Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2035 of 2002
PETITIONER:
HARBHAJAN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRESS COUNCIL OF INDIA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/03/2002
BENCH:
R.C. Lahoti & K.G. Balakrishnan
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
The controversy centres around the interpretation of sub-section
(7) of Section 6 of the Press Council Act, 1978 (hereinafter ’the Act’,
for short), viz., for how many terms of the Council a member can be
nominated?
The facts are jejune. Harbhajan Singh, the appellant, is an
editor of Indian Observer. All India Small and Medium Newspapers
Federation, the respondent no.2 is an ’association of persons’ within
the meaning of clause (b) of sub-section (4) of Section 5 of the Act.
The appellant had been a member of the Council for two terms of
three years each, namely, 1982-1985 and 1985-1988. Steps were
taken for the constitution of the Seventh Council commencing from
the year 1998. A notification in that regard was issued on 21.11.1997.
On 5.5.1997 and 9.8.1997 the Federation __ respondent No.2 had
sought for a clarification-cum-opinion from the Chairman of the Press
Council of India as to whether a person who had already been a
member of the Council for two terms earlier is eligible for being
nominated though such nomination did not amount to re-nomination,
that is to say, at the time of being nominated he was not a retiring
member. In response, the Council circulated an opinion of the
President dated 30.9.1997, the substance whereof is, that Section 6(7)
debars the same person from holding the office as a member of the
Council for more than two terms in his life. The appellant and the
Federation, respondent no.2 herein, filed a writ petition before the
High Court of Delhi seeking quashing of the opinion of the Chairman
of the Press Council. A learned Single Judge of the High Court
directed rule nisi to issue and on 9.12.1997 issued an interim direction
that the decision of the Press Council would be subject to the decision
in the writ petition. The Federation __ respondent No.2 nominated the
appellant and also his son as a cover candidate. The appellant’s
nomination was not accepted by the Council on the ground that he
having remained a member of the Council for two terms, was
ineligible for nomination as per sub-section (7) of Section 6 of the
Act.
After hearing the petitioners and the Press Council, as also the
Union of India, the learned Single Judge vide order dated August 18,
2000 allowed the writ petition and quashed the decision of the Press
Council of India rejecting the nomination of the appellant. The
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learned Single Judge formed an opinion that the language of the
statute was plain, admitting of no ambiguity, and therefore, deserves
to be assigned the plain meaning which naturally flows from a reading
thereof. In the opinion of the learned Single Judge the disqualification
spelled out by sub-section (7) of Section 6 attaches to a member
’retiring’ in presenti and was sought to be ’re-nominated’ but did not
apply to a person who had ’retired’ some time in the past though
having held two consecutive terms as member of the Council and was
now being only ’nominated’ and ’not re-nominated’. The Press
Council of India preferred an intra-court appeal before a Division
Bench which allowed the appeal and set aside the judgment of the
learned Single Judge. Tracing out the legislative history of the
enactment and giving a liberal interpretation to sub-section(7) of
Section 6 in its desire to spell out and read the objective sought to be
achieved by the Act, the Division Bench formed an opinion that the
Legislature intended not to allow a member to hold office for more
than two terms in his life-time, and therefore, the appellant was not
eligible for nomination to membership of the Council for the term
commencing 1998 in view of his having held membership of the
Council for two terms 1982-1985 and 1985-1988. The appellant has
filed this appeal by special leave.
Leave granted.
The Act, as its preamble shows, proposed to establish a Press
Council for the purpose of preserving the freedom of the Press and of
maintaining and improving the standards of newspapers and news
agencies in India. Section 4 provides for incorporation, and Section 5
provides for composition, of the Council. The details are irrelevant
for our purpose. Section 6, in so far as relevant for our purpose,
provides that the Chairman and other members of the council shall
hold office for a period of three years. Sub-section(7) reads as under:-
(7) A retiring member shall be eligible for re-nomination for
not more than one term."
According to the appellant, all that the provision bars is a
member holding two terms of office successively. According to the
respondent Council the total number of terms for which a member can
hold office, whether in succession or otherwise, is two, as the
provision makes it permissible for any member to seek re-nomination
for one term only. This is the narrow controversy.
Clearly the language of Sub-Section (7) of Section 6 abovesaid,
is plain and simple. There are two manners of reading the provision.
