Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BEHRAM KHURSHED PESIKAKA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY.REFERENCE UNDER ARTICLE 145(3) OF THE CO
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/02/1954
BENCH:
ACT:
Constitution of India, Arts. 13 and 141-Statute
declared unconstitutional-Effect of-Declaration in Balsara’s
case--Effect of-If the decision throws onus on the accused-
Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949 (Bombay Act XXV of 1949), ss. 2
(24),13 (b), 66(b).
HEADNOTE:
Held (Per MEHR CHAND MAHAJAN C. J., MUKHERJEA, VIVIAN
BOSE and GHULAM HASAN JJ., S. R. DAS J. dissenting) that
the effect of the declaration in the case of The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara(1) that clause (b) of s.
13 of the Bombay Prohibition Act (XXV of 1949) is void under
Art. 13(1) of the Constitution in so far as it affects the
consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol, is to render part of s.
13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act inoperative, ineffective
and ineffectual and thus unenforceable.
In view of the constitutional invalidity of a
part of s. 13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act having been
declared void by the Supreme Court, that part of the section
ceased to have legal effect in judging cases of citizens and
must be regarded as null and void in determining whether a
citizen was guilty of an offence.
The clear enactment of Art. 141 of the Constitution
leaves no scope in India for the application of the American
doctrine that "the declaration by a court of
unconstitutionality of a statute which is in conflict with
the Constitution affects the parties only and there is no
judgment against the statute and it does not strike the
statute from the statute book."
In India, on the other hand, once a law has been -struck
down as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, no notice can
be taken of it by any Court because after it is declared as
unconstitutional it is no longer law and is null and void.
The bare circumstance that a citizen accused of an offence
under s. 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act is smelling of
alcohol is compatible both with his innocence as well as his
guilt. The smell of alcohol may be due to the fact that the
accused had contravened the enforceable part of s. 13(b) of
the Bombay Prohibition Act or it may well be due to the fact
that he had taken alcohol which fell under the unenforceable
and inoperative part of the section. Therefore the onus was
laid on the prosecution to prove that the
(I) [1951] S.C.R. 682.
79
614
alcohol of which he was smelling came under the category of
prohibited alcohol within the meaning of the enforceable
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part of s. 13(b).
Per S. R. DAS J. :-The declaration in the case of The
State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara gives a citizen
who has consumed or used liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations a defence to a charge under s. 66(b) read with
s. 13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act and it is for the
accused person to prove the facts on which that declaration
of law is based.
The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
([1951] S.C.R. 682) explained.
Kesava Madhava Menon v. The State of Bombay ([1951]
S.C.R. 228) followed.
rangarao Bala Maize v. The State ([19511 54 Bom. L. R.
325), In re Kanakasabai Pillai (A.I.R. 1940 Mad. 1) and
Norton v. Shelby County (118 U. S. 425) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 42 of
1953.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 5th February, 1953, of the High Court of
Judicature at Bombay in Criminal Appeal No. 1149 of 1952
arising out of the Judgment and Order dated the 22nd April,
1952, of the Court of the Presidency Magistrate 19th Court,
Bombay, in Case No. 933/P of 1951.
B. M. Mistry, J. B. Dadachanji, Rajinder Narain and
R. D. Chadda for the appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (R.
Ganapathy Iyer and P. G. Gokhale, with him) for the
respondent.
1954. February 19, April 28, September 23, and September
24.
[The present Criminal Appeal (No. 42 of 1953) came up for
hearing in the first instance before a Bench of Hon’ble
Judges composed of Bhagwati, Jagannadhadas and Venkatarama
Ayyar JJ. who delivered the following Judgments dated 19th
February, 1954].
BHAGWATI J.-This is an appeal by special leave from a
judgment of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay reversing
the order of acquittal passed in favour of the appellant by
the Court of the Presidency
615
Magistrate, 19th Court, Bombay, and convicting him of
an offence under section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition
Act, 1949, and sentencing him to one month’s’ rigorous
imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 500.
The appellant, who was the Officiating Regional
Transport Officer, Bombay Region, was on the 29th May, 195
1, at about 9.30 P.m., proceeding in his jeep car towards
the Colaba Bus Stand when he knocked down three persons,
Mrs. Savitribai Motwani, her husband and Miss Parvatibai
Abhichandani. The police arrested the appellant and took
him to the police station. From the police station he was
taken to St. George’s Hospital in order to be examined by
the doctor for alleged consumption of liquor. The doctor
found his breath smelling of alcohol. He however found the
conjunctiva were congested, the pupils were semi-dilated and
reacting to light. The speech was coherent and he could
behave himself and walk along a straight line. The doctor
was therefore of opinion that he did not seem to be under
the influence of alcohol though he had taken alcohol in some
form or the other.
The appellant was put up before the Presidency
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Magistrate for his trial under two offences, one under
section 338 of the Indian Penal Code on three counts for
causing grievous hurt to the three injured persons by doing
a rash and negligent act, i.e., driving his motor car in a
rash and negligent manner, and the other under section 66
(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act. The appellant cross-
examined the doctor and suggested that he had taken a
medicinal preparation, B. G. Phos, and also stated in answer
to the Magistrate on the 20th December, 1951, that he had
not consumed any liquor but had taken medicinal preparation
containing a small percentage of alcohol. He also filed a
written statement on the 13th March, 1952, setting out in
detail the whole history of his case. He stated there that
owing to his ill health he had been recommended to take
tonics, specially those containing vitamin B Complex and
Phosphates and had regularly taken tonics, such as Wampole’s
Phospho Lecitin, B. G. Phos, and Huxley’s Nerve Vigour. He
further stated that on the night in question he had at about
9 or 9.15 P.m. after dinner
616
taken a dose of B. G. Phos and was proceeding in his jeep
car for a drive via Cuffee Parade and Marine Drive when the
accident took place. He produced his driving licence and
registration certificate and a copy of the agenda of the
Regional Transport Authority’s meeting to be held next day
and a carton of B. G. Phos on which it was stated that it
contained 17 per cent alcohol according to its formula.
The learned Presidency Magistrate acquitted the
appellant of both these offences. In regard to the offence
under section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act he
observed that the evidence did not go to show conclusively
that the appellant had consumed alcohol without a permit,
that there were certain medicinal preparations which were
allowed to be used by law and there was no satisfactory
evidence to show that the appellant had not consumed those
tonics but only liquor for which he ought to have a permit.
The respondent, the State of Bombay, took two appeals
before the -High Court against each of these two cases. The
High Court confirmed the acquittal in regard to the charge
under section 338 of the Indian Penal Code but reversed the
order acquitting him of the charge under section 66(b) of
the Bombay Prohibition Act. The High Court followed a
decision of its own Division Bench in Rangarao Bala Mane v.
State(1) where it had been held that-"Once it is proved by
the prosecution that a person has drunk or consumed liquor
without a permit, it is for that person to show that the
liquor drunk by him was not prohibited liquor, but was
alcohol or liquor which he is permitted by law to take,
e.g., medicated alcohol. The prosecution is not to
discharge the burden of the accused, and if in answer to a
charge of drinking liquor without a permit the accused
suggests that the liquor which was drunk by him was not
liquor in a prohibited form or was alcohol in a medicated
form, he must show it." The High Court observed that the
Magistrate had misdirected himself on a point of law and it
was therefore open to it to examine the evidence and come to
its own conclusion whether the appellant had shown that he
had
(1) (1951) 54 Bom. L. R. 325.
617
taken B. G. Phos that night after dinner and that the
alcoholic smell which was still found in his mouth as late
as 11.30 P.m. when he was examined by the doctor"’ was the
smell of the alcoholic con-tents of B. G. Phos. It came to
the conclusion that the appellant had failed to prove the
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existence of circumstances from which the Court could come
to the conclusion that the liquor which was consumed by the
appellant was not prohibited liquor but liquor which was
excepted by the Bombay Prohibition Act from its operation
and set aside the order of acquittal passed by the learned
Presidency Magistrate in his favour convicting him of the
offence and sentencing him as above.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant before us
that the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949, was impugned after
the advent of the Constitution and this Court by its
decision in The State of Bombay and Another v.F.N.Balsara(1)
inter alia declared the provisions of clause (b) of section
13 to be invalid so far as it affects the consumption or use
of liquid medicinal and toilet preparations containing
alcohol, that the effect of that declaration was to lift the
consumption or use of liquid medicinal and toilet
preparations containing alcohol from the prohibition enacted
in section 13(b) and that section 66(b) was inoperative and
unenforceable so far as such medicinal and toilet
preparations containing alcohol were Concerned. It was
therefore incumbent on the prosecution, if a charge under
section 66(b) was framed against an accused, to prove that
the accused had consumed or used an intoxicant in
contravention of the provisions of the Act, which provision
so far as section 13(b) was concerned was to be read as
prohibiting the consumption or use of liquor, i.e., spirits
of wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and all non-
medicinal and non-toilet liquid preparations consisting of
or containing alcohol, which were the only categories of
validly prohibited liquor. On this interpretation of the
effect of the judgment in The State of Bombay and Another v.
P. N. Balsara (supra) there was no question whatever of the
applicability of section 105 or of section 106 of the
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 682.
618
Evidence Act as was sought to be done by the High Court.
It was further’ -urged that even if an onus was cast on the
accused to prove that he had consumed a liquid medicinal or
toilet preparation containing alcohol that onus was lighter
in burden than the onus on the prosecution and the moment
the accused indicated his defence the onus again shifted on
the prosecution to negative such defence.
It was urged on the other hand on behalf of the
respondent that the effect of the declaration in The -State
of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) was to graft
an exception or a proviso to section 13(b) and that the onus
and the burden of proving the existence of circumstances
bringing his case within the exception or proviso lay on the
accused and the Court was to presume the absence of such
circumstances. (Vide section 105 of the Evidence Act). It
was further urged that the prosecution could not possibly
prove that no form of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparation containing alcohol was taken by the accused,
that the fact of the consumption of such medicinal or toilet
preparation containing alcohol was especially within the
knowledge of the accused and that therefore the burden of
proving such fact was upon him, and that once the
prosecution had discharged the onus which lay upon it to
prove that the accused had consumed liquor it would be for
the accused to show that the liquor which was taken by him
was a liquid medicinal or toilet preparation containing
alcohol. (Vide section 106 of the Evidence Act).
The relevant provisions of the Bombay Prohibition Act,
1949, may be here set out. The Act was passed inter alia to
amend and consolidate the law relating to the promotion and
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enforcement of and carrying into effect the policy of
prohibition in the Province of Bombay. Section 2(22)
defined ’an "intoxicant" to mean any
liquor..................... Section 2(24) defined "liquor"
to include (a) spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine,
beer, toddy and all liquids consisting of or containing
alcohol. Chapter III enacted the prohibitions and section
13(b) provided:-No person shall..................... (b)
consume or use
619
liquor Section 66(b) is the penal section and provided:-
"Whoever in contravention of the provisions of this Act,
or of any rule, regulation or order made, or of any licence,
permit, pass or authorisation issued, thereunder (b)
consumes, uses, possesses or transports any intoxicant or
hemp shall, on conviction, be punished."
It may be noted that the Act as it stood before the
amendment by Bombay Act XXVI of 1952 which came into
operation on the 22nd October, 1952, enacted in section 103
the only presumption as to the commission of offences in
certain -cases which cases had nothing to do with the
question before us.
