Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2995-2997 of 1984
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
RESPONDENT:
ELPHINSTONE SPINNING & WEAVING CO.LTD.& ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/01/2001
BENCH:
G.B. PATTANAIK & S.RAJENDRA BABU & D.P.MOHAPATRA & DORAISWAMY RAJU & S.V.PATIL
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED BY:
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
PATTANAIK,J.
These appeals by the Union of India are directed
against the judgment of the Bombay High Court, Certificates
under Articles 132(1) and 133 of the Constitution for leave
to appeal to the Supreme Court having been granted by the
High Court itself. By the impugned judgment, the Bombay
High Court came to the conclusion that the action of the
Union Government in taking over the managements of the three
Cotton Mills, namely, The Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving
Mills Company Ltd., Jam Manufacturing Mills and New City
Mills of Bombay under the provisions of Textile Undertakings
(Taking over of Management) Ordinance, 1983, (hereinafter
referred to as The Ordinance) and the Textile Undertakings
(Taking over of Management) Act, 1983 (hereinafter referred
to as The Act), infringed the fundamental right under
Article 14 of the Constitution and, therefore, qua them it
was invalid. The High Court also further came to hold that
the Act infringed the petitioners fundamental rights under
Article 19(1)(g) and on that count qua the petitioner was
equally invalid. In coming to the aforesaid conclusion the
High Court after thorough discussion of the materials on
record found that the Union Government failed to establish
either directly or inferentially any mis-management on the
part of the three companies and failed to establish from the
material on record that there was any nexus between the main
object or purpose of the Act, viz., to take over management
of only those mills whose financial condition before strike
was wholly unsatisfactory by reason of mis-management.
The short facts leading to the promulgation of the
Ordinance and replacement of the same by the Act are that
the Textile Mills in and around Bombay had gone on strike
with effect from 18.1.1982. On 15.2.1982 the Government of
India declared its policy for nationalisation of all these
Textile Industries. In October 1982, the Reserve Bank of
India had called a meeting to discuss the situation arising
out of the strike. Depending upon the economic conditions
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of different mills the mills had been classified into three
groups. The continued Textile strike had deteriorated the
financial condition of all the Textile Mills and the Mills
were looking forward to the Financial Institutions and
Nationalised Banks for financial aid to make the Mills
viable. On 28th March, 1983, the Government of India wrote
letters to the Nationalised Banks and IDBI to conduct a
viability study of these Mills. The three Mills, with which
we are concerned, in these appeals had been included in
category III. On 20th September, 1983, the Government of
India in the Ministry of Commerce had issued a Memorandum
constituting a Task Force to collect data and submit a note
for being placed before Economic Affairs Committee of the
Union Cabinet to enable it to take a decision as to which of
the Mills in category III would be Nationalised. The said
Task Force submitted its report by the end of September
1983. On 18th October, 1983, the Ordinance was promulgated
and the management of 13 Textile Mills enumerated in the
First Schedule to the Ordinance was taken over pending
Nationalisation of the Undertakings. The Ordinance
indicates that for re-organising and re-habilitating the
Textile Mills to protect the interest of the workmen
employed therein, and to augment the product and
distribution at fair price of different varieties of cloth
and yarn so as to subserve the interest of the general
public, investment of very large sums of money was necessary
and for such investment, the Central Government felt that
the acquisition of the Mills would be necessary, but since
acquisition would take some time and it was felt that it
would be expedient in the public interest to take over the
management of the Undertakings, pending acquisition, and
that Parliament was not in Session, the President, on being
satisfied that circumstances exists for taking immediate
action, promulgated the Ordinance in exercise of powers
conferred under Article 123(1) of the Constitution. The
said Ordinance was replaced by the Act and the Act provided
that the same shall be deemed to have come into force on
18th day of October, 1983. Immediately after the
promulgation of the Ordinance the Management of the Mills,
enumerated in the First Schedule thereof, having been taken
over by the Government, the three Mills referred to earlier
filed three Writ Petitions in Bombay High Court challenging
the applicability of the Ordinance so far as those Mills are
concerned. After replacement of the Ordinance by the Act
the Writ Petitions were amended and thus the validity of the
Act was challenged qua the three Writ Petitioners. Though
the challenge was on three counts, namely, violation of
Article 14, violation of Article 19(1)(g) and violation of
Article 300A, but at the time of hearing the challenge in
relation to violation of Article 300A was not pressed and,
therefore, the High Court considered the challenge, so far
as it relates to violation of Articles 14 and 19(1)(g) of
the Constitution. The High Court in the impugned judgment
made elaborate discussion of the materials on record as well
as interpreted the different provisions of the Constitution
and came to hold that the act with its object of only taking
over the management cannot be considered to be law for
taking over the ownership and control of the property, as
required under Article 39(b), but would squarely fall under
Article 31A (1)(b) and, therefore, Article 31(c) will have
no application. The High Court also came to the conclusion
that to protect a legislation under Article 31(c), there
must be a declaration in the legislation itself that the Act
was enacted to give effect to the Directive Principles under
Article 39(b) and (c), and in the case in hand, there being
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no such declaration either in the Ordinance and in the Act,
Article 31(c) will have no application and, squarely the
challenge on the ground of violation of Article 14 or 19 has
to be examined. On examining Article 31A(1)(b) the High
Court was of the opinion that two conditions must be
satisfied for attracting Clause 1(b) of Article 31A, namely,
that the taking over of the management of the property by
the State would be for a limited period, and such taking
over must be either in public interest or in order to secure
the proper management of the property, since the taking over
of management was not for any limited period and in fact
such management had been taken over pending nationalisation,
the provisions of Clause 1(b) of Article 31A would not get
attracted. According to the High Court the expression
Pending Nationalisation cannot be held to be for a limited
period and the protection of Article 31A (1)(b) would be
available only when there is a definite limit in the law for
the period of management and, consequently the challenge on
the anvil of violation of Articles 14 and 19(1)(g) has to be
examined. The High Court then examined the factual aspect
for considering the question as to whether there were any
materials to put the three Mills in a class of Mills for
which the taking over of the management was meant
notwithstanding a declaration or recital in the Preamble
itself, the same being Mills whose financial condition had
become wholly unsatisfactory by reason of mis-management.
The High Court then examined the different datas collected
by the Government of India as well as several reports
including the Task Force Report and ultimately came to the
conclusion that even though the financial condition had
become unsatisfactory but the Union Government has failed to
establish that such unsatisfactory financial condition is by
reason of mis-management and, therefore, there was no nexus
between the basis of the classification of the petitioner
Mills with other mismanaged Mills and the said object and
the purpose of the Act. In other words, the High Court came
to the conclusion that inclusion of the three Mills in the
Schedule appended to the Ordinance and the Act was arbitrary
and, on the other hand, the figures given by the Union of
India itself show that the financial position of the three
Mills were far better than even the Mills which were in
category II. Consequently, the High Court was of the
opinion that the Government could not have, for taking over
of the management of the petitioners Mills, classified
those Mills as Mills whose financial condition was bad due
to mis-management. The High Court, therefore, ultimately
came to the conclusion that there has been a gross violation
of Article 14 in clubbing the three Mills with other Mills
in category three, enumerated in the Schedule appended to
the Act and such inclusion violates the fundamental right
guaranteed under Article 14 of the Constitution. The High
Court also came to the conclusion that the impugned Act
infringed the petitioners right under Article 19(1)(g) and
on that count qua petitioners was equally invalid. Having
come to the aforesaid conclusion the Writ Petitions were
allowed and the order of taking over of the management of
three Mills was set aside. But the operation of the order
had been stayed for 8 weeks and certain restrictions had
been imposed and the High Court also granted Certificate
under Article 132(1) and 133 of the Constitution for Leave
to Appeal to the Supreme Court. When the matter was listed
before this Court the aforesaid interim order staying the
operation of the judgment was continued and later on certain
Misc. Applications being filed by different Mills certain
orders have been passed by the Court with regard to the
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possession of certain assets, like, car, telephone
connections etc. When the appeals were taken up for hearing
in January 1985, the same had been heard before a Three
Judge Bench but after hearing for some time the Three Judge
Bench felt that in view of the questions which arise for
consideration, and in view of Clause 3 of Article 145 of the
Constitution the cases should be heard by a Bench of not
less than Five Honble Judges and that is why these appeals
were heard by us.
