Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KESHAVAN MADHAVA MENON
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/01/1951
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
CITATION:
1951 AIR 128 1951 SCR 228
CITATOR INFO :
MV 1951 SC 253 (30,31)
F 1952 SC 235 (3,5,9,23,24,25)
E 1952 SC 339 (15)
R 1953 SC 156 (16)
D 1953 SC 394 (8)
RF 1954 SC 158 (13)
R 1955 SC 13 (14)
R 1955 SC 123 (34,50,51,65)
R 1955 SC 781 (9)
RF 1956 SC 503 (13)
F 1957 SC 397 (43)
F 1957 SC 540 (25)
F 1958 SC 86 (22)
D 1958 SC 468 (40)
E 1959 SC 149 (45,60,92,93)
F 1959 SC 648 (19,21,23,25,33)
R 1960 SC 862 (15)
R 1962 SC1737 (14)
RF 1963 SC1019 (15,23)
D 1964 SC1284 (18,20)
RF 1970 SC 470 (26)
R 1972 SC 425 (17)
RF 1972 SC2205 (26)
RF 1973 SC1461 (26)
RF 1974 SC1300 (28,30,32,33)
RF 1979 SC 25 (38,40)
RF 1979 SC 602 (6)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 13 (1)--Whether retro-
spective --Prosecution for contravention of Indian Press
(Emergency Powers) Act, 1931, ss. 15, 18--Constitution
passed during pendency of prosecution--Laws inconsistent
with fundamental rights declared void-Whether prosecution
can be continued--Absence of provision saving pending’
proceedings--Effect of--Expiry of temporary laws or
repeal of laws, and laws becoming void by statutory declara-
tion-Difference--Interpretation--Spirit of the Constitution.
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HEADNOTE:
Held by the Court (KANIA C.J., PATANJALI SASTRI, MEHR
CHAND MAHAJAN, DAS and CHANDRASEKHARA AIYAR JJ.--FAZL ALI
and MUKHERJEA JJ., dissenting)--Article 13(1) of the Indian
Constitution does not make existing laws which are incon-
sistent with fundamental rights void ab initio, but only
renders such laws ineffectual and void with respect to the
exercise of fundamental rights on and after the date of the
commencement of the Constitution. It has no retrospective
effect, and if therefore an act was done before the com-
mencement of the new Constitution in contravention of the
provisions of any law which was a valid law at the time of
the commission of the act, a prosecution for such an act,
which was commenced before the Constitution came into force
can be proceeded with and the accused punished according to
that law. even after the commencement of the new Constitu-
tion.
On the expiry of a temporary statute no further proceed-
ings can be taken under it unless the statute itself saved
pending proceedings and if an offence had been committed
under a temporary statute and proceedings were initiated but
the offender had not been prosecuted and punished before the
expiry of the statute, then in the absence of a saving
clause the pending prosecution cannot be proceeded with
after the expiry of the statute by efflux of time. The
effect of Art. 13(1) is quite different from that of the
expiry of a temporary statute or the repeal of a statute by
a subsequent statute.
A court of law has to gather the spirit of the Constitu-
tion from the language/of the Constitution. What one may
believe or wish to be the spirit of the Constitution cannot
prevail if the language of the Constitution does not support
that view.
229
Per FAZL ALI and MUKHERJEA JJ. (contra)-Though Art.
13(1) has no retrospective operation, and transactions which
are past and closed and rights which have already vested
will remain untouched, with regard to inchoate matters which
were still not determined when the Constitution came into
force, and as regards proceedings which were pending at the
time of the enforcement of the Constitution and not yet
prosecuted to a final judgment, a law which has become void
under Art. 13(1) of the Constitution cannot be applied.
What has to be looked at is the state of the law at the time
when the question arises as to whether a person has commit-
ted an offence, and if it is found that the law which made
the act an offence has become completely ineffectual and
nugatory, then neither can a charge be framed nor can the
accused person be convicted.
Judgment of the Bombay High Court affirmed.
JUDGMENT:
APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Appeal under Art. 132(1) of the
Constitution from a judgment and order dated 12th April,
1950, of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay (Chagla
C.J., Bavdekar and Shah JJ.): Case No. I X of 1950.
A.S.R. Chari, for the appellant.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (G. N.
Joshi, with him) for the respondent.
1951. Jan. 22. The judgment of Kania C.J., Patanjali
Sastri J. Das J. and Chandrasekhara Aiyar J. was delivered
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by Das J. Mahajan J. and Fazl Ali J. delivered separate
judgments. Mukherjea J. agreed with Fazl Ali J.
DAs J.--At all material times the petitioner, who is the
appellant before us, was the Secretary of People’s Publish-
ing House, Ltd., a company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act with its registered office at 190-B, Khetwadi
Main Road in Bombay. In September, 1949, a pamphlet
entitled "Railway Mazdooron ke khilaf Nai Zazish" is alleged
to have been published in Bombay by the petitioner as the
secretary of that company. Learned counsel for the peti-
tioner states that the pamphlet was published as a "book"
within the meaning of section 1 of the Press and Registra-
tion of Books Act (XXV of 1867) and that the provisions of
that Act had been duly complied
230
with. The Bombay Government authorities, however, took the
view that the pamphlet was a "news sheet" within the meaning
of section 2 (6) of the Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act,
1931, and that as it had been published without the authori-
ty required by section 15 (1) of that Act, the petitioner
had committed an offence punishable under section 18 (1) of
the same Act. A prosecution under that Act was accordingly
started against the petitioner in the Court of the Chief
Presidency Magistrate, Bombay, and was registered as Case
No. 1102/P of 1949. During the pendency of the proceedings
the Constitution of India came into force on January 26,
1950. On March 3, 1950, the petitioner filed a written
statement submitting, inter alia, that the definition of
"news sheet" as given in section 2 (6) of the Indian Press
(Emergency Powers) Act, 1931, and sections 15 and 18 thereof
were ultra vires and void in view of article 19(1)(a) read
with article 13 and that the hearing of the case should be
stayed till the High Court decided that question of law.
This was followed up by a petition filed in the High Court
on March 7, 1950, under article 228 of the Constitution,
praying that the record of Case No. 1102/P of 1949 be sent
for, that it be declared that sections 15 and 18 read with
section 2 (6) and (10), in so far as they create liability
for restrictive measure for a citizen, are ultra vires of
article 19 (1) (a)and are, therefore, void and inoperative
and that the petitioner be ordered to be acquitted. During
the pendency of this petition the Chief Presidency Magis-
trate on March 23, 1950, framed a charge against the peti-
tioner under section 18 of the Press (Emergency Powers) Act,
1931.
