Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UTKAL CONTRACTORS & JOINERY PRIVATE LIMITED &ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ORISSA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/05/1987
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
KHALID, V. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1454 1987 SCR (3) 317
1987 SCC (3) 279 JT 1987 (2) 466
1987 SCALE (1)1162
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1987 SC2310 (2)
RF 1991 SC1806 (7)
ACT:
Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Act, 1981: ss.
5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b)--Whether applicable to forest produce
grown in Government lands--Existing contracts for collec-
tion, purchase and sale of sal seeds in respect of Govern-
ment forests--Whether rescinded.
Statutory interpretation: Wide words not to be given
literal meaning--To be construed contextually restricting
scope of provision in consonance with the object, reasons
and scheme of the Act.
HEADNOTE:
Sub-section (1) of s. 5 of the Orissa Forest Produce
(Control of Trade) Act, 1981 provides that on the issue of a
notification under sub-s. (3) of s. 1 in respect of an area
(a) all contracts for the purchase, sale, gathering or
collection of specified forest produce shall stand rescind-
ed, and (b) no person other than the State Government or its
officers or agents shall purchase or transport any specified
forest produce in the said area. Explanation II thereto
provides that purchase of specified forest produce from the
State Government or its officers or agents is not to be
deemed to be a purchase in contravention of the provisions
of the Act.
The appellant-company was granted a licence for collec-
tion, sale and purchase of sal seeds from Government forests
on the stipulation that it would establish solvent extrac-
tion units in backward areas. The appellant-company was to
supply sal seeds to these extraction plants. The agreement
was renewed for a further period of ten years from October
1, 1979. The State Government by a notification dated Decem-
ber 9, 1982 issued under sub-s. (3) of s. 1 brought the Act
into force immediately in the whole of the State in relation
to sal seeds. Thereafter it refused to accept royalty from
the appellant on the ground that the notification had the
effect of rescinding the contract between the company and
the Government.
318
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A writ petition filed by the company for a declaration
that the abovesaid notification did not have the effect of
rescinding their contract with the State Government, was
dismissed by the High Court.
In the appeals to this Court it was contended for the
appellants that the Act had no application to the produce
grown in Government forests, that the Act was aimed at
creating a monopoly in forest produce in the Government by
vesting in it the exclusive right to purchase forest produce
grown in private holdings, and that even otherwise Explana-
tion II to s. 5(1) saved such contracts for the purchase of
specified forest produce from Government lands also. On
behalf of the respondents it was contended that the very
wide language of s. 5(1)(a) made it applicable to all forest
produce whether grown in private holdings or Government
forests, and that the contract being for collection and not
for purchase of forest produce it was not saved by the
Explanation II to s. 5(1).
Allowing the appeals, the Court,
HELD: 1. The Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade)
Act, 1981 and the notification issued under it do not apply
to the forest produce grown in Government forests. It was
not, therefore, open to the Government to treat the con-
tracts with the appellants as rescinded. [333C]
2. The scheme of the Act is fully in tune with the
object set out in the Statement of Objects and Reasons and
in the Preamble, namely, that of creating a monopoly in
forest produce by making the Government the exclusive pur-
chaser of forest produce grown in private holdings. Sections
4, 5(1)(b), 5(3), 7, 8 and 9 deal with purchase of forest
produce by the State Government. This can only be of forest
produce grown in private holdings and not in Government
forests since there can be no question of or providing for
the purchase by the Government of forest produce grown on
Government lands. The only provision in the Act which ex-
pressly deals with sale of forest produce by the State
Government is s. 12, and that again is confined to the sale
of specified forest produce purchased by the State Govern-
ment. The Act, therefore, cannot to said to have any appli-
cation to produce grown in Government forests. [331H-332A,
331FG, EF, CD, F, 323E]
3.1 The safest guide to the interpretation of a statute
is the reason for it, which can he discovered through exter-
nal and internal aids. The external aids are Statement of
Objects and Reasons when the Bill is
319
presented to Parliament, the reports of Committees which
preceded the Bill and the reports of Parliamentary Commit-
tees. Occasional excursions into the debates of Parliament
are permitted. Internal aids are the Preamble, the scheme
and the provisions of the Act. [328EF[
3.2. No provision in the statute and no word of the
statute may be construed in isolation. Every provision and
every word must be looked at generally before any provision
or word is attempted to be construed. The setting and pat-
tern are important. Parliament does not waste its breath
unnecessarily. It is neither expected to use unnecessary
expressions, ’nor to express itself unnecessarily. While the
words of an enactment are important, the context is no less
important. The fact that general words are used in a statute
is not in itself a conclusive reason why every case failing
literally within them should be governed by that statute.