Mr. Salve, the learned Solicitor General, appearing
for the appellant Union Government contended that the basic
approach of the High Court in examining the constitutional
validity of the Act is grossly erroneous and such approach
has vitiated the ultimate conclusion. According to the
learned Solicitor General, the financial condition of these
mills had become so bad that unless large sum of money from
the public exchequer was pumped into it, the mills were not
in a position to run and that in turn would have made
thousands of labourers idle. To overcome the aforesaid
crisis and since large scale government money was going to
be pumped into the Mills for making it viable, the
Parliament itself thought it appropriate to take step for
acquiring the Mills and pending finalisation of acquisition
the Parliament thought it fit to take over the management
which was absolutely necessary in the public interest.
According to Mr. Salve this is apparent from the Bill
introduced by the concerned Minister as well as the Act
itself and in such a case the Court would not be justified
in examining the datas which persuaded the Parliament to
take the aforesaid decision to come to a conclusion that the
said decision of the Parliament could not have been taken on
the available materials. According to Mr. Salve the fact
that the management of the Mills had been taken over until
the Mills are acquired by enacting an Acquisition Act, for
all practical purposes the taking over was for a limited
period thereby attracting Clause 1(b) of Article 31A and the
High Court was in error in concluding that the taking over
was not for a limited period and, as such, Clause 1(b) of
Article 31A will not get attracted. According to learned
Solicitor General the Act in question was for a limited
period and had been enacted in the public interest coming
within the purview of Clause (1)(b) of Article 31A and,
therefore, provisions of Article 14 or Article 19 cannot at
all be attracted for assailing the validity of the action
taken under the Act. The learned Solicitor General also
further urged that the materials which were there before the
Government before promulgation of the Ordinance and before
the Parliament before enactment of the Act were sufficient
for classifying the Mills into three categories and in fact
by inclusion of the three Mills with which we are concerned
in the present appeals with the group of 13, the Management
of which was being taken over by the Act, by no stretch of
imagination can be held to be discriminatory nor the
conclusion of the High Court that there has been an
infringement of Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution is at
all sustainable. The learned Solicitor General also placed
reliance on the averments made by the Union of India in its
Counter Affidavit filed before the High Court to indicate
how it was absolutely necessary to promulgate the Ordinance
and how the Government took the decision after considering
the reports submitted by the IDBI and other financial
institutions as well as the report of the so called Task
Force. He also placed reliance on the Affidavit of Mr.
Prabhat Kumar, the then Secretary Commerce explaining the
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Task Force Report and contended that the High Court was in
error in basing its conclusion on the earlier Affidavit of
one Mr. Singh. According to learned Solicitor General that
while considering the constitutional validity of a statute,
more particularly a statute on economic matter, certain well
established principles evolved by the Courts as rules of
guidance in discharge of its constitutional function of
judicial review have to be borne in mind, and in the case in
hand the impugned judgment of the High Court, on the face of
it, indicates that those guiding principles have not been
borne in mind. According to the learned Solicitor General
one cardinal principle well accepted and recognized by
Courts is that the legislature understands and correctly
appreciates the needs of its own people and its laws are
directed to problems made manifest by experience and its
discrimination are based on adequate grounds and the
presumption of constitutionality is indeed so strong that in
order to sustain it the Court may take into consideration
matters of common knowledge, matters of common report, the
history of the times and may assume every state of facts
which can be conceived existing at the time of legislation.
He further emphasised that the law relating to economic
activities should be viewed with greater latitude than laws
touching civil rights such as freedom of speech, religion
etc. and the High Court totally over-looked the aforesaid
approach and guidelines in basing its conclusion. According
to the learned Solicitor General the preamble of the Act
unequivocally indicates the Act to be a piece of legislation
for taking over in the public interest of the management of
the Textile Undertakings of the Companies specified in the
First Schedule pending nationalisation of such undertakings.
It no doubt, further stipulates that by reason of mis-
management of the affairs of the Textile Undertakings
specified in the First Schedule their financial condition
became wholly unsatisfactory but the financial condition of
these Mills had become so precarious and unsatisfactory as
was found from the reports of different financial
institutions including IDBI that mis-management is the
natural inference and the preamble read as a whole would
indicate that the Parliament thought it appropriate to take
over the management of Textile Undertakings in the public
interest pending nationalisation of such undertaking and in
this view of the matter the High Court was hyper-technical
in recording a finding that even though the financial
condition become wholly unsatisfactory but the Government
failed to establish the mis-management of the undertaking
which had brought the financial condition to such
unsatisfactory stage and, therefore, by including the three
mills in question in the group of 13 there has been
violation of Article 14. The learned Solicitor General also
seriously commented upon the conclusion of the High Court
and submitted that the High Court committed error in
assuming mis-management as fraud and such fraud has not been
established by the Union Government . According to learned
Solicitor General the High Court mis-understood the basis of
the classification itself and taking an over all view of the
financial position of these three Mills the conclusion is
irresistible that these three Mills were rightly clubbed
together with the group of 13 whose financial position was
wholly unsatisfactory and government money was required to
be pumped into it for making the mills viable and for
effective running of the Mills so that the large number of
workers will not face the misery of closure of the Mills.
The learned Solicitor General also urged that in view of the
prevailing situation in the 13 Mills including the three
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with which we are concerned, in these appeals, the
Parliament thought that only way to put the management on
the wheels was to take over the management of the Mills
which is permissible in the larger public interest, as
contained in Article 31A (1)(b) of the Constitution, and
such Parliamentary wisdom cannot be scrutinised by the Court
in a scale on the basis that certain reports might not have
been placed before the Parliament or on the ground that
factually the Mills were not mis-managed and yet had
sustained heavy financial loss and thereby putting them
alongwith the group of 13 constitutes an infraction of
Article 14 of the Constitution. According to the learned
Solicitor General the burden being on a person who attacks
the constitutionality on the grounds of discrimination the
said burden cannot be held to have been discharged by the
Mills and the High Court committed serious error in
annulling the taking over of the management of the three
Mills under the Act on the ground that Government failed to
establish the relevant material before the Court. The
learned Solicitor General also argued that Article 31(c)
does apply to the legislation in question, and therefore,
infraction of Article 14 or 19 should not have been gone
into by the Court.
Mr. F.S. Nariman, learned senior counsel appearing
for the Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving Mills Company Ltd.,
emphatically urged that Article 31 A (1)(b) was introduced
by the Constitution IVth Amendment Act of 1955 which enables
to make law for taking over of the management of any
property by the State for a limited period either in the
public interest or in order to secure proper management of
the same. The law made by the Parliament is the Textiles
Undertakings (Taking over of Management) Act, 1983. The
said law permits take over only when the financial condition
became unsatisfactory by reason of mis-management of the
affairs of the Textile Undertakings. And, this being the
position, if there is no material to establish that
financial losses is on account of mis-management then the
taking over of the management of the mill by taking recourse
to the impugned Act must be held to be invalid and the High
Court in fact has held it to be invalid. According to Mr.
Nariman mere losses will not entitle to take over of the
management of mill, inasmuch as, all the mills have suffered
loss and, therefore, there must be some other factors on
account of which it will be possible for the Government to
take over the management of only 13 mills as included in the
First Schedule to the Act. He also further urged that in
view of the language of Article 31A (1)(b) the law for
taking over of the management must be for a limited period
and the expression pending nationalisation in the impugned
Act cannot be construed to be a definite limited period and,
therefore, the Act in question is not referable to Article
31A (1)(b). It is in this connection he cited the decision
of Raman Lal as well as the decision of the Delhi High Court
in ILR 74 (1) Delhi 311 and also a decision of Andhra
Pradesh High Court in AIR 1977 A.P. 420. Mr. Nariman also
argued that in the impugned Act there is intrinsic evidence
to indicate that the taking over of management was not for a
limited period as it would be apparent from Sections 33, 34,
36 and Sections 6, 8 and 11(1), and essentially it
constitutes acquisition and not take over of management for
a limited period. Mr. Nariman also urged that the
legislative declaration of facts are not beyond judicial
scrutiny in the constitutional context of Articles 14 and 16
and the Court can always tear the veil to decide the real
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nature of the statute if the facts and circumstances warrant
such a course. A mere declaration in the legislation would
not be permissible so as to defeat the fundamental right.
If the legislation in question was merely a pretence and the
object was discrimination the validity of the statute could
be examined by the Court notwithstanding the declaration
made by the legislature and, therefore, the High Court was
fully justified in examining the facts and coming to the
conclusion that in grouping the three mills alongwith other
13 mills for the purpose of taking over the management
constitutes an infraction of Article 14 of the Constitution.
