Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 276 of 2001
Writ Petition (civil) 543 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Dharam Dutt & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/11/2003
BENCH:
R.C. LAHOTI & BRIJESH KUMAR.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
R.C. LAHOTI, J.
W.P. (C) No.276/2001 filed on June 22, 2002, lays challenge to
the constitutional validity of the Indian Council of World Affairs
Ordinance, 2001 (No.3 of 2001), promulgated by the President of
India on May 8, 2001, in exercise of the powers conferred by clause
(1) of Article 123 of the Constitution of India. During the pendency of
this petition the Ordinance came to be replaced by an Act of
Parliament, namely, the Indian Council of World Affairs Act, 2001(Act
No.29 of 2001), which came into force w.e.f. September 1, 2000. On
19.10.2001 W.P.(C) No.543/2001 was filed laying challenge to the
constitutional validity of this Act. Both the petitions have been filed
under Article 32 of the Constitution of India and respectively allege the
Ordinance and the Act to be violative of Articles 14, 19(1)(a), 19(1)(c)
and 300A of the Constitution.
Factual backdrop:
In the year 1943, the Indian Council of World Affairs was formed
by about 50 distinguished eminent public personalities as a non-
official, non-political and non-profit organization. On March 31, 1945,
the Association was registered as a society under the Societies
Registration Act, 1860. The principal object of the Society, as set out
in the Memorandum of Association, was to promote the study of Indian
and international questions so as to develop a body of informed
opinion on world affairs and Indian relation thereto through study,
research, discussion, lectures, exchange of ideas and information etc.,
with other bodies in India and abroad engaged in similar activities.
The activities of the Society were housed in a building known as Sapru
House. Sapru House has come up on a land of about 2 acres situated
at No.1, Barakhamba Road, New Delhi, given on lease by the
Government of India some time in the year 1950-51. Sapru House
has a library with a collection of books mainly on international affairs,
an auditorium for holding seminars and discussions, a conference room
and other office accommodation. The Society was receiving grants
from the Government of India from 1974 until the year 1987,
whereafter the grant has been discontinued.
On June 30, 1990, the President of India promulgated an
Ordinance whereby a statutory body known as the Indian Council of
World Affairs was constituted, having perpetual succession and a
common seal, with power to hold and dispose of property both
movable and immovable. The constitutional validity of this Ordinance
was put in issue by filing a writ petition before the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana at Chandigarh, registered as Civil Writ Petition
No.9120 of 1990. A learned single Judge of the High Court vide
judgment dated September 10, 1990, allowed the writ petition,
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holding the Ordinance to be ultra vires of the Constitution of India,
violating Articles 14, 19(1)(a) and 19(1)(c) thereof and also beyond
the legislative competence of the Parliament. The Union of India filed
a letters patent appeal against this judgment of the learned single
Judge. The letters patent appeal came up for hearing before a Division
Bench of the High Court on October 22, 1990. It was brought to the
notice of the Division Bench that the Ordinance promulgated on June
30, 1990 had lapsed on September 19, 1990, as the Bill seeking to
replace the Ordinance by an Act of Parliament could not be passed.
The Division Bench formed an opinion that the letters patent appeal
had become infructuous and directed the same to be dismissed
without any adjudication on merits.
In December 1999, the Ministry of Urban Development,
Government of India, cancelled the perpetual lease of the land of the
Indian Council of World Affairs. The cancellation of lease was followed
by an order of re-entry. A writ petition was filed in the Delhi High
Court, laying challenge to the said action of the Central Government.
The learned single Judge before whom the writ petition came up for
hearing refused to grant any interim relief to the writ petitioner, and
so a Letters Patent Appeal No.577/99 came to be filed before the
Division Bench of the Delhi High Court. On December 24, 1999, the
High Court directed further proceedings before the Estate Officer under
the Public Premises Act to remain stayed. It seems that there was
some controversy about the breach of the interim order granted by the
High Court, which led to the filing of two contempt petitions in the
High Court of Delhi, which are still pending.
On September 1, 2000, the President of India promulgated
Ordinance No.3 of 2000, the terms whereof were more or less similar
and identical with those of the Ordinance of 1990. The constitutional
validity of this Ordinance was challenged by filing C.W.P. No.5174 of
2000 in the High Court of Delhi. A Bill proposing to replace the
Ordinance was moved in the Parliament which was passed by the Lok
Sabha and was pending in the Rajya Sabha, but the Rajya Sabha was
adjourned and, therefore, the Ordinance lapsed on December 31,
2000.
On January 5, 2001, Ordinance No.1 of 2001 was promulgated
seeking to revive Ordinance No.3 of 2000; however, this Ordinance too
lapsed on April 3, 2001.
On May 8, 2001, Ordinance No.3 of 2001 was promulgated and
replaced by an Act of Parliament, which received the assent of the
President of India on September 3, 2001.
The facts stated hereinabove are almost undisputed. We say so
because the chronology of events is not at all in dispute; there is a
minor variation in the manner of narration of the events and the
background leading to the promulgation of the Ordinances and the
passing of the Act, which are not very material and hence have been
overlooked. We may now broadly state the facts which are disputed
and which form the subject matter of the controversy arising for
decision in the writ petitions.
The Controversy
According to the writ petitioners, Sapru House is a building
constructed by the Society. The building, the library and all other
movables in Sapru House are owned by the Society. By promulgating
the impugned Ordinance and by enacting the impugned Act, the
Central Government has taken over the Society as also its movable
and immovable properties. This has resulted in violating the right of
the writ petitioners to the freedom of speech and expression and to
form associations or unions as conferred on citizens by sub-clauses (a)
and (c) of clause (1) of Article 19 of the Constitution of India. The
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Society has been deprived of its property without any authority of law
which is violative of Article 300A of the Constitution of India. The
impugned Ordinance and the Act are malicious inasmuch as they are
motivated by political considerations. It is also alleged that the
impugned Ordinance and the Act are violative of the doctrine of
Separation of Powers. The High Court of Punjab and Haryana had
struck down an Ordinance which contained similar provisions and the
said judgment dated September 10, 1990, has achieved a finality in
view of the challenge to the legality of the judgment having been
given up by the Union of Indian by not pressing the letters patent
appeal. A subsequent legislation which is in defiance of the judgment
of the High Court deserves to be struck down solely on this ground.
According to the counter-affidavit filed by the Union of India, the
Indian Council of World Affairs (’ICWA’, for short) had attained an
international stature in connection with world affairs and the foreign
policies of India vis-a-vis other countries. However, the activities of
the Society, i.e. running the Institution, were being complained against
by several persons all over the country on account of the sub-standard
level of the programmes and the activities being conducted, as also
about the standard of the maintenance of stock of books, periodicals,
etc. in the library. The image and reputation of the Institution drew
adverse publicity in the Press. In the counter-affidavit several such
instances have been highlighted under the title "Glaring Instances of
Maladministration" as revealed in the Audit conducted by the
Comptroller and Auditor General of India. These instances highlight
irregular and incomplete maintenance of accounts, misuse and
diversion of funds, and deficits and losses accumulating year by year
on account of mismanagement and mal-administration. Photographs
have been filed with the counter affidavit showing the state of
disrepair of the building and its furniture. Serious irregularities were
found to have been committed in the conduct of elections of the
Executive Committee, resulting in the complete breakdown of the
democratic functioning of the Institution. The electoral roll consisted
of members who had discontinued their membership. Fruit and
vegetable vendors were enrolled as members of the Indian Council of
World Affairs, so as to pack the membership with defunct members
only to ensure the continuance in office of a certain set of people.
Membership fees of all such multiple members were being deposited
by a single cheque.
On the affidavit of the Joint Secretary in the Ministry of External
Affairs, Government of India, New Delhi, it has been stated that
financial assistance was regularly granted to ICWA by the MEA and
Deptt. Of Culture (Ministry of Education). Grants have been given
after 1986 by organizations like ICSSR. Adhoc grants had been given
by the Deptt. of Culture between 1974-1975 till 1988-1989. The last
grant of Rs.5 lakh from MEA was in 1985-1986. In 1996-1997, the
ICWA management wrote off the Capital Reserve of Rs.19,38,302/-
against an accumulated deficit of Rs.31,06,897/-. The deficit of the
erstwhile ICWA continued to increase till the takeover by the newly
incorporated body on 2nd September, 2000. The report of the Special
Audit of ICWA by CAG, which commenced on 11.8.2000, highlights
unaccounted for liabilities to the extent of Rs.132.84 lacs,
contravention of the provisions of the perpetual lease, non-adjustment
of cash drawn for day to day expenses amounting to Rs.22,48,399.65,
and possible misappropriation of funds to the tune of Rs.1,39,086.10
by inflating the total amount of the salary bills.
