Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 31
PETITIONER:
IZHAR AHMAD KHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/02/1962
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1052 1962 SCR Supl. (3) 235
CITATOR INFO :
F 1962 SC1778 (5,6)
R 1963 SC 645 (13)
F 1965 SC 810 (9)
R 1965 SC1623 (7)
RF 1966 SC 693 (27)
R 1969 SC1234 (5,8)
R 1971 SC1382 (9,11,12)
R 1974 SC 28 (1)
RF 1975 SC1069 (25)
RF 1986 SC1099 (15)
ACT:
Citizenship, Termination of-Determination by Central
Government-Rule making obtaining of passport from another
countery conclusive evidence-Validity-Citizenship Act,
1955(57 of 1955), s. 9(2)-Citizenship Rules, 1956, Sch.
III, r 3.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners claiming to be Indian Citizens sought to
enforce their fundamental rights under Art. 19 (1) (e) of
the Constitution. The crucial question was whether they
were citizens of India. While the petitions were pending
the Government of India tinder s. 9(2) of the citizenship
Act, 1955 determined that they had voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of Pakistan by the application of r. 3 of’ Sch.
III of the Citizenship Rules, 1956, framed by the Central
Government under s. 18 of the Act. Section 9 of the
Citizenship Act, 1955, provides as follows:-
"(1) Any citizen of India who by naturalisation, regist-
ration or otherwise voluntarily acquires, or has at any time
between the 26th January, 1950, and the commencement of this
Act voluntarily acquired, the citizenship of another
country, shall, upon such acquisition or, as the case may
be, such commencement, cease to be a citizen of India
......................
(2) If any question arises as to whether,, when or how any
person has acquired the citizenship of another country it
shall be determined by such authority, in such manner, and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 31
236
having regard to such rules of evidence, as may be
prescribed in this behalf."
Rule 30 of the Rules which made the Central Government the
authority for the purpose of s.9(2) provided that for a
determination under that section the Central Government
should have due regard to the rules of evidence specified in
Sch. III of the Rules.
Rule 3 of the said schedule was as follows.
"The fact that a citizen of India has obtained on any date a
passport from the Government of any other country shall be
conclusive proof of his having voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of the country before that date."
After such determination by the Central Government the
petitioners challenged the constitutional validity of s. 9
(2) of the Citizenship Act, 1955, as also of r. 3 of Sch.
III of the Citizenship Rules, 1956. Their . case was that
(1) r. 3 of Sch. III of the Rules was not a rule of
evidence but a rule of substantive law and as such outside
the purview of the delegated authority conferred by s. 9 (2)
as also the general rule making power under s. 18 of the
Act, and that (2) s. 9 (2) itself was ultra vires as it
affected the status of citizenship and deprived the
petitioners of their fundamental rights under Art. 19 (1)
(e) of the Constitution.
Held, (per Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Ayyangar, JJ.) that
the contentions raised by the petitioners must fail.
It was not correct to say that r. 3 of Sch III of the
Citizenship Rules, 1956, which made it obligatory on the
authority to infer the acquisition of foreign citizenship
from the fact of obtaining a passport from a foreign country
was not a rule of evidence but a rule of substantive law.
Like the rule of rebuttable presumption, which was
undoubtedly a rule of evidence. The function of an
irrebuttable presumption was also to help the judicial mind
in appreciating the existence of facts with this difference
that while the former was open to rebuttal, the latter was
placed beyond rebuttal. So considered a rule of
irrebuttable presumption could not be said to fall outside
the law of evidence.
D. B. Heiner v. John. H. Donnan, (I 932) 76 Law Ed. 772,
referred to.
That such a rule might in some cases lead to hardship and
injustice was not a relevant consideration in judging its
constitutional validity.
The real test whether a rule of irrebuttable presumption was
one of evidence was inherent relevancy, If the fact from
237
the proof of which the presumption was required to be drawn
was inherently relevant in proving it, the rule was one of
evidence, no matter whether the presumption prescribed was a
rebuttable or irrebuttable.
There could be no doubt that a passport obtained from
Pakistan was relevant in deciding whether or not the
citizenship of Pakistan had been voluntarily acquired and
any argument to the contrary would be clearly erroneous.
B. v. Brailsford, (1905) 2 K. B. 730 and Joyce Case,
11946] A. C. 347, referred to.
Domingo Urteliqwi v. John N.D arcy, Henry Didier and Domingo
D’ Arble (1835) 9 Law. Ed. 690 and In re COHN, (1945) Ch.
D. 5, held inapplicable.
It was clear that under the law of Pakistan only a citizen
of that country could apply for and obtain passport. The
impugned rule, therefore, was not a rule of substantive law
and was within the purview of s. 9 (2) of the Citizenship
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 31
Act and its validity could not be challenged.
The expression rules of evidence’ in s. 9 (2) must be
construed in the light of its legislature history. Ever
since the passing of the Evidence Act a conclusive
presumption has been a part of the law of evidence.It was
well settled that the scope power to legislate on a topic,
had to be determined by the denotation of that topic
obtaining in legislative practice.
Croft. v. Dunphy, 1933 A.C. 156 and The Central Provinces
and Berar Act, No. XIV of 1938, (1939) F.C.R. 18, referred
to.
Status of citizenship was not a fundamental right under the
Constitution and the Parliament had clearly the power under
Art. II of the Constitution to regulate the right of
citizenship by law. The challenge to s. 9(2) of the Act,
therefore, on the ground that enabled the rule-making
authority to deprive the petitioners of their rights, of
citizenship could not be sustained.
The scheme of the Act and principles it enunciated clearly
showed that the Legislature in enacting s. 9(2) had not
abdicated its essential legislative function in favour of
the rule making authority. There would be no doubt
therefore that the section was valid.
Per Sarkar and Das Gupta, JJ.-Whether a particular rule was
one of substantive law or of evidence had to be judged by
what it sought to do. Did it create or extinguish or modify
a right or liability or its sole concern was with the
adjective
238
function of reaching a conclusion as to what had taken place
under the substantive law ? If the first, it would be a rule
of substantive law, otherwise it would be a rule of
evidence. If a rule, purporting to be one of evidence, in
effect said what must be the right or liability on the
happening of a paricular fact. it went beyond the scope of
the law of evidence and trenched on the domain of
substantive law.
A rule of conclusive presumption made with a view to affect
a specified substantive right was a rule of substantive law
and did not cease to be so because it was rested on a fact
which was relevant to it. The test was not one of relevancy
but whether it was intended to affect a specified
substantive right or provide a method of proof.
So judged, when obtaining of a passport from another country
was made conclusive proof of voluntarily acquiring the
citizenship of that country, in the context of s. 9 of the
Act, a substantive right was directly affected and the rule
could not obviously be one of evidence and must be one of
substantive law. It might so happen that when one
voluntarily acquired the passport of a country he might not
have to acquire the citizenship of that country.
Mohd. Khan v. Govt. of Andhra Pradesh, A.I.R. 1957 And.
Pra. 1047 and Sharafat Ali Khan v. State of U.P., A.I.R.
1960 All, 637, approved
Mohomed Usman v. State of Madras A.I.R. 1961 Mad 129 and
Ghaural Hasan, v. State of Rajasthan, A.I.R. 1958 Raj. 173,
disapproved.
In view of Art, 11 of the Constitution it was not correct to
say that the right of citizenship was a fundamental right or
that the power conferred by s. 9(2) of the Act was an
unguided power. That sub-section gave enough guidance to
the General Government to frame rules of evidence.
The question whether the petitioners had acquired foreign
nationality must, therefore be determined by the Government
leaving r. 3 of Sch. III of the Citizenship Rules, 1956,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 31
out of account.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL, JURISDICTION : Petitions Nos. 101 and 136 of 1959
and 88 of 1961.
Petitions Under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
The Judgment of Gajendragadkar, Wanchoo and Ayyangar, JJ.,
was delivered by Gajendragadkar, J.
239
The Judgment of Sarkar and Das Gupta, JJ., was delivered by
Das Gupta, J.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-These three Writ Petitions are filed by
the three respective petitioners under Art. 32 of the
Constitution for the enforcement of their fundamental right
under Article 19(1) (e). They were heard separately but it
would be convenient to deal with them by one common judgment
because they raise for our decision the same constitutional
questions. In all the petitions, the constitutional
validity of section 9(2) of the Citizen ship Act, 1955, (Act
LVII of 1955) (hereinafter called the Act) and of rule 3 in
Schedule III of the Citizenship Rules, 1956, is challenged.
It would also be convenient to set out briefly at the outset
material facts on which the three petitions are based.
Izhar Ahmad Khan, the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 101 of
1959, claims to be a citizen of India and was a resident of
Bhopal. He war, enrolled as a voter in the Parliamentary as
well as State Legislative Assembly Electoral Roll. On the
20th August, 1952, he was, taken into custody by the police
from the restaurant which he used to run at Bhopal and was
told that he had been arrested under an order from the then
Bhopal Government under section 7 of the Influx from
Pakistan (Central) Act. He was then removed by train the
very next day and left at the Pakistan border and was asked
to go to Pakistan despite his protests. Thereafter, his
elder brother, lqbal Ahmad moved the Court of the Judical
Commissioner, Bhopal, under Art.226 of the Constitution for
the issue of a writ in the nature of Habeas Corpus. In
February, 1953, the learned Judicial Commissioner pronounced
his judgment in the said writ petition. He found in favour
of the petitioner that he was born in India and was a
citizen of India. Even on the question of migration, the
Judicial Commissioner made a
240
finding in his favour. He, however, observed that the
petitioner was in Pakistan in May and June, 1952, and be
came to the conclusion that since he had contravened the
provisions of section 3 of the Influx from Pakistan
(Central) Act, he was liable to be removed physically from
India under section 7 of the said Act.
Having gone to Pakistan much against his will, the
petitioner tried to obtain the help of the High Commissioner
of India for returning of India but he failed and so he had
to sign an application form in order to secure a passport to
come to India. With the passport thus obtained he came back
to India on the 13th August, 1953. Soon after his return to
India, he applied for permission to stay in India
permanently and his visa for stay in India was accordingly
extended from time-to time pending the final decision of his
application for leave to stay in India permanently.
