Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KHAN CHAND
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/12/1973
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 543 1974 SCR (2) 768
1974 SCC (1) 549
CITATOR INFO :
E&D 1976 SC1031 (28)
D 1976 SC1961 (8)
RF 1978 SC 597 (56)
RF 1979 SC 916 (54)
R 1979 SC1628 (21)
R 1980 SC1255 (12)
RF 1980 SC1561 (28)
RF 1980 SC2147 (63)
RF 1981 SC 487 (16)
R 1981 SC1829 (97)
RF 1981 SC2041 (8)
RF 1981 SC2138 (26,27,30,31)
D 1982 SC 149 (1244)
R 1983 SC 130 (13)
R 1983 SC 624 (8)
RF 1984 SC1361 (19)
RF 1985 SC 551 (7)
R 1985 SC1416 (92,93)
R 1986 SC 180 (39)
RF 1986 SC 872 (71)
RF 1986 SC1035 (10)
D 1986 SC1955 (5)
E&D 1987 SC 294 (39)
RF 1987 SC1676 (17)
RF 1987 SC2359 (14,15)
RF 1988 SC 157 (9)
RF 1988 SC 354 (15)
RF 1988 SC 535 (22)
F 1989 SC1335 (52)
F 1989 SC1642 (25)
R 1990 SC 334 (104,107)
R 1990 SC1031 (12)
R 1990 SC1277 (46)
R 1990 SC1402 (29)
RF 1990 SC1480 (29)
R 1991 SC 101 (165,257)
RF 1992 SC 1 (133)
RF 1992 SC1277 (47)
F 1992 SC1858 (19)
ACT:
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Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 14-If s. 2 of the East
Punjab Movable Property (Requisitioning) Act, (15 of 1947)
is violative of Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
The truck of the respondent was requisitioned under s. 2 of
the East Punjab Movable Property (Requisitioning) Act, 1947
for famine relief work. The section provides that the State
Government, if it considers it necessary or expedient so to
do, may requisition any movable property provided that no
property used for the purpose of religious worship and no
aircraft or any thing connected with aircraft, shall be
requisitioned.
On the question of the constitutional validity of the
section
HELD : (Per A. N. Ray, C.J., H. R. Khanna, A. Alagiriswami
and P. N. Bhagwati, JJ. :) The Act confers arbitrary powers
for requisitioning of movable property upon the authorities
under the Act and no guidelines whatsoever have been
prescribed for the exercise of the powers. The provision
therefore falls within the mischief which Art. 14 of the
Constitution is designed to prevent and hence is invalid.
In view of the complex nature of the problems a modern State
has to face, it is but inevitable that matters of detail
should be left to the authorities acting under an enactment.
Discretion has therefore to be given to the authorities con-
cerned for the exercise of powers vested in them under in
enactment. Such vesting does not by itself entail
contravention of Art. 14. What is objectionable is the
conferment of arbitrary and uncontrolled discretion without
any guidelines for the exercise of that discretion. The
enactment must therefore prescribe the guidelines so that,
within the framework of those guidelines the authorities can
exercise their discretion. But discretion which absolute
and uncontrolled degenerates into arbitrariness. If a
Legislature bestows such untrammeled discretion on
authorities, it abdicates its essential function, for, such
discretion is bound to result in discrimination which is a
negation of the ideal of equally enshrined in Art. 14. A
statute need not itself make any classification of the
persons or things for the purpose of applying its
provisions, but may leave it to the Government to select and
classify In determining the validity of such a statute, the
Court will not strike it down, merely because no
classification appears on its face or because discretion is
given to Government to make the classification. The
Court will examine and ascertain if the statute has laid
down any principle or policy for the guidance of the
Government in the matter of classification; and it is only
if the statute does not lay down any such principle or
policy that the court will strike down the statute on the
ground that it provides for the delegation of arbitrary and
uncontrolled power to the Government which may result in
discrimination. [774H]
(1) In the present case, the Act confers uncontrolled power
on the State Government or the officers authorised by it to
requisition any movable property except those excluded. No
guidelines have been laid down in the Act regarding the
object or the purpose for which the State Government or its
officers may consider it necessary or expedient to
requisition. The Act does not even require that the
authority requisitioning the movable property should specify
the purpose in the order of requisition. [773G]
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(2) There is no provision in the Act that the power of
requisitioning can be exercised only for a public purpose or
in an emergency or in some special contingency. To read the
words ’for a public purpose’ in the section, when the words
are not there, would amount to judicial legislation. [773H]
769
(3)It is open under the Act, for an authorised officer to
requisition any movable property for any purpose. It is no
answer to say that an officer would not do so when there is
nothing in the Act which makes it impermeable for him to
requisition any movable property for any purpose whatsoever.
[774A-B]
(4)The power under the Act can be exercised not only by
the State Government but by any of its officers to whom it
may be delegated by the State Government. The Act does not
specify that the delegate should not be an officer below a
particular rank and hence the powers of requisitioning could
be conferred even upon a petty officer. [774D]
(5)No suitable machinery is provided in the Act for
determining the compensation payable to the owner.
According to s. 4. it shall be such amount as the State
Government may determine. [774D-E]
(6)The fact that Act is a pre-Constitution Act makes no
difference. The protection afforded by Art. 31(5) to pre-
Constitution laws is against the challenge on theground of
contravention of Art. 31(2) and not against challenge on the
ground of contravention of Art. 14. [774G]
(7)Both the conditions laid down in Pannalal Binjraj v.
Union of India [1957] S.C.R. 233 are satisfied. There is
every possibility of real and substantial discrimination
under the impugned Act; and the Act impinges on the
fundamental right of property. [776G-H]
(8)In adjudicating on the Constitutional validity of
statutes, the courts discharge an obligation imposed on them
by the Constitution and no judicial arrogance is involved.
The Courts would be shirking their responsibility if they
hesitate to declare the provisions of a statute
unconstitutional when they are found to be violative of the
articles of the Constitution. Abnegations in a matter where
power is conferred to protect the interests of others
against measures which are violative of the Constitution is
not commendable and is fraught with serious consequences.
[777D]
Shri Ram Krishna Dalmia v. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar &
Ors. [1959] S.C.R. 279 on pages 299 and Pannalal Binjraj v.
