of the Karnataka Act were incidental and necessary to
carry out the main object of the said Act. Without the said
provisions, the object of the said Act would have been
frustrated. In the case of State of Karnataka & Anr. Etc.
v..Ranganatha Reddy & Anr. Etc., (supra) while repelling the
contention that there was a legislation encroachment by the
Karnataka Act because it impinged on the subject of Inter-
State Trade & Commerce in the Union List as it provided also
for acquisition of transport carriages running on inter-
state routes, this Court in para 32 of the Judgment has
observed as follows:
" ..... It (the Karnataka Act) is not an Act which deals
with any Inter-State Trade and Commerce. Even assuming for
the sake of argument that carriage of passengers from one
state to the other is in one sense a part of the InterState
Trade and Commerce, the impugned Act is not one which seeks
to legislate in regard to the said topic. Primarily and
almost wholly it is an Act to provide for the acquisition of
contract carriages, the Intra-State permits and the other
properties situated in the State of Karnataka. In pith and
substance it is an Act of that kind. The incidental en-
croachment on the topic of inter-state trade and commerce,
even assuming there is some, cannot invalidate the Act. The
MV Act 1939 was enacted under Entry 20 of List III of Sched-
ule Seven of the Government of India Act 1935 corresponding
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to Entry 35 of List III of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution. The subject being in the Concurrent List and
the Act having received the assent of the President, even
the repugnancy, if any between the Act and the Motor Vehi-
cles Act stands cured and cannot be a ground to invalidate
the Act. Entry 42 of List 111 deals with acquisition of
property. The State has enacted the Act
mainly under this entry ...... "
(emphasis supplied)
According to me these observations should put an end to
any controversy on the subject, namely, whether the two
Legislations are enacted under two different entries in the
Concurrent List, and whether they occupy different areas or
not.
I am also unable to appreciate the contention that the
provisions of Sections 14 and 20 of the Karnataka Act are in
conflict with the provisions of Sections 74 and 80 of the
New MV Act 1988. Section 98 of the MV Act 1988 in terms
clearly states (as did Section 68B of the
638
MV Act 1939) that Chapter VI relating to the special provi-
sions about the State Transport Undertaking and the rules
and orders made thereunder, shall have effect notwithstand-
ing anything inconsistent therewith contained in Chapter V
or in any other law for the time being in force or in any
instrument having effect by virtue of any such law. Sections
74 and 80 relating to the grant of the contract carriage
permit and the procedure in applying for the grant of such
permits respectively, are in Chapter V. This means that when
under Chapter VI, a scheme is prepared by the State Govt.
entrusting the contract carriage services in relation to any
area or route or portion thereof, to a State Transport
Undertaking to the exclusion--complete or partial of other
persons, the provisions of Sections 74 and 80 would have no
application, and the private transport operators cannot
apply for the grant of contract carriage permits under
Section 80 nor can such permits be granted by the Transport
Authority. In other words, the MV Act 1988 also makes a
provision for nationalisation of routes, and envisages a
denial of permits to private operators when routes are so
nationalised. Hence it is not correct to say that there is a
conflict between the provisions of the two Acts.
9. It was then contended that when there is a repugnancy
between the legislations under Article 254 of the Constitu-
tion, the doctrine of pith and substance does not apply, and
even if some of the provisions of the impugned State legis-
lation are in conflict with some of the provisions of the
Central legislation, the conflicting provisions of the State
legislation will be invalid. In support of this contention,
reliance was placed on two decisions one of the Federal
Court in the case of Meghraj & Ors. v. Allahrakhiya & Ors.,
29 AIR 1942 FC 27 and the other of the Privy Council report-
ed in AIR 34 1947 PC 722 confirming the former.
The Federal Court in the above decision has observed
that when a provincial Act is objected to as contravening
not Section 100 but Section 107(1) the Govt. of India Act
1935 (corresponding to Article 254(1) of the Constitution)
the question of the pith and substance of the impugned Act
does not arise. In that case, the validity of the Punjab
Restitution of Mortgage Lands Act was challenged on the
ground that some of its provisions were repugnant to certain
provisions of the Contract Act and of the Civil Procedure
Code. The Court held that there was no repugnancy between
the legislations. But while holding so, the Court made a one
sentence observation as follows: "In the judgment of the
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High Court there is some discussion of the question of the
"pith and substance" of the Act; but that question does not
639
arise as objection is taken not under Section 100 of the
Constitution act but Sec. 107." There is no discussion on
the point. The arguments, if any advanced on the question
are neither reproduced nor dealt with. The observation
further was not necessary for the decision in that case,
since as is pointed out above, the Court had held that there
was no repugnancy between the two statutes since they cov-
ered two different subject matters. Hence the issue as to
whether the impugned Punjab Restitution of Mortgage Lands
Act was valid because the pith and substance of the Act
covered an area different from the one covered by the Con-
tract Act and the Civil Procedure Code, did not fall for
consideration before the Court. What is more, when the
matter went in appeal before the Privy Council, the said
point was not even remotely referred to and I find no obser-
vation in the judgment either confirming, or dissenting from
the said observations. This being the case the said observa-
tions cannot be regarded as more than general in nature.
They are not even an obiter-dicta much less are they the
ratio decidendi of the case Hence the said observations do
not have a binding effect.
Even otherwise, I am of the view that not to apply the
theory of pith and substance when the repugnancy between the
two statutes is to be considered under Article 254 of the
Constitution, would be illogical when the same doctrine is
applied while considering whether there is an encroachment
by the Union or the State legislature or a subject exclu-
sively reserved for the other. When the legislative en-
croachment is under consideration the doctrine of pith and
substance comes to the aid to validate a legislation which
would otherwise be invalid for the very want of legislative
competence. When the repugnancy between the two legislations
is under consideration, what is in issue is whether the
provision of the State enactment though otherwise constitu-
tionally valid, has lost its validity because the Parliament
has made a legislation with a conflicting provision on
allegedly the same matter. If it is open to resolve the
conflict between two entries in different Lists, viz. the
Union and the State List by examining the dominant purpose
and therefore the pith and substance of the two legisla-
tions, there is no reason why the repugnancy between the
provisions of the two legislations under different entries
in the same List, viz. the Concurrent List should not be
resolved by scrutinizing the same by the same touchstone.
What is to be ascertained in each case is whether the legis-
lations are on the same subject matter or not. In both cases
the cause of conflict is the apparent identity of the sub-
ject matter. The tests for resolving it therefore cannot be
different.
640
10. I may in this Connection refer to some of the au-
thorities relied upon by the parties. In Municipal Council
Palai v.T.J. Joseph & Ors., [1964] 2 SCR 87 this Court had
to consider the repugnancy between the presolution passed by
the appellant Municipal Council in exercise of the powers
vested in it under Section 286 and 287 of the Travancore
District Municipalities Act 1941, and the provisions of
Section 42 of the Travancore-Cochin Motor Vehicles Act 1950
which came into force on January 5, 1950, providing for the
use of a public bus stand constructed for Stage Carriage
buses starting from and returning to the Municipal limits or
passing through its limits.
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The respondent operators challenged the resolution of
the Council by contending that the provisions of Sections
286 and 287 of the Municipalities Act stood repealed by
implication by virtue of the provisions of Section 42 of
Travancore-Cochin Motor Vehicles Act, 1950. That Section
read as follows:
"Government or any authority authorised in this behalf by
Government may, in consultation with the local authority
having jurisdiction in the area concerned, determine places
at which motor vehicles may stand either indefinitely or for
a specified period of time, and may determine the places at
which public service vehicles may stop for a longer time
than is necessary for the taking up and setting down of
passengers. ’ ’
The High Court accepted the contention of the respondents
and allowed the Writ Petition. In appeal against the said
decision, this Court discussed the law relating to the
repugnancy between two legislations by referring to various
decided cases foreign as well as Indian. The Court pointed
out that in Daw v. The Metropolitan Board of Works, [1862]
142 ER 1104 after stating the general principles of con-
struction, the Court there had said that when the legisla-
tion was found dealing with the same subject matter in two
Acts, so far as the later statute derogates from and is
inconsistent with the earlier one, the legislature must be
held to have intended to deal in the later statute with the
same subject matter which was within the ambit of the earli-
er one. This Court further observed that in that case the
English Court was concerned with the statutes which covered
more or less the same subject matter and had the same object
to serve. That decision further had kept open the question
whether the powers conferred upon one authority by an earli-
er Act, could continue to be exercised by that authority
after the enactment of a provision in a subsequent law which
641
conferred wide powers on another authority which would
include some of the powers conferred by the earlier statute
till the new authority chose to exercise the powers con-
ferred upon it. Referring to the case of The Great Central
Gas Consumers Co. v. Clarke, [1863] 143 ER 331 the Court
observed that the foundation of that decision was that the
later statute was a general one whereas the previous one was
a special one and, therefore, the special statute had to
give way to the later general statute.
Referring to the case of Goodwin v. Phillips, [1908] 7
CLR 16 the Court observed that the doctrine of implied
repeal was well recognised, and that repeal by implication
was a convenient form of legislation and that by using this
device, the legislature must be presumed to intend to
achieve a consistent body of law. The Court then went on to
say that it is undoubtedly true that the legislature can
exercise the powers of repeal by implication, but it is an
equally well-settled principle of law that there is a pre-
sumption against an implied repeal. Upon the assumption that
the legislature enacts laws with a complete knowledge of all
existing laws pertaining to the same subject, the failure to
acid a repealing clause indicates that the intent was not to
repeal existing legislation. This presumption is rebutted if
the provisions of the new Act are so inconsistent with the
old ones that the two cannot stand together. Then the Court
referred to the following observations from page 631, para
311 of Crawford on Statutory Construction:
"There must be what is often called ’such a positive repug-
nancy between the two provisions of the old and the new
statutes that they cannot be reconciled and made to stand
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together’. In other words they must be absolutely repugnant
or irreconcilable. Otherwise, there can be no implied
repeal ..... for the intent of the legislature to repeal
the old enactment is utterly lacking."
The Court then referred to the observations made in Crosby
v. Patch, 18 Calif. 438 quoted by Crawford "Statutory Con-
struction" p. 633 to point out the reasons of the rule that
an implied repeal will take place in the event of clear
inconsistency or repugnancy. The said observations are as
follows:
"As laws are presumed to be passed with deliberation, and
with full knowledge of all existing ones on the same sub-
ject, it is but reasonable to conclude that the Legislature,
in
642
passing a statute, did not intend to interfere with or
abrogate any former law relating to the same matter, unless
the repugnancy between the two is irreconcilable. Bowen v.
Lease, 5 Hill 226. It is a rule, says Sedgwick, that a
general statute without negative words will not repeal the
particular provisions of a former one, unless the two acts
are irreconcilably inconsistent. ’The reason and philosophy
of the rule’, says the author, ’is, that when the mind of
the legislator has been turned to the details of a subject,
and he has acted upon it, a subsequent statute in general
terms, or teating the subject in a general manner, and not
expressly contradicting the orginal act, shall not be con-
sidered as intended to affect the more particular or posi-
tive previous provisions, unless it is absolutely necessary
to give the latter act such a construction, in order that
its words shall have any meaning at all."
The Court then pointed out that for implying a repeal the
next thing to be considered is whether the two statutes
relate to the same subject matter and have the same purpose.
The Court in this connection quoted the following passage at
page 634 from Crawford:
"And, as we have already suggested, it is essential that the
new statute covers the entire subject matter of the old;
otherwise there is no indication of the intent of the legis-
lature to abrogate the old law. Consequently, the later
enactment will be construed as a continuation of the old
one."
(emphasis supplied)
These observations are very material for considering the
question with which we are concerned in the present case,
namely whether the doctrine of pith and substance is ap-
plicable while examining the repugnancy of the two statutes.
The Court then stated that the third question to be
considered was whether the new statute purports to replace
the old one in its entirety or only partially, and the Court
observed that where replacement of an earlier statute is
partial, a question like the one, which the Court did not
choose to answer in Daw’s case (supra) would arise for
decision. The Court also stated that it has to be remembered
that at the basis of the doctrine of implied repeal is the
presumption that the legislature which must be deemed to
know the existing law did not intend to create any confusion
in the law by retaining conflicting provi-
643
sions on the statute book and, therefore, when the court
applies this doctrine, it does no more than give effect to
the intention of the legislature ascertained by it in the
usual way, i.e., by examining the scope and the object of
the two enactments, the earlier and the later.
The Court then referred to its earlier decision in Deep
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Chand v. State of U.P. & Ors., [1959] 2 SCR 8 and pointed
out that in that case the following principles were laid
down to ascertain whether there is repugnancy or not:
1. Whether there is direct conflict between the two provi-
sions;
2. Whether the legislature intended to lay down an exhaus-
tive code in respect of the subject matter replacing the
earlier law;
3. Whether the two laws occupy the same field.
The Court then referred to Sutherland on Statutory Construc-
tion (Vol. 13rd Edn. p. 486) on the question of "repeal of
special and local statutes by general statutes". The para-
graph reads as follows:
"The enactment of a general law broad enough in its scope
and application to cover the field of operation of a special
or local statute will generally not repeal a statute which
limits its operation to a particular phase of the subject
covered by the general law, or to a particular locality
within the jurisdictional scope of the general statute. An
implied repeal of prior statutes will be restricted to
statutes of the same general nature since the legislature is
presumed to have known of the existence of prior special or
particular legislation, and to have contemplated only a
general treatment of the subject-matter by the general
enactment. Therefore, where the later general statute does
not propose an irreconcilable conflict, the prior special
statute will be construed as remaining in effect as a quali-
fication of or exception to the general law."
