Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGAT RAM SHARMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/11/1987
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
RAY, B.C. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 740 1988 SCR (1)1034
1988 SCC Supl. 30 JT 1987 (4) 476
1987 SCALE (2)1097
ACT:
Claim for pension-Under Regulation 8(3) of the Punjab
State Public Service Commission (Conditions of Service)
Regulations, 1958 and proviso to sub-section (1) of section
6B of the Himachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly (Allowances
& Pension of Members) Act, 1971.
HELD:
%
The appellant was elected from the Kangra district West
General Constituency, as a member of the Punjab Legislative
Assembly in the elections held in 1937 and 1946. By virtue
of section 5 of the Punjab (Provincial Legislature) Order,
1947, he became a member of the Join Panjab Legislative
Assembly. He continued to be a member of the Joint Punjab
Legislative Assembly as he had contested election again
after the Assembly was dissolved in June, 1951. On January
3, 1953, he was appointed a member of the Punjab State
Public Service Commission and retired as such on January 2,
1959.
The district of Kangra was transferred to the new State
of Punjab formed under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956,
w.e.f.November 1, 1956. Thereafter, the Kangra district was
added to the Union Territory of Himachal Pradesh w.e.f.
November 1, 1966. Himachal Pradesh was established as a
State w.e.f. January 25, 1971, and the Kangra West General
Constituency from which the appellant had been elected all
along, stood transferred to the State of Himachal Pradesh,
and he was deemed to have been elected to the Legislative
Assembly of Himachal Pradesh-under the provisions of the
State of Himachal Pradesh Act, 1970.
The appellant made representations both to the Chief
Ministers of Punjab and Himachal Pradesh for the grant of
pensionary benefits to him either as a member of the Punjab
State Public Service Commission or as a member of the State
Legislative Assembly. The State Government of Punjab replied
that the appellant could not be granted pension as a retired
member of the Punjab State Public Service Commission. The
State government of Himachal Pradesh replied that the
appellant was not eligible to pension under the provisions
of the State of Himachal Pradesh Act.
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1035
The appellant then moved the High Court of Punjab and
Haryana for relief by a Writ Petition. The High Court partly
allowed the writ petition and ordained the State government
of Punjab to pay a monthly pension (of Rs.400 to the
appellant as a retired member of the Punjab State Public
Service Commission, under Regulation 8(3) of the Punjab
State Public Service Commission (conditions of service)
Regulations, 1958, with effect from August 10,1972-the date
when the said provision was introduced. The appellant’s
claim for pension w.e.f. January 2, 1959-the date of his
retirement-was disallowed. His claim for pension as a member
of the State Assembly under the provisions of the Himachal
Pradesh Legislative Assembly (Allowances and Pension of
Members) Act, 1971, was also disallowed on the ground that
no part of the cause of action against the State of Himachal
Pradesh arose within the territorial jurisdiction of the
High Court of Punjab & Haryana under Article 226 of the
Constitution. The appellant appealed to this Court by
Special Leave against the order of the High Court.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: 1. It is extremely doubtful whether the appellant
can claim pension as a member of the State Legislative
Assembly from the State of Punjab in view of the
constitutional changes brought about. The Kangra West
General Constituency from which the appellant was elected to
the Punjab Legislative Assembly and later to the Joint
Punjab Legislative Assembly, is by reason of sub-section (2)
of Section 10 of the State of Himachal Pradesh Act, 1970,
deemed to be a constituency of the Legislative Assembly of
the State of Himachal Pradesh. The liability to pay pension
to a member of the State Legislative Assembly elected from a
constituency which now forms part of the Legislative
Assembly of the Himachal Pradesh, cannot possibly be saddled
on the State of Punjab.[1043D-F]
2. As regards the liability of the State of Himachal
Pradesh to pay pension to the appellant under section 6B
(1), read with the second proviso, of the Himachal Pradesh
Act, the High Court has rightly declined to grant relief as
