Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VIJ RESINS PVT. LTD. & ANR. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF JAMMU & KASHMIR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/05/1989
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1629 1989 SCR (3) 257
1989 SCC (3) 115 JT 1989 Supl. 214
1989 SCALE (1)1303
ACT:
Articles 19(1)(f), 31(2) and 31(2A)--Constitutional
validity of Jammu & Kashmir Extraction of Resin Act, 1986:
Jammu & Kashmir Extraction of Resin Act, 1986--Sections 3, 4
and 5--Whether constitutionally valid--Resin--Ban on extrac-
tion by Private persons--Right to appropriate usufruct of
trees--Held right to property--Compensation payable before
property could be taken.
HEADNOTE:
These three Writ Petitions have been filed by three
different Private Limited Companies and their share-holders
challenging the vires of the Jammu & Kashmir Extraction of
Resin Act (7 of 1986). The circumstances that led to the
filing of these Writ Petitions may be stated thus:
The State of Jammu & Kashmir with a view to industria-
lise the under-developed State formulated schemes and invit-
ed outsiders to set up industries in the State and as a
stimulus the Government offered land and other facilities.
The Petitioner-Companies, in response to the said invitation
went to the State of Jammu & Kashmir and negotiated the
arrangements, as a result of which each Company had obtained
a right to collect resin gum to process the same for indus-
trial purposes.
The Petitioner Company in Writ Petition No. 751 of 1986
had obtained under Government order dated 27.4.79 allotment
of 10 to 12 lacs of blazes annually for extraction of resin
from the forests in Poonch and Rambam Divisions for a period
of 10 years. Government order granting rights had been made
in favour of the Petitioner Company in W.P. No. 794 of 1986.
The Petitioner-Company in W.P. No. 798 of 1986 was a proces-
sor only and had undertaken to work as a tapper. The orders
passed in favour of these Companies referred to above were
challenged before this Court as being violative of Arts. 14
and 19 of the Constitution on the ground that grant of
forest rights to the Petitioners were arbitrary, mala fide
and not in public interest. It was contended that State
largesse had been created in favour of the Petitioners at
the cost of State Exchequer and the grant created monopoly.
This Court dismissed the Writ Petitions holding that there
was no substance
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258
in any of the contentions advanced by the Petitioners.
Kasturi Lal Lakshmi Reddy v. State of Jammu & Kashmir &
Anr., [1980] 3 SCR 1336.
The order made in favour of the Petitioner in W.P. No.
794 of 1986 and incorporated in the agreement dated
6.11.1978 was also challenged but this Court rejected the
Petition.
Brij Bhushan & Ors. v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Ors.,
[1986] 2 SCC 354.
While the Petitioners were carrying on with the business
contracted for, Governor’s Act of 1986 came into force. The
provisions of the said Act particularly ss. 3, 4 and 5 have
been impugned in these Petitions.
It is contended on behalf of the Petitioners that Gov-
ernment orders and contracts under which they have got the
right to exploit or utilize the particular forest product
amounts to "property" and they are entitled to protection
thereof against expropriation and in case no compensation
was provided, the provisions of the Act are hit for contra-
vening the fundamental right guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(g)
which confers upon them the right to carry on any occupa-
tion, trade or business. On the other hand the case put
forward by the State is that the benefits and privileges
conferred on the three Petitioners either under contract or
under Government orders did not constitute property and by
the provisions of the Act no transfer of such property has
taken place.
Allowing the Writ Petition, this Court,
HELD: The statutory scheme of Jammu & Kashmir Extraction
of Resin Act, 1986 is to extinguish private rights both in
respect of Government owned trees as also trees in private
ownership and to vest those1 rights in the State Government
or the Government Company. [271A-B]
The Executive grant or the contract created interest in
the Petitioners and there is no room to doubt that by such
process in favour of the Petitioners property right had been
created. The interests which are in dispute before this
Court do constitute property entitled to protection under
Art. 19(1)(1) and are covered by Art. 31(2). [267G; 268A-B]
259
Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. The International Airport
Authority of India & Ors., [1979] 3 SCR 1014 and Kasturi Lal
Lakshmi Reddy v. State of Jammu & Kashmir & Anr., [1979] 3
SCR 1014.