The Court, however, hastened to add that there is no rule of
law to prevent repeal of special and local statute by a
later general statute and therefore, where the provisions of
the special statute are wholly repugnant to the general
statute, it would be possible to infer that the special
statute was repealed by the general enactment. However, the
Court observed that where it is doubtful whether the special
statute
644
was intended to be repealed by the general statute, the
Court should try to give effect to both the enactments as
far as possible, since the general statute applies to a11
persons and localities within its jurisdiction and scope as
distinguished from the special one which in its operation is
confined to a particular locality. Where the repealing
effect of a statute is doubtful, the statute is to be
strictly construed to effectuate its consistent operation
with previous legislation as observed by Sutherland on
Statutory Construction. The Court also approved of the
observations of Suleman J., in Shyamakant Lal v. Rambhajan
Singh, [1939] FCR 193 that repugnancy must exist in fact,
and not depend merely on a possibility. After discussing the
principles of repugnancy as above, the Court answered the
question that fell for consideration before it in favour of
the Municipal Council by observing as follows:
"It seems to us however, clear that bearing in mind
the fact that the provisions of s. 72 of the Travancore
Cochin Motor Vehicles Act were intended to apply to a much
wider area than those of ss. 286 and 287 of the Travancore
District Municipalities Act it cannot be said that s. 72 was
intended to replace those provisions of the Travancore
Distt. Municipalities Act. The proper way of construing the
two sets of provisions would be to regard s. 72 of the
Travancore-Cochin Motor Vehicles Act as a provision inconti-
nuity with ss. 286 and 287 of the Travancore District Munic-
ipalities Act so that it could be availed of by the appro-
priate authority as and when it chose. In other words the
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intention of the legislature appears to be to allow the two
sets of provisions to co-exist because both are enabling
ones. Where such is the position, we cannot imply repeal.
The result of this undoubtedly would be that a provision
which is added subsequently, that is, which represents the
latest will of the legislature will have an overriding
effect on the earlier provision in the sense that despite
the’ fact that some action has been taken by the Municipal
Council by resorting to the earlier provision the appropri-
ate authority may nevertheless take action under s. 72 of
the Travancore Cochin Motor Vehicles Act, the result of
which would be to override the action taken by the Municipal
Council under s. 287 of the District Municipalities Act. No
action under section 72 has so far been taken by the Govern-
ment and, therefore, the resolutions of the Municipal Coun-
cil still hold good. Upon this view it is not necessary to
consider certain other points raised by learned counsel."
645
It would thus appear from this decision that the Court
held there that the allegedly conflicting provisions of
Travancore Cochin Motor Vehicles Act were intended to apply
to much wider area than the relevant provisions of the
Distt. Municipalities Act and, therefore, it could not be
said that the provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act were
intended to replace the provisions of Municipalities Act.
The Court also held that the proper way of construing the
two sets of provisions would be to regard the conflicting
provisions of the Motor Vehicles Act as provisions in conti-
nuity with the relevant provisions of the Municipalities Act
so that it could be availed of by the appropriate authority
as and when it chose. The Court, therefore, read into the
relevant provisions, the intention of the legislature to
allow the two sets of provisions to co-exist because both
were enabling ones, and in such circumstances no repeal
could be implied. The Court also rested the said decision by
relying on the fact that since no action was taken by the
Government under the relevant provisions of the Motor Vehi-
cles Act, till such time as the action was taken under the
said provisions, the Municipal Council could act under the
provisions of the Municipalities Act.
What is important from our point of view, is the view
taken in that case that when repugnancy is alleged between
the two statutes, it is necessary to examine whether the two
laws occupy the same field, whether the new or the later
statute covers the entire subject matter of the old, whether
legislature intended to lay down an exhaustive code in
respect of the subject matter covered by the earlier law so
as to replace it in its entirety and whether the earlier
special statute can be construed as remaining in effect as a
qualification of or exception to the later general law,
since the new statute is enacted knowing fully well the
existence of the earlier law and yet it has not repealed it
expressly. The decision further lays down that for examining
whether the two statutes cover the same subject matter, what
is necessary to examine is the scope and the object of the
two enactments, and that has to be done by ascertaining the
intention in the usual way and what is meant by the usual
way is nothing more or less than the ascertainment of the
dominant object of the two legislations.
In Ratan Lal Adukia v. Union of India, [1989] 3 SCR 537
the conflict was between the provisions of Section 80 of the
Railways Act 1890 as amended by the Railways (Amendment) Act
1961 on the one hand and the provisions of Section 20 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 and section 18 of the Presi-
dency Small Causes Courts Act 1882, on the other. Section 80
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of the Railways Act before its amendment had
646
provided that a suit for compensation for loss of life or
injury to a passenger or for loss, destruction and deterio-
ration of animals or goods, would lie where the passengers
or the animals or goods were booked through over the Rail-
ways of two or more Railway Administrations, against the
Railway Administration from which the passengers and the
goods were booked or against the Railway Administration on
whose railway the loss injury, destruction or deterioration
occurred. By the amendment of 1961, the aforesaid provisions
of Section 80 were changed and such a suit was made main-
tainable--(a) if the passenger or the animals or goods were
booked from one station to another on the railway of the
same Railway Administration, against that Railway Adminis-
tration. (b) if they were booked through over the railway of
two or more Railway Administrations, against the Railway
Administration from which they were booked or against the
Railway Administration on whose railway the destination
station lay or the loss etc. occurred. It was further pro-
vided that in either of these two cases the suit may be
instituted in a court having jurisdiction over the place at
which the passenger or the goods were booked or the place of
destination or over the place in which the destination
station lies or the loss etc. occurred. Thus the changes
brought about by the amendment were significant. The old
section did not deal with the liability of claims in respect
of goods etc. carried by single railway. It only concerned
itself with them when they were carried by more than one
railway and provided that the suit for loss of such goods
could he brought against either the Railway Administration
with which the booking was made or against the Railway
Administration of the delivery station. The old section
further did not speak of the places where such suits could
be laid. The choice of the forum was regulated by section 20
of the Code of Civil Procedure or section 18 of the Presi-
dency Small Causes Courts, as the case may be. The amendment
of the section however, made a departure in this respect,
namely, it also named the place where such suits could be
instituted and it is with this change the decision in ques-
tion was concerned. Confirming the High Court’s view, the
Court held that the new Section 80 prevailed over the provi-
sions of Section 20 of the Code of Civil Procedure and of
Section 18 of the Presidency Small Causes Courts Act. The
Court took the view that in view of the fact that the provi-
sions of the new Section 80 as well as the relevant provi-
sions of the Code of Civil Procedure and the Presidency
Small Causes Courts Act dealt with the same subject matter,
namely, the forum for suits, and since the new Section 80
was a special provision relating to special suits against
the Railway Administration the special provisions would
prevail over the general provisions. The Court also stated
that Section 80, looking into its earlier history
647
and the other changes which were brought in it, was a code
in itself dealing with the relevant subject matter, and
therefore, it repealed the provisions of Section 20 of the
Code of Civil Procedure and of Section 18 of the Presidency
Small Causes Courts Act by necessary implication. The Court
also held that since the provisions of the latter two gener-
al statutes related to territorial jurisdiction of courts
and since the amendment to Section 80 also dealt with the
same subject, but in case of only suits for compensation
against the Railway, Section 80 being the special statute
should be deemed to have supplanted the general statutes
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like the Code of Civil Procedure and general provisions of
section 20 of the Code and Section 18 of the Presidency of
Small Causes Courts Act.
It will thus be apparent that in that case the provi-
sions which were in conflict related to the same subject
matter unlike in our case. The provisions with regard to
application and grant of permits in Sections 14 and 20 have
nothing in common with the provisions of Sections 74 and 80
of the Motor Vehicles Act 1988. The former provisions are
ancillary to giving effect to the acquisition and nationali-
sation of the road transport within local territorial lim-
its. The later provisions are general in nature and in
furtherence of the object of the Act which is to regulate
transport. The subject matters of both the statutes and the
object of the two sets of provisions are, therefore, materi-
ally different. In our case both the statutes can stand
together. The legislative intent is clear. Since, further,
the Parliament had enacted the later statute knowing fully
well the existence of the earlier statute and yet it did not
expressly repeal it, it will be presumed that the Parliament
felt that there was no need to repeal the said statute.
In Ch. Tika Ramji & Ors. etc. v. State of U.P. & Ors.,
[1956] SCR 393 what fell for consideration was the alleged
repugnancy between the U.P. Sugarcane (Regulation of Supply
and Purchase) Act 1953 and two Notifications issued by the
State Government under it on September 27, 1954 and November
9, 1955 on the one hand, and Industries (Development &
Regulation) Act 1951 and the Essential Commodities Act 1955
and the Sugar Cane Control Order 1955 issued under it on the
other. The Court has stated there that no question of repug-
nancy under Article 254 of the Constitution can arise where
Parliamentary legislation and State legislation occupy
different fields and deal with separate and distinct matters
even though of a cognate and allied nature, and whereas in
that case there was no inconsistency in the actual terms of
the Act enacted by Parliament and the State Legislature, the
test of repugnancy would be whether Parliamentary
648
and the State Legislature in legislating under an Entry in
the Concurrent List exercised their powers over the same
subject matter or whether the laws enacted by Parliament
were intended to be exhaustive so as to cover the entire
field.
The Court then referred to three tests of inconsistency
or repugnancy listed by Nicholas on p. 303 2nd Edn. of his
Australian Constitution, namely, (1) there may be inconsist-
ency in the actual terms of the competing statutes, (2)
though there may be no direct conflict, a State law may be
inoperative because the Common Wealth Law, or the Award of
Common Wealth Court is intended to be a complete exhaustive
code, (3) even in the absence of intention, the conflict may
arise when both State and Common Wealth Law seek to exercise
their powers over the same subject matter. The Court also
quoted with approval, observations of the Calcutta High
Court in G.P. Stewart v.B.K. Roy Choudhary, AIR 1939 Cal.
628 on the subject which are as follows:
"It is sometimes said that two laws cannot be said
to be properly repugnant unless there is a direct conflict
between them, as when one says "do" and the other "don’t",
there is no true repugnancy according to this view, if it is
possible to obey both the laws. For reasons which we shall
set forth presently, we think that this is too narrow a
test: there may well be cases of repugnancy where both laws
say "don’t" but in different ways. For example, one law may
say, "No person shall sell liquor by retail, that is, in
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quantities of less than five gallons at a time" and another
law may say, "No person shall sell liquor by retail, that
is, in quantities of less than ten gallons at a time". Here,
it is obviously possible to obey both laws, by obeying the
more stringent of the two namely the second one; yet it is
equally obvious that the two laws are repugnant, for to the
extent to which a citizen is compelled to obey one of them,
the other, though not actually disobeyed, is nullified".
"The principle deducible from the English cases, as
from the Canadian cases, seems therefore to be the same as
that enunciated by Issacs, J.in the Australian 44 hours case
(37 CLR 466) if the dominant law has expressly or impliedly
evinced its intention to cover the whole field, then a
subordinate law in the same field is repugnant and therefore
inoperative. Whether and to what extent in a
649
given case, the dominant law evinces such an intention must
necessarily depend on the language of the particular law".
The Court also approved the observations of Sulaiman, J. in
Shyamakant Lal v. Rarnbhajan Singh, (supra) on the subject
which are as follows:
"When the question is whether a Provincial legisla-
tion is repugnant to an existing Indian law, the onus of
showing its repugnancy and the extent to which it is repug-
nant should be on the party attacking its validity. There
ought to be a presumption in favour of its validity, and
every effort should be made to reconcile them and construe
both so as to avoid their being repugnant to each other; and
care should be taken to see whether the two do not really
operate in different fields without encroachment. Further,
repugnancy must exist in fact, and not depend merely on a
possibility. Their Lordships can discover no adequate
grounds for holding that there exists repugnancy between the
two laws in districts of the Province of Ontario where the
prohibitions of the Canadian Act are not and may never be in
force: (Attorney-General for Ontario v. Attorney-General for
the Dominion, [1896] AC 348).
11. Referring to the case in hand; the Court then stated
that there was no question of any inconsistency in the
actual terms of the two Acts. The only questions that arose
there were whether the Parliament and the State Legislature
sought to exercise their powers over the same subject matter
or whether the laws enacted by Parliament were intended to
be a complete exhaustive code, or in other words, expressly
or impliedly evinced an intention to cover the whole field.
