Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
SUB DIVISIONAL OFFICER & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR. MEHAR SINGH AND ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/08/1988
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
NATRAJAN, S. (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 206 1988 SCR Supl. (2) 467
1988 SCC (4) 200 JT 1988 (3) 470
1988 SCALE (2)391
ACT:
Punjab Municipal Act 1939: Section 244-Challenging the
Constitutional validity of section 244-Guidelines
discernible in section 241 to be read into section 241-
Whether provisions of section 244 are ultra vires Article 14
of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
Certain areas in Punjab State were constituted as
notified areas. An ares was declared a ’notified area by
notification under s. 241 of the Act. The Government
nominated members, issued the necessary enabling
notifications under s. 242 and appointed a notified area
committee consisting of certain persons. Later, the
Government issued a notification under s. 244, cancelling
the earlier notification under s. 241.
Writ Petitions were filed in the High Court by the
office-bearers of the notified area committees challenging
the constitutional validity of s. 244. The challenge was
sustained by the High Court; heading to the appeals in this
Court.
Before the High Court, bare proposition of law was urged
that s. 244 violated Art. 14 of the Constitution for the
reason that it gave an arbitrary and unduided power to the
State Government to cancel a notification issued under s.
241 without specifying/indicating the godliness or the
principles on the basis of which such cancellation could be
effected.
Allowing the appeals, the Court,
HELD: The preliminary objection raised by the appellants
to the locus standi of the members of the notified area
committees to pursue the matter was not tenable. As a result
of the notification, the rights of the members under the
statute had been taken away, and they were entitled to come
to the Court impugning the notifications which affected
them. Merely because they had ceased to be members of the
notified area committees, their locus standi to ventilate
their grievance was not affected. [473D, G]
PG NO 467
PG NO 468
Section 244, by itself, does not in express words spell
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
out the circumstances in which a notification issued under
s. 241 or an order under s. 242 may be cancelled or
modified, but s. 244 should not be read or construed in
isolation from the rest of the Chapter dealing with this
subject-matter. The whole purpose of notifying areas under
Chapter XIII of the Act is to grant a degree of self
autonomy to an area which is comprised in a village. [477H;
478A]
As and when the economy of a particular area develops,
the State Government should see to it that arrangement for
its administration also improve and provide for more
efficient local administration. [478G-H]
The provisions that notified area will exercise only
such powers as are entrusted to it by the State Government
under s. 242 and that only such provisions of the Act as the
State Government considers fit can be applicable to a
notified area, show that the principal consideration was the
economic and administrative viability of the particular unit
to look after its own local affairs. If the area develops
further and proves viable and self-sufficient economically
and efficient administratively, it may be eventually
converted into a municipal area. If the area is not
financially solvent or is administratively weak, the status
quo ante may have to be restored. [479B-C]
Section 244 is intended as a power enabling the
Government to go forward or backward in the process of this
evolution depending upon the circumstances of each case. It
may turn out that a particular area is not economically
viable and the notification issued under s. 241 has to be
cancelled. [279D]
The situations, in which a cancellation or modification
of a notification under s. 241 may be called for, will be
numerous and impossible to be spelt out in a statutory
provision. The power of cancellation or modification is not
an arbitrary and unduided one but is one intended to be
exercised in the light of the implementation of the
notification in a particular local area having regard to the
main principle and purpose behind s. 241. [279E-G]
There are sufficient guidelines or indications available
in the Statute as to the circumstances in which the power
can be invoked. It could not be said to be a naked and
arbitrary power. Section 244 contains sufficient guidelines
to act thereunder and it was not possible to accept the plea
that s. 244 itself was ultra vires and should be declared
void.The provisions of s. 244 are valid. They could not be
PG NO 469
said to be bad being violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. [481F-G]
Gram Sabha Begowal v. State of Punjab and another, AIR
1981 P and H 101, approved.
State of Punjab v. Dewan Chand, AIR 1979 P & H 46 and
Ayodhya Prasad Vajpai v. State of U. P. and others, AIR 1968
SC 1344,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JUTRISDlCTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1888
and 1888-A of 1982.