The petition under article 228 was heard on April 12,
1950, by a Bench of the Bombay High Court consisting of
Chagla C.J. and Bavdekar and Shah JJ. Two questions were
raised before the Bench, namely---
(1) Whether sections 15 (1) and 18 (1) read with the
definitions contained in sections 2 (6) and 2 (.10) of the
Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act, 1931, were
231
inconsistent with article 19 (1) (a) read with clause (2) of
that article ? and
(2) Assuming that they were inconsistent, whether the
proceedings commenced under section 18 (1) of that Act
before the commencement of the Constitution could neverthe-
less be proceeded with ?
The High Court considered it unnecessary to deal with or
decide the first question and disposed of the application
only on the second question. The High Court took the view
that the word "void" was used in article 13 (1) in the sense
of "repealed" and that consequently it attracted section 6
of the General Clauses Act, which Act by article 367 was
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made applicable for the interpretation of the Constitution.
The High Court, therefore, reached the conclusion that
proceedings under the Indian Press (Emergency Powers)
Act, 1931, which were pending at the date of the commence-
ment of the Constitution were not affected, even if the Act
were inconsistent with the fundamental rights conferred by
article 19 (1)(a)and as such became void under article 13
(1) of the Constitution after January 26, 1950. The High
Court accordingly answered the second question in the af-
firmative and dismissed the petitioner’s application.
The petitioner has now come up on appeal before us on the
strength of a certificate granted by the High Court under
article 132 (1) of the Constitution.
Learned counsel appearing in support of this appeal
urged that the Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act, 1931,
was one of the many repressive laws enacted by an alien
Government with a view to stifle the liberty of the Indian
subjects and particularly of the Indian Press; that, with
the advent of independence the people of India began to
breathe freely and by the Constitution which they gave unto
themselves they took care to guarantee to themselves the
fundamental rights of free citizens of a democratic republic
and that article 13 (1) of that Constitution brushed aside
all vestiges of subordination which the tyranny of the alien
rulers had imposed upon them and declared all
232
laws inconsistent with the fundamental rights to be void as
if they had never been passed and had never existed. It
was, therefore, against the spirit of the Constitution,
argued the learned counsel, that a free citizen of India
should still continue to be persecuted under such a retro-
grade law which, being inconsistent with the fundamental
rights, must be declared to be void. Learned counsel urged
that it was not necessary for him to contend that such
inconsistent laws became void ab initio or that all past and
closed transactions could be reopened but he contended that
on and from January 26, 1950, when the Constitution came
into force such inconsistent laws which became void could
not be looked at for any purpose and far less could they be
utilised for the purpose of framing a charge or punishing a
free citizen. As the void law cannot be utilised any long-
er, the pending prosecutions, according to learned counsel,
must fall to the ground. To permit pending proceedings
under a law which, after the commencement of the Constitu-
tion had become void, to proceed further, after the Consti-
tution has taken effect, is to prolong the efficacy of the
law notwithstanding that it has become void on and from the
date the Constitution came into force and that is against
the spirit of the Constitution.
An argument founded on what is claimed to be the spirit
of the Constitution is always attractive, for it has a
powerful appeal to sentiment and emotion; but a court of law
has to gather the spirit of the Constitution from the lan-
guage of the Constitution. What one may believe or think to
be the spirit of the Constitution cannot prevail if the
language of the Constitution does not support that view.
Article 372 (2) gives power to the President to adapt and
modify existing laws by way of repeal or amendment. There
is nothing to prevent the President, in exercise of the
powers conferred on him by that article, from repealing, say
the whole or any part of the Indian Press (Emergency Powers)
Act, 1931. If the President does so, then such repeal will
at once attract section 6 of the General Clauses Act. In
such a situation all prosecutions under
233
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the Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act, 1931, which were
pending at the date of its repeal by the President would be
saved and must be proceeded with notwithstanding the repeal
of that Act unless an express provision was otherwise made
in the repealing Act. It is therefore clear that the
idea of the preservation of past inchoate rights or liabili-
ties and pending proceedings to enforce the same is not
foreign or abhorrent to the Constitution of India. We are,
therefore, unable to accept the contention about the spirit
of the Constitution as invoked by the learned counsel in aid
of his plea that pending proceedings under a law which has
become void cannot be proceeded with. Further, if it is
against the spirit of the Constitution to continue the
pending prosecutions under such a void law, surely it should
be equally repugnant to that spirit that men who have al-
ready been convicted under such repressive law before the
Constitution of India came into force should continue to rot
in jail. It is, therefore, quite clear that the court should
construe the language of article 13(1) according to the
established rules of interpretation and arrive at its true
meaning uninfluenced by any assumed spirit of the Constitu-
tion.
Article 13 (1) with which we are concerned for the pur-
poses of this application is in these terms: -
"All laws in force in the territory of India immediately
before the commencement of this Constitution, in so far as
they are inconsistent with the provisions of this Part,
shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void."
It will be noticed that all that this clause declares is
that all existing laws, in so far as they are inconsistent
with the provisions of Part II1 shall, to the extent of such
inconsistency, be void. Every statute is prima facie pro-
spective unless it is expressly or by necessary implications
made to have retrospective operation. There is no reason why
this rule of interpretation should not be applied for the
purpose of interpreting our Constitution. We find nothing
in the language of article 13 (1) which may be read as
indicating an
234
intention to give it retrospective operation. On the con-
trary, the language clearly points the other way. The provi-
sions of Part III guarantee what are called fundamental
rights. Indeed, the heading of Part III is "Fundamental
Rights". These rights are given, for the first time, by and
under our Constitution. Before the Constitution came into
force there was no such thing as fundamental right. What
article 13(1) provides is that all existing laws which clash
with the exercise of the fundamental rights (which are for
the first time created by the Constitution) shall to that
extent be void. As the fundamental rights became operative
only on and from the date of the Constitution the question
of the inconsistency of the existing laws with those rights
must necessarily arise on and from the date those rights
came into being. It must follow, therefore, that article
13(1) can have no retrospective effect but is wholly pro-
spective in its operation. After this first point is noted,
it should further be seen that article 13 (1) does not in
terms make the existing laws which are inconsistent with the
fundamental rights void ab initio or for all purposes. On
the contrary, it provides that all existing laws, in so far
as they are inconsistent with the fundamental rights, shall
be void to the extent of their inconsistency. They are not
void for all purposes but they are void only to the extent
they come into conflict with the fundamental rights. In
other words, on and after the commencement of the Constitu-
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tion no existing law will be permitted to stand in the way
of the exercise of any of the fundamental rights. Therefore,
the voidness of the existing law is limited to the future
exercise of the fundamental rights. Article 13(1) cannot be
read as obliterating the entire operation of the inconsist-
ent laws, or to wipe them out altogether from the statute
book, for to do so will be to give them retrospective
effect which, we have said, they do not possess. Such laws
exist for all past transactions and for enforcing all rights
and liabilities accrued before the date of the Constitution.
