Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARISHCHANDRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/09/1964
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SARKAR, A.K.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 932 1965 SCR (1) 323
ACT:
Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Amendment Act, 1950
(Act 52 of 1950) Proviso to S. 17(4)-Central legislation
extended to Part B State-Notification under corresponding
State law not expressly repealed-whether survives-
Subordinate legislation whether can survive repeal of
parent law-Association of persons whether ’person’ for
purpose of prosecution-Liability of President of
Association.
HEADNOTE:
The Indian Scrap Order, 1943, passed under the Defence of
India Rules, was after the expiration of the said Rules,
preserved by the Essential Supplies Act, 1946. By (Central)
Act 52 of 1950, the said Act was extended, inter alia to the
Part B State of Madhya Bharat. That State already had its
corresponding law on the subject, namely, the Madhya Bharat
Essential Supplies Act, 1948, under which the Madhya Bharat
Scrap Order, 1949 had been issued. While extending the Cen-
tral legislation to the Part B States, Act 52 of 1950 also
laid down, in s. 17(4) that the "corresponding law" in the
State would stand repealed, with a proviso that the orders,
directions etc., issued under the repealed law would
continue. The appellant who was President of the Scrap
Dealers Association, Indore, was prosecuted under the
allegation that the Association had sold scrap iron at rates
higher than those fixed under the Indian Scrap Order. The
defence taken was that the prices at which the sales had
been effected were those fixed by -a notification dated 26th
August, 1949 under the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order which
continued in force. The appellant was acquitted by the
trial Court but was convicted by the High Court and appealed
to the Supreme Court by special leave.
The contentions of the appellant were : (1) The Madhya
Bharat Scrap Order had not been expressly repealed by the
Indian Scrap Order and therefore it continued by force of
the proviso to s. 17(4) of the Act 52 of 1950, and, in any
case, the notification dated 26th August, 1949, continued in
force as an independent piece of subordinate legislation.
(2) The appellant as President of the Scrap Dealers
Association which was an unincorporated body could not be
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held liable for a sale in excess of the authorised maximum
price effected by a Munim or Munims of the Association.
HELD : (i) The Central notification by which the Indian
Scrap Order was extended to Madhya Bharat, no doubt, did not
expressly provide for the repeal of the Madhya Bharat Scrap
Order, but the provisions of the two Orders were not
identical and they could not, therefore, operate
simultaneously. It was therefore obvious that on the
extension to Madhya Bharat of the Indian Scrap Order, the
Madhya Bharat Scrap Order was repealed and replaced by the
Indian law. [331D].
(ii) The notification in question could not survive even if
it was treated as an independent piece of subordinate
legislation under the State law. According to Craies, if
the statute under which by-laws are made is repealed, those
bye-laws are impliedly repealed and cease to have any
validity unless the repealing statute contains some
provision preserving the validity of the by-laws,
notwithstanding the repeal. As the parent
324
order under which the notification dated August 26, 1949,
was made had been repealed without a saving, the effect was
that the said notification also stood repealed. (333D; 333G-
H; 334H].
(iii) The definition of ’person’ in the General Clauses
Act includes within that term an unincorporated body of
persons. In the present case it was the Association that
was given the facility of obtaining scrap at more favourable
prices than dealers, and it was that body which was
subjected to control in the shape of having to sell what it
had purchased from controlled sources at specified prices.
The argument could not be accepted that the Association as
such could not be penalised for selling at unauthorised
rates. The appellant as President of the Association was
liable to be convicted by virtue of s. 8 of the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946 which made the
abetment of contravention of any order under the Act, also
an offence. [335C-D,E-F].
Watson v. Winch. [1916] 1 K.B. 688 and Craies on Statute
Law. 6th Edn. 332, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos.
211 to 217 of 1962.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
May, 5, 1962, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court (Indore
Bench) at Indore, in Criminal Appeals Nos. 216, 222 and 227
to 231 of 1961.
C. B. Agarwala and Rameshwar Nath, for the appellant.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ayyangar J. These seven appeals are connected as they relate
to the same appellant and the point involved in each is
identical. They are before us by virtue of special leave
granted by this Court and are directed against the common
judgment of the Indore Bench of the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh convicting the appellant of a contravention of the
Indian Iron & Steel (Scrap Control) Order, 1943.
