Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LACHMANDAS KEWALRAM AHUJAAND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/05/1952
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1952 AIR 235 1952 SCR 710
CITATOR INFO :
D 1953 SC 156 (16)
R 1953 SC 287 (4)
R 1953 SC 394 (6)
RF 1953 SC 404 (11)
RF 1954 SC 424 (18)
F 1955 SC 13 (14)
R 1955 SC 191 (5)
F 1957 SC 503 (16)
R 1957 SC 877 (16)
D 1957 SC 927 (9)
D 1958 SC 86 (22)
R 1958 SC 538 (11)
RF 1958 SC 578 (211)
F 1959 SC 149 (45,46,47)
E 1959 SC 609 (12,13,27)
E 1960 SC 457 (16)
R 1961 SC1245 (12)
RF 1962 SC1621 (109)
R 1962 SC1737 (14)
R 1974 SC2009 (9,13)
R 1979 SC 478 (64,67)
R 1980 SC1789 (36)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Arts. 13, 14--Bombay Public
Safety Measures Act, 1947, s. 12--Provision empowering
Government to refer ’cases’ for trial by Special
Judge--Validity--Discrimination --Proceedings commenced
before 26th January, 1950, before Special Judge--Procedure
discriminatory--Continuation of trial under spicjul proce-
dure--Validity of trial--Applicability of Constitution to
pending trials.
HEADNOTE:
Held, per MAHAJAN, MUKHERJEA, DAs and CHANDRASEKHARA
AIYAR, JJ. (PATANJALI SASTRI C.J. dissenting).--Section 12
of the Bombay Public Safety Measures Act, 1947, in so far,
at any rate, as it authorises the Government to direct
particular "cases" to be tried by a Special Judge appointed
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under the Act does not purport to proceed on any classifica-
tion and therefore contravenes Art. 14 of the Constitution
and is void under Art. 13 on the principles laid down in the
cases of State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar ([1952]
S.C.R. 284) and Kathi Raning Rawat v. Tht State of Saurash-
tra ([1952] S.C.R. 435).
The appellants who were accused of having committed
murder and other serious offences were directed by the
Government of Bombay by an order made on the 6th August,
1949, to be tried under the Bombay Public Safety Measures
Act by a Special Judge appointed under the Act, charges were
framed against them on the 13th January, 1950, and they were
convicted in March, 1950. On appeal it was contended before
the High Court that the trial and conviction were illegal as
the Bombay Public Safety Measures Act was void under Art. 13
read with Art. 14of the Constitution which came into force
on the 26th January, 1950, but the High Court held that as
the proceedings against the accused had commenced before the
Constitution, the provisions of Arts. 13 and 14 did not
apply and the conviction was not illegal.
Held,by a majority, that although substantive rights
and liabilities acquired or accrued before the date of the
Constitution remain enforceable, it cannot be held that
after that date, those rights or liabilities must be en-
forced under the particular procedure that was in force
before that date, although it has since that date been
repealed or come into conflict with the fundamental right to
equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the
711
Constitution, as there is no vested right in procedure. The
fact of reference of "cases" to the Special Judge before the
Constitution came into force has no reasonable relation to
the objects sought to be achieved by the Act, the discrimi-
nation therefore continued after the Constitution came into
force and such continuation of the application of the dis-
criminatory procedure to the cases of the appellants after
the date of the Constitution constituted a breach of the
fundamental right guaranteed by Art. 14, and the appellants
were therefore entitled to be tried under the ordinary
procedure after the date of the Constitution.
PATANJALI SASTRI C.J. (contra).--Granting that s. 12 of
the Bombay Act must, in view of the decision in Anwar Ali
Sarkar’s case, be held to be discriminatory and void in so
far as it empowers the State Government to refer individual
cases to a Special Judge for trial, the trial of the appel-
lants which had validly started before the Special Judge who
had been empowered to try the case cannot be vitiated by the
Constitution subsequently coming into force. The provisions
of the Constitution relating to fundamental rights have no
retrospective operation and do not affect a criminal prose-
cution commenced before the Constitution came into force.
The jurisdiction of the Special Judges validly created
and exercised before the Constitution and their competence
to try the cases referred to them cannot be affected by the
special procedure becoming discriminatory. The correct view
is that Art. 14 does not affect pending trials even in
matters of procedure. Moreover the appellants against whom
proceedings had been commenced before the Special Judge,
were not in the same situation as others and there was
nothing discriminatory in a law which permits them to be
tried under the special procedure which was applicable to
them when the proceedings were started against them.
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Cases Nos. 20 and 21 of
1950.
Appeals under Art. 132(1)of the Constitution of India
from the judgment and order dated the 19th May, 1950, of the
High Court of Judicature at Bombay (Dixit and Shah, JJ.) in
Confirmation Case No. 4 of 1950 and Criminal Appeals Nos.
190 and 199 of 1950, arising out of judgment dated the 13th
March, 1950, of the Court of the Special Judge at Ahmedabad
in Special Cases Nos. 2 and 3 of 1949.
N.C. Chatterjee and Ram Lal Anand (Hardyal Hardy and
S.L. Chibber, with them) for the appellants.
712
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (G. N. Joshi,
with him) for the respondent.
A.A. Peerbhoy and J.B. Dadachanji lot the Intervener.
1952. May 20. The judgment of Mehr Chand Mahajan,
Mukherjea, Das and Chandrasekhara Aiyar, JJ. was deliv-
ered by Das J. Patanjali Sastri delivered a separate
dissenting judgment.
PATANJALI SASTRI C.J.--I regret I am unable to a gree with
the reasoning and conclusion of my learned brother Das J.
whose judgment I have had the advantage of reading.
The appellants were convicted and sentenced to death and
varying terms of imprisonment by the Special Judge, Ahmeda-
bad, on charges of murder and other offences under the
Indian Penal Code, the Arms Act and the Bombay Police Act.
