Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAKHAWAT ALI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ORISSA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/11/1954
BENCH:
ACT:
Constitution of India, arts. 14,19(1)(g)-Orissa Municipal
Act, 1950 (Orissa Act XXIII of 1950), ss.
1(3),1(5),16(1)(x)-Nomination filed and rejected, effect of-
Disqualification for nomination if violates fundamental
right--Orissa General Clauses Act, 1937 (Orissa Act I of
1937), s. 23-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The provisions of section 16(1)(x) of the Orissa Municipal
Act, 1950, by which a paid legal practitioner on behalf of
or against the Municipality is disqualified for election to
a seat in such Municipality do not violate the fundamental
rights guaranteed to such legal practitioner under article
14 or under article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution of India.
The Orissa Municipal Act, 1950, having received the Gover-
nor’s assent on November 7, 1950, all preliminary steps
specified in section 1(5) of the Act which were taken for
the purpose of a Municipal election after such assent are
valid even though the Act itself had not then come into
force in terms of section 1(3).
Accordingly a nomination filed on March 15, 1951, was
validly subjected to the test of disqualification contained
in section 16(1) (x) of the Act and the rejection of such
nomination on March 25, 1951, was not defective though the
Act came into force on April 15, 1951, in the area to which
the rejected nomination relates. Section 23 of the Orissa
General Clauses Act, 1937, does not authorise the making of
rules or bye-laws, which are to come into
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 941.
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operation before the commencement of the Act, but they will
be valid under the express provision of section 1(5).
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 81 of 1953.
Appeal under article 132(1) of the Constitution of India
from the Judgment and Order, dated the 18th April, 1951, of
the High Court of Judicature for the State of Orissa at
Cuttack in Judicial Case No. 60 of 1951.
H. J. Umrigar, Sri Narain Andlay and Rajinder Narain for
the appellant.
Porus A. Mehta and P. g. Gokhale for the respondent.
1954. November 25. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
BHAGWATI J.-The appellant who is a legal practitioner
residing within the limits of the Kendrapara Municipality
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and practising as a mukhtar in the criminal and the revenue
Courts there filed his nomination paper for election as a
Councillor of the Municipality on the 15th March, 1951.
That nomination paper was rejected by the Election Officer
on the 25th March, 1951, on the ground that he was employed
as a legal practitioner against the Municipality in a case
U/S 198 of the Bihar and Orissa Municipal Act which was
pending in the Sub-Divisional Magistrate Court. The
appellant then filed on the 4th April, 1951, a petition
before the High Court of Orissa under article 226 of the
Constitution praying that a writ or order of prohibition be
issued to the State Government and the Election Officer
restraining them from holding the election to the Kendrapara
Municipality under the Orissa Municipal Act, 1950 or the
Municipal Election Rules, 1950. This petition was rejected
by the High Court but the High Court granted the appellant a
certificate under article 132(1) of the Constitution for
leave to appeal to this Court.
The Orissa Municipal Act, 1950 (Orissa Act 23 of 1950) was
passed by the local Legislature and received the assent of
the Governor on the 7th November, 1950, and was published in
the official gazette on the 11th November, 1950. Section I
of the Act runs as under
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(1) This Act may be called the Orissa Municipal Act, 1950.
(2) It shall extend to the whole of the State of Orissa.
(3) It shall come into force in such area or areas on such
date or dates as the State Government may appoint from time
to time
(5) Any notification, order or rule and any appointment to
an office, may be made or election held under this Act,
after it shall have received the assent of the Governor and
shall take effect on this Act coming into force.