Union of India, [1957] S.C.R. 233, followed.
Jayantilal Parshottamdas v. State of Gujarat. 11 Gujarat Law
Reporter 403 Harishankar Bagla & Anr. v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh [1955] 1 S.C.R. 380, Sri Ram Ram Narain Medhi v. The
State of Bombay, [1959] 1 Suppl. S.C.R. 489, and P. J.
Irani v. The State of Madras, [1962] 2 S.C.R. 169,
distinguished.
Per Mathew J : (dissenting) With the proliferation of the
functions of the State, it has become necessary to vest wide
discretionary powers upon administrative organs of the
State. Often it is practically useless to lodge power in a
public functionary without giving him a large measure of
discretion for, the situations which might arise in public
affairs are multifarious and very often unpredictable and
unforeseen. There is always a potential danger in vesting
any discretionary power in any person as it is liable to be
abused or exercised in a discriminatory manner, however much
the legislature might try to hedge the power with
safeguards. [781F]
(1)It is impossible for anybody to read the section as
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conferring a power to requisition any movable property for a
purpose other than a public purpose.
(2)Nothing hinges upon the presence or absence of such
phrases as ’public interest’ ’public good’, ’public
purpose’, Courts and parties all assume that the legislature
always wants protection of the public interest, to serve
public causes and do things for public good or to exercise
powers for public purposes, and, always intends that
administrators act justly and reasonably whether the
legislative says so or not in the statute. Government
exists and its only title to exist is claim to advance the
public good and serve the public interest. So, when the
section said that the State Government may requisition if it
considers ’necessary or expedient’, it can only mean, when
it considers ’necessary’ or "expedient’ so to do public
interest. This is implied in the section and when the
purpose for which a power is given may not be specified in
the Act, the Court is not prevented from
inferring the purpose. The expression ’necessary’ or
’expedient’ used in the section
770
is sufficient to give an adequate guidance to the Government
when read in juxtaposition with the implied Purpose of the
concernment of the power. ’Necessary’ means ’what is
indispensable, needful or essential’ and ’expedient means
’useful for affecting a desired result, fit or suitable for
the purpose.’ One has to appreciate the fact that the
legislature, while laying down the policy or principle, is
bound to keep in mind the nature of the problem that is to
be tackled by the State Government. A variety of factors
and circumstances arise for consideration in deciding
whether a particular movable property should or should not
be requisitioned. The legislature rightly decided that it
would not serve the purpose if it were to define and
describe all the relevant factors which have to be taken
into account for requisitioning any movable property. It
was not necessary for the legislature to supply the State
Government with a more specific formula for its guidance
where flexibility and adaptation to infinitely variable
conditions constitute the essence of the legislative scheme.
The expression ’necessary or expedient’ read in conjunction
with the public purpose implied in the section does canalise
the exercise of the power and discretion of the Government.
[780H. 781H; 782F]
(3)The validity of the section must be tested with
reference to its terms and not what an officer to whom the
State Government delegates the power under s. 8 might do in
his quixotic vagaries. The presumption is that public
functionaries will administer the law properly. Courts do
not strike down a provision in a statute on the assumption
that a person invested with power under it would, exercise
it with an evil eye and unequal hand’. So long as courts
are open in this country and the doctrine of abuse of power
is there need be no apprehension that any power will be
exercised arbitrarily or in a discriminatory manner merely
because the power is apparently capable of being so
exercised. It is perfectly open to the State Government or
an officer to whom the power is delegated to exercise it in
a reasonable and non-discriminatory manner. The court’&
power is properly invoked it a person is actually aggrieved
by the exercise of the power under the law. [785B]
(4)If the power which is conferred on the State Government
under s. 2 of the Act is valid there is no objection to that
power being delegated. It cannot be assumed that the State
Government will delegate the power without due regard to the
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status of, the delegate in the official hierarchy. The
vesting of the discretionary power in a State Government or
in a high public dignitary is a guarantee that the power
will be exercised on the basis of a reasonable standard for
the purpose intended by the legislature. [785F]
(5)It is not contrary to the rule of law that powers
should be vested ill public officers for performing public
functions. What the rule of law requires is that any abuse
of power by public officers should be subject to the control
of the courts. There is nothing unreasonable in granting
power to meet unforeseen situations. If there are no
guidelines for the exercise of the power the vesting of the
power in a functionary need not be struck down.
Unreasonableness it to be found in its exercise and not in
its existence. [782F-G]
(6)Under Art. 31(5). being an existing law, the Act is not
liable to be challenged on the score that it violates the
fundamental right under Art. 31(2). It was not necessary
for the Act to have expressly stated that the requisition of
movable property could only be for a public purpose and to
have fixed the amount of compensation or the principles
therefore. [779H]
(7)In Pannalal Binjraj v. Union of India, [1957] S.C.R.
233 this Court held that a power which is discretionary is
not necessarily discriminatory and abuse of power cannot be
easily assumed where the discretion is vested in high
officials. The Court was also of the view that there might
be cases where improper execution of power will result in
discriminatory treatment and injustice to the parties, but,
the possibility of such discriminatory treatment cannot
necessarily invalidate the legislation; and where there is
abuse of such power, the parties aggrieved are not without
ample remedies under the law and what will be struck down in
such cases will not be the provision which invests the
authorities with such power but the abuse of power itself by
the authorities. [783H]
(8)The attempt of the Court should be to preserve and not
destroy. Respect for a coordinate branch of the Government
as well as the presumption of constitutionality demands it.
Before a duly enacted law can be judicially nullified, it
771
must be forbidden by some explicit restriction in the
Constitution. The attitude of judicial humility which this
consideration enjoins is not an abdication of the judicial
function, but a due observance of its limits. A just
respect for the legislature requires that the obligation of
its laws should not be unnecessarily and wantonly assailed.
In determining the constitutionality of an Act, the, Court
should construe it in such a manner as to sustain it and
every possible presumption will be indulged in for that
purpose. [785C-E]
Gurhachan Singh v. State of Bombay, [1952] S.C.R. 737,
Virendra v State of Punjab, [1958] S.C.R. 308, Jayantilal
Parshottamdas v. State [1970] 11 Guj. L.R. 403. State of
Bombay v. P. N. Balsara, [1951] S.C.R. 682, K. T. Moopil
Nair v. State of Kerala, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 77 at 93 and Bidi
Supply Co. v. The Union of India and Others, [1956] S.C.R.