In support of this contention he places reliance on the
decision of this Court in Indira Sawhney vs. Union of India
and others (2000) 1 Supreme Court Cases 168. Mr. R.F.
Nariman, learned senior counsel pursued the arguments
advanced by Mr. F.S. Nariman and contended that the
classification itself may be valid but while choosing the
mills to be included in such classification and clubbing the
Elphinstone Mill within the group of 13 is discriminatory in
as much as a well managed mill is being clubbed with a mis-
managed mill. According to Mr. R.F. Nariman
categorisation of the Elphistone mill as a mis-managed mill
is contrary to the facts available on record, and as such,
it violates Article 14. Mr. R.F. Nariman also further
urged that a machinery available under IDR Act for an
inquiry not having been resorted to it contravenes Article
19(1)(g). According to learned counsel the Parliament chose
to adopt a procedure without any urgency being there and
without any machinery to look into the facts on the basis of
which categorisation could be made, the classification is
bad in law. Mr. Nariman also contended that in view of
Article 300A the law must be reasonable and fair and in view
of the judgment of this Court in Dwarkadas Shrinivas of
Bombay vs,. The Sholapur Spinning & Weaving Co. Ltd. and
others 1954 Supreme Court Reports 674, the impugned action
is bad in law. Mr. RF Nariman also contended that it was
open for the Writ Petitioners to place and establish that
the legislative facts are incorrect and in fact the
petitioners have discharged that burden by placing materials
on record and the High Court, therefore, was fully justified
in arriving at its decision on the materials produced. He
placed reliance on the decision of this Court in Dr. K.R.
Lakshmanan vs. State of T.N. and another (1996) 2 Supreme
Court Cases 226 in support of aforesaid contention.
According to Mr. Nariman the following facts establishes
that the Elphinstone Mill was not a mis-managed mill and
Parliament erroneously clubbed the same with other mis-
managed mills. Those facts are :- (a) IDBI viability study
report (b) Task Force Report (c) Approval of the Central
Government itself to appoint a Managing Director (d)
Sanction of loan by IRCI AND IDBI in September 1993 (e) No
investigation done under Section 15 and 15(a) of IDR Act,
and (f) No action of any kind under the provisions of
Companies Act, and on this score the conclusion of the High
Court is unassailable.
Mr. Ganesh, learned counsel appearing for the New
City Mills contended, that the High Court itself has given a
positive finding on the basis of the materials those have
been produced that the performance of the mill; was good.
Even the Counter Affidavit of the Union Government before
the High Court does not indicate that the performance of the
New City Mill was in any way made out a case of mis-
management. The analysis of Mr. Bilmoria, the letter of
RBI dated 23rd March, 1983 and the very Task Force Report
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clearly demonstrates that the New City Mill was not at all a
mis-managed mill and these materials could be looked into by
the Court when the Mill itself had alleged discrimination
under Article 14. In support of this contention he places
reliance on the decision of this Court in Shashikant Laxman
Kale and Another vs. Union of India and Another 1990(4)
Supreme Court Cases 366 and Mrs. Maneka Gandhi vs. Union
of India and Another 1978 Supreme Court Cases 248. Mr.
Ganesh also placed reliance on the decision of this Court in
Chiranjit Lal Chowdhuri vs. The Union of India and Others
1950 Supreme Court Reports 869 and submitted that in that
case the Court did go into the materials and came to the
conclusion about the mis-management and, therefore, in the
case in hand the High Court was fully justified in
interfering with the order of taking over qua New City Mill.
Ms. Indira Jaisingh, learned senior counsel appearing
for the workers of the Mills supported the stand taken by
the learned Solicitor General and placed before us different
materials on record to establish the mis-management of the
mills concerned.
In view of the rival submissions the following
questions arise for our consideration:-
1. Can the impugned Act be held to be a law providing
for the taking over of the management of the Mills for a
limited period? 2. The Act read as a whole expresses the
intention of the Parliament for taking over the management
of the Textile Undertakings specified in the First Schedule
in the public interest or is it capable of indicating the
legislative intent that only those Mills whose financial
condition became wholly unsatisfactory by reasons of
mis-management of the affairs of the Textile Undertakings
which are sought to be specified in the First Schedule and
management of those Mills are being taken over under the
Act? 3. Has any case been made out by the Mills concerned
to enable a Court that in fact by clubbing the three Mills
in the group of 13 there has been the violation of the
mandate under Article 14? 4. Was the High Court justified
in recording a conclusion that there has been a violation of
Article 19(1)(g)? 5. On the available materials on record
was the High Court justified in going behind the legislative
intent apparent on the face of the Act to find out the so
called true intention and thereby coming to the ultimate
conclusion that there has been a gross discrimination in
clubbing the three mills with the other admitted mis-managed
mills which are enumerated in the Schedule to the Act?
But before examining the aforesaid questions it would
be appropriate for us to notice the legal position on
certain general principles relating to the challenge of a
statute in the anvil of Articles 14 and 19 and the
parameters of Courts jurisdiction to examine materials for
arriving at the legislative intent behind a statute as well
as the presumption of constitutionality of a statute.
A statute is construed so as to make it effective and
operative. There is always a presumption that the
legislature does not exceed its jurisdiction and the burden
of establishing that the legislature has transgressed
constitutional mandates such as, those relating to
fundamental rights is always on the person who challenges
its vires. Unless it becomes clear beyond reasonable doubt
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that the legislation in question transgresses the limits
laid down by the organic law of the constitution it must be
allowed to stand as the true expression of the national will
- Shell Company of Australia vs. Federal Commissioner of
Taxation (1931) AC 275 (Privy Council). The aforesaid
principle, however, is subject to one exception that if a
citizen is able to establish that the legislation has
invaded its fundamental rights then the State must justify
that the law is saved. It is also a cardinal rule of
construction that if one construction being given statute
will become ultra vires the powers of the legislature
whereas on another construction which may be open, the
statute remains effective and operative then the Court will
prefer the latter, on the ground that the legislature is
presumed not to have intended an excess of jurisdiction. In
Sanjeev Coke Manufacturing Company vs. M/s. Bharat Coking
Coal Limited (1983) 1 Supreme Court Cases 147, the
Constitution Bench speaking through Chinnappa Reddy, J., had
observed, in the context of interpretation of the provisions
of Coking Coal Mines (Nationalisation) Act, 1972 that the
Court is not concerned with the statements made in the
Affidavits filed by the parties to justify and sustain the
legislation. The deponents of the affidavits filed into the
court may speak for the parties on whose behalf they swear
to the statements. They do not speak for the Parliament.
No one may speak for the Parliament and Parliament is never
before the court. After Parliament has said what it intends
to say, only the court may say what the Parliament meant to
say. None else. Once a statute leaves Parliament House,
the Court is the only authentic voice which may echo the
Parliament. This the Court will do with reference to the
language of the statute and other permissible aids. The
executive Government may place before the court their
understanding of what Parliament has said or intended to say
or what they think was Parliaments object and all the facts
and circumstances which in their view led to the
legislation. When they do so, they do not speak for
Parliament. No Act of Parliament may be struck down because
of the understanding or misunderstanding of parliamentary
intention by the executive Government or because their
spokesmen do not bring out relevant circumstances but
indulge in empty and self-defeating affidavits. They do not
and they cannot bind Parliament. Validity of legislation is
not to be judged merely by affidavits filed on behalf of the
State, but by all the relevant circumstances which the court
may ultimately find and more especially by what may be
gathered from what the legislature has itself said. In the
facts of that case the Court had held that We do not
entertain the slightest doubt that the nationalisation of
the coking coal mines and the specified coke oven plants for
the above purpose was towards securing that the ownership
and control of the material resources of the community are
so distributed as best to subserve the common good and there
has been no discrimination or infringement of Article 14 of
the Constitution Justice A.N. Sen in his separate judgment
also agreed with the ultimate conclusion of Chinnappa Reddy,
J and had said that there was logical basis for the
nationalisation of the 4 oven plants of the petitioners,
leaving out a few and I am not satisfied that there has been
any wrong and arbitrary discrimination of Article 14 of the
Constitution. While examining the constitutional validity
of the special courts bill in the anvil of Article 14 of the
Constitution, after an exhaustive review of all the
decisions bearing on the question, in 1979(1) S.C.C. 380,
it was held as follows:-
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(3) The constitutional command to the State to afford
equal protection of its laws sets a goal not attainable by
the invention and application of a precise formula.
