Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE SUPREME COURT REPORTSK.C. GAJAPATI NARAYAN DEO AND OTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ORISSA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/05/1953
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1953 AIR 375 1954 SCR 1
CITATOR INFO :
F 1954 SC 139 (6A)
RF 1954 SC 257 (7)
C 1954 SC 259 (7)
F 1956 SC 503 (21)
RF 1959 SC 308 (7)
F 1959 SC 648 (14)
APL 1960 SC 796 (3,6)
RF 1961 SC 459 (50)
R 1962 SC 137 (9)
R 1962 SC 458 (27)
R 1962 SC 594 (14)
R 1962 SC 723 (4)
R 1962 SC 821 (16)
R 1962 SC1912 (2,5)
R 1964 SC 381 (75)
R 1964 SC 925 (73)
R 1965 SC1017 (16)
RF 1966 SC 416 (16)
R 1966 SC 619 (6)
R 1966 SC1571 (7,13)
R 1967 SC 691 (15)
RF 1968 SC1138 (51)
R 1970 SC 508 (16)
RF 1973 SC2734 (35)
RF 1976 SC2118 (6)
RF 1978 SC1296 (68)
RF 1979 SC1550 (14)
RF 1980 SC1682 (27)
RF 1982 SC1107 (39)
R 1987 SC 579 (7)
RF 1991 SC1792 (6)
ACT:
Orissa Estates Abolition Act, 1952, ss. 23, 26, 27, 37-
Orissa Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1950-
Validity "Colourable legislation"-Tests of validity-Effect
of ulterior motives-Provisions for vesting buildings and
private lands in Government-Provision for paying
compensation in 30 Years Validity -Provisions introduced in
Bill after coming into force of new Constitution-Whether
protected by art. 31(4)-Constitution of India, 1950, arts.
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31(2), 31(4); Sch.VII, List II entry 46, List III entry 42.
HEADNOTE:
The Bill relating to the Orissa Estates Abolition Act,
1952, was published in the Gazette on the 3rd January, 1950.
It contained a provision that any sum payable for
agricultural incomes-Tax for the previous year should be
deducted from the gross asset of an estate for the purpose
of arriving at its not income on the basis on which
compensation was payable to the estate owners. On the 8th
January, 1950, a Bill to amend the Orissa Agricultural
Income-tax Act of 1947 so as to enhance the highest rate of
tax from 3 annas in the rupee to 4 annas and reduce the
highest slab from Rs. 30,000 to Rs. 20,000 was published in
the Gazette. This Bill was dropped by the next Chief
Minister who introduced a revised Bill on the 22nd July,
1950, enhancing the highest rate to 12 annas 6 pies in the
rupee and reducing the highest slab to Rs. 15,000 and this
was passed into law in August, 1950. It was contended that
the Orissa Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Act of 1950
was a fraud on the Constitution and as such invalid as it
was a colourable legislation to effect a drastic reduction
in the compensation payable under the Estates Abolition Act:
Held" (i) that the question whether a law was a
colourable legislation and as such void did not depend on
the. motive or bona fides of the legislature in passing the
law but upon the competency of the legislature to pass that
particular law, and what the courts have to determine in
such cases is whether though the legislature has purported
to act within the limits of its powers, it has in substance
and reality transgressed those powers, the transgression
being veiled by what appears, on proper,examination, to be a
mere pretence or disguise. The whole doctrine of colourable
legislation is based upon the maxim that you cannot do
indirectly what you cannot do directly.
2
(ii) The impugned Act was in substance and form a law in
respect to the "taxing of agricultural income", as described
in entry 46 of List 11 of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution and, as the State Legislature was competent to
legislate on this subject, the Act was not void, and the
fact that the object of the legislature was to accomplish
another purpose, viz., to reduce the compensation payable
under the Estates Abolition Act, cannot render this law a
colourable legislation and void as such, as the ulterior
object itself was not beyond the competence of the
legislature.
(iii) Assuming that in India there is no absolute rule
of law that whatever is affixed to or built on the soil
becomes a part of it and is subject to the same rights of
property as the soil itself, there is nothing in law which
prevents the State Legislature from providing as part of an
estate abolition scheme that buildings lying within the
ambit of an estate and used primarily for the management or
administration of the estate should vest in the Government
as appurtenances to the estate itself. Such acquisition
would come within article 31(2) of the Constitution and if
the conditions laid down in clause (4) of that article are
complied with, it would be protected by that clause even if
the compensation provided for is not just and proper.
(iv) The provisions in the Orissa Estates Abolition Act,
1950, relating to private lands in the possession of
temporary tenants are not unconstitutional. Merely because
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compensation was based on the produce rent payable by the
tenants it cannot be said that the landholder was given
compensation only for the landholder’s rights and not for
the kudivaram (tenant’s) rights also.
(v) The expression "passed by such legislature" in article
31(4) of the Constitution means passed with or without
amendments and the fact that the provisions relating to
vesting of private lands did not form a part of the Estates
Abolition Bill as originally introduced but were added to
the Bill after the new Constitution had come into force
would not deprive those provisions of the protection of
article 31(4) of the Constitution.
(vi) The provision contained in section 37 of the Orissa
Estates Abolition Act, 1950, for payment of compensation by
30 annual instalments is not a piece of colourable
legislation. It comes clearly within entry 42 of List III
of Schedule VII of the Constitution.
[The question whether the provisions of the Madras Estates
Land (Orissa Amendment) Act, 1947, which empowered the
Collector to settle and reduce rents were void because they
involved an improper delegation of legislative powers to the
executive and contravened article 14 of the Constitution was
raised, but with the consent of the counsel, their Lordships
decided to leave the question open as it did not relate to
the validity of the Orissa
3
Estates Abolition Act, which was the subject-matter in
dispute in the present case].
State of Bihar v. Maharajah Kameshwar Singh and Others
([1952] S.C.R. 889) distinguished. Surya Pal Singh v. The
State of Uttar Pradesh ([1952] S.C.R. 1056) followed.
Attorney-General for Ontario v. Reciprocal Insurers and
Others ([1924] A.C. 328), Attorney-General for Alberta v.
Attorney General for Canada ([1939] A.C. 117), Union
Colliery Co. of Br. Columbia Ltd. v. Bryden ([1899] A.C.
580), Cunningham v. Tomeyhomma ([1903] A.C. 151), Be
Insurance Act of Canada ([1932] A.C. 41), Moran v. Deputy
Commissioner for Taxation, New South Wales ([1940] A.C. 838)
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 71 to 76 of
1953.
