Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE SUPREME COURT REPORTSASWINI KUMAR GHOSH AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ARABINDA BOSE AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/10/1952
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1952 AIR 369 1953 SCR 1
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1954 SC 92 (36)
R 1955 SC 765 (33)
RF 1956 SC 105 (6)
RF 1956 SC 246 (65)
R 1957 SC 657 (36)
D 1957 SC 832 (25)
RF 1958 SC 468 (19)
RF 1958 SC 578 (173)
R 1960 SC1080 (15,74)
D 1962 SC 201 (7,8)
R 1962 SC1781 (18)
RF 1964 SC 855 (5)
R 1971 SC 221 (15)
MV 1971 SC 530 (373)
RF 1977 SC 366 (15)
R 1980 SC 962 (69,79,113)
RF 1980 SC2147 (20)
RF 1981 SC 917 (18)
E 1982 SC 149 (264)
RF 1987 SC 117 (40)
R 1992 SC 81 (11)
ACT:
Supreme Court Advocates (Practice in High Courts) Act, 1951,
s. 2-Advocate of Supreme Court-Bight to appear in Original
Side of Calcutta High Court without attorney-" Pactice",
meaning ofInterpretation of s. 2-Indian Bar Councils Act,
1926, ss. 4(2), 5(1), 8(1), 9(4), 14-Calcutta High Court,
Original Side Rules, Chapter I, rr. 37, 38-Bombay High Court
Original Side Rules, Chapter I, r. 40-Interpretation of,
Statutes-Reference to title, statement of objects,
punctuation, speeches, original Bill.
HEADNOTE:
Section 2 of the Supreme Court Advocates (Practice in High
Courts) Act, 1951, provided that "notwithstanding anything
contained in the Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926 (XXVIII of
1926), or any other law regulating the conditions subject to
which a person not entered in the roll of advocates of a
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High Court may be permitted to practise in that High Court
every advocate of the Supreme Court shall be entitled as of
right to practise in any High Court whether or not he is an
advocate of that High Court " :
Held by the Court (PATANJALI SASTRI C.J., VlvIAN BosE, and
GHULAM HASAN JJ.-MUKHERJEA and DAS JJ. dissenting)-The
practice of law in India generally involves the exercise of
both the functions of acting and pleading behalf of
litigant parties, and when s. 2 of the abovesaid Act
conferred upon an advocate of the Supreme Court the right to
" practise " in any High Court, it is legitimate to
understand that expression as authorising him to appear and
plead as well as to act behalf of suitors in all the High
Courts-including the Original Side thereof. It is
fallacious to relate that expression as applied to an
advocate either, the one band, to the court in which the
advocate is enrolled, or,, the other, to the court in
which he seeks to exercise the statutory right conferred
him. It must be related to the general constitution of the
Bar in India as a single agency in dealing with the litigant
public. A rule made by a High Court which denies to an’
advocate the right; to exercise an essential part of his
function by insisting a dual agency the Original Side is
much more-than, a rule of practice and constitutes a serious
invasion of his statutory right to practise, and the power
of making such a rule, Unless expressly reserved (as it ’was
reserved by the Bar Councils Act) would be repugnant, to the
right conferred by s. 2; and as the, Act does not reserve
any such power, the statutory right, of a Supreme Court
advocate under s. 2 to plead as well as’to act in the High
Courts of Calcutta, and Bombay in the exercise
2
of their Original Jurisdiction can-not be taken away or
curtailed by the rules of those courts, and any rule which
the Calcutta High Court may have made in the past purporting
to exclude any advocate from practising the Original Side
or from appearing and pleading unless he is instructed by an
attorney cannot affect such right.
MUKHERJEA J.-The word " practise" when used with reference
to an advocate is an elastic expression having no rigid or
fixed connotation and the precise ambit of its contents can
be ascertained only by reference to the rules of the
particular forum in which the profession is exercised. When
a. 2 of the Supreme Court Advocates (Practice in High
Courts) Act, 1951, speaks of a Supreme Court advocate being
entitled as of right to practise in any High Court, what it
actually means is that he would be clothed by reason of this
statutory provision with all the rights which are enjoyed by
an advocate of that court, and his right to plead and to act
would depend the Bar Councils Act and the rules validly
framed by that court, subject to this that no rule or
provision of law would be binding which would affect in any
way his statutory right to practise in that court solely by
reason of his being enrolled as an advocate of the Supreme
Court.
DAS J.-The words "to practise", used in relation to lawyers
as a class, mean "to exercise their profession" which is
their dictionary meaning and which is wide enough to cover
the activities of the entire genus of lawyers. They are
words of indeterminate import and have no fixed connotation
or content. In their application to particular species of
lawyers their meaning varies according to the scope and
ambit of the profession of the particular species in
relation to whom they may be used and such meaning has to be
ascertained by reference to the subject or context. A
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Supreme Court advocate being entitled only,"to appear and
plead" in that court, when s. 2 autborised him to practise"
in any High Court it must be taken, to have meant that he
was authorised to do in the High Courts all that he was
entitled to do in the Supreme Court, namely, to appear and
plead only. Alternatively the section must be taken to
authorise every Supreme Court advocate to practise as of
right in any High Court as advocates of that High Court do
and the exercise of the profession of an advocate in a High
Court by a Supreme Court advocate must involve the
observance of the rules of practice of that High Court
except to the extent they are abrogated by s. 2. That sec-
tion has made the Supreme Court advocate a statutory
advocate’ of the High Court where he goes to practise and as
such he is bound by the rules of such High Court except,
such of them as are contrary to this new statutory right.
Whichever of the two constructions is adopted, a Supreme
Court advocate cannot appear in the Original Side of the
Calcutta or Bombay High Courts unless he is instructed by an
attorney.
Queen v. Doutre (L.R. 9 App. Cas. 745), Powers of
Advocates, ln re (I.L.R. 52 Mad. 92) and Laurentius Ekka v.
Dukhi Koeri (I.L.R. 4 Pat. 766) referred to.
3
Per PATANJALI SASTRI C.J., VIVIAN BOSE, and GHULAM HASAN
JJ.-The non-obstante clause in s. 2 can reasonably be read
as overriding "anything contained" in any relevant existing
law which is inconsistent with the new enactment. Sections
9(4) and 14(3) of the Bar Councils Act and s. 2 of the new
Act cannot stand together. Whether by force of the non-
obstante clause liberally construed or of the well
established maxim of construction that the enacting part of
an Act must, when it is clear, control the non-obstante
clause when both cannot be read harmoniously, the new Act
must have the effect of abrogating the powers reserved and
continued in the High Courts by ss. 9(4) and 14(3) of the
Bar Councils Act-. MUKHERJEA and DAS JJ.-The non-obstante
clause in s. 2 of the said Act removes only those provisions
contained in the Bar Councils Act, 1926, and in any other
law, which regulate the conditions subject to which a person
not entered in the roll of advocates of a High Court may be
permitted to practise in that High Court. Other provisions
contained in the Bar Councils Act or other statutes, which
lay down the conditions under which an advocate enrolled in
the High Court is entitled to practise in the Original Side
of that court stand unaffected by the Act. Even if the
entire Bar Councils Act is excluded for the purpose of s. 2,
the rules framed by the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts
under their Letters Patent would remain valid and effective
of their own force even without the saving provision
contained in the Bar Councils Act and the Letters Patent
would also remain in full force.
Per PATANJALI SASTRI C. J., MUKHERJEA, DAB, VIVIAN BosE, and
GHULAM HASAN JJ.-Speeches made by members of the House of
Parliament the floor of the House are not admissible as
extrinsic aids to the interpretation of statutory
provisions.
State of Travancore-Cochin and Another v. Bombay Co. Ltd.
etc, ([1952] S.C.R. 1112), Administrator-General of Bengal
v. Prem Lal ( [1895] 22 I.A. 107), Krishna Aiyangar v. Nella
Perumal ( [1920] 47 I.A. 33), A.K. Go‘alan v. The State of
Madras ( [1950] S.C.R. 88) and Debendra Narain Roy v. Jogesh
Chandra Deb (A.I.R. 1936 Cal. 593) referred to.
Held per PATANJALI SASTRI C.J., DAs, VIVIAN BOSE and GHULAM
HASAN JJ.--The statement of objects and reasons annexed to a
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Bill, the form of the original Bill and the fact that
certain words: or phrases were added to or omitted from the
original Bill are also not admissible as aids to the
construction of a, statute. MUKHERJEA J.-Judicial opinion
the point whether in construing a statute the, statement of
objects and reasons or the original form of -the Bill or
reports of committees can be referred to is not uniform.
English Courts and the Privy Council have laid down that
such extrinsic aids must be dismissed from consideration.
But there are American decisions to the effect that the
general history of a statute and the various steps leading
up to an enactment including amendments or modifications of
the original Bill and reports of Legislative Committees can,
be looked I at for
4
ascertaining the intention of the legislature where it is in
doubt. The legislative history is, however, clearly
inadmissible where there is no obscurity in the meaning of a
statute.
Per MUKHERJEA and DAS JJ.-Punctuation is after all a minor
element in the construction of a statute, and even if the
orthodox view that it forms no part of the statute is to be
regarded as of imperfect obligation and it can be looked at
as contemporanea, expositio, it is clear that it cannot be
allowed to control the plain meaning of a text.
Stephenson v. Taylor ( [1861] 1 B.S. 101), Clawdon V. Green
[1868] L.R. 3 C.P. 511), Duke of Devonsshire v. Conor (L.R.
1890 Q.B.D. 468), Maharani of Burdwan v. Murtanjoy Singh
([1886] 14 I.A. 30), Pugh v. Ashutosh Sen ( (1928]55 I.A.
63) referred to.
Judgment of the Calcutta High Court reversed.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition (No. 160 of 1952) under
article 32 of the Constitution of India for the enforcement
of fundamental rights. The facts of the case and arguments
of the counsel are stated fully in the judgment.
Petitioner No. I (Aswini Kumar Ghosh) in person.
B. Sen for the respondents.
N. C. Chatterjee (S.N. Mukherjee and B. Sen, with him)
for the Incorporated Law Society, Calcutta High Court
(Intervener No. 1)
Dr. N. C. Sen Gupta (A. K. Dutt and V. N. Sethi, with him)
for the Secretary, Bar Association, Calcutta High Court
(Intervener No. 2).
N. C. Chatterjee (B. Sen, with him) for Secretary, Bar
Library, Calcutta High Court (Intervener No. 3). C. K.
Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (G. N. Joshi and J.
B. Dadachanji, with him) for the Secretary, Bar
Association, Bombay High Court (Intervener No. 4).
K. B. Naidu for Secretarv, Advocates’ AssociationMadras
High Court (Intervener No. 5).
M. C. Setalvad, Attoney-General for India (Intervener No.
6).
1952. October 27. The The judgment of Patanjali Sastri C.J.
and Vivian Bose and Ghulam Hasan JJ. was delivered by
Patanjali Sastri C. J. Mukherjea and, Das JJ. delivered
separate judgments.
5
PATANJALI SASTRI C. J.-This is an application under article
32 of the Constitution for relief in respect of an alleged
infringement of the fundamental right of the petitioners
under article 19 (1) (g) or, alternatively, under article
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136 for special leave to appeal from a judgment of the High
Court of Judicature at Calcutta rejecting their application
for the same relief under article 226.
As the petitioners would clearly be entitled to relief under
the one or the other form of remedy if their claim was well-
founded, no objection was taken to the maintainability of
the present proceeding, and we desire to guard ourselves
against being taken to have decided that a proceeding under
article 32 would lie after an application under article 226
for the same relief the same facts had been rejected after
due enquiry by a High Court. We express no opinion that
point.
The facts leading to this proceeding are not in dispute and
may be briefly stated. The first petitioner is an Advocate
of this Court and his name is also the roll of Advocates
of the High Court of Calcutta. As an Advocate of the latter
Court he is entitled, under the relevant rules there in
force, both to act and to plead the Appellate Side but not
to act or to appear, unless instructed by an Attorney, the
Original Side. 18th July, 1951, he filed in the Registry
the Original Side a warrant of authority executed in his
favour by the second petitioner to defend the latter in a
pending suit. The warrant was returned 27th July, 195 1,
with the endorsement that it "must be filed by an Attorney
of this Court under the High Court Rules and Orders,
Original Side, and not by an Advocate". The return was made
by an Assistant in charge of Suit Registry Department, who
is called as the first respondent to this petition. The
second respondent is the Registrar, Original Side, who is
alleged to have refused the same ground to accept a
warrant filed earlier in a company matter. It is conceded
that the action of the respondent would be
6
valid apart from the right claimed by the first petitioner
as an Advocate of this Court under the Supreme Court
Advocates (Practice in High Courts) Act, 1951, (hereinafter
referred to as the new Act) which provides that such
Advocates are " entitled as of right to practise" in any
High Court in India. The petitioners, however, claimed that
the right to practise thus conferred included also the right
to act as well as to appear without the intervention of an
Attorney the Original Side, and moved the High Court under
article 226 for issue of appropriate writs orders or
directions to the respondent for enforcement of the right
denied to them. A Special Bench consisting of Trevor
Harries C.J., Chakravartti and Banerjee JJ. heard the motion
and dismissed it, holding that the first petitioner did not,
being enrolled as an Advocate of the Supreme Court, become
entitled to act the Original Side of the Court.
The second petitioner has since dropped out of these
proceedings, and the first petitioner, who appeared in
person and argued his case before us, is hereinafter
referred to as the petitioner.
I As the issues involved are of far-reaching importance to
certain sections of the Bar at Calcutta and at Bombay, this
Court directed notice of the proceeding to be served the
Incorporated Law Society, Secretary Bar Association, and
Secretary, Advocates’ Association, Calcutta High Court, and
Secretary, Bar Association, Bombay High Court, and all of
them appeared by their learned counsel, while the Attorney-
General appeared in person as intervener. We have thus had
the advantage of a full argument from all points of view.
A brief historical survey of the functions, rights and
duties of legal practitioners in this country may facilitate
appreciation of the contentions of the parties. Before the
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Indian High Courts Act of 1861 (24 and 25 Vic. Ch. 104) was
enacted, there were, in the territories subject to the
British rule in India, Supreme Courts exercising
jurisdiction mainly in the
7
Presidency Towns and Sudder Courts exercising jurisdiction
over the mofussil. Though the Supreme Courts were given, by
the Charter Acts and the Letters Patent establishing them,
power to enroll Advocates who could be authorised by the
rules to act as well as to plead in the Supreme Courts,
rules were made empowering Advocates only to appear and
plead and not to act, while Attorneys were enrolled and
authorised to act and not to plead. In the Sudder Courts
and the Courts subordinate thereto, pleaders who obtained a
certificate from those Courts were allowed both to act and
plead. When the Supreme Courts and the Sudder Courts were
abolished and their jurisdictions were transferred to High
Courts under the statute of 1861, this differentiation in
the functions of legal practitioners was continued in the
High Courts under the notion, apparently, that the High
Court, in the exercise of its Ordinary Original
Jurisdiction, was the successor of the Supreme Court, and
that, the Appellate Side, it inherited the jurisdiction
and powers of the Sudder Courts, with the result that
Advocates were allowed only to appear and plead instructed
by Attorneys empowered to act the Original Side as in the
Supreme Court, while the Appellate Side, they were allowed
both to act and plead as in the Sudder Courts. There was
also another class of practitioners known as Vakils who were
neither allowed to act nor to plead the Original Side, but
were allowed both to act and plead the Appellate Side.
Within a short time, however, the Vakils at Madras were
permitted by a rule made by the High Court to appear, plead
and act the Original Side as wel1-vide In the Matter of
the Petition of the Attorneys(1)-but the cleavage between
the two jurisdictions, Original and Appellate, was
maintained in the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts with modi-
fications by means of rules framed by the respective High
Courts from time to time. While this was the position in
the High Courts in the three Presidency Towns of Calcutta,
Bombay and Madras, no distinction
(1) (1876-78) I.L.R. I Mad. 24.
8
was drawn between Advocates and Vakils (except in the matter
of authorisation by their clients) as regards their right to
appear, plead and act in the other High Courts subsequently
established in British India without original jurisdiction.
The position in these Courts was correctly stated by a Full
Bench of the Allahabad High Court thus:-
" Not only by the Letters Patent but by the Civil Procedure
Code, an Advocate may act for his client in this Court in
the manner in that statute set forth and do all things that
a Pleader, that is, a Vakil, may do, provided always that
he. be upon the Roll of the Court’s Advocates": Bakhtawar
Singh v. Sant Lal(1).
In this situation, the Legal Practitioners Act, 1879, (Act
XVIII of 1879) which consolidated and amended the law
relating to Legal Practitioners was passed. By section 4 it
empowered the Advocates and Vakils enrolled in any High
Court to "practise" in all subordinate courts and in any
other High Court with the "permission" of the latter Court.
No Vakil or’Pleader, however, was to be entitled to
"practise" in a High Court exercising jurisdiction in a
Presidency Town. By section 5 all persons enrolled as
Attorneys in any High Court became "entitled to practise" in
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all courts .subordinate to such High Court and in any court
in British India other than a High Court established by
Royal Charter the roll of which he is not entered. It is
worthy of note that the right to practise thus conferred
included the right to plead a,; well as to act in all the
courts referred to above.
Then came the Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926, which was
enacted in response to a demand by the legal profession for
unification and autonomy of the Bar, and it achieved a
certain measure of both, eliminating the two grades of
practitioners, the Vakils and the Pleaders, by merging them
in the class of Advocates who, were "entitled as of right to
practise" in the High Courts in which they were enrolled and
in any other court in British India, subject to certain
(1) (1887) 9 All. 617, 621.
9
exceptions. It also provided for the constitution of Bar
Councils for the High Courts with power to regulate the
admission of Advocates, to prescribe their qualifications
and to inquire into any case of miscouduct that may be
referred to them. But the right to practise and the power
to make rules were not to limit or in any way affect the
unlimited powers of the High Courts at Calcutta and Bombay
to make rules allowing or disallowing Advocates to practise
their Original Side: (vide section 9 (4) and section 14).
While such was the position of Advocates in the courts in
what -used to be known as British India, it is not a matter
of dispute that Advocates practising in the courts of what
were known as Indian States were allowed to appear, plead
and act behalf of suitors.
It will thus be seen that legal practitioners, by whatever
name called, practising in all the High Courts in India,
except the Original Side of the Calcutta and Bombay High
Courts, and in the innumerable subordinate courts all over
India were always entitled to plead as well as to act. In
the Original Side of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts
alone, where the cleavage between the Original and Appellate
jurisdictions continued to be marked, due, as we have seen,
to historical reasons, the functions of pleading and acting,
which a legal practitioner normally combines in his own
person, were bifurcated and assigned, following "the usage
and the peculiar constitution of the English Bar" (per Lord
Watson in the case cited below), to Advocates and Attorneys
respectively.
In this situation, the establishment of the Supreme Court of
India, exercising appellate jurisdiction over all the High
Courts naturally stimulated the demand for the unification
of the Bar in India, and Parliament enacted the new Act as a
step towards that end. It is a brief enactment intituled
"an Act to authorise Advocates of the Supreme Court to
practise as of right in any High Court" and consists of only
two
10
sections. Section I describes the short title of the Act
and section 2 enacts (so far as material here :-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian Bar
Councils Act, 1926, or in any other law regulating the
conditions subject to which a person not entered in the roll
of Advocates of a High Court may, be permitted to practise
in that High Court every Advocate of the Supreme Court shall
be entitled as of right to practise in any High Court
whether or not he is an Advocate of that High Court:
Provided that nothing in this section shall be deemed to
entitle any person, merely by reason of his being an
Advocate of the Supreme Court, to practise in any High Court
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of which he was at any time a judge, if he bad given an
undertaking not to practice therein after ceasing to hold
office as such judge."