The Court then compared the provisions of Industries (Devel-
opment and Regulation) Act, 1951 as amended by Act XXVI of
1953, the Essential Commodities Act X of 1955 and the Sugar
Control order 1955 issued thereunder with the U.P. Act and
Order of 1954 issued by the State Government thereunder. By
comparing the impugned State Act with the Central Act of
1951 as amended by the Act, 1953, the Court held that the
Central Act related to sugar as a finished product while the
State legislation covered the field of sugar cane. Thus the
fields of operation of the two legislations were different
and hence there was no repugnancy between the Central Act
and the State Act. It was also further pointed out there
that even assuming that sugar cane
650
was an article or class of articles relatable to the sugar
industry within the meaning of Section 18(g) of the Central
Act, no order was issued by the Central Government in exer-
cise of the powers vested in it under that Section, and
hence no question of repugnancy could ever arise because
repugnancy must exist in fact and not depend merely on a
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possibility. The possibility of an Order under Section 18(g)
being issued by the Central Government would not be enough.
The existence of such an Order would be the essential pre-
requisite before any repugnancy could ever arise.
12. As far as the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 was
concerned, the Court pointed out that the Parliament was
well within its powers in legislating in regard to sugar
cane, and the Central Government was also well within its
powers in issuing the Sugar Cane Control Order, 1955 because
all that was in exercise of the concurrent powers of legis-
lation under Entry 33 of List 111. That, however, did not
affect the legislative competence of the U.P. State Legisla-
ture to enact the law in regard to sugar cane and the only
question which had to be considered was whether there was
any repugnancy between the provisions of the Essential
Commodities Act and the State legislation in that behalf.
The Court then pointed out that the State Government did not
at all provide for the fixation of minimum price for sugar
cane. Neither had it provided for the regulation of movement
of sugar cane as was done by the Central Government in
Clauses (3) and (4) of the Sugar Cane Control Order 1955.
Likewise, the provision contained in Section 17 of the State
Act in regard to the payment of sugar cane price (as fixed
by the Central Govt.) and the recovery thereof as if it was
an arrear of land revenue, did not find its place in the
Central Government Sugar Cane Control Order 1955. The provi-
sions in the two legislations were, therefore, mutually
exclusive and did not impinge upon each other. By referring
to the provisions of Central Government Sugar Cane Control
Order 1955 and the U.P. Govt. Sugar Cane (Regulation and
Purchase) Order 1954 issued under the respective statutes,
the Court pointed out that none of those provisions also
overlapped. The Centre was silent with regard to some of the
provisions which had been enacted by the State and the State
was silent with regard to some of the provisions which had
been enacted by the Centre. There was no repugnancy whatever
between those provisions, and neither the State Act nor the
rules flamed thereunder as well as the State Government’s
Order issued under it, trenched upon the field covered by
the Essential Commodities Act. The Court therefore held that
since there was no repugnancy between the two, the provi-
sions of Article 254(2) of the Constitution did not come
into play. The Court then considered
651
whether the repealing Section 16 of the Essential Commodi-
ties Act and clause 7 of the Sugar Cane Control Order 1955
had repealed the State Act to the extent mentioned therein.
Section 16(1)(b) provides as follows:
"16(1) The following laws are hereby repealed--
(a) x x x x
(b) any other law in force in any State immediately before
the commencement of this Act in so far as such law controls
or authorises the control of the production, supply and
distribution of, and trade and commerce in, any essential
commodity".
The contention was that the expression "any other law"
covered the impugned State Act which was in force in the
State immediately before the commencement of the Essential
Commodities Act in so far as it controlled or authorised the
control of production, supply and distribution of and trade
and commerce in sugar cane (which was), an essential commod-
ity under the Central Act and Clause (7) of the Sugar Cane
Control Order. The contention advanced on behalf of the U.P.
State was that under the proviso to Article 254(2), the
power to repeal a law passed by the State Legislature was
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incidental to enacting a law relating to the same matter as
is dealt with in the State legislation and that a statute
which merely repeals a law passed by the State Legislature
without enacting substantive provisions on the subject would
not be within the proviso, as it could not have been the
intention of the Constitution that on a topic within the
concurrent sphere of the legislation, there should be a
vaccum. The Court observed that there was considerable force
in the said contention and there was much to be said for the
view that a repeal simpliciter was not within the scope of
the proviso. The Court however, stated that it was not
necessary to give its decision on the said point as the
petitioner in that case would fail on another ground. The
Court then observed that while the proviso to Article 254(2)
does confer on Parliament a power to repeal a law passed by
the State Legislature, that power is, under the terms of the
proviso, subject to certain limitations. It is limited to
enacting a law with respect to the same matter adding to,
amending, varying or repealing a "law so made by the State
Legislature". The law referred to here is the law mentioned
in the body of Article 254(2). It is a law made by the State
Legislature with reference to a matter in the Concurrent
List containing provisions repugnant to an earlier law made
by
652
Parliament and with the consent of the President. It is only
such a law that could be altered, amended or repealed under
the proviso. The impugned Act was not a law relating to any
matter, which is the subject of an earlier legislation by
Parliament. It was a substantive law covering a field not
occupied by Parliament, and no question of its containing
any provisions inconsistent with a law enacted by Parliament
could therefore arise. To such a law, the proviso had no
application and Section 16(1)(b) of Act X of 1955 and clause
7(1) of the Sugar Cane Control Order 1955 must, in this
view, be held to be invalid. (Sic).
13. The aforesaid review of the authorities makes it
clear that whenever repugnancy between the State and Central
Legislation is alleged, what has to be first examined is
whether the two legislations cover or relate to the same
subject matter. The test for determining the same is the
usual one, namely, to find out the dominant intention of the
two legislations. If the dominant intention, i.e. the pith
and substance of the two legislations is different, they
cover different subject matters. If the subject matters
covered by the legislations are thus different, then merely
because the two legislations refer to some allied or cognate
subjects they do not cover the same field. The legislation,
to be on the same subject matter must further cover the
entire field covered by the other. A provision in one legis-
lation to give effect to its dominant purpose may inciden-
tally be on the same subject as covered by the provision of
the other legislation. But such partial coverage of the same
area in a different context and to achieve a different
purpose does not bring about the repugnancy which is intend-
ed to be covered by Article 254(2). Both the legislations
must be substantially on the same subject to attract the
Article.
14. In this view of the matter I am of the view that
there is no repugnancy in the provisions of Sections 14 and
20 of the Karnataka Act and Sections 74 and 80 of the MV Act
1988. The petitions must therefore fail and are hereby
dismissed with costs.
ORDER
15. In view of the decision of the majority the Writ
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Petitions stand dismissed and the rule in each is discharged
with costs.
K. RAMASWAMY, J. 1. Despite my deep respect to my
learned brother, I express my inability to persuade myself
to agree with the result proposed in the draft judgments of
my brothers.
653
The notoriety of open and uninhibited misuse of contract
carriage as stage carriages in picking up and setting down
the passengers en route the route for hire or reward sabo-
taging the economic, efficient and co-ordinated transport
service by the respective State Transport Undertakings (for
short, "the S.T.U.") had been taken cognizance of by the
Karnataka State Legislature. It provided the remedy making
the Karnataka Contract Carriages (Acquisition) Act (21 of
1976), for short, "the Acquisition Act" by taking aid of the
Entry 42, List III (Concurrent List) of the Seventh Schedule
to the Constitution and Articles 31, 39(b) and (c) of the
Constitution. It was reserved for consideration and has
received the assent of the President on March 11, 1976. It
came into force with effect from March 12, 1976. Section
3(g) of the Acquisition Act defines "Contract Carriage" as
one covered under s. 2(4) of the Motor Vehicles Act (4 of
1939), for short, "the Repealed Act" including public serv-
ice vehicle defined under s. 63(6), etc. s. 3(a) defines
"acquired property"--means the vehicles and other immovable
and movable property vesting in the State Government under
s. 4 thereof. The Acquisition Act excluded tourist vehicles,
motor cabs, etc. Section 4 declares that on and from the
notified date, every contract carriage along with permit or
certificate of registration or both, lands, buildings,
workshop, etc. shall stand vested in the State Government
free from encumbrances. Section 6 provides machinery to
determine the amount for the vesting of the acquired proper-
ty under s. 4. Section 14 which is relevant for the purpose
of this case read thus:
"Fresh permit or renewal of the existing permit barred-
Except as otherwise provided in this Act--
(1) No person shall on or after the commencement of this Act
apply for any permit or fresh permit or for renewal of an
existing permit for the running of any contract carriage in
the State; and
(2) every application for the grant of a permit or fresh
permit or for the renewal of the existing permit and all
appeals or revisions arising therefrom relating thereto made
or preferred before the commencement of this Act and pending
in any Court or with any Officer, Authority or Tribunal
constituted under the Motor Vehicles Act shall abate."
A reading thereof manifests its unequivocal declaration that
on and
654
from the date of vesting viz., March 12, 1976, the statute
prohibits any person to apply for, any fresh permit or
renewal of an existing permit to run any contract carriage
in that State and all applications, appeals or revisions
pending before the appropriate authority as on the notified
date, statutorily declared to have been abated. Section 20
declares by employing non-obstenti clause in sub-s. (1) that
notwithstanding anything in the repealed Act with effect
from March 12, 1976 all contract carriage permits granted or
renewed in respect of any vehicle other than a vehicle
acquired under the Acquisition Act, or belonging to the
S.T.U., Karnataka; or referred to in s. 24 thereof shall
stand canceled. Sub-s. (2) accords with mandatory language
that the S.T.U. "shall be entitled for or renewal of con-
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tract carriage permits to the exclusion of all other per-
sons" and sub-s. (3) prohibits by employing a negative
language that "no officer or authority shall invite any
application or entertain any such application of persons
other than the Corporation (S.T.U.) for grant of permit or
the running of the contract carriage." By conjoint operation
of ss. 14 and 20, the right of any person other than S.T.U.,
Karnataka to apply for and to obtain any permit or renewal
of an existing permit to run a motor vehicle as a contract
carriage has been frozen and issued statutory injunction
restraining the authority concerned from either inviting or
entertaining any application from him for the grant or
renewal of contract carriage permit. Monopoly to obtain
permit or renewal to run contract carriage was conferred on
S.T.U., Karnataka. The constitutional validity of the Acqui-
sition Act was upheld by this Court in State of Karnataka v.
Ranganatha Reddy, [1978] 1 SCR 64 1. The contention that the
Acquisition Act fails under Entry 42 of List I of Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution, viz., inter-state trade and
commerce and that therefore the State Legislature lacked
competence to make the Acquisition Act was negatived. It was
held that in pith and substance, it is an act of acquisition
of the contract carriages falling in Entry 42 of List III.
It was further held that the effect of operation of ss. 14
and 20 is incidental or ancillary to the acquisition. Having
received the assent of the President, it is saved by Art.
254(2) of the Constitution. When an attempt to obtain renew-
al or fresh special permits to run contract carriages taking
aid of s. 62(1) or s. 63(6) respectively of the repealed Act
4 of 1939 was made on the ground that the Acquisition Act
had saved their operation, this Court in Secretary, R.T.A.,
Bangalore v. P.D. Sharma, AIR 1989 SC 509 held that by
operation of ss. 14 and 20(3), a public service vehicle be
it a contract carriage or stage carriage for which temporary
permits under ss. 62(1) and 63(6) were issued and were in
force on January 30, 1976 are not entitled to fresh permits
and exclusive monopoly to run contract carriages was given
to S.T.U., Karnataka.
655
2. The Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (Act 59 of 1988), for
short, "the Act", came into force with effect from July 1,
1989. Section 2(7) defines ’contract carriage’. Section 2(8)
defines ’motor vehicle’ or ’vehicle’ to mean any mechanical-
ly propelled vehicle adapted for use upon road whether the
power of propulsion is transmitted thereto from an external
or internal source and includes a chasis to which a body has
not been attached and a trailer ..... Section 2(34) de-
fines ’public place’ to mean, a road, street, way or other
place whether a thoroughfare or not, to which the public
have a right of access and includes any place or stand at
which passengers are picked up or set down by a stage car-
riage. Section 2(35) defines ’public service vehicle’ to
mean, any motor vehicle used or adapted to be used for the
carriage of passengers for hire or reward, and includes
a ..... , contract carriage and stage carriage. Section
2(47) defines ’transport vehicle’ to mean, a public service
vehicle ..... , or a private service vehicle. Chapter V
deals with Control of Transport Vehicles, s. 66 mandates an
owner of a motor vehicle to obtain permit to run it in
accordance with the conditions of a permit thus:
"(1) No owner of a motor vehicle shall use or permit the use
of the vehicle as a transport vehicle in any public place
whether or not such vehicle is actually carrying any passen-
gers or goods save in accordance with the conditions of a
permit granted or countersigned by a Regional Transport
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Authority or any prescribed authority authorising him the
use of the vehicle in that place in the manner in which the
vehicle is being used."
(Emphasis supplied)
(The provisos are not necessary for the purpose of this
case. Hence omitted)
Section 73 requires him to make an application for permit of
a contract carriage with particulars specified therein.
Section 74 deals with grant of contract carriage permit.