Learned counsel for the appellant has drawn our attention to
articles 249 (3), 250, 357, 358
235
and 369 where express provision has been made for saving
things done under the laws which expired. It will be no-
ticed that each of those articles was concerned with expiry
of temporary statutes. It is well known that on the expiry
of a temporary statute no further proceedings can be taken
under it, unless the statute itself saved pending proceed-
ings. If therefore, an offence had been committed under a
temporary statute and the proceedings were initiated but the
offender had not been prosecuted and punished before the
expiry of the statute, then, in the absence of any saving
clause, the pending prosecution could not be proceeded with
after the expiry of the statute by efflux of time. It was
on this principle that express provision was made in the
several articles noted above for saving things done or
omitted to be done under the expiring laws referred to
therein. As explained above, article 13 (1) is entirely
prospective in its operation and as it was not intended to
have any retrospective effect there was no necessity at all
for inserting in that article any such saving clause. The
effect of article 13 (1) is quite different from the effect
of the expiry of a temporary statute or the repeal of a
statute by a. subsequent statute. As already explained,
article 13 (1) only has the effect of nullifying or
rendering all inconsistent existing laws ineffectual or
nugatory and devoid of any legal force or binding effect
only with respect to the exercise of fundamental rights on
and after the date of the commencement of the Constitution.
It has no retrospective effect and if, therefore, an act was
done before the commencement of the Constitution in contra-
vention of the provisions of any law which, after the Con-
stitution, becomes void with respect to the exercise of any
of the fundamental rights, the inconsistent law is not wiped
out so far as the past act is concerned, for, to say that it
is, will be to give the law retrospective effect. There is
no. fundamental right that a person shall not be prosecuted
and punished for an offence committed before the Constitu-
tion came into force. So far as the past acts
31
236
are concerned the law exists, notwithstanding that it does
not exist with respect to the future exercise of fundamental
rights. We, therefore, agree with the conclusion arrived at
by the High Court on the second question, although on dif-
ferent grounds. In view of that conclusion, we do not
consider it necessary to examine the reasons of the High
Court for its conclusion. In our opinion, therefore, this
appeal fails, and is dismissed.
FAZL ALI J.--I regret that I cannot agree with the view
which the majority of my colleagues are inclined to take in
this case.
The facts of the case are simple and will bring out the
point to be decided. On the 9th December, 1949, the appel-
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lant was arrested and a prosecution was started against him
under section 18(1) of the Indian Press (Emergency Powers)
Act (XXIII of 1931) in the Court of the Chief Presidency
Magistrate at Bombay for publishing a pamphlet in Urdu
entitled "Railway Mazdoorun Ke Khilaf Nai Sazish." The
prosecution case was that the pamphlet was a news-sheet
within the meaning of section 2(6) of the Act and that since
it had been published without the authority required by
section 1.5(1) of the Act, the appellant had committed an
offence punishable under section 18(1) of the Act. While the
prosecution was pending, the Constitution of India came into
force on the 26th January, 1950, and thereafter the appel-
lant raised the contention that sections 2(6), 15 and 18 of
the Act were void, being inconsistent with article 19(1) (a)
of the Constitution and therefore the case against him could
not proceed. Having raised this contention, the appellant
filed a petition in the High Court at Bombay under article
228 of the Constitution asking the High Court to send for
the record of the case and declare that sections 15 and 18of
the Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act read with section
2(6) and (10) thereof were void and inoperative and the
petitioner should be ordered to be acquitted. The
petition was heard by a Full Bench of the Bombay High
Court, and the learned Judges constituting the Bench, in
237
deciding the point raised, assumed that the provisions of
the Act impugned by the appellant were inconsistent with the
fundamental right guaranteed by article 19(1)(a) of the
Constitution of India, and held that
article 13(1) had virtually the effect of repealing such
provisions of existing laws as were inconsistent with any of
the fundamental rights and that consequently under section 6
of the General Clauses Act, which is made applicable for the
interpretation of the Constitution by article 367, pending
proceedings were not affected. The appellant’s petition to
the High Court having been dismissed, he preferred this
appeal in the Supreme Court.
One of the points discussed elaborately by the learned
counsel appearing for the parties in the course of their
arguments was as to what was the effect upon pending pro-
ceedings when an Act was repealed or when a temporary Act
expired. In Craies on Statute Law, the effect of the expiry
of a temporary Act is stated to be as follows :--
"As a general rule, and unless it contains some special
provision to the contrary, after a temporary Act has expired
no proceedings can be taken upon it, and it ceases to have
any further effect. Therefore, offences committed against
temporary Acts must be prosecuted and punished before the
Act expires, and as soon as the Act expires any proceedings
which are being taken against a person will ipso facto
terminate." (4th Ed., pp. 347-348).
This statement of law by Craies was referred to with
approval and adopted by the Federal Court in J.K. Gas Plant
Manufacturing Co., (Rampur) Ltd., and Others v. King Emper-
or. (1) As to the effect of the repeal of an Act, the fol-
lowing passage from Craies book seems to sum up the legal
position as it obtained in England before the enactment of
the Interpretation Act of 1889 :-
"When an Act of Parliament is repealed," said Lord
Tenterden in Surtees v. Ellison(2) "it must be
[1947] F.C.R. 141 at 166. (2) [1829] 9 B & C. 752.
238
considered (except as to transactions past and closed) as if
it had never existed. That is the general rule." Tindal
C.J. states the exception more widely. He says (in Kay v.
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Goodwin)(1): ,, The effect of repealing a statute is to
obliterate it as completely from the records of the Parlia-
ment as if it had never been passed;and it must be consid-
ered as a law that never existed except for the purpose of
those actions which were commenced, prosecuted and concluded
whilst it was an existing law." (P. 350).
Again, Crawford in his book on "Statutory Construction"
dealing with the general effect of the repeal of an Act
states the law in America to be as follows:---
’’A repeal will generally, therefore, divest all incho-
ate rights which have arisen under the repealed statute, and
destroy all accrued causes of action based thereon. As a
result, such a repeal, without a saving clause, will destroy
any proceedings whether not yet begun, or whether pending at
the time of the enactment of the repealing Act, and not
already prosecuted to a final judgment so as to create a
vested right." (Pp. 599-600).