267, referred to and explained. Pannalal Binjraj v. Union of
India, [1957] S.C.R. 233, referred to and discussed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1730 of
1967.
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From the judgment and order dated the 24th March, 1966 of
the Punjab High Court in C.W. No. 26 of 1965 and
Civil Appeals Nos. 1751-1753 of 1967.
From the judgment and order dated the 24th March, 1966 of
the Punjab High Court in C.W. Nos. 627 to 629 of 1965
V. C. Mahajan and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant.
Shaukat Hussain, for the respondent.
The Judgment of A. N. Ray, C.J., H. R. Khanna, A.
Alagiriswami and P. N. Bhagwati, JJ was delivered by Khanna,
J. K. K. Mathew, J gave a dissenting Opinion.
KHANNA, J.-This judgment would dispose of civil appeals No.
1730 and 1751, 1752 and 1753 of 1967 which have been filed
on certificate by the State of Punjab against a Full Bench
judgment of the Punjab High Court whereby section 2 of the
East Punjab Movable Property (Requisitioning) Act, 1947
(East Punjab Act XV of 1947) (hereinafter referred to as the
Act) was struck down on the ground of being violative
article 14 of the Constitution. It was further held that
section 2 was not severable from the rest of the Act and the
other provisions of the Act were merely ancillary to the
powers of requisitioning and acquisition of property
contained in sections 2 and 3 of the Act. The High Court
accordingly held the entire Act to be unconstitutional and
void.
We may set out the facts giving rise to civil appeal No.
1730, because it is the common case of the parties that the
decision in that appeal would govern the other three appeals
also. The respondent in civil appeal No. 1730 is the owner
of Tata Mercedes Benze truck No. 1607. On December 18, 1964
the District Magistrate Rohtak passed an order under section
2 of the Act requiring Khan Chand respondent to place the
above truck at the disposal of the Executive Engineer Rohtak
because the District Magistrate was of the view that trucks
were necessary to carry road ’material for famine work.
772
It was also mentioned that compensation for the use of the
truck would be paid at the rate fixed by the Government.
The truck was thereafter taken into possession by the
District Magistrate or December 19, 1964. The respondent
thereupon filed petition under article 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court challenging the validity of
the above order of the District Magistrate. Prayer was also
made to declare the, provisions of the Act to be
unconstitutional
The petition was resisted by the State of Punjab and the
District Magistrate of Rohtak, who are the appellants before
us, and the affidavit of the District Magistrate was filed
in opposition to the petition. The petition was first
posted for hearing before a single Judge who referred it to
a Division Bench. The Division Bench, it view of the
importance of the matter, referred it to Full Bench. The
Full Bench examined the different provisions of the Act and
found that section 2 of the Act was violative of article 14
of the Constitution as it gave unfettered and unguided power
to the executive to interfere with the property rights of
the citizen-, in an arbitrary manner. If was observed that
the Act did not lay down any principle or policy for
guidance in the exercise of the wide discretion conferred by
it or the executive authorities. Section 2 of the Act was
accordingly, as observed earlier, held to be violative of
article 14 of the Constitution, As regards section 3 of the
Act, it was observed that it could not corn( into operation
without Section 2 being first invoked. The,other provisions
of the Act were held to be merely ancillary to the power of
requisitioning and acquisition of property contained in
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sections 2 and 3 of the Act. As the Act was found to confer
on the Government arbitrary and uncontrolled power to
discriminate both between things and persons and as the
discrimination was writ large on the face of the Act, the
entire Act was held to be unconstitutional and void.
The Act, it may be stated replaced Ordinance V of 1947 which
had been promulgated by the Governor of East Punjab on
September 15, 1947. The Act was first published in the East
Punjab Government Gazette on December 13, 1947. According
to the preamble it was an Act to provide for the
requisitioning and acquisition movable property. Section 2,
3, and 4 of the Act read as under
"2. (1) The State Government, if it considers
it necessary or expedient so to do, may by
order in writing requisition any movable
property and may make such further orders as
may be necessary or expedient in connection
with the requisitioning :
Provided that no property used for the purpose
of religious worship and no aircraft or
anything forming part of an aircraft or
connected with the operation, repair or
maintenance of aircraft, shall be
requisitioned.
(2)Where the State Government makes any
order under sub-section (1), it may use or
deal with the property in such manner as may
appear to it to be expedient.
773
3.(1) The State Government may at any time
acquire any movable property requisitioned by
it under section 2 by serving on the owner
thereof, or, where the owner is not readily
traceable or the ownership is in dispute, by
publishing in the Official Gazette, a notice
stating that the said authority has decided to
acquire it in pursuance of this section.
(2)Where a notice of acquisition is served
on the owner of the property or published in
the Official Gazette under subsection (1) then
at the beginning of the day on which the
notice is so served or published the property
shall vest in the State Government free from
all encumbrances and the period of requisition
thereof shall end.
4.The owner of any movable property
requisitioned or acquired under this Act shall
be paid such compensation as the State
Government may determine."
Section 5 of the Act deals with release from requisition of
the requisitioned property. Section 6 empowers the State
Government to obtain information and to give directions with
a view to requisitioning or acquiring any property or for
the purpose of determining the amount of compensation
payable under the Act. Section 7 enables the State
Government to take or cause to be taken such steps and use
or cause to be used such force as may be reasonably
necessary for securing compliance with any order made under
the Act. According to section 8, the State Government may
by order notified in the Official Gazette, direct that any
power conferred or any duty imposed on it by the Act shall
in such circumstances and under such conditions as may be
specified in the direction be exercised or discharged by
such officer as may be specified. Section 9 prescribes the
offences and penalties under the Act, while section 10 gives
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protection to persons acting under the Act against civil or
criminal proceedings. Section 11 repealed Ordinance No. V
of 1947.