Sub-s. (1) thereof provides that "subject to provisions of
sub-s. (3), a Regional Transport Authority may, on an appli-
cation made to it under s. 73, grant a contract carriage
permit in accordance with the application or with such
modifications as it deems fit or refuse to grant such a
permit, provided that no such permit shall be granted in
respect of any area not specified in the application." Sub-
s. (2) empowers the Regional Transport Authority to impose
any one or more conditions enumerated therein to be attached
to the permit, the details thereof are redundant. Sub-s. (3)
empowers a State
656
Government, when directed by the Central Government, to
limit the number of contract carriages generally or a speci-
fied type as may be fixed in the notification published in
this behalf for their operation on the city routes. The
details are also not necessary for the purpose of this case.
Under s. 80(1), an application for a permit of any kind may
be made at any time. Sub-s. (2) posits that "a Regional
Transport Authority shah not ordinarily refuse to grant an
application for permit of any kind made at any time under
this Act." (Emphasis Supplied). The proviso are omitted as
not being relevant. The petitioners have applied under ss.
73, 74 and 80 of the Act for grant of contract carriage
permits. Placing reliance on ss. 14 and 20 of the Acquisi-
tion Act, the concerned authorities have refused to enter-
tain their applications. Calling them in question the above
writ petitions have been filed under Art. 32 of the Consti-
tution.
3. The contention of Sri Nariman, learned senior counsel
for the petitioners, is that the object of the Act is to
liberalise grant of contract carriages which do not ply on
any particular routes. Contract carriage defined under s.
2(7) of the Act is a public service vehicle within the
meaning of s. 2(35) of the Act. Section 66 obligates the
owner to obtain permits to run contract carriages. Section
14(1) read with s. 80(1) accords the right to the petition-
ers to apply for, and enjoins the authorities under s. 80(2)
to consider and to grant permits to run public service
vehicles as contract carriages. Section 217(1) repealed all
the laws, save such of the laws which are not inconsistent
with the provisions of the Act. The operation of ss. 14 and
20 of the Acquisition Act is inconsistent with ss. 74 and 80
of the Act. Grant of permit to run contract carriage is
covered by Entry 35 of List III of the Seventh Schedule.
Though, the Acquisition Act was made under Entry 42 of List
III and has received the assent of the President, by opera-
tion of s. 74 read with s. 80 and s. 2 17, the operation of
ss. 14 and 20 became void under proviso to Art. 254(2).
Sections 14 and 20 also stood repealed by implication. The
authorities are, hereby, enjoined to consider the petition-
ers’ applications for grant of contract carriage permits as
per the provisions of the Act and the relevant rules. Mr.
Sanghi, learned senior counsel for the S.T.U., Karnataka,
contended that the Acquisition Act was made in exercise of
the power under Entry 42 of List III of Seventh Schedule to
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the Constitution. Its constitutional validity was upheld by
this Court. It does not occupy the same field as under the
Act. The Acquisition Act, having been reserved for consider-
ation under Art. 254(2) and has received the assent of the
President, it prevails over the Act in the State of Karnata-
ka. The Acquisition Act is a "special law" in juxtaposition
to the general law under the
657
Act. The argument of Mr. Sanghi, though apparently at first
blush is alluring and attractive, but on a deeper probe, I
find insurmountable difficulties in his way to give accept-
ance to them. The main questions are whether ss. 14 and 20
of the Acquisition Act and ss. 73, 74 and 80 of the Act is
"in respect of the same matter" and whether the Act evinces
its intention to occupy the same field.
4. At the cost of repetition, it may be stated that ss.
49 to 51 and the relevant rules under the Repealed Act
govern the grant of contract carriage permits and in partic-
ular the rigour imposed in s. 50 thereof is absent in the
Act. The Acquisition Act aimed to acquire the contract
carriages. They stood vested in the State Government under
s. 4. Incidental and ancillary thereto, the operation of the
existing permits or seeking renewal thereof and the pendency
of the proceedings in that regard either by way of an appli-
cation or in appeal or in revision, having statutorily been
declared under s. 14(2) to have been abated, the right to
obtain permits or special permits afresh or renewal thereof
to run contract carriages or stage carriages after expiry of
the term, has been frozen to all citizens. Exclusive monopo-
ly to obtain permits or of the renewal to run them has been
given to the S.T.U., Karnataka. On and from March 12, 1976,
s. 20(3) prohibits the authorities concerned to invite or
entertain an application or to grant or renew the permits to
a contract carriage or special permit, except to the S.T.U.,
Karnataka. The non-obstenti clause makes clear any cloud of
doubts of the applicability of the repealed Act 4 of 1939.
After the receipt of the assent of the President, though it
is inconsistent with the Repealed Act, its operation is
saved by Art. 254(2) of the Constitution. Sections 73 and 74
read with s. 80 of the Act gives to an applicant the right
to apply for and to obtain, and obligates the Regional
Transport Authority to grant permit to run any public serv-
ice vehicle as contract carriage throughout the country
including the State of Karnataka. Though, s. 80(1) gives
discretionary power to grant permit but sub-s. (2) of s. 80
manifests that refusal to grant contract carriage permits
appears to be an exception for stated grounds and obviously
for reasons to be recorded.
4A. Constitutionalism is the alter to test on its anvil the
constitutionality of a statute and Art. 254 is the sole
fountain source concerning a State law in the Concurrent
List. Article 254(1) deals with inconsistency of law made by
Parliament and the law made by the Legislature of a State.
Clause (1) adumbrates that the existing law, if it is repug-
nant with the law made by the Parliament, subject to the
provisions of cl. (2), the law made by the Parliament wheth-
er passed before or after the law made by the Legislature of
such state, or, as the case
658
may be, the existing law shall prevail and the law made by
the Legislature of the State shall, to the extent of repug-
nancy, be void. Clause (2) deals with the law made by the
Legislature of a State with respect to one of the matters
enumerated in the Concurrent List contains any provision
repugnant to the provisions of an earlier law made by the
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Parliament or an existing one "with respect to that matter",
then the law so made by the Legislature of such State shall,
if it has been reserved for the consideration of the Presi-
dent and has received his assent, prevails in that State;
provided that nothing in this clause shall prevent Parlia-
ment from enacting "at any time any law with respect to the
same matter’ ’, including a law adding to, amending, varying
or repealing the law so made by the Legislature of the
State.
(Emphasis supplied)
5. In a federal system like ours, there are two streams
of law, viz., Union and State. At times, the citizen sub-
jected to both of laws Central and State will find incon-
sistency between the obligations imposed on him by those
laws or finds variance to avail both laws. In fact, both the
Union and State Legislatures are competent to make laws on a
subject enumerated in the Concurrent List. We are not con-
cerned in this case with regard to Union List or State List.
it is quite possible that while legislating upon the sub-
ject, they might end up in handing down inconsistent law and
the observance of one law may result is non-observance of
the other. The citizen will, in such a situation, be at a
loss to decide which of the two laws he should follow. To
resolve the inconsistency, in other words, to bring about
operational uniformity Constitution presses into Service
Art. 254. Its forerunner is s. 107 of the Government of
India Act, 1935. Both the Parliament and a State Legislature
derive their power only under Art. 254 and Art. 246(2) to
legislate concurrently on the subjects enumerated in the
Concurrent List. The enumeration of the subjects in the
Concurrent List is only for demarcation of legislative heads
or distribution of the subject/subjects over which the
Parliament and the State Legislature have competence to make
law. However, paramouncy has been accorded to the Union Law,
making provision in Art. 254 firstly as to what would happen
in case of repugnancy between the Central and the State law
in the concurrent field and secondly resolving such a con-
flict. The reason is that there are certain matters which
cannot be allocated exclusively either to the Parliament or
to a State Legislature and for which, though often it is
desirable that the State Legislature should make a provision
in that regard. Local conditions necessarily vary from State
to State and the State Legislature ought to have the power
to adopt general legislation to meet the particular circum-
stances of a State. It is equally necessary that the
659
Parliament should also have plenary jurisdiction to enable
it in some cases to secure uniformity in the main principles
of law throughout the country or in other matters to guide
and encourage the States’ efforts and to provide remedies
for mischiefs arising in the State sphere extending or
liable to extent beyond the boundaries of a single State.
The subjects like the Indian Penal Code, Civil Procedure
Code, Criminal Procedure Code, Labour Laws, the Motor Vehi-
cles Act, etc. occupy this area. The essential condition for
the application of Art. 254(1) is that the existing law or a
law made by the Parliament subsequent to State law, must be
with respect to one of the matters enumerated in the Concur-
rent List. In other words, unless it is shown that the
repugnancy is between the provisions of a State law and an
existing or subsequent law or amended law etc. of the Par-
liament in respect of the same specified matter, Art. 254
would be inapplicable,
6. The Court has to examine in each case whether both
the legislations or the relevant provisions therein occupy
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the same field with respect to one of the matters enumerated
in the Concurrent List and whether there exists repugnance
between the two laws. The emphasis laid by Art. 254 is "with
respect to that matter". Clause (1) of Art. 254 posits as a
rule that in case of repugnancy or inconsistency between the
State law and the Union law relating to the same matter in
the Concurrent List occupying the same field, the Union law
shall prevail and the State law will fail to the extent of
the repugnancy or inconsistency whether the Union law is
prior or later in point of time to the State law. To this
general rule, an exception has been engrafted in cl. (2)
thereof, viz., provided the State law is reserved for con-
sideration of the President and it has received his assent,
and then it will prevail in that State notwithstanding its
repugnancy or inconsistency with the Union law. This excep-
tion again is to be read subject to the proviso to cl. (2)
thereof, which empowers the Parliament to make law afresh or
repeal or amend, modify or vary the repugnant State law
which will become void even though it received President’s
assent. In short, cl. (1) lays down a general rule; cl. (2)
is an exception to cl. (1) and proviso qualifies that excep-
tion. The premise is that the law made by the Parliament is
paramount and Union and State law must relate to the same
subject matter in the Concurrent List. It is, thus, made
clear that the Parliament can always, whether prior or
subsequent to State law, make a law occupied by the State
law. An absurd or an incongruous or irreconcilable result
would emerge if two inconsistent laws or particular provi-
sions in a statute, each of equal validity, could coexist
and operate in the same territory.
660
7. Repugnancy between the two pieces of legislation,
generally speaking, means that conflicting results are
produced when both laws are applied to the same set of
facts. Repugnancy arises when the provisions of both laws
are fully inconsistent or are absolutely irreconcilable and
that it is impossible to obey without disobeying the other.
Repugnancy would arise when conflicting results are produced
when both the statutes covering the same field are applied
to a given set of facts. The Court should, therefore, make
every attempt to reconcile the provisions of the apparently
conflicting enactments, and would give harmoneous construc-
tion. There is no repugnancy unless the two Acts or provi-
sions are wholly incompatible with each other or the two
would lead to absurd result. The purpose of determining the
inconsistency is to ascertain the intention of the Parlia-
ment which would be gathered from a consideration of the
entire field occupied by the State Legislature. The proper
test is whether the effect can be given to the provisions of
both the laws or whether both the laws can stand together.
There is no repugnaney if these two enactments relate to
different fields or different aspects operating in the same
subject. In my considered views, Art. 254 was engrafted in
the Constitution by the rounding fathers to obviate such an
absurd situation. The reason is obvious that there is no
provision in the Constitution that the law made by the
Parliament is to be void by reason of its inconsistency with
the law made by the Legislature of a State. It may be dif-
ferent if the State law is only to supplement the law made
by the Parliament. If both the laws without trenching upon
another’s field or colliding with each other harmoneously
operate, the question of repugnancy does not arise. It is
also axiomatic that if no law made by Parliament occupies
the field, the State Legislature is always free to make law
on any subject/subjects in the Concurrent List III of the
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Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
8. It is seen that the Acquisition Act was made in
exercise of the power under Entry 42 of the Concurrent List
and ss. 14 and 20 thereof are integral part of the Acquisi-
tion Act. Undoubtedly, they are consequential or ancillary
to s. 4 thereof. It had received the assent of the Presi-
dent. But after the Act was brought on statute, the question
emerges whether there exists no repugnancy between ss. 14(1)
and 20(3) of the Acquisition Act in juxtaposition to ss.
66(1), 73, 74 and 80 of the Act. Before embarking upon an
enquiry into the results produced by these provisions in the
light of above discussion, let us consider the relevant
decisions and the ratio laid down therein in this context.
661
Occupied Field:
1n Tika Ramji v. State of U.P., [1956] SCR 393. Bhag-
wati, J. speaking for the Constitution Bench, applied three
tests propounded by Nicholas in his Australian Constitution,
Second Edition, page 303, to find the inconsistency or
repugnancy thus. (1) There may be inconsistency in the
actual terms of competing statutes; (2) Though there may be
no direct conflict, a State law may be inoperative because
the Commonwealth law, or the award of the Commonwealth
Court, is intended to be a complete and‘ exhaustive Code;
and (3) Even in the absence of intention, a conflict may
arise when both State and Commonwealth seek to exercise
their power over the same subject matter. (Emphasis sup-
plied). The repugnancy between the two statutes should exist
in fact and not depend merely on a possibility. In that
case, the question was whether the U.P. Sugarcane (Regula-
tion of Supply and Purchase) Act (Act 24 of 1953) is ultra
vires of the U.P. Legislature in view of Art. 246 read with
Entry 52 of List I and Item 33 of List III of Seventh Sched-
ule to the Constitution. In that context, it was held that
if both the Central Legislature and the Provincial Legisla-
tures were entitled to legislature in regard to this subject
of production, supply and distribution of sugarcane, there
would arise no question of legislative competence of the
Provincial Legislature in the matter of having enacted the
impugned Act. Repugnancy falls to be considered when the law
made by the Parliament and the law made by the Legislature
occupy the same field, because if both these pieces of
legislation deal with separate and distinct matters, though
of a cognate and allied character, repugnancy does not
arise. (Emphasis supplied) So far as our Constitution is
concerned, repugnancy is dealt with in Art. 254. On a com-
parison of various provisions of the State and Central laws,
it was held that there was no question of any inconsistency
in the actual terms of the Act enacted by the Parliament and
the impugned Act and they did not occupy the same field.
