Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VALLURI BASAVAIAH CHAUDHARY ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/05/1979
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1415 1979 SCR (3) 802
1979 SCC (3) 324
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1980 SC1568 (2)
RF 1981 SC 234 (54,91)
R 1983 SC1303 (2)
RF 1988 SC 220 (1,11)
D 1988 SC1708 (15)
R 1989 SC1796 (5)
RF 1990 SC1796 (3)
RF&E 1992 SC1567 (4)
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950. Art. 252(1)-Term
’legislature’ therein means only the House or Houses of
Legislature and not the Governor-’An Act of Legislature’, ’A
legislative Act’, ’A resolution of the House’, ’Bill’-
Difference between.
The Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act 1976-
Whether ultra vires Parliament so far as State of Andhra
Pradesh is concerned-Inclusion of State of Rajasthan in
Schedule I of the Act and categorisation of the urban
agglomerations of the cities and towns of Jaipur and Jodhpur
in category ’C’ and Ajmer, Kota and Bikaner in Category ’D’
whether beyond legislative competence of Parliament-
Existence of a master plan not a sine qua non for
applicability of Act to an urban agglomeration.
The Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District
Municipalities Act, 1956. S. 244(1)(c)(iii)-Master plan to
designate the land subject to compulsory acquisition.
HEADNOTE:
The State Legislatures of eleven States, (Andhra
Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka,
Maharashtra, orissa, Punjab, Tripura, U.P. and West Bengal)
considered it desirable to have a uniform legislation
enacted by Parliament for the imposition of a ceiling on
urban property for the country as a whole and in compliance
with cl. (1) of Art. 252 of the Constitution passed a
resolution to that effect.
Parliament accordingly, enacted the Urban Land (Ceiling
and Regulation) Act, 1976. In the first instance, the Act
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came into force on the date of its introduction in the Lok
Sabha i.e. January 28,1976 and covered the Union Territories
and the eleven States which had already passed the requisite
resolution under Art. 252(1) of the Constitution, including
the State of Andhra Pradesh. Subsequently, the Act was
adopted, after passing resolutions under Art. 252(1) of the
Constitution by the State Legislatures of Assam, Bihar,
Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya and Rajasthan. The Act is
in force in seventeen States and all the Union Territories
in the country.
The primary object and the purpose of the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 was to provide for the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith,
with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering
therein, and with a view to bringing about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the
common good, in furtherance of the Directive Principles of
Articles 39(b) and (c).
803
The legislation falls under Entry 18, List II of
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, which refers to ’Land,
that is to say, rights in or over land, etc.’ The State
Legislatures alone are competent to enact any legislation
relating to land of every description including lands
situate in urban areas.
The resolutions passed by the State Legislatures,
vested in Parliament the power to regulate by law, the
imposition of a ceiling on urban immovable property and
acquisition of such property in excess of this ceiling, as
well as in respect of ’all matters connected therewith and
ancillary or incidental thereto.’
In writ petitions filed by the respondents, the High
Court being of the view that the term ’legislature’ in Art.
252(1) of the Constitution comprises both the Houses of
Legislature, (the Legislative Assembly and the Legislative
Council) and the Governor of the State, struck down the Act
on the ground that the Parliament was not competent to enact
the impugned Act for the State of Andhra Pradesh inasmuch as
the Governor of Andhra Pradesh did not participate in the
process of authorisation for the passing of the Act by the
Parliament.
The High Court observed that since two distinct terms
’legislature’ and ’Houses of Legislature’ were used in the
same article they must, as a matter of construction, bear
different meanings, and The Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act 1976 is ultra vires the Parliament so far as
the State of Andhra Pradesh is concerned. It also held that
even assuming the Act is in force in the State, it is not
applicable to Warangal because there was no master plan
prepared in accordance with the requirements of s. 244(1)
(c) of the Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District
Municipalities Act, 1956.
In the connected writ petition under Art. 32, the
question raised was whether the inclusion of the State of
Rajasthan in Schedule I to the Urban (Land Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 and the categorisation of the urban
agglomeration of the cities and towns of Jaipur and Jodhpur
in category ’C’ and Ajmer, Kota and Bikaner in category ’D’
therein is beyond the legislative competence of Parliament
and, therefore, the Act is liable to be struck down to that
extent.
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In the appeals to this Court, it was contended on
behalf of the appellant, that the term ’legislature’ in Art.
252(1) must, in the context, mean the House or the Houses of
Legislature, as the case may be and it does not include the
Governor. The key to the interpretation of the first part of
cl. (1) of Art. 252 lies in the words ’to that effect’, and
they obviously refer to the ’desirability’ of Parliament
making a law on a State subject. It was pointed out that
though the Governor is the component part of the State
Legislature under Art. 168, he is precluded by the terms of
Art. 158(1) from being a member of either House of
Parliament or of a House of Legislature of any State. Not
being a member of the House or Houses of Legislature of a
State, as the case may be, the question of his
participation, in the proceedings of the State Legislature
in passing a resolution under Art. 252(1) does not at all
arise. To concede to the Governor the power to participate
in the process of authorization for the passing of a law by
the Parliament on a State subject under Art. 252(1), as the
High Court had done, or to the process of ratification of a
constitutional amendment by the State Legislature under
proviso to Art. 368(2) to a constitutional amendment by the
Parliament under Art. 368(1), would create a dangerous
situation and would be destructive of the constitutional
system which is based on the Westminster model under which
the Governor is only the constitutional head of the state.
804
The Parliament being invested with the power by
resolution passed under the first part of Art. 252(1) by as
many as eleven states, to legislate on the subject i.e. to
make a law for the imposition of a ceiling on immovable
property, it had the competence to so structure the Act that
it was capable of being adopted by other States under the
second part of Art. 252(1). A fortiori, the specification of
the State of Rajasthan by which the Act may be adopted, as
well as the categorisation of the urban agglomerations
therein to which it may apply, had to be there.
Allowing the appeals and dismissing the writ petition;
^
HELD: 1 (a) Declared that the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act 1976 a law enacted by the Parliament by
virtue of its powers under Article 252(1) is and has always
been in force in the State of Andhra Pradesh with effect
from January 28, 1976. [831D]
(b) Declared that the Act extends to the Urban
agglomerations of Warangal. [831D]
(c) The Act applies to the States of Rajasthan with
effect from March 9, 1976. [831D]
2. Art. 252 appears in Part XI headed ’Relations
between the Union and the States’ and occurs in Chapter I
relating to ’Legislative Relations’, i.e., dealing with the
distribution of legislative powers between the Union and the
States. Our constitution though broadly federal in structure
is modelled on the British Parliamentary system, with
unitary features. Parliament may assume legislative powers
(though temporarily) over any subject under Art. 249, by a
two third vote that such legislation is necessary in ’the
national interest’, while a Proclamation of Emergency under
Art. 352 is in operation, Parliament is also competent under
Art. 250 to legislate with respect to any such matter in the
State List. Art. 251 makes it clear that the legislative
power of the State legislatures to make any law which they
have power under the Constitution to make, is restricted by
the provisions of Articles 249 and 250, but, if any law made
by the legislature of a State is repugnant to any provision
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of a law enacted by the Parliament, the law made by
Parliament shall prevail and the law made by the State
legislature to the extent of repugnancy shall not be valid
so long as the law enacted by Parliament is effective and
operative. [812H-813C]
3. While Art. 263 provides for the creation of an
Inter-State Council for effecting administrative co-
ordination between the States in matters of common interest,
Art. 252 provides the legislative means to attain that
object. [813F]
4. The effect of the passing of a resolution under
cl.(1) of Art. 252 is that Parliament, which has no power to
legislate with respect to the matter which is the subject of
the resolution, becomes entitled to legislate with respect
to it, and the State legislature ceases to have a power to
make a law relating to that matter. After the enactment of a
law by the Parliament under this Article, it is open to any
of the other States to adopt the Act for such State by
merely passing a resolution to that effect in its
legislature, but the operation of the Act in such State
cannot be from a date earlier than the date of the
resolution passed in the Legislature adopting the Act.
