Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 8951 of 1997
PETITIONER:
Bakhtawar Trust & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
M.D. Narayan & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/05/2003
BENCH:
CJI & Ashok Bhan
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
(with C.A. No. 831 of 1998)
KHARE, CJI.
The question that arises in these appeals is, whether the Bangalore
City Planning Area Zonal Regulations (Amendment & Validation) Act,
1996 (Karnataka Act No.2 of 1996) [hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’], is
constitutionally valid?
Civil Appeal No. 831/98 has been filed at the instance of the State of
Karnataka whereas Civil Appeal No. 8951/97 is by the builders [hereinafter
referred to as "the builders"].
In the year 1980 the builders were granted permission to construct
eight-storied building eighty feet in height in the locality of 9th Main Road,
Rajmahal Vilas Extension, Bangalore by the Karnataka Municipal
Corporation, Bangalore (hereinafter referred to as "the Corporation").
The respondent has the property adjoining to the site where eight-
storied buildings were to be constructed. When the builders were about to
construct the building, the respondent herein filed a petition challenging the
permission granted to the builders to construct eight-storied residential
building. In the writ petitions, it was alleged that the aforesaid sanction is in
contravention of the Outline Development Plan and the Zonal Regulations
framed for the City of Bangalore under the provisions of the Karnataka
Town & Country Planning Act, 1965 (hereinafter referred to as "the
Planning Act"). In the writ petition it was prayed that a writ of mandamus
be issued to the Corporation to issue forthwith a fresh licence to the builders
in conformity with the Outline Development Plan and Zonal Regulations
appended thereto promulgated under Section 13(4) of the Planning Act.
Here it is relevant to notice that outline development plan and the Zonal
Regulations framed under the Act provided maximum height of new
construction as 55 feet, whereas Rule 16 of Bye-laws 38 framed by the
Bangalore Municipal Corporation provided maximum height of new
building as 80 feet. In the writ petition, the respondent prayed for grant of an
interim order. However, the prayer for interim order was refused. The
respondent thereafter preferred writ appeal against the refusal of the grant of
interim order before the Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court. The
Division Bench of the High Court passed an order restraining the builder
from constructing the building. Aggrieved, the appellants challenged the
aforesaid order by means of a special leave petition before the apex Court.
This Court set aside the impugned order subject to the builders’ furnishing
the undertakings to the effect that in the event of the writ petition being
decided against them, they would have no objection to the demolition of the
portion of the building made by them. It is not disputed that the builders
gave undertakings before the High Court in terms of the order of the apex
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Court. Similarly, every purchaser and occupier of the flats in the aforesaid
building also gave individual undertakings before the Court. Subsequently,
the writ petition filed by the respondent came up for hearing before a
Division Bench of the High Court. The High Court by means of the order
and judgment dated 11th of June, 1982 allowed the writ petition. The
builders thereafter filed appeals before the apex Court, but their appeals
were dismissed on 19.1.1987. After dismissal of the civil appeals by this
Court, some of the occupants of the premises filed writ petitions challenging
the action of the Commissioner in implementing the writ issued by the High
Court. However, the said writ petitions were disposed of by an order and
judgment dated 29.10.1987. In terms of the directions given by the High
Court and after giving opportunity of hearing to all the occupiers of the
building, the Commissioner passed an order that 3 floors (6th, 7th and the 8th
floors) of the building constructed by the builders be demolished.
Thereafter, different proceedings were taken, which are not relevant for the
purpose of the present case. However, the respondent filed a contempt
petition in the High Court for non-compliance of the order of the High
Court. While the matters were pending, the Amending and Validating Act
was passed by the Karnataka Legislature, modifying the maximum height of
the new building upto above 165 feet and validating the new construction
raised in violation of Outline Development Plan and the Zonal Regulations.