no part of the cause of action arose within its territorial
jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution; the
Himachal Pradesh Act is operative within the territories of
the State of Himachal Pradesh. No interference with the
judgment of the High Court, dismissing the Writ Petition
against the State of Himachal Pradesh is called for. [1043F-
G]
3. The claim of the appellant that he was entitled to
pension, as a
1036
retired member of the Public Service Commission, from
January 2, 1959-the date of his superannuation-and not
August 10, 1972-the date when Regulation 8(3) of the Punjab
State Public Service Commission (Conditions of Service)
Regulations, was introduced, cannot be accepted. [1044G-H]
OBSERVATION: The appellant clearly answers the
description of a Member as defined in section 2(c) of the
State of Himachal Pradesh Act. Admittedly, he had
continuously been a Member of the State Legislative
Assembly, representing the Kangra West General Constituency
from the year 1937 to January 2, 1953, on which date he
resigned his membership from the Joint Punjab Legislative
Assembly to assume the office of a Member of the Punjab
State Public Service Commission. Thus, the appellant had
been a member of the State Legislative Assembly for a period
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of about 16 years, and his case appears to be covered by
section 6B (1)(a) and (e) of the State of Himachal Pradesh
Act, read with its second proviso. There is no provision in
the Himachal Pradesh Act which disentitles a member to the
benefit of the period during which he was a member of the
State Legislative Assembly prior to the partition of the
country. In accordance with the view taken by this Court in
D.S. Nakara & Ors. v. Union of India, [1983] 2 SCR 165-the
appellant would prima facie be entitled to the benefit of
section 6B (1) read with the second proviso of the Himachal
Pradesh Act. In view of this position, the appellant is at
liberty to move the State Government of Himachal Pradesh
afresh for the grant of pension under section 6B(1) of the
Himachal Pradesh Act, read with the second proviso, failing
which, he may file a petition in the Himachal Pradesh High
Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution for the grant of
appropriate writ or direction. [1044B-F]
The State of Maharashtra v. The Central Provinces
Manganese Ore Co. Ltd., [1977] 1 SCR 1002; Firm A.T.B.
Mehtab Majid & Co. v. State of Madras, [1963] Suppl. 2 SCR
435; Koteshwar Vittal Kamath v. K. Rangappa Balica & Co.,
[1969] 3 SCR 40, and Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd
Edition, vol 36,p. 474, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3006 of
1987.
From the Judgment and Order dated 31.5.1984 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in C.W.P. No. 5440 of 1982.
M.R. Sharma, R.S. Yadav and H.M. Singh for the
Appellant.
1037
R.S. Sodhi, for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J. This appeal by special leave directed against
the judgment and order of the Punjab & Haryana High Court
dated May 31, 1984, raises a question of some importance. By
the judgment, a learned Single Judge (Tiwana, J.) party
allowed the writ petition filed by the appellant and
ordained the State Government of Punjab to pay a pension of
Rs.400 per mensem to the appellant as a retired Member of
the Punjab State Public Service Commission under Regulation
8(3) of the Punjab State Public Service Commission
(Conditions of Service) Regulations, 1958 w.e.f. August 10,
1972, the date when the said provision was first introduced.
While disallowing his claim for payment of such pension from
January 2, 1959 i.e. from the date of his retirement, the
learned Single Judge disallowed the appellant’s claim for
pension as a Member of the State Legislative Assembly under
the proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 6B of the Himachal Pradesh
Legislative Assembly (Allowances & Pension of Members) Act,
1971 on the ground that no part of the cause of action
against the State of Himachal Pradesh arose within the
territorial jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 of
the Constitution.
The facts. The appellant herein Bhagat Ram Sharma, has
had a very distinguished record of public service. In 1937,
he was enrolled as an Advocate at Dharamshala and in that
year he contested the general elections to the Punjab
Legislative Assembly as an independent candidate from the
Kangra West General Constituency. He was returned
successfully and later joined the Indian National Congress.
