Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE DOMINION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRINBAI A. IRANI AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/05/1954
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1954 AIR 596 1955 SCR 206
CITATOR INFO :
R 1955 SC 765 (33)
RF 1956 SC 105 (6)
MV 1971 SC 530 (374)
F 1983 SC 259 (18)
RF 1987 SC 117 (40)
RF 1992 SC 81 (11)
ACT:
Requisitioned Land (Continuance of Powers) Ordinance, 1946
(XIX of 1946), cls. 2(3) and 3-Effect thereof on the
existing requisition order in respect of immovable property-
Non obstante clause--Interpretation of.
HEADNOTE:
Three shoprooms were requisitioned on April 15, 1943, under
the Defence of India Rules and the requisition order inter
alia stated that is the said requisitioned property shall be
continued in requisition during the period of present war
and six months thereafter or for such shorter period as may
be specified by the Food Controller, Bombay........
Held, that on a plain and grammatical construction of cls.
2(3) and 3 of Ordinance XIX of 1946, the immoveable property
which when the Defence of India Act expired on the 30th
September, 1946, was subject to any requisition order
effected under the Act and the rules thereunder, continued
to be subject to requisition until the expiry of Ordinance,
no matter whether the requisition order to which the
immoveable property was subject was of a limited duration or
an indefinite period.
The ordinary rule is that there should be a close approxima-
tion between the non obstante clause and the operative
portion of the section but the non obstante clause need not
necessarily and always be co-extensive with the operative
part if it has the effect of cutting down the clear terms of
an enactment.
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 154 of 1953.
Appeal by Special Leave against the Judgment and Decree
dated the 8th January, 1953, of the High Court of Judicature
at Bombay in Appeal No. 117 of 1952 arising out of Suit No.
235 of 1949 in the said High Court.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, and C. K.
Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, (Porus A. Mehta,
with them) for the appellants.
N.A. Palkhivala and S. P. Varma for respondent No. 1.
1954. May 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI J.
207
BHAGWATI J.-This appeal by special leave from a judgment of
the High Court of Judicature at Bombay in Appeal No. 117 of
1952 raises a short point as to the construction of clause 3
of the Requisitioned. Land (Continuance of Powers)
Ordinance, 1946.
The suit out of which this appeal arises was commenced by
the first respondent against the appellants and the second
respondent for delivery of vacant and peaceful possession of
the three shops situated ’on the ground floor of the
premises known as "Irani Manzil." The first respondent was
the owner of the said immovable property which had been
requisitioned on the 15th April, 1943, by the Collector of
Bombay in exercise of the powers conferred upon him by, rule
75-A(1) of the Defence of India Rules read with the
Notification of the Government, Defence Co-ordination
Department, No. 1336/OR/1/42 dated the 15th April, 1942.
The order of requisition was in the following terms:-
"Order No. M.S.C. 467/H-Whereas it is necessary for
securing the public safety and the efficient prosecution of
the war to requisition the property specified in the
schedule hereto appended......... 1, M.A. Faruqui, the
Collector of Bombay, do hereby requisition the said property
and direct that possession of the said property be delivered
forthwith to the Food Controller, Bombay, subject to the
following conditions:
(1)The property shall be continued in requisition during the
period of the present war and six ’months thereafter, or for
such shorter period as may be specified by the Food
Controller, Bombay............... "
The said premises were used for the purpose of housing the
Government Grain Shop No. 176.
By a letter dated the 30th July, 1946/17th August, 1946, the
Controller of Government Grain Shops, Bombay, wrote to the
first respondent that as the validity, of the requisitioning
order was to expire on the 30th September, 1946, the first
respondent should allow the Department to remain as her
tenants in respect of the premises. The first respondent
replied by her advocate’s letter dated the 27th August,
1946,
208
offering the tenancy to the Department on certain terms.
