Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MADHUBHAI AMATHALAL GANDHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UNION OF INDIA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/08/1960
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 21 1961 SCR (1) 191
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1964 SC 648 (46)
R 1972 SC1982 (4)
R 1987 SC1527 (21)
ACT:
Stock Exchange-Rules for membership-Notification laying
conditions restricting membership-Classification between
active members and others-Whether unreasonable or infringed
fundamental rights-Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act,
1956, (42 of 1956) s. 4. --Securities-Contracts (Regulation)
Rules, 1957, rr. 17-22.
HEADNOTE:
The Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956, was enacted
with the object of preventing undesirable transactions in
securities by regulating the stock exchange business, and
the Act conferred an effective controlling power on the
Central Government over the stock exchange. In exercise of
the power conferred on the Central Government to make rules
the Central Government made rules described as the
Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules, 1957, providing,
inter alia, for the qualification for membership of a stock
exchange seeking recognition etc. After the Act came into
force two Companies, namely, the Native Share and Stock
Brokers’ Association and the Indian Stock Exchange Limited
doing stock exchange business in Greater Bombay applied for
recognition under the Act. The Government after considering
the merits of the companies and the relevant circumstances
issued a notification dated August 31, 1957, recognising the
Native Share and Stock Brokers’ Association under the name "
The Stock Exchange, Bombay " subject to certain conditions.
One of the conditions was that the members of the other com-
pany, India Stock Exchange Limited, would be entitled to
apply for membership of the Stock Exchange, Bombay, provided
they were active members of the Indian Stock Exchange
Limited for 12 months immediately preceding August 6, 1957,
and they were also eligible under r. 8(i) of the Securities
Contracts (Regulation) Rules, 1957, to be members of a
recognised stock exchange. Within the time granted for
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applying for membership a number ’of active members of the
Indian Stock Exchange Limited applied for membership and
were admitted as members of the recognised Stock Exchange.
Though three years had elapsed after this no member other
than the petitioner questioned the validity of the
notification which was accepted and the recognised Stock
Exchange became established. The petitioner, however, filed
a petition under Art. 32 Of the Constitution praying that
the Union be directed to withdraw or cancel the notification
dated August 31, 1957, recognising the Stock Exchange,
Bombay, under S. 4 Of the Securities Contracts (Regulation)
Act, 1956. Subsequently on November 30, 1957, the Central
Government
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issued another notification applying s. 13 Of the Act to
Greater Bombay with the result that thereafter every
contract in shares between the members of any unrecognised
stock exchange in that city would be illegal. The
contentions of the petitioner in the petition for the issue
of a writ of mandamus were that under Art. 19(i)(g) of the
Constitution he had a fundamental right to carry on business
in shares and the two notifications in question imposed
unreasonable restrictions on his right, that the
notification dated August 31, 1957, was void as it was not
sanctioned by the provisions Of s. 4 Of the’ Act, that the
condition 2(i)(a) of the said notification classifying
members of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited as active
members and members who were not active infringed
fundamental right granted under Art. 14 Of the Constitution
and as the said condition was not severable the entire
notification was bad. The respondent besides controverting
the said contentions further contended that as the
petitioner had not questioned the validity of the Act itself
the notification issued thereunder could not be questioned.
Held, that the validity of a notification could not be ques-
tioned if it was issued under a self contained Act and
restated the provisions of the Act the validity of which was
accepted. If, however, the Act conferred a power on the
State in general terms and the notification issued
thereunder infringed any of the fundamental rights it could
be attacked even though the Act was valid.
The Stock Exchange Rules did not operate as a bar against
the petitioner becoming a member of the Stock Exchange sub-
ject to the rules governing such application.
The restrictions and conditions imposed under the notifica-
tion in question were not unreasonable. The condition
restricting membership to active members only is germane to
the recognition of the Stock Exchange and is therefore, a
condition within the meaning of " any other conditions " in
cl. (b) of sub s. (1) Of s. 4 Of the Act.
The classification between active members and others was
justifiable and the period fixed by the Government as the
standard for ascertaining the active membership was neither
arbitrary nor unreasonable.