The Special Judge was appointed by a notification issued
under the Bombay Security Measures Act, 1947, (hereinafter
referred to as the impugned Act) and on August 6, 1949, the
State Government, in exercise of the powers conferred by
section 12 of the impugned Act, directed the Special Judge
to try the case of the appellants who were implicated in
what was known as the Central Bank Robbery Case. Charges
were framed on January 13, 1950, without any preliminary
enquiry and committal by a Magistrate which had been dis-
pensed with by the impugned Act, and seventeen witnesses for
the prosecution were examined before January 26, 1950, when
the Constitution came into force. The proceedings continued,
and after the examination of sixty witnesses in all, ended
in the conviction of the appellants on March 13, 1950.
Separate appeals were preferred by the present appel-
lants to the High Court which, however, confirmed the con-
viction and sentence in each case. An objection that the
trial was illegal as the impugned Act was void under article
13 (1) of the Constitution, read with article 14, was over-
ruled on the ground that
713
those provisions had no retrospective operation and did not
affect proceedings already started in the Court of the
Special Judge. the learned Judges followed the decision of
a Special Bench of their own Court in In re Keshav Madbar
Menon(1) which has since been affirmed by this Court in
[1951] S.C.R. 228.
It is urged on behalf of the appellants that the deci-
sion relied on by the High Court is distinguishable and that
the present case is governed by the decision of this Court
in The State of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar(2) to the
effect that section 5 of the Bengal Act (which is in identi-
cal terms with section 12 of the impugned Act) is discrimi-
natory and void in so far, a any rate, as it empowers the
State Government to direc "cases" to be tried by a Special
Court under a special procedure. Accordingly, it was
claimed that the Special Judge had no jurisdiction to try
the appellant applying the special procedure prescribed by
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the impugned Act.
Granting, however, that section 12 of the impUgned Act
must, in view of the decision in Anwar Ali Sarkar’ case (2),
be held to be discriminatory and void in so far as it empow-
ers the State Government to refer individual cases to a
Special Judge for trial, it does no seem to me to follow
that the trial of the appellants which had validly started
before the Special Judge who had been duly empowered to try
the case, is vitiated by reason of the Constitution subse-
quently coming into force. It is to be noted that the West
Bengal case(2) was argued on the basis that article 12 of
the Constitution was applicable to the proceeding from their
inception, although the notification directing the trial of
some of the persons accused in that case was issued on the
day before the commencement of the Constitution. The posi-
tion here is different The appellant’s case was sent to the
Special Judge for trial by notification dated 6th August,
1949, and the Judge took cognisance of it, framed the
charges and proceeded with the trial to a considerable
extend before the commencement of the Constitution on 26th
(1) (1950) 52 Born. L.R. 540. (2) [5952] S.C.R.
284.
714
January, 1950. There could be no question, therefore, of the
appellants’ fundamental right under article 14 being in-
fringed up to that point, as it has been held by this Court
in Keshavan Madhava Menon’s case(1) that the provisions of
the Constitution relating to fundamental rights have no
retrospective operation and do not affect a criminal prose-
cution commenced before the Constitution came into force.
On and after 26th January, 1950, the appellants, no
doubt, had the right to the equal protection of the law;
but, as has been repeatedly pointed out, that right only
meant that the State, including the executive and the legis-
lature, should apply the same law, substantive and procedur-
al, to all persons alike in the same situation without
discrimination. It is said that after the commencement of
the Constitution persons who commit the same offences with
which the appellants stood charged would, according to Anwar
All Sarkar’s case (2) not be liable to be tried by the
Special Judge under the special procedure and, if so, the
trial of the appellants, too, could not be continued by the
Special Judge under such procedure after 26th January, 1950,
because such of the departures from the normal procedure of
trial under the Criminal Procedure Code as were applied to
the appellants during the rest of their trial, being disad-
vantageous to them in some respects, involved discrimination
against them. It is, therefore, claimed that the continued
application of such discriminatory procedure after the
Constitution came into force rendered the trial and the
resulting conviction illegal. I am unable to agree. In the
first place, as already pointed out: equal protection of the
laws postulates persons in the same situation and in
the same circumstances claiming that the same law should
be applied to them. Can it be said that the appellants,
whose trial by the Special Judge had been lawfully com-
menced and was pending at the commencement of the Constitu-
tion, were in the same situation with persons who committed
the same offences after the Constitution came into
(1) [1951] S.C.RR. 228.. (2) [1952] S.C.R. 284.
715
force ? It seems to me that the situation and circumstances
are different in the two cases and no complaint of dis-
criminatory treatment by reason only of the trial having
been continued under the special procedure can be sustained,
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even assuming that the ordinary procedure under the Crimi-
nal Procedure Code became applicable to the appellants on
and after 26th January, 1950.
Such assumption, however, seems to be open to ques-
tion. Section 1, sub-section (2), of the Criminal Procedure
Code enacts that "Nothing herein contained shall
affect .......... any special jurisdiction or power con-
ferred or any special form of procedure prescribed, by any
other law for the time being in force ......... The juris-
diction conferred on the Special Judge by the impugned Act,
which, as pointed out already, was perfectly valid and fully
operative down to the 26th ,January, 1950, thus remained
unaffected and application to the appellants of the ordinary
procedure prescribed by the Code was excluded. It cannot,
therefore, be said that on the 26th January, 1950. the
appellants were in a position to claim that they were enti-
tled to be tried under the ordinary procedure like those
who committed the same offences after that date or who,
having committed them before such date, had not been direct-
ed to be tried’by the Special Judge. It was said that sec-
tion 1 (2) of the Criminal Procedure ’ Code pre-supposes a
valid law conferring a special juris diction or prescribing
a special form of procedure and, inasmuch as such parts of
the special procedure as could still be applied to trials
continued after the commencement of the Constitution are
void under article 13(1) read with article 14, section 1(2)
of the Code could not stand in the way of the appellants
being tried under the ordinary procedure. This argument
seems to me to beg the question. It assumes that the special
procedure is discriminatory and void to the extent to which
it could have been applied to the trial of the appellants
after 26th January, 1950. But the assumption would not be
valid unless the appellants could be tried
716
under the normal procedure after 26th January, 1950, in
which case alone they could say "Why not try us under the
Code; why discriminate?" But, having regard to section 1
(2) of the Code, the normal procedure would become applica-
ble only if the special procedure is excluded as being
discriminatory and void. The argument thus proceeds in a
circle.