According to the respondents, the property - Sapru House, is
situated on land which belongs to the Government of India (Land &
Development Office). Large subventions and grants have been given
from time to time by the Government of India to the Society
wherefrom the building was constructed. The lease of the land was
terminated for non-payment of dues as well as for various breaches
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amounting to misuse committed by the Society. The dues as per the
claim of the L&DO worked out to more than Rs.9 crores. Eviction
orders were passed by the Estate Officer, which have been stayed by
the High Court. However, having acquired management and control
over the Institution and the building and other properties in the year
1990, pursuant to the Ordinance, the Government of India had spent
about Rs.2 crores so as to restore Sapru House to its original condition
and make it fit for habitation and use. The Union of India has
vehemently denied the allegation of the petitioners that the impugned
Ordinance and Legislation were politically motivated. It is submitted
that Governments have changed from time to time with different
political leanings. However, three Parliamentary Standing Committees
appointed at different points of time have recommended the taking
over of Sapru House, lamenting the decline in the standard of the
Institution. Earlier Ordinances are a matter of history and of mere
academic relevance in view of the Parliament having ultimately
enacted the Act. As to the impugned Act being in violation of the
doctrine of Separation of Powers and in defiance of the decision of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court, the respondents have submitted that
the decision of the learned single Judge was incorrect. It was put in
issue by filing a letters patent appeal, which appeal was disposed of
without any adjudication on merits due to the High Court having
formed an opinion that the adjudication of the appeal was rendered
academic in view of the Ordinance having lapsed. The respondents
could not have pressed for decision of the letters patent appeal on
merits nor could they have taken the matter further because the High
Court or this Court would not have entered into the examination of an
issue which was rendered of academic interest only.
The Union of India has vehemently submitted that the Society
has not been touched. It continues to survive as before and,
therefore, the question of any fundamental right within the meaning of
sub-clauses (a) and (c) of clause (1) of Article 19 of the Constitution of
India having been breached, does not arise. As the Institution, the
Indian Council of World Affairs, is an institution of national importance,
the impugned enactment is protected by Entries 62 and 63 of List I of
the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India.
In the submission of the Union of India the building and the
library have been built out of Government of India funds and
subventions, and some donations received from persons of the
eminence of former Prime Ministers and the President of India and
other dignitaries. The Society does not have any right in any of the
properties, as is being claimed by the petitioners.
Challenge to Ordinance infructuous (W.P.(C) No.276 of 2001)
Before we enter into examining the merits of the attack laid on
the impugned Act, we would like to summarily dispose of W.P.(C)
No.276 of 2001 wherein the challenge has been laid to the validity of
the Ordinance only. The Ordinance has been replaced by an Act of
Parliament. A fresh petition has been filed laying challenge to the
constitutional validity of the Act. All the grounds taken in W.P.(C)
No.276/2001 have been reiterated and reurged in W.P.(C)
No.543/2001. As the merits of the pleas raised on behalf of the writ
petitioners are available to be considered in the latter civil writ
petition, W.P.(C) No.276/2001 is rendered infructuous and we direct it
to be treated as disposed of without any adjudication on merits. The
Ordinance impugned therein having ceased to operate, the factum of
promulgation of such Ordinance remains only a part of the narration of
events. No such action was taken thereunder the legality whereof
may survive for adjudication in spite of the lapse of the Ordinance.
We will, therefore, confine ourselves to dealing with the validity of the
impugned Act.
Whether the impugned enactment is vitiated by malafides? :
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Though the petition alleges the impugned Act (with the history
of preceding Ordinances) to be the outcome of political malice, no
particulars thereof have been given by the writ petitoner. However,
that aspect need not be deliberated upon any further in view of two
Constitution Bench decisions of this Court. It has been held in K.C.
Gajapati Narayan Deo & Ors. Vs. State of Orissa, (1954) SCR 1,
and in Board of Trustees, Ayurvedic and Unani Tibia College,
Delhi Vs. State of Delhi (Now Delhi Administration) & Anr.,
1962 Supp.(1) SCC 156, that the doctrine of Colourable Legislation
does not involve any question of bona fides or mala fides on the part
of the legislature. The whole doctrine resolves itself into the question
of the competency of a particular legislature to enact a particular law.
If the legislature is competent to pass a particular law, the motives
which impelled it to act are really irrelevant. On the other hand, if the
legislature lacks competency, the question of motive does not arise at
all. We will, therefore, concentrate on the legislative competence of
Parliament to enact the impugned legislation. If the Parliament has
the requisite competence to enact the impugned Act, the enquiry into
the motive which persuaded the Parliament into passing the Act would
be of no use at all.
Gist of the impugned Act
The Preamble to the Act, that is, the Indian Council of World
Affairs Act, 2001 (Act No.29 of 2001) reads - " An Act to declare the
Indian Council of World Affairs to be an institution of national
importance and to provide for its incorporation and matters connected
therewith." Section 2 declares I.C.W.A. as an institution of national
importance. Section 4 incorporates a statutory council by the name of
the Indian Council of World Affairs as a body corporate, which shall
have perpetual succession and a common seal with power to hold
property, movable and immovable, and to contract and to sue and be
sued in its name. Section 5 transfers all properties and assets, debts,
obligations and liabilities and contracts of the existing council to the
new body corporate. The new council consists of the Vice-President of
India as its ex-officio President and the Prime Minister of India, the
Speaker of the Lok Sabha, the Leader of the House, Rajya Sabha, the
Leaders of the Opposition in both the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha to
be its members, with a provision for future expansion so as to include
in the council certain specified and nominated members of the Central
Government. Provisions are made for the staff, the functions of the
council, budgeting, accounts and audit, and so on. The Central
Government is vested with the power to make Rules to carry out the
provisions of the Act. The council may make regulations consistent
with the Act and the Rules. Without entering into further details it
would suffice for our purpose to sum up the gist of the Act by stating
that :- (1) a new body corporate known as the Indian Council of
World Affairs has come into existence; (2) the institution, ’Indian
Council of World Affairs’ has been declared to be an institution of
national importance; (3) the institution has been taken over by the
Central Government and entrusted to the new Council - a statutory
corporate body; (4) the society named the Indian Council of World
Affairs has not been touched at all; its membership and organization
have been left intact, untampered with and untouched.
According to the respondents, the impugned Act falls within the
purview of Entries 62 and 63 of List I of the Seventh Schedule, which
Entries read as under:-
"62. The institutions known at the commencement
of this Constitution as the National Library,
the Indian Museum, the Imperial War
Museum, the Victoria Memorial and the
Indian War Memorial, and any other like
institution financed by the Government of
India wholly or in part and declared by
Parliament by law to be an institution of
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national importance.
63. The institutions known at the commencement
of this Constitution as the Benares Hindu
University, the Aligarh Muslim University and
the Delhi University; the University
established in pursuance of Article 371-E;
and any other institution declared by
Parliament by law to be an institution of
national importance."
With this much of an introductory statement, we proceed to deal
with the several grounds of attack urged by the petitioners.
Impugned Act if violative of Article 19(1)(a) & (c)
Article 19(1)(a) and (c) and clauses (2) and (4) of Article 19,
relevant for our purpose, provide as under :-
"19. Protection of certain rights regarding
freedom of speech, etc. -
(1) All citizens shall have the right.-
(a) to freedom of speech and expression;
(b) xxx xxx
(c) to form associations or unions;
(d) to (g) xxx xxx
(2) Nothing in sub-clause (a) of clause (1) shall
affect the operation of any existing law, or prevent
the State from making any law, in so far as such
law imposes reasonable restrictions on the exercise
of the right conferred by the said sub-clause in the
interests of the sovereignty and integrity of India,
the security of the State, friendly relations with
Foreign States, public order, decency or morality or
in relation to contempt of court, defamation or
incitement to an offence.
(3) xxx xxx xxx
(4) Nothing in sub-clause (c) of the said clause
shall affect the operation of any existing law in so
far as it imposes, or prevent the State from making
any law imposing, in the interests of the
sovereignty and integrity of India or public order or
morality, reasonable restrictions on the exercise of
the right conferred by the said sub-clause.
(5) xxx xxx xxx
(6) xxx xxx xxx"
The Constitution Bench in The State of Madras Vs. V.G. Row,,
1952 SCR 597, laid down twin tests on which the constitutional validity
of a legislation under Article 19 is to be tested. The first test is the
test of reasonableness which is common to all the clauses under Article
19(1); and the second test is to ask for the answer to the question,
whether the restriction sought to be imposed on the fundamental
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right, falls within sub-articles (2) to (6) respectively qua the clauses
(a) to (g) of Article 19(1). The test of reasonableness, according to
the Constitution Bench, should be applied to each individual statute
impugned, and no abstract standard, or general pattern of
reasonableness can be laid down as applicable to all cases. The nature
of the right alleged to have been infringed, the underlying purpose of
the restrictions imposed, the extent and urgency of the evil sought to
be remedied thereby, the disproportion of the imposition, the
prevailing conditions at the time, should all enter into the judicial
verdict. In evaluating such elusive factors and forming their own
conception of what is reasonable, in all the circumstances of a given
case, it is inevitable that the social philosophy and the scale of values
of the Judges participating in the decision should play an important
part, and the limit to their interference with legislative judgment in
such cases can only be dictated by their sense of responsibility and
self-restraint, and the sobering reflection that the Constitution is
meant not only for people of their way of thinking but for all, and that
the majority of the elected representatives of the people have, in
authorizing the imposition of the restrictions, considered them to be
reasonable. Under the second test, the Constitution Bench, called
upon to deal with the legislation impugned before it by reference to
Articles 19(1)(c) and 19(4) of the Constitution, held the impugned
legislation to be unconstitutional and void because it curtailed the
fundamental right to form associations or unions and fell outside the
limits of authorized restrictions under clause (4) of Article 19.
Article 19(1) of the Constitution came up for the consideration
of a Seven-Judges Bench of this Court in Smt. Maneka Gandhi Vs.