[813E, F]
805
5. The question as to whether or not there is surrender
by the State Legislature of its power to legislate, and if
so, to what extent, must depend on the language of the
resolution passed under Art. 252(1). [813G]
M/S. R.M.D.C. (Mysore) Private Ltd. v. The State of
Mysore [1962] 3 SCR 230 referred to:
6. Article 252(2) specifically lays down that after
Parliament makes an Act in pursuance of the resolution, such
Act cannot be amended or repealed by the State Legislature
even though the matter to which the Act of Parliament
relates was included in List II of the Seventh Schedule of
the Constitution. [813H]
7. Art. 252(1) is in two parts. The first part of the
Article is only introductory the second is the operative
part. The first part merely recites about the "desirability"
of the Parliament legislating on a subject in respect of
which it has no power to make laws except as provided in
Articles 249 and 250. The words "to that effect" in the
first part, therefore, refer to the ’desirability’ for
effecting administrative control by the Parliament over two
or more States in respect of matters of common interest.
Thus the word ’legislature’ in the first part of Art.
252(1), in the context in which it appears, cannot mean the
three component parts of the State Legislature, contemplated
by Art. 168, but only the House or Houses of Legislature, as
the case may be, i.e. excluding the Governor. [815D, 815H-
816A]
8. The High Court had completely overlooked the fact
that there is a clear distinction between ’an Act of
legislature,’ ’a legislative act’ and ’a resolution of the
House. [816B]
9. It is quite clear from an enumeration of the powers,
functions and duties of the Governor, that he cannot, in the
very nature of things, participate in the proceedings of the
House or Houses of Legislature, while the State Legislature
passes a ’resolution’ in terms of Art. 252(1), he not being
a member of the legislature under Art. 158. [817C]
10. The right of the Governor to send messages to the
House or Houses of the Legislature under Art. 175 (2), with
respect to a Bill pending in the legislature or otherwise,
normally arises when the Governor withholds his assent to a
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Bill under Art. 200, or when the President, for whose
consideration a Bill is reserved for assent, returns the
Bill withholding his assent. [817E]
12. A ’Bill’ is something quite different from a
’resolution of the House’ and, therefore, there is no
question of the Governor sending any message under Art. 175
(2) with regard to a resolution pending before the House or
Houses of the Legislature. [817F]
12. The constitutional requirement under proviso to
Art. 368 (2) of a ratification by the legislature of not
less than one half of the States is that so far as the State
legislatures are concerned, it requires that a resolution
should be passed ratifying the amendment. Such a resolution
requires voting, and the Governor never votes upon any
issue. [818E]
Jatin Chakravarty v. Shri H. K. Bose A.I.R. 1964 Cal.
500 approved.
13. What is true of a ratification by the State
legislatures under proviso to Art. 368(2), is equally true
of a resolution of the House or Houses of the
806
Legislature under Art. 252(1). The Governor, nowhere
comes in the picture at all in those matters. [818F]
14. The absence of the words ’unless the context
otherwise requires’ in Art. 168, cannot control the meaning
of the term ’legislature’ in Art. 252(1). The term
’legislature’, in the context in which it appears, can only
mean the House or Houses of Legislature, as the case may be.
[819C, D]
15. The subject matter of Entry 18, List II of the
Seventh Schedule i.e. ’land’ covers ’land and buildings’ and
would, therefore, necessarily include ’vacant land.’ The
expression ’urban immovable property’ may mean ’land and
buildings’ or ’buildings’ or ’land’. It would take in lands
of every description i.e. agricultural land, urban land or
any other kind and it necessarily includes vacant land.
[820G-H]
16. Before the Act was introduced in the Lok Sabha on
January 28, 1976 it was preceded by State wise deep
consideration and consultation by the respective States,
including the State of Andhra Pradesh. A working Group was
constituted and in its report it proposed the imposition of
a ceiling on urban immovable property and defined ’urban
area’ to include the area within the territorial limits of
municipalities or other local bodies and also the peripheral
areas outside the said limits. The Govt. prepared a Model
Bill in pursuance of the Report and a copy of each of the
Report of the working Group and the Model Bill was placed on
the table of Parliament. The said documents were forwarded
to the State Government of Andhra Pradesh, besides other
State Governments for consideration by the State
Legislatures before they passed a resolution under Art.
252(1). [821A-C]
17. The State Legislatures were, therefore, aware of
the position when they passed a resolution authorising the
Parliament to make a law in respect of urban immovable
property. Their intention was to include the lands within
the territorial area of a municipality or other local body
of an urban area and also its peripheral area. The concept
of ceiling on urban immovable property and the nature and
content of urban agglomeration ultimately defined by s. 2(n)
of the impugned Act, was, therefore, fully understood by the
State Governments. [821D-E]
18. It is but axiomatic that once the legislatures of
two or more states, by a resolution in terms of Art. 252(1),
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abdicate or surrender the area i.e. their power of
legislation on a State subject, the Parliament is competent
to make a law relating to the subject. It would indeed be
contrary to the terms of Art. 252(1) to read the resolution
passed by the State Legislature subject to any restriction.
The resolution, contemplated under Art. 252(1) is not hedged
in with conditions. In making such a law, the Parliament was
not bound to exhaust the whole field of legislation. It
could make a law, like the present Act, with respect to
ceiling on vacant land in an urban agglomeration, as a first
step towards the eventual imposition of ceiling on immovable
property of every other description. [822B-D]
19. Under the scheme of the Act the imposition of a
ceiling on vacant land in urban agglomeration does not
depend on the existence of a master plan. The definition of
’urban land’, as contained in s. 2(o) of the Act is in two
parts, namely (i) in a case where there is a master plan
prepared under the
807
law, for the time being in force, any land within the limits
of an urban agglomeration and referred to as such in the
master plan, is treated to be urban land, and (2) in a case
where there is no master plan, or the master plan does not
refer to any land as urban land, any land within the limits
of an urban agglomeration and situate in any area included
within the local limits of a municipality or other local
authorities is regarded as such. The existence of a master
plan within the meaning of s. 2(h) is, therefore, not a sine
qua non for the applicability of the Act to an urban
agglomeration. [824D-F]
20. A master plan prepared by a municipality may or may
not contain a proposal for compulsory acquisition of land,
or any descriptive matter or map to illustrate a scheme for
development. Mere absence of such proposal for compulsory
acquisition or a map or descriptive matter would not be
tantamount to there being no master plan. A master plan may
include proposals for development of areas required to be
covered by s. 244, sub-s.(1), cl.(c) contiguous and adjacent
to the municipal limits of a city or town, but may not
designate the land to be compulsorily acquired, the absence
of which would not invalidate the scheme. This is because
the municipality has always the power under s. 250 of the
Act to acquire the land required for implementation of such
scheme. [825E-F]
21. The revised master plan prepared for Warangal does,
as it should provide for various development schemes, it
also designates the lands subject to compulsory acquisition.
Even, if it were not so, the master plan prepared under s.
244, sub-s.(1), cl.(c) did not cease to be ’a master plan
prepared in accordance with the law for the time being in
force’, within the meaning of s. 2(h) of the Act, in
relation to the town of Warangal. The Act is, therefore
clearly applicable to the urban agglomerations of Warangal
and it extends not only to all the lands included within the
local limits of the Warangal Municipality but also includes
the peripheral areas specified i.e. one kilometre around
such limits. [825G-826A]
22. The Parliament having been invested with powers to
legislate on a State subject, by resolutions passed by
Legislatures of two or more States under Art. 252(1) has
plenary powers to make suitable legislation. It follows, as
a necessary corollary, that the Act passed by the Parliament
under Art. 252(1) can be so structured as to be capable of
being effectively adopted by the other States. Article
252(1) undoubtedly enables the Parliament to make a uniform
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law. The Act so passed would automatically apply to the
States, the legislatures of which have passed a resolution
in terms of Art. 252(1), and at the same time it must be
capable of being adopted by other States which have not
sponsored a resolution, i.e. the non-sponsoring States. The
second part of Art. 252(1) will be meaningful only if it
were so interpreted otherwise, it would be rendered wholly
redundant. [830A-C]
23. The Act would automatically apply from the date of
its application to those States which had passed the
resolution in terms of the first part of Art. 252(1), and
would extend to the adopting States from the date of the
resolutions passed by the legislatures of such States. The
Parliament had, therefore, in fact and in law, competence to
legislate on the subject of the imposition of ceiling on
urban immovable property, and the Schedule to the Act cannot
therefore, be struck down in relation to the State of
Rajasthan. [830F]
808
24. In a law relating to the imposition of ceiling on
vacant land in urban agglomerations throughout the territory
of India, it was competent for the Parliament under Entry
18, List II of Seventh Schedule not only to have the States
specified in the Schedule to the Act where the law will
extend, but also include the categorisation of urban
agglomerations in respect of the whole of the territory of
India. [830E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos.