After the impugned Act was passed, the respondent herein filed a
petition challenging the constitutional validity of the Act. The State of
Karnataka and the builders defended the validity of the Act. Subsequently,
the writ petition came up for hearing before the Division Bench of the
Karnataka High Court which allowed the writ petition and struck down the
impugned Act holding it to be constitutionally invalid. The High Court was,
inter alia, of the view that the impugned Act instead of curing the basis of
the decision rendered by the High Court, purported to set at naught the
decision given by the High Court which was upheld by the Supreme Court;
that the object of the impugned Act was to invalidate the pronouncement of
the High Court and not to remove the fact of invalidity on the action taken
by the appellant; and that Section 2 of the Act only amends the Zonal
Regulations appended to the Outline Development Plan made and framed by
the Executive in exercise of the delegated power of legislation vested in it
without amending the provisions of the Planning Act.
S/Shri Harish N. Salve and Gopal Subramanium, learned senior
counsel appearing for the appellants argued that the impugned Act is
constitutionally valid and the view taken by the High Court is erroneous and
deserves to be set aside. However, Shri Ranjit Kumar, learned senior
counsel appearing for the respondents defended the view taken by the High
Court.
On the arguments of the parties, the question that arises for
consideration is whether the Karnataka Legislature by the impugned Act has
removed the basis of the judgment of the High Court or it, without amending
the basis, has purported to nullify the judicial decree per se and, therefore,
such an Act is ultra vires the competence of the State Legislature.
Here it would be relevant to advert to the relevant provisions of the
Planning Act and the Zonal Regulations framed under Section 13 and Bye-
laws framed by the Corporation and the impugned Act.
The Planning Act provides for regulation by way of planned growth
of land use and development and execution of Town Planning Scheme in the
State of Karnataka. Section 4-A of the Planning Act empowers the State
Government to declare any area in the State to be a Local Planning Area for
purposes of the Act. Section 4-C of the Planning Act provides for
constitution of Planning Authority for the purpose of performing the
functions assigned to it. Chapter III relates to Outline Development Plan
authorising every Planning Authority to carry out a survey of the area and
prepare and publish an Outline Development Plan and submit the same to
the Government for provisional approval. An Outline Development Plan is
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to indicate the manner in which the development and improvement of the
entire planning area within the jurisdiction of the Planning Authority is
required to be carried out and regulated. Under Section 13 of the Planning
Act the State Government has authority to approve the Outline Development
Plan in the manner and the procedure prescribed therein. Section 14
provides that on and from the date of declaration no change in the land use
or development can be made except with written permission of the Planning
Authority. In exercise of power conferred under Section 13, the Authority
has framed Zonal Regulations appended to Outline Development Plan. The
said Regulations provide maximum height of the building to be constructed
in the area as 55 fts.
Chapter IV of the Planning Act deals with Comprehensive
Development Plan providing for preparation of such plan, its contents and
approval by the State Government and the manner of its enforcement. The
Comprehensive Development Plan is to supersede the Outline Development
Plan. The Corporation has framed its bye-laws providing for maximum
height of building constructed within the Corporation’s limits. Rule 16 of
Bye-law 38, which is relevant for the present case, and was in existence at
the material time, runs as under:
"16. Height of the Building:- No person erecting
or re-erecting a building on a site which abuts on a street
shall, so construct it that any point of it is at a height
greater than 1-1/2 times the width of the street including
drain and pavement immediately in front of it, and any
open space immediately in front of such building and in
no case more than eighty feet."
(Emphasis added)
The impugned Act, which received the assent of the Governor on
14.3.1996 and was published in the Karnataka Gazette Extra-ordinary on the
same day, reads thus:
"1. Short title and commencement:- (1) This Act may
be called the Bangalore City Planning Area Zonal
Regulations (Amendment and Validation) Act,
1996.
(2) It shall come into force at once.
2. Amendment of Zonal Regulations appended to the Outline
Development Plan.-
Notwithstanding anything contained in any judgment,
decree or order of any court, tribunal or any other authority,
Zonal regulations appended to the Outline Development Plan of
the Bangalore City Planning Area made under the Karnataka
Town and Country Planning Act, 1961 (Karnataka Act 11 of
1963) as they existed during the period from 22nd may 1972 to
12th October, 1984 (hereinafter referred to as the said Zonal
Regulations) shall be deemed to have been modified as
specified in the Schedule with effect from the 22nd day of May,
1972.