Again, it is difficult to see on what principle the
jurisdiction of the Special Judge, validly created and
exercised over the appellants’ case, could cease to continue
on and after 26th January, 1950. According to the appel-
lants’ contention. the special procedure prescribed by the
impugned Act became discriminatory and void after 26th Janu-
ary, 1950, and, therefore, inapplicable to what remained of
their trial. But, could this circumstance affect the compe-
tence of the Special Judge to try their case of which he had
validly taken cognisance ? In Keshoram Poddar v. Nundo Lal
Mullick(1) the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council held
that the cessation of the jurisdiction of a Rent Control
Tribunal after 31st March, 1924, over properties beyond a
certain rental value did not affect its power to deal with a
case after such cessation if the case was within its juris-
diction when it was filed and related to a period prior to
such cessation. Their Lordships observed: "The application
of the Act is when the parties begin to move under it. This
was done in the present case before March 1924. The rest is
merely the working out of the application". The position
here seems to me to be closely analogous. The Special Judge
was competent to try the appellants’ case when the trial
commenced before 26th January, 1950, and the impugned Act
was validly applied to the case. The rest was merely working
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out the application of the impugned Act. I find it diffi-
cult to see why the competency of the Special Judge to try
the case should cease after 26th January, 1950, any more
than that of the Rent Control Tribunal to deal with a pend-
ing matter after 31st March, 1924, when its jurisdiction was
restricted.
(1) (1927) 54. I.A.152.
717
If, then, the jurisdiction of the Special Judge to
continue the trial of the appellants remained unaffected by
the advent of the Constitution, it would be impracticable
for the Judge to switch the pending trials to a different
procedure from 26th January, 1950, so as to give effect to
the equal protection claims of under-trial prisoners. The
impugned Act, for instance, enacts that "Notwithstanding
anything contained in the Code the trial of offences before
a Special Judge shall not be by jury or with the aid of
assessors" (s. 20). The trials having been held so far
without a jury or assessors as the case may be. it would
obviously be impossible in such cases to continue them after
26th January, 1950, with a jury or with the aid of asses-
sors, where such trials are required to be so conducted
under the ordinary procedure. Again, the impugned Act
provides that no case shall be transferred from any Special
Judge, a necessary consequence of the exclusive jurisdiction
of the Special Judge and the special mode of proceeding
prescribed for him. If a right of transfer under section 526
of the Code were to be recognised as accruing after 26th
January, 1950, to persons undergoing trial before the Spe-
cial Judge, the scheme of trial by Special Courts may well
break down. The alternative courses open to the Court would,
therefore, seem to be either to hold that article 13(1),
read with article 14, does not affect pending trials even in
respect of procedural matters, as it has been held not to
affect such trials in respect of substantive rights and
liabilities accrued before the date of the Constitution in
Keshavan Madhava Menon’s case(1), or to go back on that
decision and give those provisions of the Constitution
retrospective, effect. I am clearly of opinion that the
principle of the above-said decision must rule the present
case. That principle has been stated thus: "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, for, to do so will be to give them retrospec-
tive effect which, we have said, they do not possess. Such
laws exist for all past transactions and ,.for enforcing
all
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 228.
718
rights and liabilities accrued before the date of the Con-
stitution", (Italics mine). Indeed, the last few words are
apt to cover the present case, though, as a party to that
decision, I am sensible that we did not have in mind a case
precisely like the one now before us. But, it is well to
remember that over-fine distinctions sometimes lead to
unsuspected traps.
In the foregoing discussion I have assumed that such
departures from the normal procedure as were still applica-
ble to what remained of the appellants’ trial after the 26th
January, 1950, were so materially prejudicial to them as to
amount to a denial of the equal protection of the laws
within the meaning of article 14 of the Constitution. I am,
however, by no means satisfied that that is the position.
One of these deviations relates to the recording of evi-
dence. ’1 he SpeCial Judge is empowered to record only a
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memorandum of the substance of the evidence of each witness
examined, whereas the Criminal Procedure Code requires the
evidence to be recorded in full. Another relates to the
summoning of witnesses for the defence, the Special Judge
being given a discretion to refuse to summon a witness ’ ’if
satisfied after examination of the accused that the evidence
of such witness will not be material" (s. 13), while under
section 257(1)of the Code the Magistrate has the discretion
to refuse to summon witnesses if he considers that the
application for the issue of process for compelling the
attendance of any witness is made "for the purpose of vexa-
tion or delay or for defeating the ends of justice". And
lastly, the impugned Act provides that no court shall have
jurisdiction to transfer any case from any Special Judge
(section 18 (3)), whereas transfers under section 526 of the
Code are allowed on certain specified grounds. The more
important departures from the procedure under the Code such
as dispensation of preliminary enquiry and committal and the
elimination of jury and assessors had already been applied,
and validly applied, to the trial of the appellants before
the Constitution came into force. and there can be no ques-
tion of such departures vitiating the trial. I am unable to
regard the
719
procedural variations in the recording of evidence and the
summoning of witnesses as so serious as to amount to a
denial of the equal protection of the laws within the mean-
ing of article 14. Even if the appellants were to be tried
under the normal procedure of the Code after 26th January,
1950, the omission to record the evidence in full and the
refusal to summon a witness in the circumstances mentioned
in section 13 may well be regarded as mere irregularities
curable under section 537 of the Criminal Procedure Code. As
regards transfer, it does not, as already pointed out, fit
in with the scheme of trial before a Special Judge, and,
unless any system of trials by Special Courts is to be
condemned as violative of article 14--the decision of this
Court in Kathi Raning Rawat v. The State of Saurashtra(1)
shows that it can be validly instituted in appropriate
circumstances--a prohibition of transfer cannot be regarded
as falling within the inhibition of article 14. I have
emphasised elsewhere, and I do so again, that in applying
the dangerously wide and vague language of the equality
clause to the concrete facts of life, a doctrinaire approach
should be avoided.