The ownership vested in the private persons, by opera-
tion of s. 3 of the Act, the right to appropriate the usu-
fruct of the trees is taken away from the private owner and
is vested in the State. Sub-Art. (2A) of Art. 31, therefore,
does not apply. Consequently, sub-Art. (2) applies and
compensation, therefore, was payable before the property
could be taken over by the State. Provisions of ss. 3 and 4
of the Act are ultra vires of the Constitution and since
these provisions contain the soul of the Act, without them
the Act cannot operate, the entire Act has to suffer.
[271C-D; 272B-C]
Subodh Gopal Bose’s case [1954] SCR 587; Dwarkadas
Shrinivas of Bombay v. The Sholapur Spinning & Weaving Co.
Ltd. & Ors., [1954] SCR 674; R.C. Cooper v. Union of India,
[1970] 3 SCR 530; Madan Mohan Pathak v. Union of India &
Ors., [1978] 3 SCR 334 and Tara Prasad Singh v. Union of
India & Ors., [1980] 3 SCR 1042, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition Nos. 751, 794
and 798 of 1986.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.)
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, Soli J. Sorabiee, A.B. Diwan, B.V.
Desai, Ms. Madavi Gupta, Bharat Sangal, Harish N. Salve,
T.V.S.N. Chari, Ms. Sunita Modigunda, Ms. Vrinda Grover and
S.K. Bhattacharya for the Petitioners.
G. Ramaswamy, Additional Solicitor General Anil Dev
Singh, P.S. Shroff, S.S. Shroff, R. Karanjawala, Mrs. M.
Karanjawala, Ejaz Maqbool, Mrs. Shobha Dikshit, E.C. Aggar-
wal, B.V. Desai, Ms. Madhavi Gupta, C.S. Vaidyanathan and
S.V. Deshpande for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATH MISRA, J. These are three petitions under Art.
32 of the Constitution by three different groups of peti-
tioners. In each of these writ petitions petitioner No. 1 is
a private limited company and the second petitioner is a
shareholder thereof. The petitionercompany in each of these
cases obtained the right to collect oleo resin
260
gum or to process the same for industrial purposes from the
State of Jammu & Kashmir and each of them seeks to challenge
the vires of the provisions of the Jammu & Kashmir Extrac-
tion of Resin Act (7 of 1986) (hereinafter referred to as
the ’Act’).
Though there are some variations of facts relevant to
each of the writ petitions, the allegations are more or less
similar in regard to the relevant contentions--both factual
and legal. When rule was issued the respondent-State came
with almost the same plea, traversing common grounds and
revealing a common stand in its returns to the Court. These
three writ petitions were heard at a time and are now being
disposed of by a common judgment.
Resin is the secretion extracted by tapping or otherwise
from chir, chil and kail trees wildly growing in the forests
of Jammu & Kashmir. It is an exudate and when subjected to
chemical treatment and distillation with the aid of steam
yields 70% resin, 15% turpentine and the remaining 15% of
waste material. The down-stream products which are manufac-
tured from this raw material are varnish, camphor, paints
and turpene chemicals.
The petitioner-company in writ petition No. 751/86
obtained under Government order dated 27.4.1979 allotment of
10 to 12 lacs of blazes annually for extraction of resin
from the inaccessible forests in Poonch, Reasi and Ramban
Divisions of the State for a period of 10 years on terms and
conditions set out in the said Government order. Government
order had also been made granting rights in favour of the
petitioner-company in writ petition No. 794/86. The petitio-
nercompany in writ petition No. 798/86 was a processor only
and had not undertaken to work as a tapper. Applications
under Art. 32 of the Constitution were filed in this Court
at that point of time on the ground that the Government
orders and/or contracts were hit by Arts. 14 and 19 of the
Constitution and the grant of forest rights in favour of the
present petitioners was arbitrary, mala fide and not in
public interest. It was further contended that State lar-
gesse had been conferred on the petitioners at the cost of
the State exchequer. The petitioners therein also pleaded
that a monopoly had been created in favour of the private
grantees and was not protected under Art. 19(1)(g) of the
Constitution. According to Kasturilal, the petitioner before
this Court then, the benefits should have been thrown open
and opportunity should have been provided to all interested
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persons to compete for the obtaining of the contract. A
three-Judge Bench consisting one of us (the learned Chief
Justice) dealt with the matter at length and ulti-
261
mately dismissed the petition holding that there was no
substance in any of the contentions advanced on behalf of
Kasturilal. (Kasturi Lal Lakshmi Reddy v. State of Jammu &
Kashmir & Anr., [1980] 3 SCR 1336). The order made in favour
of the petitioner-company in writ petition No. 794/86 and
incorporated in the agreement dated 6.11. 1978 had also been
challenged in a separate writ petition before this Court and
the reasoned order for rejection of the writ petition is
found in Brij Bhushan & Ors. v. State of Jammu & Kashmir &
Ors., [1986] 2 SCC 354.