Therefore, classification need not be constituted by an
exact or scientific exclusion or inclusion of persons or
things. The courts should not insist on delusive exactness
or apply doctrinaire tests for determining the validity of
classification in any given case. Classification is
justified if it is not palpably arbitrary. (4) The
principle underlying the guarantee of Article 14 is not that
the same rules of law should be applicable to all persons
within the Indian territory or that the same remedies should
be made available to them irrespective of differences of
circumstances. It only means that all persons similarly
circumstanced shall be treated alike both in privileges
conferred and liabilities imposed. Equal laws would have to
be applied to all in the same situation, and there should be
no discrimination between one person and another if as
regards the subject-matter of the legislation their position
is substantially the same. x x x x x x x x x (6) The law
can make and set apart the classes according to the needs
and exigencies of the society and as suggested by
experience. It can recognise even degree of evil, but the
classification should never be arbitrary, artificial or
evasive. (7) The classification must not be arbitrary but
must be rational, that is to say, it must not only be based
on some qualities or characteristics which are to be found
in all the persons grouped together and not in others who
are left out but those qualities or characteristics must
have a reasonable relation to the object of the legislation.
In order to pass the test, two conditions must be fulfilled,
namely, (1) that the classification must be founded on an
intelligible differentia which distinguishes those that are
grouped together from others and (2) that that differentia
must have a rational relation to the object sought to be
achieved by the Act.
In the Doypack System Pvt. Ltd. vs. Union of India
(1988) 2 Supreme Court Cases 299, the Court had observed
that when the constitutionality of a legislation is being
assailed before a Court it is the collective will of the
Parliament with which the Court is concerned. No officer of
the department can speak for the Parliament. The
interpreter of the statute must take note of the well known
historical facts. In conventional language the interpreter
must put himself in the armchair of those who were passing
the Act i.e. the Members of the Parliament. It is the
collective will of the Parliament with which we are
concerned. The aforesaid observation had been made in the
context of an argument sought for by the petitioner for
production of certain documents to ascertain the question
whether the shares vested in the Government or not?
In Bearer Bonds case (1981) 4 Supreme Court Cases
675, this Court held that it is a rule of equal importance
that laws relating to economic activities should be viewed
with greater latitude than law touching civil rights, such
as freedom of speech, religion etc. The Court observed that
:-
It has been said by no less a person than Holmes, J.
that the legislature should be allowed some play in the
joints, because it has to deal with complex problems which
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do not admit of solution through any doctrinaire or
strait-jacket formula and this is particularly true in case
of legislation dealing with economic matters, where having
regard to the nature of the problems required to be dealt
with, greater play in the joints has to be allowed to the
legislature. The court should feel more inclined to give
judicial deference to legislative judgment in the field of
economic regulation than in other areas where fundamental
human rights are involved. Nowhere has this admonition been
more felicitously expressed than in Morey v. Doud (354 US
457:1 L Ed 2d 1485 (1957) where Frankfurter, J. said in his
intimitable style:
In the utilities, tax and economic regulation cases,
there are good reasons for judicial self-restraint if not
judicial deference to legislative judgment. The legislature
after all has the affirmative responsibility. The courts
have only the power to destroy, not to reconstruct, the
uncertainty, the liability to error, the bewildering
conflict of the experts, and the number of times the judges
have been overruled by events self- limitation can be seen
to be the path to judicial wisdom and institutional prestige
and stability.
The Court must always remember that legislation is
directed to practical problems, that the economic mechanism
is highly sensitive and complex, that many problems are
singular and contingent, that laws are not abstrct
propositions and do not relate to abstract units and are not
to be measured by abstract symmetry; that exact wisdom
and nice adaption of remedy are not always possible and
that judgment is largely a prophecy based on meagre and
uninterpreted experience. Every legislation particularly
in economic matters is essentially empiric and it is based
on experimentation or what one may call trial and error
method and therefore it cannot provide for all possible
situations or anticipate all possible abuses. There may be
crudities and inequities in complicated experimental
economic legislation but on that account alone it cannot be
struck down as invalid. The courts cannot, as pointed out
by the United States Supreme Court in Secretary of
Agriculture v. Central Reig Refining Company (94 L Ed 381:
338 US 604 (1950)) be converted into tribunals for relief
from such crudities and inequities. There may even be
possibilities of abuse, but that too cannot of itself be a
ground for invalidating the legislation, because it is not
possible for any legislature to anticipate as if by some
divine prescience, distortions and abuses of its legislation
which may be made by those subject to its provisions and to
provide against such distortions and abuses. Indeed,
howsoever great may be the care bestowed on its framing, it
is difficult to conceive of a legislation which is not
capable of being abused by perverted human ingenuity. The
Court must therefore adjudge the constitutionality of such
legislation by the generality of its provisions and not by
its crudities or inequities or by the possibilities of abuse
of any of its provisions. If any crudities, inequities or
possibilities of abuse come to light, the legislature can
always step in and enact suitable amendatory legislation.
That is the essence of pragmatic approach which must guide
and inspire the legislature in dealing with complex economic
issues.
In Shri Ram Krishna Dalmia vs. Shri Justice S.R.
Tendolkar and Ors., 1959, S.C.R., 279, this Court held:
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(a) xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx (b)that there is always a
presumption in favour of the constitutionality of an
enactment and the burden is upon him who attacks it to show
that there has been a clear transgression of the
constitutional principles; (c)that it must be presumed that
the legislature understands and correctly appreciates the
need of its own people, that its laws are directed to
problems made manifest by experience and that its
discriminations are based on adequate grounds; (d)that the
legislature is free to recognise derees of harm and may
confine its restrictions to those cases where the need is
deemed to be the clearest; (e) that in order to sustain the
presumption of constitutionality the court may take into
consideration matters of common knowledge, matters of common
report, the history of the times and may assume every state
of facts which can be conceived existing at the time of
legislation.
In the case of The Superintendent and Remberancer of
Legal Affairs, West Bengal vs. Girish Kumar Navalakha and
Ors., 1975(4) S.C.C., 754, this Court held:
The preamble provides the key to the general purpose
of the Act. That purpose is the regulation of certain
payments, dealings in foreign exchange and securities and
the import and export of currency and bullion in the
economic and financial interest of India. The general
purpose or object of the Act given in the preamble may not
show the specific purpose of the classification made in
Section 23(1)(a) and Section 23(1A) .The Court has therefore
to ascribe a purpose to the statutory classification and
co-ordinate the purpose with the more general purpose of the
Act and with other relevant Acts and public policies. For
achieving this the Court may not only consider the language
of Section 23 but also other public knowledge about the evil
sought to be remedied, the prior law, the statement of the
purpose of the change in the prior law and the internal
legislative history. When the purpose of a challenged
classification is in doubt, the court attribute to the
classification the purpose thought to be most probable.
Instead of asking what purpose or purposes the statute and
other materials reflect, the Court may ask what
constitutionally permissible objective this statute and
other relevant materials could plausibly be construed to
reflect. The latter approach is the proper one in economic
regulation cases. The decisions dealing with economic
regulation indicate that courts have used the concept of
purpose and similar situations in a manner which give
considerable leeway to the Legislature. This approach of
judicial restraint and presumption of constitutionality
requires that the Legislature is given the benefit of doubt
about its purpose. How far a court will go in attributing a
purpose which though perhaps not the probable is at least
conceivable and which would allow the classification to
stand depends to a certain extent upon its imaginative power
and its devotion to the theory of judicial restraint.
The Court further held:
It would seem that in fiscal and regulatory matters
the Court not only entertains a greater presumption of
constitutionality but also places the burden on the party
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challenging its validity to show that it has no reasonable
basis for making the classification.
The Legislation in a modern State is actuated with
some policy to curb some public evils or to effectuate some
public benefit. The Legislation is primarily directed to
the problems before the legislature based on information
derived from past and present experience. It may also be
designed by use of general words to cover similar problems
arising in future. But from the very nature of things, it
is impossible to anticipate fully, the varied situations
arising in future in which the application of the
legislation in hand may be called for, and, words chosen to
communicate such indefinite reference are bound to be in
many cases, lacking in clarity and precision, and thus
giving rise to the controversial question of construction.
Bearing in mind the aforesaid general principles, let us now
examine the five questions formulated earlier.