In all the circumstances of this case, I do not feel
impelled to set aside the trial and conviction of the appel-
lants and I accordingly dismiss the appeals.
DAs J.--These two appeals are from the judgment of a
Division Bench of the Bombay High Court (Dixit and Shah JJ.)
dated May 19, 1950, dismissing the appeals preferred by the
appellants against the order made by Shri M.S. Patti on
March 13, 1950, as the Special Judge appointed under the
Bombay Public Security Measures Act, 1947, whereby he con-
victed and sentenced them to death and to different terms of
imprisonment under the different charges.
The prosecution case is shortly as follows: On the
morning of May 26, 1949, between the hours of 10-30 a.m.
and 11 a.m. in the city of Ahmedabad the two appellants with
another companion, after injuring, by gunshot, the driver
and a peon of the Central
(1) [1952] S C.R. 435.
720
Bank of India Ltd, forcibly removed motor van No. BY 4388
belonging to the bank in which a large sum of money was
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being carried from its head office at Gandhi Road to its
branch office at Maskati. After abandoning the motor van at
a distance of threefourths of a mile, the three gunmen
forcibly took possession of the bicycles of some persons who
were riding the same and continued their escape. In course
of their flight, they fired and injured several people.
Eventually, however, the two appellants were arrested by the
police but their companion made good his escape. The driver
and the peon of the bank who had been injured succumbed to
their injuries, one dying on the spot and the other in the
hospital on the next day.
After investigation, the Ahmedabad Police, on July 19,
1949, submitted to the City Magistrate, Ahmedabad, two
charge sheets Nos. 183 and 188-A against the two appellants
and the then unknown absconder in respect of several of-
fences committed in course of the transaction that took
place on May 26, 1949. The charge sheet No. 183 was in
respect of offences under sections 394, 397, 302, 307 read
with section 84 of the Indian Penal Code, section 19 (e) of
the Arms Act, and section 68 (1) of the Bombay District
Police Act. The charge sheet No. 183-A was in respect of
offences punishable under sections 307, 392 read with sec-
tion 84 of the Indian Penal Code, section 19 (e) of the Arms
Act and section 68 (1) of the Bombay District Police Act.
In each of these charge sheets there was appended a note to
the effect that the District Superintendent of Police,
Ahmedabad City, had requested the District Magistrate.
Ahmedabad, to move the Government of Bombay/or the constitu-
tion of a Special Court to hear the cases and that the
said charge sheets might be transferred to the Special Court
as and when one was so constituted. In view of this note
the City Magistrate did not hold any enquiry but only re-
manded the appellants.
By a Notification dated August 6, 1949, the Government of
Bombay exercising its powers under section 10 ofthe Bombay
Public Security Measures Act, 1947,
721
constituted a Special Court of criminal Jurisdiction for the
Ahmedabad District and under section 11 of that Act appoint-
ed Shri M.S. Patil, District and Sessions Judge, Ahmedabad,
as a Special Judge to preside over the Special Court. By
another Notification made on the same date, the Government
of Bombay in exercise of powers conferred by section 12
the Act directed the Special Judge to try two particular
cases, namely, the Postal Van dacoity case in which there
were 9 accused and the Central Bank robbery with murder case
in which the two appellants before us were the accused under
the two charge sheets. In view of the above Notification
the City Magistrate, Ahmedabad, transferred the two cases
against the appellants to the Court of the Special Judge and
they came to be numbered as cases Nos. 2 and 3 respectively
of 1949. On December 31, 1949, the Government of Bombay
directed that the trial of the appellants should be held by
the Special Judge in the Ahmedabad Central Prison. There
was no order of committal by any Committing Magistrate nor
was there any preliminary enquiry by the Special Judge.
On January 13, 1950, the Special Judge consolidated the
two cases against the appellants with a view to holding a
joint trial. On the same day he framed five several charges,
namely, four under different sections of the Indian Penal
Code and one under section 19 (e) of the Indian Arms Act and
section 68 (1)of the Bombay District Police Act. On January
19, 1950, the ’first prosecution witness was examined and up
to January 25, 1950, seventeen prosecution witnesses were
examined. The Constitution came into operation on January
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26, 1930. The hearing proceeded thereafter and the deposi-
tion of the last witness was recorded on February 9, 1950.
Altogether sixty-two witnesses were examined. The two
appellants were examined under section 342 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure on February 10, 1950. One handwriting
expert was examined as a Court witness on February 13,
1950, and arguments for the prosecution commenced on the
following day. After the conclusion of the
722
arguments for the defence on February 23, 1950, the Special
Judge delivered his judgment on March 13, 1950. According
to his findings both the appellants had committed eleven
different offences punishable under several penal provisions
of law as specified by him and he convicted both the appel-
lants of the said eleven offences and sentenced both of them
to death under section 302/34, Indian Penal Code, and to
transportation for life under section 307/34, Indian Penal
Code, and to various terms of imprisonment under various
other sections of the Indian Penal Code, Arms Act and Bombay
District Police Act. The capital sentences were, of course,
subject to the confirmation by the High Court.
Both the appellants appealed to the Bombay High Court.
The appeals along with the reference for the confirma-
tion of the sentences of death were heard together by Dixit
and Shah JJ. who by their judgments dated May 19, 1950,
dismissed the appeals and confirmed the sentences of death.
The appellants applied to the High Court for certificates
under articles 132 (1) and 134 (1) (c) of the Constitution
to enable them to appeal to this Court. The High Court
(Bhagwati and Dixit JJ.), however, granted the appellants a
certificate only under article 132 (1) but declined to issue
any under article 134 (1) (c). The appellants thereupon
filed the present appeals pursuant to the certificate under
article 132 (1). A petition was filed before us under arti-
cle 132 (3) for leave to urge, as an additional ground, that
the trial was vitiated by reason of misjoinder of charges.
No such ground was actually advanced before the High Court
and as this Court did not think fit to permit the appellants
to raise a new point at this stage it disallowed that peti-
tion. Accordingly these appeals must be limited to attack-
ing the judgment of the High Court on the ground that a
substantial question of law as to the interpretation of the
Constitution has been wrongly decided.