Appeals under article 132(1) of the Constitution of India
from the Judgment and Order dated 30th January, 1953, of the
Orissa High Court in Original Jurisdiction Cases Nos. 13,
14, 15, 16, 25 and 26 of 1952. The facts of the case appear
in the judgment.
B. Somayya (K. B. Krishnamurthi, with him) for the
appellant in Civil Appeal No. 71 of 1953.
B. Somayya (D. Narasaraju and N. Y. Ramdas, with him) for
the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 72 of 1953.
D. Narasaraju and A. Krishnaswami (N. V. Ramdas, with
them) for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 73 of 1953.
D. Narasaraju (N. V. Ramdas, wit him) :for the appellant
in Civil Appeal No. 76 of 1953.
D. V. Narasinga Rao for the appellant in Civil Appeal No.
75 of 1953.
R. Patnaik for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 74 of
1953.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, and Pitambar
Misra, Advocate-General of Orissa (P. A. Mehta, with them)
for the respondent.
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1953. May 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUKHERJEA J.
4
MUKHERJEA J.-These six appeals arise out of as many
applications, presented to the High Court of Orissa, under
article 226 of the Constitution, by the proprietors of
certain permanently settled estates within the State of
Orissa, challenging the constitutional validity of the
legislation known as the Orissa Estates Abolition Act of
1952 (hereinafter called "the Act") and praying for
mandatory writs against the State Government restraining
them from enforcing the provisions of the Act so far as the
estates owned by the petitioners are concerned.
The impugned Act was introduced in the Orissa State
Legislature on the 17th of January, 1950, and was passed by
it on the 28th September, 1951. It was reserved by the
State Governor for consideration of the President and the
President gave his assent on 23rd January, 1952. The Act
thus receives the protection of articles 31(4) and 31A of
the Constitution though it was not and could not be included
in the list of statutes enumerated in the ninth schedule to
the Constitution, as referred to in article 31B.
The Act, so far as its main features are concerned, follows
the pattern of similar statutes passed by the Bihar, Uttar
Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assemblies. The
primary purpose of the Act is to abolish all zemindary and
other proprietary estates and interests in the State of
Orissa and after eliminating all the intermediaries, to
bring the ryots or the actual occupants of the lands in
direct contact with the State Government. It may be
convenient here to refer briefly to some of the provisions
of the Act which are material for our present purpose. The
object of the legislation is fully set out in the preamble
to the Act which discloses the public purpose underlying it.
Section 2(g) defines an "estate" as meaning any land held by
an intermediary and included under one entry in any of the
general registers of revenue-paying lands and revenue-free
lands prepared and maintained under the law for the time
being in force by the Collector of a district. The
expression "intermediary" with reference to any estate is
then defined and it
5
means a proprietor, sub-proprietor, landlord, landholder ...
thikadar, tenure-holder, under-tenure-holder and includes
the holder of inam estate, jagir and maufi tenures and all
other interests of similar nature between the ryot and the
State. Section 3 of the Act empowers the State Government
to declare, by notification, that the estate described in
the notification has vested in the State free from all
encumbrances. Under section 4 it is open to the State
Government, at any time before issuing such notification, to
invite proposals from "intermediaries" for surrender of
their estates and if such proposals are accepted, the
surrendered estate shall vest in the Government as soon as
the agreement embodying the terms of surrender is executed.
The consequences of vesting either by issue of notification
or as a result of surrender are described in detail in
section 5 of the Act . It would be sufficient for our
present purpose to state that the primary consequence is
that all lands comprised in the estate including communal
lands, non-ryoti lands, waste lands, trees, orchards,
pasture lands, forests, mines and minerals, quarries, rivers
and streams, tanks, water channels, fisheries, ferries, hats
and bazars, and buildings or structures together with the
land on which they stand shall, subject to the other
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provisions of the Act, vest absolutely in the State
Government free from all encumbrances and the intermediary
shall cease to have any interest in them. Under section 6,
the intermediary is allowed to keep for himself his
homestead and buildings and structures used for residential
or trading purposes such as golas, factories, mills, etc.,
but buildings used for office or estate purposes would vest
in the Government. Section 7 provides that an intermediary
will be entitled to retain all lands used for agricultural
or horticultural purposes which are in his kha’s possession
at the date of vesting. Private lands of the intermediary,
which were held by temporary tenants under him, would
however vest in the Government and the temporary tenants
would be deemed to be tenants under the Government, except
where the intermediary himself holds less than 33 acres of
land in any capacity. As
6
regards the compensation to be paid for the compulsory
acquisition of the estates, the principle adopted is that
the amount of compensation would be calculated at a certain
number of years’ purchase of the net annual income of the
estate during the previous agricultural year, that is to
say, the year immediately preceding that in which the date
of vesting falls. First of all, the gross asset is to be
ascertained and by gross asset is meant the aggregate of the
rents including all cesses payable in respect of the estate.
From the gross asset certain deductions are made in order to
arrive at the net income. These deductions include land
revenue or rent including cesses payable to the State
Government, the agricultural ’income-tax payable in the
previous year, any sum payable as chowkidary or municipal
tax in respect of the buildings taken over as office or
estate buildings and also costs of management fixed in
accordance with a sliding percentage scale with reference to
the gross income. Any other sum payable as income-tax in
respect of any other kind of income derived from the estate
would also be included in the deductions. The amount of
compensation thus determined is payable in 30 annual equated
instalments commencing from the date of vesting and an
option is given to the State Government to make full payment
at any time. These in brief are the main features of the
Act.
There was a fairly large number of grounds put forward on
behalf of the appellants before the High Court in assailing
the validity of the Act. It is to be remembered that the
question of the constitutional validity of three other
similar legislative measures passed, respectively, by the
Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh Legislative
Assemblies had already come for consideration before this
court and this court had pronounced all of them to be valid
with the exception of two very minor provisions in the Bihar
Act. In spite of all the previous pronouncements there
appears to have been no lack of legal ingenuity to support
the present attack upon the Orissa legislation, and as a
matter of fact, much of the arguments put forward on behalf
of the appellants purported to have been based
7
on the majority judgment of this court in the Bihar appeals,
where two small provisions of the Bihar Act were held to be
unconstitutional.
The arguments advanced on behalf of the appellants before
the High Court have been classified by the learned Chief
Justice in his judgment under three separate heads. In the
first place, there were contentions raised, attacking the
validity of the Act as a whole. In the second place, the
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validity of the Act was challenged as far as it related to
certain specified items of property included in an estate,
e.g., private lands, buildings, waste lands, etc. Thirdly,
the challenge was as to the validity of certain provisions
in the Act relating to determination of compensation payable
to the intermediary, with reference either to the
calculation of the gross assets or the deductions to be made
therefrom for the purpose of arriving at the net income.
