Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JETHA NAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE HON’BLE JUDGES OF THE PUNJAB HIGH COURT
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/12/1961
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1962 AIR 742 1962 SCR Supl. (1) 961
ACT:
Advocate on the roll of Sind High Court-Sind
ceases to form part of India-If right to practice
in courts of India continue-India (Adaptation of
Existing Indian Laws) Order, 1947, s. 5-The Indian
Bar Councils Act, 1926 [38 of 1926], s. 14.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant J who was enrolled as an
advocate in the Chief Court of Sind in May 1947
came to India at the end of the year 1948, and
practiced in the Courts at Delhi. The Chief
Justice of Punjab High Court prohibited the
appellant from practicing as an advocate in the
Courts of Delhi. At
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the time the appellant was enrolled he was an
advocate for the purposes of the Indian Bar
Councils Act, 1926, and so was entitled as of
right to practice in any subordinate courts in
what then was British India.
The question was whether this right continued
to exist, after Sind ceased to form a part of
India.
^
Held, that the Chief Court of Sind which was
a High Court for the purposes of Indian Bar
Councils Act. 1926, upto August 14, 1947, ceased
to exist as a High Court for the purposes of the
Indian Bar Councils Act, with effect from August
15, 1947, by virtue of s. 5 of the India
(Adaptation of Existing Indian Law) Order, 1947.
The necessary consequence of this was that the
Roll maintained by the Chief Court of Sind was
from August 15, 1947, no longer a roll maintained
by a High Court within the meaning of the Indian
Bar Councils Act, 1926, and any person whose name
was entered on the Roll of the Chief Court of Sind
ceased to be an advocate for the purposes of s. 14
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of the Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926, and
therefore ceased to have the right under that
section to practice in courts of India.
In the present case even though the appellant
had a right on August 14, 1947, to practice in the
courts subordinate to any High Court in India,
such a right ceased to exist after the India
(Adaptation of Existing Indian Laws) Order, 1947.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 490 of 1860.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated October 6, 1958, of the Punjab High
Court in Civil Misc. No. 28 of 1958(File ’A’).
Mohan Behari Lal, for the appellant.
N. S. Bindra and P. D. Menon, for the
respondent No. 1.
Radhey Lal Agarwal and V.N. Sethi, for
respondent No.2.
1961. December 5. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
DAS GUPTA, J.-The appellant, Jetha Nand
(Betab) was enrolled as an Advocate in the Chief
Court of Sind on May 14, 1947. He came away to
India at the end of the year 1948 and practised in
the courts at Delhi. On October 8, 1956 an order
was passed by the Chief Justice of the Punjab High
Court prohibiting the appellant from practising as
an
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Advocate in the courts at Delhi. On November 8,
1956 the appellant presented an application to the
High Court in which he contended that by virtue of
his having been enrolled as an Advocate in the
Chief Court of Sind he was entitled to practice in
all the subordinate courts within the territory of
India. This petition was however rejected by a
Full Bench of the Punjab High Court on the view
that the appellant could not after the partition
of India be considered to be an Advocate enrolled
under the provisions of the Bar Councils Act.
Against this order the present appeal has been
preferred on special leave granted by this Court.
The petitioner’s case is that as immediately
before the partition of India he was entitled to
practise in any court in British India his right
to practise in those Courts continued to exist
even when on partition of India, "British India"
ceased to exist and provinces of India took their
place; and when thereafter on the formation of the
Indian Union under the Constitution these
provinces became States of India but those same
courts continued, his right to practise in those
courts also continued.
On behalf of the respondents it is contended
that the petitioner’s right to practise in courts
which were not under the Chief Court of Sind
ceased as soon as Sind ceased to form part of
India and the Chief Court of Sind ceased to be a
High Court in India.
As the appellant bases his claim on s. 14 (1)
(b) of the Indian Bar Councils Act, it is
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necessary to examine first the scheme of that Act.
This Act was passed to provide for the
constitution and incorporation of Bar Councils for
certain courts in British India, to confer powers
and impose duties on such Bar Councils and to
amend the law relating to legal practitioners
entitled to practise in the courts. It extended to
the whole of British
964
India but was in the first instance made
applicable to only certain named High Courts-the
High Court at Calcutta, and the High Courts at
Madras, Bombay, Allahabad, Patna and Rangoon. It
was also provided (s. 1, sub-s.2) that the Act
shall apply to such other High Court within the
meaning of cl. 24 of s. 3 of the General Clauses
Act, 1897 as the Governor-General in Council may,
by notification in the Gazette declare to be High
Courts to which this Act applies. Sections 2,17,
18 and 19 were to come into force at once; but as
regards the other provisions it was enacted that
they could come into force in respect of any High
Court to which the Act applied on such date as the
Governor-General in Council might by notification
direct. Section 2 defined Advocate as "an
advocate" entered in the roll of advocates of a
High Court under the provisions of this Act and
"High Court" as "a High Court to which this Act
applies". Sections 3, 4 and 5 deal with the
constitution and incorporation of Bar Councils.
Section 8 makes it the duty of every High Court to
prepare and maintain a roll of advocates of the
High Court and also provides that no person shall
be entitled as of right to practise in any High
Court unless his name is entered in the roll of
the advocates of the High Court. Section 10
empowers the High Court to reprimand, suspend or
remove from practice any advocate of the High
Court whom it finds guilty of professional and
other misconduct. The manner in which such action
can be taken is dealt with in ss. 10, 11, 12 and
13. Of these, s. 12 provides inter alia that when
any advocate is reprimanded or suspended under
this Act a record of the punishment shall be
entered against his name in the roll of the
Advocates of the High Court and when an Advocate
is removed from Practice his name shall forthwith
be struck of the roll. Section 14 provides inter
alia that an advocate shall be entitled as of
right to practise in any other Court in British
India.