3. Regularisation of certain constructions:-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Karnataka
Town and Country Planning Act, 1961 (Karnataka Act
11 of 1963) or in the said Zonal Regulations as modified
by this Act if any person after obtaining permission from
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the Corporation of the City of Bangalore during the
period from 22nd May 1972 to 12th October, 1984 has
constructed any building deviating from the said Zonal
Regulations as modified by this Act or the permission
granted by the Corporation of the City of Bangalore such
person may within thirty days from the date of
commencement of this Act, apply to the State
Government for regularisation of such construction in
accordance with the provisions of this Section.
(2) There shall be a committee for the purpose of
regularisation of constructions referred to in sub-section
(1) consisting of the following members, namely:-
(i)
The Secretary to
Government, Urban
Development
Department
Chairman
(ii)
The Commissioner,
Corporation of the
City of Bangalore
Member
(iii)
The Commissioner,
Bangalore
Development
Authority
Member
(iv)
The Director of Town
Planning
Member Secretary
(3) The Committee shall scrutinise the applications received under
sub-section (1) and after holding such enquiry as it deems fit if
it is satisfied that the deviation referred to in sub-section (1)
does not constitute material deviation from the said Zonal
Regulations as modified by this Act or the permission granted
by the Corporation of the City of Bangalore it may make
recommendations to the Government for regularisation subject
to payment of such amount as may be determined by it having
regard to, -
(i) the situation of the building;
(ii) The nature and extent of deviation;
(iii) Any other relevant factors.
Provided that the amount so determined shall not be less than
an amount equivalent to one and half times the then market
value of such construction.
(4) The State Government may, on receipt of the recommendation
of the committee and after payment of the amount by the
applicant towards regularisation of such construction, order for
regularisation of the construction.
4. Validation:- Notwithstanding anything contained in any
judgment, decree or order of any court, tribunal or other authority, any
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permission to construct building granted by the Corporation of the
City of Bangalore during the period from 22nd May 1972 to 12th
October 1984 and building constructed in pursuance to such
permission and regularised under section 3 shall be deemed to have
been validly granted or constructed and shall have effect for all
purposes as if the permission had been granted and buildings had been
constructed in conformity with the said Zonal Regulations as modified
by this Act, and accordingly;
(a) all such permissions granted, buildings constructed or
proceedings or things done or action taken shall for all
purposes deemed to be and to have always been done or
taken in accordance with law.
(b) No suit or other proceeding shall be instituted,
maintained or continued in any court or before any
tribunal or other authority for cancellation of such
permission or demolition of buildings which were
constructed after obtaining the permission from the
Corporation of the City of Bangalore and were
regularised under section 3, or for questioning the
validity of any action or things taken or done in
pursuance to the said Zonal Regulations as modified by
this Act, and no Court shall enforce or recognise any
decree, judgment or order declaring any such permission
granted or buildings constructed, action taken or things
done in pursuance to the said Zonal Regulations as
modified by this Act as invalid or unlawful."
A perusal of the aforesaid provisions shows that with effect from 1972
to 1984 under the Zonal Regulations the maximum height permissible for
any new building was upto 55 fts. However, Rule 16 of Bye-law 38
provided height of the erection or re-erection of any new building up to 80
fts. It is also not disputed that the said Zonal Regulations ceased to have
effect after the Comprehensive Development Plan came into force in the
year 1985 and after passing of the impugned Act, the height of the new
building could be raised to above 50 meters, i.e., 165 fts.
In the light of the aforesaid provisions, the validity of the impugned
Act has to be looked into.
The validity of any Statute may be assailed on the ground that it is
ultra vires the legislative competence of the Legislature which enacted it or
it is violative of Part III or any other provision of the Constitution. It is well
settled that the Parliament and State Legislatures have plenary powers of
legislation within the fields assigned to them and subject to some
constitutional limitations, can legislate prospectively as well as
retrospectively. This power to make retrospective legislation enables the
legislature to validate prior executive and legislative acts retrospectively
after curing the defects that led to their invalidation and thus makes
ineffective judgments of competent courts declaring the invalidity. It is also
well settled that a validating Act may even make ineffective judgments and
orders of competent Courts provided it, by retrospective legislation, removes
the cause of invalidity or the basis that had led to those decisions.
