Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3106 of 1991
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. M. SHANKARAPPA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/11/2000
BENCH:
V.N. Khare & S.N. Variava.
JUDGMENT:
S. N. VARIAVA, J.
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This Appeal is against a Judgment dated 2nd April, 1990
in Writ Petition No. 4335 of 1979.
The Respondent (herein) had challenged the virus of
certain provisions of the Cinematograph Act, 1952
(hereinafter called the said Act) as amended by Act No. 49
of 1981. In the Writ Petition the challenge was to the
constitutional validity of Sections 3(1), 4(1), 5D, 6(1) and
7(1). By the impugned Judgment Sections 3(1), 4(1), 5D and
7(1) were held to be constitutionally valid. However,
portions of Section 6(1) have been held to be
unconstitutional and those portions have been struck down.
It must be mentioned that, in the case of K. A. Abbas
v. Union of India reported in AIR 1971 S.C. 481, the
validity of certain provisions of the said Act had been
challenged, inter alia, on the ground that an appeal from a
decision of the Board should lie to a Court or to an
independent Tribunal and not to the Central Government. The
Solicitor General made a statement that the Government would
appropriately amend the Act to set up a Tribunal. This
Court commented as follows:
"We express our satisfaction that the Central Government
will cease to perform curial functions through one of its
Secretaries in this sensitive field involving the
fundamental right of speech and expression. Experts sitting
as a Tribunal and deciding matters quasi-judicially inspire
more confidence than a Secretary and therefore, it is better
that the appeal should lie to a court or Tribunal."
It is pursuant to this statement and in keeping with the
opinion expressed by this Court that the Tribunal was
established. Section 5C of the said Act now provided for an
appeal to a Tribunal. Section 5D now provided that the
Government is to constitute an Appellate Tribunal. The
Tribunal is to consist of a Chairman and not more than four
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other members. The Chairman of the Tribunal is to be a
person who is a retired Judge of a High Court, or a person
who is qualified to be a Judge of a High Court. The other
members should be such persons who are qualified to judge
the effect of the film on the public. Thus the Tribunal is
an expert body which has been set up for the purposes of
considering, amongst other things, the effect of the films
on the public. However the Government still sought to
retain powers by enacting Section 6(1). For a better
understanding of the question under consideration, it would
be appropriate to set out Section 6(1). It reads as
follows:
"6(1): Notwithstanding anything contained in this part,
the Central Government may, of its own motion, at any stage,
call for the record of any proceeding in relation to any
film which is pending before, or has been decided by, the
Board, or as the case may be, decided by the Tribunal (but
for including any proceeding in respect of any matter which
is pending before the Tribunal) and after such inquiry, into
the matter as it considers necessary, make such order in
relation there to as it thinks fit, and the Board shall
dispose of the matter in conformity with such order:
Provided that no such order shall be made prejudicially
affecting any person applying for a certificate or to whom a
certificate has been granted, as the case may be, except
after giving him an opportunity for representing his views
in the matter:
Provided further that nothing in this sub- section shall
require the Central Government to disclose any fact which it
considers to be against public interest to disclose."
Thus even after establishing the Appellate Tribunal, by
means of Section 6(1), the Central Government sought to
retain with it the power to make such orders as it thought
fit. In effect what the Government is seeking to do is to
exercise power of review or revision over the decisions of
the Board or the Tribunal. Mr. Goswami sought to submit
that it was necessary to retain such a power because it has
been found that on certain occasions, after the film has
been cleared by the Board or by the Tribunal, there was
public resentment to the film and law and order situations
arose. He submitted that such a situation would necessitate
a review and/or revision of the order passed by the
Tribunal. He submitted that under our Constitution there
was no strict separation of powers. He submitted that
judicial functions could also be discharged by the Central
Government by way of conferment of revisional powers.
We are unable to accept the submission of the learned
counsel. The Government has chosen to establish a quasi-
judicial body which has been given the powers, inter alia,
to decide the effect of the film on the public. Once a
quasi-judicial body like the Appellate Tribunal, consisting
of a retired Judge of a High Court or a person qualified to
be a Judge of a High Court and other experts in the filed,
gives its decision that decision would be final and binding
so far as the Executive and the Government is concerned. To
permit the Executive to review and/or revise that decision
would amount to interference with the exercise of judicial
functions by a quasi-judicial Board. It would amount to
subjecting the decision of a quasi-judicial body to the
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scrutiny of the Executive. Under our Constitution the
position is reverse. The Executive has to obey judicial
orders. Thus, Section 6(1) is a travesty of the rule of law
which is one of the basic structures of the Constitution.
The Legislature may, in certain cases, overrule or nullify
the judicial or executive decision by enacting an
appropriate legislation. However, without enacting an
appropriate legislation, the Executive or the Legislature
cannot set at naught a judicial order. The Executive cannot
sit in an appeal or review or revise a judicial order. The
Appellate Tribunal consisting of experts and decides matters
quasi-judicially. A Secretary and/or Minister cannot sit in
appeal or revision over those decisions. At the highest,
the Government may apply to the Tribunal itself for a
review, if circumstances so warrant. But the Government
would be bound by the ultimate decision of the Tribunal.
We fail to understand the apprehension expressed by the
learned counsel that there may be a law and order situation.
Once an Expert Body has considered the impact of the film on
the public and has cleared the film, it is no excuse to say
that there may be a law and order situation. It is for the
concerned State Government to see that the law and order is
maintained. In any democratic society there are bound to be
divergent views. Merely because a small section of the
society has a different view, from that as taken by the
Tribunal, and choose to express their views by unlawful
means would be no ground for the Executive to review or
revise a decision of the Tribunal. In such a case, the
clear duty of the Government is to ensure that law and order
is maintained by taking appropriate actions against persons
who choose to breach the law.
We, therefore, see no substance in the Appeal. The same
stands dismissed. There will, however, be no Order as to
costs.