Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
ASA RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE DISTRICT BOARD, MUZAFFARNAGAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/12/1958
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 480 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 715
ACT:
Conflict of Statutes-Two statutes conferring same power on
two different bodies-Construction-’Committee’ and
’Panchayat’, if identical in meanning-Power to regulate, if
includes power to require taking out of licence-U. P.
District Boards Act (U. P. X of 1922), ss. 93(3), 106 and
174(1)(k)-U. P. Town Areas Act (U. P. II of 1914) as
amended in 1934, S. 26(a).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was running machines with the aid of power in
a locality which was admittedly within the jalalabad Town
Area. He did not take out a licence for running the
machines as required by the Muzaffarnagar Factories Bye-laws
framed by the respondent, the District Board Muzaffarnagar,
under s. 174(1)(k) read with s. 106 of the U. P. District
Boards Act, and was prosecuted by the respondent. The
appellant contended that the bye-laws did not apply to the
town area and it was not necessary for him to take out a
licence. Section 174(1)(k) of the District Boards Act and
s. 26(a) of the Town Areas Act both provided for the
regulation of offensive trades and admittedly the trade
carried on by the appellant was an offensive trade. The
District Boards had the power under s. 174(1)(k) to frame
bye-laws for rural areas which included town areas. But s.
93(3) of the District Boards Act took away the power of the
District
716
Boards to exercise within the limits of a town area any
authority which was vested in a ’Town Panchayat’. Though
the words ’Town Panchayat’ were replaced by the words " Town
Area Committee " in the Town Areas Act by an amendment in
1934 there was no corresponding amendment in s. 93(3) Of the
District Boards Act. The respondent contended that as there
were no Town Panchayats as such now, s. 93(3) did not bar
the District Board from framing bye-laws for town areas.
Held, that the respondent had no power to frame bye-laws for
the town area and, consequently, the prosecution of the
appellant was bad. As the word ’committee’ was merely a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
translation of the word ’panchayat’, the -substitution of
the word ’committee’ for the word ’Panchayat’ in the Town
Areas Act did not make any substantial change and
consequently the restriction under s. 93(3) Of the District
Boards Act continued in full force.
When there is a body dealing with a larger area and from
that area is carved out a smaller area which is entrused to
another body, the law giving power to the body governing the
smaller area must prevail over the law giving power to the
body governing the larger area. If the Act of 1934 amending
the Town Areas Act brought into existence a new body, the
Town Area Committee, then it means that a smaller area was
carved out from a larger area in 1934 and the powers given
to the new statutory body would prevail.
Where two statutes give authority to two bodies to exercise
powers which cannot co-exist, the earlier is repealed by the
later statute. On this principle also the power of the Town
Area Committee, if it be deemed to be a new body coming into
existence in 1934, must prevail over that of the District
Board.
King v. The Justices of Middlesex, (1831) 169 E. R. 1347 and
Daw v. The Metropolitan Board of Works, (1862) 133 R.R. 311,
relied upon.
The power to regulate a trade includes the power to frame
bye-laws requiring the taking out of a licence.
Mohamad Yasin v. The Town Area Committee, jalalabad, [1952]
S.C.R. 572, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 119 of
1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 11, 1956, of
the Allahabad High Court in Criminal Revision No. 1724 of
1955, against the Order dated July 13, 1955, of the
Additional District Magistrate (J), Muzaffarnagar, in
Criminal Revision No. 17/18 of 1955 upholding that of the
Magistrate 1st Class, Muzaffarnagar, dated February 14,
1955, in Cr. Case No. 132 of 1955.
717
Rameshwar Nath and S. N. Andley, for the appellant.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India and P. C.
Aggarwal, for the respondent.
1958. December 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO, J.-This appeal on a certificate granted by the
Allahabad High Court raises a question relating to the
interpretation of certain provisions of the U. P. District
Boards Act, (U. P. X of 1922), and the U. P. Town Areas
Act (U. P. No. II of 1914). It is necessary to state the
facts on which the question has arisen. Asa Ram appellant
runs certain machines with the aid of power in premises
which are in a locality which is admittedly within the
Jalalabad town area since the year 1953-54. He did not take
out a licence for running these machines for 1953-54, as re-
quired by bye-law (7) of the Muzaffarnagar Factories Bye-
laws, framed by the District Board of Muzaffarnagar, under
s. 174(1) (k) read with s. 106 of the District Boards Act.