Meanwhile, on the 15th February, 1954, section 7 of the
Influx Act was declared void by this Court. In consequence,
the petitioner began to press his application for permanent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 31
settlement in India and a long term visa was granted to him
by the Government of India pending the decision of his
application. Thereafter, the Act was passed in 1955 and
under advice, the petitioner applied for registration as a
citizen. The said application was, however, rejected and
his application for leave to stay in India permanently met
with the same fate. The petitioner was then directed by the
District Superintendent of Police, Bhopal, to leave India
within seven days by an order dated the 16th June, 1959,
served on the petitioner. This order was passed under
section 3(2)(p) of the Foreigners Act, 1946 (No. XXXI of
1946). It was against this order that the petitioner came
to this Court by his present writ petition on August 13,
1959. in the petition orginally filed by him, the
petitioner’s contention was that he was not a
241
foreigner within the meaning of the Foreigners Act and he
challenged the validity of the relevant operative sections
of the said Act.
After -notice was served on the Union of India, the State of
Madhya Pradesh and the District Superintendent of Police,
Bhopal, who were impleaded as respondents 1, 2 & 3 to the
petition, the matter came on for hearing before this Court
on January 22, 1960. After hearing counsel for some time,
the Court delivered an interlocutory judgment in which it
pointed out that the crucial question which falls to be
considered in the writ petition is whether the petitioner is
a citizen of India or not. This question can be decided
only under section 9(2) of the Act. Therefore, this Court
observed that an enquiry should be made by an appropriate
authority in that behalf and the result of the enquiry
intimated to this Court as early as possible. On receipt of
the result of the enquiry by this Court, the petition will
be listed for final hearing. Meanwhile., stay of
deportation of the petitioner was continued.
In accordance with this interlocutory judgment, an enquiry
was held under s.9(2) after serving a notice about the said
enquiry on the petitioner On Saptember 11, 1961, the Central
Government recorded its conclusion that the petitioner had
voluntarily acquired the citizenship of Pakistan after
January 26, 1950; and before July 29, 1953. This conclusion
was reached substantially by the application of the impugned
R. No. ’3.
After the enquiry had thus terminated and its result
communicated to this Court, the petitioner applied for
permission to take additional grounds and amongst the
grounds which he thus wanted to raise. are the, two
questions which we have already indicated. That. in brief,
is the background of facts in Petition No. 101 of 1959.
Syed Abrarul Hassan, the petitioner in petition No. 136 of
1959, claims to be a citizen of India
212
and was a resident of Bhopal. In 1951, his family received
the news from Pakistan that his elder brother Syed Hassan
was seriously ill. That is why the petitioner with his
mother and younger sisters and one younger brother went to
Pakistan. Thereafter, the petitioner stayed there for some
years. Then they tried to come back to India and with that
object applied for a Pakistan passport to travel to India
and after the passport was thus obtained, he returned to
India in May, 1954, After he came to India, he applied to
the Government of India for permission to settle down in
India permanently and pending the said application, he was
granted long term visas. In 1959, however, the District
Superintendent of Police, Bhopal, served an order on him
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 31
directing him to leave India by the 22nd August, 1959. This
order was issued under section 3(2)(c) of the Foreigners
Act. Like petition No. 101 of 1959, this petition also was
originally filed to challenge the validity of the said order
and to impugn the validity of the relevant provisions of the
Foreigners Action the ground that the petitioner was, not a
foreigner and that the relevant provisions could not be
invoked against him.
Subsequently, this petition as well as Petition No. 101 of
1959 were heard together on January, 22, 1960, and the
course of events in this petition’ was similar to that in
the earlier petition. The result was that after an enquiry
was held under s. 9(2) of the Act and the petitioner -was
informed that the Central Government had come to the con-
clusion that the petitioner had voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of Pakistan after January 26,1950, and before
November 20, 1952, he applied for leave to take additional
grounds, including the two grounds to which we have already
referred. Thus, the material facts in these two petitions
are substantially similar,
243
Habib Hidayatullah, the petitioner in petition No. 88 of
1961, claims to be a citizen of India and complains that his
fundamental rights under Art. 19 of the Constitution are
being infringed because he is about to be deported out of
India on the ground that he has acquired the citizenship of
Pakistan. It appears that the petitioner sailed from Bombay
for Basra (Iraq) in April, 1950 and stayed there for three
years in connection with business. Then he accompanied his
brother to Karachi in May, 1963, for his treatment. On
arrival at Karachi, the Pakistan authorities took away his
Indian travel documents. Then he tried to obtain the
assistance of Indian High Commission for returning to India
but failed and so he applied for and obtained a Pakistani
passport on December 14, 1957. According to him, he
obtained his passport with a view to return to India. On
returning to India with this passport, the petitioner made
several representations to the Indian authorities for his
recognition as a citizen of India and even tried to obtain
registration as such. His efforts in that direction,
however, failed and so he stood the risk of being deported
from India. That is how the petitioner filed the present
petition on February 20, 1961. By his petition, he claimed
a direction against the respondents the Union of India and
the State of Maharashtra restraining them from taking any
steps to deport him from India.
While admitting the petition, this, Court passed an order
stating that it would be open to the petitioner to move the
Government tinder section 9(2) of the Citizenship Act or the
Government to act suo motu in that behalf. After the
petition was thus admitted, the respondents entered
appearance and opposed grant of stay on the ground that the
petitioner had ceased to be a citizen of India. The Govern-
ment of India then took action under section 9(2) of the Act
and has held that the petitioner has voluntarily acquired
the citizenship of Pakistan after
244
26th January, 1950, and before the 14th December, 1957.
After this order was communicated to the petitioner, he took
additional grounds and amongst them, are the two points
which have been already indicated. It is in the
background of these respective facts that the three
petitioners resist their deportation from India on the
grounds that section 9(2) of the, Act is ultra vires and
that Rule 3 in Schedule III of the Citizenship Rules, 1956,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 31
is also constitutionally invalid.
Before dealing with the points thus raised by the three
petitions, it would be useful to refer briefly to the,
relevant constitution and statutory provisions. Part If of
the Constitution, consisting of Arts. 5 to II, deals with
citizenship. Article 5 provides that every person specified
in cl. (a), (b) and (e) shall be a citizen of India.
Article 6 lays down that notwithstanding anything contained
in Art. 5, a person who has migrated to the territory of
India from the territory now included in Pakistan shall be
deemed to be a citizen of India at the commencement of the
Constitution if he Satisfies the tests prescribed by clauses
(a) and (b). Under Art. 7, a person who has after the first
day of March, 1947, migrated from the territory of India to
the territory now included in Pakistan shall not be deemed
to be a citizen of India, notwithstanding anything contained
in Arts. 5 and 6. This Article is subject to the proviso to
which it is unnecessary to refer. Art. 8 deals with the
rights of citizenship of a person who or either of whose
parents or any of whose grandparents were born in India as
defined in the Government of India Act, 1935, and who
ordinarily resides in any country outside India as so
defined. The next three articles are important. Art. 9
provides that no person shall be a citizen of India by
virtue of Art. 5, or be deemed to be a citizen of India by
virtue of Art. 6 or Art. 8, if he has voluntarily acquired
the citizenship of any foreign State. In
245
other words, if prior to the commencement of the
constitution, a person had voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of any Foreign State, he is not entitled to
claim the citizenship of India by virtue of Art. 5 or Art. 6
or Art. 8. This article thus deals with cases where
citizenship of a foreign State had been acquired by an
Indian citizen prior to the commencement of the
Constitution. Article 10 guarantees the continuance of the
rights of citizenship and provides that every person who is
or s deemed to be a citizen of India under any of the
foregoing provisions of Part II shall continue to be such
citizen; but this guarantee is subject to the important
condition that it would be governed by the provisions of any
law that may be made by Parliament. The Proviso introduced
by Art. 10, therefore, makes it clear that any law made by
Parliament may affect the continuance of the rights of
citizenship subject to its terms. That takes us to Art. 11
which empowers the Parliament to regulate the right of
citizenship by law. It provides that nothing in the
foregoing provisions of Part II shall derogate from the
power of Parliament to make any provision with respect to
the acquisition and termination of citizenship and all other
matters relating to citizenship. It would thus be noticed
that while making provisions for recognising the right of
citizenship in the individuals as indicated by the respec-
tive articles, and while guaranteeing the continuance of the
said rights of citizenship as specified by Art. 10, Art. 11
confers and recognises the power of the Parliament to make
any provision with respect to not only acquisition but also
the termination of citizenship as well as all matters
relating to citizenship. Thus, it would be open to the par-
liament to affect the rights of citizenship and the
provisions made by the Parliamentary statute in that behalf
cannot be impeached on the ground that they are inconsistent
with the provisions contained in Art. 5 to 10 of Part II.
In this connection,
246
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 31
it is important to bear in mind that Art. 11 has been
included in Part II in order to make it clear that the
sovereign right of the Parliament to deal with citizenship
and all questions connected with it is not impaired by
the rest of the provisions of the said Part’ Therefore, the
sovereign legislative competence of the Parliament to deal
with the topic of citizenship which is a part of Entry 17 in
List I of the Seventh Schedule is very wide and not fettered
by the provisions of Articles 5 to 10 of Part II of the
Constitution. This aspect of the matter may have relevance
in dealing with the contention raised by the petitioners
that their rights under Article 19 are affected by the
impugned provisions of section 9(2) of the Act.
In exercise of its legislative authority conferred by Entry
17 and in the pursuance of the provisions of the Art. 11 of
Part II, the Parliament passed the Act which came into force
on December, 30, 1955. As its preamble shows, it has been
passed to provide for the acquisition and termination of the
Indian citizenship. Acquisition of citizenship is provided
for by ss. 3 to 7. Section 3 deals with acquisition of
citizenship by birth, section 4 with acquisition by descent,
s. 5 with acquisition by registration, s.6 with acquisition
by naturalisation and s. 7 with acquisition by incorporation
of territory. Having dealt with the acquisition of
citizenship by these five sections, termination of
citizenship is dealt with by as. 8, 9 and 10. Section 8
deals with renunciation of citizenship, s. 9 with the
termination of citizenship and s. 10 with its deprivation.
We are concerned with s. 9 which deals with the termination
of citizenship. This section provides :
"(1) Any citizen of India who by natura-
lisation, registration or otherwise
voluntarily acquires, or has at any time
between the 26th January, 1950 and the
commencement of this
247
Act voluntarily acquired, the citizenship of
another country, shall, upon such acquisition
or, as the case may be, such commencement,
cease to be a citizen of India :
Provided that nothing in this sub-section
shall apply to a citizen of India who, during
any war in which India may be engaged, volun-
tarily acquires the citizenship of another
country, until the Central Government other-
wise directs.
(2) If any question arises as to whether,
when or how any person has acquired the
citizenship of another country, it shall be
determined by such authority, in such manner
and-having regard to such rules of evidence as
may be prescribed in this behalf."