According to the petitioner’s contention, an Advocate of
the Supreme Court becomes entitled as of right to appear and
plead as well as to act in all the High Courts including the
High Court in which he is already enrolled, without any
differentiation being made for this purpose between the
various jurisdictions exercised by those courts. The word
"practise" as applied to an Advocate in India includes both
the functions of acting and pleading, and there is nothing
in section 2 to warrant the cutting down of that statutory
right to pleading only the Original Side of the Calcutta
High Court as the respondents seek to do. the other hand,
the respondents contend that the non obstante clause in the
first part of the section furnishes the key to the proper
interpretation of its scope, and inasmuch as that clause
supersedes only those pro-visions of the Bar Councils Act,
and of any other law which exclude persons not entered in
the roll of Advocates of a High Court from the right to
practise in that Court, the enacting clause must be
construed as conferring only a right co-extensive with the
disability removed by the opening clause; that is to say,
the section is designed only to enable Advocates of the
Supreme Court who are not enrolled as
11
Advocates of any High Court to practise nevertheless in that
High Court. The petitioner, who is already an Advocate of
the Calcutta High Court, could derive no additional right
from the section in relation to that Court, as he does not
fall within the purview of the section. Alternatively, even
if the provision is read as conferring Advocates of the
Supreme Court the right to practise in relation to all the
High Courts in India, including the High Courts in which
they are already enrolled, the section does no more than
entitle them to practise in conformity with the conditions
subject to which advocates are permitted to practise in
those Courts, for the word "practise" is a term of
indefinite import and, as applied to an Advocate, it may
mean pleading or acting or both, according to the conditions
under which the profession of an Advocate is exercised in
the court concerned. Both branches of this contention have
found favour with the learned Judges of the court below.
A third view was also suggested in the course of the debate
before us. An Advocate of the Supreme Court is entitled
under the Rules of that Court only to appear and plead and
not to act, while Agents who are enrolled as such are
entitled only to act but not to appear and plead. In
dealing with the right of Advocates of the Supreme Court to
"practise" in the High Courts, Parliament must therefore be
taken to have used that word in the sense only of appearing
and pleading, the object of section 2 being only to confer
the Supreme Court Advocates the right to appear and plead in
all the High Courts and no further or other right.
Having given the matter our most careful and anxious
consideration, we have come to the conclusion that the
petitioner’s contention is correct and must prevail.
As we have already seen, there are in this country more than
20 High Courts (including the Judicial Commissioners’ Courts
which are treated as High Courts for this purpose), and in
all these
12
High Courts excepting the original jurisdiction of the
Calcutta and Bombay High Courts and in all the numerous
subordinate courts, both civil and criminal, existing all
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over the country, an Advocate combines in himself both the
functions of acting and pleading which constitute the.
normal activities of all legal practitioners except members
of the English Bar whose "usage and peculiar constitution"
allow them only to appear and plead and not to act. It
would seem that this peculiar British system of division of
functions between Barristers and Attorneys is not in vogue
even in all the British Dominions and Colonies. For
instance, in the report of the case Queen v. Doutre(1), we
find counsel for the respondent stating in the course of his
argument that "In all the Provinces of Canada the functions
of Barristers and Solicitors are united in the same person
and the rules of the English Bar do not apply there". In
upholding in that case the right of counsel to sue for and
recover a quantum meruit in respect of professional
services rendered by him, the Judicial Committee remarked:-
"Their Lordships entertain serious doubts whether in
an English Colony where the common law of England is in
force, they (i.e., general considerations of public policy)
could have any application to the case of a lawyer who is
not a more advocate or pleader and who combines in his own
person various functions which are exercised by legal
practitioners of every class in England all of whom, the Bar
alone excepted, can recover their fees by an action at law."
It seems reasonable, therefore, to assume that the practice
of law in this country generally involves the exercise of
both the functions of acting and pleading, behalf of a
litigant party; in other words, the Bar in India, generally
speaking, is organised as a single agency. Accordingly,
when the Legislature confers upon an Advocate "the right to
practise" in a Court, it is legitimate to understand that
expression as authorising him to appear and plead as well as
to
(1)(1883) 9 App. Cas. 745.
13
act behalf of suitors in that Court. It is true that the
word "practice" used in relation to a given profession means
simply the pursuit of that profession and involves the
exercise of the functions which are cordinarily exercised by
the members of the pro fession. But it seems to be
fallacious to relate that expression, as applied to an
Advocate, either, the one, hand, to the Court in which the
Advocate is enrolled or, the other, to the Court in which
he seeks to exercise the statutory right conferred him.
It must, in our opinion, be related to the general
constitution of the Bar in India as a single agency in
dealing with the litigant public, a system which prevails
all over this vast country except in two small pockets where
adual agency imported from England was maintained, owing, as
we have seen, to historical reasons.
We are accordingly unable to accept the suggestion that
because the Advocates of the Supreme Court are not, under
the Rules of that Court, entitled to act, the word
"practise" as used by Parliament in section 2 must be
understood in the restricted sense of appearing and pleading
only. Parliament was, of course, aware that the right of
the Advocates of the Supreme Court to practise in that Court
was confined only to appearing and pleading, but the object
of section 2 was to confer upon a designated body of
persons, namely, the Advocates of the Supreme Court, a right
to practise in other courts, viz., the various High Courts
in India, whether or not they were already enrolled in such
courts. This statutory right, which is conferred the
Supreme Court Advocates in relation to other courts and
which they did not have before) cannot, as a matter of
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construction, be taken to be, controlled by reference to
what they are allowed or not allowed to do in the Supreme
Court under the Rules of that Court. Such Rules are liable
to be altered at any time in exercise of the rule-making
power conferred by article 145 of the Constitution. The
scope and
14
content of the new statutory right conferred in relation to
the High Courts could not have been intended to depend the
varying scope of the functions which the Supreme Court
Advocates are allowed to, exercise in that Court from time
to time. Besides, the consequences of such a construction
would be somewhat startling. For instance, if an Advocate
of the Supreme Court not entered the Roll of the Allahabad
High Court desired to practise in the latter Court where
there are no Attorneys or Agents, he would find himself in a
difficult situation. It was said that a, local Advocate
could be engaged to instruct him, acting for the client.
Even if it were permissible to substitute a local Advocate
for an "Agent" to overcome the disability imposed by Order
IV, Rule 11, of the Supreme Court Rules which prohibits an
Advocate from appearing "unless he is instructed by an
Agent", it would be tantamount to introducing a new type of
dual agency where it does not exist at present, an
innovation which, we think, could hardly have been
contemplated. Such an interpretation would also render the
right conferred by the new Act largely illusory in practice.
The construction adopted by the learned Judges of
the High Court, which relates the word "practise" in section
2 to the High Court in which the Supreme Court Advocate
seeks to exercise his right, seems to us to be equally open
to objections. In their view, that word as applied to the
same Advocate should be understood in a wider or narrower
sense in relation to different High Courts, and indeed, to
different jurisdictions of the same High Court, according to
the rules there in force. They say:--
"Since the section applies to a number of different High
Courts where-different conditions of practice prevail, the
word ’practice’ has no one particular and invariable meaning
in the section but its meaning must vary according as the
section is applied to one High Court or another. In its
application to each High Court it will have the meaning
which an Advocate’s right to practise bears in that Court at
15
the time under the local rules and regulations. This
meaning may be wider in relation to one High Court and
narrower in relation to another, and even in relation to the
same High Court it may not always remain the same, for a
High Court-may enlarge the professional rights of its
Advocates and if it does so, Advocates of the Supreme Court
will, thereafter, have the enlarged rights in that Court.
But at any given point of time the rights of an Advocate of
the Supreme Court to practise in -any particular High Court
in exercise of the power conferred him by section 2 can at
most be co-extensive with but no greater than the right
which Advocates of that Court themselves possess at the
time."
We are unable to agree with this ambulatory inter-
pretation of section 2. It may be that the full sense of the
word "practise" as including., both acting and pleading may
be out down by the context in which it is used in a
particular statute. But we do not find any such context in
the language of the new Act or in its object as we conceive
it.- The construction which the learned Judges have placed
section 2 was supported before us by attributing to the word
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((practise" the "dictionary meaning", as it was called, of
exercising a profession and postulating the exercise by the
Advocate of the Supreme Court of different professions in
different High Courts in which he may seek to appear. Thus,
he exercises the profession of a Madras Advocate while
appearing in Madras; the profession of an. Appellate Side
Advocate or of an Original Side Advocate, as the case may
be, while appearing those sides of the Calcutta and the
Bombay High Courts, and so . The object of this curious
differentiation is to read the different conditions under
which. an Advocate exercises his professsion in each of
those Courts or jurisdictions into the word "practise"
itself as the necessary implication of its dictionary
meaning so as to bring in the exclusion of acting the
Original Side as part of its connotation. We find it
difficult to appreciate this view. The Advocate of the
Supreme Court in all the cases
16
referred to above seeks to practise only one profession,
namely, the profession of an Advocate. As such he would be
bound to observe the rules of practice of each Court, that
is, the prescribed procedure for conducting legal
proceedings in the Court concerned; but a rule which denies
to him the right to exercise an essential part of his
function by insisting a dual agency the Original Side is
much more than a rule of practice and the power of making
such a rule, unless expressly reserved by the new Act, as it
was reserved in section 9 (4) and section 14(3) of the Bar
Councils Act, would be repugnant to the right conferred by
section 2. In this connection, it may be pertinent to point
out that the power of the High Courts to make rules of
practice regulating the procedure to be followed in the
conduct of proceedings before them and the power to frame
rules regulating the admission and conduct of legal practi-
tioners were always derived from distinct sources
originally under different clauses of the Letters Patent
establishing them and later from the Civil Procedure Code
and the Bar Councils Act.
The learned Judges have also overlooked an important
distinction between the position of an Advocate of the
Calcutta or the Bombay High Court in relation to his Court
and that of an Advocate of the Supreme Court in relation to
those Courts. The former is not entitled to practise "as of
right" the Original Side of his High Court as his right to
practise is made under section 14(1) (a) expressly subject
to section 9(4) which reserves the power of those Courts to
exclude him from such right so far as the Original Side is
concerned. In other words,the local Advocate is not
entitled "as of right" to practise the Original Side of
those two High Courts, whereas it is open to argument and
indeed is now argued that the Advocate of the Supreme Court
becomes under the new Act entitled to practise "as of right"
in all High Courts without any distinction in the matter of
the jurisdictions exercised by them, because no, such power
is preserved and continued in the new Act. In -view of this
17
difference, which is vital to the petitioner’s contention,
it is not correct to say that the right conferred the
Supreme Court Advocate "can at most be co-extensive with but
no greater than the right which Advocates of that Court
themselves possess at the time". Here, indeed, we reach the
crux of the whole case.
Now, section 14(1) (a) of the Bar Councils Act enacts
14.(1) An Advocate shall be entitled as of right to
practise-(a) subject to the provisions of subsection (4) of
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section 9, in the High Court of which he is an Advocate,"
and
Section 9(4) provides:-
"Nothing in this section or in any other, provision of this
Act shall be deemed to limit or in any way affect the powers
of the High Courts of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal
and at Bombay to prescribe the qualifications to be
possessed by persons applying to practise in those High
Courts respectively in the exercise of their original
jurisdiction or the powers of those High Courts to grant or
refuse, as they think fit, any such application, or to
prescribe the conditions under which such persons shall be
entitled to practise or plead."
Section 14(3) reads
"Nothing in this section shall be deemed to limit or in
anyway affect the power of the High Court of Judicature at
Fort William in Bengal or of the High Court of Judicature at
Bombay to make rules determining the persons who shall be
entitled respectively to lead and to act in the High Court
in the exercise of its original jurisdiction."
It is to be noted that by virtue of the last two provisions
to which the right of local Advocates is made expressly
subject, the High Courts of Calcutta and Bombay have the
power to "grant or refuse as they think fit" the application
of any person applying to practise in the Original Side of
those Courts, and the power to make rules laying down who
shall plead and
18
who shall act that side. It is in exercise of these
powers that the High Courts have framed the rules, to which
reference has been made, cutting down the right of the
Advocates of those Courts to practise the Original Side to
appearing and pleading only and otherwise imposing
restrictions that right, such as, that they shall not
appear unless instructed by an Attorney. That is to say, the
Advocates of those Courts are not entitled to practise as
of right the Original Side. As the powers thus reserved
are exercisable only in regard to the Original Side, the
Advocates of these Courts are under section 14(1) (a)
entitled as of right to practise in the appellate and other
jurisdictions exercised by those Courts. Similarly, under
section 2 of the new Act every Advocate of the Supreme Court
is entitled as of right to practise in any High Court. But
it is significant that no power is reserved, to the Calcutta
or the Bombay High Courts to cut down this statutory right
and confine it to pleading alone the Original Side. Why
were the reservations which the Legislature took care to
insert in the Bar Councils Act in conferring a statutory
right of practice Advocates of the High Courts omitted in
the new Act in conferring a similar right in similar terms
the Advocates of the Supreme Court in relation to the High
Courts? Why this departure from the pattern of what is, in
this respect, a closely analogous piece of legislation? The
respondents made two,answers to this question neither of
which seems to us satisfactory. One was that the word
"practise" itself connoted, in relation to the Original Side
of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts, only pleading and
not acting, as Advocates of those Courts practising that
side had long been only appearing and pleading instructed by
Attorneys who acted for the suitors. This argument we have
already rejected. But, even so, why insert section 9(4) in
the Bar Councils Act and make the right under section 14(1)
(a) subject to the overriding powers under section 9(4)? If
the argument were valid, such provisions would have been
wholly unnecessary, for,
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19
even in their absence, the word "practise" would con-. note
only pleading and not acting. This indeed is an additional
ground for rejecting that construction. It is legitimate,
therefore, to conclude that the Legiglature used the word
"practise" both in the Bar Councils Act and in the new Act
in its full sense of acting and pleading, but while in the
case of Advocates of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts it
has expressly preserved and continued the power of those
courts to restrict or exclude the right of practice the
Original Side, it has reserved no such overriding power
under the new Act with the result that any restrictive rule
cutting down the statutory right would be repugnant to
section 2 and therefore void and inoperative.
A similar view of the effect of section 14(1) (a) of the Bar
Councils Act was expressed by a Full Bench of the Madras
High Court in Powers of Advocates, In re (1), where it was
held that a rule made by that Court excluding the Advocates
enrolled there from acting the Insolvency Side became
invalid and inoperative after the enactment of that Act, and
we entirely agree with that decision. The learned Judges
below attempted to distinguish that case, as Mr. Chatterjee
for the respondents did before us, by observing that because
the Bar Councils Act made no distinction between the
different jurisdictions of the Madras High Court and the
rules of that Court allowed the Advocates to act and plead
the Original as well as the Appellate jurisdiction
thereof, the learned Judges construed the word "practise" in
section 14 to mean both acting and pleading. That is not a
correct view of the reasoning employed by the Full Bench.
The learned Judges failed to see that such reasoning would
indeed lead to the opposite conclusion. As a matter of,
fact, there was a rule under which the local Advocates were
prevented from acting and they had accordingly not acted in
the insolvency jurisdiction of that Court, so that if
"practise" in section 14(1) (a) were to be construed
(1) (1928) I.L.R. 52 Mad. 92,
20
in the light of what the Advocates bad been doing in the
past under the rules of that Court, the Court would have had
to hold that the Advocates acquired no new right by virtue
of section 14(1) (a) But the Full Bench held that they did
and the gist of their reasoning was thus put by Kumaraswami
Sastri J. who delivered the leading judgment:-
"The word ’practise’ ordinarily means ’appear, act
and plead, unless there is anything in the subject or
context to limit its meaning...... I am of opinion that
where an Act confers rights to a party in general terms and
entitles him to perform more than one function, the cutting
down of those rights by a rule would make that rule
repugnant to the provisions of the Act."
It was next suggested that no support for
the petitioner’s contention could be derived from the
absence in the new Act of reservations like those contained
in sections 9 (4) and 14 (1) (a) of the Bar Councils Act
because the power of framing rules regarding legal
practitioners given to the Chartered High Courts under their
respective Letters Patent could be exercised only in respect
of the Advocates enrolled in those Courts, and the
reservation of a power so limited would be meaningless in
the new Act which deals with the rights of the Supreme Court
Advocates. This argument overlooks that those High Courts
had unfettered discretion to admit or to refuse admission to
any person to practise as an Advocate, Vakil or Attorney.
Clause 9 of the Letters Patent of the Calcutta High Court,
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for instance, empowers that Court "to approve, admit and
enroll such.......... Advocates, Vakils and Attorneys as to
the said High Court shall seem meet". The Bar Councils Act
also assumed that a power to exclude any person from
practising the Original Side existed in the High Courts,
as is shown by section 9 (4) which provides that nothing
contained in that Act shall be deemed to affect the power of
the Calcutta and the Bombay High Courts to grant or refuse
the application of "persons " applying to practise the
Original Side of
21
those Courts or their power to prescribe the conditions
under which " such persons" could practise that side. Be
it noted that the word used is not " Advocates " which, in
view of the definition in section 2 (1) (a), would indicate
a power confined to the Advocates of those Courts. And when
that Act proceeded to empower by section 14 (1) (a) an
Advocate enrolled in a High Court to practise as of right in
that Court, it took care to make it clear that the right so
conferred was subject to the exercise of the power reserved
under section 9 (4). But, as pointed out already, it is
significant that Parliament, in conferring a similar right
under the new -Act the Supreme Court Advocates, did not
reserve any such overriding power. In the absence of such
reservation, the statutory right of a Supreme Court Advocate
to plead as well as to act in the High Courts of Calcutta,
and Bombay in the exercise of their original jurisdiction
cannot be taken away or curtailed by those Courts, and any
rules which they may have made in the past purporting to.
exclude any Advocate from acting their Original Side, or
from appearing and pleading unless he is instructed by an
Attorney cannot affect such right.
Turning now to the non obstante clause in section
2 of the new Act, which appears, to have furnished the whole
basis for the reasoning of the Court belowand the argument
before us closely, followed ’that reasoning-we find the
learned Judges begin by inquiring what are the provisions
which that clause seek-, to supersede and then place upon
the enacting clause such Construction as would make the
right conferred by-it co-extensive with the disability im-
posed by the superseded provisions. The meaning of the
section will become clear", they, obser, "if we examine a
little more closely what the, section in fact supersedes or
repeals......The disability which the section removes and
the right which it confers are coextensive." This is not, in
our judgments a correct approach, to the construction of
section 2. It should
4
22
first be ascertained what the enacting part of the section
provides, a fair construction of the words used according
to, their natural and ordinary meaning, and the non obstante
clause is to be understood as operating to set aside as no
longer valid anything contained in relevant existing laws
which is inconsistent with the new enactment. We will
revert to this clause again presently.
Following their line of approach, the learned
Judges reached two conclusions: first, that section 2
confers no new right an Advocate of the Supreme Court in
relation to the High Court in which he is already enrolled,
but gives him the right to practise in the High Courts in:
the roll of which he was not entered as, an Advocate. The
petitioner was accordingly not within the purview of the
section in relation to the Calcutta High Court of which. he
was already an Advocate; and secondly, that the only pro-
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visions superseded by the non obstante clause are section 8
(1) and section 14 (2) of the Bar Councils Act and Rule 38
of Ch. V of the Original Side Rules of the Calcutta High
Court and a similar rule framed under section,15 (b) of the
Bar Councils Act by the Calcutta Bar, Council, which
prescribe the conditions subject to which Advocates of other
High Courts are permitted to practise the Original and
Appellate Sides of. that Court and the corresponding rules
then in force in, the Bombay High Court. These provisions
alone, it was said fell within the description " regulating
the conditions subject to which a person not eptered in the
roll of Advocates of a High Court may be. permitted to
practise in that High Court." All other provisions of the
Bar Councils Act,, including sections 9 (4) and 14 (3), as
well as other rules of the Original. Side of both Calcutta
and Bombay High Courts have not been superseded or repealed
by section 2 of the new, Act but continue in force. We now
proceed to examine whether these conclusions are well-
founded.