While the petitioner-company in writ petition No. 751/86
had agreed to work as tapper and processor on the stipula-
tion that 25% of the annual collection of gum subject to
minimum of 1500 metric tonnes would be made over to the
Government company (J & K Industries Limited) and out of the
rest not exceeding the limit of 3500 metric tonnes would be
used by them, the petitioner-company in writ petition No.
794/86 who had been operating from before as tappers only
entered into a formal agreement with the State claiming to
process and manufacture down-stream goods. The writ peti-
tioner-company in writ petition No. 798/86 had agreed to
work as processor only.
In the seventies, the State of Jammu & Kashmir decided
to industrialise the hitherto under-developed State and with
that end in view came forward with scheme and threw open
invitation to outsiders to set up industries at convenient
places within the State. As stimulus Government offered land
and other facilities. The petitioners in these three writ
petitions and another who has since withdrawn the writ
petition, went into the State of Jammu & Kashmir in response
and negotiated the arrangements we have already adverted to.
While the petitioners were carrying on their business
activities, Governor’s Act 7 of 1986, the provisions whereof
are impugned in these petitions by which all their existing
rights came to terminate, came into force with effect from
23.4.1986. The Act sought to create a monopoly with refer-
ence to resin in favour of J & K Industries Limited, which
is a respondent to these petitions.
The Act has seven sections in all. Section 1 gives the
short title, extent and the date of commencement while s. 2
defines four terms, namely, ’prescribed’, ’resin’, ’resin
depot’ and ’resin products’. Section 3 bans extraction and
other dealings of resin by private persons while s, 4 makes
provision for disposal of resin. Section 5 provides the
manner of fixation of price. Section 6 provides for penalty
for offences
262
and s. 7 clothes the State Government with power to make
rules for carrying out the purposes of the Act. Challenge in
the writ petitions has been to the provisions contained in
ss. 3, 4 and 5 of the Act. We propose to excerpt these
provisions for convenience:
"3. Ban on extraction by private persons
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in any law, rule, order, instrument,
agreement or contract or in any judgment,
decree or order of any Court or Authority, no
person, other than the Government shall as
from the commencement of this Act ,--
(a) extract resin by tapping or
otherwise from Chit/ Chil or Kail trees in the
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State whether such trees belong to the State
or not;
(b) transport resin from one place to
other in the State except under and in accord-
ance with the permit granted under this Act;
(c) acquire, possess, store, dispose
of or otherwise deal with any resin extracted
and manufactured in the State.
4. Disposal of resin
(1) All resin extracted under section
3 shall be stored at resin depots and thereaf-
ter shall be sold by the Government to the
Jammu & Kashmir Industries Limited for proc-
essing.
(2) After processing it by the Jammu
& Kashmir Industries Limited, the resin
products, if any surplus, shall be sold by it
to the small scale units and medium scale
units in the State in such manner as may be
provided for, and at such price as may be
fixed by the Jammu & Kashmir Industries Limit-
ed in consultation with the Government.
5. Fixation of price--
(1) The Government shall, having due
regard to the following facts, fix the price
at which resin shall be sold by it during a
year, namely
263
(a) the sale price of resin, if any,
fixed under this Act during the preceding
three years;
(b) the cost of transport;
(c) the cost of extraction of resin;
(d) the cost of packing of resin
including the cost of container in which resin
is delivered;
(e) the prevalent sale price at which
resin is being sold in other resin producing
States;
(f) any other factor which the Gov-
ernment considers relevant.
(2) The price so fixed shall be
published in the Official Gazette and shall
not be altered during the year to which it
relates."
In exercise of the rule-making power, the State Government
has brought into force a set of rules known as the Jammu &
Kashmir Extraction of Resin Rules, 1986 with effect from
27.9.1986.