Mr. Mahajan on behalf of the appellants has assailed the
judgment of the High Court and has argued that the
provisions of section 2 of the Act do not contravene article
14 of the Constitution. This contention, in our opinion, is
not well founded. The relevant provisions of the Act have
been reproduced above and from a perusal thereof we find
that the Act confers uncontrolled power on the State
Government or the officers authorised by it to requisition
any movable property. The only property excluded from the
purview of the Act is one used for the purpose of religious
worship or an aircraft or anything forming part of an
aircraft or connected with the operation, repair or
maintenance of aircraft. No guidelines have been laid down
in the Act regarding the object or the purpose, for which
the State Government or the officers authorised by it may
consider it necessary or expedient to requisition a movable
property. it is not even the requirement of the Act that the
authority requisitioning movable property should specify in
the order the purpose for which it has become necessary or
expedient to requisition that property. There is no
provision in the Act that the power of requisitioning
movable property can be
774
exercised under the Act only for a public purpose nor is
there any provision that powers under the Act can be
exercised only in an emergency or in some special
contingency-. It is open under the provisions of the Act
for an officer authorised under the Act to requisition
movable property for any purpose whatsoever. For example,
it would be permissible under the provisions of the Act for
the District Magistrate, who is an officer auhorised under
the Act, to requisition the furniture of any one within the
district for use in the office of the District Magistrate.
Likewise, it would be permissible for the District
Magistrate to requisition any private car which may have
caught his fancy for his own use. It is not necessary to go
into the question as to whether the District Magistrate
would ever use his powers under the Act for such purposes.
Suffice it to say that there is nothing in the provisions of
the Act which makes it impermeable for a District Magistrate
to requisition movable property for any purpose whatsoever
for which he considers it necessary or expedient to do so.
The power conferred under the Act can be exercised not only
by the State Government but also by the officers to whom it
may be delegated by the State Government. There is nothing
in the Act that the officer to whom the powers under the Act
can be delegated must not be below a particular rank. The
result is that the powers of requisitioning a movable
property, which are of a most comprehensive nature, can be
conferred even upon a petty officer. No suitable machinery
is also provided in the Act for determining the compensation
payable to the owner of the movable property nor does the
Act contains any guiding principles for determining the
amount of compensation. According to section 4 of the Act,
the compensation to be paid shall be such as the State
Government may determine".
The drastic and unusual features of the Act which have been
pointed out above highlight the fact that the Act confers
arbitrary powers for requisitioning of movable property upon
the authorities under the Act and that no guidelines
whatsoever have been prescribed for the exercise of the
powers of requisitioning. The total absence of guidelines
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for the exercise of power of requisitioning of movable
property, in our opinion, vitiates section 2 of the Act.
Arbitrariness and the power to discriminate are writ large
on the face of the said provision of the Act and, in our
opinion, that provision falls within the. mischief which
article 14 of the Constitution is designed to prevent. The
fact that the impugned Act was enacted before the coming
into force of the Constitution would not made any material
difference. The protection afforded by article 31(5) to
pre-Constitution laws is against the challenge on the ground
of contravention of article 31(2); article 31(5) gives no
immunity to pre-Constitution laws from attack on the ground
that they violate article 14 of the Constitution.
We may state that the vesting of discretion in authorities
in the exercise of power under an enactment does not by
itself entail contravention of article 14. What is
objectionable is the conferment of arbitrary and
uncontrolled discretion without any guidelines whatsoever
with regard to the exercise of that discretion. Considering
the complex nature of problems which have to be faced by a
modem State, it
775
is but inevitable that the matter of details should be left
to the authorities acting under an enactment. Discretion
has, therefore, to be given to the authorities concerned for
the exercise of the powers vested in them under an
enactment. The enactment must, however, prescribe the
guidelines for the furtherance of the objects of the
enactment and it is within the framework of those guidelines
that the authorities can use their discretion in the
exercise of the powers conferred upon them. Discretion
which is absolute uncontrolled and without any guidelines in
the exercise of the powers can easily degenerate into
arbitrariness. When individuals act according to their
sweet. will, there is bound to be an element of ’pick and
choose’ according to the notion of the individuals. If a
Legislature bestows such untrammeled discretion on the
authorities acting under an enactment, it abdicates its
essential function for such discretion is bound to result in
discrimination which is the negation and antithesis of the
ideal of equality before law as enshrined in article 14 of
the Constitution. It is the absence of any principle or
policy for the guidance of the authority concerned in the
exercise of discretion which vitiates an enactment and makes
it vulnerable to the attack on the ground of violation of
article 14. It is no answer to the above that the executive
officers are presumed to be reasonable men who do not stand
to gain in the abuse of their power and can be trusted to
use "discretion" with discretion. As mentioned on page 3 of
Parliamentary Supervision of Delegated Legislation by John
E. Kersell, 1960 Ed.
"The point is, however, that no one ought to
be trusted with power without restraint.
Power can be of an encroaching nature, and its
encroachments are usually for the sake of what
are sincerely believed to be good, and indeed
necessary, objectives. Throughout history the
most terrible form of tyranny has been the
forcing on human beings of what someone
believes to be good for them. The imposition
of controls on the use of delegated
legislative authority, therefore, does not
imply a deep suspicion of malevolent
intentions. Human nature, being what it is,
has to be protected against itself, and where
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power is concerned the very existence of the
possibility of restraint, as we shall see, is
a safeguard against abuses in which ends may
be used to justify means and the good in
intent becomes the evil in effect."
It has been observed by this Court in the case of Shri Ram
Krishna Dalmia v. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar & Ors.(1)
that a statute may not make any classification of the
persons or things for the purpose of applying its provisions
but may leave it to the discretion of the Government to
select and classify persons or things to whom its provisions
are to apply. In determining the question of the validity
or otherwise of such a statute the court will not strike
down the law out of hand only because no classification
appears on its face or because a discretion is given to the
Government to make the selection or classification but will
go on to examine and ascertain if the statute has laid down
any principle or policy for the guidance of the exercise of
discretion by the Government in the matter of the selection
or classification. After such
(1) [1959] SCR 279 on page 299.
