Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAMPAT PRAKASH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF JAMMU & KASHMIR & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/10/1968
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
SHELAT, J.M.
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1118 1970 SCR (2) 365
1969 SCC (1) 562
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 963 (24)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950 (as applied to Jammu and
Kashmir) Arts. 35(c) and 370--Jammu and Kashmir Preventive
Detention Act J & K 13 of 1964) s. 13A--Validity of
detention under without reference to Advisory Board--Scope
of Art. 370--Power of President to extend period of immunity
of State laws even if fundamental rights are infringed.
HEADNOTE:
After the accession of the State of Jammu and Kashmir to
India. in Art. 35 of the Constitution of India, in its
application to the State, el. (c) was introduced in 1954
providing protection to any law relating to preventive
detention in the State against invalidity on the ground of
infringement of any of the fundamental rights guaranteed by
Part III of the Constitution. The protection was limited to
a period of five years.in 1956, ,the Constituent Assembly of
the State completed its work by :’raining a Constitution for
the State and it came into force on 26th January 1956.
In 1959 the period of 5 years in Art. 35(c) was extended to
10 and in 1964, it was further extended to 15 years by
Orders passed by the President of India under Art. 370(1).
On 18th March 1968, the petitioner was detained by the
District Magistrate under the Jammu and Kashmir Preventive
Detention Act, 1964. The State Government acting under s.
13A of the Act continued the detention without making any
reference to the Advisory Board.
In a petition under Art. 32 challenging his detention
the petitioner contended that, the Orders making the
modifications in 1959 and 1964 could not be validly passed
by the President, because.
(1) the Article contained only temporary provisions which
ceased to effective after the Constituent Assembly of the
State had completed its work by framing a Constitution for
the State;
(2) Under Art. 370(2) the power of the President, depending
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on the concurrence of the State Government, must be
exercised before the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly
of the State;
(3) Under Art. 370(1), at the time of applying any provision
of the Constitution to the State, the President was
competent to make modification and exceptions, but after a
provision of the Constitution had been applied the power
under the Article ceased;
(4) Since Art. 368 relating to amendment of the Constitution
with proviso added to it is ’applied to the State Art. 370
was no longer applicable for .amending or modifying the
provisions of the Constitution applied to the State;
(5) The power of making modifications under the Article
should be limited to making minor alterations and not to
abrogate an Article applied to the State; and
(6) The modifications made by the Presidential orders under
Art. 370 had the effect of abridging the fundamental rights
of citizens of
366
Kashmir under Art. 22 and other Articles of Part III, after
they had been applied to the State and so were void under
Art. 13 of the Constitution.
HELD: (1) The-political situation that existed when Art,
370 was incorporated in the Constitution had not materially
altered either in 1959 or 1964 and the purpose of
introducing it was to empower the President to exercise his
discretion in applying the Indian Constitution while that
situation remained unchanged. Article 370(3) envisages that
the Article will continue to be operative until and can
cease to be operative only if. on the recommendation of
Constituent Assembly of the State, the President makes a
direction to that effect. No such recommendation was made
nor was any order made by the President. On the contrary
the Constituent Assembly of the State made a recommendation
that the Article should be operative with a modified
Explanation. Therefore the Article did not cease to be
operative. [372 C--D; 373 A--B]
(2)Article 370(2) only refers to the concurrence given
by the Government of the State before the Constituent
Assembly was convened. and makes no mention at all of the
completion of the work of the Constituent Assembly or its
dissolution.
(3) The power under the Article is to be exercised from
time to time and includes within it the power to add, amend,
vary or rescind.
Article 367 lays down that, unless the context
otherwise requires, the General Clauses Act, 1897,
shall .apply for the interpretation of the Constitution.
Therefore s. 21 of the General Clauses Act, under which a
power to issue a notification or order includes a power to
add. amend, vary or rescind it, is applicable to the power
of the President under Art. 370: If it were held that s. 21
of the General Clauses Act is not to be applied to the
interpretation of the Constitution, it will lead to the
anomaly that when once rules are made under the rule
making powers- under various Articles such as Arts. 77(3),
166(3) and 309, they would be inflexible.