After the outbreak of the second world war, the Assembly had
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a longer life than its normal tenure and it was not till
1946 that fresh elections were held. The appellant contested
the election from the same constituency and was again
returned as the successful candidate to the newly-elected
Assembly. Before the expiry of the normal terms of that
Assembly the partition of the country having taken place,
the appellant by virtue of s. 5 of the Punjab (Provincial
Legislatures) Order, 1947 issued under s. 9 of the India
Independence Act, 1947, became a Member of the Joint Punjab
Legislative Assembly. On July 17, 1948 the appellant was
appointed to be Parliamentary Secretary. This Assembly was
dissolved on June 19, 1951 and reconstituted on May 3, 1952.
Prior to its dissolution, the appellant resigned from the
post of Parliamentary Secretary on March, 29, 1951 and
contested elections to the reconstituted Assembly and was
elected as a Member.
1038
He continued to be a Member of the Joint Punjab Legislative
Assembly till January 2, 1953 when, according to him, he
resigned the Membership of the Assembly as directed by the
Congress High Command to become a Member of the Punjab State
Public Service Commission w.e.f. January 3, 1953. He
continued to be such Member of the Public Service Commission
for a period of six years i.e. till January 2, 1959,the date
of his superannuation.
As from the appointed day under the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956 i.e. November 1, 1956, the district
of Kangra was transferred to the new State of Punjab. By
virtue of cl.(a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 5 of the Punjab
Reorganisation Act, 1966, on and from the appointed day i.e.
November 1, 1966, the district of Kangra was added to the
Union Territory of Himachal Pradesh. The State of Himachal
Pradesh was established under the State of Himachal Pradesh
Act, 1970 w.e.f. January 25, 1971, the appointed day. Sub-s.
(2) of s. 10 of the Act provides that the territorial
constituencies of the existing Union Territory of Himachal
Pradesh shall be deemed to be the constituencies of the
Legislative Assembly of the State of Himachal Pradesh. Sub-
s. (3) thereof provides that every sitting Member of the
Legislative Assembly of the existing Union Territory of
Himachal Pradesh representing a territorial constituency
which, on the appointed day, by virtue of the provisions of
sub-s. (2), becomes a constituency of the State of Himachal
Pradesh, shall be deemed to have been elected under Art. 170
to the Legislative Assembly of State of Himachal Pradesh
from that constituency. As a result of these constitutional
changes, the Kangra West General Constituency is a
constituency of the Legislative Assembly of the State of
Himachal Pradesh.
At the time when the appellant was elected to the
Punjab Legislative Assembly from the Kangra West General
Constituency in the year 1937, no monthly allowance or
pension was payable to the Members of the Legislative
Assembly. Similarly, when the appellant was appointed to be
a Member of the Punjab State Public Service Commission,
there was no provision for grant of pension to a Member of
the Public Service Commission, who at the date of his
appointment was not in the service of the Central or a State
Government. However, with the passage of time, two important
changes were brought about with respect to pensionary
benefits. The Himachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly
(Allowances & Pension of Members) Act, 1971 (’Himachal
Pradesh Act’ for short) was brought into force w.e.f.
January 25, 1971. The expression ’Member’is defined in s.
2(c) to mean a member of the Assembly, other than a
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Minister, Deputy Minister, Speaker or Deputy
1039
Speaker. Section 6B was inserted by the Himachal Pradesh
Legislative Assembly (Allowances of Members) (Amendment)
Act, 1976 and consequential changes were brought about. The
Act was first intituled as the Himachal Pradesh Legislative
Assembly (Allowances of Members) Act, 1971 and with the
amendment of 1976, was changed to the Himachal Pradesh
Legislative Assembly (Allowances & Pension of Members) Act,
1971 by introduction of the words ’allowances and pension’.