From the Judgment and Order dated 16.9.1987 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 3880 of
1980 and 1839 of 1981,
C.M. Nayyar for the Appellants.
E.C. Agarwala and Ms. Purnima Bhatt for the Respondents.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. RANGANATHAN, J . These appeals raise a common point.
They arise out of two out of a batch of writ petitions,
disposed of by the Punjab & Haryana High Court, which
challenged the validity of Section 244 of the Punjab
Municipal Act. The High Court concluded that, both on
principle and precedent, the provisions should be struck
down as they plainly suffer from the taint of
unconstitutionality. ’The State of Punjab has preferred
these appeals.
The Punjab Municipal Act (hereinafter referred to as the
’Act’) was an Act to make better provisions for the
administration of municipalities in Punjab. The procedure
for constituting any local area as a municipality is set out
in Sections 4 to 10 (Chapter II) of the Act. Under section 4
the State Government is empowered by notification to propose
any local area (other than any part of a military
cantonment) to be a municipality under the Act. Any
inhabitant, who desires to object to such a proposal, can
put forward his objections in writing within a specific
period. The State Government is obliged to take such
objections into consideration. It may then, by a
notification, declare the local area to be a municipality
of the first, second or third class as the case may be.
Section 5 enables the Government to alter the areas of a
PG NO 470
municipality by including within the municipality any other
local area. In such a case also the inhabitants of the
municipality or the local area proposed to be included, are
entitled to file objections which the State Government is
obliged to take into account before notifying the inclusion
of the local area in the municipality. Section 6 provides
for a notification of the intention of the Government to
exclude from a municipality any local area comprised
therein. Here again, any in habitat of the municipality or
local area is entitled to put forward his objections and a
final notification of exclusion of the local area from the
municipality will be issued by the State Government after
taking such objections into consideration. Section 9 confers
a power on the State Government to except any municipality
or part thereof from the operation of such of the provisions
of the Act as are unsuited thereto. Section 10 of the Act
(as originally enacted) gave power to the State Government
to withdraw from the operation of the Act the area of any
municipality constituted thereunder with the result that the
Act would not apply within the limits of that area. These
are the sets of provisions relating to the constitution of a
local area as a municipal area to be fully governed by the
provisions of the municipal Act. These municipalities are
managed by committees constituted as provided in Section 12
and they have powers of raising money by taxation. The fund
of the municipality, called the municipal fund, consists of
all sums raised by or on behalf of the Committee under the
Act or otherwise. The funds are to be defrayed by the
committee on various types of civil needs set out in detail
in Section 52 of the Act.
The Act also contemplates the constitution of certain
local areas into what may be described as ’notified areas.
These notified areas do not function as municipalities
proper but they are given a certain amount of local
autonomy. The State Government appoints a committee and the
committee manages the affairs of the local area. they are in
charge of all aspects of local administration like a full-
edged municipality. They are given powers to impose certain
taxes as are permitted by the State Government and only such
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
provisions of the Act are applicable to them as may be
extended by the State Government. The creation of a notified
area is the recognition by the Government of the necessity
for granting powers of local administration to a particular
area in a smaller measure than is the case with a
municipality. The provisions governing the constitution of a
notified area are set out in Section 241 to Section 245
(Chapter XIII!) of the Act. It is however, sufficient to set
out the provisions of Section 241 to section 244 here for a
proper appreciation of the issue that arises in these
appeals:
PG NO 471
Section 241:
Constitution of Notified Area
(1) The State Government may, by notification, declare
that with respect to some or all of the matters upon which a
municipal fund may be expended under section 52, improved
arrangement are required within a specified area, which
nevertheless, it is not expedient to constitute as a
municipality.
(2) An area in regard to which a notification has been
issued under sub-section (1) is hereinafter called a
notified area.
(3) No area shall be made a notified area unless it
contains a town or a bazar and is not a purely agricultural
village.