The only substantial question of law as to the interpre-
tation of the Constitution urged before us is that
723
the Bombay Public Safety Measures Act, 1947, or, at any
rate, that part of section 12 of that Act which authorises
the State government to direct specific "cases" to be tried
by a Special Judge appointed under that Act, offends against
the equal protection of law guaranteed by article 14 of the
Constitution and is as such void under article 13 on the
principle laid down by this Court in the cases of The State
of West Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar(1) and Kathi Raning Rawat
v. The State of Saurashtra(2). In order to appreciate the
point in issue, it is necessary to consider in some detail
the provisions of the impugned Act.
The Act came into force on March 23, 1947. It was
then instituted as "An Act to consolidate and amend the law
relating to public safety, maintenance of public order and
the preservation of peace and tranquillity in the Province
of Bombay". The preamble recited the expediency of consoli-
dating and amending the law relating to those several mat-
ters. By section 9 (3) the Act was to remain in force for a
period of three years. The Act was amended by Bombay Act I
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of 1950 and, amongst other things, the words "security of
the State, maintenance of public order and maintenance of
supplies and services essential to the community in the
State of Bombay" were substituted for the words "public
safety, maintenance of public order and the preservation of
peace and tranquillity in the Province of Bombay" occurring
in the long title and preamble of the Act. The word "six"
was substituted for the word "three" in section 2(3). The
remaining sections of the Act are grouped under several
heads. Thus sections 3 (A1) to 5B are grouped under the
heading "Restrictions of movements etc." A contravention of
an order made under some of these sections is made an
offence punishable as mentioned therein. The subject of
"collective fines" is dealt with under that heading in
section 6. "Control of. camps etc. and uniforms" are
covered by sections 7 and 8, each of which makes a contra-
vention
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 284. (2) [1952] S..C.R. 435.
94
724
of any order made under it an offence. Section 9 prescribes
whipping as a punishment for certain offences under certain
Acts in addition to any other punishment to which the of-
fender may be liable under those Acts. Section 9A is set
down under the heading "Control of Publications etc." and
section 9B under the heading "Control of Commodities etc."
Each of those sections makes a contravention of any order
made thereunder an offence punishable as provided therein.
Sections 10 to 20 which are collected under the heading
"Special Courts" are material for the purposes of the point
in issue before us and will have to be carefully noted. The
rest of the sections are set out under the headings "Miscel-
laneous" and "Amendments to Acts".
Turning to the group of sections under the heading
"Special Courts", it will be noticed that section 10, like
section 3 of the West Bengal (Special Courts) Act. 1950,
and section 9 of the Saurashtra State Public Safety
Measures Ordinance, 1948, authorises the government by
notification in the Official Gazette to constitute Special.
Courts of criminal jurisdiction for such’ area as may be
specified in the notification. Section 11 which corresponds
to section 4 of the West Bengal Act and section 10 of the
Saurashtra Ordinance empowers the government to appoint as a
Special Judge to preside over a Special Court any person
possessing the requisite qualifications mentioned therein.
Section 12 is expressed in precisely the same terms in which
section 5(1)of the West Bengal Act and section 11 of the
Saurashtra Ordinance are’ expressed, namely:
"A Special Judge shall try such offences or class of
offences or such cases or class of cases as the Provincial
Government may, by general or special order in writing
direct."
It will be noticed that the offences mentioned in the
above section are not limited to offences created by this
Act only but also cover offences under any other law, e.g,
the Indian Penal Code, Section 13 runs thus
725
"13. (1) A Special Judge may take cognizance of of-
fences without the accused being committed to his Court for
trial.
(2) A Special Judge shall ordinarily record a memoran-
dum only of the substance of the evidence of each witness
examined, may refuse to summon any witness if satisfied
after examination of the accused that the evidence of such
witness will not be material and shall not be bound to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
adjourn any trial for any purpose unless such adjournment
is, in his opinion, necessary in the interests of justice.
(3) In matters not coming within the scope of sub-
sections (1) and (2), the provisions of the Code, in so far
as they are not inconsistent with the provisions of sections
10 to 20, shall apply to the proceedings of a Special Judge;
and for the purposes of the said provisions, the Court of
the Special Judge shall be deemed to be a Court of Session."
Under section 14 the Special Judge may in his discretion
direct the evidence of a person who is not in a position to
attend the Court to be recorded on commission. Enhanced
punishments are provided for certain offences by section 15
as follows:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian
Penal Code, whoever commits an offence of attempt to murder
may, in lieu of any punishment to which he is liable under
the said Indian Penal Code, be punishable with death, and
whoever commits an offence of voluntarily causing hurt by
stabbing may. in lieu of any punishment to which he is
liable under the said Indian Penal Code, be punishable with
death or transportation for life."
Section 16 authorises the Special Judge to pass any
sentence authorised by law and section 17 prescribes a
special rule of procedure for recovery of fines. Section 18
gives a right of appeal to a person convicted on a trial
held by a Special Judge within a period of fifteen days
from ’the date of sentence and also empowers the High Court
to call for the records of the proceedings of any
726
case tried by a Special Judge and in respect of such case
exercise any of the powers conferred on a Court of appeal by
sections 423, 426 and 428 of the Code. Sub-section (3) of
section 18 runs thus:
"No Court shall have jurisdiction to transfer any case
from any Special Judge or to make any order under section
491 of the Code in respect of any person triable by a Spe-
cial Judge or, save as herein otherwise provided, have
jurisdiction of any kind in respect of proceedings of any
Special Judge."
Thus the right to apply for transfer of the case and the
right to apply for revision are denied to an accused who is
tried by a Special Judge. Ordinary law is, by section 19
made applicable in so far as it is not inconsistent with the
provisions of sections 10 to 20. Section 20 provides as
follows :-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code, the
trial of offences before a Special Judge shall not be by
jury or with the aid of assessors."