Read positively, it confers a right on a retiring member to seek re-
nomination. Read in a negative manner, the provision speaks of a
retiring member not being eligible for re-nomination for more than
one term. The spell of ineligibility is cast on ’re-nomination’ of a
member who is ’retiring’. The event determinative of eligibility or
ineligibility is ’re-nomination’, and the person, by reference to whom
it is to be read, is ’a retiring member’. ’Retiring member’ is to be
read in contra-distinction with a member/person retired some time in
past, and so, would be called a retired or former member. ’Re’ means
again, and is freely used as prefix. It gives colour of ’again’ to the
verb with which it is placed. ’Re-nomination’ is an act or process of
being nominated again. Any person who had held office of member
some time in past, if being nominated now, cannot be described as
being ’again nominated’. It is only a member just retiring who can be
called ’being again nominated’ or ’re-nominated’. No other meaning
can be assigned except by doing violence to the language employed.
Legislature does not waste its words. Ordinary, grammatical and full
meaning is to be assigned to the words used while interpreting a
provision to honour the rule Legislature chooses appropriate words
to express what it intends, and therefore, must be attributed with such
intention as is conveyed by the words employed so long as this does
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not result in absurdity or anomaly or unless material intrinsic or
external is available to permit a departure from the rule.
The provision is cast in present tense. A retiring member is
ineligible for re-nomination. ’Not more than one term’ qualifies ’re-
nomination’. The words ’retiring’, used in present tense, and ’re-
nomination’ speak aloud of the intention of the Legislature. If the
word ’retiring’ was capable of being read as ’retired’ (sometime in
past) then there would have been no occasion to use ’re-nomination’
in the construction of the sentence. If the intention of law framers
would have been not to permit a person to be a member of council for
more than two terms in his lifetime then a different, better and
stronger framing of the provision was expected. It could have been
said __ ’no member shall be eligible for nomination for more than two
terms’, or it could have been said __ ’a retired member shall not be
eligible for nomination for more than two terms’.
Cross in Statutory Interpretation (Third Edition, 1995) states :
"The governing idea here is that if a statutory provision is intelligible
in the context of ordinary language, it ought, without more, to be
interpreted in accordance with the meaning an ordinary speaker of the
language would ascribe to it as its obvious meaning, unless there is
sufficient reason for a different interpretation. . . . .Thus, an ’ordinary
meaning’ or ’grammatical meaning’ does not imply that the judge
attributes a meaning to the words of a statute independently of their
context or of the purpose of the statute, but rather that he adopts a
meaning which is appropriate in relation to the immediately obvious
and unresearched context and purpose in and for which they are used.
By enabling citizens (and their advisers) to rely on ordinary meanings
unless notice is given to the contrary, the legislature contributes to
legal certainty and predictability for citizens and to greater
transparency in its own decisions, both of which are important values
in a democratic society" (p.32 ibid). The learned author cites three
quotations from speeches of Lord Reid in House of Lords cases, the
gist whereof is: (i) in determining the meaning of any word or phrase
in a statute ask for the natural or ordinary meaning of that word or
phrase in its context in the statute and follow the same unless that
meaning leads to some result which cannot reasonably be supposed to
have been the legislative intent; (ii) rules of construction are our
servants and not masters; and (iii) a statutory provision cannot be
assigned a meaning which it cannot reasonably bear; if more than one
meaning are capable you can choose one but beyond that you must
not go (p.40, ibid). Justice G.P. Singh in his celebrated work __
Principles of Statutory Interpretation (Eighth Edition, 2001) states (at
page 54) __ "The intention of the Legislature is primarily to be
gathered from the language used, which means that attention should
be paid to what has been said as also to what has not been said. As a
consequence a construction which requires for its support addition or
substitution of words or which results in rejection of words as
meaningless has to be avoided." The learned author states at another
place (at page 74, ibid) that the rule of literal construction whereby the
words have to be assigned their natural and grammatical meaning can
be departed from but subject to caution. The golden rule is that the
words of statute must prima facie be given their ordinary meaning. A
departure is permissible if it can be shown that the legal context in
which the words are used or the object of the statute in which they
occur requires a different meaning. To quote, "Such a meaning
cannot be departed from by the judges ’in the light of their own views
as to policy’ although they can ’adopt a purposive interpretation if
they can find in the statute read as a whole or in material to which
they are permitted by law to refer as aids to interpretation an
expression of Parliament’s purpose or policy’. A modern statement of
the rule is to be found in the speech of Lord Simon of Glaisdale in
Suthendran v. Immigration Appeal Tribunal, (1976) 3 All ER 611,
616 to the effect __ ’Parliament is prima facie to be credited with
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meaning what is said in an Act of Parliament. The drafting of
statutes, so important to a people who hope to live under the rule of
law, will never be satisfactory unless courts seek whenever possible to
apply ’the golden rule’ of construction, that is to read the statutory
language, grammatically and terminologically, in the ordinary and
primary sense which it bears in its context, without omission or
addition. Of course, Parliament is to be credited with good sense; so
that when such an approach produces injustice, absurdity,
contradiction or stultification or statutory objective the language may
be modified sufficiently to avoid such disadvantage, though no
further’."