Union of India & Anr. - (1978) 1 SCC 248. Dealing with the scope
and purport of Article 19(1) the Bench held:-
"Even if a right is not specifically named in
Article 19(1), it may still be a fundamental
right covered by some clause of that Article
if it is an integral part of a named
fundamental right or partakes of the same
basic nature and character as that
fundamental right. It is not enough that a
right claimed by the petitioner flows or
emanates from a named fundamental right
or that its existence is necessary in order to
make the exercise of the named
fundamental right meaningful and effective.
Every activity which facilitates the exercise
of a named fundamental right is not
necessarily comprehended in that
fundamental right nor can it be regarded as
such merely because it may not be possible
otherwise to effectively exercise that
fundamental right. What is necessary to be
seen is, and that is the test which must be
applied is, whether the right claimed by the
petitioner is an integral part of a named
fundamental right or partakes of the same
basic nature and character as the named
fundamental right so that the exercise of
such right is in reality and substance nothing
but an instance of the exercise of the named
fundamental right. If this be the correct
test, the right to go abroad cannot in all
circumstances be regarded as included in
freedom of speech and expression."
(emphasis supplied)
Their Lordships referred to All India Bank Employees’
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Association Vs. National Industrial Tribunal - (1962) 3 SCR 269
wherein the plea raised was that the right to form associations
protected under Article 19(1) (c) carried with it a guarantee that the
association shall effectively achieve the purpose for which it was
formed, without interference by law, except on grounds relevant to the
preservation of public order or morality as set out in Article 19(4). The
plea so raised was rejected. The Court negatived the argument that
the freedom to form unions carried with it the concomitant right that
such unions should be able to fulfill the object for which they were
formed. The scope of the fundamental right conferred by Article
19(1)(a) cannot be expanded on the theory of peripheral or
concomitant right. Their Lordships held that such a theory having
been firmly rejected in the All India Bank Employees Association’s
case (supra), any attempt to revive it cannot be countenanced as that
would completely upset the scheme of Article 19(1). The words of
Rajagopala Ayyanger, J. were quoted with approval, as saying "by a
series of ever expanding concentric circles in the shape of rights
concomitant to concomitant rights and so on, lead to an almost
grotesque result". In Maneka Gandhi’s case (supra) the right to go
abroad was clearly held not to be a guaranteed right under Article
19(1) and an imposition by law of restrictions on the right to go
abroad was held to be not offending Article 19(1)(a) or (g), as its
direct and inevitable impact is only on the right to go abroad and not
on the right of free speech and expression or the right to carry on any
trade, business, profession or calling.
From a reading of the two decisions, namely, Smt. Maneka
Gandhi’s case (supra), (seven-Judges Bench) and All India Bank
Employees Association’s case (supra), (five-Judges Bench), the
following principles emerge : (i) a right to form associations or unions
does not include within its ken as a fundamental right a right to form
associations or unions for achieving a particular object or running a
particular institution, the same being a concomitant or concomitant to
a concomitant of a fundamental right, but not the fundamental right
itself. The associations or unions of citizens cannot further claim as a
fundamental right that it must also be able to achieve the purpose for
which it has come into existence so that any interference with such
achievement by law shall be unconstitutional, unless the same could
be justified under Article 19(4) as being a restriction imposed in the
interest of public order or morality; (ii) A right to form associations
guaranteed under Article 19 (1)(c) does not imply the fulfillment of
every object of an association as it would be contradictory to the
scheme underlying the text and the frame of the several fundamental
rights guaranteed by Part III and particularly by the scheme of the
guarantees conferred by sub-clauses (a) to (g) of clause (1) of Article
19; (iii) While right to form an association is to be tested by reference
to Article 19(1)(c) and the validity of restriction thereon by reference
to Article 19(4), once the individual citizens have formed an
association and carry on some activity, the validity of legislation
restricting the activities of the association shall have to be judged by
reference to Article 19(1)(g) read with 19(6). A restriction on the
activities of the association is not a restriction on the activities of the
individual citizens forming membership of the association; and (iv) A
perusal of Article 19 with certain other Articles like 26, 29 and 30
shows that while Article 19 grants rights to the citizens as such, the
associations can lay claim to the fundamental rights guaranteed by
Article 19 solely on the basis of there being an aggregation of citizens,
i.e., the rights of the citizens composing the body. As the stream can
rise no higher than the source, associations of citizens cannot lay claim
to rights not open to citizens or claim freedom from restrictions to
which the citizens composing it are subject.
The Constitution Bench in All India Bank Employees’
Association’s case (supra) gave a precise illustration thus - "If an
association were formed for the purpose of carrying on business, the
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right to form it would be guaranteed by sub-clause (c) of clause (1) of
Article 19, subject to any law restricting that right conforming to
clause (4) of Article 19. As regards its business activities, however,
and the achievement of the objects for which it was brought into
existence, its rights would be those guaranteed by sub-clause (g) of
clause (1) of Article 19, subject to any relevant law on the matter
conforming to clause (6) of Article 19; while the property which the
association acquires or possesses would be protected by sub-clause (f)
of clause (1) of Article 19 subject to legislation within the limits laid
down by clause (5) of Article 19."
Giving exposition to the law by reference to the labour union,
the Constitution Bench held - "While the right to form a union is
guaranteed by sub-clause (c), the right of the members of the
association to meet would be guaranteed by sub-clause (b), their right
to move from place to place within India by sub-clause (d), their right
to discuss their problems and to propagate their views by sub-clause
(a), their right to hold property would be that guaranteed by sub-
clause (f) and so on - each of these freedoms being subject to such
restrictions as might properly be imposed by clauses (2) to (6) of
Article 19 as might be appropriate in the context. It is one thing to
interpret each of the freedoms guaranteed by the several Articles in
Part III in a fair and liberal sense; it is quite another to read each
guaranteed right as involving or including concomitant rights
necessary to achieve the object which might be supposed to underlie
the grant of each of those rights."
The Constitution Bench further held that the framing and
structure of part III of the Constitution by the founding fathers calls for
the guarantees embodied in it to be interpreted in a liberal way, so as
to subserve the purpose for which the constitution-makers intended
them, and not in any pedantic or narrow sense. This, however, does
not imply that the Court is at liberty to give an unnatural and artificial
meaning to the expressions used based on ideological considerations.
A right to form unions guaranteed by Article 19(1)(c) does not
carry with it a fundamental right in the union so formed to achieve
every object for which it was formed with the legal consequence that
any legislation not falling within clause (4) of Article 19 which might in
any way hamper the fulfillment of those objects, should be declared
unconstitutional and void. Even a very liberal interpretation cannot
lead to the conclusion that the trade unions have a guaranteed right to
an effective collective bargaining or to strike, either as part of
collective bargaining or otherwise. The right to strike or the right to
declare a lock-out may be controlled or restricted by appropriate
industrial legislation, and the validity of such legislation would have to
be tested not with reference to the criteria laid down in clause (4) of
Article 19 but by totally different considerations. A right guaranteed
by Article 19(1)(c) on a literal reading thereof can be subjected to
those restrictions which satisfy the test of clause (4) of Article 19. The
rights not included in the literal meaning of Article 19(1)(c) but which
are sought to be included therein as flowing therefrom i.e. every right
which is necessary in order that the association, brought into
existence, fulfills every object for which it is formed, the qualifications
therefor would not merely be those in clause (4) of Article 19 but
would be more numerous and very different. Restrictions which bore
upon and took into account the several fields in which associations or
unions of citizens might legitimately engage themselves, would also
become relevant.
The law so settled, as has been stated hereinabove, has not
changed its course in the flow of subsequent judicial pronouncements.
We may selectively refer to a few of them. In M/s. Raghubar Dayal
Jai Parkash & Anr. Vs. The Union of India & Anr., (1962) 3 SCR
547, the issue related to the Forward Contracts (Regulation) Act,
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1952, which imposed restrictions on the recognition of associations by
the Government. Provisions were made for certain enquiries to be
held and for the satisfaction of certain criteria whereupon the
association could be recognized. The challenge to the constitutional
validity of the provision was founded on the submission that the
provisions infringed upon the freedom to form associations under
Article 19(1)(c). It was urged that the constitutional guarantee to
every citizen to the right to form an association could be limited only
by an imposition on the right which might legally fall within clause (4)
of Article 19 viz. bye laws which place restrictions based on either
public order or morality. It was further urged that where the object of
the association is lawful, the citizens, through that association, and the
association itself, are entitled by virtue of the guaranteed right to
freedom from legislative interference in the achievement of its object,
except on grounds germane to public order or morality. In other
words, the freedom guaranteed should be read as extending not
merely to the formation of the association as such, but to the effective
functioning of the association so as to enable it to achieve its lawful
objectives. Unless Article 19(1)(c) were so read, the freedom
guaranteed would be illusory and the Court should, in construing a
freedom guaranteed to the citizen, give him an effective right. In
short, the submission was that the right guaranteed under sub-clause
(c) of clause (1) of Article 19 was not merely, as its text would
indicate, the right to form an association, but would include the
functioning of the association without any restraints not dictated by
the need for preserving order or the interests of morality. The
Constitution Bench discarded the argument as without force and held -
"the restriction imposed by Section 6 of the Act is for the purpose of
recognition and no association is compelled to apply to the
Government for recognition under that Act. An application for the
recognition of the association for the purpose of functioning under the
enactment is a voluntary act on the part of the association and if the
statute imposes conditions subject to which alone recognition could be
accorded or continued, it is a little difficult to see how the freedom to
form the association is affected unless, of course, that freedom implies
or involves a guaranteed right to recognition also."