It is not in dispute that by the provisions of this Act
all the existing contracts between parties and the State and
existing grants in respect of collection, transport, storage
and otherwise dealing with resin have come to forthwith
terminate and a monopoly situation has been created qua
these operations in resin in favour of the Government compa-
ny. The Act does not provide for any compensation and the
petitioners maintain that the existing rights in their
favour amounted to ’property’ and could not have been expro-
priated in contravention of the guarantee in Part III of the
Constitution. It is the stand of the State that the benefits
and privileges conferred on the three petitioners either
under contract or under Government orders did not constitute
property and by the provisions of the Act no transfer of
such property has taken place.
It is relevant to point out at this stage that sub-
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clause (f) was deleted from Art. 19(1) of the Constitution
by the Forty-fourth Amendment with effect from 20th of June,
1979 and acquisition, holding and/or disposal of property
ceased to be a fundamental right. The same constitutional
amendment deleted Art. 31 but so far as the State
264
of Jammu & Kashmir is concerned the Forty-fourth Amendment
did not bring about any change and right to property, there-
fore, continues to be fundamental and law enunciated by this
Court treating property be one of the fundamental rights
still applies to Jammu & Kashmir. That is why, sumptuous
reference has been made by counsel for the petitioners to a
catena of precedents touching upon right to property as a
fundamental one.
The petitioners maintained that the Government orders
and contracts under which they have got the right to exploit
or utilise the particular forest product does amount to
’property’ and the petitioners were entitled to protection
thereof against expropriation and in case no compensation
was provided the relevant provisions of the Act became
exposed to challenge. They have similarly contended that the
impugned provisions of s. 3 are hit for contravening the
fundamental right guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(g) which confers
upon them the right to carry on any occupation, trade or
business.
The Government orders made in 1979 did confer the right
to exploit the forest and appropriate a part of the collec-
tion of the gums for purposes of business. The concept of
’property’ known to jurisprudence has expanded through
several pronouncements of this Court. Ramana Dayaram Shetty
v. The International Airport Authority of India & Ors.,
[1979] 3 SCR 1014, to which one of us (the learned Chief
Justice) was party held:
"Today the Government in a welfare State is
the regulator and dispenser of special serv-
ices and provider of a large number of bene-
fits, including jobs, contracts, licences,
quotas, mineral rights etc. The Government
pours forth wealth, money, benefits, services,
contracts, quotas and licences. The valuables
dispensed by Government take many forms, but
they all share one characteristic. They are
steadily taking the place of traditional forms
of wealth. These valuables which derive from
relationships to Government are of many kinds.
They comprise social security benefits, cash
grants for political sufferers and the whole
scheme of State and the local welfare. Then
again, thousands of people are employed in the
State and the Central Governments and local
authorities. Licences are required before one
can engage in many kinds of business or work.
The power of giving licences means power to
withhold them and this gives control to the
Government or to
265
the agents of Government on the lives of many
people ........ It is virtually impossible to
lose money on them and many enterprises are
set up primarily to do business with Govern-
ment. Government owns and controls hundreds of
acres of public land valuable for mining and
other purposes. These resources are available
for utilisation by private corporations and
individuals by way of lease or licence. All
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these mean growth in the Government largess
and with the increasing magnitude and range of
governmental functions as we move closer to a
welfare State, more and more of our wealth
consists of these new forms. Some of these
forms of wealth may be in the nature of legal
rights but the large majority of them are in
the nature of privileges. But on that account,
can it be said that they do not enjoy any
legal protection? Can they be regarded as
gratuity furnished by the State so that the
State may withhold grant or revoke it at its
pleasure ..... The law has not been slow to
recognise the importance of this new kind of
wealth and the need to protect individual
interest in it and with that end in view, it
has developed new forms of protection. Some
interests in Government largess, formerly
regarded as privileges, have been recognised
as rights while others have been given legal
protection not only by forging procedural
safeguards but also by confining/structuring
and checking Government discretion in the
matter of grant of such largers ..... It is
insisted, as pointed out or’ Prof. Reich in an
especially stimulating article on The New
Property’ in 73 Yale Law Journal 733, ’that
Government action be based on standards that
are not arbitrary or unauthorised."