Sir Dinshah Mulla, while interpreting Article 182 of the
Limitation Act, 1908 emphasised the need of testing the question of
interpretation upon the plain words of the Article and opined that
there is no warrant for reading into the words quoted any qualification
and the strict grammatical meaning of the words is the only safe
guide. (see Nagendra Nath Dey and Anr. Vs. Suresh Chandra Dey
and Ors. AIR 1932 P.C. 165). Viscount Maugham in General
Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corporation Ltd. Vs. Janmahomed
Abdul Rahim AIR 1941 P.C. 6 approved the principle that it may be
desirable for an act to receive such construction as the language in its
plain meaning imports. The same principle has been followed by the
Supreme Court of India in several decisions. Suffice it to refer to
Siraj-il-Haq Khan and Ors. VS. The Sunni Central Board of Waqf
U.P. and Ors. 1959 SCR 1287, wherein P.B. Gajendragadkar, J. (as
His Lordship then was) said that effect must be given to the strict
grammatical meaning of the words used. Without multiplying the
authorities we would still like to refer to two more decisions which we
think are apposite. In F.S. Gandhi (Dead) by Lrs. Vs. Commissioner
of Wealth Tax (1990) 3 SCC 624, the expression "where the
interest is available to an assessee for a period not exceeding six years
from the date the interest vests in the assessee" contained in Section
2(e)(2)(iii) of the Wealth Tax Act, 1957 came up for consideration
and the emphasis was on the significance of "is" on the import of the
provision. This Court held that the word "is", normally refers to the
present and often a future meaning. It may also have a past
signification as in the sense of "has been". However, in the setting in
which "is" was used followed by the word "available", it was held
"the word ’is’ must be construed as referring to the present and the
future. In that sense it would mean that the interest is presently
available and is to be available in future for a period not exceeding six
years". The High Court had construed the word "is" to mean "has
been" which construction was discarded by this Court. The tense of
the sentence played a pre-dominant role in the interpretation placed on
the relevant provision by this Court in F.S. Gandhi’s case. In
Maradana Mosque (Board of Trustees) Vs. Badi-ud-Din Mahmud
and Anr.- (1966) 1 All ER 545, under the relevant Statute the
Minister was empowered to declare that the school should cease to be
an unaided school and that the Director should be the Manager of it, if
the Minister was satisfied that an unaided school "is being
administered" in contravention of any provisions of the Act. Their
Lordships opined, "Before the Minister had jurisdiction to make the
order he must be satisfied that ’any school.is being so
administered in contravention of any of the provisions of this Act’.
The present tense is clear. It would have been easy to say ’has been
administered’ or ’in the administration of the school any breach of any
of the provisions of this Act has been committed’, if such was the
intention of the legislature; but for reasons which common sense may
easily supply, it was enacted that the Minister should concern himself
with the present conduct of the school, not the past, when making the
order. This does not mean, of course, that a school may habitually
misconduct itself and yet repeatedly save itself from any order of the
Minister by correcting its faults as soon as they are called to its
attention. Such behaviour might well bring it within the words ’is
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being administered’ but in the present case no such situation arose.
There was, therefore, no ground on which the Minister could be
’satisfied’ at the time of making the order. As appears from the
passages of his broadcast statement which are cited above, he failed to
consider the right question. He considered only whether a breach had
been committed, and not whether the school was at the time of his
order being carried on in contravention of any of the provisions of the
Act. Thus he had no jurisdiction to make the order at the date on
which he made it".
The Division Bench, in its impugned judgment, entered into
tracing the legislative history and tried to find out the object of
enactment and intention of the Legislature. The effort made by the
Division Bench can be appreciated but regrettably the deductions
drawn by the Bench are based on no material. In fact, the learned
Judges of the Division Bench fell into the same error as has been
pointed out above, that is, of attributing such intention to Legislature
as suited their own view of the policy behind enactment. M.H. Beg, J.
warned against beginning with a theory as to what the real purpose or
need is or could be, for the danger is that we may be injecting a
subjective notion or purpose of our own into what is, after all a legal
question of construction or interpretation. His Lordship emphasized
the need of avoiding the danger of a priori determination of the
meaning of a provision based on our own preconceived notions of an
ideological structure or scheme into which the provision to be
interpretated is somehow fitted. (See, concurring judgment of M.H.