The context of an Act may well indicate that wide or general
words should be given a restrictive meaning. [328F-329B]
Attorney General v. H.R.H. Prince Augustus, [1957] 1 All
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ER 49; Chertsey, U.D.C.v. Mixnam’s Properties, [1964] 2 All
ER 627, Empress Mills v. Municipal Committee, Wardha, AIR
1958 SC 341 and Maunsell v. Olins, [1975] 1 All ER 16,
referred to.
4.1 It is not permissible to the Court to construe the
wide and general words of s. 5(1)(a) in their literal sense
as that would not be in consonance with the scheme of the
Act. The proper way to construe that provision is to give a
restricted meaning to the wide language there used so as to
fit into the general scheme of the Act. [332B-D]
4.2 Section 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b) are connected by the
conjunction ’and’, and having regard to the circumstances
leading to the enactment and the policy and design of the
Act, cls.(a) and (b) must be construed in such a way as to
reflect each other. Viewing s. 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b) together
and in the light of the Preamble and the Statement of Ob-
jects and Reasons and against the decor of the remaining
provisions of the Act, it is apparent that s. 5(1), like the
rest of the provisions, applied to forest produce grown in
private holdings and not to forest produce grown in Govern-
ment lands. [332D, F-G]
5. The contracts relating to specified forest produce
which, therefore, stood rescinded were contracts in relation
to forest produce grown in private holdings only. Since the
very object to the Act was to create a monopoly in forest
produce in the Government so as to enable the Government,
among other things, to enter into contracts and since
320
s. 5(1) does not bar any future contracts by the Government
in respect of the forest produce, there was no justification
in rescinding contracts solemnly entered into by the Govern-
ment for the avowed purpose of encouraging the setting up of
certain industries in the State. [332E, 334A]
6. The object of the Act was to prevent smuggling of
those varieties of forest produce as were grown both in
Government forests and private lands. It was expressly
mentioned in the Statement of Objects and Reasons that such
varieties of forest produce were unlike sal seeds which were
grown only in Government forests. Even so the only notifica-
tion ever issued under the Act was in respect of sal seeds
and no other forest produce. The mere inclusion of ’sal
seeds’ in the definition of ’forest produce’ cannot in the
teeth of the several provisions of the Act lead to the
inference that forest produce grown in Government lands was
also meant to be dealt with by the Act. Several species of
forest produce were included in the definition of forest
produce and among them ’sal seeds’ were also included so as
to eliminate even the remote possibility of the existence of
some stray private holdings in which sal seeds may have been
grown. [324G-325A, 333AB]
7. The circumstance that ’grower of forest produce’ is
defined so as to include the Government is of no consequence
in determining whether the Act is applicable to forest
produce grown on Government lands. The expression ’grower of
forest produce’ is not found in any other provision except
s. 5(2)(a) and s. 10. Section 5(2)(a) provides for the
transport of forest produce by the grower from a place
within one unit to another place within the unit. Section 10
requires every grower of specified forest produce to get
himself registered in the prescribed manner. Neither s.
5(2)(a) nor s. 10 has, therefore, any application to the
Government lands. [331B, A]
8. It is not necessary to consider the submission that
Explanation II to s. 5(1) saves the present contract or that
Explanation I1 is an explanation only to s. 5(1)(a) and not
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to s. 5(1)(b). [333B]
[It is not permissible for the Court to extend the
period of lease of the appellants by way of relief for the
business lost. The parties to work out their rights in the
light of the various interim orders and the declaration
granted by the Court. ] [333E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 6230 and
6231 of 1983.
321
From the Judgment and Order dated 20.6.1983 of the
Orissa High Court in O.J.C. Nos. 237 and 46 of 1983.