Sub-s. (1) of s. 6B of the Act, insofar as relevant,
provides:
"6B. Pension. (1) There shall be paid a pension of
Rs.300 per mensem to every person who has served
for a period of not less than five years whether
continuous or not as-
(a) a member of Assembly; or
(e)partly as a member of the Assembly and partly
as a member of the Legislative Assembly
...............of the erstwhile State of Punjab,
as the case may be;"
The second proviso reads:
"Provided further that where any person has served
as aforesaid for a period exceeding five years,
there shall be paid to him an additional pension
of Rs. 50 per mensem for every year in excess of
five, so, however, that in no case the pension
payable to such person shall exceed Rs.500 per
mensem."
Similarly, the Punjab Legislative Assembly enacted the
Punjab State Legislature Members (Pension & Medical
Facilities Regulation) Act, 1977 to provide for pension and
medical facilities to persons who had been Members of the
Punjab Legislative Assembly. The expression ’member’ as
defined in s. 2 of the Act unless the context otherwise
requires, means a person who, after the commencement of the
Constitution of India, has been a Member of (i) the Punjab
Legislative Assembly; or (ii) the Punjab Legislative
Council; or (iii) the Legislative Assembly of the erstwhile
State of Patiala and East Punjab States Union; or (iv)
partly as a Member of one and partly as a Member of the
other. It would be seen that in the corresponding definition
of ’member’ in s. 2(c) of the Himachal Pradesh Act, the
words ’after the commencement of the Constitution of
India’are not there.But that
1040
should not make any difference in principle as to the
liability of the State of Punjab under s. 3(1) of the Act,
if at all applicable. Section 3(1) reads as follows:
"3.(1) From the date of commencement of this Act,
there shall be paid to every person who has served
as a member for a period of five years, whether
continuous or not, a pension of three hundred
rupees per mensem:
Provided that where any person has served as
aforesaid for a period exceeding five years, there
shall be paid to him an additional pension of
fifty rupees per mensem for every year in excess
of five, so, however, that in no case pension
payable to such person shall exceed five hundred
rupees per mensem."
After the conclusion of the hearing, we find that the
amount of pension payable to a Member of the State
Legislative Assembly has been increased both in the State of
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Himachal Pradesh as well as in the State of Punjab. By the
Himachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly (Allowances & Pension
of Members) (Amendment) Act, 1986, the minimum pension as
provided by s. 6B has been raised to Rs. 500 and the maximum
pension as specified in the second proviso thereto from Rs.
500 to Rs. 1000. The Punjab Legislative Assembly has enacted
the Punjab State Legislature Members (Pension and Medical
Facilities Regulation) (Amendment) Act, 1986 and by a new
sub-s. (1B) the pension of Rs. 300 as specified in s. 3(1),
has been enhanced to Rs. 500 and the maximum pension of Rs.
500 as specified in the proviso, enhanced to Rs. 1000.
There was also a change in the Punjab State Public
Service Commission (Conditions of Service) Regulations, 1958
which were brought on the statute book on March 10, 1958.
But the Regulations by a deeming clause in Regulation 1(2)
were brought into force w.e.f. November 1, 1956. To begin
with, pensionary benefits were conferred by Regulation 8(1)
upon a Member who at the date of his appointment was in the
service of the Central or a State Government. Later on, it
was realised that a person who was not in Government service
on the date of his appointment as such Member should also be
extended the pensionary benefits. To achieve this end, the
Regulations were amended by an order dated August 10, 1972
issued by the Governor of Punjab in exercise of the powers
under Art. 318 of the Constitution and all other powers
enabling him in that behalf. Clauses (2) and (3) of
1041
the Punjab State Public Service Commission (Conditions of
Service) (First Amendment) Regulations, 1972 were in these
terms:
"(2) In the Punjab State Public Service
Commission (Conditions of Service)
Regulations, 1958 (hereinafter referred to as
the said regulations), for regulation 8, the
following regulation shall be substituted,
namely:-
8(1) In the case of Member who at the date of
his appointment was in the service of the
Central or a State Government, service as
Member shall count for pension under the
rules applicable to the Service to which such
Member belonged ............"