This Court in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra) held that the definition of liquor contained
in section 2(24) was not ultra vires inasmuch as the word
liquor as understood in India at the time of the Government
of India Act, 1935, covered not only those alcoholic liquids
which are generally used as beverages and produce
intoxication but also all liquids containing alcohol. It
however considered the restrictions imposed by sections 12
and 13 of, the Act on the possession, sale, use and
consumption of liquor not reasonable restrictions on the
fundamental right guaranteed by article 19(1) (b) of the
Constitution to "acquire, hold and dispose of property" so
far as medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol
were concerned and declared the said sections invalid so far
as they prohibited the possession, sale, use and consumption
of these articles. The sections were however not wholly
declared void on this ground as the earlier categories
mentioned in the definition of liquor, viz., spirits of
wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer and toddy, were
distinctly separable items which were easily severable from
the last category, viz., all liquids containing alcohol, and
the restrictions on the possession, sale, use and
consumption of these earlier categories were not
unreasonable restrictions. It therefore declared section
13(b) invalid to the extent of the inconsistency, i.e., so
far as it affected the
620
consumption or use of liquid medicinal and toilet
preparations containing alcohol. The question that falls to
be determined is what was the effect of this declaration
The effect of the declaration of a statute as un-
constitutional has been thus set out by Cooley on
Constitutional Limitations, Vol. I, page 382.-
"Where a Statute is adjudged to be unconstitutional, it
is as if it had never been. Rights cannot be built up under
it; contracts which depend upon it for their consideration
are void; it constitutes a protection to no one who has
acted under it and no one can be punished for having refused
obedience to it before the decision was made. And what is
true of an Act void in toto is true also as to any part of
an Act which is found to be unconstitutional and which
consequently has to be regarded as having never at any time
been Possessed of any legal force........
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See also the dictum of Field J. in Norton v. Shelby
County(1):
"An unconstitutional Act is not law, it confers no
rights, it imposes no duties, it affords no protection, it
creates no office; it is, in legal contemplation, as
inoperative as though it had never been passed."
To the same effect are the passages from Rottschaefer on
Constitutional Law, at page 34:
"The legal status of a legislative provision in so far as
its application involves violation of constitutional
provisions, must however be determined in the light of the
theory on which Courts ignore it as law in the decision of
cases in which its application produces unconstitutional
results. That theory implies that the legislative provision
never had legal force as applied to cases within that
class."
Willoughby on Constitution of the United States, Second
Edition, Vol. 1, page 10:-
"The Court does not annul or repeal the statute if it
finds it in conflict with the Constitution. It simply
refuses to recognise it, and determines the rights of the
(1) 118 U. S. 425: 30 L.Ed. 178,
621
parties just as if such statute had no application. The
Court may give its reasons for ignoring or disregarding the
statute, but the decision affects the parties only, and
there is no judgment against the statute. The opinion or
reasons of the Court may operate as a precedent for the
determination of other similar cases, but it does not strike
the statute from the statute book; it does not repeal the
statute. The parties to that suit are concluded by the
judgment, but no one else is bound. A new litigant may
bring a new suit, based on the very same statute, and the
former decision can be relied on only as a precedent "
"It simply refuses to recognise it and determines the
rights of the parties just as if such statute had no
application "
And Willis on Constitutional Law, at page 89
" A judicial declaration of the unconstitutionality of a
statute neither annuls nor repeals the statute but has the
effect of ignoring or disregarding it so far as the
determination of the rights of private parties is concerned.
The courts generally say that the effect of an
unconstitutional statute is nothing. It is as though it had
never been passed
The declaration was a judicial pronouncement and. even
though under article 141 of the Constitution the -law
declared by this Court is binding on all the Courts within
the territory of India and is to be the law of the land the
effect of that declaration was not to enact a statutory
provision or to alter or amend section 13(b) of the Act. No
exception or proviso was also grafted in terms on section
13(b). The only effect of the declaration was that the
prohibition enacted in section 13(b) was to be enforceable
in regard to the consumption or use of validly prohibited
liquor, i.e., spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine,
beer, toddy and all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid
preparations consisting of or containing alcohol. The
prohibition which was enacted in section 13(b) against the
consumption or use of liquor could in the light of the
declaration made by this Court only refer to the consumption
or use of validly prohibited liquor, i.e., spirits of wine,
methylated spirits, wine, beer, today and all non-medicinal
and
80
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622
non-toilet liquid preparations consisting of or containing
alcohol, and that was the only prohibition which could be
enforced under section 13(b) and the penal section 66(b).
The consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations. containing alcohol could not be validly
prohibited and any person consuming or using such medicinal
or toilet preparations containing alcohol could not be
hauled up for having contravened the provisions of the Act.
No offence could be committed by the consumption of liquid
medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol and the
provision enacted in section 13(b) read in the light of the
definitions of intoxicant and liquor contained in sections 2
(22) and 2(24) of the Act in so far as it prohibited the
consumption or use of liquor including liquid medicinal or
toilet preparations containing alcohol was rendered
inoperative and unenforceable by the declaration to the
extent of the inconsistency and liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol were lifted out of the
category of validly prohibited liquor. Whatever may be the
implications or the consequences of the unconstitutionality
of section 13(b) to the extent of the inconsistency in other
respects, here was the State enforcing the penal provisions
of section 66(b) and encroaching upon the liberties of the
subject. Penal statutes should be strictly construed and
the, State could only penals the consumption or use of
validly prohibited liquor which only could constitute an
offence under section 66(b). The consumption or use of any
intoxicant meaning any liquor in contravention of the
provisions of this Act was to be punished and unless and
until the prosecution proved that the accused had consumed
or used liquor in contravention of the enforceable provi-
sions of the Act the accused could not be held guilty and
punished under section 66(b). The accused could be held
guilty only if he had contravened the enforceable provisions
of the Act and for the purpose of the present enquiry the
only provision of the Act which he could be charged with
having contravened was section 13(b), the prohibition
contained in which was by reason of the declaration made by
this Court enforceable only in regard to the consumption or
use of Validly prohibited liquor, i.e., spirits of wine.,
methylated spirits,
623
wine, beer, toddy and all non-medicinal and non-toilet
liquid preparations consisting of or containing alcohol.
It was strenuously urged before us on behalf of the
respondent that the declaration in effect, though not in
terms, enacted an exception or proviso to section 13(b) and
that therefore the onus lay upon the appellant to prove the
existence of circumstances bringing his case within the
exception or proviso. (Vide section 105 of the Evidence
Act.) It cannot be disputed that no exception or proviso was
in terms enacted by this declaration. It had the effect of
rendering the prohibition of consumption or use of liquid
medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol as
having never at any time been possessed of any legal force
and so not to be enforceable wherever any accused person was
charged with having contravened the provisions of section
13(b) of the Act. The effect of the declaration on the
provisions of section 13(b) could be worked out in any of
the following modes:
No person shall consume or use spirits of wine,
methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and all liquids
consisting of or containing alcohol as are not or which are
not or other than or save or except or provided they are not
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or but shall not include liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol or all non-medicinal and
non-toilet liquid preparations consisting of or containing
alcohol.
When these several interpretations were possible in
regard to the effect of the declaration on the provisions of
section 13(b), where would be the justification for
interpreting the effect of the declaration to be that of
grafting an exception o r proviso on section 13(b) so as to
attract the operation of the provisions of section 105 of
the Evidence Act? It is clear that where several
interpretations are possible, the Court should adopt an
interpretation favourable to the accused, rather than one
which casts an extra or special burden upon him, which if at
all should be done by clear and unequivocal provision in
that behalf rather than in this indirect manner. (See also
In re Kanakasabai Pillai(1) ). It would be more in
consonance with the principles of
(1) A.I.R. 1940 Mad. 1.
624
criminal jurisprudence to interpret the effect of this
declaration to be that the prohibition enacted in section
13(b) where it came to be enforced against any accused
person after the declaration should be enforceable as
regards the consumption or use of validly prohibited liquor,
?I.e., spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer,
toddy and all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid
preparations consisting of or containing alcohol, as above
stated.
If this is the effect of the declaration made by this
Court there is no room for holding that the only duty of the
prosecution was to prove that the accused had taken liquor
in some form or the other and that the burden lay on the
accused to prove that be had taken a liquid medicinal or
toilet preparation containing alcohol. When an accused
person is charged with having committed an offence it is for
the prosecution to prove all the ingredients of the offence
with which he has been charged and the ingredients of the
offence under section 13(b) as stated above were that he had
consumed or used liquor validly prohibited, i.e. spirits of
wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and all non-
medicinal and non-toilet liquid preparations consisting of
or containing alcohol. There was no presumption enacted in
the Act as it stood which would throw the burden of proof on
the accused to show that he had consumed or used liquid
medicinal or toilet preparation containing alcohol. There
was no exception or proviso enacted either in terms or in
effect in section 13(b) which attracted the operation of
section 105 of the Evidence Act and cast upon the accused
the burden of proving the existence of circumstances
bringing his case within such exception- or proviso. The
mere circumstance that the fact in regard to his consumption
or use of liquid medicinal or toilet preparation containing
alcohol was specially within the knowledge of the accused
also could not shift the burden of proving the ingredients
of the offence from the prosecution to the accused, because
it is a cardinal principle of criminal jurisprudence as
administered in this country that it is for the prosecution
and prosecution alone to prove all the ingredients of the
offence with which the
625
accused has been charged. The accused is not bound to open
his lips or to enter upon his defence unless and until the
prosecution has discharged the burden which lies upon it and
satisfactorily proved the guilt of the accused. Section 106
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of the Evidence Act cannot be construed to mean that the
accused has by reason of the circumstance that the facts are
especially within his own knowledge to prove that he has not
committed the offence. (See Attygalle v. The King(1), also
In re Kanakasabai Pillai(2)). It is for the prosecution to
prove that he has committed the offence and that burden is
not in any manner whatsoever displaced by section 106 of the
Evidence Act.
The High Court in arriving at its decision in Rangarao
Bala Mane v. State (supra) above referred to was impressed
with the circumstance that the prosecution could not
possibly prove that no form of medicated alcohol was taken
by the accused, that there were evidently numerous forms of
medicated alcohol and that it was impossible for the
prosecution on the very face of things to exclude all those
forms. The difficulty was illustrated by the High Court in
the manner following:-
"For instance, if the prosecution were to lead evidence
to show that the accused had not taken medicated alcohol in
the form of B. G. Phos, the accused would contend that he
had taken it in some other form. If the prosecution were to
lead evidence that the accused had not taken it in the form
of Winedex, the accused would say that he had taken it in
the form of Waterbury’s Compound or Hall’s Wine. These are
only two instances to show how, it is impossible for the
prosecution to exclude all forms of medicated alcohol."
It therefore came to the conclusion that once the
prosecution had discharged the onus which was upon it to
prove that the accused person had consumed liquor, it would
be for the accused to show that the liquor which was taken
by him was liquor in the form of medicated alcohol, in other
words, not prohibited liquor. The difficulty thus envisaged
by the High Court was, in my opinion, imaginary. Where an
accused
(1) A.I.R. 1936 P.C. 169. (2) A.I.R. 1940 Madras 1.
626
person is suspected of having committed the prohibition
offence, it would be for the police to investigate the
offence and while investigating the offence, it would be for
the police to find out whether the accused has consumed
liquor which falls within ’the enforceable prohibition
enacted in section 13(b). As there are a number of
preparations which come within the category of liquid
medicinal and toilet preparations consisting of or
containing alcohol, there are a number of preparations which
come within the category of non-medicinal or non-toilet
liquid preparations consisting of or containing alcohol and
it would be really for the police investigating the alleged
offence to find out which out of the latter category of
preparations the accused had consumed and bring him to book
for the same. The circumstance that the accused person was
smelling of alcohol and that he had consumed liquor in some
form or the other would not be an unequivocal circumstance
pointing to the guilt of the accused. The smell of alcohol
could as well be the result of his having consumed medicinal
or toilet preparations consisting of or containing alcohol
as his having consumed validly prohibited liquor, i.e.,
spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and
all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid preparations
consisting of or containing alcohol. To hold the accused
guilty under these circumstances would be to convict him
merely because he was smelling of alcohol and depriving him
of the benefit of doubt which an accused person is always
entitled to in the event of the facts and circumstances
being consistent either with his guilt or his innocence. To
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adopt the reasoning which appealed to the High Court would
further be tantamount to laying down that once an accused
person was shown to have consumed liquor in some form or the
other the presumption was that he had consumed validly
prohibited liquor and the onus would be-upon him to rebut
that presumption by showing that lie had consumed medicinal
or toilet preparation containing alcohol.