There was a presumption in favour of the State that there
was a reasonable basis for the classification and the burden
to prove that it violated the guarantee of equal protection
lay on the petitioner who impeached it.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 136 of 1957.
Writ Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
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Purshottam Tricumdas, Mukund R. Mody, Anil B. Divan, Ramesh
A. Shroff and I. N. Shroff, for the petitioner.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R. Ganapathy
Iyer and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent.
1960. August 17. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SUBBA RAO J.-This is a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution for the issue of a writ of mandamus or a writ
in the nature of mandamus or any other appropriate
direction, order or writ to direct the respondent, the Union
of India, to withdraw or cancel the notification dated
August 31, 1957, recognising " the Stock Exchange, Bombay "
under s. 4 of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act,
1956 (XLII of 1956), (hereinafter referred to as"the Act ").
At the outset it is necessary to notice briefly how a Stock
Exchange is worked and how it is controlled or regulated by
the State. " Stock Exchange " means, " any body of
individuals, whether incorporated or not, constituted for
the purpose of assisting or con. trolling the business of
buying, selling or dealing in securities ". The history of
stock exchanges in foreign countries as well as in India
shows that the development of joint stock enterprise would
never have reached its present stage but for the facilities
which the stock exchanges provided for dealing in
securities. They have a very important function to fulfil
in the country’s economy. Their main function, in the words
of an eminent writer, is " to liquify capital by enabling a
person who has invested money in, say, a factory or a
railway, to convert it into cash by disposing of his share
in the enterprise to someone else ". Without the stock
exchange, capital would become immobilized. The proper
working of a stock exchange depends upon not only the moral
stature of the members but also on their calibre. It is a
trite saying that a jobber or dealer is born and not made.
In the words of the same author, a jobber must be a man of
good nerve, cool judgment, and ready to deal
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under any ordinary conditions, and he must be a man of
financial standing, considerable experience, with an
understanding of market psychology. There are three modes
of dealing in shares and stores, namely, (1) spot delivery
contract, i.e., a contract which provides for the actual
delivery of securities on the payment of a price thereof
either on the day of the contract or the next day, excluding
perhaps the period taken for the despatch of the securities
or the remittance of money from one place to another; (2)
ready delivery contract, which means a contract for the
purchase or sale of securities for the performance of which
no time is specified and which is to be performed
immediately or within a reasonable time; (3) forward
contracts, i.e., contracts whereunder the parties agree for
their performance at a future date. If the stock exchange
is in the hands of unscrupulous members, the second and
third categories of contracts to buy or sell shares may
degenerate into highly speculative transactions or, what is
worse, purely gambling ones. Where the parties do not
intend while entering into a contract of sale or purchase of
securities that only difference in prices should be paid,
the transaction, even though speculative, is valid and not
void, for " there is no law against speculation as there is
against gambling ". But, if the parties do not intend that
there should be any delivery of the shares but only the
difference in prices should be accounted for, the contract,
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being a wager, is void. More often than not it is difficult
for a court to distinguish one from the other, as a wagering
transaction may be so cleverly camouflaged as to pass off as
a speculative transaction. These mischievous potentialities
inherent in the transactions, if left uncontrolled, would
tend to subvert the main object of the institution of stock
exchange and convert it into a den of gambling which would
ultimately upset the industrial economy of the country.
For that reason, in Bombay as early as 1925, the Bombay
Securities Contracts Control Act was passed to regulate and
control contracts for the purchase and sale of securities in
the City of Bombay and elsewhere in the Bombay Presidency.