Further the legislative history of the Article shows
that it was envisaged that the President would have to take
into account the situation existing in the State when
applying a provision of the Constitution and that such
situations arise from time to time: There was the
possibility that, when applying a particular provision, the
situation might demand an exception or modification of the
provision applied; but subsequent changes in the situation
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might justify the rescinding of those modifications or
exceptions. This could only be brought about by conferring
on the President the power of making Orders from time to
time under Art. 370. [375 E--H]
(4) The proviso to Art. 368, serves the purpose that
amendments to the Constitution should be made applicable to
the State only with the concurrence of the State Government
and that after such concurrence available the amendments
should take effect when an order is made under Art. 370 of
the Constitution. Therefore, the powers of the President
under Art. 370 have to be exercised and the applicability of
Art. 368 to the ’State does not curtail the President’s
power under Art. 370. [376 D--F]
(5) There is-no reason to limit the word ’modification’
in Art. 370(1) only to such modification as do not make any
’radical transformation’. [377 H]
Puranlal Lakhanpal v. The President of India, [1962] 1
S.C.R. 688, 692, followed.
367
(6) Under Art. 35(c) as originally enacted, the
applicability of the provisions of Part III for the purpose
of judging the validity of a law relating to preventive
detention made by the State ’Legislature was postponed for a
period of five years. The object of the subsequent Orders
of 1959 and 1964 was to extend the period of protection.
The result of the. extension is that a detenu cannot,
during the period of protection challenge the law on the
ground of its being inconsistent with Art 22, and not to
infringe or abridge fundamental rights. [378 E, H]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 11 of 1968.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
the
enforcement of the fundamental rights.
M. K. Ramamurthi, Baroobhai Mehta, Vineet Kumar and
Shyamala Pappu, for the petitioner.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, B.R.L.lyengar and
R.N. Sachthey, for the respondents.
R.K. Garg, for intervener No. 1.
R.V.S. Mani, for intervener No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. This petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution of India (hereinafter referred to as "the
Constitution") has been presented by Sampat Prakash who was
the General Secretary of the All Jammu & Kashmir Low-Paid
Government Servants Federation. On October 25, 1967,
Government employees and teachers of the Jammu Province held
a mass meeting making a demand that dearness allowance at
Central rates should be paid to them. They further resolved
that, if the Government did not accept this demand, the
employees and the teachers would go on ’Dharna’ on 5th
November 1967. The Revenue Minister of the Jammu & Kashmir
State promised dearness allowance at half the rates
applicable to Central Government servants. No dharna was
started on 5th November 1967, but, on 17th November, 1967, a
notice was given on behalf of the employees to the
Government that there would be a hunger strike on 18th
November, 1967. On that day, the employees went on a hunger
strike for one day outside the residence of the Chief
Minister. Then, there was a mass meeting on 27th November
1967, in which it was announced that, if their demands were
not met, the employees would go on a pen-down strike on 2nd
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December, 1967. The Government failed to comply with this
demand. Then, between 4th and 10th December, 1967, the
employees went on a strike--first a pendown strike and,
later, a general strike. Between this period, on 5th
December, 1967, there was another mass meeting which was
addressed by the petitioner. On 11th December, 1967, even
the workers of the various industries in the State went on a
general strike in sympathy with the Government employees.
On that day, the petitioner was dismissed from government
service and on 12th December, 1967, he addressed another
mass meeting. In view
368
of these activities of the petitioner and the continuance of
such a situation, the District Magistrate of Jammu, on
16th March, 1968, made an order of detention of the
petitioner under section 3 of the Jammu & Kashmir Preventive
Detention Act No. 13 of 1964 (hereinafter referred to as
"the Act") and, on 18th March, 1968, the petitioner was
actually placed under detention. The grounds of detention
were served on the petitioner on the 26th March, 1968 and
the State Government granted approval to the order of
detention on 8th April, 1968. The detention of the
petitioner was continued without making a reference to the
Advisory Board, as the State Government purported to act
under s. 13A of the Act. The present petition was flied by
the petitioner on 3rd May, 1968.