In a footnote relating to the cases which the learned
author cites in support of the above proposition, he adds:--
"See Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Mumford (Ind.)(2) where
the repeal of a statute during the trial prevented a judg-
ment from being rendered. Similarly, there can be no legal
conviction for an offence, unless the act be contrary to law
at the time it is committed; nor can there be a judgment,
unless the law is in force at the time of the indictment and
judgment. If the law ceases to operate, by its own limita-
tion or by a repeal, at any time before judgment, no judg-
ment can be given. Hence, it is usual in every repealing
law to make it operate prospectively only, and to insert a a
saving clause, preventing the retroactive operation of the
repeal and continuing the repealed law in force as to all
pending prosecutions, and often as to all violations of the
existing law already committed."
(1) (1830) 6 Bing. 576. (2) 197 N.E. 826.
239
The author then proceeds to quote the following passage
from Wall v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry., Company (1):--
"It is well settled that if a statute giving a special
remedy is repealed without a saving clause in favour of
pending suits all suits must stop where the repeal finds
them. If final relief has not been granted before the
repeal went into effect, it cannot be after. If a case is
appealed, and pending the appeal the law is changed, the
appellate court must dispose of the case under the law in
force when its decision was rendered. The effect of the
repeal is to obliterate the statute repealed as completely
as if it bad never been passed, and it must be considered as
a law which never existed, except for the purposes of those
actions or suits which were commenced, prosecuted and con-
cluded while it was an existing law. Pending judicial pro-
ceedings based upon a statute cannot proceed after its
repeal. This rule holds true until the proceedings have
reached a final judgment in the court of last resort, for
that court, when it comes to announce its decision, conforms
it to the law then existing, and may therefore reverse a
judgment which was correct when pronounced in the subordi-
nate tribunal from whence the appeal was taken, if it ap-
pears that pending the appeal a statute which was necessary
to support the judgment of the lower court has been with-
drawn by an absolute repeal." (P. 601).
It is well known that formerly the practice in England
used to be to insert in most of the repealing statutes a
clause saving anything duly done or suffered under the
repealed statutes and any pending legal proceeding or inves-
tigations. Ultimately, to dispense with the necessity of
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having to insert a saving clause in almost every repealing
Act, section 38 (2) was inserted in the Interpretation
Act, 1889, which provides that a repeal, unless the con-
trary intention appears, does not affect the previous opera-
tion of the repealed enactment or anything duly done or
suffered under it and any investigations, legal proceedings
or
(1) 125 N.E.20.
240
remedies may be instituted, continued or enforced in respect
of rights, liabilities and penalties under the ;repealed
Act, as if the repealing Act had not been passed.
Crawford in his book to which I have referred adverts in
these words to a similar difficulty which was experienced in
America and to the manner in which it has been met:
"Due to the numerous troublesome problems which
constantly arose with the repeal of statutes, as well as to
the numerous cases where hardship was caused, statutes have
been enacted in several States expressly providing that the
repeal of a statute shall not affect any rights, causes of
action, penalties, forfeitures, and pending suits, accrued
or instituted under the repealed statute."
In India, the earliest attempt that was made to guard
against the normal legal effect of a repeal is to be found
in section 6 of Act I of 1868. This provision was further
elaborated by section 6 of the General Clauses Act of 1897
which is on the same lines as section 38 (2)of the Interpre-
tation Act of England. The position therefore now in India
as well as in England is that a repeal has not the drastic
effect which it used to have before the enactment of the
Interpretation Act in England or the General Clauses Act in
this country. But this is due entirely to the fact that an
express provision has been made in those enactments to
counteract that effect. Hence, in those cases which are not
covered by the language of the General Clauses Act, the
principle already enunciated will continue to operate.
The learned AttorneyGeneral had to concede that it was
doubtful whether section 6 of that Act is applicable where
there is a repeal by implication, and there can be no doubt
that the law as to the effect of the expiry of a temporary
statute still remains as stated in the books, because sec-
tion 6 of the General Clauses Act and section 38 (2) of the
Interpretation Act have no application except where an Act
is repealed. It should be remembered
241
that the soundness of the law which has been consistently
applied to cases governed by statutes which have ceased to
be in force, by reason of having been repealed or having
expired, has never been questioned, and it cannot be brushed
aside as if it embodied some archaic or obsolete rule pecul-
iar only to the common law of England. It is the law which
has been enunciated by eminent Judges both in England and in
America and is based on good sense and reason.
I shall now proceed to consider what would be the cor-
rect legal position, when a provision of an existing law is
held to be void under article 13 (1) of the Constitution.
From the earlier proceedings before the Constituent Assem-
bly, it appears that in the original draft of the Constitu-
tion, the words "shall stand abrogated" were used instead of
"shall be void," in article 13 (1), and one of the questions
directly before the Assembly was what would be the effect of
the use of those words upon pending proceedings and anything
duly done or suffered under the existing law. Ultimately,
the article emerged in the form in which it stands at
present, and the words "shall stand abrogated" were replaced
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by the words "shall be void." If the words "stand abrogated"
had been there, it would have been possible to argue that
those words would have the same effect as repeal and would
attract section 6 of the General Clauses Act, but those
words have been abandoned and a very strong expression,
indeed the strongest expression which could be used, has
been used in their place. The meaning of the word "void" is
stated in Black’s Law Dictionary (3rd Edn.) to be as fol-
lows:---
"null and void; ineffectual; nugatory; having no legal
force or binding effect;unable in law to support the purpose
for which it was intended; nugatory and ineffectual so that
nothing can cure it; not valid."
A reference to the Constitution will show that the
framers thereof have used the word "repeal" wherever neces-
sary (see articles 252, 254, 357, 372 and 395). They have
also used such words as "invalid" (see
242
articles 245, 255 and 276), "cease to have effect" (see
articles 358 and 372),’ ’shall be inoperative", etc. They
have used the word "void" only in two articles, these being
article 13 (1) and article 154, and both these articles deal
with cases where a certain law is repugnant to another law
to which greater sanctity is attached. It further appears
that where they wanted to save things done or omitted to be
done under the existing law, they have used apt language for
the purpose; see for example articles 249, 250,357, 358 and
369. The thoroughness and precision which the framers of
the Constitution have observed in the matters to which
reference has been made, disinclines me to read into article
13 (1) a saving provision of the kind which we are asked to
read into it. Nor can I be persuaded to hold that treating
an Act as void under article 13 (1) should have a milder
effect upon transactions not past and closed than the repeal
of an Act or its expiry in due course of time. In my opin-
ion, the strong sense in which the word "void" is normally
used and the context in which it has been used are not to be
completely ignored. Evidently, the framers of the Constitu-
tion did not approve of the laws which are in conflict with
the fundamental rights, and, in my judgment, it would not be
giving full effect to their intention to hold that even
after the Constitution has come into force, the laws which
are inconsistent with the fundamental rights will continue
to be treated as good and effectual laws in regard to cer-
tain matters, as if the Constitution had never been passed.