The difficulty in the way of the prosecution proving its
case need not deflect the Court from arriving at a correct
conclusion. If these difficulties are genuinely
627
felt it would be for the Legislature to step in and amend
the law. It would not be the function of the Court to read
something in the provisions of the law’ which is not there
or to find out a way of obviating the difficulties in
enforcing the law- howsoever meritorious the intentions of
the Legislature might be. If these difficulties were felt
in the matter of enforcing the policy of prohibition by the
State of Bombay the only remedy was to effect the necessary
amendments when the Bombay Act XXVI of 1952 was enacted on
the 22nd October, 1952, after this Court made the declara-
tion in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra).
In my opinion it was not enough for the prosecution in
the present case merely to prove that the appellant had
taken alcohol in some form or the other. The prosecution
ought to have proved that the appellant had in contravention
of the provisions of the Act med an intoxicant meaning any
liquor which consumer regard to the declaration made by this
Court having could only be validly prohibited liquor, i.e.,
spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and
all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid preparations con-
sisting of or containing alcohol. The evidence of the
doctor only went to show that the appellant had consumed
alcohol in some form or the other. That was not enough and
I have therefore come to the conclusion that the prosecution
failed to prove that the appellant had committed the offence
with which he was charged.
In view of the conclusion reached above it is un-
necessary to go into the interesting question which was
canvassed before us at some length as to the burden of proof
on the prosecution as well as the defence in a criminal
trial having regard to the provisions of section 105 of the
Evidence Act as also the applicability in India of the
principles enunciated in Woolmington v. The Director of
Public Prosecutions(1).
I would therefore allow the appeal, and quash the
conviction and sentence passed upon the appellant by the
High Court.
(1) [1935] A.C. 462,
628
JAGANNADHADAS J.-I have had the benefit of the
judgments of both my learned brothers. perusing But, with
great regret, I feel unable to agree with the view taken by
my learned brother Justice Bhagwati.
Two questions of law have been raised in this case,
viz., (1) on whom does the burden of proof lie to make out
that the "liquor" consumed by the appellant was or was not
medicinal or toilet preparations though contain ing alcohol,
and (2) what is the nature and quantum of proof required if
the burden is upon the appellant. The answer to question
No. 1 depends upon the effect of the decision of this Court
in The State, of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra)
which, while holding that the definition of liquor in sub-
section (24) of section 2 of the Bombay Prohibition Act,
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1949 (Act XXV of 1949) is valid, has declared that clause
(b) of section 13 in so far as it affects the consumption or
use of medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol,
is invalid. My learned brother Justice Bhagwati, while
holding that the effect of the declaration was not to alter
and amend section 13(b) of the Act, is of the opinion that
in the light-thereof the prohibition under section 13(b) is
to be understood to relate (so far as is relevant for the
present purpose) to consumption or use of "non-medicinal or
non-toilet liquid preparation containing alcohol" and that,
therefore, the burden lies on the prosecution to make out
all the ingredients of the prohibition so understood with
the negative thereof On the other hand, my learned brother
Justice Venkatarama Ayyar is of the opinion that the effect
of the decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (Supra) is not to amend or alter section 13(b) but
only to render it partly unenforceable, and hence to provide
a defence to the accused, on the ground of
unconstitutionality in so far as that section is sought to
be applied to medicinal or toilet preparations containing
alcohol and that, therefore, the burden of making out the
facts required for this plea is on the accused.
I agree that no legislative function can be attributed
to a judicial decision and that the decision in The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) does not,
629
proprio vigore amend the Act. The effect of a judicial
declaration of the unconstitutionality of a statute has been
stated at page 10 of Vol. I of Willoughby on the
Constitution of the United States, Second Edition, as
follows:
"The Court does not annul or repeal the statute if it
finds it in conflict with the Constitution. It simply
refuses to recognize it, and determines the rights of the
parties just as if such statute had no application. The
Court may give its reasons for ignoring or disregarding the
statute, but the decision affects the parties only, and
there is no judgment against the statute. The opinion or
reasons for the court may operate as a precedent for the
determination of other similar cases, but it does not strike
the statute from the statute book; it does not
repeal............... the statute. The parties to that suit
are concluded by the judgment, but no one else is bound. A
new litigant may bring a new suit, based on the very same
statute, and the former decision............ can be relied
on only as a precedent."
This and other similar passages from other treatises
relate, however, to cases where the entire legislation is
unconstitutional from the very commencement of the Act, a
situation which falls within the scope of article 13(2) of
our Constitution. They do not directly cover a situation
which falls within article 13(1). In the present case,
though the decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F.
N. Balsara (Supra) does not by itself bring about a change
in the Act, the declarations made therein are founded on
article 13(1) and it is with the effect thereof we are
concerned. The question is what is the effect of article
13(1) on a pre-existing valid statute, which in respect of a
severable part there. of violates fundamental rights. Under
article 13(1) such part is "void" from the date of the
commencement of the Constitution, while the other part
continues to be valid. Two views of the result brought
about by this voidness are possible, viz., (1) the said
severable part becomes unenforceable, while it remains part
of the Act, or (2) the said part goes out of the Act and the
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Act stands -appropriately amended pro tanto. The first is
the view which appears to have been adopted
81
630
by my learned brother, Justice Venkatarama Ayyar, an the
basis of certain American decisions. I feel inclined to
agree with it. This aspect, however, was not fully
presented by either side and was only suggested from the
Bench in the course of arguments. We have not had the
benefit of all the relevant material being placed before us
by the learned advocates on either side. The second view
was the basis of the arguments before us. It is, therefore,
necessary and desirable to deal with this case on that
assumption.
The question, then, for consideration is what is the
notional amendment which must be imported into the Act
consistently with the decision in The State of Bombay and
Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra). The relevant portions
thereof are as follows: (1) The definition of "liquor" in
the Act to its full extent continues to be valid, (2)
section 13(b) of the Act in so far as it relates to liquid
toilet or medicinal preparations containing alcohol is
invalid, and (3) this portion of the content of section
13(b) is severable. The argument of the appellant’s learned
counsel is that the essence of the valid prohibition under
section 13(b) now is the consumption or use of liquor other
than liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing
alcohol. - Ha urges, therefore, that section 13(b) must be
taken to stand amended accordingly. The argument, if I
understood it a right, was that the word "liquor" stands
amended as "prohibited liquor" or that it must be understood
with this limited connotation. I am unable to see how this
can be done. The definition of the word "liquor" with its
inclusive content remaining intact and valid, that content
has to be imported wholesale into the meaning of the word
"liquor" in section 13(b) and it appears to me that it is
not permissible to read it or understand it in a different
sense. So to read it or understand it would be to import a
new definition of "prohibited liquor" into the Act and to
make the consumption or use of "prohibited liquor", the
offence. What, however, the Balsara decision has done is
not to authorise the importation of a new definition and the
rewriting of section 13(b). It keeps section 13(b) intact
631
but treats the consumption or use of liquid toilet or
medicinal preparations containing alcohol as severable and
takes such consumption or use out of the ambit of the
section itself as the prohibition thereof is un-
constitutional. This can be done and only done, in my
opinion, by grafting an appropriate exception or proviso
into section 13(b).
My learned brother, Justice Bhagwati, has in his,
judgment suggested that, if it is a question of treating
section 13(b) as amended,. the amendment can be made in one
of many modes and that there is no reason to choose between
them and that it is not fair to an accused person to read it
in a manner throwing the burden on him, when a more
favourable mode is open. The various modes of amendment are
indicated in the following suggested reading of section
13(b).
"No person shall consume or use spirits of wine,
methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and all liquids
consisting of or containing
’A’ alcohol as are not or which are not or other than or
save or except or provided they are not or but shall include
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liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol,
or
all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid ’B’ preparations
consisting of or containing alcohol."
(The underlinings and markings are mine).
Now, if the relevant portion of the section is recast in
the manner above indicated, in any of the alternative modes
in the portion marked ’A’ above, I have no doubt that every
one of these modes is only an exception or a proviso which
falls within the specific terms of section 105 of the
Evidence Act, i.e., an exception or proviso "in the law
defining the offence." If, on the other hand, the section is
treated as amended by incorporating the portion marked ’B’
omitting the portion marked ’A’, it appears to me, with
great respect, that it is to alter the very content of the
word’ "liquor" in the section, for which I can find no legal
justification. What the decision in The State of Bombay
632
and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) authorises is, as I
have already explained above, to keep the word "liquor"
intact with its full content and sever from the provision
taken as alcohol (not merely from the word "liquor")
medicinal or toilet preparations. I feel accordingly
confirmed in the view that I have taken, viz., that this can
only be done by engrafting an exception or a proviso.
As regards the other view suggested by my learned
brother Justice Bhagwati, that without importing any
alteration or amendment in the section itself, the same is
to be understood as having reference to what maybe called
"prohibited liquor", understanding that word with reference
to the decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra), here again, with great respect, I feel
difficulty in imputing into a specific statutory provision a
meaning different from what its plain words, in the light of
the definition, indicate. The decision in The State Of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra), if it does not
bring about an amendment in the provision does not also
provide any mere aid to interpretation.
The question is not done of insisting on a merely
technical view of the matter. I feel unable to impute to
the decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra), taken with article 13(1), the effect of
rendering section 13(b) unworkable, which certainly was not
intended. In this view, therefore, (and on the basis put
forward by learned counsel on both sides), the effect of
article 13(1) on section 13(b) of the Act in the light of
the decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra) is that it stands amended pro tanto by means
of an appropriate exception or proviso. It follows that
section 105 of the Evidence Act would in terms apply to such
a situation. Thus in either view of the effect’ of article
13(1) of the Constitution on section 13(b) of the Bombay Act
in the light of the judgment in The State of Bombay and
Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) the opinion expressed by
the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court that the burden
of proof in a case like this lies on the accused is correct.
633
As regards the second question that has been raised
namely as to the nature and quantum of the evidence required
to discharge this burden of proof, considerable arguments
have been advanced before us. Our attention has been drawn
to the existence of conflicting decisions in the High Courts
on this topic. On the one side there is the decision of the
Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Prabhoo v.
Emperor(1) and on the other, there is a later Special Bench
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decision of the Bombay High Court in Government of Bombay v.
Sakur(2). In my opinion it is unnecessary for us to resolve
that conflict in this case, since, on either view, the
finding of the appellate Court that the burden has not been
discharged on the available material seems to me to be
correct. In particular it is to be noticed that the
appellant put forward a specific defence in Paragraph 8 of
the written statement filed by him into Court in answer to
the charge. In support of this defence he has given no
proof of any circumstances, which must be within his
knowledge, to render the defence reasonably probable even if
be may not have been able to prove the same strictly to the
hilt.
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the conviction of
the appellant under section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition
Act, 1949, is correct. But in the circumstances, it is not
necessary to send him back to jail. I would, therefore,
reduce the sentence of imprisonment to the period already
undergone. In the result, the appeal has to be dismissed
subject to this modification.
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-I regret that I am unable to agree
with the view taken by my learned brother, Bhagwati J. The
facts giving rise to this appeal have been stated in his
Judgment which I have had the advantage of reading and it is
unnecessary to restate them. The point for decision shortly
is whether in a prosecution under section 66(b) of the
Bombay Prohibition Act, XXV of 1949, for contravention of
section 13(b), the prosecution has to establish not merely
that liquor had been taken in some form but that further
what was taken was not a medicinal preparation. The
(1) I.L.R. 1941 All. 843.
(2) 48 Bom. L. R. 746; A.I.R. 1947 Bom. 38.
634
learned Judges of the Bombay High Court held following an
earlier decision of that Court in Rangrao Bala Mane v. State
(supra) that once the prosecution had established that the
accused had taken alcohol in some form it was for him to
establish that he had taken a medicinal preparation, both on
the ground that it was in the nature of an exception which
it was for the party pleading it to establish under section
105 of the Evidence Act and that it was a matter specially
within his knowledge and that therefore the burden of
proving it lay on him under section 106 of the Evidence’
Act. The appellant challenges the correctness of this deci-
sion and contends that it is opposed to the decision of this
Court in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra).