In A.S. Krishna v. Madras State, [1957] SCR 399, the
question was whether s. 4(2) of the Madras Prohibition Act
which lays down a presumptive evidence is repugnant to the
Central legislation, viz., Criminal Procedure Code. Dealing
with s. 107 of the Government of India Act, 1935 which is in
pari material to Art. 254 read with Schedule VII, List II,
Items 2 and 31 and List III, Items 2 and 5 of Schedule VII
to the Constitution, Venkatarama Ayyar, J. speaking for the
Constitution Bench, held that for applying s. 107 of the
Government of India Act 1935, two conditions must be ful-
filled--the provisions of the provincial law and those of
the Central legislation must both be in
662
respect of a matter which is enumerated in the Concurrent
List; and they must be repugnant to each other. It is only
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when both these requirements are satisfied that the provi-
sional law will to the extent of repugnancy becomes void.
Section 4(2) of the Prohibition Act was held to be void.
In Prem Nath Kaul v. State of J & K, [1959] 2 Supp. SCR
273, another Constitution Bench held that the essential
condition for application of Art. 254(1) is that the exist-
ing law must be with respect to one of the matters enumerat-
ed in the Concurrent List; in other words, unless it is
shown that the repugnancy is between the provisions of a
subsequent law and those of an existing law in respect of
the specified matters, the Article would be inapplicable. In
Bar Council of U.P.v. State of U.P., [1973] 2 SCR 1073 the
question arose was whether the State Government is empowered
to impose stamp duty on the certificate of enrollment under
s. 22 of the Advocates Act. In considering schedule VII,
List I, Entries 77, 78 and 96; List II, Entry 63 and List
III, Entries 44 and 26 and the relevant provisions of the
Stamp Act and its Schedules, this Court held that the ques-
tion of repugnancy can only arise in respect of matters
where both the parliament and the State Legislature have
competence to pass laws. In other words, when the Legisla-
tive power is located in the Concurrent List, the question
of repugnancy arises. In Deep Chand v. State of U.P., [1959]
Supp. 2 SCR 8 relied on by Sri Nariman, the Uttar Pradesh
legislature made U.P. Transport Service (Development) Act,
which had received the assent of the President, introduced a
scheme of nationalisation of the transport service. Subse-
quently, Parliament has amended Act IV of 1939 through
Amendment Act 100 of 1956. By reason thereof, it was con-
tended that the U.P. Amendment Act became void by reason of
Art. 254 of the Constitution. The matter was examined by the
Constitution Bench of this Court. Subba Rao, J. (as he then
was) per majority, while considering the question, laid
three propositions to determine the repugnancy thus: (1)
Whether there is direct repugnancy between the two provi-
sions; (2) Whether Parliament intended to lay down an ex-
haustive code in respect of the subject matter replacing the
Act of the State Legislature; and (3) Whether the law made
by the Parliament and the law made by the State Legislature
occupy the same field. After examining in detail the provi-
sions of the respective Acts, it was held that after the
Central Amendment Act 100 of 1956, it prevailed over the
U.P. Act and prospectively became void as the Central Amend-
ment Act occupied the same field in respect of the same
schemes initiated under the U.P. Amendment Act and to that
extent the State Act must yield its place to the Central
Act.
663
In State of Orissa v.M.A. Tulloch & Co., [1964] 4 SCR
461 another Constitution Bench of this Court held that the
inconsistency may be demonstrated not by a detailed compari-
son of provisions of the two statutes but by the mere exist-
ence of the two pieces of legislation. Meeting the argument
as to on which Entry in the list the subject falls, it was
held thus:
"If by reason of the declaration by Parliament the entire
subject matter of ’conversation and development of minerals’
has been taken over for being dealt with by Parliament, thus
depriving the State of the power which it therefore pos-
sessed, it would follow that the ’matter’ in the State List
is, to the extent of the declaration, (substracted from the
scope of the declaration) and ambit of Entry 23 of the State
List. There would, therefore after the Central Act 67 of
1957, be no matter in the List to which the fee could be
related in order to render it valid."
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It was accordingly held that the Orissa Mining Areas Devel-
opment Fund Act (27 of’ 1952) to be void. Of course, this
was in considering the question under Article 246, Entry 54
of List I, and Entry 23 of List 11.
In State of Assam v. Horizon Union, [1967] 1 SCR 484 the
facts are that under the Industrial Disputes Act 1947,
Section 7-A(3)(a) provided that the appropriate Government
may by notification constitute an Industrial Tribunal con-
sisting of one person to be appointed by the appropriate
Government. The person shall not be qualified for appoint-
ment as presiding officer of the Tribunal unless he is or
has been a Judge of a High Court or he has held the office
of Chairman or any other member of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal constituted under the Industrial Disputes (Appel-
late Tribunal) Act, 1950, or of any Tribunal, for a period
of not less than two years. Assam Act 8 of 1962 made an
amendment to the above procedure and had received the assent
of the President, introducing clause (aa) to sub-section
(3)(a) of Section 7-A thus:
"He has worked as a District Judge or as an Additional
District Judge or as both for a total period of not less
than three years or is qualified for appointment as a Judge
of a High Court; provided that the appointment to a Tribunal
of any person qualified under this clause shall not be made
without consultation with the Assam High Court."
664
In 1964, the Parliament made an amendment viz. Industri-
al Disputes (Amendment) Act (36 of 1964) amending Section
7-A(3)(a) stating that "he has, for a period of not less
than three years, been a District Judge or an Additional
District Judge." The contention raised was that the Assam
Act became void by reason of the subsequent Amendment Act of
1964. Both the Parliament and the State Legislature have
exercised their power under the Concurrent List of VII
Schedule. Another Constitution Bench of this Court has held
that the Central Amendment Act 36 of 1964 intended to be an
exhaustive code in respect of the subject matter and occu-
pies the same field. Therefore, the Assam Act 8 of 1962 was
repugnant to the Central Amendment Act 36 of 1964 as it does
not require the consultation with the High Court for the
appointment of an Industrial Tribunal. Accordingly, it was
held to be void.
In State ofJ & K v.M.S. Farooqi, [1972] 3 SCR 881 the
facts were that the respondent was a member of the Indian
Police Service governed by the All India Services Act, 1951
and the All India Services (Discipline and Appeal) Rules,
1955. They provided an exhaustive procedure to enquire into
the misconduct by a member of the All India Services. The
State Legislature, exercising the concurrent power, made
Jammu and Kashmir Government Servants’ Prevention of Corrup-
tion (Commission) Act, 1962. The validity thereof was ques-
tioned on the anvil of Article 254 of the Constitution.
Dealing with the subject, another Constitution Bench, speak-
ing through Sikri, C.J. held that the Commission Act empow-
ers to conduct on enquiry into the charges of corruption and
misconduct against all Government Servants including the
members of All India Services. In addition to the recommen-
dation for imposition of punishment engrafted in sub-section
(2) of Section 17 of the Commission Act, it also disquali-
fies for any public office to a specified period and also
recommendation for prosecution for an offence in a Court of
law. These details were not dealt with under the Central Act
and the Rules. From this conspectus, this Court further held
thus:
"It seems to us that in so far as the Commission Act deals
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with the infliction of disciplinary punishments it is repug-
nant to Discipline and Appeal Rules. Parliament has occupied
the field and given clear indication that this was the only
manner in which any disciplinary action should be taken
against the members of the All India Services
665
Accordingly it was held that the State Act must be read down
so as to leave the members of the All India Services outside
its purview. Thereby, by implication it was held that by
operation of Article 254 of the Constitution the Commission
Act is repugnant to the All India Services Act and Rules.
In Kerala State Electricity Board v. Indian Aluminium
Co., [1976] 1 SCR 552 another Constitution Bench of this
Court held that:
"Having discussed the question of the legislative field it
might be necessary to discuss the question as to what hap-
pens if it should be held that the matter under considera-
tion in these cases falls within the concurrent list, that
is, Entry 38 in List III as contended in the alternative by
some of the respondents. As already mentioned the question
will arise only if it should be held that the Kerala State
Act falls under Entry 38 as contended by Mr. B. Sen. If the
impugned legislation falls under List III then the question
of repugnancy of that legislation with the existing law or
the law made by Parliament as the case may be, will have to
be considered."
In Basu’s Commentary on the Constitution of India
(Silver Jubilee Edition), Volume K, at page 144, it is
stated that "the repugnancy to be found is the repugnancy in
the actual provisions of two laws and not the subject matter
of the two laws. The proper test is whether effect can be
given to the provisions of both the laws or whether both the
laws can stand together." (Emphasis added). It is trite law
that the form of the provision does not conclude the matter.
It must be the "same matter" under consideration.
Operational Incompatibility:
9. Repugnancy could also be angulated from the perspec-
tive of operational incompatibility as well. The celebrated
decision in Clyde Engineering Co. v. Cowburn, [1926] 37 CLR
466 popularly known as 44-hour case, is a leading authority
on this topic. The facts therein are that a Commonwealth
Arbitration award fixed rates of pay and overtime on the
basis of 48-hour working week while Forthfour Hours Week Act
1925 (NSW) S. 6 purported to deal with the same matter on
the basis of 44-hours working week. The respondent employee
claimed the State Act rate of pay but was denied on the
basis of 48-hours working week. When questioned, it was
argued that there was no
666
inconsistency between the award and the State Act because
the employer, it was said, could obey both laws by observing
the 44-hours working week but on the basis that the pay
scale determined by the award applied to the 44-hours work-
ing week. The High Court of Australia relying on s. 109 of
Australian Constitution rejected the argument and found that
an inconsistency existed, as the State law operated to vary
the adjustment of industrial relations established by the
Commonwealth award. Knox, C.J. held that two enactments may
be inconsistent although obedience to each of them may be
possible without disobeying the other. Statute may do more
than impose duties; they may for instance confer rights; and
one statute is inconsistent with another when it takes away
a right conferred by the other even though the right may be
one which might be waived or abandoned without disobeying
the statute which conferred it. Issacc, J. in his separate
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but concurrent judgment held:
"The vital question would be: was the second Act in its true
construction intended to cover the whole ground, and there-
fore, to supersede the first? If it was intended, then the
inconsistency would consist in giving operative effect at
all to the first Act; because the second was intended en-
tirely to exclude it. The suggested test however useful a
working guide it may be in some cases prove a test; cannot
be recognised as the standard measuring rod of inconsisten-
cy. If, however, a competent legislature expressly or im-
pliedly evinces its intention to cover the whole field, that
is a conclusive test of inconsistency where another legisla-
ture assumes to enter to any extent upon the same
field ......
If such a position as I have postulated be in fact estab-
lished the inconsistency is demonstrated not by comparison
of detailed provisions but by the existence of the two sets
of provisions; where that wholesale inconsistency does not
occur but the field in partly open, then it is necessary to
enquire further and possibly to examine and contrast partic-
ular provisions. If one enactment makes or acts upon as
lawful that which the other makes unlawful or if one enact-
ment makes unlawful that which the other makes or acts upon
as lawful, the two or to that extent inconsistent. It is
plain that it may be quite possible to obey both simply by
not doing what is declared by either to be unlawful and yet
there is palpably inconsistency. The basic reason is that
the
667
Constitution clearly intended that once the Commonwealth
settled an interstate dispute, that settlement shall stand
and that its terms should be framed by the one hand, the
other being necessarily excluded. Forty-four hours shall
constitute a week’s work. No day’s work to exceed either
hours without payment for overtime, etc."
Higgins, J. has held that:
"When is a law inconsistent with another law? Etimologically
I presume that things are inconsistent when they cannot
stand together at the same time and law is inconsistent with
another when the command or power or provision in one law
conflicts directly with the command, power or other provi-
sion of another. Where two legislations operate over the
same territory and came into collision, it is necessary that
one should prevail, but the necessity is confined to actual
collision as one legislature says ’do’ and the other says
’do not’.
(Emphasis supplied)
In that case it was held that there is operational incompat-
ibility between the Commonwealth award and the State law.
The State law was held to be void.
In Hume v. Palmer, [1926] 38 CLR 441 both New South
Wales Act and Commonwealth Act authorised making of the
Regulations dealing with collisions at sea. In both cases
regulations had been made. They were in identical terms
except that in relation to the jurisdiction to convict for
breaches. The New South Wales regulations prescribed summary
prosecution and a maximum penalty of Pound 50 whereas the
Commonwealth regulations prescribed summary prosecution on
indictment and a maximum penalty Pound 100. It was held that
the same facts produced different legal results under the
two Acts, the penalty under State law was held displaced.