"3(i). A Member, who at the date of his
appointment as such was not in the service of the
Central or a State Government shall, on his
ceasing to hold office as such Member, be paid a
pension of four hundred rupees per month;
Provided that no such pension shall be payable to
a Member:
(a) unless he has completed not less than
three years of service for pension as such
Member; or
’’
It appears that the appellant made representations both
to the Chief Minister of Punjab as well as to the Chief
Minister of Himachal Pradesh in the matter of grant of
pensionary benefits to him either as a Member of the State
Legislative Assembly or as a Member of the Punjab State
Public Service Commission, but in vain. The State Government
of Punjab by letter dated August 30, 1982 regretted that the
appellant could not be granted pension as a retired Member
of the Punjab State Public Service Commission on the basis
of Regulation 8(3) introduced by way of amendment on August
10, 1972 i.e. long after he had ceased to hold office as
such Member. It was pointed out that the amendment made in
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1972 was not given any retrospective effect. The State
Government of Himachal Pradesh by letter of the Secretary to
the Himachal Pradesh Vidhan Sabha dated October 26, 1982
intimated the decision of the State Government that he was
not
1042
eligible to the grant of pension under s. 6B of the Himachal
Pradesh Act. For the redressal of his grievances, the
appellant approached the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
As already adumbrated, the learned Single Judge has
partly allowed the writ petition directing the State
Government of Punjab to pay a pension of Rs.400 per mensem
to the appellant w.e.f. August 10, 1972 i.e. the date on
which Regulation 8(3) was brought into force. He however
repelled his claim for payment of such pension as such
Member from January 2, 1959, the date of his retirement, on
the ground that in the absence of any provision giving to it
a retrospective effect, Regulation 8(3) merely because it
had been ’substituted’ could not be treated to relate back
to the appointed day i.e. November 1, 1956. He also declined
to grant any relief against the State of Himachal Pradesh
based upon s. 6B of the Himachal Pradesh Act on the ground
that no part of the cause of action arose within the
territorial jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 of
the Constitution. Hence this appeal by special leave.
During the course of the arguments, learned counsel for
the appellant was fair enough to accept that the appellant
could not, in any event, claim more than one set of pension
of Rs.500 per mensem either as a member of the State
Legislative Assembly or as a retired Member of the Punjab
State Public Service Commission. The High Court having
partly allowed the writ petition and directed payment of
Rs.400 per mensem to the appellant under Regulation 8(3) of
the Regulations as a retired Member of the Public Service
Commission w.e.f. August 10, 1972, the controversy is now
limited to the payment of Rs.100 more and the period for
which such pension could be claimed.
The submission on behalf of the appellant before us, as
was in the High Court, is that the appellant was entitled to
receive pension of Rs.500 per mensem as a Member of the
State Legislative Assembly under s. 6B(1) of the Act read
with the second proviso thereto from the State of Himachal
Pradesh and that Regulation 8(3)(i) of the Punjab State
Public Service Commission (Conditions of Service)
Regulations, 1958 having been ’substituted’ by an order of
the Governor under Art. 318 of the Constitution, must be
deemed to have come into effect from November 1, 1956, the
appointed day, and therefore the appellant was upon that
basis entitled to draw pension of Rs.400 per mensem from the
State of Punjab as a Member of the Punjab State Public
Service Commission w.e.f. January 2, 1959, the date of his
superannuation. During the course of the arguments, it
transpired that
1043
the Punjab Legislative Assembly had also enacted the Punjab
State Legislature Members (Pension & Medical Facilities
Regulation) Act, 1977 to provide for pension and medical
facilities to persons who had been Members of the Punjab
Legislative Assembly. That being so, the response of the
learned counsel to this was that the appellant was in any
view entitled to receive pension of Rs.500 per mensem as a
Member of State Legislative Assembly either from the State
of Himachal Pradesh or the State of Punjab. The matter is
not so simple. The question still remains whether the
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appellant can claim pension as a Member of the State
Legislative Assembly against the State of Punjab under s.