Under s. 6 of that Act,
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" Every contract for the purchase or sale of securities,
other than a ready delivery contract, entered into after a
date to be notified in this behalf by the Provincial
Government shall be void, unless the same is made subject to
and in accordance with the rules duly sanctioned under s. 5
and every such contract shall be void unless the same is
made between members or through a member of a recognised
stock exchange; and no claim shall be allowed in any Civil
Court for the recovery of any commission, brokerage, fee or
reward in respect of any such contract ". But this Act
defined " ready delivery contract " to mean " a contract for
the purchase or sale of securities for performance of which
no time is specified and which is to be performed
immediately or within a reasonable time ". It was also
stated therein by way of explanation that what was
reasonable time was in each particular case a question of
fact. This Act did not achieve its purpose, for under s. 6
thereof contracts entered into in contravention of the
provisions of that section were not made illegal but only
void, with the result that even members of a stock exchange
not recognised under that Act were able to do business in
that line. What is more, the explanation to the definition
of " ready delivery contract " which is excluded from the
operation of the Act was so elastic that in the name of
ready delivery contracts unrecognised stock exchanges. and
individuals were able to carry on business in forward
contracts. (-,ambling in shares went on unchecked in Bombay
as elsewhere. After the Second World War, the post-war boom
gave an unhealthy impetus to the stock exchange
transactions. Various expert committees appointed by the
Government from time to time considered the question of
regulation of stock exchanges and the latest of those
committees was the Gorwalla Committee. The report of that
Committee was circulated to the principal stock exchanges,
Chambers of Commerce, and other interested associations and
individuals. After considering the reports of the
committees and the comments made thereon by the various
bodies, the Government introduced a bill in the Parliament,
which became law on
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September 4, 1956. The Act was passed to prevent
undesirable transactions in securities by regulating the
business therein by prohibiting auction and by providing for
certain other matters connected therewith. The Act mainly
provides for the recognition of stock exchanges and for
controlling the rule-making of the said exchanges. Section
4 of the Act empowers the Central Government to recognise
stock exchanges subject to two conditions. Section 13
enables it to issue a notification that in a particular
State or area every contract which is entered into after the
date of the notification otherwise than between members of a
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recognised stock exchange in such State or area or through
or with such member shall be illegal. Without resorting to
such drastic procedure the Government is also given power to
prohibit contracts in certain securities in certain areas
from doing business without obtaining a licence. Spot
delivery contracts are excluded from the operation of ss.
13, 14, 15 and 17 of the Act, unless the Central Government
by notification thinks fit to extend the operation of s. 17
of the Act to such contracts. Section 19 prohibits
formation of stock exchanges other than recognised ones
except with the permission of the Central Government. It
declares all auctions in securities entered into after the
commencement of the Act illegal. It also provides penalties
for the infringements of the provisions of the Act. In
short, the Act confers an effective controlling power on the
Central Government over the stock exchanges.
In exercise of the power conferred upon the Central
Government to make rules, the Central Government made rules
described as the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules,
1957, providing, inter alia, for the qualification for
membership of a stock exchange seeking recognition, the
procedure for recognition, the manner of keeping accounts,
the submission of annual reports, the constitution of
governing bodies and for taking disciplinary action against
any member of such bodies and other similar matters.
In Greater Bombay there were two stock exchanges,
197
one called the Native Share & Stock Brokers’ Association,
and the other the Indian Stock Exchange Limited. The former
was in existence for more than., 80 years and it was
registered under the Bombay Securities Contracts Control
Act, 1925. Its rules and bye-laws were approved by the
Government of Bombay and it was doing business in both
forward as well as ready transactions. It has a clearing
house and was doing extensive business in different kinds of
securities.
The other, namely, the Indian Stock Exchange Limited, was a
company incorporated under the Indian Companies Act, 1913,
as a company limited by guarantee without any share capital.
The said Company had been functioning since 1937, but was
not registered under the Bombay Securities Contracts Control
Act, 1925. It was mainly doing business in Tata Ordinary
and Bombay Dyeing shares and had hardly any investment
business. Not being registered under the Bombay Securities
Contracts Control Act, 1925, it could only deal in ready
delivery contracts; and as the definition of " ready
delivery contract " under that Act was elastic and as
forward contracts were not made illegal thereunder, this
Exchange was also doing speculative business mainly in the
said two shares.
