Basheshar Nath Vs. The Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Delhi & Rajasthan & ANR [1958] INSC 117 (19 November 1958)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ) BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION: 1959 AIR 149 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 528
CITATOR INFO :
R 1960 SC1080 (24) E&R 1960 SC1125 (26) R
1961 SC1457 (6) RF 1962 SC 92 (6,11) MV 1966 SC1089 (54) RF 1967 SC1643 (14) E
1970 SC 898 (60) RF 1973 SC1461 (311,313,405,447,533,1693,1933 RF 1975 SC1121
(18) RF 1975 SC2299 (344,528) R 1976 SC1207 (157,516) RF 1977 SC1496 (18) RF
1979 SC 25 (40) RF 1980 SC1362 (24) RF 1981 SC 679 (12) R 1986 SC 180 (29) D
1987 SC 925 (13) RF 1990 SC1480 (52) C 1991 SC 101 (257)
ACT:
Income-tax-Evasion of taxation-Case referred
to Investigation Commission-Commencement of the Constitution Settlement of case
--Constitutional validity of-Waiver of fundamental right, if
permissible-Taxation of Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947 (30 Of
1947), s. 8AConstitution of India, Art. 14, Part III.
HEADNOTE:
The two questions for determination in this
appeal were, (1) whether a settlement under s. 8A of the Taxation of Income
(Investigation Commission) Act, 1947 (30 Of 1947) made after the commencement
of the Constitution was constitutionally valid and (2) whether the waiver of a
fundamental right was permissible under the Constitution. The appellant's case
was on July 22, 1948, referred by the Central Government under S. 5(1) of the
Act to the Investigation Commission for investigation and report. The
Commission directed the authorised official under s. 6 of the Act to examine
the appellant's accounts. He submitted his final report by the end of 1953. The
Commission considered the report heard the assessee and came to the conclusion
that Rs. 4,47,915 had escaped assessment. Thereupon the appellant on May 20, 1954, applied to the Commission for a settlement of his case under s. 8A of the
Act, agreeing to pay Rs. 3,50,000 by way of tax and penalty at the concessional
rate. The Commission reported to the Central Government approving of the
settlement, the Central Government accepted it and it was recorded by the
Commission. The Central Government directed the recovery of the said amount
under s. 8A(2) of the Act.
The appellant was permitted to make payments
by monthly installments of Rs. 5,000 and the total amount thus paid up to September 8, 1957, aggregated to Rs. 1,28,000. In the meantime the Income Tax Officer
issued a certificate and certain properties of the appellant were attached.
Relying on the decisions of this Court in Suraj Mall Mohta and Co. v. A. V.
Visvanatha Sastri, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 448 and M. Ct. Muthiah v. The Commissioner
of Income-tax, Madras, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247, the appellant applied to the
Commissioner of Income-tax challenging the validity of the settlement made
under s. 8A of the Act on the ground that S. 5(1) Of the Act on which it was
founded had been declared void by this Court, and claimed that his properties
might be released from attachment and the amount paid under the settlement
might be refunded to him., On January 29, 1958, the Commissioner of Income Tax
sent a reply to the appellant maintaining that the settlement was valid and 529
that the appellant was bound there under to pay up the arrears of installments
and requesting him to continue to pay in future. Against this decision of the
Commissioner of Income Tax the. appellant came up to the Supreme Court by
special leave. It was contended on behalf of the respondent that the Act laid
down two distinct and separate procedures, one for investigation and the other
for settlement and it was the former alone and not the D, latter that was
affected by the decisions of this Court. and that the appellant by voluntarily
entering into the settlement had waived his fundamental right founded on Art.
14 of the Constitution.
Held (Per Curiam), that both the contentions
must fail.
It was not correct to say that the Taxation
of Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, laid down two different
procedures, one for investigation and assessment under s. 8(2) of the Act and
another for settlement under s. 8A of the Act and assessment in terms of such
settlement and that while the decision of this Court in M. Ct. Muthiah v. The
Commissioner of Income tax, Madras, declaring s. 5(1) of the Act to be
discriminatory and therefore void, affected only the former procedure and not
the latter. The Act laid down but one procedure and in entertaining a proposal
for settlement as in the investigation itself the Commission exercised the same
jurisdiction, and powers and followed the one and the same procedure as laid
down by ss. 5, 6 and 7 Of the Act. Since the settlement in the instant case was
no exception to that rule, it was covered by the decision and must be held to
be violative of Art. 14 Of the Constitution.
M. Ct. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247, applied.
The observations made in the majority
judgment of this Court in Syed Qasim Razvi v. The State of Hyderabad, [1953]
S.C.R. 589, must be kept strictly confined to the special facts of that case
and had no application to the facts of the present case.
Syed Qasim Razvi v. The State of Hyderabad,
[1953] S.C.R. 589, held inapplicable.
Per Das, C. J., and Kapur J.-There could be
no waiver of the fundamental right founded on Art. 14 Of the Constitution and
it was not correct to contend that the appellant had by entering into the
settlement under s. 8A of the Act, waived his fundamental right under that
Article. Article 14 was founded on a sound public policy recognised and valued
all over the civilised world, its language was the language of command and it
imposed an obligation on the State of which no person could, by his act or
conduct, relieve it. As it was not strictly necessary for the disposal of this
case, the question whether any other fundamental right could be waived need not
be considered in this connection.
Laxamanappa Hanumantappa jamkhandi v. The
Union of India, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 769; Dewan-Bahadur Seth Gopal Das Moht 67 530
v. The Union of India, [1955] 1 S.C.R.773; Baburao Narayanrao Sanas v. The
Union Of India, [1954] 26 I.T.R.
725; Subedar v. State, A.I.R. 1957 All. 396
and Pakhar Singh v. The State, A.I.R. 1958 Punj. 294, distinguished and held
inapplicable.
Per Bhagwati and gubba Rao, jj.-There could
be no waiver '.,not only of the fundamental right enshrined in Art. 14 but also
of any other fundamental right guaranteed by Part III of the Constitution. The
Constitution made no distinction between fundamental rights enacted for the
benefit of the individual and those enacted in the public interest or on
grounds of the public policy. There could, therefore, be no justification for
importing American notions or authority of decided cases to whittle down the
transcendental character of those rights, conceived in public interest and
subject only to such limitations as the Constitution had itself thought fit to
impose.
Article 13(2) was in terms a constitutional
mandate to the State in respect of all the fundamental rights enacted in Part
III of the Constitution and no citizen could by waiver of any one of them
relieve the State of the solemn obligation that lay on it. The view expressed
by Mahajan, C. J., in Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. The State of Bombay, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 613, correctly laid down the law on the point. Since the arguments in
the instant case had covered the entire field of fundamental rights, there was
no reason why the answer should be confined to Art. 14 alone.
Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. The State of
Bombay, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613; State of Travancore-Cochin v. The Bombay Co.,
Ltd., [1954] S.C.R. 1112 and The State of Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamarbaugwala,
[1957] S.C.R. 874, referred to.
Per S. K. Das, J.-It seems clear that Art. 13
itself recognises the distinction between absence of legislative power which
will make the law made by an incompetent legislature wholly void, and exercise
of legislative power in contravention of a restriction or check on such power,
which will make the law void to the extent of the inconsistency or contravention;
therefore the mere use of the word " void " in Art. 13 does not
necessarily militate against the application of the doctrine of waiver in
respect of the provisions contained in Part III of the Constitution.
Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. The State of
Bombay, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613, considered.
Bhikaji Narain Dhakyas v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 589; M. Ct. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247 and The State of Bombay v. R.M.D. Chamarbaugwala,
[1957] S.C.R. 874, referred to.
There was nothing in the two preambles to the
Indian and the American Constitutions that could make the doctrine of waiver
applicable to the one and not to the other; since the doctrine 531 applied to
the constitutional rights under the American Constitution, there is no reason
why it should not apply to the fundamental rights under the Indian
Constitution.
Case-law considered.
But it must be made clear that there is no
absolute rule, or one formulated in the abstract, as to the applicability of
that doctrine to fundamental rights and such applicability must depend on (1)
the nature of fundamental right to which it is sought to be applied and (2) the
foundation on the basis of which the plea is raised. The true test must be whether
the fundamental right is one primarily meant for the benefit of individuals or
for the benefit of the general public.
Where, therefore, the Constitution vested the
right in the individual, primarily intending to benefit him and such right did
not impinge on the rights of others, there could be a waiver of such right
provided it was not forbidden by law or did not contravene public policy or
public morals.
As in the instant case the respondents who
had raised the plea, had failed to prove the necessary facts on which it could
be sustained, the plea of waiver must fail.
Per Subba Rao, J.-Apart from the question as
to whether there could be a waiver in respect of a fundamental right, s. 5(1)
of the Taxation of Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, having been
declared void by this Court in M. Ct. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras, as being violative of the fundamental right founded on Art'
14 Of the Constitution and such decision being binding on all courts in India,
the Commissioner of Income-tax had no jurisdiction to continue the proceedings
against the appellant under that Act and the appellant could not by a waiver of
his right confer jurisdiction on him.
No distinction could be made under Art. 13(1)
of the Constitution between the constitutional incompetency of a legislature
and constitutional limitation placed on its power of legislation, for a statute
declared void on either ground would continue to be so, so long as the
inconsistency continued. As the inconsistency of S. 5(1) of the Act with Art.
14 continued, it must continue to be void.
Keshavan Madhava Menon v. The State of
Bombay, [1951] S.C.R. 228; Behram Khurshed Pesihaka v. State of Bombay, [1955]
1 S.C.R. 613 and Bhikaji Narain Dhakras v. State of Madhya Pradesh, [1955] 2
S.C.R. 589, referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No.208 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the order dated
January 29, 1958, of the Commissioner of Income-tax,Delhi & Rajasthan at
New Delhi, under s. 8A(2) of the 532 Taxation on Income (Investigation
Commission) Act, 1947.
Harnam Singh and Sadhu Singh for the
appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India,
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, B. Sen and R. H. Dhebar for the
respondents.
A. C. Mitra and B. P. Maheshwari, for the
interveners.
1958. November 19. The Judgment of Das, C.
J., and Kapur, J.,, was delivered by Das, C. J. Bhagwati, S. K. Das and Subba
Rao, JJ., delivered separate judgments.
DAS, C. J.-This appeal by special leave filed
by one Shri Besheshar Nath hereinafter referred to as ",the assessee
" calls in question the validity of a settlement made under s. 8A of the
Taxation on Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947 (30 of 1947),
hereinafter referred to as " the Investigation Act ". This Act, which
came into force on May 1, 1947, by a notification issued by the Central
Government under s. (1) (3) thereof, has had a short but chequered career, as
will appear from the facts hereinafter stated.
In order to appreciate the several questions
canvassed before us it is necessary to refer to the provisions of the impugned
Act. Section 3 authorised the Central Government to constitute an Income Tax
Investigation Commission (hereinafter called the Commission) and imposed on it
the following duties:" (a) to investigate and report to the Central
Government on all matters relating to taxation on income, with particular
reference to the extent to which the existing law relating to, and procedure
for, the assessment and collection of such taxation is adequate to prevent the
evasion thereof;
(b) to investigate in accordance with the
provisions of this Act any case or points in a case -referred to it under
section 5 and make a report thereon (including such interim report ' s as the
Commission may think fit) to the Central Government in respect of all or any of
the assessments made in relation to the case 533 before the date of its report
or interim report, as the case may be." We may skip over s. 4 which dealt
with the composition of the Commission. Section 5, which is of importance was
as follows:" 5. (1) The Central Government may at any time' before the
30th day of June, 1948, refer to the Commission for investigation and report
any case or points in a case in which the Central Government has prima facie
reasons for believing that a person has to a substantial extent evaded payment
of taxation on income, together with such material as may be available in
support of such belief, and may at any time before the 30th day of June, 1948,
apply to the Commission for the withdrawal of any case or points in a case thus
referred, and if the Commission approves of the withdrawal, no further
proceedings shall thereafter be taken by or before the Commission in respect of
the case or points so withdrawn.
(2) The Commission may, after examining the
material submitted by the Central Government with reference to any case or
points in a case and making such investigation as it considers necessary,
report to the Central Government that in its opinion further investigation is
not likely to reveal any substantial evasion of taxation on income and on such
report being made the investigation shall be deemed to be closed.
(3) No reference made by the Central
Government under subsection (1), at any time before the 30th day of June, 1948,
shall be called in question, nor shall the sufficiency of the material on which
such a reference has been made be investigated in any manner by any Court.
(4) If in the course of investigation into
any case or points in a case referred to it under sub-section (1), the
Commission has reason to believe(a)that some person other than the person whose
case is being investigated has evaded payment of taxation on income, or (b)
that some points other than those referred to 534 it by the Central Government
in respect of any case also require investigation, it may make a report to the
Central Government stating its reasons for such belief and, on receipt of such
report, the Central Government shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), forthwith refer to the Commission for investigation the case
of such other person or such additional points as may be indicated in that
report." The date " 30th day of June, 1948 " appearing in
sub-ss. (1) and (3) was, by Act 49 of 1948, substituted by the words " 1st
day of September, 1948 ". Section 6 set out the various powers conferred
on the Commission and s. 7 prescribed the procedure of the Commission. It is
not necessary to set out the various powers and the details of the procedure in
extension and it will suffice to say that they have been considered by this
Court and pronounced to be much more drastic and harsh than the powers to be
exercised and the procedure to be followed by the income tax authorities acting
under the provisions of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. The relevant portions
of s. 8 ran as follows:" 8. (1) Save as otherwise provided in this Act,
the materials brought on record shall be considered by all the three members of
the Commission sitting together and the report of the Commission shall be in
accordance with the opinion of the majority.
(2) After considering the report, tile
Central Government shall by order in writing direct that such proceedings as it
thinks fit under the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, the Excess Profits Tax Act,
1940, or any other law, shall be taken against the person to whose case the
report relates in respect of the income of any period commencing after the 31st
day of December, 1938; and, upon such a direction being given, such proceedings
may be taken 'and completed under the appropriate law notwithstanding the
restrictions contained in section 34 of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, or
section 15 of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940, or any other law and
notwithstanding any lapse of time or any decision to a different effect given
535 in the case by any Income tax authority or Income Tax Appellate Tribunal.
(3).........................................................