The applicability of Article 19 of the Constitution came to be
examined from yet another angle in The Tata Engineering and
Locomotive Co.Ltd. & Anr. Vs. The State and Ors & Anr., (1964)
6 SCR 885. Corporations and companies moved the Supreme Court
alleging violation of their fundamental right under Article 19 of the
Constitution. Articles 19(1)(c) and 19(1)(g) came up for
consideration. Their Lordships held that Article 19 applies to ’citizens’
and not to ’persons’ as Article 14 does. The effect of confining Article
19 to citizens as distinguished from persons, is that protection under
Article 19 can be claimed only by citizens and not by corporations or
companies. The attempt of the petitioners to claim the benefit of
Article 19 by placing reliance on the doctrine of lifting the corporate
veil and submitting that the corporation or the company consists of its
members and what is adversely affected is their fundamental right,
was rejected by the Court. The Constitution Bench held that the
fundamental right to form an association cannot be coupled with the
fundamental right to carry on any trade or business. As soon as
citizens form a company, the right guaranteed to them by Article
19(1)(c) has been exercised and no restraint has been placed on that
right and no infringement of that right is made. Once a company or a
corporation is formed, the business which is carried on by the said
company or corporation is the business of the company or corporation,
and is not the business of the citizens who get the company or
corporation formed or incorporated, and the rights of the incorporated
body must be judged on that footing alone and cannot be judged on
the assumption that they are the rights attributable to the business of
individual citizens. In our opinion, the same principle as has been
applied to companies and corporations would apply to a society
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registered under the Societies Registration Act, 1860.
In Azeez Basha Vs. Union of India - (1968) 1 SCR 833, this
Court has held that Article 19(1)(c) does not give any right to any
citizen to manage any particular educational institution and it only
gives the right to a citizen to form associations or unions.
In D.A.V. College, Jullundur etc., Vs. The State of Punjab
and Ors., (1971) 2 SCC 269, the impugned legislation provided for
compulsory affiliation of religious or linguistic minority institutions to
the University. It was contended that the compulsory affiliation of the
petitioners to the University affects their fundamental ’right of freedom
of association’ as guaranteed under Article 19(1)(c). It was held that
the Notification providing for compulsory affiliation of the educational
institution with the University did not in any manner interfere or
attempt to interfere with the petitioners’ right to form an association
under Article 19(1)(c).
A Full Bench (five-Judges) decision by the Andhra Pradesh High
Court in Seethapathi Nageswara Rao & Ors. Vs. The Government
of A.P. & Ors., AIR 1978 A.P. 121 (F.B.), is relevant and we are
inclined to make a reference to the same. The statutory provision
impugned therein was one which provided for merger, amalgamation
or liquidation of co-operative societies. The non-viable societies could
be merged or amalgamated with the viable societies. It was urged
that the forcible dumping of the members of the non-viable societies
where such societies are merged with viable societies, violates the
rights of the members of the viable societies. It was submitted that a
viable society is one voluntarily formed by the members of that society
and it is for them to decide whether they would admit other members
of non-viable societies or not. The members of a non-viable society
cannot be forced upon them against their will. It was also submitted
that when a non-viable society is merged with a viable society, the
share value in a viable society would drop down and this would
adversely affect their fundamental rights under sub-clauses (f) and (g)
of clause (1) of Article 19 and Article 31 of the Constitution. The Full
Bench rejected the argument as one of absolutely no merit and held
that merger does not affect the right to form an association. The
effect of merger is regulating the business activity of the society and
not the right of the members to form an association. The merger or
liquidation is a reasonable restriction imposed on the business activity
of the co-operative society by regulating its trade or business activity
which would be protected by clause (6) of Article 19. The High Court
drew a distinction between the right of a person to form an association
and the right of such association to carry a business activity.
Before the Full Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court, a
Division Bench decision of the High Court of Patna in Harakh Bhagat
and Anr. Vs. Assistant Registrar, Co-operative Societies, Barh,
and Ors., AIR 1968 Patna 211, was cited and it was followed.
Following the law laid down by the Constitution Bench of this Court in
the case of The Tata Engineering and Locomotive Co.Ltd. (supra)
the Division Bench upheld the validity of a legislative provision
providing for compulsory amalgamation of co-operative societies in
certain situations, and held that the provision did not violate the
fundamental right of the members of the Societies under Article
19(1)(c) of the Constitution.
The scheme of Article 19 shows that a group of rights are listed
as clauses (a) to (g) and are recognized as fundamental rights
conferred on citizens. All the rights do not stand on a common
pedestal but have varying dimensions and underlying philosophies.
This is clear from the drafting of clauses (2) to (6) of Article 19. The
framers of the Constitution could have made a common draft of
restrictions which were permissible to be imposed on the operation of
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the fundamental rights listed in clause (1), but that has not been done.
The common thread that runs throughout sub-clauses (2) to (6) is that
the operation of any existing law or the enactment by the State of any
law which imposes reasonable restrictions to achieve certain objects, is
saved; however, the quality and content of such law would be different
by reference to each of the sub-clauses (a) to (g) of clause (1) of
Article 19 as can be tabulated hereunder :
Article 19
Clause (1)
Nature of Right
Clauses (2) to (6)
Permissible Restrictions
By existing law or by law made
by State imposing reasonable
restrictions, in the interests of
(a) Freedom of speech and
expression
(i) the sovereignty and integrity
of India
(ii) the security of the State
(iii) friendly relations with Foreign
States
(iv) public order, decency or
morality
(v) in relation to contempt of
court, defamation or
incitement to an offence
(b) right to assemble peaceably
and without arms
(i) the sovereignty and integrity
of India
(ii) public order
(c) right of form associations or
unions
(i) the sovereignty and integrity of
India
(ii) public order or morality
(d) & (e) right to move freely
and/or to reside and settle
through out the territory of
India
(i) the general public
(ii) the protection of the interests
of Schedules Tribe
(g) right to practise any
profession, or to carry on any
occupation, trade or business
The general public and in
particular any law relating to
(i) the professional or technical
qualifications necessary for
practising of any profession or
carrying on any occupation,
trade or business
(ii) the carrying on by the state,
or by a corporation owned or
controlled by the State, of any
trade, business, industry or
service, whether to the
exclusion, complete or partial,
of citizens or otherwise.
Article 19 confers fundamental rights on citizens. The rights
conferred by Article 19(1) are not available to and cannot be claimed
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by any person who is not and cannot be a citizen of India. A statutory
right __ as distinguished from a fundamental right __ conferred on
persons or citizens is capable of being deprived of or taken away by
legislation. The fundamental rights cannot be taken away by any
legislation; a legislation can only impose reasonable restrictions on the
exercise of the right. Out of the several rights enumerated in clause
(1) of Article 19, the right at sub-clause (a) is not merely a right of
speech and expression but a right to freedom of speech and
expression. The enumeration of other rights is not by reference to
freedom. In the words of the then Chief Justice Patanjali Sastri (In
State of West Bengal Vs. Subodh Gopal Bose & Ors., 1954 SCR
587) these rights are great and basic rights which are recognized and
guaranteed as the natural rights, inherent in the status of a citizen of a
free country. Yet, there cannot be any liberty absolute in nature and
uncontrolled in operation so as to confer a right wholly free from any
restraint. Had there been no restraints, the rights and freedoms may
tend to become the synonyms of anarchy and disorder. The founding
fathers of the Constitution, therefore, conditioned the enumerated
rights and freedoms reasonably and such reasonable restrictions are
found to be enumerated in clauses (2) to (6) of Article 19 excepting
for sub-clauses (i) and (ii) of clause (6), the laws falling within which
descriptions are immune from attack on the exercise of legislative
power within their ambit (See: H.C. Narayanappa & Ors. Vs. State
of Mysore & Ors., (1960) 3SCR 742).
The Court, confronted with a challenge to the constitutional
validity of any legislative enactment by reference to Article 19 of the
Constitution, shall first ask what is the sweep of the fundamental right
guaranteed by the relevant sub-clause out of sub-clauses (a) to (g) of
clause (1). If the right canvassed falls within the sweep and expanse
of any of the sub-clauses of clause (1), then the next question to be
asked would be, whether the impugned law imposes a reasonable
restriction falling with the scope of clauses (2) to (6) respectively.
However, if the right sought to be canvassed does not fall within the
sweep of the fundamental rights but is a mere concomitant or adjunct
or expansion or incidence of that right, then the validity thereof is not
to be tested by reference to clauses (2) to (6). The test which it
would be required to satisfy for its constitutional validity is one of
reasonableness, as propounded in the case of V.G. Row (supra) or if it
comes into conflict with any other provision of the Constitution.
The learned Additional Solicitor General, Shri Raju
Ramachandran, placed implicit reliance on the decision of this Court in
L.N. Mishra Institute of Economic Development and Social
Change, Patna Vs. State of Bihar & Ors., (1988) 2 SCC 433, and
submitted that the said case has a close resemblance to the facts of
the present case and provides a complete answer to the plea raised on
behalf of the petitioners.
