Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JADAB SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE HIMACHAL PRADESH ADMINISTRATIONAND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/04/1960
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1008
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC1753 (19)
RF 1968 SC 360 (1)
RF 1975 SC2299 (606,609,611,613)
ACT:
Estates, Abolition of--Enactment declared invalid as having
been passed by State Legislature not duly constituted-
Validating Act passed by Parliament-Competence-
Constitutional validity of the Abolition Act-Himachal
Pradesh Abolition of Big Landed Estates and Land Reforms
Act, 1953 (Himachal 15 of 1954), ss. 11, 15-Himachal Pradesh
Legislative Assembly (Constitution and Proceedings)
Validation Act (No. 56 of 1958), ss. 3, 4-Constitution of
India, Arts. 19, 31, 31A, 240, 248, Item No. 97, List I,
Seventh Schedule.
HEADNOTE:
On October 10, 1958, the Himachal Pradesh Abolition of Big
Landed Estates and Land Reforms Act, 1953, was declared
invalid by the Supreme Court on the ground that the
Legislative Assembly of the New Himachal Pradesh State which
passed it was not duly constituted and was as such
incompetent to pass the Act (Vide: Shree Vinod Kumar v.
State of Himachal Pradesh, [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 160). The
President by Ordinance NO. 7 of 1958 validated the
constitution and proceedings of the said Assembly. That
Ordinance was replaced by the Validating Act No. 56 of 1958
passed by the Parliament. Section 3 of the Act validated
the constitution and proceedings of the Legislative Assembly
of the Himachal Pradesh State and s. 4 prohibited the courts
from questioning the validity of any Act or proceeding of
the Assembly on the ground of defect in its constitution.
The Himachal Pradesh Abolition of Big Landed Estates and
Land Reforms Act was accordingly validated. The petitioners
who were land-holders challenged the constitutionality of
the Ordinance and the validating Act, by petitions under
Art. 32 of the Constitution:
Held, that (i) in view of Art. 24o as it stood before its
amendment by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956,
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the Parliament was competent to enact the validating Act;
(ii) the provisions of the Abolition Act did not infringe
Arts. 19 and 31 Of the Constitution, and
(iii)the Abolition Act fell within the protection of Art.
31A of the Constitution and it was not open to challenge on
the ground that it infringed Arts. 19 and 31 Of the
Constitution.
Shri Ram Narain v. State of Bombay, [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R.
489, referred to.
The reason which precluded the members of the Old Himachal
Pradesh Assembly from functioning as the Legislature of the
New Himachal Pradesh State was that a Notification under
S. 74 of, the Representation of the People Act 1951, Was
not
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issued. The Parliament, by- virtue of its residual powers
of legislation under Art. 248 of the Constitution and item
No. 97 of List I to the Seventh Schedule, was competent to
remove the defect that arose because of the failure to issue
the notification, and to validate the actual proceedings
of the body which functioned as the Legislature.
Under Art. 240 Of the Constitution, as it stood before it
was amended by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act,
1956, the Parliament was not debarred from enacting the
validating Act nor did the power of the Parliament to
validate the acts and proceedings of the State Legislature
come to an end when the State itself ceased to exist.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petitions Nos. 161 of1958 and 109 of
1959.
Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
Achhru Ram, D. B. Prem and Ganpat Rai, for the petitioners
(In Petn. No. 161 of 58 and 16, 17, 35, 58, 69, 102,
109/1959).
D.R. Prem, B. Thiagarajan and T. Satyanarayana, for the
petitioners (In Petn. No. 36 of 1959).
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R. Ganapathy
Iyer, R. H. Dhebar and T. M. Sen, for the respondents (in
all the petitions).