F.S. Nariman, A.K. Ganguli, S.N. Kacker, R.F. Nariman,
A. Patnaik and M.M. Kshatriya for the Appellants.
G. Ramaswamy, Additional Solicitor General and R.K.
Mehta for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. On December 12, 1967, the State of
Orissa granted ’a license for collection of Sal Seeds’ from
eleven Forest Divisions to M/s. Utkal Contractors and Join-
ery Private Limited. The agreement provided for the sale and
purchase of Sal Seeds failing on the ground naturally in the
forests. There was a stipulation that the company should
establish solvent extraction units in the backward areas of
Mayurbhanj and Sambalpur. There was also an option for
renewal of the lease for a further period of ten years. It
was later agreed that the period from October 1, 1967 to
September 30, 1969 should be treated as experimental period
and the lease should be deemed to have commenced from Octo-
ber 1, 1969 and to last for a period of ten years. The
Orissa Oil Industries Limited, a public limited company, was
floated by the Utkal Contractors and Joinery Private Limited
and it was agreed that the State Government should also
contribute to the share capital of the company. It was
agreed that the Utkal Contractors and Joinery Private Limit-
ed should supply Sal Seeds to the two solvent extraction
plants of the Orissa Oil Industries Limited, one set up at
Bairangpur in Mayurbhanj District with a capacity to crush
21,000 M.T. Sal Seeds and the other at Sasan in Sambalpur
District with a capacity to crush 21,000 M.T. sal seeds.
Thereafter on May 25, 1979, agreements renewing the leases
for the purchase and removal of sal seeds from the eleven
Forest Divisions for a further period of ten years from
October 1, 1979 to September 30, 1989 were entered into by
the Utkal Contractors and Joincry Private Limited and the
Government of Orissa. This was followed up by an agreement
between the Utkal Contractors and Joinery Private Limited
and the Orissa Oil Industries Limited for the supply of the
entire collection of sal seeds from the eleven Forest Divi-
sions by the Utkal Contractors to the Orissa Oil Industries.
While so the Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Bill
1981 was introduced in the Legislative Assembly of Orissa
State. The Statement of Objects and Reasons was as follows:-
322
"Smuggling of various forest pro-
duces is increasing day by day. The present
provisions of the Orissa Forest Act, 1972 for
checking, hoarding and transport of forest
produce are not adequate to bring the culprits
to book. The said Act is not adequate for
imposition of any restrictions of control on
trade in forest produce by framing rules
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thereunder. Barring few items like sal seeds.
most of the important items of minor
forest produce such as Mahua flower, Tamarind,
Charmaji, Karanja and the like are grown in
private holdings as well as in the forest
areas owned by Government. Unscrupulous trad-
ers take advantage of this situation and evade
the law under the cover that the produce
relates to private land and not to forests
under the control of Government. Instances of
smuggling in such cases are too many and the
smugglers are escaping with impunity because
of absence of any legislation providing for
State monopoly in forest produce. Enactment of
a separate legislation for the purpose is,
therefore, absolutely necessary.
The Bill seeks to achieve the above purpose."
It appears from a perusal of the Statement of Objects
and Reasons that the object of the proposed Act was to
prevent smuggling of forest produce like Mahua flowers,
Tamarind, Charmaji, Karanja, etc. which were grown both in
private holdings and Government forests. The object of the
legislation was to prevent smuggling in such forest produce
and to provide for State monopoly therein. It is seen that
the Statement of Objects and Reasons expressly mentions sal
seeds as a forest produce which is grown in Government
Forests and not in private holdings.
The Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Act, 1981
received the assent of the President of India on August 21,
1981. Under s. 1(3) of the Act, the State Government is
empowered from time to time to issue a notification specify-
ing the area or areas, the forest produce in relation to
which and the date with effect from which the Act shall come
into force. Purporting to act under this provision, a noti-
fication was issued by the Government of Orissa on December
9, 1982 directing that the Act shall come into force at once
in the whole of the State of Orissa in relation to sal
seeds. We are told that this is the only notification issued
so far under s. 1(3) of the Act, despite the fact that in
the very Statement of Objects and Reasons it was expressly
323
recited that sal seeds was not a forest produce grown in
Government forests. In fact, we find that even after the
commencement of the Act and before the issue of the Notifi-
cation, there were negotiations between the Utkal Contrac-
tors and Joinery Private Limited and the State Government
for long term agreements for purchase _and sale of sal seeds
in Athagarh and Puri Forest Divisions. Such agreements were
in fact entered into in relation to Parlakhemundi Forest
Division between the State of Orissa and Indo East Extrac-
tion Limited. On December 24, 1982, the Government refused
to accept royalty from Utkal Contractors and Joinery Private
Limited in respect of Dhenkanal and Sambalpur Forest Divi-
sion on the ground that the Notification dated December 9,
1982 had the effect of rescinding the contract between the
company and the Government. Thereupon Utkal Contractors and
Joinery Private Limited and Orissa Oil Industries Limited
filed a writ petition in the Orissa High Court for a decla-
ration that the Notification dated December 9, 1982 did not
have the effect of rescinding the contracts which they had
with the State Government. The Writ Petition was dismissed
by the Orissa High Court. The Utkal Contractors and Joinery
Private Limited and Orissa Oil Industries Limited have filed
Civil Appeal No. 6230 of 1983. In another case, on similar
facts the Orissa Minor Oil Private Limited have filed Civil
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Appeal No. 6231 of 1983.