There is no ambiguity about the effect of this section. It
is clear that the voluntary acquisition by an Indian citizen
of the citizenship of another country terminates his
citizenship of India, provided the said voluntary
acquisition has taken place between the 26th January, 1950
and the commencement of the Act, or takes place thereafter.
It would thus be seen that whereas Art. 9 of the
Constitution dealt with the acquisition of citizenship of a
foreign State which had taken place prior to the
commencement of the Constitution, s. 9 of the Act deals with
acquisition of foreign citizenship subsequent to the
commencement of the Constitution. There is, therefore, no
doubt that the Constitution does not favour plural or dual
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 31
citizenship and just as in regard to the period prior to the
Constitution, Art. 9 prevents a person who had voluntarily
acquired the citizenship of foreign country from claiming
the status of an Indian citizen, so does s.9(1) make a
similar provision in regard to the period subsequent to the
commencement’ of the Constitution. Section 9 provides that
the acquisition of foreign citizenship can be the result
either of naturalisation or registration or any other method
248
of voluntarily acquiring such citizenship. Just as the
citizenship of India can be acquired by naturalisation or
registration, or registration, so can the citizenship of a
foregin country be, similarly acquired by naturalisation or
registration. If it is shown that the person has acquired
foreign citizenship either by naturalisation or
registration, there can be no doubt that he ceases to be a
citizen of India in consequence of such naturalisation or
registration. These two classes of foreign citizenship
present no difficulty. It is only in regard to the last
category of cases where foreign citizenship is acquired
otherwise than by naturalisation or registration that
difficulty may arise. But the position in respect of the
last category of cases is also not in doubt and that is that
if it is shown that by some other procedure foreign
citizenship has been voluntarily acquired. Indian
citizenship, immediately comes to an end. The proviso to
sub-section (1) need not detain us because we are not
concerned with the cases falling under that proviso.
That takes us to sub cl. (2) of s.9. This -clause provides
that if any question arises as to the acquisition by an
Indian citizen of foreign citizenship, it shall be
determined by such authority, in such manner, and having
regard to such rules of evidence as may be prescribed in
this behalf. In other words if any dispute arises as to
whether foreign citizenship has been acquired voluntarily by
an Indian citizen, or if it has been so acquired, when or
how the power to decide this question has been delegated to
the authority as may be prescribed in that behalf.
Likewise, the manner in which the enquiry should be held and
the rules subject to which the enquiry should be held have
also to be prescribed in that behalf. The result of this
sub-section is that rules are to be framed prescribing the
authority by which the said questions should be tried, the
manner in which they should be tried and the rules of
evidence subject to which they should be tried.
249
Section 18 (1) provides that the said power to make rules
may be exercised to carry out the purposes of the Act, and
sub-section (2) provides that in particular and without
prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, the
rules may provide for the topics covered by cls. (a) to (k)
of the said sub-section. Section 18(3) authorises the
Central Government to provide that a breach of any rule
shall be punishable with fine which may extend to one
thousand rupees and s, 18(4) requires that all the rules
made under the said section shall, as soon as may be after
they are made, be laid for not less than 14 days before both
Houses of Parliament and shall be subject to such
modifications as Parliament may make during the session in
which they are so laid. This rule is intended to enable the
Parliament to exercise control over the rules made by the
Central Government in pursuance of its delegated authority.
In 1956, the Central Government purported to make Rules in
exercise of the powers conferred upon it by section 18 of
the Act. We are concerned with Rule, 30 in the present
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 31
case. It prescribes the authority to determine acquisition
of citizenship of another country. 30(1) provides that if
any question arises as to whether, when or how any person
has acquired the citizenship of another country, the
authority, to determine such question shall, for the
purposes of s. 9(2), be the Central Government. Sub-rule
(2) provides that the Central Government shall in
determining any such question have due regard to the rules
of evidence specified in Schedule Ill.
That takes us to Schedule III which prescribes the rules of
evidence under which the enquiry under section 9(2) would be
held. Under Rule I, it is provided that if it appears to
the Central Government that a citizen of India has
voluntarily acquired the citizenship of any other country,
it may require proof
250
within the specified time that he has not so acquired the
citizenship of that country, and the burden of proving this
shall be upon him. Under r. 2, the Central Government is
empowered to make a reference in respect of any question,
which it has to decide in the enquiry, to its Embassy in the
country concerned or to the Government of the said country
and it authorises the Central Government to act on any
report or information received in pursuance of such
reference. Then follows r. 3 the validity of which is
challenged before us. This rule reads thus
"The fact that a citizen of India has obtained
on any date a passport from the Government of
any other country shall be conclusive proof of
his having voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of the country before that date.
To the rest of the rules it is unnecessary to refer. The
scope and effect of r. 3 are absolutely clear. If it is
shown that a citizen of India has obtained a passport from a
foreign Government on any date, then under rule 3 an
inference has to be drawn that by obtaining the said
passport he has voluntarily acquired the citizenship of that
country before the date of the passport. In other words,
the proof of the fact that a passport from a foreign country
has been obtained on a certain date, conclusively determines
the other fact that before that date, he has voluntarily
acquired the citizenship of that country. The question
which arises for decision is whether this rule is
constitutionally valid and if it is, whether s. 9(2) under
which the power to hold the enquiry subject to the relevant
rules, has been delegated to the Central Government is
itself constitutionally valid.
We will first deal with the challenge to the validity of r.
3. The principal ground on which the validity of r. 3 is
challenged is that whereas s. 9(2)
251
authorises the Central Government to prescribe rules of
evidence subject to which the relevant enquiry should be
held, what the Central Government has purported to do in
framing-rule 3 is to prescribe a rule of substantive law.
The argument is that when s. 9(2) refers to rules of
evidence, it refers obviously to rules of evidence, properly
so-called and since the impugned rule is in substance, not a
rule of evidence but a rule of substantive law, it is
outside the purview of the delegated authority conferred by
s. 9(2) and as such, is invalid. It is true that s. 18 (1)
confers on the Central Government power to make rules to
carry out the purposes of the said Act, but this general
power to make rules will not taken within its scope the
power to make a rule of substantive law and so if the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 31
impugned rule is a rule of substantive law and if the
expression "rules of evidence" in s. 9(2) does not include
such a rule, then clearly the challenge to the validity of
the rule will have to be upheld.
In appreciating the merits of this argument it is essential
to bear in mind the genesis of the, Law of Evidence and the
function which its enactment is intended to discharge. The
division of law into two broad categories of substantive law
and procedural law is well-known. Broadly stated, whereas
substantive law defines and provides for rights, duties,
liabilities, it is the function of the procedural law to
deal with the application of substantive law to particular
cases and it goes without saying that the law of Evidence is
apart of the law of procedure. The law of the evidence
deals with the question as to what facts may, and what may
not, be proved, what sort of evidence may or may not be
given and by whom and in what manner such evidence may or
may not be given. Consistently, with the broad functions of
the law of evidence, the Indian Evidence Act also deals with
the topics that usually fall within the purview of such law.
It prescribes the rules of relevance, it provides for the
exclusion
252
of some evidence, as for instance, exclusion of hearsay
evidence or of parole evidence in some cases ; it deals with
onus of proof, with the competence of witnesses, with
documentary evidence and its proof, with presumptions and
with estoppel. "Evidence", observes Best (1) "has been well
defined as any matter of fact, the effect, tendency, or
design of which is to produce in the mind a persuasion,
affirmative or disaffirmative of the existence of some other
matter of fact." Judicial evidence with which the Evidence
Act deals is a species of the genus "evidence", and,
according to Best, is for the most part nothing more than
natural evidence, restrained or modified by rules of
positive law. The statutory provisions contained in the Law
of Evidence may be said to be based on the doctrine that
that system of law is best which leaves least to the Judges’
discretion. That is why -,the laws of every well-governed
State have established rules regulating the quality, and
occasionally the quantity, of the evidence necessary to form
the basis of judicial decision." It is in its attempt to
regulate the production of and proof by evidence in a
judicial enquiry that the rules of evidence refer to certain
presumptions either rebuttable or irrebuttable. The term
"’presumption" in its largest and most comprehensive
signification, may be defined to bean inference, affirmative
or disaffirmative of the truth or falsehood of a doubtful
fact or proposition drawn by a process of probable reasoning
from something proved or taken for granted. Thus, according
to Best, when the rules of evidence provide for the raising
of a rebuttable or irrebuttable presumption, they are merely
attempting to assist the judicial mind in the matter of
weighing the probative or persuasive force of certain facts
proved in relation to other facts presumed or inferred. The
whole scheme of the Evidence Act is thus intended to serve
the objective of regulating the proof of facts by
(1) The Principles of the Law of Evidence Twelfth Edition
Pages 6. 23, 25 and 267.
253
subjecting the production of evidence to the rules
prescribed in that behalf. It is in the light of this
function and objective of the Evidence Act that the argument
of the petitioners has to be judged.
It has been strenuously urged before us that when the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 31
impugned rule makes it obligatory on the enquiring authority
to infer the acquisition of citizenship of foreign country
from the fact that the passport of foreign country has been
obtained by an Indian citizen, it is really, Dot a rule of
evidence properly so called but is a part of the rule of
substantive law in relation to the acquisition or
termination of citizenship. In support of this argument,
opinions of jurists have been pressed into service. We
must, therefore, briefly refer to the said opinions and
decide whether they lead to the conclusion for which the
petitioners contend. Holdsworth observes that "the
difficulty of proving the facts needed to establish legal
liability under the older modes of trial, the slow growth of
our modern mode of trial, the same difficulties even under
our modern procedure, and sometimes the wish to modify an
inconvenient law, have all at different periods led both
legislators and courts to’ adopt the expedient of inventing
a presumption of law which is some times rebuttable and
sometimes irrebuttable. These rebuttable presumptions of
law no doubt belong primarily to those particular branches
of the substantive law with which they are concerned; but
they are all connected with that part of the adjective law
which is concerned with evidence; for they direct the court
to deduce particular inferences from particular facts till
the contrary is proved. Irrebuttable presumptions of law,
on the other hand belong at the present day more properly to
the substantive law than to the law of evidence (1)."
Holdsworth then draws a, distinction between estoppel which
is a rule of
(2) Holdsworth on ’A History of English Law’ 192 6 Vol. IX,
Pages 143-144.