How such a meaning can be read into the words used in arti-
cle 13 (1), it is difficult for me to understand. There can
be no doubt that article 13 (1)will have no retrospective
operation, and transactions which are past and closed, and
rights which have already vested, will remain untouched. But
with regard to inchoate matters which were still not
determined when the Constitution came into force, and as
regards proceedings whether not yet begun, or pending at the
time of the enforcement of the Constitution and not yet
prosecuted to a final judgment, the very serious question
arises as to whether a law which
243
has been declared by the Constitution to be completely
ineffectual can yet be applied. On principle and on good
authority, the answer to this question would appear to me to
be that the law having ceased to be effectual can no longer
be applied. In R. v. Mawgan (Inhabitants)(1) a presentment
as to the non-repair of a highway had been made under 13
Geo. 3, c. 78, s. 24, but before the case came on to be
tried, the Act was repealed. In that case, Lord Denman C.J.
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said: "If the question had related merely to the present-
ment, that no doubt is complete. But dum loquimur, we have
lost the power of giving effect to anything that takes place
under that proceeding." And Littledale J. added: "/do not
say that what is already done has become bad, but that no
more can be done." In my opinion, this is precisely the way
in which we should deal with the present case.
It was argued at the Bar that the logical outcome of
such a view would be to hold that all the convictions al-
ready recorded and all the transactions which are closed,
should be reopened, but, in my opinion, to argue on these
lines is to overlook what has been the accepted law for
centuries, namely, that when a law is treated as dead,
transactions which are past and closed cannot be revived and
actions which were commenced, prosecuted and concluded
whilst the law was operative cannot be reopened.
In the course of the arguments, a doubt was also raised
as to what would be ’the effect in the case of an appeal
pending when the Constitution came into force, from a con-
viction already recorded before the 26th January, 1950. The
law applicable to such a situation is well-known and has
been correctly summed up by Crawford in these words:--
"Pending judicial proceedings based upon a statute
cannot proceed after its repeal. The rule holds true until
the proceedings have reached a final judgment in the court
of last resort, for that court, when it comes to announce
its decision, conforms it to the law then existing, and may
therefore reverse a judgment which was
(1) (1888) 8 A. & E. 496.
244
correct when pronounced in the subordinate tribunal from
whence the appeal was taken, if it appears that pending
the. appeal a statute which was necessary to support the
judgment of the lower court has been withdrawn by an abso-
lute repeal."
I think I should at this stage deal briefly with two
points which were raised in the course of the arguments in
support of the opposite view. It was urged in the first
place that without there being a saving clause to govern
article 13 (1), it can be so construed as to permit offences
committed prior to the 26th January, 1950, to be punished.
The argument has been put forward more or less in the fol-
lowing form. The law which is said to be in conflict with
the fundamental rights was a good law until the 25th
January, and, since article 13 (1) is to be construed
prospectively, and not retrospectively, every act
constituting an offence under the old law remains an
offence and can be punished even after the 26th January. It
seems to me that the same argument could be urged with
reference to matters which constituted offences under a
repealed Act or a temporary Act which has expired. But such
an argument has never succeeded. The real question is wheth-
er a person who has not been convicted before the Act has
ceased to exist or ceased to be effectual can still be
prosecuted under such an Act. The answer to this question
has always been in the negative, and I do not see why a
different answer should be given in the case of an Act which
has be-come void, i.e., which has become so ineffectual that
it cannot be cured.
The second argument which also has failed to impress me
is that if section 6 of the General Clauses Act does not in
terms apply, the principle underlying that section should be
applied. The answer to this argument is that the Legislature
in its wisdom has confined that section to a very definite
situation, and, though it was open to it to make the section
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more comprehensive and general, it has not done so. It is
well-known that situations similar to those which arise by
reason of the repeal of an Act have arisen in regard to Acts
245
which have expired or Acts which have been declared to be
void, and, though such situations must have been well-known
to the Legislature, they have not been provided for. In
these circumstances,I do not see how the very clear and
definite provision can be enlarged in the manner in which it
is attempted to be enlarged. Besides, I have not come across
any case in which the principle underlying section 38 (2) of
the Interpretation Act or section 6 of the General Clauses
Act has been invoked or applied.
In the present case, we have to look at the state of the
law at the time when the question arises as to whether a
person has committed any offence. If we find that the law
which made the act an offence has become completely ineffec-
tual and nugatory, then neither can a charge be framed nor
can the accused person be convicted. In my opinion, if the
assumption on which the High Court has proceeded is correct,
the appellant is entitled to a declaration that he cannot be
convicted for the offence of which he is accused.
MAHAJAN J.--The appellant is the secretary of the Peo-
ple’s Publishing House Ltd., Bombay. In September, 1949, he
published a pamphlet entitled "Railway Mazdoorum Ke Khilaf
Nai Sazish."On the 9th December, 1949, he was arrested and a
prosecution was launched against him under section 18 (1) of
the Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act (XXIII of 1931)in
the Court of the Chief Presidency Magistrate at Bombay in
respect of this pamphlet, as it had been published without
any authority as required under section 16 of the said Act.
On the 8th March, 1950, an application was made on his
behalf in the High Court of Judicature at Bombay under
article 228 of the Constitution of India for quashing the
proceedings started against him and it was contended that
sections 16 and 18 of Act XXIII of 1931 were ultra vires of
Part III of the Constitution of India and were thus void and
had no effect whatsoever and no prosecution launched under
these sections could be proceeded with after the coming into
force of the Constitution. The High Court refused this
246
application and held that the proceedings instituted against
the appellant before the commencement of the Constitution
could not be affected by the provisions of the Constitution
that came into force on the 26th January, 1950. Dissatis-
fied with this decision, the appellant has preferred the
present appeal to this court.
The sole point to decide in the appeal is whether pro-
ceedings instituted under section 18 (1) of the Indian Press
(Emergency Powers) Act, XXIII of 1931, before the commence-
ment of the Constitution of India are affected by its provi-
sions. The High Court has answered this question in the
negative and, in my opinion, rightly.