Section 16 of the Act prescribes the disqualifications of
candidates for election and provides
(1) No person shall be qualified for election to a seat in
a Municipality, if such person
(ix ) is employed as a paid legal practitioner on behalf of
the Municipality or as legal practitioner against the
Municipality
On the 11th November, 1950, the Secretary to the Government,
Local Self-Government Department addressed to all District
Magistrates of the State letter No. 1336/L.S.G. intimating
that the Government had decided that general elections
should be held on the basis of adult suffrage as provided in
the Act in 12 Municipalities including the Kendrapara
Municipality. Notification No. 2015 L.S.G. was issued on
the 13th December, 1950, under section 13 read with section
1 (5) of the Act fixing- the 1st day of March, 1950, as the
relevant date for voters in the election as regards their
residential qualification in the Municipality. Notification
No. 65 L.S.G. issued on the 4th January, 1951, published
rules made in exercise of the powers conferred by clauses
(1) and (2) of sub-section (2) of section 387 of the Act
called the "Municipal Election Rules, 1950." Redistribution
of wards was effected by Notification No. 167 L.S.G. dated
the 10th January, 1951, and two Notifications Nos. 519 and
521 L.S.G. were issued on the 24th January, 1951, fixing
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the numbers of Councillors and of the reserved seats for
each Municipality. The 15th March, 1951, was fixed as the
date for filing the nominations and the 25th March, 1951,
for scrutiny of nomination papers. The 20th April, 1951,
was the date fixed for the holding of the election.
All these steps were taken by the Government in anticipation
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acting under the powers reserved under section 1 (5) of the
Act and it was only on the 15th April, 1951, that the Act
was extended to the Kendrapara Municipality by a
notification under section 1 (3) of the Act.
The appellant contended (1) that the Act had not come into
operation in the Kendrapara Municipality till the 15th
April, 1951, that the disqualification- prescribed by
section 16(1) (ix) could not consequently have been incurred
by him on the 15th March, 1951, when he filed his nomination
paper, that the rejection of his nomination paper therefore
on that ground by the Election Officer on the 25th March,
1951, was illegal and no election could be held on the 20th
April, 1951, as was sought to be done under the provisions
of the Orissa Municipal Act, 1950, or the Municipal Election
Rules, 1950, and (2) that in any event the disqualification
prescribed under section 16(1) (ix) of the Act violated his
fundamentals rights guaranteed under article 14 and article
19(1) (g) of the Constitution.
Both these contentions were in our opinion rightly negatived
by the High Court. Section 1 (5) of the Act in express
terms provides that after the Act has received the assent of
the Governor elections could be held under the Act but were
only to take effect on the Act coming into force, which
means the coming into force of the Act in such area or areas
on such date or dates which the State Government might
appoint from’ time to time under section 1 (3) of the Act.
There is thus contemplated under the very provisions of sec-
tion 1 (5) the holding of elections under the Act in spite
of the fact that the Act had not come into force in a
particular area. Ordinarily the statute enacted by a State
Legislature comes into force as soon as it receives
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the assent of the Governor. Section 1 (3) of the Act
however postpones the commencement of the Act which means
that section 1 (3) came into operation immediately the
Governor gave his assent to the Act. Section 1 (5) is
nothing but a proviso to section 1 (3) and must be regarded
also to have come into operation simultaneously with section
1 (3). Section 1 (5) having thus come into force at once on
the Act having received the assent of the Governor on the
7th November, 1950, if elections were to be held under the
Act before the rest of the Act came into force in any
particular area.’ all incidental steps for the holding of
such elections were certainly contemplated to be taken and
those steps which would be thus taken in anticipation of the
Act coming into force in a particular area were certainly
authorised by the terms of section 1(5) by necessary
implication, because no elections could be held unless all
the preliminary steps for holding the same were taken. It
would be necessary for holding elections to prescribe the
residential qualification, to distribute the wards, to fix
the numbers of Councillors and of reserved seats, to frame
election rules with reference to the filing of nominations,
the scrutiny of the nomination papers and also the holding
of elections. All these preliminary steps would have to be
taken if the elections were to be held and section 1(5)
clearly contemplated the taking of these steps in
authorising elections to be held under the Act.
No doubt the Act was not to be in force in a particular area
until the relevant notification was issued by the State
Government and until the Act came into force the
disqualifications prescribed in section 16(1) of the Act
would not normally attach to candidates for election. The
election rules also would be framed in exercise of the power
reserved under the Act and if the -Act had not come into
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force much less could the election rules come into operation
and bind the candidates. This argument could have availed
the appellant if the State Legislature had not enacted
section 1(5) of the Act and the defect could not have been
cured by the provisions of section 23 of the Orissa General
Clauses Act (Orissa Act I of 1937) which was relied upon by
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the respondent. That section only enables the making of
rules or bye-laws or the issue of the preliminary orders in
anticipation of the Act coming into force, which rules, bye-
laws or orders however would not come into effect till the
commencement of the Act. The clear provisions of section
1(5) of the Act however expressly empowered the State
Government to hold elections and thereby validated all the
preliminary steps taken for the purpose of holding such
election, the only reservation made being that even though
the election under the Act be held such election was not to
take effect till the Act came into force in the particular
area. This contention of the appellant therefore fails.