The accused, the appellant before us, was the President of
the Scrap Dealers Association at Indore and he was
prosecuted before the learned Additional City Magistrate,
Indore City in seven sets of criminal cases filed by the
State of Madhya Pradesh alleging contravention of S. 8(4) of
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the Iron & Steel (Scrap Control) Order, 1943 by selling or
causing to be sold scrap iron to different customers on
different dates at a rate higher than was authorised by
notification dated September 30, 1952 issued by the Steel
Controller under the said order. He was acquitted by the
Additional City Magistrate but on appeals preferred by the
State Government, the learned Judges set aside the acquittal
and convicted him of the offences and sentenced him to pay a
fine of
325
Rs. 100 in each case with imprisonment in default of payment
of
fine. It is the correctness of this judgment of the High
Court
that is canvassed before us by the appellant in these
appeals.
To appreciate the points raised by the appellant it is
necessary to narrate briefly the history of the legislation
on the topic of control over the price at which scrap was
permitted to be sold by dealers. The Defence of India Act,
1939 enabled the Central Government to frame rules,
among others, "for maintaining supplies and services
essential to the life of the community (vides. 2)." In
pursuance thereof Rule 81 (2) of the Defence of India Rules
empowered the Central Government "so far as appears to them
to be necessary or expedient for . . . . . . maintaining
supplies and services essential to the life of the com-
munity" to provide by order, inter alia, (a) for controlling
the pi-ices or rates at which articles or things of any
description whatever may be sold......... and for relaxing
any such prices or rates". By virtue of this power, the
Central Government promulgated the Iron & Steel (Scrap
Control) Order, 1943 (hereinafter referred to as the Indian
Scrap Order) on February 25. 1943. This Order to whose
provisions we shall have to make some reference later would
normally have lapsed on the expiry of six months after the
revocation of the proclamation of emergency because of the
provisions of s. 102(3) (a) of the Government of India Act,
1935. In order to avoid this result, the Emergency
Provisions Continuance Ordinance, 1946 was promulgated on
September 25, 1946 which continued several orders in
relation to the control of production, distribution etc. of
essential commodities, and Indian Scrap Order among them,
and this ordinance was replaced by a permanent legislation-
the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946 (Act 24
of 1946) which also contained a provision for the
continuance of the Control Orders in force [vide s. 17(2)].
Section 8(4) of the Indian Scrap Order prohibited the sale
of scrap in excess of the prices fixed therefore by the
Controller. It is not disputed that the sales in regard to
which the appellant has been prosecuted were in excess of
the maximum there specified.
Several defences were raised but of these those which now
survive are only two: (1) The legal effect of the parallel
provisions on the same subject viz., control over the sale
price of scrap which were in force in the Part B State of
Madhya Bharat which comprised Indore, and (2) Whether the
appellant as the President of the Scrap Dealers Association
which was an unincorporated body could be held liable for, a
sale in excess of the
sup./64--8
326
authorised maximum price effected by a Munim or Munims of
the Association.
We shall now proceed to narrate in brief outline the history
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of the parallel provisions relative to control over the sale
price of Scrap in the Part B State of Madhya Bharat. These
provisions undoubtedly continued in force in the State till
September 12, 1950 when the Indian Scrap Control Order, 1943
was in terms made applicable in that State and the principal
point raised by Mr. Agarwala was whether a certain
notification which had been issued under the State law and
was in force on that date continued in force even
thereafter. The State legislation on this topic started on
October 9, 1948 with the promulgation of the Madhya Bharat
Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Ordinance, 1948, which
was a reproduction of the Indian Essential Supplies
(Temporary Powers) Ordinance, 1946. When this Ordinance was
replaced in India by the Essential Supplies (Temporary
Powers) Act, 1946, the same process was repeated in Madhya
Bharat by the enactment of the Essential Supplies (Temporary
Powers) Act (Samvat 2005) (Madhya Bharat Act III of 1948).
Among the "essential, commodities" dealt with by the State
enactment were iron and steel [vide S. 2(3)(7)]. Section 4
of the Act read:
"4. Powers to control production, supply,
distribution etc., of essential commodities.