The learned Chief Justice in a most elaborate judgment
discussed all the points raised by the appellants and
negatived them all except that the objections with regard to
some of the matters were kept open. Mr. Justice Narasimham,
the other learned Judge in the Bench, while agreeing with
the Chief Justice as to other points, expressed,, in a
separate judgment of his own, his suspicion about the bona
fides of the Orissa Agricultural Income-tax (Second
Amendment) Act, 1950, and he was inclined to hold that
though ostensibly it was a taxation measure, it was in
substance-nothing else but a colorable device to cut down
drastically the income of the intermediaries so as to
facilitate further reduction of their net income as provided
in clause (b) of section 27(1) of the Act. He, however, did
not dissent from the final decision arrived at by the Chief
Justice, the ground assigned being that whenever there is
any doubt regarding the constitutionality of an enactment,
the doubt should always go in favour of the legislature.
The result was that with the exception of the few matters
that were kept open, all the petitions were dismissed. The
proprietors have now come before us on appeal on the
strength of certificates granted by the High Court under
articles 132 and 133
8
of the Constitution as well as under section 110 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
No contention has been pressed before us on behalf of the
appellants attacking the constitutional validity of the Act
as a whole. The arguments that have been advanced by the
learned counsel for the appellants can be conveniently
divided under three heads: In the first place, there has
been an attack on the validity of the provisions of two
other statutes, namely, the Orissa Agricultural Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1950, and the Madras Estates Land
(Amendment) Act, 1947, in so far as they affect the
calculation of the net income of an estate for the purpose
of determining the compensation payable under the Act. In
the second place, the provisions of the Act have been
challenged as unconstitutional to the extent that they are
applicable to private lands and buildings of the
proprietors, both of which vest as parts of the estate,
under section 5 of the Act. Lastly, the manner of payment
of compensation money, as laid down in section 37 of the
Act, has been challenged as invalid and unconstitutional.
Under the first head the appellants’ main contention relates
to the validity of the Orissa Agricultural Income-tax
(Amendment) Act of 1950. This Act, it is said, is not a
bona fide taxation statute at all, but is a colorable piece
of legislation, the real object of which is to reduce, by
artificial means, the net income of the intermediaries, so
that the compensation payable to them under the Act might be
kept down to as low a figure as possible. To appreciate
this contention of the appellants, it would be necessary to
narrate a few relevant facts. Under section 27 (1)(b) of
the Act, any sum payable in respect of an estate as
agricultural income-tax, for the previous agricultural year,
constitutes an item of deduction which has to be deducted
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from the gross asset of an estate for the purpose of
arriving at its net income, on the basis of which the amount
of compensation is to be determined. The Estates Abolition
Bill was published in the local gazette on 3rd January 1950,
As has been said
9
already, it was introduced in the Orissa Legislative
Assembly on the 17th of January following and it was passed
on the 28th September, 1951. There was an Agricultural
Income-tax Act in force in the State of Orissa from the year
1947 which provided a progressive scale of taxation on
agricultural income, the highest rate of tax being 3 annas
in the rupee on a slab of over Rs. 30,000 received as
agricultural income. On 8th January, 1950, that is to say,
five days after the publication of the Abolition Bill, an
amended agricultural income-tax bill was published in the
official gazette. At that time Mr. H. K. Mahtab was the
Chief Minister of Orissa and this bill was sponsored by him.
The changes proposed by this Amendment Act were not very
material. The highest rate was enhanced from 3 annas to 4
annas in the rupee and the highest slab was reduced from Rs.
30,000 to Rs. 20,000. For some reason or other, however,
this bill was dropped and a revised bill was_ published in
the local gazette on 22nd July, 1950, and it passed into law
on 10th of August following. This new Act admittedly made
changes of a very drastic character regarding agricultural
income-tax. The rate of taxation was greatly enhanced for
slabs of agricultural income above Rs. 15,000 and for the
highest slab the rate prescribed was as much as 12 annas 6
pies in the rupee. It was stated in the statement of
objects and reasons that the enhanced agricultural income
was necessary for financing various development schemes in
the State. This, it is said, was wholly untrue for it could
not be disputed that almost all the persons who came within
the higher income group and were primarily affected by the
enhanced rates were intermediaries under the Estates
Abolition Bill which was at that time before the Select
Committee and was expected to become law very soon, and as
the legislature had already definitely decided to extinguish
this class of intermediaries, it was absurd to say that an
increased taxation upon them was necessary for the
development schemes. The object of this amended
legislation, according to the appellants, was totally
different from what it ostensibly purported
2
10
to be and the object was nothing else but to use it as a
means of effecting a drastic reduction in the income of the
intermediaries, so that the compensation payable to them may
be reduced almost to nothing. This change in the provisions
of the Agricultural Income-tax Bill, it is further pointed
out, synchronized with a change in the Ministry of the
Orissa State. The original amended bill was introduced by
the then Chief Minister, Mr. H. K. Mahtab, who was in favour
of allowing suitable compensation to expropriated zemin.
dars; but his successor, who introduced the revised bill,
was said to be a champion of the abolition of zemindary
rights with little or no compensation to the proprietors.
In these circumstances, the argument of the learned counsel
is that the agricultural income-tax legislation being really
not a taxation statute but a mere device for serving another
collateral purpose constitutes a fraud on the Constitution
and as such is invalid, either in its entirety, or at any
rate to the extent that it affects the estate abolition
scheme. We have been referred to a number of decisions on
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this point where the doctrine of colourable legislation came
up for discussion before courts of law; and stress is laid
primarily upon the pronouncement of the majority of this
court in the case of The State of Bihar v. Maharaja
Kameshwar Singh and Others (1) which held two provisions of
the Bihar Land Reforms Act, namely, sections 4(b) and 23 (f)
to be unconstitutional on the ground, among others, that
these provisions constituted a fraud on the Constitution.
The fact that the provisions in the amended Agricultural
Income-tax Act were embodied in a separate statute and not
expressly made a part of the Abolition Act itself should
not, it is argued, make any difference in principle. As the
question is of some importance and is likely to be debated
in similar cases in future, it would be necessary to examine
the precise scope and meaning of what is known ordinarily as
the doctrine of "colourable legislation".