Thus, besides providing for enhanced punishment and
whipping the Act eliminates the committal proceedings
[section 13 (1)], permits the Special Judge to record only a
memorandum of the evidence, confers on him a larger power to
refuse to summon a defence witness, than what is conferred
on a Court by section 257(1) of the Code of Criminal Proce-
dure and also deprives the accused of his right to apply for
a transfer or for revision. That these departures from the
ordinary law cause prejudice to persons subjected to the
procedure prescribed by the Act cannot for a moment be
denied. This Court has, by its decisions in the State of
West Bengal v. Artwar Ali Sarkar (supra) and in Kathi
Raning Rawat v The State of Saurashtra (supra). recognised
that article 14 condemns discrimination not only by a sub-
stantive law but also by a law of procedure and that the
procedure prescribed by the corresponding provisions in the
West Bengal Special Courts Act and the Saurashtra Ordinance
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which introduced similar departures from the ordinary law of
procedure constituted a discrimination
727
against persons tried by the Special Judge according to
procedure prescribed by those pieces of legislation and
finally that, in any event, section 5 (1) of the West Bengal
Act and section 11 of the Saurashtra Ordinance, both of
which corresponded to section 12 of the Bombay Public Secu-
rity Measures Act, in so far as they authorised the govern-
ment to direct specific and particular "cases" to be tried
by the Special Judge, was unconstitutional and void. In
view of the departures from the ordinary law brought about
by the Bombay Public Safety Measures Act, 1947, which are
noted above, it cannot but be held, on a parity of reason-
ing, that at any rate section 12 of the Act, in so far as it
authorises the Government to direct particular "cases" to be
tried by a Special Judge, is also unconstitutional.
Learned Attorney-General appearing for the State of
Bombay does not controvert the legal position as discussed
above but he points out that the offences were committed in
May, 1949, that the Special Court was constituted and the
Special Judge was appointed in August, 1949, and these
"cases" were directed to be tried by the Special Judge in
August, 1949, that the Special Judge actually framed charges
against the appellants on January 13, 1950, and that the
depositions of seventeen witnesses had been taken before
the Constitution came into force and when the Bombay Public
Safety Measures Act, 1947, was valid in its entirety. He
contends, on the authority of the decision of this Court in
Keshavan Madhava Menon v. The State of Bombay(1). that the
Constitution has no retroactive operation and that it does
not affect the rights acquired or the liabilities incurred
under laws which, before the advent of the Constitution,
were valid, and, quoting from the jud ment of the majority
of the Bench in that case, that "such laws exist for all
past transactions and for enforcing all rights and liabili-
ties accrued before the date of the Constitution", he urges
that the legal proceedings commenced before the Constitution
came into
(1) [1951] S.C.R.. 228.
728
operation are in no way affected by it and may well be
proceeded with.
In Keshavan Madhava Menon’s case, the appellant was the
Secretary of People’s Publishing House, Ltd., of Bombay. In
September, 1949, he was alleged to have published a pamphlet
which, according to the Bombay Government authorities was a
"news sheet" within the meaning of section 2 (6) of the
Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act, 1931. On December 9,
1949, he was arrested and a prosecution was started against
him in the Court of the Chief Presidency Magistrate at
Bombay for having published the pamphlet without the author-
ity required by section 15(1) of the Act and for having
thereby committed an offence punishable under section 18 of
that Act. During the pendency of the proceedings the Con-
stitution of India came into force on January 26, 1950. On
March 3, 1950, the petitioner filed a written statement
submitting, inter alia, that the definition of "news sheet"
as given in section 2(6) of that Act, and sections 15 and 18
thereof were inconsistent with article 19(1)(a) and, as
such, void under article 13 of the Constitution. This was
followed up by a petition filed in the High Court on March
7, 1950, under article 228 of the Constitution. The Bombay
High Court considered it unnecessary to deal with the ques-
tion whether sections 15 and 18 were inconsistent with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
article 19(1)(a) but held that, Assuming that they were
inconsistent, the proceedings commenced under section 18
before the commencement of the Constitution could neverthe-
less be proceeded with. The High Court took the view that
the word "void" was used in article 13(1) in the sense of
repealed" and that consequently it attracted section 6 of
the General Clauses Act which by article 367 was made ap-
plicable for the interpretation of the Constitution. The
High Court having dismissed the applicant the appellant came
up on appeal before this Court after having obtained a
certificate granted by the High Court under’ article 132 (1)
of the Constitution. the majority of this Court held that
the Constitution and no retrospective effect-but was wholly
prospective
729
in its operation and as the existing laws, in so far as they
were inconsistent with the fundamental rights, were rendered
void only to the extent of their inconsistency, they were
not void for all purposes but were void only to the extent
they came into conflict with the fundamental rights. In
other words, the majority of this Court held that while on
and after the commencement of the Constitution no existing
law could, by reason of article 13 (1), be permitted to
stand in the way of the exercise of any of the fundamental
rights, that article could not be read as wiping out the
inconsistent law altogether from the statute book and as
obliterating its entire operation on past transactions, for
to do so would be to give it retrospective effect which it
did not possess. Such law, it was held, existed for all past
transactions and for enforcement of rights and liabilities
accrued before the date of the Constitution. To the same
effect were the observations of Mahajan J. who delivered a
separate but concurrent judgment, namely, that a provision
that with effect from a particular date an existing law
would be void to the extent of the repugnancy had no retro-
spective operation and could not affect pending prosecutions
or actions taken under such law, and there was in such a
situation no necessity for introducing a saving clause and
that it did not need the aid of a legislative provision of
the nature contained in the Interpretation Act or the Gener-
al Clauses Act. According to him, not being retrospective in
its operation, the Constitution could not, therefore, in any
way affect prosecutions started for punishing offences that
were complete under the law in force at the time they were
committed. It will be noticed that in that case the prose-
cution was started according to the ordinary law of proce-
dure. The only question there was whether a criminal pro-
ceeding instituted for a contravention of the provisions of
the Indian Press (Emergency Powers) Act which amounted to a
completed offence before the date of the Constitution could
be continued after the Constitution came into force where no
change in procedure was involved. The result of that deci-
sion iS that although
730
the acts which before the Constitution constituted an of-
fence under that Act would not, if done after the date of
the Constitution, amount to an offence, nevertheless as the
Constitution had no retrospective operation it did not
obliterate the offence completed before the date of the
Constitution and the offender could, therefore, be proceeded
against after the Constitution came into force. It was in
this sense that it was stated in Keshavan Madhava Menon’s
case that the law existed for the past transactions and for
enforcing all rights acquired or liabilities incurred before
the date of the Constitution. If the law did not exist, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
offence created by it would ipso facto disappear and no
question of punishing the non-existing offence could arise.
