Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CAPTAIN GANPATI SINGHJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF AJMER AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/12/1954
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1955 AIR 188 1955 SCR (1)1065
ACT:
Ajmer Laws Regulation of 1877 (Reg. III of 1877), s. 40-
Chief Commissioner empowered to make rules for establishing
a system of conservancy and sanitation at fairs-First three
sub-rules of Rule 1 prohibit the holding of fair except
under a permit issued by District Magistrate who is required
to satisfy himself that applicant can establish a proper
system of conservancy-Fourth sub-rule empowering District
Magistrate to revoke permit without assigning any reason or
without previous notice-Sub-rulles-Whether ultra vires the
Regulation.
HEADNOTE:
Under s. 40 of the Ajmer Laws Regulation of 1877 (Reg. III
of 1877) the Chief Commissioner is empowered, among other
things, to make rules about................. the
establishment of a proper system of conservancy and
sanitation at fairs.............................. The first
three sub-rules of Rule 1, framed by the Chief Commissioner
prohibit the holding of a fair except under a permit issued
by the District Magistrate and the District Magistrate is
enjoined "to satisfy himself, before issuing any permit that
the applicant is in a position to establish a proper system
of conservancy, sanitation and watch and ward at the fair".
The fourth sub-rule empowers the District Magistrate "to
revoke any such permit without assigning any reasons or
giving any previous notice".
The appellant’s application for a permit to hold a fair was
refused by the District Magistrate on the ground that no
more permits were to be issued to private individuals.
Held, that under the Regulation it is the Chief Commissioner
and not the District Magistrate who has power to frame
rules, that the Chief Commissioner had no authority to
delegate that power and that the Rules made by the latter
are therefore ultra vires;
Held further, that the Rule is also ultra vires for the
reason that in authorising the District Magistrate to revoke
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a permit granted " without giving any reason or previous
notice" it invests him with a power to prohibit the exercise
by the citizen of the constitutionally protected right to
bold fairs.
The District Magistrate’s order, which in effect prohibits
the holding of the fair, is therefore bad, for, without the
aid of these rules or some other law validly empowering him
to impose the ban, he has no power in himself to do it.
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Per JAGANNADHADAS J. (DAS J. concurring):-
The impugned order of the District Magistrate is bad:-
(i)because the rules do not authorise him to reject an
application on the ground on which-lie has done;
(ii)because the not effect of the rules is to establish a
system of ad hoc control by the District Magistrate through
the issue of a permit and by the vesting of other powers in
him under the rules. This result is not within the
intendment of the section which authorises the making of the
rules.
Tahir Hussain v. District Board, Muzafarnagar (A.I.R. 1954
S.C. 630) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 43 of 1954.
Appeal under Article 132(1) of the Constitution of India
from the Judgment and Order dated the 22nd November 1952 of
the Judicial Commissioner’s Court, Ajmer, in Misc. Petition
No. 226 of 1952.
N. C. Chatterji (I. N. Shroff, with him) for the
appellant.
Porus A. Mehta and P. G. Gokhale for the respondents.
1954. December 3. The judgment of Mehr Chand Mahajan C.J.,
Mukherjea, Vivian Bose, Bhagwati and Venkatarama Ayyar JJ.
was delivered by Bose J. The judgment of Das and
Jagannadhadas JJ. was delivered by Jagannadhadas J.
BOSE J.-The appellant is the Istimrardar of Kharwa.
According to him, be has held a cattle fair on his estate
every year for some twenty years. On 8-1-1951 the Chief
Commissioner of Ajmer framed certain rules for the
regulation of cattle and other fairs in the State of Ajmer.
He purported to do this under sections 40 and 41 of the
Ajmer Laws Regulation of 1877 (Reg. III of 1877). One of
the rules required that persons desiring to hold fairs
should obtain a permit from the District Magistrate.
Accordingly the appellant applied for a permit. This was
refused on the ground that no more permits were to be issued
to private individuals. The appellant thereupon applied
under article 226 of the Constitution to the Judicial
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Commissioner’s Court at Ajmer for the issue of a writ
directing the authorities concerned to permit the appellant
to hold his fair as usual. He contended that his
fundamental rights under the Constitution were infringed and
also that the rules promulgated by the Chief Commissioner
were ultra vires the Regulation under which he purported to
act.
The learned Judicial Commissioner refused to issue the writ
but granted leave to appeal under article 132(1) of the
Constitution in the following terms:
"I am of opinion that the question whether the regulation
and the bye-laws framed thereunder amount to a reasonable
restriction on the appellant’s fundamental right to hold a
cattle fair in his own land involves a substantial question
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of law as to the interpretation of the Constitution".
The leave is confined to the vires of the Regulation and the
bye-laws but we allowed the appellant to attack the,
validity of the District Magistrate’s action as well.
It is admitted that the land on which the fair is normally
held belongs to the appellant. That being so, he has a
fundamental right under article 19(1)(f) which can only be
restricted in the manner permitted by sub-clause (5). The
holding of an annual fair is an occupation or business
within the meaning of article 19 (1) (g), therefore, the
appellant also has a fundamental right to engage in that
occupation on his land provided it does not infringe any law
imposing "reasonable restrictions on that right in the
interests of the general public", or any law
"relating to-
(i) the professional or technical qualifications necessary
for practising................ or carrying on" the
occupation or business in question. (Article 19(6) as
amended in 1951).
The only law relevant here is sections 40 and 41 of
Regulation III of 1877. Under section 40, the Chief
Commissioner is empowered, among other things, to make rules
about-
137
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"(a) the maintenance of watch and ward, and the
establishment of a proper system of conservancy and
sanitation at fairs and other large public assemblies; (b)
the imposition of taxes for the purposes mentioned in clause
(a) of this section on persons holding or joining any of the
assemblies therein referred to;
(b) the registration of cattle".