On behalf of the appellants, it was submitted by Shri
F.S. Nafiman in Civil Appeal No. 6230 of 1983 and Shri S.N.
Kacker in Civil Appeal No. 6231 of 1983 that the Orissa
Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Act, 1981 had no applica-
tion to forest produce grown in Government forests. The Act
was aimed at creating a monopoly in forest produce in the
Government. Since the Government was already the owner of
forest produce in Government forests all that was necessary
to create a monopoly in all forest produce in the Government
was to vest in the Government the exclusive right to pur-
chase forest produce grown in private holdings. That was
precisely what was done by the Orissa Forest Produce (Con-
trol of Trade) Act, 1981 according to the learned counsel.
It was further argued that even otherwise Explanation II to
s. 5(1) saved such contracts for the purchase of specified
forest produce from Government forests also. It was also
brought to our notice that such contracts were entered into
in pursuance of the avowed Industrial Policy of the Govern-
ment of Orissa. Shri G. Ramaswamy, learned Additional Solic-
itor General argued that Orissa Forest Produce (Control of
Trade) Act, 1981 was a comprehensive Act intended to control
and regulate trade in forest produce whether grown in Gov-
ernment forest or land held by private owners. He urged
324
that the language of s. 5(1)(a) was so wide as to be incapa-
ble of any construction other than to say that all contracts
relating to trade in forest produce shall stand rescinded
irrespective of whether the contract related to forest
produce grown in Government forests or forest produce grown
on private lands. He urged that Explanation II, properly
viewed, was an explanation to s. 5(1)(b) only and not to s.
5(1)(a) He argued that in any event the contract was for the
collection and not for the purchase of forest produce and
therefore, not saved by the explanation. He further urged
that the agents contemplated by s. 4 of the Act were not
agents to act on behalf of the Government. They were "public
agents", named as such, to carry on the activity of purchas-
ing and trading in specified forest produce. They could
purchase from and sell to the Government. We may straight-
away say that it was never the case of the Government in the
High Court that the character of the agents was as suggested
by the learned Additional Solicitor General. We do not,
therefore, propose to consider the submission of learned
Additional Solicitor General whatever justification there
may be for the submission on the-language of section 4. The
learned Additional Solicitor General further submitted that
even if the agreement which Utkal Contractors and Joinery
Private Limited had with the Government was saved by Expla-
nation II, the further agreement by which the Utkal Contrac-
tors and Joinery Private Limited was required to supply sal
seeds to Orissa Oil Industries Limited and the latter was
required to purchase from the former was not saved by Expla-
nation II and therefore, no relief could be granted to the
appellants. This submission again is a new point raised for
the first time in this Court. We do not think we will be
justified in permitting the Additional Solicitor General to
raise the question at this stage. Such a question was not
raised in the High Court probably because the contract
between Utkal Contractors and Joinery Private Limited and
Orissa Oil Industries Limited appears to have been entered
into at the behest of the Government. The questions for
consideration, therefore, are whether purchase of sal seeds
grown in Government forests is outside the purview of the
Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Act, 1981 and
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whether, in any event, a contract such as the one with which
we are concerned is saved by Explanation II to s. 5(1).
We have already referred to the Statement of Objects and
Reasons of the Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Act.
We have noticed that’ the object was to prevent smuggling of
those varieties of forest produce as were grown both in
Government forests and private lands. We also notice that it
was expressly mentioned in the Statement of Objects and
Reasons that such varieties of forest
325
produce were unlike sal seeds which were grown only in
Government forests. Even so we notice that the only notifi-
cation ever issued under the Act was in respect of sal seeds
and no other forest produce. We can only comment that curi-
ous indeed are the ways of the powers that be.