The test of judging the validity of the Amending and Validating Act
is, whether the legislature enacting the Validating Act has competence over
the subject matter; whether by validation, the said legislature has removed
the defect which the Court had found in the previous laws; and whether the
Validating law is consistent with the provisions of Part III of the
Constitution.
In Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills v. Broach Borough Municipality, (1970)
2 SCC 388, it was held that
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"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.
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. .. 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 or the law. .
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 or for a valid imposition
of the tax."
In Government of Andhra Pradesh & Anr. Vs. Hindustan
Machine Tools Ltd., 1975 (Supp.) SCR 394, this Court obsereved :
"We see no substance in the respondent’s contention
that by redefining the term ‘house’ with retrospective
effect and by validating the levies imposed under the
unamended Act as if, notwithstanding anything
contained in any judgment decree or order of any court,
that Act as amended was in force on the date when the
tax was levied, the Legislature has encroached upon a
judicial function. The power of the Legislature to pass a
law postulates the power to pass if prospectively as well
as retrospectively, the one no less than the other. Within
the scope of its legislative competence and subject to
other constitutional limitations, the power of the
Legislature to enact laws is plenary..
The State legislature, it is significant, has not overruled
or set aside the judgment of the High Court. It has
amended the definition of ‘house’ by the substitution of
a new section 2(15) for the old section and it has
provided that the new definition shall have retrospective
effect, notwithstanding anything contained in any
judgment, decree or order of any court or other authority.
In other words, it has removed the basis of the decision
rendered by the High Court so that the decision could
not have been given in the altered circumstances. If
the old section 2 (15) were to define ‘house’ in the
manner that the amended section 2(15) does, there is
doubt that the decision of the High Court would have
been otherwise. In fact, it was not disputed before us that
the buildings constructed by the respondent meet fully
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the requirements of section 2(15) as amended by the Act
of 1974."
In State of Mysore Vs. Fakrusab Babusab Karanandi, 1977 (2) SCR
544 at 546, it was held -
"It is now settled law that when a legal fiction is enacted
by the Legislature, the Court should not allow its
imagination to boggle but must carry the legal fiction to
its logical extent and give full effect in it. We must,
therefore, proceed on the basis that the words "or
police" were always there in clause (b) of Section 60,
even at the time when the learned Judicial Magistrate
made his order dated 3rd October, 1970 refusing to take
cognizance of the offence and returning the charge-
sheet to the police. If these words were in clause (b) of
Section 60 at that time, then obviously the learned
Magistrate was in error in refusing to take cognizance of
the complaint on the ground that the charge-sheet was not
filed by an excise officer but by the police. That is the
clear effect of the legal fiction enacted in Section 23 of
Mysore Act 1 of 1971."
In Hindustan Gum and Chemicals Ltd. Vs. State of Haryana & Ors.
1985 (4) SCC 124, this Court held -
"It is now well settled that it is permissible for a
competent Legislature to overcome the effect of a
decision of a court setting aside the imposition of a tax
by passing a suitable legislation amending the relevant
provisions of the statue concerned with retrospective
effect, thus taking away the basis on which the decision
of the court had been rendered and by enacting an
appropriate provision validating the levy and collection
of tax made before the decision in question was
rendered."
In Vijay Mills Company Ltd. & Ors. Vs. State of Gujarat & Ors.,
1993 (1) SCC 345 at 357, it was held -
"18. From the above, it is clear that there are different
modes of validating the provisions of the Act
retrospectively, depending upon the intention of the
legislature in that behalf. Where the Legislature intends
that the provisions of the Act themselves should be
deemed to have been in existence from a particular date
in the past and thus to validate the actions taken in the
past as if the provisions concerned were in existence
from the earlier date, the Legislature makes the said
intention clear by the specific language of the validating
Act. It is open for the Legislature to change the very
basis of the provisions retrospectively and to validate
the actions on the changed basis. This is exactly what
has been done in the present case as is apparent from the
provisions of clauses (3) and (5) of the Amending
Ordinance corresponding to Sections 2 and 4 of the
Amending Act No. 2 of 1981. We have already referred
to the effect of Sections 2 and 4 of the Amending Act.
