Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF NAGALAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RATAN SINGH, ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/03/1966
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 212 1966 SCR (3) 830
CITATOR INFO :
R 1971 SC 813 (4)
R 1982 SC 710 (21)
R 1990 SC 73 (2)
RF 1991 SC1557 (10)
ACT:
Scheduled Districts Act, 1874-Rules thereunder-If valid and
it force-If Act bad for excessive delegation-If Rules
violate Arts. 14 and 21 of Constitution-Applicability of
Criminal Procedure Code to back ward tracts-constitution of
India, 1950.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents were sought to be tried for offences under
the India Penal Code, before the Additional Deputy
Commissioner, Kohima, when objection was taken that the
trial should be before the Court of Session after
commitment, as the offences were triable exclusively by the
Court of Session under the Code of Criminal Procedure. The
Additional Deputy Commissioner overruled the objection on
the ground that there were no Courts of Session in the Naga
Hills District and the Criminal Procedure Code was also not
in force. He ruled that committal proceedings and the trial
before a session court was therefore not possible and the
procedure laid down in the Rules for the Administration of
Justice and Police in the Naga Hills District, 1937, would
be followed. Thereupon the respondents filed writ petitions
to quash the proceedings commenced under the Rules of 1937.
The High court issued a writ directing the State not to
proceed with the trial under the Rules of 1937.
The area, where the trial was taking place was one of the
backward tracts and it was for a century and more specially
administered. The successive Criminal Procedure Codes,
which ordinarily would have governed the trial of offences,
were always withdrawn from this area and special rules for
administration of criminal justice were promulgated instead.
By the Government of India Act, 1870, the Governor-General
and other authorities were conferred the power to make or
propose laws and the Governor-General was allowed to
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legislate separately for the backward tracts. As
difficulties arose in determining what laws were in force
and in which area of backward tracts, the Scheduled
Districts Act 1874 was passed. The position at the
inauguration of the Government of India, 1935 was that the
Governor-General in Council legislated for these backward
areas and the Governor-General could direct that any Act of
the Indian Legislatures should not apply at all or should
apply with such exceptions and modifications as he might
think fit. The 1937 Act provided for the ascertainment of
the backward tracts and for making of laws in those areas
and in 1936 an Order in Council was made specifying the
backward tracts. The Scheduled District Act was repealed by
the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1937. The Constitution of
India, 1950 by Art. 244 made a special provision for the
scheduled and tribal areas The State of Nagaland was formed
by the State of Nagaland Act, 1965 comprising of Naga Hills-
Tuensang Area and consisting of three distracts. The
administration of the State of Nagaland was to be in accord-
ance with the provisions of the State of Nagaland Act, which
among other things provided for the continuance of existing
laws and their adaptation The Government and administration
of these areas was often not carried on directly under laws
made by the Governor-General either by himself
831
or in his Council but through rules which were framed from
time to time by other agencies. In 1937, the Governor of
Assam prescribed revised Rules under the powers vested in
him by s. 6 of the Scheduled Districts Act. These Rules of
1937 began by stating that they cancelled "all previous
orders on the subject" but were on the pattern of earlier
rules which laid down that in criminal trials the spirit of
the Criminal Procedure Code was to be followed because the
Code itself was not in force. In appeal to this Court, the
main question that arose were whether the Rules of 1937 were
validly enacted and they continued to be in force, whether
the Scheduled Districts Act was bad because of excessive
delegation, and whether the Rules of 1937 were rendered void
by reason of Arts. 14 and 21 of the Constitution.
HELD : The Rules of 1937 were validly enacted and continued
to be ’in force and governed the trial of the respondents.
The Code of Criminal Procedure admittedly did not apply to
that area and the Additional Deputy Commissioner was
therefore right in holding the trial under the Rules of
1937, [854 E-F]
The Rules of 1937 did survive the repeal of the Scheduled
Districts Act, 1874 by virtue of the saving clause in the
Adaptation of Laws Order which repealed the Act. The saving
clause preserved all notifications and the Rules of 1937
were enacted by a notification. After the passing of the
Government of India Act, 1935, the Rules of 1937 were
successively preserved by ss. 292 and 293 of the Government
of India Act, 1935, s. 18 of the Indian Independence Act,
1947 and Art. 372 of the Constitution. [847 G-848 A]
There was no excessive delegation under the Scheduled
Districts Act. The Legislature clearly indicated the policy
and the manner of effectuating that policy. The Act
conferred on the local Governments power to appoint officers
for administration of civil and criminal justice within the
Scheduled Districts and empowered the local Government to
regulate the procedure of the officers so appointed and to
confer on them authority and jurisdiction powers and duties
incidental to the administration of civil and criminal
justice. These provisions afforded sufficient guide to the
local Government that the administration of Civil and
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Criminal justice was to be done under their control by the
officers appointed by them and the procedure which they were
to follow had to be laid down. Beside.,, there was
sufficient guidance in the three sub-sections of a. 6 read
as a whole with the preamble, and the Chief Commissioner’s
Rules made in 1872 and republished In 1874 by Governor-
General in Council were also available as a further guide as
the last were continued in force by 7. [849 G-850 D]
By the Scheduled Districts Act the Governor-General in
Council conferred on the local Government an equal or
concurrent power and this was clearly indicated by the word
"as the case may be’ in s. 7 of the Act. Those words did
not, show that the local Government could only amend its own
Rules. They showed that whoever made the rules the
authority of the Act made them binding. [851 A-B]
Article 21 of the Constitution did not render the
Rules of 1937 ineffective. In the backward tracts it was
considered necessary that discretion should have greater
play than technical rules and the provision that the spirit
of the Code should apply was a law conceived in the best
interests of the people. The discretion of the Presiding
Officer was not subjected to rigid control because of the
unsatisfactory state of defences which would be offered and
which might fail if they did not comply with
83 2
some technical rule. The removal of technicalities, led to
the advancement of the cause of justice in these
backward tracts. On the other hand the imposition of the
Code of Criminal Procedure would have retarded Justice as
indeed the Governors-General, the Governors and the heads of
local Government had always thought. [852 B-D]
It was not discriminatory to administer different laws in
different areas. These backward tracts were not found
suitable for the application of the Criminal Procedure Code
in, all its vigour and technicality and to say that they
were to be governed, not by the technical rules of the Code,
but by the substance of such rules was not to discriminate
this area against the rest of India. [852 &G]
The law had not attempted to control discretion by Rules in
this area but had rightly left- discretion free so that the
rule might not hamper the administration of justice. ’Mere
was no vested right in procedure; therefore, the respondents
could not claim to be tried under the Criminal Procedure
code in this area where the, Code was excluded. 1853 G]
No discrimination can be spelled out from the differences in
the rules applicable to different areas in the backward
tracts. The object was to bring these territories under the
Code of Criminal Procedure applicable in the rest of India,
by stages. Article 371 of the Constitution itself
contemplates a different treatment of these tracts and the
differences are justified by the vast differences between
the needs of social conditions in Nagaland and the various
stages of development of different parts of this area. [854
D]
(Uniform set of Rules for the whole area suggested.)
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeals Nos. 198
of 1965 and 29-32 of 1966.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated August 26, 1965 of
the Assam and Nagaland High Court in Civil Rules Nos. 200,
235, 234, 233,and 232 of 1965.