It may be made clear at the outset that the doctrine of
colourable legislation does not involve any question
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 889.
of bona fides or mala fides on the part of the legislature.
The whole doctrine resolves itself into the, question of
competency of a particular legislature to enact a particular
law. If the legislature is competent to pass a particular
law, the motives which impelled it to act are really
irrelevant. On the other hand, if the legislature lacks
competency, the question of motive does not arise at all.
Whether a statute is constitutional or not is thus always a
question of power( ’ (1). A distinction, however, exists
between a legislature which is legally omnipotent like the
British Parliament and the laws promulgated by which could
not be challenged on the ground of incompetency, and a
legislature which enjoys only a limited or a qualified
jurisdiction. If the Constitution of a State distributes
the legislative powers amongst different bodies, which have
to act within their respective spheres marked out by
specific legislative entries, or if there are limitations on
the legislative authority in the shape of fundamental
rights, questions do arise as to whether the legislature in
a particular case has or has not, in respect to the subject-
matter of the statute or in the method of enacting it,
transgressed the limits of its constitutional powers. Such
transgression may be patent, manifest or direct, but it may
also be disguised, covert and indirect and it is to this
latter class of cases that the expression "colorable
legislation" has been applied in certain Judicial
pronouncements. The idea conveyed by the expression is that
although apparently a legislature in passing a statute
purported to act within the limits of its powers, yet in
substance and in reality it transgressed these powers, the
transgression being veiled by what appears, on proper
examination, to be a mere presence or disguise. As was said
by Duff J. in Attorney-General for Ontario
v. Reciprocal Insurers and Others(2),
"Where the law making authority is of a limited or qualified
character it may be necessary to examine with some
strictness the substance of the legislation
(1) Vide Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations Vol. I. p.
379.
(2) [1924] A.C. 328 at 337.
12
for the purpose of determining what is that the legislature
is really doing."
In other words, it is the substance of the Act that is
material and not merely the form or outward appearance, and
if the subject-matter in substance is something which is
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beyond the powers of that legislature to legislate upon, the
form in which the law is clothed would not save it from
condemnation. The legislature cannot violate the
constitutional prohibitions by employing an indirect method.
In cases like these, the enquiry must always be as to the
true nature and character of the challenged legislation and
it is the result of such investigation and not the form
alone that will determine as to whether or not it relates to
a subject which is within the power of the legislative
authority(1). For the purpose of this investigation the
court could certainly examine the effect of the legislation
and take into consideration its object, purpose or
design(1). But these are only relevant for the purpose of
ascertaining the true character and substance of the
enactment and the class of subjects of legislation to which
it really belongs and not for finding out the motives which
induced the legislature to exercise its powers. It is said
by Lefroy in his well known work on Canadian Constitution
that even if the legislature avow on the face of an Act that
it intends thereby to legislate in reference to a subject
over which it has no jurisdiction, yet if the enacting
clauses of the Act bring the legislation within its powers,
the Act cannot be considered ultra vires(3).
In support of his contention that the Orissa Agricultural
Income-tax (Amendment) Act of 1950 is a colorable piece of
legislation and hence ultra vires the Constitution, the
learned counsel for the appellants, as said above, placed
considerable reliance upon the majority decision of this-
court in the case of The State of Bihar v. Sir Kameshwar
Singh(4), where two clauses
(1) Vide Attorney-General for Ontario v. Reciprocal
Insurers and Others, [1924] A.C. 328 at 337.
(2) Vide Attorney-General for Alberta v. Attorney-General
for Canada,
[19391 A.C. I 17 at 130.
(3) See Lefroy on Canadian Constitution, page 75.
(4) [1952] S.C.R. 889.
13
of the Bihar Land Reform Act were held to be un-
constitutional as being colourable exercise of legislative
power under entry 42 of List III of Schedule VII of the
Constitution. The learned counsel has also referred us, in
this connection, to a number of cases, mostly of the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, where the doctrine
of colourable legislation came up for consideration in
relation to certain enactments of the Canadian and
Australian legislatures. The principles laid down in these
decisions do appear to us to be fairly well settled, but we
do not think that the appellants in these appeals could
derive much assistance from them.
In the cases from Canada, the question invariably has been
whether the Dominion Parliament has, under colour of general
legislation, attempted to deal with what are merely
provincial matters, or conversely whether the Provincial
legislatures under the pretence of legislating on any of the
matters enumerated in section 92 of the British North
America Act really legislated on a matter assigned to the
Dominion Parliament. In the case of Union Colliery Company
of British, Columbia Ltd. v. Bryden( ), the question raised
was whether section 4 of the British Columbian Coal Mines
Regulation Act, 1890, which prohibited China men of full age
from employment in under-ground coal working, was, in that
respect, ultra vires of the Provincial legislature. The
question was answered in the affirmative. It was held that
if it was regarded merely as a coal working regulation, it
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could certainly come within section 92, sub-section (10) or
(13), of the British North America Act; but its exclusive
application to Chinamen, who were aliens or naturalised
subjects, would be a statutory prohibition which was within
the exclusive authority of the Dominion Parliament, con-
ferred by section 91, sub-section (25), of the Act. As the
Judicial Committee themselves explained in a later case(2),
the regulations in the British Columbian Act "were not
really aimed at the regulation of coal mines at all, but
were in truth a device to deprive the Chinese,
(1) [1899] A.C. 580.
(2) Vide Cunningham v. Tomeyhomma [1903] A.C. 151 at 157.
14
naturalised or not, of the ordinary rights of the inhabit-
ants of British Columbia and in effect to prohibit their
continued residence in that province since it prohibited
their earning their living in that province."
On the other hand, in ReInsurance Act of Canada(1), the
Privy Council had to deal with the constitutionality of
sections 11 and 12 of the Insurance Act of Canada passed by
the Dominion Parliament under which it was declared to be
unlawful for any Canadian company or an alien, whether a
natural person or a foreign company, to carry on insurance
business except under a licence from the Minister, granted
pursuant to the provisions of the Act. The question was
whether a foreign or British insurer licensed under the
Quebec Insurance Act was entitled to carry on business
within that Province without taking out a licence under the
Dominion Act? It was held that sections 1 1 and 12 of the
Canadian Insurance Act, which required the foreign insurers
to be licensed, were ultra vires, since in the guise of
legislation as to aliens and immigration -matters admittedly
within the Dominion authority the Dominion legislature was
seeking to intermeddle with the conduct of insurance
business which was a subject exclusively within the
provincial authority. The whole law on this point was thus
summed up by Lord Maugham in Attorney-General for Alberta v.