The effect of the two provisions, therefore, is not only to
validate with retrospective effect the rules already
made but also to amend the provisions of Section 214
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itself to read as if the power to make rules with
retrospective effect were always available under Section
214 since the said section stood amended to give such
power from the time the retroactive rules were made. The
Legislature had thus taken care to amend the provisions
of the Act itself both to give the Government the power
to make the rules retrospectively as well as to validate the
rules which were already made. The contention that the
Validating Act cannot validate rules made or acts done
prior to the date it was enacted, if accepted, will strike at
the very root of the concept of retrospective validation.
The device of validating a statute is forged precisely to
adopt the law to meet the exigencies of the situations.
The validation, therefore, may be done in the manner
required by the needs of the time. All that is required is
that the agency which validates the statute must have the
power to do it. The manner and method of doing it is to
be left to the authority. If the intentions are clear, the
validation has to be interpreted according to the
intentions. The Courts have in fact upheld such
validation regarding it to be an important weapon in the
armoury of legislative devices. It is to emphasise this
aspect that we have endeavoured to summarise the law
on validation as above, at the cost of lengthening the
judgment."
In Indian Aluminium Co. & Ors. Vs. State of Kerala & Ors., 1996
(7) SCC 637, explaining Madan Mohan Pathak’s judgment, this Court
observed, thus-
"From the observations made by Bhagwati J. (per
majority,) it is clear that this Court did not intend to lay
down that Parliament, under no circumstance, has power
to amend the law removing the vice pointed out by the
court. Equally, the observation of Chief Justice Beg is to
be understood in the context that as long as the effect of
mandamus issued by the court is not legally and
constitutionally made ineffective, the State is bound to
obey the directions. Thus understood, it is
unexceptionable. But, it does not mean that the learned
Chief Justice intended to lay down the law that
mandamus issued by court cannot at all be made
ineffective by a valid law made by the legislature,
removing the defect pointed out by the court."
In Comorin Match Industries (Pvt) Ltd. Vs. State of TN, 1996 (4)
SCC 281, this Court held -
"We are unable to uphold the contention that merely
because an order was passed in the contempt proceeding
to make payment, the respondent is estopped from
claiming the amount of tax raised by an assessment order
validated by the Act of 1969. If this argument is
accepted, a strange result will follow. The assessment
order will remain valid. That notice of demand raised
pursuant to the assessment order will remain intact and in
force, but it will not be open to the Department to realise
the amount of tax merely because of the order passed in
the contempt proceeding. The writ court’s order had to
be carried out, which is why the refund order was passed
in the contempt proceeding. This direction to refund the
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amount of tax already collected was given only because
the assessment orders had been set aside by the writ
court. But, when the assessment orders were validated
by passing the Amendment Act of 1969 with
retrospective effect, the tax demand became valid and
enforceable. The tax demand is a debt owed by an
assessee which can be realised by the State in accordance
with law. Merely because the amount of tax which had
been realised earlier was directed to be refunded by
court’s order on the finding that the assessment order was
invalid, will not preclude the State from realising the tax
due subsequently when the assessment order was
validated by the Amending Act of 1969. The order
passed in the contempt proceeding will not have the
effect of writing off the debt which is statutorily owed
by the assessee to the State. The State has filed a suit for
recovery of this debt. Unless it can be shown that the
debt does not exist or is not legally due, the court cannot
intervene and prevent the State from realising its dues
by a suit. All that the Department has done in this case is
to bring a suit to recover the amount of tax due and
payable to it as a result of what must now be treated as a
valid assessment order."