(4) In all assessment or re-assessment
proceedings taken in pursuance of a direction under sub-section' (2), the
findings recorded by the Commission on the case or on the points referred to it
shall, subject to the provisions of sub-sections (5) and (6), be final; but no
proceedings taken in pursuance of such direction shall be a bar to the
initiation of proceedings under section 34 of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922.
(5).........................................................
(6).........................................................
(7) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in this Act or in any other law, for the time being in force, any
evidence in the case admitted before the Commission or an authorised official
shall be admissible in evidence in any proceedings directed to be taken under
sub-section (2).
(8).........................................................
Section 9 barred the jurisdiction of Courts
to call in question any act or proceeding of the Commission or any authorised
official appointed under s. 6. Section 10 gave power to the Central Government
to make rules by notification in the official gazette.
On July 22, 1948, the case of the assessee
was referred to the Commission in the following terms:
" Ministry of Finance (Revenue Division)
New Delhi, the 22nd July, 1948.
Under section 5 (1) of the Taxation on Income
(Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, the cases of the following persons are
hereby referred to the Investigation Commission for investigation and report,
as the Central Government has prima facie reasons for believing that each such
person has either alone or in combination with the other persons mentioned
below, evaded payment of taxation on income to a substantial 536 extent. The
material available in support of 'such belief accompanies.
-----------------------------------------------------------No.
Name -----------------------------------------------------------EP. 829/1
Beshashar Nath and Co.
829/2 Lala Beshashar Nath.
Sd./-Pyare Lal, Deputy Secretary, Ministry of
Finance (Revenue Division).
The Secretary,Income-tax, Investigation
Commission, New Delhi." It is not necessary to set out the annexures that
accompanied this Orders It appears that the total wealth statement of the
assessee was filed on November 10, 1948, and was forwarded to the authorised
official. It also appears that from January 8, 1949, to October 14, 1949, the
authorised official was engaged in the collection of assessment records of the
assessee from the territorial income tax offices and of materials from the
Civil Supplies Directorate regarding the assessee. In the meantime by a. 33 of
Act 67 of 1949 the following section was inserted in the Act as s. 8A:"
8A. Settlement of cases under investigation:(1) Where any Person concerned in
any case referred to or pending before the Commission for investigation applies
to the Commission at any time during such investigation to have the case or any
part thereof settled in so far as it relates to him, the Commission shall, if
it is of opinion that the terms of the settlement contained in the application
may be approved, refer the matter to the Central Government, and if the Central
Government accepts the terms of such settlement, the Commission shall have the
terms thereof recorded and thereupon the investigation, in so far as it relates
to matters covered by such settlement, shall be deemed to be closed.
(2) For the purpose of enforcing the terms of
any, settlement arrived at in pursuance of sub-section (1), 537 the Central
Government may direct that such proceedings as may be appropriate under the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940 (XV
of 1940), or any other law may be taken against the person to whom the
settlement relates, and in particular the provisions of the second proviso to
clause (a) of-sub-section (5) of section 23, section 24B, the proviso to
sub-section 2 of section 25A, the proviso to subjection 2 of section 26 and
sections 44 and 46 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, shall be applicable to
the recovery of any sum specified in such settlement by the, Income Tax Officer
having jurisdiction to assess the person by whom such sum is payable as if it
were income-tax or an arrear of income-tax within the meaning of those
provisions.
(3) Subject to the provisions of sub-section
(6) of section 8, any settlement arrived at under this section shall be
conclusive as to the matters stated therein, and no person whose case has been
so settled be entitled to re-open in any proceeding for the recovery of any sum
under this section or in any subsequent assessment or reassessment proceeding
relating to taxation on income or in any other proceeding before any Court or
other authority any matter which forms part of such settlement.
(4) Where a settlement has been accepted by
Government under sub-section (1), no proceedings under section 34 of the Indian
Income Tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), or under section 15 of the Excess Profits
Tax Act, 1940 (XV of 1940), shall be initiated in respect of the items of
income covered by the settlement, unless the initiation of such proceedings is
expressly allowed by the terms of the settlement." On July 5, 1949, the
total wealth statement was received back from the authorised official. Our
Constitution came into force on January 26, 1950. The order-sheet shows that
the authorised official on May 26, 1950, issued a notice to the assessee fixing
the hearing for June 10, 1950, which indicates that the authorised official was
proceeding with the investigation set in motion by the reference of the
assessee's 68 538 case to the Commission. The assessee appears to have attended
on June 6, 1950, with an application for extension of time which apparently was
given. On September 30, 1950, the assessee supplied certain statements of his
firm. The entry in the order-sheet ,,,against the date October 31, 1950, shows that
the assessee asked for further extension of time. There appears to be a hiatus
of about 3 years and evidently nothing was done until June 9, 1953, when the
authorised official fixed the hearing of the case on June 15, 1953. The
authorised official submitted his interim report to the Commission on June 9.
1953. The assessee was examined on October 9, 10 and 13, 1953, and the
authorised official submitted his final report on October 19, 1953. On January
30, 1954, notice was issued to the assessee to appear before the Commission on
February 15, 1954.
Presumably to get ready for the hearing the
assessee, on February 5, 1954, asked for inspection of certain assessment
orders concerning his case-, for the return of his lease deed filed by him and
a copy of the statement of one L. Kalidas and for production of certain
documents before the Commission. The hearing, which had been fixed for February
15, 1954, was adjourned till March 4, 1954. Witness Kalidas was examined on
March 4,. 1954. On March 29, 1954, the assessee asked for a, copy of the
deposition given by the witness Durgadas before the Commission. After the
evidence was closed notice was issued to the assessee on May 1, 1954, asking
him to appear before the Commission on May 19, 1954.
On that date the assessee attended, arguments
were heard and orders were reserved. Learned counsel for the assessee states
that at the close of the arguments on May 19, 1954, the Commission announced
its view that the income, profits and gains that had escaped assessment in the
hands of the assessee for the period beginning with April 1, 1939, and ending
March 31, 1947, were the sum of Rs. 4,47,915, that the Commission also threw a
hint that should the assessee accept the said finding he would be granted the
benefit of a settlement on the lower concessional basis of. payment of 75% and
a small penalty of Rs. 14,064 539 other alternative than to make the best of
the bad job by proposing a settlement under s. 8A offering to pay Rs.
3,50,000 by way of tax and penalty. This sequence
of events is amply borne out by paragraphs 3 and 4 of the settlement
application filed by the assessee on May 20, 1954, a copy of which has been
produced before us by the respondents. The Commission on May 24, 1954, made a
report under s. 8A (1) to the Central Government that it was of opinion that
the terms of settlement contained in the application might be approved. The
Central Government having accepted the proposed settlement, the Commission had
the terms thereof recorded. The Central Government by its Order C No. 74 (9IT)
54 made on July 5, 1954, under s. 8A (2) of the Investigation Act directed that
demand notice in accordance with the said terms be served immediately by the
Income Tax Officer and that all such other proceedings under the Indian Income
Tax Act or other law as may be necessary be taken with a view to enforce the
payment of the demand and that the entire sum of Rs. 3,50,000 be demanded in
one sum. It appears, however, that the assessee was allowed to make payments by
installments of Rs. 5,000, per month.
In the meantime on May 28, 1954, this Court
delivered judgment in Suraj Mall Mohta and Co. v. A. V. Visvanatha Sastri (1).
In that case in the course of investigation of the case of Messrs. Jute and
Gunny Brokers Ltd. which had been referred to the Commission under s. 5 (1) of
the Investigation Act, it was alleged to have been discovered by the Commission
that Suraj Mall Mohta and Co. had made large profits which they had not
disclosed and had thus evaded taxation. A report to that effect having been
made on August 28, 1953, by the Commission to the Central Government under s. 5
(4) of the Investigation Act the Central Government on September 9, 1953,
referred the case against Suraj Mall Mohta and Co. to the Commission under the
provisions of s. 5 (4). On September 15, 1953, the Commission notified Suraj
Mall [1955] 1 S.C.R.448 540 Mohta and Co. that their cases had been referred
for investigation and called upon them to furnish certain materials, details of
which were set out in annexure to the petition. On April 12, 1954, Suraj Mall
Mohta and Co. filed a petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution asking for an
appropriate writ restraining the, Commission from taking any action on the
ground that the provisions of the Investigation Act had become void being
discriminatory in character. By that judgment this Court held that both s. 34
of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, as it then stood, and sub-s. (4) of s. 5 of
the Investigation Act dealt with persons who had similar characteristics of
being persons who had not truly disclosed their income and had evaded payment
of tax on their income but that as the procedure prescribed by the
Investigation Act was substantially more prejudicial than the procedure under
the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, sub-s. (4) of s. 5 and the procedure
prescribed by the Investigation Act,-in so far as it affected persons proceeded
against under that sub-section was a piece of discriminatory legislation which
offended the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution and was, therefore, void
and unenforceable.
Sub-section (4) of s. 5 of the Investigation
Act having been declared void, Parliament passed the Indian Income Tax
Amendment Act (33 of 1954) amending s. 34 of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922.
Paradoxical as it may seem, the result of this amendment was that persons who
originally, fell only within the ambit of s. 5 (1) of the Investigation Act and
formed a distinct class of substantial tax evaders also came within the amended
s. 34 of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. The position after the amendment,
therefore, was that the Income Tax Officers could pick out some of these
persons and refer their cases under s. 5 (1) of the Investigation Act and
thereby subject them to the drastic and harsh procedure of that Act, while they
could deal with other persons similarly situate under s. 34 as amended and
apply to them the comparatively more beneficial procedure laid down in the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. Promptly several applications were 541 made under
Art. 32 of the Constitution complaining that after the amendment of s. 34 of
the Indian Income Tax Act, s. 5 (1) of the Investigation Act became
discriminatory in that the persons falling within it could be dealt with under
the drastic, prejudicial and harsh procedure prescribed by the Investigation
Act, while other persons similarly situate and belonging to the same category
could at the whim or pleasure of the Income Tax authorities be proceeded
against under the more beneficial procedure prescribed under the Indian Income
Tax Act. All those applications were disposed of by a common judgment reported
as Shree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. Sri A. V. Visvanatha Sastri (1) This Court
held that s. 34 of the Income Tax Act, as amended by the Indian Income Tax
Amendment Act, 1954 (33 of 1954), operated on the same field as s. 5 (1) of the
Investigation Act, and, therefore, s. 5 (1) had become void and unenforceable
as the procedure applied to persons dealt with there under became
discriminatory in character. It should be noted that in none of those petitions
disposed of by that judgment had any assessment been made under the
Investigation Act and this Court only prohibited further proceedings before the
Commission under the Investigation Act. The assessee appellant now before us
who had entered into a settlement under s. 8 of the Investigation Act and had
been assessed in accordance with the terms of the settlement continued to pay
the tax by monthly installments of Rs. 5,000 as before.
Finally on December 20, 1955, came the
decision of this Court in M. CT. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of Income Tax,
Madras (2). In that case the Central Government had under s.
5 (1) of the Investigation Act referred the
case to the Commission. The Commission after holding an enquiry recorded its
findings and held that an aggregate sum of Rs.
10,07,322-4-3 represented the undisclosed
income during the period under investigation. The Commission having submitted
its report to the Central Government, the latter acting under s. 8 (2) of the
Investigation Act directed that appropriate action under the (1) [1955] 1 S. C.
R. 787.
(2) [1955] 2 S. C. R. 1247.
542 Indian Income Tax Act, 1922, be taken
against that assessee with a view to assess or re-assess the income which had
escaped assessment for the period 1940-41 to 1948-49. The Income Tax Officer
accordingly issued notices and made the re-assessment for the years 1940-41,
1941-42 and 1943-44 to 1948-49 based upon the finding of the Commission, which
was treated as final and conclusive. These assessment orders were served on
that assessee. There was, however, no re.
assessment order for the year 1942-43. In
regard to the assessment orders which had been served the assessee concerned
applied to the Commissioner of Income Tax under S.
8 (5) of the Investigation Act for reference
to the High Court on questions of law arising out of those re-assessment
orders. During the pendency of those proceedings the assessee, in that case on
December 6, 1954, filed a petition contending that the provisions of the
Investigation Act were illegal, ultra vires and unconstitutional. The majority
of this Court held that different persons, though falling under the same class
or category of substantial evaders of income.
tax, were being subjected to different
procedures, one a summary and drastic procedure and the other the normal
procedure which gave to the assessees various rights which were denied to those
who were specially treated under the -procedure prescribed by the Investigation
Act and, therefore, the assessments made under s. 8 (2) were void and
unenforceable. That was a case of assessment under s. 8 (2) in invitum after an
investigation under the Investigation Act. The assessee appellant before us,
who had at the end of the investigation entered into a settlement and been assessed
in accordance with the terms of such settlement, however, went on making
payments in discharge of the balance due under the terms of settlement right up
to September 8, 1957, when he made the last payment of Us. 8,000 bringing the
aggregate payment up to Rs. 1,28,000.
In the meantime the Income Tax Officer had
sent a certificate requesting the Collector of Delhi for the recovery of the
balance due by the assessee under the settlement. In execution of that
certificate some of 543 the properties belonging to the assessee situate in
Dharamsalla and Hissar were attached. On December 27, 1957, the assessee made
an application to the Income Tax Commissioner. After pointing out that between
July 5, 1954, and December 27, 1957, the petitioner had paid in all Rs. 1,28,000
towards the-' discharge of his liability under the settlement and referring to
the decisions of this Court in suraj Mall Mohta's case (1) and Muthiah's case
(2) the assessee submitted that the settlement under a. 8A of the Investigation
Act had no force and did not bind the petitioner and that the settlement had
been made under the pressure of the situation and in view of the coercive
machinery of the Investigation Act and that from either point of view the
settlement was not binding. His contention was that when s. 5(1) of the
Investigation Act had been held unconstitutional the settlement under s. 8A
could not be enforced, for the foundation of the proceedings under s. 8A was
the reference under s. 5(1) and the foundation having crumbled down the
superstructure must fall with it. Under the circumstances the assessee
submitted that the attached properties be released and the amount already
recovered under the settlement be refunded. On January 29, 1958, the Income Tax
Commissioner sent the following communication to the assessee:No.
L-228(1)/54-55/17590 Office of the Commissioner Income Tax Delhi and Rajasthan,
New Delhi.
Dated, New Delhi the 29th January, 1958. Shri
Besheshar Nath, 9, Barakhamba Road, New Delhi.
Dear Sir, Sub:-Taxation on Income
(Investigation Commission) Act, 1947-Order u/s 8A(2)-Your petition dated 27th
December, 1957.