Attorney-General for Canada(2):
"It is not competent either for the Dominion or a Province
under the guise, or the pretence, or in the form of an
exercise of its own powers to carry out an object which is
beyond its powers and a trespass on the exclusive power of
the other."
The same principle has been applied where the question was
not of one legislature encroaching upon the exclusive field
of another but of itself violating any constitutional
guarantee or prohibition. As an illustration of this type
of cases we may refer to the Australian case of Moran v. The
Deputy Commissioner of Taxation for New South Wales(3).
What happened
(1)[1932] A.C. 41. (3) [1940]A.C.838.
(2)[1939] A.C. 117 at 130.
15
in that case was that in pursuance of a joint Commonwealth
and States scheme to ensure to wheat growers in all the
Australian States "a payable price for their produce " a
number of Acts were passed by the Commonwealth Parliament
imposing taxes on flour sold in Australia for home
consumption, so as to provide a fund available for payment
of moneys to wheat growers. Besides a number of taxing
statutes, which imposed tax on flour, the Wheat Industry
Assistance Act No. 53 of 1938 provided for a fund into which
the taxes were to be paid and of which certain payments were
to be made to the wheat growers in accordance with State
legislation. In the case of Tasmania where the quantity of
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wheat grown was relatively small but the taxes were imposed
as in the other States, it was agreed as a part of the
scheme and was provided by section 14 of the Wheat Industry
Assistance Act that a special grant should be made to
Tasmania, not subject to any federal statutory conditions
but intended to be applied by the Government of Tasmania, in
paying back to Tasmanian millers, nearly the whole of the
flour tax paid by them and provision to give effect to that
purpose was made by the Flour Tax Relief Act No. 40 of 1938
of the State of Tasmania. The contention raised was that
these Acts were a part of a scheme of taxation operating and
intended to operate by way of discriminating between States
or parts of States and as such were contrary to the
provisions of section 51(ii) of the Commonwealth Australian
Constitution Act. The matter came up for consideration
before a full court of the High Court of Australia and the
majority of the Judges came to the conclusion that such
legislation was protected by Section 96 of the Constitution,
which empowered the Parliament of the Commonwealth to grant
financial assistance to any State on such terms and
conditions as the Parliament thought fit. Evatt J. in a
separate judgment dissented from the view and held that
under the guise of executing the powers under section 96 of
the Constitution, the legislature had really violated the
constitutional prohibition laid down in section 51(ii) of
the Constitution. There was an appeal taken to the Privy
Council. The Privy Council
16
affirmed the judgment of the majority but pointed out that "
cases may be imagined in which a purported exercise of the
power to grant financial assistance under section 96 would
be merely colourable. Under the guise and pretence of
assisting a State with money, the real substance and purpose
of the Act might simply be to effect discrimination in
regard to taxation. Such an Act might well be ultra vires
the Commonwealth Parliament."
We will now come to the decision of the majority of this
court regarding two clauses in the Bihar Land Reforms Act
which seems to be the sheet anchor of the appellants’
case(1). In that case the provisions of sections 23(f) and
4(b) of the Bihar Land Reforms Act were held to be invalid
by the majority of this court not on the ground that, in
legislating on these topics, the State legislature had
encroached upon the exclusive field of the Central
legislature, but that the subjectmatter of legislation did
not at all come within the ambit of item No. 42 of List III,
Schedule VII of the Constitution under which it purported to
have been enacted. As these sections did not come within
entry 42, the consequence was that half of the arrears of
rent as well as 12’% of the gross assets of an estate were
taken away, otherwise than by authority of law and therefore
there was a violation of fundamental rights guaranteed by
article 31 (1) of the Constitution. This was a form of
colourable legislation which made these provisions ultra
vires the Constitution.
It may be stated here that section 23 of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act lays down the method of computing the net income
of an estate or a tenure which is the subject-matter of
acquisition under the Act. In arriving at the net income
certain deductions are to be made from the gross asset and
the deductions include, among others, revenue, cess and
agricultural income tax payable in respect of the properties
and also the costs of management. Section 23 (f) provided
another item of deduction under which a sum representing 4
to 121 % of the gross asset of an estate was to be
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(1) Vide The State of Bihar v. Sir Kameshwar Singh, [1952]
S.C.R. 889.
17
deducted as "costs of works for benefit to the raiyat". The
other provision contained in section 4 (b) provides that all
arrears of rent which had already accrued due to the
landlord prior to the date of vesting shall vest in the
State and the latter would pay only 50% of these arrears to
the landlord. Both these provisions purported to have been
enacted under entry 42 of List III Schedule VII of the
Constitution and that entry speaks of" principles on which
compensation for property acquired is to be -determined and
the form and manner in which that compensation is to be
given." It was held in the Bihar case(1) by the majority of
this court that the item of deduction provided for in
section 23(f) was a fictitious item wholly unrelated to
facts. There was no definable pre-existing liability on the
part of the landlord to execute works of any kind for the
benefit of the raiyat. What was attempted to be done,
therefore, was to bring within. the scope of the legislation
something which not being existent at all could not have
conceivable relation to any principle of compensation. This
was, therefore, held to be a colourable piece of legislation
which though purporting to have been made under entry 42
could not factually come within its scope.
The same principle was held applicable in regard to
acquisition of arrears of rent which had become due to the
landlord prior to the date of vesting. The net result of
this provision was that the State Government was given the
power to appropriate to itself half of the arrears of rent
due to the landlord without giving him any compensation
whatsoever. Taking the whole and returning the half meant
nothing more or less than taking the half without any return
and this, it was held, could not be regarded as a principle
of compensation in any sense of the word. It was held
definitely by one of the learned Judges, who constituted the
majority, that item 42 of List III was nothing but the
description of a legislative head and in deciding the com-
petency of the legislation under this entry, the court is
not concerned with the justice or propriety of the
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 889.
3
18
principles upon which the assessment of compensation is
directed to be made; but it must be a principle of
compensation, no matter whether it was just or unjust and
there could be no principle of compensation based upon
something which was unrelated to facts. It may be mentioned
here that two of the three learned Judges who formed the
majority did base their decision regarding the invalidity of
the provision, relating to arrears of rent, mainly on the
ground that there was no public purpose behind such
acquisition. It was held by these Judges that the scope of
article 31(4) is limited to the express provisions of
article 31(2) and although the court could not examine the
adequacy of the provision for compensation contained in any
law which came within the purview of article 31(4), yet that
clause did not in any way debar the court from considering
whether the acquisition was for any public purpose. This
view was not taken by the majority of the court and Mr.