It will be convenient first to refer to the statutory
provisions bearing on the question and ascertain what the
position is thereunder, and then consider how it is affected
by the decision of this Court in The State Of Bombay and
Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra). The relevant provisions
of the Bombay Prohibition Act are sections 2(24), 13(b) and
66(b). Section 2(24) defines "liquor" as including all
liquids consisting of or containing alcohol. Section 13(b)
enacts that no person shall use or consume liquor and a
contravention of this provision is made punishable under
section 66(b). As medicinal preparations containing alcohol
are liquor as defined in section 2(24) the consumption
thereof will be an offence punishable under the Act and it
will be no answer to a prosecution for contravention of
section 13(b) that what was consumed was a medicinal
preparation and a question of the kind now presented to us
therefore could not possibly arise under the Act prior to
the Constitution.
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I may next consider the effect of the decision of this
Court in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra) on the legal position under the Act. It was there
held inter alia that section 13(b) in so far as it
prohibited the consumption of medicinal preparations was an
unreasonable restriction on the rights of an owner to hold
and enjoy property and was therefore void as being repugnant
to article 19 (1) (f) of the
635
Constitution. The appellant contends that the effect of
this declaration was to remove medicinal preparations from
out of the purview of section 13(b); that’ that section
should therefore be read as if it had been amended to the
effect that no person shall use or consume liquor other than
medicinal preparations or toilets; that in that view no
question of the accused having to rely on an exception arose
and no question of the burden being thrown on him under
section 105; and that as the offence itself consisted in
consuming a liquor which was not a medicinal preparation,
the burden would lie on the prosecution to establish that
what was consumed was a prohibited liquor. On the other
hand, the respondent contends that the definition of liquor
in section 2(24) includes not only beverages but also
medicinal preparations, that the extended definition would
apply to section 13(b) as well, that the immunity of
medicinal preparations containing alcohol from the operation
of the section by reason of the decision in The, State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) must in
consequence be treated as an exception to it and that the
’section should be read as containing a saving in favour of
those preparations, in the nature of an exception or
proviso, the burden of establishing which under section 105
of the Evidence Act would be on the accused. I agree with
the appellant that section 105 has no application. We are
not here concerned with any exception, general or special,
under the Penal Code or any other law defining the offence.
The exception or proviso, if it may be so called, arises as
a result of the decision of this Court and not under any
statute and section 105 cannot therefore in terms apply. At
the same time it is difficult to see how the decision in The
State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (Supra) can be
considered to effect an amendment of section 13(b) so as to
exclude medicinal preparations from out of its ambit. The
rival contentions which have been presented to us on the
effect of the decision in The State of Bombay and Another v.
F. N. Balsara (supra) proceed both of them on the basis
that’ section 13(b) has in some manner been amended by it;
according to the appellant, the
636
section must be taken to have been amended by excluding
medicinal preparations from the word " liquor" according
to the respondent, by inserting an exception or proviso to
the section in favour of such preparations. That, however,
is not the correct position. Decisions of Court do not
amend or add to a statute. That is a purely legislative
function. They merely interpret the law and declare whether
it is valid or not and the result of a declaration that it
is not valid is that no effect could be given to it in a
Court of law. If therefore section 13(b) cannot be
construed as itself amended or modified by reason of the
decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra), there is no reason to hold that medicinal
preparations containing alcohol, which fell within its scope
before, have gone out of it after that decision. This
argument therefore does not furnish any ground for throwing
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the burden on the prosecution under section 13( b) to
establish not merely that what was consumed was liquor but
that it was not a medicinal preparation.
The question of burden of proof must therefore be
decided not on the basis of a suppositions amendment of the
section or addition of an exception or proviso to it but on
the language of the section as it stands and with reference
to Well established principles of law. Under that section
it is an offence to use or consume liquor and that under the
definition in section 2(24) includes medicinal preparations
containing alcohol. One of the points raised in The State
of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) was that the
State Legislature which was competent to legislate on into-
xicating liquor could not under that head of legislation
enact a law in respect of medicinal preparations containing
alcohol because the words "intoxicating liquor" meant
beverages and not medicines but this contention was
negatived by this Court on the ground that the words
"intoxicating liquor" had acquired an extended sense as
including medicinal preparations containing alcohol and that
the Legislature was competent while enacting a law with
reference to intoxicating liquors to legislate on medicinal
preparations
637
containing alcohol. The definition of "liquor" in section
2(24) in its extended sense having thus been held to be
valid, it follows that unless there is something in the
particular provision to the contrary, the word "liquor" must
wherever it occurs in the statute include medicinal
preparations and that is the meaning which it must bear in
section 13(b). In The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra), it is on the footing that medicinal
preparations are included in section 13 that the entire
discussion on its validity with reference to article 19(1)
(f) proceeds. We therefore start with this that under
section 13(b), the Legislature has made it an offence to
take alcohol in any form, whether as beverages or as
medicinal preparations. That being the position and it
having been decided that the section in so far as it relates
to medicinal preparations is void as repugnant to article
19(1) (f), the question as to who should prove whether what
was consumed was alcohol or medicinal preparation containing
alcohol appears to me to admit of a simple answer. There is
a strong presumption in favour of the constitutionality of a
statute and it is for those who assail it as
unconstitutional to establish it. The contention of the
appellant is, when analyzed, that section 13(b) is bad in so
far as it hits medicinal preparations containing alcohol as
it contravenes article 19(1) (f) of the Constitution, and
the decision of this Court in The State of Bombay and
Another v.. F. N. Balsara (supra) is relied on as supporting
it. But before the appellant can bring himself within that
decision, he must establish that what he consumed was a
medicinal preparation. The plea of unconstitutionality is
not established unless all the elements necessary to sustain
such a plea are established ; and as observed by this Court
in Rao Shiv Bahadur Singh v. The State of Vindhya
Pradesh(1), "the burden of making out facts requisite for
the constitutional invalidity of the convictions" is on the
appellant. He has therefore to make out as a fact that what
he consumed was a medicinal preparation and as a matter of
law, that section 13(b) is bad in so far as it prohibits it.
The decision of this Court concludes the
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1188,1202.
82
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638
question in his favour so ’far as the second point is
concerned. But the burden of establishing the first point,
that in fact what he consumed was a medicinal preparation,
still remains on him.
It was argued for the appellant that this Court had
declared that section 13(b) was void under article 13(1) of
the Constitution in so far as it related to medicinal
preparations; that that meant that it was to that extent a
nullity and that it should in consequence be read as if it
did not include medicinal preparations. The question is,
what is the legal effect of a statute being declared
unconstitutional. The answer to it depends on two
considerations,-firstly, does the constitutional prohibition
which has been infringed affect the competence of the
Legislature to enact the law or does it merely operate as a
check on the exercise of a power which is within its
competence; and secondly, if it is merely a check, whether
it is enacted for the benefit of individuals or whether it
is imposed for the benefit of the general public on grounds
of public policy. If the statute is beyond the competence
of the Legislature, as for example, when a State enacts a
law which is within the exclusive competence of the Union,
it would be a nullity. That would also be the position when
a limitation is imposed on the legislative power in the
interests of the public, as, for instance, the provisions in
Chapter XIII of the Constitution relating to inter-State
trade and commerce. But when the law is within the com-
petence of the Legislature and the unconstitutionality
arises by reason of its repugnancy to provisions enacted for
the benefit of individuals, it is not a nullity but is
merely unenforceable. Such an unconstitutionality can be
waived and in that case the law becomes enforceable. In
America this principle is well setted. (Vide Cooley on
Constitutional Limitations, Volume 1, pages 368 to 371;
Willis on Constitutional Law, at pages 524, 531, 542 and
558; Rottschaefer on Constitutional Law, at pages 28 and 29-
30). In Shepard v. Barron(1), it was observed that
"provisions of a constitutional nature, intended for the
protection of the property owner, may be waived by him." In
Pierce v. Somerset Railway(2),
(1) 194 U.S. 553 ; 48 L. Ed. III5. (2) I71 U.S. 64I ; 43
L. Ed. 316.
639
the position was thus stated: "A person may by his acts or
omission to act waive a right which he might otherwise have
under the Constitution of the United States, as well as
under a statute." In Pierce Oil Corporation v. Phoenix
Refining Co.(1), where a statute was impugned on the ground
that it imposed unreasonable restrictions on the rights of a
corporation to carry on business and thereby violated the
rights guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court
observed "There is nothing in the nature of such a
constitutional right as is here asserted to prevent its
being waived or the right to claim it barred, as other
rights may be, by deliberate election or by conduct
inconsistent with the assertion of such a right." The
position must be the same under our Constitution when a law
contravenes a prescription intended for the benefit of
individuals. The rights guaranteed under article 19(1) (f)
are enacted for the benefit of owners of properties and when
a law is found to infringe that provision, it is open to.
any person whose rights have been infringed to waive it and
when there is waiver there is no legal impediment to the
enforcement of the law. It would be otherwise if the
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statute was a nullity; in which case it can neither be
waived nor enforced. If then the law is merely
unenforceable and can take effect when waived it cannot be
treated as non est and as effaced out of the statute book.
It is scarcely necessary to add that the question of waiver
is relevant to the present controversy not as bearing on any
issue of fact arising for determination in this case but as
showing the nature of the right declared under article 19(1)
(f) and the effect in law of a statute contravening it.
Another point of distinction noticed by American jurists
between unconstitutionality arising by reason of lack of
legislative competence and that arising by reason of a check
imposed on a competent Legislature may also be mentioned.
While a statute passed by a Legislature which had no
competence cannot acquire validity when the Legislature
subsequently acquires competence, a statute which was within
the competence of the Legislature at the time of its
enactment but
(1) 259 U-S- 125; 66 L. Ed. 855.
640
which infringes a constitutional prohibition could be
enforced proprio vigore when once the prohibition is
removed. The law is thus stated in Willoughby on the
Constitution of the United States, Volume 1, at
page 11:-
"The validity of a statute is to be tested by the
constitutional power of a legislature at the time of its
enactment by that legislature,, and, if thus tested it is
beyond the legislative power, it is not rendered valid,
without re-enactment, if later, by constitutional amendment,
the necessary legislative power is granted.
However, it has been held that where an act is within
the general legislative power of the enacting body, but is
rendered unconstitutional by reason of some adventitious
circumstance, as for example, when a State legislature is
prevented from regulating a matter by reason of the fact
that the Federal Congress has already legislated upon that
matter, or, by reason of its silence, is to be construed as
indicating that there should be no regulation, the act does
not need to be re-enacted in order to be enforced, if this
cause of its unconstitutionality is removed."
The authority cited in support of this observation is
the decision in Wilkerson v. Rahrer(1). There the State of
Kansas enacted a law in 1889 forbidding the sale of
intoxicating liquors in the state. Though it was valid with
reference to intra-state sales, it was unconstitutional in
so far as it related to inter-State sales. In 1890 the
Congress passed a legislation conferring authority on the
States to enact prohibition laws with reference to inter-
State trade. A prosecution having been instituted under the
1889 Act in respect of sales effected after the Congress
legislation of 1890, one of the contentions urged was that
as the State law was unconstitutional when it was enacted it
was void and it could not be enforced even though the bar
had been removed by the Congress legislation of 1890. In
repelling this contention the Court observed:-
" This is not the case of a law enacted in the
unauthorized exercise of a power exclusively confided to
Congress, but of a law which it was competent for
(1) 140 U.S. 545 ; 35 L. Ed.572.
641
the State to pass, but which could not operate upon articles
occupying a certain situation until the passage of the Act
of Congress. That Act in terms removed the obstacle, and we
perceive no adequate ground for adjudging that a re-
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enactment of the State law was required before it could have
the effect upon imported which it had always had upon
domestic property. "
The position is thus stated by Cooley in his work on
Constitutional Law, at page 201 :-
" A court’s decision merely decides the case that is
then under adjudication, and a finding of unconstitu-
tionality does not destroy the statute but. merely involves
a refusal to enforce it."
Rottschaefer, after referring to the conflict of
authorities on the point in the States refers to the
decision in Wilkerson V. Rahrer(1), as embodying the better
view. This question again, it may be noted, does not arise
as such for determination in this case and is material only
as showing that an infringement of a constitutional’
prohibition which does not affect the competence of a
Legislature but is merely a check on its exercise does not
render the law a nullity.