254
evidence and irrebuttable presumption by observing that
"while an irrebuttable presumption is in effect a rule of
substantive law, to the effect that when certain facts exist
a particular inference shall be drawn an estoppel is a rule
of evidence that when, as between two parties to a
litigation, certain facts are proved, no evidence to combat
those facts can be received." Thus, according to Holdsworth,
irrebuttable presumptions are always a matter of substantive
law, not so rebuttable presumptions, and estoppel is a rule
of evidence and not a rule of substantive law.
Wigmore expresses the same opinion, about the character of
irrebuttable presumptions, for he says that "wherever from
one fact another is said to be conclusively presumed, in the
sense that the opponent is absolutely precluded from showing
by any evidence that the second fact does not exist, the
rule is really providing that, where the first fact is shown
to exist, the second facts existence is wholly immaterial
for the purpose of the proponent’s case; and to provide this
is to make a rule of substantive law, and not a rule
apportioning the -burden of persuading as to certain
propositions or varying the duty of coming forward with
evidence(1)"With respect,, it is doubtful whether it is
correct to say that in drawing a conclusive presumption from
one fact proved about the existence of another fact, the
rule renders the second fact’s existence wholly immaterial.
What the rule provides is that the probative or persuasive
value of the proved fact in relation to the fact not proved
is so great that the fact not proved should always be taken
to be proved once the other fact is proved. In any case,
the opinion of Wigmore is in favour of the contentions
raised by the petitioners.
Phipson puts the proposition in somewhat guarded and
qualified terms. ’In many cases"
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 31
(1) Wigmore on Evidence IX Edition P. 292. Para. 2492.
255
he observes, "these so called conclusive presumptions are
rules which belong properly speaking, to the various
branches of substantive law and not to the law of evidence,
such as the presumption that an infant under seven is
incapable of committing a felony or that all men know the
law (i. e., that ignorance of the law is no excuse for
crime)." (1). It would thus be noticed that according to
Phipson, it is not true as a general inflexible rule that
all conclusive presumptions pertain to the branch of
substantive law and he has illustrated his statement by
taking two instances of conclusive presumptions to show that
the said presumptions are really matters of substantive law.
Therefore, if the test laid down by Phipson is reliable then
the question as to whether a conclusive presumption in a
given case is a part of the substantive law or forms a part
of the rule of evidence, properly so called. Will have to
be decided in the light of the content of the rule and its
implications.
Stephen also has considered this problem. "Conclusive
presumptions", he says, ,,appear to me to belong to
different branches of the Substantive Law, and to be
unintelligible except in connection with them. Take for
instance the presumption that every one knows the law. This
rule cannot be properly appreciated if it is treated as a
part of the Law of Evidence. It belongs to the Criminal
Law. In the same way, numerous presumptions as to rights of
property (in particular easements and incorporal
hereditaments) belong not to the Law of Evidence but to the
Law of Real Property’. Having said so, the learned author
adds that ’-the only presumptions which, in my opinion,
ought to find a place in the Law of Evidence, are those
which relate to facts merely as facts and apart from the
particular rights which they constitute(2). That is how in
his Digest, he has included certain
(1) Phipson on Evidence, IX Edition P. 698.
(2) Stephens Digest of the Law of Evidence, page xvii.
256
presumptions under Arts. 98 to 105. These are respectively,
presumption of legitimacy, presumption of death from seven
years’ absence, presumption of lost grant, presumption of
regularity and of deeds to complete title estoppel by
conduct, estoppel of tenant and licensee, estoppel of
acceptor of bill of exchange and estoppel of bailee, agent
and licensee. It would thus be seen that estoppel of the
four kinds just indicated constitutes a branch of rule of
evidence, according to Stephen.
Dicey seems to take the view that even for purposes of
domestic law, irrebuttable presumptions of law are rules of
substance, and he adds that "’rebuttable presumptions of law
must, for the, present purpose, be further sub-divided.
First, there are those which only apply in certain contexts,
such as the presumptions of advancement, satisfaction and
ademption. It is submitted that these are so closely
connected with the existence of substantive rights that they
ought to be classified as rules of substance. Secondly,
there are those which apply (though not always in precisely
the same way) to all types of cases, such as the
presumptions of legitimacy, marriage and death. ’It is
uncertain whether such presumptions are rules of substance
or rules of procedure." (1) According to Diciy, for the
,purposes of English domestic law, estoppel is generally
treated as a rule of evidence. In dealing with this topic,
Dicey has observed that : "in order to determine whether
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 31
presumptions are rules of substance or rules of procedure,
it is necessary to distinguish between three kinds of
presumptions". Then he refers to presumptions of fact,
rebuttable presumptions of law and irrebuttable presumptions
of law. As to presumptions of facts, he thinks that,
strictly speaking, they have no legal effect at all; they
are merely common inferences and, as such, will be applied
alike to cases governed by English and foreign law.
(1) Dicey’s Conflict of Laws, Seventh Edition. page 1098.
(2) Thayer’s ’A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the
Common Law page 314.
257
It is no doubt true that in dealing with the question about
the character of the rule prescribing irrebuttable
presumptions, we must attach due importance to the opinions
expressed by jurists. But, as we have just seen, the views
expressed by jurists on this topic do not disclose an
identity of approach and their conclusions show different
shades of opinion. That is why bearing in mind the juristic
opinion to which we have just referred, we will proceed to
examine the merits of the argument that the rule of
irrebuttable presumption prescribed by the impugned rule is
a part of the substantive law and does not form part of the
law of evidence properly so-called.
It is conceded, and we think, rightly, that a rule
prescribing a rebuttable presumption is a rule of evidence.
It is necessary to analyse what the rule about the
rebuttable presumption really means. A fact A which has
relevance in the proof of fact B and inherently has some
degree of probative or persuasive value in that behalf may
be weighed by a judicial mind after it is proved and before
a conclusion is reached as to whether fact B is proved or
not. When the law of evidence makes a rule providing for a
rebuttable presumption that on proof of fact A, fact B shall
be deemed to be proved unless the contrary is established,
what the rule purports to do is to regulate the judicial
process of appreciating evidence and to provide that the
said appreciation will draw the inference from the proof of
fact A that fact B has also been proved unless the contrary
is established. In other words, the rule takes away
judicial discretion either to attach the due probative value
to fact A or not and requires prima facie the due probative
value to be attached in the matter of the inference as to
the existence of fact B, subject, of course to the said
presumption being rebutted by proof to the contrary. As
Thayer has observed : "presumptions are aids to reasoning
argumentation, which assume the truth of certain matters for
the purpose of some given inquiry. The exact scope and
operation of
258
these prima facie assumptions are to cast upon the party
against whom they operate, the duty of going,forward, in
argument or evidence, on the particular point to which they
relate. They are thus closely related to the subject of
judicial notice ; for they furnish the basis of many of
those spontaneous recognitions of particular facts or
conditions which make up that doctrine". (1) According to
the same author, legal presumptions of the rebuttable kind
are definitions of the quantity of evidence or the state of
facts sufficient to make out a prima facie case ; in other
words, of the circumstances under which the burden of proof
lies on the opposite party. Thus, the rule of rebuttable
presumption adds statutory force to the natural and inherent
probative value of fact A in relation to the proof of the
existence of fact B and in adding this statutory value to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 31
the probative force of fact A, the rule, it is conceded,
makes a provision within the scope and function of the law
of evidence. If that is so how does it make a difference in
principle if the rule adds conclusive strength to the
probative value of the said fact A in relation to the proof
of the existence of fact B ? In regard to the category of
facts in respect of which an irrebuttable presumption is
prescribed by a rule of evidence, the position is that the
inherent probative value of fact A in that behalf is very
great and it is very likely that when it is proved in a
judicial proceeding, the judicial mind would normally attach
great importance to it in relation to the proof of fact B.
The rule steps in with regard to such facts and provides
that the judicial mind should attach to the said fact
conclusiveness in the matter of its probative value. It
would be noticed that as in the case of a rebuttable
presumption, so in the case of an irrebuttable presumption,
the rule purports to assist the judicial mind in
appreciating the existence of facts. In one case the
probative value is statutorily strengthened but yet left
open to rebuttal, in the other
(1) Thayer’s ’A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the
Common Law, page 314.
259
case, it is statutorily strengthened and placed beyond the
pale of rebuttal. Considered from this point of view, it
seems rather difficult to accept the theory that whereas a
rebuttable presumption is within the domain of the law of
evidence, irrebuttable presumption is outside the domain of
that law and forms part of the substantive law.
In D. B. Heiner v. John H. Donnan(1), the Supreme Court of
the United States of America bad occasion to consider the
validity of the provision of a Federal statute imposing a
death transfer tax in respect to transfers at the time of or
in contemplation of death, that any transfer made within two
years prior to the death of decendent shall be deemed to
have been made in contemplation of death within the meaning
of the statute and it was held that the said provision
violated the due process clause of the 5th Amendment. The
argument partly turned upon the question as to whether the
irrebuttable presumption authorised to be drawn by the
impugned section of statute was a part of the law of
evidence or of the substantive law. In support of the
statute, it was urged that the conclusive presumption
created by the statute was a rule of substantive law. The
Court, however, rejected the plea and held that the rule was
a rule of evidence and as such violated the constitutional
guarantee provided by the 5th Amendment. In rejecting the
plea urged by the State that the rule was a rule of subs-
tantive law, Mr. Justice Sutherland observed that a
rebuttable presumption clearly is a rule of evidence which
has the effect of shifting the burden of proof and in
support of this conclusion, he referred to the earlier
decisions of the Court. The Learned Judge then added that
"it is hard to see how a statutory rebuttable presumption is
turned from a rule of evidence into a rule of substantive
law as the result of a later statute making it conclusive.
(1) (1932) 76 aw. Ed. 772, 780
260
In both cases it is a substitute for proof, in the one open
to challenge and disproof and in the other conclusive." We
ought to add that the learned Judge made it clear that
"whether the presumption be treated as a rule of evidence or
of substantive law, it constitutes an attempt, by
legislative fiat, to enact into existence a fact which here
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 31
does not, and cannot be made to, exist in actuality, and the
result is the same, unless we are ready to over-rule the
Schlesinger Case, as we are not; for that case dealt with a
conclusive presumption and the Court held it invalid without
regard to the question of its technical characterization."
Thus, the observations made by Mr. Justice Sutherland in
regard to the character of the rule of irrebuttable presump-
tion afford assistance to the contention raised before us on
behalf of the Union of India.
