Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ZAVERBHAI AMAIDAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/10/1954
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1954 AIR 752 1955 SCR 799
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1956 SC 676 (39)
F 1957 SC 458 (20)
R 1959 SC 648 (29)
RF 1967 SC1091 (11)
R 1979 SC 898 (28)
F 1983 SC 150 (16)
R 1983 SC1019 (66)
R 1985 SC1729 (10)
R 1987 SC1837 (33,35)
R 1988 SC1708 (24)
R 1990 SC 104 (11)
F 1990 SC 548 (14)
RF 1990 SC2072 (14,46)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 254(2), Government of India Act,
1935, s. 107(2)-Principle embodied therein--Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act (XXIV of 1946) s. 7 as
amended by Act LII of 1950-Bombay Act XXXVI of 1947-S. 2-
Subject matter of legislation identical-Repugnancy-Repeal by
necessary intendment.
HEADNOTE:
Article 254(2) of the Constitution is, in substance, a
reproduction of s. 107(2) of the Government of India Act,
1935, the concluding portion whereof is incorporated in a
proviso with further additions. The principle embodied
therein is that when there is legislation covering the same
ground both by the Centre and by the State, both of them
being competent to enact the same, the law of the Centre
should prevail over that of the State.
Section 7 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act,
1946, was amended in 1948 and 1949 and thereafter by Act LII
of 1950.
Held, that Act LII of 1950 is a legislation in respect of
the same matter as Bombay Act (XXX VI of 1947) within the
meaning of Art. 254(2) of the Constitution and therefore s.
2 of Bombay Act XXXVI of 1947 cannot prevail as against s. 7
of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act as amended
by Act LII of 1950.
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It is a well-settled rule of construction that if a later
statute again describes an off once created by a previous
one and imposes a different punishment or varies the
procedure, the earlier statute is repealed by the later
statute.
Attorniey-Geneeral for Ontario v. Attorney-General for the
Dominion [1896] A.C. 348, Smith v. Benabo [1937] 1. K.B.
518, and Michell v. Brown (I El. & El. 267, 274) referred
to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 31 of
1953.
Under article 132(1) of the Constitution of India from the
Judgment and Order dated 20-1-1953 of the High Court of
Judicature at Bombay in Criminal Revision Application No.
642 of 1952,
800
1. C. Dalal and P. K. Chatterjee for the appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India (P. A. Mehta
and P. G. Gokhale, with him) for the respondent.
1954. October 8. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-This is an appeal against the judgment
of the High Court of Bombay dismissing a revision petition
filed by the appellant against his conviction under section
7 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act No. XXIV
of 1946.
The charge against the appellant was that on 6th April,
1951, he had transported 15 maunds of juwar from his village
of Khanjroli to Mandvi without a permit, and had thereby
contravened section 5(1) of the Bombay Food Grains
(Regulation of Movement and Sale) Order, 1949. The Resident
First Class Magistrate of Bardoli who tried the case found
him guilty, and sentenced him to imprisonment till the
rising of the Court and a fine of Rs. 500. The conviction
and sentence were both affirmed by the Sessions Judge,
Surat, on appeal. The appellant thereafter took up the
matter in revision to the High Court of Bombay, and there
for the first time, took the objection that the Resident
First Class Magistrate had no jurisdiction to try the case,
because under section 2 of the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947
the offence was punishable with imprisonment, which might
extend to seven years, and under the Second Schedule to the
Criminal Procedure Code, it was only the Sessions Court that
had jurisdiction to try such offence. The answer of the
State to this contention was that subsequent to the
enactment of the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947, the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act bad undergone substantial
alterations, and was finally recast by the Central Act No.
LII of 1950; that the effect of these amendments was that
Act No. XXXVI of 1947 had become inoperative, that the
governing Act was Act No. LII of 1950, and that as under
that Act the maximum sentence for the offence in question
was three years, the Resident First Class Magistrate had
jurisdiction over the offence.
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The revision petition was heard by a Bench consisting of
Bavdekar and Chainani JJ. Bavdekar J. was of the opinion
that the amendments to the Essential Supplies (Temporary
Powers) Act including the re-enactment of section 7 in Act
No. LII of 1950 did not trench on the field covered by the
Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947, which accordingly remained
unaffected by them. Chainani J., on the other hand, held
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that both Act No. XXXVI of 1947 and Act No. LII of 1950
related to the same subject-matter, and that as Act No. LII
of 1950 was a Central legislation of a later date, it
prevailed over the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947. On this
difference of opinion, the matter came up under section 429,
Criminal Procedure Code, for hearing before Chagla C. J.,
who agreed with Chainani J, that there was repugnancy
between section 7 of Act No. LII of 1950 and section 2 of
the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947, and that under article
254(2), the former prevailed ; and the revision petition was
accordingly dismissed. Against this judgment, the present
appeal has been preferred on a certificate under article 132
(1), and the point for determination is whether
contravention of section 5(1) of the Bombay Food Grains
(Regulation of Movement and Sale) Order, 1949, is punishable
under section 2 of the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947, in
which case the trial by the Resident First Class Magistrate
would be without jurisdiction ; or whether it is punishable
under section 7 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers)
Act, as amended by Act No. LII of 1950, in which case, the
trial and conviction of the appellant by that Magistrate
would be perfectly legal.