In view of the principles discussed above, the use of the
word "void" in article 13(1) is not decisive on the question
as to the precise effect of a law being repugnant to article
19(1) (f). Reference may be made in this connection to the
statement of the law in Corpus Juris, Volume 67, page 263 et
seq., to which counsel for the respondent invited our
attention. It is there pointed out that the word "void" in
statutes and decisions might mean either that is "absolutely
void" or "relatively void" ; that "that is ’absolutely void
which the law or the nature of things forbids to be enforced
at all, and that is relatively void’ which the law condemns
as a wrong to individuals and refuses to enforce as against
them"; that what is absolutely void is incapable of
confirmation and ratification; and that what is relatively
void could be waived.
The true scope of article 13(1) was considered by this
Court in Kesavan Madhava Menon v. State Of
(I) 140 U.S. 545 ; 35 L. Ed. 572.
642
Bombay(1). There the point for determination was whether
the Constitution was retrospective in its operation. In the
course of his judgment Das J. observed:-
"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............... Article 13(1) cannot be read as
obliterating the entire operation of the inconsistent laws,
or to wipe them out altogether from the statute
book.................... 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 commencement of
the Constitution. "
It is true that the question which the Court was
considering there was different from the one which we have
now to decide in this appeal. But those observations embody
a principle which is applicable to the present case as well.
In effect, "void" in article 13(1) was construed as meaning,
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in the language of American jurists, "relatively void.
Therefore both on the ground that a judicial determination
does not operate as an amendment of the statute and, on the
ground that a declaration that the impugned law is void
under article 13(1) as repugnant to article 19(1) (f) merely
renders it unenforceable, I am of the opinion that the
decision in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra) cannot be held to remove medicinal preparations from
out of the purview of section 13(b). I therefore agree with
the learned Judges
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 228.
643
of the Bombay High Court, though not for the reasons given
by them, that the burden of establishing that. what was
consumed was a medicinal preparation lies on the appellant.
It was next contended that even if the burden lay on the
appellant,to prove that he had taken a medicinal
preparation, he must be held on the evidence to have
discharged it because the doctor who examined him at 11-30
P.m., on the day of the occurrence stated in his evidence
that he was coherent in his speech and could walk along a
straight line, that the smelling of alcohol could be caused
by oxidation and that the condition of the conjunctive in
the eyes could result from street dust. It was argued that
if the prosecution evidence did not exclude the possibility
of the defence being true, then notwithstanding section 105
of the Evidence Act the burden which lay on the posecution
of establishing the offence had not been discharged and
reliance was placed on the decision in Woolmington v.
Director of Public Prosecutions(1), and on Indian
authorities wherein it was followed: Emperor v.
U.Damapala(2); Parbhoo v. Emperor(1). In opposition to
these authorities counsel for the respondent relied on the
decision in Government of Bombay v. Sakur(4). The question
is whether if the burden lay upon the appellant the
conclusion of the learned Judges that it had not been
discharged is on the evidence a reasonable one. If it is,
this Court cannot interfere with it in an appeal under
article 136. It must be noted that the appellant himself
led no evidence in support of the plea. If at least the
evidence which the prosecution adduced disclosed facts which
would lend support to the defence, it might then have been
open to the appellant to rely on them without himself having
to adduce independent evidence but none such were elicited.
The learned Judges in the Court below have approached the
case from the correct standpoint and have discussed the
entire evidence with a view to find whether on that the
(1) [1935] A.C. 462.
(2) I.L.R. 14 Rang. 666.
(3) I.L.R. 194i All. 843.
(4) A.I.R. 1947 Bom. 38; 48 Bom. L.R. 616.
644
defence was reasonably probable. They held that the giving
of coherent answers or walking in a straight line would only
show that the appellant was not drunk at that time but would
not show that he had not consumed liquor. They also
remarked that the appellant could have informed both -the
sub-inspector and the doctor who examined him that he had
taken medicine in which case the police might have been in a
position to find out whether there was a medicine bottle at
his residence at that time. If the learned Judges were
right in their view that the burden lay on the appellant,
their finding that it had not been discharged is not one
which is open to attack.
It was also contended that the trial magistrate having
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acquitted the appellant, the presumption of innocence which
the law raises in favour of the accused became reinforced
and that there were no compelling reasons for the appellate
Court to have reversed the order of acquittal. But the
judgment of the trial Court was based on the view that the
burden was on the prosecution to establish that the accused
had not taken a medicinal preparation and when the learned
Judges differed from that view, they had to review the
evidence afresh and decide whether the appellant had
discharged the burden and their finding on the question is
not vitiated by any misdirection.
In the result the conviction of the appellant under
section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act must be
confirmed. As regards the sentence of one month’s
imprisonment passed on him, it appears that he has already
served 22 days out of it. The justice of the case does not
require that he should be again sent to jail. I would,
therefore, reduce the sentence of imprisonment to the period
already undergone. Subject to this modification, I am of
the opinion that this appeal should be dismissed.
By THE Court -Having regard to the judgments of the
majority, the appeal will be dismissed subject to the
modification that the sentence imposed upon the appellant
will be reduced to that already undergone. Bail bond will
be cancelled.
Appeal dismissed and sentence reduced.
645
[There was an application for review of the aforesaid
Judgments under article 137 of the Constitution and the
Hon’ble Judges of the original Bench (Bhagwati,
Jagannadhadas and Venkatarama Ayyar JJ.) passed the
following order dated 28th April, 1954, referring the case
for the opinion of the Constitution Bench.]
The Order of the Court was pronounced by
BHAGWATI J.-We grant the review and reopen the case to
enable us to obtain the opinion of a larger Bench on the
constitutional question raised in the judgments previously
delivered by us. Under proviso to article 145 of the
Constitution, we refer the following question for the
opinion of the Constitution Bench of the Court.
"What is the effect of the declaration in The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara(1) that clause (b)
of section 13 of the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949, is void,
under article 13(1) of the Constitution, in so far as it
affects the consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol, on the ground that it
infringes article 19(1) (f) of the Constitution?"
On receipt of the opinion the case will be taken up for
further consideration.
[In pursuance of the above reference under the proviso
to article 145(3) of the Constitution their Lordships of the
Constitution Bench (Mehr Chand Mahajan C. J., Mukherjea, S.
R. Das, Vivian Bose and Ghulam Hasan JJ.) gave the following
Opinion dated 23rd September, 1954.]
MEHR CHAND MAHAJAN C.J.-(Mukherjea, Vivian Bose and
Ghulam Hasan JJ. concurring) A Bench of this Court hearing
an appeal under the provisions of Chapter IV of the
Constitution has referred, under article 145(3) of the
Constitution, for the opinion of the Constitution Bench the
following point:-
"What is the effect of the declaration in The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara(1) that clause (b) of
section 13 of the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949, is void,
under article 13(1) of the Constitution, in so far as it
affects the consumption or use of liquid
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(1) [1952] S.C.R. 682.
83
646
medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol, on ,the
ground that it infringes article 19(1) (f) of the
Constitution?"
The facts giving rise to the reference are these: Shri
Pesikaka, the appellant in the case, was at the relevant
period, officiating Regional Transport Officer, Bombay
Region. On the 29th May, 1951, at about 9-30 P.m., while
proceeding in his jeep towards Colaba Bus Stand, he knocked
down three persons. He was arrested by the police and taken
to the police station and then to St. George’s Hospital.
The doctor, found his breath smelling of alcohol,
conjunctiva congested, pupils semi-dilated and reacting to
light, and speech coherent. He could behave himself and
walk along a straight line. In the opinion of the doctor
the appellant did not seem to be under the influence of
alcohol, though he had taken alcohol in some form or other.
On these facts. the appellant was prosecuted for having
committed offences under section 338, Indian Penal Code
(rash driving), as well as under section 66(b) of the Bombay
Prohibition Act. In defence it was suggested that he had
taken a medicinal preparation, B.G. Phos, and had not
consumed any liquor, and that on the night in q question he
had taken at about 9 or 9-15 p.m. after dinner a dose of B.
G. Phos which contained 17 per cent. of alcohol according to
its formula.
The learned Presidency Magistrate acquitted the
appellant on the finding that the prosecution had failed to
establish his guilt under either of the sections under which
he was charged. With regard. to the offence under section
66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act, it was observed that
there were certain medicinal preparations which were allowed
to be used by law, and there was no satisfactory evidence to
show that the appellant had not consumed those tonics but
only liquor for which he ought to have a -permit. The State
of Bombay appealed against the acquittal order to the High
Court. The High Court confirmed the acquittal in regard to
the charge under section 338, Indian Penal Code, but
reversed the order acquitting him of the charge under
section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act followed a
decision of its own’ Division
647
Bench in Rangrao Bala Mane v. The State (supra) where it had
been held that once it was proved by the prosecution that a
person had drunk or consumed liquor without a permit, it was
for that person to show that the liquor drunk by him was not
prohibited liquor, but was alcohol or liquor which he was
permitted by law to take, e.g., medicated alcohol. On this
view of the law, on the merits of the case it was held that
the appellant had failed to prove the existence of circum-
stances from which the Court could come to the conclusion
that the liquor which was consumed by the appellant was not
prohibited liquor but liquor which was excepted by the
Bombay Prohibition Act from its operation. In the result
the appellant was sentenced to one month’s rigorous
imprisonment and a fine. of Rs. 500. Against this order an
appeal was admitted in this Court by special leave and was
heard by a Bench of the Court consisting of Bhagwati,
Jagannadhadas and Venkatarama Ayyar JJ. on the 19th
February, 1954. The learned Judges could not reach an una-
nimous decision and expressed different and divergent
opinions. Bhagwati J. wanted to allow the appeal and quash
the conviction. He was of the opinion that the onus rested
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on the prosecution to prove that the liquor consumed by the
appellant was prohibited liquor under section 13(b) of the
Act and that the prosecution had failed to prove this.
This, in the opinion of the learned Judge, was the
consequence of the declaration of unconstitutionality of a
portion of section 13(b) by this Court in The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra).
Venkatarama Ayyar dissented from this view. He was of
the opinion that the decision in The State of Bombay and
Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) could not be held to have
the effect of taking out medicinal preparations from the
purview of section 13(b) and that its effect was merely to
render that part of the section unenforceable and that the
onus rested on the accused to establish the plea of
unconstitutionality, and it could not be held established
unless all the elements necessary to sustain such a plea
were proved and the accused had therefore to make out as a
fact that what he had
648
consumed was a medicinal ’preparation. On the merits of the
case it was held that the accused had failed to discharge
the burden that rested on him. In the result the conviction
of the appellant by the High Court was upheld.
Jagannadhadas J. agreed in the result reached by Venkatarama
Ayyar J. but on different grounds. lie was of the opinion
that the only way to give full effect to the judgment in
The, State Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) was
to engraft an appropriate exception or proviso upon section
13(b) in the light of that decision. He considered that The
State of Bombay and Another v. F., N. Balsara (supra) did
not import a new definition or re-write section 13(b). It
kept the section intact but treated the consumption of
liquid or medicinal preparations containing alcohol as
beyond its ambit and thus engrafted an exception or proviso
on to section 13(b). On this view of the effect of
Balsara’s decision it was held that the onus rested on the
accused to establish that his case fell within the exception
and he had failed to discharge that onus. In accordance
with the opinion of the majority the conviction of the
appellant, under section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act
was confirmed and the appeal was dismissed but the sentence
was reduced to that already undergone.
On a petition for review being presented, the learned
Judges -granted the review on the 26th April, 1954, and
reopened the case, to enable them to obtain the opinion of
the Constitution Bench of this Court on the constitutional
question formulated and mentioned above.
For a proper appreciation of the question referred to us,
it is necessary to set out what this Court decided In The
State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra). In
that case the constitutional validity of the Bombay
Prohibition Act (XXV of 1949) was challenged on different
grounds. This attack substantially failed and the Act was
maintained as it was passed, with the exception of ’a few
provisions that were declared invalid. Inter alia, clause
(b) of section 13 so far as it affected the consumption or
use of such medicinal and toilet preparations containing
alcohol was held invalid.