(1) The Government so far as it appears to it
to be necessary or expedient for maintaining
or increasing supplies of any essential
commodities, or for securing their equitable
distribution and availability at fair prices
may by an Order notified in the Official
Gazette provide for regulating or prohibiting
the production, supply, distribution and
movement thereof, and trade and commerce
therein.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of
the powers conferred by sub-section (1), an
order made thereunder may provide
(c) For controlling the prices at which any
essential commodity may be bought or sold;
to quote only the material words. In exercise of the powers
thus conferred the Director of Civil Supplies, Madhya
Bharat, to whom the powers in that behalf were delegated by
the State Government, promulgated on June 4, 1949 the Madhya
Bharat Iron, Steel and Scrap (Production, Procurement and
Distribution)
327
Control Order, 1949. Clause 5 of this Order empowered the
Director of Civil Supplies, Madhya Bharat to specify from
time to time the maximum prices-wholesale and retail-at
which "iron and steel, scrap or specified articles made
thereof" may be sold (a) by a producer, (b) by a controlled
stockholder, (c) by a registered stockholder (d) by a
controlled dealer and (e) by a scrap merchant. The several
categories of persons whose sales were thus regulated were
defined in the Order. Acting under this provision, the
Director Civil Supplies issued a notification on the same
date-June 4, 1949-which read:
"In exercise of the powers conferred on the
Director under clause 5(1) of the Madhya
Bharat Iron, Steel and Scrap (Production,
Procurement and Distribution) Control Order,
1949, I hereby specify that the Price
Schedules as may be in force for the time
being under ...... Iron and Steel Scrap
Control Order in the Indian Union in respect
of sales by producers, controlled and
Registered Stockholders and Scrap Merchants
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shall apply mutatis mutandis to sales by the
aforesaid persons in Madhya Bharat; provided
however, that the Registered Stockholders
shall sell to Controlled Dealers at II column
rates of the Government of India Price
Schedule for the time being in force, that
Iron and Steel which they receive at column I
rate from the producers and at column III
rate, that Iron and Steel which they receive
from the Controlled Stockholders at column II
rates : provided also that controlled Dealers
in Madhya Bharat shall sell to consumers at a
profit margin of not exceeding Rs. 30 per ton;
subject however, in all cases to such local
extra charges as may be fixed by me or the
officers authorised by me in this behalf."
It is only necessary to add that there were similar Orders
passed under the Indian Scrap Order, 1943 in which also the
classification of dealers etc., proceeded on the same lines.
The form of the notification by the Steel Controller to the
Government of India, referred to in this notification was on
the following lines :
There was a schedule to the notification fixing the maximum
prices and it was divided into five columns. First was the
number of the item, the second was the description or
classification of the material and the next three which were
headed columns I, II and III dealt with specified maximum
basic prices per ton for sale at Calcutta, Bombay and
Madras. There were adjustments
328
indicated for arriving at the prices chargeable at other
centres. Column I specified the prices for sales by
Controlled Sources other than those mentioned in column 11.
The second column was headed "specified prices fixed for
sales by scrap merchants who have been declared controlled
sources" and the ,last or third column specified the maximum
for sales by all persons other than those mentioned in
columns I and 11. Different maxima were fixed for sale by
persons falling under the three columns, the first column
price being the lowest, the second t little higher and the
last which included sales by retail dealers to the consuming
public being the highest. It is common ground that the
Scrap Dealers Association, Indore of which the appellant was
the President had been declared "a Controlled Source"’ so
that the maximum prices at which members of the Association
which was an unincorporated body could sell, were those
specified in column II of the schedule. It is not necessary
to set out the prices at which the actual sales which wore
stated to be in violation-of the law, took place, but it is
sufficient to state that admittedly the servants of the
Association sold scrap iron at prices higher than those
fixed in column II and at prices fixed for column III.
The first submission of Mr. Agarwala learned Counsel for the
appellant was that the sale by the Association at the column
]II price was authorised and legal because of a notification
issued by the Government of Madhya Bharat dated August 26,
1949. The principal point argued before us in respect of
this notification is as to whether this notification was
alive and in force on the date of the sales in 1956 which
were the subject of the several prosecutions and whether it
has survived subsequent Indian legislation extended to the
State to which we shall advert presently. But before
proceeding to do so, it would be convenient to consider the
nature of that notification.
The Scrap Dealers Association of Madhya Bharat appear to
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have made a representation to the State Government that
though the dealers in Scrap as constituent units of the
Association were treated as a Controlled Source and secured
advantages thereby and were bound to sell at prices fixed in
column II, still the Association should ’be accorded special
privilege and be permitted to sell at prices fixed for the
residuary class of dealers in column III. This
representation was considered by an Advisory Committee
appointed by the State Government and a direction was given
that "a change be made to the extent that at present for the
goods which is sold to consumers by the Scrap Association
329
at the regional headquarters they will be allowed to charge
column III rates on the goods instead of column II rates."
It is stated that the Association has been selling at these
rates ever since. There is no doubt that if this direction
stood, and we need only add that the validity of this
direction was not challenged by the respondent as beyond the
powers of the State Government, the appellant could not have
been guilty of the offence with which he was charged.
