Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF HARYANA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SAMPURAN SINGH ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/09/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
GUPTA, A.C.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1952 1976 SCR (1) 626
1975 SCC (2) 810
ACT:
Construction of Statutes-Interpretation of land reform
statutes or agrarian laws-Construction to promote the
general purpose of the act-Punjab Security of Land Tenures
Act, 1953-Section 10A and 19B-Validity of the Transfers
reducing surplus lands.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents were small land owners within the
meaning of Punjab Securrity of’ Land Tenures Act, 1953. The
respondents, later on inherited certain lands which together
with the lands already held by them exceeded the ceiling
area. The respondents, therefore, ceased to be small land-
owners. The respondents thereafter divested themselves of
the excess lands by executing gift deed, mortgage with
possession and pursuant to decrees passed in favour of their
near relations. The Collector after investigating into the
matter declared the lands in excess of the ceiling area as
surplus lands and ignored the subsequent transfers. An
appeal filed by the respondents was rejected by the
Commissioner. Respondents Revision Applications to the
Financial Commissioner were also rejected.
The respondents thereafter filed Writ Petitions in the
High Court. The High Court allowed the Writ Petitions
holding that section 19B read with section 10A did not
affect the transfers made by the respondents. According to
High Court the transfers affected during the period
prescribed for filing returns are valid since they were
consistent with the scheme of’ the act which requires that
no one should hold land in excess of permissible limits.
Section 2(2) of the Act defines small land owner as a
person owning less than certain area of land. Permissible
area is defined limiting the maximum permissible extent a
person may hold land. So long as a person does not hold
lands in excess of permissible area he is a small land
holder. He can evict his tenants from the holding and be in
actual enjoyment as provided by the Act. If any person has
lands beyond the permissible area he becomes a large land
owner and he has to surrender the excess land after choosing
the best area he desires to keep. Such excess land goes to
the surplus pool which is distributed for the rehabilitation
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of ejected tenants and landless persons. The Act was amended
by inserting section 10A and Section 19B with retrospective
effect. Section 10A provides that for the purpose of
determining the surplus area of any person any judgment,
decree or order of a Court or authority contained after the
commencement of the Act and having the effect of diminishing
the area of such person which could have been declared as
his surplus area shall be ignored.
Section 19B provides that if after the commencement, of
the Act any person whether as land owner or tenant acquires
by inheritance or by bequest or gift from a person to whom
he is an heir or if any person after the commencement of the
Act acquires in any other manner any land and which with or
without the lands already owned or. held by him exceeds in
the aggregate the permissible area such a person is required
to file a return with the Collector in the prescribed form
giving the necessary particulars and selecting the land not
exceeding the permissible area which he desires to retain.
The section further provides that the surplus land in excess
of the permissible area would be distributed among the
tenants who are evicted or landless persons.
On an appeal by certificate under Article 133(1)(c) in
one appeal and in an appeal by Special Leave in another
allowing the appeals held
^
1. Land reform is so strategic that special
constitutional concern has been shown for this programme.
The State naturally enacted the Act whereby ceiling on land
ownership was set. surplus lands were taken over for
settling ejected tenants and others. If constitutionally
envisioned socio-economic revolution is
627
not to be a paper tiger, agrarian lands have to be
meaningfully enacted, interpreted and executed and the Court
is not the anti-hero of the Drama of limping land reform.
The decision of this Court in Amar Singh’s case A.I.R.