With reference to your petition dated 27th
December, 1957, regarding the settlement arrived at (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 448.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
544 under section 8A(2) of the Taxation on
Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, I am to inform you that the
settlement is valid and binding on you.
2. You are, therefore, requested to make good
arrears of installments which you have not paid recently by 5th February, 1958,
and also to continue making the payments in accordance with the installments
scheme agreed to, failing which the recovery proceedings will be vigorously
pursued through the usual recovery channels.
Your's faithfully, Sd./S. K. Gupta,
Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi & Rajasthan, New Delhi.
Being aggrieved by the above decision the
assessee thereupon moved this Court and obtained special leave to appeal
against that order. The appeal has now come up for final disposal before us.
It may be mentioned here that as the
respondents are anxious to have the matters of controversy raised in this
appeal decided and set at rest by a decision of this Court, the respondents,
for the purposes of this appeal, have not insisted on their objection that an
appeal does not lie under Art. 136 of the Constitution against an order of the
Commissioner of Income Tax. Learned counsel for the assessee also has not
pressed his claim for refund of the amounts already paid and has pressed the
appeal regarding the balance that remains to be paid under the settlement which
is characterised as invalid. Model Knitting Industries Ltd. which has a case
pending in the High Court of Calcutta where the same questions as are in issue
in the appeal before us, are also in issue has been. permitted to intervene and
we have heard counsel appearing for that intervener.
In view of the three decisions referred to
above learned Attorney General does not seriously contend that the powers
conferred on the Commission by s. 6 and the procedure laid down by s. 7 of the
Investigation Act are not discriminatory, but what he urges is that none of the
said decisions has held that s. 5(1) is 545 wholly void and inoperative. He
says that s. 5(1) only authorises the Central Government to refer certain cases
to the Commission. Upon such a reference two lines of procedure are clearly
indicated by the Investigation Act, namely, (1) that an investigation may be
held in invitum following the procedure prescribed and exercising the powers
conferred by the lnvestigation Act and (2) that a settlement may be made under
s. 8A. If the first procedure is followed and an assessment is made under s.
8(2) such assessment will undoubtedly be invalid as has been held in Muthiah's
case (1), but if on a case being referred the settlement procedure is followed
then the consequential order of assessment under s. 8A cannot be questioned. We
are unable to accept this line of argument as permissible in view of the
provisions of the Investigation Act. It will be recalled that when the case of
the assessee was referred to the Commission under s. 5(1) on July 22, 1948,
there was no provision for settlement in the Act at all. Therefore, that
reference, when it was made, consigned the assessee to the only procedure of investigation
that was then prescribed by the Act. In the next place it should be remembered
that after s. 8A was added in the Investigation Act by s. 33 of Act 67 of 1949
an authorised official was appointed under s. 6(3) to investigate the affairs
of the assessee and to examine the books and to interrogate any person or
obtain any statement from any person and under sub-s. (4) the authorised
official was empowered to exercise the same powers as had been vested in the
Commission under sub-ss.
(1) and (2) of s. 6. Further, by its own
terms s. 8A made it clear that the person concerned in any case referred to the
Commission for investigation might apply to the Commission at any time during
such investigation to have the case settled. Therefore this provision for
settlement was an integral part of the entire investigation procedure. It was
not a separate or independent procedure apart from the investigation procedure.
It is true that there was nothing to prevent the assessee from straightaway (1)
[1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
69 546 making a proposal for settlement
before any actual step towards investigation -was taken by the Income Tax
authorities, but before the Commission could refer the proposal for settlement
to the Central Government it had to be satisfied that the terms of settlement
contained in the application were such as might be approved. For the purpose of
satisfying itself the Commission had obviously to go into the facts either by
itself or through an authorised official and to consider the materials collected
by the authorised official and in the process of doing so had to hold an
investigation of some sort and that investigation had necessarily to be made in
accordance with the procedure prescribed by the Investigation Act itself. It
is, therefore, not correct to say that there could be a proceeding for
settlement without any investigation at all. In our opinion s. 8A did not
provide for a separate procedure at all. When a case was referred under s. 5(1)
it was really for investigation and a settlement was something which could crop
up in the process of that investigation just as in the course of a suit parties
may arrive at some compromise. In recording the compromise and passing a
judgment in accordance with the compromise thereof, the court exercises the
same jurisdiction as it exercises in entertaining and disposing of the suit
itself. Likewise in entertaining a proposal for settlement the Commission
exercised its jurisdiction of investigation under s. 5, followed the procedure
prescribed by s. 7 and exercised all its powers under s. 6. As already stated
the language of s.8A itself shows that a settlement can be proposed only during
such investigation. In our judgment, therefore, the contention of the learned
Attorney General that the Investigation Act prescribed two procedures is not
well founded.
Learned Attorney General then points out that
the Investigation Act was a pre-Constitution Act and that before the
commencement of the Constitution when there was no such thing as a fundamental
right, its provisions could not be questioned however discriminatory the
procedure may have been. He urges that after the commencement of the
Constitution the 547 assessee has not been subjected to the coercive procedure
laid down by the Investigation Act, but voluntarily -proposed a settlement
which was accepted by the Central Government on the recommendation of the
Commission. In that situation he was in the same position as Qasim Razvi had
been in and the observations to be found in the judgment of Mukherjea, J., who
delivered the majority judgment in Syed Qasim Razvi v. The State of Hyderabad
(1) applied to the present appeal. We do not think it is necessary, for the
purpose of this appeal, to go minutely into the facts of Qasim Razvi's case (1)
with reference to which the observations relied on had been made, or to analyse
the correctness of the reasoning adopted in that case, for that can only be
done by a larger Bench. We are definitely of opinion, however, that the
observations made in the majority judgement should not be extended but must be
kept strictly confined to the special facts of that case. In our judgement
those observations have no ~application to the facts of the present appeal
before us, for here even after the commencement of the Constitution, the process
of investigation continued in that the authorised official went on collecting
materials by following the procedure prescribed by s. 7 and exercising the
powers conferred on him by s. 6 of the Investigation Act.
The last argument advanced by the learned
Attorney General is that if there had been a breach of the assessee's
fundamental right by subjecting him to a discriminatory -procedure laid down in
the Investigation Act, the asessee, by voluntarily entering into a settlement,
must be taken to have waived such breach and cannot now be permitted to set up
his fundamental right. Immediately two questions arise for consideration,
namely, (1) whether the assessee could waive the breach of the fundamental
right in question and (2) whether in the facts and circumstances of this case
he had actually done so.
Re. (1): In Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. State
of Bombay (2) there was a general discussion whether a (1) [1953] S.C.R. 589.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613.
548 fundamental right could be waived. At
page 638 Venkatarama Aiyar, J., observed:" The question is, what is the
legal effect of a statute being declared unconstitutional. The answer to it
depends on two considerations firstly does the constitutional prohibition which
has been infringed affect the competence of the Legislature to enact the law or
does it merely operate as a check on the exercise of a power which iswithin its
competence; and secondly, if it is merely a check, whether it is enacted for
the benefit of individuals or whether it is imposed for the benefit of the
general public on grounds of public policy. If the statute is beyond the
competence of the Legislature, as for example, when a State enacts a law which
is within the exclusive competence of the Union, it would be a nullity. That would
also be the position when a limitation is imposed on the legislative power in
the interests of the public, as, for instance, the provisions in Chapter XIII
of the Constitution relating to inter-State trade and commerce. But when the
law is within the competence of the Legislature and the unconstitutionality
arises by reason of its repugnancy to provisions enacted for the benefit of
individuals, it is not a nullity but is merely unenforceable. Such an
unconstitutionality can be waived and in that case the law becomes enforceable.
In America this principle is well settled. (Vide Cooley on Constitutional
Limitations, Volume 1, pages 368 to 371 ; Willis on Constitutional Law at pages
524, 531, 542 and 558 ; Rottschaefer on Constitutional Law at pages 28 and 29-30)."
After referring to three decisions of the American Supreme Court which are also
now relied on by the learned Attorney General, the learned Judge concluded as
follows:" The position must be the same under our Constitution when a law
contravenes a prescription intended for the benefit of individuals. The rights
guaranteed under Art. 19 (1) (f) are enacted for the benefit of owners of
properties and when a law is found to infringe that provision, it is open to
any person whose rights have been infringed to waive it and when there 549 is
waiver there is no legal impediment to the enforcement of the law. It would be
otherwise if the statute was a nullity; in which case it can neither be waived
nor enforced. If then the law is merely unenforceable and can take effect when
waived it cannot be treated as non and as effaced out of the statute book. It
is scarcely necessary to add that the question of waiver is relevant to the
present controversy not as bearing on any issue of fact arising for
determination in this case but as showing the nature of the right declared
under Art. 19 (1) (f) and the effect in law of a statute contravening it."
When the case came up before the court on review Mahajan, C. J., with the
concurrence of Mukherjea, Vivian Bose, and Ghulam Hassan, JJ., said at page
653:" In our opinion, the doctrine of waiver enunciated by some American
Judges in construing the American Constitution cannot be introduced in our
Constitution without a fuller discussion of the matter. No inference in deciding
the case should have been raised on the basis of such a theory. The learned
Attorney General when questioned about the doctrine did not seem to be very
enthusiastic about it. Without finally expressing an opinion on this question
we are not for the moment convinced that this theory has any relevancy in
construing the fundamental rights conferred by Part III of our Constitution. We
think that the rights described as fundamental rights are a necessary
consequence of the declaration in the preamble that the people of India have
solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign democratic republic and
to secure to all its citizens justice, social, economic and political; liberty
of thought, expression belief, faith and worship; equality of status and of
opportunity. These fundamental rights have not been put in the Constitution
merely for individual benefit, though ultimately they come into operation in
considering individual rights. They have been put there as a matter of public
policy and the doctrine of waiver can have no application to provisions of law
which have been enacted as a matter of constitutional policy.
550 Reference to some of the Articles, inter
alia, Arts. 15 (1), 20, 21, makes the proposition quite plain. A citizen cannot
get discrimination by telling the State " You can discriminate ", or
get convicted by waiving the protection given under Arts. 20 and 21." On
that occasion one of us preferred not to express any opinion on this subject
and said at page 670:" In coming to the conclusion that I have, I have in
a large measure found myself in agreement with the views of Venkatarama Aiyar,
J., on that part of the case. 1, however, desire to guard myself against being
understood to agree with the rest of the observations to be found in his
judgment, particularly those relating to waiver of unconstitutionality, the
fundamental rights being a mere check on legislative power or the effect of the
declaration under Art. 13(1) being " relatively void ". On those
topics I prefer to express no opinion on this occasion." It will, however,
be noticed that the observations of the learned judges made in that case did
not relate to the waiver of a breach of the fundamental right under Art. 14.
The fundamental right, the breach whereof is
complained of by the assessee, is founded on Art. 14 of the Constitution.
The problem, therefore, before us is whether
a breach of the fundamental right flowing from Art. 14 can be waived. For
disposing Of this appeal it is not necessary for us to consider whether any of
the other fundamental rights enshrined in Part III of our Constitution can or
cannot be waived. We take the view that this court should not make any
pronouncement on any question which is not strictly necessary for the disposal
of the particular case before it.
We, therefore, confine our attention to Art.
14 and proceed to discuss the question on that footing.
Article 14 runs as follows:" The State
shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of
the laws within the territory of India." It is the first of the five
Articles grouped together under the heading " Right to Equality". The
underlying object of this Article is undoubtedly to secure to 551 all persons,
citizen or non-citizens, the equality of status and of opportunity referred to
in the glorious preamble of our Constitution. It combines the English doctrine
of the rule of law and the equal protection T. clause of the 14th Amendment to
the American Federal Constitution which enjoins that no State shall deny to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws ". There
can, therefore, be no doubt or dispute that this Article is founded on a sound
public policy recognised and valued in all civilised States. Coming then to the
language of the Article it must be noted, first and foremost that this Article
is, in form, an admonition addressed to the State and does not directly purport
to confer any right on any person as some of the other Articles, e.g., Art. 19,
do. The obligation thus imposed on the State, no doubt, enures for the benefit
of all persons, for, as a necessary result of the operation of this Article,
they all enjoy equality before the law. That is, however, the indirect, though
necessary and inevitable, result of the mandate. The command of the Article is
directed to the State and the reality of the obligation thus imposed on the
State is the measure of the fundamental right which every person within the
territory of India is to enjoy. The next thing to notice is that the benefit of
this Article is not limited to citizens, but is available to any person within
the territory of India. In the third place it is to be observed that, by virtue
of Art. 12, " the State " which is, by Art.
14, forbidden to discriminate between persons
includes the Government and Parliament of India and the Government and the
legislature of each of the States and all local or other authorities within the
territory of India or under the control of the Government of India. Article 14,
therefore, is an injunction to both the legislative as well as the executive
organs of the State and the other subordinate authorities. As regards the
legislative organ of the State, the fundamental right is further consolidated
and protected by the provisions of Art. 13. Clause (1) of that Article provides
that all laws in force in the territories of India immediately before the
commencement of the Constitution, in so 552 far as they are inconsistent with
the provisions of Part III shall, to the extent of the inconsistency be void.
Likewise el. (2) of this Article prohibits the State from making any law which
takes away or abridges the rights conferred by the same Part and follows it up
by saying that any law made in contravention of this clause Shall, to the
extent of the contravention, be void. It will be observed that so far as this
Article is concerned, there is no relaxation of the restriction imposed by it
such as there are in some of the other Articles, e.g., Art. 19, cls. (2) to
(6). Our right to equality before the law is thus completely and without any
exception secured from all legislative discrimination.
It is not necessary, for the purpose of this
appeal to consider whether an executive order is a " law" within the
meaning of Art. 13, for even without the aid of Art. 13 our right to the equal
protection of the law is protected against the vagaries, if any, of the
executive Government also. In this connection the observations of Lord Atkin in
Eshugbayi Eleko v. Officer Administering the Government of Nigeria (1) are
apposite. Said his Lordship at page 670 that in accordance with British
jurisprudence no member of the executive can interfere with the liberty or
property of a British subject except when be can support the legality of his
act before a court of justice That apart, the very language of Art. 14 of the
Constitution expressly directs that " the State ", which by Art. 12
includes the executive organ, shall not deny to any person equality before the
law or the equal protection of the law. Thus Art. 14 protects us from both
legislative and executive tyranny by way of discrimination.