1896/76, 265-300/77 and 29-38/77 and 5/77.
(From the Judgment and Order dated 3-12-1976 of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition Nos. 1634/76,
2068, 2426, 2477, 2585, 3026, 2914, 2918, 2926, 2965, 3471,
2517, 2522, 2581, 2597, 2401, 2461-2462, 2465, 2469, 2485,
2507, 2877, 2949, 3213, 3469, 2492, 2509, 2513, 2514, 2520,
2523, 2818, 2935, 2951 and 2936 of 1976, 2509, 2513, 2514,
2520, 2523, 2818, 2932, 2935, 2936 and 2951/76 and 2492 of
1976).
AND
WRIT PETITION NO. 350 OF 1977
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
S. V. Gupte, Attorney General of India (1896/76), U.R.
Lalit (1896/76) R. N. Sachthey, Girish Chandra, K. N. Bhatt
(1896/76) Miss A. Subhashini for the Appellants in C.As.
1896 and 265-300/ 77 for Respondent No. 1 in W.P. 350/77 and
for the Union of India in C.As. 29-38/77 and Respondent No.
4 in C.A. 5/77.
V. M. Tarkunde, K. K. Mehrish, S. M. Jain and S. K.
Jain for the Petitioner in W.P. 350/77.
T. V. S. Narasimhachari and M. S. Ganesh for the
Appellant in CAs. 5 and 29-38/77.
K. K. Venugopal, Addl. Sol. Genl. and S. S. Khanduja
for Respondents 2-3 in W.P. 350/77.
B. Kanta Rao for RR 1-50, 53-66, 68-83, 85-91, 93-95,
97-100 and 112-114 in C.A. 1896/76.
Vepa P. Sarathi and B. Parthasarathi for RR 28 and 53
in C.A. 276/77.
P. Ram Reddy, A. V. V. Nair and Subodh Markendaya for
the other appearing Respondents in C.As. 279, 280-84, 286
and 293/77.
R. K. Mehta, for Advocate General for the State of
Orissa.
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Badridas Sharma, for Advocate General for the State of
Rajasthan.
809
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J.-These appeals, by certificate, are directed
against the judgment and order of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court dated December 3, 1976 allowing a batch of thirty-
seven writ petitions. The appeals raise an important
question, namely, whether the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 is ultra vires the Parliament so far
as the State of Andhra Pradesh is concerned. A subsidiary
question is also involved as to whether even assuming the
Act is in force in the State, it is not applicable to
Warangal because there was no master plan prepared in
accordance with the requirements of s. 244(1) (c) of the
Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District Municipalities Act,
1956.
A further question arises in a connected writ petition
under Art. 32 of the Constitution, whether the inclusion of
the State of Rajasthan in Schedule I to the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 and the categorisation of
the urban agglomerations of the cities and towns of Jaipur
and Jodhpur in category ’C’ and Ajmer, Kota and Bikaner in
category ’D’ therein, is beyond the legislative competence
of Parliament and, therefore, the Act is liable to be struck
down to that extent.
The State Legislatures of eleven States, namely, all
the Houses of the Legislature of the States of Andhra
Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka,
Maharashtra, Orissa, Punjab, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh and West
Bengal considered it desirable to have a uniform legislation
enacted by Parliament for the imposition of a ceiling on
urban property for the country as a whole and in compliance
with cl. (1) of Art. 252 of the Constitution passed a
resolution to that effect. One merit of such Central
legislation is that property owned by families anywhere in
India can be aggregated for valuation purposes, and the
basis of acquisition and compensation can be uniform all
over the country.
The Parliament accordingly, enacted the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976. In the first instance,
the Act came into force on the date of its introduction in
the Lok Sabha, i.e., January 28, 1976 and covered the Union
Territories and the eleven States which had already passed
the requisite resolution under Art. 252(1) of the
Constitution, including the State of Andhra Pradesh.
Subsequently, the Act was adopted, after passing resolutions
under Art. 252(1) of the Constitution by the State
Legislature of Assam on March 25, 1976, and those of Bihar
on April 1, 1976, Madhya Pradesh on September 9, 1976,
Manipur on March 12, 1976,
810
Meghalaya on April 7, 1976 and Rajasthan on March 9, 1976.
Thus, the Act is in force in seventeen States, and all the
Union territories in the country.
Schedule I to the Act lists out all States,
irrespective of whether or not they have passed a resolution
under Art. 252(1) authorising the Parliament to enact a law
imposing a ceiling on urban immovable property, and the
urban agglomerations in them having a population of two lacs
or more. The ceiling limit of vacant land of metropolitan
areas of Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and Madras having a
population exceeding ten lacs falling under category ’A’ is
500 sq. mtrs.; urban agglomerations with a population of ten
lacs and above, excluding the four metropolitan areas
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falling under category ’B’ is 1000 sq. mtrs.; urban
agglomerations with a population between three lacs and ten
lacs falling under category ’C’ is 1500 sq. mtrs., and urban
agglomerations with a population between two lacs and three
lacs falling under category ’D’ is 2000 sq. mtrs. The
schedule does not mention the urban agglomerations having a
population of one lac and above; but if a particular State
which passed a resolution under s.252(1), or if a State
which subsequently adopts the Act, wants to extend the Act
to such areas, it could do so by a notification under s.
2(n)(B) or s. 2(n)(A)(ii), as the case may be, after
obtaining the previous approval of the Central Government.
The primary object and the purpose of the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976, ’the Act’, as the long
title and the preamble show, is to provide for the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith,
with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering
therein, and with a view to bringing about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the
common good, in furtherance of the Directive Principles of
Art. 39(b) and (c).
The legislation falls under entry 18, List II of
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution, which refers to:
’Land, that is to say, rights in or over land, etc.’
Admittedly, the State Legislatures alone are competent to
enact any legislation relating to land of every description
including lands situate in urban areas. The two Houses of
the Andhra Pradesh Legislature, however, passed the
following resolution on April 8, 1972 and April 7, 1972
respectively:
811
"Resolution passed by the Andhra Pradesh Legislative
Assembly on
the 8th April, 1972.
RESOLUTION
Whereas this Assembly considers that there should be a
ceiling on Urban Immovable Property;
And whereas the imposition of such a ceiling and
acquisition of urban immovable property in excess of that
ceiling are matters with respect to which Parliament has no
power to make law for the State except as provided in
Articles 249 and 250 of the Constitution of India;
And whereas it appears to the Andhra Pradesh
Legislative Assembly to be desirable that the aforesaid
matters should be regulated in the State of Andhra Pradesh
by Parliament by law;
Now, therefore, in pursuance of clause (1) of Article
252 of the Constitution, this Assembly hereby resolves that
the imposition of a ceiling on urban immovable property and
acquisition of such property in excess of the ceiling and
all matters connected therewith or ancillary and incidental
thereto should be regulated in the State of Andhra Pradesh
by Parliament by law."
The record shows that similar resolutions were passed
by all the remaining ten State Legislatures. These
resolutions vested in the Parliament the power to regulate
in the aforesaid eleven States by law the imposition of a
ceiling on urban immovable property and acquisition of such
property in excess of this ceiling, as well as in respect of
’all matters connected therewith and ancillary or incidental
thereto’. The expression ’immovable property’ takes in lands
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of every description, i.e. agricultural lands, urban lands
or of any other kind.
The High Court was of the view that the term
’legislature’ in Art. 252(1) of the Constitution comprises
both the Houses of Legislature i.e., the Legislative
Assembly and the Legislative Council and the Governor of the
State. It struck down the Act on the ground that the
Parliament was not competent to enact the impugned Act for
the State of Andhra Pradesh inasmuch as the Governor of
Andhra Pradesh did not participate in the process of
authorization for the passing of the Act by the Parliament.
It observed, since two distinct terms ’Legislature’ and
’Houses of Legislature’ were used in the same article they
must, as a matter of construction, bear different meanings.