During the preliminary .hearing of this petition, Mr.
Ramamurthy, representing the petitioner, raised a ground
that s. 13A of the Act was ultra vires the Constitution as
contravening the provisions of Art. 22 of the Constitution.
That question was referred by the Constitution Bench of the
Court to a larger Bench and came before the Full Court. On
this occasion, the Court held. that, in view of clause (c)
of Art. 35 of the Constitution introduced in the
Constitution in its application to the State of Jammu &
Kashmir, the point that had been raised stood answered by
the addition of this clause and, unless the clause itself
was challenged, the point raised on behalf of the detenu did
not arise. In this view, that reference was dissolved and
the case has been heard by the Constitution Bench.
On the return of the reference, the main point which
has been argued on behalf of the petitioner is based on the
fact that Art.35(c) of the Constitution, as initially
introduced by the Constitution (Application to Jammu &
Kashmir) Order, 1954 (C.O. 48),had given protection to any
law relating to preventive detention in Jammu & Kashmir
against invalidity on the ground of infringement of any
of the fundamental rights guaranteed by Part III of the
Constitution for a limited period of five years only. This
clause, as introduced in 1954, read as follows :--
"No law with respect to preventive
detention, made by the Legislature of the
State of Jammu & Kashmir, whether before or
after the commencement of the Constitution
(Application to Jammu & Kashmir) Order, 1954,
shall be void on the ground that it is
inconsistent with any of the provisions of
this Part, but :any such law shall, to the
extent of such inconsistency, cease to have
effect on the expiration of five years from
the commencement of the said Order, except as
respects things done or omitted to be done
before the expiration thereof."
369
It was urged that the five years mentioned in this clause
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expired in 1959, and, consequently, the Act, which was
passed in 1964, did not get immunity from being declared
void on the ground of inconsistency with Art. 22 of the
Constitution. It, however, appears that for the words
"five years" in Art. 35(c), the words "ten years" were
substituted by the Constitution (Application to Jammu &
Kashmir) Second Amendment Order, 1959 (C.O. 59), which was
passed before the expiry of those five years and,
subsequently, for the words "ten years" so introduced,
the words "fifteen years" were substituted by the
Constitution (Application to Jammu and Kashmir) Amendment
Order, 1964 (C.O. 69). This modification was also made
before the expiry of the period of ten years from the date
on’which the Constitution (Application to Jammu and Kashmir)
Order, 1954 was passed. On these facts, the point raised on
behalf of the detenu was that these two modifications in
1959 and 1964, substituting "ten years" for "five years",
and "fifteen years" for "ten years", were themselves void on
the ground that orders making such modifications could not
be validly passed by the President under Art. 370(1) of the
Constitution in the years 1959 and 1964.
Article 370 of the Constitution is as follows .--
"370. (1) Notwithstanding anything in
this Constitution,-
(a) the provisions of article 238 shall
not apply in relation to the State of Jammu &
Kashmir;
(b) the power of Parliament to make
laws for the said State shall be limited to-
(i) those matters in the Union List and
the Concurrent List which, in consultation
with the Government of the State, are
declared by the President to correspond to
matters specified in the Instrument of
Accession governing the accession of the
State to the Dominion of India as the
matters with respect to which the Dominion
Legislature may make laws for that State; and
(ii) such other matters in the said
Lists as, with the concurrence of the
Government of the State, the President may by
order specify.