C.K Daphtary, Attorney-General, D. M. Sen, Advocate-
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General for the State of Nagaland, P. K. Goswami, Anil
Barthukar, B. Dutta and Naunit Lal, for the appellant (in
all the appeals.)
A.K. Sen, S. S. Ray, H. K Puri and H. L. Arora, for the
respondents (in all the appeals).
Niren De, Additional Solicitor-General and Naunit Lal,
for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, J. These are appeals by the State of Nagaland
against the judgment and order of the High Court of Assam
and Nagaland, August 26, 1965, by which the High Court,
allowing ,certain writ petitions filed by the respondents,
issued a writ of mandamus directing the Additional Deputy
Commissioner, Kohima and the State of Nagaland, not to
proceed with the trial of the
833
respondents. The High Court has certified the case as fit
for appeal to this court. The facts are these :
The respondents are members of the 7th Battalion of the
Central Reserve Police (shortly called in this judgment the
C.R.P.) who, under the command of the 8th.Mountain Division
Infantry Brigade, were engaged in_ operations in the State
of Nagaland. On receipt of information that on or about
August 3, 1964, seven hostile Nagas, who were captured and
kept prisoners with the C.R.P. at Pfutser Camp, were
murdered and their dead bodies secretly disposed of, the
police, after investigating the report, arrested 44 persons
and charged them with offences under ss. 302/109/34 and 201,
Indian Penal Code. Some other members of the C.R.P. were
charged at the same time under s. 436, Indian Penal Code for
setting fire to some houses in certain villages. The trial
was about to take place before the Additional Deputy Com-
missioner, Kohima, when an objection was taken that the
trial should be before the Court of Session after
commitment, as the offences were triable by the Court of
Session exclusively, under the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The Additional Deputy Commissioner overruled the objection
pointing out that there were no Courts of Session in the
Naga Hills District and the Criminal Procedure Code was also
not in force. He ruled that committal proceedings and trial
before a Sessions Court were, therefore, not possible and
the procedure laid down in the Rules for the Administration
of Justice and Police in the Naga Hills District, 1937,
would be followed. For brevity we shall refer to these
Rules as the Rules of 1937.
The respondents filed five petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for writs or orders to quash the proceedings
under the Rules of 1937 and other reliefs. By the order
impugned here a Divisional Bench consisting of C. Sanjeeva
Rao Nayudu and S. K. Dutta JJ., quashed the proceedings and
issued a writ of mandamus directing the Additional Deputy
Commissioner and the State of Nagaland not to proceed under
the Rules of 1937 with the trial of the accused before him.
The learned Judges gave separate, but concurring judgments.
Mr. Justice Dutta in a brief judgment reached the conclusion
that the Rules of 1937 made by the Governor of Assam and the
earlier rules made by the Lt. Governor on November 29, 1906
were not validly made. In his opinion there already existed
certain other Rules made by the Governor-General in Council
in 1874 and the local Government was not competent to make
rules while those Rules existed. In regard to the Rules of
1874 the learned Judge held that they "had become
infructuous" for want of suitable adaptations after the
political changes since 1874. He did not consider any other
ground of alleged invalidity of these Rules and expressly
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refrained from giving any opinion. Mr. Justice C. Sanjeeva
Rao Nayudu
834
dealt with the problem exhaustively and viewed it from many
angles. He gave several reasons for holding that the trial
could not take place under the Rules of 1937. We have not
found it easy to summarize his reasons effectively but,
briefly stated, they were : that the Rules of 1937 were void
ab initio because the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874 under
which the Governor purported to make them did not give him
any authority to make them; that if the Act gave such
authority, it was itself ultra vires the statutes of British
Parliament and involved excessive delegation; that on the
repeal of Scheduled Districts Act in 1937, all ruled made
under it lapsed; that the Rules of 1937 were vague, uncer-
tain and elusive and were not law as contemplated by Art. 21
; that they were discriminatory for various reasons ; that
they could not apply to Indian citizens in Nagaland and
that, in any event, the Additional District Magistrate was
not acting in accordance with those Rules such as they were.
We need not at this stage attempt to enlarge upon the
various themes because the arguments on behalf of the
respondents have presented a selection of the reasons which
were given by Mr. Justice Nayudu and they will appear in
appropriate places in our Judgment.
We are concerned with a new State formed as late as 1962 but
the territory of this State has had a very long and
chequered history. The area, where the trial is taking
place is one of the backward tracts and it has, for a
century and more, been specially administered. In that area
the ordinary laws (particularly the two main Codes) in force
in the rest of India, have not been applied. The successive
Criminal Procedure Codes, which ordinarily would have
governed the trial of offences, were always withdrawn from
this area and special rules for administration of criminal
justice were promulgated instead. Whether such rules
(particularly the Rules of 1937) were validly enacted,
whether they continue to be in force and whether they are
rendered void by reason of Arts. 14 and 21 of the
Constitution are the main problems requiring consideration.
Before we consider these questions the history of law-making
in these areas may first be told generally and then in
relation to the Rules for the Administration of Justice
promulgated in 1937 and at other times.
Even prior to the taking over of the Government of
the territories formerly administered by the East India
Company the making of laws was entrusted to the Governor-
General in Council under 3 & 4 William IV, Ch. 85 and 16 &
17 Vict. Ch. 95. They allowed laws to be made directly for
the areas which were under the Government of East India
Company. After the Indian Councils Act of 1861 (24 & 25
Vict. Ch. 67) was passed the legality of the laws which had
been made by the Governor-General either in Council or on
his own was in question. Section 22 of the Indian Councils
Act made new provision by which the Governor-General in
Council
835
was authorised to make laws and regulations for India and to
repeal, amend or alter any law or regulation whatever in
force in India. The Act also made provision validating all
earlier laws by enacting that no rule, law or regulation
made before the passing of that Act by the Governor-General
or certain named executive authorities would be deemed
invalid by reason of not having been made in conformity with
the provisions of the Charter Acts. The power to make laws
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was taken away from the executive authorities. The power,
which was taken away from the Governor and other authorities
to make or propose laws was again conferred on the Governor-
General and other authorities by the Government of India
Act, 1870 (33 & 34 Vict. Ch. 3) and the Governor-General
was allowed to legislate separately for the backward tracts.
For this purpose the Governor in Council, the Lt. Governor
or the Chief Commissioner, as the case, may be, could submit
to the Governor-General draft regulations for his
consideration and after their approval by the Governor-
General in his Council such regulations became law for these
backward areas.
This state of affairs existed right down to the Government
of India Act, 1915. As difficulties arose in determining
what laws were in force and in which areas of the backward
tracts, the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874 was passed. This
Act will be considered closely later and for the present we
content ourselves with a few points of importance to the
present narrative. The preamble of the Act clearly set out
that the object, inter alia, was to ascertain the enactments
in force in any territory and the boundaries of such
territory. The Act, therefore, specified Scheduled tracts"
and the local Governments were given the powers to extend by
public notification, any enactment in force in British
India. When the Government of India Act, 1915 (5 & 6 Geo V,
Ch. 61) was enacted, while repealing by the Fourth Schedule
the Government of India Act, 1870, section 71 was included
in the 1915 Act which, in effect, provided the same
procedure for making and applying laws as had been provided
by the Act of 1870. The local Governments could propose
draft regulations for peace and good Government of any part
within their jurisdiction and the Governor-General after
taking the draft regulations and the reasons into
consideration could approve in his Council and assent to the
Regulations. After his assent and on their publication in
the official Gazette of India and in the local official
Gazette, if any, they had the same force of law and were
subject to the same disallowance as if they were the Act of
the Governor-General in his Legislative Council. When the
Government of India Act, 1919 (9 & 10 Geo. V, Ch. 101) was
passed s. 52-A. was inserted which read as follows :-
"52-A. Constitution of new provinces, etc.,
and provision as to backward tracts.