1960. April 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHAH, J.-In the First Schedule to the Constitution, as
originally enacted under the heading " Part C States" were
set out the names of ten "C" States. The Parliament of
India enacted The Government of Part C States Act, 49 of
1951, providing for the constitution of Legislative
Assemblies, Councils of Ministers and Councils of Advisers
for Part C States. Under s. 4 of the Act, the President was
authorised to delimit by order the constituencies into which
each Part C State was to be divided and the areas of the
constituencies, the number of seats allocated to each such
constituency and the number of seats reserved for scheduled
castes and tribes. In exercise of the powers conferred by
s. 4 of the Act, the President made an order determining the
constituencies into which the State of Himachal Pradesh was
to be divided. In 1952, elections were held to the Himachal
Pradesh Assembly and 36 members were elected in the
different constituencies. In the Legislative Assembly of
the State,
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Bill No. 7 of 1953 was introduced by the Government for the
abolition of certain intermediaries in respect of landed
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estates. Before that Bill was passed into an Act, on May 8,
1954, the Parliament of India enacted the Himachal Pradesh
and Bilaspur (New State) Act No. 32 of 1954. This Act which
constituted a new State by uniting the States of Himachal
Pradesh and Bilaspur received the assent of the President on
May 28, 1954, and was brought into force under a notifi-
cation dated July 1, 1954. Under s. 12 of Act 32 of 1954, a
Legislative Assembly for the new State of Himachal Pradesh
was to be constituted with 41 seats to be filled by direct
elections. No fresh elections to the new State Assembly
were held, but on July 7, 1954, a notification was issued by
the Lieutenant Governor of the new Himachal Pradesh State
purporting to exercise the powers conferred by s. 9 of the
Government of Part C States Act, 1951, converting the second
session of 1954 of the Himachal Pradesh Legislative
Assembly. Pursuant to this notification, the Legislature
assembled and Bill No. 7 of 1953 which was introduced in the
old Himachal C State Assembly was passed into an Act. This
Act called the Himachal Pradesh Abolition of Big Landed
Estates and Land Reforms Act, 1954-hereinafter called the
Abolition Act-received the assent of the President on Novem-
ber 23, 1954, and was brought into force under a
notification issued by the State Government on January 26,
1955.
This court, in petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution
challenging the constitutional validity of the Abolition
Act, held that the said Act could not be recognised as a
piece of legislation validly enacted. It was held that even
though s. 15(1) of the New State Act provided that each of
the 36 sitting members representing a constituency of the
old Legislative Assembly of Himachal Pradesh was to be
deemed to have been elected by that constituency, and by "
the deeming provision ", these members were placed in the
same position in which they would have been placed had they
gone through the entire process of election and been
elected, as no notification had been issued under S. 74 of
the Representation of the People
758
Act, 1951, the 36 members of the old Himachal Pradesh
Assembly could not constitute the Legislative Assembly. It
was further held that by the notification issued by the
Lieutenant Governor, the second session of the old
Legislative Assembly was summoned, and not the new
Legislative Assembly; and in the session held pursuant to
the command of the Lieutenant Governor, Bill No. 7 of 1953
pending before the Assembly of the old State which had
lapsed when that Assembly was dissolved could not be enacted
as an Act of the Legislative Assembly of the new State.
After this decision was pronounced on October 10, 1958, the
President issued Ordinance No. 7 of 1958 validating the
constitution and proceedings of the Legislative Assembly of
the new State of Himachal Pradesh formed under Act 32 of
1954, and prohibiting the courts from questioning the
validity of the proceedings of the new Legislative Assembly
on the ground of defect in its constitution. This Ordinance
was replaced by Act 56 of 1958. Sections 3 and 4 of the
said Act provided as under:
Section 3:
" Notwithstanding anything contained in any law or in any
judgment, decree or order of any court,-
(a)the body of persons summoned to meet from time to time as
the Himachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly (Himachal Pradesh
Vidhan Sabha) during the period commencing on the 1st day of
July, 1954, and ending with the 31st day of October, 1956,
by the Lieutenant Governor of Himachal Pradesh in the
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exercise or purported exercise of the powers conferred on
him by s. 9 of the Government of Part C States Act, 1951,
shall be deemed for all purposes to have been the duly
constituted Legislative Assembly of the new State of
Himachal Pradesh formed under’s. 3 of the Himachal Pradesh
and Bilaspur (New State) Act, 1954;
(b)the persons who sat or voted or otherwise took part in
the proceedings of the new Legislative Assembly shall be
deemed to have been entitled so to do as members;
(c)the persons who functioned as the Speaker and the Deputy
Speaker of the new Legislative Assembly
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shall be deemed to have been duly chosen as the Speaker and
the Deputy Speaker respectively;
and accordingly-
(1)any Bill passed by the new Legislative Assembly (whether
the Bill was introduced in the new Legislative Assembly or
was introduced in the Legislative Assembly of Himachal
Pradesh functioning immediately before the 1st day of July,
1954) and assented to by the President shall be deemed to
have been validly enacted and to have the force of law;
(2) any grant made, resolution passed or adopted,
proceeding taken or any other thing done by or before the
new Legislative Assembly shall be deemed to have been made,
passed, adopted, taken or done in accordance with law."