In that view, if went on to say that the passing of an Act
in terms of the first part of Art. 252(1) is a condition
pre-requisite to the passing of a resolution by the House or
Houses
812
of Legislature, as the case may be, entrusting to the
Parliament the power to legislate on a State subject,
stating:
"In our opinion, the only way in which the
Legislature of a State, consisting of the Governor and one
or two Houses of Legislature, as the case may be, can
express its view that it is desirable to enact a law
regulating a particular matter, is by enacting a law and
passing an Act to that effect. Because it is difficult to
conceive of the Legislature consisting of the Governor and
the House or Houses of the Legislature of a State acting in
any manner than by passing an enactment; no such Act has
been passed by the Legislature of the State of Andhra
Pradesh consisting of the Governor and the Houses of
Legislature of Andhra Pradesh, expressing the desirability
of having the matter of imposition of a ceiling on urban
lands regulated by Parliament."
(Emphasis supplied)
We are afraid, the construction placed by the High
Court on Art. 252 (1) cannot be sustained. Article 252 (1)
of the Constitution reads:
"If it appears to the Legislatures of two or more
States to be desirable that any of the matters with respect
to which Parliament has no power to make laws for the States
except as provided in articles 249 and 250 should be
regulated in such States by Parliament by law, and if
resolutions to that effect are passed by all the Houses of
the Legislatures of those States, it shall be lawful for
Parliament to pass an Act for regulating that matter
accordingly, and any Act so passed shall apply to such
States and to any other State by which it is adopted
afterwards by resolution passed in that behalf by the House,
or where there are two Houses, by each of the Houses of the
Legislature of that State."
In order to appreciate the content, scope and meaning
of the provisions of Art. 252, it is necessary to refer to
the scheme of the Constitution. It appears in Part XI headed
’Relations between the Union and the States’ and occurs in
Chapter I relating to ’Legislative Relations’, i.e., dealing
with the distribution of legislative powers between the
Union and the States. It would appear that our Constitution
though broadly federal in structure, is modelled on the
British Parliamentary System, with unitary features. Thus,
813
even apart from emergencies, the Parliament may assume
legislative power (though temporarily) over any subject
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under Art. 249, by a two-third vote that such legislation is
necessary in ’the national interest’. While a Proclamation
of Emergency under Art. 352 is in operation the Parliament
is also competent under Art. 250 to legislate with respect
to any such matter in the State list. Article 251 makes it
clear that the legislative power of the State legislatures
to make any law which they have power under the Constitution
to make, is restricted by the provisions of Arts. 249 and
250; but, if any law made by the legislature of a State is
repugnant to any provision of a law enacted by the
Parliament, the law made by Parliament shall prevail and the
law made by the State legislature to the extent of
repugnancy shall not be valid so long as the law enacted by
Parliament is effective and operative.
Reverting back to Art. 252, it will be noticed that
this article corresponds to s. 103 of the Government of
India Act, 1935. It empowers the Parliament to legislate for
two or more States on any of the matters with respect to
which it has no power to make laws except as provided in
Arts. 249 and 250.
The effect of the passing of a resolution under cl. (1)
of Art. 252 is that Parliament, which has no power to
legislate with respect to the matter which is the subject of
the resolution, becomes entitled to legislate with respect
to it. On the other hand, the State legislature ceases to
have a power to make a law relating to that matter. While
Art. 263 provides for the creation of an Inter-State Council
for effecting administrative co-ordination between the
States in matters of common interest, Art. 252 provides the
legislative means to attain that object. After the enactment
of a law by the Parliament under this article, it is open to
any of the other States to adopt the Act for such State by
merely passing a resolution to that effect in its
Legislature, but the operation of the Act in such State
cannot be from a date earlier than the date of the
resolution passed in the Legislature adopting the Act. The
question as to whether or not there is surrender by the
State Legislature of its power to legislate, and if so, to
what extent, must depend on the language of the resolution
passed under Art. 252 (1): M/s. R.M.D.C. (Mysore) Private
Ltd. v. The State of Mysore.(1) Clause (2) specifically lays
down that after Parliament makes an Act in pursuance of the
resolution, such Act cannot be amended or repealed by the
State Legislature even though the matter to which the Act of
Parliament relates was included in List II of the Seventh
Schedule of the Constitution.
814
The learned Attorney General rightly contends that the
term ’legislature’ must, in the context, mean the House or
the Houses of Legislature, as the case may be and it does
not include the Governor. It is urged that the key to the
interpretation of the first part of cl. (1) of Art. 252 lies
in the words ’to that effect’ and they obviously refer to
the ’desirability’ of Parliament making a law on a State
subject. It is pointed out that though the Governor is the
component part of the State Legislature under Art. 168, he
is precluded by the terms of Art. 158(1) from being a member
of either House of Parliament or of a House of the
Legislature of any State. Not being a member of the House or
Houses of Legislature of a State, as the case may be, the
question of his participation, it is said, in the
proceedings of the State Legislature in passing a resolution
under Art. 252(1) does not at all arise. He drew our
attention to different provisions of the Constitution, and
in particular to proviso to Art. 368(2) which requires a
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ratification by the Legislatures of not less than one-half
of the States to a Bill passed by the Parliament under Art.
368(1) in exercise of its constituent powers to amend the
Constitution. It is urged that to concede to the Governor
the power to participate in the process of authorization for
the passing of a law by the Parliament on a State subject
under Art. 252(1), as the High Court had done, or to the
process of ratification of a constitutional amendment by the
State Legislatures under proviso to Art. 368(2) to a
constitutional amendment by the Parliament under Art.
368(1), would create a dangerous situation and would be
destructive of our constitutional system based on the
Westminster model, under which the Governor is only the
constitutional head of the State. The contentions of the
learned Attorney General must, in our opinion, be accepted.
In the State of Bihar v. Maharajadhiraja Sir Kameshwar
Singh of Darbhanga & Ors.(1) in repelling the contention
that the words ’law’ and ’legislature’ were deliberately
used in Art. 31(3) as a special safeguard, which, in order
to ensure that no hasty or unjust expropriatory legislation
is passed by a State Legislature, requires for such
legislation the assent of both the Governor and the
President, Patanajali Sastri C.J. observed:
"It is true that the "Legislature" of a State
includes the Governor and that a bill passed by such
Legislature cannot become a law until it receives the
Governor’s assent ..... The term "legislature" is not always
used in the Constitution as including the Governor, though
article 168 makes him a component Part of the State
Legislature. In article
815
173, for instance, the word is clearly used in the
sense of the "Houses of legislature" and excludes the
Governor. There are other provisions also where the word is
used in contexts which exclude the Governor. Similarly the
word ’law’ is sometimes loosely used in referring to a bill.
Article 31(4), for instance, speaks of a "bill" being
reserved for the President’s assent "after it has been
passed" by the "legislature of a State" and of "the law so
assented to." If the expression "passed by the legislature"
were taken to mean "passed by the Houses of the legislature
and assented to by the Governor"....then, it would cease to
be a "bill" and could not longer be reserved as such. Nor is
the phrase "law so assented to" strictly accurate, as the
previous portion of the clause makes it clear that what is
reserved for the President’s assent and what he assents to
is a "bill" and not a "law."
This decision really clinches the whole issue.
Article 252(1) is in two parts. The first part merely
recites about the "desirability" of the Parliament
legislating on a subject in respect of which it has no power
to make laws except as provided in Articles 249 and 250.
This power to legislate is vested in the Parliament only if
two or more State Legislatures think it desirable to have a
law enacted by the Parliament on such matter in List II,
i.e., with respect to which the Parliament has no power to
make laws for the States, and all the Houses of the
Legislatures of those States express such desire by passing
a resolution to that effect. The Legislatures of those
States should not only think it desirable and expedient, but
actually pass resolution that the Parliament should regulate
the matter in those States, in order to invest the
Parliament with the power to legislate on such subject. The
passing of such resolution by the State Legislatures of two
or more States, is a condition precedent for investing the
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Parliament with the power to make a law on that topic or
matter, and then only it shall be lawful for the Parliament
to make a law for regulating that matter accordingly. The
law so made or enacted by the Parliament under Art 252(1)
will apply only to those States whose Legislatures have
passed resolutions under that provision and also to those
States which have afterwards adopted the same by resolution
passed by the Legislatures of such States in that behalf. It
would appear that the first part of the article is only
introductory, the second is the operative part. The words
"to that effect" in the first part, therefore, refer to the
’desirability’ for effecting administrative control by the
Parliament over two or more States in respect of matters
816
of common interest. Thus, the word ’legislature’ in the
first part of Art. 252(1), in the context in which it
appears, cannot, mean the three component parts of the State
Legislature contemplated by Art. 168, but only the House or
Houses of Legislature, as the case may be, i.e., excluding
the Governor.