Section 1(3) of the Act declares that the Act shall come
into force in such area or areas and in relation to such
forest produce and on such date or dates as the State Gov-
ernment may, from time to time, by notification, specify in
that behalf. Section 2(c) defines ’forest produce’ and
enumerates various items of forest produce. One of them is
sal seeds. Section 2(d) defines "growers of forest produce"
to mean "(i) in respect of forest produce grown on land
owned by any person, the owner of such land, and (ii) in all
other cases the State Government." Section 2(h) and 2(i)
define ’specified area’ and ’specified forest produce’ in
the following terms:
"(h) "specified area" in relation to a
specified forest produce means the area speci-
fied in the notification under sub-section (3)
of section 1 for such specified forest produce
;"
"(i) "specified forest produce" in
relation to a specified area means the forest
produce specified in the notification issued
under sub-section (3) of section 1 for such
specified area."
Section 4 authorises the Government to appoint one or more
agents for the purchase of and trade in specified forest
produce in respect of one or more subdivisions of a speci-
fied area. It is also provided that any person including a
Gram Panchayat, a Cooperative Society or the State Tribal
Development Corporation may be appointed as an agent. Sec-
tion 5 is important and we are particularly concerned with
subsections (1) and (3) of section 5 which may be fully
extracted here. They are as follows:-
"5. Restriction on purchase and transport and
rescission of subsisting contracts---(1) On
the issue of a notification under sub-section
(3) of section 1 in respect of any area--
(a) all contracts for the purchase, sale,
gathering or collection of specified forest
produce grown or found in the said area shah
stand rescinded, and
326
(b) no person other than--
(i) the State Government,
(ii) an officer of the State Government autho-
rised in writing in that behalf, or
(iii) an agent in respect of the unit in which
the specified forest produce is grown or
found.
shall purchase or transport any specified
forest produce in the said area.
Explanation 1--"purchase" shall include pur-
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chase by barter.
Explanation II--Purchase of specified forest
produce from the State Government or the
aforesaid Government Officer or agent or a
licensed vendor shall not be deemed to be a
purchase in contravention of the provisions of
this Act.
Explanation III--A person having no interest
in the holding who has acquired the right to
collect the specified forest produce grown or
found on such holding shall be deemed to have
purchased such produce in contravention of the
provisions of this Act.
(2) .....................................
(3) Any person desiring to sell any specified
forest produce may sell them to the aforesaid
Government Officer or agent at any depot
situated within the unit wherein such produce
was grown or found:
Provided that State Government, the
Government Officer or the agent shall not be
bound to repurchase specified forest produce
once sold.
(4).......................................
We notice that though s. 5(1)(a) is in general terms and
declares that
327
all contracts for the purchase and sale of forest produce
shall stand rescinded and clause (b) bans purchase and
transport of forest produce by any person other than the
State Government or its officers or agents. Explanation II
is clear that purchase of specified forest produce from the
State Government or its officers or agents is not to be
deemed to be a purchase in contravention of the provisions
of the Act. Explanation III, we see, declares that a person
having no interest in the holding but acquires the right to
collect the specified forest produce grown or found on such
holding shall be deemed to have purchased such produce in
contravention of the provisions of the Act. It is obvious
that the reference to holding here is to land held by a
person other than the Government and not to land owned by
the Government. We are primarily concerned in this case with
the effect of s. 5(1)(a) and (b) in the light of Explanation
II. Sub-section (3) of section 5 also, we further notice,
refers to sale to the officers, or agents of the Government
by individuals and not sale by the Government or its offi-
cers or agents to individuals.
Section 5(2), which we have not extracted, is an excep-
tion to the ban imposed by s. 5(1)(b) on transport of speci-
fied forest produce. Section 5(2)(b) provides that notwith-
standing anything contained in sub-s. (1), any person may
transport any specified forest produce within the prescribed
limits from the place of purchase of any such produce to the
place where such produce is required for bona fide use or
for consumption. It is further provided that any specified
forest produce purchased from the State Government or any
Officer or agent or any person for manufacture of goods
within the State in which such specified forest produce is
used as raw material or by any person for sale outside the
State may be transported in accordance with the terms and
conditions of a permit issued by the prescribed authority.
Section 6 provides for the constitution of an Advisory
Committee in respect of each specified forest produce for
each Revenue Division. The object of the Committee is to
advise the Government "in the matter of fixation of fair and
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reasonable price of each specified forest produce at which
such produce may be purchased by the State Government or its
authorised officers or agents when they are offered for sale
in such division in accordance with the provisions of this
Act." Section 7 enables the State Government, after consul-
tation with the Advisory Committee to fix the price at which
specified forest produce may be purchased by it or by its
officers or agents. Again we see that the price to be fixed
is in regard to authorised produce that may be purchased by
the State Government and not forest produce that may be sold
by the
328
State Government. Section 8. enables the State Government to
open depots for the convenience of the growers of specified
forest produce and s. 9 obliges the State Government to
purchase at the price fixed under s. 7 any specified forest
produce offered for sale at the depot. Section 10 enables
growers of forest produce to get themselves registered.