But it is said that a conclusive presumption prevents the
party against whom it is drawn from disproving the inference
about the existence of fact B which is required to be drawn
from the proof of fact A. This circumstance, however, does
not affect the character of the rule as failing within the
domain of the law of evidence. Take the case of estoppel
which is admitted to be a part of the law of evidence. In
the cage of estoppel where the essential ingredients of the
rule are satisfied, a party is precluded from denying the
truth of the thing covered by his declaration, act or
omission. In other words, where estoppel is pleaded against
a party on the strength of his declaration, act or omission,
whereby he intentionally caused or permitted another person
to believe a thing to be true, that party is not permitted
to say that the thing itself was not true and yet the rule
which puts this bar against the party and precludes him from
proving that the thing in question is untrue, is treated as
a rule of evidence. Therefore, the fact that a bar is
created preventing a party from
261
proving the truth or falsity of a thing the existence of
which is inferred, does not show that the rule itself is a
part of the substantive law.
Then it is argued that the conclusive rule in the present
case extinguishes the status of citizenship and as such, is
a part of the rule of substantive law. We are not impressed
by this argument either. What the rule really provide,% is
that when one fact in established, another fact shall be
deemed to have been established. The fact established is
that an Indian citizen has obtained a passport from a
foreign Government on a certain date. From this fact, an
irrebuttable presumption is required to be drawn that the
obtaining of the passport from the foreign Government estab-
lishes the acquisition of the citizenship of the said
foreign State. This is a case where from the proof of fact
A an inference as to the existence of fact B is required to
be drawn. As to the inherent probative and persuasive value
of fact A in relation to the existence of fact B in this
context, we will have occasion to discuss it later on. The
argument that the application of the rule may in some
hypothetical cases conceivably lead to hardship and
injustice, is not relevant or material in dealing with the
constitutional validity of the rule.
In deciding the question as to whether a rule about
irrebuttable presumption is a rule of evidence or not, it
seems to us that the proper approach to adopt would -be to
consider whether fact A from the proof of which a
presumption is required to be drawn about the existence of
fact B, is inherently relevant in the matter of proving fact
B and has inherently any probative or persuasive value in
that behalf or not. If fact A is inherently relevant in
proving the existence of fact B and to any rational mind it
would bear a, probative or persuasive value in the matter of
262
proving the existence of fact B, then a rule prescribing
either a rebuttable presumption or an irrebuttable
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 31
presumption in that behalf would be a rule of evidence. On
the other hand, if fact A is inherently not relevant in
proving the existence of fact B or has no probative value in
that behalf and yet a rule is made prescribing of a
rebuttable or an irrebuttable presumption in that connection
that rule would be a rule of substantive law and not a rule
of evidence. Therefore, in dealing with the question as to
whether a given rule prescribing a conclusive presumption is
a rule of evidence or not, we cannot adopt the view that all
rules prescribing irrebuttable presumptions are rules of
substantive law. We can answer the question only after
examining the rule and its impact on the proof of facts A
and B. If this is the proper test, it would become necessary
to enquire whether obtaining a passport from a foreign
Government is or is not inherently relevant in proving the
voluntary acquisition of the citizenship of that foreign
state.
It has been fairly conceded before us that a passport
obtained by the petitioners from the Pakistan Government
would undoubtedly by relevant in deciding the question as to
whether by obtaining the said passport they have or have not
acquired the citizenship of Pakistan. Sometimes the
argument appears to have been urged and accepted that a
passport in question would not be relevant to the enquiry as
to whether citizenship of Pakistan has been acquired or not.
That view, in our opinion, is clearly erroneous.
The definition of a passport given by Lord Alverstone, C.
J., in R. v. Brailsford (1) has been adopted by the House of
Lords in the joyce case (2) and it is of some assistance in
dealing with the .point with which we are concerned. "It is
a document", says Lord Alverstone, ,,issued in the name of
(1) [1905] 2 K. IL 730.
(2) [1946] A.C. 347.
263
the Sovereign on the responsibility of a Minister of the
Crown to a named individual, intended to be presented to the
Governments of foreign nations and to be used for that
individual’s protection as a British subject in foreign
countries". As P. Weis observes : "a passport is considered
in Great Britain and the United States to be prime facie
evidence of the national status of the holder, but it is not
conclusive evidence". He adds that "’the United States has
on many occasions insisted that foreign authorities were not
entitled to ignore an American passport, i.e.,; to refuse to
regard it as sufficient proof of the holder’s
nationality"(1).
It appears that in support of the view that a passport is
not relevant in an enquiry as to the citizenship of a person
holding a passport, reliance is sometimes placed on the
observation,% made by Mr. Justice Thompson in Dominao
Urtetiqui v. John N. D’arcy, Henry Didier and Domi D’Arbel:
(2) "Upon the general and abstract question" observes Thomp-
son J., in delivering the decision of the Supreme Court of
the United States, " whether the passport per se, was legal
and competent evidence of the fact of citizenship, we are of
the opinion that it was not." It would, however, be seen on
looking at the whole of the judgment that the learned Judge,
made it perfectly clear during the course of the latter
portion of his judgment that on that issue, the court was
divided in opinion, and the point was of course undecided.
So, the general observation made in the earlier part of the
judgment is really of no & saistance in the matter. That
case shows that the plaintiff had produced a passport
granted by the Secretary of States of the United States, in
order to show that he was the citizen of the State of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 31
Maryland. The defendant, on the other band, offered in
evidence the record of the District Court of the United
States for the District of Louisiana which contained
proceedings in a suit which had
(1) P. Weis on ’Nationality and Statelessness in
International Law P. 225-226
(2) (1835) 9 Law. Ed., 692.
264
been originally instituted against the plaintiff to the
effect that he was an alien and it appears that of the two
pieces of evidence, the latter was held to be more reliable.
Therefore, in our opinion, the learned counsel for the
petitioners were quite right in conceding that the passports
obtained by the petitioners were relevant in the enquiry as
to the question whether they had acquired the citizenship of
Pakistan or not. If that be so, applying the test which, we
think, is appropriate in such cases, it must be held that
the impugned rule of evidence and not a rule of substantive
law. The fact of obtaining the passport from Pakistan on
which a conclusive presumption is drawn as to the voluntary
acquisition of the citizenship of Pakistan is relevant and
the rule merely makes its probative value conclusive.
Therefore, we are not disposed to uphold the objection
raised by the petitioners that the impugned rule is a rule
of substantive law and as such, falls outside the purview of
section 9(2). If it is a rule of evidence properly so.
called, it would be within the scope of the authority
conferred on the. Central Government by s. 9(2) and its
validity-cannot be successfully challenged.
There is one decision to which we ought to refer before we
part with this topic. The petitioners in support of their
argument that impugned rule is a rule of substantive law,
have placed reliance on the decision in In re KOHN In -that
case, a mother and a daughter, who were German nationals and
at all times domiciled in Germany, were killed in an air
raid in London as a result of the same explosion, and it
could not be proved which of them had died earlier. The
daughter was entitled to movable property under her mother’s
will, if she survived her mother. On these facts, it was
held that the question of survivorship depended on the
provision of the German Civil Code under which
(1) [1945] Ch. D. 5.
265
the deaths were presumed to have taken place simultaneously
and so she was not a person living at the time when the
succession to her mother’s estate opened and, therefore, was
not entitled to the property. The provision contained in
section 181 of the English Law of Property Act, 1925,
however, was to the contrary. It provided that where two or
more persons have died circumstances rendering it uncertain
which of them survived the other or others, such deaths
shall, (subject to any order of the Court) for all purposes
affecting the title to the property, be presumed to have
occurred in order of seniority, and accordingly the younger
shall be deemed to have survived the elder. It was held
that the two relevant statutory provisions both of English
’and German Law were rules of substantive law., In fact, the
relevant English section occurred in the Law of Property Act
and its ,setting and context import that it was a rule of
substantive law. So was the rule contained in Article 20 of
the Civil Code of Germany treated as a rule of substantive
law. The main reason given in support of the conclusion
that the two rules were rules of substantive law appears to
be that each one directed a certain presumption to be made
in all cases affecting the title to property. It would be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 31
noticed that the scope, purport and effect of the two rules
is substantially different from the scope, purport and
effect of the rule with which we are concerned. In the
rules with which the court was concerned in re-Cohn, there
is no question about the probative value of one fact being
judged or appreciated under statutory rule in regard to the
proof of the existence of another fact. Like the rule that
ignorance of law is no excuse, the rules with which the
court was concerned were clearly rules of substantive law.
Therefore, in our opinion, not much assistance can be drawn
from the judgment of Uthwatt, J., in the case of re-Cohn.
It is clear that the simultaneous deaths of two persons is
266
neither rationally or inherently relevant to, nor has it any
inherent probative value in, the proof of the question as to
the sequence of the two deaths and, therefore, the
provisions in the two sections being purely arbitrary, were
rightly held to be matters of substantive law.
In dealing with this question, it may also be relevant to
consider the practical aspect of the rule; and that takes us
to the procedure which has to be followed in Pakistan in
obtaining a passport from the Government of that country for
travel to India. One of the objects which the Act was
incidentally intended to achieve was to meet the emergency
which arose as a result of the partition of the country into
India and Pakistan, and the relevant rules are also
primarily applicable to Indian nationals who on going to
Pakistan obtained passport from the Government of that
country. Now, it is not disputed that according to the laws
prevailing in Pakistan, a person is not entitled to apply
for or obtain a passport unless he is a citizen -of Pakistan
under its Citizenship Act. Besides, the prescribed form of
the application requires that the applicant should make a
declaration to the effect that he is a citizen of Pakistan
and the said declaration has to be accepted by the Pakistan
authorities before a passport is issued. In the course of
the enquiry as to the citizenship of the Applicant,
declaration by officials of Pakistan about the truth of the
statement of the applicant are also required to be filed.
Thus, the procedure prescribed by the relevant Pakistan laws
makes it abundantly clear that the application for the
passport has to be made by a citizen of Pakistan, it has to
contain a declaration to that effect and the truth of the
declaration has to be established to the satisfaction of the
Pakistan officials before a passport is granted. When a
passport is obtained under these circumstances, so tar as
the Pakistan Government is concerned, there can be no doubt
that it would be entitled to claim
267
the applicant as its own citizen. The citizen would be
estopped from claiming against the Pakistan Government that
the statement made by him about his status was untrue. In
such a case, if the impugned rule prescribes that the
obtaining of a passport from the Pakistan Government by an
Indian national, (which normally would be the result of the
prescribed application voluntarily made by him) conclusively
proves the voluntary acquisition of Pakistani citizenship,
it would be difficult to hold that the rule is ’not a rule
of evidence. In our opinion, it would be pedantic and
wholly unrealistic to contend that the rule in question does
not purport to assess the probative value of fact A in the
matter of proving fact B but imports considerations which
are relevant to substantive law. Our conclusion, therefore,
is that the impugned rule of evidence and falls within the
scope prescribed by s. 9 (2). The challenge to its validity
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 31
on the ground that it is rule of substantive law must,
therefore fail.