776
scrutiny the court will strike down the statute if it does
not lay down any principle or policy for guiding the
exercise of discretion by the Government in the matter of
selection or classification, on the ground that the statute
provides for the delegation of arbitrary and uncontrolled
power to the Government so as to enable it to discriminate
between persons or things similarly situate and that,
therefore, the discrimination is inherent in the statute
itself. In such a case the court will strike down both the
law as well as the executive action under such law. A
distinction which may also be kept in view was pointed out
by this Court in the case of Pannalal Binjraj v. Union of
India(1), which has been referred to by Mr. Mahajan. In
that case this Court upheld the constitutional validity of
section 5(7-A) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 and held
that the power vested in the Commissioner of income Tax or
the Central Board of Revenue to transfer income-tax cases
outside the area where the assessed resided or carried on
business would not amount to a denial of equality before the
law. The Court in this context observed :
"There is a broad distinction between
discretion which has to be exercised with
regard to a fundamental right guaranteed by
the Constitution and some other right_which is
given by the statute. If statute deals with a
right which is not fundamental in character
the statute can take it away but a fundamental
right the statute cannot take away. Where,
for example, a discretion is given in the
matter of issuing licences for carrying on
trade, profession or business or where
restrictions are imposed on freedom of speech,
etc. by the imposition of censorship, the
discretion must be controlled by clear rules
so as to come within the category of
reasonable restrictions. Discretion of that
nature must be differentiated from discretion
in respect of matters not involving
fundamental rights such as transfer of cases.
An inconvenience resulting from a change of
place or venue occurs when any case is
transferred from one place to another but it
is not open to a party to say that a
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fundamental right has been infringed by such
transfer. In other words, the discretion
vested has to be looked at from two points of
view, viz., (1) does it admit of the
possibility of any real and substantial
discrimination, and (2) does it impinge on a
fundamental right guaranteed by the
Constitution ? Article 14 can be invoked only
when both these conditions are satisfied."
The view taken by the High Court in the present case, in our
opinion, can be sustained because both the conditions laid
down above have been satisfied. There is ’every possibility
of real and substantial discrimination under the impugned
Act. The Act further impinges on the fundamental right of
property.
We find it difficult to accede to the contention that the
requisitioning of movable property contemplated by section 2
of the Act is requisitioning of such property for a public
purpose. The words "for a public purpose" do not find a
mention in section 2 and it is, in our
(1) (1957] S.C.R.233.
777
opinion, impermissible to construe that section in such a
way as if those words were a part of that section. To read
those words in the: section, even though those words are not
there, would for all intents and purposes amount to judicial
legislation. It may be mentioned that section 4 of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (Act 1 of 1894) which relates to the
acquisition of land makes an express reference to the need
for a public purpose. Likewise, section 3 of the
Requisition. and Acquisition of Immovable Property Act, 1952
(Act 30 of 1952) purpose for which property could be
requisitioned. If the purpose. Rule 75A of Defence of
India Rules framed under section 2 of Defence of India Act,
1939 (Act 35 of 1939) also specified the purpose for which
property could be requisitioned. It the purpose for which
property can be requisitioned under the Act had been
specified by saying that it should be a ’public purpose’ or
some other specified purpose, it might have been possible to
sustain section 2 as was done by the Gujarat High Court in
Jayantilal Parshottamdas v. State of Gujarat,(1) but as
pointed out above, we find no specifications of any purpose
at all in the section.
It would be wrong to assume that there is an element of
judicial arrogance in the act of the courts in striking down
an enactment. The Constitution has assigned to the courts
the function of determining as to whether the laws made by
the legislature are in conformity with the provisions of
the, Constitution. in adjudicating the constitutional
validity of statutes, the courts discharge an obligation
which has been imposed upon them by the Constitution. The
courts would be shirking their responsibility if they
hesitate to declare the provisions of a statute to be
unconstitutional, even though those provisions are found to
be violative of the articles of the Constitution. Articles
32 and 226 are an integral part of the Constitution and
provide remedies for enforcement of fundamental rights and
other rights conferred by the Constitution. Hesitation or
refusal on the part of the courts to declare the provisions
of an enactment to be unconstitutional, even though they are
found to infringe the Constitution because of any notion of
judicial humility would in a large number of cases have the
effect of taking away or in any case eroding the remedy
provided to the aggrieved parties by the Constitution.
Abnegation in matters affecting one’s own interest may
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sometimes be commendable but abnegation in a matter where
power is conferred to protect the interest of others against
measures which are violative of the Constitution is fraught
with serious consequences. It is as much the duty of the
courts to declare a provision of an enactment to be
unconstitutional if it contravenes any article of the
Constitution as it is theirs to uphold its validity in case
it is found’ to suffer from no such infirmity.
We may now refer to the other cases relied upon by Mr.
Mahajan. In Harishankar Bagla & Anr. v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh(2), this Court upheld the validity of sections 3, 4
and 6 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act,
1946. It was observed that the Legislature must declare the
policy of the law and the legal principles which are to
control given cases and must provide a standard to guide-
(1) Gujrat Law Reporter 403.
(2) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 380.
778
The officials or the body in power to execute the law. This
Court in that context examined the various provisions of the
Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946 and found
that the Legislature had laid down such a principle in the
Act and that the said principle was the maintenance or
increase in, supply of essential commodities and of securing
equitable distribution and availability at fair prices. The
preamble and the body of the sections of the aforesaid Act,
it was observed, sufficiently formulated the legislative
policy and the ambit and the character of the Act. This
case can, hardly be of any assistance to the appellants
because, as would appear from the above, the Legislature has
not declared the policy of the law and the legal principles
which are to govern the authorities in the exercise of the
discretion vested in them under the Act with which we are
concerned in the present case.
Another case referred to on behalf of the appellants is Sri
Ram Ram Narain Medhi v. The State of Bombay(1) wherein the
constitutional validity of the Bombay Tenancy and
Agricultural Lands (Amendment) Act, 1956 was assailed. This
Court on examining the provisions of the Act found that the
Legislature had laid down the policy of the Act in the
preamble and enunciated the broad principles in sections 5,
6 and 7 of the Act. The Court accordingly came to the con-
clusion that the Act had not conferred uncontrolled power on
the State Government to vary the ceiling area of the
economic holding. The Court in this context observed that
where the Legislature settles the policy and broad
principles of the legislation, there could be no bar against
leaving the matters of detail to be fixed by the executive
and such delegation of power could not vitiate the
enactment. This case again can be of no held to the
appellants because, as would appear from the above, the
Legislature has not settled the policy and broad Principles
of the legislation in the impugned Act in the present case.