Such being the true intent and effect of Art.
14 the question arises, can a breach of the obligation imposed on the State be
waived by any person ? In the face of such an unequivocal admonition administered
by the Constitution, which is the supreme law of the land, is it open to the
State to disobey the constitutional mandate merely because 'a person tells the
State that it may do so ? If the Constitution asks the State as (1) L.R. [1931]
A,.C. 662.
553 to why the State did not carry out its
behest, will it be any answer for the State to make that " true, you
directed me not to deny any person equality before the law, but this person
said that I could do so, for he had no objection to my doing it." I do not
think the State will be in any better position than the positions in which Adam
found himself when God asked him as to why he had eaten the forbidden fruit and
the State's above answer will be as futile as was that of Adam who pleaded that
the woman had tempted him and so he ate the forbidden fruit. It seems to us
absolutely clear, on the language of Art. 14 that it is a command issued by the
Constitution to the State as a matter of public policy with a view to implement
its object of ensuring the equality of status and opportunity which every
welfare State, such as India, is by her Constitution expected to do and no
person can, by any act or conduct, relieve the State of the solemn obligation
imposed on it by the Constitution. What. ever breach of other fundamental right
a person or a citizen may or may not waive, he cannot certainly give up or
waive a breach of the fundamental right that is indirectly conferred on him by
this constitutional mandate directed to the State.
The learned Attorney General has relied on
various passages in text-books written by well-known and eminent writers, e.g.,
Cooley, Willoughby, Willis and Rottschaefer and on eight American decisions. In
considering the statements of law made by American writers and judges the following
observations of Patanjali Sastri, C. J., in The State of Travancore-Cochin and
others v. The Bombay Co. Ltd. (1) should constantly be borne in mind scope and
purpose, and a varying body of doctrines and tests have grown around them
interpreting, extending or restricting, from time to time, their operation and
application in the context of the expanding American commerce and industry, and
we are of opinion that not much help can be derived from them (1) [1952] S.C.R.
1112,112O, 1121. 70 554 in the solution of the problems arising under Art. 286
of the Indian Constitution." (See also The State of Bombay v. R.M.D.
Chamarbaugwala(1)).
The American authorities cited by the
Attorney General relate to waiver of obligations under a contract, of the deprivation
of right to property without due process of law or of the constitutional right
to trial by jury and the like. They have no bearing on the question of the
waiver of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment which, like our
Art. 14, is a mandate to the State. It is significant that no American decision
is forthcoming which upholds the waiver of the breach of that clause. When a
case of breach of any of the fundamental rights akin to what are dealt with in
the American authorities will come before us it will, then, be the time for us
to discuss those authorities and to consider their applicability in the matter
of the interpretation of the corresponding provisions of our Constitution. For
the moment we prefer to confine our observations to a consideration of waiver
of the breach of the fundamental right under Art. 14.
Learned Attorney General has relied on three
decisions of this Court: (1) Laxmanappa Hanumantappa Jamkhandi v. The Union of
India (2), (2) Dewan Bahadur Seth Gopal Das Mohta v. The Union of India (3) and
(3) Baburao Narayanrao Sanas v. The Union of India(4) in support of his thesis
that a breach of Art. 14 may well be waived by a person. In none of those
cases, all of which were disposed of on the same day (October 21, 1954) was the
question of waiver specifically or seriously discussed. As learned counsel
appearing for the intervener points out, the first of the above mentioned cases
proceeded on the footing that as Art.
265 was not a fundamental right conferred by
Part III, it could not be enforced under Art. 32. Learned counsel for the
intervener further submitted that the decision in the 2nd case mentioned above
could also be explained on that basis and on -the further ground that
proceeding under Art.
32 was not (1) [1957] S.C.R. 874, 918.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 773.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 769 (4) [1954] 26 I.T.R.
725.
intended to be used for obtaining relief
against the voluntary action of a person and that appropriate remedy for
recovery of money lay in a suit. The decision in the 3rd case proceeded on the
same basis and did not carry the matter any further. It is impossible to treat
any of those decisions as representing the considered opinion of this Court on
the question of waiver of a breath of the fundamental right under Art. 14 of
the Constitution.
Reference was also made by the learned
Attorney General to the decision of a Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court
in Subedar v. State (1) where it was held that Art. 20(3) conferred merely a
privilege and that such privilege could always be waived It was overlooked that
if a person voluntarily answered any question then there was no breach of his
fundamental right at all, for the fundamental right is that a person shall not
be compelled to incriminate himself.
That case, therefore, is not a case of waiver
at all. The case of Pakhar Singh v. The State (2) is also, for the same reason,
not a case of waiver.
Be. (2): The answer to this question depends
upon facts which have not been properly investingated. The appeal is against
the order of the income tax authorities which order makes no reference to the
plea of waiver. Further the filing of the statements of case having been
dispensed with, we have not had the benefit of the statement of facts on which
this plea is said to be founded. The view taken on question (1), however,
relieves us of the necessity of going into this question.
On a consideration of the nature of the
fundamental right flowing from Art. 14, we have no doubt in our mind that it is
not for a citizen or any other person who benefits by reason of its provisions
to waive any breach of the obligation on the part of the State. We are,
therefore, of the opinion that this appeal should be accepted, the order of the
Income Tax Commissioner, Delhi, dated January 29, 1958, should be set aside and
all proceedings now pending for implementation of the order of the Union
Government dated July 5, 1954, (1) A. I. R. 1957 All. 396.
(2) A. 1. R. 1958 Punj. 294.
556 should be quashed and that the assessee
appellant, should get the costs of this appeal.
BHAGWATI, J.-I agree with the reasoning
adopted and the conclusion reached in the judgments prepared by My Lord the
Chief Justice and my brother, S. K. Das, J., in regard to the ultra vires
character of the proceedings adopted under s. 8-A of the Taxation on Income
(Investigation Commission) Act, 1947 (30 of 1947), and the void character of
the settlement reached thereunder. As regards the parts of the judgments which
deal with the question whether a fundamental right guaranteed by the
Constitution can be waived at all, I find myself in agreement with the judgment
prepared by my brother, Subba Rao, J., and am of the opinion that it is not
open to a citizen to waive the fundamental rights conferred by Part III of the
Constitution.
The question of waiver came to be argued
before us in this way.If the proceedings and the settlement under section 8-A
of the Act were void as aforesaid, the respondent contended that the appellant
had waived the fundamental right enshrined in Art. 14 of the Constitution and
was therefore not entitled to challenge the settlement. This was only by way of
reply to the contention of the appellant and was not set out in proper details
in any affidavit filed on behalf of the respondent. The learned Attorney-General,
however, relied upon the application made by the appellant before the
Investigation Commission and the contents thereof as also the payments made by
the appellant from time to time both before and after the pronouncement of our
decision in M. Ct. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (1) in
order to support this plea of waiver and the arguments before us proceeded on
that basis. No objection was taken by either of the parties before us to the
issue of waiver being decided on such materials and the question was argued at
considerable length before us. The arguments moreover extended to the whole
field of fundamental rights and were not confined to Art. 14 only.
(1) [1955] 2 S. C. R. 1247.
557 We, therefore, see no reason why we
should refrain from pronouncing our opinion on that question.
The preamble to our Constitution, Art. 13 and
the language in which the fundamental rights have been enacted lead to one
conclusion and one conclusion only that whatever be the position in America, no
distinction can be drawn here, as has been attempted in the United States of
America, between the fundamental rights which may be said to have been enacted
for the benefit of the individual and those enacted in public interest or on
grounds of public policy. Ours is a nascent democracy. and situated as we are,
socially, economically, educationally and politically, it is the sacred duty of
the Supreme Court to safeguard the fundamental rights which have been for the
first time enacted in Part III of our Constitution. The limitations on those
rights have been enacted in the Constitution itself, e.g., in Arts. 19, 33 and
34. But unless and until we find the limitations on such fundamental rights
enacted in the very provisions of the Constitution, there is no justification
whatever for importing any notions from the United States of America or the
authority of cases decided by the Supreme Court there in order to whittle down
the plenitude of the fundamental rights enshrined in Part III of our
Constitution.
The genesis of the declaration of fundamental
rights in our Constitution can be traced to the following passage from the
Report of the Nehru Committee (1928):" Canada, Australia and South Africa
have no declaration of rights in their Constitutions but there are various
articles to be found in the Constitution of the Irish Free State which may
properly be grouped under the general head " fundamental rights ".
The reason for this is not far to seek. Ireland is the only country where the
conditions obtaining before the treaty were the nearest approach to those we
have in India. The first concern of the people of Ireland was, as indeed it is
of the people of India to-day, to secure fundamental rights that have been
denied to them.
The other dominions had their rise from
earlier British 558 settlements which were supposed to have carried the law of
England with them. Ireland was taken and kept under the rule of England against
her own will and the acquisition of dominion status by her became a matter of
treaty between the two nations. We conceive that the constitutional position in
India is very much the same. That India is a dependency of Great Britain cannot
be denied. That position can be altered in one of two ways-force or mutual
consent. It is the latter in furtherance of which we are called upon to
recommend the principles of a constitution for India. In doing so it is obvious
that our first care should be to have our fundamental rights guaranteed in a
manner which will not permit their withdrawal under any circumstances." At
the Round Table Conference that preceded the making of the Government of India
Act, 1935, therefore, the, Indian leaders pressed for a Bill of Rights in the
proposed Constitution Act, in order to bind the administration with certain declarations
of individual rights. This was, however, rejected by the Simon Commission with
these observations:
" We are aware that such provisions have
been inserted in many Constitutions, notably in those of the European States
formed after the War. Experience, however, has not shown them to be of any
great practical value. Abstract declarations are useless unless there exist the
will and means to make them effective." The framers of our Constitution
however followed the American view represented by the famous words of Jefferson
in preference to that expressed by the Simon Commission :" The
inconveniences of the declaration are, that it may cramp government in its
useful exertions. But the evil of this is short-lived, moderate and reparable.
The inconveniences of the want of a declaration are permanent, afflictive and
irreparable. They are in constant progression from bad to worse. The executive
in our governments is not the sole, it is scarcely the principal object of my
jealousy. The tyranny of the legislatures is the most formidable
dread...................
559 (Vide Basu's Commentary on the
Constitution of India, Vol. 1, p. 74).
and incorporated the fundamental rights in
Part III of our Constitution.
The object sought to be achieved was as the
preamble to the Constitution states " to secure to all its -citizens:
JUSTICE, social, economic and political; -] LIBERTY
of status and of opportunity; and to promote among them all FRATERNITY assuring
the dignity of the individual and the unity of the Nation and Art. 13 provided:"
13. (1) All laws in force in the territory of India immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution, in so far as they are inconsistent with the
provisions of this Part, shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void.
(2) The State shall not make any law which
takes away or abridges the rights conferred by this Part and any law made in
contravention of this clause shall, to the extent of the contravention, be
void...........
" Laws in force " were defined in
Art. 13(3) to include :
" Laws passed or made by a Legislature
or other competent authority in the territory of India before the commencement
of this Constitution and not previously repealed, notwithstanding that any such
law or any part thereof may not be then in operation either at all or in
particular areas " and they were declared void, in so far as they were
inconsistent with the provisions of this Part, to the extent of such
inconsistency. As regards laws to be enacted after the commencement of the
Constitution, the State, in the wider significance of the term as including
" the Government and Parliament of India and the Government and the
legislature of each of the States and all local or other authorities within the
territory of India or under the control of the Government of India " (Vide
Art. 12) was enjoined not to make any law which takes away or abridges the
rights conferred by this Part and 'any law made in contravention of this clause
was to the extent of the 560 contravention declared void. It will be seen that
the prohibition was thus effective both against past laws as well as future
laws and both were equally void in so far as they -were " inconsistent
with " or " in derogation of " the fundamental rights enshrined
in Part III of the Constitution. no distinction was made between the past laws
and future laws in this respect and they were declared void to the extent of
the inconsistency or the extent of the contravention a,,; the case may be,
leaving the unoffending parts thereof untouched.
It will be also seen that under Art. 13(2) an
admonition was administered to the State not to enact any law which takes away
or abridges the rights conferred by this Part and the obligation thus imposed
on the State enured for the benefit of all citizens of Bharat alike in respect
of all the fundamental rights enacted in Part III of the Constitution.
No distinction was made in terms between the
fundamental rights said to have been enacted for the benefit of the individual
and those enacted in the public interest or on grounds of public policy.
The question then arises whether a breach of
the obligation thus imposed on the State can be waived by a citizen. To borrow
the words of My Lord the Chief Justice " In the face of such unequivocal
admonition administered by the Constitution, which is the supreme law of the
land, is it open to the State to disobey the Constitutional mandate merely
because a citizen told the State that it may do so ? if the Constitution asks
the State as to why the State did not carry out its behest, will it be any
answer for the State to make that " True, you directed me not to take away
or abridge the rights conferred by this Part, but this citizen said that I
could do so, for he had no objection to my doing so." I do not think the
State will be in any better position than the position in which Ad-am found
himself when God asked him as to why he had eaten the forbidden fruit and the
State's above answer will be as futile as that of Adam who pleaded that the
woman had tempted him and Bo he ate the forbidden fruit." It is absolutely
clear on a perusal of Art. 13(2) of the Constitution that it is a
constitutional mandate 561, to the State 'and no citizen can by any act or
conduct relieve the State of the solemn obligation imposed on it by Art. 13(2)
and no distinction can be made at all between the fundamental rights enacted
for the benefit of the individual and those enacted in the public interest or
on grounds of public policy.
What then is the basis of this distinction
which has be strenuously urged before us that there are certain fundamental
rights which are enacted only for the private benefit of a citizen, e.g.,
rights of property, which can be waived by him and there are other fundamental
rights enacted for the public good or as a matter of public policy which it
would not be open to a citizen to waive even though he were affected by the
breach thereof. Reliance is placed in this behalf on certain decisions of the
Supreme Court of the United States of America, passages from Willoughby, Willis
and Rottschaeffer, quoted in the judgment of T. L. Venkatarama Aiyar, J., in
Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. The State of Bombay (1) and the observations of the
said learned Judge in that case adopting the said distinction. (Vide pp. 638-643
of the Report). I am afraid this distinction cannot be accepted. There is
nothing in the terms of the various articles embodying the fundamental rights
in Part III of our Constitution which warrants such a distinction. The
fundamental rights are enacted with all precision and wherever limitations on
their exercise are thought of they are also similarly enacted. Such
constitutional limitations are to be found within the terms of the articles
themselves and there is no justification for reading in the terms of the
articles anything more than what is expressly stated therein. There is further
this distinction between the American Constitution and ours that whereas the
American Constitution was merely enacted in order to form a more perfect union,
establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for common defence,
promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty and was an
outline of government and nothing more, our Constitution was (1) [1955] 1
S.C.R. 613. 71 562 enacted to secure to all citizens, justice, Liberty.'