But quite apart from this thoretical or juris-prudential
aspect of the matter, there is another independent
consideration which supports the same conclusion. The
question raised before us is one of construing the words
"’rules of evidence" used in s. 9 (2) of the Act, and in
construing the said words, it would obviously be necessary
to bear in mind the legislative history of the content of
the words "rules of evidence" in India. The Evidence Act
(Act No. I of 1872) was passed as early as 1872 and by
section 4 it recognised as rules of evidence the rules which
prescribe for a presumption which may be drawn, for a
presumption which shall be drawn subject to rebuttal and for
a presumption which shall be conclusively drawn. Sections
41, 112 and 113 are illustrations of conclusive
presumptions. It will be recalled that similar provisions
were included by Stephen in his draft of the Law of Evidence
after expressing the opinion that the said
268
presumptions form part of the Law of Evidence, Therefore,
from 1872 onwards, it has been accepted in India that a
conclusive presumption is a part of the law of evidence.
Bearing this fact in mind, we have to consider what the
denotation of the expression ’.’evidence" would be in the
relevant entries to the Seventh Schedule in the Government
of India Act of 1935 as well as the Constitution. Entry 5
in List III of the Seventh Schedule of the earlier Act was :
"Evidence and oaths ; recognition of laws, public acts and
records and judicial proceedings." Similarly Entry 12 in the
concurrent List of the 7th Schedule to the Constitution
reads in the same way. It is well settled that "when a
power is conferred to legislate on a particular topic, it is
important in determining the scope of the power to have
regard to what is ordinarily treated as embraced within that
topic in legislative practice and particularly in the
legislative practice of the State which has conferred the
power (1) (Croft Dunphy). A relevant instance in point of
this rule of construction is afforded by the decision of the
Federal Court in The Central Provinces and Berar.Act No. XIY
1938 Dealing with the content of the expression ’,,excise
Gwyer, C. J., observed:
"Parliament must surely be presumed to have
had Indian legislative practice in mind and,
unless the context otherwise clearly requires,
not to have conferred a legislative power
intended to be interpreted in a sense not
understood by those to whom the Act was to
apply."
There can, therefore, be no doubt that the expression ,-
rules of evidence" construed in the light of the Indian
legal and legislative history would include some rules of
conclusive proof and if that is so, it
(1) [1933] A. C. 156, 165.
(2) [1939] F. C. R. 18, S.
269
would be idle to contend that the impugned rule is a part of
the substantive law merely because it prescribes a
conclusive presumption. If that be the true position, we do
not think we would be justified in contruing the words
"rules of evidence to adopt the academic or pedantic
approach suggested by the petitioners. The expression
"rules of evidence" would certainly include a rule as to
conclusive presumption like the one with which we are
concerned in the present petitions. Therefore, on this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 31
construction of s. 9(2), the impugned rule must be he-Id to
be intra vires.
The question about the validity of this rule has been
considered by some of the High Courts in India. The Andhra
Pradesh (1) and Allahabad High Courts (2) have held that the
rule is invalid, whereas the Bombay,the Rajasthan (4)
and the Madras High Courts have held that the rule is
valid.
The next point to consider is about the validity of s. 9(2)
itself. It is argued that this rule is ultra vires because
it affects the status of citizenship conferred on the
petitioners and recognised by the relevant Articles Of the
Constitution, and it is urged that by depriving the
petitioners of the status of citizenship, their fundamental
rights under Art. 19 generally and -particularly the right
guaranteed by Art.19(1)(e) are affected. It is not easy to
appreciate this argument. As we have already observed, the
scheme of the relevant Articles of Part II which deals with
citizenship clearly suggests that the status of citizenship
can be adversely affected by a statute made by the
Parliament in exercise of its legislative powers. It may
prema facie sound somewhat surprising, but it is never the
less true, that though the citizens of India are guaranteed
the fundamental rights specified in Art. 19 of the
Constitution, the
(1) A. I.R. 1957 Andh. 1047.
(2) 1 A. 1. R. 1960 All 1637.
(3) A. 1. R. 1958 Bom. 1422.
(4) A. 1. R. 1958 Raj. 172.
(5) A. 1. R. 1961 Mad. 129.
270
status of citizenship on which the existence or continuance
of the said rights rests is itself not one of the
fundamental rights guaranteed to anyone. If a law is
properly passed by the Parliament affecting the status of
citizenship of any citizens in the country, it can be no
challenge to the validity of the said law that it affects
the fundamental rights of those whose citizenship is thereby
terminated. Article 19 proceeds on the assumption that the
person who claims the rights guaranteed by it is a citizen
of India. If the basic status of citizenship is validly
terminated by a Parliamentary statute, the person whose
citizenship is terminated has no right to claim the
fundamental rights under Art. 19. Therefore in our opinion,
the challenge to s. 9(2) on the ground that it enables the
rule-making authority to make a rule to deprive the
citizenship rights of ’the Petitioners cannot be sustained.
That leaves only one point to be considered in the
petitioners’ attack against the validity of s.9(2). It is
urged that s.9(2) confers on the Central Government
uncanalised and arbitrary power to make rules without any
guidance and as such it amounts to excessive delegation. In
our opinion, there is no substance in this argument.
Section 9(1) has itself provided that if an Indian citizen
applies for naturalisation in a foreign State and obtains
such naturalisation, he will be deemed to have lost the
citizenship of India. The same provision is made in regard
to registration. The Legislature knew that the acquisition
of the citizenship of a foreign State may be made
voluntarily even otherwise than by naturalisation or
registration and so it has provided for the third category
of acquisition of foreign, citizenship under the la-at
clause "otherwise voluntarily acquires" so that rule-making
had to be confined primarily to this last category of
acquisition of foreign citizenship. The basic principle on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 31
which the Act proceeds and which has been recognised by
Art.9 of the Constitution itself is that no Indian
271
citizen can claim a dual or plural citizenship. The
acquisition of foreign citizenship can be made by
naturalisation or registration and as soon as it is so made,
the prior Indian citizenship is terminated. It is in the
light of these principles which are writ large on the
provisions of the Act that the rule making power had to make
rules about the class of cases falling under the last
category of acquisition of foreign citizenship, and the
rules show how the task has been attempted. We have already
referred to r. I to 3. Rules 4 and 5 which deal with cases
other then those where passport has been obtained by an
Indian citizen, prescribe the relevant factors which have to
be considered in each case before deciding whether foreign
citizenship has been acquired by an Indian or not and the
impugned r. 3 itself proceed,% on the basis that the
conditions prescribed by the Pakistan Law for obtaining a
passport from the Pakistan Government take the case of the
obtaining of the passport very near to the case of regis-
tration or naturalization. Therefore, having regard to the
scheme of the Act and the principles enunciated in its
relevant sections, we do not think that it can be held that
in enacting section 9(2), the Legislature has abdicated its
essential legislative function in favour of the rule making
authority. That is why our conclusion is that section 9(2)
is valid.
In the result, the petitions fail and are dismissed, there
would be no order as to costs.
DAS GUPTA, J.-These, three petitions raise common questions
of law and have therefore been heard together. As the
questions that arise are of law and the facts are not in
dispute and substantially the same, it would be convenient
to deal with the facts of one of those petitions only. We
propose to take for this purpose W. P. No. 88 of 1961.
The petitioner Habib Hidayatullah claims to be a citizen of
India and has filed this petition for
272
protection of his fundamental right under Act. 19 of the
Constitution which he says is threatened by the action of
the Union of India and the State of Maharashtra. It is not
disputed that the petitioner was on January 26, 1950, a
citizen of India and obtained a Hai passport for pilgrimage
in that capacity. According to him he sailed from Bombay
for Basra (Iraq) on April 5, 1950. and stayed there for
three years in connection with some business and then went
to Karachi on May 2, 1953, with his brother for the latter’s
treatment. On his arrival at Karachi the Pakistan
authorities took away his Indian travel documents. During
the years 1954, 1955, 1956 and 1957 be made several attempts
to obtain facilities from the Indian High Commission at
Karachi for his return to India. But having failed to get
any assistance there he obtained a Pakistan passport and
travelled to India on the basis of the same. This was
obtained on December 14, 1957 and the petitioner’s case is
that he obtained it as this was the only possible way for
him to return home to India with his ailing brother and
without any intention to renounce his Indian eitizenship or
to acquire Pakistan citizenship. After his return to India
the petitioner made several representations to the Indian
authorities asking them "to recognize him as a citizen of
Indian and/or to register him as such and/or to permit him
to stay premanently in India." But ultimately the Indian
authorities refused to recognise him as a citizen of India
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 31
and/or to permit him to stay permanently in India.
Faced now with the risk of being deported from India the
petitioner has approached this Court for an order directing
the respondents, the Union of India and the state of
Maharashtra to refrain from taking any steps to deport or
remove him from India and to recognise him as a citizen of
India by birth under Art. 5(1)(a) of the Constitution.,
When admitting his writ petition after the
273
preliminary hearing this Court made an order stating that it
would be open to the petitioner to move the Government under
s. 9(2) of the Citizenship Act or the Government suo motu to
take action under it.
Thereafter both the respondents have entered appearance and
oppose the petition for stay on the ground that the
petitioner has ceased to be a citizen of India. The
Government of India then took action under s. 9(2) of the
Citizenship Act and has determined that the petitioner has
voluntarily acquired the citizenship of Pakistan after
January 26, 1950, and before December 14, 1957.
The order made by the Government of India shows that in
reaching the above conclusions it took into consideration,
among other things, the fact that "the petitioner by
declaring himself to be a citizen of Pakistan before the
Pakistan authorities ............ obtained a passport on the
14th December 1957."
Section 9 of the Citizenship Act runs thus:-
"Any citizen of India who by naturalization
registration or otherwise voluntarily acq-
uires, or has at any such time between the
26th January, 1950 and the commencement of
this Act voluntarily acquired the citizenship
of another country shall, upon such
acquisition or, as the case may be, such
commencement, cease to be a citizen of India:
Provided that nothing in this subsection shall
apply to a citizen of India who during any war
in which India may be engaged, voluntarily
acquires the citizenship of another country
until the Central Government otherwise
directs.