After the Act came into force, both the Exchanges applied
for recognition under the Act. The Government, after
considering the relative merits and the relevant
circumstances, issued a notification dated August 31, 1957,
recognising the Native Share and Stock Brokers’ Association
under the name " The Stock Exchange, Bombay " subject to the
conditions mentioned therein. One of the conditions imposed
was that the members of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited
would be entitled to apply for membership of the Stock
Exchange, Bombay, provided they were active members of the
Indian Stock Exchange Limited for 12 months immediately
preceding August 6, 1957, and they were also eligible under
r. 8(1) of the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Rules,
1957, to be members of a recognised stock exchange. The
notification
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198
further gave some concessions to such active members in the
matter of payment of the membership fee. They had to apply
for membership before October 15, 1957, or before such
period as the Board of the recognised Stock Exchange might
think fit to extend. It appears that within the extended
time a number of active members of the Indian Stock Exchange
Limited as defined by the notification applied for
membership and were admitted as members of the recognised
Stock Exchange. Though three years have passed by, no
member other than the petitioner has so far thought fit to
question the validity of the notification, that is, the
validity of the notification has been accepted and the
recognised Stock Exchange has become stabilised on that
basis. Subsequent to the filing of. the petition on
November 30, 1957, the Central Government issued another
notification applying s. 13 of the Act to Greater Bombay;
with the result that thereafter every contract in shares
between the members of any unrecognised stock exchange in
that City would be illegal.
The petitioner had become a member of the Indian Stock
Exchange Limited on February 27, 1956, but he had not been
transacting any business on the floor of the said Stock
Exchange either on his own account or on account of his
clients. He avers in the affidavit filed in support of the
petition that he has been doing considerable business on his
own account or on account of his clients through other
members of the Stock Exchange and that he intends to
commence business directly in ready delivery contracts. As
the impugned notifications affect his right to do business,
he seeks for the issue of a writ of mandamus for the
aforesaid reliefs.
Shri Purshottam Trikumdas, learned counsel for the
petitioner, raised before us the following contentions: (1)
under Art. 19(1)(g) of the Constitution the petitioner has a
fundamental right to carry on the business in shares and the
notification dated August 31, 1957, and the subsequent
notification dated November 30, 1957, imposed unreasonable
restrictions on his said right; (2) the notification dated
August 31,
199
1957, is void inasmuch as it is not sanctioned by the
provisions of s. 4 of the Act; and (3) the condition 2(i)(a)
of the said notification classifying members of A the Indian
Stock Exchange Limited as active members and members who
were not active infringes the fundamental right enshrined in
Art. 14 of the Constitution and that as the said condition
is not severable the entire notification is bad.
Learned Solicitor-General in addition to controverting the
said contentions pressed on us to hold that as the vires of
the Act was not questioned, the notification issued
thereunder could not be questioned by the petitioner on the
ground that it contravened one or other of the said
fundamental rights.
It would be convenient to take first the contention of the
learned Solicitor-General as it is in the nature of a
preliminary point. He says that as the validity of the Act
was not questioned the notification issued in the exercise
of the power conferred thereunder cannot also be questioned.
There is a fallacy underlying this contention. Under Art.
13(2) of the Constitution, the State shall not make any law
which takes away or abridges the rights conferred by Part
III thereof; and " law " is defined under Art. 3(a) to
include a notification. Therefore, the validity of a
notification issued by the State, it being law, is as much
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vulnerable to attack as that of the Act itself on the ground
that it infringes any of the fundamental rights. If an Act
is a self-contained one and the notification issued there-
under only restates the provisions of the Act, the validity
of the notification cannot obviously be questioned as the
validity of its contents were accepted. But if the Act
confers a power on the State in general terms and the
notification issued thereunder infringes one or other of the
fundamental rights, the validity of the Act cannot equally
obviously prevent an attack on the notification. In the
former case the notification only reflects the provisions of
a valid Act and in the latter it is the notification and not
the Act that infringes the fundamental rights. Take an
example of an Act imposing restrictions on the freedom of
speech. The Act authorizes the State to impose conditions
on
200
the said freedom in the interests of security of State. The
Act is constitutionally valid. But, if a notification
issued under that Act imposes unreasonable restrictions
infringing the said rights, it is liable to be challenged on
the ground of unconstitutionality. So too, in the instant
case s. 4 of the Act empowers the Central Government to
issue a notification recognising a stock exchange subject to
certain conditions expressed in general terms. The general
terms can comprehend both reasonable and unreasonable
restrictions. If the notification imposes unreasonable
restrictions-if the contention of the learned counsel for
the petitioner be accepted, the restrictions imposed would
certainly be unreasonable-it is liable to be set aside. We
cannot, therefore, accept this contention.