Much ado was made an both sides ;about the comina
occurring just before the word " or " in the
23
non obstante clause, the petitioner stressing its importance
as showing that the adjectival clause " regulating the
conditions etc." does not qualify the words " Indian Bar
Councils Act " which are separated by the comma and that,
therefore, the whole of that Act is superseded,
while’learned counsel for the respondents insisted that in
construing a statute punctuation marks should be left out of
consideration. Nothing much we think, turns the comma, as
it seems I grammatically more correct to take the adjectival
clause as qualifying " law ". Having ’regard to the words
anything contained" and the preposition "in" used after the
disjunctive "or", the qualifying clause cannot reach back to
the words " Bar Councils Act ". But, whichever way we take
it, it must be admitted that, in framing the non obstante
clause, the draftsman had primarily in, mind those
Provisions which stood in the way of an Advocate not
enrolled in any particular High Court practising in that
Court. It does not, however, necessarily follow that
section 2 is concerned only with the right of Advocates of
the Supreme Court to practise in the High Courts in which
they are not enrolled. The true scope of the enacting
clause must, as we have observed, be determined a fair
reading of the words used in their natural and ordinary
meaning, and in the present case, there is not much room for
doubt the point. The words " every Advocate " and "
whether or not he is an Advocate of that High Court" make it
plain that the section was designed to apply to the Advo-
cates of the Supreme Court not only in relation. to the High
Courts of which they are not Advocates but also in relation
to those High Courts in which they have been already
enrolled. The learned Judges below dismissed the words "
whether or not etc." with the remark that " they -are not
very apposite ",,as
" no one who is an Advocate of a particular
High Court requires to be an Advocate of the Supreme Court
in order to practise in that Court". While it may be true
to say that section 2 does not give Advocates of many of the
High Courts any additional right
24
in relation to their own Courts, it would,
according to the petitioner’s contention, give at least to
the Advocates of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts some
additional right in the Original Side of those Courts, and
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that may well have been the purpose of using those words.
It is not a sound principle of construction to brush aside
words in a statute as being inapposite surplusage, if they
can have appropriate application in circumstances
conceivably within the contemplation of the statute.
Nor can we read the non obstante clause as specifically
repealing only the particular provisions which the learned
Judges below have been at pains to pick out from the Bar
Councils Act and the Original Side Rules of the Calcutta and
Bombay High Courts. If, as we, have pointed out, the
enacting part of section -2 covers all Advocates of the
Supreme Court, the non obstante clause can reasonably be
read as overriding " anything contained" in any relevant
existing law which is inconsistent with the new enactment,
although the-draftsman appears to have had primarily in his
mind a particular type of law as conflicting with the new
Act. The enacting part of a statute must, where it is
clear, be taken to control the non obstante clause where
both cannot be read harmoniously; for, even apart from such
clause, a later law abrogates earlier laws clearly
inconsistent with it. Posteriores leges priores contrarias
abrogant (Broome’s Legal Maxims, 10th Edn., p. 347). Here,
section 2 entitles every Advocate of the Supreme Court as of
right to practise in any High Court in India. The phrase "
entitled as of right " has evidently been adopted from the
Bar Councils, Act, and we have already indicated our view
that; the word "Practise as applied to a legal practitioner
in,,, India includes, in the absence of any limiting or
restrictive; context, both the functions of acting and
pleading. The phrase " entitled as of right to practise "
is an emphatic affirmation of a right to plead, and to act
independently,of the will or discretion of any other person.
Could it be said that sections 9 (4)and 14 (3)
25
of the Bar Councils Act are consistent with the
existence of such a right ? As we have seen already, section
9 (4) preserves the powers of the High Courts at Calcutta
and Bombay, among other things, " to grant or refuse, as
they think fit " the applications of persons to practise in
those High Courts in the exercise of their original
jurisdiction How could a person be said to be entitled as of
right to practise in a High Court if that Court has
unfettered power to reject his application to practise an
important side of its jurisdiction ? Similarly, bow Could a
person be said to be entitled as of right to pleadin a High
Court if that Court has the power to frame a rule which pre-
cludes him from pleading in the original jurisdiction of
;that Court unless he is instructed by an Attorney?
Obviously, sections 9 (4) and 14 (3) of the Bar Councils Act
and section 2 of the new Act entitling an Advocate of the.
Supreme Court as of right to practise in any High Court
cannot stand together. Whether by force of the non obstante
clause liberally construed as indicated above or of the
wellestablished maxim of construction already referred to,
the new Act must have the effect of abrogating the powers
reserved and continued in the High Courts by the aforesaid
provisions of the Bar Councils Act. We cannot, therefore,
agree with the learned Judges below that the said two
provisions have not been superseded or repealed by section
2. As we have already observed, if such reservations bad
also been inserted in the new Act, the analogy with section
14 (1) (a) of the Bar Councils Act would have been complete
and the petitioner as an Advocate of the Supreme Court could
be prevented by rules made in appropriate terms from acting
the Original Side of the Calcutta and the Bombay High
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Courts. But, in the absence of such reservations in the new
Act, his claim in these proceedings must succeed.
It has been said in the course of the argument
that, notwithstanding the absence of such reservations in
the new Act, it must be assumed that the Advocates of the
Suprme Court have become entitled to practise
26
in any High Court only subject to the rules and regulations
of that Court or, as the High Court put it " section 2 does
not confer Ian uncharted freedom the Advocates of the
Supreme Court to practise in any High Court in any way they
like, but only puts them, in each different High Court, a
par with the; Advocates of that Court, where they must
submit to the same terms and conditions as bind those
Advocates". Otherwise, it was said, the Supreme Court
Advocates would be "let loose" to practise in all Courts
freed of all obligations to observe the rule and regulations
of those Courts and the result would be confusion and chaos.
Therefore, it was urged, the rules of the Calcutta and
Bombay High Courts, which preclude Advocates of those Courts
from acting the Original Side of their jurisdiction or
from pleading without the intervention of an Attorney, are
binding upon Supreme -Court Advocates as well. We see no
force in the argument which seems to proceed a
misconception. The right of an Advocate to practise, as we
have seen, normally Comprises the exercise of his two-fold
function’ of acting and pleading without the intervention of
anybody else. Any rule or condition that prevents him from
exercising one of those functions is plainly a cutting down
of his right to practise and, affecting as it does the sub-
stance of his right, is in its operation, quite unlike the
rules and conditions of practice under which all Advocates
normally carry their business in courts. No one suggests
that a Supreme Court Advocate is, by becoming entitled to
practise in the High Courts, freed from all. obligation to
conform to the ruler, of practice and regulations as, to
costume and Such other matters, according to which the
profession of law must be exercised in the various High
Courts. There is a vital distinction between such rules and
regulations and the rules which seek to out down the sub-
stance of an Advocate’s right to act and to plead by
excluding him from the exercise of the one or the other of
those two functions. The Bar Councils Act recognises this
distinction by expressly reserving the
27
power of the High Courts of Calcutta and Bombay to exclude
or impose restrictions upon the right of Advocates to plead
and to act the Original Side, whereas no similar
reservation has been considered necessary in respect of the
power to make rules and regulations of the former type,
because they were not regarded as derogating from the
substance of the statutory right to practise. Suppose, for
instance, the Calcutta, High Court made a rule that no
person other than those mentioned in Rule 2 (1), Chapter I
of the Original Side Rules (i.e., practising Barristers in
England, N. Ireland, etc.) will be entitled to appear and
plead its Original Side, could it reasonably be suggested
that such -a rule was only a matter of "internal
administration" and, as such, would bind all Advocates
practising in that Court even apart, from section 9 (4) ?
Any rules which prevent an Advocate from acting the
Original Side or appearing that side without the
intervention of an Attorney constitute a serious invasion of
his statutory right to practise, and unless the power to
make such rules is reserved in the statute which confers the
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right they cannot prevail against that right.
Reference was also made in this connection to the
difficulty of exercising disciplinary control over the
Supreme Court Advocates practising in the High Courts in
which they are not enrolled but such difficulty, if any, may
arise under both the interpretations contended for before
us. It is not denied that a Supreme Court Advocate is
entitled to, appear and plead and act the Appellate Side
of all the High Courts and the question as to how
disciplinary jurisdiction is to be exercised over him in
relation to his activities the Original Side will have to
be determined the same lines as in relation to his
activities the Appellate Side and the possibility of any
such difficulty arising cannot be more of an objection to
the one construction than to the other.
There was much argument before us as to the ob-
ject which Parliament had in view in passing, the; new, Act,
each side suggesting an object which would
28
support the construction which it sought to place upon
section 2. Each side relied upon the "statement of objects
and reasons" annexed to the Bill in support of its own
contentions. Reference was also made to speeches made the
floor of the House by members during the debate the Bill.
Our attention was also called to the form of the Bill as
originally introduced in the House and its amendment by
omitting part (a) of the proviso to clause (2) thereof.
As regards the speeches made by the members of
the House in the course of the debate, this Court has
recently held that they are not admissible as extrinsic aids
to the interpretation of statutory provisions: The State of
Travancore-Cochin & Another v. The Bombay Co. Ltd. etc.(1).
As regards the propriety of the reference to
the statement of objects and reasons, it must be remembered
that it seeks only to explain what reasons induced the mover
to introduce the Bill in the House and what objects he
sought to achieve. But those objects and reasons may or may
not correspond to the objective which the majority of
members had in view when they passed it into law. The Bill
may have undergone radical changes during its passage
through the House or Houses, and there is no guarantee that
the reasons which led to its introduction and the objects
thereby sought to be achieved have remained the same
throughout till the Bill emerges from the House as an Act of
the Legislature for they do not form part,of the Bill and
are not voted upon by the members. We, therefore,
consider that the statement of objectsand reasons appended
to the Bill should be, ruled out as an aid to the
construction of a statute.
The omission of part (a) of the
proviso to clause (2) of the Bill seems to us to stand no
higher footing. It sought to exclude from the purview of
the Bill the right of an Advocate of the Supreme Court to
plead or to act in any, High Court in the exercise of its
original jurisdiction,. - Its omissions was strongly relied
by the petitioner as indicating the intension of
(1) [1952] S,C.R. 1112.
29
Parliament that the right of a Supreme Court Advocate to
plead and to act should prevail also the Original Side of
a High Court. It was urged that acceptance or rejection of
amendments to a Bill in the course of Parliamentary
proceedings forms part of the pre-enactment history of a
statute and as such might throw valuable light the
intention of the legislature when the language used in the
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statute admitted of more than one construction. We are
unable to assent to this proposition. The reason why a
particular amendment was proposed or ’accepted or rejected
is often a matter of controversy, as it happened to be in
this case, and without the speeches bearing upon the motion,
it cannot be ascertained with any reasonable degree of
certainty. And where the legislature happens to be
bicameral, the second Chamber may or may not have known of
such reason when it dealt with the measure. We hold
accordingly that all the three forms of extrinsic aid-
sought to be resorted to by the parties in this case must be
excluded from consideration in ascertaining the true object
and intention of the Legislature.
In the result, treating this proceeding as an
appeal from the judgment of the High Court, we set aside the
order of that Court and direct the respondents to receive
any warrant of authority which the first; petitioner may
produce from the legal representative of the second
petitioner who is reported to have died in the course of the
proceeding. We make no order as to costs.
MUKHERJEA J.-This case has been argued before us with
elaborate fulness by the ’petitioner No. 1, Mr. Aswini Kumar
Ghosh, who appeared in person, as well as by a number of
eminent counsel representing the Barristers’ and Advocates’
Associations in the three principal High Courts in India.
Having given their learned arguments the best consideration
that I am capable of, I have come to the conclusion that
this application cannot succeed.
30
The matter in controversy is a very short one. The
petitioner No. I is an Advocate of the Calcutta High Court
entitled to practise both its Original and Appellate
Sides. This means, that he can both plead and act the
Appellate Side of the Court and plead only its Original
Side. Mr. Ghosh later got himself enrolled as an Advocate
of the Supreme Court and after the passing of the Supreme
Court Advocates (Practice in High Courts) Act, 1951, he
asserted his right, the strength of the provision of that
enactment, to " or act" also the Original Side of the
Calcutta High Court. He actually filed "a warrant of power
and appearance" behalf of the petitioner No. 2 in a suit
pending in the Original Side of that Court in which the
latter figures ’as the- defendant. The warrant was returned
to him by the Suit Registrar, Original Side, with an
endorsement it, that it must be filed by an Attorney of
the Court under the rules and orders of the Original Side of
the High Court, and not by an Advocate. Being aggrieved by
this refusal, the petitioners presented an application
before the Calcutta High Court under article 226 of the
Constitution, complaining of infraction of the right
conferred upon the first petitioner by Act XVIII of 1951 and
praying for an appropriate writ or order to enforce the
same. A rule was granted this application by Bose J.
sitting singly; and eventually, having regard to the
importance of the question involved in the application, the
rule was heard by a Special Bench of three Judges, con-
sisting of Trevor Harries C.J. and Chakravartti and Banerjee
JJ. By the judgment, which was delivered by Mr. Justice
Chakravartti 21st December, 1951, the rule was discharged
and the application of the petitioner was dismissed. The
petitioners have now come up to this court a substantive
petition under article 32 of the Constitution and have also
prayed for special leave to appeal against the judgment of
the Calcutta High Court. We admitted the petition and
issued notices to the Attorney-General of India as well as
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to the Barristers’ and Advocates "Associations in those High
Courts in India which are likely,
31
to be affected by the decision in the case. A number of
them, as said above, appeared before us through counsel and
we had also the advantage of hearing the learned Attorney-
General the points that were raised in course of hearing.
The sole point for consideration in this case is,
whether the petitioner No. 1, who is an Advocate of the
Supreme Court’ can, in addition to exercising his right of
pleading the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court
which is not challenged by anybody, claim, by virtue of the
provision of section 2 of Act XVIII of 1951, the right to
"act" the Original Side of that Court, although according
to the rules framed under the Letters Patent an Advocate of
the Calcutta High Court may not appear in the Original Side
unless instructed by an Attorney: (vide Chapter 1, Rule 37,
of the Original Side Rules). To decide this question we
will have to investigate the precise extent of the right
that has been conferred upon the Supreme Court Advocates by
section 2 of the Act mentioned above and ascertain what
exactly is the meaning of the word "practise’.’ as used in
that section’.
The Act is a very short one and consists only of two
sections. The first section gives the name and description
of the Act which is intituled "The Supreme Court Advocates
(Practice in High Courts) Act" and the object, as stated at
the, outset before the enacting clause commences, is to
"authorise Advocates of the Supreme Court to practise as of
right in any High Court". The entire provision of the Act
is contained in section 2 which runs thus
"Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926 (XXXVIII of 1926) or in any
other law regulating the conditions subject to which a
person not entered in the roll of Advocates of a High Court,
may be permitted to practise in that High Court every
Advocate of the Supreme Court shall be entitled as of right
to’ practise in any High Court whether or not he is an
Advocate of that High Court".
32
Upon this,aproviso is engrafted to the following
effect that"nothing in this section shall be deemed to
entitle any person merely by reason of his being an Advocate
of the Supreme Court to practise in a High Court of which he
was at any time a Judge, if he had given an undertaking not
to practise therein after ceasing to hold office as such
Judge". Then follows a short explanation which simply lays
down that the expression "High Court" in the section
includes the Court of a Judicial Commissioner and the
statute ends there.
It may be mentioned at the outset that the Supreme
Court was established in the year 1950 and article 145(1) of
the Constitution empowered the Court to make rules "for
regulating generally the practice and procedure of the
court" including (a) rules as to the persons practising
before the Court’. The Supreme Court Advocates were not
entitled to practise as of right in any of the High
Courts/in India. The rules made by the different High
Courts impose considerable restrictions and disabilities
upon the Advocates of other High Courts who wanted to appear
and conduct cases before them. The power to grant or
withhold permission to these outside Advocates lay for the
most part in the exercise of an unfettered discretion by the
Chief Justice of the Court, and that too in individual
cases, and instances were not rare of such permission being
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refused to lawyers of acknowledged eminence belonging to
other High Courts. After the establishment of the Supreme
Court in India and with the prospect of a united Bar looming
in the minds of the people, this was felt to be extremely
unjust and anomalous. It was primarily to remedy this
defect in the existing law, that this particular enactment
was passed by the legislature and the legislative purpose,
as is disclosed in the language of the enactment, is to
allow the Supreme Court Advocates access to the other High
Courts in India as of right, untrammelled by any restriction
or condition that the High Courts themselves might lay down
in respect to the "Outside
33
Advocates. So far there is little room for any
controversy. The dispute centers round the point as to the
extent of right that the legislature conferred upon the
Supreme Court Advocates in achieving this legislative
purpose. The question is, what meaning is to be attributed
to the word "practise" as used in the section ?
Mr. Ghosh argues that the word
"practise" in its ordinary and literal sense would mean the
right to appear, plead and to act’as well; and it is an
established rule of construction that a literal interpreta-
tion should not be departed from unless there are adequate
grounds for such departure. It is said next that the
literal meaning of the word "practise" cannot be out down or
controlled in any way by the language of the opening clause
in section 2 of the Act; and that clause which maybe
described as a non-obstante clause is not confined in its
operation to removal of the disabling provisions affecting
those whose names are not entered as Advocates the roll of
a particular High Court, but has the effect of excluding all
the provisions of the Bar Councils Act for purposes of this
enactment. It is further argued that the words "whether or
not he is an Advocate of that High Court" occurring in
section 2 unmistakably indicate that the -legislature had
not in mind the removal of disabilities attaching to outside
Advocates merely, but that it intended to confer certain
privileges domestic Advocates as well who happened to be
enrolled as Advocates of the Supreme Court. All these
matters require to be examined carefully.
The word "practise" when used with reference to a
profession means "to follow, pursue, work at, or exercise
such profession". The profession Of an Advocate may
contemplate both acting and pleading; under certain
circumstances it may mean pleading alone without acting, but
it can never mean acting simply, for those who are entitled
to act only and have no right to plead do not come within
the description of Advocates at all. There are other
classes of nonAdvocate lawyers who like Solicitors and
Agents can
34
act only but cannot plead, and to the carrying of their
profession also the same expression practise" is applied.
What is to be remembered in this connection is that the
profession of an Advocate can be carried only in a court
of law and within the framework of the rules and
regulations that obtain in such court. The word "practise"
when used with reference ,to an Advocate is an elastic
expression, having no rigid or fixed connotation and the
precise ambit of its contents can be ascertained only by
reference to the rules of the particular forum in which the
profession is exercised.
Thus in the Supreme Court Rules the expression "Advocate"
has been defined to mean "a person entitled to appear and
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plead before the Supreme Court". He has no right of acting
at all. In Order IV, Rule 31, of the Rules, this right
of an Advocate to ’appear and plead has been spoken of as
the right of "practising"; while in the rule that follows,
the function of an Agent, who can only act and not plead,
has also been spoken of as "practice" before the Court.
In the Bar Councils Act the right of practice as an
Advocate has been defined in section 14 (1) which lays down
that "an Advocate shall be entitled as of right to practise-
(a) subject to the provisions of subsection (4) of section
9, in the High Court of which he is an Advocate". The word
"practise" has apparently been used here in the general
sense of both pleading and acting and these rights have been
limited by and made subject to the rules which the High
Courts of Calcutta and Bombay may make, determining the
persons who shall be entitled to plead and to act in these
High Courts in the exercise of their original jurisdiction.