There is a clear distinction between ’an Act of
legislature’, ’a legislative act’ and ’a resolution of the
House’. The High Court has completely overlooked this
distinction.
The Governor is a constitutional head of the State
Executive, and has, therefore, to act on the advice of a
Council of Ministers under Art. 163. The Governor is,
however, made a component part of the State Legislature
under Art. 164, just as the President is a part of
Parliament. The Governor has a right of addressing and
sending messages to under Arts. 175 and 176, and of
summoning, proroguing and dissolving under Art. 174, the
State Legislature, just as the President has in relation to
Parliament. He also has a similar power of causing to be
laid before the State Legislature the annual financial
statement under Art. 202(1), and of making demands for
grants and recommending ’Money Bills’ under Art. 207 (1). In
all these matters the Governor as the constitutional head of
the State is bound by the advice of the Council of
Ministers.
The Governor is, however, made a component part of the
legislature of a State under Art. 168, because every Bill
passed by the State legislature has to be reserved for his
assent under Art. 200. Under that article, the Governor can
adopt one of the three courses, namely (i) he may give his
assent to it, in which case the Bill becomes a law; or (ii)
he may except in the case of a ’Money Bill’ withhold his
assent therefrom, in which case the Bill falls through
unless the procedure indicated in the first proviso is
followed, i.e., return the Bill to the Assembly for
reconsideration with a message, or (iii) he may (subject to
Ministerial advice) reserve the Bill for the consideration
of the President, in which case the President will adopt the
procedure laid down in Art. 201. The first proviso to Art.
200 deals with a situation where the Governor is bound to
give his assent when the Bill is reconsidered and passed by
the Assembly. The second proviso to that article makes the
reservation for consideration of the President obligatory
where the Bill would, ’if it became law’, derogate from the
powers of the High Court. Thus, it is clear that a Bill
passed by a State Assembly may become law if the Governor
gives his assent to it, or if, having been reserved by the
Governor for the consideration of the President, it is
assented to by the President. The Governor is, therefore,
one of
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817
the three components of a State legislature. The only other
legislative function of the Governor is that of promulgating
Ordinances under Art. 213(1) when both the Houses of the
State legislature or the Legislative Assembly, where the
legislature is unicameral, are not in session. The
Ordinance-making power of the Governor is similar to that of
the President, and it is co-extensive with the legislative
powers of the States legislature.
From an enumeration of the powers, functions and duties
of the Governor, it is quite clear that he cannot, in the
very nature of things, participate in the proceedings of the
House or Houses of Legislature, while the State legislature
passes a resolution in terms of Art. 252(1), not being a
member of the legislature under Art 158.
The function assigned to the Governor under Art. 176(1)
of addressing the House or Houses of Legislature, at the
commencement of the first session of each year, is strictly
not a legislative function but the object of this address is
to acquaint the members of the Houses with the policies and
programmes of the Government. It is really a policy
statement prepared by the Council of Ministers which the
Governor has to read out. Then again, the right of the
Governor to send messages to the House or Houses of the
Legislature under Art. 175(2), with respect to a Bill then
pending in the legislature or otherwise, normally arises
when the Governor withholds his assent to a Bill under Art.
200, or when the President, for whose consideration a Bill
is reserved for assent, returns the Bill withholding his
assent. As already stated, a ’Bill’ is something quite
different from a ’resolution of the House’ and, therefore,
there is no question of the Governor sending any message
under Art. 175(2) with regard to a resolution pending before
the House or Houses of the Legislature.
Similar considerations must also arise with regard to
ratification of a Bill passed by the Parliament in exercise
of its constituent power of amending the Constitution under
Art. 368(1). In Jatin Chakravorty v. Sri Justice H. K.
Bose(1) D. N. Sinha J., as he then was rightly negatived a
challenge to the constitutional validity of the Constitution
(Fifteenth Amendment) Act, 1963, which amended Art. 217 of
the Constitution raising the age of retirement of a Judge of
the High Court from 60 to 62 years on the ground that no
assent of the Governor in the State of West Bengal was
taken, observing:
"A legislature discharges a variety of functions.
The House has to be summoned or prorogued, bills have to
818
be introduced, voted upon and passed, debates take
place on important political questions, ministers are
interrogated, and so on. The Governor, though a limb of the
legislature does not take part in every such action. While
the Governor summons the House and may prorogue or dissolve
it (Art. 174) or address the legislature (Art. 175), he does
not sit in the House or vote upon any issue. When a Bill has
been passed by the House or Houses, Art. 200 requires that
it shall be presented to the Governor for assent. The assent
of the Governor is necessary, only because the Constitution
expressly requires it. Whenever the assent of the Governor
is necessary or the assent of the President is necessary, it
is specifically provided for in the Constitution (see
Articles 31-A, 200, 201 and 304). The necessity of such
assent cannot be implied, where not specifically provided
for."
(Emphasis supplied)
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Reverting to the constitutional requirement under
proviso to Art. 368(2) of a ratification by the legislatures
of not less than one-half of the States he observed:
"So far as the State legislatures are concerned,
it requires that a resolution should be passed ratifying the
amendment. Such a resolution requires voting, and the
Governor never votes upon any issue." (Emphasis supplied)
The interpretation placed by D. N. Sinha J. upon the
proviso to Art. 360(2) in Jatin Chakravorty’s case (supra)
is in consonance with the constitutional system. Any other
construction would result in an alarming situation as
constitutional amendments by the Parliament under Art.
368(1), could be held up by the Governor of a State. What is
true of a ratification by the State legislatures under
proviso to Art. 368(2), is equally true of a resolution of
the House or Houses of the Legislature under Art. 252(1).
The Governor, in our view, nowhere comes in the picture at
all in these matters.
It is, however, argued, on behalf of the respondents
that both the expressions ’legislature’ as well as ’Houses
of Legislature’ are used in Art. 252 and, therefore, the
term ’Legislature’ must be understood in the sense in which
it is used in Art. 168. In support of the contention, it is
said that it is the ’Legislature’ which is surrendering its
sovereign legislative functions and, therefore, it must be
the legislature, as defined in Art. 168, which should do
that, and not a part of the legislature. It is pointed out
that Art. 168 does not use the words.
819
’unless the context otherwise requires’. It is, accordingly,
urged that the words ’to that effect’ in Art. 252(1) mean
that the legislature, meaning the House or Houses of
Legislature and the Governor, is desirous that the
Parliament should legislate on a State subject.
Conceptually, it is said to be the better interpretation of
the term ’legislature’ in the first part of Art. 252(1).
The respondents’ contention in the present appeals is
the same as that prevailed in the High Court. The point has
already been dealt with by us at length. The contention
cannot be accepted because it runs counter to this Court’s
decision in Kameshwar Singh’s case (supra). The absence of
the words ’unless the context otherwise requires’ in Art.
168, cannot control the meaning of the term ’legislature’ in
Art. 252(1). It was fairly conceded at the Bar that even
without these words, a word or a phrase may have a different
meaning, if the context so requires, than the meaning
attached to it in the definition clause. The term
’legislature’ in the context in which it appears, can only
mean the House or Houses of Legislature, as the case may be.
Learned counsel for the respondents, tries to draw
sustenance from s. 103 of the Government of India Act, 1935,
which read:
"If it appears to the Legislatures of two or more
Provinces to be desirable that any of the matters enumerated
in the Provincial Legislative List should be regulated in
those Provinces by Act of the Federal Legislature, and if
resolutions to that effect are passed by all the Chambers of
those Provincial Legislatures, it shall be lawful for the
Federal Legislature to pass an Act for regulating that
matter accordingly but any Act so passed may, as respects
any Province to which it applies, be amended or repealed by
an Act of the Legislature of that Province."