The last case to be relied upon on behalf of the appellants
is that of P. J. Irani v. The State of Madras(2). In that
case the constitutional validity of section 13 of the Madras
Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1949 under which
exemption could be granted to a building or class of
buildings from the operation of all or any provision of the
Act was assailed on the ground that the said section
violated article 14 of the Constitution. This Court upheld
the validity of that section on the ground that enough
guidance was afforded by the preamble and the operative
provisions of the Act for the exercise of the discretionary
power vested in the Government. It was observed that the
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power tinder section 13 of the aforesaid Act for exempting
any building or class of buildings was to be exercised in
cases where the protection given by the Act caused hardship
to the landlord or was the subject of abuse by the tenant.
As the provisions of the impugned Act in the present case do
not afford any guidance for the exercise of the
discretionary power, the above case, in our opinion, cannot
be of much assistance to the appellants.
There is no merit in these appeals which accordingly fail
and are dismissed with costs. One set of hearing fee.
(1) [1959] 1 Supp. S. C. R. 489.
(2) [1962] 2 S. C. R. 169,
779
MATHEW, J. The ultimate question in these appeals is whether
the provisions of s.2 of the East Punjab Movable Property
(Requisioning) Act, 1947 (East Punjab Act XV of 1947),
hereinafter referred to as the Act, violate article 14 of
the Constitution and are, therefore, bad.
Sections 2,3,4 and 5 of the Act provide
"2. Requisitioning of movable property.-(1) The State
Government, if it considers it necessary or expedient so to
do, may by order in writing requisition any movable property
and may make such further orders as may be necessary or
expedient in connection with the requisitioning :
Provided that no property used for the purpose of religious
worship and no aircraft or anything forming part of an
aircraft or connected with the operation or maintenance of
aircraft, shall be requisitioned.
(2)Where the State Government makes any order under sub-
section (1), it may use or deal with the property in such
manner as may appear to it to be expedient.
3.Power to acquire requisitioned property.-(1) The State
Government may at any time acquire any movable property
requisitioned by it under section 2 by serving on the owner
thereof or, where the, owner is not readily traceable or the
ownership is in dispute, by publishing in the Official
Gazette, a notice stating that the said authority has
decided to acquire it in pursuance of this section.
(2)Where a notice of acquisition is served on the owner of
the property or published in the Official Gazette under sub-
section (1) then at the beginning of the day on which the
notice is so served or published the property shall vest in
the State Government free all encumbrances and the period of
requisition thereof shall end.
4.Payment of compensation.-The owner of any movable pro-
perty requisitioned or acquired under this Act shall be paid
such compensation as the State Government may determine.
8.Delegation of functions.-The State Government may by order
notified in the Official Gazette, direct that any power
conferred or any duty imposed on it by this Act shall in
such circumstances and under such conditions, if any, as may
be specified in the direction be exercised or discharged by
such officer as may be go specified".
The Act is a pre-Constitution Act. As the provisions of
s.299(2) of the Government of India Act, 1935, did not
apply, the Act was a perfectly valid one when it was
enacted. And, being an existing law, the Act is not liable
to be challenged on the scope that it violates the
fundamental right under article 31(2) (see article 31(5) ).
In other words, it was not necessary for the Act to have
expressly
780
stated that the requisition of movable property could only
be for a public purpose and to have fixed the amount of
compensation or the principles therefore.
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The question, therefore, is whether the High Court was right
in holding that s. 2 of the Act is violative of article 14,
of the Constitution and in striking down the whole Act for
the reason that s. 2 is not severable from the rest of the
provisions of the Act.
Let me take s. 2 and see whether the provisions thereof in
any way violate article 14. That section confers power on
the State Government if it considers it necessary or
expedient so to do to requisition any movable property by an
order in writing. The section does not state the purpose
for which any movable property could be requisitioned. The
High Court has, therefore, held that an unlimited discretion
has been given to the State Government without any guideline
to requisition movable property and that would lead to
discrimination in the exercise of the power.
I think it impossible for anybody to read the section as
conferring a power to requisition any movable property for a
purpose other than a public purpose. We must test the
validity of the section with reference to its terms and not
what an officer to whom the State Government delegates the
power under s. 8 might do in his Quixotic vagaries. The
illustrations of what a District Magistrate might do in his
fancy might perhaps have some relevance to test the validity
of the power of delegation conferred under s. 8 on the State
Government but it has absolutely no relevance when we arc
considering the validity of s.2 where we are concerned only
with the power conferred on the State Government.
It it quite immaterial that the section does not
specifically say for what purpose the power of requisition
of movable property could be exercised. I should have
thought that nothing hinges upon the presence or absence of
such phrases as ’public interest’, ’public good’ or ’public
purpose’. The, substance is the same whether the
legislature says ’deal with the problem,’ or says ’deal with
the problem in the public interest’ or ’exercise the power
for public good’ or ’for public purpose’. Courts and
parties all assume that the legislature always wants
protection of the, public interest, to serve public cause
and do things for public good or to exercise powers for
public purpose and always intends that administrators act
justly and reasonably whether the legislature says so in the
statute or not (see, Kenneth Culp Davis, "Administrative Law
Treatise", (1958) vol. 1, p. 87). Every legislative body
must be presumed to favour the true, the good and above all
the public interest and public good and whether it says so
or not is of absolutely no consequence. Could any court
have said or could any court say for that matter, on reading
the section, that the power conferred on the State
Government could be exercised for any private purpose?
Government exists and its only title to exist is its claim
to advance the public good and serve the public interest.
So when the section said that the, State Government, if it
considers, it necessary or expedient so to do, may by an
order in writing requisition any moveable property, it can
only mean, when it considers it necessary or expedient so to
do in public interest or for public good or purpose. That
781
is implied in the section. Nobody could or would, in the
year of our Lord 1973, read the section in any other manner.
"The purpose for which a power is given may not be specified
in the enabling Act, but that does not necessarily prevent
the Court from inferring the purpose and holding that the
power has been abused"(1).
Grant of discretionary power has been upheld in several
cases by this Court on the ground of the high standing of
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the body or authority upon which the power was conferred.