Section 4:
"No court shall question any Act passed, or any grant,
resolution, proceeding or thing made, passed, adopted, taken
or done by or before the new Legislative Assembly merely on
the ground that the new Legislative Assembly had not been
duly constituted or on the ground that a person who was not
entitled so to do presided over, sat or voted or otherwise
took part in the proceedings of the new Legislative
Assembly."
By these nine petitions, the constitutional validity of
Ordinance No. 7 of 1958 and Act No. 56 of 1958 is challenged
and the petitioners pray for writs of mandamus or other
writs or directions restraining the Himachal Pradesh
Administration and the Union of India from giving effect to
Ordinance No. 7 of 1958 and Act No. 56 of 1958 and to the
Abolition Act or "acting in any manner under or on the basis
of that Act ".
Counsel for the petitioners contends, (1) that the persons
summoned by the Lieutenant-Governor by his notification
dated July 7, 1954, could not constitute a Legislature of
the new State as those persons were not elected or nominated
in the manner prescribed by Art. 240 of the Constitution;
and the Parliament could Dot by law validate acts and
proceedings of that body which had no authority to
legislate, (2) the Parliament in enacting the Validating
760
Act had no authority retrospectively to form a Legislative
Assembly in violation of the terms of Art. 240 of the
Constitution especially when the new State of Himachal
Pradesh which was formed under Act 32 of 1954 had ceased to
exist at the date when the Abolition Act was enacted, and
(3) even if the Validating Act is not open to challenge, the
Abolition Act contravened Art. 31 of the Constitution and is
therefore void as infringing the fundamental rights of the
petitioners under Art. 19 and Art. 31 of the Constitution.
In our view, there is no substance in any of the contentions
raised.
By Art. 240(1) of the Constitution, before it was amended by
the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, it was
provided:
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" 240. (1) Parliament may by law create or continue for any
State specified in Part C of the First Schedule and
administered through a Chief Commissioner or Lieutenant-
Governor-
(a)a body, whether nominated, elected or partly nominated or
elected, to function as a Legislature for the State; or
(b)a Council of Advisers or Ministers, or both with such
constitution, powers and functions in each case,, as may be
specified in the law."
By the Article as it stood before its amendment, the
Parliament was competent by law to create or continue for
any State specified in Part C of the First Schedule a body
to function as a Legislature. Under that Article, the
Legislature was to consist of persons nominated or elected,
or partly elected and partly nominated, and there is no
dispute that the Legislature consisting of members validly
elected from the various constituencies functioned for the
old State of Himachal Pradesh. Those 36 members of the old
Himachal Pradesh Assembly having been under Act 49 of 1951
duly elected to the Assembly of that State, by virtue of s.
15(1) of Act 32 of 1954 each member was to be deemed to have
been duly elected by the corresponding constituency of the
Legislature of the new State, and the only reason why those
members could not function as a Legislature of the new State
was that the notification under s. 74 of the Representation
of
761
the People Act was not published. The legislative acts of
that Assembly were undoubtedly unauthorised, but it Was
competent to the Parliament by legislation to remove the bar
which arose because of the failure to issue the notification
and to validate the acts done by the Legislature.
Article 240 did not provide that the Legislative Assembly
could not function unless the members thereof were expressly
elected or were nominated to the Legislature of a Part C
State. By Art. 248, the Parliament has the residuary power
to make laws with respect to any matter not enumerated in
the Concurrent List or the State List, and legislation
seeking to remove the disability of members of a Legislative
Assembly of a Part C State arising because of the failure to
issue a notification under s. 74 of the Representation of
the People Act, is not covered by any item falling in the
Concurrent List or in the State List. By item No. 97 in
List I to the Seventh Schedule, the Union Parliament is
competent to make any other law not enumerated in Lists II
and III. The legislative competence of the Parliament to
enact the Act is therefore not open to challenge.
The legislative competence of the Legislative Assembly of
the New Himachal State Assembly to enact the Abolition Act
in 1954 cannot be and is not denied. There is no absolute
bar against the authority of the Parliament to enact
legislation which takes away vested rights provided the
legislation falls within any of the legislative lists within
the competence of the Parliament and it does not infringe
any of the fundamental rights of the citizens. Again, no
constitutional provision is violated by the enactment of Act
56 of 1958. We are also unable to hold that the authority
of Parliament to validate the acts and proceedings of the
Assembly summoned by the Lieutenant-Governor in 1954 was
exhausted when Art. 240 as it originally stood was amended
by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, and Part
C State of Himachal Pradesh ceased to exist. When the
Validating Act was enacted, the Himachal Pradesh Part C
State had ceased to exist but on that ’account, the
authority of the Parliament to validate
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the proceedings of the body of persons which purported to
function as the Legislative, Assembly under Act 32 of 1954
was not extinguished.