Section 11 enables every manufacturer who uses any specified
forest produce as a raw-material and every trader or consum-
er to get himself registered. Section 12 enables the State
Government to dispose of specified forest produce purchased
by the State Government or its officers or agents by sale or
otherwise as the State Government may direct. Section 13
bans any person from engaging himself in retail sale of any
specified forest produce except under a licence granted
under this section. Section 15 provides for searches and
seizures. Section 16 provides for penalties. Section 22(1)
rovides "Nothing contained in the Orissa Forest Act, 14 of
1972 shall apply to specified forest produce in respect of
matters for which provisions are made under this Act."
In considering the rival submissions of the learned
counsel and in defining and construing the area and the
content of the Act and its provisions, it is necessary to
make certain general observations regarding the interpreta-
tion of statutes. A statute is best understood if we know
the reason for it. The reason for a statute is the safest
guide to its interpretation. The words of a statute take
their colour from the reason for it. How do we discover the
reason for a statute? There are external and internal aids.
The external aids are Statement of Objects and Reasons when
the Bill is presented to Parliament, the reports of Commit-
tees which preceded the Bill and the reports of Parliamen-
tary Committees. Occasional excursions into the debates of
Parliament are permitted. Internal aids are the preamble,
the scheme and the provisions of the Act. Having discovered
the reason for the statute and so having set the sail to the
wind, the interpreter may proceed ahead. No provision in the
statute and no word of the statute may be construed in
isolation. Every provision and every word must be looked at
generally before any provision or word is attempted to be
construed. The setting and the pattern are important. It is
again important to remember that Parliament does not waste
its breath unnecessarily. Just as Parliament is not expected
to use unnecessary expressions, Parliament is also not
expected to express itself unnecessarily. Even as Parliament
does not use any word without meaning something, Parliament
does not legislate where no legislation is called for.
Parliament cannot be assumed to legislate for the sake of
legislation, nor can it be assumed to make pointless legis-
lation. Parliament does not indulge in legislation merely
329
to state what it is unnecessary to state or to do what is
already validly done. Parliament may not be assumed to
legislate unnecessarily. Again, while the words of an enact-
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ment are important, the context is no less important. For
instance, "the fact that general words are used in a statute
is not in itself a conclusive reason why every case falling
literally within them should be governed by that statute,
and the context of an Act may well indicate that wide or
general words should be given a restrictive meaning" (see
Halsbury, 4th edn. Vol. 44 para 874).
In Attorney General v.H.R.H. Prince Augustus, [1957] 1
All ER 49, Viscount Simonds said,
"My Lords, the contention of the
Attorney-General was, in the first place, met
by the bald, general proposition that, where
the enacting part of a statute is clear and
unambiguous, it cannot be cut down by the
preamble, and a large part of the time which
the hearing of this case occupied was spent in
discussing authorities which were said to
support that proposition. I wish, at the
outset, to express my dissent from it, if it
means that I cannot obtain assistance from the
preamble in ascertaining the meaning of the
relevant enacting part. For words, and partic-
ularly general words, cannot be read in isola-
tion; their colour and content are derived
from their context. So it is that I conceive
it to be my right and duty to examine every
word of a statute in its context, and I use
context in its widest sense which I have
already indicated as including not only other
enacting provisions of the same statute, but
its preamble, the existing state of the law,
other statutes in pari materia, and the mis-
chief which I can, by those and other legiti-
mate means, discern that the statute was
intended to remedy."
In Chertsey, U.D.C.v. Mixnam’s Properties, [1964] 2 All
ER 627, Lord Reid said that the general effect of the au-
thorities was properly stated in Maxwell’s Interpretation of
Statutes as follows:-
"General words and phrases ,therefore, however
wide and comprehensive they may be in their
literal sense, must usually be construed as
being limited to the actual objects of the
Act."
Though no reference was made to Maxwell this Court in Em-
press Mills v. Municipal Committee, Wardha, AIR 1958 SC 341
stated the same proposition:
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"It is also a recognised principle of construction that
general words and phrases however wide and comprehensive
they may be in their literal sense, must usually be con-
strued as being limited to the actual objects of the Act."