640
Section 2(24) of the Act defined a "liquor" to include
spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and
all liquids consisting of or containing alcohol. Section
13(b) prohibits the use or consumption of liquor without a
permit. Section 66(b) which is the penal section provides
that "whoever in contravention of the provisions of this Act
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consumes, uses any intoxicant shall, on conviction, be
punished." The appellant was charged under section 66(b) of
the Act for having used or consumed liquor the use of which
was prohibited by section 13(b). In The State of Bombay and
Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra), the part of the section
that brought all liquids containing alcohol within its ambit
was declared invalid and the section therefore, though it
stood intact as enacted in respect of prohibited liquor up
to the date of the coming into force of the Constitution and
qua non-citizens subsequently, a part of it was declared
invalid, and so far as it concerned citizens, qua them that
part of the section ceased to have legal effect.
The problem now raised is; what is the effect of this
partial declaration of the invalidity of section 13(b) on
the case of a citizen prosecuted under section 66(b) for
committing a breach of the provisions of the section after
the coming into force of the Constitution. Our opinion on
this question is that the effect of the declaration in The
State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra), that
clause (b) of section 13 of the Bombay Prohibition Act is
void under article 13(1) of the Constitution in so far as it
affects the consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol, is to render part of
section 13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act, inoperative,
ineffective and ineffectual and thus unenforceable. The
part of the section which has been declared void has no
legal force so far as citizens are concerned and it cannot
be recognized as valid law for determining the rights of
citizens. In other words, the ambit of the section stands
narrowed down so far as its enforceability against citizens
is concerned and no notice can be taken of the part of the
section struck down in a prosecution for contravention of
the provisions of that section, with
650
the consequence that in prosecutions against citizens of
India under section 13(b), the offence of contravention of
the section can only be proved if it is established that
they have used or consumed liquor or an intoxicant which is
prohibited by that part of the section which has been
declared valid and enforceable and without reference to its
unenforceable part. No notice at all should be taken of
that other part as it has no relevance in such an enquiry,
having no legal effect. In a criminal case unless the
prosecution proves a contravention of a provision that is
legally enforceable and valid, it cannot succeed. No onus
is cast on the accused to prove that his case falls under
that part of the section which has been held unenforceable.
The High Court was in error in placing the onus on the
accused to prove that he had consumed alcohol that could be
consumed without a permit merely on proof that he was
smelling of alcohol. In our judgment, that was not the
correct approach to the question. The bare circumstance
that a citizen accused of an offence under section 66(b) is
smelling of alcohol is compatible both with his innocence as
well as his guilt. It is a neutral circumstance. The smell
of alcohol may be due to the fact that the accused had
contravened the enforceable part of section 13(b) of the
Prohibition Act. It may well be due also to the tact that
he had taken alcohol which fell under the unenforceable and
inoperative part of the section. That being so, it is the
duty of the prosecution to prove that the alcohol of which
he was smelling was such that it came within the category of
prohibited alcohols and the onus was not discharged or
shifted by merely proving a smell of alcohol. The onus thus
cast on the prosecution may be light or heavy according to
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the circumstances of each case. The intensity of the smell
itself may be such that it may negative its being of a
permissible variety. Export evidence may prove that
consumption in small doses of medicinal or other
preparations permitted cannot produce the smell or a state
of body or mind amounting to drunkenness. Be that as it
may, the question is one of fact to be decided according to
the circumstance of each case. It is open to the accused to
prove in defence that what he
651
consumed was not prohibited alcohol, but failure of the
defence to prove it cannot lead to his conviction unless it
is established to the satisfaction of the Judge by the
prosecution that the case comes within the enforceable part
of section 13(b), contravention of which alone is made an
offence under the provisions of section 66 of the Bombay
Prohibition Act. Our reasons for this opinion are these.
The meaning to be given to the expression "void" in
article 13(1) is no longer res integra. It stands concluded
by the majority decision in Kesava Madhava Menon v. The
State of Bombay(,). The minority view there was that the
word "void" had the same meaning as " repeal" and therefore
a statute which came into clash with fundamental rights
stood obliterated from the statute book altogether, and that
such a statute was void ab initio. The majority however
held that the word "void" in article 13(1), so far as
existing laws were concerned, could not be held to
obliterate them from the statute book, and could not make
such laws void altogether, because in its opinion, article
13 had not been given any retrospective effect. The
majority however held that after the coming into force of
the Constitution the effect of article 13(1) on such repug-
nant laws was that it nullified them, and made them
ineffectual and nugatory and devoid of any legal force or
binding effect. It was further pointed out in one of the
judgments representing the majority view, that the American
rule that if a statute is repugnant to the Constitution the
statute is void from its birth, has no application to cases
concerning obligations incurred or rights accrued in
accordance with an existing law that was constitutional in
its inception, but that if any law was made after the 26th
January, 1950, which was repugnant to the Constitution, then
the same rule shall have to be followed in India as followed
in America. The result therefore of this pronouncement is
that the part of the section of an existing law which is un-
constitutional is not law, and is null and void. For
determining the rights and obligations of citizens the part
declared void should be notionally taken to be
(I) (1951] S.C.R, 228.
652
obliterated. from the section for all intents and purposes,
though it may remain written on the statute book and be a
good law when a question arises for determination of rights
and obligations incurred prior to 26th January, 1950, and
also for the determination of rights of persons who have not
been given fundamental rights by the Constitution. Thus, in
this situation, there is no scope for introducing terms like
"relatively void" coined by American Judges in construing a
Constitution which is not drawn up in similar language and
the implications of which are not quite familiar in this
country.
We are also not able to endorse the opinion expressed by
our learned brother, Venkatarama Ayyar, that a declaration
of unconstitutionality brought about by lack of legislative
power stands on a different footing from a declaration of
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unconstitutionality brought about by reason of abridgement
of fundamental rights. We think that it is not a correct
proposition that constitutional provisions in Part III of
our Constitution merely operate as a check on the exercise
of legislative power. It is axiomatic that when the
lawmaking power of a State is restricted by a written
fundamental law, then any law enacted and opposed to the
fundamental law is in excess of the legislative authority
and is thus a nullity. Both these declarations of
unconstitutionality go to the root of the power itself and
there is no real distinction between them. They represent
but two aspects of want of legislative power. The
legislative power of Parliament and the State Legislatures
as conferred by articles 245 and 246 of the Constitution
stands curtailed by the fundamental rights chapter of
Constitution. A mere reference to the provisions of article
13(2) and articles 245 and 246 is sufficient to indicate
that there is no competency in Parliament or a State
Legislature to make a law which comes info clash with Part
III of the Constitution after the coming into force of the
Constitution. Article 13(2) is in these terms :
"The State shall not make any law which takes away or
abridges; the rights conferred by this Part and any law made
in contravention of this clause shall, to the extent of the
contravention, be void."
653
This is a clear and unequivocal mandate of the funda-
mental law prohibiting the State from- making any laws which
come into conflict with Part III of the Constitution. The
authority thus conferred by articles 245 and 246 to make
laws subject wise in the different Legislatures is qualified
by the declaration made in article 13(2). That power can
only be exercised subject to the prohibition contained in
article 13(2). On the construction of article 13(2) there
was no divergence of opinion between the majority and the
minority in Kesava Madhava Menon v. The State of Bombay
(supra). It was only on the construction of article 13(1)
that the difference arose because it was felt that that
article could not retrospectively invalidate laws which when
made were constitutional according to the Constitution then
in force.
Again, we are not able to subscribe to the view that in a
criminal prosecution it is open to an accused person to
waive his constitutional right and get convicted. A
reference. to Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, Vol. I,
p. 371, makes the proposition clear. Therein the learned
professor says that a party may consent to waive rights of
property, but the trial and punishment for public offences
are not within the province of individual consent or
agreement. In our opinion, the doctrine of waiver
enunciated by some American Judges in construing the
American Constitution cannot be introduced in our
Constitution without a fuller discussion of the matter. No
inference in deciding the case should have been raised on
the basis of such a theory. The learned Attorney-General
when questioned about the doctrine did not seem to be very
enthusiastic about it. Without finally expressing an
opinion on this question we are not for the moment convinced
that this theory has any relevancy in construing the
fundamental rights conferred by Part III of our
Constitution. We think that the rights described as
fundamental rights are a necessary consequence of the
declaration in the preamble that the people of India have
solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign
democratic republic and to secure to all its citizens
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justice, social, economic and political;
84
654
liberty of thought, expression, belief, faith and worship;
equality of status and of opportunity. These fundamental
rights have not been put in the Constitution merely for
individual benefit, though ultimately they come into
operation in considering individual rights. They have been
put there as a matter of public policy and the doctrine of
waiver can have no application to provisions of law which
have been enacted as a matter of constitutional policy.
Reference to some of the articles, inter alia, articles
15(1), 20, 21 makes the proposition quite plain. A citizen
cannot get discrimination by telling the State "You can
discriminate", or get convicted by waiving the protection
given under articles 20 and 21.
The learned Attorney-General contended that the correct
approach to the question was that there being a strong
Presumption in favour of the constitutionality, of a
statute, it is for those who assail it as unconstitutional
to establish it, and therefore it was for the appellant to
establish that the statute was. unconstitutional, and that
unless he proved facts requisite for the constitutional
invalidity of the conviction he could not succeed. We
cannot agree that that is a correct way of judging criminal
cases. The constitutional invalidity of a part of section
13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act having been declared by
this Court, that part of the section ceased to have any
legal effect in judging cases of citizens and had to be
regarded as null and void in determining whether a citizen
was guilty of an offence. Article 141 of the Constitution
declares that the law declared by the Supreme Court shall be
binding on all Courts within the territory of India. In
view of this clear enactment there is no scope in India for
the application of the American doctrine enunciated by
Willoughby ("The Constitution of the United States" Vol. I,
P. 10), wherein the learned author states, "the declaration
by a court of unconstitutionality of a statute which is in
conflict with the Constitution affects the parties only and
there is no judgment against the statute; that the opinion
or reasons of the court may operate as a precedent for the
determination of other similar cases, but it does
655
not strike the statute from the statute book; the parties to
that suit are concluded by the judgment, but no one else is
bound; a new litigant may bring a new suit, based on the
very same statute, and the former decision cannot be pleaded
as an estoppel, but can be relied on only as a precedent."
Once a statute is declared void under article 13(1) or 13(2)
by this Court, that declaration has the force of law, and
the statute so declared void is no longer law qua persons
whose fundamental rights are thus infringed. In America
there is no similar statutory provision and that being so,
the doctrine enunciated by the learned author can have no
application here. In this country once a law has been
struck down as unconstitutional law by a Court, no notice
can be taken of that law by any Court, and in every case an
accused person need not start proving that the law is
unconstitutional. The Court is not empowered to look at
that part of the law which has been declared as void, and
therefore there is no onus resting on the accused person to
prove that the law that has already been declared
unconstitutional is unconstitutional in that particular case
as well. The Court has to take notice only of what the law
of the land is, and convict the accused only if he
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contravenes the law of the land.
Our learned brother, Jagannadhadas J., took the view
that the only appropriate way of giving effect to the
judgment in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra) was by engrafting an exception or proviso to section
13(b) in the light of that decision and that the onus of
proving the exception was on the accused person. This, in
our judgment, is again not a true approach to the question.
As pointed out by the learned Judge himself, the Court has
no power to re-write the section. It has to be kept intact.
The Court therefore has no power to engraft an exception or
a proviso on section 13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act.
Apart from this circumstance it seems plain that unless
there is a power to make a law inconsistent with the
provisions of Part III of the Constitution, there can be no
power to engraft an exception of the nature suggested by our
brother. An exception or proviso
656
can only be engrafted for the purpose of excluding from the
substantive part of the section certain matters which but
for the proviso would be within it. But when there is no
power to enact at all what is proposed to be embodied in the
exception, there is no power to enact an exception by
enacting a law which the Legislature is not competent to
make. The State has no power to make a law abridging
fundamental rights and therefore there is no power to
engraft an exception by taking something out of a law which
cannot be enacted. It is therefore difficult to treat what
was declared void in The State of Bombay and Another v. F.