836
(1) ..... .... ......
(2)The Governor-General in Council may
declare any territory in British India to be a
"backward tract", and may, by notification,
with such sanction as aforesaid,. direct that
this Act shall apply to that territory subject
to such exceptions and modifications as may be
prescribed in the notification.
Where the Governor-General in Council has, by
notification, directed as aforesaid, he may,
by the same or subsequent notification, direct
that any Act of the Indian legislature shall
not apply to the territory in question or any
part thereof, or- shall apply to the territory
or any part thereof subject to such exceptions
or modifications as the Governor-General
thinks fit, or may authorise the Governor in
Council to give similar directions as respects
any Act of the local legislatures."
Thus at the inauguration of the Government of India Act,
1935 the position was that the Governor-General in. Council
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or the Governor etc. with the approval of the Governor-
General in Council legislated for these backward tracts and
the Governor-General could direct that any Act of the Indian
legislature should not apply at all or should apply with
such exceptions and modifications as the Governor-General
might think fit. When the Government of India Act, 1935
replaced the Government of India Act, an Order in Council
was made in 1936 specifying the backward tracts and the 1935
Act included ss. 91 and 92 for the ascertainment of the
backward tracts and for the making of laws in those areas.
Section 92, which dealt With the administration of the
excluded areas and partially excluded areas, provided :
"92. Administration of excluded areas and
partially excluded areas :
(1)The executive authority of a Province
extends to excluded and partially excluded
areas therein, but, notwithstanding anything
in Act, no Act of the Federal Legislature or
of the Provincial Legislature, shall apply to
an excluded area or a partially excluded area,
unless the Governor by public notification so
directs, and the Governor in giving such a
direction with respect to any Act may direct
that the Act shall in its application to the
area, or to any specified part thereof, have
effect subject to such exceptions or
modifications as he thinks fit.
(2)The Governor may make- regulations for
the peace and good Government of any area in a
Pro-
837
vince which is for the time being an excluded
area, or a partially excluded area,
and any
regulations so made may repeal or amend any
Act of the Federal Legislature or of the
Provincial Legislature, or any existing Indian
Law, which is for the time being applicable to
the area in question.
Regulations made under this sub-section shall
be submitted forthwith to the Governor-General
and until assented to by him in his discretion
shall have no effect, and the provisions of
this Part of this Act with respect to the
power of His Majesty to disallow Acts shall
apply in relation to any such regulations
assented to by the Governor-General as they
apply in relation to Acts of a Provincial
Legislature assented to by him.
(3)The Governor shall, as respects any area
in a Province which is for the time being an
excluded area, exercise his functions in his
X X
discretion."
After this the Scheduled Districts Act became obsolete and
war, repealed by the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1937.
Next came the inauguration of the Constitution. Article 244
made a special provision for the scheduled and tribal areas
and the second clause of that article provided that the
provisions of the Sixth Schedule were to apply to the
administration of the tribal areas in the State of Assam.
Originally in the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution the
Naga Hills District was included as an autonomous district
and was shown in Part A of Paragraph 20 and the Naga Tribal
Area was shown in Part B. It is not necessary to refer in
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detail to the Sixth Schedule which provided for separate
modes of administration of the Part A and Part B
territories. The name Naga Tribal Area was changed to
Tuensang Frontier Division by the North East Frontier Areas
(Administration) Regulation, 1954 (No. 1 of 1954) which
came into force on January 19, 1954. By the same Regulation
the North East Frontier Tract was stated to include Balipara
Frontier Tract, the Tirap Frontier Tract, the Abor Hills
District, the Misimi Hills District and with the Naga Tribal
Area was named collectively as the North East Frontier
Agency. Then by the Naga Hills-Tuensang Area
(Administration) Act, 1957 (42 of 1957), the Naga Hills
District was omitted from Part A and the whole of the Naga
Hills-Tuensang area was shown in Part B with effect from
December 1, 1957. The Tuensang area was the former Naga
Tribal Area and the other two areas were the autonomous
districts of Kohima and Mokokchung. The State of Nagaland
was formed by the State of Nagaland Act, 1962 (27 of 1962).
That Act repealed and replaced the Nagaland (Transitional
Provisions) Regulation, 1961 (Regulation 2 of 1961). The
838
territory of the new State comprises the Naga Hills-Tuensang
Area and consists of three districts which are the Kohima
District, the Mokokchung District and the Tuensang District.
The State of Nagaland Act also deleted all references to the
Naga Hills-Tuensang Area from the Sixth Schedule. The
administration of the State ,of Nagaland was to be in
accordance with the provisions of State ,of Nagaland Act.
Among other things it provided for a common High Court for
the State of Assam and the State of Nagaland. By section 26
it laid down:--
"26. Continuance of existing laws and their
adaptation.-
(1)All laws in force, immediately before
the appointed day, in the Naga Hills-Tuensang
Area shall continue to be in force in the
State of Nagaland until altered, repealed or
amended by a competent Legislature or other
competent authority.
(2)For the purpose of facilitating the
application in relation to the State of
Nagaland of any law made before the appointed
day, the appropriate Government may, within
two years from that day, by order make such
adaptations and modifications of the law,
whether by way of repeal or amendment, as may
be necessary or expedient, and thereupon every
such law shall have effect subject to the
adaptations and modifications so made until
altered, repealed or amended by a competent
Legislature or other competent authority.
Explanation.-In this section the expression
"appropriate Government" means, as respects
any law relating to a matter enunciated in the
Union List in the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution. The Central Government; and as
respects any other law, the Government of
Nagaland."
Section 27 conferred power on courts, tribunals and
authorities to construe, in the absence of adaptations, the
laws in such manner, without affecting the substance, as may
be necessary. By s. 28 all courts, tribunals and
authorities discharging lawful functions were continued as
before unless their continuance was inconsistent with the
State of Nagaland Act. So much will suffice to describe the
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ground-work of law-making under the authority of British
Parliament, the Governor-General in Council and the
Parliament and Legislatures under the present Constitution.
We shall now see the real crux of the problem because the
Government and administration of these areas was often not
carried on directly under laws made by the Governor-General
either by himself or
839
in his Council but through rules which were framed from time
to time, by other agencies. We will now describe how these
rules, some of which are in controversy in the present
appeal, were made.
On September 24, 1869 the Governor-General enacted
the Garo Hills Act, 1869 (Act 22 of 1869). By this Act the
Garo Hills were removed from the jurisdiction of the Civil,
Criminal and Revenue courts and offices established under
the General, Regulations and Acts and the Act provided for
the administration of justice and collection of revenue.