Explanation. For the purposes of this article, the
Government of the State means the person for the time being
recognised by the President as the Maharaja of Jammu &
Kashmir acting on the advice of the Council
370
of Ministers for the time being in office under the
Maharaja’s Proclamation dated the fifth day of March, 1948;
(c) the provisions of article (1) and of this article
shall apply in relation to that State;
(d) of that clause be given before the Constituent shall
apply in relation to that State subject to such exceptions
and modifications as the President may be order specify:
Provided that no such order which relates to the
matters specified in the Instrument of Accession of the
State referred to in paragraph (i) of sub-clause (b) shall
be issued except in consultation with the Government of the
State;
Provided further that no such order which relates to
matters other than those referred to in the last preceding
proviso shall be issued except with the concurrence of that
Government.
(2) If the concurrence of the Government of the State
referred to in paragraph (ii) of sub-clause (b) of clause (1
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) or in the second proviso to sub-clause (d) of that clause
be given before the Constitutent Assembly for the purpose
of framing the Constitution of the State is convened, it
shall be placed before such Assembly for such decision as it
may take thereon.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in the foregoing
provisions of this article, the President may, by public
notification, declare that this article shall cease to
be .operative or shall be operative only with such
exceptions and modifications and from such date as he may
specify:
Provided that the recommendation of the Constituent
Assembly of the State referred to in clause (2) shall be
necessary before the President issues such a
notification."
The first argument was that this article contained
temporary provisions which ceased to be effective after
the Constituent Assembly convened for the purpose of
framing the Constitution the Jammu & Kashmir State had
completed its task by flaming the Constitution for that
State. Reliance was placed on the historical background in
which this Art. 370 was included in the Constitution to urge
that the powers under this article were intended to be
conferred only for the limited period until the
Constitution of the State was framed, and the President
could
371
not resort to them after the Constituent Assembly had
completed its work framing the Constitution of the State.
The back ground or the legislative history,which reference
was made was brought to our notice by learned counsel by
drawing our was brought to our notice by e
attention to the speech of the Minister,Sri N. Gopalaswami
Ayyangar when he moved in the Constituent Assembly clause
306A of the Bill, which now corresponds ’with Article 370 of
the Constitution. It was stated by him that conditions in
Kashmir were special and required special treatment. The
special circumstances, to which reference was made by him
were :--
(1) that there had been a war going on within the
limits of Jammu & Kashmir State;
(2) that there was a cease-fire agreed to at the
beginning of the year and that cease-fire was still on;
(3) that the conditions in the State were still unusual
and abnormal and had not settled down;
(4) that part of the State was still in the hands of
rebels and enemies;
(5) that our country was entangled with the
United Nations in regard to Jammu & Kashmir and it was not
possible to say when we would be free from this
entanglement;
(6) that the Government of India had committed
themselves to the people of Kashmir in certain respects
which commitments included an undertaking that an
opportunity be given to the people of the State to decide
for themselves whether they would remain with the Republic
or wish to go out of it; and
(7) that the will of the people expressed through
the Instrument of a Constituent Assembly would determine the
Constitution of the State as well as the sphere of Union
Jurisdiction over the State.
Learned counsel urged that, in this background, Art. 370 of
the Constitution could only have been intended to remain
effective until the Constitution of the State was framed and
the will of the people of Jammu & Kashmir had been
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expressed and, there after, this article must be held to
have become ineffective, so that the modifications made
by the President in exercise of the powers under this
article, subsequent to the enforcement of the Constitution
of the State, would be without any authority of law. The
Constitution of the State came into force on 26th January,
1956 and, therefore, the two Orders of 1959 and 1964 passed
by the President in purported exercise of the power under
Art. 370 were void. It was also urged that the provisions of
clause (2) of Art. 370 support this view, because it
directs that, if the
372
concurrence of the Government of the State is given under
para (ii) of sub-clause (b) of clause ( 1 ) or under the
second proviso to sub-clause (d) of that clause before the.
Constituent Assembly for ,the purpose of flaming the
Constitution of the State is convened, that concurrence has
to be placed before such Assembly for such decision as it
may take thereon. From this, it was sought to be inferred
that the power of the President, depending on the
concurrence of the Government of the State, must be
exercised before the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly
of the State, sot hat the concurrence could be placed for
its decision, and that. power must be held to cease to exist
after the dissolution of the Constituent Assembly when that
course became impossible.