The observations made in that case related to the substan-
tive rights acquired or liabilities incurred under the Act
before the Constitution came into force. Under what proce-
dure the rights and liabilities would be enforced did not
come up for consideration in that case, as the procedure
adopted throughout was the same. namely, the procedure
prescribed by the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The law of procedure regulates legal proceedings gener-
ally from its inception up to its termination and usually
connotes a continuous process. ]he Bombay Public Safety
Measures Act, 1947, by sections 10 to 70 under the heading
"Special Courts" prescribes a special procedure for the
trial by the Special Judge of "such offences or class of
offences or cases or class of cases as the government may by
general or special order in writing direct". The offences
or cases so directed to be tried by the Special Judge need
not be, or relate to, the special offences created by the
Act itself but may be or relate to, any offence under
any law, e.g., Indian Penal Code. Arms Act and the Bombay
District Police Act. It has been seen that the special
procedure prescribed by the impugned Act constitutes a
departure from the ordinary law of procedure and is, in some
important respects, detrimental to the interest of the
persons subjected to it and as such is discriminatory. The
731
discrimination does not end with the taking of cognizance of
the case by the Special Judge without the case being commit-
ted to him but continues even in subsequent stages of the
proceedings in that the person subjected to it cannot, even
at those subsequent stages, have the benefit of having the
evidence for or against him recorded in extenso, may not get
summons for all witnesses he wishes to examine in defence
only on the ground that the Special Judge does not consider
that such evidence will be material and cannot exercise his
right to apply to a superior Court for transfer. of the case
even though the Special Judge has exhibited gross bias
against him or to apply for revision of any order made by
the Special Judge. As the Act ’was valid in its entirety
before the date of the Constitution, that part of the pro-
ceeding before the Special Judge, which, up to that date,
had been regulated by this special procedure cannot be
questioned, however discriminatory it may have been, but if
the discriminatory procedure is continued after the date of
the Constitution, surely the accused person may legitimately
ask: "Why am I to-day being treated differently from other
persons accused of ’similar offences in respect of proce-
dure? It is stated in Maxwell’s Interpretation of Statutes,
9th Edn., p. 232
"No person has a vested right in any course of proce-
dure. He has only the right of prosecution or defence in
the manner prescribed for the time being by or for the Court
in which he sues, and, if an Act of Parliament alters that
mode of procedure, he has no other right than to proceed
according to the altered mode."
If in the absence of any special provision to the con-
trary, no person has a vested right in procedure it must
follow as a corollary that nobody has a vested liability in
matters of procedure in the absence of any special provision
to the contrary. If this is the position when the law of
procedure is altered by statute, why should the position be
different when the Act prescribing the discriminatory proce-
dure becomes
732
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
void by reason of its repugnancy to the equal protection
clause of the Constitution? Although the substantive rights
and liabilities acquired or accrued before the date of the
Constitution remain enforceable, as held in Keshavan Madhava
Menon’s case, nobody can claim, after that date, that those
rights or liabilities must be enforced under that particular
procedure although it has, since that date, come into con-
flict with the fundamental right of equal protection of laws
guaranteed by article 14.
It is said, in reply, that in this case there is, in
law, no discrimination which can be said to be within the
mischief sought to be prevented by article 14. The appel-
lants are persons whose "cases" had been properly sent for
trial to the Special Court before the Constitution came into
force and, therefore, they cannot complain if the procedure
prescribed by the Act is continued to be applied to their
"cases" although such procedure cannot be applied to "cases"
which had not been referred to the Special Court up to that
date, for the appellants cannot claim to be similarly situ-
ated with persons whose "cases" had not been directed to be
tried by the Special Court before the date of the Constitu-
tion or who committed similar offences after that date. In
the circumstances. the continued application of the proce-
dure laid down in the impugned Act to the "cases" of the
appellants cannot. it is contended, amount to discrimination
in the eye of the law and is, therefore, not within the
inhibition of the equal protection clause of the Constitu-
tion. Article 14 being thus out of the way, the procedure
laid down in the impugned Act continues to be valid in law
as regards the persons whose’ ’cases" had been subjected to
it before the advent of the Constitution I and so far as
those persons are concerned there has been no change in
the procedure and, therefore, their "cases" must continue to
be regulated by that procedure. We are unable to accept
this argument as sound. It is now well established that
while article 14 forbids class legislation it does not
forbid reasonable Classification for the purposes of legis-
lation. In
733
order, however, to pass the test of permissible classifica-
tion, two conditions must be fulfilled, namely, (i) that
the classification must be founded on an intelligible dif-
ferentia which distinguishes persons or things that are
grouped together from others who are left out of the group
and (ii) that differentia must have a rational relation to
the object sought to be achieved by the Act. What is
necessary is that there must be a nexus between the basis of
classification and the object of the Act. To take an exam-
ple: Under section 11 of the Contract Act persons who have
not attained majority cannot enter into a contract. The two
categories are adults and minors. The basis of classifica-
tion is the age. That basis obviously has a relation to the
capacity to enter into a contract. Therefore, the section
satisfies both the requirements of a permissible classifica-
tion. In the present case, although the first part of
section 12of the Bombay, Act, like section 5 (1)of the West
Bengal Actor section 11 of the Saurashtra Ordinance, may
indicate and imply a process of classification, the section,
in so far as it authorises the government to direct particu-
lar "cases" to be tried by the Special Court, does not
purport to proceed upon the basis of any classification at
all. Further, the supposed basis of the alleged classifica-
tion, namely the fact of reference to the Special Court
before the Constitution came into effect, has no reasonable
relation to the objects sought to be achieved by the Act.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
The avowed objects of the Act recited in the preamble are
the expediency of consolidating and amending the law relat-
ing to the security of the State, maintenance of public
order and maintenance of supplies and services essential to
the community in the State of Bombay. If the consideration
of the security of the State or the maintenance of public
order requires the application of the special procedure
there is no obvious reason why it should be applied to
"cases" already referred and not to cases not yet referred
at the date of the Constitution. The same consideration
applies equally to both categories of cases. It is, there-
fore, clear that there is no nexus
734
which connects the basis on which the supposed classifica-
tion is founded with the objects of the Act, for the object
of the Act is wide enough to cover both categories of "cases
". Therefore, it is not a permissible classification.