Coming to the first question, the contention of the
Companies, who were the petitioners before the High Court is
that under Article 31A(1)(b), a law providing for taking
over of the management of any property by the State for a
limited period, either in the public interest or in order to
secure the proper management of the property, cannot be
assailed on the ground of violation of Article 14 or 19 but
the impugned ordinance and the Act cannot be held to be a
law for providing for taking over of the management for a
limited period, even though, the same may be in the public
interest and as such, such a law cannot be held to be immune
from attack being violative of Article 14 or 19 within the
ambit of Article 31A(1)(b) of the Constitution. According
to the learned counsel, appearing for these textile mills,
the expression for a limited period as a definite
connotation and the impugned legislation being a law until
the acquisition proceedings are over, cannot be held to be a
law for a limited period. This argument found favour with
the High Court and following the decision of this Court in
Raman lals case, the High Court held that the legislation
in question cannot be held to be within the purview of
Article 31A(1)(b) of the Constitution. Mr. Salve, the
learned Solicitor General, appearing for the Union of India
contended before us that it is the usual pattern of taking
over of such undertaking to take over the management,
immediately by a law made by the appropriate legislature and
since it was apparent at the time of enactment of the law
that the taking over of the management is pending
nationalisation which had been embodied in the legislation
itself, such take-over of the management must be held to be
for a limited period and the observations of this Court in
Raman lal, must be construed in the context of the facts of
the said case and will have no application to the facts and
circumstances of the present case. According to the learned
Solicitor General, the legislature on being satisfied about
the financial instability of the mills and further
substantial sum of money required to be pumped into the
mills for running of the same, so that large number of
employees will not be kept out of employment, it was
necessary in the public interest to take over the management
immediately, inasmuch as the process of nationalisation will
take sometime, the conclusion is irresistible that the
so-called taking over was for a limited period and not for
ad infinitum, and is intended to over-come a particular
crisis. That being the position, the High Court committed
error in recording a finding that the taking over of the
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management was not for a limited period.
Mr. Nariman, the learned senior counsel, appearing
for one of the mills, on the other hand contended that the
expression pending nationalisation, by no stretch of
imagination can be held to be a definite period and this has
been answered directly in the case of The Indore Malwa
United Mills Ltd. and Ors. Vs. Union of India and Ors.,
Indian Law Reports(Delhi) 1974(1) Page 311, as well as the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh in Full Bench decision of The
Governing Body of the Rangaraya Medical College, Kakinada
and Anr. vs. The Govt. of Andhra Pradesh and Anr., AIR
1977, Andhra Pradesh, Page 420, following the decision of
this Court in Raman lal, 1969(1) S.C.R., 42. According to
Mr. Nariman, there is intrinsic evidence in the impugned
Act itself that the so-called taking-over was not for a
limited period, as is apparent from examining Sections 3(3),
3(4), 3(6), Section 6, Section 8 and Section 11(1) of the
Act. The Counsel further urged that the Act is in essence
one for acquisition and not for taking over of management
for a limited period and consequently, the challenge on the
ground of Article 14 and 19 will get attracted, as the law
does not come within the purview of Article 31A(1)(b) of the
Constitution. Article 31A was introduced by the
Constitution (First Amendment)Act, 1951 to validate the
acquisition of Zamindari and the abolition of Permanent
Settlement without interference from Courts. The further
amendment of the Constitution was made by (Fourth Amendment)
Act of 1955 with the object that items of agrarian and
social welfare legislation, which affect the proprietary
rights, should be kept out of the purview of Articles 14, 19
and 31. Clause (b) of Article 31A(1) provides for taking
over the management of any property, movable or immovable,
agricultural or non-agricultural for a limited period
without being obliged to justify its action in a Court of
law, with reference to Article 14 or 19. The necessary
conditions for application of sub-clause (b), therefore are
that the taking over in question must be for a limited
period, as distinguished from any indefinite period and such
taking over must be either in the public interest or in
order to secure the proper management of the property, which
of course require to be objectively established. That the
facts and circumstances leading to the taking over of the
management of the sick mills undoubtedly indicated that the
same was in the public interest, but the only question
remains to be answered is whether it can be said to be for a
limited period. In Ramanlals case, 1969 (1) S.C.R., 42,
the provisions of Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act
was under consideration before this Court. The said Act had
been amended by Bombay Act 13 of 1956, which confers the
power on the State Government to take over the management of
any land on the ground that full and efficient use of the
land had not been made for the purposes of agriculture and
under the Act, it was contemplated that the land taken over
could be returned to the land holder under certain
contingencies. This Court considering the provisions of the
Act and the rules made thereunder, came to the conclusion
that even though there may be a possibility of return of the
land to the original owner but that does not satisfy the
requirement of Article 31A(1)(b), as the taking-over of the
management was not for a limited period. The Court held
that the scheme of the Act ought to have shown the limit of
the period for which the management is being taken over and
consequently, the protection of Article 31A(1)(b) cannot be
invoked as the limit for the period of management had not
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been indicated. Having examined the ratio of the aforesaid
decision to the case in hand, we are not in a position to
hold that the taken over of the management in the present
case was not for a limited period . The Act itself
stipulates that the management of the mill is being taken
over pending nationalisation of the mill, therefore, the
decision to nationalise the mills had already been taken.
But as the process of nationalisation would take a
considerable period and it was thought absolutely necessary
in the public interest to take over the management of the
mills immediately, the Parliament passed the impugned
legislation. In our considered opinion the context in which
the observations have been made by this Court in Raman lals
case, referred to supra, will have no application to the
case in hand and it must be construed that the management of
the property in the present case by virtue of the ordinance
and the Act was for a limited period, the period being till
the process of nationalisation is finalised. It is to be
noticed that Sita Ram Mills, which was also one of the mills
in category III and had been put in Group II by the Task
Force, whose management had been taken over under the
provisions of Textile Undertakings (Taking over of
Management) Act, 1983 had approached the High Court and the
High Court had upheld the action of taking over but had held
that the surplus lands appurtenant to the mills would not
vest under sub-section (2) of Section 3 of the Act, but this
Court had reversed the said decision and had held that the
surplus lands appurtenant to the mill did form a part of the
assets in relation to the textile undertaking within the
meaning of Section 3(2) of the Act and the said land was
held for the benefit of, and utilised for the textile mill
in question. Before this Court, it is true that the
question of applicability of Article 31A(1)(b) had not
cropped up for consideration, but yet certain observations
of this Court in the aforesaid case would be appropriate to
be quoted:-
There can be no doubt that the legislative intent and
object of the impugned Act was to secure the socialisation
of such surplus lands with a view to sustain the sick
textile undertakings so that they could be properly utilised
by the Government for social good i.e. in resuscitating the
dying textile undertakings. Hence, a paradoxical situation
should have been avoided by adding a narrow and pedantic
construction of a provision like sub- section(2) of Section
3 of the Act which provides for the consequences that ensue
upon the taking over in public interest of the management of
a textile undertaking under sub-section(1) thereof as a step
towards nationalisation of such undertakings, which was
clearly against the national interest. In dealing with
similar legislation, this Court has always, adopted a broad
and liberal approach.
What has been observed above, while interpreting sub-
section (2) of Section 3, should be borne in mind also while
interpreting the expression for a limited period used in
Article 31A(1)(b) and in our view the construction to the
aforesaid expression made by Delhi High Court in its
Judgment in The Indore Malwa United Mills Ltd. & Ors. Vs.
Union of India and Ors., I.L.R.(Delhi) 1974(1) 311, as well
as the Bombay High Court in the impugned judgment, cannot be
accepted. The Delhi High Court has no doubt in The Indore
Malwa United Mills case, considered the applicability of
Article 31A(1)(b) and held that taking over of the
management, pending nationalisation cannot be held to be for
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a limited period, since there is no question of returning
the property to the old management, but we are unable to
accept this view of Delhi High Court and we hold that the
views expressed therein are not correct in law. Having
regard to the conditions of these mills at the time of
taking over of the management and having regard to the
decision of the Union Cabinet on the basis of data and
materials to nationalise the mills falling under category
III and the ultimate policy decision of the Government to
achieve the process of nationalisation in two stages, first
by taking over the management of the textile undertakings
and thereafter, enact suitable legislation to nationalise
the same, the ultimate legislation for taking over the
management of the mills passed by the Parliament, cannot but
be held to be a law, providing for taking over of the
management for a limited period in public interest and as
such the said law comes within the purview of Article
31A(1)(b) of the Constitution. Once it is held that the law
is one attracting Article 31A(1)(b) of the Constitution,
then the validity of the said law cannot be assailed on the
ground of violation of Articles 14 and 19 of the
Constitution. But since elaborate arguments had been
advanced, we would also examine the other questions posed by
us.