We are not impressed by either of these two arguments
advanced by Mr. Ramamurthy. So far as the historical
background is concerned, the Attorney-General appearing on
behalf of the Government also relied on it to urge that
the provisions of Art. 370 should be held to be continuing
in force, because the situation that existed when this
article was incorporated in the Constitution had not
materially altered, and the purpose of introducing this
article was to empower the President to exercise his
discretion in applying the Indian Constitution while that
situation remained unchanged. There is considerable force
in this submission. The legislative history of this
article cannot, in these circumstances, be of any assistance
for holding that this article became ineffective after the
Constituent Assembly of the State had framed the
Constitution for the State.
The second submission based on clause (2) of Art. 370
does not find support even from the language of that clause
which only refers to the concurrence given by the Government
of the State before the Constituent Assembly was convened,
and makes no mention at all of the completion of the work
of .the Constituent Assembly or its dissolution.
There are, however, much stronger reasons for holding
that the provisions. of this article continued in force and
remained effective even after the Constituent Assembly of
the State had passed the Constitution of the State. The
most important provision in this connection is that
contained in clause (3) of the article which lays down
that this article shall cease to be operative or .shall be
operative only with such exceptions and modifications and
from, such date as the President may specify by public
notification, provided that the recommendation of the
Constituent Assembly of the State referred to in clause (2)
shall be necessary before the President issues such a
notification. This clause clearly envisages that the
article will continue to be operative and can cease to be
operative only if, on the recommendation of the Constituent
Assembly of the State, the President
373
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makes a direction to that effect. In fact, no such
recommendation was made by the Constituent Assembly of the
State, nor was any Order made by the President declaring
that the article shall cease to be operative. On the
contrary, it appears that the Constituent Assembly of the
State made a recommendation that the article should be
operative with one modification to be incorporated in the
Explanation to clause (1 ) of the article. This
modification in the article was notified by the President by
Ministry. of Law Order No. C.O. 44 dated 15th November,
1952, and laid down that, from the 17th November, 1952, the
article was to be operative with substitution of the new
Explanation for the old Explanation as it existed at that
time. This makes it very clear that the Constituent
Assembly of the State did not desire that this article
should cease to be operative and, in fact, expressed its
agreement to the continued operation of this article by
making a recommendation that it should be operative with
this modification only.
Further reference may also be made to the proviso added
to Art. 368 of the Constitution in its application to the
State of Jammu & Kashmir, under which an amendment to the
Constitution made in accordance with Art. 368 is to have no
effect in relation to the State of Jammu & Kashmir unless
applied by Order of the President under clause (1 ) of
Article 370. The proviso, thus, clearly requires that the
powers of the President under Art. 370 must be exercised
from time to time in order to bring into effect in Jammu &
Kashmir amendments made by Parliament in the Constitution in
accordance with Art. 368. In view of these provisions, it
must be held that Art. 370 of the Constitution has never
ceased to be operative and there can be no challenge on this
ground to the validity of the Orders passed by the President
in exercise of the. powers conferred by this Article.
The next submission made for challenging the validity of
the Orders of modification made in the years 1959 and 1964
was that, under sub-clause (d) of clause (1 ) of Art. 370 of
the Constitution, the power that is conferred on the
President is for the ’purpose of applying the provisions of
the Constitution to Jammu & Kashmir and not for the purpose
of making amendments in the Constitution as applied to that
State. The interpretation sought to be placed was that, at
the time of applying any provision of the Constitution to
the State of Jammu & Kashmir, the President is competent to
make modifications and exceptions therein; but once any
provision of the Constitution has been applied, the power
under Art. 370 would not cover any modification in the
Constitution as applied. Reliance was thus placed on the
nature of the power conferred on the President to urge that
the President could not from time to time amend any of the
provisions .of the Constitution as applied to the State of
Jammu & Kashmir. It was
374
further urged that the President’s power under Art. 370
should not be interpreted by applying section 21 of the
General Clauses Act, because a Constitutional power cannot
be equated with a power conferred by an Act, rule, bye-law,
etc.
