Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CHIMANLAL PREMCHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/09/1959
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1960 AIR 96 1960 SCR (1) 764
ACT:
Agricultural produce-Packed or Pressed-If loses identity-
State Government-Powers to make rule for regulation of
business and condition of trading-Bombay Agricultural
Produce Market Act, 1939 (Bom. 22 of 1939), ss. 2 and 26-
Bombay Agricultural Produce Market Rules 1941, r. 65.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant as a trader made purchases of full pressed,
cotton bales in the market area of Broach without requisite
licence from the market committee, thereby contravening the
provisions of r. 65(1) of the Bombay Agricultural Produce
Market Rule 1941. The appellant, inter alia, contended that
the Act and Rules passed thereunder did not apply to pressed
cotton which having been pressed into bales had lost its
identity and was no more an agricultural produce and that r.
65 was ultra vires inasmuch as its provisions were in excess
of the rule making power of the State Government.
Held, that an agricultural produce by being packed in
containers or pressed into bales does not in any way change
its essential character, and continues to be an agricultural
produce,
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The fact that the cotton ginned or unginned is pressed into
bales, or packed otherwise does not make it any less the
cotton and is an agricultural produce as defined under S. 2
of the Bombay Agricultural Market Act, 1939.
Under S. 26 of the Act, the State Government has ample
powers to make rules for the regulation of business and
conditions of trading in the market and sub-s. (1) of the
said s. 26 confers power on the State Government to make r.
65.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Criminal Appeal No. 200 of
1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the September 11, 1956, of the Bombay High Court, in
Criminal Appeal No. 742 of 1956, arising out of the judgment
and order dated December 31, 1955, of the Joint Civil Judge
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(J.D.) and Judicial Magistrate, First Class, ’Broach, in
Criminal Case No. 605 of 1953.
Purshottam Tricumdas, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley and
Rameshwar Nath, for the appellants.
H. J. Umrigar and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1959. September 15. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
SUBBA RAO J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay setting
aside that of the First Class Magistrate, Broach, and
convicting the appellant for contravening the provisions of
r. 65 (1) of the Bombay Agricultural Produce Markets Rules,
1941, hereinafter called the Rules, and imposing on him a
fine of Rs. 25.
The appellant was a trader carrying on business in cotton at
Broach. On February 7 and 9, 1953, he purchased full
pressed cotton bales from M/s. Ratanji Faramji & Sons in
two instalments of 200 bales each through a licensed broker,
Dahyabhai Acharatlal. He also purchased 100 bales from
Halday Multi-Purpose Co-operative Society. All these
purchases were made by the appellant as a trader in the
market area of Broach without the requisite licence from the
Market Committee. He was charged in the Court of
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the Joint Civil Judge (Junior Division) and Judicial
Magistrate, First Class, Broach, for committing the breach
of r. 65 (1) of the Rules. The Judicial Magistrate held
that pressed cotton was not cotton, ginned or unginned,
within the meaning of one of the items mentioned in the
schedule to the Bombay Agricultural Produce Markets Act
(hereinafter called " the Act "), and, therefore, the
appellant did not commit any offence under the Act or the
Rules framed thereunder. The State of Bombay carried the
matter by way of appeal to the High Court of Bombay, and a
Division Bench of the said High Court, consisting of
Chainani and Shah, JJ., allowed the appeal and convicted the
appellant for contravening the provisions of r. 65(1) of the
Rules and imposed upon him a fine of Rs. 25. This appeal
challenges the correctness of the judgment of the High
Court.
Learned Counsel for the appellant raised before us the
following three contentions: (i) the Act and the Rules
framed thereunder did not apply to pressed cotton, and,
therefore, the appellant did not contravene the provisions
of r. 65 (1) of the Rules; (ii) r. 65 is ultra vires
inasmuch as its provisions are in excess of the rule making
power of the State Government; and (iii) the transactions in
question were forward contracts for future delivery, and, as
no delivery was intended or in fact made, the appellant
cannot be said to have traded in cotton within the market
area.
The answer to the first contention turns upon the
interpretation of cl. (1) of sub-s. (1) of s. 2 of the Act
read along with the relevant items or items in the Schedule.
The relevant provisions read:
S. 2 (1): In this Act unless there is anything repugnant
in the subject or context,-
(i) "Agricaltural Produce" includes all produce of
agriculture, horticulture and animal husbandry specified in
the schedule;
*
(vi) "Market Area " means any area declared to be a market
area under section 4.
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Schedule E.
1. Fibres:
(i) Cotton (ginned and unginned)
The.Bombay Agricultural Produce Markets Rules, 1941:
Rule 65. (1): No person shall do business as a trader or a
general commission agent in agricultural produce in any
market area except under a licence granted by the market
committee under this rule.