Equality and Fraternity and laid emphasis on the welfare state and contained
more detailed provisions,, defining the rights and also laying down
restrictions thereupon in the interest of the general welfare, etc. -As
observed by Wills in his Constitutional Law at p. 477:"The conflict
between man and the state is as old as human history. For this reason some
compromise must be struck between private liberty and public authority. There
is some need of protecting personal liberty against governmental power and also
some need of limiting personal liberty by governmental power. The ideal
situation is a matter of balancing one against the other, or adjusting
conflicting interests." " In the United States Constitution an
attempt has been made to strike a proper balance between personal liberty and
social control through express limitations written into the Constitution and
interpreted by the Supreme Court, by implied limitations created by the Supreme
Court, and by the development of the governmental powers of regulation, taxation,
and eminent domain by the Supreme Court." (Ibid pp. 477-478), whereas our
Constitution has expressly sought to strike the balance between a written
guarantee of individual rights and the collective interests of the community by
making express provisions in that behalf in Part III of the Constitution.
(Vide Gopalan v. State of Madras) (1).
Moreover in the matter of considering the
statements of law made by the text book writers in America and the dicta of the
judges of the Supreme Court there in the various decisions cited before us, we
must bear in mind the following admonition of Patanjali Sastri, C. J., in the
State of Travancore-Cochin v. The Bombay Co., Ltd. (2).
" These clauses are widely different in
language, scope and purpose, and a varying body of doctrines (1) [1950] S.C.R.
88.
(2) [1952] S.C.R.1112, 1120 and tests have
grown around them interpreting, extending or restricting, from time to time,
their operation and application in the context of the expanding American
commerce and industry, and we are of opinion that not much help can be derived
from them in the solution of the problems arising under Art. 286 of the Indian
Constitution" or for the matter of that, articles embodying the
fundamental rights in Part III of our Constitution (see also The State of
Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamarbaugwala(1) The rights conferred on citizens may be
thus classified :
(i) statutory rights; (ii) constitutional
rights; and (iii) fundamental rights. One need not consider the statutory rights
in this context but the constitutional rights are those created and conferred
by the Constitution. They may or may not be waived by a. citizen, as stated in
the text books and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States of
America above referred to. But when the rights conferred are put on a high
pedestal and are given the status of fundamental rights, which though embodied
in the Constitution itself are in express terms distinguished from the other
constitutional rights (e.g., fundamental rights which are enshrined in Part III
of the Constitution and are enacted as immune from any legislation inconsistent
with or derogatory thereto and other constitutional rights which are enacted in
other provisions, for instance in Arts. 265 and 286 and in Part XIII of the
Constitution), they are absolutely inviolable save as expressly enacted in the
Constitution and cannot be waived by a citizen. The Constitution adopted by our
founding fathers is sacrosanct and it is not permissible to tinker with those
fundamental rights by any ratiocination or analogy of the decisions of the
Supreme Court of the United States of America. The only manner in which that
can be done is by appropriate amendment of the Constitution and in no other
manner whatever.
There is no difficulty whatever in working
out this position and to my mind the difficulties pointed out (1) [1957] S.C.R.
874, 918.
564 are more imaginary than real. If a
citizen wanted to assert his fundamental right under the circumstances
envisaged for instance in the judgment of my brother S. K. Das, J., and made an
application for a writ under Art. 32 or Art. 226 of the Constitution he would
be promptly confronted with the argument that the Court should in the exercise
of its discretion refuse him the relief prayed for. The remedy is purely
discretionary and no Court in those circumstances would exercise @ its
discretion in his favour (Vide Dewan Bahadur Seth Gopal Das Mohta v. Union of
India (1), Baburao Narayan Savas v. Union of India(2) and Laxmanappa Hoonmantappa
Janakhandi v. Union of India (3). Even then he might merely obtain a relief
declaring the legislation ultra vires the Constitution and the Court would not
grant him any consequential relief For that relief he would have to approach
the regular courts of law, when all questions of law, apart from the mere
constitutionality of the provision would be considered by the Court on a
contest between the par. ties, e.g., estoppel, acquiescence, limitation and the
like (Compare our observations in Sales Tax Officer, Banaras v. Kanayalal
Mukundlal Saraf (4) ). The only thing which parties would be concluded by would
be the adjudication as to the ultra vire's character of the measure in question
and the citizen would not be entitled to the relief claimed merely for the
asking. These considerations, therefore, do not militate against the position
that a citizen cannot waive the fundamental rights conferred upon him by Part
III of the Constitution.
I fully endorse the opinion expressed by
Mahajan, C. J., in Behram Khursheed Pesikaka v. The State of Bombay (5) at page
653 :,,We think that the rights described as fundamental rights are a necessary
consequence of the declaration in the preamble that the people of India have
solemnly resolved to constitute -India into a (1) [1955] I S.C.R. 773.
(3) [19551 1 S.C.R. 769.
(2) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 725.
(4) Civil Appeal No. 87 Of 1957 decided on
September 23, 1958.
(5) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 613.
565 sovereign democratic republic and to
secure to all its citizens justice, social, economic and political; liberty of
thought, expression, belief, faith and worship; equality of status and of
opportunity. These fundamental rights have not been put in the Constitution
merely for individual benefit, though ultimately they come into operation in
considering individual rights. They have been put there as a matter of public
policy and the doctrine of waiver can have no application to provisions of law
which have been enacted as a, matter of constitutional policy." This, in
my opinion is the true position and it cannot therefore be urged that it is
open to a citizen to, waive his fundamental rights conferred by Part III of the
Constitution. The Supreme Court is the bulwark of the fundamental rights which
have been for the first time enacted in the Constitution and it would be a,
sacrilege to whittle down those rights in the manner attempted to be done.
The result is however the same and agree with
the order proposed by My Lord the Chief Justice.
S. K. DAS J.-This is an appeal by special leave
from an order dated January 29, 1958, passed by the Commissioner of Income-tax,
Delhi, respondent no. 1 before us, in circumstances which are somewhat unusual
and out of the ordinary. We shall presently relate those circumstances;
but at the very outset it may be stated that
two questions of far-reaching importance fall for consideration in this appeal.
One is the validity of a settlement made under s.
8A of the Taxation on Income (Investigation
Commission) Act, 1947 (30 of 1947) hereinafter referred to as the Act, after
the coming into force of the Constitution on January 26, 1950, and the second
is if a fundamental right guaranteed by the Constitution can be said to have
been waived by the appellant in the circumstances of this case.
'The appellant before us is Basheshar Nath,
whom we shall hereafter call the assessee. As we have already stated, the
Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi, is the first respondent, The second
respondent 566 is the Union of India. We also allowed the Model Knitting
Industries, a limited liability Company with its registered office in Calcutta,
to intervene in the appeal, on the ground that the intervening Company has a
case pending in the High Court of Calcutta where the same questions are in
issue. We have also heard the intervener in support of the appeal.
On behalf of the appellant it has been'
contended that the Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi, is a tribunal within the
meaning of Art, 136 of the Constitution and exercised judicial functions when
it passed the impugned order of January 29, 1958. The respondents pointed out,
however, that the so-called order was nothing but a reply which respondent no.
1 gave to a communication received, from the assessee. However, the respondents
have waived any preliminary objection to the maintainability of the present
appeal, and the learned Attorney General appearing for the respondents has
frankly stated before us that he is raising no such preliminary objection, as
the Union Government is equally anxious to have a decision on the question,
very important from its point of view and with far-reaching financial
consequences, as to whether a settlement made under s. 8A of the Act after
January 26, 1950, and the orders passed thereon by the Union Government are
valid. We have, therefore, proceeded on the footing that the present appeal is
competent, and have considered it unnecessary to decide in the abstract the
more general question as to the circumstances in which an order made by a
revenue authority like the Commissioner of Income-tax partakes of the character
of A judicial or quasi-judicial order.
Now, for the facts and circumstances which
have led up to this appeal. The Act received the assent of the GovernorGeneral
on April 18, 1947, and came into force on May 1, 1947. On July 22, 1948, the
case of the assessee was referred to the Investigation Commission, constitued
under s. 3 of the Act. The reference was made under s. 5(1) of the Act, and it
,stated that the Central Government had prima facie reasons for believing that
the assessee either alone or 567 in combination with' other persons evaded
payment of taxation on income to a substantial extent, and therefore the case
of the asseesee was sent to the Investigation Commission for investigation and
report. The period of investigation was from April 1, 1939 to March 31, 1947.
The report of the Investigation Commission which has been made available to us
shows that the case against the assessee was that he carried on a business of
supplying tents, executing contract works, and commission agency for some
textile mills on a fairly extensive scale, both individually and in partnership
With his brother. It appears that the total wealth statement of the assessee
was filed on November 10, 1948, and was forwarded to an authorised official appointed
under s. 6(3) of the Act. From January 8, 1949 to October 14, 1949 the
authorized official was engaged in the collection of assessment records of the
assessee from the income-tax authorities and of materials from the Civil
Supplies Directorate. On July 5, 1949, the total wealth statement was received
back from the assessee and the order,sheet shows that on May 26, 1950, (that
is, after the coming into force of the Constitution) the authorised official
is-sued a notice to the assessee fixing the hearing for June 10, 1950. The
assessee then asked for time, and it appears that for a period of about three
years till June, 1953, nothing was done. Thereafter, the authorised official
held a preliminary investigation and computed initially that the undisclosed
income ,of the assessee for the period in question was Rs. 12,07,000; on
further scrutiny and examination of accounts and after heating the assessee's
explanation, the authorised official reduced the amount in his final report,
submitted sometime towards the end of 1953, to Rs. 9,56,345. The Investigation
Commission considered the report of the authorised official, heard the
assessee, and came to the conclusion that the total amount to be assessed in
the hands of the assessee was Rs' 4,47,915. In their report dated May 24, 1954
the Investigation Commission said:
" During the course of the hearing
before us, the assessee as well as his Auditors applied for a 568 settlement
after admitting liability for the aforesaid sum.
In the circumstances, we consider it proper
to allow the assessee the benefit of a settlement on the lower concessional
basis of 75% of evaded income payable by way of tax and a moderate penalty of
Rs, 14,064....... The assessee accepting our findings both as regards the
amount of income that escaped assessment and the amount of tax and penalty
payable, offered a settlement. In the circumstances, we recommend the
acceptance by the Government of the assessee's offer of a settlement." The
Central Government accepted the settlement under s. 8A of the Act and on July
5, 1954, passed an order under s. 8A(2) directing the issue of a demand notice
by the Income tax Officer concerned for a sum of Rs. 3,50,000 (including the
penalty of Rs. 14,064) on the assessee and further directing that " all
such other proceedings under the Indian Income-tax Act or under any other law,
as may be necessary, should be taken with a view to enforcing the payment of
the demand and the terms and conditions of settlement." Though under the
terms of settlement no installments were given, it appears that the assessee
was allowed to pay the amount at the rate of Rs. 5,000 per month. It further
appears that up to and including September 8, 1957, the assessee had paid in
all a sum of Rs. 1,28,000 towards the demand. In December, 1955 was given the
decision of this Court in M. CT. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of Income tax,
Madras (1), in which the majority of Judges held that s. 5(1) of the Act was
ultra vires the Constitution, as it was discriminatory and violative of the fundamental
right guaranteed by Art. 14 of the Constitution by reason of two amendments
which were made in s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act 1922-one in 1948 by the
enactment of the Income. tax and Business Profits Tax (Amendment) Act, 1948 (48
of 1948) and the other in 1954 by the enactment of the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1954 (33 of 1954). Sometime earlier than the aforesaid decision,
the Income-tax Officer concerned had sent a (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247, 569
recovery certificate to the Collector, New Delhi, and the assessee stated that
in execution of the said certificate his properties situated in Dharamsala and
Hissar were attached. On December 27, 1957, the assessee filed a petition to
the Income-tax Commissioner, Delhi, in which after stating the relevant facts,
the assessee claimed that, after the decision in Muthiah's case (1), the
settlement made under s. 8A of the Act had no force and was not binding on him:
the assessee then prayed that the attached properties should be released from attachment
and the amounts recovered under the terms of settlement refunded to him. On
January 29, 1958, the Commissioner of Income-tax sent the following reply"
With reference to your petition dated 27th December 1957 regarding the
settlement arrived at under section 8A(2) of the Taxation on Income
(Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, 1 am to inform you that the settlement is
valid and binding on you.
2. You are' therefore, requested to make good
the arrears of installments which you have not paid recently by 5th February,
1958 and also to continue making the payments in accordance with the installments'
scheme agreed to, failing which the recovery proceedings will be vigorously
pursued through the usual recovery channels." The assessee asked for and
obtained special leave from this Court on February 17, 1958, to appeal from the
aforesaid order. In the appeal as orginally filed in pursuance of the special
leave granted to the assessee, the prayer portion was inadvertently left out.
Subsequently, the assessee prayed that-(a) the report of the Investigation
Commission dated May 24, 1954, be quashed, (b) the settlement made on the basis
of the report and the directions given by the Central Government in pursuance
thereof and the proceedings for recovery of arrears of tax be all quashed, and
(c) the amounts already recovered may be ordered to be refunded.
With regard to the last prayer, we may state
here that it was not pressed before us and we are relieved from the task, at
least in this appeal, of (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
72 570 deciding in what circumstances and on
what considerations a refund of tax voluntarily paid can be claimed.
Therefore, the first and foremost question
before us is the validity of the settlement made under S. 8A of ,-the Act.
On behalf of the assessee the main argument
is that s. 5(1) of the Act having been held ultra vires the Constitution, the
very foundation for the report of the Investigation Commission has disappeared
and a settlement based thereon is neither valid, nor can it be enforced. On
behalf of the respondents, the learned Attorney General has contended that
there is no decision of this Court which has held that s.