The argument, in our opinion, proceeds on an entirely
incorrect basis. Under Art. 370(1 )(d.), the power of the
President is expressed by laying down that provisions of the
Constitution, other than article (1 ) and article 370
which, under Art. 370(1) (c), became applicable when the
Constitution came into force, shall apply in relation to the
State of Jammu & Kashmir subject to such exceptions and
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modifications as the President may by order specify. What
the President is required to do is to specify the
provisions of the Constitution which are to apply to the
State of Jammu & Kashmir and, when making such
specification, he is also empowered to specify exceptions
and modifications to those provisions. As soon as the
President makes such specification, the provisions become
applicable to the State with the specified exceptions and
modifications. The specification by the President has to be
in consultation with the Government of the State if those
provisions relate to matters in the Union List and the
Concurrent List specified in the Instrument of Accession
governing the accession of the State to the Dominion of
India as matters with respect to which the Dominion
Legislature may make laws for that State. The specification
in respect of all other provisions of the Constitution under
sub-clause (d) of clause (1) of Art. 370 has to be with the
concurrence of the State Government. Any specification made
after such consultation or concurrence has the effect that
the provisions of the Constitution specified with the
exceptions and modifications become applicable to the State
of Jammu & Kashmir. It cannot be held that the nature of the
power contained in this provision is such that section 21
the General Clauses Act must be held to be totally
inapplicable.
In this connection, it may be noted that Art. 367 of the
Constitution lays down that, unless the context otherwise
requires, the General Clauses Act, 1897, shall, subject to
any adaptations and modifications that may be made therein
under article 372, apply for the interpretation of this
Constitution as it applies for the interpretation of an Act
of the Legislature of Dominion of India. This provision made
by the Constitution itself in Art. 367, thus, specifically
applied the provisions of the General Clauses Act to the
interpretation of all the articles of the Constitution
which include Art. 370. Section 21 of the General Clauses
Act is as follows :-
"Where, by any Central Act or Regulation, a
power to issue notifications, orders, rules,
or by-laws is conferred, then that power
includes a power, exercisable in the like
manner and subject to the like sanction and
375
conditions (if any), to add to, amend, vary or
rescind any notifications, orders, rules or
bye-laws so issued."
This provision is clearly a rule of interpretation which has
been made applicable to the Constitution in the same
manner as it applies to any Central Act or Regulation. On
the face of it, the submission that s. 21 cannot be applied
to the interpretation of the Constitution will lead to
anomalies which can only be avoided by holding that the rule
laid down in this section is fully applicable to all the
provisions of the Constitution. As an example, under Art.
77(3), the President, and, under Art. 166(3), the Governor
of a State are empowered to make rules for the more
convenient transaction of the business of the Government
of India or the Government of the State, as the case may be,
and for the allocation among Ministers of the said business.
If, for the interpretation of these provisions, section 21
of the General Clauses Act is not applied, the result would
be that the rules once made by the President or a Governor
would become inflexible and the allocation of the business
among the Ministers would for ever remain as laid down in
the first rules. Clearly, the power of amending these
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rules from time to time to suit changing situations must be
held to exist and that power can only be found in these
articles by applying section 21 of the General Clauses Act.
There are other similar rule-making powers, such as the
power of making service rules under Art. 309 of the
Constitution. That power must also be exercisable from
time to time and must include within it the power to add
to, amend, vary or rescind any of those rules. The
submission that s. 21 of the General Clauses Act cannot be
held to be applicable for interpretation of the Constitution
must, therefore, be rejected. It appears to us that there
is nothing in Art. 370 which would exclude the applicability
of this section when interpreting the power granted by that
article.
The legislative history of this article will also fully
support this view. It was because of the special situation
existing in Jammu & Kashmir that the Constituent Assembly
framing the Constitution decided that the Constitution
should not become applicable to Jammu & Kashmir under Art.
