Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
B. VISWANATHIAH AND COMPANY AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/02/1991
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
KULDIP SINGH (J)
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (1) 305 1991 SCC (3) 358
JT 1991 (1) 386 1991 SCALE (1)174
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950: Seventh Schedule-List I
Entry 7,52 List II Entry 24/27/List III, Entry 33-
Declaration of ascertain industry to be within the
purview of Parliamentary legislation-Raw materials,
production, and distribution of the products
thereof-Legislation-Competence of State Legislature.
Mysore Silkworm Seed and Cocoon (Regulation of
Production, Supply and Distribution) Act, 1959:
Sections 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10- Enactment of-Competence of
State Legislature in the context of Cent-ral Act-
Whether repugnant to the provisions of Central Silk
Boards Act, 1948.
HEADNOTE:
The Mysore Silkworm Seed and Cocoon (Regulation
of Production, Supply and Distribution) Act, 1959 provided
for the regulation of production, supply and distribution
of silk worm seed and cocoon in the State of Mysore. The
said Act was amended in 1969 and 1979. The 1979
amendments imposed restrictions on the production,
distribution and sale of silk yarn, and were analogous to
the restrictions imposed earlier in respect of silk worm
seeds and cocoons.
The appellants filed Writ Petitions before the High
Court challenging the validity of the provisions of the
Act on several grounds, Including lack of legislative
competence since the Central Silk Boards Act, 1948
has already been passed by the Parliament- The High
Court negatived the contentions and dismissed the Writ
Petitions. The present appeals challenged the correctness
of the said judgment.
The Writ Petitions filed directly in this Court also
challenged the validity of the Provisions of the said Act.
The main contention raised in these matters was that
the Provisions of the Act lack legislative competence
after the enactment by Parliament of the Central Silk
Boards Act, 1948 which contained a declaration
contemplated under Entry 52 of List I in the Seventh
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Schedule to the Constitution of India, taking the Silk
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industry within the purview of Parliamentary legislation.
Dismissing the matters, this Court,
HELD: 1. Legislation in regard to raw materials would
be permissible under Entry 27 of List II, notwithstanding a
declaration of the industry under Entry 52, to be one within
the purview of parliamentary legislation. The process of
manufacture or production can be legislated on by States
under Entry 24 of List II so long as the industry is not a
controlled industry within the meaning of Entry 7 or Entry
52 of List 1. So far as the distribution of the products of
the industry is concerned, the State Legislature would be
quite competent to legislate under Entry 27 of List II.
However, when the industry is also a controlled industry,
legislation in regard to the products of the industry would
be permissible by both the Central and the State
Legislatures by virtue of Entry 33 of List III. [314A-C]
Calcutta Gas Co. (P) Ltd. v. State, [1962] Supp. 3
S.C.R. 1, relied on
2. It is true that the Central Silk Boards Act
purpots to control the raw silk industry in the territory of
India. But the control of the industry vested in Parliament
was only restricted to the aspect of production and
manufacture of silk yarn or silk. It did not obviously take
in the earlier stages of the industry, namely, the supply of
raw materials. Even in regard to the silk industry, the
reeling, production, development and distribution of
silkworm seeds and cocoons was regulated by the Mysore
Silkworm Seed and Cocoon (Regulation of Production, Supply
and Distribution) Act, 1959. These items can perhaps be
legitimately described as the raw materials of the silk
industry. The control being vested in Parliament under
Entry 52, of silk industry, did not affect the
control over the raw materials. That is perhaps the reason
why the industry did not challenge the provisions of the
Act, when it was originally enacted, on the ground that is
now being put forward. The present legislation, as a result
of the amendments, controls the supply and distribution of
the goods produced by the industry. Though the production
and manufacture of raw silk cannot be legislated upon by the
State Legislature in view of the provisions of the Central
Act and the declaration in section 2 thereof, that
declaration and Entry 52 do not in any way limit the powers
of the State Legislature to legislate in respect of the
goods produced by the silk industry. To interpret Entry 52
otherwise would render Entry 33 in List III of the Seventh
Schedule
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to the Constitution otiose and meaningless. In this view
of the matter the limitation contained in Entry 52 does
not affect the validity of the present legislation. [314H;
315A-F]
I.T.C. Ltd. & Ors. v. State of Karnataka & Ors., [1985]
(supp.) S.C.C. 476, distinguished.