In R.v. Brisbane Licensing Court, [1920] 28 CLR 23 a
section of the Commonwealth Electoral Act provided that on a
polling day fixed for a federal election, a referandum or
vote of the electors of a State or part thereof, should not
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be taken. A local option poll had been taken on such a day
under Queensland legislation. It was held that a direct
inconsistency existed, and that the local option poll was,
therefore, declared to be invalid. In Colvin v. Bradley
Bros. Pvt. Ltd., [1943] 68
668
CLR 151 an order made pursuant to a section of New South
Wales Factories and Shops Act prohibiting the employment of
women on a milling machine. An award had been made by the
Commonwealth Arbitration Court under the Conciliation and
Arbitration Act which permitted the employment of females on
work, which included work on a milling machine, unless the
work was declared to be unsuitable for women by a Board of
Reference. No such declaration had been made by the Board.
it was held that the order was inconsistent with the award
by virtue of s. 109 in that it directly prohibited something
which the Commonwealth award permitted.
In In Re Ex Parte Maclean, [1930] 43 CLR 472 at 483. Dixon
J. held:
"When the Parliament of the Commonwealth and the Parliament
of a State each legislate upon the same subject and pre-
scribe what the rule of conduct should be, they make laws
which are inconsistent notwithstanding that the rule of
conduct is identical, which each prescribes, and s. 109
applies."
It was further held that the Federal statute had evinced an
intention to cover the subject matter and provide what the
law upon it should be.
In Wenn v. Attorney General (Victoria), [1948] 77 CLR 84
the Re-establishment and Employment Act dealt with the
obligations of employers’ to give preference to ex-service-
men in employment (but included no provision as to the duty
to give preference in promotion to ex-servicemen already
employed). The State Act dealt not only with the same mat-
ter, but also included a provision requiring employers to
give preference in promotion. It was held that Commonwealth
Legislation was an exhaustive code allowing no room for the
operation of the State legislation relating to matter not
covered by the Commonwealth Act. The Victorian Law giving
preference in promotion was, therefore, held to have been
displaced.
In O’Sullivan v. Noarlunga Meat Co. Ltd., [1954] 92 CLR
565 the facts are that the South Australian Act prohibited
laughter of stock for export without a State licence while
the Commonwealth Act prohibited export of meat from stock
which had not been slaughtered on premises registered under
the regulations thereof. In an evenly divided Court, the
opinion of the Chief Justice had prevailed, it was held that
the Commonwealth regulations were detailed enough to show
that
669
they covered the whole field of ’slaughter for export’ and,
therefore, the State licensing requirement did not apply. On
further appeal the Judicial Committee in O. Sullivan v.
Noarlunga Meat Co. Ltd., [1957] AC 1 at 28 added that "in
applying this principle it is important to bear in mind that
the relevant field or subject is that covered by the law
said to be invalid."
In Australian Federal Constitutional Law by Collin
Howard, Second Edition (1972). at page 27, it was stated
that where both a Commonwealth Law and a State law are in
terms applicable to a given set of facts, and they produce
conflicting legal results on those facts, the Commonwealth
law applies and not the State law. In Blackley v. Devondale
Cream (Vie.) Pvt. Ltd., [1968] 117 CLR 253, a State wages
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determination prescribed a minimum rate of pay for certain
work which was also covered by a Commonwealth award. The
Commonwealth award prescribed a lower minimum rate. It was
held that there was a direct inconsistence because on the
same facts the two laws produced different entitlements. The
award rate, therefore, prevailed over the State’s determina-
tion.
10. REPEAL BY IMPLICATION:
Sub-s. (1) of s. 217 of the Act repeals thus:
"The Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, and any law corresponding to
that Act in force in any State immediately before the com-
mencement of this Act (hereafter in this section referred to
as the repeal enactments) are hereby repealed."
(The other sub-sections are not relevant. Hence omitted. )
(Emphasis
supplied)
Thereby s.217(1) does not expressly repeal sections 14(1)
and 20(3) of the Acquisition Act. In Zaveribhai v. State of
Bombay, [1955] 1 SCR 799 relied on by Sri Nariman, the facts
were that s. 7 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers)
Act, 1949 provides penalty for contravention of orders
issued under s. 3 for a term of three years or with fine or
with both. The Bombay Legislature amended the Act, by Act 52
of 1950. Section 2 of the Amendment Act provides that ’-
notwithstanding anything contained in Essential Supplies
(Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, whoever contravenes an order
made under Sec. 3 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary
Powers) Act, shall be punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to seven years but shall not,
670
except for reasons to be recorded in writing, be less than
six months and shall also be liable to fine". Thus, the
Bombay Act imposes minimum sentence while indicating maximum
sentence and obtained the assent of the President. Later,
the Central Act was amended in 1948, 1949 and 1950. In 1950
Act, Sec. 7 categorised three groups of offences covering
the same field and imposd graded sentences depending on the
character of the offence and the nature of the commodity
contravened. The Bombay Act was challenged on the ground
that it was repugnant and was repealed by implication.
Venkatarama Iyer, J. speaking for the Constitution Bench
held that repugnancy might result when both the legislations
cover the same field. It was further held:
"The important thing to consider with reference to this
provision is whether the legislation in ’in respect of the
same matter.’ If the later legislation deals not with the
matters which formed the subject of the earlier legislation
but with other and distinct matters though of a cognate and
allied character, then Art. 254(2) will have no application.
The principle embodied in s. 107(2) and Art. 254(2) is that
when there is legislation covering the same ground both by
the Centre and by the Province, both of them being competent
to enact the same, the law of the Centre should prevail over
that of the State."
It was further held that though there is no express repeal,
even then the State law will be void under the proviso if it
conflicts with later law with respect to the same matter
that may be enacted by the Parliament. The principle on
which the rule of implied repeal rests, namely, that if the
subject matter of later legislation is identical with that
of the earlier, so that they cannot both stand together then
the earlier is repealed by the later enactment, will be
equally applicable to a question under Art. 254(2) where the
further legislation by Parliament is in respect of the same
matter as that of the State law. Accordingly, it was held
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that Sec. 2 of the Bombay Act, No. 36 of 1947 cannot prevail
as against Sec. 7 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary
Powers) Act as amended by Act 52 of 1950.
The doctrine of repugnancy and implied repeal was again
considered by this Court in M. Karunanidhi v. Union of
India, [1979] 3 SCR 254 where the Tamil Nadu Public Men
(Criminal Misconduct) Act (2 of 1974) was assailed to be
repugnant to the Indian Penal Code and the Prevention of
Corruption Act 1947. In considering that question, Fazal
Ali, J. speaking for the Constitution Bench held:
671
"... So far as the Concurrent List is concerned, both Par-
liament and the State Legislatures are entitled to legislate
in regard to any of the Entries appearing therein, but that
is subject to the condition laid down by Art. 254(1).
Where the provisions of the Central Act and a State Act in
the Concurrent List are fully inconsistent and are absolute-
ly irreconciliable, the Central Act will prevail and the
State Act will become void in view of the repugnancy.
Where, however, a law passed by the State comes into colli-
sion with a law passed by Parliament on an Entry in the
Concurrent List, the State Act shall prevail to the extent
of the repugnancy and the provisions of the Central Act
would become void provided the State Act has been passed in
accordance with CI. (2) of Art. 254.
Where a law passed by the State Legislature the entries in
the State List entrenches upon any of the entries in the
Central List the consitutionality of the law may be upheld
by invoking the doctrine on a subject covered by the Concur-
rent List is inconsistent with and repugnant to a previous
law made by the Parliament, then such a law can be protected
by obtaining the assent of the President under Art. 254(2)
of the Construction. The result of obtaining the assent of
the President would be that so far as the State Act is
concerned, it will prevail in the State and overrule the
provisions of the Central Act in their applicability to the
State only. Such a state of affairs will exist only until
Parliament may at any time make a law adding to, or amend-
ing, varying or repealing the law made by the State Legisla-
ture under the proviso to Article 254."
Dealing with the question of repeal by implication, it was
held that there is no repeal by implication unless the
inconsistency appears on the face of the two statutes that
where two statutes occupy a particular field but there is a
room or possibility of both the statutes operating in the
same field without coming into collision with each other, no
repugnancy results and that where there is no inconsistency,
a statute occupying the same field seeks to create distinct
and separate offence, no question of repugnancy arises and
both the statutes continue to operate in the same field. On
a comparison of the relevant provisions of the ,impugned Act
and the Central Acts, it was not repealed by implication.
672
In T. Barai v. Henry Ah Hoe, [1983] 1 SCR 905 relied on
by. Sri Nariman, the facts are that for an offence under
Sec. 16(1)(a) read with Sec. 7 of the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, 1954, prescribed maximum punishment of six
years. But the West Bengal Legislature amended the Central
Act with effect from April 29, 1974 by the Prevention of
Adulteration of Food, Drugs and Cosmatics (West Bengal)
(Amendment) Act, 1973, providing punishment with imprison-
ment for life and triable by a Court of Sessions. It had
received the assent of the President. Later on the Parlia-
ment amended the Section (Section 16(a) and also introduced
Section 16-A in 1976 to the Prevention of Food Adulteration
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Act, 1954, imposing punishment of three years. Both the
enactments have been made in exercise of the concurrent
power. In considering the question whether the State Act
became void, A.P. Sen J. speaking for three Judges’ Bench
has held thus:
"There is no doubt or difficulty as to the law applicable.
Art. 254 of the Constitution makes provision firstly, as to
what would happen in the case of conflict between a Central
and State Law with regard to the subjects enumerated in the
Concurrent List. and secondly, for resolving such conflict,
Art. 254(1) enunciates the normal rule that in the event of
a conflict between a Union and a State Law in the concurrent
field, the former prevails over the latter. Clause (1) lays
down that if a State law relating to a concurrent subject is
’repugnant’ to a Union law relating to that subject, then,
whether the Union law is prior or later in time, the Union
law will prevail and the State law shall. to the extent of
such repugnancy, be void. To the general rule laid down in
Clause (1), Clause (2) engrafts an exception, viz., that if
the President assents to a State law which has been reserved
for his consideration, it will prevail notwithstanding its
repugnancy to an earlier law of the Union, both laws dealing
with a concurrent subject. In such a case, the Central Act
will give way to the State Act only to the extent of incon-
sistency between the two, and no more. in short, the result
of obtaining the assent of the President to a State Act
which is inconsistent with a previous Union law relating to
a concurrent subject would be that the State Act will pre-
vail in that State and override the provisions of the Cen-
tral Act in their applicability to that State only. The
predominance of the State law may, however, be taken away if
Parliament legislate under the proviso to Clause (2). The
proviso to Art. 254(2) empowers the Union Parliament to
673
repeal or amend a repugnant State law even though it has
become valid by virtue of the President’s assent. Parliament
may repeal or amend the repugnant State law, either direct-
ly, or by itself enacting a law repugnant to the State law
with respect to the ’same matter’. Even though the subse-
quent law made by Parliament does not expressly repeal a
State law, even then, the State law will become void as soon
as the subsequent law of Parliament creating repugnancy is
made. A State law would be repugnant to the Union law when
there is direct conflict between the two laws. Such repug-
nancy may also arise where both laws operate in the same
field and the two cannot possibly stand together, e.g. where
both prescribe punishment for the same offence but the
punishment differs in degree or kind or in the procedure
prescribed, In all such cases, the law made by Parliament
shall prevail over the State law under Art. 254(1). That
being so, when Parliament stepped in and enacted the Central
Amendment Act, it being a latter law made by Parliament
’with respect to the same matter’, the West Bengal Amendment
Act stood impliedly repealed."
In M/s Hoeshst Pharmaceuticals Ltd. v. State of Bihar,
[1983] 3 SCR 130 the Bihar Finance Act, 1981 was made in
exercise of the power under Entry 54 of List II of Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution amending and repealing the
previous Act providing therein to levy tax on sale or pur-
chase of goods. Section 5(1) imposes levy of surcharge on
every dealer whose gross turnover during an year exceeds
Rupees Five lakhs, in addition to the tax payable by him at
such rate not exceeding 10 per cent of the total amount of
tax. Sub-s. (3) of s. (5) prohibits such dealer from col-
lecting the amount of surcharge from the purchasers. The
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Essential Commodities Act made under Entry 33 of the Concur-
rent List III empowering the Government to fix prices of the
essential commodities including drugs, medicines, etc. It
was contended that by operation of sub-s. (1) of s. 5, the
State Act is repugnant and is void. In considering that
question, A.P. Sen, J. speaking for three Judges’ Bench held
that both the Union and the State Legislature have concur-
rent powers of legislation with respect to any of the mat-
ters enumerated in List 111, subject only to the proviso
contained in el. (2) of Art. 254, i.e. provided the State
Act do not conflict with those of any Central Act on the
subject .... The question of repugnancy arises only when
both legislatures are competent to legislature in the same
field, i.e. when both Union and the State laws relate
674
to a specified subject in List III and occupy the same
field. Yet another place it was held that it is only when
both these requirements are fulfilled that the State law
will, to the extent of repugnancy became void. Art. 254(1)
has no application to the cases of repugnancy due to over-
lapping found between List II on the one hand and Lists I
and II on the other. If such overlapping exists in any
particular case, State law will be ultra vires because of
the non obstenti clause in Art. 246(1) read with opening
words--"Subject to" Art. 246(3). In such cases, the State
law will fail not because of repugnance in the Union List
but due to want of legislative competence. Repugnancy arises
where there is a direct conflict or collision between the
Central Act and the State Legislation and to the extent of
repugnancy by necessary implication or by express reference
the State legislation stands repealed."