Re. (1): Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution states that
every citizen shall have the right to carry on any business;
but the State in empowered under el. (6) of the said Article
to make any law imposing in the interest of the general
public reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the said
right. Briefly stated, the argument is that the combined
effect of the two notifications is that the petitioner is
driven out of his business of stock exchange in as much as,
it is said, they confer a monopoly on the Stock Exchange,
Bombay, and the rules of the said Stock Exchange exclude any
outsider from becoming its member without obtaining a
nomination and that too only in the place of an existing
member. To put it differently, the argument proceeds that
under the rules of the Stock Exchange, Bombay, membership is
not thrown open to the public. This leads us to the
consideration of the relevant provisions of the Stock
Exchange Rules, Bye-laws and Regulations, 1957. Under r. 3
the membership of the Exchange shall consist of such number
of members as the Exchange in general meeting may from time
to time determine. It is common case that the membership of
the Exchange is not limited. Under the heading " Election
of New Members ", the Rules prescribe the conditions of
eligibility for election as a member of the Exchange. These
Rules adopt the provisions of r. 8 of the Securities
201
Contracts (Regulation) Rules, 1957. The Rules do not
contain any limitation on the eligibility of a person to be
elected as a member such as that the person, should be
nominated in the manner provided by the Rules or that he
should come only in the vacancy caused by another member
ceasing to be one in one of the ways mentioned thereunder.
The words " no person " in r. 17 are comprehensive enough to
take in any outsider seeking for election as a, member.
Rule 22 provides for an application for admission in the
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form prescribed in Appendix A to the Rules. This rule also
does not impose any such limitation. The admission
application form in Appendix A is also general in terms and
enables any person of India to apply for membership provided
he agrees to abide by the conditions imposed therein. In
the form also there is no such limitation. But it is
contended that a fair reading of the provisions of rr. 20
and 21 makes it clear that a candidate for admission is
confined only to two categories, viz., (1) a candidate
nominated by a member or a legal representative of a
deceased member seeking admission to membership in the place
of’ the deceased; and (2) a person recommended for admission
to membership in the place of a member who has forfeited his
right to membership. A careful scrutiny of the Rules does
not bear out the contention; nor do they enable us to cut
down the wide amplitude of rr. 17 to 22. Rule 10 says:
" When a right of membership is forfeited to
or vests in the Exchange under any Rule, Bye-
law, or Regulation of the Exchange for the
time being in force it shall belong absolutely
to the Exchange free of all rights, claims or
interest of such member or any person claiming
through such member and the Governing Body
shall be entitled to deal with or dispose of
such right of membership as it may think fit."
Rule 54 is to the following effect:
" A member’s right of membership shall lapse to and vest in
the Exchange immediately be is declared a defaulter."
Rule 11 is as follows..
26
202
"(a) A member of not less than seven years’
standing who desires to resign may nominate a
person eligible under these Rules for
admission to membership of the Exchange as a
candidate for admission in his place
(b) The legal representatives of a deceased member or his
heirs or the persons mentioned in Appendix C to these Rules
may with the sanction of the Governing Board nominate any
person eligible under these Rules for admission to
membership of the Exchange as a candidate for admission in
the place of the deceased member. In considering such
nomination the Governing Board shall be guided so far as
practicable by the instructions set out in Appendix C to
these Rules."
Appendix B gives the nomination forms Nos. 1 and 2 to be
filled by a member or a legal representative, as the case
may be, under r. 11 (a) and (b). Now it would be convenient
to read rr. 20 and 21. They are
as follows:
Rule 20: " A candidate for admission except’ a candidate
applying for a membership vesting in the Exchange must
obtain a nomination in the manner provided in these Rules."
Rule 21: " A candidate for admission must be recommended by
two members none of whom should be a member of the Governing
Board. The recommenders must have such personal knowledge
of the candidate and of his past and present circumstances
as shall satisfy the Governing Board."
