Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
FIRM RAMDEO ONKARMAL & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/07/1981
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1582 1982 SCR (1) 14
1981 SCC (3) 489 1981 SCALE (3)1046
ACT:
Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act. 1952 s. 18 (3)-
Regulation and Control of non-transferable specific delivery
contracts-Notification issued-Area over which regulation and
control to extend-Whether to be expressly specified in
notification.
HEADNOTE:
The Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952 by sub-
section (1) of section 18 declares that the provisions of
Chapters III and IV shall not apply to nontransferable
specific delivery contracts for the sale or purchase of any
goods. Sub-section (3) of section 18 however, provides that
if the Central Government is of opinion that in the interest
of the trade or in the public interest, it is expedient to
regulate and control such contracts in any area, it may by
notification in the Official Gazette, declare that all or
any of the provisions of Chapters III and IV shall apply to
such class or classes of non-transferable specific delivery
contracts in such area and in respect of such goods or class
of goods as may be specified in the notification and may
also specify the manner in which and the extent to which all
or any of the said provisions shall so apply.
On July 17, 1958 the Central Government issued three
notifications under the Act. The first notification S.O.
1384-B issued under section 17 read with section 16 of the
Act prohibited forward contracts for the sale or purchase of
certain specified goods, including Tur (Arhar). The second
notification S.O. 1384-C issued under sub-section (3) of
section 18 declared that section 17 would apply to non-
transferable specific delivery contracts in respect of the
goods specified in the notification, and these included Tur
(Arhar). The third notification, S.O. 1384-D, issued under
sub-section (1) of section 17 declared that no person could,
save with the permission of the Central Government, enter
into any non-transferable specific delivery contracts for
the sale or purchase of the goods specified therein, and
these included Tur (Arhar).
The appellants were prosecuted for various offences
under section 20 and section 21 of the Act on the ground
that three transactions of purchase of Tur (Arhar) were
entered into by them in violation of the aforesaid
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notifications. The appellants challenged the validity of the
notifications but the Sub-Divisional Magistrate and the
Sessions Judge in revision took the view that the challenge
was premature.
A Division Bench of the High Court dismissed the
appellant’s petition under section 561A read with section
435 Code of Criminal Procedure, upheld
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the validity of the notifications, and rejected the plea of
the appellants that the notifications were invalid as they
did not specifically mention the area over which they were
to operate.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
^
HELD: 1. What sub-section (3) of section 18 requires is
that before issuing a notification under that provision the
Central Government must satisfy itself that the regulation
and control of non-transferable specific delivery contracts
in a particular area are in the interest of the trade or in
the public interest. The determination of the area over
which the regulation and control will extend is a vital
component to which the Central Government must apply its
mind when deciding to issue a notification, and when a
notification is in fact issued the area must be communicated
by specifying it in the notification. [18 D]
2. The area specified may be comprehended from material
expressed or implied in the notification. The sub-section
does not require that the area must be expressly specified
in the notification. If it is possible to define the area by
necessary implication, that is sufficient compliance with
the requirement of the sub-section. [18 E]
3. A notification may operate over part only of the
territory to which the Act extends, or it may be intended to
operate throughout that territory. Ordinarily, whether the
notification extends over part only of the territory or
throughout the territory would be specified in the
notification. If the notification is intended to operate
over part only of the territory to which the Act extends,
the notification must necessarily define that limited area.
When it contains no express signification of the area, it
may be implied that it is intended to operate throughout the
territory covered by the Act. That is a construction by
implication. It is not mandatory in such a case that the
notification should specify that it operates throughout the
territory to which the Act extends. [18H- 19 A]
In the instant case the absence of any express
reference to a specific area constituted a ground in the
High Court for alleging that the Central Government did not
apply its mind to the "area" ingredient when deciding on the
notification. The large volume of material produced by the
respondents shows that the Central Government did apply its
mind to the fact that the notification should cover the
entire country. [19 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
552 of 1976.
From the judgment and order dated the 22nd May, 1975 of
the Allahabad High Court in Criminal Misc. Application No.
2138 of 1971.
Pramod Swarup for the Appellants.
R.K. Bhat, for Respondent No. 1.
P.A. Francis and R.N. Podar for Respondent No. 2.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J. This appeal by certificate granted under
sub-clause (c) of clause (1) of Article 134 of the
Constitution by the Allahabad High Court is directed against
a judgment of that Court dismissing the appellants’ petition
for quashing criminal proceedings against them under the
Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952.
The appellants are being prosecuted for various
offences under s. 20 and s. 21 of the Forward Contracts
(Regulation) Act, 1952 on the ground that three transactions
of purchase of Tur (Arhar) were entered into by them in
violation of Notifications Nos. 1384-B, 1384-C and 1384-D,
all dated July 17, 1958 issued by the Central Government
under that Act. During the proceedings before the Sub-
Divisional Magistrate, the appellants challenged the
validity of the three notifications. The Sub-Divisional
Magistrate, and there after the learned Sessions Judge in
revision took the view that it was premature to decide the
question. They applied to the Allahabad High Court under s.
561A read with s. 435, Code of Criminal Procedure, raising
the same question and praying for the quashing of the
criminal proceedings. The learned Single Judge of the High
Court hearing the petition considered the question to be of
substantial importance and accordingly the case was referred
to a larger Bench.
A Division Bench of the High Court by its judgment
dated May 22, 1975 upheld the validity of the notifications
and dismissed the petition. It saw no substance in the plea
of the appellants that the notifications did not
specifically mention the area over which they were to
operate and, therefore, were invalid. On application by the
appellants the High Court granted a certificate under sub-
clause (c) of clause (1) of Article 134 of the Constitution
that the case was fit for appeal to this Court.