In Kasturi Lal Lakshmi Reddy v. State of Jammu & Kashmir
& Anr., (supra), the interest created in favour of the
petitioners in the forest assets of the State (which has now
been fatally hit by section 3) was considered to be proper-
ty. At page 1354 of the Reports this Court stated:
"It was pointed out by this Court in Ramana
Dayaram Shetty v. The International Airport
Authority of India & Ors., (supra) that with
the growth of the welfare state, new forms of
property in the shape of Government largess
are developing, since the Government is in-
creasingly assuming the role of regulator and
dispenser of social services and provider of a
large number of benefits including jobs, con-
266
tracts, licences, quotas, minerals rights
etc."
In Subodh Gopal Bose’s case [1954] SCR
587, this Court had pointed out:
"The word ’property’ in the context of Article
31 (the same should be the meaning under
Article 19(1)(f) which is designed to protect
private property in all its forms, must be
understood both in a corporeal sense as having
reference to all those specific things that
are susceptible of private appropriation and
enjoyment as well as in its juridical or legal
sense of a bundle of rights which the owner
can exercise under the municipal law with
respect to the user and enjoyment of those
things to the exclusion of all others."
Again, in Dwarkadas Shrinivas of Bombay v. The
Sholapur Spinning & Weaving Co. Ltd. & Ors.,
[1954] SCR 674, this Court held:
"A contract or agreement which a person may
have with the company and which may be can-
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celled by the Directors in exercise of powers
under ordinance will undoubtedly be property
within the meaning of the two articles."
In R.C. Cooper v. Union of India, [1970] 3 SCR
530 an eleven-Judge Bench at page 567 of the
Reports, stated:
"By Entry 42 in the Concurrent List power was
conferred upon the Parliament and the State
Legislatures to legislate with respect to
’Principles on which compensation for property
acquired or requisitioned for the purpose of
the Union or for any other public purpose is
to be determined, and the form in which such
compensation is to be given’. Power to legis-
late for acquisition of property is exercisa-
ble only under Entry 42 of List III, and not
as an incident of the power to legislate in
respect of a specific head of legislation in
any of the three lists. Under that Entry
property can be compulsorily acquired.
In its normal connotation property means the
’highest right a man can to anything, being
that right which one has to lands or tene-
ments, goods or chatties which does not depend
on another’s courtesy; it includes ownership,
estates
267
and interests in corporeal things, and also
rights such as trade-marks, copyrights, pat-
ents and even rights in personam capable of
transfer or transmission, such as debts; and
signifies a beneficial right to or a thing
considered as having a money value, especially
with reference to transfer or succession, and
to their capacity of being injured."
In Madan Mohan Pathak v. Union of India & Ors., [1978] 3
SCR 334 this Court was examining the validity of the Life
Insurance Corporation (Modification of Settlement) Act of
1976. The settlement had created a right to bonus in favour
of the Class 111 and Class IV employees of the Corporation
and the Act adversely interfered with that settlement. The
question for consideration of the seven-Judge Bench was
whether bonus payable under the settlement was ’property’
within the meaning of Art. 31(2) and whether stopping pay-
ment of bonus amounted to compulsory acquisition of property
without payment of compensation. The Court ultimately held
that bonus was property and the legislation was bad. At p.
358 of the Reports, this Court said:
"It is clear from’ the scheme of fundamental
rights embodied in Part III of the Constitu-
tion that the guarantee of the right to
property is contained in Article 19(1)(f) and
clauses (1) and (2) of Article 31. It stands
to reason that ’property’ cannot have one
meaning in Article 19(1)(f), another in Arti-
cle 31 clause (1) and still another in Article
31, clause (2). ’Property’ must have the same
connotation in all the three Articles and
since these are constitutional provisions
intended to secure a fundamental right, they
must receive the widest interpretation and
must be held to refer to property of every
kind."
At p. 360 of the Reports, the Court again stated that every
form of property, tangible or intangible, including debts
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and choses in action constituted property, In this group of
cases before us the executive grant or the contract created
interest in the petitioners and there is no room to doubt
that by such process in favour of the petitioners property
right had been created.
Learned Additional Solicitor General appearing for the
State had contended that the contractual interest or the
interest in terms of the Government order did not constitute
property and relied upon certain precedents of this Court.
The Coal Nationalisation case on which reliance was mainly
placed is clearly distinguishable on facts.