The Act repealed an earlier Act of 1835 (No. 6 of 1835) and
the Bengal Regulation 10 of 1822, but in this case we are
not required to go behind 1869. We are referring to this
Act because it was extended also to the Naga Hills. Section
4 of the Act on extension provided that the territory known
as the Naga Hills was removed from the jurisdiction of
courts of Civil and Criminal Judicature as well as from the
law prescribed for the said courts and no Act passed by the
Council of the Governor-General for making laws and
regulations was deemed to extend to any part of the said
territory unless the same was specially named in it. By s.
5 the administration of Civil and Criminal justice was
vested in such officers as the Lt. Governor might, for the
purpose of tribunals of first instance or of reference and
appeal, from time to time, appoint. The officers so
appointed were, in the matter of administration, subject to
the direction and control of the Lt. Governor and were to
be guided by such instructions as the Lt. Governor might,
from time to time, issue. The Lt. Governor could extend by
notification any law or any portion of a law in force in the
other territories subject to his Government or to be enacted
by the Council of the Governor. General or of the Lt.
Governor for making laws and regulations and while making
such extensions could direct by whom the powers and duties
incident to the provisions so extended should be exercised
or performed and might make any order which was deemed
requisite for carrying such provisions into operation. The
Act also gave power by s. 9 to the Lt. Governor to extend
mutatis mutandis all or any of the provisions contained in
the other sections of the Act to the Jaintia Hills, the Naga
Hills and to such portions of the Khasi Hills as for the
time being formed parts of British India. The Act was also
extended to Khasi and Jaintia Hills and the authority of the
Governor-General to enact the Act and of the Lt. Governor
to "tend it was challenged. The decision of the Judicial
Committee is reported in Queen v. Burah (L. R. 5 I.A. 178)
which held that both the powers existed. On October 14,
1871 acting under s. 9 of the Act of 1869 the Lt. Governor
extended the whole of the Act to the Naga Hills District and
vested the administration of Civil and Criminal jurisdiction
in the Commissioner of Assam subject to his own direction
and control. The Commissioner
840
was to exercise the powers of the High Court in Civil and
Criminal cases triable in the Courts of the said districts
but no sentence of death was to be carried out without the
sanction of the Lt. Governor and it was competent to the
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Lt. Governor to call for the record of any criminal or
civil case and to pass such orders thereon as he saw fit.
The notification also ordered that cases not then triable in
the ordinary British Courts would not be triable therein and
even in those cases which were triable in those courts, the
officers were to guide themselves by the spirit of the laws
prevailing in British India and in force in the districts.
In continuation of this notification, the Lt. Governor made
under s. 5 of the Act of 1869, in application to the Naga
Hills (which he renamed the Naga Hills Agency) Rules for the
Administration of Justice and Police in the Naga Hills
Agency. These rules were first published on August 7, 1872
and may be called, for brevity, the Rules of 1872.
The Rules of 1872, 39 in number, dealt with various
topics but we shall set down the purport of such rules only
as concern US. Part I was general and consisted of two
rules. By Rule 1, the administration of the Naga Hills
Agency was vested in the Commissioner of Assam, the
Political Agent and his assistants, the Monzadars,
Gaonburahs, Peumahs (Naga Chiefs) and Houshas (Kookie
Chiefs) or headmen of Khels, or such other classes of
officers as the Lt. Governor deemed fit. Part II provided
for police a-.id consisted of Rules 3 to 15. We are not
concerned with it. Criminal justice was provided for in
Part III (Rules 16 to 24) and Civil Justice in Part IV
(Rules 25 to 30). We are only concerned with the former.
Criminal justice was to be ordinarily administered by the
Political Agent, his assistants and by the Mouzadars etc.
The Political Agent could pass a sentence of death or
imprisonment for a term unlimited or of fine up to any
amount but not so as to exceed the value of the offender’s
property. No sentence of death was to be carried into
effect without the concurrence of the Commissioner and the
sanction of the Lt. Governor. Similarly, no sentence above
7 years’ imprisonment could be carried into effect without
the approval of the Commissioner. The Commissioner could
enhance any sentence passed by his subordinates. The
Assistant to the Political Agent was to exercise the powers
of a Magistrate, First Class as laid down in the Criminal
Procedure Code of 1872. The Mouzadars etc. were to try
petty offences and could impose a fine up to Rs. 50. There
were elaborate rules for trial by them and appeals lay
against their decisions to the Political Agent or his
Assistant. Appeals lay to the Political Agent from the
decisions of his Assistant. No appeal lay as of right from
the sentence of the Political Agent involving less than
three years’ imprisonment but the Commissioner could call
for the record of the case to satisfy himself. Sentences
above that period were appealable to the Com-
841
missioner. The Lt. Governor was empowered to review the
proceedings of all subordinate officers. Rule 23 bore upon
the manner of the trial. It provided that the procedure of
the Political Agent and his Assistant was to be in the
spirit of the Code of Criminal Procedure as far as it was
applicable to the circumstances of the District and
consistent with the Rules. The main exceptions were:
(a)Verbal notices fixing a date to appear
were sufficient when the police was employed
to convey them or the person was not
resident
or in the district or where his place of abode
was not known.
(b)Political Agent and his Assistant were
to keep only the substance of all proceedings
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in cases requiring sentences below three
years. In other cases, full notes of the
proceedings had to be kept in English.
(c)Proceedings before Mouzadars etc. were
not required to be in writing but if a person
could be found to be able to write, a brief
note of the proceeding was to be made.
(d)All fines levied by the Mouzadars etc.
were to be paid to the Political Agent or his
Assistant or some officer specially empowered
by the Political Agent.
(e)It was discretionary to examine
witnesses on oath in any form or to warn them
that they were liable to punishment for
perjury if they stated what they knew to be
false.
On February 6, 1874 there was formation of the Chief
Commissioner ship in Assam. The Governor-General in Council
issued a proclamation under s. 3 of 17 & 18 Vict., Ch. 77.
By the proclamation he took under his immediate authority
and management the backward territories then under the Lt.
Governor of Bengal including the Naga Hills. By another
notification the Governor-General in Council in exercise of
powers under s. 3 of the Act formed those territories into a
Chief Commissioner ship called the Chief Commissioner ship
of Assam. In April of the same year an Act (Act 8 of 1874)
was passed to provide for the exercise within the said
territories, of the powers which were before exercised under
or by virtue of any law or regulation by the Lt. Governor of
Bengal and the Board of Revenue. By the first section these
powers were transferred and vested in the Governor-General
in Council and by s. 2 the Governor-General in Council was
empowered to delegate to the Chief Commissioner all or any
of the powers or withdraw any power so delegated. On 16th
of April, 1874 the Governor-General in Council by
notification delegated to the Chief Commissioner of Assam
powers which
M12SupCI/66-8
842
were formerly vested in or were exercisable by the Lt.
Governor of Bengal. On June 13, 1874 the Governor-General
in Council made alterations in the Rules of 1872 but only to
make them accord with the political changes and republished
them for general information. The changes were that
wherever the Commissioner was mentioned in the Rules, the
Chief Commissioner was substituted and where the Lt.
Governor was mentioned the Governor-General was to be read.
The Rules, however, remained the same. We shall refer to
these Rules as the Rules of 1874.
Doubts having arisen in some cases as to which Acts or Regu-
lations were in force or the boundaries of the territories
in which they were in force and with a view to providing a
ready means for ascertaining the enactments in force in the
respective areas and the boundaries of the areas and for
administering the law therein, an Act was passed by the
Governor-General of India in Council. This Act was
in titled the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874 (14 of 1874).