In Maunsell v. Olins, [1975] 1 All ER 16, Lord Wilber-
force observed,
" ........ I am not, myself, able to solve the problem by
a simple resort to plain meaning. Most language, and partic-
ularly all languages used in rent legislation, is opaque:
all general words are open to inspection, many general words
demand inspection, to see whether they really bear their
widest possible meaning."
But we think that when we rely upon rules of construc-
tion we must always bear in mind’ Lord Reid’s admonition in
Maunsell v. Olins (supra) to the following effect:
"Then rules of construction are relied on.
They are not rules in the ordinary sense of
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having some binding force. They are our serv-
ants not our masters. They are aids to con-
structions, presumptions or pointers. Not
infrequently one ’rule’ points in one direc-
tion, another in a different direction. In
each case we must look at all relevant circum-
stances and decide as a matter of judgment
what weight to attach to any particular
’rule’."
Bearing these broad rules in mind, we may now examine
the Act and the argument. The reason for the Act is not far
to seek. Earlier we have set out the Statement of Objects
and Reasons. The Statement of Objects and Reasons is explic-
it that the Act was proposed to be enacted to prevent smug-
gling of forest produce grown in Government lands under the
guise of produce grown on private lands. This was sought to
be achieved, as stated in the preamble by the creation of a
State monopoly. Since the State was already the owner of the
forest produce grown in Government land, what was necessary
and sufficient to be done by-the proposed legislation was to
vest in the Government the exclusive right to purchase
forest produce grown on private land. We may now proceed to
examine the scheme and the provisions of the Act to find out
whether this was not precisely what was done.
At the outset, we notice that ’grower of forest produce’ is
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defined to include the State Government but on an examina-
tion of the remaining provisions of the Act we find that the
expression ’grower of forest produce’ is not found in any
other provision except sec. 5(2)(a) and s. 10. Section
5(2)(a) provides for the transport of produce by the grower
of forest produce from a place within one unit to another
place within the unit. Section 10 requires every grower of
specified forest produce to get himself registered in the
prescribed manner. Obviously neither s. 5(2)(a) nor s. 10
has any application to the Government. Therefore, the cir-
cumstance that grower of forest produce is defined so as to
include the Government appears to us to be of no consequence
in determining whether the Act is applicable to forest
produce grown on Government lands. On the other hand, from
the extracts and summary of the other provisions of the Act
that we have given earlier, we find that section after
section deals with purchase of forest produce which, in the
circumstances, can only refer to purchase of forest produce
grown on private holdings since there can be no question of
or providing for the purchase by the Government of forest
produce grown on Government lands. Section 4 enables the
appointment by the State Government of agents for the pur-
chase of and trade is specified forest produce. Section
5(1)(b) refers to purchase or transport of specified forest
produce by the State Government, its officers and agents.
Section 5(3) refers to sale of forest produce to the Govern-
ment, its officers or agents. Section 7 refers to the fixa-
tion of price at which the Government, its officers or
agents may purchase forest produce. Section 8 enables the
opening of depots for the purchase of forest produce by the
Government, its officers and agents. Section 9 deals with
the obligation of the State Government, its agents and
officers to purchase specified forest produce. All these
provisions, we see, deal with purchase of forest produce by
the State Government. As stated by us earlier, this can only
be of forest produce grown in private holdings and not in
Government forests. The only provision which deals with sale
of forest produce by the State Government is section 12 and
that again is confined to the sale of specified forest
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produce purchased by the State Government, its officers or
agents. Thus, s. 4, s. 5(1)(b), s. 5(3), s. 7, s. 8, s. 9,
s. 10 and s. 12, all deal with the forest produce grown in
private holdings and all these provisions except sections 10
and 12 deal with purchase of forest produce by the Govern-
ment, its officers or agents. Section 10, as we have already
seen, deals with registration of growers of forest produce
and section 12 with sale of forest produce purchased by the
Government. Thus none of these provisions deals with forest
produce grown in Government lands nor is there any other
provision in the Act which expressly deals with forest
produce grown in Government lands. The scheme of
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the Act is, therefore, fully in tune with the object set out
in the Statement of Objects and Reasons and in the Preamble,
namely, that of creating a monopoly in forest produce by
making the Government the exclusive purchaser of forest
produce grown in private holdings. It was argued by the
learned Additional Solicitor General that s. 5(1)(a) was
totally out of tune with the rest of the provisions and,
while the rest of the provisions dealt with forest produce
grown in private holdings, the very wide language of s.