5(1) of the Act is wholly void and on a
proper construction of the various sections of the Act, it will be found that
there are two separate and distinct procedures or jurisdictions which the
Investigation Commission may follow or exercise: one is investigation and the
other relates to settlement. He has submitted that the jurisdiction conferred
on the Investigation Commission under s. 8A, which was inserted in the Act in
1949 by s. 33 of Act 67 of 1949, is not affected by the decision in Muthiah's
case (1), and if the Investigation Commission had jurisdiction to entertain an
application from the assessee for settlement, approve of the same, and refer it
to the Central Government, the latter had also jurisdiction to accept it under
subs.(1) and make necessary orders under sub.s. (2) of s. 8A.In short, the
argument of the learned Attorney General is that there is nothing in Muthiah's
decision (1), which renders s. 8A constitutionally invalid.
It is necessary to read at this stage the
relevant provisions of the Act in so far as they bear upon the problems before
us. We have said that the Act came into force on May 1, 1947. This was before
the coming into force of the Constitution of India, and no question of the
violation of any fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution arose on
that date. Section 3 of the Act empowers the Central Government (now Union Government)
to constitute a Commission to be called the Income-tax Investigation (1) [1955]
2 S. C. R. 1247.
571 Commission, whose duties shall be (to
quote the words of the section)" (a) to investigate and report to the
Central Government on all matters relating to taxation on income, with
particular reference to the extent to which the existing law relating to, and
procedure for, the' assessment and collection of such taxation is adequate to
prevent the evasion thereof ;
(b)to investigate in accordance with the
provisions of this Act any case or point in a case referred to it undersection
5 and make a report thereon (including such interim reports as the Commission
may think fit) to the Central Government in respect of all or any of the
assessments made in relation to the case before the date of its report or
interim report, as the case may be." We are concerned in this appeal with
the duty of the Commission referred to in s. 3(b) above. Section 4 deals with
the composition of the Commission, details whereof are unnecessary for our
purpose, Sub-sections (1), (2) and (4) of s. 5 are relevant to the problems
before us and must be read :
" 5(1). The Central Government may at
any time before the 1st day of September 1948 refer to the Commission for
investigation and report any case or points in a case in which the Central
Government has prima facie reasons for believing that a -person has to a
substantial extent evaded payment of taxation on income, together with such
material as may be available in support of such belief, and may at any time
before the 1st day of September, 1948 apply to the Commission for the
withdrawal of any case or points in a case thus referred, and if the Commission
approves of the withdrawal, no further proceedings shall thereafter be taken by
or before the Commission in respect of the case or points so withdrawn.
(2) The Commission may, after examining the
material submitted by the Central Government with reference to any case or
points in a case and making such investigation as it considers necessary,
report to the Central Government that in its opinion further investigation is
not likely to reveal any substantial 572 evasion of taxation on income and on
such report being made the investigation shall be deemed to be closed.
(3)........................................................
(4) If in the course of investigation into
any case or points in a case referred to it under sub-section (1), the
Commission has reason to believe(a)that some person other than the person whose
case is being investigated has evaded payment of taxation on income, or (b)
that some points other than those referred to it by the Central Government in
respect of any case also require investigation, it may make a report to the
Central Government stating its reasons for such belief and, on receipt of such
report, the Central Government shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), forthwith refer to the Commission for investigation the case
of such other person or such additional points as may be indicated in that
report." Section 5 as originally enacted mentioned the date, 30th of June,
1948, but by Act 49 of 1948 the date substituted was " 1st day of
September, 1948 ". Section 6 states the powers of the Commission, and they
may be summarised thus:
(a) the Commission has power to require any
person or banking or other Company to give information on relevant points;
(b) it has power to administer oaths and all
the powers of a civil court to take evidence, enforce the attendance of
witnesses etc;
(c) it has power to impound and retain a
document in its custody;
(d)it has power to ask an authorised official
to examine accounts and interrogate any person;
(e) it has power to give directions to an
authorised official;
(f) it has power to close the investigation
and make a best of judgment assessment in respect of a person who refuses or
fails to attend in person to give evidence or produce documents etc; and 573
(g) it has power of seizure, search etc. in certain specified circumstances.
Sections 6A and 6B deal with the power of the
Commission to tender immunity from prosecution and to withdraw such tender.
Section 7 states the procedure to be followed by the Commission, sub-ss. (2),
(4) and (6) whereof need only be referred to here:
" 7(2) In making an investigation under
clause (b) of section 3, the Commission shall act in accordance with the
principles of natural justice, shall follow as far as practicable the
principles of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), and shall give the
person whose case is being investigated a reasonable opportunity of rebutting
any evidence adduced against him; and the power of the Commission to compel
production of documents shall not be subject to the limitation imposed by
section 130 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), and the Commission
shall be deemed to be a court and its proceedings legal proceedings for the
purpose of sections 5 and 6 of the Bankers' Books Evidence Act, 1891 (XVIII of
1891).
(3).........................................................
(4) No person shall be entitled to inspect,
call for, or obtain copies of, any documents, statements or papers or materials
furnished to, obtained by or produced before the Commission or any authorised
official in any proceedings under this Act; but the Commission, and after the
Commission has ceased to exist such authority as the Central Government may in
this behalf appoint, may, in its discretion, allow such inspection and furnish
such copies to any person:
Provided that, for the purpose of enabling the
person whose case or points in whose case is or are being investigated to rebut
any evidence brought on the record against him, he shall, on application made
in this behalf and on payment of such fees as may be prescribed by Rules made
under this Act, be furnished with certified copies of documents, statements,
papers and materials brought on the record by the Commission.
(5).........................................................
574 (6) In any proceedings under this Act,
the Commission may, in its discretion, admit in evidence and act upon any
document notwithstanding that it is not duly stamped or registered."
Section 8 states in effect what the Commission shall do on the conclusion of
the investigation: it states that the materials brought on the record shall be
considered by all the members, and the report shall be in accordance with the
opinion of the majority. Subsection (2) of s. 8 gives the Central Government
power to direct reopening of assessment proceedings on the report of the
Commission. Sub-section (4) states that in the assessment or reassessment
proceedings in pursuance of a direction given under sub-s.
(2), the findings recorded by the Commission
shall be final, subject to the provisions of sub-ss. (5) and (6). Then comes s.
8A which must be quoted in full:
"S. 8A(1) Where any person concerned in
any case referred to or pending before the Commission for investigation applies
to the Commission at any time during such investigation to have the case or any
part thereof settled in so far as it relates to him, the Commission shall, if
it is of opinion that the terms of the settlement contained in the application
may be approved, refer the matter to the Central Government, and if the Central
Government accepts the terms of such settlement, the Commission shall have the
terms thereof recorded and thereupon the investigation, in so far as it relates
to matters covered by such settlement, shall be deemed to be closed.
(2) For the purpose of enforcing the terms of
any settlement arrived at in pursuance of subsection (1), the Central
Government may direct that such proceedings as may be appropriate under the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940 (XV
of 1940) or any other law may be taken against the person to whom the
settlement relates, and, in particular, the provisions of the second proviso to
clause. (a) of sub-section (5) of section 23, section 24B, the proviso to
sub-section (2) of section 25A, the proviso to sub-section (2) of section 26
and -sections 44 and 46 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 575 shall be
applicable to the recovery of any sum specified in such settlement by the
Income-tax Officer having jurisdiction to assess the person by whom such sum is
payable as if it were income-tax or an arrear of income-tax within the meaning
of those provisions.
(3) Subject to the provisions of subsection
(6) of section 8, any settlement arrived at under this section shall be
conclusive as to the matters stated therein, and no person whose case has been
so settled shall be entitled to reopen in any proceeding for the recovery of
any sum under this section or in any subsequent assesssment or reassessment
proceeding relating to taxation on income or in any other proceeding before any
court or other authority any matter which forms part of such settlement.
(4) Where a settlement has been accepted by
Government under sub-section (1), no proceedings under section 34 of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), or under section 15 of the Excess Profits
Tax Act, 1940 (XV of 1940), shall be initiated in respect of the items of
income covered by the settlement unless the initiation of such proceedings is
expressly allowed by the terms of the settlement." Section 9 bars the
jurisdiction of courts, but it is not disputed that if any of the provisions of
the Act are ultra vires the Constitution, s. 9 will neither cure the defect nor
stand in the way of the assessee. Section 10, the last section, gives the
Central Government power to make rules.
The above recital gives a brief conspectus of
the main provisions of the Act. It is necessary now to refer to a few earlier
decisions of this Court with regard to some of these provisions. The earliest
in point of time is the decision in Suraj Mall Mohta and Co. v. A. V. Viswanatha
Sastri where sub-s. (4) of S. 5 of the Act and the procedure prescribed by the
Act in so far as it affected the persons proceeded against under that
sub-section, were held to be discriminatory and therefore void and
unenforceable. No opinion was, however, expressed on the validity of s. 5(1) of
the Act.
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 448.
576 In Shree Meenakshi Mills Ltd., Madurai v.
Sri A. V. Viswanatha Sastri (1), it was held that after the coming into force
on July 17, 1954, of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1954, (33 of 1954)
which operated on the same field as s. 5(1) of the Act, the provisions of s. 5
(1) became void and unenforceable as being discriminatory in character. It was
further held that when an Act was valid in its entirety before the date of the
Constitution, that part of the proceedings regulated by the special procedure
and taken during the pre-Constitution period could not be questioned how. ever
discriminator it might have been, but the discriminatory procedure could not be
continued after the coming into force of the Constitution. In that case
(Meenakshi Mills' case(1)) the Investigation Commission had not even commenced
the proceedings though a period of seven years had elapsed and the
investigation was pending when the writ petitions were filed. In those
circumstances it was held that the proceedings before the Investigation
Commission which had become discriminatory could no longer be continued. Then
came the decision in M. CT. Muthiah v.
The, Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras(2). The
facts relevant to that decision were that the Investigation Commission held an
enquiry into three cases and submitted a report on August 26, 1952, finding a
particular sum to be the undisclosed income during the investigation period.
The Central Government accepted the report and passed an order under s. 8(2) of
the Act on September 16, 1952. Notices under s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act
were then issued and reassessments except for one year were made on the
findings of the Commission, which were treated as final and conclusive. The
re-assessment orders were served on the assessees in February and May 1954. On
December 6, 1954, the assessees filed their writ petitions challenging the
constitutionality of S. 5 (1) of the Act. It was held by the majority that s. 5
(1) was discriminatory and violative of the fundamental right guaranteed under
Art. 14 of the Constitution, because s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
as (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 787.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
577 amended in 1948 operated on the same
field and from and after January 26, 1950, it included the strip of territory
which was also occupied by s. 5 (1) and two substantially different laws of
procedure, one more , prejudicial to the assessee than the other, could not be
allowed to operate on the same field in view of the , guarantee of Art. 14 of
the Constitution. In the result it was held that barring those cases which were
already concluded by reports made by the Commission and directions given by
Government before January 26, 1950, the cases which were pending before the
commission for investigation as also assessment or reassessment proceedings
which were pending on January 26, 1950, were hit by Art. 14. The -assessment
orders were accordingly quashed as being unconstitutional.
Now, we come back to the problems before us:
(1) what is the effect of Muthia's decision(1) in the present ease, and (2)
does the Act contemplate two separate and distinct, but severable, procedures
or jurisdictions -one relating to investigation and the other to settlement, so
that the vice of discrimination (if any) attaches to the investigation
procedure only and not to the other ? We do not see how the learned Attorney
General can escape from the position that Muthia's decision (1) holds in
express terms that s. 5 (1) of the Act was hit by Art. 14 of the Constitution
on and after January 26, 1950. The ratio of the decision was thus explained in
the majority judgment at page 1260, 1261:" After the 8th September, 1948,
there were two procedures simultaneously in operation, the one under Act XXX of
1947 and the other under the Indian Income tax Act with reference to persons
who fell within the same class or category, viz., that of the substantial
evaders of income-tax. After the 8th September, 1948, therefore, some persons
who fell within the class of substantial evaders of income-tax were dealt with
under the drastic and summary procedure prescribed under Act XXX of 1947, while
other (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
73 578 persons who fell within the same class
of substantial evaders of income-tax could be dealt with under the procedure
prescribed in the Indian Income-tax Act after service of notice upon them under
the amended section 34 (1) of the Act. Different persons, though falling under
the same class or category of substantial evaders of income-tax, would,
therefore, be subject to different procedures, one a summary and drastic
procedure and the other a normal procedure which gave to the assessees various
rights which were denied to those who were specially treated under the
procedure prescribed in Act XXX of 1947.
The legislative competence being there, these
provisions, though discriminatory, could not have been challenged before the
advent of the Constitution. When, however, the Constitution came into force on
the 26th January, 1950, the citizens obtained the fundamental rights enshrined
in Part III of the Constitution including the right to equality of laws and
equal protection of laws enacted in article 14 thereof, and whatever may have
been the position before January 26, 1950, it was open to the persons alleged
to belong to the class of substantial evaders thereafter to ask as to why some
of them were subjected to the summary and drastic procedure prescribed in Act
XXX of 1947 and others were subjected to the normal procedure prescribed in
section 34 and the cognate sections of the Indian Income-tax Act, the procedure
prescribed in Act XXX of 1947 being obviously discriminatory and, therefore,
violative of the fundamental right guaranteed under article 14 of the
Constitution." That ratio is equally applicable in the present case, and
if s. 5(1) of the Act is unenforceable after January 26, 1950, the reference
made thereunder against the assessee must also fall after that date and with it
must go overboard all that was done under the drastic and summary procedure
prescribed under the Act after January 26,1950. Two possible arguments that (1)
substantial evaders whose s were referred by the Central Government for
investigation by the Commission 579 before September 1, 1948, formed a class by
themselves and (2) that proceedings having started before the Commission under
a reference valid at the time when it was made cannot be affected by any
subsequent amendment of the Income-tax Art, 1922, were raised, but not accepted
in Suraj Mall Mohta's Meenakshi Mills' or Muthia's case (1) (2) (3).
There has been some argument before us as to
how the two procedures-one prescribed under the Income-tax Act, 1922, and the
other under the Act-compare and contrast with each other; but this is a point
which was canvassed at great length in each of the three cases mentioned above.