*
(7): Whoever does business as a trader or a
general commission agent in agricultural produce in any
market area without a licence granted under this rule or
otherwise contravenes any of the provisions of this rule
shall, on conviction, be punishable with a fine which may
extend to Rs. 200 and in the case of a continued
contravention with a further fine which may extend to Rs. 50
for every day during which the contravention continues after
the date of the first conviction, subject to the maximum of
Rs. 200.
The gist of ’the aforesaid provisions may be stated thus:
Agricultural produce includes all produce of agriculture
specified in the Schedule. Cotton, ginned and unginned, is
specified in the Schedule as an agricultural produce. A
trader cannot do business in the said produce in any market
area without obtaining licence from the Market Committee.
If he does such business without a licence, he is liable to
punishment under r. 65 of the Rules.
If pressed cotton is " cotton, ginned or unginned specified
in the Schedule, the appellant, having admittedly done
business in the said cotton in the market area, has
contravened the provisions of r. 65, and therefore, he is
liable to be convicted under r. 67 of the Rules.
It is contended that ginned cotton which has been pressed
into bales is not cotton within the meaning of the Act.
What is " pressed cotton " in bales ? It involves a simple
process described as pressing, and cotton is pressed into
bales only to facilitate its transport from one place to
another; it does not involve
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any chemical change or even a manufacturing process. Ginned
cotton, after it is pressed into bales, continues to be
ginned cotton, and it is sold and purchased only as cotton,
though in bales. We find it difficult to accept the
argument that pressed cotton is a different commodity. Nor
do we find any relevancy in the argument that stockists,
industrialists and exporters deal with pressed cotton and
not loose cotton, because the said fact does not in any way
change the essential character of the agricultural produce.
If a trader carries on business in that commodity, the
consideration whether the trader or the buyer is an
agriculturist or a non-agriculturist is not relevant to the
enquiry.
Items 11 to XI of the Schedule specify cereals, pulses,
oilseeds, narcotics, sugarcane, fruits, vegetables, animal
husbandry products, condiments, spices and others, and grass
and fodder. A perusal of the items indicates that most of
them would be sold in containers like baskets, packages,
tins etc. It cannot be argued that when the pulses, fruits
or vegetables are packed in a basket, the basket with its
contents becomes a different commodity from that contained
in it. So too, when tobacco is pressed and packed, it
cannot be suggested that packed tobacco has changed its
character. So also in the case of other products mentioned
in the Schedule. We do not, therefore, see any principle or
reason for treating cotton in a different way from other
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agricultural products.
It is said that the primary object of the Act is to help
agriculturists, that agriculturists do not ordinarily deal
or do business in bales of cotton and that the legislature
could not, therefore, have intended to make the Act
applicable to pressed cotton. It cannot be disputed that
one of the objects of the Act is to protect the producers.
That object would certainly be defeated, if within the
market area a trader, whether he is an agriculturist or not,
can do business of buying and selling cotton pressed into
bales, for by that simple process he would be free from the
restrictions imposed to protect the agriculturists. The
object of such legislation is to protect the producers of
agricultural crops from being exploited by the middlemen and
profiteers
769
and to enable them to secure a fair return for their
produce. This object would certainly be defeated if we were
to accept the contention of the learned Counsel for the
appellant.
Shortly stated the position is this: Cotton, ginned or
unginned, continues to be cotton till it loses its identity
by some chemical or industrial process. So long as the
identity is not lost, the fact that it is pressed into bales
or packed otherwise does not make it any the less cotton
specified in the Schedule to the Act. In this view, the
pressed cotton in bales is an agricultural produce as
defined in s. 2(1)(i) of the Act, and, therefore, the
appellant in doing business in the said produce without
licence has contravened r. 65 of the Rules.
The second contention is that r. 65 is in excess of the rule
making power of the State Government. This argument is
elaborated by the learned Counsel in the following manner:
Purporting to exercise the powers conferred by s. 26 of the
Act, the Government of Bombay made r. 65 prohibiting any
person from doing business as a trader, or as a commission
agent, in any agricultural produce in any market area except
under a licence granted by the Market Committee under that
rule. Under s. 26(2)(e) of the Act, the State Government
has power only to make rules fixing the maximum fees which
may be levied by the Market Committee in respect of
agricultural produce, bought and sold by persons holding a
licence under the Act in the market area. Under the Act the
State Government is only empowered to grant a licence to any
person to use any place in the market area for the purpose
of buying or selling of any agricultural produce; therefore,
under s. 26(2) (e) of the Act, the Government can only make
a rule prescribing the fees in respect of a licence issued
to a person to use any place in the said area and not
prohibiting any other person from doing business without a
licence in that area. So stated the argument appears to be
plausible, but a scrutiny of the relevant provisions of the
Act, the Rules made by the Government and the Bye-laws
framed by the Market Committee shows that there is no basis
for this contention. The relevant provisions read:
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The Bombay Agricultural Produce Markets Act, 1939.