1974 SC 994, 996 followed. [628 B-C 631 A]
2. It is settled law that Courts should favour an
interpretation that promotes the general purpose of an Act
rather than one that does not. [634-E]
3. The agrarian reform laws with special constitutional
status, as it were warrant interpretative skills which, will
stiffle the evasive attempts, specialty by way of gifts and
bequests and suspect transfers. [635 C-D]
4. The profound concern of the law to preserve the
surplus stock is manifest from the obligation cast by
section 19B to declare and deliver excess lands. The
agrarian policy is equitable ownership and the reform
philosophy is redistributive justice, the rural goal being
small peasant proprietorship. What difference does it make
as to how you came by a large holding from the standpoint
above outline ? The thrust of section 19B is that even if
the source of the excess area is inheritance. bequest or
gift the capacity to own is conditioned by the permissible
limit. Section 10A does not militate against the mandate of
section 19B. Section 19B had to be enacted because the High
Court took the view that the area which became surplus
subsequent to the commencement of the Act was not hit by the
ceiling and land acquired by an heir by inheritance is saved
from utilisation by the State. [633H-634A-C]
5. The reasoning of the High Court that the scheme of
the Act was that no one should held land in excess of the
permissible area and since after the transfers the land held
by the respondent was within permissible limits there was no
frustration of the policy of the law is repugnant to the
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basic scheme because the Surplus pool would be adversely
affected if gifts and other transfers which would skim off
surplus were to be allowed. A legislation which has provided
for ignoring decrees diminishing surplus lands and has
otherwise prevented the escape of excess area by voluntary
transfers cannot conceivably be intended to permit inherited
excesses. [634-F-G]
6. The further reasoning of the High Court that since
section 19B gives to the owner who by inheritance comes to
own an excess area. a certain time for making a declaration,
that during this period land owner can effect transfers, is
obviously absurd. What is intended to give some time to the
heir to ascertain the assets he has inherited, make the
choice of his reserved area which he likes to keep and make
the necessary declaration. The processual facility cannot be
converted into an opportunity to prevert and thwart the
substantive object of the law. After all courts faced with
special case situations, have creatively to interpret
legislation [634 H; 635 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 123 of
1969 and 2023 of 1972.
From the Judgment and order dated the 25th October 1967
of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil Writ No. 525
of 1966 and Civil Appeal No. 2023 of 1972.
Appeal by Special Leave from the order dated the 20th
May, 1970 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in L.P.A. No.
231 of 1970.
Naunit Lal and R. N. Sachthey for the Appellant in both
the appeals.
N. N. Goswamy and Arvind Minocha for the Respondent in
C.A 123 of 1969.
O. P. Sharma for Respondent No. 1 (In C.A. 2023/72).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. These two appeals turn on the
construction of s. 19B of the Punjab Security of Land
Tenures Act, 1953 (Act X of
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1953) (for short, the Act). This legislation was enacted to
bring about an agrarian re-ordering so pivotal to the
progress of our rural economy. Haryana, happily a granary of
our country, is one of the States where land reform laws are
likely to generate great changes by banishing big
concentration of Natur’s bounty in a few feudal hands,
creating an enthusiastic sense of distributive justice and
exploiting the productive potential of land by the
possessive passion of the landless many. So strategic is
land reform that special constitutional concern has been
shown for this programme. Naturally the State enacted the
Act whereby ceiling on land-ownership was set; surplus lands
were taken over for settling ejected tenants and others and
peasant proprietorship created. The scheme of the Act with
which we are concerned is fairly simple and somewhat
scientific, although its language, what with frequent
amendments dovetailed from time to time, has made for
ambiguity, obscurity, marginal inconsistency and a rich crop
of litigation. Indeed, the conflict of opinion at the High
Court level and the bone of contention before us arise from
this drafting deficiency
Legal Preface:
A thumb-nail sketch of the Act is a prefatory
necessity. the defines ’small land-owner’ [S. 2(2)] having
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in mind the optimum ownership in the given conditions.
’Permissible area’ [s. 2(3)] is a cognate concept limiting
the maximum permissible extent a person may hold, and so
long as he does not have any excess, he is a small
landholder. He can evict the tenants from his holding and be
in actual enjoyment as provided by the Act. If, however, he
has lands beyond the permissible area, he becomes a large
land-owner and has to cough up the excess. However, he is
given the option to choose there best area he desires to
keep, called ’reserved area’ [s. 2(4)] and then he must make
available to the State such excess called surplus area [s.
2(5-a)]. This creation of a surplus pool or reservoir is
vital to the success of the statutory project since, by
distribution of such lands, rehabilitation of ejected
tenants and landless persons is to be "accomplished.
Maximisation of the surplus pool and suppression of evasion
by large holders are of profound legislative, concern.
Even if a person is a small holder, it is quite on the
cards that, by inheritance or other operation of law, or by
voluntary transfer, he may acquire lands in excess of the
permissible limit. The law takes care to see that such
excess is also made available for re-settlement of ejectees
and their ilk. In short, the legislative mandate is that
every agricultural holder in the State shall hold no more
than the permissible area and the surplus in the hands of
large holders, whether acquired by voluntary transactions or
involuntary operation of law, will go to feed the surplus
pool.