This Act remained on the statute book till the Government
,of India Act, 1935 came into force when it was repealed by
the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1937. The scheme of the
relevant provisions of this Act was this. The Act extended
to the whole ,of India. It defined "Scheduled Districts" by
reference to its First Schedule and these districts were to
include such other territories in which the Secretary of
State in Council declared the provisions of 33 Vict. Ch. 3
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(section 1) to be applicable. The Act repealed other
enactments by its Second Schedule. By sections 3 and 4 the
local Government was enabled, with the previous sanction of
the Governor-General in Council to notify what enactments
were in force and what were not in force in any of the
Scheduled Districts and to correct any mistake of fact in a
notification already issued under that Act but not so as to
change a declaration once made and on the issue of such
notifications the intended effect was to follow. By s. 5
the local Government with the previous sanction of the
Governor-General in Council was enabled to extend to the
Scheduled Districts any Act in force in British India. Sec-
tions 6 and 7, which were the subject of great discussion in
this appeal, may be quoted for future reference:
"6. Appointment of officers and regulation of
their procedure.
The Local Government may from time to time:-
(a) appoint officers to administer civil and
criminal justice and to superintend the
settlement and collection of the public
revenue, and all matters relating to rent, and
otherwise to conduct the administration,
within the Scheduled Districts,
(b) regulate the procedure of the officers
so appointed; but not so as to restrict the
operation of any enact-
843
ment for the time being in force in any of the
said Districts,
(c) direct by what authority any
jurisdiction, powers or duties incident to the
operation of any enactment for the time being
in force in such District shall be exe
rcised or
performed."
"7. Continuance of existing rules and
officers.
All rules heretofore prescribed by the
Governor-General in Council or the Local
Government for the guidance of officers
appointed within any of the Scheduled
Districts for all or any of the purposes
mentioned in section six and in force at the
time of the passing of this Act, shall
continue to be in force unless and until the
Governor General in Council or the Local
Government, as the case may be, otherwise
directs.
All existing officers so appointed previous
to the date on which this Act comes into force
in such District, shall be deemed to have been
appointed hereunder."
Section 8 enabled settlement of question as to boundaries of
Scheduled Districts. Section 9 indicated the place of
imprisonment or of transportation. Sections 10 and 11 do
not matter to us.
The Assam Frontier Tracts Regulation 1880 (Regulation II of
1880) was next enacted to provide for the removal of certain
Frontier Tracts in Assam from the operation of enactments in
force there. Section 2 of the Regulation read:
"2. Power to direct that enactment shall cease
to be in force.
When this regulation has been extended in man-
ner hereinbefore prescribed to any tract, the
Chief Commissioner may from time to time, with
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the previous sanction of the Governor General
in Council, by notification in the local
Gazette, direct that any enactment in force in
such tract shall cease to be in force therein,
but not so as to affect the criminal
jurisdiction of any court over European
British Subjects."
Under the provisions of this Regulation the Criminal
Procedure Codes of 1882 and 1898 were withdrawn from the
Naga Hills.
By proclamation No. 2832 dated the 1st September, 1905 the
Governor-General, with the sanction of His Majesty, consti-
tuted the Province of Assam (to which were added certain
districts
844
of East Bengal) and appointed a Lt. Governor. The new
Province was known as Eastern Bengal and Assam. The
Governor-General in Council also passed on the 29th
September, 1905 an Act (No. 7 of 1905). it provided by s. 5
as follows:-
"5. Power to Courts and Local Governments
for facilitating application of enactments.
For the purpose of facilitating the
application to any of the territory mentioned
in Schedule A, B or C of any enactment passed
before the commencement of this Act, or of any
notification, order, scheme rule, form or by-
law made under any such enactment,--
(a)
(b) the Local Government may, by notification
in the local official Gazette, direct by what
officer any authority or power shall be
exercisable, and any such notification shall
have effect as if enacted in this Act."
Naga Hills were in Schedule A.
On November 29, 1906, the Lt. Governor prescribed Rules for
the Administration of Justice and Police in the Naga Hills
District under S. 6 of the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874.
These Rules may be conveniently called the Rules of 1906.
These Rules repeated the Rules which had been in force from
1872 with appropriate modifications consequent upon the
political changes. The nomenclature of Political Agent and
his Assistant was dropped and in their place the Deputy
Commissioner and his Assistants were named in the Rules.
The Deputy Commissioners became the equivalent of Political
Agents in the exercise of powers. The Assistants to the
Deputy Commissioner were invested with powers of First Class
Magistrates. All sentences of death or transportation were
required to be confirmed by the Lt. Governor but did not
have to be considered by the Commissioner as in the Rules of
1872 and 1874. All sentences of imprisonment of 7 years and
upward had to be confirmed by the Commissioner. The Lt.
Governor and the Commissioner had record of a criminal case
and reduce enhance it within the limits prescribed Except
for these differences the Rules the same.
Assam underwent yet another change at the imperial
Coronation Darbar held in Delhi in December, 1911, the King
announced a new distribution of territory. Bihar and Orissa
were cut off from Bengal and were formed into an independent
845
Lt. Governorship. Eastern Bengal was reunited with West
Bengal and Assam once again became a separate Province with
a Chief Commissioner. This new scheme took effect from
April 1, 1912.
In 1914 by two notifications (Nos. 5467P and 5459P dated 13-
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10-1914), which were issued under Regulation 2 of 1818, all
enactments in force in the Western, Central, North East and
Eastern Tracts were to cease to be in force and under s. 5
of the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874, the Indian Penal Code,
the Indian Police Act, the Indian Arms Act, the Assam Land
Revenue Regulation, the Assam Forest Regulation and the
Whipping Act were extended by the Chief Commissioner with
the previous sanction of the Governor-General in Council.
The administration of Assam thereafter continued under the
above mentioned Acts and the procedural part was taken from
the Rules of 1906 which laid down that in criminal trials
the spirit of the Criminal Procedure Code was to be followed
because the Code itself was not in force. In 1921 Assam
became a Governor’s Province.
We next come to March 25, 1937, On that day the Governor of
Assam prescribed revised Rules under the powers vested in
him by s. 6 of the Scheduled Districts Act. These Rules did
not materially differ from the Rules of 1872, 1874 and 1906.