In L.N. Mishra’s case (supra) the Institute __ Lalit Narain
Mishra Institute of Economic Development and Social Change, Patna,
was started by a Society. The name of the Institute and the name of
the Society were the same. On April 19, 1986, the State Government
of Bihar promulgated Ordinance No.15 of 1986, whereby the
possession of the Institute was taken over by the State Government
on that very day. The constitutional validity of the Ordinance was
challenged alleging that it was promulgated and the Institute was
taken over at the instance of the then Chief Minister, actuated by mala
fides. The Ordinance was later replaced by an Act, the constitutional
validity whereof was also challenged on identical grounds. The
preamble to the Act stated the need to nationalize private education
relating to business management in view of a very good possibility of a
rapid industrial and economic development of the State of Bihar. The
nationalization was proposed to be resolved in phases. The first phase
related to the taking over of the Institute. The challenge was founded
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on violation of Article 19(1)(c) of the Constitution, submitting that the
fundamental right to form an association was infringed. The
management of the Society was totally displaced and its composition
changed. All assets and properties were vested in the State
Government and the Commissioner was deemed to have taken charge
of the Institute. As all incidence of ownership and management were
taken over by the State, what was left to the Society was paper
ownership and management. Turning down the challenge, this Court
held that the impugned Ordinance and the Act merely took over the
Institute. Although, the name of the Society and of the Institute are
the same, they were two different entities. The impugned legislations
took over the Institute and not the Society. No restriction whatsoever
was imposed on the functioning of the Society. The provisions of the
Act referred to the Institute. The Institute constituted one of the
activities of the Society. The petitioner-Society had constituted itself
into an association in exercise of the fundamental right conferred by
Article 19(1)(c). That right of that Society remains unimpaired and
uninterfered with by the impugned Act and Ordinance.
The Court further held that - "There can be no doubt that the
Institute has been taken over by the provisions of the Ordinance and
the Act. It is true that with the taking over of the Institute, the
Society lost its right of management and control of the Institute, but
that is the consequence of all acquisitions. When a property is
acquired, the owner loses all control, interest and ownership of the
property. Similarly the Society, which was the owner of the Institute,
has lost all control and ownership of the Institute. It may be equally
true that the Institute was the only activity of the Society, but we are
concerned with the right of the Society to form an association. So
long as there is no interference with the Society, its constitution or
composition, it is difficult to say that because of the taking over or
acquisition of the Institute, which was the only property or activity of
the Society, the fundamental right of the Society to form an
association has been infringed." The Court clarified - "the composition
of the Society has not been touched at all. All that has been done is to
nationalize the Institute of the Society by the acquisition of the assets
and properties relating to the Institute. The Society may constitute its
governing body in accordance with its rules without any interference
by the government."
The Court also tested the validity of the submission that the
right of citizens to form associations or unions within the meaning of
Article 19 (1)(c) of the Constitution should be given the widest
operation and any law which infringes upon the wide sweep of the
right must satisfy the test of Article 19(4), which saves only such laws
which impose in the interests of the sovereignty and integrity of India
or public order or morality the reasonable restrictions on the exercise
of the right conferred by Section 19(1)(c). Reliance was placed on All
India Bank Employees’ Association Vs. National Industrial
Tribunal, (1962) 3 SCR 269 and the Court concluded that the
fundamental right guaranteed under Article 19(1)(c) does not carry
with it a further guarantee that the objects or purposes or activities of
an association so formed shall not be interfered with by law except on
grounds as mentioned in Article 19(4). In sum, the Court rejected the
contention on behalf of the society that because of the acquisition of
the institute the society lost its right of management over the institute,
and as the institute was the main or the only activity of the society,
the impugned legislations interfered with the right of the society to
form and continue the association and are as such unconstitutional and
void.
In S.P. Mittal Vs. Union of India & Ors., (1983) 1 SCC 51,
the disciples and devoted followers of Sri Aurobindo formed the
Aurobindo Society in Calcutta and got it registered as a Society with
the object of preaching and propagating the ideals and teachings of Sri
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Aurobindo and the Mother. The Society for its Auroville project
received grants and subventions from UNESCO and also from the
Government of India. However, after the death of the Mother,
complaints started pouring in with the Central Government which, on
enquiry, revealed mismanagement of the affairs of the Society, misuse
of the funds thereof and diversion of the funds meant for Auroville to
other purposes. There was in-fighting between the groups of
members and the situation went out of control. The Auroville
(Emergency Provisions) Ordinance, 1980, was promulgated followed
by an Act, whereby the management of Auroville was taken over,
though for a limited period. The constitutional validity of the Act was
challenged on the ground that Articles 25, 26, 29 and 30 and also
Article 14 were infringed; and that the Parliament had no legislative
competence to enact the said Act. Turning down the challenge on all
the grounds, the Constitution Bench held, inter alia, that assuming but
not holding that the Society or Auroville were a religious
denomination, the impugned Act was not hit by Article 25 or 26. It
does not curtail the freedom of conscience and the right to freely
profess, practise and propagate one’s own religion. "The right of
management in matters of religion of a religious denomination" under
Article 26(b) was not taken away; what was taken away was the right
of management of the property of Auroville which was a secular
matter. So also the Act did not curtail the right of any section of
citizens to conserve its own language, script or culture conferred by
Article 29. An activity, secular in nature, though assumed to be of the
Society or the organization to be of religious denomination, did not
adversely affect the freedom of conscience and the right to freely
profess, practise and propagate one’s own religion. The Constitution
Bench has drawn a distinction between such activities of the institution
which would necessarily fall within the purview of Articles 25, 26 or 29
and an individual activity which would fall outside the purview of these
Articles.
The Preamble to the Act declares the Indian Council of World
Affairs (ICWA) to be an institution of national importance and to
provide for its incorporation. The same declaration is contained in the
body of the Act vide Section 2. The pre-existing society ___ ICWA and
the new body corporate, also given the name of ICWA, bear a
similarity of names. Yet, it is clear that the impugned Act only deals
with ICWA the pre-existing body and ICWA the body corporate under
the impugned Act. The new body takes over the activities of the pre-
existing society by running the institution which too is known as ICWA.
So far as the society ICWA is concerned, it has been left intact,
untouched and un-interfered with. There is no tampering with the
membership or the governing body of the society. The society is still
free to carry on its other activities. No membership of the old society
has been dropped. No new member has been forced or thrust upon
the society. The impugned legislation nominates members who will be
members of the council, the new body corporate, different from the
society. The pith and substance of the impugned legislation is to take
over an institution of national importance. As the formation of the
society, which is a voluntary association, is not adversely affected and
the members of the society are free to continue with such association,
the validity of the impugned legislation cannot be tested by reference
to sub-Clause (a) and (c) of Clause (1) of Article 19. The activity of
the society which was being conducted through the institution ICWA
has been adversely affected and to that extent the validity of the
legislation shall have to be tested by reference to sub-Clause (g) of
Clause (1) of Article 19. The activity was of the society and the
society cannot claim a fundamental right. Even otherwise the
impugned legislation is a reasonable legislation enacted in the interest
of the general public and to govern an institution of national
importance. It is valid.
Sarva Shri P.P. Rao and Ashok Nigam, the learned senior
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counsel for the petitioners have placed strong reliance on two
decisions of this Court, namely, Smt. Damyanti Naranga & Anr. Vs.
The Union of India and Ors. & Anr., 1971 (3) SCR 840 and Asom
Rashtrabhasha Prachar Samiti, Hedayatpur-Gauhati-3 and Anr.
Vs. State of Assam and Ors., 1989 (Supp.) SCR 160. In Smt.
Damyanti Naranga’s case (Supra) the Constitution Bench ruled that
the right to form an association includes not only a right of forming an
association to begin with, but also the right to continue to be
associated with only those whom they voluntarily admit in the
association. Once the citizens have formed any association voluntarily
then without any option being given to the members, neither can their
membership be taken away nor can they be compelled to associate
themselves with members with whom they do not want to associate.
The constitutional validity of the Hindi Sahitya Sammelan Act, 1962,
was successfully challenged. A perusal of the judgment shows that
the impugned legislation created a statutory body called ’The Hindi
Sahitya Sammelan’. The existence of the original Sammelan was
terminated, which resulted in violating the right of members of the
original Sammelan to form an association as guaranteed by Article
19(1)(c), and this was the main thrust of attack which dominated the
Court’s opinion. All the existing members of the original Sammelan
were made members of the new Sammelan and many outsiders were
also made members thereof by the Act. The new members which
were enrolled or could be enrolled, were entitled to be admitted
without the consent of the original members of the Sammelan. Thus,
the members of the old Sammelan came under compulsion to
associate and unite involuntarily with such persons as they did not
wish to do. The property of the original Sammelan was taken away
and vested in the new Sammelan. The case is, therefore,
distinguishable and not applicable to the facts of the present case,
where the original society has been left intact and untouched. These
distinguishing features were noted also by the Constitution Bench in
the case of D.A.V. College, Jullundur, (supra) and the ratio of Smt.
Damyanti Naranga’s case (supra) was held inapplicable.
However, even in Smt. Damyanti Naranga’s case (supra), the
Constitution Bench has held that after an association has been formed
and the right under Article 19(1)(c) has been exercised by the
members forming it, they have no right to claim that its activities must
also be permitted to be carried on in the manner they desire.
In the case of Asom Rastrabhasa Prachar Samiti (supra),
the impugned Act was enacted to meet a temporary contingency for
taking over of the management of the Prachar Samiti temporarily.