I am in respectful agreement with the observations of
the learned Chief Justice of Bombay that it is difficult to
believe that the Constituent Assembly contemplated that with
regard to the laws which it was declaring to be void under
article 13 all vested rights and all proceedings taken
should be disturbed and affected by particular laws ceasing
to be in force as a result of inconsistencies with the
fundamental rights guaranteed to the citizens. It is not
arguable and was not argued that Part III of the Constitu-
tion has any retrospective operation. The appellant was not
possessed of any fundamental rights in September, 1949, when
he published the pamphlet in question and his act clearly
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came within the mischief of the provisions of section 18 of
Act XXIII of 1931 and he thus became liable to the penalties
prescribed therein.
It was, however, contended by Mr. Chari, the learned
counsel for the appellant, that the effect of the language
employed in article 13 (1)of the Constitution was that the
proceedings commenced before the coming into force of the
Constitution could not be continued after its commencement
under the laws that became inconsistent with its provisions.
For this proposition he placed reliance on the rule of
construction stated in Maxwell on "Interpretation of Stat-
utes ", p. 404, which is to the following effect :--
247
"Where an Act expired or was repealed, it was formerly
regarded, in the absence of provision to the contrary, as
having never existed, except as to matters and transactions
passed and closed. Where, therefore, a penal law was broken,
the offender could not be punished under it if it expired
before he was convicted, although the prosecution was begun
while the Act was still in force." This rule seems to be
based on a statement of Tindal C.J. in Kay v. Goodwin(1).
The learned Chief Justice made the following observations
:--
"I take the effect of repealing a statute to be, to
obliterate it as completely from the records of Parliament
as if it had never been passed; and it must be considered as
a law that never existed except for the purpose of those
actions which were commenced, prosecuted and concluded
whilst it was an existing
laW."
This was the rule of the English common law which was
applied in cases of statutes which were repealed and under
this rule all pending actions and prosecutions could not be
proceeded with after the repeal of the law under which they
were started. This rule was however changed by the Inter-
pretation Act of 1889, section 38. Therein it was enacted
that unless the contrary intention appears, no repeal is to
affect any investigation, legal proceeding, including the
initiation of criminal proceedings, or remedy in respect of
any such right, privilege, obligation, liability, penalty,
forfeiture, or punishment and any such investigation,
legal proceeding or remedy may be instituted, continued or
enforced and any such penalty, forfeiture or punishment may
be imposed as if the repealing Act had not been passed. A
similar provision exists in India in section 6 of the Gener-
al Clauses Act of 1868 and 1897. The High Court held that
the provisions of article 13(1) were analogous to the repeal
of a statute and therefore section 6 of the General Clauses
Act had application to the construction of these provisions
and that being so, the coming into force of the Constitution
did
(1) 180 E.R. 1403; (1830) 6 Bing. 576.
248
not in any way affect the continuance of the proceedings
that had been commenced against the appellant under the law
that was in force at the time of the publication of the
pamphlet. Mr. Chari contended that the High Court was in
error in applying the provisions of section 6 of the General
Clauses Act to the interpretation of article 13 (1) of the
Constitution inasmuch as the provisions of this article were
not analogous to repeal and did not amount to a repeal of
the existing law. He contended that a repeal of the law
could only be by the legislature but that under article 13
power had been given to the court to declare any law incon-
sistent with the Constitution to be void; in other words,
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the power given was larger in scope and effect than the
power of repeal and the effect of the declaration that a
certain statute was void as it was repugnant to the freedom
guaranteed by the Constitution was to wipe out the statute
altogether from the date of the coming into force of the
Constitution and that nothing could be done under that
statute with effect from the 26th January, 1950, and there-
fore the court could not frame a charge under the law that
was declared void, or pass a judgment of conviction against
a person under a law that had been declared void. Mr. Chari
went to the length of saying that a statute which was incon-
sistent with the Constitution became dead on the coming into
force of the Constitution and under a dead statute no action
could be taken whatsoever. He emphasised his contention by
stressing the fact that freedoms guaranteed by Part III of
the Constitution could not be tainted by keeping alive
prosecutions and actions under laws framed by a foreign
government which were inconsistent with those freedoms. It
was said that some of the laws which the Constitution in-
tended to be declared void by the court because of their
repugnancy to the fundamental rights guaranteed to the
citizen by the Constitution were those which a foreign
government had enacted to keep the people of this country
under its domination and that to continue prosecutions under
these laws after the coming into force of the Constitution
would be wholly contrary and
249
repugnant not only to the letter of the Constitution but
also to its spirit. It was conceded that transactions
finally closed under such laws could not be reopened but
that prosecutions and actions which were still continuing
should be stopped and further action concerning them would
become illegal and would be contrary to the freedoms guaran-
teed by the Constitution. Reference was made to articles
249, 250, 357, 358, and 369 to show that the scheme of the
Constitution was that wherever it intended that the proceed-
ings commenced under existing laws which became inoperative
on the 26th January, 1950. were to continue after that date,
apt phraseology had been used to indicate that intention but
that in article 13 no such saving words were used and there-
fore it must be presumed that the Constituent Assembly did
not intend that proceedings taken under such laws were to be
continued after the 26th January, 1950.
Article 13 (1) of the Constitution is in these terms
:--
"All laws in force in the territory of India immediately
before the commencement of this Constitution, in so far as
they are inconsistent with the provisions of this Part,
shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void. ’ ’
The freedom guaranteed to the citizen which has applica-
tion to the case of the appellant is in article 19 (1) (a)
and this article is in these terms :--
"All citizens shall have the right to freedom of speech
and expression."