Narasaraju, who argued the appeals before us, did not very
properly pursue that line of reasoning. This being the
position, the question now arises whether the majority
decision of this court with regard to the two provisions of
the Bihar Act is really of any assistance to the appellants
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in the cases before us. In our opinion, the question has,
got to be answered in the negative.
In the first place, the line of reasoning underlying the
majority decision in the Bihar case(1) cannot possibly have
any application to the facts of the present case. The
Orissa Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Act of 1950 is
certainly a legislation on " taxing of agricultural income "
as described in entry 46 of List II of the Seventh Schedule.
The State legislature had undoubted competency to legislate
on agricultural income tax and the substance of the amended
legislation of 1950 is that it purports to increase the
existing rates of agricultural income-tax, the highest rate
being fixed at 12 annas 6 pies in the rupee. This may be
unjust or inequitable, but that does not affect the
competency of the legislature. It cannot be said, as was
said in the Bihar case(1), that the legislation purported to
be based
(1) (1952) S.C.R. 889.
19
on something which was unrelated to facts and did not exist
at all. Both in form and in substance the Act was an
agricultural income-tax legislation and agricultural income-
tax is certainly a relevant item of deduction in the
computation of the net income of an estate and is not
unrelated to it as item No. 23(f) of the Bihar Act was held
to be. If under the existing law the agricultural income-
tax was payable at a certain-rate and without any amendment
or change in the law, it was provided in the Estates
Abolition Act that agricultural income-tax should be
deducted from the gross asset at a higher rate than what was
payable under law, it might have been possible to argue that
there being no pre-existing liability of this character it
was really a non-existing thing and could not be an
ingredient in the assessment of compensation. But here the
Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Act was passed in
August, 1950. It came into force immediately thereafter and
agricultural income-tax was realised on the basis of the
amended Act in the following year. It was, therefore, an
existing liability in 1952, when the Estates Abolition Act
came into force. It may be that many of the people
belonging to the higher income group did disappear as a
result of the Estates Abolition Act, but even then there
were people still existing upon whom the Act could operate.
The contention of Mr. Narasaraju really is that though
apparently it purported to be a taxation statute coming
under entry 46 of List II, really and in substance it was
not so. It was introduced under the guise of a taxation
statute with a view to accomplish an ulterior purpose,
namely, to inflate the deductions for the purpose of valuing
an estate so that the compensation payable in respect of it
might be as small as possible. Assuming that it is so..
still it cannot be regarded as a colourable legislation in
accordance with the principles indicated above, unless the
ulterior purpose which it is intended to serve is something
which lies beyond the powers of the legislature to legislate
upon. The whole doctrine of colourable legislation is based
upon the maxim that you cannot do indirectly what you cannot
do
20
directly. If a legislature is competent to do a thing
directly, then the mere fact that it attempted to do it in
an indirect or disguised manner, cannot make the Act
invalid. Under entry 42 of List III which is a mere head of
legislative power the legislature can adopt any principle of
compensation in respect to properties compulsorily acquired.
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Whether the deductions are large or small, inflated or
deflated they do not affect the constitutionality of a
legislation under this entry’ The only restrictions on this
power, as -has been explained by this court in the earlier
cases, are those mentioned in article 31(2) of the
Constitution and if in the circumstances of a particular
case the provision of article 31(4) is attracted to a
legislation, no objection as to the amount or adequacy of
the compensation can at all be raised. The fact that the
deductions are unjust, exorbitant or improper does not make
the legislation invalid, unless it is shown to be based on
something which is unrelated to facts. As we have already
stated, the question of motive does not really arise in such
cases and one of the learned Judges of the High Court in our
opinion pursued a wrong line of enquiry in trying to find
out what actually the motives were which impelled the
legislature to act in this manner. It may appear on
scrutiny that the real purpose of a legislation is different
from what appears on the face of it, but it would be a
colourable legislation only if it is shown that the real
object is not attainable to it by reason of any
constitutional limitation or that it lies within the
exclusive field of another legislature. The result is that
in our opinion the Orissa Agricultural Income-tax
(Amendment) Act of 1950 could not be held to be a piece of
colourable legislation, and as such invalid. The first
point raised on behalf of the appellants must therefore
fail.
The other point raised by the learned counsel for the
appellants under the first head of his arguments relates to
the validity of certain provisions of the Madras Estates
Land (Orissa Amendment) Act of 1947. This argument is
applicable only to those estates which are
21
situated in what is known as ex-Madras area, that is to say,
which formerly belonged to the State of Madras but became a
part of Orissa from 1st April, 1936. The law regulating the
relation of landlord and tenant in these areas is contained
in the Madras Estates Land Act of 1908 and this Act was
amended with reference to the areas situated in the State of
Orissa by the amending Act XIX of 1947. The provisions in
the amended Act, to which objections have been taken by the
learned counsel for the appellants, relate to settlement and
reduction of rents payable by raiyats. Under section 168 of
the Madras Estates Land Act, settlement of rents in any
village or area for which a record of rights has been
published can be made either on the application of the
landholder or the raivats. On such application being made,
the Provincial Government may at any time direct the
Collector to settle fair and equitable rents in respect of
the lands situated therein. Sub-section (2) of section 168
expressly provides that in settling rents under this
section, the Collector shall presume, until the contrary is
proved, that the existing rate of rent is fair and
equitable, and he would further have regard to the
provisions of this Act for determining the rates of rent
payable by raiyats. Section 177 provides that when any rent
is settled under this chapter, it can neither be enhanced
nor reduced for a period of 20 years, except on grounds
specified in sections 30 and 38 of the Act respectively.
The amending Act of 1947 introduced certain changes in this
law. A new section, namely, section 168-A was. introduced
and a further provision was added to section 177 as sub-
section (2) of that section, the original section being
renumbered as sub-section (1). Section 168-A of the amended
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Act runs as follows:--
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act the
Provincial Government may, on being satisfied that the
exercise of the powers hereinafter mentioned is necessary in
the interests of public order or of the local welfare or
that the rates of rent payable in money or in kind whether
commuted, settled or
22
otherwise fixed are unfair or inequitable invest the
Collector with the following powers:-
(a) Power to settle fair and equitable rents in cash;
(b) Power, when settling rents to reduce rents if in the
opinion of the Collector the continuance of the existing
rents would on any ground, whether specified in this Act or
not, be unfair and inequitable.
(2) The power given under this section may be made
exercisable within specified areas either generally or with
reference to specified cases or class of cases."