Consequently, he was prosecuted for contravening the bye-
laws in question. He admitted that he was running these
machines with the aid of power; but his contention was that
as the premises where the machines were running were in the
town area of Jalalabad, the bye-laws framed by the District
Board did not apply to him and it was not necessary for him
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
to take out a licence, and his prosecution at the instance
of the District Board for contravening the bye laws was bad.
The decision of this point depended upon the construction of
s. 93(3) of the District Boards Act and s. 26 of the Town
Areas Act.
The trial Magistrate was of the opinion, on a construction
of the sections above-named, that the bye. laws framed by
the District Board were not applicable to premises within
the Jalalabad town area, and, therefore, Asa Ram need not
have taken out a licence. He consequently acquitted Asa
Ram. There was a revision application by the District
Board, which was dismissed by the Additional District
Magistrate (Judicial), Muzaffarnagar, who agreed with the
view of the
718
Magistrate. The District Board then went up in revision to
the High Court of Allahabad. The revision was heard by a
learned Single Judge, who framed three questions which arose
for determination, namely,
(1) Is running of a flour mill, etc., an offensive trade ?
(2) Does the word ’regulation’ used in s. 26(a) U. P. Town
Areas Act include the power of issuing a licence ? and
(3)Does s. 93(3) of the District Boards Act amount to a
divestment of authority of the District Board in favour of
the Town Area Committee ?
On the first question, the learned Judge was of the
opinion that the machines run by Asa Ram would come within
the provisions of s. 26(a) of the Town Areas Act, though he
also took the view that it was not necessary for him to
decide the point. On the second question, he held that
’regulation’ did not include the power of granting a
licence, though this was against a Division Bench authority
of that High Court reported as Municipal Board, Hathras v.
Behrey Narain Dutt (1). He relied on a decision of this
Court in Mohamad Yasin v. The Town Area Committee, Jalalabad
(2 ) also in this connection. On the third question he was
of the view that s. 93(3) barred the District Board from
exercising any authority in a town area which is vested in
the body mentioned in it. He was further of the view that
the amendment of the Town Areas Act in 1934 by which the
word ’Panchayat’ occurring in the Town Areas Act was
substituted throughout by the word ’Committee’ made no
difference even though s. 93(3) of the District Boards Act
was not simultaneously amended by substituting the words
’Town Area Committee’ for the words ’Town Panchayat’ therein
in conformity with the change made in the Town Areas Act.
But in view of his decision on the second question, viz.,
that ’ regulation’ did not include the power of granting a
licence, he held that bye-laws framed by the District Board
for taking out licences applied to premises within the town
areas. He, therefore, set aside the acquittal and
(1) A.I.R. 1948 All. 1.
(2) [1952] S.C.R. 572.
719
ordered a retrial. He also gave leave to appeal to this
Court.
The three points formulated by the High Court arise for
decision before us also. The learned Solicitor General
appearing for the-District Board does not challenge the
correctness of the decision on the first point, namely,
whether the running of the machines which the appellant is
running would come within the relevant words of s. 26(a) of
the Town Areas Act. It is enough in this connection to set
out the two provisions in the two Acts to see that the
decision is correct. Section 174 (1)(k) of the District
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
Boards Act, under which the bye-laws were framed is in these
terms-
" regulating slaughter houses and offensive, dangerous or
obnoxious trades, callings, or practices and prescribing
fees to defray the expenditure incurred by a board for this
purpose."
Section 26(a) of the Town Areas Act is in these terms-
" The Committee may by general or special order in writing
provide and if so advised by the district magistrate shall
provide for all or any of the following matters within the
town area, namely:-
(a)the regulation of offensive callings or trades;
........................................."
It is obvious therefore that s. 26(a) of the Town Areas Act
is co-extensive with s. 174(1) (k) of the District Boards
Act, so far as regulation of offensive trades or callings is
concerned. As the learned Solicitor General does not
contest the finding of the High Court that the trades in
question carried on by As& Ram with his machines with the
aid of power are offensive trades, it follows that the Town
Area Committee has power to regulate these trades as well as
the District Board.