3(1) of the Punjab Act.
We shall first deal with the question of payment of
pension to the appellant as a Member of the State
Legislative Assembly. As regards the liability of the State
of Punjab to pay such pension to the appellant under s. 3(1)
read with the proviso of the Punjab Act, we find that the
appellant has laid no foundation for any such claim in the
writ petition. There is no such point taken in the special
leave petition as well. It is extremely doubtful whether the
appellant can claim pension as a Member of this State
Legislative Assembly from the State of Punjab in view of the
constitutional changes brought about. The Kangra West
General Constituency from which the appellant was elected to
the Punjab Legislative Assembly and later to the Joint
Punjab Legislative Assembly, is by reason of sub-s. (2) of
s. 10 of the State of Himachal Pradesh Act, 1970 deemed to
be a constituency of the Legislative Assembly of the State
of Himachal Pradesh. The liability to pay pension to a
Member of the State Legislative Assembly elected from a
constituency which now forms part of the Legislative
Assembly of Himachal Pradesh, cannot possibly be saddled on
the State of Punjab. As regards the liability of the State
of Himachal Pradesh to pay pension to the appellant under s.
6B(1) read with the second proviso of the Himachal Pradesh
Act, the learned Single Judge has in our view rightly
declined to grant any such relief inasmuch as no part of the
cause of action arose within the territorial jurisdiction of
the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution. It is
needless to stress that the Himachal Pradesh Act is
operative within the territories of that State. No exception
can be taken to the view expressed by the learned Single
Judge and we affirm the same. No interference with the
judgment of the High Court dismissing the writ petition
against the State of Himachal Pradesh is therefore called
for.
It appears that the State Government of Himachal
Pradesh repudiated the claim of the appellant to pension as
a Member of the
1044
State Legislative Assembly under s. 6B(1) read with the
second proviso on the ground that the period during which he
was a Member of the Punjab Legislative Assembly and the
Joint Punjab Legislative Assembly prior to the partition of
the country i.e. prior to August 15, 1947 when the Dominion
of India came into existence under the India Independence
Act, 1947, could not be counted for purposes of his
entitlement to pension under s. 6B of the Act, which appears
to be prima facie erroneous. The appellant clearly answers
the description of a Member as defined in s. 2(c) of the
Act. Admittedly, the appellant had continuously been a
Member of the State Legislative Assembly representing the
Kangra West General Constituency from the year 1937 to
January, 2, 1953, on which date he resigned his Membership
from the Joint Punjab Legislative Assembly to assume the
office of a Member of the Pubjab State Public Service
Commission. Thus, the appellant had been a Member of the
State Legislative Assembly for a period of nearly 16 years
and his case appears to be covered by s.6B(1)(a) and (e) of
the Act read with the second proviso. There is no provision
in the Himachal Pradesh Act which disentitles a Member to
the benefit of the period during which he was a Member of
the State Legislative Assembly prior to the partition of the
country. According to the view taken by this Court in D.S.
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Nakara & Ors. v. Union of India, [1983] 2 SCR 165 the
appellant would prima facie be entitled to the benefit of s.
6B(1) read with the second proviso of the Himachal Pradesh
Act. Inasmuch as the State of Himachal Pradesh has chosen
not to enter appearance in these proceedings, we refrain
from expressing any final opinion on the question.
In view of the foregoing, the appellant is at liberty
to move the State Government of Himachal Pradesh afresh for
grant of pension under s. 6B(1) of the Act read with the
second proviso, failing which he may file a petition in the
Himachal Pradesh High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for grant of an appropriate writ or direction.
