Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PATHUMMA AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/01/1978
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH (CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SHINGAL, P.N.
SINGH, JASWANT
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 771 1978 SCR (2) 537
1978 SCC (2) 1
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1980 SC 898 (66)
RF 1980 SC1789 (117)
MV 1982 SC1325 (32)
E&D 1983 SC1155 (13,23,24,26,27,29)
E 1985 SC 389 (22)
ACT:
Kerala Agriculturists’ Debt Relief Act, 1970 s. 20-Scope of-
Section 20 entitles debtors to recover properties sold to
purchasers in execution of decree passed in liquidating the
debt owed by the agriculturist-Restriction if reasonable-If
deprives the creditors of their right to property-Sub s. 3-
If purchaser of Property at auction is, stranger, property
to be returned to agriculturist debtor if purchase money
paid within six months-Sub-s. (6) a bona fide alienee
purchasing from auction purchaser before the date of the Act
exempt from operation of the Act-Sub-s.(3)-If violative of
Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
The statement of objects and reasons to the Kerala
Agriculturists’ Debt Relief Act, 1970 states that the
benefits conferred by Kerala Act 31 of 1958 were available
only in respect of debts incurred by the agriculturists
before the date of commencement of the Act, namely July 14,
1958. And since even after this date agricultural
indebtedness among the poorer sections continued to be on
the increase the legislature considered it necessary to give
relief to the agriculturists against whom suits had been
filed for recovery of debts accrued after the commencement
of the 1958 Act.
Section 20(1) of the Act provides that where any immovable
property in which the agriculturist had an interest has been
sold in execution of any decree for recovery of a debt but
possession has not actually passed from the judgment debtor
to the purchaser and the decree-holder is the purchaser then
such judgment-debtor may deposit one half of the purchase
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money and, apply to the Court to set aside the sale of the
property and the Court shall order the sale to be set aside
and further order payment of the balance of the purchase
money in ten equal instalments in accordance with the
procedure set out therein. Subsection (2) provides that
where any immovable property in which the agriculturist had
an interest has been sold in execution of any decree for
arrears of rent and the possession of the property has
actually passed from the judgment debtorto the purchaser
during the periods mentioned therein then such judgment
debtormay deposit one half of the purchase money and apply
to the Court to setaside the sale of the property and the
court shall order the setting aside of the sale and for the
payment of the balance of the purchase money according to
the procedure set out in the section. Sub-section (3)
provides that where property sold in the execution of any
decree for the recovery of a debt and the decree holder is
not the purchaser such judgment-debtor may deposit the
purchase money and apply to the court to set aside the sale
of the property and the Court shall order the sale to be set
aside. Sub-section (5) provides that where improvements
have been effected on the property sold after the date of
sale the value of such improvement as determined by the
Court shall be deposited by the applicant for payment to the
auction purchaser. Sub-section (6) provides that an order
under sub-sections (1) or (2) or (3) shall not be deemed to
affect the rights of bona fide alienees of the auction
purchaser deriving right before the date of publication of
the Bill.
In the instant cases a creditor had obtained a mortgage
decree against the judgment debtor, who was an
agriculturist. Since the debtor was not able to pay the
decretal amount in instalments, a decree for sale of the
property was passed by the Court. The debtor’s property was
auctioned and purchased by the appellant who was not the
decree-holder. In some cases decrees were obtained by the
creditors against the debtors and, on their failure to pay
the
538
instalments property was purchased at the auction by the
decree-holders the-selves. After the purchase, improvements
were made by them in the propertieswhen the debtors launched
proceedings under the Act for restoration of possession of
the property on payment of the decretal amount, the
appellants challenged the constitutional validity of the
Act. The High Court upheld the validity of s. 20 and
dismissed the writ petitions.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended on behalf of the
appellants that (1) the appellants having acquired valid
title to the property after purchase at auction sale in
execution of a decree, s. 20 which deprives them of their
right to hold property was violative of Art. 19(1)(f), (2)
though the obvious object of the Act was to give relief to
debtors who filed suits for recovery of debts after the
commencement of the 1958-Act it travels beyond the statement
of objects and reasons, giving a blanket power to the Court
to set aside the sale completed even before the passing of
the Act and (3) s. 20(3) and (6) are violative of Art. 14
because the stranger decree-holder was selected for hostile
discrimination whereas a bona fide alienee was exempted from
the operation of the Act.
Dismissing the appeals,
(per Beg, C. J., Krishna Iyer, S. Murtaza Fazal Ali and
Jaswant Singh, J.)
HELD : There is no constitutional infirmity on the ground
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that the Act is violative of Art. 19(1)(f). The
restrictions imposed are clearly reasonable within the
meaning of cl. (6) of that Article. [559 A-B]
1(a) In interpreting the constitutional provisions for
judging the impact of an enactment on the fundamental rights
of the citizens the approach of the Courts is to interpret
the constitutional provisions against the social setting of
the country so as to show a complete consciousness and deep
awareness of the growing requirements of the society, the
increasing needs of the nation, the burning problems of the
day and the complex issues facing the people which the
legislature in its wisdom, through beneficial legislation,
seeks to solve. The judicial approach should be dynamic
rather than static, pragmatic rather than pedantic and
elastic rather than rigid. It must take into consideration
the changing trends of economic thought, the temper of the
times and the living aspirations and feelings of the people.
This Court must strike a just balance betweenthe fundamental
rights and the larger and broader interests of society.[534
A-C]
(b) The legislature is in a better position to understand
and appreciate the needs of the people and to bring about
social reforms for the uptiftment of the backward and the
weaker sections and for the improvement of the lot of the
poor. The Court will interfere only when the statute is
clearly violative of the fundamental right or when the Act
is beyond the legislative competence. Courts have
recognised that there is always a presumption in favour of
the constitutionality of a statute and the onus to prove its
invalidity lies on the party assailing the Act. [544 A-B]
Jyoti Prashad v. The Administrator for the Union Territory
of Delhi (1962) 2 SCR 125 and Mohd. Hanif Quareshi & Ors v.
The State of Bihar (1959) SCR 629 referred to.
(e) The object of the Act being removal of agricultural
indebtedness and reduction of one of the important causes of
poverty, is undoubtedly in public interest and the
restriction must be presumed to be reasonable. [545 B-C]
(b) By a long line of decisions this Court has laid down
seteral tests and guidelines for judging the reasonableness
of restrictions. They are :
(i) Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles constitute
the "conscience" of the Constitution. The purpose of the
latter is to fix certain social and economic goals for
immediate attainment by bringing about a non-violent social
revolution. The Constitution aims at bringing about a
synthesis between funda.mental rights and directive
principles by giving to the former a place of pride and to
the latter a place of permanence. [545 F-G]
5 3 9
Fatechand Himmatlal & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra etc.
(1977) 2 SCR 828, His Holiness Kesavananda Bharati
Sripadagalavaru v. State of Kerala (1973) Supp. SCR 1,
State of Kerala & Anr. v. N. M. Thomas & Ors. (1976) 2 SCC
310 and The State of Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamarbattgwala
(1957) SCR 874 at 921 referred to.
In the instant case the object of the Act being to eradicate
rural indebtedness and thereby secure the common good, of
the people living in object poverty, clearly fulfils the
directives in Arts. 38 and 39(b) of the Constitution. There
is no conflict between the directives and the restrictions
sought to be placed by the Act. [545 E-F, 547 A]
(ii)The restrictions must not be arbitrary or excessive in
nature so as to go beyond the requirement of the interest of
the general public. What is required is that the
legislature should take intelligent care in choosing I
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course which is dictated by reason and good conscience so as
to strike a just balance between the freedom contained in
Art. 19(1)(f) and the social control permitted by cll. (5)
and (6) of that Article. [547 B-E]
Chintamman Rao v. The State of Madhya Pradesh (1950) SCR 759
at 763 and Messrs. Dwarka Prasad Laxmi Narain v. The State
of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. (1954) SCR 803 at 811-12 referred
to.
(iii)No abstract or general pattern or a fixed principle can
be laid down which can be of universal application and the
same will have to vary from case to case and with regard to
changing conditions, the values of human life, social
philosophy of the Constitution, prevailing conditions and
the surrounding circumstances, all of which must enter into
the judicial verdict. [547 F]
Messrs. Dwarka Prasad Laxmi Narain v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh & Ors. (1954) SCR 803 at 811-12 State of Madras v.
V. C. Row (1952) SCR 597. Mohd. Hanif Quareshi & Ors. v.
The State of Bihar (1959) SCR 629 at 660 and The Lord
Krishna Sugar Mills Ltd. & Anr. v. The Union of India & Anr.
(1960) 1 SCR 39 at 56 referred to.
(iv)The Court has to examine the nature and extent, the
purport and content of the right, nature of the evil sought
to be remedied by the statute, the harm caused to the
citizen and the benefit to be conferred on the person or the
community for whose benefit the legislation is passed,
urgency of the evil and the necessity to rectify the same.
In so doing the Court has to strike a just balance between
the restriction imposed and the social control envisaged by
Art. 19(6). [549 A-B]
Narendra Kumar & Ors. v. The Union of India & Ors. (1960) 2
SCR 375 and Bachan Singh & Ors. v. State of Punjab & Ors.
(1971) 1 SCC 713 at 718 referredto.
(v)There must be direct and proximate nexus or a reasonable
connection betweenthe restriction imposed and the object
sought to be achieved. In other words, the Court has to see
whether by virtue of the restriction imposed on the right of
the citizen the object of the statute is really fulfilled or
frustrated. If there is a direct nexus between the
restriction and the object of the Act then a strong
presumption in favour of the constitutionality of the Act
will arise. [549 F-G] Kavalappara Kottarrathil Kochunni &
Ors. v. The State o Madras & 0rs. (1960) 3 SCR 887 at 928
and O. K. Ghosh & Anr. v. N. K. Joseph (1963) Supp. 1 SCR
789 at 705 referred to.
(vi)Courts must see whether the social control envisaged in
Art. 19(6) is being effectuated by the restriction imposed
on the fundamental right. If they look at the restrictions
only from the point of view of the citizen who is affected,
it will not be a correct or safe approach inasmuch as the
restriction is bound to be irksome and painful to the
citizen even though it may be for the public good. However
important the right of a citizen or an individual may be, it
has to yield to the larger interests of the country or the
community. [550 G-H, 551 A]
Jyoti Prashad v. The Administrator for the Union Territory
of Delhi (1962), 2 SCR 125 at 148 referred to.
540
(vii)The Court is fully entitled to take into consideration
matters of common report, history of the times and matters
of common knowledge and the circumstances existing at the
time of legislation. [551 D]
Mohd. Hanif Quareshi & Ors. v. The State of Bihar (1959)
SCR 629 referred to.