The Rules of 1937 began by stating that they cancelled "all
previous orders on the subject." The changes that were
introduced were of the pattern we have known before. The
administration of the Naga Hills was vested in the Governor
of Assam, the Deputy Commissioner, the Additional Deputy
Commissioners and Assistants to the Deputy Commissioner, the
Mouzadars, etc. The Deputy Commissioner, the Additional
Deputy Commissioner and Assistants to the Deputy
Commissioner were to be appointed by the Governor. As a
result of these changes, the provisions of Part III dealing
with criminal justice were suitably amended. The first
change was to assign duties to the Additional Deputy Commi-
ssioner. The term Deputy Commissioner was said to include
an Additional Deputy Commissioner and the latter had the
same powers as the former (Rule 15A). The terms District
Magistrates, Additional District Magistrates and Magistrates
of the District, Sub-Divisional Magistrates or Magistrate of
a Sub-Division were to refer to in any law in force in Naga
Hills to the Deputy Commissioner, Additional Deputy
Commissioner and Sub-Divisional Officers, Mokokchung (Rule
15B). In respect of all offences under the Indian Penal
Code or under any other law to be investigated, inquired
into, tried or otherwise dealt with according to the Rules
of 1937 the words and expressions defined in s. 4 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, 1898 were to have the same
meanings. The Deputy Commissioner could impose any sentence
but the sentence of death was subject to confirmation by the
High Court. The Assistants to the Deputy Commissioner were
equated to
846
Magistrates of First Class, but the Governor could, if he
thought fit, invest an Assistant to the Deputy Commissioner
either generally or for trial of a particular case or cases
with all powers of the Deputy Commissioner, except to pass a
sentence of death. Another change was that instead of the
Lt. Governor the High Court of Assam and the Deputy
Commissioner could call for the record of any case and
reduce, enhance or cancel any sentence or remand the case
for retrial. Sentences of death Passed by the Deputy
Commissioner were subject to the confirmation by the High
Court of Assam (Rule 16-A) and the Deputy Commissioner while
convicting the accused and sentencing him to death was to
inform the accused about the period in which the appeal
should be filed (Rule 16-B). The other Rules defined the
powers of the High Court in cases submitted for confirmation
of sentence (Rule 16-C, D and E.). Appeals lay from the
Deputy Commissioner to the High Court in any case.
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These Rules, it is contended on behalf of the State of
Nagaland, continue till today. They were amended in 1952,
1954, 1956 and 1957. In 1937 by the Adaptation of Laws
Order the Scheduled Districts Act was repealed but there was
a special saving which read as follows:-
" This Act shall cease to have effect, without
prejudice to the continuing validity of any
notification, appointment, regulation,
direction or determination made thereunder and
in’ force immediately before the commencement
of Part III of the Government of India Act,
1935 :
Provided that, where immediately before the
first day of April, 1937, any enactment is, by
virtue of any notification made under this
Act, in force in any area in British India,
either with or without restrictions or
modifications, the Central Government, in
relation to matters enumerated in List I of
the Seventh Schedule to the Government of
India Act, 1935, and the Provincial
Government, in relation to other matters, may,
within six months from the said date, by
notification in the Official Gazette, declare
that the enactment in question shall have
effect in that area subject to such
modifications and adaptations specified in the
notification as the Government in question may
deem necessary or expedient to bring it into
accord with the Government of India Act,
1935."
In 1945 the Assam Frontier (Administration of Justice)
Regulation, 1945 (Regulation 1 of 1945) was enacted. It was
originally made applicable to Balipara, Lakhimpur, Sadiya
and Tirap Frontier Tracts. It was applied to Tuensang in
1955. In the main these Regulations were the same as the
Rules of 1937 applicable in the Kohima and Mokokchung
Divisions but slight differ-
847
ence existed in the powers of the High Court in the matter
of transfers and appeals against acquittals. As these were
the subject of an argument we shall refer to these
differences later.
Before the formation of the State of Nagaland the laws in
the Tuensang Frontier Division and those in force in the
rest of the North-East Frontier Agency were assimilated by
the Tuensang Frontier Division (Assimilation of Laws)
Regulation, 1955 (No. 4 of 1955). These were made by the
Governor in exercise of the powers conferred by clause (2)
of Art. 243 of the Constitution read with Sub-paragraph (2)
of paragraph 18 of the Sixth Schedule to the Constitution by
the President of India. By Paragraph 3 of that Regulation
all laws except the Tuensang Frontier Division (Undesirable
Persons) Regulation, 1951, which were extended to or were in
force in Tuensang Frontier Division but were not extended to
and not in force in the rest of the North East Frontier
Agency ceased to be in force in Tuensang Frontier Division.
Similarly, all laws which immediately before the appointed
day did not extend to or were not in force in the Tuensang
Frontier Division but extended to or were in force in the
rest of the North East Frontier Agency, were extended to or
came into force in the Tuensang Frontier Division. In other
words, the laws in the North East Frontier Agency became
completely uniform except in one respect, namely, the
continued enforcement of the Undesirable Persons Regulation
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referred to above in Tuensang Division. As the Criminal
Procedure Code was never in force in any part of the North
East Frontier Agency it did not come into force in the
Tuensang Area. On the other hand, the Rules of 1937 if they
were valid and in force got extended to the Tuensang area
also. In 1921, in accordance with the provisions of the
Government of India Act, Assam became a Governor’s Province
and later one of the States in the Indian Republic. The
Regulations of 1952, 1954, 1956 and 1957 were made by the
Governor in exercise of his powers under the Sixth Schedule
of the Constitution. We shall now consider the arguments in
these appeals which have covered a wide field, and they were
also apparently addressed in the High Court and found favour
there.
We may here dispose of one argument which is somewhat
independent of the others. It is contended that the Rules
of 1937 did not survive the repeal of the Scheduled
Districts Act, 1874 by the Adaptation of Laws Order, 1937,
notwithstanding the saving clause in the Adaptation of Laws
Order. This argument is. based on the submission that the
savings clause (reproduced earlier by us) did not mention
rules as such. We do not agree. The saving clause
preserved all notifications. The Rules of 1937 were enacted
by notification and if notifications were saved the Rules in
the notification were also saved. After the passing of the
Government of India Act, 1935, the Rules of 1937 would be
successi-
848
vely preserved by ss. 292 and 293 of the Government of India
Act, 1935, S. 18 of the Indian Independence Act, 1947 and
Art. 372 of the Constitution. The real questions are
whether they were invalid for any reason to start with or
became void after the Constitution.
The powers of the Governor-General in Council and now ,of
the President derived from the various constitutional
documents are not and indeed cannot be in doubt. Hence the
attempt of the respondents is to challenge the powers of the
Lt. Governor, Chief Commissioners and the Governor who have
in turns made Rules for the administration of these areas.
The attack is on the Rules of 1906 and 1937 as being
incompetently made under the Scheduled Districts Act and on
ss. 6 and 7 of the Scheduled Districts Act, if it be held
that the Rules were competently made. We shall deal first
with these arguments.
The contention that the Rules of 1937 were void ab initio is
supported by many arguments. The submission is that ss. 6
and 7 of the Scheduled Districts Act did not confer any
powers of legislation to regulate judicial procedure. It is
pointed out in this connection that s. 6(a) gave powers to
appoint officers to administer civil and criminal justice
and s. 6(b) allowed the procedure of the officers so
appointed to be regulated which meant administrative
procedure and no general law-making authority can be implied
and s. 6(c) enabled the choosing of authority by which any
jurisdiction, power or duty incident to the operation of any
enactment for the time being in force should be exercised or
performed in any scheduled district. Reference is made in
this connection to s. 5 of the Act of 1869 where it was laid
down that the officers so appointed would, in the matter of
administration and superintendence, be subject to the
direction and control of the Governor and would be guided by
such instructions as he might, from time to time, issue. It
is contended that by regulating the procedure is meant
instructions on the administrative side.
In our opinion this is a wrong reading of the section. We
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must not forget that the Scheduled Districts Act was passed
because the backward tracts were never brought within the
operation of all the general Acts and Regulations
(particularly the Criminal Procedure Code) and were removed
from the operation and jurisdiction of the ordinary courts
of Judicature. In these areas the Indian Penal Code was
always applicable but not the Code of’ Criminal Procedure.