That takes us to the next and last contention of the
appellant that Regulation 8(3) of the Regulations having
been ’substituted’ by cl. (3) of the Punjab State Public
Service Commission (Conditions of Service) (First Amendment)
Regulations, 1972 must be read along with Regulation 1(2)
and therefore deemed to have come into force on November 1,
1956, the appointed day, and consequently, the appellant was
entitled to pension as a retired Member of the Public
Service Commission from January 2, 1959, the date of his
superannuation, and not August 10, 1972, the date when the
amendment came into effect. We are affraid, we are unable to
accept this contention.
1045
In order to appreciate the point involved, we may
reproduce the operative part of the order dated August 10,
1972 issued by the Governor of Punjab under Art. 318 of the
Constitution bringing about a change in the law, which reads
as follows:
"In exercise of the powers conferred by Article
318 of the Constitution of India and all other
powers enabling him in that behalf, the Governor
of Punjab is pleased to make the following
Regulations further to amend the Punjab State
Public Service Commission (Conditions of Service)
Regulations, 1958, namely:"
close look at the aforesaid order manifests an
intention to enact a regulation to further amend the
Regulations. It would be noticed that the new Regulation
8(1) has been ’substituted’ for the old Regulation 8(1) and
both deal with pensionary benefits to a Member who at the
date of his appointment as such Member was in the service of
the Central or a State Government. In contrast, Regulation
8(3) is a ’newly-added’ provision conferring pensionary
benefits on a person who at the date of his appointment was
not in Government service. It may be recalled that while
pensionary benefits under Regulation 8(1) were conferred
upon a person who at the date of his appointment as a Member
was in the service of the Central or a State Government, and
his service as such Member was to count for pension under
the rules applicable to the service to which he belonged,
there was no corresponding provision for conferral of
pensionary benefits on a person who at the date of his
appointment as such Member was not in the service of the
Central or a State Government. The newly-added provision
contained in Regulation 8(3) is therefore a remedial measure
to remove the anomaly then existing. Regulation 8(3) being a
remedial measure, must receive a beneficial construction and
if it is capable of two interpretations, the Courts must
prefer that construction which permits the beneficent
purpose behind it. When language of a statute is free from
ambiguity, no duty is cast upon the Court to do anything
more than to give effect to the word or words used. We do
not mean to say that there might not be something in the
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context of an Act of Parliament, or to be collected from its
language, which might give to words prima facie prospective
a larger operation, but that ought not to receive a larger
operation unless you find some reason for giving it. Now, it
would be seen that cl.(5) similarly ’substituted’ new
Regulation 6(1) dealing with the salary and allowances
payable to the Chairman and other Members of the Public
Service Commission, and underneath appears the following:
1046
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Regulations, clause (i) of the proviso to sub-
regulation (I) shall be deemed to have come into
effect from 1.11.1956."
Nothing prevented the Governor while issuing the aforesaid
order dated August 10, 1972 from making a similar provision
with regard to the newly-added Regulations 8(3). It is
therefore manifest that the newly-added Regulation 8(3), in
the absence of any provision giving it a retrospective
operation, cannot prima facie bear a greater retroactive
effect than intended.
It is a matter of legislative practice to provide while
enacting an amending law, that an existing provision shall
be deleted and a new provision substituted. Such deletion
has the effect of repeal of the existing provision. Such a
law may also provide for the introduction of a new
provision. There is no real distinction between ’repeal’ and
an ’amendment’. In Sutherland’s Statutory Construction, 3rd
edn., vol. 1 at p. 477, the learned author makes the
following statement of law:
"The distinction between repeal and amendment as
these terms are used by the Courts, is arbitrary.