(4) The decision of the State Government that a local
area is not an agricultural village within the meaning of
sub-section (2) (sic) shall be final, and a publication in
the Official Gazette of a notification declaring an area to
be notified area shall be conclusive proof of such decision.
Section 242:
Power of State Government to impose taxation and regular
expenditure of proceeds thereof- (1) The State Government
may-
(a) impose in any notified area any tax which could be
imposed there by the committee under the provisions of
section 6 if the notified area were a municipality:
Provided that any tax imposed on buildings and lands
shall not be subject to the maximum limits prescribed by sub
clause (a) of clause ( f) of section 6:
Provided also that a tax payable by the owner may be
made payable by the occupier:
(b) apply or adapt to the notified area for the
assessment and recovery of any tax imposed under clause (a),
any of the provisions of this Act, or of any rules for the
PG NO 472
time being in force, with respect to the assessment and
recovery of any tax imposed under this Act:
(C) arrange for the due expenditure of the proceeds of
taxes imposed under- clause (a) and for preparation and
maintenance of proper accounts.
(d) appoint a committee of one or more persons for the
purposes of clauses (b) and (c) :
(e) appoint a president of such committee and fix the
term of office of member or president of the committee.
(f) extend to any notified area provisions of any
section of this Act subject to such restrictions and
modifications, if any, as the Government may think fit.
(2) The proceeds of any tax levied in any notified area
under this section shall be expended only in some (sic)
manner in which the municipal fund of such notified area
might be expended if the notified area were a municipality.
Section 243:
Application of Act to notified area--
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
For the purposes of any section of this Act which may be
extended to a notified area the committee appointed for such
area under section 243 shall be deemed to be a municipal
committee under this Act and the area to be a municipality.
Section 244
Discontinuance of notified area-
The State Government may at any time cancel or modify
any notification under section 241 or any order under
section 242.
In Punjab, certain areas in the State-it is not
necessary to set out these in detail-were constituted as
notified areas. To give the relevant details in regard to
PG NO 473
one of them, it was declared a ’notified area’ by a
notification under section 241 of the Act dated 19. 10.
1978. It took sometime for the State Government to nominate
members and issue the necessary enabling notifications under
section 242. These were issued only on 11.2. 1980 and a
notified area committee consisting of certain persons was
appointed. The committee functioned for a few months. Soon
thereafter, on 7.10.1980, the Government issued a
notification under Section 244 cancelling the earlier
notification made under section 241. A batch of writ
petitions was filed in the High Court by the office bearers
of the notified area committees challenging the
constitutional validity of section 244 and this challenge
has been sustained by the division bench leading to the
present appeal.
At the outset, the counsel for the appellant raised a
preliminary contention. He stated that the members of the
various notified area committees were appointed only for a
period of three years. Even if the notifications under
section 241 had continued to be in force, their term of
office would have expired quite some time back. He.
therefore, submitted that the writ petitioners have ceased
to have any locus standi to pursue the matter further. In
our opinion, this objection is neither tenable nor can it
entitle the appellant to any relief automatically. At the
time the writ petitions were filed, these persons were the
members of the notified area committees and as a result of
the notification, their rights under the statute had been
taken away. They were, therefore, entitled to come to the
Court impugning the notifications which affected them. The
High Court has sustained their challenge and, since the
conclusion of the High Court affects the appellant. the
appeal has to he heard on the merits and cannot be disposed
of as infructuous. That apart, the petitioners were
concerned with the matter not only in their capacity as
members of the notified area committees but also in their
capacity as inhabitants of the concerned notified areas.
They had. and continue to have. an interest in seeing that
the uplift in status conferred on their local area by the
notifications under section 241 continues to be in operation
and is not with-drawn or cancelled to their determent.
Merely because some or all of them have ceased to, be
members of the notified area committees, their locus standi
to ventilate this grievance is not affected.
Coming to the principal question, the short ground on
which the High Court has accepted the plea of the
petitioners is that section 244 does not contain any
guidelines or indications as to the considerations which
should be taken note of by the Government in deciding to
cancel a notification already issued under section 241.