These terms were not accepted but the occupation of the
premises continued even after the 30th September, 1946, and
the first respondent complained about such occupation after
the period of requisition of the said shops had come to
anend and also complained that it was contemplated to
transfer the said shops to a private party or concern
without any reference to her in the matter. By her
advocate’s letter dated the 29th August, 1947, she gave to
the Collector of Bombay a notice to vacate the said shops
giving him two clear calendar months’ time and asking him to
deliver over to her peaceful and vacant possession of the
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said shops. The Controller of Government Grain Shops,
Bombay, wrote to the first respondent on the 1st October,
1947, that the second respondent was being handed over the
Government Grain Shop No. 176 and that she should give her
consent to the electric connection to be carried out in the-
said shops by the second respondent. The first respondent
refused to giver her consent and protested against the
contemplated action. The Collector, of Bombay by his letter
dated the 15th January, 1948, intimated to the first
respondent that the requisitioning of the said shops was
continued after the 30th September, 1946, by Act XVII of
1947 and as possession of the said shops had been handed
over to the second respondent vacant possession of the same
could not be given to the first respondent. Further
correspondence ensued between the first respondent’s
attorneys and the Collector of Bombay in the course of which
the Collector of Bombay admitted that the said shops had
been sublet to the second respondent but contended that the
maintenance of essential supplies was the purpose for which
the premises in question were requisitioned and that as the
second respondent continued to serve the same purpose the
first respondent was not entitled to peaceful and vacant
possession of the premises. The first respondent therefore
filed a suit on the original side of the High Court. of
Judicature at Bombay being Suit No. 235 of 1949 claiming
vacant and peaceful possession
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of the premises as also compensation for wrongful use and
occupation thereof till delivery of possession was given
over to her.
The appellants were impleaded as defendants Nos. 1 and 2 in
the said suit and the second respondent was impleaded as the
third defendant. The suit was contested by- the appellants.
The second respondent did not file any written statement nor
did he contest the suit.
The first respondent contended that, the requisitioning
order had expired, that the property was no longer under
-requisition and therefore the possession by the Government
was wrongful. She next contended that the order was made
for a specific purpose and as that purpose no longer
obtained the order was no longer operative. She further
contended that after August, 1947, the user of the property
was not by the appropriate Government, viz., the Dominion of
India, but was by the State Government. She also contended
that the requisitioning order had ceased to be operative by
reason of Act IX of 1951.
The trial Judge, Mr. Justice Coyajee, upheld all these
contentions of the first respondent and decreed the suit.
The appellants preferred an appeal against that decision and
the Court of Appeal confirmed the decree passed by the
trial. Court on the short point as to whether clause 3 of
Ordinance No. XIX of 1946 had the effect of continuing the
requisitioning order. It affirmed the conclusion of the
trial Court that there was no further extension of the
duration of the requisitioning order by the provisions of
clause 3 of the Ordinance and declined to go into the other
questions which had been mooted before the trial Court and
which had been decided by the trial Court in favour of the
first respondent. The appellants not being satisfied with
that judgment applied for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court, but the High Court rejected that application. The
appellants thereupon applied for and obtained special leave
under article 136 of the Constitution.
It is common ground that the Defence of India Act, 1939
(XXXV of 1939), and the rules made thereunder
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210
were to expire on the 30th September, 1946. Various
immoveable properties had been requisitioned in exercise of
the powers conferred by sub-rule I of rule 75A of Defence of
India Rules and all these requisitioning orders would have
come to an end and the immoveable properties released from
requisition on the, expiration of the Defence of India Act
and the rules made thereunder. These requisitions had to
be continued and an emergency arose which made it necessary
to provide for the continuation of certain powers
theretofore exercisable under the said Act and the said
rules and the Governor-General in exercise of the powers
conferred by section 72 of the Government of India Act
promulgated on the 26th September, 1946, an Ordinance being
Ordinance No. XIX of 1946, the relevant provisions of which
may be set out hereunder
"ORDINANCE NO. XIX OF 1946. An Ordinance to provide for
the continuance of certain emergency powers in relation to
requisitioned land..... Whereas an emergency has arisen
which makes it necessary to provide, in relation to land
which, when the Defence of India Act, 1939 (XXXV of 1939),
expires, is subject to any requisition effected under rules
made under that Act, for the continuance of’ certain powers
theretofore exercisable under the said Act or the said
rules.................. the Governor-General is pleased to
make and promulgate the following
Ordinance:...... ...............
2. DEFINITIONS.....................
(3) " Requisitioned land " means immoveable property which,
when the Defence of India Act, 1939 (XXXV of 1939), expires
is subject to any requisition effected under the rules made
under this Act........