Indeed, it is an instance of fanciful classification which
has no rational basis at all. We see no particular reason
why the special procedure should be applied to the appel-
lants’ "cases" any more than it should be applied to "cases"
not referred to the Special Court up to the 26th January,
1950. No special or peculiar circumstances have been shown
to exist which may make the appellants’ "cases" specially
suited to this special procedure. In the absence of a
rational basis of classification, as explained above, there
can be no justification, after the advent of the Constitu-
tion, for depriving the appellants of the right to move the
Court for transfer or for revision or to obtain process for
the attendance of defence witnesses or of having the evi-
dence of the witnesses recorded as in an ordinary trial
which is available to other persons accused of similar
offences and prosecuted according to the ordinary procedure
laid down in the Code of Criminal Procedure. It is, there-
fore, clear that in this case the discrimination continued
after the Constitution came into force and such continuation
of the application of the discriminatory procedure to their
cases after the date of the Constitution constituted a
breach of their fundamental right guaranteed by article 14
and being inconsistent ’with the provisions of that article
the special procedure became void under article 13 and as
there is no vested right or liability in matters of proce-
dure the appellants are entitled to be tried according to
the ordinary procedure after the date of the Constitution.
Their complaint is not for something that had happened
before 26th January, 1950, but is for unconstitutional
discrimination shown against them since that date. Their
grievance, their cause of action as it were, is post-consti-
tution and, therefore, must be scrutinised and examined in
the light of their constitutional rights. So viewed, there
can be no doubt or
735
question that they have been discriminated against after the
date of the Constitution in the matter of procedure. It has
already been held in the West Bengal and the Saurashtra
cases that discrimination can lie in procedure just as much
as in a substantive law. Therefore, the continuation of the
trial after that date according to the discriminatory proce-
dure resulting in their conviction and sentence cannot be
supported. Indeed in a sense the Special Judge’s jurisdic-
tion came to an end, for he was enjoined to proceed only
according to the special procedure and that procedure having
become void as stated above, he could not proceed at all as
a Judge of a Special Court constituted under the impugned
Act. The learned Attorney-General relied on the decision of
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the Privy Council in Keshoram Poddar v. Nundo Lal
Mallick(1). The Calcutta Rent Act, 1920, enabled the land-
lord or tenant of premises in Calcutta to obtain from the
Controller of Rents a certification of the standard rent of
the premises and also gave a right to apply to the President
of the Calcutta Improvement Tribunal for revision of the
order of the Controller. The Act was originally to be in
force for a period of three years which was subsequently
extended until the end of March, 1924, and finally the
figure 1927 was substituted for 1924 with a proviso "that
after 31st March, 1924, this Act shall cease to apply to any
premises the rent of which exceeded Rs. 250 a month". The
appellant was let into possession on 1st June, 1920, but the
rent payable was not then fixed. He remained in possession
until March, 1923, and the question raised by the case was
what rent ought to be paid for that period of occupation.
Disputes having arisen, the appellant applied to the Con-
troller and on 23rd October, 1922, the Controller fixed the
rent at Rs. 4,500 per month. On 25th November, 1922, the
appellant appealed to the President of the Improvement
Tribunal to revise that decision. The revision application
could not be taken up by the President until long after 31st
March, 1924, and when it was eventually
(1) I.L.R. 54 Cal. 508 ; 54 I.A. 152.
736
posted before him on 3rd August, 1924, he held that had no
jurisdiction to determine the matter, for the Act had ceased
to apply to the premises. It will be observed that the
application to the President was made long before 31st
March, 1924, and that the period for which the rent had to
be determined was between June, 1920, and March, 1923. The
Privy Council held that the application of the Act was
when the parties began to move under it and that was done
before March, 1924, and that the President accordingly had
jurisdiction to decide it. That decision appears to us to
have no application to the facts of the present case, for
the problem before us does not relate to a period anterior
to the Constitution when the Act was good and the Special
Judge had authority to apply the special procedure. The
point for decision now is whether the continuation of the
procedure prescribed by the Act after the Constitution came
into force operates to the prejudice of the appellants and,
as such, offends against their newly acquired fundamental
right of equal protection of law guaranteed by article 14.
The Constitution has no retrospective operation to invali-
date that part of the proceedings that has already been gone
through but the Constitution does not permit the special
procedure to stand in the way of the exercise or enjoyment
of post-constitutional rights and must, therefore, strike
down the discriminatory procedure if it is sought to be
adopted after the Constitution came into operation. To that
situation, the decision of the Privy Council referred to
above can have no application.
For reasons Stated above, the conviction of the appel-
lants on trial held by the Special Judge after the date of
the Constitution according to the special procedure pre-
scribed by the impugned Act and the sentences passed on them
cannot be supported and these appeals must, therefore, be
allowed and the convictions and sentences must be set aside.
The appellants are entitled, after the Constitution, not to
be discriminated against in matters of procedure and are
entitled to be tried according to law. We, therefore,
737
direct that they be tried for the offences alleged to have
been committed by them according to law and in the meantime
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they be retained in custody as undertrial prisoners.
Appeals allowed.
Agent for the appellants: Naunit Lal.
Agent for the respondent: P.A. Mehta.
Agent for the intervener: Rajinder Narain.