In Gurbachan Singh v. State of Bombay(2) Mukherjea, J.
upheld the power of externment conferred on the Commissioner
of Police, inter alia on the ground that-
"... This power is vested not in minor
officials, but in top-ranking authorities like
the Commissioner of Income Tax and the Central
Board of Revenue, who act on the information
supplied to them by the Income-tax officers
concerned."
In Virendra v. State of Punjab(3), Das, C.J.
said :
"... In the first place, the discretion is
given in the first instance to the State
Government itself and not to a very
subordinate officer like the licensing officer
as was done in Dwarka Prasad’s Case.... It is
true that the State Government may delegate
the power to any officer or person but the
fact that the power of delegation is to be
exercised by the State Government itself was
some safeguard against the abuse of this power
of delegation".
In short, it appears to me that the vesting of the
discretionary power in a State Govt. or in a high public
dignitary is a guarantee that the power will be exercised on
the basis of a reasonable standard for the purpose intended
by the legislature.
With the proliferation of the functions of the State, it has
become necessary to vest wide discretionary powers upon
administrative organs of the State. A modern State cannot
be carried on without vesting wide administrative or
discretionary powers on public functionaries. Often it is
practically useless to lodge power in a public functionary
without giving him a large measure of discretion, for, the
situations which might arise in public affairs are
multifarious and very often unpredictable and unforeseen.
There is always a potential danger in vesting any
discretionary power in any person as it is liable to be
abused or exercised in a discriminatory manner, however much
the legislature might try to hedge the power with
safeguards.
I think that the expression "necessary or expedient" used in
the section is sufficient to give an adequate guidance to
the Government when read in juxtaposition with the implied
purpose of the conferment of the power. ’Necessary’ means
"what is indispensable, needful or essential" and
’expedient, means "useful for effecting a desired result,
fit or suitable for the purpose". One has to appreciate the
fact that the legislature, while laying down the policy or
principle, is bound to
(1) See Hood Phillips, "Constitutional and Administrative
Law". pp. 623-24.
(2) [1952] S.C. R. 737.
(3) [1958] S. C. R. 308.
782
keep in mind the nature of the problems that is to be
tackled by the State Government. A variety of factors and
circumstances arise for consideration in deciding whether a
particular movable property should or should not be
requisitioned. The legislature rightly appears to have
decided that it would not serve the purpose if it were to
define and describe all the relevant factors which have to
be taken into account for requisitioning any movable
property.
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Section 3(1) of the Essential Commodities Act, 1955, reads
" 3(1) If the Central Government is of the opinion that it
is necessary or expedient so to do for maintaining or in-
creasing supplies of any essential commodity."
Section 3(1) of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers)
Act XXIV of 1946 provides:
"3 (1) The Central Government, so far as it appears to it
to be necessary or expedient for maintaining and increasing
supplies of any essential commodity.
In all these provisions the Central Government on which the
power is conferred has to decide as a condition-precedent
whether, it is necessary or expedient to exercise tile power
in relation to the purpose sought to be attained and the
legislature, having regard to the nature of the power and
the purpose to be attained, had thought it fit to leave the
exercise of the power flexible to attain the object and
advisedly used the expression "necessary or expedient" for
that purpose. Whether a particular requisitioning is
expedient for a particular purpose or not may require many
factors and shades of considerations to be taken into
account. It was not necessary for the legislature to supply
the State Government with a more specific formula for its
guidance where flexibility and adaptation to infinitely
variable conditions constitute the essence of the
legislative scheme. I think the expression "necessary or
expedient" read in conjunction with the purpose implied in
the section, namely, public interest or purpose, does
canalise the exercise of the power and discretion to be used
by the Government(1).
It is not contrary to the rule of law that powers should be
vested in public officers for performing public functions.
What the rule of law requires is that any abuse of power by
public officers should be subject to the control of courts.
In State of Bombay v. P. N. Balsara,(2) one question which
fell for consideration was whether the provisions of
sections 52, 53 and 139(c) of the Bombay Prohibition Act
(Act 25 of 1949) were valid. Section 52 (of this Act
empowered an authorised officer to grant licences, permits,
etc. in cases not specifically provided for; section 53
dealt with the form in which and the conditions under which
licences, etc., may be granted and s. 139(c) stated that the
State Government may by general or special order exempt any
person or class of persons or institution or class of
institutions from the observance of all or any
(1) See Jayantilal Parshottamdas v. State (1970) 11 Guj.
L. R. 403.
(2) [1951] S. C. R. 682.
783
of the provisions of the Act or any rule, regulation or
order made thereunder. The High Court of Bombay held these
sections to be bad as they did not provide any guidance for
the exercise of the powers. This Court, in appeal, held the
sections to be valid by saying :
"A legislature while legislating cannot
foresee and provide for all future
contingencies,. and s. 52 does no more than
enable the duty authorized officer to meet
contingencies and deal with various situations
as they arise. The same considerations will
apply to sections 53 and 139(c)".
In enacting a general law it is not possible to foresee
every situation or to envisage every contingency and to
provide specially for it by excluding the operation of the
law wholly or in pan in respect of such situations or such
contingencies. Power is, therefore, conferred by statutes
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on the executive to exempt persons or bodies from all or any
of the provisions of an Act.
There is nothing unreasonable in granting a power to meet
unforeseen situations. If there are no guidelines for the
exercise of the power, the vesting of the power in a
functionary need not be down. The unreasonableness is to be
found in its exercise and not in its existence. I am aware
that in K. ’I’. Moopit, Nair v. State of Kerala(1), the
Court without, referring to the view taken in State of
Bombay v. F. N. Balsara(2) struck down s. 7 of the
Travancore Cochin Land Tax Act, 1955, which gave power to
the State Government to grant exemption from payment of land
tax. I need only say that one can visualise several
contingencies like drought, pestilence, etc. in which
exemption from tax would be reasonable.