It is admitted that after the 26th January, 1950, there
has been no infringement of the appellant’s right of freedom
of speech or expression. In September, 1949, he did not
enjoy either complete freedom of speech or full freedom of
expression. It is in relation to the freedom guaranteed in
article 19(1) of the Constitution to the citizen that the
provisions of article 13 (1) come into play. This article
does not declare any law void independently of the existence
of the freedoms guaranteed by Part III. A citizen must be
possessed
250
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of a fundamental right before he can ask the court to de-
clare a law which is inconsistent with it void ;but if a
citizen is not possessed of the right, he cannot claim this
relief. The appellant in the present case was not possessed
of any fundamental right on the day that he published the
pamphlet and in these circumstances the question is whether
he can claim protection under the rights guaranteed to him
on 26th January, 1950, for escaping the consequence of his
act on any principles of construction of statutes. Accord-
ing to the contention of the learned counsel, the principles
applicable to repealed statutes are not in terms applicable
to such a case, whether they are to be found in the rules of
the common law of England or whether they are contained in
the Interpretation Act or the General Clauses Act. Those
rules are applicable to cases either of repeal or to cases
of a statute dying a natural death by efflux of time. None
of those however have any application to the construction of
statutes framed in languages like the one contained in
article 13 (1) of the Constitution. Besides the rule of
construction which applies to repealed statutes or to tempo-
rary statutes our attention was not drawn to any other rule
of construction under which a person who commits an offence
against an Act during its existence as a law becomes unpun-
ishable on its termination. Both on considerations of con-
venience and also on grounds of justice and reason I am
inclined to think that penalties incurred under a law in
force at the time when the act was committed would survive
its extinction so that persons who violate its provisions
might afterwards be punished. Persons who during the contin-
uance of a statute have obtained rights under it cannot be
affected by a declaration that the statute with effect from
a certain date will become an inoperative statute. When in
the case of repeal of a statute, which according to Tindal
C.J. obliterates it completely from the records of Parlia-
ment as if it had never been passed, the common law rule has
been abrogated by statute, it is difficult to apply that
rule on any sentimental grounds at this date to the case of
statutes which are declared void or declared to have
251
no effect whatsoever after a certain date only. The expres-
sion "void" has no larger effect on the statute so declared
than the word "repeal". The expression "repeal" according to
common law rule obliterates a statute completely as if it
had never been passed and thus operates retrospectively on
past transactions in the absence of a saving clause or in
the absence of provisions such as are contained in the
Interpretation Act, 1889, or in the General Clauses Act,
1897, while a provision in a statute that with effect from a
particular date an existing law would be void to the extent
of the repugnancy has no such retrospective operation and
cannot affect pending prosecutions or actions taken under
such laws. There is in such a situation no necessity of
introducing a saving clause and it does not need the aid of
a legislative provision of the nature contained in the
Interpretation Act or the General Clauses Act. To hold that
a prospective declaration that a statute is void affects
pending cases is to give it indirectly retrospective opera-
tion and that result is repugnant to the clear phraseology
employed in the various articles in Part III of the Con-
stitution.
The contention of the learned Attorney-General that the
phraseology employed in article 13 (1) of the Constitution
clearly indicates that there was no intention to give any
retrospective operation to the provisions of Part III of the
Constitution and that the declaration that laws repugnant to
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Part III of the Constitution are void only operates from
26th January, 1950, has, in my opinion, force. It seems
clear that an existing statute in spite of a declaration-by
court that it is void remains in force till the 25th Janu-
ary, 1950, and continues to remain on the statute book even
after the 26th January, 1950, except that no effect can be
given to any of its provisions which are repugnant to the
fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution. The
effect of article 13 (1)is only prospective and it operates
in respect to the freedoms which are infringed by the State
subsequent to the coming into force of the Constitution but
the past acts of a person which came within the mischief of
the law then in force are not affected
33
252
by Part III of the Constitution. The reference made by Mr.
Chari to different articles of the Constitution where saving
clauses have been inserted to save pending proceedings or
acts is not very helpful inasmuch as where a certain provi-
sion has a retrospective effect, then it is necessary to
introduce a saving clause if things done in the past have to
be saved from the retrospective effect of the statute; but
where the provision is clearly not intended to be retrospec-
tive, then the necessity of saving clause does not arise.
The provisions of the Constitution to which Mr. Chari made
reference were of the nature that but for the saving clause
the effect of them would be retrospective in character under
the accepted canons of construction of statutes.
Mr. Chari’s argument that it could not have been intend-
ed by the Constitution makers that prosecutions started
under laws passed by a foreign power and which affect the
freedoms guaranteed to the citizen under the Constitution in
Part III were to be continued after the dawn of independence
and after India had become a democratic republic to a cer-
tain extent seems to me to be plausible; but on further
thought I have come to the conclusion that this argument
appeals more to the heart than to the head and is not based
on any sound principle of construction of statutes. Under
the accepted canons of construction of statutes, if a law
has no retrospective operation of any kind whatsoever, then
such a law cannot affect pending prosecutions or actions and
the Constitution not being retrospective in its operation
could not therefore in any way affect prosecutions started
for offences that were complete under the law in force at
the time they were committed. The cure for such an incon-
gruous state of affairs and the relief for such situation
lies with the Government and the legislature and not with
the courts. If a case of sedition against an alien govern-
ment is continued after the coming into force of the Consti-
tution, the court cannot decline to proceed with it and to
pass some sentence howsoever lenient, against an accused by
placing a construction on the Constitution
253
which gives it retrospective operation, but the government
of the republic or its legislature can always by executive
or legislative action bring to a close all such distasteful
proceedings and not only can it do so in the case of pending
prosecutions but it can give relief also to persons who have
suffered under laws of sedition against an alien government
and are suffering terms of imprisonment in the jails of the
Republic. If punishment for contravention of such laws
cannot be given to offenders because decision in their case
has been delayed beyond the 26th January, 1950, it will be
highly unreasonable not to give relief and to let punish-
ments continue in case of persons, the sentence against whom
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have already been passed under laws which were solely enact-
ed to maintain the alien rule. Both cases, in my opinion,
stand on the same footing and relief in those cases lies not
with courts but with the executive government of the Repub-
lic. If Mr. Chari’s argument that on the commencement of
the Constitution on 26th January, 1950, all proceedings
started under laws that became repugnant and inconsistent
with the Constitution were to be stopped was accepted, it
would lead to very strange results, and Mr. Chari had to
concede that it would be so. Suppose a person was convicted
of the offence of sedition or of an offence under one of the
safety Acts, the provisions of which are repugnant to
the Constitution, but his appeal was pending in the High
Court against his conviction, then, according to the conten-
tion of Mr. Chari, the court has no power to hear the appeal
because the law being void, no further action could be taken
in the matter. The result would be that the Court would not
be able to hear an appeal and to give relief to the accused
if he had been erroneously convicted. If a court cannot
frame a charge or convict a person under a law that is
repugnant to the Constitution equally it would not be enti-
tled to continue any proceeding for the benefit of the
accused under cover of such a law.
Great deal of emphasis was laid during the course of the
argument on the meaning to be given to the word "void" and
it was said that this word in its widest
254
sense meant that the law declared void was void ab initio,
i.e, from the very reception of the law it was bad. H that
meaning was given to this word, then it would mean that all
laws existing on the 26th January, 1950, and which were
declared void by article 13 (1) because of their being
repugnant to the Constitution were bad when they were passed
by the legislature, though at the same time the subject
enjoyed no fundamental rights. It was sought to give to this
word "void" the same wide meaning as was given to the word
"repeal" by Tindal C.J. in the case above mentioned. With
every respect to the great Judges who administered the
common law in England during the earlier period of British
history and in all humility I venture to say that the rule
evolved by them qua "repeal" was of an artificial nature.