The point on which the certificate has been granted is
whether the only method of specifying the area in a
notification issued under sub-s. (3) of s. 18 of the Forward
Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952 is to expressly describe it
in the notification itself or whether such a specification
can be inferred from other circumstances as well as
notifications issued simultaneously. That is the only point
on which this appeal is pressed, and we need consider no
other aspect of the case.
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It is desirable to appreciate first the statutory
matrix within which the controversy is embedded. Sub-s. (1)
of s. 18 declares that the provisions of Chapters III and IV
(Chapter IV includes s. 17) shall not apply to non-
transferable specific delivery contracts for the sale or
purchase of any goods. But by virtue of sub-s. (3) of s. 18
if the Central Government is of opinion that in the interest
of the trade or in the public interest, it is expedient to
regulate and control such contracts in any area, it may by
notification in the Official Gazette, declare that all or
any of the provisions of Chapters III and IV shall apply to
such classes of non-transferable specific delivery contracts
in such area and in respect of such goods or class of goods
as may be specified in the notification and may also specify
the manner in which and the extent to which all or any of
the said provisions shall so apply.
In other words, by a notification under sub-s. (3) of
s. 18 the Central Government may make the provisions of s.
17 applicable to a class or classes of non-transferable
specific delivery contracts in an area and in respect of
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specified goods or class of goods. By itself, s. 17 deals
with forward contracts for the sale or purchase of any goods
or class of goods. On a notification under sub-clause (3) of
s. 18 it is made applicable to non-transferable specific
delivery contracts. On making s. 17 thus applicable, a
notification can follow in exercise of the powers under sub-
s. (1) of s. 17, prohibiting such contracts save with the
permission of the Central Government; and the issue of such
a notification, by reason of sub-s. (3) of s. 17, brings
into play the provisions of s. 16.
Now on July 17, 1958, the Central Government in the
Ministry of Commerce and Industry issued three notifications
under the Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1952. The
first notification, S.O. 1384-B was issued under s. 17 read
with s. 16 of the Act, and prohibited forward contracts for
the sale or purchase of certain specified goods, including
Tur (Arhar). The second notification, S.O. 1384-C was issued
under sub-s. (3) of s. 18 and declared that s. 17 would
apply to non-transferable specific delivery contracts in
respect of the goods specified in the notification, and
these included Tur (Arhar). In consequence, the third
notification, S.O. 1384-D, was issued under sub-s. (1) of s.
17, declaring that no person could, save with the permission
of the Central Government, enter into any non-transferable
specific delivery contracts for the sale or purchase of the
goods specified therein, and predictably these included Tur
(Arhar).
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As a result of the three notifications, there was an
integrated scheme, prohibiting forward contracts as well as
non-transferable specific delivery contracts for the sale or
purchase of Tur (Arhar).
The contention of the appellants is that the powers
conferred by sub-s. (3) of s. 18 to apply the provisions of
Chapters III and IV to non-transferable specific delivery
contracts must necessarily be exercised in terms of a
specific area, and the area must be specified in the
notification. They urge that is what sub-s. (3) of s. 18
mandates. And they say as the Notification S.O. 1384-C does
not expressly specify any area, it is not in accordance with
sub-s. (3) of s. 18 and is incomplete and therefore invalid.
In consequence, they submit, the Notification S.O. 1384-D
must also fail.
It seems to us that what sub-s. (3) of s. 18 requires
is that before issuing a notification under that provision
the Central Government must satisfy itself that the
regulation and control of non-transferable specific delivery
contracts in a particular area are in the interest of the
trade or in the public interest. The determination of the
area over which the regulation and control will extend is a
vital component to which the Central Government must apply
its mind when deciding to issue a notification. And when a
notification is in fact issued the area must be communicated
by specifying it in the notification. The area specified may
be comprehended from material expressed or implied in the
notification. The sub-section does not require that the area
must be expressly specified in the notification. If it is
possible to define the area by necessary implication, that
is sufficient compliance with the requirement of the sub-
section. In the present context, when the notification does
not expressly specify the area, one of two conclusions is
possible. Either the notification is intended to operate
throughout the territory over which the Act extends, or the
omission indicates that the authority required to apply its
mind to the "area" ingredient did not do so. These are two
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distinct, separate and alternative possibilities.
A notification may operate over part only of the
territory to which the Act extends, or it may be intended to
operate throughout that territory. Ordinarily, whether the
notification extends over part only of the territory or
throughout the territory would be specified in the
notification. If the notification is intended to operate
over part only of the territory to which the Act extends,
the noti-
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fication must unnecessarily define that limited area. When
it contains no express signification of the area, it may be
implied that it is intended to operate throughout the
territory covered by the Act. That is a construction by
implication. It is not mandatory in such a case that the
notification should specify that it operates throughout the
territory to which the Act extends.
The alternative possibility is that the authority
required to determine the "area" ingredient did not do so
when issuing the notification. If such a contention is
raised, and we point out that it was not raised before us,
it is open to the authority to show that it did in fact
apply its mind to the matter. In the present case, the
absence of any express reference to a specific area
constituted a ground in the High Court for alleging that the
Central Government did not apply its mind to the "area",
ingredient when deciding on the notification. But a large
volume of material was produced by the respondents before
the High Court to show that the Central Government did apply
its mind to that fact and it was intended that the
notification should cover the entire country.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
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