Seen. 3. Continuance of requisitions-Notwithstanding the
expiration of the Defence of India Act, 1939 (XXXV. of
1939), and the rules made thereunder, all requisitioned
lands shall continue to be subject to requisition until the
expiry of this Ordinance and the appropriate Government may
use or deal with any requisitioned land in such manner a&
may appear to it to be expedient,"
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It is clear from the preamble as also clause 3 of the
Ordinance that the occasion for the enactment of the
Ordinance was the impending expiration of the Defence of
India Act, 1939, and the rules made thereunder. All the
requisition orders which had been made under the Act and the
rules would have ceased to be operative and come to an end
with the expiration of the Act and the rules and the
immovable properties which had been requisitioned thereunder
would have been released from such requisition. It was in
view of that emergency that the Ordinance came to be
promulgated and the obvious object of the enactment was to
provide for the continuance of the powers exercisable under
the Act and the rules and to continue the requisitions of
immoveable properties which had been made thereunder. It
was therefore argued that those requisition orders which
would cease to be operative and come to an end with the
expiration of the Act and the rules were the only orders
which were intended to be continued by virtue of clause 3 of
the Ordinance and clause 3 would accordingly cover only such
requisition orders as would have. ceased to be operative and
come to an end with the expiration of the Act and the rules
and not those orders which by reason of their inherent
weakness such as the limitation of the period of duration
expire ipso facto on the date of the expiration of the Act
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and the rules. The latter category of orders would have
ceased to be operative and come to an end by reason of the
limitation placed on the period of duration within the terms
of the orders themselves and their expiration would not have
depended upon the expiration of the Act and the rules and
were therefore not touched by clause 3 of the Ordinance.
That this was the true construction of clause 3 of the
Ordinance was further sought to be supported by the non
obstante clause appearing therein, viz., "Notwithstanding
the expiration of the Defence of India Act, 1939 (XXXV of
1939), and the rules made thereunder." The non obstante
clause was invoked in support of the submission that those
orders which would have ceased to be operative and come to
an end with the expiration of the Act and the rules were the
only orders which were intended to be, continued under
clause 3 of the Ordinance.
212
There is considerable-force in the argument and it found
favour with the trial Court as well as the Court of appeal.
It was recognised that but for the non obstante clause the
plain wording of the Ordinance was capable of covering the
order in dispute. The preamble in so far as it could be
drawn upon for the purpose showed that the Ordinance was
being enacted to provide for the continuation of certain
powers in relation to land which was subject to any
requisition effected under the Act and the rules. The
definition of requisitioned lands contained in clause 2(3)
also covered immoveable property which when the Defence of
India Act, 1939, expired was subject to any requisition
effected under the Act and the rules. Clause 3 of the
Ordinance covered all requisitioned lands which having
regard to the definition above mentioned covered immovable
properties which when the Defence of India Act, 1939,
expired were subject to any requisition effected under the
Act and the rules and such requisitioned lands were to
continue to be subject to- requisition until the expiry of
the Ordinance. On a plain and grammatical construction of
these provisions it was obvious that once you had an
immovable property which when the Defence of India Act
expired, that is on the 30th September, 1946, was subject to
any requisition effected under the Act and the rules, that
immovable property continued to be subject to requisition
until the expiry of the Ordinance, no matter whether the
requisition order to which the immovable property was
subject was of a limited duration or an indefinite duration.
The only test was whether the immovable property in question
was on the 30th September, 1946, subject to any requisition
effected under the Act and the rules. This construction was
sought to be negatived by having resort to the non obstante
clause which, it was submitted, restricted the operation of
clause 3 of the Ordinance only to those cases where the
requisition order would have ceased to be operative or come
to an end merely by reason of the expiration of the Act and
the rules. If there was in existence on the 30th September,
1946, any requisition order which would have ceased to be
operative or come to an end by reason of the fact that it
was limited in duration and
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was to expire on the 30th September, 1946, the non obstante
clause saved that from the operation of clause 3 of the
Ordinance and such requisition order could not continue in
operation until the expiry of the Ordinance as therein
provided. Such orders could not have been in the
contemplation of the legislative authority because they
would cease to be operative and come to an end by reason of
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the inherent weakness of the orders and not by reason of the
fact that the Act and the rules were to expire on the 30th
September, 1946, and it would not be at all necessary to
make any provision for the continuance of such requisitions,
because they could never have been intended to be continued.