N. Balsara (supra) as an exception to section 13(b) of the
Bombay Prohibition Act and apply the rule enunciated in sec-
tion 105 of the Evidence Act to the case of the appellant.
The only correct approach to the subject is to ignore the
part of the section declared void by this Court in The State
of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) and see if
the prosecution has succeeded in bringing the offence home
to the accused on the part of the section that remains good
law.
With the observations made above the opinion in this
case is returned to the Bench which originally heard the
appeal.
DAS J.-I respectfully beg to differ from the opinion of
the majority of this Court just delivered by my Lord the
Chief Justice. It is, therefore, incumbent on me to
formulate my answer to the question referred to this
Constitution Bench and state shortly the reasons in support
thereof.
It is necessary at the outset to refer to the relevant
statutory provisions bearing on the question. The appellant
before us was prosecuted on a charge under section 13 read
with section 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949 (Act
XXV of 1949). The relevant part of section 66(b) of the Act
which is the penal section reads as follows:
"66. Whoever in contravention of the provisions of this Act
(a)...........................
(b)consumes, uses, possesses or transports any intoxicant or
hemp,
657
(c).......................................
(d)........................................
shall, on conviction, be punished.............."
By section 2 (22) "intoxicant" is defined as meaning "any
liquor, intoxicating drug, opium or a any Other substance
which the State Government may, by notification in the
Official Gazette, declare to be an intoxicant." Read in the
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light of this definition consumption, use, etc., of "liquor"
is within the mischief of this section. Further, it will be
noticed that what is made punishable is not consumption,
use, etc. of liquor simpliciter but consumption, use, etc.,
of liquor "in contravention of the provisions of this Act."
The prosecution, as the charge shows, relied on section 13
as being the provision of the Act in contravention of which
the consumption, use, etc., was alleged to have been made by
the appellant who was the accused person. That section is
to be found in Chapter III beaded "Prohibitions". So far as
it is material for our purpose, it runs thus:
"13. No person shall--
(b) consume or use liquor; or
(c)
By section 2 (24) "liquor" is defined as including
"(a) spirits of wine; denatured spirits, wine, beer, toddy
and all liquids consisting of or containing alcohol; and
(b) any other intoxicating substance which the State
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette,
declare to be liquor for the purposes of this Act."
Therefore the prohibition of section 13(b)extends to
the consumption or use of each and everyone of the above
enumerated items which are included in the definition of
"liquor". It follows that whoever consumes or uses any of
these enumerated substances contravenes the provisions of
section 13(b) and consumption or use of any of these
substances in contravention of this provision is an offence
punishable under section 66(b).
658
The Bombay Prohibition Act containing the above ,provisions
came into force on the 20th May, 1949. It is conceded on
all hands that it was a perfectly valid piece of legislation
enacted well within its legislative competency by the then
Bombay Legislative Assembly. Then came the Constitution of
India on the 26th January, 1950. Article 19(1)(f) gives to
all citizens the fundamental right to acquire, hold and
dispose of property. By sub-article(5) however,it is
provided that nothing in clause(f) shall affect the
operation of any existing law in so far as it imposes, or
prevent the State from making any law imposing, reasonable
restrictions on the exercise of the right conferred by sub-
clause (f) either in the interests of the general public or
for the protection of the interests of any Scheduled Tribe.
The Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949, was an existing law. By
virtue of sub-article (5) the right conferred by sub-clause
(f) cannot affect the operation of the Act in so far as it
imposes reasonable restrictions of the kind mentioned in
that sub-article. If, however, this existing law imposes
restrictions which are unreasonable then it becomes
inconsistent with the right guaranteed to the citizens by
article 19(1)(f) and consequently under article 13(1)
"shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void". It
is beyond all dispute that it is for the Court to judge
whether the restrictions imposed by any existing law or any
Part thereof on the fundamental rights of citizens are
reasonable or unreasonable in the interest of the general
public or for the protection of the interests of any
Scheduled Tribe. If the Court holds that the restrictions
are unreasonable then the Act or the part thereof which
imposes such unreasonable restrictions comes into conflict
and becomes inconsistent with the fundamental right con-
ferred on the citizens by article 19(1)(f) and is by article
13(1). rendered void, not in toto or for all purposes or for
all persons but "to the extent of such inconsistency", i.e.,
to the extent it is inconsistent with the exercise of that
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fundamental right by the citizens. This is plainly the
position, as I see it.
Shortly after the commencement of the Constitution the
validity of the Bombay Prohibition Act was
659
challenged in its entirety. One F. N. Balsara, claiming to
be an Indian citizen prayed to the High Court, at Bombay,
infer alia, for a writ of mandamus against the State of
Bombay and the Prohibition Commissioner ordering them (i) to
forbear from enforcing against him the provisions of the
Prohibition Act and (ii) to allow him to exercise his right
to possess, consume and use certain articles, namely,
whisky, brandy, wine, beer, medicated wine, eau-de-cologne,
lavender water and medicinal preparations containing
alcohol. The High Court, agreeing with some of the
petitioner’s contentions and disagreeing with others,
declared some of the provisions of the Act to be invalid and
the rest to be valid. Both the State of Bombay and the
petitioner, Balsara, appealed to this Court after obtaining
a certificate from the High Court under article 132(1) of
the Constitution. The judgment of this Court in those
appeals was pronounced on the 25th May, 1951. See The State
of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra). So far as
it is material for our present purpose this Court held-
(1) that under entry 31 of List II of the Seventh
Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935, the
Provincial Legislatures had the power to make laws with
respect to "intoxicating liquors, that is to say, the
’production, manufacture, possession, transport, purchase
and sale of intoxicating liquors" and there was, therefore,
no legislative incompetency in the Bombay Legislature to
enact the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949;
(2) that the word "liquor" as understood in India at
the time of the Government of India Act, 1935, covered not
only those alcoholic liquids which are generally used as
beverages and produce intoxication, but also liquids
containing alcohol and, therefore, the definition of
"liquor" contained in section 2(24) of the -Act was not
ultra vires, and
(3) that the restrictions imposed by sections 12 and
13 of the Act on the possession, sale, use and consumption
of liquor were not reasonable restrictions on the
fundamental right guaranteed by article 19(1)(f), so far as
medicinal and toilet preparations containing
660
alcohol were -concerned and that the said sections were
invalid so far as they prohibited the possession, sale, use.
and consumption of these articles, but that those sections
were not wholly void on this ground as the earlier
categories mentioned in the definition of liquor, -namely,
spirits of wine, methylated spirit, wine, beer and toddy
were distinctly separable items which were easily severable
from the last category, namely, all liquors containing
alcohol and further that the last category of "all liquids
consisting of or containing alcohol" were again capable of
being split up in several sub-categories, e.g., liquid
medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol and the
restrictions on the possession, sale, use and consumption of
the earlier categories and all liquids containing alcohol
other than medicinal and toilet preparations were not
unreasonable. In the result this Court declared certain
provisions of the Act invalid. Amongst the provisions
declared invalid was section 13(b), but it was so declared
only "so far as it affects the consumption or use of such
medicinal and toilet preparations containing alcohol." This
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declaration, no doubt, was made pursuant to article 13(1) of
the Constitution. The very foundation of this declaration
was that the prohibition imposed by this section against the
consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations was an unreasonable restriction on the exercise
of the fundamental right of citizens to acquire, hold and
dispose of property which in that case was liquid medicinal
or toilet preparations containing alcohol’ The law thus
declared by this Court is, by virtue of article 141 of the
Constitution, binding on all Courts within the territory of
India.
The offence with which the appellant was charged was
alleged to have been committed on the 29th May, 1951, that
is to say, four days after this Court pronounced its
judgment in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra). On the 22nd April, 1952, the learned Presidency
Magistrate acquitted the appellant of that charge with the
following remark:
"The evidence also does not go to show conclusively that
the accused had consumed alcohol without a permit
There are. certain medicinal preparations which are
661
allowed to be used by law and there must be satisfactory
evidence to show that the accused has not consumed those
tonics but only liquor for which he ought to have a permit."
The State appealed to the High Court against this order
of acquittal. The High Court following its own earlier
decision in Rangrao Bala, Mane v. State (supra) reversed the
order of the Presidency Magistrate. Neither in the judgment
of the Presidency Magistrate nor in the judgment of the
Court was any reference made to the decision of this Court
in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra).
The appellant came up to this Court in appeal after having
obtained special leave from this Court.
The appeal came up for hearing before a Division Bench of
this Court consisting of Bhagwati, Jagannadhadas and
Venkatarama Ayyar JJ. Bhagwati J. clearly and, if I may
respectfully say so, correctly accepted the position that
the declaration made by this Court in The State of Bombay
and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) "was a judicial
pronouncement and that even though under article 141 of the
Constitution the law declared by this Court was binding on
all Courts in India and is to be the law of the land the
effect of that declaration was not to enact a -statutory
provision or to alter or amend section 13(b) of the Act."
Having accepted this position the learned Judge logically
and, again I say with respect, correctly repelled the argu-
ment that the result of the decision in The State of Bombay
and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) was to introduce, not
in terms but in effect, an exception or proviso to section
13(b) and that consequently the onus lay on the appellant to
prove the existence of circumstances bringing his case
within the exception or proviso as laid down in section 105
of the Evidence Act. The learned Judge, however, observed:-
"The only effect of the declaration was that the
prohibition enacted in section 13(b) was to be enforce. able
in regard to the consumption or use of validly prohibited
liquor, i.e., spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine,
beer, toddy and all non-medicinal and
85
662
non-toilet liquid preparations consisting of or containing
alcohol. The prohibition which was enacted in section 13(b)
against the consumption or use of liquor could in the light
of the declaration made by this Court only refer to the
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consumption or use of validly prohibited liquor, i.e.,
spirits of wine, methylated spirits, wine, beer, toddy and
all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid preparations
consisting of or containing alcohol, and that was the only
prohibition which could be enforced under the section 13(b)
and the penal section 66(b)."
The learned Judge proceeded to illustrate how the effect
of the declaration could be worked out:
"The effect of the declaration on the provisions of
section 13(b) could be worked out in any of the following
modes:
No person shall consume or use spirits of wine, methylated
spirits, wine, beer, toddy and all liquids consisting of or
containing alcohol as are not or which are not or other than
or save or except or provided they are not or but shall not
include liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing
alcohol or all non-medicinal and non-toilet liquid
preparations consisting of or containing alcohol.
When these several interpretations were possible in
regard to the effect of the declaration on the provisions of
section,13(b), where would be the justification for
interpreting the effect of the declaration to be that of
grafting an exception or proviso on section 13(b) so as to
attract the operation of the provisions of section 105 of
the Evidence Act9 It is clear that where several
interpretations are possible, the Court should adopt an
interpretation favourable to the accused, rather than one
which casts an extra or special burden upon him, which if at
all should be done by clear and unequivocal provision in
that behalf rather than in this indirect manner. (See also
In re Kanakasabai Pillai)(1)."
With the utmost respect to the learned Judge, the modes
of working out the effect of the declaration indicated by
him clearly involve the acceptance of one or other of the
different forms of amendment of the section, although
according to his views expressed
(1) A.I. R. 1940 Mad. I.
663
earlier in his judgment the effect of the declaration was
not to alter or amend section 13(b) of the Act. Venkatarama
Ayyar J., however, took the view that as the Court had no
legislative function and as judicial decisions did not amend
or add to a statute but merely interpreted the law and
declared whether it was valid or not, the result of a
judicial declaration that a statute or any part thereof was
not valid was only that no effect could be given to it in a
Court of law but that it did not mean that the statute or
the part thereof declared void had gone out of the statute
book after the Court’s decision. He also held that section
105 of the Evidence Act would not in terms apply as article
19(1)(f) could not be said to form an exception to section
13(b). He rested his decision on the ground that the
inclusive definition of "liquor" adopted in section 2(24) of
the Act having been held to be within entry 31 in List II of
the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935,
and, therefore, valid, that meaning should be its
connotation in section 13(b) as well and that under the
section so read the offence would be established as soon as
consumption or use of "liquor" so defined was established
and that the plea that what was consumed was medicinal
preparation containing alcohol was really a plea that the
section, in so far as it prohibits consumption or use of
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol,
infringed the citizens’ fundamental right under article
19(1)(f) and was, therefore, unconstitutional as declared by
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this Court. His view was that it was for those who pleaded
unconstitutionality to establish all the elements which
would go to establish that plea. Jagannadhadas J. felt
inclined to agree with the view of Venkatarama Ayyar J. but
as that aspect of the matter had not been fully argued he
passed on to the argument canvassed before them, namely,
that the part of the section declared invalid went out of
the Act and the Act stood appropriately amended pro tanto.