The argument is that under r. 20 a candidate for ad. mission
falls under two categories, namely, (1) a candidate who must
obtain a nomination in the manner provided in the Rules,
i.e., r. 11 (a) and (b); and (2) a candidate applying for a
membership vesting in the Exchange; and, therefore, these
two categories exhaust the candidates for admission and that
when under r. 21 the same words, " a candidate for admission
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", are used they must carry the same meaning as in r. 20,
that is, they must be confined only to the two categories
comprehended by r. 20. This argument appears to be
plausible and even incontrovertible, if
203
rr. 20 and 21 are taken out of their setting and construed
independently of other rules. But in the setting in which
they appear they can bear only one meaning, namely, that r.
20 provides for nomination only in the case of a candidate
for admission who requires a nomination in the manner
provided by the rule and r. 21 provides, for all the
candidates for admission, that they should be recommended by
two members who have personal knowledge of the candidates.
To put it in other words, under the Rules candidates for
admission fall under three groups, viz., (1) candidates
falling under r. 11, (a) and (b); (2) candidates applying
for membership vesting in the Exchange; and (3) other
candidates. All the three categories of candidates must be
recommended by two members. But the candidates belonging to
the first category shall in addition be nominated in the
manner provided by the Rules. We, therefore, hold that the
Stock Exchange Rules do not operate as a bar against the
petitioner becoming a member of the Stock Exchange subject
to the rules governing such application. The petitioner has
the right to do business in shares: in spite of the
notifications he can still do business in spot delivery
contracts. He can apply to become a member of the Stock
Exchange subject to the conditions laid down by the Rules.
The Act the validity of which he has not chosen to question,
enables the State to give or refuse recognition to any Stock
Exchange and it has chosen to give recognition to the Stock
Exchange, Bombay, subject to the conditions prescribed. The
restrictions, in our view, are not unreasonable, having
regard to the importance of the business of a stock exchange
in the country’s national economy and having regard to the
magnitude of the mischief sought to be remedied in the
interest of the general public. At another place we have
already dealt with the necessity for stringent rules
governing this type of business For the reasons Mentioned we
reject the first contention.
Re. (2): The second contention also has no merits. The
criticism is that condition 2(i) (a) annexed to the
notification cannot be supported on the basis of any
204
of the provisions of s. 4 of the Act. Condition 2 (i) reads
as follows:
" The Members of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited,
Bombay, will be entitled to apply for Membership of the
Stock Exchange, Bombay, provided they fulfil or comply with
the following terms and conditions:-
(a) they have been active members of the Indian Stock
Exchange Limited, for twelve months immediately preceding
the 6th August, 1957.
Explanation:" Active Members " for purpose of this condition
means members who have themselves transacted business
regularly on the floor of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited
either on their own account or on account of their clients.
To appreciate the argument it is also necessary to read the
material provisions of s. 4 of the Act.
Section 4: " (1) If the Central Government is satisfied,
after making such inquiry as may be necessary in this behalf
and after obtaining such further information, if any, as it
may require,-
(a) that the rules and bye-laws of a stock exchange applying
for registration are in conformity with such conditions as
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may be prescribed with a view to ensure fair dealing and to
protect investors;
(b) that the stock exchange is willing to comply with any
other conditions (including conditions as to the number of
members) which the Central Government after consultation
with the governing body of the stock exchange and having
regard to the area served by the stock exchange and its
standing and the nature of the securities dealt with by it,
may impose for the purpose of carrying, out the objects of
this Act; and
(c) that it would be in the interest of the trade and also
in the public interest to grant recognition to the stock
exchange;
It may grant recognition to the stock exchange subject to
the conditions imposed upon it as aforesaid and in such form
as may be prescribed.