But the question is whether this direction or this
modification of the prices fixed under s. 5(1) of the Madhya
Bharat Scrap Control Order by incorporating the notification
by the Steel Controller of the Government of India in its
text, subsisted in 1956 when the sales which are stated as
being in contravention of the Indian Scrap Order, took
place.
We have already seen that the notification dated June 4,
1949 which we have extracted earlier, was issued under the
Madhya Bharat Iron and Steel etc., Control Order, 1949 pro-
mulgated under the Madhya Bharat Essential Supplies (Tem-
porary Powers) Act, 1948. The Madhya Bharat Act, however,
stood repealed by virtue of the provisions of the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Amendment Act, 1950 (Act 52 of
1950) under which the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers)
Act, 1946 was extended to the Part B States as and from such
dates as might be specified by the Central Government. -By a
notification issued by the Central Government the Essential
Supplies Act, 1946 was made applicable to the Part B State
of Madhya Bharat from August 17, 1950. The effect of this
extension was provided for by s. 10 of Act 52 of 1950 which
enacted :
"1O. Amendment of section 17, Act XXIV of
1946. After sub-section (3) of section 17 of
the said Act, the following sub-section shall
be inserted, namely
(4) If immediately before the day on which
this Act comes into force in a Part B State,
there is in force in that State any law which
corresponds to this Act, such corresponding
law shall on that day stand repealed in so far
as it relates to any of the essential
commodities governed by this Act:
Provided that any Order made and in force
immediately before that day in the said State
shall continue in force and be deemed to be an
Order made under this Act, and all
appointments made, licences or permits
granted, and directions issued, under any such
Order and in force immediately before that day
shall likewise continue in
330
force and be deemed to be made, granted or
issued in pursuance of this Act."
If the main part of sub-s. (4) stood alone without the
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proviso, the effect would have been not merely a repeal of
the Madhya Bharat Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act,
1948 which was "a corresponding law" which was in force in
that State, but with that repeal, all the subordinate
legislation enacted thereunder including the Control Orders
as well as the Orders of the Director fixing prices would
also have stood repealed. By virtue of the proviso,
however, notwithstanding the repeal of the parent enactment,
the Orders made under it were continued and were to be
deemed to have been made under the Indian Act.
Mr. Agarwala laid considerable stress on the proviso and
urged that by reason of its language it continued in force
not merely the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order of June 4, 1949 and
the price fixation by the Director under s. 5 ( I) of that
Order on the same date, but also the variation in the prices
to be charged by the Association effected by the Government
Order dated August 26, 1949 which enabled that body,
notwithstanding its being a dealer specified in column II to
sell at prices fixed for persons falling under column M. We
need not pause to consider whether the direction or the
notification dated August 26, 1949 is "a direction issued
under any such order" within the proviso to s. 17(4) but
shall proceed on the basis that it is, accepting the
construction suggested by learned Counsel. But the
replacement of the Madhya Bharat law on this topic by the
law in force in India did not stop with that effected by Act
52 of 1950. By a notification of the Government of India
dated September 12, 1950, the Indian Scrap Order, 1943 was
extended to Madhya Bharat. It is really the legal effect of
this extension that calls for scrutiny in these appeals.
The notification by which the Indian Scrap Order was extend-
ed to Madhya Bharat, no doubt, did not expressly provide for
the repeal of the "Madhya Bharat Scrap Iron & Steel etc.,
Order, 1949", but if the two Control Orders cannot operate
simultaneously, it would be obvious that the Indian Scrap
Order would have repealed and replaced the State law. In
the first place, even if the provisions contained in the two
sets of Orders were in identical terms, it might be proper
to hold that the Indian Scrap Order replaced the State law
in order to give some meaning and effect to the extension of
the Indian Scrap Order to Madhya Bharat. But that is not
the position here. There are
331
marked differences between the provisions of the two Orders
such that it would not be possible for the two to stand
together. For instance, Rule 3 of the Indian Scrap Order
prohibits producers from acquiring or agreeing to acquire
scrap except and in accordance with a written order of the
Controller etc. There is no rule corresponding to this in
the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order. In line with this, in Rule 6
of the Madhya Bharat Order which corresponds to Rule 8(4) of
the Indian Scrap Order, there is no prohibition against
acquisition for a higher price than the maximum fixed, such
as is to be found in Indian Order. Again, Rule 7 of the
Madhya Bharat Order relating to the restrictions on the
movement of scrap has no corresponding provisions in the
Indian Scrap Order. Illustrations of this type of variation
may be multiplied, but this is unnecessary as it was
conceded that the provisions contained in the two orders
were not identical. What we desire to emphasise is that the
two orders, though achieving substantially the same object,
are not identical in their provisions. If that is so, it is
obvious that on the extension to Madhya Bharat of the Indian
Scrap Order, the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order would stand
repealed and be replaced by the Indian law.