Sub-section (2) which has been added to section 177 stands
thus:--
" 2(a) Notwithstanding anything in sub-section (1) where
rent is settled under the provisions of section 168-A, the
Provincial Government may either retrospectively or
prospectively prescribe the date on which such settlement
shall take effect. In giving retrospective effect the
Provincial Government may, at their discretion, direct that
the rent so settled shall take effect from a date prior to
the commencement of the Madras Estates Land (Orissa
Amendment) Act, 1947."
The appellants’ contention is that by these amended
provisions the Provincial Government was authorised to
invest the Collector with power to settle and reduce rents,
in any way he liked, unfettered by any of the rules and
principles laid down in the Act and the Provincial
Government was also at liberty to direct that the reduction
of rents should take effect retrospectively, even with
reference to a period for which rents had already been paid
by the tenant. Under section 26 of the Orissa Estates
Abolition Act, the gross asset of an estate is to be
calculated on the basis of rents payable by raiyats for the
previous agricultural year. According to the appellants,
the State Government made use of the provisions of the
amended Madras Estates Land (Orissa Amendment) Act to reduce
arbitrarily the rents payable by raiyats and further to make
the reduction take effect retrospectively, so that the
diminished rents could be reckoned
23
as rents for the previous year in accordance with the
provision of section 26 of the Estates Abolition Act and
thus deflate the basis upon which the gross asset of an
estate was to be computed.
It is conceded by the learned counsel for the appellants
that the amendments in the Madras Estates Land Act are no
part of the Estates Abolition Act of Orissa and there is no
question of any colourable exercise of legislative powers in
regard to the enactment of these provisions. The
legislation, however, has been challenged, as
unconstitutional, on two grounds. First of all, it is urged
that by the amended sections mentioned above, there has been
an improper delegation of legislative powers by the
legislature to the Provincial Government, the latter being
virtually empowered to repeal existing laws which govern the
relations between landlord and tenant in those areas. The
other ground put forward is that these provisions offend
against the equal protection clause embodied in article 14
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of the Constitution. It is pointed out that the Provincial
Government is -given unfettered discretion to choose the
particular areas where the settlement of rent is to be made.
The Government has also absolute power to direct that the
reduced rents should take effect either prospectively or
retrospectively in particular cases as they deem proper. It
is argued that there being no principle of classification
indicated in these legislative provisions and the discretion
vested in the Government being an uncontrolled and unfetter-
ed discretion guided by no legislative policy, the pro-
visions are void as repugnant to article 14 of the Con-
stitution.
In reply to these arguments it has been contended by the
learned Attorney-General that, apart from the fact as to
whether the contentions are well-founded or not, they are
not relevant for purposes of the present case. The
arguments put forward by the appellants are not grounds of
attack on the validity of the Estates Abolition Act, which,
is the subject-matter of dispute in the present case, and it
is not suggested that the provisions of the Estates
Abolition Act relating to
24
the computation of gross asset on the basis of rents payable
by raiyats is in any way illegal. The grievance of the
appellants in substance is that the machinery of the amended
Act is being utilised by the Government for the purpose of
deflating the gross asset of an estate. We agree with the
learned Attorney-General that if the appellants are right in
their contention, they can raise these objections if and
when the gross assets are sought to be computed on the basis
of the rents settled under the above provisions. If the
provisions are void, the rents settled in pursuance thereof
could not legitimately form the basis of the valuation of
the estate under the Estates Abolition Act and it might be
open to the appellants then to say that for purposes of
section 26 of the Estates Abolition Act, the rents payable
for the previous year would be the rents settled under the
Madras Estates Land Act, as it stood unamended before 1947.
The learned counsel for the appellants eventually agreed
with the views of the Attorney-General on this point and
with the consent of both sides we decided to leave these
questions open. They should not be deemed to have been de-
cided in these cases.
The appellants’ second head of arguments relates to two
items of property, namely, buildings and private lands of
the intermediary, which, along with other interests, vest in
the State under section 5 of the Act.
There are different provisions in the Act in regard to
different classes of buildings. Firstly, dwelling houses
used by an intermediary for purposes of residence or for
commercial or trading purposes remain with him on the
footing of his being a tenant under the State in respect to
the sites thereof and paying such fair and equitable rent as
might be determined in accordance with the provisions of the
Act. In the second place, buildings used primarily as
office or kutchery for man agement of the estates or for
collection of rents or as rest houses for estate servants or
as golas for storing of rents in kind vest in the State and
the owner is allowed compensation in respect thereof. In
addition to these, there are certain special provisions in
the Act
25
relating to buildings constructed after 1st January, 1946,
and used for residential or trading purposes, in respect to
which the question of bona fides as to its construction and
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use might be raised and investigated by the Collector.
There are separate provisions also in respect to buildings
constructed before 1st January, 1946, which were not in
possession of the intermediary at the date of coming into
force of the Act. The questions arising in regard to this
class of cases have been left open by the High Court and we
are not concerned with them in the present appeals. No
objection has been taken by the appellants in respect to the
provisions of the Act relating to buildings used for
residential or trade purposes. Their objections relate only
to the building used for estate or office purposes which
vest in the State Government under the provisions of the
Act.
In regard to these provisions, it is urged primarily that
the buildings raised on lands do not necessarily become
parts of the land under Indian law and the legislature,
therefore, was wrong in treating them as parts of the estate
for purposes of acquisition. This contention, we are
afraid, raises an unnecessary issue with which we are not at
all concerned in the present cases. Assuming that in India
there is no absolute rule of law that whatever is affixed to
or built on the soil becomes a part of it and is subject to
the same rights of property as the soil itself, there is
nothing in law which prevents the State legislature from
providing as a part of the estates abolition scheme that
buildings, lying within the ambit of an estate and used
primarily for management or administration of the estate.
would vest in the Government as appurtenances to the estate
itself. This is merely ancillary to the acquisition of an
estate and forms an integral part of the abolition scheme.
Such acquisition would come within article 31(2) of the
Constitution and if the conditions laid down in clause (4)
of that article are complied with, it would certainly
attract the protection afforded by that clause.
Compensation has been pro. vided for these buildings in
section 26(2) (iii) of the
4
26
Act and the annual rent of these buildings determined in the
prescribed manner constitutes one of the elements for
computation of the gross asset of an estate. The contention
of the appellants eventually narrows down to this that the
effect of treating the annual valuation of the buildings as
part of the gross asset of the estate in its entirety, leads
to unjust results, for if these buildings were treated as
separate properties, the intermediaries could have got
compensation on a much higher scale in accordance with the
slab system adopted in the Act. To this objection, two
answers can be given. In the first place, if these
buildings are really appurtenant to the estate, they can
certainly be valued as parts of the estate itself. In the
second place, even if the compensation provided for the
acquisition of the buildings is not just and proper, the
provision of article 31 (4) of the Constitution would be a
complete answer to such acquisition.