In Bidi Supply Co. v. The Union of India and Others(3) the
majority judgment held that s. 5(7A) read with s. 22(2) of
the, Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, did not authorise an
omnibus transfer of cases and consequently, it was not
necessary to consider the constitutional validity of s. 5
(7A) as the Income-tax authorities had, by an illegal
executive order picked out the petitioner and transferred
all his cases by an omnibus order unlimited in point of
time. The order was clearly discriminatory as it was
calculated to inflict considerable Inconvenience and
harassment on the petitioner. Bose, J. concurred in the
result but held s. 5(7A) of the Indian Income Tax Act was
ultra vires as offending articles 14.
In Pannalal Binjraj v. Union of India(4) it was held that
the herassment and inconvenience caused to an assessee by
transfer of his case was not conclusive, that the right to
be assessed in a particular locality was not an absolute
right but subject to the exigencies of tax collection and
that even if there is a possibility of discriminatory treat-
ment of persons falling within the, same group or category,
such possibility cannot necessarily invalidate the piece of
legislation. The Court said that a power which is
discretionary is not necessarily
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R 77,93. (2) [1951] S.C.R. 682.
(3) [1956] S.C.R. 267. (4) [1957] S.C.R 233.
784
discriminatory and abuse of power cannot be easily assumed
where the discretion is vested in high officials. According
to the Court there is a presumption that public officials
will discharge their duties honesty and in accordance with
the rules of law, that unless the contrary were shown, the
administration of a particular law would be done not "with
an evil eye and unequal hand." The Court was of the view
that there might be cases where improper execution of power
will result in discriminatory treatment and injustice to the
parties, but, the possibility of such discriminatory
treatment cannot necessarily invalidate the legislation and
where there is an abuse of such power, the parties aggrieved
are not without ample remedies under the, law and what will
be struck down in such cases will not be the, provision
which invests the authorities with such power but the abuse
of the power itself. The Court said that there is a
distinction between a discretion which has to be exercised
with regard to fundamental rights guaranteed by the
Constitution and ordinary rights given by statutes and that
discretion vested in a functionary has to be looked at from
two points of view, namely, "(1) Does it admit of the
possibility of any real and substantial discrimination, and
(2) Does it impinge on a fundamental right guaranteed by
the. Constitution and that article 1-4 could be invoked
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only if both these conditions were satisfied". Article 14
confers a fundamental right, namely, the right to equality
before the law. it is difficult to see why it is necessary
for a person asserting that right to prove that another
fundamental right has been violated. The-concept of
equality before the law does not vary with tile nature, of
the right in issue. In other words, whether the right at
stake is fundamental or not, is quite immaterial when we are
considering the question of equality before the law.
Be that as it may,, this ruling, I think, is an authority
for two propositions : (1) that even if a power is
discretionary, it need not necessarily result in a
discriminatory exercise of it and (2) that even if no
guidelines are laid down for the exercise of discretionary
power, the section which confers the power need not be
struck down but only the actual exercise of power under it
which is unreasonable or discriminatory.
Dealing with the Equality Clause in the Constitution of the
U.S.A. Professor Willis has said : (1)
"Perhaps the best view on the subject is that ’due process’
and ’equality’ are, not violated by the mere conference of
unguided power, but only by its arbitrary exercise by those
upon whom conferred (see Plymouth Coal Co. v. Pennsylva-
nia(1914) 232 U.S. 531".
The theory behind this proposition is that although the
conferment of discretionary power without guideline might
result in its being exercised in a discriminatory manner, no
one will presume that it will be so exercised. On the other
hand, the presumption is that public functionaries will
administer the law properly. Courts do not strike down
(1) Willis, "constitutional Law" pp. 586-87.
785
a provision in a statute on the assumption that the person
invested with power under it would exercise it "with an evil
eye and unequal hand". The heart of the matter is that in
such a case the law itself is not bad, because it is capable
of being administered in an impartial and reasonable manner
as this case illustrates. So long as courts are open in
this country and the doctrine of abuse of power is there,
there need be no apprehension that any power will be
exercised arbitrarily or in a discriminatory manner merely
because the power is apparently capable of being so
exercised. It is perfectly open to the State Government or
an honest officer to whom the power is delegated to exercise
it in a reasonable and nondiscriminatory manner. Why then
should the court be anxious to strike down the law ? The
court’s power is properly invoked if a person is actually
aggrieved by the exercise of the power under the law. We
should not exercise our power to strike down a law on
hypothetical considerations of what a bad officer might do.
In determining the constitutionality of an Act, we would
construe it in such a manner as to sustain it and every
possible presumption will be indulged in for that purpose.
Our attempt must be to preserve and not destroy. Respect
for a coordinate branch of the Government as well as the
presumption of constitutionality demands it. Before a duly
enacted law can be judicially nullified, it must be
forbidden by some explicit restriction in the Constitution.
Our duty of deference to those who have the responsibility
for making the laws has great relevance in this context.
The attitude of judicial humility which this Consideration
enjoins is not an abdication of the judicial function. It
is a due observance of its limits. As Marshall said : "No.
questions can be brought before a judicial tribunal of
greater delicacy than those which involve the
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constitutionality of legislative acts". And, as laid, a
just respect for the legislature requires that the
obligation of its laws should not be unnecessarily and
wantonly assailed.
If the power which is conferred on the State Government
under 2 of the Act is valid, I see no objection to that
power being delegated. cannot assume that the State
Government will delegate the power without due regard to the
status of the delegate in the official hierarchy. We have
not been referred to any case where it has been held that
wide discretionary powers are bad for the reason that the
State or any other body on which they have been conferred
has power to delegate them to another body or person.
The High Court has not passed upon the question whether the
District Magistrate, in requisitioning the truck in
question, was acting in an unreasonable or a discriminatory
manner or the requisition of the truck was not for a public
purpose. I think that the requisition of the truck by the
District Magistrate was for a public purpose and that his
action in so doing was perfectly reasonable.
No other reason has been given by the High Court for
declaring the provisions of s. 2 of the Act to be invalid.
If section 2 is not invalid for the reasons given by the
High Court, the ground on which the other provisions of the
Act were struck down by the High Court will not survive.
786
In my view, the provisions of s. 2 do not violate article,
14 and are not invalid for that reason. I uphold the action
taken by the District Magistrate and would allow the appeals
with costs.
ORDER
In accordance with the decision of the majority, the appeals
are dismissed with costs. One set of hearing fee.
V. P. S. Appeals dismissed.
787