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Mr. Agarwala, however, submitted that this would not follow
because according to him the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order had
some sort of higher efficacy or stood on a footing superior
to the Indian Scrap Order by reason of its having been
continued by the proviso to s. 17(4) to Act 24 of 1946, the
argument being that the notification etc., should be deemed
to be one under the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers)
Act itself. This argument, even if sound, does not really
help the appellant, for the Indian Scrap Order itself was
preserved by a saving of the same type and couched in
exactly the, same language in the Essential Supplies
(Temporary Powers) Ordinance, 1946 and the Act of the same
name of 1946 [vide s. 17(2) & (3) of Act 24 of 1946].
Besides, just as an order made or notification issued. under
the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946 could be
amended, modified or cancelled, even if the Madhya Bharat
Scrap Control Order and the notifications issued thereunder
are deemed to have been passed under the Act of 1946 which
is what learned Counsel contends, they could surely be
modified. amended or replaced by other subordinate
legislation originating from the same parent Act. The
Indian Scrap Order, 1943 was one such, because it is deemed
to have been made under that
332
Act. When the Indian Scrap Order was extended to Madhya
Bharat, the result was that it effectively replaced the
Madhya Bharat Order on the same topic.
Even granting that the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order of June 4,
1949 was repealed on the extension to that territory of the
Indian Scrap Order, Mr. Agarwala urged that the direction
contained in the notification of the State Government dated
August 26, 1949 was a special law which stood unaffected by
the extension of the Indian Scrap Order to Madhya Bharat.
That when the Indian Scrap Order was extended it carried
with it the notifications issued by the Controller from time
to time and that after the extension of the Scrap Order to
Madhya Bharat, all sales of scrap would have to be effected
only in conformity with the prices fixed by the
’notifications issued under the Scrap Order was not
contested. Nor was it disputed that on the terms of the
notifications issued fixing the prices at which several
classes of dealers might effect sales tinder the Indian
Scrap Order, the Association of which the appellant was the
President would have fallen under column 11 and would have
been bound to sell scrap only at the prices fixed in that
column. But it was submitted that the fact that even before
the extension of the Indian Scrap Order to Madhya Bharat in
September, 1950 tinder the very provisions of the
notification dated June 4, 1949 itself the maximum prices
fixed in Madhya Bharat were only those prescribed by the
Controller in India and that the deviation in regard to
these prices permitted to the Association was thus in effect
a local modification of the Indian Order and that
consequently the direction issued by the State Government on
August 26, 1949 and which was continued even after the
repeal of the Madhya Bharat Temporary Powers Act, 1948 by
reason of the proviso to s. 17 (4) of the Act 24 of 1946 was
not affected by the extension of the Indian Scrap Order to
Madhya Bharat. We find ourselves unable to accept this
argument. The concession allowed to the Association by the
notification dated August 26, 1949 could be looked at from
one of two alternative positions. The direction could be
viewed as in effect a modification of the prices fixed under
S. 5 (1) of the Madhya Bharat Order by the Director so that
in law it should be deemed to have been incorporated in that
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price fixation and became, as it were, the price fixed by
the Controller. The effect of this would be that in Madhya
Bharat before the extension of the Indian Scrap Order, the
maximum prices chargeable by the specified type of dealer
falling under
333
column It would be those applicable to dealers in column
III. If this were the true position, the result would be
that when the Indian Scrap Order was made applicable to
Madhya Bharat without a saving or special provision as
regards sales by the Association, it would supersede that
law and the special classification effected by the Madhya
Bharat law would cease to be in force. In this respect the
fact that the prices fixed in Madhya Bharat for sales by
dealers etc., specified in the three column corresponded to
those fixed by the Controller in India, would be wholly
irrelevant, for the authority by which the fixation was
effected would be traceable to Madhya Bharat and not the
Indian law.