Sections 9 (4) and 14 (3) of the Bar Councils Act expressly
reserve to the Calcutta and the Bombay High Courts the power
to make rules in this respect and under the rules framed by
them an Advocate is not permitted to appear the Original
Side unless he is instructed by an Attorney
35
The words "entitled to practise as of right" which occur in
section 14 (1) mentioned above have also been used in other
parts of the Bar Councils Act, to wit, in sections 4 (2), 5
(1) and 8 (1) of the Act; but the word "practise" in all
these provisions does not mean pleading find acting in an
unlimited sense. It connotes the same rights and the same
limitations which are prescribed in section 14 of the Act.
The same expression has been used in section 2 of the
Supreme Court Advocates Act apparently in the same sense and
with the same implications and it cannot be argued that it
connotes an unrestricted right of pleading and acting
because the reservations mentioned in section 14 (1) of the
Bar Councils Act have not been repeated there.
Mr. Ghosh has in this connection drawn our attention
to two reported cases, one of which is a pronouncement of
the Patna High Court and the other of the Madras High Court.
In the Patna case(1) the question &rose as to
whether an Advocate or Vakil whose name appeared the roll
of any High Court could "act" behalf of his client by
presenting an application for review of a judgment in a case
which was tried by a court subordinate to the High Court.
The question was answered in the affirmative and reliance
was placed upon section 4 of the Legal Practitioners Act
which lays down that "an Advocate or Vakil enrolled any
High Court’shall be entitled to practise in all courts
subordinate to the court the roll of which he is entered".
This case, it is to be noted, deals with Advocates’ right to
practise in subordinate courts where no distinction at all
exists between pleading and acting. Consequently, the word
"practise" in this context does include both pleading and
acting.
In the Madras case(1) the point for consideration
was, whether an Advocate enrolled in the High Court of
Madras ’under the Indian Bar Councils Act was entitled not
only to appear and plead
(1) Laurentius Ekka v. Dhuki, [1925] I.L.R. 4 Pat- 766.
(2) In re the Powers of the Advocates, [1928] I.L.R.52
Mad. 92,
36
but also to "act" in the insolvency jurisdiction
of the court, in spite of the provision in Rule 128 of the
Insolvency Rules of the High Court, which gave such right
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only to the Attorneys. It was held that the Advocate had the
right to "act" by reason of the provision contained in
section 14 (1) of the Bar Councils Act which entitled an
Advocate to practise as of right in the High Court in which
he is an Advocate; and because so far as the Madras High
Court was concerned the Bar Councils Act made no distinction
between different jurisdictions of the court and did not
save the powers of the court to frame rules in respect of
the original and insolvency jurisdictions. In these
circumstances, a rule which cut down the right conferred by
sections 8 and 14 of the Bar Councils Act would be deemed to
be repealed under section 19 (2) of the Act as being
repugnant to its provisions. It was expressly stated in the
judgment that the position was different in regard to the
Bombay and Calcutta High Courts and so far as these courts
were concerned, their powers were expressly saved by the Bar
Councils Act. This decision clearly shows that the
’expression " practise" would not include "acting" if with
regard to particular jurisdictions of a High Court there are
valid rules to the contrary.
The question for our consideration really is, what
exactly is the position of a Supreme Court Advocate who
wants to avail himself of the right of practising in any
High Court in India in terms of section 2 of the Supreme
Court Advocates Act? Is he to exercise the right only as a
Supreme Court Advocate and in accordance with the rules
which the Supreme Court itself has laid down in this
respect, or is his position, when he appears before a High-
Court, the same as that of an Advocate enrolled in the said
court and he has the same rights and disabilities which
attach to such persons under its rules? The only other
alternative that is or can be suggested and has been put
forward behalf of the petitioner is that he is not’
fettered by any rules either of the Supreme Court or of the
particular High Courtr in,which he appears;
37
and as the extent of his right depends upon the language of
the section itself, the legislature by using the word
"practise" has conferred upon him the righ of both pleading
and acting in any High Court he chooses, irrespective of the
rules of practice which obtain in such court.
The first view does not appear to me to be
tenable. ’I If it is held, that what the section
contemplates is that a Supreme Court Advocate in exercising
his right of practice in any High Court should be governed
by the Supreme Court Rules, the Act itself would be
altogether unworkable. It is laid down in Order IV, Rule
12, of the Supreme Court Rules that "no person shall appear
as Advocate in any case unless he is instructed by an Agent.
By "Agent" is meant an Agent of the Supreme Court and under
no provision of law is such Agent entitled to act in any
High Court in India. The result, therefore, is that if the
Supreme Court Rules are applied, no Advocate would be
entitled to appear in any High Court at all.
It cannot be argued that even though the
rules of the Supreme Court may not be strictly applicable,
the intention of the legislature is that a Supreme Court
Advocate in appearing before a High Court either the
Original or the Appellate Side shall have only the right
of pleading and he has to be instructed by an Attorney or a
local Advocate who is competent to act. Whatever the merits
of this view might otherwise be, the language of the section
does not at all warrant such a construction and it cannot
seriously be suggested that the word " practise ",.must in
all cases be confined to pleading only. The result of such
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a construction would be to extend the dual system which is
at present confined to the Original Sides of the Calcutta
and the Bombay High Courts to all the High Courts in India,
in all their jurisdictions and to the subordinate courts as
well a possibility which the legislature could never have
contemplated.
To me it seems that when section 2 -speaks of a Supreme
Court Advocate being entitled as of right to practise in any
High Court, what it actually means is
38
that he would, be clothed by reason of this statutory
provision with all the rights which are enjoyed by an
Advocate of that Court and his right to plead or to act
would depend upon. the provisions of the Bar Councils Act
and the rules validly framed by the said Court, subject to
this that -no rule or provision of law would be binding,
which would affect in any way his statutory right to
practise in that Court solely by reason of his being
enrolled as an Advocate of the Supreme Court.
It is suggested that if this was the intention of the
legislature, nothing could have been easier for it than to
state explicitly that a Supreme Court Advocate would have
the right to practise in any High Court in the same way as
an Advocate of that Court. In my opinion, that is the
implication of the general word It practise " that has been
used. As said already, the practice of an Advocate must
always have reference to a court and it must imply the
carrying of the profession according to the rules which.
are binding that court, except to the extent that the
rules themselves are invalidated expressly or by necessary
implication. If the legislature had expressly stated that
an Advocate qualified under section 2 of the Act would have
the right of both pleading and acting in any High Court in
India or if that was the clear intendment. and implication
of the language used, any rule conflicting with that
provision could certainly have been held to be invalid; but
I am unable to say that the use of the word " practise "
which has only a general import, by itself, would have that
effect.
Looked at from this standpoint, the third view
indicated above, which has been pressed vehemently behalf
of the petitioner, cannot certainly be supported. So long
as the rules relating to pleading and acting in particular
jurisdictions of specified High Courts are allowed to remain
valid and binding, no intention can be imputed to the
legislature, without clear words to that effect, of
abrogating these rules with regard to the few persons who
happen to be enrolled as Advocatess of the Supreme Court.
Far
39
from achieving uniformity in any sense of the
word, such step would lead to serious anomaly and practical
difficulties of an enormous character. In. the original
jurisdictions of the Calcutta and the Bombay High Courts,
where the dual system subsists, there are elaborate rules
regarding the functions of the Solicitors who alone are
competent to act that side, both in ’relation to the
courts and to the litigants. The whole procedure is of a
different type, dissimilar in many respects to that which is
laid down in the Civil Procedure Code. It would be
difficult, if not impossible, for an Advocate of the Supreme
Court, who chooses to act the Original Side of the
Calcutta or the Bombay High Court, to fit himself within the
framework of these rules. He cannot possibly carry unless
a fresh set of rules is prepared and the framing of new
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rules, which must exist side by side with the old rules,
would lead to further complications and diversities. The
position would certainly have been understandable if it
could be held that the legislature wanted to do away with
the dual system altogether and introduce one set of rules
which would apply uniformly to all classes of lawyers.
Speaking for myself, I would consider that to be an
extremely desirable change; but I look in vain for
expression of any such legislative intent either in the
enactment itself or even in its historical background. The
object of the legislation is quite simple. It is only to
allow Advocates of the Supreme Court the right to practise
in all the High Courts in India irrespective of the rules
framed by them imposing restrictions the right of
Advocates whose names do not appear their rolls. From the
mere use of the word it practise ", the connotation of which
is not at all definite, I am unable to hold that it was the
intention of the legislature to introduce such sweeping
changes in the existing rules which the acceptance of this
view would imply.
This leads me to an examination of the other parts
of section 2 of the Act to discover, what light, if any,
they throw upon the present question.
40
It is one of the settled rules of construction that to
ascertain the legislative intent, all the constituent parts
of a statute are to be taken together and each word, phrase
or sentence is to be considered in the light of the general
purpose and object of the Act itself. Mr. Justice
Chakravartti of the Calcutta High Court laid very great
stress the opening clause of section 2 of the Act which
excludes the operation of certain statutory provisions, and
this negative part of the section constitutes, according to
the learned Judge, the measure and criterion of the right
which the positive part formulates. The first question is,
to what extent the provisions of any existing law have been
eliminated by the opening clause of section 2 The language
of the clause is as follows:-
" Notwithstanding anything contained in the Bar
Councils Act (XXXVIII of 1926), or in any other law
regulating the conditions subject to which a person not
entered in the roll of Advocates of a High Court may be
permitted to practise in that High
Court......................."
Mr. Justice Chakravartti is of opinion that this
clause purports to remove all those provisions of the Bar
Councils Act or of any other law which imposed restrictions
upon persons not enrolled as Advocates of a particular court
in the matter of practising in that court. The exclusion is
to this extent and no further; and consequently all the
other provisions contained in the Bar Councils Act or other
statutes which lay down the conditions ’under which an Ad-
vocate enrolled in a High Court is entitled to practise in
the Original Side of that Court, stand unaffected by that
clause. If these provisions remain valid and effective, it
is quite reasonable to hold that the word "practise " in the
section must mean " practise " in accordance with these
rules and not in supersession of them.
The contention of Mr. Ghosh is that a proper
construction of the language of the claue the whole of the
Bar Councils Act and not merely those provisions in it,
which relate to disabilities attaching to
41
Advocates of other High Courts, must be deemed to be
eliminated, so that the right of practising that is
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conferred by the section is to be exercised without the
restrictions or limitations flowing from any of the
provisions of the Bar Councils Act. In support of his
contention that the whole of the Bar Councils Act is
excluded by the opening clause, Mr. Ghosh lays great stress
a comma, which separated the Bar Councils Act and the
figures and words that follow, from the expression " or in
any other law " which comes immediately after that. He says
further that under the ordinary rules of interpretation the
adjectival phrase "-regarding the conditions etc." should be
taken to apply to the word or phrase immediately preceding
it and not to the remoter antecedent term or expression.
These arguments, though they have an air of plausibility
about them, do not impress me much, Punctuation is after all
a minor element in the construction of a statute, and very
little attention is paid to it by English, courts. Cockburn
C.J. said. in Stephenson v. Taylor (1) : " the Parliament
Roll there is no punctuation and we therefore are not bound
by that in the printed copies". It seems, however, that in
the Vellum copies printed since 1850 there are some cases of
punctuation, and when they occur they can be looked upon as
a sort of contemporanea expositio(2). When a statute is
carefully punctuated and there is doubt about its meaning, a
weight should undoubtedly be given to the punctuation(1). I
need not deny that punctuation may have its uses in some
cases, but it cannot certainly be regarded as a controlling
element and cannot be allowed to control the plain meaning
of a text(4).
Similarly, although a relative or a qualifying
phrase is normally taken with the immediately. preceding
term or expression, yet this rule has got to be discarded if
it is against common sense and natural
(i) (i861) 1 B. & S. page 101.
(2) See Craies Statute Law, page 185.
(3) Vide Crawford Statutory-Construction, Page 343.
(4) lbid.
42
meaning of the words and the expressions used. I
find considerable force in the opinion expressed by
Chakravartti J. that in the present case the effect. of the
position of the comma or the particular array of ,words in
the sentence has been completely neutralised I by the use of
the word " other " occurring in the #phrase " or in any
other law ". The result is, as the learned Judge has said,
that the Bar Councils Act has been posited as an alternative
to other laws and both have been subjected to the
qualification contained in the qualifying clause.
Assuming, however, for argument’s sake that Mr. Ghosh is
right and that the whole of the Bar Councils Act is
eliminated by the opening clause of the section, I do not
think that even then it really improves his position. The
Bar Councils Act itself does not make any provision relating
to the rights of pleading and acting in the Original Side of
any High Court. Sections 9(4) and 14(3) of the Act save
only the rights of the High Courts of Calcutta and Bombay to
make rules in relation thereto ; and these rules are made by
these courts in the exercise -of their powers under the
Letters Patent. Section 19(2) of the Bar Councils Act lays
down as follows:-
" When sections 8 to 16 come into force in respect of
any High Court of Judicature established by Letters Patent,
this Act shall have effect in respect of such Court
notwithstanding anything contained in such Letters Patent,
and such Letters Patent shall, in so far as they are
inconsistent with this Act or any rules made there under, be
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deemed to have been repealed."
If the entire Bar Councils Act is excluded for purposes
of section 2 of Act XVIII of 1951, the rules framed by the
High Courts of Calcutta and Bombay under-the Letters Patent
would remain valid -and effective of their own force even
without the saving provision contained in the above-
mentioned section of the Bar Councils Act, and section 19(2)
of the Act being out of the picture, the Letters Patent
would
43
also remain fully alive. The result will be that Rule 37,
Chapter I, of the Original Side Rules of the Calcutta High
Court or Rule 40(2) of Chapter II of the Bombay High Court
Rules, under which no Advocate can appear in the Original
Side of these courts unless instructed by an Attorney, would
not come within the purview of the opening clause of Section
2, as they do not relate to matters regulating the
conditions of outside Advocates. Rule 6, Chapter I, of the
Bombay High Court Rules, to which our attention was drawn by
the learned Attorney-General, lays down that an Advocate of
any other High Court may appear in a particular case, with
the permission of the Chief Justice, the Original Side of
the Court, provided he is instructed by an Attorney, and an
Advocate of the Bombay High Court appears along with him.
In my opinion, -the whole of this provision must be deemed
to be invalid for purposes of section 2 of Act XVIII of
1951, and a Supreme Court Advocate,, who wants to appear and
plead in a case in the Original Side of the Bombay High
Court, has neither to take the permission of the Chief
Justice nor is it necessary that he should have along with
him an Advocate of that court. He should certainly be
instructed by an Attorney, but that is because of the other
provisions, which I have already mentioned, and which apply
to the Advocates of the Bombay High Court itself.
I would be quite prepared to hold that what has been
excluded by the opening clause of section 2 of the Act may
not be the exact measure of the new right that the section
purports to create. In my opinion, the section its
negative side eliminates so far as the Supreme, Court
Advocates are concerned, all disabling provisions existing
under any law in regard to persons who are not enrolled
as .Advocates of any particular High Court. the positive
Side, the section confers Supreme Court Advocates the
statutory privilege of practising as of right, in any High
Court in India, no matter whether he is enrolled as an
Advocate of that court or not.
44
It is this positive aspect that has been emphasised by the
words "whether or not he is an Advocate of that court" which
occur at the conclusion of the section. It may not be
strictly correct to say that these words are altogether
inappropriate, for the section aims at conferring, though
indirectly,’ certain privileges those who are enrolled as
Advocates of the particular High Court as well. Section 9
(4) of the Bar Councils Act lays down:-
"Nothing in this section or in any other provision of
this Act shall be deemed to limit or, in any way affect the
powers of the High Courts of Judicature at Fort William in
Bengal and at Bombay to prescribe the qualifications to be
possessed by persons applying to practise in those High
Courts respectively in the exercise of their original
jurisdiction or the powers of those High Courts to grant or
refuse, as they think fit, any such application (or to
prescribe the conditions under which such persons shall be
entitled to practise or plead)."
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Provisions of this type are to be found in the Rules
of both the Bombay and the Calcutta High Courts. Under Rule
1, Chapter I, of the Calcutta, Original Side Rules, even an
Advocate of that court has to make an application for being
entitled to appear and plead the Original Side and he can
exercise that right only after that permission is granted.
Such rules would have no effect after the passing of Act-
XVIII of 1951 and an Advocate of the Supreme Court will be
entitled to plead in the Original Side of the Calcutta High
Court as a matter of right and without complying with any of
the formalities that may be prescribed by the rules of that
court. Mr. Justice Chakravartti expressed doubt as to
whether an Advocate of the Supreme Court, who presumably is
not an Advocate of the Calcutta High Court, can, as such,
plead in the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court. In
my opinion, there is no room for doubt this point at all.
He is entitled to appear and plead as a matter of right
under the express provision of section 2 of the, Act,
45
Mr. Ghose finally attempts to support his Contention that
the intention of the legislature was to confer upon the
Supreme Court Advocates the right to plead as well as to act
in all High Courts in India by calling in aid three other
facts. It is said first of all that in the statement of
objects and reasons which accompanied the original bill, the
right to practise was expressly stated to include both
pleading and acting. In the second place it is pointed out
that proviso (a) to section 2 which occurred in the original
bill and which excluded the right of both pleading and act-
ing in the Original Side of the High Courts from the
operation of section 2 was dropped altogether and the Act
was passed -without that proviso. Lastly it is urged that
the expression "practise", which has been employed in the
existing proviso to the section, obviously means both
pleading and acting, and it is against sound rules of
construction to attach different meanings to the same word
used in, two parts of the same section.
There are weighty pronouncements of English courts as
well as of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council which
lay down that in construing a statute all negotiation
previous to the Act or the original form of- the bill must
be dismissed from consideration. "We cannot interpret the
Act" said Lord Halsbury, "by any reference to the bill, nor
can we determine its construction by any reference to its
original form"(1). It is not permissible to ascertain the
meaning of the word used in an Act by reference to the
proceedings in the Legislative Council, and the language of
a "Minister of the Crown" in proposing a measure in
Parliament which eventually becomes law is inadmissible(2).
In a, Calcutta case the learned Judges refused to look into
the statement of objects and reasons accompanying an
enactment as an aid to its construction(3). The
(i)Vida Herron V. Rathmins (1802] A.C. 492 at 5o2.
(2)Vida Krishna Ayyangar v. Nellaperumal[1920] 47 I.A- 33;
Assam. Railway & Trading Co. Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners (1935] A.C, 443; Administrator General of
Bengal v. Premlal [1895] 12 I.A. 107
(3) Vida Debendra v. Jogendru, A.I.R. 1936 Cal. 593.
46
judicial opinion this point is certainly not quite uniform
and there are American decisions to the effect that the
general history of a statute, and the various steps leading
up to an enactment including amendments or modifications -of
the original bill and reports of Legislative Committees can
be, looked at for ascertaining the intention, of the
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legislature where it is in doubt; but they hold definitely
that the legislative history is inadmissible when there is
no obscurity in the meaning of the statute(1). Even
assuming that the latter view is correct, it does not appear
to me that the first and the second contentions of the
petitioner indicated above are really of any assistance to
him. It is true that in the statement of, objects and
reasons which was circulated’ along with the original bill,
the word "practise" was said to include both Pleading and
acting; but at the same time the original bill did not
purport to confer at all upon the Supreme Court Advocates,
the’ right either of pleading or of acting in any High Court
in the exercise of its original jurisdiction. This was
expressly laid down in the original proviso (a) to section 2
and the concluding portion of the statement of objects and
reasons stood thus:
"The present bill is intended to achieve such
unanimity by providing that every Advocate of the Supreme
Court shall be entitled to practise as of right, in any High
Court otherwise than its Original Side."