In the instant case the object of the Act being to protect
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the agriculturistdebtors from the clutches of the greedy
creditors, is undoubtedly a laudable object. The Act does
not take away the property of the purchaser without
compensation and, therefore, his right to hold property has
not been destroyed. No exception can be taken to s. 20(2)
(b) which provides for payment of the purchase money by
instalments because the debtor, on account of his poverty,
cannot pay the debt in a lump-sum. Secondly having regard
to the economic condition of the peasantry in the State, the
object sought to be achieved being to remove agricultural
indebtedness and amelioration of the lot of the agricui-
turists, it cannot be said that the restrictions are in any
way arbitrary or excessive or beyond the requirements of the
situation. [558 B, D, F, H, 559 A]
2. The object of the Act mentioned in the first part of
the statement of objects and reasons clearly shows that it
is comprehensive in nature and is not confined to any
particular situation. In view of the clear and unambiguous
provisions of the Act, it is not necessary to delve into
statement of objects and reasons. [559 G-H]
Section 20 is not violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution.
[562 B]
3(a) What Article 14 forbids is hostile discrimination and
not reasonable classification. Equality before law does not
mean that the same set of laws should apply to all persons
under every circumstance ignoring differences and
disparities between men and things. It is for the State to
make reasonable classification which must fulfil two
conditions : (1) the classification must be founded on an
intelligible differentia which distinguishes persons or
things that are grouped together from others left out of the
group; and (2) the differentia must have a reasonable nexus
to the object sought to be achieved by tile statute. [560 C-
E]
Shri Ram Krishna Dalnua v. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar &
Ors. (1959) SCR 279 it 296-97 and State, of Kerala & Anr. v.
N. M. Thomas & Ors. (1976)2 SCC 310 referred to.
(b)Having regard to the allowed object of the Act, if by
reason of their povertyand economic backwardness the
agriculturist-debtors are treated as a separatecategory or
class for preferential treatment in public interest, the
classi-fication is not unreasonable. In making the
classification, the legislature cannot be expected to
provide an abstract symmetry. All that is necessary is that
the classes have to be set apart accordions to the
necessities and exige ies a, as dictated by experience and
surrounding circumstances and the cl ton should not be
arbitrary, artificial or illusory. [561 6-H, 562 A]
State of West Bengal v. Anway Ali Sarkar (1952) SCR 284 at
321 referred to.
(c) It is well settled that before a person can claim to be
discriminated against another he must show that all the
other persons are similarly situate or equally
circumstanced. Unless the appellant is able to establish
that he is equated with a bona fide alienee in every
respect, Art. 14 will have no application. In other words,
discrimination violative of Art. 14 can only take effect if
there is discrimination between equals and not where
unequals are being differently treated. [562 C-D]
State of J & K v. T. N. Khosa & Anr. (1974) 1 SCR 771 at
783, Chiranjit Lal Chowadhuri v. The Union o India & Ors.
(1950) SCR 860 It 911 and Southern Railways Co. v. Greene
216 U.S. 400, 412 referred to.
541
(d) A stranger auction purchaser and a bona fide alienee
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cannot be said to be similarly situate. [563 D]
In the instant case the stranger auction purchaser who
participates in the proceedings in execution of the decree
against the debtor has a clear notice of the circumstances
under which the decree was passed and of the fact that the
property sold was the property of the debtor. If the
legislature at a later stage passes a law to restore the
property to the agriculturist-debtor the auction-purchaser
cannot complain. Secondly, the stranger auction-purchaser
knows that he had purchased the property at a distress sale.
Thirdly even if the property was restored to the stranger
auction-purchaser, he is entitled to get the entire purchase
money in lump-sum including the cost before parting with
possession of the property. This distinguishes the case
from that of a decreeholder-purchaser. A bona fide alienee
on the other hand purchases, the property under negotiation;
he has no notice of the debt of the debtor or the cir-
cumstances under which the decree was passed. [563 E, H, 564
A]
Per Bhagwati, Shinghal and Tulzapurkar, JJ concurring.
The subject-matter of the Act is clearly within the purview
of Entry 30 (money lending and money lenders; relief of
agricultural indebtedness) and the Act which provides for
the " relief of indebted agriculturists in the State of
Kerala" is within the competence of the State Legislature.
[568 G, 569 A]
1(a) There is no justification for the contention that Entry
30 is confined only to subsisting- indebtedness and Would
not cover the necessity of providing relief of those
agriculturists who had lost their immovable property by
Court sales in execution of the decree against them and had
been rendered destitute. Section 20 deals with a liability
which had ceased and did not subsist on the date the Act
came into force. But there is nothing in Entry 30 of List
11 to show that it will not be attracted and would not
enable the State Legislature to make a law simply because
the debt of the agriculturist had been paid off under a
distress sale-. [569 C-E]
(b) An agriculturist does not cease to be an agriculturist
merely because he has lost his immovable property. It
cannot be said that the State is not interested in providing
him necessary relief merely because he has lost his
immovable property. On the other ’hand his helpless
condition calls for early solution and it is only natural
that the State Legislature should think of rehabilitating
him by providing the necessary relief under an Act of the
nature under consideration. There is nothing in the working
of Entry 30 to show that the relief contemplated by it must
necessarily relate to any subsisting indebtedness and would
not cover the question of relief to those who have lost the
means of their livelihood because of the delay in providing
them legislative relief.
[569- F-G]
(c) It cannot be gainsaid that agriculturists. and even,
indebted agriculturists, form the bulk or, at any rate a
considerable part of the rural population in an essentially
rural economy. and so if a restriction is reasonable in
their interest. it world squarely fall within the purview of
cl. (5) of Art. 19.
[570 F-G]
Kavalappara Kottarathil Kochuni & Ors. v. The State of
Madras and Ors. (1960) 3 SCR 887 and State of Andhra Pradesh
v. Kannapalli Chinna Venkata Chalamayya Sastri (1963) 1 SCR
156 referred to.
(d) Thousands of suits were pending against indebted
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agriculturists in various Courts and immovable properties of
a large number of agriculturists had been sold rendering
them completely helpless. So if the State Legislature
passed the Act in the interest of the general public to
provide relief of the nature mentioned in s. 20 the
restriction provided therein is clearly "reasonable". Even
so, the section makes provision for repayment of the
purchase money, the costs of execution and the improvements
made by the purchaser Their restriction is, therefore,
reasonable in every sense and the High Court rightly
rejected the argument to the contrary. [571 A-C],
Section 20 is not violative of Art. 14. [573 D]
54 2
2(a) A comparison of sub-s-(1) with sub-s. (3) would show
that the treatment to a decree-holder-purchaser is different
and is less advantageous than the treatment to a purchaser
who is not a decree-holder. The former is treated as a
different class. Decree-holders very often exploit their
debtors in many ways and sales to them are generally viewed
with suspicion and disfavour. Under O.XXI, r.72 CPC, it is
not permissible for a decree-holder to bid for or purchase
the property without the express permission of the Court.
The decree holder purchaser has rightly been treated as a
class by himself and that classification obviously has the
object of benefiting the agriculturist debtor by permitting
him to deposit only half the purchase money and paying the
balance in instalments.[572 A-B]
(b) There is also justification for treating an auction
purchaser at a Court sale differently from a bona-fide
alienee of the auction purchaser who derived his rights
before the date of publication of the 1968 Bill. Such an
alienee of the auction-purchaser could not possibly have
been aware of the hazards of Purchasing the property of an
indebted agriculturist at the time of purchase.
[572 C-D]
(c) It is futile to contend that if the legislature has
protected the interests of an alienee by enacting sub-s.
(6) it has made a hostile discrimination against the auction
purchaser as a class. [573 D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 420 of 1973.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17-8-1972 of the Kerala
High Court in Original Petition No. 5576 of 1970.
T. S. Krishnamoorthy Iyer, S. B. Saharya, K. Ram Kumar and
V. B. Saharya for the Appellants in C. As. 420 and 442-
445/73.
V. A. Sayed Muhamed (In CA 420/73) and K. M. K. Nair for
R. I in all appeals and R. 2 in C. As. 442, 443 and 445 of
1973.
Miss Lilly Thomas RR. 3-10 and CA 445/73.
The following Judgments of the Court were delivered by
FAZAL ALI, J.-These appeals by certificate granted by the
High Court of Kerala involve a common question of law
containing a challenge to the constitutionality of the
Kerala Agriculturists’ Debt Relief Act, 1970 (Act 11 of
1970) (hereinafter referred to in short as the Act). The
appeallants have assailed particularly section 20 of the Act
which entitles the debtors to recover the properties sold to
purchasers in execution of a decree passed in liquidating
the debt owed by the agriculturists.
As the five appeals involve common questions of law we
propose to decide them by one common judgment.
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Section 20 of the Act was assailed before the High Court on
three grounds, namely.
1. That the Act was beyond the legislative
competence of the State legislature and did
not fall within entry 30 of the State List.
2. That the provisions of section 20 and
the sub-sections thereof were violative of
Article 19 (1 ) (f) of the Constitution of
India inasmuch as they sought to deprive the
appellants of their right to hold property;
543
3. That sub-sections 3 and 6 of section 20
of the Act were violative of Article 14 of
the, Constitution of India inasmuch as the
stranger decree-holder was
selected for hostile discrimination whereas a
bona fide alienee who stood on the same
footing as the stranger decree holder was
exempted from the operation of the Act.
Mr. Krishnamoorty Iyer, learned counsel for the appellants
has not pressed point No. 1 relating to the legislative
competence of the legislature and has fairly conceded that
in view of the decision of this Court in the case of
Fatehchand Himmatlal & Ors’ v. State of Maharashtra etc.(1)
the constitutionality of the Maharashtra Debt Relief Act,
1976 which contained similar or rather harsher provisions is
the Act was upheld by this Court. In these circumstances,
it will not be necessary for us to examine this question any
further.
Before however taking up the other two points raised by
counsel for the appellants which were pressed before us in
this Court it may be necessary to set out the approach which
a Court has to make and the principles by which it has to be
guided in such matters. Courts Interpret the constitutional
provisions against the social setting of the country so as
to show a complete consciousness and deep awareness of the
growing requirements of the society, the increasing needs of
the nation the burning problems of the, day and the complex
issues facing the people which the legislature in its
wisdom, through beneficial legislation, seeks to solve. The
judicial approach should be dynamic rather than static,
pragmatic and not pedantic and elastic rather than rigid.
It must take into consideration the changing trends of
economic thought, the temper of the times and the living
aspirations and feelings of the people. This Court while
acting as a sentinel on the quivive to protect fundamental
rights guaranteed to the citizens of the country must try to
strike a just balance between the fundamental rights and the
larger and broader interests of society, so that when such
right clashes with the larger interest of the country it
must yield to the latter. Emphasising the role of Courts in
such matters this Court in the case of Jyoti Prashad v. The
Administrator for the Union Territory of Delhi(2) observed
as follows :-
" where the legislature fulfils its purpose
and enacts laws, which in its wisdom, is
considered necessary for the solution of what
after all is a very human problem the tests of
"reasonableness" have to be viewed in the
context of the issues which faced the
legislature. In the construction of such laws
and particularly in judging of their validity
the Courts have necessarily to approach it
from the point of view of furthering the
social interest which it is the purpose of the
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legislation to promote, for the Courts are
not, in these matters. functioning as it were
in vacuo, but as parts of a society which is
trying, by enacted law, to solve its problems
and achieve social concord and peaceful
adjustment and thus furthering the moral and
material progress of the community as a
whole."
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 125 at 148.