5(1)(a) made it applicable to all forest produce whether
grown in private holdings or Government forests. We do not
think that it is permissible for us to construe s. 5(1) (a)
in the very wide terms in which we are asked to construe it
by the learned Additional Solicitor General because of its
wide language, as that would merely introduce needless
confusion into the scheme of the Act. Having scanned the
object and the scheme of the Act, having examined each of
the provisions of the Act textually and contextually, we do
not think that it is proper for us to construe the words of
s. 5(1)(a) in their literal sense; we think that the proper
way to construe s. 5(1)(a) is to give a restricted meaning
to the wide and general words there used so as to fit into
the general scheme of the Act. Section 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b)
are connected by the conjunction ’and’, and having regard to
the circumstances leading to the enactment and the policy
and design of the Act, we think that clauses (a) and (b)
must be construed in such a way as to reflect each other. We
have no doubt that the contracts relating to specified
forest produce which stand rescinded are contracts in rela-
tion to forest produce grown in private holdings only. If
the very object of the Act is to create a monopoly in forest
produce in the Government so as to enable the Government,
among other things, to enter into contracts, there was no
point in rescinding contracts already validly entered into
by the Government. Again s. 5(1) does not bar any future
contracts by the Government in respect of forest produce; if
so, what is the justification for construing s. 5(1)(a) in
such a way as to put an end to contracts already entered
into by the Government. Viewing s. 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b)
together and in the light of the preamble and the Statement
of Objects and Reasons and against the decor of the remain-
ing provisions of the Act, we have no doubt that s. 5(1),
like the rest of the provisions, applies to forest produce
grown in private holdings and not to forest produce grown in
Government lands.
One of the submissions of the learned Additional Solici-
tor General was that despite noticing in the Statement of
Objects and Reasons that ’sal seeds’ were grown in Govern-
ment lands only yet ’sal seeds’ were included in the defini-
tion of forest produce and this was a clear indication that
forest produce grown in Government lands was
333
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also meant to be dealt with by the Act. We do not think that
the mere inclusion of ’sal seeds’ in the definition of
forest produce can lead to such consequences in the teeth of
the several provisions of the Act. Several species of forest
produce were included in the definition of forest produce
and among them ’sal seeds’ were also included so as to
eliminate even the remote possibility of the existence of
some stray private holdings in which sal seeds may have been
grown.
In the view that we have taken it is unnecessary for us
to consider the further submission that Explanation II to s.
5(1) saves the present contract or t, hat Explanation II is
an explanation only to s. 5(1)(a) and not to s. 5(1)(b). We
declare that the Act and the notification issued under the
Act do not apply to forest produce grown in Government
forests and that it was not therefore, open to the Govern-
ment to treat the contract dated May 25, 1979 as rescinded.
As a result of the attitude of the Government in treating
the contract as rescinded from the date of the notification
the appellants were not able to collect and purchase the sal
seeds from the Government forests which they have taken on
lease for a period of about four years. The question arises
whether any further relief in addition to declaration may be
granted by us. It was suggested on behalf of the appellants
that their lease should be extended by another period of
four years. We do not think that it is permissible for us to
extend the lease for a further period of four years in that
fashion. We can only leave it open to the parties to work
out their rights in the light of the declaration granted by
us. We find that various interim orders were made from time
to time. The rights of the parties will naturally have to be
worked out after taking into account the interim orders.
Civil Appeal No. 6231 is an appeal by other persons
similarly placed as the appellants in Civil Appeal No. 6230
of 1983 in respect of a different contract. Both the appeals
are allowed with costs in the manner indicated above. We
mentioned at the outset that although several species of
forest produce were included in the definition of forest
produce under the Act, the only notification issued under
the Act in respect of any specie of forest produce was in
respect of sal seeds, an item in respect of which no notifi-
cation whatsoever was necessary if what was stated in the
Statement of Objects and Reasons was correct. We are not a
little surprised that the only occasion for using the ma-
chinery of Orissa Forest Produce (Control of Trade) Act,
1981 was to issue a notification in respect of sal seeds and
not in respect of other forest produce, leaving an uneasy
feeling with us that the notification was issued only with
the object of putting an end to
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these contracts solemnly entered into by the Orissa Govern-
ment for the avowed purpose of encouraging the setting up of
certain industries in the State of Orissa. The allegation of
the appellants is that this has been done with a view to
help certain industrialists outside the State. We desire to
express no opinion on this allegation.
P.S.S. Appeals
allowed.
335