394, under which it came into effect in the rest of India,
and preferred to confer on the President the power to apply
the various provisions of the Constitution with exceptions
and modifications. It was envisaged that the President
would have to take into account the situation existing in
the State when applying a provision of the Constitution and
such situations could arise from time to time. There was
clearly the possibility that, when applying a particular
provision, the situation might demand an exception or
modification of the provision applied; but subsequent
changes in the situation might justify the rescinding of
those modifications or exceptions.
376
This could only be brought about by conferring on the
President the power of making orders from time to time under
Art. 370 and this power must, therefore, be held to have
been conferred on him by applying the provisions of s. 21 of
the General Clauses Act for the interpretation of the
Constitution.
The next point urged was that Art. 368 of the
Constitution having been applied to Jammu & Kashmir with a
proviso added to it, there now exists a provision relating
to amendment of the Constitution as applied to Jammu &
Kashmir under tiffs article and, consequently, while such
special provision for this purpose exists, we should
interpret Art. 370 as being no longer applicable for
amending or modifying the provisions of the Constitution
applied to that State. This argument, in our opinion, is
based on a wrong premise. Art. 368 has been applied to
Jammu & Kashmir primarily with the object that amendments
made by the Parliament in the Constitution of India as
applicable in the whole of the country should also take
effect in the State of Jammu & Kashmir. The proviso, when
applying this article, serves the purpose that those
amendments made should be made applicable to the State of
Jammu & Kashmir only with the concurrence of the State
Government and, after such concurrence is available, these
amendments should take effect when an order is made under
Art. 370 of the Constitution. Thus, Art. 368 is not
primarily intended for amending the Constitution as
applicable in Jammu & Kashmir, but is for the purpose of
carrying the amendments made in the Constitution for the
rest of India into the Constitution as applied in the State
of Jammu & Kashmir. Even, in this process, the powers of
the President under Art. 370 have to be exercised and,
consequently, it cannot be held that the applicability of
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this article would necessarily curtail the power of the
President under Art. 370.
It was also urged that the power of making modifications
and exceptions in the orders made under Art. 370(1)(d)
should at least be limited to making minor alterations and
should not cover the ’power to practically abrogate an
article of the Constitution applied in that State. That
submission is clearly without force. The challenge to the
validity of Art. 35(c) introduced in the Constitution as
applied to Jammu & Kashmir on this ground was repelled by
this Court in P.L. Lakhanpal v. The State of Jammu &
Kashmir(1). Subsequently, the scope of the powers of making
exceptions ’and modifications was examined in greater
details by this Court in Puranlal Lakhanpal v. The President
of India and Others(2). Dealing with the scope of the word
"modification" as used in Art. 370(1), the Court held :--
"But, in the present case, we have to find out the
meaning of the word "modification" used in Art. 370
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1101. (2) [1962] S.C.R. 688, 692.
377
(1) in the context of the Constitution. As we
have said already, the object behind enacting
Art. 370(1) was to recognise the special
position of the State of Jammu & Kashmir and
to provide for that special position by giving
power to the President to apply the provisions
of the Constitution to that State with such
exceptions and modifications as the President
might by order specify. We have already
pointed out that the power to make exceptions
implies that President can provide that a
particular provision of the Constitution would
not apply to that State. If, therefore, the
power is given to the President to efface in
effect any provision of the Constitution
altogether in its application to the State of
Jammu & Kashmir, it seems that when he is also
given the power to make modifications that
power should be considered in its widest
possible amplitude. If he could efface a
particular provision of the Constitution
altogether in its application to the State
of Jammu & Kashmir, we see no reason to think
that the Constitution did not intend that he
should have the power to amend a particular
provision in its application to the State of
Jammu and Kashmir. It seems to us that when
the Constitution used the word "modification"
in Art. 370( 1 ), the intention was that the
President would have the power to amend the
provisions of the Constitution if he so
thought fit in their application to the State
of Jammu and Kashmir."