PG NO 474
Referring to the earlier decision of the same High Court in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
Gram Sabha v. State, AIR 1981 P & H 101 which repelled a
like challenge to the constitutionality of section 241, the
Bench observed that the criteria spelt out by the statute
for the creation of a notified area committee under section
241 could have little or no relevance to the pre-conditions
which might be necessary for its denotification and
dissolution. Reliance was placed on a decision of the Punjab
High Court in State of Punjab v. Dewan Chand, AIR 1979 P & H
46 by which section 10 of the Municipal Act was declared to
be unconstitutional. The Court was of the opinion that the
ratio of Dewan Chand case covered the issue before them. It
added that even de hors the same, on principle and on the
existing statutory provisions, the same conclusion appeared
to be inevitable. The learned judges distinguished the
decision in Ayodhaya Prasad Vajpai v. State of U.P. and
others, AIR 1968 SC 1344 on which the State relied and
repelled an argument of desperation, that section 244 should
be treated as merely a statutory declaration of the inherent
power of cancellation of any order that is vested in any
authority under the General Clauses Act. Referring to the
well established constitutional proposition that a statute
has to be held to be discriminatory irrespective of the way
in which it is applied, "if the statute itself does not
disclose a definite policy or objective and confers
authority on another to make selection at its pleasure", the
Court declared section 244 to be unconstitutional.
It may be mentioned at the outset that, before the High
Court,the writ petitioners had also taken certain objections
on the merits and also attributed mala fides to the State
Government in issuing the notifications of cancellation but
these allegations.,of mala fides and extraneous
considerations having vitiated the notifications were
expressly given up. Only a bare proposition of law was urged
that section 244 violates article 14 of the Constitution for
the sole and simple reason that it gives an arbitrary and
unduided power to the State Government to cancel a
notification issued under section 241 without also
specifying, or atleast indicating, the guidelines or
principles on the basis of which such cancellation could be
effected.
It will be appropriate first to notice the Full Bench
decision of Punjab High Court in Gram Sabha Begowal) v.
Stare of Punjab and another, AIR 1981 P & H 101 repelling a
similar challenge to the provisions of section 241 and 242.
Two objections were raised to the validity of sections 241
and 242. It was said first that these sections do not
provide enough guidelines regarding the circumstances in
which an area can be constituted into a notified area and
PG NO 475
empowered to administer its own fund for local
administration. Secondly, it was submitted that there was no
provision to provide persons affected by such notification
with an opportunity of hearing and that this was violative
of article 14. In that case, an area comprised in a gram
sabha was included under section 241 and the gram sabha came
to the court urging that it could not be so notified without
hearing its objections. These contentions were overruled by
the Full Bench [to which one of the members of the Bench
which heard the present batch of cases was a party). The
principle of the decision is contained in the head note of
the report of the said case :
"Section 241 of the Act gives sufficient guidelines to
the State Government as to which area deserves to be
declared as notified area. Whenever the State Government
finds that the proposed area is not big enough to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
constituted as a municipality, but nevertheless requires
improved arrangements with respect to some or all of the
matters enumerated in s. 52 for which municipal funds may be
expended,it can constitute a notified area. Further, the
State Government has been prohibited from declaring a purely
agricultural village to be a notified area but if such a
village contains a town or a Bazar, then it can be declared
to be a notified area. Before a decision is taken under s.
241, the State Government has to apply its mind fully to
consider the pros and cons whether the area can be
constituted as a municipality but if it finds that it is not
possible to do so because it is not such a large area so as
to be able to sustain the expense of a municipality but at
the same time the State Government considers that some of
the improved arrangements as detailed in section 52 of the
Act deserve to be made in that area, then the State
Government has been given the power to constitute that area
into a notified area subject to the restrictions imposed in
sub-s. (3) of section 241 of the Act. Similarly, once a
notified area is constituted, s. 242 merely authorises the
State Government to impose tax under s. 61 and to apply any
of the provisions of the Act to the notified area subject to
such restrictions and limitations, if any, as the State
Government may think proper besides doing other beneficial
acts for the notified area as detailed in the section.