This Court found in unequivocal terms that the procedure prescribed under the
Act was more summary and drastic, and in Suraj Mall Mohta's case the substantial
differences between the two procedures were summarised at pp. 463-466 of the
report. We do not propose to cover the same ground again, but cop-tent
ourselves with drawing attention to what was pointedly said in Suraj Mall
Mohta's case namely, that it was conceded on behalf of Government that the
procedure prescribed by the impugned Act in ss. 6 and 7, which we have read
earlier, was more drastic than the procedure prescribed in ss. 37 and 38 of the
Indian Income-tax Act. It was stated therein that though in the first stages of
investigation there was some similarity between the two procedures, the overall
picture was not the same.
The learned Attorney General has not
seriously contested the correctness of this position, but has argued that what
we are concerned with in the present case is not the mere possibility of a
differential treatment, but what actually was done by the Commission in the
case of the present assessee after January 26, 1950. He has submitted that the
assessee was not subjected to any differential treatment in fact, and has
invoked to his aid the ratio of our decision in Syed Qasim Razvi v. The State
of Hyderabad (4), where the majority judgment laid down the following tests: in
a case where part of the trial cannot be challenged as (1) [1955] 1S.C.R.448
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 787.
(3) [1955) 2 S.C.R. 1247.
(4) [1953] S.C.R. 589.
580 bad, it is incumbent on the court to
consider, first whether the discriminatory provisions of the law can be
separated from the rest and even without them a fair measure of equality in the
matter of procedure can be secured, and secondly, whether the procedure
-actually followed 'did or did not, proceed upon the discriminatory provisions
and it was stated that a; mere threat or possibility of unequal treatment was
not sufficient to invalidate the subsequent proceedings. A reference was there
made to the earlier decisions, of this Court in Keshavan Madhava Xenon v. The
State of Bombay (1), and Lachmandas Kewalram Ahuja v. The State of Bombay (2 ),
and the decision in Lachmandas case (supra), again a majority decision, was
distinguished on two grounds: first, the question as to whether after
eliminating the discriminatory provisions it was still possible to secure a
fair measure of equality with the normal procedure was neither raised nor
considered ; secondly, it was assumed that it was not possible to proceed with
the trial without following the discriminatory procedure and as that procedure
became void on the coming into force of the Constitution, the jurisdiction to
proceed under that procedure came to an end. Applying the tests laid down in
the majority decision of Syed Qasim Razvi's case (3), the learned Attorney
General has contended that in the present case the discriminatory provisions
can be separated from the rest of the Act, and the assessee was not in fact
subjected to any discriminatory procedure. He has sought to distinguish
Muthia's case on the same ground, viz., that the re-assessments made in that
case were actually based on a discriminatory procedure.
In our view the ratio of the majority
decision in Syed Qasim Razvi's case (3) has no application in the case under
our consideration, and the principle which applies is what was laid down in
Lachmandas's case (2). The majority decision is Syed Qasim Razvi's case
proceeded on the finding (to quote the words of Mukherjea, J., who delivered
the majority judgment) that " although there were deviations in certain
particulars, (1) [1951] S. C. R. 228. (2) [1952] S. C. R. 71O.
(.3) [1953] S. C. R. 589.
581 the accused had substantially the benefit
of a normal trial". The minority judgments, however, very pertinently
pointed out that the discriminatory provisions were an integral part of the
Regulation under which the accused person in that case was tried and in fact
the discriminatory provisions were applied. Bose, J. (as he then was expressed
the view (at p. 618) " that in testing the validity of a law, it is
irrelevant to consider what has been done under it, for a law is either
constitutional or not and the validity or otherwise cannot depend upon what has
been accomplished under its provisions." It is, we think, unnecessary to
go into the controversy which arises out -of the two views expressed above. For
the present case, it is sufficient to say that (1) the discriminatory
provisions are an integral part of the procedure prescribed under the Act which
cannot be separated from the rest; and (2) we are satisfied that the report
which led to the settlement was made by the Investigation Commission in pursuance
of and as a direct result of the discriminatory procedure which it followed.
Indeed, the Investigation Commission followed the only procedure of
investigation prescribed under the Act, which was a drastic and summary
procedure, and if that procedure became void on the coming into force of the
Constitution, the jurisdiction of the Investigation Commission practically came
to an end (see Lachmandas's case, supra).
It is necessary to explain here why we cannot
accept the contention of the learned Attorney General that there are two
procedures or two jurisdictions under the Act. What in substance is the effect
of the provisions of the Act, in so far as they relate to the Commission's duty
under s. 3 (b)? The Commission receives a reference under s. 5 (1) if it does
not proceed under s. 5 (2), it exercises such of its powers under s. 6 as it
considers necessary. It then follows the procedure laid down in s. 7 and
submits its report under s. 8. On that report, the Central Government takes
action under s. 8 (2). If, however, the assessee applies for settlement, even
then the Commission has the, duty to report to Government if the terms of
settlement are 582 approved by it. To fulfil this duty, the Commission must get
the materials by exercising its powers under s. 6 and by following the
procedure laid down in s. 7. That is exactly what was done in the present case.
An authorised official was asked to examine the accounts etc. under s. 6 (3).
He examined the accounts and submitted an interim report in 1953. He followed
the procedure laid down in the Act with regard to inspection of documents,
examination of witnesses etc. He then submitted a final report. The Commission
then heard the assesee on May 19, 1954, and reserved orders. On May 20, 1954,
after the assessee knew what the final finding of the Commission was going to
be, he filed an application for settlement. The Commission made its final
report four days after. It is difficult to understand how in the circumstances
stated above, it can be said that the Commission followed a non-discriminatory
procedure or that it had two jurisdictions-one relating to investigation and
the other to settlement. The jurisdiction was really one, and the procedure
followed also the same. It is not as though the Act provided a separate
procedure for purposes of effecting a settlement; nor is this a case where a
settlement has been made without applying any of the provisions relating to
investigation. A full investigation was made, and after the assessee had been
subjected to the drastic and summary procedure under the Act, he was told what
the result of the investigation was. Then, he made an application for
settlement, which was approved by the Commission under s. 8A.
We are accordingly of the view that the
learned Attorney General has failed to make out his case that (1) Muthia's
decision (1) does not apply and (2) the settlement under s. 8A of the Act is a
legally valid settlement by reason of the severability or non-application of
the discriminatory procedure under the Act in the case of the assessee..
This brings me to the second question, that
of waiver of a fundamental right, which is as important as it is complex.
It is a question on which unfortunately we
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R.1247.
583 have not been able to achieve unanimity.
It is beset with this initial difficulty that the present appeal is not from a
judgment or order rendered after the trial of properly framed issues; it is
from an order which merely rejected the prayer of the assessee that his
properties attached in execution of the recovery certificate should be released
and the amounts paid under the terms of the settlement refunded.
The question of waiver was neither raised,
nor tried; and the necessary facts were not ascertained or determined by the
revenue authority concerned. Unfortunately, the filing of a statement of their
case by the parties was also dispensed with, the result whereof has been that
the question of waiver has been urged for the first time in the course of
arguments here. We have, however, heard full arguments on it, and proceed to
consider it on such materials as have been placed before us. It is necessary to
make one point clear. The respondents have raised the plea of waiver, and the
onus lies heavily on them to establish the essential requirements in support of
the plea.
Two points arise in this connection: (1) have
the respondents established, on the materials before us, the necessary facts on
which a plea of waiver can be founded ;
and (2) if so, can a fundamental right
guaranteed by the Constitution be waived at all. If the first point is answered
in the negative, the second point need not be answered in the abstract. On
behalf of the respondents, it has been submitted that assuming (without
conceding) that the discriminatory provisions of the Act were applied in the
case of the assessee before he asked for a settlement, the materials on record
-show that he never objected to the procedure adopted, voluntarily asked for a
settlement, got by the settlement the benefit. of reducing his liability for
both tax and penalty, and paid without demur the following installments (some
even after Muthia's decision (1) ) (1) [1955] 2 S.C.P. 1247.
584 Payments made up to April 55 10,000
Payment made on 10-5-55 5,000 19-6-55 5,000 7-7-55 5,000 13-8-55 5,OOO 7-9-55
5,000 15-10-55 5,000 10-11-55 5,000 15-12-55 5,000 8-2-56 5,000 13-2-56 5,000
7-3-56 5,000 14-5-56 5,000 19-5-56 5,000 13-6-56 5,000 6-8-56 5,000 7-9-56
5,000 9-10-56 5,000 10-11-56 5,000 23-12-56 5,000 14-1-57 5,000 29-3-57 5,000
4-6-57 5,000 8-9-57 8,000 ---------1,28,000 ----------The learned Attorney
General has in thisconnection referred us to the application for settlement
which the assessee had made to the Commission, wherein the following statements
were made:" in view of the fact that though no disclosure statement had
been made before the submission of his reports by the authorised official,,
still during the enquiry before the Commission,, the assessee and his auditors
admitted their liability to tax in respect of the aforesaid sum of Rs.
4,47,915, the Commission was of the opinion
that the assessee should be granted the benefit of a settlement on the lower
concessional basis of payment of 75 per cent. of the undisclosed income by way
of tax. The Commission was also of the opinion that the assessee should pay by
way of penalty a sum of Rs. 14,064.
585 The assessee accepts the conclusions of
the Commission as regards the amount of income that escaped assessment, the tax
payable thereon and the penalty payable as aforesaid." On the basis of
these statements, the learned Attorney General has argued that there is no
foundation for the suggestion made on behalf of the assessee that the
application for settlement was made " under the pressure of circumstances
and in view of the coercive machinery of the Act." He has submitted that
the necessary facts on which the plea of waiver is founded have been
established, and he has relied on three cases decided by this Court, where
according to him the effect of the decisions was to accept such a plea in
circumstances very similar: Dewan Bahadur Seth Gopal Das Mohta v. The Union of
India(1); Baburao Narayanrao Sanas v. The Union of India (2); and Laxnanappa
Hanumantappa Jamkhandi v. The Union of India (3) On behalf of the assessee, it
is contended on the contrary that the necessary facts to found a plea of waiver
are totally absent in the present case, and none of the aforesaid three
decisions which were all pronounced on the same day proceed on a plea of
waiver.
Two of the three decisions referred to above
relate to a settlement made under s. 8A and the third to an order made under s.
8(2) of the Act. All the three decisions were pronounced on applications made
under Art. 32 of the Constitution, and not on any appeal from an order of the
revenue authority. In Gopal Das Mohta's case (1) the argument urged was, inter
alia, that ss. 5, 6, 7 and 8 of the Act were invalid and ultra vires as they
contravened the provisions of Arts. 14, 19 (1) (f), and 31 of the Constitution
and the prayer made was that the entire proceedings should be quashed as also
all orders made by the Central Government in pursuance of the settlement under
s.
8A. In rejecting the argument and prayer,
Mahajan, C. J., who delivered the , judgment of the Court said at p. 776(1)
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 773. (2) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 725.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 769.
74 586 " In our judgment this petition
is wholly misconceived.
Whatever tax the petitioner has already paid,
or whatever is still recoverable from him, is being recovered on the basis of the
settlement proposed by him and accepted by the Central Government. Because Of
his request for a settlement no assessment was made against him by following
the whole of the -procedure of the Income-tax Act. In this situation unless and
until the petitioner can establish that his consent was improperly procured and
that he is not bound thereby he cannot complain that any of his fundamental
rights has been contravened for which he can claim relief under art. 32 of the
Constitution. Article 32 of ',,the Constitution is not intended for relief
against the voluntary actions of a person. His remedy, if any, lies in other
appropriate proceedings." There has been a good deal of argument before us
as to the true effect of the decision in Gopal Das Mohta's case (1).
While I recognise that the reason stated for
the decision, viz., that Art. 32 is not intended for relief against voluntary
actions of a person, comes very near to saying that a person has waived his
protection in a given case since whatever injury he may incur is due to his own
act rather than to the enforcement of an unconstitutional measure against him,
I am unable to hold that the decision proceeded strictly on the doctrine of
waiver; it is perhaps true to say that some of the observations made therein
are of a " Delphic nature to be translated into concreteness by the
process of litigating elucidation" (to borrow the words of Frankfurter,
J., in Machinists v. Gonzales (2). It seems to me that the decision proceeded
more upon the scope of Art. 32 than upon the doctrine of waiver. I am fortified
in this view by the circumstance that in a decision given only a month earlier
(see Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. The State of Bombay (3)) the same learned
Chief Justice expressed himself strongly, though tentatively, against
introducing in our Constitution the doctrine of waiver as enunciated by some
American Judges in construing the American Constitution, without a full
discussion of the matter. The report of Gopal (1) [1955] 1 S.C.P. 773. (2)
(1958) 356 U.S. 617,619 (3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613 653,654.
587 Das Mohta's case (1) does not contain any
reference to the doctrine of waiver, and it is obvious that no ,fuller
discussion of the doctrine took place in that case. It is not, therefore,
reasonable to hold that the effect of Gopal Das Mohta's case is to uphold the
doctrine of waiver. Babu Rao's case (2) merely followed Gopal Das Mohta (1) and
gave no separate reasons. Laxmanappa Jamkhandi's case (3) dealt with an order
under s. 8(2) of the Act and said at p. 772:" From the facts stated above
it is plain that the proceedings taken under the impugned Act XXX of 1947
concluded so far as the Investigation Commission is concerned in September,
1952, more than two years before this petition was presented in this Court. The
assessment orders under the Income-tax Act itself were made against the
petitioner in November, 1953. In these circumstances we are of the opinion that
-he is entitled to no relief under the provisions of Article 32 of the
Constitution. It was held by this Court in Ramjilal v. Income-tax Officer,
Mohindargarh, [1951] S.C.R. 127, that as there is a special pro.
vision in Article 265 of the Constitution,
that no tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law, clause (1)
of Article 31 must therefore be regarded as concerned with deprivation of
property otherwise than by the imposition or collection of tax, and inasmuch as
the right conferred by Art. 265 is not a right conferred by Part III of the
Constitution, it could not be enforced under Article
32. In view of this decision it has to be
held that the petition under Article 32 is not maintainable in the situation
that has arisen and that even otherwise in the peculiar circumstances that have
arisen it would not be just and proper to direct the issue of any of the writs
the issue of which is discretionary with this Court." Here, again, there
is no reference to the doctrine of waiver, and the case was decided on the
ambit and scope of Art. 32 of the Constitution.
I would hold, therefore, that the decisions
of this Court relied on by the learned Attorney General do (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R.
773. (2) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 725.
(3)[1955] 1 S.C.R.769.