So far as the second point is concerned, the learned
Solicitor General concedes that regulation’ would include
the power of issuing a licence-and very rightly so. No case
has been brought to our notice in which this Court held that
power of ’regulation’ does not include the power of issuing
a licence and that issue of a licence amounts to prohibition
and is not a
720
restriction on carrying on a trade or business. It is
enough to point out that the District Boards Act under which
these bye-laws have been framed does not specifically
provide anywhere for granting of licences. Section 174(1)
(k) itself speaks only of regulating offensive trades, etc.,
and has not given in so many words power to issue licences.
It is true that s. 106 provides that the board may charge a
fee to be fixed by bye-law for any licence, sanction or
permission which it is entitled or required to grant by or
under the Act; but that section merely provides for levying
of fee where a licence is necessary under other provisions
of the Act and is not in itself an authority for issue of
licences. Therefore, when the Board framed a bye-law
relating to issue of licences it did so under its power of
regulation. The High Court with respect seems to have mis-
understood Mohamad Yasin’s case (1). That case turned on
the question whether the Town Areas Committee could impose a
fee and did not deal with the question whether it could
issue a licence. It was in that connection that the
following sentence which the High Court has picked out,
appeared in that judgment-
" We have not been referred to any notification whereby a.
294 of the U. P. Municipalities Act was extended to the
respondent committee."
Section 294 of the Municipalities Act is in the same terms
as s. 106 of the District Boards Act and deals with the
power of, levying fees. The High Court seems to have lost
sight of the distinction between granting licences which
depends on the power of regulation and levying of licence-
fees, which can only be levied if there is specific
provision to that effect in the law. Mohamad Yasin’s case
(1) decided that as there was no provision authorising a
Town Area Committee to levy licence-fee it could not do so.
That, however, did not mean that ’regulation’ did not
include the power of issuing licences, though in the absence
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
of a provision for charging licence-fees, licences must be
issued without charge, if bye-laws require the issue of a
licence in order to regulate trades or callings which a Town
Area Committee can regulate under s. 26(a) of the
(1)[1952] S.C.R. 572.
721
Town Areas Act. The view of the learned Judge, therefore,
that the Town Area Committee could not issue a licence when
framing rules regulating offensive trades or callings is not
correct. The Town Area Committee would thus have the power
to frame bye-laws requiring taking out of licences in case
it exercises its power of regulation under s. 26(a) of the
Town Areas Act in the same way as a District Board has the
power of framing bye-laws under s. 174(1)(k) requiring those
carrying on certain trades to take out licences. This
brings us to the third question, namely, what happens when
two statutory bodies have concurrent power in the same
field?
The power of the District Board to frame bye-laws under s.
174(1)(k) is confined to rural area as defined in s. 3(10).
We understand that this section has been amended recently in
1958 and now town areas are to be excluded from the ambit of
rural area’; but at the relevant time it ran as follows:-
" ’Rural area’ means the area of a district excluding every
municipality as defined in the United Provinces
Municipalities Act, 1916 and every cantonment as defined in
the Cantonment Act, 1910."
Therefore, at the relevant time, the District Board would
have the power to frame bye-laws even for town areas. In
order, however, to resolve any conflict, which may arise, s.
93 (3) was included in the District Boards Act. It is in
these terms :-
"Nothing in this Act shall entitle a board to exercise
within the limits of any municipality, notified area,
cantonment or town area, any authority which is vested in
the municipal board, notified area committee, cantonment
committee, district magistrate, or town panchayat, as the
case may be."
There are certain exceptions to this provision, but we are
not concerned with them in the present case. The argument
of the learned Solicitor General in this behalf is that the
District Board will be divested of its power to frame bye-
laws for regulating offensive trades and callings in town
areas, if the same authority is vested in the town
panchayat. He goes. on that
91
722
now there are no Town Panchayats having authority in town
areas, for the words " Town Panchayat " appearing in the
Town Areas Act have everywhere been substituted by the
words "Town Area Committee". It is submitted that a
corresponding amendment was not made in s. 93 (3) and,
therefore, though the District Board would have no power
upto 1934 to frame bye-laws for town areas relating to
regulation of offensive trades or callings, which were
covered by s. 26 (a) of the Town Areas Act, it would have
that power after the amendment of 1934.