So far as the second question is concerned, the entire
emphasis of the arguments advanced on behalf of
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Mills persuaded the High Court and
the High Court in fact came to the conclusion in paragraph
125 of the impugned judgment that the provisions of the Act
read with its objects and reasons and the preamble go to
show that in the context of things the term mismanagement
has been used in the impugned Act not as indicating mere bad
or incompetent or poor management as contended by the
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learned counsel for the Union of India but meant
mismanagement having an element of fraud or dishonesty.
Thereafter the High Court examined different affidavits and
materials and came to the conclusion that the question of
management of the mills had no where been discussed or dealt
with either directly or indirectly and that the existence of
bad financial condition was in fact a general phenomena
during the said period amongst the Textile Mills in Bombay
and the same by itself anything more could not have been an
indication of bad/inadequate management. In paragraph 180
of the impugned judgment the High Court came to the
conclusion that the Government, therefore, could not have,
for taking over the management of the said Mills, relied on
the said CATS for classifying the petitioners Mills as
mills whose financial condition was bad due to mis-
management. In paragraph 203 of the impugned judgment the
learned Judges came to the ultimate conclusion :
In our view, therefore, all the circumstances
mentioned above by the learned counsel for the Union of
India do not bring out either directly or inferentially any
mis-management on the part of the petitioner company, but on
the contrary the fact that the said circumstances existed
even in case of some of CAT I and CAT II Mills show that the
Government could not have considered the said circumstances
for concluding that the said Petitioners Mills were
mismanaged or their financial condition was wholly
unsatisfactory by reason of such mismanagement.
The learned Judges then held that there was no nexus
between the main object or purpose of the Act to take over
the management of only those Mills whose financial condition
before strike was wholly unsatisfactory by reason of
mis-management., and as such, the rights of the Mills under
Article 14 of the Constitution has been violated. At the
outset it may be stated that the High Court committed
serious error in recording a finding that the preamble and
other provisions of the Act go to show that in the context
of things the term mis-management has been used to mean
mis- management having an element of fraud or dishonesty.
We have examined the impugned Act carefully and we fail to
understand that how the High Court could come to a
conclusion that the expression mis-management has been
used to indicate an element of fraud and dis-honesty whereas
in fact neither the provisions of the Act nor the object or
preamble have indicated any such intention. While examining
a particular statute for finding out the legislative intent
it is the attitude of judges in arriving at a solution by
striking a balance between the letter and spirit of the
statute without acknowledging that they have in any way
supplement the statute would be the proper criteria. The
duty of judges is to expound and not to legislate is a
fundamental rule. There is no doubt a marginal area in
which the courts mould or creatively interpret legislation
and they are thus finishers, refiners and polishers of
legislation which comes to them in a state requiring varying
degrees of further processing. (see: Corocraft Ltd. vs.
Pan American Airways Inc. (1968) 3 WLR 714, p.732, State of
Haryana vs. Sampuran Singh 1975 (2) SCC 810). But by no
stretch of imagination a Judge is entitled to add something
more than what is there in the Statute by way of a supposed
intention of the legislature. It is, therefore, a cardinal
principle of construction of statute that the true or legal
meaning of an enactment is derived by considering the
meaning of the words used in the enactment in the light of
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any discernible purpose or object which comprehends the
mischief and its remedy to which the enactment is directed.
Applying the aforesaid principle we really fail to
understand as to how the learned judges of Bombay High Court
could come to a conclusion that the mismanagement must
necessarily mean an element of fraud or dishonesty. Courts
are not entitled to usurp legislative function under the
disguise of interpretation and they must avoid the danger of
determining the meaning of a provision based on their own
preconceived notions of ideological structure or scheme into
which the provision to be interpreted is somehow fitted.
Caution is all the more necessary in dealing with a
legislation enacted to give effect to policies that are
subject to bitter public and parliamentary controversy for
in controversial matters there is room for differences of
opinion as to what is expedient, what is just and what is
morally justifiable; it is the Parliaments opinion in
these matters that is paramount. (see; Duport Steels Ltd.
vs. Sirs, (1980) 1 All ER 529 at 541. When the question
arises as to the meaning of a certain provision in a Statute
it is not only legitimate but proper to read that provision
in its context. The context means; the statute as a whole,
the previous state of law, other statutes in pari materia,
the general scope of the statute and the mischief that it
was intended to remedy. An Act consists of a long title
which precedes the preamble and the said long title is a
part of an Act itself and is admissible as an aid to its
construction. It has been held in several cases that a long
title along with preamble or even in its absence is a good
guide regarding the object, scope or purpose of the Act
whereas the preamble being only an abbreviation for purposes
of reference is not a useful aid to construction. The
preamble of an Act, no doubt can also be read along with
other provisions of the Act to find out the meaning of the
words in enacting provisions to decide whether they are
clear or ambiguous but the preamble in itself not being an
enacting provision is not of the same weight as an aid to
construction of a Section of the Act as are other relevant
enacting words to be found elsewhere in the Act. The
utility of the preamble diminishes on a conclusion as to
clarity of enacting provisions. It is therefore said that
the preamble is not to influence the meaning otherwise
ascribable to the enacting parts unless there is a
compelling reason for it. If in an Act the preamble is
general or brief statement of the main purpose, it may well
be of little value. Mudholkar, J. had observed in Burakar
Coal Co. Ltd. vs. Union of India - AIR 1961 SC 954, It
is one of the cardinal principles of construction that where
the language of an Act is clear, the preamble must be
disregarded though, where the object meaning of an enactment
is not clear the preamble may be resorted to explain it.
Again where very general language is used in an enactment
which, it is clear must be intended to have a limited
application, the preamble may be used to indicate to what
particular instances, the enactment is intended to apply.
We cannot, therefore, start with the preamble for construing
the provisions of an Act, though we could be justified in
resorting to it nay we will be required to do so if we find
that the language used by Parliament is ambiguous or is too
general though in point of fact Parliament intended that it
should have a limited application. In Coal Bearing Areas
(Acquisition and Development) Act 1957 the Court was
construing a Notification issued under Section 4(1) of the
said Act and as in the present case the preamble of that Act
was to the effect An Act to establish in the economic
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interest of India greater public control over the coal
mining industry and its development by providing for the
acquisition by the State of unworked land containing or
likely to contain coal deposits or of right in or over such
land, for the extinguishment or modification of such rights
accruing by virtue of any agreement, lease license or
otherwise, and for matters connected therewith. Repelling
an argument advanced on behalf of the Mine owners that the
Act intended to apply only to virgin land and not on the
land which are being worked or were worked in the past
because of the use of the words unworked land in the
preamble, this Court held that the language of the enacting
provisions was clear and therefore not controlled by the
preamble. (see; Burrakur Coal Co. Vs. Union of India
AIR 1961 SC 954 at p. 957). This being the position, and
the Textile Undertakings Taking Over of the Management Act,
1983, being an Act providing for taking over in the public
interest of the Management of Textile Undertakings of the
Companies specified in the First Schedule pending
nationalisation of such undertakings and for matters
connected therewith or incidental thereto as is apparent
from the long title, use of the expression mis-management
of the affairs in the preamble will not control the purpose
of the Act, namely, the public interest and the Parliament
having decided to take over the management of the Textile
Mills which were in serious financial crisis, in the public
interest it was not open for the Court to come to a
conclusion by taking recourse to the use of the word
mis-management in the preamble to hold that the Parliament
intended only to take those Mills whose financial condition
was deplorable on account of mismanagement and not in case
of those mills where the financial condition may be
deplorable but not on account of mis-management.