268
We do not think it necessary to refer to other authorities
as the ones referred to above are binding precedents and
unequivocally indicate that the interests which are in
dispute before us do constitute property entitled to protec-
tion under Art. 19(1)(f) and are covered by Art. 31(2) of
the Constitution.
Reliance has been placed by learned Additional Solicitor
General on the restrictive provision contained in sub-Art.
(5) whereby reasonable restrictions in public interest could
be imposed on the exercise of right to property. There are
situations, the learned counsel has argued, where the re-
strictions could go to the point of almost wiping out the
right. He relied upon some precedents in support of this
proposition. Section 3 is a total annihilation of existing
rights and nothing of the interest created either under the
executive orders or contract is allowed to survive. We do
not think there is room within the legal frame to sustain
such a situation under sub-Art. (5).
Sub-Art. (6), like sub-Art. (5), protects restrictive
law in public interest. What we have said in regard to sub-
Art. (5) perhaps equally applies to sub-Art. (6).
Article 31(2) provided:
"No property shall be compulsorily acquired or
requisitioned save for a public purpose and
save by authority of a law which provides for
acquisition or requisitioning of the property
for an amount which may be fixed by such law
or which may be determined in accordance with
such principles and given in such manner as
may be specified in such law; and no such law
shall be called in question in any court on
the ground that the amount so fixed or deter-
mined is not adequate or that the whole or any
part of such amount is to be given otherwise
than in cash:"
It has already been stated that the Act does not provide
for any compensation. Section 3 has an overriding applica-
tion. It provides that it shall not only apply to the clas-
sified trees belonging to the State but it shall also apply
to such trees belonging to private persons and rights of
such private owners to carry on the various operations
described in s. 3 are completely taken away without provi-
sion of any compensation. It cannot be contended in view of
what we have stated above that the right of beneficial
enjoyment of the trees by carrying out the processes named
in s. 3 do not constitute ’property’. Unless the position is
269
covered by clause (2A) of Art. 31, in view of our conclusion
that the interest created under the contract, Government
order or the right of beneficial enjoyment vested in the
private owner of the trees amount to ’property’, the Act
would be hit by Art. 31(2). Sub-Art. (2A) provides:
"Where a law does not provide for the transfer
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of the ownership or right to possession of any
property to the State or to a corporation
owned or controlled by the State, it shall not
be deemed to provide for the compulsory acqui-
sition or requisitioning of property, notwith-
standing that it deprives any person of his
property."
Learned Additional Solicitor General’s contention has
been that under the provisions of s. 3 of the Act the rights
that vested in the petitioners stand wiped out or extin-
guished but those rights have not been vested in either the
State or the Government company. This contention overlooks
the resultant outcome of the provisions of the Act. Section
3 which takes away private fights and authorises Government
alone to extract, transport it and acquire, possess or
dispose of or otherwise deal with the resin extracted and
manufactured within the State and s. 4 authorises Government
to sell the same to the Government company for processing.
What is taken away under s. 3 from the hands of private
parties is undoubtedly given by the same provision to Gov-
ernment. In Madan Mohan Pathak’s case (supra), this Court
had pointed out:
"The verbal veil constructed by employing the
device of extinguishment of debt cannot be
permitted to conceal or hide the real nature
of the transaction. It is necessary to remem-
ber that we are dealing here with a case where
a constitutionally guaranteed right is sought
to be enforced and the protection of such
right should not be allowed to be defeated or
rendered illusory by legislative stratagems.
The courts should be ready to rip open such
stratagems and devices and find out whether in
effect and substance the legislation trenches
upon any fundamental rights. The encroachments
on fundamental rights are often subtle and
sophisticated and they are disguised in lan-
guage which apparently seems to steer clear of
the constitutional inhibitions."
It is not necessary to multiply precedents, As we have
already pointed
270
out, s. 3 of the Act extinguishes private rights and confers
the right to deal with the subject matter of such rights on
the State.
An attempt was made to distinguish the rule in Pathak’s
case by relying upon the decision in Tara Prasad Singh v.