Section 242 is merely consequential authorising the State
Government to levy tax and to frame the procedure for
PG NO 476
recovery etc. and to apply the Act insorfar as it may be
beneficial for the proper working of the notified area.
Although in Ss. 4 to 7 a provision for hearing of
objections has been made, but no similar provision has been
made in section 241. Section 241 is however, not ultra vires
article 14 of the Constitution merely because there is no
provision therein for inviting- objections from the
inhabitants of the area before declaring a notified area. No
provision of law can be struck down as ulta vires merely
because it does not contain a provision for affording a
hearing to the persons concerned. No violation of the
principles of natural justice arises in construing the
statutory provisions."
The Full Bench, with which we are in agreement, clearly
laid down that the provisions of section 241 are not liable
to challenge on grounds similar to those raised in the
present petition.
Basing itself on this Full Bench decision, it was argued
for the State that the same principle would be applicable in
the case of section 244 as well. The f-High Court repelled
this contention by saying that the criteria spelt out in
section 241 could have no relevance to the preconditions
which might be necessary for its denotification. The Court
observed:
"For instance, one -of the pre-requisites for the
creation of a Notified Area Committee laid down in sub-
section (3) is the existence of a town or a bazar therein.
Some modicum of urbanization or semi-urbanization is thus a
pre-requisite for the creation of a Notified Area Committee.
Now it is manifest that this cannot have the remotest
relevance when subsequently the question of the
denotification or the dissolution of an existing Notified
Area Committee arises. Clearly the statute was not
visualising an earthquake which would raze the town or hazar
to shambles and consequently obliterate one of the pre-
requisites for the creation. An urban area in the shape of
a town or bazar having already come into existence, it is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
too remote a possibility that the same would vanish into
thin air and in this manner provide a guideline or policy
for de-notifying the Committee under Section 244 of the Act.
Again the other criterion negatively put for the
creation of a Notified Area Committee is that the area
PG NO 477
comprised therefor is not a purely agricultural village. Now
once this is satisfied that the area loses its pristine
rural or agricultural nature so as to warrant the creation
of a Notified Area Committee. It seems rather inconceivable,
if not impossible, that the same would revert again to a
purely agricultural village so as to necessitate a de-
notification. Indeed, it appears to me that the learned
counsel for the petitioner is on a sound footing that at
least for the limited purpose of the statute before usz the
guidelines for the constitution and creation of a Notified
Area Committee would be totally alien to the considerations
which might later require its de-notification.
The Bench concluded that:
Once it is held as above, it appears to be plain and
beyond cavil that in the language of Section 244, there is
not the least hint of any legislative policy or any inkling
of a guideline for the de-notification of a Committee.
lndeed,the language excels in its absoluteness and confers
powers on the State Government to cancel ar any time any
notification under ,section 241 of the Act without more.
There is no manner of doubt that a de-notification of a
corporate urban area is fraught with grave and material
Legal and civil consequences not merely to the individual
members of the Committee, but to the corporate existence of
all the citizens composed there of. Nevertheless, section
244 is wholly silent, both as to policy and as to guideline
for the exercise of a totally arbitrary power vested in the
Government to de-notify an existing Committee. It seems to
be now well settled that where such an unlimited and
uncanalised power is vested without even remotely indicating
a legislative policy or the rational criteria, the same
would be hit by Article 14 of the Constitution, even though
the repository of the power is the State or the Central
Government itself."