It is submitted that when an Act passed by the Federal
Legislature in respect of any of the matters enumerated in
the Provincial Legislative List based on the resolution of
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the Legislatures of two or more Provinces, could be amended
or repealed by an Act of the Legislature of that Province,
the Governor had necessarily to be consulted at the stage of
introduction of a resolution before the Legislature of that
Province. There is a fallacy in the argument. The second
part of s. 103 of the Government of India Act is replaced by
Art. 252(2) of the Constitution which takes away the power
of repeal from the State Legislature and entrusts it to the
Parliament. When his attention was drawn to the fact that
cl. (2) of Art. 252 of the Constitution
820
differs from the provisions of s. 103 of the Government of
India Act, 1935, the learned counsel did not pursue the
point any further. Under Art. 252(2) an amending or
repealing Bill must go through the same procedure as
prescribed for the original Bill i.e., by the process laid
down in cl.(1) of Art. 252. The surrender or abdication of
the legislative power of the State Legislature places the
matter entirely in the hands of the Parliament.
Next, it is urged that the impugned Act passed by the
Parliament was without legislative competence. It is said
that the resolution, as passed by the State Legislature,
gave authority to Parliament to legislate on a particular
subject, i.e., ’ceiling on immovable property’, whereas the
Parliament contrary to the resolution, passed a law on a
different subject i.e., ’ceiling on urban land’. It is
pointed out that the Working Group with the Secretary to
Government of India, Ministry of Works, Housing and Urban
Development, in its report dated July 25, 1970 recommended
that the ceiling on urban property should be imposed on the
basis of the monetary value of properties and suggested a
ceiling of 4 to 5 lacs of rupees. The Prime Minister
forwarded the aforesaid report of the Working Group along
with a draft Bill, prepared on the basis of its
recommendations, to the Chief Ministers of various States,
with a view to securing concurrence and authorisation of the
State legislatures under Art. 252(1) to enable the
Parliament for enacting a uniform law for the whole country.
It was said that the State Legislature gave the
authorisation to the Parliament on the distinct
understanding that there was to be a law for the imposition
of ceiling on the basis of valuation of immovable property.
It is said that the authorisation was for ceiling on
ownership of immovable property and not on area of land.
Idea of ceiling, it is said, has been transferred from
persons to objects. It is, accordingly, urged that the
impugned Act, insofar as it provides for ceiling for
acquisition of vacant land by the State was not in
conformity with the real intendment of the resolution.
We are afraid, the contention cannot be accepted. It is
not disputed that the subject matter of Entry 18, List II of
the Seventh Schedule i.e., ’land’ covers ’land and
buildings’ and would, therefore, necessarily include ’vacant
land’. The expression ’urban immovable property’ may mean
’land and buildings’, or ’buildings’ or ’land’. It would
take in lands of every description, i.e., agricultural land,
urban land or any other kind and it necessarily includes
vacant land.
The Union of India before the High Court in its counter
averred that, before the Act was introduced in the Lok Sabha
on January
821
28, 1976, it was preceded by State-wise deep consideration
and consultation by the respective States, including the
State of Andhra Pradesh for a period of over five years
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starting from 1970. A Working Group was constituted under
the Chairmanship of the Secretary, Ministry of Works,
Housing and Urban Development. The report of the Working
Group shows that the proposal was to impose a ceiling on
urban immovable property. In its report the said Working
Group defined‘urban area’ to include the area within the
territorial limits of municipalities or other local bodies
and also the peripheral area outside the said limits. Such
inclusion of the peripheral limits in an urban area was
accepted by the Government and a Model Bill prepared in
pursuance thereof also contained such a definition. A copy
of each of the report of the Working Group and the Model
Bill referred to was placed on the table of the Parliament
on December 15, 1970 and March 22, 1972 respectively. The
said documents were forwarded to the State Government of
Andhra Pradesh, besides other State Governments, for
consideration by the State Legislatures before they passed a
resolution under Art. 252(1). The State Legislatures were,
therefore, aware of the position when they passed a
resolution authorising the Parliament to make a law in
respect of urban immovable property. Their intention was to
include the lands within the territorial area of a
municipality or other local body of an urban area and also
its peripheral area. The concept of ceiling on urban
immovable property and the nature and content of urban
agglomeration ultimately defined by s. 2(n) of the impugned
Act was, therefore, fully understood by the State
Governments.
In this Court the Union of India has placed on record
an Approach Paper of the Study Group which indicated that
the Parliament was faced with several practical difficulties
to implement the proposal to place a ceiling on ownership of
built-up properties, namely:
"Firstly, the valuation of such properties is very
difficult task, Secondly, it varies from urban area to urban
area and within the same area also and might result in
inequitable application. Thirdly, in our inflationary
situation the values of properties quickly change from time
to time. Fourthly, investment by persons in housing and
building is like other forms of investment and, subject to
certain restrictions, primarily to prevent speculation,
needs to be encouraged to serve social purposes. Fifthly,
the management of properties which may vest with the
government on account of any ceiling would pose serious
problems; perhaps, a large number of properties may be in
the form of slums or dilapidated
822
buildings and in respect of other types of houses it
may not be possible to manage or dispose them of
economically."
It was, therefore, suggested that ceiling in respect of
built-up properties was to be brought about through fiscal
and other restrictive measures.
It is but axiomatic that once the legislature of two or
more States, by a resolution in terms of Art. 252(1),
abdicate or surrender the area, i.e., their power of
legislation on a State subject, the Parliament is competent
to make a law relating to the subject. It would indeed be
contrary to the terms of Art. 252(1) to read the resolution
passed by the State Legislature subject to any restriction.
The resolution, contemplated under Art. 252(1) is not hedged
in with conditions. In making such a law, the Parliament was
not bound to exhaust the whole field of legislation. It
could make a law, like the present Act, with respect to
ceiling on vacant land in an urban agglomeration, as a first
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step towards the eventual imposition of ceiling on immovable
property of every other description.
There is no need to dilate on the question any further
in this judgment, as it can be better dealt with separately.
It is sufficient for purposes of these appeals to say that
when Parliament was invested with the power to legislate on
the subject i.e., ‘ceiling on immovable property’, it was
competent for the Parliament to enact the impugned Act,
i.e., a law relating to ‘ceiling on urban land’.
In our opinion, therefore, the High Court was clearly
in error in holding that the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976, was not applicable to the State of
Andhra Pradesh. In reaching that conclusion, it proceeded on
the wrong assumption that ‘legislature’ for purposes of Art.
252(1) means the House or Houses of Legislature, as the case
may be, and the Governor. In consequence whereof, it felt
into an error in holding that the State Legislature of
Andhra Pradesh could not, in law, be regarded to have
authorised the Parliament to enact the impugned Act, in
relation to that State, due to the non participation of the
Governor.
There still remains the question whether the Act is not
applicable to Warangal for the reason that there was no
master plan prepared in conformity with s. 244(1) (c) (iii)
of the Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District
Municipalities Act, 1956. The section, so far as material,
runs thus:
"244(1) (c) The Master Plan shall include such
maps and such descriptive matter as may be deemed necessary
to illustrate the proposals, and in particular:
(i)....................................................
...
823
(ii)...................................................
(iii) designate the land subject to compulsory
acquisition under the powers in that behalf conferred by
this Act or any other law for the time being in force."
The High Court has clearly erred in holding that the
Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 cannot apply
to the urban agglomeration of Warangal. In reaching that
conclusion, it observed that under s. 244(1) (c) (iii) the
master plan must designate the land subject to compulsory
acquisition under the powers in that behalf conferred by the
Act or any other law for the time being in force; otherwise,
the master plan prepared for the town cannot be treated to
be a master plan as prepared in accordance with law. The
view taken by the High Court is wholly unwarranted and
proceeds on a misconception of the scheme of the Act.