(2)If any question arises as to whether when
or how any person has acquired the
274
citizenship of another country. it shall be
determined by such authority, in such manner
and having regard to such rules of evidence,
as may be prescribed in this behalf."
Rule 30 of the Citizenship Rules 1956, framed by the Central
Government under Section 18 of the Citizenship Act, 1955,
(Act, No. 57 of 1955) provides: (1) that if any question
arises as to whether’ when or how any person has acquired
the citizenship of another country, the authority to
determine such question shall, for the purposes of s. 9(2)
be the Central Government ; and (2) the Central Government
shall in determining any such question have due regard to
the rules of evidence specified in Sch.III Schedule III
contains five rules of which r. 3
runs thus:-
"The fact that a citizen of India has obtained
on any date. a passport from the Government of
any other country shall be conclusive proof of
his having voluntarily acquired the
citizenship of that country before that date."
There can be no dispute that if the order of the Central
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 31
Government determining that the petitioner has voluntarily
acquired the citizenship of Pakisthan after the 26th
January, 1950, is a valid order in accordance, with s. 9(2)
the petitioner has under the provisions of 9(1) of the
Citizenship Act ceased to be a citizen of India and his
petition must accordingly fail. It has been urged before us
however that this determination of the Government has no
legal force inasmuch as it was made on the basis of Rule 3
of Sch. III of the Citizenship Rules, which Rule itself is
invalid.
The principal question canvassed before us is as regerds the
validity of this ’rule-. The main attack against the rule
is that while s. 9(2) empowers the Government to prescribe
rules of evidence,
275
Rule 3 is not a rule of evidence but a rule of substantive
law and is therefore beyond the limits of the powers which
were delegated to the rulemaking authority by the
legislature.
The contention on behalf of the petitioner is that a
distinction must be drawn between a rule of evidence,
properly so called and a rule which though called a rule of
evidence lays down ai rule of substantive law ; and that if
that distinction is borne in mind it becomes clear that r.3
is not a rule of evidence. The other argument is that when
any fact is stated by a rule to be conclusive proof of
another fact, the rule is in effect laying down that the
happening of the first fact will be equivalent in law to the
happening of the other fact and so a party interested to
prove the falsity of such other fact is being prevented from
giving relevant evidence.
Every law has something to do with the function if the State
in securing rights to and imposing liabilities on its
people. While however some of the laws deal primarily with
the ,creation, modification or extinguishment of rights or
liabilities, other laws deal with the further task that then
becomes necessary-of ascertaining how far in any particular
case, such rights or liabilities have come into existence,
or have become, destroyed. For clarity of thought, and
convenience of discussion, the laws falling in the former
class are called substantive laws while those in the second
class are called adjective laws. Adjective laws again have
two branches, one dealing with the procedure of the court ;
and the other (which is also in the strict sense
"procedure") rule of evidence. The distinction between
Substantive law adjective law is well understood in
jurisprudence, thought some amount of confusion has occa-
sionally been caused by some writers losing sight of the
distinction. As early as the beginning of
276
the nineteenth century Bentham criticised in his Rationale
of Judicial Evidence the tendency of many writers to present
rules I of civil law and criminal law as rules of evidence.
"What, there. fore. the lawyers give us, under the
appellation "law of evidence," says Bentham, ,is really, in
a great part’ of it, civil and penal law." Since Bentham’s
time much progress has been made in this matter and many
jurists of eminence have emphasised the distinction between
rules of evidence properly so called and rules which in the
guise of rules of evidence are really rules of substantive
law. Mr. Justice Holmes in this Common Law says-"lf the
Court should rule that certain acts or omissions coupled
with damage were conclusive evidence of negligence unless
explained, it would, in substance and in truth; rule that
such acts or missions were a ground of liability or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 31
prevented a recovery, as the case might be." "It is then
fundamental", says. Professor Thayer, in his -Preliminary
Treatise on Evidence,"’ that not all determinations
admitting or excluding evidence are referable to the law of
evidence. Far the larger part of them are not." "Permitting
a fact", says Professor Wigmore in his Treatise on Evidence,
to become a proposition is not an evidentiary process and
gives the following example : ""An action of battery upon a
plea of not guilty, the defendant offers evidence to prove
that the plaintiff used insulting words to the defendent
before the attack, and this is rejected; here the ruling is
in truth that insults constitute no excuse or no ground for,
mitigation of damages, a rule of substantive law; or
perhaps, that such a defence is. not available upon a plea
,traversing the, battery a rule Of pleading. It is
certainly not a ruling upon a question of evidence ; it is a
ruling that the proposition desired to be prove(] is either
not tenable by, the substantive law, or riot issuable, by
the law of pleading."
277
This reasoning is obviously at the basis of Wigmore’s view
in s. 2492, Vol. IX of the ’Same treatise that rules laying
down conclusive presumptions are really rules substantive
law. "In strictness" says he, "there cannot be such a thing
as a conclusive presumption." Wherever from one fact another
is said to be conclusively presumed in the sense that the
opponent is absolutely precluded from showing by any
evidence that the second fact does not exist., the rule is
really providing that, where the first fact is shown to
exist, the second facts existence is wholly immaterial for
the purpose of the proponent’s case ; and to provide this is
to make a substantive law and not a rule apportioning the
burden of persuading as to certain propositions or varying
the duty of coming forward with evidence."
The same view has been expressed by Prof. Holdsworth in his
History of English Law. At page 139, Vol. IX, of this
history, he, after tracing how presumptions have been
evolved by the Courts or the legislature, proceeds to says:
---" lit this way the law as to presumptions of different
kinds comes to contain a confused and heterogeneous mass of
rules, relating to many different legal topics. In so far
as the courts or the legislature treat these presumptions as
conclusive, they cannot at the present day be regarded as
parts of the law of evidence." They are rather rules of
substantive law." Again at page 143, the learned author
after stating that rebuttable presumptions of law though
belonging primarily to those particular branches of the
substantive law with which they are concerned, are all
connected with that part of the adjective law which is con-
cerned with evidence, observes: "Irrebuttable presumptions
of law, on the other hand, belong at a present day more
properly to the substantive law than to the law of evidence.
But they are
278
rules of substantive law which borrow the terminology and
adopt the guise of that branch of the law of evidence which
is concerned with presumptions; and, historically, they
originate in the period when the law, not having arrived at
the conception of a trial by the examination of the evidence
produced by the contending parties, aimed at obtaining a
conclusive proof which could settle the controversy. It
might therefore be said that these irrebuttable presumptions
have never been part of the law of evidence, in the sense
which we give to the term "’law of evidence" in modern
systems of law."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 31
While both Wigmore and Holdsworth seem to regard all
conclusive presumptions as rules of substantive law, Phipson
in his Law of Evidence says, more guardedly, that many of
such conclusive presumptions are rules of substantive law.
At page 698 of his book the learned author says :"In many
cases these so-called conclusive presumptions are rules
which belong, properly speaking, to the various branches of
substantive law and not to the law of evidence, such as the
presumption that an infant under seven is incapable of
committing a felony, or that all men know the law (i.e.,
that ignorance of the law is no excuse for crime)." He then
gives several instances of matters which are conclusive
presumptions or amount to’ conclusive evidence. either by
statute or common law. But unlike Wigmore and Holdsworth,
he does not say that all rules of conclusive presumptions
are rules of substantive.
The matter has been critically considered again by Sir James
Stephen in his Digest of the Law of evidence. After stating
first (p.xiii) that all law may be divided into substantive
law, by which rights, duties and liabilities are defined,
and the law of procedure, by which the substantive law is
applied to particular cases. Stephen says that the law
279
of evidence is that part of the law of procedure, which,
with a view to ascertain individual rights and liaiblities
in particular cases, decides : (1) what facts may and what
may not be proved in such cases; (ii) what sort of evidence
must be given of a fact which may be proved and (iii) by
whom and in what manner the evidence must be produced by
which any fact is to be proved." Speaking of presumptions,
he says at p.xvii: "Again, I have dealt very shortly with
the whole subject of presumptions. My reason is that they
also appear to me to belong to different branches of the
substantive law, and to be unintelligible, except in
connection with them. Take for instance the presumption
that every one knows the law. The real meaning of this is
that, speaking generally, ignorance of the law is not taken
as an excuse for breaking it. This rule cannot be properly
appreciated if it is treated as a part of the law of
evidence. It belongs to the Criminal Law. In the same way
numerous presumptions as to rights of property (in
particular easements and incorporeal here ditament) belong
not to the law of evidence but to the law of Real Property."
After saying this, the learned author ’proceeds to
distinguish certain conclusive presumptions which in this
opinion, may rightly be considered to form part of the law
of evidence and observes:,,The only presumptions, which in
my opinion, ought to find a place in the law of evidence,
are those which relate to facts merely as -facts, and apart
from the particular rights which they constitute. Thus the
rule, that a man not heard of for seven years is presumed to
be dead, might be equally applicable to a dispute as to the
validity of the marriage, an action of ejectment by a
reversioner against a tenant pur autre vie, the
admissibility of a declaration against interest, and many
other subjects. After careful consideration, I have put a
few presumptions of this kind into a Chapter on the subject,
and have passed over the
280
rest as belonging to different branches of the substantive
law." Rules of conclusive presumptions as regards fact which
may help to constitute rights in different branches of
substantive law may thus, according to Stephen, be
considered as rules of evidence. It is unnecessary for us
to decide for the purposes of the present case whether every
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 31
rule that on fact is conclusive proof of another is a rule
of substantive law. lb is clear however that whenever
question arises to whether a particular rule is one of
substantive law, or of evidence, we have to ask ourselves-
does it seek to create, or extinguish or modify a right or
liability or does it concern itself with the adjective
function of reaching a conclusion as to what has taken place
under the substantive law .In the first case, the rule is a
rule of substantive law ; in the other case, it is a rule of
evidence.
For, a rule of evidence, can be concerned only with the
manner and extent of presentation of facts, for the purpose
of persuading the mind of the Judge or jury or other
Tribunal of the existence or nonexistence of facts on which
substantive rights or liabilities, civil or criminal arise.
It has nothing to do with giving an answer to the question
:-What is the right or a liability which arises on the
happening of a fact ? If a rule, purporting to be a rule of
evidence does in effect give such an answer, it has gone
beyond the scope of the law of evidence and has trenched on
the domain of substantive law.