It is now necessary to refer in chronological sequence to
the statutes bearing on the question. We start with the
Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act No. XXIV of 1946
enacted by the Central Legislature by virtue of the powers
conferred on it by 9 and 10, George VI, Chapter 39. It
applied to the whole of British India. Section 3 of the Act
conferred power on the Central Government to issue orders
for regulating the production, supply and distribution of
essential commodities, and under section 4, this power could
be
802
delegated to the Provincial Government. Section 7(1)
provided for punishment for contravention of orders issued
under the Act, and ran as follows:
"If any person contravenes any order made under section 3,
he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which
may extend to three years or with fine or with both, and if
the order so provides any Court trying such contravention
may direct that any property in respect of which the Court
is satisfied that the order has been contravened shall be
forfeited to His Majesty:
Provided that where the contravention is of an order
relating to foodstuffs which contains an express provision
in this behalf, the Court shall make such direction, unless
for reasons to be recorded in writing it is of opinion that
the direction should not be made in respect of the whole or
as the case may be, a part of the property."
The State of Bombay considered that the maximum punishment
of three years’ imprisonment provided in the above section
was not adequate for offences under the Act, and with the
object of enhancing the punishment provided therein, enacted
Act No. XXXVI of 1947. Section 2 of the said Act provided
(omitting what is not material for the present purpose) that
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, whoever contravenes
an order made or deemed to be made under section 3 of the
said Act shall be punished with imprisonment which may
extend to seven years, but shall not, except for reasons to
be recorded in writing, be less than six months, and shall
also be liable to fine." This section is avowedly repugnant
to section 7(1) of the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers)
Act. Section 107 (2) of the Government of India Act, which
was the Constitution Act then in force, enacted that,
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"Where a Provincial law with respect to one of the matters
enumerated in the Concurrent Legislative List contains any
provision repugnant to the provisions of an earlier Dominion
law or an existing law with respect to that matter, then, if
the Provincial law having been reserved for the
consideration of the Governor-General has received the
assent of the Governor-General,
803
the Provincial law shall in that Province prevail, but
nevertheless the Dominion Legislature may at any time enact
further legislation -with respect to the same matter. "
On the footing that the subject-matter of Act No. XXXVI of
1947 fell within the Concurrent List, the Bombay Government
obtained the assent of the Governor-General therefor, and
thereafter it came into force on 25th November, 1947. The
position therefore was that by reason of section 107(2) of
the Government of India Act, Act No. XXXVI of 1947 prevailed
in Bombay over section 7 of the Essential Supplies
(Temporary Powers) Act; but at the same time, it was subject
under that section to all and any "further legislation with
respect to the same matter", that might be enacted by the
Central Legislature.
The contention of the State is that there was such further
legislation by the Central Legislature in 1948, in 1949 and
again in 1950, and that as a result of such legislation,
section 2 of the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947 had become
inoperative. In 1948 there was an amendment of the
Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, whereby the
proviso to section 7(1) was repealed and a new proviso
substituted, which provided inter alia that,
" Where the contravention is of an order relating to
foodstuffs which contains an express provision in this
behalf, the Court shall direct that any property in respect
of which the order has been contravened shall be forfeited
to His Majesty, unless for reasons to be recorded in writing
it is of opinion that the direction should be made not in
respect of the whole, or as the case may be, a part of the
property. "
The Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act was again
amended in 1949. Under this amendment, the proviso to
section 7(i) was repealed, and a new clause substituted in
the following terms:
" (b) Where the contravention is of an order relating to
foodstuffs, the Court shall (i) sentence any person
convicted of such contravention to imprisonment for a term
which may extend to three years and may, in addition, impose
a sentence of fine, unless for
804
reasons to be recorded, it is of opinion that a sentence of
fine only will meet the ends of justice; and
(ii)direct that any property in respect of which the order
has been contravened or a part thereof shall be forfeited to
His Majesty, unless for reasons to be recorded it is of
opinion that such direction is not necessary to be made in
respect of the whole, or, as the case may be, a part of the
property. "
Then came Central Act No. LII of 1950, under which the old
section 7 was repealed and a new section enacted in the
following terms:
" (1) If any person contravenes any order under section 3
relating to cotton textiles he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years and
shall also be liable to fine; and any property in respect of
which the order has been contravened or such part thereof as
to the Court may seem fit shall be forfeited to the
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Government.