544
It is obvious that the legislature is in the best position
to understand and appreciate the needs of the people as
enjoined by the Constitution to bring about social reforms
for the upliftment of the backward and the weak-or sections
of the society and for the improvement of the lot of poor
people. The Court will therefore, interfere in this process
only when the statute is clearly violative of the right
conferred on the citizen under Part III of the Constitution
or when the Act is beyond the legislative competence of the
legislature or such other grounds. It is for this reason
that the Courts have recognised that there is always a
presumption in favour of the constitutionality of a statute
and the onus to prove its invalidity lies on the party which
assails the same. In the case of Mohd. Hanif Quareshi &
Ors. v. The State of Bihar(1) while adverting to this aspect
Das, C.J. as he) then was, speaking for the Court observed
as follows :-
"The pronouncement of this Court further
establish, amongst other things, that there is
always a presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of an enactment and that the
burden is upon him, who, attacks it, to show
that there has been a clear violation of the
constitutional principles. The Courts, it is
accepted, must presume that the legislature
understands and correctly appreciates the
needs of its own people, that its laws are
directed to problems made manifest by
experience and that its discriminations are
based on adequate grounds".
It is in the light of these principles that we have to
approach the impact of the Act on the fundamental rights of
the citizen conferred on him by Part III of the
Constitution.
The first plant of argument by learned counsel for the,
appellants is that the Act was violative of Article 19(1)
(f) of the Constitution inasmuch as it takes away the right
to hold property as guaranteed by Article 19 (1) (f).
Article 19 (1) (f) may be extracted thus
"All citizens shall have the right
(f) to acquire, hold and dispose of property".
It was contended that in the present case the appellants had
acquired valid title to the property after having purchased
it at the auction sale in execution of a decree against the
debtors. After the sale the properties vested. in the
appellants and the law which invaded their right to the
property was clearly violative of Article 19(1) (f) of the
Constitution. There can be no doubt that Article 19
guarantees all the seven freedoms to the citizen of the
country including the right to hold, acquire and dispose of
property. It must, however, be remembered that Article 19
confers an absolute and unconditional right which is subject
only to reasonable restrictions to be placed by Parliament
or the legislature in public interest. Clause (5) of
Article 19 runs thus:
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"Nothing in sub-clauses (d), (e) and (f) of
the said clause shall effect the: operation
of any existing law in so far as
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 629.
545
it imposes, or prevent the state from making
any law imposing, reasonable restrictions on
the exercise of any of the rights conferred by
the said sub-clauses either in the interests
of the general public or for the protection of
the interests of any Schduled Tribe".
A perusal of this clause manifestly reveals that the right
conferred, by Article 19(1) (f) is conditioned by the various facto
rs mentioned in clause (5). The Constitution
permits reasonable restrictions to be placed on the right in
the interest of the general public or for the protection of
the interest of any Scheduled Tribe. The State in the,
instant case claims protection under clause (5) by
submitting that the provisions contained in the Act amount
to reasonable restrictions for the general good of an
important part of the community, namely, the poor
agriculturist debtors. The object of the Act, according to
the State, is to remove agricultural indebtedness and
thereby to eradicate one of the important causes of poverty
in this country. Such an object is undoubtedly in public
interest, and, therefore, the restriction contained in the
Act must be presumed to be a reasonable restriction. This
Court has considered this question on several occasions
during the last 21 decades, and has laid down several tests
guidelines to indicate what in a particular circumstance can
be regarded as a reasonable restriction. One of the tests
laid down by this Court is that, in judging the
reasonableness of the restrictions imposed by clause (5) of
Article 19, the Court has to bear in mind the Directive
Principles of State Policy. It will be seen that Article 38
contains a clear directive to the State to promote the
welfare of the people by securing and protecting as effec-
tively as possible a ’social order in which justice, social,
economic and political ,hall inform all the institutions of
national life. Article 39(b) contains a direction to secure
that the ownership and control of the material resources of
the community are so distributed as best to subserve the
common good. Indisputably, the object of the Act is to
eradicate rural indebtedness and thereby to secure the
common good of people living in abject poverty. The object,
therefore, clearly fulfils the directive laid down in
Articles 38 and 39(b) of the Constitution as referred to
above.
In fact in the case of His Holiness Kesavananda Bharati
Sripadagalavaru v. State of Kerala(,) all the Judges
constituting the Bench have with one voice given the
Directive Principles contained in the Constitution a place
of honour. Hegde and Mukherjea. JJ. as they then were have
said that the fundamental rights and the Directive
Principles constitute the "conscience" of our Constitution.
The purpose of the Directive Principles is to fix certain
socio and economic goals for immediate attainment by
bringing about a non-violent social revolution.
Chandrachud, J. observed that our Constitution aims at
bringing about a synthesis between ’Fundamental Rights and
the ’Directive Principles of State Policy’ by giving to the
former a place of pride and to the latter a place of
permanence.
In a latter case State of Kerala & Anr. v. N. M. Thomas &
Ors.(2) (1976) 2 S.C.C. 310 one of us (Fazal Ali, J.) after
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analysing the
(1) [1973] Supp. S.C.R. 1.
(2) [1976] 2 S.C.C. 310.
546
Judgment delivered by all the Judges in the Kesvananda
Bharati’s case (supra) on the importance of the Directive
Principles observed as follows :
"In view of the principles adumbrated by this
Court it is clear that the Directive
Principles form the fundamental feature and
the social conscience of the Constitution and
the Constitution enjoins upon the State to
implement these directive principles. The,
directives thus provide the policy, the
guidelines and the end of socio-economic
freedom of Articles 14 and 16 are the means to
implement the policy to achieve the ends
sought to be promoted by the directive
principles. ’So far as the courts are
concerned where there is no apparent
inconsistency between the directive principles
contained in Part III, which in fact
supplement each other, there is no difficulty
in putting a harmonious construction which
advances the object of the Constitution. Once
this basic fact is kept in mind, the
interpretation of Articles 14 and 16 and their
scope and ambit become as clear as day".
In the case of The State of Bombay v. R.M.D.
Chamarbaugwala(1) this Court while stressing the importance
of directive principles contained in the Constitution
observed as follows :
"The avowed purpose of our constitution is to
create a welfare State. The directive
principles of State policy set forth in Part
IV of our Constitution enjoin upon the, State
the duty to strive to promote the welfare of
the people by securing and protecting, as
effectively as it may, a social order in which
justice, social, economic and political, Shall
inform all the institutions of the national
life".
In the case of Fatehchand Himmatlal & Ors. v. State of Maha-
rashtra etc. (supra) the Constitution Bench of this Court
observed as follows :
"Incorporation of Directive Principles ’of
State Policy casting the high duty upon the
State to strive to promote the welfare of the
people by securing and protecting as effec-
tively as it may, a Social order in which
justice-social, economic and political shall
inform all the institutions of the national
life., is not idle print but command to
action. We can never forget, except at our
peril, that the Constitution obligates the
State to ensure an adequate means of
livelihood to its citizens and to see that the
health and strength of workers, men and women,
are not abused, that exploitation, moral and
material, shall be extradited. In short,
State action defending the weaker sections
from social injustice and all forms of
exploitation and raising the standard of
living of the people, necessarily imply that
economic activities, attired as trade or
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business or commerce, can be de-recognised as
trade or business."
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 874 at 921.
547
In the instant case, therefore, we are not
able to see any conflict between the directive
principles contained in Article 38 and 39(b)
and the restrictions placed by the Act. In
the case of The State of Bombay & Anr. v. P.
N. Bulsara(l) this Court observed as follows
"In judging the reasonableness of the
restrictions imposed by the Act, one has to
bear in mind the directive principles of State
policy set forth in Article 47 of the
Constitution."
Another test which has been laid down by this Court is that
restrictions must not be arbitrary or of an excessive nature
so as to go beyond the requirement of the interest of the
general public. In the case of Chintaman Rao v. The State
of Madhya Pradesh(2) this Court observed as follows :-
"The phrase ’reasonable restriction’ connotes
that the limitation imposed on a person in
enjoyment of the right should not be arbitrary
or of an excessive nature, beyond what is
required in the interests of the public. The
word ’reasonable’ implies intelligent care and
deliberation, that is, the choice of a course
which reason dictates. Legislation which
arbitrarily or excessively invades the right
cannot be said to contain the quality of
reasonableness and unless it strikes a proper
balance between the, freedom guaranteed in
Article 19 ( 1 ) (g) and the social control
permitted by clause (6) of Article 19, it must
be held to be wanting in that quality."
What is required is that the legislature takes intelligent
care and deliberation in choosing a course which is dictated
by reason and good conscience so as to strike a just balance
between the freedom contained in Article 19 (1) and the
social control permitted by clauses (5) and (6) of Article
19. This view, was reiterated in the case of Messrs. Dwarka
Prasad Laxmi Narain v. The State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors.(3)
It has also been pointed out by this Court that in order to
judge the quality of the reasonableness no abstract or
general pattern or a fixed principle can be laid down so as
to be of universal application and the same will have to
vary from case to case and with regard to changing
conditions, the value of human life, social philosophy of
the Constitution, prevailing conditions and the surrounding
circumstances all of which must enter into the judicial
verdict. In other words, the position is that the Court has
to make not a rigid or dogmatic but an elastic and pregmatic
approach to the facts of the case and to take an over-all
view of all the circumstances, factors and issues facing the
situation. In the case of State of Madras v. V. G. Row(4)
the Court observed as follows
It is important in this context to bear in
mind that the test of reasonableness, wherever
prescribed, should be applied to each
individual statute impugned, and no abstract
standard,
(1) [1951] S.C.R 682.
(2) [1956] S.C.R. 759 at 763.
(3) [1954] S.C.R. 803 at 811-12.
(4) [1952] S.C.R. 597.
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548
or general pattern, of reasonableness can be
laid down as applicable to all cases. The
nature of the right alleged to have been
infringed, the underlying purpose of the
restrictions imposed, the extent and urgency
of the evil sought to be remedied thereby, the
disproportion of the imposition, the pre-
vailing conditions at the time, should all
enter into the judicial- verdict. In
evaluating such elusive factors and forming
their own conception of what is reasonable, in
an the circumstances of a given case, it is
inevitable that the special philosophy and the
scale of values of the judges participating
in,the decision should play an important
part."
This view was endorsed in the case of Mohd. Hanif Quareshi
& Ors. v. The State of Bihar(1) 1959 S.C.R. 629 at 660 where
this Court observed as follows :
"Quite obviously it is left to the court, in
case of dispute, to determine the
reasonableness of the restrictions imposed by
the law. In determining that question the
court, we conceive, cannot proceed on a
general notion of what in reasonable in the
abstract or even on a consideration of what is
reasonable from the point of view of the person or pe
rsons on whom the restrictions
are imposed."
Similarly in the case of The Lord Krishna Sugar Mills Ltd. &
Anr. v. The Union of India & Anr. (1) the Court observed
that the Court in judging the reasonableness of a law, will
necessarily see, not only the surrounding circumstances but
all contemporaneous legislation passed as part of a single
scheme."
To the same effect is another decision of this Court in the
case of Kavalappara Kottarrathil Kochuni & Ors. v. The State
of Madras & Ors. (2) where this Court observed as follows :
"There must, therefore, be harmonious
balancing between the fundamental rights
declared by Article 19(1) and the social
control permitted by Article 19(5). It is
implicit in the nature of restrictions that no
inflexible standard can be laid down : each
case must be decided on its facts."