Section 3 of the Act provides that except as otherwise
provided in the Act, on and from the commencement thereof,
no person shall be entitled to hold any ‘vacant land’ in
excess of the ceiling limit in the territories to which this
Act applies under sub-s.(2) of s. 1. By s. 4(1)(d), the
ceiling limit placed on such land situate in an ‘urban
agglomeration’ falling within category ‘D’ specified in
Schedule I, is fixed at two thousand square metres. An urban
agglomeration is made up of the main town together with the
adjoining areas of urban growth and is treated as one urban
spread. The expression ‘vacant land’ is defined in s. 2(q)
as meaning land, not being land mainly used for the purpose
of agriculture, in an urban agglomeration, but does not
include certain categories thereof. The term ‘urban land’ is
defined in s. 2(o) as meaning:
"(o) ‘Urban land’ means.-
(i) any land situated within the limits of an
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urban agglomeration and referred to as such in the master
plan; or
(ii) In a case where there is no master plan, or
where the master plan does not refer to any land as urban
land, any land within the limits of an urban agglomeration
and situated in any area included within the local limits of
a municipality (by whatever name called), a notified area
committee, a town area committee, a city and town committee,
a small town committee, a cantonment board or a panchayat,
but does not include any such land which is mainly used for
the purpose of agriculture."
824
The expression "urban agglomeration", as defined in s. 2(n)
of the Act, so far as material, reads:
(n) "urban agglomeration,-
(A) in relation to any State or Union Territory
specified in column (1) of Schedule I, means:
(i) the urban agglomeration specified in the
corresponding entry in column (2) thereof and includes the
peripheral area specified in the corresponding entry in
column (3) thereof; and"
The urban agglomeration of Warangal is specified in
Schedule I to the Act. The relevant entry reads:
"States Towns Peripheral Category
---------- ------ --------- ---------
(1) (2) (3) (4)
1. Andhra Pradesh 5.Warangal 1m 1Km. D"
It is quite clear that under the scheme of the Act the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations does not depend on the existence of a master
plan. The definition of ‘urban land’, as contained in s.
2(o) of the Act is in two parts, namely (1) in a case where
there is a master plan prepared under the law for the time
being in force, any land within the limits of an urban
agglomeration and referred to as such in the master plan, is
treated to be urban land, and (2) in a case where there is
no master plan, or the master plan does not refer to any
land as urban land, any land within the limits of an urban
agglomeration and situated in any area included within the
local limit of a municipality or other local authorities is
regarded as such. The existence of a master plan within the
meaning of s. 2(h) is, therefore, not a sine qua non for the
applicability of the Act to an urban agglomeration. The only
difference is that where there is a master plan, the Act
extends to all lands situate within the local limits of a
municipality or other local authority, and also covers the
peripheral area thereof; but where there is no such master
plan, its applicability is confined to the municipal limits
or the local area, as the case may be.
It is common ground that there was a master plan
prepared for Warangal on October 26, 1949. On September 7,
1963, the Warangal Municipality resolved by a resolution to
prepare a fresh master plan and on February 18, 1966, the
State Government directed that untill the new plan was
prepared, the old master plan should continue. There after,
a revised master plan was prepared by the Direc-
825
tor of Town Planning, Hyderabad after conducting physical
and socio-economic surveys and sent to the Municipal
Council, Warangal for adoption and approval, in pursuance of
its resolution dated September 7, 1963. The Municipal
Council by its resolution dated April 30, 1969 approved the
same with some modifications. The revised master plan was
submitted by the Municipal Council, Warangal to the State
Government for sanction under s. 244, sub-s.(1), cl.(d) of
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the, Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District Municipalities
Act, 1956. On November 25, 1971, the old master plan was
revoked by the State Government and a new master plan
sanctioned. The master plan contains proposals for areas
required to be covered by s. 244, sub-s.(1), cl.(c),
contiguous and adjacent to the municipal limits of Warangal
which were under the jurisdiction of various gram panchayats
and all such lands were deemed to be lands needed for public
purpose within the meaning of the Hyderabad Land Acquisition
Act, 1309 Fasli, and the Municipality could under s. 251 of
the Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District Municipalities
Act, 1956 acquire the lands required for the implementation
of for the master plan. The learned Attorney General has
placed before us the relevant notifications.
The word "shall" in cl. (c) of sub-s. (1) of s. 244 of
the Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) District Municipalities
Act, 1956 in its context and setting, is directory. A master
plan prepared by a municipality may or may not contain a
proposal for compulsory acquisition of land, or any
descriptive matter or map to illustrate a scheme for
development. Mere absence of such proposal for compulsory
acquisition or a map or descriptive matter would not be
tantamount to there being no master plan. A master plan may
include proposals for development of areas required to be
covered by s. 244, sub-s. (1), cl.(c), contiguous and
adjacent to the municipal limits of a city or town, but may
not designate the land to be compulsorily acquired, the
absence of which would not invalidate the scheme. It is
because the municipality has always the power under s. 250
of the Act to acquire the land required for implementation
of such scheme.
It appears that the revised master plan prepared for
Warangal does, as it should, provide for various development
schemes. For ought we know, it also designates the lands
subject to compulsory acquisition. Even if it were not so,
the master plan prepared under s. 244, sub-s. (1), cl. (c)
did not cease to be ‘a master plan prepared in accordance
with law for the time being in force’, within the meaning of
s. 2(h) of the Act, in relation to the town of Warangal. The
Act, is, therefore, clearly applicable to the urban
agglomerations of
826
Warangal and it extends not only to all the lands included
within the local limits of the Warangal Municipality but
also includes the peripheral areas specified, i.e. one
kilometre around such limits.
In this group of cases, there is a writ petition filed
by Maharao Sabeb Bhim Singhji, former ruler of the erstwhile
princely State of Kota. It raises the question whether the
Parliament had legislative competence to enact the Urban
Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976, in relation to the
State of Rajasthan. The question involved is common to all
the States which subsequently adopted the Act.
The Bill, after it was passed by both the Houses of
Parliament, received the assent of the President on February
17, 1976. There is a schedule annexed to the Act and among
the various States specified in the schedule, is the State
of Rajasthan with the urban agglomerations of Jaipur,
Jodhpur, Ajmer, Kota and Bikaner. Of these, the cities of
Jaipur and Jodhpur are declared to be agglomerations
belonging to category ‘C’ while Ajmer, Kota and Bikaner are
placed in category ‘D’. On March 9, 1976, the State
Legislature of Rajathan passed the following resolution
adopting the Act:
"Whereas the Legislature of Rajasthan State
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considers it expedient to provide for the imposition of a
ceiling on vacant land in urban agglomerations, for the
acquisition of such land in excess of the ceiling limit, to
regulate the construction of buildings on such land and for
matters connected therewith, with a view to preventing the
concentration of urban land in the hands of a few persons
and speculation and profiteering therein and with a view to
bringing about an equitable distribution of land in urban
agglomerations to subserve the common good.
And whereas the Parliament has no power to make
laws for the States with regard to the matters aforesaid
except as provided in Article 249 and 250 of the
Constitution.
And whereas this Legislature is of the opinion
that aforesaid matter may be regulated in Rajasthan State by
the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (33 of
Central Act of 1976) enacted by the Parliament.
Now therefore the Legislature of Rajasthan State
passes the following resolution in pursuance of Article
252:, clause (1) :-
"Rajasthan State adopts the Urban Land (Ceiling
and Regulation) Act, 1976 (33 of Central Act of 1976) for
this State"."
827
When the Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha on
January 28, 1976, it cannot be denied that the State of
Rajasthan was not one of the eleven States which had passed
a resolution under the first part of Art. 252(1), and the
question that arises is whether the Parliament had the
legislative competence to enact a law in relation to that
State. It is argued that the inclusion of the State of
Rajasthan in the Schedule as one of the States specified to
which the Act applies, or the categorisation of the various
cities and towns of that State, including the town of Kota,
was non est. It is submitted that the legislature of the
State of Rajasthan never authorised the Parliament to enact
a law for the imposition of ceiling on immovable properties
in that State and, therefore, the Act was still-born in
respect of the State of Rajasthan. It is accordingly urged
that the Act being legislatively incompetent in so far as
the State of Rajasthan was concerned, it could not be
adopted by a subsequent resolution passed by the State
legislature of Rajasthan on March 9, 1976.
The learned Attorney General, however, tries to meet
the challenge to the applicability of the Act to the State
of Rajasthan from two aspects. He contends that the
Parliament was undoubtedly invested with legislative
competence to enact a law for the imposition of a ceiling on
urban land for the State of Rajasthan, both under Art. 250
as well as under Art. 252. First of all, he points out that
while there was a Proclamation of Emergency in force on
February 17, 1976, the Parliament had the power to legislate
with respect to any matter in the State List under Article
250, which reads:
"250. (1) Notwithstanding anything in this
Chapter, Parliament shall, while a Proclamation of Emergency
is in operation, have power to make laws for the whole or
any part of the territory of India with respect to any of
the matter enumerated in the State List.