However, it failed to make any provision for the restoration of the
elected body in due course. Not only were new members introduced
into the Samiti, no norms were laid down for nominating the
government nominees (who could be any one), and the elected
members were kept away from the control of the Samiti. On the
peculiar facts of the case and the implications of the provisions
contained in the impugned enactment the Court concluded that the
right of association was virtually taken away and in the name of
temporary control and management on the affairs of the society, what
was done was a permanent deprivation. In response to a query
raised by the Court it was stated by the State before the Court that
the State had no desire to restore the Samiti. The impugned
legislative provision was, therefore, struck down as violative of Article
19(1)(c) of the Constitution. Asom Rashtrabhasha Prachar
Samiti’s case (supra) is a three-Judge Bench decision and the only
decision referred to therein is the case of Smt. Damyanti Naranga’s
case (supra). Though Article 14 has not been referred to in the
judgment by specifically mentioning it, it is clear from the judgment
that this Court has also formed an opinion that the action of the State
was arbitrary and unreasonable, and so was liable to be struck down.
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Both the decisions relied on by the learned senior counsel for
the petitioners are distinguishable and do not apply to the present
case.
It is well-settled that while dealing with a challenge to the
constitutional validity of any legislation, the court should prima facie
lean in favour of constitutionality and should support the legislation, if
it is possible to do so, on any reasonable ground and it is for the party
who attacks the validity of the legislation to place all materials before
the Court which would make out a case for invalidating the legislation.
(see : Charanjit Lal Chowdhury Vs. The Union of India & Ors.,
1950 SCR 869 and Ayurvedic and Unani Tibia College, Delhi
(supra)).
In spite of there being a general presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of the legislation, in a challenge laid to the validity of
any legislation allegedly violating any right or freedom guaranteed by
Clause (1) of Article 19 of the Constitution, on a prima facie case of
such violation having been made out, the onus would shift upon the
respondent State to show that the legislation comes within the
permissible limits of the most relevant out of Clauses (2) to (6) of
Article 19 of the Constitution, and that the restriction is reasonable.
The Constitutional Court would expect the State to place before it
sufficient material justifying the restriction and its reasonability. On
the State succeeding in bringing the restriction within the scope of
any of the permissible restrictions, such as, the sovereignty and
integrity of India or public order, decency or morality etc., the onus
of showing that restriction is unreasonable would shift back to the
petitioner. Where the restriction on its face appears to be
unreasonable, nothing more would be required to substantiate the plea
of unreasonability. Thus the onus of proof in such like cases is an on-
going shifting process to be consciously observed by the court called
upon to decide the constitutional validity of a legislation by reference
to Article 19 of the Constitution. The questions: (i) Whether the right
claimed is a fundamental right, (ii) whether the restriction is one
contemplated by any of the Clauses (2) to (6) of Article 19, and (iii)
whether the restriction is reasonable or unreasonable, are all questions
which shall have to be decided by keeping in view the substance of the
legislation and not being beguiled by the mere appearance of the
legislation.
The impugned Act does not offend the right guaranteed by
Article 19(1)(c). It also does not in any manner deprive the members
of the Society of their freedom of speech and expression under Article
19(1)(a).
Scrutiny by reference to Article 300A
It was submitted that the impugned legislation is violative of
Article 300A of the Constitution inasmuch as it unreasonably deprives
the petitioners of the property vesting in the society. In this context,
a reference to a Constitution Bench decision of this Court would be
apposite which deals with the right to acquire, hold and dispose of
property under Article 19(1)(f) (since repealed) though not on all the
fours with the facts of this case. Board of Trustees, Ayurvedic and
Unani Tibia College, Delhi Vs. State of Delhi (Now Delhi
Administration) & Anr., 1962 Supp.(1) SCR 156, projects principles
which would be relevant for our purpose. An individual founded a
pharmaceutical institute known as ’Hindustani Dawakhana’. He also
established a medical college known as ’The Tibbia College’. He then
formed a society with a few members along with himself and
registered the same under the Societies Registration Act, 1860. The
Society was known as the Board of Trustees, Ayurvedic and Unani
Tibbia College, Delhi, (’the Board’ for short). The Board was operating
the Tibbia College, an attached hostel and a pharmaceutical institute.
Disputes arose within the trustees which led to filing of civil suits. The
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Court appointed receivers who took possession of the Dawakhana and
the College. The Delhi State Legislature passed an Act called ’The
Tibbia College Act, 1952’ which came into force on October 10, 1952.
The old Board stood dissolved and all property, movable and
immovable, and all rights, powers and privileges of the Board came to
vest in a new Board constituted under the Act. This new Board was
called the Tibbia College Board. The civil suits were withdrawn and the
Court directed the possession over the properties and institutions to be
handed over to the new Board. The old Board filed a civil revision in
the High Court of Punjab and thereafter a petition under Article 32 of
the Constitution in this Court, impugning the constitutional validity of
the Act mainly on two grounds, namely, that the Delhi State
Legislature had no legislative power or competence to enact the
impugned Act and that, assuming that the Delhi State Legislature had
the legislative competence, the Act was still bad as being violative of
Articles 14, 19 and 31 of the Constitution. Incidentally, it was also
contended that the Act passed by the Delhi State Legislature could not
override the provisions of the Societies Registration Act, 1860, which is
a Central legislation. According to the State of Delhi, the field of
legislation was covered by List II (State List) Item 32 which reads as
under :
"32. Incorporation, regulation and winding up of
corporations, other than those specified in List I,
and universities; un-incorporated trading, literary,
scientific, religious and other societies and
associations; co-operative societies."
The Constitution Bench held that a society could not be equated
with a corporation as a society cannot be said to be ’incorporated’ as a
corporation is. Under Section 5 of the Societies Registration Act,
1860, the property belonging to the society, if not vested in trustees,
shall be deemed to be vested in the governing body of the society and
in all proceedings, civil and criminal, the property will be described as
being the property of the governing body. The expression "property
belonging to the Society" does not give the Society a corporate status
in the matter of holding and acquiring property; it merely describes
the property which vests in the trustees or governing body for the time
being.
It was held that the impugned legislation while creating the new
Board has given it a corporate status, confining its powers and duties
to the college, pharmaceutical institute and laboratory in Delhi. It fell
within the purview of Entry 32 of List II. Dealing with the submission
based on Article 31(2) of the Constitution (as it then stood), the Court
held that the impugned legislation does not relate to nor does it
provide for compulsory acquisition of property for a public purpose.
The impugned legislation provides for the transfer of the management
of the Ayurvedic and Unani Tibbia College, Delhi, from the old Board to
a new Board, and for that purpose the old Board was dissolved and a
new Board was created with certain rights, powers and privileges to be
applied for the exercise of powers and the performance of duties as
laid down in the Act. Such legislation could not be tested under Article
31(2) or the tests emerging therefrom.
Dealing with the submission made by reference to the repealed
Article 19(1)(f), the fundamental right to acquire, hold and dispose of
property, the Court held that
"During the subsistence of the society, the right of
the members was to ensure that the property was
utilized for the charitable objects set out in the
memorandum and these did not include any
beneficial enjoyment. Nor did the members of the
society acquire any beneficial interest on the
dissolution of the society; for Section 14 of the Act,
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quoted earlier, expressly negatived the right of the
members to any distribution of the assets of the
dissolved body. In such an event the property had
to be given over to some other society, i.e., for
being managed by some other charitable
organization and to be utilized for like purposes,
and the only right of the members was to
determine the society to whom the funds or
property might be transferred and this had to be
done by not less than three-fifths of the members
present at the meeting for the purpose and, in
default of such determination, by the civil court.
The effect of the impugned legislation is to vary or
affect this privilege of the members and to vest the
property in a new body created by it enjoined to
administer it so as to serve the same purposes as
the dissolved society. The only question is whether
the right to determine the body which shall
administer the funds or property of the dissolved
society which they had under the pre-existing law
is a right to ’acquire, hold and dispose of property’
within the meaning of Article 19(1)(f), and if so
whether the legislation is not saved by Article
19(5). We are clearly of the opinion that that right
is not a right of property within the meaning of
Article 19(1)(f). In the context in which the words
’to dispose of’ occur in Article 19(1)(f), they denote
that kind of property which a citizen has a right to
hold. Where however the citizen has no right to
hold the property, for on the terms of Section 14 of
the Societies Registration Act the members have no
right to ’hold’ the property of the dissolved society,
there is, in our opinion, no infringement of any
right to property within the meaning of Article
19(1)(f). In this view the question as to whether
the impugned enactment satisfies the requirements
of Article 19(5) does not fall to be determined.
The Court concluded by holding that the Delhi State Legislature did not
transgress any of the limitations placed on it, by Article 19(5) when it
enacted the impugned legislation.
The protection of Article 300A is available to any person,
including a legal or jurisdic person and is not confined only to a citizen.
For more than one reason, we are not inclined to entertain this plea.
Firstly, with the Forty-Fourth Amendment, w.e.f. June 20, 1979, Right
to Property having ceased to be a fundamental right, we have grave
doubts if the same can be sought to be enforced by a petition under
Article 32 of the Constitution. Secondly, we find that a case of
violation of Article 300A in the dimension in which it was sought to be
canvassed is not taken up in the writ petition. The Union of India has
taken over the institution by enacting a law which we have held to be
within the legislative competence of the Parliament. Thirdly and lastly,
the petition in that regard raises disputed questions of facts. The
Union of India do not admit title of the petitioner either in the land or
in the building or in any other property claimed to be owned by the
petitioners. There is not one document of title produced by the
petitioners in support of their claim to the property. Such highly
disputed questions of fact which cannot be determined except on
evidence are not fit to be taken up for adjudication in the exercise of
writ jurisdiction. The exercise of testing the vires of the impugned
legislation by reference to Article 300A of the Constitution is uncalled
for in the present petition.