3. The State legislation would be quite valid unless
it is repugnant to the provisions of a Central legislation
on the subject. A perusal Of the Central Act makes it clear
that the pith and substance of the legislation is the
constitution of a silk Board for research into the
scientific, technological and economic aspects of the
industry. It does not have anything to do with the aspects
covered by Entry 33 in List III. There is, therefore, no
infirmity in the State Legislation. [315G-H]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2959-60
of 1980.
WITH
Writ Petition Nos. 5548-50 of 1980.
From the Judgment and Order dated 9.9. 1980 of
the Karnataka High Court in W.P. Nos. 20298 of 1979 and
1031 of 1980.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Rajinder Sachhar, H.
Raghavendra Rao and Vineet Kumar for the
Appellants/Petitioners.
M. Veerappa, K.H. Nobin Singh and P.R.
Ramasesh for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. The two appeals and the three
writ petitions challenge the validity of the provisions
of the Mysore Silkworm Seed and Cocoon (Regulation
of Production, Supply and Distributions) Act, 1959
(Act No. 5 of 1960), hereinafter referred to as ’the
impugned Act’. The challenge was repelled by the
Karnataka High Court by its common judgment dated 9.9.
1980 in two writ petitions, which is the subject matter
of appeals. It is perhaps in view of this judgment
that writ petitions no. 5548-5550 of 1980 have been
filed directly in this Court raising a similar contention.
At the outset, it is necessary to clarify two
important points. The first is that the validity of the
Act above mentioned and certain notifications issued
thereunder were challenged in Civil Appeal Nos. 450
and 451 of 1966 and 542 of 1964. These Civil appeals were
disposed of
308
by a judgment of this Court dated 6.1.1967 in State of
Mysore & Ors. v. Hanumiah. By the said judgment this Court
repelled the contentions then put forward. The validity of
certain provisions of the impugned Act had then been
challenged on the footing that the said provisions as well
as the rules made and the notifications issued thereunder
imposed unreasonable restrictions on the fundamental right
of the petitioners to carry on trade or business under
Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. Again, the Mysore
High Court in Mohammed Hussain v. State of Mysore, (W.P. 45
of 1971) and this Court in Syed Ahmed Agha v. State, A. I.
R. 1975 S. C. 1443 were called upon to consider contentions
as to the validity of certain amendments effected by Mysore
Act 29 of 1969 to the impugned Act, in the light of the
provisions of Articles 301 to 304 of the Constitution of
India. The contentions were repelled with the result that
the statutory regulations providing for protection to
readers by the establishment of regulated cocoon markets and
forbidding the sale or purchase of silk worm cocoons except
in such markets were held to be valid. The present
challenge, however, is on different grounds. The contention
now is that certain amendments effected to the impugned Act
by Karnataka Act No. 33 of 1979 have to be struck down as
the State Legislature was not competent to enact the same.
Thus, the contention now addressed is different from those
which were considered by this Court on the earlier
occasions. The second aspect which we wish to clarify at
the outset is that, though several grounds were raised
before the High Court as well as in the writ petitions, the
argument before us was limited to a single contention. This
was that the impugned provisions lack legislative competence
after the enactment, by Parliament, of the Central Silk
Boards Act (Act 61 of 1948), (hereinafter referred to as
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’the Central Act’) which contains a declaration contemplated
under Entry 52 of List I in the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution of India. We shall be addressing ourselves
only to this argument.
Mysore Act 5 of 1960 was passed since it was considered
expedient to consolidate the laws providing for the
regulation of the production, supply and distribution of
silk worm seed and cocoon in the State of Mysore. This Act
contained several restrictions in regard to the production,
supply and distribution of silk worm seed and cocoon.
Basically, sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 of the Act required
a person to obtain a licence for production, sale and
distribution of silkworm seed, for rearing silkworms from
silkworm seed, for possession of silkworm seed, for disposal
of silkworm cocoons for reeling or for reproduction, for
sale or purchase of silkworm cocoons for reeling, and for
carrying on the business of reeling silk worm cocoons.
Section 10 enabled the
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Government to specify the manner of marketing the above
goods, the places at which cocoon markets, cocoon market
yards and cocoon stores could be located, specify the
sericultural areas to be served by each cocoon market,
assign zones and markets in which any licensed buyer could
carry on his business. It also provided that all
transactions involving the sale or purchase of cocoons in a
cocoon market shall be by weight, in open auction and in
cash. The above Act, (and in particular the provisions
contained in Sections 6 and 7), was amended by
the Karnataka Act 29 of 1969. But these amendments
are not relevant for our present purposes. There were
further amendments effected to the Act by Karnataka
Act 33 of 1979. The petitioner is challenging the
amendments carried out by this Act. The principal amendments
carried out were, briefly, these. References to
’Mysore’ were replaced by references to ’Karnataka’. In
the preamble, in addition to the ’silk worm seed’
and ’cocoon’, reference was added to silk yarn’.