Proceeding further, and ’after discussing the meaning of the
word "modify", the Court held :--
"Thus, in law, the word "modify" may just
mean "vary", i.e., amend, and when Art. 370(1)
says that the President may apply the
provisions of the Constitution to the State of
Jammu & Kashmir with such modifications as he
may by order specify, it means that he may
vary (i.e., amend) the provisions of the
Constitution in its application to the State
of Jammu & Kashmir. We are, therefore, ’of
opinion that in the context of the
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Constitution we must give the widest e
ffect to
the meaning of the word "modification" used in
Art. 370(1) and in that sense it includes an
amendment. There is no reason to limit the
word "modifications" as used in Art. 370(1)
only to such modifications as do not make any
"radical transformation".
This decision being binding on us, it is not possible to
accept the submission urged by counsel.
Sup. C169--7
378
Lastly, it was argued that the modifications made in
Art. 35(c) by the Constitution (Application to Jammu &
Kashmir) Orders of 1959 and 1964 had the effect of abridging
the fundamental right of the citizens of Kashmir under Art.
22 and other article contained in Part III after they had
already been applied to the State of Jammu & Kashmir, and an
order of the President under Art. 370 being in the nature of
law, it would be void under Art. 13 of the Constitution.
Article 35(c) as originally introduced in the Constitution
as applied to Jammu & Kashmir laid down that no law with
respect to preventive detention made by the Legislature of
that State could be declared void on the ground of
inconsistency with any of the provisions of Part II1, with
the qualification that such a law to the extent of the
inconsistency was to cease to have effect after a period of
five years. This means that, under clause (c) of Article 35,
immunity was granted to the preventive laws made by the
State Legislature completely, though the life of the
inconsistent provisions was limited to a period of five
years. The extension of that life from five to ten years
and ten to fifteen years cannot, in these circumstances, be
held to be an abridgement of any fundamental right, as the
fundamental rights were already made inapplicable to the
preventive detention law. On the other hand, if the
substance of this provision is examined, the proper
interpretation would be to hold that, as a result of Art.
35(c), the applicability of the provisions of Part III for
the purpose of judging the validity of a law relating to
preventive detention made by the State Legislature was
postponed for a period of five years, during which the law
could not be declared void. As already stated, Art.
370(1)(d), in terms, provides for the application of the
provisions of the Constitution other than Articles 1 and 370
in relation to Jammu & Kashmir with such exceptions and
modifications as the President may by order specify. It was
not disputed that the President’s Order of 1954, by which
immunity for a period of five years was given to the State’s
preventive detention law from challenge on the ground of its
being inconsistent with Part III of the Constitution. was
validly made under ,and in conformity with clause (d) of
Art. 370(1). We have already held that the power to modify
in clause (d) also includes the power to subsequently vary,
alter, add to or rescind such an order by reason of the
applicability of the rule of interpretation laid down in
section 21 of the General Clauses Act. If the Order of 1954
is not invalid on the ground of infringement or abridgement
of fundamental rights under Part III, it is difficult to
appreciate how extension of period of immunity made by
subsequent amendments can be said to be invalid as
constituting an infringement or ’abridgement of any of the
provisions of Part IT. The object of the subsequent Orders
of 1959 and 1964 was to extend the period of protection to
the preventive detention law and not to infringe or abridge
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the funda-
379
mental rights, though the result of the extension is that a
detenu cannot, during the period of protection, challenge
the law on the ground of its being inconsistent with Art.
22. Such extension is justified prima facie by the
exceptional state of affairs which continue to exist as
before.
The provision made in Art. 35(c) has the effect that
the validity of the Act cannot be challenged on the ground
that any of the provisions of the Act are inconsistent with
Art. 22 of the Constitution.
As a result the grounds taken to challenge the validity
of the Act fail and are rejected. The petition will now be
set down for hearing arguments, if any, on the facts of the
case.
R.K.P.S. Petition set down for hearing on merits.
380