In the case of Jyoti Pershad v. The Administrator for the
Union Territory of Delhi (supra) at 147 Ayyangar, J.
speaking for the Court observed as follows :
"The criteria for determining the degree of
restriction on the right to hold property
which would be considered reasonable, are by
no means fixed or static, but must obviously
vary from age to age and be related to the
adjustments necessary to solve the problems
which communities face from time to time."
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 597.
(2) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887 at 928.
549
The fourth test which has been laid down by this Court to
judge the reasonableness of a restriction is to examine the
nature and extent, the purport and content of the right,
nature of the evil sought to be remedied by the, statute,
the ratio of harm caused to the citizen and the benefit to
be conferred on the person or the community for whose
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benefit the legislation is passed, urgency of the evil and
necessity to rectify the same. In short, a just balance has
to be struck between the restriction imposed and the social
control envisaged by clause (6) of Article 19. In the case
of Narendra Kumar & Ors. v. The Union ,of India & Ors.(1)
this Court observed as follows;
"In applying the test of reasonableness, the
Court has to consider the question in the
background of the facts and circumstances
under which order was made, taking into ac-
count the nature of the evil that was sought
to be remedied by such law, the ratio of the
harm caused to individual citizens by the
proposed remedy, to the beneficial effect
reasonably expected to result to the general
public. It will also be necessary to consider
in that connection whether the restraint
caused by the law is more than was necessary
in the interests of the general public."
In the case of Bachan Singh & Ors. v. State of
Punjab & OrS. (2) this Court observed as
follows
"The Court has in no uncertain terms laid down
the test for ascertaining reasonableness of
the restriction on the rights guaranteed under
Article 19 to be, determined by a reference to
the nature of the right said to have been
infringed, the purpose of the restrictions
sought to be imposed, the urgency of the evil
and the necessity to rectify or remedy it all
of which has to be balanced with the Social
Welfare or Social purpose sought to be
achieved. The right of the individual has
therefore to be sublimated to the larger
interest of the general public."
The fifth test formulated by this Court is that there must
be a ,direct and proximate nexus or a reasonable connection
between the other words, the Court has to see whether by
virtue of the restriction imposed on the right of the
citizen the object of the statute is really fulfilled or
frustrated. If there is a direct nexus between the
restriction and the object of the Act then a strong
presumption in favour of the constitutionality of the Act
will naturally arise. In the case of K. K. Kochuni
& Ors. v. State of Madras & Ors. (supra) this Court
,observed as follows :
"But the restrictions sought to be imposed
shall not be arbitrary, but must have
reasonable relation to the object sought to be
achieved and shall be in the interests of the
general public".
(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 375.
(2) [1971] 1 S.C.C. 713 at 718.
550
Same view was taken by this Court in the case of O. K. Ghosh
& Anr. v. E. X. Joseph(1) where Gajendragadkar, J. speaking
for the Court observed as follows
"A restriction can be said to be in the
interests of public order only if the
connection between the restriction and the
public order is proximate and direct.
Indirect or farfetched or unreal connection
between the restriction and public order would
not fall within the purview of the expression
’in the interests of public order’."
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Another test of reasonableness of restrictions is the
prevailing social values whose needs are satisfied by
restrictions meant to protect social welfare. In the case
of The State of Uttar Pradesh v. Kaushaliya & Ors.(2) this
Court while relying on one of its earlier decisions in the
case of State of Madras v. V. G. Row (supra) observed as
follows :-
"The reasonableness of a restriction depends
upon the values of life in a society, the
circumstances; obtaining at a particular point
of time when the restriction is imposed, the,
decree and the urgency of the evil sought to
be controlled and similar others".
We have deliberately not referred to the American cases
because the conditions in our country are quite different
and this Court need not rely on the American Constitution
for the purpose of examining the seven freedoms contained in
Article 19 because the social conditions and the habits of
our people are different. In this connection, in the case
of Jagmohan Singh v. The State of U.P.(3) this Court
observed as follows :
"So far as we are concerned in this country,
we do not have, in our constitution any
provision like the Ninth Amendment nor are we
at liberty to apply the test of reasonableness
with the freedom with which the Judges of the
Supreme Court of America are accustomed, to
apply ’the due process’ clause".
Another important test which has been enunciated by this
Court is that so, far as the nature of reasonableness is
concerned it has to be viewed not only from the point of
view of the citizen but the problem before the legislature
and the object which is sought to be achieved by the
statute. In other words the Courts must see whether the
social control envisaged in clause (6) of Article 19 is
being effectuated by the restrictions imposed on the
fundamental right. It is obvious that if the Courts look at
the restrictions only from the point of view of the citizen
who is affected it will not be a correct or safe approach in
as much as the restriction is bound to be irksome and
painful to the citizen even though it may be for the public
good. Therefore a just Wince must be struck in relation to
the restriction and the public good that is
(1) [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 789 at 705.
(2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 1002 at 1013.
(3) [1973] 1 S.C.C. 20 at 27.
551
done to the people at large. It is obvious that, however
important the right of it citizen or an individual may be,
it has to yield to the larger interests of the country or
the community. In the case of Jyoti Pershad v. The
Administrator for the Union Territory of Delhi (supra) this
Court observed as follows :
"Where the legislature fulfils its purpose and
enacts laws, which in its wisdom, is
considered necessary for the solution of what
after all is a very human problem and tests of
,reasonableness’ have to be, viewed in the
context of the issues which faced the
legislature. In the construction of such laws
and particularly in judging of their validity
the Courts have necessarily to approach it
from the point of view of furthering the
social interest which it is the purpose of the
legislation to promote, for the Courts are
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not, in these matters, functioning as it were
in vacuo, but as parts of a society which is
trying, by enacted law, to solve its problems and achieve
social concord and peaceful
adjustment and thus furthering the moral and
material progress of the community as a
whole".
It has also been held by this Court that in judging
reasonableness of restrictions the Court is fully entitled
to take into consideration matters of common report, history
of the times and matters of common knowledge and the
circumstances existing at the time of legislation. In this
connection, in the case of Mohd. Hanif Quareshi & Ors.
v. The State of Bihar (supra) the Court observed as
follows :
"It must be borne in mind that the legislature
is free to recognise degrees of harm and may
confine its restrictions to those cases where
the need is deemed to be the clearest and
finally that in order to sustain the
presumption of constitutionality the Court may
take into consideration matters of common
knowledge, matters of common report, the
history of the times and may, assume every
state of facts which can be conceived existing
at the time of legislation".
We do not mean to suggest that the tests laid down above are
completely exhaustive but they undoubtedly provide
sufficient guidelines to the Court to determine, the
question of reasonableness of a restriction whenever it
arises.
We would now like to examine the facts and circumstances of
the present case in the light of the principles enunciated
above in order to find whether or not restrictions imposed
by the Act on the rights of the appellants are unreasonable.
Before however going into this question, it may be necessary
to give a brief survey of the facts of the present case and
the history of the period preceding the Act as also the
economic position of the debtors prevailing at the time when
the Act was passed. It appears that in Civil Appeal No. 420
of 1973 the appellant was a stranger auction purchaser at a
Court sale. The creditor had obtained a mortgage decree
against the debtor which was
552
to be paid by instalments but as the debtor was not able to
pay the instalment, a decree for sale of the property was
passed by the Court and the property was auctioned and
purchased by the appellant who was not the decree-holder.
The rest of the facts are not disputed and need not be
mentioned in the judgment. In the other appeals also
decrees were obtained by the creditors against the debtors
and on failure of the debtors to pay the instalments the
property was sold and purchased at the auction by the
decree-holders themselves. It is also not disputed that
after the-purchase of the properties some of the appellants
had built houses, wanted trees and made other improvements
in the property. When however the debtors launched
proceedings under the Act for restoration of the possession
of the property on payment of the decretal amount the
appellants had challenged the Act on the ground that it was
unconsitutional as indicated above. The High Court has
pointed out in its judgment that though the Act was preceded
by Act 31 of 1958 under which benefits were conferred on the
debtors for debts incurred by the agriculturists before 14th
July, 1958 but as this date was considered to be inadequate
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by an amendment in 1961 the date was extended to 14th July,
1959. In spite of this concession all the debtors were not
able to pay off their debts as a result of which they lost
their property which was sold in execution of the decrees
brought by the creditors against them. It was also found by
the High Court that as many as 102867 suits were filed in
various Courts in the St-ate after 14-7-1958 and in most of
them no relief could, be given to the debtors because of the
expiry of the date. The very fact that most of the debtors
were not able to pay debts and save valuable properties
which were in their possession shows the pitiable condition
and the object poverty in which they live. The High Court
has also given the facts, figures and statistics to prove
the economic condition of the agriculturist debtors. In
this connection, the High Court has pointed out that the
All-India Rural Credit Committee’s Report, 1954 shows that
51.7% of the Rural families ill Kerala are indebted and out
of this, the proportion between cultivators and non-
cultivators is 58.6 and 38.6 respectively. The All India
average borrowing per rural family was Rs. 160. The
corresponding average for the cultivator and non-cultivator
was Rs. 21 0 and Rs.66 respectively. Of the
average borrowing per family of Rs. 309for rural
households, that of the cultivators was Rs. 358 per family
as against Rs. 171 for non-cultivators i.e. almost double of
that of the cultivators. Family expenditure accounted for
49.8% in the caseof medium cultivators, 49.2% for large
cultivators and 37.2% ’or big cultivators. The rural credit
survey of 1961-62 shows that 64% of the cultivatorsin
Kerala are indebted, which is said to be the second biggest
in India. The average of loan borrowed by the cultivators
in Kerala was Rs. 318/- per household as against Rs. 127 for
the non-cultivatorhousehold. The main purpose for the
borrowing was for householdexpenditure and the capital
expenditure on cultivation was of the agriculturist
households in India have increased from Rs. 750 crores in
1951-52 to 1034 crores in 1961-62.In other words, there has
been an increase of 38% in one decade.Although the level
of debt per household, is comparatively low inKerala and
so is the cost
553
of cultivation and yet the cultivator is living from hand to
mouth and is not able to make both ends meet. Consumer’s
needs and distressed circumstances assume an important role
in adding to total debt. The High Court has then referred
to the report of Dr. C. B. Memoria and has quoted therefrom.
Apart from these facts of history the entire matter was
considered exhaustively by a Constitution Bench of this
Court in the case of Fatehchand Himmatlal & Ors. v. State of
Maharashtra etc. (supra) where this Court referred to
several reports and Krishna Iyer, J. speaking for the Court
and quoting exhaustively from the various reports made the
following observations :
"Quite recently the _report published by the
All India Rural Debt and Investment Survey
relating to 1971-72 also depicts an
increasing trend in rural indebtedness. It
has been estimated that the aggregate
borrowings of all rural households on June 30,
1971 was Rs. 3921 crores, while the average
per rural household being Rs. 503/-.
Fortythree per cent of the rural families bad
reported borrowings."