On behalf of the respondent it was contended that even
though a rule laying down that one fact will be conclusive
proof of another might be said to be a rule of substantive
law if the former fact was wholly irrelevant in persuading a
rational human mind about the existence of the other, the
position is different when the former fact is "relevant" in
the’ sense of having some persuasive value on the mind
according to ordinary process of
281
reasoning. All that happens, it is urged, when such a
"relevant" fact is laid down by a rule to be conclusive
proof of the fact to be proved is that its persuasive value
is stated by law to be hundred per cent though otherwise it
would have been lower percentage. Such a rule according to
the respondents ought to be regarded as a rule of evidence,
just as a rule stating merely that a fact is relevant i.e.
it has some persuasive value, is always regarded as a rule
of evidence. The argument appears to us to be wholly
misconceived Indeed, it appears to be based on a
misunderstanding of what the, law of evidence does. It does
not instruct the Judge as to what value an item has or ought
to have. Its task is, apart from saying on whom the burclon
of proof would lie and the mode in which documents and oral
evidence will be allowed to be presented to the Tribunal, to
select some of the innumerable facts which according to the
ordinary process of reasoning have-some more, some less-an.
effect on the human mind in persuading it of the existence
of other facts, which tend to create, extinguish or modify a
right or a liability-as matters of which evidence will be
allowed to be given. When a rule says that a fact is
relevant for proving a fact in issue, it is merely saying
that the Court will allow evidence to be given of it. When
however the rule goes further and says that this relevant
fact will be conclusive proof of a fact in issue so that a
specified right or liability may arise from it, what is
being done is to directly affect substantive right or
liability and is not providing for evidence only. A rule of
conclusive peresumption made with a view to affect a
specified substantive right is a rule of substantive law as
it is intended to affect substantive right and does not
cease to be so because the conclusive presumption, that is,
conclusive proof of the existence of another fact, is rested
on a fact which is relevant to it. The point is not
relevancy but
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 31
282
whether the rule is intended to affect a specified
substantive right or to provide a method of proof Where the
purpose of a rule of conclusive presumption is that the
Judge should on that basis hold that a specified right or
liability exists, or does not exist, the rule is really
saying that this particular relevant fact will create, or
extinguish or modify the right or liability. The substance
of the matter then is that a rule of conclusive presumption
as to the existence of a certain fact only for establishing
or disestablishing a specified substantive right results in
affecting that right and ceases to be a rule of proof
It was also said that estoppel, which is really a rule of
conclusive presumption, has invariably been treated as a
branch of the law of evidence. Suppose this is so. Does
that prove that all rules of conclusive presumption are
rules of evidence ? We have already said that some may be.
Estoppels may belong to that class. "There is said to be an
estoppel where a party is not allowed to say that a certain
statement of fact is untrue., whether in reality it is true
or not": Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd Edition Vol. XV,
p. 168. It therefore is concerned with a statement of fact
; it is not directed to affect any particular right though
no doubt ultimately all estoppels do affect some rights as
all rules of evidence do. In so far as estoppels, whether
treated as rules of conclusive presumption or not, are not
intended to affect substantive rights, they axe rules of
evidence. Therefore it seems to us that the contention that
estoppel is a rule of evidence does not establish that all
rules of conclusive presumption are rules of evidence.
Let us come now to the impugned rule. It lays down that the
fact that a citizen of India has obtained on any date a
passport from the Government of another country shall be
conclusive proof of his having voluntarily acquired the
citizenship
283
of that country before that date. Section - 9 of the
Citizenship Act (Act No.57 of 1955) provides that any
citizen of India who by naturalisation registration or
otherwise voluntarily acquires or has at any time between
the 26th January, 1950, and the commencement of the Act
voluntarily acquired the citizenship of another country
shall upon such ,acquisition or as the case may be, such
commencement cease to be a citizen of India. This provision
in section 9 is undoubtedly a substantive law laying down
inter alia that the’ fact of voluntary acquisition of,
citizenship of another country by a citizen of India will
extinguish his right of citizenship of India. Under sub
section 2 of section 9 the question whether a person has
acquired citizenship of another country shall be determined,
by a -proscribed authority which shall have regard to pres-
cribed rules of evidence. Ordinarily such rules of evidence
would, as already indicated above, be dealing with the
question of the burden of proof, as to the mode of
presentation of evidence, as to the rights of examination
and cross-examination and would also select some of the
facts which may have a persuasive value as facts of which
evidence can be given. In dealing with the question’ of
burden of proof the rules may also legitimately raise a
rebuttable presumption, from certain facts, of this fact of
voluntary acquisition of citizenship of another country. A
rule raising a rebuttable presumption is clearly a rule of
evidence for its only effect is to shift the onus of proof
and it is not intended to affect nor does it affect any
particular substantive right. In determining the question
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 31
the prescribed authority would then have to consider the
facts which tend to persuade the mind that the person has
voluntarily acquired the citizenship of another country and
also facts which tend to show the other way, provided the
presentation of these is not barred by the prescribed rules
of evidence. What happens when the rule making authority
steps in with the rule that the obtaining of a passport of
284
another country will be conclusive proof of the fact of
voluntary acquisition of citizenship of another country ?
Under s, 9 the fact of voluntary acquisition. of citizenship
of another country results in the extinction of his right as
an Indian citizen. The rule therefore directly affects a
subtantive right and, in the context of s. 9, mast be taken
to have been intended to do so. Such a rule cannot
obviously be a rule of evidence; it is clearly a rule of
substantive law.
Under the law as laid down in the impugned rule the fact of
obtaining a foreign passport will have this result, even
though it may very well be that though he has voluntarily
acquired such a passport he has not thereby, or for that
purpose acquired the citizenship of another country. This
may happen for instance, when a person who is a citizen of
India by reason of descent, but is at the same time a
citizen of another country, says, France by birth, obtains a
passport from the French authorities. Again, each country
is of course free to make its own laws.. Suppose a foreign
country makes a law under which it can issue a passport to
one who is not its national. If an Indian takes such a
passport, he does not under the law of that country become
its national but under the rule now being considered, he is
to be taken as a foreign national. The obtaining of such a
passport in either case cannot under the ordinary process of
reasoning have any value whatsoever to show that he has
voluntarily acquired foreign citizenship. Yet, under the
impugned rule a passport so obtained by an Indian national
will extinguish his right of citizenship of India.’ Clearly,
therefore, the impugned rule is a rule substantive la* as
distinct from a, rule of evidence.
As a last attempt to save the rule it was argued on behalf
of the respondent that it is not really a rule of
irrebuttable -presumption. It is pointed out that r.30(2)
lays down that the central
285
Government shall in determining the’ question whether, when
or how a person has acquired the citizenship of another
country "have due regard to" the rules of evidence specified
in Scheduled III. The effect of the words "’shall have due
regard to’ it is urged, is that the Central Government would
have normally to take these rules into account but was not
strictly bound to do so. Reliance was placed for this
contention on the observations of Viscount Simon in Ryots of
Garabandho v. Zamindar of Parlakimadi(1). That authority
appears to us to be of no avail for the interpretation of
the words "shall have due regard to" in the present case.
The effect of the words -,shall have due regard to" will
necessarily be defferent in different contexts. The present
context is that the deciding authority is directed to have
due regard to a rule that one fact will be conclusive proof
of another. It is idle to contend that in this context the
deciding authority will or can disregard the rule and in the
face of the fact which is said to be conclusive proof of
another hold the other fact not to have been proved.
it is really unnecessary however to consider the effect of
the words "’,shall have due regard to", for as soon as it is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 31
hold that the Rule is void because of its being outside the
powers of the rule-making authority any decision in which
any regard has been paid to the rule becomes void.
The question of validity of Rule 3 of Schedule III of the
Citizenship Act came up for consideration before several
High Courts in India. The High Court of Madras in Mohomed
Usman v. State of Madras (2) and the Rajasthan High Court in
Ghaural Hasan v. State of Rajasthan (3 ) held the Rule to be
valid ; while the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Mohd. Khan
v. Govt. Andhra Pradesh (4) and the Allahabad High Court in
Sharafat Ali Khan v. State of U.P.(5)
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 129. 168.
(2) A.I.R. (1961) Mad. 129.
(3) A.I.R. (1951) Raj. 173.
(4) A.I.R. [1957] Andh. 1047.
(5) A.I.R. [1960] All. 637.
286
held the Rule to be void. For the reasons mentioned earlier
we are of opinion that the view taken by the Andhra High
Court and the Allahabad High Court is correct.
The necessary consequence of our conclusion that r.3, Sch.
III of the Citizenship Rules is void is that the
determination of the Central Government that the petitioner
has voluntarily acquired the citizenship of Pakistan after
the 26th January, 1950 and before the 14th December, 1957,
has no legal validity.
Two other contentions have now to be noticed. First, it is
said that s.9 itself offends the Constitution as it takes
away rights of citizenship. It is sufficient to dispose of
this point to say that, if citizenship is a fundamental
right, as to which doubts may legitimately be entertained,
Art. 11 authorises Parliament to make any provision with
regard to acquisition and termination of citizenship.
Section 9 is thus cleary within this Article. It was next
said that s.9(2) gives unguided power to the Government and
is therefore bad as it really amounts to an abdication of
Parliament’s power of legislation under Art. I 1. We are
unable to see that s.9(2) gives any unguided power. It
first gives the Government the power to provide an authority
to decide’ the question whether a person has acquired
foreign citizenship. This gives really no power of
subordinate legislation but only empower a the Government to
constitute an authority for deciding a question which the
section itself requires, should be decided. So far as the
subsection gives power to frame rules of evidence, we think
there is enough guidance provided. All that the Government
is empowered to do is to frame rules of evidence. Whatever
difficulty there may be in deciding whether a particular
rule is of evidence or not, there is no vagueness about the
power given. It is clear out and limited, for the power is
to make
287
rules of evidence and nothing else. If that power is
exceeded, then, as in our. view has happened in this case,
the exercise of the power becomes bad. The difficulty, if
any, in deciding what is a rule of evidence, cannot make a
power to frame rules of evidence vague or too wide.
For the disposal of the present petitions in the view that
we have taken however, it is necessary that the question
whether the petitioners have acquired foreign nationality
should be considered and determined by the Central
Government in accordance with law. We would therefore
direct the Central Government to decide the question whether
the petitioners have voluntarily acquired the citizenship of
Pakistan after the 26th January, 1950, in accordance with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 31
law, leaving out of account r.3 of Sch. III of,’ the
Citizenship Rules, 1956, and on receipt of the result to the
enquiry we would proceed with the further hearing of these
petitions.
By COURT. In accordance with the decision of the majority,
the petitions fail and are dismissed. There will be no
Order as to costs.
288