(2)If any person contravenes any order under section 3
relating to foodstuffs,--
(a)he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which
may extend to three years and shall also be liable to fine,
unless for reasons to be recorded the Court is of opinion
that a sentence of fine only will meet the ends of justice ;
and
(b)any property in respect of which the order has been
contravened or such part thereof as to the Court may seem
fit shall be forfeited to the Government, unless for reasons
to be recorded the Court is of opinion that it is not
necessary to direct forfeiture in respect of the whole or,
as the case may be, any part of the property:
Provided that where the contravention is of an order
prescribing the maximum quantity of any foodgrain that may
lawfully be possessed by any person or class of persons, and
the person contravening the order is found to have been in
possession of foodgrains exceeding twice the maximum
quantity so prescribed, the Court shall-
(a)sentence him to imprisonment for a term which may extend
to seven years and to a fine not less than
805
twenty times the value of the foodgrain found in his
possession, and
(b)direct that the whole of such foodgrain in excess of the
prescribed quantity shall be forfeited to the Government.
Explanation:-A person in possession of foodgrain which does
not exceed by more than five maunds the maximum quantity so
prescribed shall not be deemed to be guilty of an offence
punishable under the proviso to this sub-section.
(3)If any person contravenes any order under section 3
relating to any essential commodity other than cotton
textiles and food-stuffs, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years, or
with fine or with both, and if the order so provides, any
property in respect of which the Court is satisfied that the
order has been contravened may be forfeited to the
Government.
(4)If any person to whom a direction is given under sub-
section (4) of section 3 fails to comply with the direction,
he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which
may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both."
It must be mentioned that while the amendments of 1948 and
1949 were made when section 107(2) of the Government of
India Act was in force, the Constitution of India Act had
come into operation, when Act No. LII of 1950 was enacted.
Article 254(2) of the Constitution is as follows:
" Where a law made by the Legislature of a State specified
in Part A or Part B of the First Schedule with respect to
one of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List
contains any provision repugnant to the provisions of an
earlier law made by Parliament or an existing law with
respect to that matter, then, the law so made by the
Legislature of such State shall,, if it has been reserved
for the consideration of - the President and has received
his assent, prevail in that State :
Provided that nothing in this clause shall prevent
Parliament from enacting at any time any law with
806
respect to the same matter including a law adding to,
amending, varying or repealing the law so made by the
Legislature of the State."
This is, in substance, a reproduction of section 107(2) of
the Government of India Act, the concluding portion thereof
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being incorporated in a proviso with further additions.
Discussing the nature of the power of the Dominion
Legislature, Canada, in relation to that of the Provincial
Legislature, in a situation similar to that under section
107(2) of the Government of India Act, it was observed by
Lord Was on in Attorney-General for Ontario v. Attornery-
General for the Dominion(1), that though a law enacted by
the Parliament of Canada and within its competence would
override Provincial legislation covering the same field, the
Dominion Parliament bad no authority conferred upon it under
the Constitution to enact a statute repealing directly any
Provincial statute. That would appear to have been the
position under section 107(2) of the Government of India Act
with reference to the subjects mentioned in the Concurrent
List. Now, by the proviso to article 254(2) the
Constitution has enlarged the powers of Parliament, and
under that proviso, Parliament can do what the Central
Legislature could not under section 107(2) of the Government
of India Act, and enact a law adding to, amending, varying
or repealing a law of the State, when it relates to a matter
mentioned in the Concurrent List. The position then is that
under the Constitution Parliament can, acting under the
proviso to article 254(2), repeal a State law. But where it
does not expressly do so, even then, the State law will be
void under that provision if it conflicts with a later "law
with respect to the same matter" that may be enacted by
Parliament.
In the present case, there was no express repeal of the
Bombay Act by Act No. LII of 1950 in terms of the proviso to
article 254(2). Then the only question to be decided is
whether the amendments made to the Essential Supplies
(Temporary Powers) Act by the Central Legislature in 1948,
1949 and 1950 are "furthers
(1) [1896] A.C. 348.
807
legislation" falling within section 107(2) of the Government
of India Act or "law with respect to the same matter"
falling within article 254(2). The important thing to
consider with reference to this provision is whether the
legislation is "in respect of the same matter." If the later
legislation deals not with the matters which formed the
subject of the earlier legislation but with other and
distinct matters though of a cognate and allied character,
then article 254(2) will have no application. The principle
embodied in section 107(2) and article 254(2) is that when
there is legislation covering the same ground both by the
Centre and by the Province, both of them being competent to
enact the same, the law of the Centre should prevail over
that of the State.