Beg, J. in D.R. Venkatachalam etc. Vs. Dy. Transport Commissioner
and Ors. etc. (1977) 2 SCC 273. The Division Bench has not culled
out and placed material on record, either available intrinsically in the
Act or from any external aid to interpretation, so as to lead to the
inference drawn by the Division Bench and sustain departure from the
golden rule of interpretation.
The learned single Judge followed the correct track on the path
of interpretation of statutes by reading what has been said and
comparing with what has not been said. The learned single Judge
gave at least three illustrations of what could have been said but has
not been said so as to find out how the Legislature would have
construed the provision in question if the intention would have been
not to permit a person to be a member of the council for more than
two terms. It would be advantageous to restate briefly the three
illustrations from the judgment of the learned single Judge which are
as under:
(i) In the Schedule appended to the Delhi University Act, 1922
called ’The Schedule __ The Statutes of the University’, para 5(1)
provides for composition of the Executive Council as comprising the
various members as specified. Clause (2) provides __ "No person shall
be a member under item (ix) or (x) of Clause (1) for more than two
consecutive terms".
(ii) Section (1) of the Twenty-second Amendment of the US
Constitution provides __ "No person shall be elected to the office of
the President for more than twice, and no person who has held the
office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a
term to which some other person was elected President shall be electe
d to the office of President more than once. . . . . . . . . ."
(iii) In Section 31(5) of the Delhi Cooperative Societies Act, 1972 it
is provided__ "Notwithstanding anything contained in the Act, a
person shall be disqualified for election as, or for being, the president,
vice-president, chairman, vice-chairman, managing director, secretary,
joint secretary or treasurer of a committee: (a) if he has held any such
office on that committee during two consecutive terms whether full or
part; . . . . . . ."
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In all the three illustrations of drafting, the intended bar against
holding the given office for more than two terms (as provided) is
clearly and categorically spelled out.
Having given the three illustrations, the learned single Judge
held that if the construction suggested by the Council was to be
accepted, one would be required to read ’retiring member’ as ’a
retired member’. Yet another reason assigned by the learned single
Judge, and rightly so, is that the right to be appointed as a member
having been conferred by the law, ineligibility entailing prohibition or
bar on being appointed to an office should be clearly stated or
positively spelled out, in absence whereof the same cannot be read
into the provision on the basis of the assumed intention of fulfilling
the object of the statute. The learned single Judge quoted very apt and
appropriate observations of Lord Watson in Salomon Vs. Saloman &
Co., (1897) AC 22, 38 to the effect :-
" ’Intention of the Legislature’ is a common
but very slippery phrase, which, popularly
understood, may signify anything from intention
embodied in positive enactment to speculative
opinion as to what the Legislature probably would
have meant, although there has been an omission
to enact it. In a Court of Law or Equity, what the
Legislature intended to be done or not to be done
can only be legitimately ascertained from that
which it has chosen to enact, either in express
words or by reasonable and necessary
implication."
The Division Bench has, during the course of the judgment,
noted that Press Council was intended to be an independent body and
if any person was permitted to remain a member of the Council for
more than two terms, it will erode independence of the body as the
elements of vested interest would creep in and this would also defeat
the object of Sub-Section (7) of Section 6 of the Act. We fail to find
any justification for such an observation much less any basis for
forming such an opinion. Simply because the Press Council has taken
a particular view of the relevant provision it can hardly be a ground
for the Court to lean in favour of such a construction.
We are clearly of the opinion that Sub-Section (7) of Section 6
of the Press Council Act must be assigned its ordinary, grammatical
and natural meaning as the language is plain and simple. There is no
evidence available, either intrinsic or external, to read the word
’retiring’ as ’retired’. Nor can the word ’re-nomination’ be read as
nomination for an independent term detached from the previous term
of membership or otherwise than in succession. The provision on its
plain reading does not disqualify or make ineligible a person from
holding the office of a member of the Council for more than two
terms in his life. The use of the words ’retiring’ as qualifying
’member’ coupled with the use of word ’re-nomination’ clearly
suggests that a member is disqualified for being a member for the
third term in continuation in view of his having held the office of
membership for more than two terms just preceding, one of which
terms, the later one, was held on re-nomination. Such an
interpretation does not lead to any hardship, inconvenience, injustice,
absurdity or anomaly and, therefore, the rule of ordinary and natural
meaning being followed cannot be departed from.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal is allowed. The judgment
of the Division Bench is set aside and that of the learned single Judge
is restored. No order as to the costs.
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. . . . . . . . . . . . J.
( R.C. LAHOTI )
. . . . .J.
( K.G. BALAKRISHNAN )
March 11, 2002