A semi-medieval set-up where considerable estates are
cornered by a landed gentry, will naturally resist re-
distributive reform measures and try ingenious methodology
to defeat the law. But the legislature has to be astute
enough to outwit such devious devices and subtle
subterfuges. With this end in view, the Act has been amended
to block all escape routes unearthed by the law-makers as
often as the High
629
Court has upheld certain patterns of alienations and oblique
dealings by interpretative process. A study of the history
of the Act and the provocation for and frequency of
amendments thereto, suggests an unspoken criticism about
judicial approach which we will refer to later. Suffice it
to say that the law we are construing is a radical agrarian
measure; its basic goals are to cut down large holdings and
distribute lands to various landless people according to a
design and to foster, according to legislative policy, an
agrarian community of peasant proprietors. De-hoarding and
defeating hide-outs are essential to make the twin objects
successful and so ss. 10A and 19B among others, have been
written into the Act. To explore the import and ambit of
these two provisions, particularly the former, with a view
to see whether it strikes at a gift made by, the respondent
in. favour of his sons whereby he sought to stow away some
of his lands, shed some of his excess lands and look slim on
as a small holder before the law Language permiting, the
Court as interpretor, must fulfil, not frustrate the
legislative mission.
Factual Silhouette
At this stage it is appropriate to set out the facts in
the two appeals which are not in dispute and speak for
themselves.
C.A. 123 of 1969:
One Sampuran Singh who owned 450 bighas and 9 biswas of
land, acting with foresight, gifted half of it to his mother
in 1951, perhaps with a premonition of coming restrictions
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by way of ceiling on owner ship. We need not speculate on
that point in the light of subsequent happenings. The Act
came into force on April 15, 1953 but even before that date
the. Owner (who was the petitioner before the High Court
under Art. 226 and respondent before us) executed a mortgage
with possession over 12 bighas and 5 biswas. There was also
some waste land included in his total holding which fell
outside the scope of the Act. So much so, on the date when
the Act came into force, he was the owner of about 178
bighas which, admittedly, fell safely short of the
permissible area of 30 standard acres [vide s. 2(3)]. Having
thus dwarfed himself into a small land owner as defined in
s. 2(2), the ’ceiling’ provision held out no threat to him.
Certain small extents of land which were legally deductible
from his total holding brought down the area in his
possession to 138 odd bighas. Unfortunately for him, his
mother passed away in February 1958 and, he being the heir,
all that he had gifted to her earlier came back to him as
successor. The unhappy consequence was that his holding
expanded to 363 odd bighas, far in excess of the permissible
area as set out in s. 2(3) of the Act. Necessarily, this
spill-over became surplus area as in s. 2(5-a) of the Act.
Sensing the imminent peril to his property and manoeuvring
to salvage it from the clutches of the legal ceiling the
petitioner executed a gift of 182 bighas of land to his son
by deed dated February 11, 1959. He also executed three
mortgages with possession. The cumulative result of the
shedding operations was to shrink the size of his holding to
well within the permissible area. The Collector, however,
investigat
630
ed into the matter and declared an area of 117 bighas as
surplus in his hands. He reached this conclusion by ignoring
the tell-tale gift of February 1, 1959 in favour of the son
and the three possessory mortgages executed in June 1958.
The status of ’small land-owner’ thus being forfeited, the
threat lo the surplus lands revived but was sought lo be
warded off by the petitioner moving an unsuccessful appeal
Lo the Commissioner, and a further fruitless revision to the
Financial Commissioner. Eventually, he challenged the
Collector’s order i Writ Petition which, met with success.
There was disagreement between the two learned Judges on the
Bench and the third learned Judge decided in favour of the
petitioner holding that s. 19B, read with s 10A. did not
affect the petitioner’s transfers. The two Judges, whose
opinion upheld the claim of the petitioner, substantially
concurred in their reasonings but the scope of the
interpretative exercise. is somewhat limited. We, therefore,
propose straight to go into a study of the relevant
provisions and may perhaps indicate our conclusion in
advance. We wholly disagree with the High Court and hold
that to accept the construction which has appealed to the
learned Judges is to frustrate the agrarian reform scheme of
the Act and the alternative reading gives life to the law,
teeth to its provisions and fulfilment to its soul.