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It is not disputed before us that the
Governor-General by notification in the Gazette of
India did declare the Chief Court of Sind to be a
High Court to which this Act applied and that by
another notification he also directed that all the
provisions of the Act would come into force in
respect of the Chief Court of Sind on some date
long before 1947. Consequently, even though these
notifications have not been placed before us we
must proceed on the bases that on May 14, 1947,
when the appellant was enrolled as an advocate in
the Chief Court of Sind he was an advocate for the
purposes of the Indian Bar Councils Act and so was
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entitled as of right to practise in any
subordinate courts in what then was British India.
The question is whether this right continued to
exist after Sind ceased to form a part of India.
It appears to us clear that when s. 2 defines
advocate as "an advocate entered in the roll of
advocates of High Court", it means an advocate who
has been entered in such roll of advocates and
whose name continues to be on that roll. When, for
example, the name of the advocate is removed from
the roll under s. 12 (7) he ceases to be an
advocate within the meaning of s. 14 in spite of
the fact that his name was once entered in that
roll. An advocate entered in the roll of advocates
can therefore mean only one whose name continues
to be entered in that roll. What is the position
if the High Court ceases to exist, by reason of
abolition or otherwise ? The only possible answer
to this question is that if the High Court ceases
to exist; the roll which used to be maintained by
it has also no legal existence and consequently a
person whose name was in that roll, is no longer
an advocate within the meaning of s. 14 or any
other section of the Act.
That appears to be exactly the position in
the present case. The Chief Court of Sind was a
High Court within the meaning of ss. 3 to 19 of
the Indian Bar Councils Act by reason of the
notification made by the Governor-General in
Council under s. 1 sub-s. 2 of the Act. It would
be absurd
966
to think that when Sind ceased to form part of
India the Chief Court of Sind still continued to
be a High Court for the purposes of Indian law.
All doubts in the matter have however been set at
rest by the provisions of the Indian (Adaptation
of Existing Indian Laws) Order, 1947. In this
connection it is necessary to recall s. 18 sub-s.
18 sub-s. 3 of the Indian Independence Act which
provides that the law of British India and of the
several parts thereof existing immediately before
the appointed day shall, so far as applicable and
with the necessary adaptations, continue as the
law of each of the new Dominions and the several
parts thereof until other provision is made by
laws of the Legislature of the Dominion in
question or by any other legislature or other
authority having power in that behalf. Many
adaptations were in fact found necessary to remove
complications and confusions which might otherwise
have arisen. Of the several adaptation orders made
we are concerned here with the Adaptation Order
No.16 which was called the India (Adaptation of
Existing Indian laws) Order, 1947. In this Order,
the appointed dated was defined as August 15,
1947. Section 5 of the Order is in these words :-
"Any reference in an existing Indian law
to a High Court which as from the appointed
day ceases to be a High Court for any part of
the Dominion of India, shall
(a) if the reference be to the High
Court of Judicature at Lahore, be
replaced by a reference to the High
Court of East Punjab, and
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(b) in any other case, be omitted."
The Chief Court of Sind (a High Court within the
meaning of the General Clauses Act) having ceased
as from August 15, 1947 to be a High Court for any
part of the Dominion of India references to that
Court as one to which the Act applied must be
omitted in the application of the Indian Bar
967
Councils Act, 1926 after that date. In other
words, the Chief Court of Sind which was a High
Court for the purposes of the Indian Bar Councils
Act, 1926 up to the August 14, 1947 ceased to
exist as a High Court for the purposes of the
Indian Bar Councils Act with effect from the 15th
day of August, 1947. The necessary consequence of
this is that the roll maintained by the Chief
Court of Sind was from August 15, 1947 no longer a
roll maintained by a High Court within the meaning
of the Indian Bar Councils Act and thus any person
whose name was entered on the roll of the Chief
Court of Sind ceased to be an advocate for the
purpose of s. 14 of the Indian Bar Councils Act,
1926 and therefore ceased to have the right under
that section to practise in courts in India.
There can be no doubt whatsoever that in
making this adaptation in s. 5 of the India
(Adaptation of Existing Indian Laws) Order, 1947
the intention of the authority making the order
was not only to ensure that rights will not in
future accrue on the basis of a High Court now in
Pakistan having been formerly a High Court in
India but also to prevent the future exercise of
any right that may have become vested in any
person on such a High Court having been a High
Court in India. This conclusion is inevitable from
the absence of any saving clause in the Adaptation
Order. Thus, even though the appellant had a right
on the 14th August, 1947 to practise in the courts
subordinate to any High Court in India such a
right ceased to exist after the Adaptation Order
mentioned above.
We need merely add that if the appellant’s
contention was correct, the anomalous position
would have arisen that there would be no court in
India which could take disciplinary action against
him, in the event of misconduct. The scheme of the
Bar Councils Act is as has been emphasised
968
earlier, that each High Court in the country
should have disciplinary jurisdiction over the
Advocates on its rolls. The provisions of the
Adaptation order have maintained this position.
In our opinion, the High Court rightly
rejected the appellant’s application. The appeal
is accordingly dismissed.
In the circumstances of the case we make no
order as to costs. But the appellant who has filed
the appeal as a pauper is directed to pay the
court-fees which would have been paid by him if he
had not been permitted to appeal as a paper.
Appeal dismissed.