In T. Venkata Reddy & Ors. Vs. State of Andhra Pradesh, 1985 (3)
SCC 198 at 211, this Court held -
"It is a settled rule of constitutional law that the question
whether a statute is constitutional or not is always a
question of power of the legislature concerned,
dependent upon the subject matter of the statute, the
manner in which it is accomplished and the mode of
enacting it. While the courts can declare a statute
unconstitutional when it transgresses constitutional
limits, they are precluded from inquiring into the
propriety of the exercise of the legislative power. It has
to be assumed that the legislative discretion is properly
exercised. The motives of the legislature in passing a
statute is beyond the scrutiny of courts. Nor can the
courts examine whether the legislature had applied its
mind to the provisions of a statute before passing it. "
This Court in Gurudevdatta VKSS Maryadit and Ors. Vs. State of
Maharashtra & Ors., 2001 (4) SCC 534 at 546, observed thus -
"The Constitution Bench observed that the motive of the
legislature in passing a statute is beyond the scrutiny of
the courts. It is not only the propriety to follow the
Constitutional Bench judgment but we are definitely of
the opinion and view that by no stretch the courts can
interfere with a legislative malice in passing a statute.
Interference is restrictive in nature and that too on the
constitutionality aspect and not beyond the same."
The decisions referred to above, manifestly show that it is open to the
legislature to alter the law retrospectively, provided the alteration is made in
such a manner that it would no more be possible for the Court to arrive at the
same verdict. In other words, the very premise of the earlier judgment
should be uprooted, thereby resulting in a fundamental change of the
circumstances upon which it was founded.
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Where a legislature validates an executive action repugnant to the
statutory provisions declared by a Court of law, what the legislature is
required to do is first to remove the very basis of invalidity and then validate
the executive action. In order to validate an executive action or any
provision of a statute, it is not sufficient for the legislature to declare that a
judicial pronouncement given by a Court of law would not be binding, as the
legislature does not possess that power. A decision of a Court of law has a
binding effect unless the very basis upon which it is given is so altered that
the said decision would not have been given in the changed circumstances.
Here, the question before us is, whether the impugned Act has passed
the test of constitutionality by serving to remove the very basis upon which
the decision of the High Court in the writ petition was based. This question
gives rise to further two questions first, what was the basis of the earlier
decision; and second, what, if any, may be said to be the removal of that
basis.
In the earlier decision of the High Court, it was found that licence to
construct the building upto 80 feet was repugnant to the Zonal Regulations
framed under Section 13 of the Planning Act which provided a maximum
height of new building as 55 feet. Thus, the provision of Zonal Regulations
which provided maximum height of 55 feet in case of a new building was,
therefore, the basis upon which the High Court proceeded to conclude that
the construction of the building violated the prescribed norms. It is manifest
that the impugned Act has retrospectively modified the Zonal Regulations of
1972 by raising the height of a building from 55 feet to above 165 feet. The
provision of law upon which the High Court has placed reliance has,
therefore, undergone a material alteration. The High Court would now find
it impossible to take the view that the said building was erected in violation
of the law, and that the licence granted therefor, was accordingly legally
invalid.
It was urged on behalf of the learned counsel for the respondent that
the impugned amendment was tantamount to a naked usurpation of judicial
power inasmuch as its stated purpose and effect were to nullify the effect of
the earlier judgment adjudicating the rights between the parties. The adverse
effect of the provision on the rule of law, as well as on the doctrine of
separation of powers would, therefore, impart detrimentally upon the
constitutional validity of the same. We do not find any merit in the
argument. Although it would stand to reason that when viewed in isolation,
Section 4 of the impugned Act would suggest an appearance of legislative
impropriety, but it is a well-established canon of statutory construction that
the impugned provision of any statute must be considered in the context of
the statute as a whole. It is manifest that what we are concerned with in the
present proceedings are not the vires of Section 4 only, but the entire
Validation Act constitutionality of which has been brought into question.
A perusal of the impugned Act further reveals that the stipulated
maximum height upto which a building may be constructed under the Zonal
Regulations, 1972, has been retrospectively modified, thereby allowing a
maximum height of any building above 165 feet, as opposed to the earlier
permissible maximum height of 55 feet. The legislature has, therefore, not
merely negated the effect of any prior judgment; but it has removed the
actual basis upon which the judgment was based and thereafter validated the
actions. It would no more be possible for a Court to conclude that the
concerned buildings violated the terms of Zonal Regulations, since the legal
basis has now been altered through an enhancement of the maximum
permissible height retrospectively. We are, therefore, of the view that the
impugned Act is constitutionally valid.