Definition of ’silk yarn’ and various categories thereof
were inserted Section 5A was introduced under which
no person could be in possession of silk yarn in excess
of a prescribed quantity unless he is a reeler, a
licensed trader, a twister, a weaver or a person
authorised in writing by the prescribed officer. Section
10A provided for the establishment of silk exchanges
at specified places. It enabled the Government
to appoint for each silk exchange, a silk Market Officer
and also to constitute a marketing committee with the
Market Officer as the Chairman and with representatives
of reelers, twisters and traders for regulating
the conduct of business in the exchange. It also
provided that all transactions involving sale or purchase of
silk yarn in a silk exchange should be by weight, by open
auction and in cash. Section 8A placed certain
restrictions on reelers, twisters and traders after the
establishment of a silk exchange. It prohibits a reeler
or twister from selling or agreeing to sell silk yarn
reeled or twisted by him. It permitted only licensed
traders to purchase or agree to purchase silk yarn
from a reeler or a twister and that too only in a silk
exchange and in accordance with such conditions and
in such manner as may be prescribed. Sub-section
(2) of section 8A provided that no person shall,
except in such silk exchange, use, or permit the use or
assist in the use of any building, room, tent, enclosure,
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vehicle, vessel or place for the sale of silk yarn by
or purchase of silk yarn from a reeler or a twister or
in any manner aid or abet the sale or purchase of silk
yarn. To put it very shortly, the amendments of
1979 imposed on the production, supply, distribution
and sale of silk yarn restrictions in a manner more or
less analogous to those that earlier existed in respect
of silk worm seeds and cocoons.
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The short point made on behalf of the petitioners is
that any legislation in respect of ’silk industry’ can be
enacted only by Parliament and the State Legislature is
incompetent to legislate on this matter. This is because
Section 2 of the Central Silk Board Act, which reads as
follows:
"It is hereby declared that it is expedient in the
public interest that the Union should take under
its control the silk industry."
enacts a declaration in terms of Entry 52. This removes the
’silk industry’ from the purview of the State’s legislative
powers thus rendering the State legislature incompetent to
legislate thereafter on this topic. In this context, it is
emphasised that originally the Central Act and the
declaration in S. 2 had been restricted to ’raw silk
industry’ but, by an amendment of 1953 effective from
25.3.1954, their scope was widened to include the entire
’silk industry’. The long title of the Central Act is that
it is "an Act to provide for the development under Central
control of the silk industry and for that purpose to
establish a Central Silk Board". Under Section 4, the
Central Government is empowered to constitute a Board to be
called the Central Silk Board with a constitution as set out
in sub-section (3). The functions of the Board are set out
in section B, which may be set out:
"(1) It shall be the duty of the Board to promote
the development of the silk industry by such
measures as it thinks fit.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of the
foregoing provision, the measures referred to
therein may provide for-
(a) undertaking, assisting or encouraging
scientific, technological and economic research;
(b) devising means for improved methods of
mulberry cultivation rearing, developing and
distributing healthy silkworm seeds, reeling or,
as the case may be, spinning of silkworm cocoons
and silk waste, improving the quality and
production of raw silk, if necessary, by making it
compulsory for all raw silk to be marketed only
after the same has been tested and graded in
properly equipped raw silk conditioning houses:
311
(c) x x x x x
(d) improving the marketing of raw silk;
(e) the collection of statistics from such
persons as may be prescribed;
(f) carrying out any other duties which may
be vested in the Board under rules made under
this Act."
The Board has also a duty to advise the Central
Government on all matters relating to the
development of the raw silk industry and to
prepare and furnish such reports relating to the
industry as the Central Government may call for from
time to time. Two further provisions of the Central
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Act which need to be referred to are Ss. 10 and
13. S. 10 enables the Central Government to levy and
collect as a cess, a duty of excise on all filature
raw silk and on all spun silk reeled in the
territories of India.
D
Section 13 empowers the Central Government,
by notification, to make rules to carry out the
purposes of this Act. Sub-section (2) specifies
certain enumerated matters in relation to which
rules could be framed but these mostly relate to
the functioning of the Board the only two topics on
which such rules could be framed which may be
relevant purposes are those contained in clause
(xviii), (xix) and (xx) which read as follows:
"(xviii) the collection of any information
or statistics in respect of raw silk or any
product of silk;
(xix) the manner in which raw silk shall
be graded and marketed;
(xx) any other matter which is to be or may be
prescribed.