This, according to the learned Judge, involved, that the
word "liquor" stood amended as "prohibited liquor" or that
it was to be understood with this limited connotation. This
argument he could not accept. His view was that what the
decision in The, State of Bombay and Another v.
664
F. N. Balsara (supra) had done was not to authorise ,the
importation of a new definition or to rewrite the section
but, leaving the section intact, to treat the consumption or
use of liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing
alcohol as taken out of the ambit of the section itself as
the prohibition thereof was unconstitutional. This,
according to the learned Judge, could only be done by
grafting an appropriate exception or proviso into section
13(b).
The result of the hearing before that Bench was that
Bhagwati J. held that the appeal should be allowed but
Jagannadhadas and Venkatarama Ayyar JJ. were for dismissing
the appeal. An application for review was, however, made on
the ground that the judgments of the learned Judges involved
a decision on constitutional matters which that Bench had no
jurisdiction to decide but which could only be dealt with by
a Constitution Bench. By an order made on the 26th April,
1954, under the proviso to sub-article (3) of article 145
that Bench accordingly referred the following question for
the opinion of the Constitution Bench, namely:
"What is the effect of the declaration in The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) that clause (b)
of section 13 of the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949, is void,
under article 13(1) of the Constitution, in so far as it
affects the consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol, on the ground that it
infringes article 19(1)(f)
of the Constitution?"
The effect of a judicial declaration of a statute as
unconstitutional has been stated by Field J. in -Norton v.
Shelby County(1) to be that the statute is no law and that,
in legal contemplation, it is to be treated as inoperative
as though it had never been passed. Cooley, in his
Constitutional Limitations, Volume 1, page 382, has adopted
this dictum of Field J. and expressed the view that where a
statute is adjudged to be unconstitutional it is as if it
had never been. I am unable to accept the proposition so
widely stated. Even American text book writers have felt
that the statement of
(1) 118 U.S. 425; 30 L, Ed. I78.
665
Field J. needs to be somewhat qualified. (See, Willoughby on
the Constitution of the United States, Volume 1, page 11 and
Willis on Constitutional Law, page 890). The dictum, it
will be observed, related to a statute which was made after
the commencement of the Constitution and which was in
violation of the provisions of the Constitution. It cannot
obviously apply to a case where a statute which was enacted
before the commencement of the Constitution is declared to
have become unconstitutional and void. In such a situation
it cannot be said that the judicial declaration means that
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such a statute is void for all purposes including past
transactions that took place before the commencement of the
Constitution. The Bombay Act was an existing law and the
declaration in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra) cannot and does not affect anything done
under the Act prior to the commencement of the Constitution.
It will be further noticed that the decision in The State of
Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) does not declare
the entire Act or even the entire section 13(b) to be void.
It only declares void a part of section 13(b), that is to
say only that part of it which prohibits a citizen from
consuming or using only liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol. The section, in its
entirety, is still enforceable against all noncitizens.
Even as against citizens the prohibition of the section with
respect to the consumption or use of the earlier categories
of liquor, namely, "spirits of wine, denatured spirits,
wine, beer, toddy"’ is fully operative. Moreover, even the
prohibition against consumption or use of the last category
of liquor, namely, "all liquids consisting of or containing
alcohol" remains operative even as against citizens except
in so far as it prohibits them from consuming or using
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol.
In such a situation the passages from Cooley on
Constitutional Limitations and the dictum of Field J. can
have no application. This is put beyond controversy by the
decision of this Court in Keshava Madhava Menon v. The State
of Bombay (supra). The Bombay Act being an existing law,
the declaration made by
666
this Court in The- State of Bombay and Another v.. F. N.
Balsara (supra) must be taken to have been made under-
article 13(1). The article does not in terms make the
existing laws which are inconsistent with the fundamental
rights void ab initio or for all purposes. The declaration
in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra),
as I understand it, is that the prohibition contained in
section 13(b) against the consumption or use of one
particular variety of liquid Consisting of or containing
alcohol, namely, liquid medicinal or toilet preparations
containing alcohol imposes an unreasonable restriction on
the exercise of a citizen’s fundamental right under article
19(1) (f) and is, therefore, unconstitutional and as such
void to that extent. The result of it is that the prohibi-
tion of that part of section 13(b) will be ineffective
against and inapplicable to a citizen who consumes or uses
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol.
No part of the section is obliterated or scratched out from
the statute book or in any way altered or amended, for that
is not the function of the Court. The judicial declaration
that a art of the section is unconstitutional and void only
nullifies that offending Part in the sense that it renders
that part ineffective against and inapplicable to a citizen
who consumes or uses liquid medicinal or toilet preparations
containing alcohol in exercise of his fundamental right. In
other words, when a citizen is charged with an offence under
section 66(b) read with section 13(b) he will be entitled to
say-"I am a citizen of India. I have consumed or used
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol.
I am entitled to do so under article 19(1) (f). The Supreme
Court has in The State, of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra) declared the law, namely, that in such cir-
cumstances the prohibition of section 13(b) is void as
against me with respect to such consumption or use of liquid
medicinal or toilet -preparations containing alcohol " This
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plea, if substantiated, will be a complete answer to the
charge. In short, the judicial declaration serves to
provide a defence to a citizen who has consumed or used
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations
667
containing alcohol. Test the matter in this way. Suppose
after the declaration a person is charged with an offence
under section 66(b) read with section 13(b) and in such a
case the prosecution proves that the accused has taken
alcohol in some form or other, as is the evidence of the
doctor in the present case. What is to happen if nothing
further is proved by either party ? Surely, in such a
situation a conviction must follow. If the accused person
desires to avail himself of the benefit of the declaration
in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra),
surely he must prove first of all that he is a citizen. The
onus of this clearly lies on the accused. The next question
is whether that is the only onus that lies on the accused.
To my mind he has to allege and prove not only that he is a
citizen but that he has consumed or used liquid medicinal or
toilet preparations containing alcohol and it is only on
such proof that he can claim the benefit of the declaration
of law made in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra) and establish his defence. The very basis
of that declaration is that a citizen has the fundamental
right to consume or use liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol and section 13(b) in so far
as it prohibits such consumption or use imposes an
unreasonable restriction on his fundamental right under
article 19(1) (f). In other words, the on us is on him to
establish the situation or circumstances in which that part
of the section which has been declared to be void should not
be applicable to him. If he establishes the fact that he is
a citizen and that he has consumed or used such liquid, then
the declaration in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N.
Balsara (supra) will establish the law, namely, that the
prohibition of section 13(b) and the penalty under section
66(b) are not applicable to him being inconsistent with his
fundamental right. To say that after the judicial
pronouncement the section should be read qua a citizen as if
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations are not there or
that the ambit of the offence has narrowed down to a
prohibition against the consumption or use of only the
earlier categories of liquor set forth in the definition is,
to my mind,
868
tantamount to saying, covertly if not openly , that the
judicial pronouncement has to that extent amended the
section. To say that after the declaration the offence has
become limited to the consumption or use of prohibited
liquor is to alter or amend the definition of liquor
although it has been held to be valid. I repeat that it is
not within the competence of a Court to alter or amend a
statute and that the effect of the declaration made by this
Court in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara
(supra) is not to lift or take away or add anything out of
or to the section at all. What it does is to declare, as a
matter of law, that in a certain situation, namely, when
liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing alcohol
are consumed or used, a certain part of section 13(b), that
is to say, that part of it which prohibits the consumption
or use of liquid medicinal or toilet preparations containing
alcohol, shall be void qua a particular class of persons,
namely, citizens. In other words, the declaration in The
State Of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) serves
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to provide a defence only to a citizen who has consumed or
used liquid medicinal or toilet preparations. It is for the
accused person, who seeks to ward off the applicability of
the section to him by having resort to the declaration made
in The State of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra),
to establish the situations or circumstances on which that
declaration is founded. In short a person who challenges
the validity of the section on the ground of its
unconstitutionality has the advantage of the declaration as
a matter of law but the facts on which that declaration is
based have nevertheless to be established in each particular
case where the declaration is sought to be availed of. I
answer the question referred to us accordingly.
It has been strenuously urged before us, as before the
Division Bench, that such a view as to the effect of this
Court’s declaration will run counter to the well established
principle of criminal jurisprudence that the onus of
establishing the charge is always on the prosecution, for it
will throw the burden of proof on the accused person. This
argument has considerably impressed Bhagwati J. and has also
weighed with my
669
learned colleagues on the present Bench. It is, however,
not unusual in certain classes of cases or in certain
circumstances to throw the onus of proof of a defence on the
accused person. Section 105 of the Evidence Act is an
instance in point. Section 114, ill. (a) of the same Act is
another provision to which reference may be made. Section
103 of this very Bombay Prohibition Act raises a very strong
presumption of guilt and throws the burden on the accused to
prove his innocence in certain cases. Take section 96 of
the Indian, Penal Code which says-
" Nothing is an offence which is done in the exercise
of the right of private defence. "
Nobody will contend that this section requires the
prosecution to prove that the acts constituting the offence
charged against the accused were not done in the exercise of
the right of private defence. It is obvious that this
section serves to provide the accused person with a defence
and if the accused person can prove that he did the acts
complained of in defence of his person or property and if
the acts were reasonable in the circumstances of the case he
establishes his defence. It is not necessary to multiply
instances. It seems to me that the declaration in The State
of Bombay and Another v. F. N. Balsara (supra) gives a
citizen who has consumed or used liquid medicinal or toilet
preparations containing alcohol a defence to a charge under
section 66(b) read with section 13(b) of the Bombay
Prohibition Act, but it is for the accused person to prove
the facts on which that declaration of law is founded. I
see no hardship whatever in this, for the requisite facts
are within his special knowledge. To adopt the contrary
view will be to ignore the sound principle well established
in law that a judicial declaration of invalidity does not
repeal, alter or amend a statute.
As I hold that the declaration does not operate as an
amendment of the section, I must logically hold, ’with
respect to the view of Jagannadhadas J. that the declaration
cannot be treated as having grafted an exception or proviso
to section 13(b).
86
670
In coming to the conclusion that I have, I have in a large
measure found myself in agreement with the views of
Venkatarama Ayyar J. on that part of the’ case. 1, however,
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desire to guard myself against being understood to agree
with the rest of the observations to be found in his
judgment, particularly those relating to waiver of
unconstitutionality, the fundamental rights being a mere
check on legislative power or the effect of the declaration
under article 13(1) being "relatively void." On those topics
prefer to express no opinion on this occasion.
BY THE COURT.-The reference is answered in accordance
with the opinion of the majority.
[After the opinion of the Constitution Bench the
following Order, dated 24th September, 1954, was pronounced
by a Bench composed- of Bhagwati, Jagannadhadas and
Venkatarama Ayyar JJ. who had originally heard the appeal.]
The Order of the Court was pronounced by
BHAGWATI J.-We have received the opinion expressed by the
Constitution Bench. According to that opinion, which is
expressed in the majority judgment, the onus lay on the
prosecution to prove that the alcohol of which the accused
was smelling was such that it came within the -category of
prohibited alcohols.
We have heard the learned Attorney-General on the
question whether that onus has been discharged and he has
frankly conceded that on the material placed before us it
cannot be urged that that onus has been discharged by the
prosecution.
The result, therefore, is that the conviction of the
appellant will be quashed and the fine, if paid, will be
refunded.
Conviction set aside.
671