While recognising the force of this argument it is however
necessary to observe that although ordinarily there should
be a close approximation between the non obstante clause and
the operative part of the section, the non obstante clause
need not necessarily and always be co-extensive with the
operative part, so as to have the effect of cutting down the
clear terms of an enactment. If the words of the enactment
are clear and are capable of only one interpretation on a
plain and grammatical construction of the words thereof, a
non obstante clause cannot out down that construction and
restrict the scope of its operation. In such cases the non
obstante clause has to be read as clarifying the whole
position and must be understood to have been incorporated in
the enactment by the Legislature by way of abundant ’caution
and not by way of limiting the ambit and scope of the
operative part of the enactment. Whatever may have been the
presumed or the expressed intention of the legislating
authority when enacting the Ordinance No. XIX of 1946, the
words of clause 3 read along with the definition of
requisitioned land contained in clause 2(3) of the Ordinance
are quite clear and it would not be within the province of
the Courts to speculate as to what was intended to be
covered by clause 3 of the Ordinance when the only
interpretation which could be put upon the terms thereof is
that all requisitioned lands, that is, all immoveable
properties which when the Defence of India Act, 1939,
expired were subject to any requisition effected under the
Act and the rules were to continue
214
to be subject to requisition until the expiry of the
Ordinance. No doubt measures which affect the liberty of
the subject and his rights to property have got to be
strictly construed. But in spite of such strict construc-
tion to be put upon the provisions of this Ordinance one
cannot get away from the fact that the express provisions of
clause 3 of the Ordinance, covered all cases of immoveable
properties which on the 30th September, 1946, were subject
to any requisition effected under the Act and the rules,
whether the requisition was effected for a limited duration
or for an indefinite period. Even those requisition orders,
which by accidentor design were to expire on the 30th Septem
ber, 1946, would come to an end not only because the fixed
term expired but also because the Act and the Rules expired
on that date and were therefore covered by_ clause 3 read
along with the definition in clause 2(3) of the Ordinance
and were by the clear terms thereof continued until the
expiry of the Ordinance. We are not here concerned with the
equities of individual cases. There may be cases in which
the Ordinance worked to the prejudice of the owner of the
requisitioned land. In such cases the necessary relief
could be granted by the appropriate Government by releasing
the immoveable property from requisition. But the Courts
would be helpless in the matter. Once the conclusion was
reached that a particular measure was lawfully enacted by a
legislative authority covering the particular case in
question the hands of the Court would be tied and the
legislative measure would have to be given its legitimate
effect, unless mala fides or abuse of power were alleged.
We have therefore come to the conclusion that both the
trial Court and the Court of appeal were in error when they
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reached the conclusion that clause 3 of the Ordinance had
not the effect of continuing the requisition order in
question.
Mr. Palkhivala at the close of the arguments appealed to us
that his client was a petty landlady and the immoveable
property which she owned was of a small value and the result
of an order of remand would be to put her to further
harassment and costs. He pointed out to us that he had
particularly requested the Court of appeal not to decide the
appeal merely on the short
215
point in regard to the construction of clause 3 of the
Ordinance, but to decide it on all the points which had been
canvassed before trial Court. But the Court of appeal
turned down his request and decided the appeal only on that
point stating that it; was unnecessary to go into the other
points which Mr. Palkhivala wanted to urge before it. It is
to be regretted that the Court of appeal did not respond to
Mr. Palkhivala’s request, but we have not had the benefit of
the judgment of the Court of appeal on those points which
found favour with the trial Court and which were not
considered by the Court of appeal and we cannot help
remanding the matter to the Court of appeal with a direction
that the appeal be disposed of on all the points which were
dealt with by the trial Court.
It was unfortunate for the first respondent to be pitted
against the appellants who considered that this was a test
case and the matter had to be fought out in detail inasmuch
as it affected a series of cases And the properties involved
would be considerable as alleged by Mr. Seervai before the
trial Court. We are not concerned with the policy of the
appellants in making test cases of this character. The only
thing that impresses us in this case is that the unfortunate
first respondent has had to bear the brunt of the battle and
has been worsted in this preliminary point which was found
in her favour both by the trial Court and the Court of
appeal. We cannot make any order for costs in her favour.
But we think that the justice of the case requires that the
appellants as well as the first respondent will bear and pay
their own respective costs both here and in the Court of
appeal.
We therefore allow the appeal, set aside the decree passed
by the Court of appeal and remand the Appeal No. 117 of 1952
for hearing and final disposal by the Court of appeal on the
other points which have been raised in the matter after
hearing both the parties. There will be no order as to
costs here as well as in the Court of appeal.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellants: R. H. Dhebar.
Agent for respondent No. I: R. A. Gagrat,
216