C.A. 2023 of 1972: The facts in this appeal are
different but the point of law involved is identical. In
both the cases the State of Haryana has come up to this
Court in appeal, the former by certificate under Art.
133(1)(c) and the latter by special leave granted by this
Court. Anyway, in C.A. 2023 of 1972, respondent no. 1 owned
86 odd ordinary acres of land on April 15, 1953 when the Act
came into force. After the commencement of the Act he
inherited nearly 30 ordinary acres and thus he held well
above the permissible area and ceased to be a small land
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owner. Around the year 1957 he transferred 167 bighas of
land to respondents nos. 3 to 6 pursuant to a Civil Court
decree passed in 1957 in favour of his sons and wife. We
may mention here, parenthetically but pathetically, that the
weapons in the armoury of large land owners to defeat the
land reform law included securing simulactral decrees from
civil courts against themselves in favour of their close
relations, thus using the judicial process to have. their
excess lands secreted in the names of their dear and near.
This invited legislative attention and an amendment of the
Act was made viz., s. 10A whereby decrees and orders of
courts were to be ignored in dealing with surplus lands.
Thus, the Collector ignoring the transfer of 167 bighas of
land by respondent no. 1 (which resulted ill civil court
decrees of 1957 in favour of his sons and wife declared
38.41 ordinary acres as surplus with respondent no. 1. The
statutory. remedies did not see the first respondent (writ-
petitioner) safe ashore and so he sought harbourage by
moving the High Court under Art. 26 where he urged that the
land inherited by him and later transferred to his sons and
wife were not hit by s. 10A and s. 19B of the Act He
succeded in the Court in view of a certain strict
construction adopted by the Court and the State has come up
in appeal challenging the soundness of the High Court’s
approach.
631
Statutory Construction:
The key-thought that pervades our approach is that if
the constitutionally envisioned socio-economic revolution is
not to be a paper tiger, agrarian laws have to be
meaningfully enacted, interpreted and executed and the court
is not the anti-hero in the drama of limping land reform.
Much to the same effect this Court observed in Amar Singh’s
Case(1):
"We have to ’bear in mind the activist, though
inarticulate, major premise of statutory construction
that the rule of law must run close to the rule of life
and the court must read into an enactment, language
permitting, that meaning which promotes the benignant
intent of the legislation in preference to the one
which perverts the scheme of the statute on imputed
legislative presumptions and assumed social values
valid in a prior era. An aware court, in formed of this
adaptation in the rules of forensic interpretation,
hesitates to nullify the plain object of a land reforms
law unless compelled by its language, and the crux of
this case is just that accent when double possibilities
in the chemistry of construction crop up."
While dealing with a somewhat analogous set of provisions
under the same Act. The emphatic importance of augmenting
the surplus pool for distribution by the State is brought
out in Amar Singh (supra) thus:
"The triple objects of the agrarian reform
projected by the Act appear to be (a) to impart
security of tenure (b) to make the tiller the owner,
and (c) to trim large land holdings, setting sober
ceilings. To convert these political slogans and into
legal realities, to combat the evil of mass evictions,
to create peasant proprietorships and to ensure even
distribution of land ownerships a statutory scheme was
fashioned the cornerstone of which was the building up
of a reservoir of land carved out of the large
landholdings and made available for utilisation by the
State for re-settling ejected tenants." (p. 998)
Unfortunately, judicial decisions construing the language of
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the law have resulted in stultifying the objectives of the
enactment leading to further amendments. We are concerned in
the present case with ss. 10A and 19B which, in their final
form, appeared by an amendment of 1962 (Act XIV of 1962),
but retrospective effect was given with effect from the
commencement of the Act, viz., April 1953.
In this context it is convenient to excerpt the
observations of this Court in Amar Singh (supra) at p. 999:
(1) A.I.R.. 1974 S.C. 994, 996.