Considering the matter from this standpoint, the first
question to be asked is, what is the subject-matter of the
Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947? The preamble recites that it
was "to provide for the enhancement of penalties for
contravention of orders made under the Essential Supplies
(Temporary Powers) Act, 1946." Then the next question is,
what is the scope of the subsequent legislation in 1948,
1949 and 1950 ? As the offence for which the appellant has
been convicted was committed on 6th April, 1951, it would be
sufficient for the purpose of the present appeal to consider
the effect of Act No. LII of 1950, which was in force on
that date. By that Act, section 7(1) of the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act as passed in 1946 and as
amended in 1948 and 1949 was repealed, and in its place, a
new section was substituted. The scheme of that section is
that for purposes of punishment, offences under the Act are
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grouped under three categories-,those relating to cotton
textiles, those relating to foodstuffs, and those relating
to essential commodities other than textiles or foodstuffs.
The punishments’ to be imposed in the several categories are
separately specified. With reference to foodstuffs, the
punishment that could be awarded when the offence consists
in possession of foodgrains exceeding twice the maximum
prescribed is imprisonment for a term
808
which may extend to seven years, with further provisions for
fine and forfeiture of the commodities. In other cases,
there is the lesser punishment of imprisonment, which may
extend to three years. Section 7 is thus a comprehensive
code covering the entire field of punishment for offences
under the Act, graded according to the commodities and to
the character of the offence. The subject of enhanced
punishment that is dealt with in Act No. XXXVI of 1947 is
also comprised in Act No. LII of 1950, the same being
limited to the case of hoarding of foodgrains. We are,
therefore, entirely in agreement with the opinion of Chagla
C.J. and Chainani J. that Act No. LII of 1950 is a
legislation in respect of the same matter as Act No. XXXVI
of 1947.
Bavdekar J. who came to the contrary conclusion observed,
a-.id quite correctly, that to establish repugnancy under
section 107(2) of the Government of India Act, it was not
necessary that one legislation should say "do" what the
other legislation says "don’t", and that repugnancy might
result when both the legislations covered the same field.
But he took the view that the question of enhanced penalty
under Act No. XXXVI of 1947 was a matter different from that
of punishment under the Essential Supplies (Temporary
Powers) Act, and as there was legislation in respect of
enhanced penalty only when the offence was possession of
foodstuffs in excess of twice the prescribed quantity, the
subject-matter of Act No. XXXVI of 1947 remained untouched
by Act No. LII of 1950 in respect of other matters. In
other words, he considered that the question of enhanced
punishment under Act No. XXXVI of 1947 was a matter
different from that of mere punishment under the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act and its amendments; and in
this, with respect, he fell into an error. The question of
punishment for contravention of orders under the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act both under Act No. XXXVI of
1947 and under Act No. LII of 1950 constitutes a single
subject. matter and cannot be split up in the manner
suggested by the learned Judge. On this principle rests the
rule
809
of construction relating to statutes that "when the
punishment or penalty is altered in degree but not in kind,
the later provision would be considered as superseding the
earlier one." (Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, 10th
Edition, pages 187 and 188). "It is a well settled rule of
construction", observed Goddard J. in Smith v. Benabo(1),
"that if a later statute again describes an offence created
by a previous one, and imposes a different punishment, or
varies the procedure, the earlier statute is repealed by the
later statute: see Michell v.Brown(2), per Lord Campbell."
It is true, as already pointed out, that on a question under
article 254(1) whether an Act of Parliament prevails against
a law of the State, no question of repeal arises; but the
principle on which the rule of implied repeal rests, namely,
that if the subject-matter of the later legislation is
identical with that of the earlier, so that they cannot both
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stand together, then the earlier is repealed by the later
enactment, will be equally applicable to a question under
article 254(2) whether the further legislation by Parliament
is in respect of the same matter as that of the State law.
We must accordingly hold that section 2 of Bombay Act No.
XXXVI of 1947 cannot prevail as against section 7 of the
Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act No. XXIV of 1946
as amended by Act No. LII of 1950.
The appellant also sought to argue that the subjectmatter of
the legislation in Act No. XXXVI of 1947 was exclusively in
the Provincial List, and that section 107(2) of the
Government of India Act and article 254(2) of the
Constitution which apply only with reference to legislation
on subjects which are in the Concurrent List, have no
application. The very legislation on which the appellant
relies, viz., Act No. XXXVI of 1947, proceeds, as already
stated, on the basis that the subject-matter is in the
Concurrent List. The appellant raised this question before
the learned Judges of the Bombay High Court, and they
rejected it. In the application for, leave to appeal to
(1) [1937]1 K.B. 5I8.
(2) 1 El. and El. 267,274.
810
this Court which was presented under article 132(1), the
only ground that was put forward as involving a substantial
question as to the interpretation of the Constitution was,
whether the Bombay Act No. XXXVI of 1947 was repugnant and
void under article 254 of the Constitution. No other
question having been raised in the petition, we must decline
to permit the appellant to raise this point.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.