It was then urged on behalf of the respondents that a perusal of the
Statement of Objects and Reasons for the Validation Act shows that the
intention of the legislature was rather to render the decision of the High
Court infructuous than to correct any infirmity in the legal position. For this,
reliance was sought to be placed on the Statement of Objects and Reasons of
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the impugned enactment. It is well settled by the decisions of this Court
that when a validity of a particular statute is brought into question, a limited
reference, but not reliance, may be made to the Statement of Objects and
Reasons. The Statement of Objects and Reasons may, therefore, be
employed for the purposes of comprehending the factual background, the
prior state of legal affairs, the surrounding circumstances in respect of the
statute and the evil which the statute has sought to remedy. It is manifest
that the Statement of Objects and Reasons cannot, therefore, be the exclusive
footing upon which a statute is made a nullity through the decision of a
Court of law.
In T. Venkata Reddy & Ors.vs. State of Andhra Pradesh, 1985 (3)
SCC 198, and Gurudevdatta VKSS Maryadit vs. State of Maharashtra
& ORS, 2001 (4) SCC 534, it has been laid down that the intention of the
legislature in enacting a particular statute is immaterial in terms of the
question relating to its validity. The intention of the legislature in passing
of a particular statute is beyond the pale of judicial review. In the present
matter, the supposedly nebulous intention of the legislature to defeat the
judicial process is, therefore, outside the bounds of our consideration.
It would be pertinent for us to observe at this stage that in view of
Section 3(1) of the impugned Act, any building that has deviated from the
Zonal Regulations, as modified, may nonetheless be regularized by the State
Government as an authorised construction. It may be seen, then, that the
nature of the provision under the Regulation, stipulating a height of 55 feet
has thereby undergone a radical change. The provision that was earlier in
the nature of a sine qua non would now be subject to post-construction
regularization to the extent that under Section 3(3) of the impugned Act the
concerned authority is empowered to determine a penalty for deviations not
amounting to material deviations.
It follows that the basis of the decision of the High Court has
undergone a change. Earlier, the High Court could not but take the view that
construction of a building in excess of a height of 55 feet was in violation of
Zonal Planning Regulations. Now, under the changed law, it would not be
permissible for the High Court to take that view.
Lastly, Shri Ranjeet Kumar, learned senior counsel inter alia, urged
that the impugned Act though described as an Amendment Act has not
amended any provision of the principal Act, inasmuch as Zonal Regulation
has not been amended in the manner it was provided in the Act and,
therefore, the Amendment and the Validation Act have not removed the
basis of the earlier judgment and, therefore, the impugned Act is
unconstitutional. We do not find any merit in the submission.
It is true that under Section 13, the method of framing of Zonal
Regulations is provided under which a maximum height of building can be
provided by the impugned Act. The legislature in its wisdom thought to
provide a maximum height of a new building in the statute itself and it is no
longer left to the discretion of the authority to provide a maximum height of
a new construction by framing Zonal Regulations under the Act. Now, the
Outline Development Plan as prescribed in the Schedule appended to the
new Act, cannot even be amended by the procedure prescribed under
Chapter III of the Planning Act. The impugned Act substituted the existing
Regulations with a statutory Zonal Regulation to the extent it provided
maximum height of new building. Further, this is done with retrospective
effect i.e. for the entire period during which the Outline Development Plan
remained in force i.e. from 1972 to 1984. It is settled law that where a law is
retrospectively amended, the consequences of such retrospective amendment
are that all actions have to proceed on the premise that the law, as amended,
was always the law in force. In that view of the matter there was neither any
need for the legislature to modify the maximum height of a new building in
the manner provided in the Planning Act nor to amend the provisions of the
Planning Act providing for method of framing Zonal Regulations.
For the aforesaid reasons we are of the view that the impugned Act is
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constitutionally valid and the view taken by the High Court in striking down
the Act was erroneous.
For the reasons aforementioned, the judgment under appeal is set
aside. The appeals are allowed. There shall be no order as to costs.