Quoting Professor Panikar, this Court observed
as follows
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"Perhaps, it may be that the need for
borrowing is taken for granted. But the
undisguised fear that the oppressive burden of
debt on Indian farmers is the main hindrance
to progress is unanimous. There are many
writers who depict indebtedness of Indian
farmers as an unmixed evil. Thus, Alal Ghosh
quotes with approbation the French proverb
that ’Credit supports the farmer as th
e
hangman’s rope the hanged."
"The economic literature, official and other,
on agricultural and working class indebtedness
is escalating and disturbing. Indeed. the
’money-lender’ is an oppressive component of
the scheme."
"The condition of loan repayment are as
designed that the debtor is forced to sell his
produce to the mahajan at low prices and
purchase goods for consumption and production
at high prices. In many other ways take
advantage of the poverty and the helplessness
of farmers and exploit them...... Unable to
pay high interest and the principal, the
farmers even lose their land or live from
generation to generation under heavy debt."
"The harmful consequences or indebtedness are
economic and effect efficient farming, social
in that the ’relations between the loan given
and loan receivers take on the form of
relations of hatred,, poisoning the social
life."
Dr. C. B. Memoria in his book ’Agricultural Problems of
India’ has stressed that rural indebtedness has long been
one of the most pressing problems of India and observed as
follows :
5 54
"Rural people have been under heavy
indebtedness of the average money-lenders and
Sahukars. The burden of this debt has been
passed on from generation to generation inas-
much as the principal and interest went on
increasing for most of them. According to
Wold, ’The country has been in the grip of
Mahajans. It is the bond of debt that has
shackled agriculture."
Quoting the reasonableness of the restrictions
this Court observed as follows :
"There was much argument about the
reasonableness of the restriction on
moneylenders, not the general category as suck
but the cruel species the Legislature had to
confront and we have at great length gone into
the gruesome background of economic
inequities, since the test of reasonableness
is not to be applied in Vacuo but in the
context of life’s realities." "Money-lending
and trade-financing are indubitably ’trade’ in
the broad rubric, but our concern here is
blinkered by a specific pattern of tragic
operations with no heroes but only anti-heroes
and victims."
"Eminent economists and their studies have
been adverted to by the High Court and
reliance has been placed on a report of a
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Committee which went into the question of
relief from rural and urban indebtedness which
shows the dismal economic situation of the
rural and farmer and the labourers. It is not
merely the problem of agricultural and kindred
indebtedness, but the menacing proportions of
the moneylenders’ activities that have
attracted the attention of the Committee.
Giving facts and figures, which are alarming.
bearing on the indebtedness amongst industrial
workers and small holders, the Committee has
highlighted the exploitative role of money-
lenders and the high proportion of non-
institutional borrowing."
"The subject matter of the impugned
legislation is indebtedness, the beneficiaries
are petty farmers, manual workers and allied
categories steeped in debt and bonded to the
money lending tribe. So, in passing on its
constitutionality. the principles of
Developmental Juris prudence must come into
play. "
"A meaningful, yet minimal analysis of the
Debt Act, read in the light of the times and
circumstances which compelled its enactment,
will bring out the human setting of the
statute. The bulk of the beneficiaries are
rural indigents and the rest urban workers.
These are weaker sections for whom consti-
tutional concern is shown because
institutional credit instrumentalities have
ignored them. Money-lending may be ancilliary
to commercial activity and benignant in its
effects. but money-lending may also be ghastly
when it facilitates no
55 5
flow of trade, no movement of commerce, no
promotion of inter-course, no servicing of
business, but merely stagnates rural economy,
strangulates the borrowing community and turns
malignant in its repercussions."
"Every cause claims its martyr and if the law,
necessitated by practical considerations,
makes generalisations which hurt a few, it
cannot be helped by the Court. Otherwise, the
enforcement of the Debt Relief Act will turn
into an enquiry into scrupulous and
unscrupulous creditors, frustrating, through
endless litigation, the instant relief to the
indebted which is the promise of the
legislature."
Having regard to the history of economic legislation in
Kerala, the sad plight of the agriculturists debtors in the
State and the fact that the agriculturist debtors are,
living from hand to mouth and below subsistance level, the
observations made by this Court as quoted above apply to the
facts of the present case with full force because similar
conditions had prevailed in Maharashtra which led to the
passing of the Maharashtra Debt Relief Act.
We would now examine the particular provisions of the Act
which have been assailed before us to find out whether the
legislature seeks to strike a just balance between the
nature of the restrictions sought to be imposed on the
appellants and social purpose sought to be achieved by the
Act.
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The relevant portions of section 20 of the Act may be
extracted thus :
"20. Sales of immovable property to be set
aside in certain cases : (1) where any
immovable property in which an agriculturist
had an interest has been sold in execution of
any decree for recovery of a debt or sold
under the provisions of the Revenue Recovery
Act for the time being in force for the
recovery of a debt due to a banking company in
liquidation.
(a) on or after the 1st day of November,
1956; or
(b) before the 1st day of November, 1956,
but the possession of the said property has
not actually passed before the 20th day of
November, 1957, from the judgment debtor to
the purchaser, and the decree-holder is the
purchaser, then, notwithstanding anything in
the Limitation Act, 1963 or in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 or in the Revenue
Recovery Act for the time being in force, and
not withstanding that the sale has been
confirmed, such judgment debtor or the legal
representive of such judgment-debtor may
deposit one-half of the purchase money
together with the costs of execution where
such costs were not included in the purchase
money, and apply to the court within six
months from the date of the commencement of
the Act to set aside the sale of the property,
and the court shall, if satisfied that
10 - 1 146 SCI/77
556
the, applicant is an agriculturist, order the
sale to be set aside and the court shall
further order that the, balance of the pur-
chase money shall be paid in ten equal half-
yearly instalments together with the interest
accrued due on such balance outstanding, till
the date of payment of each instalment, at six
per cent per annum, the first instalment being
payable within a period of six months from the
date of the, order of the Court.
(2) Where any immovable property in which an
agriculturisthad an interest has been sold
in execution of any decree for arrears of rent
or michavaram
(a) during the period commencing on the 1st
day of November- , 1956 and ending with the
30th day of January, 1961 and the possession
of the said property has actually passed on or
before the 1st day of April, 1964, from the
judgment-debtor to the purchaser; or
(b) before the 1st day of November, 1956 and
the possession of the said property has
actually passed during the period commencing
on the 20th day of November, 1957 and ending
with the 1st day of April, 1964 from the judg-
ment-debtor to the purchaser, then,
notwithstanding anything contained in the
Limitation Act, 1963 or in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 and notwithstanding that the
sale has been confirmed, such judgment-debtor
or the legal representative of such judgment-
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debtor may deposit one-half of the purchase
money together with the costs of execution,
where such costs were not included in the
purchase money and apply to the Court within
six months from the date of the commencement
of this Act to set aside the sale of the
property, and the Court shall, if satisfied
that the applicant is an agriculturist, order
the sale to be set aside, and the Court shall
further order that the balance of the purchase
money shall be paid in ten equal half-yearly
instahnents together with the interest accrued
due on such balance outstanding till the date
of payment of each instalment, at six per cent
per annum, the first instalment being payable
within a period of six months from the date of
the order of the Court.
(3) Where any immovable property in which an
agriculturist had no interest has been sold in
execution of any decree for the recovery of a
debt or sold under the provisions of the
Revenue Recovey Act for the time being in
force for the recovery of a debt due to a-
banking company in liquidation on or after the
14th day of July, 1958 and the decree-holder
is not the purchaser, then, notwithstanding
anything in the Limitation Act, 1963 or in the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 or in the
Revenue Recovery Act for the time being in
force, and notwithstanding that the sale has
been confirmed, such judgment-debtor or the
legal representative of such judgmentdebtor
may, deposit the purchase money and apply to
the
557
Court within six months from the date of the
commencement of this Act to set aside the sale
of the property, and the court shall, if
satisfied that the applicant is an
agriculturist, order the sale to be set aside.
(4) No order under sub-section (1) or sub-
section (2) or sub-section (3) shall be passed
without notice to the decree holder, the
transferee of the decree, if any, the auction-
purchaser and any other person, who in the
opinion of the court would be affected by such
order and without affording them an
opportunity to be heard.
(5) Where improvements have been effected on
the property sold after the date of the sale
and before the notice under sub-section (4),
the value of such improvement as determined by
the court shall be deposited by the applicant
for payment to the auction-purchaser.
(6) An order under sub-section (1) or sub-
section (2) or sub-section (3) shall not be
deemed to affect the rights of bonafide
alienees of the auction-purchaser deriving
rights before the date of publication of the
Kerala Agriculturists’ Debt Relief Bill, 1963,
in the Gazette."
An analysis of this section shows that the statute seeks to
create three different categories of creditors who were
liable to restore property to the debtors under
circumstances mentioned in the section. In the first place,
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where the decree-holder has purchased the property at an
auction sale but has not been able to get possession of the
same, the court has been given power to set aside the sale
(1) if the applicant is an agriculturist and is prepared to
deposit half of the decretal amount immediately and pay the
balance in 10 equal half yearly instalments; (2) where the
purchaser who purchases the property at the auction sale is
a stranger and not a decree-holder the sale can be set aside
only on the judgment-debtor depositing the entire purchase
money within six months from the date of the commencement of
the Act. Sub-section (5) further provides that if any
improvements have been made by the purchaser, the debtor
will have to reimburse the purchaser for the same, (3) A
bonafide alienee who has purchased the property from the
auction-purchaser before the date of the publication of the
Act is completely exempted from the operation of the
provisions of the Act. The Act lays down a self-contained
procedure for the mode in which the sale is to be set aside
and the conditions on which this is to be done. Section 21
of the Act provides for an appeal to the Appellate Court
against any order passed under section. 20 and where an
order is passed by the Revenue Court an appeal lies to the
District Court. Thus the important features of the Act may
be summarised as follows
1. That even if the auction-purchaser was a
stranger and may have purchased the property
from a debtor at an auction sale, he is liable
to restore property on payment of the decretal
amount;
558
2. That if the purchaser has made any
improvement in the property the debtor has to
deposit the cost of the improvements in court
before the sale is set aside.
3. That the debtor has to exercise his
option of setting aside the sale within six
months from the date of the Act.
The avowed object of the Act seems to give substantial
relief to the agriculturist debtors in order to get back
their property and earn their livelihood. This is
undoubtedly a laudable object and the Act is a piece of
social legislation. As the decree-holder who had purchased
the property is fully compensated by being paid the amount
for which he had purchased the property, it cannot be said
that his right to hold the property has been completely
destroyed. The purchaser gets the property at a distress
sale and is fully aware of the pitiable conditions under
which the debtor was unable to pay the debt. In a
Constitution which is wedded to a social pattern of society
the purchaser must be presumed to have the knowledge that
any social legislation for the good of a particular
community or the people in general can be brought forward by
Parliament at any time. The Act, however, does not take
away the property of the purchaser without paying him due
compensation. It is true that section 20(2) (b) provides
for payment of the purchase money by instalments, but no
exception can be taken to this fact as in view of the
poverty of the debtor it is not possible for him to pay the
debt in a lump-sum and as the legislation is, for a
particular community the provision for payment by
instalments cannot be said to work serious injustice to the
decree-holder purchaser, A stranger auction purchaser has
been treated differently because he bad nothing to do with
the decree and is enjoined to return the property to the
agriculturist debtor on payment of entire amount in lumpsum
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without insisting on instalments. Thus, in short, the
position is that the object of the Act is to protect the
poor distressed agriculturist debtors from the clutches of
greedy creditors who have grabbed the properties of debtors
and deprived the debtors of their main source of sustenance.