The contention that the disqualification prescribed in
section 16(1)(ix) violates the fundamental rights of the
appellant under article 14 and article 19(1)(g) is equally
untenable. Article 14 forbids class legislation but does
not forbid reasonable classification for the purposes of
legislation. That classification however cannot be
arbitrary but must rest upon some real and substantial
distinction bearing a reasonable and just relation to the
things in respect of which the classification is made. In
other words the classification must have a reasonable
relation to the object or the purpose sought to be achieved
by the impugned legislation. The classification here is of
the legal practitioners who are employed on payment on
behalf of the Municipality or act against the Municipality
and those legal practitioners are disqualified from standing
as candidates for election. The object or purpose to be
achieved is the purity of public life, which object would
certainly be thwarted if there arose a situation where there
was a conflict between interest and duty. The possibility
of such a conflict can be easily visualised, because if a
Municipal Councillor is employed as a paid legal practi-
tioner on behalf of the Municipality there is a likelihood
of his misusing his position for the purposes of obtaining
Municipal briefs for himself and persuading the Municipality
to sanction unreasonable fees. Similarly, if he was acting
as a legal practitioner against the Municipality he might in
the interests of his client misuse any knowledge which he
might have obtained
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as a Councillor through his access to the Municipal records
or he might sacrifice the interests of the Municipality for
those of his clients. No doubt having regard to the best
traditions of the profession very few legal practitioners
would stoop to such tactics, but the Legislature in its
wisdom thought it desirable to eliminate any possibility of
a conflict between interest and duty and aimed at achieving
this object or purpose by prescribing the requisite
disqualification. The classification thus would certainly
have a reasonable relation to the object or purpose sought
to be achieved.
It was however urged that besides this category there are
also other categories where there would be a possibility of
conflict between interest and duty and that in so far as
they were not covered by the disqualifications prescribed by
section 16(1) of the Act the provision disqualifying the
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category to which the appellant belonged was discriminatory.
It was particularly pointed out that a client who had a
litigation against the Municipality was not prevented from
standing as a candidate for election whereas the legal
practitioner who held a brief against the Municipality was
disqualified, though the ban against both these categories
could be justified on ground of avoidance of conflict
between interest and duty. The simple answer to this
contention is that legislation enacted for the achievement
of a particular object or purpose need not be all embracing.
It is for the Legislature to determine what categories it
would embrace within the scope of legislation and merely
because certain categories which would stand on the same
footing as those which are covered by the legislation are
left out would not render legislation which has been enacted
in any manner discriminatory and violative of the
fundamental right guaranteed by article 14 of the
Constitution.
The right of the appellant to practise the profession of law
guaranteed by article 19(1) (g) cannot be said to have been
violated, because in laying down the disqualification in
section 16(1) (ix) of the Act the Legislature does not
prevent him from practising his profession of law but it
only lays down that if he wants
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to stand as a candidate for election he shall not either be
employed as a paid legal practitioner on behalf of the
municipality or act as a legal practitioner against the
Municipality. There is no fundamental right in any person
to stand as a candidate for election to the Municipality.
The only fundamental right which is guaranteed is that of
practising any profession or carrying on any occupation,
trade or business. There is no violation of the latter
right in prescribing the disqualification of the type
enacted in section 16(1) (ix) of the Act. If he wants to
stand as a candidate for election it is but -proper that he
should divest himself of his paid brief on behalf of the
Municipality or the brief against the Municipality in which
event there will be certainly no bar to his candidature.
Even if it be taken as a restriction on his right to
practice his profession of law, such restriction would be a
reasonable one and well within the ambit of article 19
clause 5. Such restriction would be a reasonable one to
impose in the interests of the general public for the
preservation of purity in public life. We therefore see no
substance in this contention of the appellant also.
The appeal accordingly fails and stands dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.