The dictum of the learned Chief Justice that a repeal of a
statute obliterates it completely from the records of Par-
liament as if it had never been passed is to my mind based
on an extended meaning of that expression than its ordinary
dictionary sense. When a statute has been in operation, say
for a period of fifty years, people have suffered penalties
under it or have acquired rights thereunder and the law has
been enforced by courts for such a long period, then to say
that when it is repealed it is completely obliterated and
that it never had any existence and was never passed by
Parliament, is rather saying too much and is ignoring hard
real facts and amounts to shutting one’s eyes to the actual-
ities of the situation. It would be more consonant with
reason and justice to say that the law existed and was good
at the time when it was passed but that since the date of
its repeal it has no longer any effect whatsoever. The
Parliament may however say in the repealing statute that it
will have retrospective operation and it may also prescribe
the limits of its retrospectivity and to that extent past
transactions may be affected by it. Because the rule of
common law evolved by the English Judges was not in conso-
nance with reason and justice, a legislative practice was
evolved under which each repealing statute contained a
saving clause under
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255
which past transactions were not allowed to be affected by
the repeal. Eventually the rule of common law was completely
abrogated by the enactment of the Interpretation Act, 1889.
In India in the year 1868, section 6 of the General Clauses
Act enacted what was later on enacted in England in the
Interpretation Act and for over eighty years it is this rule
of construction that has been adopted in this country, the
rule being that past transactions, whether closed or incho-
ate cannot be affected by the repeal of an earlier statute
or by the coming into effect of a new one. In my opinion,
the rule contained in the General Clauses Act and in the
English Interpretation Act is more in consonance with reason
and justice and is also a rule of convenience and should be
followed in this country, in preference to the rule evolved
by the English Judges in the earlier part of English legal
history. Be that as it may, it is unnecessary in this case
to have resort either to the rule of common law or to the
General Clauses Act as the language of article 13 itself
furnishes a solution to the problem.
Reference was also made to the rule of construction
applicable to temporary statutes. In the case of such
statutes, the rule of English law is that after the expiry
of the life of the statute no action can be taken under the
expired statute unless an intention can be gathered from its
provisions to the contrary, but transactions already com-
pleted during the period that these statutes had the force
of law are not in any way affected. That rule seems to be
quite logical and is consonant with reason and justice. When
the life of a statute is limited and it dies a natural
death, then no question either of its retrospective or of
prospective nature arises. If the intention of the statute
was that anything done under it has to continue, then it
will be allowed to continue; otherwise nothing done under it
will be continued after its natural death. Any rule applica-
ble to construction of such a statute has no application to
the interpretation of the Constitution of India and the
reference to this rule, in my opinion, is not relevant for
the decision of this
256
Reference was also made to the rule of construction laid
down by the American courts in respect of statutes de-
clared void because of their being repugnant to the Consti-
tution of the United States of America. It is obvious that
if a statute has been enacted and is repugnant to the Con-
stitution, the statute is void since its very birth and
anything done under it is also void and illegal. The courts
in America have followed the logical result of this rule and
even convictions made under such an unconstitutional statute
have been set aside by issuing appropriate writs. If a
statute is void from its very birth then anything done
under it, whether closed, completed, or inchoate, will be
wholly illegal and relief in one shape or another has to be
given to the person affected by such an unconstitutional
law. This rule, however, is not applicable in regard to laws
which were existing and were constitutional according to the
Government of India Act, 1935. Of course, if any law is
made after the 25th January, 1950, which is repugnant to the
Constitution, then the same rule will have to be followed by
courts in India as is followed in America and even convic-
tions made under such an unconstitutional law will have to
be set aside by resort to exercise of powers given to this
court by the Constitution.
The only rule of construction applicable to the inter-
pretation of article 13 of the Constitution is the one that
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concerns the determination of the question whether a statute
is intended to have any retrospective operations. If the
well-known canons of construction on this point are applied,
then it has to be held that article 13 was not intended to
have any retrospective effect whatever; on the other hand,
its language denotes that it recognized the validity of the
existing laws up to the date of the commencement of the
Constitution and even after its commencement except to the
extent of their repugnancy to any provisions of Part III of
the Constitution. On this construction of article 13 it
cannot affect any past transactions, whether closed or
inchoate. Reference in this connection may be made to the
provisions of
257
article 372(2) of the Constitution. Under this article the
President has been given power to adapt existing laws and to
bring them in accordance with the articles of the Constitu-
tion by a process of amendment, repeal or adaptation. The
President could have repealed the Press (Emergency Powers)
Act and brought the law in accordance with the provisions of
Part III of the Constitution and if he had used the powers
of repeal given to him by this article, the provisions of
the General Clauses Act would have been immediately attract-
ed to that situation and the pending prosecution of the
appellant would have to be continued in view of those provi-
sions. If in that situation the Constitution contemplates
the continuance of pending proceedings under existing laws,
it becomes difficult to place a different interpretation on
the phraseology employed in article 13(1) of the Constitu-
tion, than the one that is in accord with that situation.
By the construction that I have placed on this article that
incongruous result is avoided.
In view of the decision above arrived at it seems unnec-
essary to pronounce on the alternative argument of the
learned Attorney-General to the effect that the expression ’
’void’, used in article 13 of the Constitution is synonymous
with the word "repeal" and that it was an apt word used in
the context to indicate the same intention. It was said
that the word "repeal" was not used in the article but
instead the expression "void" was employed therein by the
draftsmen in order to include within its ambit cases of
custom and usage where such custom and usage were also
repugnant to the provisions of Part III of the Constitution.
It was also urged that by article 13 (1)the Constitution in
express terms repealed all laws inconsistent with its provi-
sions and that the only power given to the court was to find
out which of these laws was inconsistent with the provisions
of Part III. The declaration that these laws were void or
repealed was by the force of the provisions of article 13
itself and did not result from the decision of the courts.
It is also unnecessary to examine the further argument of
the learned
258
Attorney-General that in any case since 1868 in this country
the rule of construction of statutes is the one laid down by
section 6 of the General Clauses Act,1868, and that though
in express terms that statute may not be applicable to the
construction of article 13(1) of the Constitution, yet that
rule is a rule of justice, equity and good conscience and
has become a rule of common law in this country and should
be applied even to cases where statutes become void by rea
son of their being repugnant to the Constitution.
For the reasons given above I see no force in this
appeal and I would accordingly dismiss it.
MUKHERJEA J.-I am in entire agreement with the view
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taken by my learned brother Fazl Ali J. in his judgment and
I concur both in his reasons and his conclusion.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: P.G. Gokhale.
Agent for the respondent: P.A. Mehta.