As regards the private lands of the proprietor, the
appellants have taken strong exception to the provisions of
the Act so far as they relate to private lands in possession
of temporary tenants. In law these lands are in possession
of the proprietor and the temporary tenants cannot acquire
occupancy rights therein, yet they vest, under the Act, in
the State Government on the acquisition of an estate, the
only exception being made in cases of small land-holders who
do not hold more than 33 acres of land in any capacity.
Section 8(1) of the Act gives the temporary tenants the
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right to hold the lands in their occupation under the State
Government on the same terms as they held them under the
proprietor. Under the Orissa Tenants Protection Act, which
is a temporary Act, the landholder is not entitled to get
contractual or competitive rents from these temporary
tenants in possession of his private lands and the rent is
fixed at two-fifths of the gross produce. It is on the
basis of this produce rent which is included in the
computation of the gross asset of an estate under section 26
of the Act, that the land-holder gets compensation in
respect to the private lands in occupation of temporary
tenants. The appellants’ main contention is that although
in these lands
27
both the melvaram and kudivaram rights, that is to say, both
the proprietor’s as well as the raiyat’s interests are
united in the land-holder, the provisions of the Act
indicated above have given no compensation whatsoever for
the kudivaram or the tenant’s right and in substance this
interest has been confiscated without any return. This, in
our opinion, is a wrong way of looking at the provisions for
compensation made in the Act. The Orissa Act, like similar
Acts passed by the legislatures of other States, provides
for payment of compensation on the basis of the net income
of the whole estate. One result of the adoption of this
principle, undoubtedly is, that no compensation is allowed
in respect of potential values of properties; and those
parts of an estate which do not fetch any income have
practically been ignorned. There is no doubt that the Act
does not give anything like a fair or market price of the
properties acquired and the appellants may be right in their
contention that the compensation allowed is inadequate and
improper; but that does not affect the constitutionality of
the provisions. In the first place, no question of
inadequacy of compensation can be raised in view of the
provision of article 31(4) of the Constitution and it cannot
also be suggested that the rule for payment of compensation
on rental basis is outside the ambit of entry 42 of List
Ill. This point is concluded by the earlier decision of
this court in Raja Suriya Pal Singh v. The State of U.P.(1)
and is not open to further discussion. Mr. Narasaraju is
not right in saying that the compensation for the private
lands in possession of temporary tenants has been given only
for the landlord’s interest in these properties and nothing
has been given in lieu of the tenant’s interest. The entire
interest of the proprietor in these lands has been acquired
and the compensation payable for the whole interest has been
assessed on the basis of the net income of the property as
represented by the share of the produce payable by the
temporary tenants to the landlord. It is true that the
Orissa Tenants Protection Act is a temporary statute, but
whether or not it is renewed in future, the
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 1056.
28
rent fixed by it has been taken only as the measure of tile
income derivable from these properties at the date of
acquisition.
Mr. Narasaraju further argues that his clients are not
precluded from raising any objection on the ground of
inadequacy of compensation in regard to these private lands
by reason of article 31(4) of the Constitution, as the
provision of that article is not attracted to the facts of
the present case. What is said is, that the original
Estates Abolition Bill, which was pending before the Orissa
Legislature at the time when the Constitution came into
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force, did not contain any provision that the private lands
of the proprietor in occupation of temporary tenants would
also vest in the State. This provision was subsequently
introduced by way of amendment during the progress of the
Bill and after the Constitution came into force. It is
argued, therefore, that this provision is not protected by
article 31(4). The contention seems to us to be manifestly
untenable. Article 31(4) is worded as follows:-
"If any Bill pending at the commencement of this
-Constitution in the Legislature of a State has, after it
has been passed by such Legislature, been reserved for the
consideration of the President and has received his assent,
then, notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, the law
so assented to shall not be called in question in any court
on the ground that it contravenes the provisions of clause
(2)."
Thus it is necessary first of all that the Bill, which
ultimately becomes law, should be pending before the State
Legislature at the time of the coming into force of the
Constitution. That Bill must be passed by the Legislature
and then receive the assent of the President. It is the law
to which the assent of the President is given that is
protected from any attack on the ground of non-compliance
with the provisions of clause (2) of article 31. The
fallacy in the reasoning of the learned counsel lies in the
assumption that the Bill has got to be passed in its
original shape without any change whatsoever, before the
provision of clause (4) of article 31 could be attracted.
There is no
29
warrant for such assumption in the language of the clause.
The expression "passed by such Legislature" must mean
"passed with or without amendments" in accordance with the
normal procedure contemplated by article 107 of the
Constitution. There can be no doubt that all the
requirements of article 31(4) have been complied with in the
present case and consequently there is no room for any
objection to the legislation on the ground that the
compensation provided by it is inadequate.
The last contention of the appellants is directed against
the provision of the Act -laying down the manner of payment
of the compensation money. The relevant section is section
37 and it provides for the payment of compensation together
with interest in 30 annual equated instalments leaving it
open to the State to make the payment in full at any time
prior to the expiration of the period. The validity of this
provision has been challenged on the ground that it is a
piece of colourable legislation which comes within the
principle enunciated by the majority of this court in the
Bihar case referred to above. It is difficult to appreciate
this argument of the learned counsel. Section 37 of the Act
contains the legislative provision regarding the form and
the manner in which the compensation for acquired properties
is to be given and as such it comes within the clear
language of entry 42 of List III, Schedule VII of the
Constitution. It is not a legislation on something which is
non-existent or unrelated to facts. It cannot also be
seriously contended that what section 37 provides for, is
not the giving of compensation but of negativing the right
to compensation as the learned counsel seems to suggest.
There is no substance in this contention and we have no
hesitation in overruling it. The result is that all the
points raised by the learned counsel for the appellants fail
and the appeals are dismissed. Having regard to some
important constitutional questions involved in these cases
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which needed clearing up, we direct that each party should
bear his own costs in these appeals.
Appeals dismissed.
30
Agent for the appellant in Civil Appeal Nos. 71, 72, 73, 75
& 76: M. S. K. Sastri.
Agent for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 74: R.C. Prasad.
Agent for the respondent: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.