Another object which is said to be fulfilled by the statute
is to eradicate and remove agricultural indebtedness in the
State by amelioration and improvement of the lot of debtors
by bringing them to the subsistence level and reducing their
borrowings. The Act does not provide for any drastic or
arbitrary procedure as the property is restored to the
debtor only on payment of the purchase money. The Maha-
rashtra Debt Relief Act of 1976 contained such more drastic
provisions and in spite of that it was upheld by this Court
as the restrictions were hold byus to be reasonable
restrictions in the interest of the general public. To
remove poverty by eradicating rural indebtedness is one of
the very important social purposes sought to be achieved by
our Constitution and it cannot be said that the invasion of
the right of the appellants is so excessive as to be branded
by the quality of unreasonableness. Having regard to the
economic conditions prevailing in Kerala before the passing
of the Act, it cannot be said that the
559
restrictions are in any way arbitrary or excessive or beyond
the requirements of the situation. Thus, all the tests laid
down by this, Court for determining reasonableness of a
restriction have been amply fulfilled in this case and we
are unable to find any constitutional infirmity in this case
on the ground that the Act is violative of Article 19(1)
(f). We are clearly of the opinion that the provisions of
the Act are reasonable restrictions within the meaning of
clause (6) of Article 19. It is true that Article 31
confers a guarantee on a citizen against deprivation of his
property except by authority of law. In other words, under
Article 31 the property of the citizen cannot be taken away
without. there being a valid law for that purpose. The law
must not only be valid but it also must not contravene any
of the provisions of Article 19 (1) (f). In the instant
case, in view of our findings that the Act is a valid piece
of legislation and amounts to a reasonable restriction
within the meaning of sub-clauses (5) and (6) of Article 19
the law passes the test of constitutionality. In these
circumstances, therefore, Article 31 is not infringed or
violated by the Act.
Before closing this part of the case we might mention an
argument faintly submitted by learned counsel for the
appellants, that having regard to the statement of objects
and reasons of the Act, the provisions of the Act appear to
be in direct conflict with the same. The statement of
objects and reasons as published in the Kerala Gazette dated
13th December, 1968 may be extracted thus:
"The Kerala Agriculturists Debt Relief Act,
1958 (31 of 1958) provides for some relief to
the indebted agriculturists in the State. But
the benefits conferred by that Act are
available only in respect of debts incurred by
the agriculturists before the 14th July, 1958,
on which date the Act came into force. Even
after this date the agricultural indebtedness
in the state, especially among the poor
sections of the people continued to be on the
increase due to various factors. Several
suits have been Mod in courts for the recovery
of debts accrued after 14-7-1958 from poor
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indebted agriculturists. It is considered
necessary to give some relief to such agri-
culturists also. It is also considered
necessary to limit the benefit to any indebted
agriculturist whose total amount of debts does
not exceed twenty thousand rupees. It is,
therefore, proposed to bring in a more
comprehensive legislation on the subject
repealing the existing enactment".
It was contended that the main object of the Act appears to
give relief only to those debtors who had filed suits for
recovery of debts after 14th July, 1958. But the Act
travels beyond the domain of the statement of objects ’and
reasons by giving a blanket power to the Court to set aside
the sales which have been completed even before the passing
of the Act. We are, however, unable to agree with this
argument because in view of the clear and unambiguous
provisions of the Act, it is not necessary for us, to delve
into the statement of objects and reasons of- the Act.
Moreover, though the main purpose may have been to give
relief to the agriculturist debtors
560
after 14-7-1958 the object was to bring forward a
comprehensive legislation on various aspects of the matter
in order to give relief to the indebted agriculturists.
This object is mentioned in the very first part of the
statement of objects and reasons. The words clearly show
that the Act was comprehensive in nature and was not
confined to any particular situation. In these
circumstances, therefore, the contention of learned counsel
for the appellants on this score is over-ruled.
This brings us to the second branch of the argument relating
to the applicability of Article 14 of the Constitution of
India. In this connection, Mr. Krishnamoorthy Iyer
submitted in the first place, that the special treatment
afforded to the debtors under section 20 of the Act is
wholly discriminatory and is violative of Article 14.
Secondly, it was argued on behalf of the appellants in Civil
Appeal No. 420 of 1973 that they being stranger auction
purchasers were selected for hostile discrimination as
against a bonafide alienee who has been given complete
exemption from the operation of the provisions of the Act.
It is now well settled that what Article 14 forbids is
hostile discrimination and not reasonable classification.
Equality before ’law does not mean that the same set of law
should apply to all persons under every circumstance
ignoring differences and. disparties between men and things.
A reasonable classification is inherent in the very concept
of equality, because all persons living on this earth are
not alike and have different problems. Some may be wealthy;
some may be poor; some may be educated; some I may be
uneducated some may be highly advanced and others may be
economically backward. It is for the State to make a
reasonable classification which must fulfil two conditions:
(1) The classification must he founded on an intelligible
differentia which distinguishes persons or things that are
grouped together from others left out of the group. (2) The
differentia must have a reasonable nexus to the object
sought to be achieved by the statute. In the case of Shri
Ram Krishna Dalmia v. Shri Justice S. R. Tendolkar & Ors.
(1). The Court after considering a large number of its
previous decisions observed as follows :
"It is now well established that while Article
14 forbids class legislation, it does not
forbid reasonable classification for the
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purposes of legislation. In order, however,
to, pass the test of permissible
classification two conditions must be
fulfilled, namely, (i) that the classification
must be founded on an intelligible-
differentia which distinguishes persons or
things that are grouped together from others
left out of the group; and (ii) that that
differentia must have a rational relation to
the object sought to be achieved by the
statute in question. The classification may
be founded on different basis, namely,
geographical, or according to objects or
occupations or the like, what is necessary is
that there must be a nexus between the basis
of classification and the object of the Act
under consideration".
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 279 at 296-97.
561
This case has been relied upon in a large number of cases
right from 1959 upto this date. In the case of State of
Kerala & Anr. v. N. M. Thomas & Ors. (supra) one of us
(Fazal Ali, J.) while delivering the concurring judgment
observed as follows regarding the various aspects of the
concept of equality :
"It is also equally well-settled by several
authorities of this Court that Article 16 is
merely an incident of Article 14. Article 14
being the genus is of universal application
whereas Article 16 is the species and seeks to
obtain equality of opportunity in the services
under the State. The theory of reasonable
classification is implicit and inherent in the
concept of equality for there can hardly be
any country where all the citizens would be
equal in all respects. Equality of
opportunity would naturally mean a fair
opportunity not only to one section or the
other but to all sections by removing the
handicaps if a particular section of the
society suffers from the same. It has never
been disputed in judicial pronouncements by
this Court as also of the various High Courts
that Article 14 permits reasonable
classification. But what Article 14 or
Article 16 forbid is hostile discrimination
and not reasonable classification. In other
words, the idea of classification is implicit
in the concept of equality because equality
means equality to all and not merely to the
advanced and educated sections of the society.
It follows, therefore, that in order to
provide equality of opportunity to all
citizens of our country, every class of
citizens must have a sense of equal
participation in building up an egalitarian
society, where there, is peace and plenty,
where there is complete economic freedom and
there is no pestilence or poverty, no
discrimination and oppression, where there is
equal opportunity to education, to work, to
earn their livelihood so that the goal of
social justice is achieved".
In view of these authorities let us see whether the
selection of the agriculturists debtors by the State for the
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purpose of improving and ameliorating their lot can be said
to be a permissible classification. While dealing with the
first argument we have already pointed out the economic
conditions prevailing in the State and the abject poverty in
which the agriculturist debtors were living. We have also
referred to the Directive Principles of State Policy as
contained in the Constitution and have held that it is the
duty of the legislature to implement these directives.
Having regard, therefore, to the poverty and economic
backwardness of the agriculturist debtors and their
miserable conditions in which they live, it cannot be said
that if they are treated as a separate category or class
for preferential treatment in public interest then the said
classification is unreasonable. It is also clear that in
making the classification the legislature cannot be expected
to provide an abstract symmetry but the classes have to be
set apart according to the necessities and exigencies of the
society as dictated by experience and surrounding
circumstances. All that is necessary is that the classify-
562
cation should not be arbitrary, artificial or illusory.
Having regard to the circumstances mentioned above, we are
unable to hold that the classification does not rest upon
any real and substantial distinction bearing a reason-able
and just relation to the thing in respect of which the same
is made. This view was taken in the case of State of West
Bengal v. Anwar Ali Sarkar.(1) In our opinion, both the
conditions of reasonable classification indicated above are
fully satisfied in this case. For these reasons, we hold
that section 20 of the Act is not violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution and reject the first branch of the argument
on this point.
It was lastly contended that the appellant in Civil Appeal
No. 420 of 1973 (who originally was the appellant and after
his heirs have been brought on record appellants No. 1-8)
had been selected for hostile discrimination as against a
bonafide alienee who also being in the same position has
been exempted from the provisions of the Act. We have given
our anxious consideration to this argument and we find that
it is not tenable. It is well settled that before a person
can claim to be discriminated against another he must show
that all the other persons are similarly situate or equally
circumstanced. The pleading of the appellant does not at
all contain any facts to show how the two are similarly
situate. Unless the appellant is able to establish that he
is equated with the bonafide alienee in all and every
respect, Article 14 will have no application. In other
words, discrimination violative of Article 14 can only take
effect if there is discrimination between equals and not
where unequals are being differently treated vide State of
J & K v. T. N. Khosa & Anr. (2).
In the case of Chiranjit Lal Chowdhuri v. The Union of India
& Ors (3)this Court observed as follows:-
"It must be admitted that the guarantee
against the denial of equal protection of the
laws does not mean that identically the same
rules of law should be made applicable to all
persons within the territory of India in spite
of differences of circumstances and
conditions. As has been said by the Supreme
Court of America, equal protection of laws is
a pledge of the protecting of equal laws".
Yick Co. V. Hopkins (23) 118 U.S. at 369 and
this means "subjection to equal laws applying
like to all in the same situation". Southern
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Railway Co. v. Greene (24) 216 U.S. 400, 412.
fit other words, there should be no
discrimination between one person and another
it as regards the subject-matter of the
legislation their position is the same".
A similar view was taken in the case of Southern Railway Co.
v. Greene (supra) where the Supreme Court observed as
follows :-
"The legislature undoubtedly has a wide field
of choice in determining and classifying the
subject of its laws, and if the
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 284 at 321.
(2) [1974] 1 S.C.R. 771 at 783.
(3)[1950] S.C.R. 869 at 911.
5 63
law deals alike with all of a certain class,
it is normally not obnoxious to the charge of
denial of equal protection; but the
classification should never be arbitrary. It
must always rest upon some real and
substantial distinction bearing a reasonable
and just relation to the things in respect of
which the classification is made, and
classification made without any substantial
basis should be regarded as invalid".