Mr. R.F.Nariman, learned senior counsel had strongly
relied upon the decision of this Court in Madras Race Club
case 1996 (2) Supreme Court Cases, 226, whereunder the
Court struck down the provisions of Madras Race Club
(Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1986, on a
conclusion that the declaration made in the Act that the Act
was made to implement Article 39 (b) & (c) was a mere cloak
and there was no nexus between the Act and the objects
contained in Article 39 (b) & (c), and as such the Act is
arbitrary. But a reading of the aforesaid case would make
it clear that the facts and features of that case were
completely different from the facts and features of the
present case. In the Madras case the objects and reasons,
as indicated in the Act, was that the acquisition is for a
public purpose but in fact there was no material to show
that any inquiry or investigation had been held by the State
Government in the affairs of the Club and the Court held
that no public purpose is being served by the acquisition
and transfer of the undertaking of the Club by the
Government. But in the case in hand, as has been noticed by
this Court in Sitaram Mills Case, the Government had before
it several viability surveys made by different authorities
like, Ahmedabad Textile Industries Research Association,
Textile Commissioner Office, SR Batliboi and Company and an
independent survey by the IDBI itself. These surveys had
been directed in ascertaining whether companies textile
undertaking was a techno economically viable unit or not and
whether it was desirable to provide the company with the
working capital. The Government in the Ministry of Commerce
had constituted a Task Force to look into the affairs of the
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Category III strike affected mills. On the basis of all
these informations it was decided as a matter of policy that
it was desirable to achieve the process of nationalisation,
initially by taking over the management of the mills and
thereafter by enacting suitable legislation to nationalise
the same. The objects and reasons of the Act unequivocally
indicated that the basic decision of nationalisation having
been taken a genuine apprehension having arisen in the
Governments mind that unless the management of the
concerned undertakings was taken over on immediate basis,
there might be large scale flittering away of assets which
would be detrimental to the public interest and it thus
became urgently necessary for Government to take over the
management of the undertakings in the public interest. In
this state of affairs, we have no doubt in our mind that the
decision in Madras Race Club case will have no application
to the case in hand.
In our considered opinion the impugned Act read as a
whole unequivocally indicates that the Parliament was
satisfied that the management of the Textile Undertakings
specified in the First Schedule should be taken over pending
nationalisation of such undertakings, and therefore, passed
the impugned Act in public interest.
So far as third question is concerned, we think it
appropriate to discuss the same alongwith Fifth question as
they are inter-linked. In the case in hand the High Court
appears to have examined in detail the functioning of each
of these three mills which had filed Writ Petition before
it, for ascertaining whether the financial conditions of
those mills had deteriorated because of the strike or on
account of mis- management and on scrutiny of different
materials came to hold that the Union Government has failed
to establish the case of mis-management which in turn would
mean a case of fraud and dishonesty on the part of those who
were in management of the mills. We have already indicated
that the legislature nowhere expressed that fraud or
dishonesty on the part of those who were in management of
the mills had brought the mills to the acute financial
crisis. That apart, when an Act has been made by the
Parliament as the Parliament thought the taking over of the
management of the 13 Textile Mills pending their
nationalisation would be in the public interest, it was not
open for a Court in exercise of its power of judicial review
to have in depth examination of different facts and
circumstances and record a conclusion, as has been done in
the case in hand by the High Court concerned. It is of
course true, as held by this Court in the case of Indra
Sawhney vs. Union of India and Others (2000) 1 Supreme
Court Cases 168, that the legislative declaration of facts
are not beyond judicial scrutiny in the constitutional
context of Articles 14 and 16. In Keshwanand Bhartis case
this Court had also observed that the Courts could lift the
veil and examine the position inspite of a legislative
declaration. In Indra Sawhneys case (supra) the Court was
examining whether the Appropriate Authorities have rightly
determined the persons to be included in the creamy layer or
whether such determination has been arbitrarily made. These
principles will have no application to a legislation of the
present nature where the Parliament itself had already taken
a decision to nationalise the Textile Mills which had
undergone severe financial crisis and such mills could not
be re-started without pumping in large amount of money from
the public exchequer and, therefore, the legislation in
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question was passed to take over the management of the mills
immediately as such take over was in the public interest.
The argument advanced on behalf of the mills and the
microscopic examination of datas by the Court for arriving
at a conclusion as to the alleged violation of Article 14 of
the Constitution is not permissible and will not override
the legislative intent behind taking over of management of
the mills in the larger public interest. The conclusion of
the High Court on the basis of the IDBI Viability Study
Report, the Task Force Report, approval of the Central
Government to the posting of a Managing Director and the
sanction of loan by the financial institution by no stretch
of imagination could out-weigh the conclusion of the
legislature that the Act is intended to provide for the
taking over of the management of the Textile Undertakings of
the Companies specified in the First Schedule, pending
nationalisation in the public interest. We are unable to
agree with the arguments advanced on behalf of the counsel
appearing for the respondents that by picking up the three
mills who had approached the High Court and clubbing them
together with other mills in the Fist Schedule the
Government did not have germane considerations before it, in
fact it is not the Executive Government but the Parliament
itself had chosen to take over the management of the 13
mills included in the First Schedule to the impugned Act and
for that purpose the impugned legislation was enacted and
the management of the mills could be taken over by operation
of law. As has been indicated in the judgment of this Court
in the case of National Textile Corpn. Ltd. vs. Sitaram
Mills Ltd. and others. 1986 (Suppl.) Supreme Court Cases
117, that the Textile Mills and the Textile Industry in
India has played an important role in the growth of national
economy. Its importance in the industrial field is because
of the fact that it produces an essential commodity and the
export of such commodity helps in building up the foreign
exchange reserve of the country, simultaneously the industry
gives employment to a large number of persons. It is
because of this consideration the Government has always been
conscious that it is necessary to preserve such mills and
assist them by granting necessary financial loans and
advances from public financial institutions so that mills
will not be close down but in the year 1983 because of an
indefinite strike the financial condition was not
satisfactory on account of lack of proper management. This
Court had indicated that as the overall economic factors
applicable to all Textile Mills in Grater Bombay were
broadly and generally comparable the worker position of
mills in question was attributable to mis- management. This
Court had also taken note of the fact that the Government of
India was required to evolve a scheme to put the Textile
Industries on its rail and therefore after getting the
matter investigated by committee and after recommending that
IDBI and Nationalised Bank should finance and put through
expeditiously, the re-habilitation programme and having
accepted the categorisation made in the meeting called by
the Reserve Bank of India on October 29, 1982, and having
realised that none of the 13 mills in Category III could be
expected to survive on a sound basis without financial
assistance from the Government controlled Institutions and
Nationalised Banks and thereafter obtaining a detailed
Viability Report from the IDBI and the Task Force, which was
constituted by the Ministry of Commerce the Government
decided that the Mills in question should be re-habilitated
by injecting public funds but since the management of the
mills has been defective, in as much as had there been no
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mis-management the mills would not be found themselves in
the conditions in which they were even before the general
strike. As the matter of policy it was desirable to achieve
the process of nationalisation in two stages (1) taking over
of the management and (2) thereafter suitable legislation to
nantionalise the same and the taking over of management was
with a view to implement the decision of nationalisation.
We have refrained from going into the details of the
financial position of different mills which filed the Writ
Petition in Bombay High Court in as much as the financial
condition was such that it could not have revived without
pumping in of large scale of money either from financial
institutions or from the IDBI. The fact that in some of the
Reports indicating viability of the mills on large scale
money being pumped in would not in any way affect the
ultimate conclusion of the Parliament in providing for a law
to take over in the public interest the management of
Textile Undertakings of the Companies specified in the First
Schedule, as the danger of pumping in of large sum from the
public exchequer without taking over the management of the
mills would not have been a prudent action. As has been
stated earlier, and as is apparent from the long title of
the Act itself, that the decision to nationalise the mills
had already been taken, but pending nationalisation the 13
mills in question including the mills of the three
petitioners who filed Writ Petition Bombay High Court the
management was taken over by the impugned legislation as
otherwise there was imminent danger to the finance to be
pumped in to the for its revival and revival was necessary
to provide employment to the large number of mill workers.
In the aforesaid premises, we have no hesitation to come to
a conclusion on the materials on record the Parliamentary
action in legislating the law and taking over of the
management of all the 13 mills included in the First
Schedule to the Act cannot be held to be discriminatory nor
the High Court was justified in recording a conclusion about
the true intention of the legislation that it is only the
mis-managed mills whose financial condition had
deteriorated, the management of those to be taken over and
not others. On the other hand the sharp deterioration in
the financial position lead to an irresistible conclusion
that it was because of mis- management and nothing else and
that is why in the preamble of the Act the legislature have
indicated that the affairs of the Textile Undertakings
specified in the First Schedule on account of mis-management
have become wholly unsatisfactory. In other words while the
Act of taking over of the management of the mills was in the
public interest, the inference of mis-management was the
inference of the Parliament duly arrived at from the fact
that the financial condition of the mills had become wholly
unsatisfactory even before the commencement in January 1982
and such financial condition has further deteriorated
thereafter. This inference of the Parliament is not subject
to a mathematical judicial scrutiny and the way in which the
High Court has gone into this question in the impugned
judgment is certainly not within the para meters of the
power of High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution.