The local Governments were empowered by the Scheduled
Districts Act to appoint officers to administer civil and
criminal justice and to regulate the procedure of the offi-
cers so appointed. Officers appointed to administer civil
and ,criminal justice must follow some procedure in
performing this task. Regulating procedure, therefore,
meant more than framing
849
administrative rules. It meant the control of the procedure
for the effective administration of justice. It is
significant that the Governor-General in Council, who
enacted the Scheduled Districts Act, framed the Rules of
1874 containing comprehensive rules of procedure for dealing
with criminal cases. This was a clear exposition of ss. 6
and 7 of the Scheduled Districts Act by the Governor-General
in Council himself. The Act was understood as conferring
full powers to regulate not the administrative procedure
only but also the procedure for administration of criminal
justice. As the Rules of 1872, 1874, 1906 and 1937 were
almost the same (except for a few changes rendered necessary
by the altered political conditions) it is clear that a
succession of officers saw the necessity of Rules
controlling not only the administrative side but the
judicial side of administration of justice. In our judgment
the construction of ss. 6 and 7 attempted by the respondents
cannot be accepted.
It is next contended that the Act itself was bad because the
Legislature did not legislate on the subject of judicial
procedure but left essential legislation to a delegate,
without laying down any or at least enough guidance in the
Scheduled Districts Act for those who were to make Rules
under it. In this connection learned counsel has drawn our
attention to several rulings in which the question of
excessive delegation has been considered by this Court and
in particular we have been referred to Re the Delhi Laws
Act, 1912,(1) Hamdard Dwakhana (Wakf) Lal Kuan v. Union of
India,(2) Vasantlal Maganbhai Sanjanwala v. State of
Bombay(3) and D. S. Grewal v. State of Punjab.(4) It is
submitted that ss. 6 and 7 of the Scheduled Districts Act
laid down no policy, and did not afford a guide in the
making of Rules except to say that officers should be
appointed to administer civil and criminal justice and that
the local Government might regulate the procedure of such
officers, thereby leaving the essential law-making to the
delegate.
In this Court we have on several occasions pointed out
that guidance may be sufficient if the nature of thing to be
done and the purpose for which it is to be done is clearly
indicated. Instances of such legislation were cited before
us and the case of Harishankar Bagla v. Madhya Pradesh(5)
was one of them. The policy and purpose may be pointed out
in the section conferring the powers and may even be
indicated in the preamble or elsewhere in the Act. The
preamble of the Scheduled Districts Act shows that these
backward tracts were never brought within, but from time to
time were removed from, the operation of general Acts and
Regulations and the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts of
judicature was also excluded. It was therefore necessary to
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ascertain the enactments
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 747. (2) [19601 2 S.C.R. 671.
(3) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 341. (4) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 792.
(5) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 288.
8 50
in force and to set up a machinery for making simple rules.
The Act conferred on the local Governments power to appoint
officers for administration of civil and criminal justice
within the Scheduled Districts and empowered the local
Government to regulate the procedure of the officers so
appointed and to confer on them authority and jurisdiction,
powers and duties incident to the administration of civil
and criminal justice. These provisions afforded sufficient
guide to the local Government that the administration of
civil and criminal justice was to be done under their
control by the officers appointed by them and the procedure
which they were to follow must be laid down. This was not
an instance, therefore, of excessive delegation at all. The
Legislature clearly indicated the policy and the manner of
effectuating that policy. There was sufficient guidance in
the three sub-sections of s. 6 read as a whole with the
preamble and the Chief Commissioner’s Rules made in 1872 and
republished in 1874 by the Governor-General in Council were
also available as a further guide as the last were continued
in force by s. 7. Indeed, the subsequent Rules of 1906 and
1937 repeated the Rules of 1872 & 1874 with amendments
necessary’ owing to political changes and only slightly
liberalised them in some ways. We do not consider that
there was excessive delegation of legislative authority by
the Legislature.
It is next contended that s. 7 of the Scheduled Districts
Act did not confer any power upon the local Government to
alter in any way the Rules made by the Governor-General in
Council. That section says that Rules which had hitherto
been prescribed by the Governor-General or the local
Government for the guidance of the officers appointed within
any of the scheduled districts were to continue to be in
force unless and until the Governor-General or the local
Government, as the case may be, otherwise directed. It is
admitted that the Governor-General in Council, possessing an
overriding power, might even have amended the Rules made by
the local Government. But it is submitted that the Gover-
nor-General in Council could amend his own Rules and the
local Government could amend its own Rules but the Local
Government, being a delegate, could not amend or cancel the
Rules of the Governor-General in Council. It is urged that
the Rules of 1906 made by the Lt. Governor and the Rules of
1937 made by the Governor were ineffective. With regard to
the Rules of 1906 it is sufficient to say that the Bengal
Assam Laws Act 1905 authorised local Government by
notification to say by what officer any authority or power
was to be exercisable and any such notification was to have
effect as if enacted in the Act itself. When the Rules of
1906 were made by the local Government they had effect as if
they were enacted in Act 7 of 1905. But the power could be
exercised by the Governor under the Scheduled Districts Act
ss. 6 and 7 to make fresh Rules. By that Act the Governor-
General in Council conferred on the
851
local Government an equal or concurrent power and this is
clearly indicated by the word "as the case may be" in s. 7
of the Act. Those words do not, as it contended, show that
the local Government could only amend its own Rules. These
words rather show that whoever made the rules the authority
of the Act would make them binding. In our judgment the
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Rules of 1937 were validly enacted.
In order to avoid this implication, the Rules are attacked
as ultra vires Arts. 21 and 14. Article 21 is used because
it is contended that these Rules do not amount to law as we
understand it, particularly where the Rules say that not the
Criminal Procedure Code but its spirit is to govern the
administration of justice. It is urged that this is not a
law because it leaves each officer free to act arbitrarily.
This is not a fair reading of the Rule. How the spirit of
the Code is to be applied and not its letter was considered
by this Court in Gurumayum Sakhigopal Sarma v. K. Ongbi
Anisija Devi (Civil Appeal No. 659 of 1957 decided on 9th of
February, 1961) in connection with the Code of Civil
Procedure. With reference to a similar rule that the courts
should be guided by the spirit and should not be bound by
the letter of the Code of Civil Procedure this Court
explained that the reason appeared to be that the techni-
calities of the Code, should not trammel litigation embarked
upon by a people unused to them. In that case although a
suit was ordered to be dismissed for default of appearance,
an order was passed on merits. The question arose whether
it was dismissed under 0.9 r. 8 or 0 . 17 r. 3 of the Code
of Civil Procedure. It was held by this Court that it did
not matter under which Order it was dismissed but that no
second suit could be brought on the same cause of action
without getting rid of the order dismissing the suit. In
this way this Court applied the spirit of the Code and put
aside the technicalities by attempting to find out whether
the dismissal was referable to 0. 9, r. 8 or 0. 17, r. 3 of
the Code. That case illustrates how the spirit of the Code
is used rather than the technical rule. In the same way,
under the criminal administration of justice the technical
rules are not to prevail. over the substance of the matter.
The Deputy Commissioner in trying criminal cases would hold
the trial according to the exigency of the case. In a petty
case he would follow the summons procedure but in a heinous
one he would follow the procedure in a warrant case. The
question of a Sessions trial cannot arise because there is
no provision for committal proceeding and there are no
Sessions Judges in these areas. Therefore, the Deputy
Commissioner who was trying the case observed that he was
going to observe the warrant procedure and in the
circumstances he was observing the spirit of the Code.