In the context of these provisions the short
argument which has been pressed before us was dealt
with by the High Court in paragraphs 13 and 14 which
can be conveniently set out:
13. The first question to be examined in
this context is, whether the amending
legislations are beyond the legislative
competence of the State Legislature. It was
urged that silk industry is a controlled
industry declared by Parliament
312
by law to be expedient in the public interest
under Entry 52 of List 1. By section 2 of the
Central Silk Boards Act, 1948. Parliament has
declared that it is expedient in the Public
interest that the Union should take under its
control the silk industry. Again, by Section 2 of
the Industries (Development and Regulation) Act,
1951 Parliament has declared that it is expedient
in the public interest that the Union should take
under its control the industries specified in the
first Schedule to the Act. Item 23(4) of the
first Schedule thereunder specifies "textile
(including those dyed, printed or otherwise
processed) made wholly or part of silk, including
silk yarn and hosiery". Having regard to these
provisions and Entry 52 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule, the State Legislature, as urged for the
petitioners, has no power to enact the impugned
Acts:
14. It seems to us that this argument is bereft of
substance. It is now well settled by a series of
pronouncements of the Supreme Court commencing with
Tika Ramji and Others v. State of Uttar Pradesh and
Others, A.I.R. 1956 S.C. page 676 down to the
decision in Ganga Sagar Corporation Ltd. v. State
of Uttar Pradesh and Others, A.I.R. 1980 S.C. page
286 that merely because an industry is controlled
industry as declared by Parliament under Entry 52
in List I, the State is not deprived of its
legitimate power to legislate within its own sphere
in respect of such industry.
Referring to the scope of Entry 52 of List 1,
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in the context of legislation dealing with
regulation of supply and purchase of sugar cane
required for use in sugar factories. Supreme
Court in Tika Ramji’s, A.I.R. 1956 S.C. page 676,
case observed: [Ibid Note 12 pages 695-6961:
"Industry in the wide sense of the term would
be capable of comprising three different aspects:
(1) raw materials which are an integral part of
the industrial process, (2) the process of
manufacture or production, and (3) the
distribution of the products of the industry. The
raw materials would be goods which would be
comprised in Entry 27 of List 2. The process of
manufacture or production would be comprised in
Entry 24 of List 2 except where the industry was a
controlled industry when it would fall within
Entry 52 of List 1 and the products of the
industry
313
would also be comprised in Entry 27 of List
2 except where they were the products of
the controlled industries when they would
fall within Entry 33 of List 3."
It is clear from the above observations that
it is not all aspects of the industry (that)
fall within the scope of Entry 52 of List 1.
It is only one aspect of the industry, that is,
the process of manufacture or production
that falls under Entry 52 of List 1. It does
not include raw materials used in the
industry or the distribution of the products
of the industry. This view was reaffirmed by
the Supreme Court in Harakchand Ratanchand
Banthia and Others v. Union of India and
Others, A.I.R. 1970 S.C. page 1453, and in
the Kannan Devan Hills Produce Company Ltd.
v. The State Of Kerala, A.I.R. 1972 S.C.
2301 and Ganga Sugar Corporation Ltd. v.
The State of Uttar Pradesh, A.I.R. 1980 S.C.
286. The question that arose in those cases
was the scope and effect of Entry 52 of List I in
relation to Entries 24 and 27 of List 11 and
Entry 33 of List III. The effect of these
decisions is that though expressions in
legislative entries refer to broad topics and
fields of legislation and require a liberal
construction, and though the particular
expression ’industries’ in Entry 52 of List I in
its wide sense may comprise many aspects,
however, having regard to the scope of other
entries in the other lists, the ambit of Entry 52
of List I should be limited and confined
only to the ’process of manufacture or
production of an industry.’ The impugned
legislations do not fall into this category and
we, therefore, reject the contention urged for the
petitioners."
It will at once be seen that the point raised by
the petitioners/ appellants has been repelled by the High
Court on the basis of a series of decisions of this
Court regarding scope of Entry 52 of List I in the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. The High Court
has pointed out that when Entry 52 talks of control
of industry it does not mean all aspects of the
industry in question. An industry comprises of
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3 important aspects
(i) raw materials
(ii) the process of manufacture or production; and
(iii)the distribution of the products of the industry.