Did the Abolition Act infringe the fundamental rights of the
petitioners under Art. 19 or Art. 31 of the Constitution ?
By s. 1 1, the tenants were invested with the right to
acquire the interests of the land.owners in the lands held
by them. It was provided that notwithstanding any law,
custom or contract to the contrary, any tenant other than a
sub-tenant shall, on application made to the compensation
officer at any time after the commencement of the Act, be
entitled to acquire, on payment of compensation, the right,
title and interest of the land-owner in the land held by him
subject to certain terms and conditions set out therein.
Section 14 permitted acquisition by the tenants of the
rights of the land-owners in a portion of the lands of the
tenancy in certain specified circumstances. Section 15
sanctioned the acquisition by the State Government of the
rights of the land. owners by notification in the gazette
declaring that as from such date and in respect of such area
as may be specified in the notification, the right, title
and interest of the land-owner in the lands of any tenancy
held under him by a tenant shall stand transferred to and
vest in the State Government free from all encumbrances
created in such lands by the land-owner. By s. 16, the
method of computation of the compensation payable for
acquisition of the right, title and interest of the land-
owners under s. 15 is prescribed. By s. 27, it was provided
that notwithstanding anything contained in the provisions of
the foregoing sections of that chapter, the land-owner who
held land, the annual land revenue of which exceeded Rs. 125
per year, the right, title and interest of such owner in
such land shall be deemed to have been transferred and
vested in the State Government free of all encumbrances.
Sub-s. (3) of s. 27 laid down that the land-owner whose
right was acquired under sub-s. 1 by the State Government
shall be entitled to receive compensation to be determined
by the compensation officer having regard to so. 17 and 18
of the Act, in accordance with the provisions of Schedule
II; but in
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the case of such occupancy tenant who was liable to pay rent
in terms of land revenue or the multiple of land revenue,
the compensation payable to his landowner shall be computed
in accordance with Schedule 1. Provision was also made by
the Act for State management of lands in certain
eventualities. Article 31 of the Constitution as amended by
the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act, 1955, provides,
inter alia, that a law for compulsory acquisition of
property for public purposes shall not be called in question
in any court on the ground that the compensation provided by
that law is not adequate, and by Art. 31-A which was
substituted by the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act,
1955, for the original Article with retrospective effect, it
is provided that notwithstanding anything contained in Art.
13, no law providing for (a) the acquisition by the State of
any estate or of any rights therein or the extinguishment or
modification of any such rights...... shall be deemed to
have become void on the ground that it is inconsistent with
or takes away or abridges any of the fundamental rights con-
ferred by Art. 14, 19 or 31; provided that where such law is
made by the Legislature of a State, the provisions of the
Article shall not apply thereto unless the law, having been
reserved for the consideration of the President, has
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received his assent. The Abolition Act passed by the State
Assembly was reserved for consideration of the President and
it received his assent. The impugned Act contains
provisions transferring the interest of the land-owners to
the tenants in lands and for acquisition by the State of the
property of the land-owners on payment of compensation under
the Schedule provided in that behalf. This court has held
in Sri Ram Narain v. State of Bombay (1) that a statute the
object of which is to bring about agrarian reform by
transferring the interest of the land-owners to tenants
falls within the class of statutes contemplated by Art. 31-
A(a) and is protected from the attack that it violates the
fundamental rights enshrined in Arts. 14, 19 and 31 of the
Constitution. Counsel appearing on behalf of the
petitioners conceded, and in our judgment rightly, that the
principle of that case governed this
(1) [1959] Sapp; 1 S.C.R. 489;
764
case and the validity of s. 11 could not in view of Art. 31-
A be challenged. The validity of the provisions for
acquisition by the State of the lands of the land-owners for
compensation determinable in accordance with the provisions
of Sch. 11 is also not liable to be challenged under Art. 31
read with Art. 31-A.
In that view of the case, all these petitions must fail and
they are ordered to be dismissed with costs.
Petitions dismissed.