11. It is true, as tightly contended by Mr. Sanghi, that
ss. 14 and 20 are consequential or ancillary to s. 4 of the
Acquisition Act 21 of 1976 which had received the assent of
the President. Its constitutionality was upheld by seven
Judges’ Bench of this Court, when the legislative competence
was assailed on the anvil of Entry 42 of List I of the
Seventh Schedule, but not on the touchstone of proviso to
cl. (2) of Art. 254 which gives overriding power to the
Parliament to make any law or amend, vary, modify or repeal
the law made by a State Legislature. Ranganatha Reddy’s
ratio, thereby, does not stand an impediment to go into the
validity of ss. 14 and 20 of the Acquisition Act.
12. The result of the above discussion leads to the
following conclusions:
(a) The doctrine of repugnancy or inconsistency under Art.
254 of the Constitution would arise only when the Act or
provision/ provisions in an Act made by the Parliament and
by a State Legislature on the same matter must relate to the
Concurrent List III of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution;
must occupy the same field and must be repugnant to each
other;
(b) In considering repugnance under Art. 254 the question of
legislative competence of a State Legislature does not arise
since the Parliament and the Legislature of a State have
undoubted power and jurisdiction to make law on a subject,
i.e. in respect of that matter. In other words, same matter
enumerated in the Concurrent List has occupied the field.
(c) If both the pieces of legislation deal with separate and
dis-
675
tinct matters though of cognate and allied character repug-
nancy does not arise.
(d) It matters little whether the Act/Provision or Provi-
sions in an Act falls under one or other entry or entries in
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the Concurrent List. The substance of the "same matter
occupying the same field by both the pieces of the legisla-
tion is material" and not the form. The words "that matter"
connotes identity of "the matter" and not their proximity.
The circumstances or motive to make the Act/Provision or
Provisions in both the pieces of legislation are irrelevant.
(e) The repugnancy to be found is the repugnancy of Act/
provision/Provisions of the two laws and not the predoninant
object of the subject matter of the two laws.
(f) Repugnancy or inconsistency may arise in diverse ways,
which are only illustrative and not exhaustive:
(i) There may be direct repugnancy between the two provi-
sions;
(ii) Parliament may evince its intention to cover the whole
same field by laying down an exhaustive code in respect
thereof displacing the State Act, provision or provisions in
that Act. The Act of the Parliament may be either earlier or
subsequent to the State law;
(iii) Inconsistency may be demonstrated, not necessarily by
a detailed comparison of the provisions of the two pieces of
law but by their very existence in the statutes;
(iv) Occupying the same field; operational incompatibility;
irreconcilability or actual collision in their operation in
the same territory by the Act/provision or provisions of the
Act made by the Parliament and their counter parts in a
State law are some of the true tests;
(v) Intention of the Parliament to occupy the same field
held by the State Legislature may not be expressly stated
but may be implied which may be gethered by examination of
the relevant provisions of the two pieces of the legislation
occupying the same field;
676
(vi) If one Act/Provision/Provisions in an Act makes lawful
that which the other declares unlawful the two to that
extent are inconsistent or repugnant. The possibility of.
obeying both the laws by waiving the beneficial part in
either set of the provisions is no sure test;
(vii) If the Parliament makes law conferring right/obliga-
tion/ privilege on a citizen/person and enjoins the authori-
ties to obey the law but if the State law denies the self
same rights or privileges negates the obligation or freezes
them and injuncts the authorities to invite or entertain an
application and to grant the right/privilege conferred by
the Union law subject to the condition imposed therein the
two provisions run on a collision course and repugnancy
between the two pieces of law arises thereby;
(viii) Parliament may also repeal the State law either
expressly or by necessary implication but Courts would not
always favour repeal by implication. Repeal by implication
may be found when the State law is repugnant or inconsistent
with the Union law in its scheme or operation etc. anti
conflicting results would ensue when both the laws are
applied to a given same set of facts or cannot stand togeth-
er or one law says do and other law says do not do. In other
words, the Central law declares an act or omission lawful
while the State law says them unlawful or prescribes irrec-
oncilable penalties/punishments of different kind, degree or
variation in procedure etc. The inconsistency must appear on
the face of the impugned statutes/provision/provisions
therein;
(ix) If both the pieces of provisions occupying the same
field do not deal with the same matter but distinct, though
cognate or allied character, there is no repeal by implica-
tion;
(x) The Court should endeavour to give effect to both the
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pieces of legislation as the Parliament and the legislature
of a State are empowered by the Constitution to make laws on
any subject or subjects enumerated in the Concurrent List
III of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. Only when it
finds the incompatibility or irresconcilability of both
Acts/provision or provisions, or the two laws cannot stand
together, the Court is entitled to declare the State law to
be void or repealed by implication; and
(xi) The assent of the President of India under Art. 254(2)
given to a State law/provision, provisions therein accord
only opera-
677
tional validity though repugnant to the Central law but by
subsequent law made by the Parliament or amendment/modifica-
tion, variation or repeal by an act of Parliament renders
the State law void. The previous assent given by the Presi-
dent does not blow life into a void law.
Scope and operation of Rule of Pith and Substance and pre-
doninant purpose vis-a-vis Concurrent List.
13. The further question is whether the doctrines of
dominant purpose and pith and substance would be applied to
the matter covered under the Concurrent List. in my consid-
ered view, they do not apply. The doctrine of pith and
substance primarily concerns in determining the legislative
competence. The idea underlying the detailed distribution of
legislative powers in three Lists was to ensure that Parlia-
ment and State Legislatures should keep themselves within
the spheres allocated to them in List I and vice versa in
List II respectively. However, legislation is a very compli-
cated matter as it reflects life, which itself is a compli-
cated one. Hence, it is sometimes inevitable that a law
passed by the Parliament may trench upon the domain of the
State Legislature and vice versa. Would such incidental
encroachment on the territory of the other invalidates the
legislation? In examining this question and finding a solu-
tion, the Courts try to save the legislation from unconsti-
tutionality by applying the flexible rule of pith and sub-
stance. It is not that the Courts encourage one legislature
to encroach upon the legislative field of another legisla-
ture but merely recognise the reality that despite the
strict demarcation of legislative fields to respective
legislatures, it is not always possible to effectuate a
legislative purpose without incidental encroachment on
another’s field. In such a situation the Courts try to find
out the pith and substance of the legislation. If the legis-
lation is found in its pith and substance, within the legis-
lative competence of the particular legislature, it is held
to be valid, despite incidental encroachment on the legisla-
tive power of another legislature. Thus, the rule of pith
and substance is applied to determine whether the impugned
legislation is within that competence under Arts. 246(1) and
246(3) of the Constitution, and to resolve the conflict of
jurisdiction. If the Act in its pith and substance falls in
one List it must be deemed not to fall in another List,
despite incidental encroachment and its validity should be
determined accordingly. The pith and substance rule, there-
by, solves the problem of overlapping of "any two entries of
two different List vis-a-vis the Act" on the basis of an
inquiry into the "true nature and character" of the legisla-
tion. The Court examines the legislation as a whole and
tries
678
to find whether the impugned law is substantially within the
competence of the Legislature which enacted it, even if it
incidentally trespasses into the legislative field of anoth-
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er Legislature. In a case where the question of validity of
an act arises, it may be that the topic underlying the
provisions of the Act may in one view of the matter falls
within the power of the Centre, and on another view within
the power of the States. When this happens, it is necessary
to examine the pith and substance of the impugned legisla-
tion; and to see whether in its pith and substance it fails
within one, or the other of the Legislative Lists. As stated
earlier the constitutionality of the Impugned Act is not
determined by the degrees of invasion into the domain as-
signed to the other legislature but its pith and substance
and its true nature and character to find whether the matter
fails within the domain of the enacting legislature. The
incidental or ancillary encroachment into forbidden field
does not effect the competence of the legislature to make
the impugned law.
14. From this scenerio let us peep into few important
decisions touching the subject. In Prafulla Kumar v. Bank of
Commerce, Khulna, AIR 1947 PC 60 the question was whether
the Bengal Moneylenders Act (10 of 1940) is ultra vires by
reason of Schedule 7, List II, Items 28 and 38 of the Gov-
ernment of India Act, 1935, and thereby is void. In consid-
ering that question, the Judicial Committee held as culled
out in Head note (b) thus:
"It is not possible to make a clean cut between the powers
of the Federal and Provincial Legislatures. They are bound
to overlap and where they do the question to be considered
is what is the pith and substance of the impugned enactment
and in what list is its true nature and character to be
found. The extent of invasion by the Provinces into subjects
in Federal List is an important matter not because the
validity of a Provincial Act can be determined by discrimi-
nating between degrees of invasion but for determining the
pith and substance of the impugned Act. The question is not
has it trespassed more or less but is the trespass, whatever
it be, such as to show that the pith and substance of the
impugned Act is not a Provincial matter but a Federal mat-
ter. Once that is determined the Act falls on one or the
other side of the line and can be seen as valid or invalid
according to its true import.
No doubt where they come in conflict List I has priority
679
over Lists III and II and List III has priority over List II
but in each case one has to consider what the substance of
an Act is and whatever its ancillary effect, attribute it to
the appropriate list according to its true character"
This leading ratio formed foundation in countless cases
decided by this Court. In State of Bombay v.F.N. Balsara, [
1951] SCR 682 it was held that:
"It is well settled that the validity of an Act is not
affected if it incidentally trenches on matters outside the
authorised field and, therefore, it is necessary to enquire
in each case what is the pith and substance of the Act
impugned. If the Act, when so viewed, substantially falls
within the powers expressly conferred upon the Legislature
which enacted it then it cannot be held to be invalid merely
because it incidentally encroaches on matters which have
been assigned to another Legislature."
In Atiabari Tea Co. Ltd. v. State of Assam, [1961] 1 SCR 809
Gajendragadkar, J. (as he then was) speaking per majority,
has explained the purpose of the rule of pith and substance
thus:
"The test of pith and substance is generally and more appro-
priately applied when a dispute arises as to the legislative
competence of the legislature, and it has to be resolved by
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reference to the entries to which the impugned legislation
is relateable, when there is a conflict between the two
entries in the legislative list, and legislation by refer-
ence to one entry would be competent but not by reference to
other, the doctrine of pith and substance is invoked for the
purpose of determining the true nature and character of the
legislation in question."
In Meghraj & Ors. v. Allaharakhiya & Ors., AIR 1942 FC 27
relied on by Sri Nariman, the contention raised was that
when the matter in the Concurrent List had occupied the
flied whether the question of pith and substance of the
impugned Act would arise? The Federal Court held that when
the Provincial Act is objected to as contravening not Sec.
100 but Sec. 107(1) of the Government of India Act 1935,
which is in pari materia to Art. 254 of the Constitution,
that the question of pith and substance of the impugned Act
does not arise. In Tika Ramji’s case, the same question had
arisen for resolution. It was held that--
680
"The pith.and substance argument also cannot be imported
here for the simple reason that when both the Centre as well
as the State Legislatures were operating in the Concurrent
field. there was no question of any trespass upon the exclu-
sive jurisdiction vested in the Centre under Entry 52 of
List I, the only question which survived being whether,
putting both the pieces of legislation enacted by the Centre
and the State legislature together, there was any repugnancy
a contention which will be dealt with hereafter."
I have no hesitation to hold that the doctrine of pith
and substance on the predoninant purpose, or true nature and
character of the law have no application when the matter in
question is covered by an entry or entries in the Concurrent
List and has occupied the same field both in the Union and
the State Law. It matters little as to in which entry or
entries in the Concurrent List the subject-matter falls or
in exercise whereof the Act/provision or provisions therein
was made. The Parliament and Legislature of the State have
exclusive power to legislate upon any subject or subjects in
a Concurrent List. The question of incidental or ancillary
encroachment or to trench into forbidder field does not
arise. The determination of its ’true nature and character’
also is immaterial.
15. Power to legislate whether derived from the con-
cerned Articles or legislative lists in Seventh Schedule
16. Parliament and the Legislature of any state derive
their power from Art. 246(2) of the Constitution to make
laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List
III of the VIIth Schedule to the Constitution. With a non-
obstanti clause engrafted therein namely notwithstanding
anything in Clause ? the Parliament, and, subject to Clause
1, the Legislature of any State also have power to make laws
with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List III.
List III of Seventh Schedule enumerates the legislative
heads over which the appropriate Legislature can operate.