632
"The objects and reasons of Punjab Act 14 of 1962,
which brought in certain significant restrictions on
alienations and acquisitions of large land-holders
starts off in the statement of objects thus:
"Some of the recent judicial pronouncements have
the effect of defeating the objectives with which the
Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act, 1953, was enacted
and amended from time to time. It was intended that
the surplus area of every land-owner recorded as such
in the revenue records should be made utilisable for
the settlement of ejected tenants."
Certain specific decisions and their impact on the
legislative operation were mentioned, and then the
statement of objects proceeded:
"In order to evade the provisions of section 10-A
of the Parent Act interested persons, being relations,
have obtained decrees of courts for diminishing the
surplus area. Clause (43 of the Bill seeks to provide
that such decrees should be ignored in computing the
surplus area."
The short point which confronts us in both these appeals is
as to whether the gifts made by land-owners who exceeded
their permissible area having come by additional lands by
inheritance are to be ignored or taken into account when
computing the surplus area in their hands, having regard to
the specific provision in s. 19B living in fellowship with
s. 10-A.
It is appropriate to read ss. 10A and 19B here, before
proceeding to the crucial discussion in the case:
10-A.-(a) The State Government or any officer em
powered by it in this behalf shall be competent to
utilize any surplus area for the resettlement of
tenants ejected, or to be ejected, under clause (i) of
sub-section (1) or section 9.
(b) Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being ill force and save in the
case of land acquired by the State Government under any
law for the time being in force or by an heir by
inheritance no transfer or other disposition of land
which is comprised in surplus area at the commencement
of this Act, shall affect the utilization thereof in
clause (a)
Explanation.-such utilization of any surplus area
will not affect the right of the landowner to receive
rent from the tenant so settled.
(c) For the purposes of determining the surplus
area of any person under this section, any judgment,
decree or order of a court or other authority, obtained
after the commencement of this Act and having the
effect of diminishing the area of such person which
could have been declared as his surplus area shall be
ignored."
633
"19B. Future acquisition of land by inheritance, in excess
of permissible area.-
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(1) Subject to the provisions of s. 10-A, if after
the commencement of this Act, any person, whether as
land-owner or tenant, acquires any inheritance or by
bequest or gift from :. person to whom he is an heir
any land, or in after the commencement of this Act and
before the 30th of July, 1958, any person acquires by
transfer, exchange, lease, agreement or settlement any
land, or if, after such commencement, any person
acquires in any other manner any land and which with or
without the lands already owned or held by him exceeds
in the aggregate the permissible area, then he shall
within the period prescribed, furnish to the Collector,
a return in the prescribed form and manner giving the
particulars of all lands and selecting the land not
exceeding in the aggregate the permissible area which
he desires to retain, and if the land of such person is
situated in more than one patwar circle, he shall also
furnish a declaration required by section 5-A.
(2) If he fails to furnish the return and select
his land within the prescribed period, then the
Collector many in respect of him obtain the information
required to be shown in the return through such agency
as he may deem fit and select the laud for him in the
manner prescribed in sub section (2) of section 5-B.
(3) If such person fails to furnish the
declaration the provisions of section 5-C shall apply.
(4) The excess land of such person shall be at the
disposal of the State Government for utilization as
surplus are; under clause (a) of section 10-A or for
such other purposes the State Government may by
notification direct."
Unclouded by case law, we first study s. 1953.
Forgetting s. 10-A for moment, we find that if, after the
commencement of the Act, April 15, 1953, any person acquires
any land by inheritance or bequest or gift which, with the
lands already held by him exceed in the in the permissible
area, than he shall furnish to the Collector a return
indicating the permissible area he desires to retain. This
he shall do within the prescribed period [S 19B(1)]. If he
defaults to make the return, the Collector will select the
land for him [19B(2). He will suffer a penalty for failure
to furnish the declaration [19B(3)]. The excess land, i.e.,
the surplus area shall be at the disposal of Government for
utilization under s. 10-A [19B(4)1. The surplus land will be
used for re-settlement of tenants ejected or to be ejected
under cl. (i) sub-s. (1) of s. 9 or other purpose notified
by Government. The profound concern of the law to preserve
the surplus stock is manifest from the obligation cast by
sub-ss. (1) and (4) of 19B to declare and deliver excess
lands. How you came to hold the excess is not the question.