Conceding that Mr. Ghosh is entitled to rely the
fact that the first; proviso, which excluded the original
jurisdiction of the High Courts from the purview of section
2 was subsequently dropped the dropping of the proviso by
itself proves nothing. What the proviso intended was to
confine the right of practising which section 2 of -the Act
conferred Supreme Court’ Advocates exclusively to the
appellate jurisdiction of the High Courts. A Supreme Court
Advocate as such was not entitled under the proviso to act
or plead in the Original Side of any
(1) Vide Crawford Oil statutory Construction page 383
47
High Court in India. It is to be noted that this prohi
bition had nothing to do with the dual system that exists in
the original jurisdiction of the Calcutta and the Bombay
High Courts and it was totally unconnected with the
provisions of the Bar Councils Act, or the rules of the
Calcutta and the Bombay High it Courts in relation thereto.
the other hand, if, as I-have already stated, section-2 of
the Act purported to confer the Supreme Court Advocates
the right of practice in the different High Courts in India
in the same way as the Advocates enrolled in those, courts
are entitled to do, the original proviso (a) purported to
cut down that- right to a considerable extent. Under this
proviso the, Supreme Court Advocates were denied the right
of pleading the Original Side of the Calcutta and the
Bombay High Courts and they could neither act nor plead
the Original Side of the Madras High Court, although they
would have those rights under the Bar Councils Act. The
dropping of the proviso might mean nothing else than this
that this restriction was withdrawn and the rights created
by the section without the proviso stood intact.
Be that as it may, it is, in my opinion, a most
risky thing to attempt to construe the meaning of a word in
a statute with the aid of a nonexistent provision. We do
not know the reasons -why the legislature deleted this
clause and it is not permissible for us to speculate these
matters. A reference to the legislative debates or the
speeches that were actually delivered in the floor of the
House is, in my opinion, inadmissible to ascertain the
meaning of the words used in the enactment.
The use of the word "practise" in the, proviso to
section 2, as it now stands, is also a matter of no im-
portance. Section 2 confers certain additional rights upon
the Supreme Court Advocates and they have the right of
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practising in all the High Courts in India subject, as I
have said, to the rules and regulations binding the
Advocates in each one of them. The proviso makes an
exception to this rule, and in case
48
an Advocate of an particular High Court, who became a Judge
of that court, gave an undertaking at the time when he
assumed his office that he would not practise in that court
after he ceased to be a Judge, the provision in the section
could not be availed of by him in the face of his
undertaking. This is the plain meaning of the proviso.
Apparently the legislature was not in the least concerned
when it enacted this proviso with the extent of right which
such Advocate possessed when be became a Judge; and the
extent of the right would certainly depend upon the rules
and regulations of the High Court in which he carried his
practice.
My conclusion is that the view taken by the Calcutta
High Court is the right and proper view to take and this
application must fail. I make no order as to costs.
DAS J.-The present proceedings before us have been
initiated a petition by two petitioners. The first
petitioner is ’Sri Aswini’ Kumar Ghosh who is an advocate of
the Calcutta High Court enrolled the Original Side as well
as the Appellate Side of that Court. As such advocate of
the Calcutta High Court, he is entitled to act and plead
the Appellate Side, but only to plead the Original Side.
He has since been enrolled also in this Court as an advocate
which term is defined in Order’ 1, rule 2, of the Rules of
this Court as meaning a person entitled to appear and plead
before the Supreme Court. May 26, 1951, petitioner Aswini
Kumar Ghosh served notices the Registrars of the Original
Side as well as of the Appellate Side of the Calcutta High
Court intimating that, in exercise of the right conferred by
the Supreme Court Advocates (Practice in the High Courts)
Act, 1951, he, would thenceforth "practise, i.e., act and
plead", in the said High Court at Calcutta also as a Supreme
Court advocate. July 14, 1951, petitioner Aswini Kumar
Ghosh, as a Supreme Court advocate, tendered what he calls a
warrant of appearance under rule 58 of the Indian Companies
Rules framed by the Calcutta High "Court in the matter of
49
a winding up petition regarding a company. That
"warrant of appearance" was returned by the Registrar
evidently because rule 58 requires a person who intends to
appear the hearing of the winding up petition to leave
with or sent to the petitioner or to his attorney a notice
of such intention signed ’by him or by his attorney" and
does not authorise the filing of a notice signed by an
advocate. The second petitioner is one Sri Jnanendra Nath
Chatterjee who is the defendant in Suit No. 2270 of 1951
pending the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court.
July 18, 1951, petitioner Jnanendra Nath Chatterjee as
defendant in the said Suit No. 2770 of 1951 executed a
"warrant of appearance and power" in the said suit in favour
of the-petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh. The petitioner Aswini
Kumar Ghosh as advocate for the petitioner Jnanendra Nath
Chatterjee’filed the warrant with the Assistant in charge
-of the Suit Registry Department of the Original Side. This
was, clearly done in purported compliance with the provi-
sions of Chapter 8, rule 15, of the Original Side Rules.
That rule, however, requires the defendant to enter his
appearance to a writ of summons by filing a memorandum in
writing containing the name and place of business of the
defendant’s attorney or stating that the defendant defends
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in person and containing his name and place of business.
That rule does not in terms contemplate an advocate acting
for a defendant. It is, therefore, not surprising at all
that July 27,’1951, the "warrant of appearance" was
returned by the respondent Arabinda Bose, the Assistant in
the Suit Registry ]Department of the Original Side of the
Calcutta High Court, with the endorsament that "the warrant
must be filed by an attorney of this Court under High Court
Rules and Orders, Original Side, and not by an Advocate".
The petitioner Jnanendra Nath Chatterjee thereupon entered
appearance in person July 30, 1951, and has been defending
the suit in person.
The two petitioners, however, moved the Calcutta High Court
under article 226 of the Constitution
50
and obtained a Rule calling upon the two respondents
Sri Arabinda Bose, the Departmental Assistant, and Sri S. N.
Banerjee, the Registrar of the Original Side, to show cause
why an order or direction in the nature of an appropriate
writ should not be issued for the enforcement of the
fundamental right of the petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh "to
practise, i.e., to act and plead the Original Side of this
Court", as conferred him by Act XVIII of 1951 and
guaranteed by article 19 (1) (g) of the Constitution of
India and why consequential orders therein mentioned should
not be made. The Rule was heard by a Special Bench of the
Calcutta High Court consisting of Harries C.J. and
Chakravartti and Banerjee JJ. who discharged the Rule
December 21, 1961, and dismissed the petition. As will
appear from the judgment of the High Court’ the argument
addressed to it "made no reference to the alleged
fundamental right and that the petitioner confined his
argument to the provisions of the Supreme Court Advocates (
Practice in the High Courts) Act, 1951." The powers of the
High Court under article 226 not being confined to the
enforcement of fundamental rights it was possible for the
petitioner to rely the rights under the last mentioned
Act.
The petitioners did not apply for or obtain the leave
of the High Court to appeal to this Court. Long after the
time fixed by the rules for applying for special, leave to
apppal to this Court had expired the petitioners filed the
present petition against the same respondents. The.
petition is intituled as an application under articles 22
(1), 32 (1) and (2), 135 and 136 (1) of the Constitution of
India. In the prayer portion of the petition, the
petitioners ask for directions, orders or appropriate writs
the respondents for the enforcement of their fundamental
rights guaranteed under articles 19 (1) (g) and 22 (1) of
the Constitution, an order declaring the right of the
petitioner Aswini Kumar, Ghosh act behalf of his clients
the Original Side of all, High Courts in India including
Calcutta, an order upholding the
51
right of the petitioner Jnanendra Nath Chatterjee to be
defended in the said suit by the petitioner Aswini Kumar
Ghosh and other consequential reliefs. There is an
alternative prayer asking this Court to treat the petition
as an application, under article 136, for special leave to
appeal against the judgment and order of, the Special, Bench
of the Calcutta High Court dismissing the petitioners’
application, under article 226 of the Constitution and for
condonation of the delay in presenting the present petition.
At the hearing before us it has not been
seriously suggested that the rights of the petitioner
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Jnanendra Nath Chatterjee, fundamental or otherwise, have in
any way been infringed. Nor was the petition presented
before us as one for the enforcement of any fundamental
right of the petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh -guaranteed by
article 19 of the Constitution. What Was pressed before us
by the petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh, who appeared in,
person, was the right said to have been conferred- him as
an advocate of this Court by section 2 of the Supreme Court
Advocates (Practice in the High Courts) Act (Act XVII of
1951) hereinafter in this judgment referred to as "the Act".
In the circumstances the petition has not seriously been
presented before us as one under article 32 of the
Constitution and it is not necessary for me to express any
opinion as to whether a petitioner whose application for
enforcement of an alleged fundamental right under article
226 has been rejected by the High Court can maintain an
application under article 32 to this Court for the same
relief based precisely the same facts and grounds. The
petition, however,. has been presented -before us as an
application under article 136 of the Constitution for
special leave to appeal from the judgment of the Special
Bench of the Calcutta High Court. We have been pressed to
proceed with the matter the footing as if special leave to
appeal has been given and the delay in the presentation
thereof has been condoned by this Court. I deprecate this
suggestion’ for I do not desire to encourage the belief that
an intending
52
appellant who has not applied for or obtained, the
,leave of the High Court and who does not say a word by way
of explanation in the petition as to why be did not apply to
the High Court and as to why there’ has been such delay in
applying to this Court should nevertheless get special leave
from this Court for the mere asking. As, however, the
matter has been proceeded with as an appeal, I express my
views the questions that have been canvassed before us.
There is no dispute that the Act has conferred some
new rights the Supreme Court Advocates. The controversy
is as to the ambit and scope of the. right so conferred and
it has centred round the expression "to practise" used in
section 2 of the Act. In order to resolve that controversy
we have to ascertain the true meaning of that expression as
used in the Act.
The provisions of the Act quite clearly apply to
and affect all High Courts in India. It is, therefore,
necessary to bear in mind the status and position of
advocates as they prevail in the different High Courts. The
Indian High Courts Act, 1861 (24 & 25 Vic. C. 104) by
section I authorised Her Majesty, by Letters Patent, to
erect and establish High Courts for the three Presidencies
of Bengal, Madras and Bombay. Section 9 of that statute
provided that each of the High Courts to be so established
should have and exercise civil, criminal and other
jurisdiction, original and appellate, as therein mentioned
and all such powers and authority for and in relation to the
administration of justice in the presidency for which it is
established, "as Her Majesty may by such Letters Patent as
aforesaid grant and direct." Section 16 of that statute also
empowered Her Majesty to establish a High Court in and for
any portion of the territories within Her Majesty’s
dominions in India, not included within the limits of the
local jurisdiction of another High Court. Pursuant to this
authority High Courts were established by Letters Patent at
Fort William in Bengal, Madras and Bombay. Clause 9 of the
Letters Patent of each of the three Presidency High
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53
Courts authorised and empowered each of the said High
Courts:
"to approve, admit, and enrol such and so many
Advocates, Vakils, and Attorneys as to the said High Court
shall seem meet; and such Advocates, Vakils and Attorneys
shall be and are here by authorised to appear for the
suitors of the said High Court, and to plead or to act, or
to plead and act, for the said suitors, according as the
said High Court may by its rules and directions determine,
and subject to such rules and directions.
Subsequently other, High Courts -were established from time
to time by Letters Patent at different places, e.g.
Allahabad, Patna,, Lahore and Nagpur, and similar power was,
by clause 7 of the respective Letters Patent, conferred
each of the said High Courts to make similar,rules. It is
well known that each of the High Courts actually framed
rules for the admission of advocates, vakils and attorneys.
The High Courts of Calcutta, Madras and Bombay divided their
jurisdictions into two broad categories, namely, ,original
jurisdiction and appellate jurisdiction, and by their Rules
made an ’internal classification of the advocates, vakils
and attorneys. Thus the advocates or vakils enrolled the
Appellate Side were empowered "to appear, act and plead" but
the advocates enrolled the Original Side were permitted
only "to appear and plead", the "acting" the Original Side
being reserved for the attorneys for whom a separate roll
was maintained. The, Madras High Court has, however, done
away with this internal classification and advocates of that
High Court may now appear, act and plead/ the Original Side
as well as the Appellate Side. The Calcutta and Bombay
High Courts, however, maintained the distinction. Chapter
I-, rule 37, of the Rules of the Original Side of--the Cal-
cutta High-Court provides that persons to whom the rules
contained in that chapter are applicable may not appear
unless instructed by an attorney. Chapter I. rule 40,
of the Rules of the Original Side :of the
54
Bombay High Court is the same lines. Although the
remaining Letters Patent High Courts in India have
extraordinary original jurisdiction, both civil and
criminal, they did not make any distinction between original
and appellate jurisdiction as in Calcutta and Bombay and the
advocates enrolled in those High Courts were and are
permitted "to appear, act and plead" in all their
jurisdictions. Apart from the several Letters Patent High
Courts other High Courts, e.g., the High Courts of Assam and
Orissa, and the High Courts of Part B States, also have
framed rules of their own for admission of advocates and
according to those rules the advocates of all these High
Courts can ((appear, act and plead". The position,
therefore, was that, at the date of the Act, all advocates
of all High Courts including those of the Appellate Side of
Calcutta and Bombay High Courts but excluding only the
Original Side advocates of Calcutta and Bombay could
"appear, act and plead" in their own High Courts in all
jurisdictions but the advocates of the Original Side of
those two High Courts could only "appear and plead" the
Original Side.
Apart from the bar against acting imposed by the
High Courts of Calcutta and Bombay their own Original Side
advocates, all the High Courts, by their respective rules,
prescribed certain conditions subject to which alone an
advocate who was not their rolls could "appear and plead"
in such High Courts. Chapter I, rule 38, of the Original
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Side of the Calcutta High Court provides as follows:-
"An Advocate of any other High Court or Chief
Court may with the permission of the Chief Justice appear
and plead for parties in matters arising in or out of the
original jurisdiction, or in or out of appeals therefrom,
provided he is a member of the Bar of England or of Northern
Ireland, or a member of the Faculty of Advocates in
Scotland, or a person entitled to appear and plead the
Original Side of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay, and
that he is properly instructed by an Attorney-"
55
There is also a rule framed under section 15 (b)
of the Indian Bar Councils Act which applies to the
Appellate Side of the Calcutta High Court prescribing that
an advocate of another High Court can "appear and-plead"
the Appellate Side of the Calcutta High Court in a
particular case or cases only with the previous permission
of the Chief Justice. Reference may in this connection be
made to Chapter I, rule 6, of the Bombay Rules applicable to
the Original Side and the rule framed under the Indian Bar
Councils Act which applies to the Appellate Side of Bombay
High Court and is set out in Schedule II of Part II of the
Appellate Side Rules. There is no dispute that each of the
other High Courts have rules in pari materia imposing
conditions advocates not its roll in the matter of their
appearing and pleading in such High Court. Thus it is clear
that an advocate not the rolls of a particular High Court
could not as of right "appear and plead" in that High Court.
He had to satisfy the conditions laid down by that High
Court before he could "appear and plead" in that High Court.
It should be particularly noticed that under these rules
foreign advocates who satisfied the conditions were
permitted only to "appear and plead". There never was any
question or claim of a foreign advocate being permitted to
"act" in a High Court of which, he was not an advocate.
The legislature which enacted the Act now under
our consideration had full knowledge of the internal
classification of the advocates of the Calcutta and Bombay
High Courts into Original Side advocates and Appellate Side
advocates, the disability of the Original Side advocates of
those two High Courts, namely, that they were not permitted
"to act" the Original Side and could only ’,’appear and
plead", the instruction of an attorney and that the
attorneys alone were permitted "to act" that side of those
two High Courts. Further the legislature was well aware of
the bar imposed foreign advocates, i.e., advocates not
the roll of a High Court in the matter of their appearing
and pleading in that High
56
Court and the fact that eminent advocates of one High Court
were not, many occasions in the past, given permission "to
a’ pear and plead" in another High Court. The legislature
knew that under Order I, rule 2, of the Supreme Court Rules
an advocate had been defined as a person entitled "to appear
and plead" before the Supreme Court and that Order IV, rule
30, precluded an advocate from acting as agent and an agent
as advocate in any circumstances whatsoever. Finally, the
legislature was cognisant of the fact that a Supreme Court
advocate was a, foreign advocate in all High Courts other
than the one, where he was enrolled and as such was not
entitled as of right "to appear and plead" in those High
Courts. With knowledge of all these facts and circumstances
the legislature proceeded to enact this Act and, therefore,
the provisions of the Act have to be considered in the light
of these prevailing circumstances which undoubtedly form the
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background’ of this enactment and which cannot be-overlooked
or ignored.
Turning now to the text of the Act, one cannot
but be impressed at once with ’the wording of the full title
of the Act. Although there are observations in earlier
English cases that the title is not a part of the statute
and is, therefore, to be excluded from consideration in
construing the statute, it is now settled law that the title
of a statute is an important part of the Act and may be
referred to for the purpose of ascertaining its general
scope and of throwing light its construction, although it
cannot override the clear meaning of the enactment. (See
Maxwell the Interpretation of Statutes, 9th Edn.P. 44 and
the cases cited therein). The full title ’of the Act now
under consideration runs thus:
"An Act to authorise Advocates of the Supreme Court to
practise as of right in any High Court."
One cannot fail to note the words " as of right and the
words " in any High Court " which follow immediately. Those
two sets of words at once convey
57
to my mind that the act is directly and intimately concerned
with the disability imposed by a High Court advocates not
its roll in the way of their appearing and pleading in such
High Court without the permission of the Chief Justice and
without satisfying other conditions if any, and that their
purpose is to remove and supersede that disability, so far
as the Supreme Court advocates are concerned, by authorising
them to do so as of right. The words " as of right " are
quite clearly indicative of an independent statutory right
as opposed to the conditional right dependent the sweet
will of the Chief Justice concerned. Those words are used
byway of antithesis and bring out prominently the object of
the Act. In view of that well-known disability which
naturally was irksome, those words cannot fail to convey to
one’s mind the conviction that the purpose of the Act, as
indicated by its title, is to confer the advocates of the
Supreme Court a right which was denied to them by the Rules
of the High Courts referred to above. The language in
which- the title of the Act has been, expressed appears to
me to be a good and cogent means of finding out the true
meaning and import of the Act, and, as it were, a key to the
understanding of it.
The matter, however, does not rest the title of
the Act alone and I pass to section 2 of the Act which is
expressed in the following terms:
" Notwithstanding anything contained in the ’Indian Bar
Councils Act, 1926 (XXXVIII of 1926), or in any other,law
regulating the conditions subject to which a person not
entered in the roll of Advocates of a High Court may be
permitted to practise in that High Court every Advocate. of
the Supreme Court shall be entitled as of right to practise
in any High Court whether or not he is an Advocate of that
High Court.
Provided that nothing in this section shall be deemed to
entitle ’any person merely by reason of his being all
Advocate of the Supreme Court to practise
58
in a High Court of which he was at any time a Judge, if he
had given an undertaking not ’to practise therein after
ceasing to hold office as such Judge."
It will be noticed that the main body of the
section consists of two parts, namely, a non-obstante clause
beginning with the words " Notwithstanding anything" and
ending with the words "permitted to practise in that High
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Court " and a positive part beginning with the words " every
Advocate of -the Supreme Court " and ending with the words "
of that High Court." To clear the ground it will be useful,
at the outset, to ascertain the ’scope and ambit of the non-
obstante clause.