Section 41 provides for penalties in the following terms:
"The Chief Commissioner may, in making any rule under this
Regulation, attach to the breach of it, in addition to any
other consequences that would entire from such breach, a
punishment, on conviction before a Magistrate, not exceeding
rigorous or simple imprisonment for a month or a fine of two
hundred rupees, or both".
These sections were not impugned in the argument before us
nor were they attacked in the petition made to the Judicial
Commissioner, so we will pass on to the rules made by the
Chief Commissioner.
The first three sub-rules of Rule I deal with permits. They
prohibit the holding of a fair except under a permit issued
by the District Magistrate, and the District Magistrate is
enjoined to-
"satisfy himself, before issuing any permit, that the
applicant is in a position to establish a proper system of
conservancy, sanitation and watch and ward at the fair".
The fourth sub-rule empowers the District Magistrate
to
"revoke any such permit without assigning any reasons or
giving any previous notice".
When the appellant applied for a permit on 9-7-1952) the
District Magistrate replied:
"It has been decided that as a matter of policy permits to
hold fairs will be issued only to local bodies and not to
private individuals. It is, therefore, regretted that you
cannot be permitted to hold the fair and you are therefore
requested to please abandon the idea".
In our opinion, the rules travel beyond the Regu-
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lation in at least two respects. The Regulation empowers
the Chief Commissioner to make rules for the establishment
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of a system of conservancy and sanitation. He can only do
this by bringing a system into existence and incorporating
it in his rules so that all concerned can know what the
system is and make arrangements to comply with it. What he
has done is to leave it to the District Magistrate to see
that persons desiring to hold a fair are in a position "to
establish a proper system of conservancy, etc." But who,
according to this, is to determine what a proper system is:
obviously the District Magistrate. Therefore, in effect,
the rules empower the District Magistrate to make his own
system and see that it is observed. But the Regulation
confers this power on the Chief Commissioner and not on the
District Magistrate, therefore the action of the Chief
Commissioner in delegating this authority to the District
Magistrate is ultra vires.
Further, under the fourth sub-rule of Rule I the District
Magistrate is empowered to revoke a permit granted "without
assigning any reasons or giving any previous notice". This
absolute and arbitrary power uncontrolled by any discretion
is also ultra vires. The Regulation assumes the right of
persons to hold fairs, and all it requires is that those who
do so should have due regard for the requirements -of
conservancy and sanitation; and in order that they may know
just what these requirements are, the Chief Commissioner
(not some lesser authority) is given the power to draw up a
set of rules stating what is necessary. If they are in a
position to observe these rules, they are, so far as the
Regulation is concerned, entitled to hold their fair, for
there is no other law restricting that right. Therefore,
the Chief Commissioner cannot by Rule invest the District
Magistrate with the right arbitrarily to prohibit that which
the law and the Constitution, not only allow, but guarantee.
As these sub-rules of Rule I are ultra vires, the District
Magistrate’s order, which in effect prohibits the holding of
the fair, is also bad for, without the aid of these rules or
of some other law validly
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empowering him to impose the ban, he has no power in himself
to do it. The matter is covered by the decision of this
Court in Tahir Hussain v. District Board, Muzafarnagar(1).
The appeal is allowed and the order of the Judicial
Commissioner is set aside. We declare that the rules are
void to the extent indicated above and we quash the order of
the District Magistrate dated 18-9-1952. But we make no
order about costs because the point on which we have
proceeded was not taken in proper time in this Court.
JAGANNADHADAS J.-The order of the District Magistrate dated
the 18th September, 1952, declining to grant a permit to
hold the cattle fair on the ground that it has been decided
to issue permits only to local bodies and not to private
individuals is bad for two reasons.
1. The rules under which he is to grant or refuse permits
in this behalf only authorise him to satisfy himself that
the applicant is in a position to establish a proper system
of conservancy, sanitation and watch and ward at the fair
and also to impose such terms and conditions as he may deem
fit. But they do not authorise him to reject an application
on the ground on which he has done.
2. The rules themselves under which the permit has been
asked for and with reference to which the District
Magistrate declined to grant the permit are not within the
ambit of the rule-making power. These rules purport to have
been framed in exercise of the powers conferred by sections
40 and 41 of the Ajmer Laws Regulation, 1877. Section 40
authorises the framing of the rules "for the maintenance of
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watch and ward and the establishment of a proper system of
conservancy and sanitation at fairs and other large public
assemblies". But the actual rules as framed are to the
effect (1) that no such fair can be held except under a
permit of the District Magistrate, (2) that before issuing a
permit the District Magistrate is to satisfy himself that
the applicant is in a position
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S C. 630,
1071
tion and watch and ward at the fair, (3) that when issuing a
permit the District Magistrate can impose such terms and
conditions as he may deem fit. The net effect of these
rules is merely to establish a system of ad hoc control by
the District Magistrate through the issue of a permit and by
the vesting of other powers in him under the rules. These
cannot be said to be rules which in themselves constitute a
system of conservancy, sanitation and watch and ward. Thus
the result that is brought about is not within the intend-
ment of the section which authorises the making of the
rules. A system of ad hoc control of responsible officers
may, possibly be one method of regulating the sanitary and
other arrangements at such large gatherings. But if it is
intended to constitute a system of ad hoc control with
reasonable safeguards, the power to make rules in that
behalf must be granted to the rule-making authority by the
legislative organ in appropriate language.
The impugned order of the District Magistrate being bad on
both the above grounds, this is enough to dispose of the
appeal and it is not necessary to express any opinion as to
whether the impugned order infringes also the appellant’s
fundamental rights under article 19. The appeal must
accordingly be allowed.
Appeal allowed.