In our view the High Court was wholly in error in striking
down the taking over of the three petitioners mills before
it on a supposed violation of Article 14 of the
Constitution.
So far as the fifth question is concerned, though it
is no doubt true that the Court would be justified to some
extent in examining the materials for finding out the true
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legislative intent, engrafted in a Statute, but the same
would be done only, when the Statute itself is ambiguous or
a particular meaning given to a particular provision of the
Statute, it would make the Statute unworkable or the very
purpose of enacting the Statute would get frustrated. But
by no stretch of imagination, it would be open for a Court
to expand even the language used in the preamble to extract
the meaning of the Statute or to find out the latent
intention of the legislature in enacting the Statute. As
has been stated earlier, in the case in hand, the Taking
over of Management Statute of 1983, had been engrafted in
the public interest as the legislature found that there is
imperative need to take over of the management of the
companies until the process of nationalisation is finalised.
This is apparent from the long title of the Act itself and
the preamble also indicates that to make the mills viable,
it would be necessary for the public financial institutions
to invest very large sum of money, so that the mills will be
rehabilitated and the interest of the workmen, employed
therein would be protected. The preamble further indicates
that the process of acquisition would take a longer time and
to enable the Central Government to invest large sum of
money, it was necessary in the public interest to take over
the management of the undertakings. Thus, the taking over
of the management of the mills was in the public interest,
the said public interest being to rehabilitate the mills by
pumping in, huge sums of public money to protect the
interest of the workers in the mills. The High Court in the
impugned judgment, however gave a restricted meaning to the
purpose of the act by interpreting the expression
Mismanagement used in the first preamble to connote fraud
and dis-honesty, and in our considered opinion, the High
Court was wholly unjustified in going behind the apparent
legislative intention as already stated and in coming to a
conclusion which cannot be sustained either on the materials
on record or applying the rules of interpretation of a
Statute. The said conclusion of the High Court as to the
spirit behind the Statute, therefore, cannot be sustained.
Apart from answering the five points, formulated by
us, we may also deal with some other ancillary points, which
have been raised in course of arguments. Mr. R.F. Nariman
had argued on the basis of Article 300A of the constitution
and relied upon the judgment of this Court in Dwarkadas
Shrinivas of Bomay vs. The Sholapur Spinning & Weaving Co.
Ltd. and Ors. 1954, S.C.R. 674, but we find from the
impugned judgment that the said contention had not been
pressed before the High Court and, therefore, we are not
called upon to examine the contention to find out whether
the Act can be held to be reasonable and fair. That apart,
the impugned Act merely takes over the management of the
property by a legislation permitted under Article 31A(1)(b)
of the Constitution. This being the position, Article 300A
will have no application.
Mr. Nariman also had raised a contention that the
very fact that the other provisions, available under the
Companies Act or under Industrial Development and Regulation
Act had not been adhered to and a drastic step had been
taken by immediately taking over of the management of the
mills, would constitute an infraction of Article 19(1)(g)
and in support of the said contention, reliance has been
placed on the decision of this Court in the case of Mohd.
Faruk vs. State of Madhya Pradesh and Ors., 1970(1) S.C.R.,
156. In the aforesaid case, the Court was considering the
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validity of the notification issued by the Government of
Madhya Pradesh in canceling the confirmation of the bye-laws
made by Jabalpur Municipality, in so far as the bye-laws
relate to slaughter of bulls and bullocks. This Court had
observed that the Court in considering the validity of the
impugned law imposing a prohibition on the carrying on of a
business or profession, attempt an evaluation of its direct
and immediate impact upon the fundamental rights of the
citizens affected thereby and the larger public interest
sought to be ensured in the light of the object sought to be
achieved, the necessity to restrict the citizens freedom,
the inherent pernicious nature of the act prohibited or its
capacity or tendency to be harmful to the general public,
the possibility of achieving the object by imposing a less
drastic restraint, and in the absence of exceptional
situations such as the prevalence of a state of emergency
national or local or the necessity to maintain essential
supplies, or the necessity to stop activities inherently
dangerous, the existence of a machinery to satisfy the
administrative authority that no case for imposing the
restriction is made out or that a less drastic restriction
may ensure the object intended to be achieved. It is these
observations on which Mr. R.F. Nariman strongly relied
upon , since in the case in hand, the appropriate Government
did not take any action under the provisions of the
Companies Act, nor there had been any investigation as
provided under Section 15 and 15A of the Industrial
Development and Regulation Act, according to Mr. Nariman,
obviously, those provisions are less drastic in nature than
the impugned Act and in fact, there was no urgent necessity
for enacting a law and taking a drastic measure of taking
over the management of the mills. We are unable to accept
this contention, since we have already discussed the public
interest involved and how the Parliament thought of taking
over the management of the mills without which, it would not
be feasible to pump in, large sums of money from the public
exchequer and leave the management with the erstwhile
managers for whose mismanagement, the mills would not have
been in the situation in which the law was enacted. The
decision to take over the management of the mills with a
view to implement the decision to nationalise the mills
being the basis for enactment of the Taking Over of the
Management of the Mills Act, question of taking recourse to
the remedies available under the Companies Act or Industries
Development and Regulation Act really do not arise and on
that score it cannot be said that there has been a violation
of Article 19(1)(g). Applying the observations of this
Court in Dwarka Das, in fact a somewhat similar contention
had been noticed in Sitaram Mills case in paragraph 14 of
the judgment. We are, therefore, unable to persuade
ourselves to accept the contention that the very fact that
Government did not proceed with the remedies available under
other Act and proceeded to enact a legislation for taking
over of the management of the Mills would constitute an
infraction of Article 19 (1)(g) of the Constitution. We may
reiterate that we are examining the enactment of a law by
the Parliament itself and the wisdom of the Parliament in
taking a decision to take over the management of the mills
in the larger public interest and not an executive decision
of the Government which could have taken recourse to some
other remedial measure provided under the Industries
Development and Regulation Act or the Companies Act. If
Parliament decides to enact a law for taking over the
management of the Textile Mills, pending completion of the
process of nationalisation, on a genuine apprehension that
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there might be a large scale flittering away of assets if
the management is not taken over and that would be grossly
detrimental to the public interest it would not be open for
the Court to examine the question whether other remedies
could have been taken and not being taken there has been an
infraction of Article 19(1)(g). In the aforesaid premises,
we have no hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the
High Court was in error to hold that there has been an
infraction of Article 19(1)(g) in the case in hand.
In view of our conclusions, as aforesaid, we do not
propose to examine the contention of the learned Solicitor
General, with regard to the applicability of Article 31C of
the Constitution, which he had raised in course of his
arguments. In the premises, these appeals are allowed. The
impugned judgment of the Bombay High Court is set aside and
the writ petitions, filed before the High Court stand
dismissed.
During the pendency of these appeals this Court had
passed some interim orders with regard to possession of
certain land and other assets as well as with regard to cars
and telephone connections. In view of our decision setting
aside the impugned judgment of Bombay High Court and in view
of Section 3(2) of the Act all interim orders would stand
vacated. But the Elphinstone Spinning & Weaving Mills in
its Writ Petition No. 2401 of 1983 having made a specific
case that notwithstanding the Act being valid and the
management of the mills can be taken over and its properties
and assets vest with the Central Government under Section
3(2) of the Act, but there are certain other assets which
cannot be held to form a part of the assets of Elphinstone
Spinning and Weaving Mill and, therefore, cannot be taken
over, the High Court has not considered this question as the
Act itself was struck down but it would be meet and proper
for the High Court now to consider the same, bearing in mind
the law laid down by this Court in Sitaram Mills case
interpreting the provisions of Section 3(2) of the Act on
the materials to be produced by the parties. Be it stated
that until a decision is given by the High Court on this
score, by virtue of operation of law all the assets would
stand vested and such vesting would be subject to a final
decision of the High Court in respect of any of these
so-called assets which the petitioner establishes not to be
an asset of Elphinstone Mill notwithstanding the wider
meaning given to Section 3(2) in Sitaram Mills case.
...............................................J.
(G.B. PATTANAIK)