To the same effect is another decision of this
Court in the case of The State of West Bengal
v. Anwar Ali Sarkar (supra) where this Court
observed as follows :
"It can be taken to be well settled that the
principle underlying the ’guarantee in Article
14 is not that the same rules of law should
be, applicable to all persons within the
Indian territory or that the same remedies
should be made available to them irrespective,
of differences of circumstances. It only
means that all persons similarly circumstanced
shall be treated alike both in privileges
conferred and liabilities imposed. Equal laws
would have to be applied to all in the same
situation, and there, should be no
discrimination between one person and another
if as regards the subjectmatter of the
legislation their position is substantially
the same."
Having regard to the nature of the rights acquired by the
stranger auction purchaser and the bonafide alienee it
cannot be said that they are similarly situate or happen to
be in exactly the same position. So far as the stranger
auction purchaser like the appellant is concerned three
facts stare in the face. First, the stranger auction
purchaser participates in the proceedings in execution of
the decree passed against the debtor and which culminate in
the auction sale which is knocked down in favour of the
purchaser. Thus, such a purchaser has a clear notice of the
circumstances under which the decree was passed as also the
fact that the property sold was the property of the debtor.
If, therefore, the legislature at a later stage for the
amelioration of the lot of the debtors passes a law to
restore the property to the debtor the stranger auction
purchaser cannot be heard to complain. In fact, his
position is more or less the same as that of the decree-
holder. Second, the stranger auction purchaser knows that
be has purchased the property at a distress sale and the
element of innocence is completely eliminated. Third, under
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the provisions of the Act even if the property is restored
to the stranger auction purchaser unlike the decree-holder
the purchaser is entitled to get the entire purchase money
in lump-sum including the cost before parting with the
possession of the property. This clearly distinguishes the
case from that of the decree-holder purchaser and shows that
he is not seriously prejudiced. On the other hand, a
bonafide alienee does not purchase the property under a
distress sale but under sale which is negotiated with the
vendor on the terms acceptable to the purchaser. Secondly a
bonafide alienee has absolutely no notice of the debt or the
debtor or the circumstance
564
under which the decree was passed and the property was
purchased by the vendor.
A bonafide alience acquires a new title under a negotiated
and completed sale and in case the sale is allowed to be re-
opened by the Act it will lead to complicated questions
which may cloud the real issues, and frustrate the object of
the Act. That apart even our common law as a matter of
public policy protects the interests of a bonafide
transferee for value without notice against voidable
transactions. For instance, transfers which could be set
aside under section 53 of the Transfer of Property Act or
under section 27(b) of the Specific Relief Act, cannot be
set aside or enforced as against such transferees. The Act
follows more or less the same policy and protects the
bonafide alienee because his purchase is absolutely
innocent. While it is true that the provisions of the Act
operate rather harshly on the stranger auction purchaser but
the rigours of the law have been softened by the fact that
under the provisions of the Act the auction purchaser gets
his full purchase money with costs for any improvement that
he may have made, At any rate, any discomfort that he might
have suffered as an individual has to be sublimated to the
public good of the community at large, in the instant case,
the poor agriculturist debtors. ’Indeed if the bonafide
alienee was also brought within the fold of the Act then the
classification might have been arbitrary end unreasonable so
as to smack of a draconian measure and might have exceeded
the permissible limits of discrimination contemplated by
Article 14.
For the reasons given above we are unable to accept the
argument of Mr. Krishnamoorty Iyer that the appellant has
been selected for hostile discrimination under the
provisions of section 20 of the Act. The argument is over-
ruled. The result is that the judgment of the High Court is
upheld in all the cases and the appeals are dismissed. In
the peculiar circumstances of these cases, we leave the
parties to bear their own costs in this Court.
SHINGHAL, J. These appeals against the judgment of the
Kerala High Court dated August 17, 1972 are by certificate
under article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution as it stood
before the Constitution (Thirtieth Amendment) Act, 1972.
Appeals Nos. 442-445 (N) of 1973 arise out of the dismissal
of some petitions on the basis of the Judgment in the other
petitions which is the subject-matter of appeal No. 420(N)
of 1973. It will therefore be enough to refer to the facts
which have given rise to that appeal.
Civil Appeal No. 420(N) of 1973 relates to the dismissal of
O.Ps. No. 5576 and 6466 of 1970 and C.R.P. No. 124 of 1971.
O.P. No. 5576 of 1970 was filed by Pathumma who had obtained
a decree in 1953, on the basis of a registered deed of
mortgage, and had brought about the sale of some immovable
properties. of the judgment-debtors who were agriculturists,
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as they were not able to pay the instalments
565
which were payable under the debt-relief legislation which
was then in force. The properties were purchased by
Pathumma ’benami, in the name of his son. Possession of the
properties was taken from the judgment-debtors during the
period May 16, 1961 to March 15, 1967. Pathumma’s son
executed a deed of surrender in his father’s favour on April
18, 1969 who built a house and effected valuable
improvements on the lands. In the meantime, the Kerala
Agriculturists’ Debt Relief Act, 1970, hereinafter referred
to as the Act, came into force, and the judgment-debtors
filed a petition for setting aside the sale and redelivery
of properties under section 20(7). Pathumma therefore chal-
lenged the constitutional validity of section 20 of the Act
by O.P. No. 5576 of 1970.
In O. P. No. 6466 of 1970 the judgment debtors, who were
agriculturists, committed defaults in the payment of the
instalments for the discharge of the debt under the debt
relief law which was then in force. The creditor purchased
the properties under a Court sale on October 18, 1964, which
was duly confirmed, and took delivery of the lands. The
judgment-debtors applied for setting the sale aside and for
redelivery of the lands, when the Act came into force. The
auction purchaser, in his turn, filed the aforesaid writ
petition to challenge the constitutional validity of section
20 of the Act.
In C. R. P.- No. 124 of 1971 the decree-holder purchased the
land of the judgment-debtor, who was an agriculturist. The
sale was confirmed on July 5, 1968. The delivery of the
land was taken on August 19, 1968 and the decree-holder made
substantial improvements. The judgment-debtor applied for
redelivery of the land under the provisions of the Act and
his petition was allowed. On appeal, the District Judge
remanded the case for evaluating the cost of the
improvements. While the matter was pending at that stage,
the aforesaid petition (124 of 1971) was filed to challenge
the constitutional validity of the relevant provisions of
the Act.
As the High Court upheld the validity of section 20 of the
Act by the judgment dated August 17, 1972, and also
dismissed the petitions which are the subject of the other
appeals Nos. 442-445, the appellants have come up to this
Court as aforesaid.
The controversy in these appeals thus relates to the
constitutional validity of section 20 of the Act which
provides, inter alia, for the setting aside of the sale of
immovable property in execution of any decree for the
recovery of a debt.
The section reads as follows,-
20-Sales of property to be set aside in
certain cases.-- (1) Where any immovable
property in which an agriculturist had an
interest has been sold in execution of any
decree for recovery of a debt or sold under
the provisions of the Revenue Recovery Act for
the time being in force for the recovery of a
debt due to a banking company in liquidation-
(a) on or after the 1st day of November,
1956; or
566
(b) before the 1st day of November, 1956,
but the possession of the said property has
not actually passed before the 20th day of
November, 1957, from the judgment-debtor to
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the purchaser, and the decreeholder is the
purchaser, then notwithstanding anything in
the Limitation Act, 1963, or in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, or in the Revenue
Recovery Act for the time being in force, and
notwithstanding that the sale has been
confirmed, such judgment-debtor or the legal
representative of such judgmentdebtor may
deposit one-half of the purchase money
together with the costs of execution where
such costs were not included in the purchase
money, and apply to the court within six
months from the date of the commencement of
this Act to set aside the sale of the
property, and the court shall, if satisfied
that the applicant is an agriculturist, order
the sale to be set aside, and the court shall
further order that the balance, of the
purchase money shall be paid in ten equal
halfyearly instalments together with the
interest accrued due on such balance
outstanding tiff the date of payment of each
instalment, at six per cent per annum, the
first instalment being payable within a period
of six months from the date of the order of
the court.
(2) Where any immovable property in which an
agriculturist had an interest has been sold in
execution of any decree for arrears of rent or
michavaram--
(a) during the period commencing on the 1st
day of November, 1956 and ending with the 30th
day of January, 1961 and the possession of the
said property has actually passed on or before
the 1st day of April, 1964, from the judgment-
debtor to the purchaser; or
(b) before the 1st day of November, and the,
possession of the said property has actually
passed during the period commencing on the
20th day of November, ’1957 and ending with
the 1st day of April, from the judgment-debtor
to the purchaser;
then, notwithstanding anything contained in
the limitation Act, 1963 or in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, and notwithstanding
that the sale has been confirmed, such
judgment-debtor or the legal representative of
such judgment-debtor may deposit one-half of
the purchase money together with the costs of
execution, where such costs were not included
in the purchase money and apply to the court
within six months from the date of the
commencement of this Act to set aside the sale
of the property, and the court shall, if
satisfied that the applicant is an
agriculturist,
567
order the sale to be, set aside, and the court
shall further order that the balance of the
purchase money shall be paid in ten equal
half-yearly instalments together with the
interest accrued due on such balance
outstanding till the date of payment of each
instalment, as six per cent per annum, the
first instalment being payable within a period
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of six months from the date of the order of
the court.
(3) Where any immovable property in which an agricul-
turist had an interest has been sold in execution of any
decree for the recovery of a debt, or sold under the provi-
sions of the Revenue Recovery Act for the time being inforce
for the recovery of a debt due to a banking company in
liquidation, on or after the 16th day of July, 1958 and the
decree-holder is not the purchaser, then, notwithstanding
anything in the, Limitation Act, 1963 or in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 or in the Revenue Recovery Act for the
time being in force, and notwithstanding that the sale has
been confirmed, such judgment-debtor or the legal represen-
tative of such judgment-debter may, deposit the purchase
money and apply to the court within six months from the date
of the commencement of this Act to set aside the sale of the
property, and the court shall, if satisfied that the
applicant is an agriculturist, order the sale to be set
aside,
(4)No order under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) or
sub-section (3) shall be passed without notice to the
decree-holder, the transferee of the decree, if any, the
auctionpurchaser and any other person who in the opinion of
the court would be affected by such order and without
affording them an opportunity to be heard.
(5)Where improvements have been effected on the property
sold after the date of the sale and before the notice under
sub-section (4), the value of such improvement as determined
by the court shall be deposited by the applicant for payment
to the auction-purchaser.
(6)An order under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) or
sub-section (3) shall not be deemed to affect the rights of
bonafide alienees of the auction-purchaser deriving rights
before the date of publication of the Kerala Agriculturists’
Debt Relief Bill, 1963, in the Gazette.
(7)Where a sale is set aside under sub-section (1) or sub-
section (2) or sub-section (3), in case the applicant is out
of possession of the property, the court ’shall order re-
delivery of the property to him.
(8)In respect of any sale of immovable property which has
not been confirmed, the judgment-debtor if he is an agri-
culturist shall be entitled to pay the decree debt in
accordance
568
with the provisions of sections 4 and 5 and on the deposit
of the first instalment thereof, the sale shall be set
aside.