The function of the list is not to confer power on either
the Parliament or a State Legislature. Article 254 of the
Constitition removes the inconsistency between the law made
by the Parliament and by the Legislatures of States. Thus
the power to legislate on the Concurrent List is derived by
the Parliament and the Legislature of any State from Article
246(2) read with Article 254 only. Paramouncy to the law
made by the Parliament is given by Article 254(1) and provi-
so to Article 254(2). The Parliament derives its exclusive
power under Article 246(1) to legislate upon any of the
681
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subjects enumerated in List I of the Seventh Schedule in the
Constitution. Similarly the Legislature of a State derives
its exclusive power from Article 246(3) to make laws on any
matters in List II. When the Parliament or the Legislature
of a State while making legislation within its exclusive
domain, namely, List I or List II respectively if it inci-
dentally trenches upon the forbidden flied, namely, the
field demarcated or distributed to the State Legislature and
vice versa by the Legislature into List I the doctrine of
Pith and Substance was applied to find the "true purpose and
character of the Legislation". In considering the question
of the doctrine of Pith and Substance in Subrahmanyam Chet-
tiar v. Muttuswami Goundan, A.I.R. 1941 F.C. 47 at p. 51
held that it must inevitably happen from time to time that
legislation, though purporting to deal with a subject in one
list, touches also on a subject in another list, and the
different provisions of the enactment may be so closely
intertwined that blind adherence to a strictly verbal inter-
pretation would result in a large number of statutes being
declared invalid because the Legislature enacting them may
appear to have legislated in a forbidden sphere. Hence the
rule which has been evolved by the Judicial Committee where-
by the impugned statute is examined to ascertain its "pith
and substance", or its "true nature and character", for the
purpose of determining whether it is legislation with re-
spect to matters in this list or in that. In that case the
question was whether the Madras Agriculturists Relief Act 4
of 1938, Section 8 thereto is invalid, since the matter is
in Schedule VII, List I or List II of the Government of
India Act, 1935. The contention was that the negotiable
instrument; promissory notes are covered by List I of the
Seventh Schedule, therefore, the Act is invalid. In consid-
ering that question and negativing the contention the above
ratio was enunciated.
(emphasis supplied)
In Governor General in Council v. The Reliegh Investment Co.
Ltd., [1944] F.C.R. 229 at p. 261 in considering the ques-
tion whether the Federal Legislature’s power is not limited
to cases specified in clauses (a) to (e) of sub-section (2)
of Section 99 from Entry No. 23 of the List I of the Seventh
Schedule; it was held by Spens, C.J. that it would not be
right that the Legislature would derive the power to legis-
late on this topic merely from the reference to it in the
List, because the purpose of the Lists was not to create or
confer powers, but only to distribute between the Federal
and the Provincial Legislatures, the powers which had been
conferred by Section 99 and 100.
(emphasis added)
682
In Harakchand Ratanchand Banthia v. Union of India,
[1970] 1 SCR 479 at p. 489 the Constitution Bench speaking
through Ramaswami, J. dealing with the Gold (Control) Act
(45 of 1968) observed thus:
"Before construing these entries it is useful to notice some
of the well-settled rules of interpretation laid down by the
Federal Court and by this Court in the matter of construing
the entries. The power to legislate is given to the appro-
priate legislature by Article 246 of the Constitution. The
entries in the three Lists are only legislative heads or
fields of legislation; they demarcate the area over which
the appropriate legislatures can operate."
(emphasis added)
In Union of India v.H.S. Dhillion, [1972] 2 SCR 33 at p.
52 Sikri, C.J. speaking per majority of Seven Judges’ Bench
held that it must be remembered that the function of the
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lists is not to confer powers; they merely demarcate the
legislative field. The Constitution Bench followed the ratio
in Releigh Investment case, etc.
(emphasis supplied)
16. Thus I hold that the Parliament and the legislature
of a State derive their power to legislate on a
subject/subjects in Lists I and List II of Seventh Schedule
to the Constitution from Art. 246(1) and (3) respectively.
Both derive their power from Art. 246(2) to legislate upon a
matter in the Concurrent List III subject to Art. 254 of the
Constitution. The respective lists merely demarcate the
legislative field or legislative heads. The Parliament and
the legislature of a State have concurrent power to legis-
late upon any subject/subjects in the Concurrent list III of
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. Art. 254(1) and provi-
so to Art. 254(2) give paramouncy to the law made by the
Parliament, whether existing or made afresh or amended,
modified, added or repealing the law subsequent in point of
time to the state law made under Art. 254(2). The exercise
of the power by a state legislature to make impugned law
under one entry or other in the concurrent list is not
decisive. The concerned entry or entries is not the source
of power to make impugned law.
17. Keeping the principles laid hereinbefore at the back
of our mind, let us consider the impugned provision. Section
14 read with s. 20 of the Acquisition Act (21 of 1976)
freezed the right of a citizen to apply for an to obtain
permit or special permit to run a contract car-
683
riage in terms of the permit and monopoly to run a contract
carriage was conferred on the S.T.U., Karnataka. But the Act
evinces its intention to liberalise the grant of contract
carriage permit by saying in s. 80(2) that the Regional
Transport Authority "shall not ordinarily refuse to grant
the permit." It also confers the right on an applicant to
apply for and authorises and Regional Transport Authority to
grant liberally contract carriage permit except in the area
covered by s. 80(3) and refusal appears to be an exception,
that too, obviously for reasons to be recorded. It may be
rejected if the permit applied for relate to an approved or
notified route. The Act accords the right, while the Acqui-
sition Act negates and freezes the self-same right to obtain
a permit and to run a contract carriage and prohibits the
authorities to invite or entertain an application and to
grant a permit to run contract carriage. the Act and the
relevant rules cover the entire field of making an applica-
tion in the prescribed manner and directs the Regional
Transport Authority to grant permit with condition attached
thereto to run contract carriages vide ss. 66(1), 73, 74 and
80 of the Act. Thus, the existence of two sets of provisions
in the Act 59 of 1988 and Acquisition Act 21 of 1976 is
sufficient to produce conflicting results in their operation
in the same occupied field. The two sets of provisions run
on collision course, though an applicant may waive to make
an application for a permit. Thereby, there exists the
operational incompatibility and irreconcilability of the two
sets of provisions. Sections 14(1) and 20(3) of the Acquisi-
tion Act are repugnant and inconsistent of ss. 73, 74 and 80
of the Act. By operation of proviso to Art. 254(2) of the
Constitution, the embargo created by ss. 14(1) and 20(3) of
the Acquisition Act (21 of 1976) to make or invite an appli-
cation and injunction issued to Regional Transport Authority
prohibiting to grant contract carriage permit to anyone
except to S.T.U., Karnataka within the State of Karnataka
became void.
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18. For the applicability of the principle that special
law prevails over the general law, the special law must be a
valid law in operation. Voidity of law obliterates it from
the statute from its very inception. In view of the finding
that ss. 14(1) and 20(3) are void the contention that the
special law prevails over the general law is without sub-
stance. In Justiniano Augusto De Peidada Barreto v. Antonia
Vicento De Fonseca & Ors., [1979] 3 SCR 494 s. 5(1) of the
Goa, Daman and Diu (Administration) Act, 1962 declared that
all laws in force immediately before December 20, 1961 in
Goa, Daman and Diu or in part thereof shall continue to be
in force therein until amended or repealed by a competent
Legislature or other competent authority. Pursuant to the
powers conferred by Art. 240 of the Constitution, the Presi-
dent pro-
684
mulgated Goa, Daman and Diu (Laws) Regulations from time to
time. These regulations were extended with specified modifi-
cation to Goa, Daman and Diu like Civil Procedure Code, 1908
and the Arbitration Act, 1940, but the Limitation Act, 1908
was not extended by any regulation made by the President.
The Portuguese Civil Code inter alia provides limitation to
lay suits which is different from the periods prescribed in
Limitation Act 1963. It was contended that the Portuguese
Civil Code is void by operation of Art. 254 of the Constitu-
tion. While considering this question this Court at page 500
has stated thus:
"We are not here concerned with the provisions of cl.
(2). For the purpose of the present appeals, we will assume
that the Portuguese Civil Code which was continued by Par-
liament to be in force in Goa, Daman and Diu was a law made
by the State, though there may be several objections to so
doing .... Without doubt the provisions of the Portuguese
Civil Code, unless they are saved by s. 29(2) of the Limita-
tion Act, are repugnant to the provisions of the Portuguese
Civil Code are saved by s. 29(2) then there can be no ques-
tion of any repugnancy. So the question whether the provi-
sions of Portuguese Civil Code are void on the ground that
they are repugnant to the provisions of the Limitation Act
depends on the question whether the Portuguese Civil Code is
saved by s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act, 1963."
After exhaustive consideration of that question it was held
by Chinnappa Reddy, J. speaking for a bench of two Judges
that the provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code deal with
the subject of limitation of suits etc. and in force in the
Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu only is ’local law’
within the meaning of s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act and
they have to read into the Limitation Act 1963, as if the
schedule to the Limitation Act is amended mutatis mutandis
Thus, it is clear that the question of repugnancy in cl.
(2)of’Art. 245 did not arise in that case. On the other
hand, operation of Portuguese Civil Code was saved by s.
29(2) of the Limitation Act as a local law.
20. The doctrine of predominant purpose of Acquisition
Act (21 of 1976) as discussed by my learned brothers is to
achieve the objective of preventing the flagrant and blatant
misuse or abuse of the contract carriages as stage carriages
by eliminating that class of private pliers from all Karna-
taka roads I am in complete agreement with it. It is a
laudable object to subserve public purpose. But the opera-
tion of its incidental or ancillary provisions, i.e. Arts.
14(1) and 20(3) to the
685
primary or predominant purpose is nailed by the
altered/situation, viz., making the law under the Act 59 of
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1988. It is already held that Art. 254 applies only to
repugnancy arising between an existing or subsequent Union
law and State law on any one or more subjects in the Concur-
rent List III of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. The
inconsistency arising between laws on the other two Lists,
i.e. Lists I and II, of Seventh Schedule to the Constitu-
tion, has been taken care of by the opening non obstenti
clause of Art. 246(1) of the Constitution which gives Su-
premacy of List I over List II/Laws made by Parliament in
its residuary jurisdiction will be governed by the same
provision because Art. 248 is to be read with Entry 97 of
List I. Same is the position under Art. 252 of the Constitu-
tion. Once Parliament has made a law under that Article on a
matter in State List, the Legislatures of those States on
whose resolution the law was passed by Parliament or which
subsequently adopt it ceases to have a power to make a law
relating to that matter, and, therefore, there is no ques-
tion of retaining any legislative competence to make law on
that matter. Same should De the position under Art. 253 of
the Constitution. The position under temporary measures are,
therefor dealt with by Art. 251 that in case of inconsisten-
cy between the Union and State law, the former shall prevail
and the latter will be only ’inoperative’ but not ’null and
void’. Under Arts. 252 and 253, the loss of legislative
power of the States is complete and, thereafter, the States
can no longer make any law on a subject on which Parliament
has made a law and, therefore, their existing laws and any
laws that they may venture to make in future will be null
and void and for that matter Art. 254(1) cannot be invoked.
But that is not the case with matter enumerated in the
Concurrent List. The State Legislature did not surrenderated
power or jurisdiction. The Parliament, with a view to lay
down general principles makes law or amends the existing
law. The State Legislature still may feel that its local
conditions may demand amendment or modification of the
Central law. Their reserve power is Art. 254(2). If the
Parliament expressly repeals the repugnant law made under
Art. 254(2) different considerations may arise for which no
final pronouncement is needed here. It is already found that
ss. 14(1) and 20(3) of the Acquisition Act (21 of 1976)
became void. But after making the Act 59 of 1988, the power
of the State Legislature under Art. 254(2) is not exhausted
and is still available to be invoked from time to time
Though, there is opposite school of juristic thought, in my
considered view the interpretation I have but up will sub-
serve the animation of the rounding fathers of the Constitu-
tion; the Constitutional Scheme and purpose envisioned by
Art. 254. Therefore, after the Act has come into force, the
State legislature has its reserve power under Art. 254(2)
686
to make law. But unless it again enacts law and reserves it
for consideration and obtains the assent of the President
afresh, there is no prohibition for the petitioners to make
applications for the grant of contract carriage permits
under the Act and consideration and grant or refusal thereof
according to law by the concerned Regional Transport Author-
ity. It is, therefore, made clear that this order does not
preclude the Karnataka State Legislature to make afresh the
law similar to ss. 14(1) and 20(3) of the Acquisition Act
with appropriate phraseology and to obtain the assent of the
President. The authorities have misconstrued the effect of
the Act.
21. Accordingly I hold that s. 14(1) to the extent of
prohibiting to make fresh application for grant of permits
to run the contract carriages other than those acquired
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under Act 21 of 1976 (Acquisition Act) and the embargo and
prohibition created under s. 20(3) thereof on the respective
Regional Transport Authority in the State of Karnataka to
invite/receive the application to consider the grant of
permits to such contract carriages according to law, are
hereby, declared to be void.
22. The writ petitions are accordingly allowed, but, in
the circumstances, without costs.
P.S.S. Petitions
dismissed.
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