Laws of this kind are made with an eye to simplicity.
People in backward tracts cannot be expected to make
themselves aware
8 52
of the technicalities of a complex Code. What is important
is that they should be able to present their defence
effectively unhampered by the technicalities of complex
laws. Throughout the past century the Criminal Procedure
Code has been excluded from this area because it would be
too difficult for the local people to understand it.
Instead the spirit of the Criminal Procedure Code has been
asked to be applied so that justice may not fail because of
some technicality. The argument that this is no law is not
correct. Written law is nothing more than a control of
discretion. The more there is of law the less there is of
discretion. In this area it is considered necessary that
discretion should have greater play than technical rules and
the provision that the spirit of the Code should apply is a
law conceived in the best interests of the people. The
discretion of the Presiding Officer is not subjected to
rigid ,control because of the unsatisfactory state of
defences which would be offered and which might fail if they
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did not comply with some technical rule. The removal of
technicalities, in our opinion, leads to the advancement of
the cause of justice in these backward tracts. On the other
hand, the imposition of the Code of Criminal Procedure would
retard justice, as indeed the Governors-General, the
Governor and the other heads of local Government have always
thought. We think, therefore, that Art. 21 does not render
the Rules of 1937 ineffective.
A similar attempt is made by comparing these Rules with
the Criminal Procedure Code applicable in the rest of India.
It is contended that this leads to discrimination. We think
that the exigency of the situation clearly demands that the
Criminal Procedure Code should not apply in this area. It
is not discrimination to administer different laws in
different areas. The Presidency Towns have got special
procedures which do not obtain in other areas. We have
known of trial by jury in one part of India for an offence
which was not so triable in another. Similarly, what is an
offence in one part ,of India is not an offence in another.
Regional differences do not necessarily connote
discrimination and laws many be designed for effective
justice in different ways in different parts of India if
people are not similarly circumstanced. These backward
tracts are not found suitable for the application of the
Criminal Procedure Code in all its rigour and technicality,
and to say that they shall be ,governed, not by the
technical rules of the Code but by the substance of such
rules is not to discriminate this area against the rest of
India.
It is contended that there is discrimination between the
Tuensang District and the other two districts of the State
because in the other two districts the Code of Criminal
Procedure applies. This seems to be stated in the judgment
of Mr. Justice C. Sanjeeva Rao Nayudu who proceeded upon a
concession of the Advocate-General
853
of Nagaland. We have, however, no reason to think that the
Advocate-General could have conceded this point. It was
made clear to us that there was some mistake and the
assumption made by Nayudu J. was based on a misapprehension.
It is now admitted by Mr. A, K. Sen on behalf of the
respondents that the Criminal Procedure Code does not apply
to any of the three districts and therefore there is no
question of any discrimination between one district and
another in Nagaland.
Lastly, it is contended that the Rules themselves allow for
discrimination because one officer may take something to be
the spirit of the Criminal Procedure Code and another may
not. The requirements of the case must determine what
should be applied from the Criminal Procedure Code and what
should not. The Rules have been purposely made elastic so
that different kinds of cases and different situations may
be handled not according to a set pattern but according to
the requirements of the situation and the circumstances of
the case. In a backward tract the accused is not in a
position to defend himself meticulously according to a
complex Code. It is, therefore, necessary to leave the
Judge free so that he may would his proceedings to suit the
situation and may be able to apply the essential rules on
which our administration of justice is based untramelled by
any technical rule unless that rule is essential to further
the cause of justice. This would rather lead to less
discrimination because each accused would be afforded an
opportunity which his case and circumstances require. The
Rules of 1937 were designed for an extremely simple and
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unsophisticated society and approximate to the rules of
natural justice. It is impossible in such circumstances to,
think, that because the Judge has more discretion than if he
acted under the Criminal Procedure Code or is able to bring
different considerations to the aid of administration of
justice that there must be discrimination. If a Judge does
not apply +the spirit of the Code but goes against it or
acts in a manner which may be considered to be perverse the
High Court will consider his action and set it right. As we
said earlier the law has not attempted to control discretion
by Rules in this area but has rather left discretion free so
that the rule may not hamper the administration of justice.
As there is no vested right in procedure the respondents
cannot claim that they be tried under the Criminal Procedure
Code in this State where the Code is excluded. In such a
situation it is difficult to, find discrimination.
It was lastly contended that there is discrimination between
one set of rules and another; that in some of the other
backward tracts of Assam the rules are different and a
comparative study was made before us of the different rules,
as for example, Rules of 1874,
854
1937 and the Assam Frontier Administration of Justice
Regulation, 1945 which applied to Balipura, Lakhimpur,
Sadiya and Tirap tracts and had been applied in Tuensang
Division in 1955. The main differences are in the matter of
appeals against acquittals and the power of transfer. In so
far as the appeals against acquittals are concerned, it is,
of course, obvious that where such a power is not conferred
there cannot be an appeal against acquittals. In so far as
transfer is concerned, we see no difficulty because the
rules were different to start with in different districts
and even if the provisions for transfer may not be in one
part the spirit of the Code of Criminal Procedure would
permit transfer in that part. Similarly, in some places
confirmation of sentence above 7 years is required and in
some others there is only a right of appeal. This depends
on how advanced each area is. The attempt, of course, is to
bring these territories under the Criminal Procedure Code
,applicable in the rest of India, by such stages as appear
justified. As that stage is not yet reached little
differences must exist but no discrimination can be spelled
out from the differences. Art. 371A of the Constitution
itself contemplates a different treatment of these tracts
and the differences are justified by the vast differences
between the needs of social conditions in Nagaland and the
various stages of development of different parts. We do
not, therefore, consider that a comparison of these rules
leads to any conclusion that there is likelihood of
discrimination which would offend the Constitution.
We accordingly hold that the Rules of 1937 continue to be in
force and govern the trial of these respondents. The Code
of Criminal Procedure admittedly does not apply there and
the Additional Deputy Commissioner was therefore right in
holding the trial under the Rules of 1937. It is obvious
that in following the spirit of the Code and in applying the
warrant procedure the Deputy Commissioner followed the right
procedure and the High Court was in error in thinking that
neither the Rules of 1937, nor any Rules applied to this
area. We accordingly allow the appeals and set aside the
order of the High Court. The trial of the respondents shall
proceed under the Rules of 1937.
We may, however, say that it would be better if, as soon as
it is found to be expedient, all Rules are cancelled and one
uniform set of Rules is made for the whole of this area.
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This would obviate having to find out through the mazes of
history and the congress ,of rules, notifications and
regulations what law is applicable. If any difficulty is
felt in making new rules recourse may easily be taken to the
provisions of s. 31 of the State of Nagaland Act which
enables the President, by order, to remove any difficulty to
give effect to the provisions of the State of Nagaland Act.
The history of this area shows that there have been
difficulties in the past in
85 5
ascertaining laws which were applicable at any point of time
in any particular area and led to the passing of many Acts
of British Parliament and of the Governor-General in Council
to remove such difficulties. We do not think that such a
state of affairs should continue indefinitely when the State
of Nagaland Act itself gives sufficient power to remove
difficulties.
Appeals allowed.
856