With respect to the learned judges, we are unable to
concur in this conclusion. It is true that ,section 244, by
itself, does not in express words spell out the
circumstances in which a notification issued under section
241 or an order under section 242 may be cancelled or
modified. But in our opinion, section 244 should not be read
or construed in isolation from the rest of the chapter
PG NO 478
dealing with this subject matter. The whole purpose of
notifying areas under Chapter XIII of the act is to grant a
degree of self autonomy to an area which is comprised in a
village. The circumstances in which such a notification can
be issued are set out in section 241 with sufficient
particularity. The section postulates that the State
Government is to be satisfied in regard to a particular area
that it may be allowed to carry on its own local
administration, that such administration should be run by a
committee appointed by the Government, that the committee
should be empowered to collect taxes and finally, that the
committee should be empowered to take over the onerous
responsibility of providing for various types of civic
amenities and facilities as may be entrusted to it. But at
the same time the Government should be of the opinion that
either because of its location, population, lack of
affluence, backwardness or other considerations, it is not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
possible to constitute the area into a regular municipality
fully governed by the provisions of the Municipal Act. The
Government, therefore, should consider that it is sufficient
if the area is carved out as a notified area, to be given
such powers as may be considered fit and proper in regard to
its administration. The State Government is also empowered
to gradually notify, if necessary, from time to time the
various provisions of the Act which would be applicable in
respect of such notified area. In our opinion, the provision
makes clear the guidelines for declaring an area as a
notified area.
Sub-section (3) of section 241 contains specific
provisions against a purely agricultural village being
converted into a notified area and, again, against the
declaration of an area as a notified area, if it does not
contain any town or bazar. The learned judges of the High
Court have referred to the provisions of sub-section (3) and
have pointed out that once these requirements are satisfied
then it is practically impossible to conceive of a situation
when these requirements would cease to exist warranting the
cancellation of the notification already issued under
section 241. There is substance in this comment of the
learned judges. But, in our opinion, the crux of section 241
lies in sub-section (1) to which we have a˜ready referred.
The whole scheme of sections 241 to 244 is to be taken
together. The idea is that as and when the economy of a
particular area develops, the State Government should see to
it that arrangements for its administration also improve and
provide for more efficient local administration. Thus
section 241(1) envisages the criteria of the development of
a purely rural area into a township or commercial centre,
with increased trade and commerce, with increased population
and with increased economic activities justifying its
PG NO 479
evolution into a notified area to which a certain amount of
local autonomy could be granted. The whole process, however,
is one of gradual evolution. The Act does not contemplate
the sudden conferment of all types of local administrative
powers to a notified area committee. The provisions of
sections 24l to 244 of the Act make it clear that it is
really an evolutionary process. The provisions that a
notified area will exercise only such powers as are
entrusted to it by the State Government under section 242
and that only such provisions of the Act as the State
Government considers fit can be applicable to a notified
area show that the principal consideration is the economic
and administrative viability of the particular unit to look
after its own local affairs. If the area develops further
and further and proves viable and self sufficient
economically and efficient administratively it may be
eventually converted into a municipal area. If on the other
hand, the area does not come up to expectations is not
financially solvent or is administratively weak, the status
quo ante may have to be restored. If section 244 is read in
this context and background, it will be very clear that it
is intended as a power enabling the Government to go forward
or backward in the process of this evolution depending upon
the circumstances of each case. It may turn out that a
particular area is not economically viable and hence the
notification issued under section 241 has to be cancelled.
It may be that too much powers are found to have been
entrusted to a particular notified area committee and some
of the powers need to be withdrawn. It may again be that
this type of administration does not property work in a
particular situation and that the experiment undertaken in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
that particular area is somewhat pre-mature. The situations,
in which a cancellation or modification of a notification
under section 241 may be called for, will be numerous and
impossible to be spelt out in a statutory provision. But all
the same if one considers that sections 241 to 244 form a
compact group of sections of the Act which deal with a
particular topic and if one bears in mind the contents of
sections 241 to 244, it will be clear that the power of
cancellation or modification is not an arbitrary and
unguided one but is one intended to be exercised in the
light of the implementation of the notification in a
particular local area having regard to the main principle
and purpose behind section 241. It is, therefore, difficult
to agree with the High Court that section 244 contains no
guidelines whatever or that the guidelines admittedly
discernible in section 241 cannot be read into section 244
also.