(9)Where the judgment-debtor fails to deposit a of the
subsequent instalments, the decree-holder shall be entitled
to execute the decree and recover the defaulted instalment
or instalments in accordance with the provisions of this
Act.
Explanation 1-For the purposes of this section,-
(a) the expression "court" shall include a
revenue court or authority exercising powers
under the Revenue Recovery Act for the time
being in force; and
(b) the expression "judgment-debtor" shall
include-
(i) a debtor from whom money was due to a
banking company in liquidation; and
(ii)a person from whom the entire amount due
under a decree has been realised by sale of
his immovable property.
Explanation II.-For the purposes of this
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section, an applicant shall be deemed to be an
agriculturist if he would have been such an
agriculturist but for the sale of the
immovable property in respect of which he has
made the application."
It has beenargued by counsel for the appellants that
section 20 is invalid as theLegislature of the Kerala
State was not competent to make the Act. It has been
urged that section 20 can not be said to fall within the
purview of Entry 30 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution inasmuch as it deals with a debt which had
been paid off by sale of the property in execution of the
decree against the agriculturist and was no longer in
existence.
It is article 246 of the Constitution which deals with the
subject-matter of the laws to be made by the Parliament
and the Legislatures of the States. Clause (3) of the
Article provides that subject to clauses (1) and (2) of
the Article (with which we are not concerned)the
Legislature of a State has "exclusive power to make laws with
respect to any of the matters enumerated in List II."Entry
30 of the List specifically states the following matters as
being within the competence of the State Legislature,
"30-Money-lending and money-lenders; relief of agricultural
indebtedness."
It is therefore quite clear, and is beyond controversy, that
the Act which provides for "the relief of indebted
agriculturists in the State of Kerala" is within the
competence of the State Legislature. Clause (1) of section
2 of the Act defines an "agriculturist", clause (4) defines
a "debt", clause (5) defines a "debtor" and the two Explana-
tions to section 20 define the expressions "court", and
"judgment-debtor" and give an extended meaning to the
expression "agriculturist"
569
so as to include a person who would have been an
agriculturist but for the sale of his immovable property.
The other sections provide for the settlement of the
liabilities and payment of the debt (along with the
interest) of an agriculturist, including the setting aside
of the sale in execution of a decree, and the bar of suits’
The subject-matter of the Act is therefore clearly within
the purview of Entry 30 and counsel for the appellants have
not been able to advance any argument which could justify a
different view. Reference in this connection may be made to
this Court’s decision in Fatehchand Himmatlal and others v.
State of Maharashtra etc.(1) It has however been argued that
the entry would not permit the making of a law relating to
the debt of an agriculturist which has already been paid by
sale of his property in execution of a decree and is not a
subsisting debt.
It is true that section 20 of the Act provides for the
setting aside of any sale of immovable property in which an
agriculturist had’ an interest, if the property had been
sold, inter alia, in execution of any decree for the
recovery of a debt (a) on or after November 1, 1956, or (b)
before November 1, 1956, but possession whereof has not
actually passed before November 20, 1957, from the judgment-
debtor to the purchaser, and the decree-holder is the
purchaser, on depositing one-half of the purchase money
together with the cost of the execution etc. The section
therefore deals with a liability which had ceased and did
not subsist on the date ’when the Act came into force. But
there is nothing in Entry 30 of List 11 to show that it will
not be attracted and would not enable the State Legislature
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to make a law simply because the debt of the agriculturist
had been paid off under a distress sale. The subject-matter
of the entry is "relief of agricultural indebtedness" and
there is no justification for the contention that it is
confined only to subsisting indebtedness and would not cover
the necessity of providing relief to those agriculturists
who had lost their immovable property by court sales in
execution of the decrees against them and had been rendered
destitute. Their problem was in fact more acute and
serious, for they had lost the wherewithal of their
livelihood and reduced to a state of penury. An
agriculturist does not cease to be an agriculturist merely
because he has lost his immovable property, and it cannot be
said that the State is not interested in providing him
necessary relief merely because he has lost his immovable
property. On the other hand his helpless condition calls
for early solution and it is only natural that the State
Legislature should think of rehabilitating him by providing
the necessary relief under an Act of the nature under
consideration in these cases. There is in fact nothing in
the wordings of Entry 30 to show that the relief
contemplated by it must necessarily relate to any subsisting
indebtedness and would not cover the question of relief to
those who have lost the means of their livelihood because of
the delay in providing them legislative relief. It is well-
settled, having been decided by this Court in Navinchandra
Mafatlal v. The Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay City,(2)
that "in construing words in a constitutional enactment
conferring legislative power the most liberal construction
should be put upon the words
(1) [1977] 2 S.C.R. 828.
(2) (1955) 1 S.C.R. 829.
570
so that the same may have effect in their widest amplitude".
This has to be so lest a legislative measure may be lost for
a mere technicality.
The High Court has made, a mention of the earlier
legislation in the same field. It has also made a reference
to Act 31 of 1958 which was quite similar to the Act and has
pointed out how the Amending Act of 1961 became infructuous
because of the unintended delay in amending it suitably.Great
distress was therefore caused to the indebted
agriculturistsbecause of the sale of their immovable
proper-ties by court auctions.Such agriculturists were
rendered completely helpless and it was onlyproper
that the State Legislature should have thought of coming to
their rescue by enacting a law with the avowed intention of
providing them some relief from the difficulties in which
they were enmeshed as a result of their indebtedness, by
devising the necessary means for the restoration of their
immovable properties. The plight of those agriculturists
was in fact worse than that of an agriculturist who, while
he was groaning under the burden of his debt, had the
satisfaction of having his immovable property with him as a
possible means of redeeming the future some day. If ,he
Legislature could provide relief to agriculturists against
their subsisting debts, by legislation under Entry 30, there
is no reason why it should find itself disabled from doing
so in the, case of these agriculturists who had lost their
immovable properties in the process of the liquidation of
their debts by court sales even though their case called for
greater sympathy and speedier relief.
It has next been argued that section 20 of the Act is
unconstitutional as it impinges on the fundamental right of
the decree-holder, or other auction-purchaser, under article
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19(1) (f) of the Constitution to "hold" the property
acquired by him at a Court sale and of which he had become
the owner by the express provision of section 65 of the Code
of Civil Procedure. It has thus been argued that by virtue
of article 13 of the Constitution, section 20 is void as it
is inconsistent with, or is in derogation of, a fundamental
right.
As has been urged on behalf of the State, an answer to this
argument is to be found in clause (5) of Article 19 which
specifically provides, inter alia, that nothing in sub-
clause (f) of clause (1) of article 19 shall "prevent the
State from making any law imposing reasonable restrictions
on the exercise of any of the. rights" conferred by the said
sub-clause in the interest of the general public. It cannot
be gainsaid that agriculturists, and even indebted
agriculturists, from the bulk or, at any rate, a
considerable part of the rural population, in an essentially
rural economy like ours, and so if a restriction is
reasonable in their interest, it would squarely fall within
the purview of clause (5). Reference in this connection may
be made to this Court’s decision in Kavalappara Kattarathil
Kochuni and Others v. The State of Madras anti others(1) and
State of Andhra Pradesh v. Khapperelli Chinna Venkata
Chalamayya Sastri(2) where it has been held that the redress
(1 [1960] 3 S.C.R. 837.
(2) [1963] 1 S.C.R. 155.
571
of a real and genuine grievance of a section of the
community is a measure in the interest of the general
public.
As has been stated, the High Court has made a reference to
the history of the debt relief legislation and the facts and
circumstances which led to the passing of the Act.
Thousands of suits were pending against indebted
agriculturists in various courts and immovable _properties
of a large number of agriculturists had been sold rendering
them completely helpless. So if the State Legislature
passed the Act, in the interest of the general public, to
provide relief of the nature mentioned in section 20 in view
of the rampant agricultural indebtedness in the State, and
the urgency of the malady, it does not require much argument to
hold that the restriction provided by that
section was clearly "reasonable". Even so, the section
makes provision for the repayment of the purchase money, the
costs of the execution and the improvements made by the
purchaser. The restriction provided under section 20 is
therefore reasonable in every sense and the High Court
rightly rejected the argument to the contrary.
It has lastly been argued that section 20 of the Act is
violative of article 14 of the Constitution as it
discriminates without reason between-
(a) a decree-holder, auction-purchaser and a
stranger auction-purchaser (sub-section (1)
(b) and subsection (3) ), and
(b) an auction-purchaser at a court sale and
a bona fide alienee of an auction-purchaser
[sub-section (6) ].
What Article 14 guarantees is the right to equality in
directing that the State shall not deny to any person
equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws
within the country. The prohibition is however not
absolute in as much as this Court has taken the view that it
incorporates the doctrine of "classification" (See Makhan
Lal Malhotra and others v. The Union of India(1). It is
therefore equally well settled that Article 14 will not
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prevent the making of a law which gives rise to a
classification based on an intelligible differentia having a
rational relation with the object to be achieved thereby.
Now sub-section (1) of section 20 provides that if a decree-
holder is the purchaser at a court sale, the judgment-debtor
(or his legal representative) may deposit one-half of the
purchase money together with the costs of execution (where
the costs were not included in the purchase money) and apply
to the court within six months from the date of commencement
of the Act to set aside the sale, and the court shall set
aside the sale and make an order for the payment of the
balance of the purchase money in ten equal half-yearly
instalments together with accrued interest on the balance
till the date of payment of each instalment at six per cent
per annum. As against this, sub-section (3) provides that
if the decree-holder is not the purchaser, the judgment-
debtor (or his legal representative) may deposit the
purchase
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 120.
11-1146SCI/77
572
money and make an application for setting aside the sale and
the court shall set aside the sale. The treatment to a
decree-holder purchaser is therefore different and is less
advantageous than the treatment to a. purchaser who is not a
decree-holder. The decree-holder purchaser is treated as a
different class (for it is well-known that) decree-holders
very often exploit their debtors in many ways and sales to
them are generally viewed with suspicion and disfavour so
much so that, as has been expressly provided in Order XXI
rule 72 of the Code of Civil Procedure, it is not even
permissible for a decree-holder to bid for or purchase the
property without the express permission of the Court. The
decree-holder purchaser has thus rightly been treated as a
class by himself and that classification obviously has the
object of benefiting the agriculturist judgment-debtor by
permitting him to deposit only half. the purchase money and
paying the balance in instalments. It cannot therefore be
said that the impugned provision violates article 14 of the
Constitution on that account. There is also justification
for: treating an auction-purchaser at a court sale
differently from a bona fide alienee of the auction
purchaser who derived his rights before the date of
publication of the Kerala Agriculturists’ Debt Relief Bill
1968, in the State Gazette. Such an alienee of the auction-
purchaser could not possibly have been aware of the hazards
of purchasing the property of an indebted agriculturist at
the time of the purchase, and it is futile to contend that
if the Legislature has protected his interest by an express
provision in sub-section (6) of section 20, it has thereby
made a hostile discrimination against the auction-purchasers
as a class.
There is thus no force in the arguments which have been
advanced on behalf of the appellants and the appeals are
dismissed with costs.
P. B. R. Appeals dismissed-
573