S.26 (1): The Provincial Government may, either generally or
specially for any market area or market areas, make rules
for the purposes of carrying out the provisions of this Act.
(2). In particular and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing provisions, such rules may
provide for or regulate
*
(e) the management of the market, maximum fees which may be
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levied by the market committee in respect of agricultural
produce bought and sold by persons holding a licence under
the Act in the market area.
S. 27 (1): Subject to any rules made by the Provincial
Government under section 26 and with the previous sanction
of the Director or any other officer specially empowered in
this behalf by the Provincial Government, the market
committee may in respect of the market area under its
management make bye-laws for the regulation of the business
and the conditions of trading therein.
The Bombay Agricultural Produce Markets Rules, 1941.
Rule 65 (1): No person shall do business as a trader or a
general commission agent in agricultural produce in any
market area except under a licence granted by the market
committee under this rule.
(2). Any person desiring to hold such licence shall
make a written application for a licence to the market
committee and shall pay such fee as may be’ specified in the
bye-laws.
(3). On receipt of such application together with the proper
amount of the fee the market committee may, after making
such enquiries, as may be considered necessary for the
efficient conduct of the market, grant him the licence
applied for. On the grant of such licence the applicant
shall execute an agreement in such form as the market
committee may determine, agreeing to conform with these
rules and the bye-laws and such other conditions as may be
laid down by the market committee for holding the licence.
771
(4). Notwithstanding anything -contained in subrule
(3), the market committee may refuse to grant a licence to
any person, who, in its opinion, is not solvent or whose
operations in the market area are not likely to further
efficient working of the market under the control of the
market committee.
(5). The licence shall be granted for a period of one
year, after which it may be renewed on a written
application, and after such enquiries as are referred to in
sub-section (3) as may be considered necessary, and on
payment of such fees as may be specified in the bye-laws.
(6). The names of all such traders and general,
commission agents shall be entered in a register to be
maintained for the purpose.
(7). Whoever does business as a trader or a general
commission agent in agricultural produce in any market area
without a licence granted under this rule or otherwise
contravenes any of the provisions of this rule shall, on
conviction, be punishable with fine which may extend to Rs.
200 and in the case of a continued contravention with a
further fine which may extend to Rs. 50 for every day during
which the contravention continues after the date of the
first conviction, subject to the maximum of Rs. 200.
Bye-laws of the Agricultural Produce Market Committee,
Broach.
Bye-law 33: (1). All traders, general commission agents,
brokers, weighmen, measurers, and surveyors operating in the
market area shall pay full fees for each market year or any
part thereof as per Schedule given in Appendix No. 2 for
obtaining licences, required to be taken by them, under
Rules 65 and 67.
The said provisions may be summarized thus: Section 27 of
the Act empowers the Market Committee, subject to any rules
made by the State Government under s. 26 and with the
previous sanction of the Director, to make bye-laws in
respect of a market area for the regulation of the business
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and conditions of trading therein. Section 26(1) of the Act
enables the State Government to make rules for the purposes
of carrying out the provisions of the Act, In exercise of
772
that power conferred under s. 26(1), the State Government
made r. 65 prohibiting any trader from doing business in
agricultural produce except under a licence granted by the
Market Committee. In exercise of powers conferred under s.
27 on the Market Committee, it made bye-law 33 prescribing
the fee payable in respect of a licence under r. 65 of the
Rules.
The question is whether under s. 26(1) the State Government
is empowered to make r. 65 prescribing the taking of a
licence as a condition for doing business in a market area.
It can do so for the purposes of carrying out the provisions
of the Act. Section 27, which is a provision of the Act,
enables the Market Committee to make bye-laws for the
regulation of the business and the conditions of trading in
the market area. To enable the Market Committee to
discharge its functions under s. 27 of the Act more
effectively, the Government made a rule prohibiting a trader
from doing business in a market area without licence, and
the Market Committee prescribed the fees payable in respect
of the licence. The rule was certainly one made for the
purpose of facilitating the Market Committee to function
effectively under s. 27 of the Act. That the legislature
conferred such a power on the State Government is also
supported by the provisions of s. 27 of the Act. Under s.
27(1), the bye-laws made by the Market Committee for the
regulation of business and conditions of trading in the
market area are subject to the rules made by the State
Government under s. 26. This indicates that under s. 26 of
the Act, the State Government has also power to make rules
for the regulation of business and conditions of trading in
the market area, and that power can be spelled out from the
provisions of s. 26(1) of the Act, Therefore, s. 26(1)
confers ample power on the State Government to make r. 65.
In this view, it is not necessary to invoke the provisions
of s. 26(2)(e) to sustain the power of the State Government
to make r. 65.
The third contention though raised was not pursued in View
of the word ,business" in r. 65(1) which is comprehensive
enough to take in even forward contracts.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed,
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