It is necessary to make a reference to the decision in
Dewan Chand’s case. That decision was rendered in a
different context of provisions to which we have earlier
referred. From the scheme of Chapter II of the Act, it could
PG NO 480
be seen that a specific procedure was prescribed for the
constitution of a municipality as well as for the exclusion
therefrom, or inclusion therein, of other areas. Section 5
to 9 are elaborate provisions under which, before any one of
these exercises was undertaken, the inhabitants of the area
were entitled to participate therein and the State
Governments were to issue the notification only after
considering such objections. In particular, if it was
decided that a particular local area should be excluded from
a municipality, the prescribed procedure had to be gone
through. It was in this context that section 10 and the
purpose thereof became unintelligible One could not even
conceive in what respects this would be different from the
power to exclude an area from a municipality for which an
elaborate procedure was laid down. It was in these
circumstances that the High Court held that Section 10
contained a drastic power with no limits or guidelines
regarding the circumstances in which the power could be
invoked. We may mention that, subsequent to this decision,
section 10 of the Act has been amended.
We have pointed out that the scheme of sections 241 to
244 is totally different and should be treated as an
integral whole. Section 244 has to be understood, as section
10 was viewed, in the context of the preceding sections and,
doing so, we are of opinion that there are sufficient
guidelines or indications available in the statute as to the
circumstances in which the power can be invoked. It cannot
be said to be a naked and arbitrary power. In the present
case, the appellants have attempt of to explain the reasons
why the order of cancellation of the notifications was
issued. After pointing out that 31 areas were cancellation
as notified areas in the State, the counter affidavit of the
State Government filed before the High Court proceeded to
say that:
". . . . . .. .. the working of all the 31 Notified Area
Committees ill the State was considered and examined
thoroughly because it was felt that these Committees art:
not functioning properly and in other words failed to
provide civic amenities to the residents of the area with
their lean resources. In the case of some of the Notified
Area Committees the income was not sufficient to justify
their existence because major portion of the income was
spent on the establishment and the development of the area
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
remained altogether neglected, Area very purpose for which
the Notified Area Committees were created for providing
better civil amenities to the area stands forfeited.
Moreover, the Notified Area Committee lacked democratic
PG NO 481
character because it consists of nominated members which
were not liked by the inhabitants of the area concerned. The
State Government also received many representations from the
inhabitants of the entire area for the dissolution of the
Notified Area Committee, Nadala, Bholath, Begowal and
Dhilwan for the dissolution of the Notified Area Committees
in these areas. The State Govt. after having through probe
and proper application of mind came to the conclusion that
the Notified Area Committee, Nadala has failed to achieve
the very purpose for which it was created and its income
could not justify its existence and as such the State Govt.
exercised its legal right to cancel the notification
constituting the Notified Area Committees u/s 244 of the
Act, having less than annual income of Rs.5 lakhs. As such
the State Government exercised its legal right to cancel the
notification constituting Notified Area Committee u/s 241 of
the Act. The action taken by the State Govt. is perfectly
legal and in accordance with the provisions of law. The
provisions of Section 344 of the Act as already stated in
para 5 of the written statement provide sufficient guideline
to the State Government and are not arbitrary in nature."
It is not necessary for us to go into the correctness or
otherwise of these averments because as we have already
mentioned. what was argued before us was a pure question of
law that section 244 does not contain any indications or
gaudiness for the action to be taken there-under. No
questions of fact are at all involved in the contention as
urged before: the High Court and before us. We are not
called upon to express any opinion as to whether, in the
case of any particular notification involved in these
cases, the cancellation was, justified or not in the light
of the foregoing discussion and in the light of what has
been stated in the counter-affidavit. It is sufficient for
that present purposes to say that Section 244 contains
sufficient guidelines to act thereunder and it is not
possible to accept the plea that section 244 itself is ultra
vires and should be declared void.
For the reasons discussed above, we hold that the
provisions of section 244 of the Act are valid. They cannot
be said to be had being violative of article 14 of the
Constitution. The appeals are allowed. There will, however,
be no order as to costs.
S.L. Appeals allowed.