Union of India & Ors., [1980] 3 SCR 1042. That seven-Judge
Bench was dealing with the Coal Mines Nationalisation
(Amendment) Act of 1976. The Court referred to the two
previous decisions in Ajit Singh v. State of Punjab, [1967]
2 SCR 143 and Madan Mohan Pathak v. Union of India, (supra),
and observed:
"These decisions have no application to the
instant case because the interest of the
lessees and sub-lessees which was brought to
termination by section 3(3)(b) of the Nation-
alisation Amendment Act does not come to be
vested in the State. The Act provides that
excepting a certain class of leases and sub-
leases, all other leases and subleases shall
stand terminated in so far as they relate to
the winning or mining of coal. There is no
provision in the Act by which the interest so
terminated is vested in the State; Nor does
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such vesting flow as a necessary consequence
of any of the provisions of the Act. Sub-
section (4) of section 4 of the Act provides
that where a mining lease stands terminated
under sub-section (3), it shall be lawful for
the Central Government or a Government Company
or a corporation owned or controlled by the
Central Government to obtain a prospecting
licence or a mining lease in respect of the
whole or part of the land covered by the
mining lease which stands so terminated. The
plain intendment of the Act, which, may it be
reiterated, is neither a pretense nor a fa-
cade, is that once the outstanding leases and
sub-leases are terminated, the Central Govern-
ment and the other authorities will be free to
apply for a mining lease. Any lease-hold
interest which the Central Government, for
example, may thus obtain does not directly or
immediately flow from the termination brought
about by section 3(3)(b). Another event has to
intervene between the termination of existing
leases and the creation of new interests. The
Central Government, etc. have to take a posi-
tive step for obtaining a prospecting licence
or a mining lease. Without it, the Act would
be ineffective to create of its own force any
right or interest in favour of the Central
Government, a Government Company or a Corpora-
tion
271
owned, managed or controlled by the
Central Government."
The statutory scheme of the Act which we are considering
is to extinguish private rights both in respect of Govern-
ment owned trees as also trees in private ownership and to
vest those rights in the State Government or the Government
company. The facts in this group of cases, therefore, clear-
ly indicate that there is a direct relationship between
nullification of the private rights and vesting of those in
the State or the Government company. In other words, where
the contract was given by the Government in respect of the
trees belonging to the State, the nullification of the
contract would result in the automatic transfer by reversion
of the property in the contract to the Government. Similar-
ly, where the ownership vested in the private persons by
operation of s. 3 of the Act, the right to appropriate the
usufruct of the trees is taken away from the private owner
and is vested in the State. The rule in Pathak’s case,
therefore, is applicable. Sub-Art. (2A) of Art. 31, there-
fore, does not apply to the facts of the present case.
Consequently, sub-Art. (2) applies and compensation, there-
fore, was payable before the property could be taken over by
the State.
Petitioners in writ petition No. 794/86 had claimed that
pursuant to the arrangement entered into between them and
the State following the invitation by the State they had
invested Rs. 1.68 crores in shape of plant and machinery and
63 lacs of rupees by way of land and buildings. The peti-
tioner in the other two cases stated that investments had
been made by them as well. The petitioners were invited to
set up industries by assuring them supply of the raw materi-
al. They changed their position on the basis of representa-
tions made by the State and when the factories were ready
and they were in a position to utilise the raw material, the
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impugned Act came into force to obliterate their rights and
enabled the State to get out of the commitments. We are
inclined to agree with the submissions made on behalf of the
petitioners that the circumstances gave rise to a fact
situation of estoppel. It is true that there is no estoppel
against the legislature and the vires of the Act cannot be
tested by invoking the plea but so far as the State Govern-
ment is concerned the rule of estoppel does apply and the
precedents of this Court are clear. It is unnecessary to go
into that aspect of the matter as in our considered opinion
the impugned Act suffers from the vice of taking away rights
to property without providing for compensation at all and is
hit by Art. 31(2) of the Constitution.
Connected proceedings had been taken for interim arrangement
272
regarding provision of raw material to the petitioners and
certain other parties. We do not propose to deal with those
aspects in this judgment but liberty is given to parties to
apply for such directions as they consider appropriate and
such applications, when filed, will be dealt with separate-
ly.
In the result, each of the writ petitions succeeds. We
declare the provisions of ss. 3 and 4 of the Act to be ultra
vires the Constitution and since these provisions contain
the soul of the Act and without them, the Act cannot oper-
ate, the entire Act has to suffer. The petitioners shall
have their costs to these proceedings. Hearing fee of
Rs.3,000 is awarded in each of the petitions.
Y.L. Petition
allowed.
273