We must say that this is a very technical argument. The
Town Areas Act was passed in 1914 and in the Act as it was
originally passed the authority conferred by s. 26(a) was
vested in the Town Panchayat. In 1920 the U. P. Village
Panchayat Act was passed creating panchayats for any village
or groups of villages. It seems that it was then thought
fit, to change the name in the Town Areas Act to Town Area
Committee to avoid confusion with the Panchayats under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
Village Panchayat Act. But this in our opinion was only a
formal change, for the word ’committee’ in English is after
all a translation more or less of the word panchayat’ in
Hindi. Therefore, when the word "committee’ was substituted
in place of ’panchayat’ in the Town Areas Act there was
really no change of substance and the restriction on the
power of the District Board under s. 93 (3) of the District
Boards Act to deal with matters entrusted to the town areas
continued in full force. In this connection, our attention
was drawn to Shrimati Hira Devi v. District Board, Shah-
jahanpur (1). In that case, s. 71 of the U. P. District
Board’s Act was amended but no corresponding amendment was
made in s. 90. In that connection the following
observations were made at p. 1131:-
" It was unfortunate that when the Legislature came to amend
the old section 71 of the Act it forgot to amend s. 90 in
conformity with the amendment of s. 71. But this lacuna
cannot be supplied by any such liberal construction as the
High Court sought to put upon the expression orders of any
authority
(1)[1952] S.C.R. 1122.
723
whose sanction is necessary’. No doubt it is the duty of
the court to try to harmonise the various provisions of an
Act passed by the Legislature. But it is certainly not the
duty of the Court to stretch the words used by the
Legislature to fill in gaps or omissions in the pro-visions
of an Act."
That case, however, related to entirely different
circumstances. Here we are dealing with two statutes giving
power to two statutory bodies, and if there is conflict in
view of the technical submission made by the learned
Solicitor General and s. 93 (3) cannot come to the aid of
the Town Area Committee, we have still to see which Act will
prevail in the circumstances. The U. P. District Boards Act
deals with a larger area in which the area constituting the
town area is also included. The Town Areas Act on the other
hand deals with a smaller area and on principle when there
is a body dealing with a larger area and from that area is
carved out a smaller area which is entrusted to another
body, the law giving power to the body Governing the smaller
area should prevail over the law giving power to the body
governing the larger area. if the substitution of the word
committee’ for the word panchayat’ is merely a translation,
as observed earlier, it makes no difference to the
application of s. 93 (3) even after 1934. But if it is not
treated as a mere translation and it is said that a new body
was vested with powers under the Town Areas Act by the
amendment of 1934, then it means that a smaller area was
carved out from a larger area in 1934 and a new statutory
body was created to govern it with certain powers; in those
circumstances the powers given to the now statutory body in
the smaller area carved out from the larger area will
prevail.
Reference in this connection may be made to two English
cases, which lay down the principle how the conflict between
the two statutes in similar circumstances should be
resolved. In King v. The Justices of Middlesex (1), it was
held:-
" Where two Acts of Parliament, which passed during the same
session and were to come into
(1) (1831) 2 B. & AD. 818; (1831) 109 E.R. 1347, 1348.
724
operation the same day, are repugnant to each other, that
which last received the Royal assent must prevail and be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
considered pro tanto a repeal of the other."
Again in Daw, Clerk of the Commissioner of Sewers of the
City of London v. The Metropolitan Board of Works it was
held-
" Where two statutes give authority to two public bodies to
exercise powers which cannot consistently with the object of
the Legislature co-exist, the earlier must necessarily be
repealed by the later statute."
In that case the conflict was between s. 145 of the City of
London Sewers Act, 1848 and s. 141 of the Metropolis Local
Management Act, 1855, and the later was held to prevail.
The principle of these cases will apply to the present
circumstances, and if the words " town area committee " are
not held to be a translation of the words " town panchayat
", the result is that a Town Area Committee being vested
with power under s. 26 (a) to regulate offensive trades or
callings, the power of the Town Area Committee must prevail
over the power of the District Board under s. 174 (1)(k) of
the District Boards Act. We, therefore, allow the appeal,
set aside the order of the High Court and order the
acquittal of Asa Ram appellant.
Appeal allowed.