Why you should be permitted to keep more than what others
can lawfully own is the query. A might have
10-925 Sup CI/75
634
acquired by paying hard cash might have received by gift and
by bequest and D by settlement and by partition. The
agrarian policy is equitable ownership and the reform
philosophy is redistributive justice the rural goal being
small peasant proprietorship. What difference does it make
as to how you came by a large holding from the standpoint
above outlined? The thrust of s. 19-B is that even if the
source of the excess area is inheritance, bequest of gift,
the capacity to own is conditioned by the permissible limit.
Section 10-A does not militate against this mandate of
s. 19-B. Indeed, s. 19-B had to be enacted because the High
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Court took the view that area which became surplus
subsequent to April 15, 1953 was not hit by the ceiling set
and land acquired by an heir by inheritance is saved from
utilisation by the State. Section 10-(a) is wide in its
terms and encompasses all surplus area, howsoever obtained.
Even s. 10A(b) strikes not discordant note. All that it says
and means is that lands acquired by an heir by inheritance
are saved in so far as dispositions of such lands are
concerned. The drafting of the saving clause is cumbersome
but the sense is and, having regard to the conspectus, can
only be that although in the hands of the propositus, it is
surplus land, if among the heirs it is not, then their
transfers will not be affected by the interdict of s. 10-
A(a) the sins of the father shall not set the teeth of the
children on edge. If the heirs are otherwise small holders,
the fact that their father was a large owner will not
deprive the former of their heritage, if it is less than the
permissible area. We see no conflict between s. 10-A and
19B. Assuming some inconsistency, primacy goes to s. 19B
which effectuates the primary object. It is settled law that
Courts should favour an interpretation that promotes the
general purpose of an Act rather than one that does not.
Counsel for the respondents adopted the arguments which
found favour with the High Court and pressed two points. The
scheme of the Act, according to the learned Judges, was to
see that no one held in excess of the permissible area and
since by the gift to the son or wife the latter had only
lands within permissible limits, there was no frustration of
the policy of the law This reasoning is repugnant to the
basic scheme because the surplus pool will be adversely
affected if gifts and other transfers which will skim off
surplus were to be allowed. Indeed, the flaw in the High
Court’s argument is that if it were allowed to prevail,
there will be no surplus land at all, every large holder
being free to screen his surplus in the names of his with
and kin or servants or reliable friends, by going through
alienatory exercises. A legislation which has provided for
ignoring decrees diminishing surplus lands and has otherwise
prevented the escape of excess area by voluntary transfers,
cannot conceivably be intended to permit inherited excesses.
The second argument which appealed to the High Court is
a little curious, and somewhat difficult to follow. Section
19-B directs the owner who, by inheritance, comes to own an
excess area, to make a declaration of his lands within a
prescribed time. This does rot mean that the time lag is
statutorily given for executing gifts and
635
transfers to defeat the law itself. Such a conclusion would
be obviously absurd. What is intended is to give some time
to the, heir to ascertain the assets he has inherited, make
the choice of his ’reserved area’ which he likes to keep and
make the necessary declaration. A processual facility cannot
be converted into an opportunity to pervert and to thwart
the substantive object of the law. After all, courts, faced
with special case situations, have ’creatively’ to interpret
legislation. The courts are ’finishers, refiners and
polishers of legislation which comes to them in a state
requiring varying degrees of further. processing’, said
Donaldson J., in Corocraft Ltd. v. Pan American Airways
Inc.(1) and indeed it is no secret that courts constantly
give their own shape to enactments.
We feel that when economic legislation in the
implementation of Part lV of the Constitution strikes new
ground and takes liberties with old jurisprudence, there
looms an interpretation problem of some dimensions which
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Indian jurists will have to tackle. The genre of agrarian
reform laws, with special constitutional status, as it were,
warrants interpretative skills which will stifle evasive
attempts, specially by way of gifts and bequests and suspect
transfers. Here ss. 10-A, 19-A and 19B, inter alia, strike
at these tactics.
Our conclusion, in conformity with the principles of
statutory construction we have projected, is that the gifts
in both the appeals fail in the face of s. 19B. It follows
that the appeals have to be allowed, which we hereby do
without hesitation, without costs how ever to either party
at any stage.
P.H.P. Appeals allowed.
(1) [1968] 3 W.L.R. 714, 732.
636