Naturally the use of these terms by the Court is
based largely on how the Legislatures have
developed and applied these terms in labelling
their enactments. When a section is being added to
an Act or a provision added to a section, the
Legislatures commonly entitle the Act as an
amendment .... When a provision is withdrawn from
a section, the Legislatures call the Act an
amendment, particularly when a provision is added
to replace the one withdrawn. However, when an
entire Act or section is abrogated and no new
section is added to replace it, Legislatures lebel
the Act accomplishing this result a repeal. Thus
as used by the Legislatures, amendment and repeal
may differ in kind-addition as opposed to
withdrawal or only in degree-abrogation of part of
a section as opposed to abrogation of a whole
section or Act; or more commonly, in both kind and
degree-addition of a provision to a section to
replace a provision being abrogated as opposed by
abrogation of a whole section of an Act. This
arbitrary distinction has been followed by the
Courts, and they have developed separate rules of
construction for each. However, they have
recognised that frequently an Act purporting to be
an amendment has the same qualitative effect as a
repeal-the abrogation of an
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existing statutory provision-and have therefore
applied the term ’implied repeal’ and the rules of
construction applicable to repeals to such
amendments."
Amendment is, in fact, a wider term and it includes
abrogation or deletion of a provision in an existing
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statute. If the amendment of an existing law is small, the
Act professes to amend; if it is extensive, it repeals a law
and re-enacts it. An amendment of substantive law is not
retrospective unless expressly laid down or by necessary
implication inferred.
For the sake of completeness, we wish to add that the
mere use of the word ’substitution’ does not imply that
Regulation 8(3) must relate back to November 1, 1956, the
appointed day. The problem usually arises in case of repeal
by substitution. In the case of executive instructions, the
bare issue of a fresh instrument on the same subject would
replace a previous instrument. But in the case of a
legislative enactment, there would be no repeal of an
existing law unless the substituting act or provision has
been validly enacted with all the required formalities. In
State of Maharashtra v. The Central Provinces Manganese Ore
Co. Ltd., [1977] 1 SCR 1002 a three Judges Bench repelled
the argument that since the word ’substituted’ was used in
the Amending Act of 1949. It necessarily followed that the
process embraces two distinct steps, one of repeal and
another of a fresh enactment. In that case, the whole
legislative process termed ’substitution’ proved to be
abortive inasmuch the Amending Act did not receive the
assent of the Governor General under s. 107 of the
Government of India Act, 1935 and was thus void and
inoperative. Distinguishing the two earlier decisions is
Firm A.T.B. Mehtab Majid & Co. v. State of Madras, [1963]
Suppl. 2 SCR 435 and Koteshwar Vittal Kamath v. K. Rangappa
Balica & Co. [1969]3 SCR 40 the Court observed that the mere
use of the word ’substituted’ does not ipso facto or
automatically repeal a provision until the provision which
is to take its place is constitutionally permissible and
legally effective. It relied upon the following principle of
construction stated in Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd edn.,
Vol. 36. p. 474:
"Where an Act passed after 1850 repeals wholly or
partially any former enactment and substitutes
provision for the enactment repealed, the repealed
enactment remains in force until the substituted
provisions come into operation."
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And observed:
"We do not think that the word substitution
necessarily or always connotes two severable
steps, that is to say, one of repeal and another
of a fresh enactment even if it implies two steps.
Indeed, the natural meaning of the word
"substitution" is to indicate that the process
cannot be split up into two pieces like this. If
the process described as substitution fails, it is
totally ineffective so as to leave intact what was
sought to be displaced. That seems to us to be the
ordinary and natural meaning of the words ’shall
be substituted’."
The underlying fallacy of the argument is that lies in
the assumption that Regulation 8(3) had been ’substituted’.
What had been substituted is the new Regulation 8(1), and
Regulation 8(3) is newlyadded by way of amendment to remove
an existing anomaly.
We therefore find no justification to interfere with
the judgment of the High Court. The appeal must accordingly
fail and is dismissed. There shall be no order as to costs.
S.L. Appeal dismissed.
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