(2) A law made by Parliament which Parliament would not
but for the issue of a Proclamation of Emergency have been
competent to make shall, to the extent of the incompetency,
cease to have effect on the expiration of a period of six
months after the Proclamation has ceased to operate, except
as respects things done or omitted to be done before the
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expiration of the said period."
The learned Attorney General is no doubt right in
saying that if a Proclamation of Emergency is in operation,
under Art. 250(1) the power of the Parliament extends to the
making of laws for the whole or any part of the territory of
India with respect to any of the matters
828
enumerated in the State List, but the Act so passed will die
out with the revocation of the Proclamation of Emergency, by
reason of Art 250(2) on the expiration of a period of six
months after the Proclamation has ceased to operate, except
as respects things done or omitted to be done before the
expiration of the said period. That conclusion is inevitable
from the words "shall cease to have effect" appearing in
Art. 250(2).
Now, the further difficulty in accepting the learned
Attorney General’s contention is that the Parliament never
professed to act under Art 250(1). Although he drew our
attention to the second part of the preamble to the Act
which reads:
"AND WHEREAS Parliament has no power to make laws
for the States with respect to the matters aforesaid except
as provided in Articles 249 and 250 of the Constitution;"
it is amply clear from the third part of the preamble, which
reads:
"AND WHEREAS in pursuance of clause (1) of Article
252 of the Constitution resolutions have been passed by all
the Houses of the Legislatures of the States of Andhra
Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka,
Maharashtra, Orissa, Punjab, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh and West
Bengal that the matters aforesaid should be regulated in
those States by Parliament by law;"
that the Parliament never intended to take recourse to its
powers under Art. 250(1), but proceeded to make such a law,
being clothed with its powers to legislate on the subject
under Art. 252(1). The Act was, therefore, a law enacted by
the Parliament by virtue of its powers under Art. 252(1).
The Statement of objects and Reasons really places the
matter beyond all doubt. Its material portion reads:
"Statement of Objects and Reasons
There has been a demand for imposing a ceiling on
urban property also, especially after the imposition of a
ceiling on agricultural lands by the State Governments. With
the growth of population and increases in urbanization, a
need for orderly development of urban areas has also been
felt. It is, therefore, considered necessary to take
measures for exercising social control over the scarce
resource of urban land with a view to ensuring its equitable
distribution amongst the various sections of society and
also avoiding speculative transactions relating to land in
urban agglomera-
829
tions. With a view to ensuring uniformity in approach
Government of India addressed the State Governments in this
regard; eleven States have so far passed resolutions under
Art. 252(1) of the Constitution empowering Parliament to
undertake legislation in this behalf. The present proposal
is to enact a Parliamentary legislation in pursuance of
these resolutions." (Emphasis supplied)
There is also some difficulty in accepting the
contention of the learned Attorney General on a matter of
construction of Art. 252(1). The question of adoption of a
law made by the Parliament in respect of any of the matters
in State List arises under the second part of Art. 252(1)
and is dependent upon the ‘desirability’ expressed by the
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legislatures of two or more States empowering the Parliament
to make such a law under the first part thereof. We are
inclined to think that some meaning must be given to the
words "any Act so passed". The power of adoption, is,
therefore, related to a law made under Art. 252 (1) and
cannot be exercised in respect of laws made by the
Parliament under Art. 250(1) while a Proclamation of
Emergency is in force. Furthermore, such a law, in terms of
Art. 250(2), ceases to have effect on the expiration of a
period of six months after the Proclamation has ceased to
operate.
The learned Attorney General, however, rightly
contends, in the alternative, that the Parliament being
invested with the power by resolutions passed under the
first part of Art. 252(1) by as many as eleven States, to
legislate on the subject, i.e., to make a law for the
imposition of a ceiling or immovable property, it had the
competence to so structure the Act that it was capable of
being adopted by other States under the second part of Art.
252(1). A fortiori, the specification of the State of
Rajasthan by which the Act may be adopted, as well as the
categorisation of the urban agglomerations therein to which
it may apply, had to be there.
It is, however, strenuously urged on behalf of the
petitioner that law made by the Parliament under Art. 252(1)
cannot be so designated as to extend to the States which had
not sponsored a resolution. Emphasis is laid upon the words
"in such States", and it is said that they mean "in those
States", i.e., the sponsoring States. In support of the
contention, our attention was particularly drawn to the word
Accordingly’, and it is urged that the law passed by the
Parliament under Art. 252(1) must be restricted in its
operation to those States, i.e., to those States in which
the Legislature passed a resolution. We are afraid, the
contention cannot be accepted.
830
In our considered judgment, the Parliament having been
invested with powers to legislate on a State subject, by
resolutions passed by Legislatures of two or more States
under Art. 252(1), has plenary powers to make suitable
legislation. It follows, as a necessary corollary, that the
Act passed by the Parliament under Art. 252(1) can be so
structured as to be capable of being effectively adopted by
the other States. Article 252(1) undoubtedly enables the
Parliament to make a uniform law. The Act so passed would
automatically apply to the States the legislatures of which
have passed a resolution in terms of Art. 252(1), and at the
same time it must be capable of beings adopted by other
States which have not sponsored a resolution, i.e., the non-
sponsoring States. The second part of Art. 252(1) will be
meaningful only if it were so interpreted; otherwise, it
would be rendered wholly redundant. To illustrate, if the
part of the Schedule relating to the State of Rajasthan is
treated as non est, the schedule which forms part of the Act
cannot be amended except under Art. 252(2), i.e., ‘in the
like manner’. We fail to appreciate how two or more States
can now pass a resolution for extension of the Act to the
State of Rajasthan.
In a law relating to the imposition of ceiling on
vacant land in urban agglomerations throughout the territory
of India, it was competent for the Parliament under Entry
18, List II of Seventh Schedule is not only to have the
States specified in the Schedule to the Act where the law
will extend, but also include the categorisation of urban
agglomerations in respect of the whole of the territory of
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India. The Act would automatically apply from the date of
its application to those States which had passed the
resolution in terms of the first part of Art. 252(1), and
would extend to the adopting States from the date of the
resolutions passed by the legislatures of such States. The
Parliament had, therefore, in fact and in law, competence to
legislate on the subject of the imposition of ceiling on
urban immovable property, and the Schedule to the Act
cannot, therefore, be struck down in relation to the State
of Rajasthan.
It is conceded by learned counsel for the petitioner
that if the Act had been enacted without the Schedule, with
an appropriate definition, of ‘an urban agglomeration’ in s.
2(n), in general terms, making the law applicable to cities
and towns having, for example, a population of one lac and
above, five lacs and above etc., it would have been within
the legislative competence of the Parliament. If that be so,
then it is inexplicable why simply because some of the areas
in some of the States have been specified, although their
State legislatures had not sponsored any resolution, the
schedule, in so far as those States are
831
concerned should be regarded as non est. If it is competent
for the Parliament to make a general law under Art. 252(1)
to facilitate its adoption by other States, it must
logically follow that the Parliament could also pass the Act
in its present form.
We are of the opinion that the Act with the Schedule
annexed became applicable in those States where the
legislatures passed resolutions expressing the
‘desirability’ for the Parliament to make a law for the
imposition of ceiling on urban immovable property, and it
lay dormant insofar as the other States were concerned. It
became applicable to these other States from the date that
their Houses of Legislatures adopted it. In that view, we
must hold that the impugned Act is not beyond the
legislative competence of the Parliament insofar as the
State of Rajasthan is concerned.
In the result, the appeals succeed and are allowed. The
judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court is set aside, and
it is declared that the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation)
Act, 1976, is, and has always been, in force in the State of
Andhra Pradesh w.e.f. January 28, 1976. It is further
declared that the Act extends to the urban agglomerations of
Warangal. It must, for reasons already stated, also be held
that the Act applies to the State of Rajasthan w.e.f. March
9, 1976. The remaining contentions advanced in the writ
petition will be dealt with separately. There shall be no
order as to costs in these proceedings.
N.V.K. Appeals allowed.
832