The controversy this clause has raged round the
question whether the adjectival clause, namely, "regulating
the conditions subject to which a person not entered in the
roll of Advocates of a High Court may be permitted. to
practise in that High Court " governs the words " the Indian
Bar Councils Act " as well as the words "any other law"
which immediately precede that clause. If that clause also
attaches to and qualifies the words "the Indian Bar Councils
Act" then there can remain no manner of doubt that the
ambit, scope and purpose of the non-obstante clause are to
supersede, not the whole of the Indian Bar Councils Act but,
only that part of it which regulates the conditions subject
to which a person not entered in the roll of Advocates of a
High Court may be permitted to practise in that High Court,
that is to say, that the supersession of the Indian Bar
Councils. Act is only to the same extent to which that
adjectival clause supersedes "any other law". Conscious
that such a construction will run counter to his contention,
it has been the endeavour of the petitioner Aswini Kumar
Ghosh to keep the adjectival clause separated from the words
"Indian Bar Councils Act". For this purpose he fastens
the comma appearing after the bracket and before the word
"or" and contends that the comma indicates that the
qualifying clause does not govern the Indian Bar Councils
Act.
59
The High Court has rejected the contention of the petitioner
Aswini Kumar Ghosh two grounds. In the first place it has
been said that the comma was no part of the Act. That the
orthodox view of earlier English Judges was that punctuation
formed no part of the statute appears quite clearly from the
observations of Willes J. in Claydon v. Green(1). Vigorous
expression was given to this view also by Lord Esher, M. R.
in Duke of Devonshire v. Connor(1) where he said
In an Act of Parliament there are no such things as brackets
any more than there are such things as stops."
This view was also adopted by the Privy Council in the
matter of interpretation of Indian statutes as will appear
from the observations of Lord Hobhouse in Maharani of
Burdwan v. Murtunjoy Singh(1), namely, that " it is an error
to rely punctuation in construing Acts of the
Legislature." Same opinion was expressed by the Privy
Council in Pugh v. Ashutosh Sen(4). If, however, the rule
regarding the rejection of punctuation for the purposes of
interpretation is to be regarded as of- imperfect obligation
and punctuation is to be taken at least as contemporanea
expositio, it will nevertheless have to be disregarded if it
is contrary to the plain meaning of the statute. If
punctuation is without sense or conflicts with the plain
meaning of the words, the Court will not allow it to cause a
meaning to be placed upon the words which they otherwise
would not have. This leads me to the second ground which
mainly the High Court rejected the plea of the petitioner
Aswini Kumar Ghosh, namely, that the Word "other" in the
phrase "any other law" quite clearly connects the Indian Bar
Councils Act with other laws as alternatives and subjects
both to the qualification contained in the adjectival
clause. I find myself in complete-
(1) (1868) L.R. 3 C.P. 51i at P. 522.
(2) (1890) L.R.Q.13.D 468.
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(3) (1886) L.R. 14 I.A. 30 at P. 35.
(4) (1928) L.R. 56 I.A. 93 at p. zoo,
60
agreement with the High Court this point. If the
intention wag that the adjectival clause should not qualify
the Indian Bar Councils Act, then the use of the word
"other" was wholly inapposite and unnecessary. The use of
that word ’unmistakably leads to the conclusion that the
adjectival clause also qualifles something other than "other
law". If the intention were that the Indian Bar Councils
Act should remain unaffected by the qualifying phrase and
should be superseded in toto for the purposes of this Act
the legislature would have said "or in any law regulating
the conditions etc." It would have been yet simpler not to
refer to the Indian Bar Councils Act at all and to drop the
adjectival clause and to simply say "Not withstanding
anything contained in any law". In the light of the true
meaning of the title of the Act as I have explained above
and having regard to the use of the word " other " I have,
no hesitation in holding, in agreement with the High Court,
that what the non-obstante clause intended to exclude or
supersede was not the whole of the Indian Bar, Councils Act
but to exclude or supersede that Act and any other law only
in so far as -they or either of them purported to regulate
the conditions subject to which a person not entered in the
roll of advocates of a High Court might be permitted to
practise in that High Court and that the comma, if it may at
all be looked at,, must be disregarded as being contrary to
this plain meaning of the statute.
Assuming, however, that the qualifying clause
does not attach to the words "Indian Bar Councils Act", that
circumstance will, nevertheless, make no difference in the
legal position. ’Section 8(1) of the Indian. Bar Councils
A-et provides as follows:
"No person shall be entitled as of right to practise in auy
HighCourt,unless his name is entered in the roll of the
advocates of the High Court maintained under this Act:
Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall apply to any
attorney of the High Court."
61
Section 14(2) runs thus:
"Where rules have been made by any High Court within the
meaning of clause (24) of section 3 of the General Clauses
Act, 1897, or in the case of a High Court for which a Bar
Council has been constituted under this Act, by such Bar
Council under section 15, regulating the conditions subject
to which advocates of other High Courts may be permitted to
practise in the High Court, such advocates shall no be
entitled to practise therein otherwise than subject to such
conditions."
Section 15(b) authorises the Bar Council, with the
previous sanction of the High Court, to make rules to
provide for and regulate "the conditions subject to which
advocates of other High Courts may be permitted to practise
in the High Court". As already stated, a rule has been
framed under this section by the Calcutta Bar Council as
well as by the Bombay Bar Council. These three provisions
are the only provisions of the Indian Bar Councils Act or
the rules thereunder which place a bar against an advocate,
not the roll of a Hiah Court, from practising in such High
Court. It is interesting to note that the nonobstante
clause in section 2 of the Act we are construing is couched
in language which has unmistakably been taken from sections
14 (2) and 15-(b). There can be no question that a
supersession of the Indian Bar Councils Act will supersede
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those provisions of that Act and the rules thereunder which
"’regulate the conditions subject to which advocates of
other High Courts may be permitted to practise in the High
Court". Apart from this I find nothing in the Indian Bar
Councils Act which has any direct bearing section 2 of the
Act we are construing or whose supersession is necessary to
give effect to it.It is said that
the rules of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts do
prescribe the qualifications to be possessed by persona
applying to practise in those Courts and the conditions
under which such persons will be entitled to practise and
reserve to those Courts the right to grant.’
62
or refuse any application for enrolment. It is also pointed
out that the rules of the Original Sides of’ those two High
Courts do determine the persons who shall respectively plead
and act in those High Courts in the exercise of their
original jurisdictions. It is next pointed out that
sections 9 (4) and 14 (3) of the Indian Bar Councils Act
preserve these rules and it is contended that a supersession
of the Indian Bar Councils Act in its entirety will do away
with sections 9(4) and 14(3) and the protection of those
sections having been withdrawn, those rules will con-
sequently stand abrogated, so as to facilitate the operation
of the provisions of section 2 of the Act under review. I
am unable to accept, this argument as sound. Sections 9(4)
and 14(3) do not purport to give any fresh validity to the
rules of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts. All that
those sections do is to declare that nothing in the Indian
Bar Councils Act shall be deemed to limit or affect the
powers of those two High Courts which exist in-dependently
of those two. sections and flow from their respective
Letters Patent. Therefore, if the whole of the Indian Bar
Councils Act including sections 9(4) and 14(3) stand
abrogated such abrogation will not affect the existence or
validity of the rules of those High Courts which will,
nevertheless, continue in full force the strength of the
Letters Patent of those High Courts. It is clear,
therefore, that even if the adjectival clause does not
qualify the Indian Bar Councils Act and if, consequently,
the nonobstante clause under review is taken to supersede
the whole of the Indian Bar Councils Act, the effect of such
supersession will, for the purposes of section 2, be only to
do away with the provisions of sections 8(1) and 14(2) and
the rule made under section 16(b) of the Indian Bar Councils
Act in- so far as they "regulate the conditions subject to
which advocates of other High Courts may be permitted to
practise in the High Court" just as it will abrogate all
other laws in so far as they regulate those very conditions.
The supersession of the whole of the Indian Bar Councils
63
Act will not, therefore, affect the validity of
the rules framed by the High Courts under their respective
Letters Patent determining the persons who will act and who
will plead or who will act and plead and those rules will
prevail their own strength and efficacy, although the
rules regulating the conditions subject to which foreign
advocates can be permitted to appear and plead will stand
abrogated by reason of the non-obstante clause. In the
premises, the result of the construction sought to be
founded by the petitioner Aswini Kumar, Ghosh the
existence of the comma in the non-obstante clause will be
precisely the same as it would have been if the comma had
not been there and the adjectival clause "regulating the
conditions etc." also attached to and qualified the words
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"Indian Bar, Councils Act." In short, there is no escape
from the, conclusion that the ambit, scope and effect of the
non-obstante clause are, to supersede the Indian Bar
Councils Act and any other Act only in so far as they
regulate the conditions referred to therein. I again
emphasise that the rules of the different High Courts
regulated the conditions subject to which a foreign advocate
would be permitted "to appear and plead." There was no
question of the foreign advocate "acting" in a High Court of
which he was not an advocate. The purpose of the non-
obstante clause is to supersede only the provisions of the
Indian Bar Councils Act and the rules which regulated those,
identical conditions. It is not seriously disputed that the
legislature in passing the non-obstante clause had only
those conditions in mind. There can be no manner of doubt,
therefore, that the words "to practise" in the non-obstante
clause mean, in the context, "to appear and plead".
The petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh then falls back on
a-second line of reasoning. He urges that whatever may be
the meaning, scope and effect of the non-obstante clause, it
cannot possibly cut down the meaning of the positive words
in the operative part of the section. His contention is
that the High Court war, wrong in holding that the non-
obstante clause was
64
coextensive with the operative part. While it may be true
that the non-obstante clause need not necessarily be
coextensive with the operative part, there can be no doubt-
and the petitioner and Dr. N. C. Sen Gupta appearing for the
Calcutta Bar Association and supporting the petitioner do
not dispute-that ordinarily there should be a close
approximation between the two. What he urges is that the
Court should not create an ambiguity in the operative part
and then use the non-obstante clause to cut down the meaning
of the plain words used in the operative part of the
section. The argument is that the words "to practise" cover
both acting and pleading and that, therefore, the operative
part of the section authorises the advocate of the Supreme
Court as of right "to practise", that is, "to act and
plead", in any High Court. The whole case of the petitioner
is founded this plea. It is necessary, therefore, to
consider whether the critical words have that invariable and
fixed meaning when used in relation to an advocate.
The verb "practise" according to the Oxford English
Dictionary, Vol. VIII, p. 1220, means :
to work at, exercise, pursue (an occupation, pro
fession or art) ;
to exercise the profession of law or of medicine.
Similar meaning is to be found assigned to the word in Dr.
Annandale’s New Gresham Dictionary. According to this
meaning doctors "practise", consulting architects "practise"
as well as lawyers "practise" but we know that each of them
does different things. Coming to lawyers we find that there
are different categories of lawyers all of whom "practise",
although all of them do not do the same thing. Thus
attorneys "practise" in the Original Sides of the High
Courts of Calcutta and Bombay and the agents "practise" in
the Supreme Court but we know that under the rules of those
Courts the attorneys, and agents only "act". The advocates
-also, "Practise" but we know that all of them do not
perform the same functions. The advocates of all High
Courts including those of the Appellate Sides of the
Calcutta and
65
Bombay High Courts , under the rules of their respective
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High Courts, "act and plead" and, as the ambit of the
profession of such advocates extends to acting and pleading,
the words "to practise" in their application to those
advocates undoubtedly mean "to act and plead". The
advocates of the Original Sides of those two High Courts
can, under the rules, ’only " plead". the Original Side
and the ambit and scope of the profession of these Original
Side advocates being limited only to pleading, the words "to
practise" used in reference to these advocates must mean "to
plead" only. There are thus different species of lawyers,
some of whom, e.g., attorneys of the Original Sides of
Calcutta and Bombay High Courts and agents of this Court,
only "act", some others of whom, e.g., the Original Side
advocates of those two High Courts and of this Court, only
"plead" and all the remaining advocates of all the High
Courts both "act and plead". The scope of the professional
activities of the different categories of lawyers thus
varies but, nevertheless, they are all said "to practise".
These words, therefore, connote the general idea of
exercising the legal profession, which is their dictionary
meaning, and in that general sense apply to all lawyers as a
class or genus but at the same time they are capable, in
their application to particular species or categories of
lawyers, to connote the different professional attributes of
those different categories or species.
Turning to the Indian Bar Councils Act we
find that the expression "to practise" has been used in
various sections in the generic sense I have mentioned. Let
me illustrate my meaning by reference to a few sections.
Section 4 of that Act deals with the composition of Bar
Councils. Sub-section (1) provides that every Bar Council
shall consist of 15 members, of which 10 shall be elected by
the advocates. Sub-section (2) then provides :-
"(2) , Of the elected members of every Bar Council
not less than five shall be persons who have for not less
than ton years been entitled as of right to
66
practise in the High Court for which the Bar Council has
been constituted ."
If we give the general dictionary
meaning to the words "to practise" used in this sub- section
then this sub-section becomes easily intelligible, but if we
say that they mean "to act and plead" then the eligibility
will be confined to the advocates who, under the rules, can
"act and plead", i.e., to the Appellate Side advocates, and
the result of that construction will be that the advocates
of the Original Sides of Calcutta and Bombay High Courts
even though they are of ten years’ standing will not be
eligible for election, for, such advocates do not and indeed
cannot, under the rules, "act and plead". Such surely
cannot be the case. It follows, therefore, that the words
"to practise" in this sub-section have been used in their
generic sense although they connote different things when
applied to different categories of advocates all of whom are
within the subsection. Sub-section (3) rung thus:
(3). Of the elected members of the Bar Councils to
be constituted for the High Courts of Judicature at Fort
William in Bengal and at Bombay such proportion as the High
Court may direct in each case shall be persons who have for
such minimum. period as the High Court may determine, been
entitled to practice in the High Court in the exercise of
its original jurisdiction, and such number as may be fixed
by the High Court out of the said proportion shall be
barristers of England or Ireland or members of the Faculty
of Advocates in Scotland."
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If we give the words "to practise" their ordinary
dictionary meaning,then the sub-section will be quite easy
of comprehension but if we say that those words mean "to act
and plead " then the sub-section will become meaningless,
for those words in that sub-section refer to the practice
of the Original Side advocates only who do not and indeed
under the rules cannot at all act on the Original side. It
is, there’fore, clear that the words " to practise " have
been used in both sub-sections in their generic meaning
which is also their dictionary meaning, namely, " to
67
exercise their profession", although in their application to
the different-species who are within the sub-, sections they
mean different professional attributes. Thus, in sub-
section (3) which applies to Original Side advocates only
they must mean "to plead" whereas in sub-section (2) which
applies to all categories of advocates the words have
different meanings, that is to say, in relation to advocates
other than Original Side advocates they mean "to act and
plead" and in relation to the Original Side advocates they
mean only "to plead". Same remarks apply to section 5 (1).
It will be futile to refer to the principle that the same
word should be given the same meaning wherever it occurs in
the Act, for the context excludes the application of that
principle. Take section 8 (2) of the Indian Bar Councils
Act which provides:
"8. (1)........................
(2) The High Court shall prepare and maintain a
roll of advocates of the High Court in which shall be
entered the names of-’
(a) all persons who were, as advocates, vakils or
pleaders, entitled as of right to practise in the High Court
immediately before the date which this section comes into
force in respect thereof;........... It we do not give to
the words "to practise’ in clause (a) their dictionary
meaning but read them as meaning "to act and plead" the
advocates practising, i.e., only pleading the Original
Sides of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts, will not find
their names in the rolls maintained by their respective High
Courts under this section. That exclusion is certainly not
the purpose of this subsection. Therefore, in this sub-
section also the words "to practise", means "to exercise
their profession". Same remarks apply to the proviso to
section 8 (3) (b). I come next to section 14 which provides
inter alia:
"14. (1) An Advocate shall be entitled as of right to
practise-
(9) subject to the provisions of sub-section (4) of
section 9, in the High Court of which he is an
Advocate;.........
68
By sub-section (3) nothing in this section
shall be deemed to limit or affect the power of the Calcutta
and Bombay High Courts to make rules determining the persons
who are respectively to plead and to act the Original
Sides of those High Courts. Both those High Courts have
made rules under which an Original Side advocate can only
"plead", the acting having been reserved exclusively for the
attorneys. In the light of the context what is the meaning
of the words "to practise" in sub-section (1) above ? If we
put the ordinary dictionary meaning the words "to
practise", namely, "to exercise his profession", the section
will be found to be quite intelligible and workable; but if
we take them to mean only "to act and plead" then the
Original Side advocates who do not "act" but only "plead"
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will not, strictly speaking, be within the section and
consequently will not be able to avail themselves of the
protection of section 14 (1) (a). Can it, for a moment, be
said that the section gives protection and security to all
advocates other than the Original Side advocates and that
the latter are not entitled as of right "to practise", i.e.,
"to plead", in the High Court of which he is an advocate?
That cannot be so. The very fact that the right is subject
to the provisions of section 9 (4) and that the rule-making
power of the two High Courts is not affected by virtue of
section 14 (3) quite clearly show that the Original Side
advocates who cannot act the Original Side are intended
also to be included in the term advocate used in sub-section
(1). If, therefore, this section is to give any security’
to the Original Side advocates, as it does to the Appellate
Side advocates, then we must read the words "to practise" in
their ordinary dictionary meaning, namely "to exercise his
profession". It is thus clear- that the words "to practise"
have been used throughout the Indian Bar Councils Act in
their general dictionary meaning mentioned above except at
the end of section 9 (4). In the same way the word
"practising" has been used in Order IV, rule 31, of the
Supreme Court Rules in the same generic sense and being used
in relation to
69
advocates of this Court it must mean appearing and
pleading". In the next following rule the same word has
been used in its dictionary meaning although having been
used in relation to agents of this Court it must mean
"acting". The same’ generic meaning given to the words to
practise" will make, section 4 of the Legal Practitioners
Act, 1879 easily intelligible and workable
The petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh, the other
hand, relies article 220 of the Constitution and points
out that while the words used in the body of the article
forbid judges "to plead or act" the marginal note to the
article describes the subject-matter of the article as
"prohibition of practising" and concludes that " to practise
" means "to act and plead". In agreement with the High
Court I am unable to accept this reasoning., Even assuming
that the marginal note may by looked at in considering the
article it only means that the draftsman of the marginal
note considered that the single word " practise " would be a
compendious one. Nobody disputes that the words "to
practise" may, in a particular context, mean "to plead or
act" but it does not follow that it invariably has that
meaning. Further it is clear, as the High Court points out,
that what the draftsman did was to find a word which would
cover both acting and pleading without attempting to bring
out the technical distinction between the two. Nor do I
think, for reasons stated by the High Court, that entry 78
of List I in the Seventh Schedule lends any support to the
petitioner’s contentions
The petitioner then refers us to the decision in
Laurentius Ekka v. Dhuk Koeri(1) in support of his
contention that the judicial accepted meaning of words "to
practise" is "to- appear, act and plead" In that case the
question was whether an advocate the roll.of the Patna
High Court, could present and move a review petition in a
subordinate court unless he filed ’a Vakalatnama or was
instructed by a pleader
(1) (1925) I.L.R. 4 Pat. 766
19
70
of the subordinate court. It was held that an advocate of
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the High Court, unlike a pleader, aid not need to be
appointed in writing to act behalf of his client and even
when verbally appointed he could under Order III, rule 1, of
the Code of Civil Procedure appear, plead and act behalf
of his client and, therefore, when section 4 of the Legal
Practitioners Act, 1879, provided that every person entered
as an advocate or vakil the role of any High Court under
the Letters Patent should be entitled to "practise" in all
Courts subordinate to such High Court, the word
" practise" as applied to an advocate of the
Patna High Court meant "appear, plead and act". The ratio
of the decision is obvious. The scope and ambit of the
Patna High Court advocate’s profession covered acting and
pleading, and when such an advocate was given the right to
practise" in the subordinate court be was authorised to
exercise his profession in full, i.e., to act and plead in
the subordinate court. In short, the advocate carried the
attributes of his profession with him even when he went to
exercise his profesSion in the lower court. This decision
is no authority for the proposition that the words "to
practise" have a fixed and invariable meaning comprising
acting and pleading in all cases.
The petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh then referred us
to the case of In re Powers of Advocates(1)., In Madras the
High Court in exercise of its powers under clause 9 of the
Letters Patent framed a rule empowering advocates to appear,
act and plead the Original Side. That rule was held to
have been validly made in two earlier decisions. But Rules
128 and 129 of the Insolvency Rules permitted an advocate
only to " appear and plead" in’the Insolvency Jurisdiction
and the attorney to act there. In these circumstances the
question arose in the Madras case whether advocates enrolled
under the Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926, were entitled to
"act" in the Insolvency jurisdiction of the Madras High
Court,notwithstanding that under the rules framed by the
High Court they were
(2) (1928) I.L.R. 52 Mad. 92.
71
only entitled to "plead" and the Full Bench
answered the question in the affirmative. The reasoning
underlying this decision, as I understand it, was that the
general ambit and scope of the profession of a Madras High
Court advocate being, according to its rule, "to appear, act
and plead" in the Original Side, the words "to practise"
used in section 8 (1) and section 14(1) of the Indian Bar
Councils Act must, in relation to him, mean "to appear, act
and plead". Rules 128 and 129, however, said that he could
only appear and plead but not act. There being no saving of
the power of the Madras High Court as there was of that of
the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts by section 9 (4) and
section 14 (3) and those insolvency rules being inconsistent
with the provisions of sections 8(1) and 14(1) as construed
by the Full Bench, that rule should, under sections 19(2) be
deemed to have been repealed. I am unable to accept the
correctness of this reasoning. The combined effect of the
two sets of rules was that & Madras advocate was entitled to
act and plead throughout the Original Side except in
Insolvency Court which was also a part of the Original Side.
It was, therefore, not correct to say that the Madras
advocate was entitled to act and plead in the Original Side.
The passage in the judgment of Kumaraswami Sastri J. at p.
103, namely that "the word ’practise’ ordinarily means
’appear, act and plead’, unless there is anything in the
subject or context to limit its meaning" is not supported by
any authority and appears ,to me to be too wide. Indeed,
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the learned Judge himself recognised this, for throughout
the judgment it was emphasised that the word "practise",
when applied to a Madras Advocate, meant "to appear, act and
plead". It is clear from, that judgment that, according to
the learned ’ Judge, the words had not that wide meaning in
their application to the Original Side Advocates of the
Calcutta and Bombay High Courts. In any event, that passage
should, in the context,, be limited in its application to
the Madras High Court advocates and all advocates of all
other High Courts who, by their rule6, are permitted to act
72
Pand plead, for it cannot possibly have that meaning in
relation to an Original Side,advocate who is permittad only
to plead. This passage in the Madras decision could not
have been intended as an enumeration of the professional
activities of an advocate as forming the invariable contents
of the words "to practise" or as an enunciation of a fixed
meaning of general application. In this country where there
exists, as a historical fact, a clear division of legal
practitioners into three separate classes, namely, those who
act only, those who only plead and those who do both act and
plead such a definition will be wholly inaccurate. It is
necessary, therefore, to give to those words their generic
meaning I have mentioned. In this view of the matter, I
agree with the High Court that the ,petitioner can derive no
support for his contention from either of these two
decisions.
My attention has also been drawn to the case of The
Queen Doutre(1) where it was held that in Canada ,where.-the
functions of Barristers, and Solicitors are united in the
same person, the rules of English law which precludes a
Barrister to sue for his fees do not apply and that a Quebec
advocate could sue for his remuneration a quantum meruit
basis. I do not see how that case throws any light the
problem before us. In Queen all advocates "act and plead"
and as regards Quebec advocates the critical words may cover
both acting and pleading, but how can that circumstance
assist us in ascertaining the meaning of those words in
enactments of our country where we bave a clear division, of
the legal practitioners into three categories I have,
mentioned ?
The result of the foregoing discussion as to the meaning
of the words "to practise" appears to me to be that in
relation to lawyers as a class they mean "to exercise their
profession" which is their dictionary meaning and which is
wide enongh, to cover the activities of the entire genus of
lawyers. They are words of indeterminate import and have no
fixed connotation or content. In their application to
particular
(1) (1883) 9 App. Cas. 745.
73
species of lawyers their meaning varies according to the
scope and ambit of the profession of that particular species
in relation to whom they may be used, and such meaning has
to be ascertained by reference to the subject or context.
Further, the Legislative technique, as is evident from the
Indian Bar Councils Act, the Legal Practitioners Act and the
Rules of the Supreme Court to which reference has been made,
is to use these neuter words in a generic sense although in
their application to specific categories or species of
lawyers they have different connotations which are to. be
ascertained from the context in which they are used. The
question, therefore, at once arises: What in the context and
a true construction of the Act we are considering, is the
meaning of the words "to practise"?
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The petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh urges that the words "to
practise," in relation to all advocates of all the 20 High
Courts, except the Original Side advocates of the Calcutta
and Bombay High Courts only, mean "to act and plead" and
seeing that this is the meaning applicable to the vast
majority of advocates, those words must be given that
meaning. Am I to apply the rule of majority in construing a
statute? Am I to assume that the Legislature had forgotten
or deliberately ignored the hard historical fact that there
exists a large body of advocates,of not inconsiderable
importance who "practise", that is only "plead" the
Original Side of two premier High Courts in India? Or am I
to assume that the Legislature intended, by the use of a
dubious expression of indefinite import, to swamp one whole
class of legal practitioners, namely, the Attorneys of those
two High Courts? I find not the slightest indication of
such intention anywhere in this Act. the contrary, the
title of the Act and the non-obstante clause of section 2
itself run counter to such contention. I have already
pointed out that the words "to practise" have been used in
the non-obstante clause in the sense of "appearing and
pleading" only and that nobody can for a moment doubt that
in ’the non-obstante clause the
74
Legislature had in mind the provisions of the Indian Bar
Councils Act and the rules of the High Courts regulating the
conditions subject to which a foreign advocate was permitted
"to appear and plead" in a High Court of which he was not an
advocate. If that be so, it is legitimate to infer that the
Legislature in the operative part of the section gave
expression and effect to what it had in its mind when
enacting the non-obstante clause. If the intention of the
legislature were otherwise, why did not the Legislature say
openly and in a straightforward way that it gave the Supreme
Court advocate the right "to act and plead" in any High
Court ? Why did it use the dubious words "to practise" ? It
is not correct to say that those words have been used in the
-Indian Bar Councils Act only in the sense of "acting and
pleading". As already explained, those words have been used
in their ordinary dictionary meaning, namely, "to exercise
his or their profession" so as to cover the entire genus or
class of Advocates, although in their application to
different categories or species they have different
connotations as explained above. Seeing that the
legislative practice is to use those words in their general
dictionary meaning, there is no reason to suppose that the
Legislature intended to depart from this practice while
enacting this piece of legislation. It is asked: why did
not the Legislature then insert in this Act a saving clause
like sections 9(4) and 14(3) of the Indian Bar Councils Act?
The argument is that the absence of such a saving clause in
this Act constitutes a departure from the legislative
practice followed in the Indian Bar Councils Act and,
therefore, the words "to practise" in the operative part of
section 2 must have their widest meaning. A little
reflection will show that this argument is not sound. The
rule-making power of the High Courts under clause 9 of the
Letters Patent was and is with respect to advocates, vakils
and attorneys admitted and enrolled by the, High Courts.
The Indian Bar Councils Act dealt with advocates enrolled by
the High Courts and,’ therefore, it was
75
considered safer to provide that nothing in th a Act should
affect or limit the rule making powers of the High Court.
Indeed, if the critical words were, as I think, used in a
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generic sense, the saving clauses must have been inserted ex
abundanti cautela. Be that as it may, as the High Courts’
power to make rules under clause 9 extended only to the
advocates, vakils and attorneys enrolled by them and as the
Indian Bar Councils Act also dealt with advocates enrolled
by the High Courts, the insertion of the saving clauses in
the last mentioned Act is intelligible. But a saving of the
rule-making powers of High Courts over their own advocates
etc., is entirely out of place’ in an Act which is concerned
not with High Court advocates but with Supreme Court
advocates only’ The High Courts have no power under clause 9
of the Letters Patent to make any rule to govern the conduct
and activities of the Supreme Court advoCates and this Act
only deals with Supreme Court advocate and confers a new
right them. Therefore a saving of the High Courts’ rule
making power over their advocates would have been wholly
meaningless and inappropriate, for such saving clause would
not have given the High Courts any power to make any rules
with respect to the Supreme Court advocates There was,
therefore, no- necessity or occasion for inserting any
saving clause the lines of sections 9 (4) and 14 (3) of
the Indian Bar Councils Act. NO-, thing can, therefore, be
founded the absence of a saving clause the lines of that
Act.
The petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh argues that the
text of the original Bill, the statement of objects and
reasons over the signature of the Law Minister attached
thereto and the debates in the Legislature resulting in the
deletion of what was clause (a) of the proviso as it existed
in the original Bill will clearly show what the intention of
the Legislature was. In the original Bill as introduced in
the Legislature there was a proviso to section 2 which ran
thus:
"Provided that nothing in this section shall be
deemed to entitle any person, merely by reason of his being
an Advocate of the Supreme Court--
76
(a) to plead or to act in any High Court in the exercise of
its original jurisdiction ; or
(b) to practise in a High Court of which he was at any
time a Judge, if he had given an undertaking not to practise
therein after ceasing to hold office as such Judge."
The argument is that the objects and reasons clearly
show that the intention was that section 2 should not affect
the Original Sides of the two High Courts, and clause (a)
was inserted in the proviso in order to achieve that
purpose. This shows that if clause (a) was not there,
section 2 would have, entitled the Supreme Court advocate
"to practise", i.e., "to appear, act and plead" in all High
Courts in all their several jurisdictions. This
conclusively shows that the words ’to practise" were used in
that larger sense. Indeed in the objects and reasons those
words were expressly stated to be synonymous with "to act
and plead". The argument is apparently formidable but
reflecttion will be found to be devoid of any substance.
There is authority for the proposition
that the proceedings of the Legislative Council are to be
excluded from consideration in the judicial construction of
an Act and that the debates in the Legislative Council,
reports of select committees and statements of objects and
reasons annexed to a Bill may not be referred to:
Administrator-General of Bengal v. Prom Lal(1). When
construing section 68 of the Indian Companies Act, 1,882,
the Privy Council in Krishna Ayyangar v. Nella Perumal(2)
observed that no statement made the introduction of the
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measure or its discussion can be looked at as affording any
guidance is to the meaning of the words. It is neither
necessary nor profitable to go into the numerous decisions
all of which it may be difficult to reconcile but it is
quite clear from the decision of this Court in the case of
A. E. Gopalan v. The State of Madras(3) that the debates and
speeches in the Legislature which, reflect the individual
opinion of the speaker cannot
(1) (1895) 22 I.A. 107. (3) [1950] S.C.R. 88,
(1920) 17 33.
77
be referred to for the purpose of construing the Act as it
finally emerged from the Legislature and so the debates must
be left out of consideration.
The statement of objects and reasons attached to the
Bill only depicts the object which the sponsor of the Bill
had in mind, but it throws no light the object which the
Legislature as a body had in mind when passing the Bill into
an Act. If I may borrow and adapt the felicitous language
used by my Lord the present Chief Justice in that case those
objects and reasons may at best be indicative of the
subjective intention of the Law Minister who sponsored the
Bill but they could not reflect the inarticulate mental
processes lying behind the majority vote which carried the
Bill. Nor is it reasonable to assume that the minds of all
those legislators were in accord. The first Privy Council
decision referred to above rejected any reference to the
debates or the objects and reasons. So did M. N. Mukherji
J. in Debendra Narain Roy v. Jogendra Narain Deb(1).
Reference may also be made to Craies Interpretation of
Statutes, 5th Edn., at p. 123, regarding the memoranda
attached to the Bill. In my opinion it is safer to follow
the orthodox English view and leave the objects and reasons
out of consideration.
The petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh points out
that in Gopalan’s case (supra) this Court did look at the
original draft of what eventually became article 21 of the
Constitution as throwing some light the construction of
that article and urges that we should look at the original
Bill and draw appropriate inferences from the fact of the
omission of clause (a) of the proviso from the Act. What
was looked at in that case was the Report of the Drafting
Committee appointed by the Constituent Assembly. That
Report was akin to a Report of a Select Committee made after
consideration of a Bill referred to it by the Legislature
for-consideration. In that Report the Drafting Committee
recommended the substitution of the expression "except
according to procedure established
(1936) A.I. R. 1936 Cal. 593 at p. 619.
78
by law" taken from the Japanese Constitution for the words
"without due process of law" which occurred in the original
draft "as the former is more specific." The Drafting
Committee further explained that they had attempted to make
the fundamental rights conferred by the article in question
and the limitations to which they must necessarily be
subject as definite as possible since the Courts may have to
pronounce upon them. The Constitution as it was finally
adopted showed that the Constituent Assembly had accepted
the amendment suggested by the Drafting Committee. The fact
that the Drafting Committee was, in a sense, the agent of
the Constituent Assembly, and that the amendment proposed by
the Drafting Committee was in fact adopted by the
Constituent Assembly, may conceivably lead to the inference
that the reasons given by the Drafting Committee were also
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accepted by the Constituent Assembly and that the intention
of the agent, the Drafting Committee, reflected the
intention of the principal, the Constituent Assembly. This,
I apprehend, was the underlying reason why the majority of
this Court expressed the view that the Report of the
Drafting Committee could be looked at as historical material
throwing some light the question of construction of the
article 21. -That underlying reasoning does not, however,
apply to the present case. This Court, consistently with
the principles laid down in numerous judicial decisions,
some of which I have cited above, held that recourse could
not be had to the debates in the Legislature in construing
the Act.’ To keep out the debates which may, in some degree,
have disclosed the considerations operating the minds of
the vocal section of the Legislature and the intention with
which they moved the amendment and then to refer to the text
of the original Bill and the fact that some words or clauses
thereof do not find a place in the Act as eventually passed
in-order to ascertain the state of mind of the members of
the Legislature who passed the Act will, to my mind, be
indicative of a mental process which can hardly be
79
for my learned colleagues who had pronounced upon the
admissibility of the Report of the Drafting Committee, I
feel pressed to adhere to and abide by the views expressed
by them that point, I am certainly not prepared to go
further and to extend the principle of that decision that
question by permitting a reference to the original Bill.
Assuming that the reasoning of the decision in
Gopalan’s case(1) regarding admissibility of the Report as
an aid to construction may, in certain circumstances, be
applicable to the original Bill, we have yet to consider
whether in the case now before us the original Bill should
be referred to. In Gopalan’s case(1) Kania C. J. said at p.
110:-
" The report may be read not to control the
meaning of the articles, but may be seen in case of
ambiguity."
Again at p. 111 the learned Chief Justice stated:"Resort may
be had to these sources with great cautiou and only when
latent ambiguities are to be resolved."
In point of fact the learned Chief Justice did not find the
words of article 21 to be ambiguous so as to require
recourse to the Report of the Drafting Committee to
ascertain the intention of the Constituent Assembly. My
Lord the present Chief Justice and Fazl Ali J. and Mukherjea
J. did refer to the Report. In the view taken by Mahajan J.
it was not necessary for him to express any opinion this
instant problem. I did not refer to the debates or to the
Report of the Drafting Committee and stated at p. 297 and at
p. 323 that I would express no opinion as to the
admissibility of the Report or the debates. It is, however,
clear from the passages I have quoted, from the judgment of
the late Chief Justice that the Report of the Drafting
Committee could be looked at only to resolve ambiguity and
not to control the meaning of the article if it was
otherwise plain, for the intention of the Constituent
Assembly was to be gathered primarily’ from
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 88.
80
the words used in the Constitution. The question at once
arises: is there any ambiguity in section 2 as it now stands
which requires a reference to the original Bill for its
solution ? Having regard to the state of the law as it
existed before this Act was passed, namely, that by the
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rules of all High Courts an advocate of one High Court could
only "appear and plead" in another High Court if he could
obtain the permission of the Chief Justice’ of the latter
Court the mischief that followed from these rules and was
unprovided for, namely, that even eminent advocates were.
not accorded such permission for no apparent reason and. the
fact that the object of this Act, as indicated in the full
title and the non-obstante clause in section 2 was
undoubtedly to remedy this defect. So far as the Supreme
Court advocates were concerned- all which circumstances are
to be taken into consideration in construing an Act as
stated in Heydon’s case (1) and finally the legislative
practice of using the words "to practise" in their ordinary
dictionary meaning, as I have explained already, I find no
ambiguity whatever in the operative part of section 2. The
meaning and intent of the section appear to me reasonably
plain and I do not consider it necessary to have recourse to
the original Bill at all to ascertain the meaning and intent
of the words used in the section. It is wrong to imagine or
create ambiguity and then to call in aid the original Bill
and to speculate as to the intention of the Legislature.
Again, assuming that -the original Bill has to be
looked at in ascertaining the meaning of section 2, I do not
derive any assistance from the mere circumstance that clause
(a) of the proviso which appeared in the original Bill does
not find a place in the Act as it finally emerged from the
legislative anvil. The mere fact that that proviso was
omitted from the Act as finally passed does not by any means
lead us to the conclusion that the construction put upon the
section by the petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh must be
correct. There is no reason to assume that the
(1) (1584) 3 Co. Rep. 7b.
81
legislators read the words"to Practise" as meaning "to
appear,- act and plead" If they read the words to mean " to
appear and plead only, which is the ambit and scope of the
profession of Supreme Court advocates under the rules of
this Court and of the Original Side advocates of those two
High Courts then, in so far as the proviso purported not to
extend the application of the section -to "’acting" the
Original Side it was wholly unnecessary and may have
accordingly been deleted as not being necessary. Further,
if the intention was to give the Supreme Court advocates a
right to appear and plead only in any High Court in any of
its jurisdictions, then the proviso, in so far as it
purported not to extend the section to pleading the
Original Side of those two High Courts, could not be
retained. If, therefore, the intention of the operative part
of the section was that the Supreme Court advocate would
have the right only "to appear and plead", which is
consonant with the functions of a Supreme Court advocate and
also co-extensive with the rights of the Original Side
advocates of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts under the
rules, the proviso had to be deleted in full and, therefore,
no argument can be founded the fact of such deletion. We
have, therefore, to construe the operative part of the
section by reference to the intention we can gather
primarily from the language used in the section and other
parts of the Act itself.