314
Legislation in regard to raw materials would be permissible
under Entry 27 of List 2, notwithstanding a declaration of
the industry under Entry 52 to be one within the purview of
parliamentary legislation. The process of manufacture or
production can be legislated on by States under Entry 24 of
List 2 so long as the industry is not a controlled industry
within the meaning of Entry 7 or Entry 52 of List I. So far
as the third aspect viz. the distribution of the products of
the industry are concerned, the State Legislature would be
quite competent to legislate thereto in regard thereto under
Entry 27 of List II. However, when the industry is also a
controlled industry legislation in regard to the products of
the industry would be permissible by both the Central and
the State Legislatures by virtue of Entry 33 of List 3. This
in short is the decision of the High Court based, as already
pointed out on a series of decisions of this Court.
Observations by this Court to a like effect in Calcutta Gas
Co. (P) Ltd. v. State, [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 1 may also be
seen. We entirely agree with this view.
On behalf of the appellants/petitioners, Shri Soli
Sorabji contended that the validity of the enactment has now
to be tested in the light of the decision of this Court in
I.T.C. Ltd. & Ors. v. State of Karnataka & Ors., [19851
Supp. S.C.C. 476, where in, in a similar context, a State
legislation was held to be ultra vires. He also brings to
our notice that the correctness of this decision has been
doubted by a Bench of this Court and the matter has been
referred to a larger Bench and is pending consideration by
such a larger Bench. He, therefore, submits that we should
either hold following the above decision, that the State
legislation in this case is also incompetent or we should
refer this matter also to a larger Bench.
We are of the opinion that it is unnecessary, for the
purposes of the present case, to consider the contentions
raised in the I. T. C. case (supra). That was a case in
which the State enactment was held to be competent by the
High Court on the narrow ground that the central legislation
covered only virginia tobacco and did not deal with the
industry in so far as it related to other varieties of
tobacco. On a consideration of the provision of the Act,
this Court came to the conclusion that this interpretation
of the Act was not correct and that the central legislation
did purport to regulate and control ’the entire tobacco
industry. In the light of this conclusion the court
declared the State law to be incompetent, having regard to
the provisions of Entry 52 of List I and the declaration in
the Indian Tobacco Act under that provision. In the present
case, however, the matter is on a totally different footing.
It is true that the Central Silk Board Act purports to
315
control the raw silk industry in the territory of India.
But, as pointed out by the High Court in the light of the
earlier decisions of this Court therein referred to the
control of the industry vested in Parliament was only
restricted to the aspect of production and manufacture of
silk yarn or silk. It did not obviously take in the earlier
stages of the industry, namely, the supply of raw materials.
For instance, as already pointed out, even in regard to
the silk industry, the reeling, production,
development and distribution of silkworm seeds and
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cocoons was regulated by Act 5 of 1960. These items
can be perhaps legitimately described as the raw
materials of the silk industry. The control being
vested in Parliament under Entry 52 of silk industry
did not in view of the earlier ruling of this Court
affect the control over these raw materials. This is
perhaps the reason why the industry did not
challenge the provisions of the 1959 Act, when it
was originally enacted, on the ground that is now
being put forward. The present legislation, as a
result of the amendments, controls the supply and
distribution of the goods produced by the industry.
As rightly pointed out by the High Court this is
the third aspect of the industry which falls outside
the purview of the control postulated under Entry
52. In other words, though the production and
manufacture of raw silk cannot be legislated
upon by the State Legislature in view of the
provisions of the Central Act and the declaration in
section 2 thereof, that declaration and Entry 52 do
not in any way limit the powers of the State
Legislature to legislate in respect of the goods
produced by the silk industry To interpret Entry 52
otherwise would render Entry 33 in List 3 of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution otiose and
meaningless. In this view of the matter the
limitation contained in Entry 52 does not affect the
validity of the present legislation. This is an aspect
which was not touched upon and which did not arise
in the Indian tobacco case. There both the Central
Act and the State Act purported to legislate in
regard to the industry, namely, in regard to
the production and manufacture of tobacco.
In view of our conclusion above, the State legislation
would be quite valid unless it is repugnant to the
provisions of a Central legislation on the subject. A
persual of the Central Act makes it clear that the pith and
substance of the legislation is the constitution of a silk
Board for research into the scientific, technological and
economic aspects of the industry. It does not have anything
to do with the aspects covered by entry 33 in List III.
There is, therefore, no infirmity in the legislation under
consideration.
316
In this view of the matter, we agree with the
conclusion reached by the High Court. As this is the only
point that was argued before us we dismiss the appeals and
writ petitions but make no orders regarding costs.
G.N. Appeals and Petitions dismissed.
317