(2) The conditions which the Central Government
205
may prescribe under clause (a) of sub-section (1) for the
grant of recognition to the stock exchanges may include,
among other matters, conditions relating. to,--
(i) the qualifications for membership of stock exchanges;
(ii) the manner in which contracts shall be entered into and
enforced as between members;
(iii) the representation of the Central Government on each
of the stock exchanges by such number of persons not
exceeding three as the Central Government may nominate in
this behalf; and
(iv) the maintenance of accounts of members and their audit
by chartered accountants whenever such audit is required by
the Central Government. "
The argument proceeds that condition 2(i)(a) enables only
the active members of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited to
apply for membership of the Stock Exchange, Bombay and that
such a condition can be imposed only if it amounts to a
qualification of membership within the meaning of sub-s. (2)
of s. 4, as the other conditions in that sub-section are
obviously inapplicable. It is further pointed out that sub-
s. (2) refers back to sub-s. (i)(a) and under that clause
the condition imposed must only be that prescribed by the
Rules made under the Act and that the condition imposed by
the notification is not a condition so prescribed. There is
force in this argument; but, the acceptance of this
contention does not advance the case of the petitioner, for,
if the condition is not covered by cl. (a) of s. 4(1), it
falls under cl. (b) thereof. Under that clause, the Central
Government may grant recognition to a stock exchange if the
said stock exchange is willing to comply with " any other
conditions ". It is said that the other conditions in s. 4
(1) (b) must only be conditions relating to the area
served by the stock exchange, its standing and the nature
of the securities dealt with by it. This is not what cl.
(b) of s. 4(1) says. The conditions under cl. (b) of s.
4(1) no doubt shall be such as may be imposed by the
Government, having regard to the aforesaid three
considerations, but they need not necessarily be
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confined only to the said considerations. The Government
may impose any conditions, no doubt germane to the
recognition of a stock exchange, after consultation with its
governing board, and having regard to the said
considerations. It cannot be said that condition 2(i)(a)
imposed on the Stock Exchange is not a condition germane to
its recognition. The record discloses that the Central
Government in recognising the Stock Exchange sought to avoid
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the consequential hardship on the members of the rival stock
exchange and therefore imposed the said condition on the
Stock Exchange, Bombay, as a condition for its recognition.
The condition is germane to recognition of the Stock
Exchange and is, therefore, a condition within the meaning
of " any other conditions " in cl. (b) of sub-s. (1) of s. 4
of the Act.
Re. (3): Learned counsel for the petitioner advanced a
forcible argument questioning the validity of condition
2(i)(a) of the notification on the ground that it infringed
Art. 14 of the Constitution. Elaborating his argument, the
learned counsel stated that the said condition classified
members of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited into two
groups, one active members and the other who were not active
members, and that that classification was arbitrary and had
no reasonable relation to the object sought to be achieved
by the notification. He further pointed out that the
defining of active members as those who had themselves
transacted business regularly on the floor of the Indian
Stock Exchange Limited either on their own account or on
account of their clients for 12 months immediately preceding
August 6, 1957, was not only arbitrary and vague but also,
if analysed, would lead to anomalies destructive of any
standard of reasonableness. It is alleged in the affidavit
filed by the petitioner that from the inception of the
Indian Stock Exchange Limited, 199 members of the said Stock
Exchange were actually trading on the floor of the said
Exchange from time to time but for some reason or the other
were not trading during the period of 12 months immediately
preceding August 6, 1957; that there were 34 members of the
said Stock Exchange who were regularly
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transacting business on the floor of the said Stock Exchange
prior to August 6, 1956, and for some time after August 6,
1956, but not during the entire period of 12 months from
August 6, 1956 to August 6, 1957; and that there were 24
members of the said Stock Exchange who started transacting
business regularly on the floor of the said Stock Exchange
some time after August 6, 1956 and continued to transact
business right upto and after August 6, 1957. It was asked
what was the reasonable basis for confining the definition
of active members to those who were carrying on business
during the period of 12 months from August 6, 1956 to August
6, 1957, while excluding the aforesaid three categories who
were equally active members and indeed more active than
those included in the definition. It was further asked what
was the justification for excluding a member who was an
active member for years before the crucial year and
irregularly conducted business on the floor of the Stock
Exchange during the crucial year while including a member
who might have been a newcomer or who might have been
earlier a nominal member but began to do business regularly
only during the said year. Emphasis was also laid upon the
alleged elastic and indefinite content of the word " regular
" and it was suggested that the said word could not possibly
afford a precise standard. These are all weighty con-
siderations and we must confess that there is force in them.