The other alternative would be that the notification dated
August 26, 1949 was an independent piece of subordinate law-
making under the Essential Commodities Act and the Madhya
Bharat Scrap Order, and it was this aspect that was stressed
by Mr. Agarwala. Even if that be so, the appellant would
derive no advantage from this, because there has been t
repeal not merely of the Madhya Bharat Essential Supplies
Act no doubt with a saving but of the Madhya Bharat Scrap
Order without a saving and on the repeal of the Scrap Order
under which the Subordinate rule or regulation was effected
the latter would also stand repealed. As explained by Lord
Reading C.J. in Watson v. Winch(1):
"It has been long established that, when an
Act of Parliament is repealed, it must be
considered (except as to transactions passed
and closed) as if it had never
existed.......... It would follow that any
bye-law made under a repealed statute ceases
to have any validity unless the repealing Act
contains some provision preserving the
validity of the bye-law notwithstanding the
repeal."
Admittedly there is no saving clause either in the
notification of the Central Government by which the Indian
Scrap Order was extended to Madhya Bharat nor, of course, in
the Scrap Order itself. As the parent order under which the
notification was made his been repealed without a saving the
effect must be that the notification dated August 26, 1949
must, if it were held to be an independent subordinate
legislation, be held also to have been repealed. Mr.
Agarwala next referred us to s. 24 of the General Clauses
Act No. X of 1897 and urged that the notifica-
(1) [1916] 1 K.B. 688, 690.
334
tion would be a bye-law that would have continued
notwithstanding the repeal of the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order.
Section 24 of the General Clauses Act runs thus:
"24. Where any Central Act or Regulation, is
after the commencement of this Act, repealed
and re-enacted with or without modification,
then, unless it is otherwise expressly
provided, any appointment, notification,
order, scheme, rule form or bye-law, made or
issued under the repealed Act or Regulation,
shall, so far as it is not inconsistent with
the provisions re-enacted, continue in force
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and be deemed to have been made or issued
under the provisions so re-enacted, unless and
until it is superseded by any appointment,
notification, order scheme, rule form or by-
law, made or issued under the provisions so
re-enacted and when any Central Act or
Regulation, which, by a notification under S.
5 or 5A of the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874,
or any like law, has been extended to any
local area, has, by a subsequent notification,
been withdrawn from and reextended to such
area or any part thereof, the provisions of
such Act or Regulation shall be deemed to have
been repealed and re-enacted in such area or
part within the meaning of this section."
We consider that this submission is entirely without force.
Mr. Agarwala fairly conceded that the language of s. 24
would not cover a repeal of the Madhya Bharat Scrap Order by
the introduction into the Madhya Bharat territory of the
Indian Scrap Order. 1943, but he suggested that even though
the section was in terms inapplicable, he could invoke the
principle underlying it. But this argument, however,
proceeds on assuming that S. 24 was declaratory of the
common rule of interpretation and that even in the absence
of s. 24 the same principle of law would apply. The
position apart from a statutory provision such as is found
in S. 24 of the General Clauses Act, is thus summarised in
Craies on Statute Lent, 6th Edn. 334:
"If the statute under which bye-laws are made is repealed,
those bye-laws are impliedly repealed and cease to have any
validity unless the repealing statute contains sonic
provision preserving the validity of the bye-law
notwithstanding the repeal. This follows from the rule ....
when an Act of Parliament is repealed it must
335
be considered (except to transactions passed and closed) as
if it had never existed."
This submission has, therefore, no merit and must be
rejected.
The second of the points urged by Mr. Agarwala was that the
Scrap Dealers Association was an unincorporated body
consisting wholly of retail dealers and that as each of them
individually was a dealer who could himself have sold at the
column M rate, the Association could not be penalised for
selling at that rate. As an unincorporated body, he
submitted, it was merely the aggregate of its members and so
would have the rights of its constituent units. There is no
force in this point either. Apart from the definition of
"person" in the General Clauses Act as including an
unincorporated body of persons, what we are concerned with
is not sales by individual dealers who composed the
Association, but sales by and through the Association. It
was the Association that was given the facility of obtaining
scrap at more favourable prices than dealers and it was that
body which was subjected to control in the shape of having
to sell what it had purchased from controlled sources at the
prices specified in column II.
Lastly, it was faintly urged by Mr. Agarwala that the appel-
lant was merely the President of the Association and could
not be held liable for the sales effected by its employees.
There was no dispute that the sales were by the Association
and at prices fixed by that body. It was also admitted that
these prices were in excess of the prices specified for
sales fixed for the Association. under s. 8 of the Essential
Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, "Any person who abets
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the contravention of any order.... shall be deemed to have
contravened that order." In the circumstances, we do not see
bow this affords any defence to the appellant.
The result is that these appeals fail and are dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.
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