Is the impugned Act arbitrary and violative of Article 14?
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Article 14 of the Constitution prohibits class legislation and not
reasonable classification for the purpose of legislation. The
requirements of the validity of legislation by reference to Article 14 of
the Constitution are : that the subject matter of legislation should be a
well defined class founded on an intelligible differentia which
distinguishes that subject matter from others left out, and such
differentia must have a rational relation with the object sought to be
achieved by the legislation. The laying down of intelligible differentia
does not, however, mean that the legislative classification should be
scientifically perfect or logically complete.
We have already pointed out in an earlier part of this judgment
that in the present case successive parliamentary committees found
substance in the complaints received that an institution of national
importance was suffering from mismanagement and mal-
administration. The Central Government acted on such findings.
Circumstances warranting an emergent action satisfied the President
of India, resulting in his promulgating ordinances which earlier could
not culminate into legislative enactments on account of fortuitous
circumstances. At the end the Parliament exercised its legislative
power under Article 245 of the Constitution read with Entries 62 and
63 of List I. The legislation cannot be said to be arbitrary or
unreasonable.
It was further submitted that the provisions of the Societies
Registration Act, 1860 were effective enough which, if invoked, could
have taken care of the alleged grievances. If there was any truth or
substance therein the same could have been found on enquiries being
held. In our opinion, in a given set of facts and circumstances, merely
because an alternative action under the Societies Registration Act,
1860 could have served the purpose, a case cannot be and is not
made out for finding fault with another legislation if the same be within
the legislative competence of the Parliament, which it is, as will be
seen hereinafter.
A similar submission was made and repelled in S.P. Mittal’s
case (supra). The contention there was that provisions in the
Societies Registration Act were available to meet the situation in
Auroville and that the law and order situation could be controlled by
resorting to provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The
Constitution Bench held - "Whether the remedies provided under the
Societies Registration Act were sufficient to meet the exigencies of the
situation is not for the Court but for the Government to decide, and if
the Government thought that the conditions prevailing in Auroville and
the Society can be ameliorated not by resorting to the provisions of
the Societies Registration Act but by a special enactment, that is an
area of the exercise of the discretion of the Government and not of the
Court." The Constitution Bench also observed that assuming the facts
brought to the notice of the legislature were wrong, it will not be open
to the Court to hold the Act to be bad on that account.
It was then submitted that the institution ICWA was singled out
and though there were several other institutions run by societies or
other organizations which were in the grip of more serious
mismanagement and mal-administration, they were not even touched
and the Parliament chose to legislate as to one institution only. This
submission too holds no merit. Firstly, no other institution is named
or particularized so as to be comparable with ICWA. Secondly, there
can be a legislation in respect of a single institution as is clear from
the language itself of Entries 62 and 63 of List I. A single institution is
capable of being treated as a class by itself for the purpose of
legislation if there are special circumstances or reasons which are
applicable to that institution and such legislation would not incur the
wrath of Article 14. In S.P. Mittal (supra), the impugned legislation
brought with the object and purpose of taking away the management
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of Auroville from the Aurobindo Society and to bring it under the
management of the Central Government under the provisions of the
impugned Act was held to be valid. The exercise of legislative power
by Parliament was sought to be justified as falling within the field of
Entry 63 of List I. Their Lordships referred to several decisions
wherein the constitutional validity of similar legislations was upheld.
In Ram Krishna Dalmia Vs. Justice S.R. Tendolkar, 1959 SCR 279,
legislation relating to a single ’individual’, in Raja Birakishore Vs.
State of Orissa, (1964) 7 SCR 32, legislation in respect of a single
’temple’ and in Chiranjit Lal Chowdhuri Vs. Union of India, 1950
SCR 869, a separate law enacted for one company were held not to
offend Article 14 of the Constitution on the ground that there were
special reasons for passing such legislation.
Effect of the previous judgment of High Court on the impugned
legislation
Having held that the impugned Act does not suffer from any
constitutional infirmity and does not violate Article 19(1)(a) and (c) or
Article 300A of the Constitution, we may now proceed to examine by
reference to the doctrine of Separation of Powers what is the effect on
the impugned Act, of the judgment dated 10.9.1990 delivered by a
learned single Judge of the Punjab & Haryana High Court, annulling
the 1990 Ordinance as constitutionally invalid. The submission of the
learned counsel for the petitioners is short and simple. It is submitted
that an "identically worded" Ordinance having been held to be
unconstitutional and the decision of the High Court holding so having
achieved a finality, the Parliament could not have re-enacted the
contents of the vitiated Ordinance into an Act of Parliament. It was
forcefully submitted that such an enactment is violative of the doctrine
of Separation of Powers and so is liable to be annulled on this very
ground.
The facts of this case are unusual. No precedent, parallel on
facts, has been brought to our notice at the Bar though a host of
decisions laying down constitutional principles were cited, some of
which we shall refer to hereinafter.
Let us first state a few general principles relevant for upholding
validity of enactments. In Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. & Anr. Vs.
Broach Borough Municipality & Ors., (1969) 2 SCC 283, the
imposition of a tax was held to be invalid because the power to tax
was wanting. A validation Act was passed and its constitutionality was
put in issue once again. The Constitution Bench spoke a few words
about validating statutes in general, as under:-
"When a Legislature sets out to validate a tax
declared by a court to be illegally collected under
an ineffective or an invalid law, the cause for
ineffectiveness or invalidity must be removed
before validation can be said to take place
effectively. The most important condition, of
course, is that the Legislature must possess the
power to impose the tax, for, if it does not, the
action must ever remain ineffective and illegal.
Granted legislative competence, it is not sufficient
to declare merely that the decision of the Court
shall not bind for that is tantamount to reversing
the decision in exercise of judicial power which the
Legislature does not possess or exercise. A court’s
decision must always bind unless the conditions on
which it is based are so fundamentally altered that
the decision could not have been given in the
altered circumstances. Ordinarily, a court holds a
tax to be invalidly imposed because the power to
tax is wanting or the statute or the rules or both
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are invalid or do not sufficiently create the
jurisdiction. Validation of a tax so declared illegal
may be done only if the grounds of illegality or
invalidity are capable of being removed and are in
fact removed and the tax is thus made legal.
Sometimes this is done by providing for jurisdiction
where jurisdiction had not been properly vested
before. Sometimes this is done by re-enacting
retrospectively a valid and legal taxing provision
and then by fiction making the tax already
collected to stand under the re-enacted law.
Sometimes the Legislature gives its own meaning
and interpretation of the law under which tax was
collected and by legislative fiat makes the new
meaning binding upon courts. The Legislature may
follow any one method or all of them and while it
does so it may neutralise the effect of the earlier
decision of the court which becomes ineffective
after the change of the law. Whichever method is
adopted it must be within the competence of the
legislature and legal and adequate to attain the
object of validation. If the Legislature has the
power over the subject-matter and competence to
make a valid law, it can at any time make such a
valid law and make it retrospectively so as to bind
even past transactions. The validity of a Validating
Law, therefore, depends upon whether the
Legislature possesses the competence which it
claims over the subject-matter and whether in
making the validation it removes the defect which
the courts had found in the existing law and makes
adequate provisions in the Validating Law for a
valid imposition of the tax."
The law, so laid down, was reiterated and approved by a Seven
Judges Bench in M/s Misrilal Jain Vs. State of Orissa & Anr.,
(1977) 3 SCC 212. In Madan Mohan Pathak & Anr. Vs. Union of
India & Ors., (1978) 2 SCC 50 too Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd.
case (supra) was cited and considered. The law laid down by the
seven Judges Bench leads one to hold that if by reason of
retrospective alteration of the factual or legal situation, the judgment
is rendered erroneous, the constitutional validity of the subsequent
legislation is not available to be decided on the basis of the previous
judgment. The Constitution Bench in Union of India & Anr. Vs.
Raghubir Singh (Dead) by Lrs. etc., (1989) 2 SCC 754, observed
that the range of judicial review recognized in the superior judiciary of
India is perhaps the widest and the most extensive known to the world
of law and then cautioned __ "With the impressive expanse of judicial
power vested in them it is only right that the superior courts in India
should be conscious of their enormous responsibility". The
Constitution Bench summed up the effect of declaring an Act of
legislation __ in the case before us an Ordinance __ on the revival of
such Act, by stating that where a statute is declared invalid in India it
cannot be reinstated unless constitutional sanction is obtained therefor
by a constitutional amendment or an appropriately modified version of
the statute is enacted which accords with constitutional prescription. A
two Judges Bench of this Court in Indian Aluminium Co. & Ors. Vs.
State of Kerala & Ors., (1996) 7 SCC 637, made an exhaustive
review of the available judicial opinion and summed up the essence
thereof in nine points, three of which are relevant for our purpose,
which we set out as under:-
(1) In order that rule of law permeates to fulfil
constitutional objectives of establishing an
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egalitarian social order, the respective
sovereign functionaries need free play in
their joints so that the march of social
progress and order remains unimpeded. The
smooth balance built with delicacy must
always be maintained;
(2) In its anxiety to safeguard judicial power, it
is unnecessary to be overzealous and
conjure up incursion into the judicial
preserve invalidating the valid law
competently made;
(3) The Court, therefore, needs to carefully scan
the law to find out: (a) whether the vice
pointed out by the court and invalidity
suffered by previous law is cured complying
with the legal and constitutional
requirements; (b) whether the legislature
has competence to validate the law; (c)
whether such validation is consistent with
the rights guaranteed in Part III of the
Constitution."