But there is the other side of the picture. It is well-
settled that a classification must have reasonable relation
to the object sought to be achieved. The standard of
reasonableness is inextricably conditioned by the extent and
nature of the evil and the urgency for eradicating the same.
The object of the notification is twofold. The main object
is to carry out the purpose of the Act, namely, to prevent
undesirable transactions in securities by regulating the
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business in them. The subsidiary object is to assuage the
hardship that recognition of only one stock exchange would
cause to the members of the other association. To achieve
this twin object the classification is made between active
members and inactive members. While
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on the one hand the Government found it necessary to exclude
the nominal members who would add their deadweight to the
recognised association and bring down its efficiency and
affect its disciplined conduct of business, on the other
hand it gave opportunity to persons who were actively
interested in the business to become regular members of the
Stock Exchange, Bombay. There is every justification for
excluding members who had not been taking active interest in
the business, for, as we have already pointed out, the
efficient carrying out of the business of the Stock Exchange
depends upon the moral stature, high caliber, and genuine
and active interest evinced by the members. The active
members justified themselves to the preferential treatment
by their sustained interest in the business whereas the
members who were not active showed their continued
indifference to that line of business. But the crux of the
question is, what is the justification for fixing twelve
months immediately preceding August 6, 1957, as the standard
for active membership ? The Under Secretary to the Govern-
ment of India, Ministry of Finance, filed an affidavit
describing the circumstances whereunder this classification
was made. It discloses that the notification was issued
after taking into consideration the representations made on
behalf of both the Stock Exchanges and also the facts
pertaining to the course of business conducted by the Indian
Stock Exchange Limited. It also gives the vicissitudes
through which the said Stock Exchange passed from the date
of its formation and the circumstances under which the
membership of that Exchange was divided into full members
and associate members. It points out that the Indian Stock
Exchange Limited became moribund in a few years and to
revive its activities it allowed the members of the East
India Chamber of Commerce, by relaxing its entrance fee and
security deposit requirements in 1950-51 and created a new
class of Associate Members, which facilitated the enrollment
of hundreds of Associate Members on payment of a nominal
entrance fee of Rs. 100. The Government on a consideration
of the necessary data and presumably
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having regard to the record of the activities of the various
members fixed the activities in the crucial year 1956-57 as
the standard of activity for membership.
There is a presumption in favour of the State that there is
a reasonable basis for the classification. Except the mere
allegations in the affidavit which are not admitted, the
petitioner has not placed before us any materials to
ascertain that any other members, who were regularly doing
business on the floor of the Indian Stock Exchange Limited
before August 6,1956, temporarily suspended their business
for one reason or other over which they had no control. No
statement from the accounts has been produced to enable us
to evaluate the activities of the members before the crucial
date so as to enable us to form a view that really active
members were excluded by the fixing of this period. Nor are
we in a position to verify whether any of the members
excluded were regularly doing business during a part of the
year in continuation of their business in the earlier
period. We cannot also say that the words "carrying on
business regularly " are so vague that the parties did not
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understand their connotation, for it is admitted that some
of the regular members applied for membership of the Stock
Exchange, Bombay and most of them were admitted. There is
also the fact that though three years have elapsed since the
date of the notification no other member of the Indian Stock
Exchange Limited thought fit to question the notification on
the ground that the period fixed was unreasonable and that
really active members were excluded from membership of the
Stock Exchange, Bombay. So far as the petitioner is
concerned, he was admittedly not an active member, though
lie now pretends that he was doing business through other
members. There is also no material placed before us to
support the said assertion. If the classification, between
active members and others who were not, is justifiable-we
hold it is-the Government has to draw a line somewhere and
to fix a period of activity reasonable in its opinion as a
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standard to satisfy the test of " active member ". The
burden which lies upon the petitioner who impeaches the
validity of the classification to show that it violates the
guarantee of equal protection has not been discharged. On
the material placed before us we cannot say that the period
fixed by the Government as the standard for ascertaining the
active membership is arbitrary or unreasonable. We must
make it clear that this finding must be confined only to the
validity of the impugned notification dated August 31, 1956.
The petition accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
Petition dismissed.