The Legislature which enacted the statute was
well aware of the state of the law as embodied in the rules
of different High Courts preventing an advocate of one High
Court from, as of right, " appearing and pleading " in
another High Court of which he Was not an advocate. The
mischief of withholding of the permission by the Chief
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Justices no better ground than the absence of reciprocity
between the High Courts was notorious. The Act set out to
remedy that mischief as is obvious from the full title and
the non-obstante clause in section 2 of the Act as I have
herein before explained. It was known to the Legislature
that an advocate was by Order 1, rule 2, of the Supreme
82
Court Rules defined as a person entitled only "to appear and
plead" before the Supreme Court, that under Order IV,rule
11, no person could appear as an advocate unless instructed
by an agent and that under Order IV, rule 30, such an
advocate could in no circumstances "act" as an agent, In
short, the Legislature knew that the scope or ambit of the
Supreme Court advocate’s profession was only "to appear and
plead". With all this knowledge the Legislature enacted
section 2 authorising every advocate of the Supreme Court
"to practise as of right in any High Court". Applying the
dictionary meaning to the word "practise," the section
authorises every Supreme Court advocate "to exercise his
profession as of right in any High Court". The scope and
ambit of the Supreme Court advocate’s profession being only
"to appear and plead" there can be no escape from the
conclusion that the section authorises the Supreme Court
advocate only "to appear and plead" in any High Court. The
reasoning is the same as that adopted or involved in the
Patna case referred to above. An advocate of the Patna High
Court was, under its rules, entitled "to appear, act and
plead" in that High Court. When section 4 of the Legal
Practitioners Act authorised such advocate "to practise" in
the subordinate Court it was held in the Patna case to mean
that the advocate could do all that he could do in the High
Court, namely, "appear, act and plead". The words "to
practise" were held to cover all these activities not
because those words had that invariable ,meaning but because
those words had that meaning only in relation to advocates
who -by the rule of the High Courts were entitled "to
appear, act and plead In short, the content of those words
varies with the ambit and scope of the profession of the
advocate with regard-to whom they are use a parity of
reasoning, the Supreme Court advocate being entitled only
"to appear and plead", when section 2 authorised him "to
practise" in any High Court, it must be taken to have meant
that he was authorised to do in the High Courts all that he
was entitled to do in the
83
Supreme Court, namely, "to appear and plead" only. This
construction appears to me to be quite logical and
calculated to give effect to the object of the Act. It
brings about a close approximation between the non-obstante
clause and the operative part of the section which should be
the aim of every well drawn statute.
It is asked: bow can a Supreme Court advocate
who can only "appear and plead" when he is instructed by an
agent, "appear and plead" in any High Court where there are
no Supreme Court agents to instruct him ? This, in my
opinion, is taking an extremely narrow view of the matter.
The Supreme Court advocate’s profession being confined only
to appearing and pleading, when he is authorised "to
practise", i.e., to exercise his profession in any High
Court, he must carry with him his professional limitations
but must be governed by those rules of High Courts which
regulate the practice of advocates who can only " appear
and plead"’ in the High Courts, for he cannot practise in
vacuo. Seeing that there are persons authorised "to act" in
every High Court who may instruct another advocate, no
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practical difficulty can arise in the way of the Supreme
Court advocate appearing and pleading in the High Court.
Under Ch. I, rule 38, of the Calcutta Original Side Rules a
Barrister advocate of any other High Court or an Original
Side advocate of Bombay is permitted to "appear and plead"
in the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court with the
permission of the Chief Justice. Surely, nobody has ever
suggested that such a foreign advocate must carry with him
an instructing advocate or attorney of his own court who is
competent to act in order to instruct him when he appears
and pleads in the Calcutta High Court. He is instructed by
an attorney of the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court
without any difficulty. Same remarks apply when an Original
Side --advocate of Calcutta goes to appear and plead the
Original Side of Bombay under Ch. I, rule 6, of the Bombay
rules, for surely such an advocate does not carry a Calcutta
attorney with him but is quite satisfactorily
84
instructed by a Bombay attorney. An Original Side advocate
of the Calcutta or Bombay High Court who cannot appear the
Original Side unless instructed by an attorney can and
frequently does appear and plead the Appellate Side the
instruction of an advocate of the Appellate Side who being
entitled to act can instruct the Original Side advocate to
appear and plead. If we adopt this construction, the Act
becomes workable, but if we adopt the construction suggested
by the petitioner, then the Supreme Court advocates
practising in High Courts by virtue of the Act will become
freelances creating chaos and confusion as I shall
hereinafter more fully explain. In my opinion there is no
substance at all in this objection of the petitioners.
It is next pointed out that the result of this
construction will be to make the new right illusory in that
a Supreme Court advocate will not be entitled to "act" even
the Appellate Side of a High Court where he is not enrolled
and such a resuIt will militate against the principle of the
unification of the Indian Bar. This objection is obviously
based the assumption that the object of this Act is to
bring about such a drastic and far reaching result. There
is no warrant which I can see for any such assumption. I
have already mentioned that the point of controversy this
subject was that an advocate the roll of one High Court
could not as of right "appear and plead" in other High
Courts but had to depend the good graces of the Chief
Justices of such other High Courts who frequently. withheld
the requisite permission even to very. eminent advocates.
There was hardly ever any claim made by an advocate of one
High Court "to act" as an advocate of another High Court of
which he was not an advocate. The limited object of this
Act appearing from its full title and the non-obstante
clause as explained above was to remedy only this particular
defect by providing that an advocate of the Supreme Court
would be entitled as of right "to practise", i.e., exercise
his profession, i.e., "to appear and plead", in any High
Court even though
85
he was not ’ the roll of that High Court.
This certainly was an important step in the process of
bringing about uniformity in the Indian Bar, for it did
bring into,: being a category of advocates who might "appear
and plead" in all Court’s throughout India and form the
nucleus of an all India Bar. More than this was not within
the scope and object of this Act as I apprehend it. To
adopt a construction which will permit a Supreme Court
advocate who is also enrolled in the High Court of, say
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Travancore-Cochin in the south or off the State popularly
called Pepsu in the north, to go and "act" in the Original
Sides of the High Court of Calcutta or Bombay which the
advocates of those High Courts cannot do, will lead to no
end of confusion as will be explained more fully hereafter
and that consideration alone should induice me to discard
the -petitioners’ construction and adopt a construction
which will not give rise to practical inconvenience.
It is pointed out that while this construction
may bring about a perfect approximation between the non-
obstante clause and the operative part of section 2 by
entitling only foreign Supreme Court advocates "to appear
and plead" in any High Court as of right,, it runs counter
to the concluding words of the operative part of section 2,
namely, "whether or not he is an Advocate of that High
Court", for, it is urged, those words clearly indicate that
the section purports to confer a Supreme Court advocate
the right to practise not only in a High Court of which he
is not an advocate, but also to give him some right in rela-
tion to his own High Court. The Court below has held that
the words "whether or not" are not quite apposite and that
what was meant was that a right was given to every Supreme
Court advocate "to practise" in any High Court even if he
was not an advocate of that High Court. In other words, the
Act itself gives a right to the Supreme Court advocate to
practise as of right in any High Court and that being so it
was immaterial to consider whether he was an advocate of a
particular High Court or not, i.e.,
86
irrespective of his -being or not being an
advocate of that High Court. I am inclined to agree with
this view. Let me, however, test the soundness of the view
propounded by the petitioner the strength of the words
"whether or not etc." Take the case of an advocate of the
Madras High Court. Under the rules of the Madras High Court
be is entitled "to appear, act and plead" in all its
jurisdictions. When such an advocate is enrolled as an
advocate of the Supreme Court, section 2 of the Act, as
construed by the petitioner, really gives him no additional
right in relation to his own High Court, for already -he is
entitled "to appear, act and plead" there. That is the
position also with regard to the advocates of all High
Courts, other than the High Courts of Calcutta and Bombay in
the matter of their right to practise in their respective
High Courts. Seeing that the advocates of 18 High Courts
did not in fact get any new right in their respective High
Courts, it cannot reasonably be said that the object of the
Act was to give any right to an advocate of a particular
High Court in respect of his own High Court. It is pointed
out that an advocate enrolled the Appellate Sides of the
Bombay and Calcutta High Courts is not, as of right,
entitled to appear, act and plead the Original Side and
the object of the Act was to give those Appellate Side
advocates of the Calcutta and Bombay High-Courts some
additional rights in the Original- Side of their own High
Courts. In view of the fact that the Act gives no
additional right to the advocates of any of the 18 High
Courts in relation to their respective High’ Courts it is
difficult to imagine that the object of the Act was to
bestow some special favours only the. advocates of the
Appellate Sides of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts.
Therefore, it appears to me that the words "whether or not
etc." read in the light of the purpose of the Act appearing
from the full title and the non-obstante clause only
emphasise that the object was to give the Supreme Court
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advocate a statutory right to practise in any High Court
87
of which he was not an advocate, irrespective of his other
rights, if any. It is a new right given by the Act proprio
vigore to a class of foreign advocates. Further, if the use
of the words "whether or not etc." must necessarily mean
that the object of the Act was to give a special right to an
Appellate Side advocate of the Calcutta and Bombay High
Courts in relation to his own High Court it does not
necessarily follow’ that the words "to practise" must be
given such a wide meaning as would also cover acting, for if
the words’ "to practise" are read as extending only to
appearing and pleading, even then the Appellate Side
advocates of the Calcutta and Bombay High Courts would get
some additional right in their own High Courts in that they
become entitled by virtue of their position as Supreme Court
advocates "to appear and plead" the Original Side without
having to take steps under the respective rules of those
High Courts to entitle them to appear and plead the
Original Side. In this view of the matter also the con-
cluding words "whether or not etc. " cannot affect the
construction put by me the operative part of the section.
Even if I am wrong in adopting the foregoing
line of reasoning, the petitioner will yet have to meet an
alternative construction which has commended itself to the
learned Judges of the High Court and my learned brother
Mukherjea, and which I am also prepared to accept as a
cogent alternative. The Act authorises every advocate of
the Supreme Court as of right " to practise " in any High
Court. The use of the words "to practise " in relation to
an advocate clearly indicates that he is to exercise the
profession of an advocate. To exercise the profession of an
advocate in a High Court must involve the observance of the
rules of practice of ’that High Court. It is urged that
this construction amounts, in reality, to adding words to
the section, namely, as an advocate of that Court" or
"according to the rules of that Court." This contention is
founded a clear misaprehension, for I am really not adding
anything at
88
all but I am only stating what is implicit in the
section as it stands., In other words, I am construing the
words of the section and ascertaining its true meaning and
import. The necessary implication of the fact that the
Supreme Court advocate is to exercise his profession in any
High Court may well be that he becomes entitled to do
whatever an advocate (if that particular High Court can do
under the, rules of practice of that High Court. Thus when
the Supreme Court advocate goes to practise in the,
Appellate Side be will be entitled to act and plead as an
Appellate Side advocate does and when he goes to practise in
the Original Side he will only plead as an Original Side
advocate does and in either case be must abide by the
relevant rules, for he must practise. as an advocate of the
particular High Court does, namely, under and subject to the
rules. Nobody has ever suggested that an advocate or vakil
authorised to practise in subordinate courts or in any other
High Court under section 4 of the Legal Practitioners Act
was not bound by the rules of the Court where he went to
practise.
It is argued that the rules of the High Courts of
which the Supreme Court advocate is not an advocate
cannot in terms apply to him when he chooses to exercise the
right given to him by the Act, for those rules apply to the
advocates of those High Courts. This again, I conceive, is
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taking a narrow view of the matter. The rules of the High
Court certainly apply to the advocates entitled to practise
in that High Court and when an Act invests an advocate, who
is not an advocate of a particular High Court, with the
right to practise in that High Court, for all intents and
purposes such an advocate becomes, as it were, a statutory
advocate of that High Court and as such becomes invested
with the rights as well as the obligations of an advocate of
that, Court. In other words, the Act proprio vigore makes
him a person entitled to practise in that Court and as such
amenable to and governed by all the rules applicable to and
regulating the practice of persons entitled ’to
89
practise in that Court, except, of course, such of the rules
as are contrary to, i.e., destructive of this new statutory
right and which must, therefore, as regards him, be deemed
to be inoperative. Surely the Supreme Court advocate cannot
practise in vacuo. To accede to the contention of the
petitioner is to say that a body of professional men,
namely, the Supreme Court advocates, have been let loose "to
practise", i.e., to "act and plead"’ in all High Courts in
all their jurisdictions untramelled by any rules of
practice--a proposition which, in my opinion, ha-, only to
be stated to be rejected. It is fraught with grave dangers
and, at any rate, will inevitably lead to practical
inconvenience and to no end of utter confusion. If that
view were accepted the Supreme Court advocate will be
entitled to walk in and walk out of the High Court in any
costume that his fancy may choose. He may throw to the
winds the rules of precedence of advocates including that of
the Advocate-General. According to the rules of the
Original Side of Calcutta an attorney is authorised to cause
service of notice of motion and chamber summons but the
opposite party will not be bound to accept service from the
Supreme Court advocate who is not so authorised. According
to the Calcutta Original Side rules an attorney is
personally responsible for the requisition fees, deposition
fees etc., but a Supreme Court advocate acting in the
Original Side will not be so responsible at all. Nor will
the High Court be able to get at the Supreme Court advocate
to realise the fees if he is not to be governed by the rules
governing the conduct of persons who act the Original
Side.’ The attorneys acting - in the Original Side cannot
charge the client with a pice over and above the fees
prescribed in the rules of taxation as between attorney and
client but a Supreme Court advocate acting in the Original
Side, not being in terms bound by the taxation rules, will
be free to fleece the client to any extent he can. The
attorneys being officers of the Court are under the rules
and the Letters Patent amenable to the disciplinary
jurisdiction of the High
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Court but a Supreme Court advocate may with impunity snap
his fingers at the High Court, for under no provision of law
as it exists except section 2 of the Act can the High Court
exercise disciplinary jurisdiction such advocates. It is
unnecessary to multiply instances of confusion. This one
consideration of inconvenience and confusion is enough to
discard the construction sponsored by the petitioners’ for
the true rule of construction is that if two constructions
are possible, that which-leads to absurdity and brings about
practical inconvenience and encourages confusion and chaos
must be eschewed. Neither of the two constructions
suggested by me will have any such consequence and either of
them will make the section workable in practice and at the
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same time accomplish a considerable measure of unification
of the Indian Bar. The petitioners see the difficulty and
to get over it suggest that the Supreme Court advocate
practising in a High Court will and can be bound by the
existing ordinary rules of practice except those that
prevent him from acting and pleading or that the High Court
-may frame separate rules for the Supreme Court advocates
practising before them. This very concession at once gives
away the whole case of the petitioners. As I have already
stated clause 9 of the Letters Patent empowers the High
Courts to approve, admit and enrol advocates, vakils and
attorneys and such advocates, vakils and attorneys -I
emphasise the word " such "are authorised to appear in the
High Courts and to plead or to act or to do both according
to the rules made by the High Courts. The High Courts’
rule-making power as to enrolment of advocates, vakils and
attorneys and their respective functions and powers is thus
quite clearly confined to advocates, vakils and attorneys
admitted and enrolled by them and does not and cannot extend
to Supreme Court advocates who are not their rolls.
Section 119 of the Code of Civil Procedure excludes the
application of the rules of practice relating to advocates
and pleaders from Original Side of High Courts unless
adopted by them by rules framed
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under the Letters Patent which,as already stated, governs
only their own advocates. The Supreme Court of India, under
article 145, can only make rules for regulating generally
the practice and procedure of the Supreme Court including
rules as to the persons practising before it. That article
does not authorise the Supreme Court to make rules regulat-
ing the practice and procedure of High Courts or the
conditions subject to which the Supreme Court advocates may
practise before the High Courts. The Act we are considering
does not confer any power the High Courts to frame rules
subject to which the Supreme Court advocates shall exercise
in the High Court their newly acquired statutory right under
this Act. The Bar Councils’ rule-making power under section
15 is limited only to High Court advocates, clause (b)
having been superseded by, section 2 of this Act. There is,
therefore, no provision of law except section 2 itself which
will enable the High Courts to prescribe any rules of
conduct ’for the Supreme Court advocates or to oblige them
to conform to any rule of practice when they go to practise
in any High Court. Therefore, if we accept either of the
two constructions suggested by me it will prevent this
absurd and undesirable result, for then the Supreme Court
advocates when they go ’to practise in any High Court will
appear and plead or, alternatively, do what an. advocate of
the High Court can do, and in either case be subject to the
relevant rules by which the advocates of the particular High
Court are bound. If that were not the meaning of section 2,
then the Supreme Court advocates will be untrammelled by any
rule of practice at all. Further, the petitioners’
construction, even if the High Courts have power to make
rules with regard to Supreme Court advocates practising
before them, any the least obligation or restriction imposed
by such rules the Supreme Court advocates by way of making
them personally liable for any fees etc., or bringing them
under the disciplinary jurisdiction or the High Courts will
certainly be
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challenged as a fetter placed their statutory right to
practise, in the High Court and as such not binding ton
them. Finally there will be two sets of rules, namely, the
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existing rules governing the attorneys who act the
original Side and some new rules to be made for the supreme
Court advocates who may choose to act the Original Side.
The resulting creation of a now and distinct class of actors
in the Original Sides of the two High Courts will indeed be
a sad commentary the supposed intention of the Legislature
to achieve uniformity and unification of the Indian Bar.
The petitioners’ construction must, therefore, be rejected.
It is next said that this alternative
construction the rights of a Supreme Court advocate will
vary from High Court to High Court and that will not be con-
sistent with the policy of uniformity underlying the Act.
In the first place it is an assumption, without any warrant,
that the Act was out to achieve perfect symmetry and
uniformity of the kind which we may consider desirable.
Secondly,no serious inconvenience will follow if the rights
of a Supreme Court advocate vary from High Court to High
Court. The status and rights of advocates of different High
Courts do vary under their respective rules and such
variation has existed of or long time without any
inconvenience. This Act does not at all purport-to
eliminate those differences amongst the advocates of the
different High Courts which will yet continue. The
construction sought to be put the section by the
petitioner Aswini Kumar Ghosh will, therefore, only create
fresh differences by bringing into being a new variety of
practitioners who will have yet different rights in all the
High Courts. the other hand, the construction suggested
above will cause the least possible inconvenience and at the
same time remedy the long-, standing grievance of advocates
of High Courts account of the bar against their "
appearing -and pleading" in High Courts of which they are
not advocates by authorising them, after being enrolled
as Supreme Court advocates to do so as of right and
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without the necessity of their obtaining the sanction of the
Chief Justices of the High Courts concerned. The Act
permits -a well defined body of professional men, namely,
the Supreme Court advocates, to exercise the profession of
an advocate in any High Court. That this certainly was a
forward step in achieving uniformity cannot possibly be
denied. Nothing more was within the purview of the Act as
expressed in its full title and the non-obstante clause.
Finally, reference is made to the proviso as it
now appears in section 2 and it is claimed that the word
"practise" in the operative part of the section must mean
"appear, act and plead" because that word as appearing in
the proviso obviously has that meaning, and reliance is
placed the rule of construction that the same word should
be given the same meaning wherever it occurs in the Act.
All that this proviso says is that nothing in this section
shall be deemed to entitle a post-Constitution Judge who
might be -an advocate of the Supreme Court to practise in a
High Court of which he was at any time a Judge, if he had
given an undertaking not to practise there after ceasing to
hold office as such Judge. In other words, all that the
proviso does is to say that the right created by the section
shall not extend to a Tudge if he had given an undertaking
not to practise in that Court. In the first place this
proviso was wholly redundant in view of the constitutional
prohibition contained in article 220. Further, the language
of the proviso is inept in that it seems to suggest that if
such a Judge had not given an undertaking he would be free
to practise which certainly is contrary to article 220.
Finally there is no difficulty in giving to the word
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"practise" occurring in the proviso the same general meaning
given to that word in the operative part of the section,
namely, "to exercise the profession". It is said that if
the words "to practise" mean only "to plead", then a post-
Constitution Judge after his retirement would be entitled
"to act" in the High Court of which he was at any time a
Judge. There is no force in this argument because such lb
Judge
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will be prevented from acting and pleading anywhere by
virtue of the provisions of article 220 of the Constitution.
It is, therefore, not-necessary to give the word "practise"
the wider meaning contended for by the petitioner Aswini
Kumar Ghosh. We must also remember that the general rule
relied upon may be excluded by the subject,or context.
For reasons stated above, whether we
adopt one or the other method of construction suggested
above, in my opinion,, this petition cannot succeed and must
be dismissed.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the respondents: P. K. Bose.
Agent for Intervener No. 1 : P. K. Mukherjee.
Agent for Intervener No. 2: Sukumar Ghose.
Agent for Intervener No. 3: I N. Shroff, for P. K. Bose.
Agent for Intervener No 4: Bajinder Narain.