Welfare Association A.R.P., Maharashtra & Anr. Vs. Ranjit
P. Gohil & Ors., JT 2003 (2) SC 335, is a decision to which both of us
are parties. Therein we have held that it is permissible for the
legislature, subject to its legislative competence otherwise, to enact a
law which will withdraw or fundamentally alter the very basis on which
a judicial pronouncement has proceeded and create a situation which,
if it had existed earlier, the Court would not have made the
pronouncement. Very recently in People’s Union for Civil Liberties
(PUCL) & Anr. Vs. Union of India & Anr., (2003) 4 SCC 399, in the
leading opinion recorded by M.B. Shah, J. (the other two learned
Judges having also recorded their separate but concurring opinions),
the legal position has been summarized thus:-
"the Legislature can change the basis on which a
decision is rendered by this Court and change the
law in general. However, this power can be
exercised subject to constitutional provisions,
particularly legislative competence and if it is
violative of fundamental rights enshrined in Part III
of the Constitution, such law would be void as
provided under Article 13 of the Constitution. The
legislature also cannot declare any decision of a
court of law to be void or of no effect."
In Smt. Indira Nehru Gandhi Vs. Shri Raj Narain & Anr.,
1975 (Supp.) SCC 1, Chandrachud, J., as His Lordship then was, cited
with approval the opinion of Harold Laski that the "separation of
powers does not mean the equal balance of powers" and observed that
"what cannot be sustained is the exercise by the legislature of what is
purely and indubitably a judicial function. In our cooperative
federalism there is no rigid distribution of powers; what is provided is
a system of salutary checks and balances".
With advantage, we may quote Justice Aharon Barak, President
of the Supreme Court of Israel. In the context of a new statute having
been enacted on the previous one having been annulled, the learned
Chief Justice says __ "Review of a new statute should focus not on the
fact that it changes the previous ruling of the court, but on the fact
that it undermines democracy. Moreover, everything is a question of
degree. If the interpretation of a statute is met with an immediate and
hasty response from the legislature in the form of new legislation,
uncertainty about the law will result, and the public will lose
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confidence in the legislative branch. This is not the case, however,
when the change in legislation after a judicial ruling reflects a thorough
and deliberate examination of the ruling and an objective expression of
the will of the legislature". (A Judge on Judging : The Role of a
Supreme Court in Democracy __ President Aharon Barak, Harvard Law
Review, Vol.116, No.1, November 2002, at p.135). He further states
that "foundation of democracy is a legislature elected freely and
periodically by the people. Judges and legal scholars ought not to
forget this fundamental principle. The role of a judge in a democracy
recognizes the central role of the legislature. Undermining the
legislature undermines democracy. My conception of the rule of law
and of the separation of powers do not undermine the legislature.
Rather, they ensure that all branches of state act within the framework
of the constitution and statutes. Only thus can we maintain public
confidence in the legislature; only thus can we preserve the dignity of
legislation." He quotes Justice McLachlin as rightly saying that in
democracies, "the elected legislators, the executive and the courts all
have their role to play. Each must play that role in a spirit of profound
respect for the other. We are not adversaries. We are all in the
justice business, together." (ibid, pp.136, 137).
The position in the present case is, of course, a little different.
We are not here dealing with the validity of a validating enactment.
In the judgment dated September 10, 1990 (C.W.P.No.9120 of 1990)
the High Court (Bench presided over by the learned single-Judge)
unfortunately, unmindful of the correct width and expanse of the rights
conferred by sub-clauses (a) and (c) of clause (1) of Article 19 of the
Constitution, did not correctly comprehend the scope of Article 19(1)
of the Constitution and overlooked the fine distinction in the breach of
rights complained of by a citizen or citizens - collectively but as
citizens, and the right to certain activities claimed by an association.
The High Court just confined itself to finding whether the impugned
ordinance could be saved by clauses (2) and (4) of Article 19, and if
not, then it was unconstitutional, also because it was too drastic and
hence unreasonable. The High Court also went on to say that as
compensation was not paid for the property acquired, the ordinance
was arbitrary and discriminatory more so because it aimed only at a
particular society. While making this observation the High Court
overlooked the fact that the ordinance aimed at the Institution and not
at the Society, though the nomenclature of the two was the same.
The High Court nowhere recorded a finding that any property either
belonged to the petitioners or was vested in them before it was taken
away, and also did not consider the affect of repeal of Article 19(1)(f)
and 31 of the Constitution after which repeal the right to property had
ceased to be a fundamental right and the newly engrafted Article 300A
of the Constitution requires only authority of law for depriving any
person or his property.
That decision of the learned Single Judge was not left
unchallenged. In fact, the correctness of the judgment of the learned
single-Judge was put in issue by the Union of India by filing an intra-
court appeal. Filing of an appeal destroys the finality of the judgment
under appeal. The issues determined by the learned Single Judge
were open for consideration before the Division Bench. However, the
Division Bench was denied the opportunity of hearing and the
aggrieved party could also not press for decision of the appeal on
merits, as before the appeal could be heard it was rendered
infructuous on account of the Ordinance itself having ceased to
operate. The Union of India, howsoever it may have felt aggrieved by
the pronouncement of the learned single-Judge, had no remedy left
available to it to pursue. The judgment of the Division Bench refusing
to dwell upon the correctness of the judgment of the Single Judge had
the effect of leaving the matter at large. Upon the lapsing of the
earlier Ordinance pending an appeal before a Division Bench, the
judgment of the Single Judge about the illegality of the earlier
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Ordinance, cannot any longer bar this Court from deciding about the
validity of a fresh law on its own merits, even if the fresh law contains
similar provisions.
Be that as it may, we are clearly of the opinion that the
judgment dated September 10, 1990, is not correct and we specifically
record our overruling of the same. The doctrine of Separation of
Powers and the constitutional convention of the three organs of the
State, having regard and respect for each other, is enough answer to
the plea raised on behalf of the petitioners founded on the doctrine of
Separation of Powers. We cannot strike down a legislation which we
have on an independent scrutiny held to be within the legislative
competence of the enacting legislature merely because the legislature
has re-enacted the same legal provisions into an Act which, ten years
before, were incorporated in an ordinance and were found to be
unconstitutional in an erroneous judgment of the High Court and
before the error could be corrected in appeal the Ordinance itself
lapsed. It has to be remembered that by the impugned Act the
Parliament has not overruled the judgment of the High Court nor has it
declared the same law to be valid which has been pronounced to be
void by the court. It would have been better if before passing the Bill
into an Act the attention of the Parliament was specifically invited to
the factum of an earlier pari materia Ordinance having been annulled
by the High Court. If an ordinance invalidated by the High Court is still
reenacted into an Act after the pronouncement by the High Court, the
subsequent Act would be liable to be annulled once again on finding
that the High Court was right in taking the view of the illegality of the
Ordinance, which it did. However, as we have already stated, this is
not the position obtaining in the present case. The impugned Act is
not liable to be annulled on the ground of violation of the doctrine of
Separation of Powers.
Impugned Act covered by Entries 62, 63 of List I of
Schedule - 7
The challenge to the constitutional validity of the impugned Act
fails on all the grounds alleged. The legislation is clearly covered by
Entries 62 and 63 of List I Schedule 7. Initially at one time, the
institution was receiving financial aid from the Government of India.
The institution ICWA has been declared to be an ’institution of national
importance’ by the Act of Parliament. There is no challenge to the
validity of such declaration nor do we find any grounds to take a view
different from the one taken in the declaration made by the
Government of India. Once an institution is declared to be of national
importance, the Parliament is competent to make any law governing
the management, administration and affairs of such an institution. It
is not the case of the petitioners that though the institution is declared
and held to be of national importance, yet in enacting other provisions
of the impugned Act, the Parliament has encroached upon any field of
legislation not available to it. The provisions of the Act fall within the
field of legislation meant for the Union of India.
The various Entries in the three Lists of the Seventh Schedule
are legislative heads defining the fields of legislation and should be
liberally and widely interpreted. Not only the main matter but also any
incidental and ancillary matters are available to be included within the
field of the entry. The settled rules of interpretation governing the
Entries do not countenance any narrow and pedantic interpretation.
The judicial opinion is for giving a large and liberal interpretation to
the scope of the Entries. Suffice it to quote from the opinion of the
judicial committee of the Privy Council in British Coal Corporation
Vs. The King, AIR 1935 PC 158, 162 __ that in interpreting a
constituent or organic statute indeed that construction which is most
beneficial to the widest possible amplitude of its powers must be
adopted. The Federal Court in the United Provinces Vs. Atiqa
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Begum, AIR 1941 FC 16, 25 observed that none of the items in the
Lists is to be read in a narrow or restricted sense and all ancillary or
subsidiary matters referable to the words used in the Entry and which
can fairly and reasonably be said to be comprehended therein are to
be read in the Entry. This approach has been countenanced in several
decisions of this Court. (To wit, see Navinchandra Mafatlal Vs. CIT
Bombay City, (1955) 1 SCR 829, 836; Sri Ram Ram Narain Medhi
Vs. The State of Bombay, 1959 Supp.(1) SCR 989.)
Conclusion
The writ petition is dismissed with costs.