588 not help him in establishing waiver. Let
me now examine the circumstances on which the learned Attorney General founds
his plea of waiver. Indeed, it is true that the assessee submitted to the
discriminatory procedure applied to him by the Commission; he also asked for a
settlement under which he agreed to pay 75% of his alleged tax liability and a
small amount of penalty; he made some payment in installments even after
Muthia's decision in December, 1955. Do these circumstances amount to waiver ?
It is to be remembered that in 1953-1954 when the discriminatory procedure of
the Act was applied to him and the report against him was made by the
Commission on which the settlement is based, the assessee did not know, nor had
it been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction that s. 5(1) of the Act
was ultra vires. In his application for a settlement, he said clearly in
paragraph 3 that the Commission announced it as its view that the income,
profits and gains that had escaped assessment in the hands of the assessee was
Rs. 4,47,915.
The assessee also knew that under the Act
this finding was final and binding on him. If in these circumstances, the
assessee made an application for settlement, can it be said that it is a
voluntary or intentional relinquishment of a known right ? I venture to think
not. It has been said that ' waiver' is a troublesome term in the law. The
generally accepted connotation is that to constitute ' waiver', there must be
an intentional relinquishment of a known right or the voluntary relinquishment
or abandonment of a known existing legal right, or conduct such as warrants an
inference of the relinquishment of a known right or privilege. Waiver differs
from estoppel in the sense that it is contractual and is an agreement to
release or not to assert a right; estoppel is a rule of evidence. (See Dawson
Bank Limited v. Nippon Menkwa Kabushiki Kaisha) (1). What is the known legal
right which the assessee intentionally relinquished or agreed to release in
1953-1954 ? He did not know then that any part of the Act was invalid, and I
doubt if in (1) (1935) L.R.62 I.A.100,108.
589 the circumstances of this case, a plea of
'waiver' can be founded on the maxim of 'ignorance of law is no excuse'. I do
not think that the maxim 'ignorance of law is no excuse' can be carried to the
extent of saying that every person must be presumed to know that a piece of
legislation enacted by a legislature of competent jurisdiction must be held to
be-invalid, in case it prescribes a differential treatment, and he must,
therefore, refuse to submit to it or incur the peril of the bar of waiver being
raised against him. I do not think that such pre-science is a necessary
corollary of the maxim. On the contrary, the presumption, if any, which
operated at the relevant time was the presumption that a law passed by a
competent legislature is valid, unless declared unconstitutional by a court of
competent jurisdiction.
Furthermore, I do not think that any
inference of waiver can be retrospectively drawn from the installments paid in
195657, particularly when the question of refund of the amounts already paid is
no longer a live issue before us. It would, I think, be going too far to hold
that every unsuspecting submission to a law, subsequently declared to be
invalid, must give rise to a plea of waiver: this would make constitutional
rights depend for their vitality on the accident of a timely challenge and
render them illusory to a very large extent.
I hold, therefore, that the necessary
foundation for sustaining the plea of waiver has not been laid in this case,
and the onus being on the respondents, the plea must fail.
In view of my finding that the necessary
foundation on facts for sustaining the plea of waiver has not been laid in this
case, it becomes unnecessary to decide, in the abstract, the further question
if a right guaranteed by any of the provisions in Part III of the Constitution
can be waived at all. I am of the view -that this Court should indeed be
rigorous in avoiding to pronounce on constitutional issues where a reason. able
alternative exists; for we have consistently followed the two principles (a)
that " the Court will not anticipate a question of constitutional law in
590 advance of the necessity of deciding it " (Weaver on Constitutional
Law, p. 69) and (b) " the Court will not formulate a rule of
constitutional law broader than is required by the precise facts to which it is
to be applied " (ibid, p. 69).
My Lord the Chief Justice and my learned
brother Kapur, J., have however expressed the view that the fundamental right
guaranteed under Art. 14 cannot be waived; my learned brethren, Bhagwati and
Subba Rao, JJ., have expressed the view that none of the fundamental rights
guaranteed by the Constitution can be waived.
I greatly regret to have to say that I have
come to a conclusion different from theirs with regard to this question, and as
they have thought fit to express their views on it proceed now to explain why I
have come to a conclusion different from those of my learned brethren on this
question.
This question was mooted, though not fully
answered, in Behram Khurshed Pesikaka's case (1). Venkatarama Aiyar, J.,
expressed his views at pages 638 to 643 of the report.
Mahajan, C. J., with whom Mukherjea, Vivian
Bose and Ghulam Hasan, JJ., concurred, expressed his views at pages 651 to 655
of the report, and my Lord the Chief Justice as Das, J., reserved his opinion
on the question. The view which Venkatarama Aiyar, J., expressed was this: if
the constitutional provision which has been infringed affects the competence of
the legislature which passed the law, the law is a nullity; as for example, when
a State enacts a law which is within the exclusive competence of the Union;
when, however, a law is within the competence of the legislature which passed
it and the unconstitutionality arises by reason of its repugnancy to provisions
enacted for the benefit of individuals, it is not a nullity, but is merely
unenforceable; such unconstitutionality can be waived and in that case the law
becomes enforceable. He said that in America this principle was well settled
and he referred to Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, Volume 1, pages 368 to
371 ; Willis on Constitutional Law at (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613, 653, 654.
591 pages 524, 531, 542 and 558; Rottschaefer
on Constitutional Law at pages 28 and 29-30. He then referred to certain
American decisions in support of his views and then said:" The position
must be the same under our Constitution when a law contravenes a prescription
intended for the benefit of individuals............ It is open to any person
whose rights have been infringed to waive it and when there is waiver, there is
no legal impediment to the enforcement of the law. It will be otherwise if the
statute was a nullity;
in which case it can neither be waived nor
enforced. If then the law is merely unenforceable and can take effect when
waived, it cannot be treated as non est and as effaced out of the statute
book." The contrary view expressed by Mahajan, C. J., can be best
explained in his own words:
" We think that it is not a correct
proposition that constitutional provisions in Part III of our Constitution
merely operate as a check on the exercise of legislative power. It is axiomatic
that when the lawmaking power of a State is restricted by a written fundamental
law, then any law enacted and opposed to fundamental law is in excess of the
legislative authority and is thus a nullity. Both these declarations of
unconstitutionality go to the root of the power itself and there is no real
distinction between them.
They represent but two aspects of want of
legislative power.
The legislative power of the Parliament and
the State legislatures as conferred by Arts. 245 and 246 of the Constitution
stands curtailed by the fundamental rights chapter of the Constitution. "
His Lordship then referred to Art. 13 of the Constitution and said that it was
a clear and unequivocal mandate of the fundamental law prohibiting the State
from making any laws which came into conflict with Part III of the
Constitution.
His Lordship added:
" In our opinion the doctrine of, waiver
enunciated by some American Judges in construing the American Constitution
cannot be introduced in our Constitution without a fuller discussion of the
matter......... Without finally expressing an opinion on this question, we 592
are not for the moment convinced that this theory has any relevancy in
construing the fundamental rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution. We
think that the rights described as fundamental rights are a necessary
consequence of the declaration in the ,preamble that the people of India have
solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign democratic republic and
to secure to all its citizens justice, social, economic and political; liberty
of thought, expression, belief, faith and worship; equality of status and of
opportunity. These fundamental rights have not been put in the Constitution
merely for individual benefit, though ultimately they come into operation in
considering individual rights. They have been put there as a matter of public
policy and the doctrine of waiver can, have no application to provisions of law
which have been enacted as a matter of constitutional policy." It would
appear that the two main reasons which Mahajan, C. J., gave in support of the
views expressed by him were these. Firstly, he held that the effect of Art. 13
of the Constitution was to prohibit the State from making any laws which came
into conflict with Part III of the Constitution and he recognised no such
distinction as was drawn by Venkatarama Aiyar, J., between absence of
legislative power (that is, incompetence of the legislature) and nonobservance
of provisions which operate merely as a check on the exercise of legislative
power. He thought that absence of legislative power and check on the exercise
of legislative power were both aspects of want of legislative power.
Secondly, he referred to the preamble and the
scheme of Part III of the Constitution in support of his view that the doctrine
of waiver did not apply. I shall take-these reasons in the order in which I
have stated them.
First, as to the effect of Art. 13 of the
Constitution.
Article 13 is in two parts: the first part
deals with " all laws in force in the territory of India immediately
before the commencement of this Constitution "'and says that so far as
such laws are inconsistent with the provisions of Part III, they shall to the
extent of such inconsistency be void; the second part deals with laws made
after the commencement of the Constitution and says that " the State shall
not make any law which takes. away or abridges the rights conferred by Part III
" of the Constitution and any law made in contravention of cl. (2) of Art.
13 shall to the extent of the contravention be void.
It seems clear to me that the Article itself
recognises the distinction between absence of legislative power which will make
the law made by an incompetent legislature wholly void, and exercise of
legislative power in contravention of a restriction or check on such power,
which will make the law void to the extent of the inconsistency or
contravention.
The use, of the words " to the extent of
the inconsistency " and " to the extent of the contravention "
indubitably points to such a distinction, and indeed this was pointed out in
Bhikaji Narain Dhakras v. The State of Madhya Pradesh (1). This was an
unanimous decision of this Court and several earlier decisions including the
decision in Kesavan Madhava Menon's case (2), on which Mahajan, C. J., placed
so much reliance, were considered therein. The decision in Behram Khurshed
Pesikaka (3)was also considered, and then the following observations were made
with regard to Art. 13 of the Constitution at p. 598" Article 13(1) by
reason of its language cannot be read as having obliterated the entire
operation of the inconsistent law or having wiped it out altogether from the
statute book.
Such law existed for all past transactions
and for enforcement of rights and liabilities accrued before the date of the
Constitution, as was held in Keshavan Madhava Menon's case. The law continued
in force even after the commencement of the Constitution, with respect to
persons who were not citizens and could not claim the fundamental right. In
short, Art. 13(1) had the effect of nullifying or rendering the existing law
which had become inconsistent with Art. 19(1)(g) read with el. (6) as it then
stood ineffectual, nugatory and devoid of any legal (1) [1055] 2 S.C.R. 589(2)
[1951] S.C.R. 228.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613,653. 654.
75 594 force or binding effect only in
respect of the exercise of the fundamental right on or after the date of the
commencement of the Constitution............ All laws existing or future, which
are inconsistent with the provisions of Part III of our Constitution are, by
the express provision of Art. 13, rendered void I to the extent of such
inconsistency'. Such laws were not dead for all purposes." The aforesaid
view expressed in Bhikaji Narain's case (1) was accepted in many later
decisions including the decision in Muthia's case (2). The same distinction was
again referred to in another unanimous decision of this Court in The State of
Bombay v. R.M.D. Chamarbaugwala (3) where at p. 885 it was observed:
The Court of Appeal has rightly pointed out
that when the validity of an Act is called in question, the first thing for the
court to do is to examine whether the Act is a law with respect to a topic
assigned to the particular Legislature which enacted it. if it is, then the
court is next to consider whether, in the case of an Act passed by the
Legislature of a Province now a State), its operation extends beyond the
boundaries of the Province or the State, for under the provisions conferring
legislative powers on it such Legislature can only make a law for its
territories or any part thereof and its laws cannot, in the absence of a
territorial nexus, have any extra territorial operation. If the impugned law
satisfies both these tests, then finally the court has to ascertain if there is
anything in any other part of the Constitution which places ~any fetter on the
legislative powers of such Legislature. The impugned law has to pass all these
three test." Therefore, the mere use of the word ~(6 void " in Art.
13 does not necessarily militate against the application of the doctrine of
waiver in respect of the provisions contained in Part III of our Constitution.
Under the American Constitution also, a law made in violation of a
constitutional guarantee is struck down, because under Art.
VI of that Constitution, " the
Constitution and the laws of the United States which (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 589.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
(3) [1957] S.C.R. 874.
595 shall be made in -pursuance
thereof......... shall be the supreme law of the land." I am unable,
therefore, to accept the view that Art. 13 shows that the doctrine of waiver
can never be applied in respect of the provisions in Part III of the Constitution.
Let me now go to the second reason. Is there anything
in the preamble and the scheme of our Constitution, with particular reference
to Part III, which will make the doctrine of waiver inapplicable ? Let me first
place the two preambles side by side:
Premple to our Premple to the American
Constitution. Constitution,1787.
"We the people of India "We the
people of the United having solemny resolved to States, in order to form a
constitute India into a somore perfect Union, establish vereign democratic
republic justice, insure domestic trend to secure to all its cinquillity, provide
for the tizens: justice, social common defence, promote the nomic and
political; liber general welfare,and security of though, expression, the
blessing of liberty to belief, faith and worship; ourselves and our posterity
equality of status and of do ordain and establish opportunity; and to promote
this Constitution for the among them all fraternity United State of
America." assuring the dignity of the individual and the unity of the
nation in our Constituent Assemply this twenty-sixth day of November,1949 do
hereby adopt enact and give to ourselves this Constitution." 596 American
Constitution were : (a) to form a more perfect Union; (b) to establish justice;
(c) to insure domestic tranquility; (d) to promote general welfare; and (e) to
secure the blessings of liberty. In our Constitution, the emphasis is on the
Welfare State-on Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. But the question
before us is the limited question of the application of the doctrine of waiver.
I do not find any. thing in the two preambles which will make the doctrine
applicable in one case and not applicable in the other.
It is necessary to refer here to one
important distinction between the two Constitutions. Speaking broadly, the
American Constitution of 1787, except for defining the enumerated powers of the
Federal Government and limiting the powers of the States, was an outline of
government and nothing more. Its provisions were written in general language
and did not provide minute specifications of Organisation or power. It
contemplated subsequent legislation and interpretation for carrying the
provisions into effect. In other words, it was early recognised that the
Constitution was not self-executing. The Indian Constitution is more detailed,
and in Part III of the Constitution are provisions which not merely define the
rights but also state to what extent they are subject to restrictions in the
interests of general welfare, etc. In other words, there is an attempt at
adjustment of individual rights with social good, and in that sense the
limitations or restrictions are also defined. But I do not think that this
distinction has any particular bearing on the question at issue before us. The
rights as also the restrictions are justiciable, and an interpretation of the
rights given and of the restrictions imposed, by courts of competent
jurisdiction is contemplated.
Indeed, I recognise that there is a
constitutional policy behind the provisions enacted in Part III of the
Constitution. In a, sense, there is a legislative policy in all statutory
enactments. In my opinion, the crucial question is not whether there is a
constitutional or legislative policy behind a particular provision, but the
question is-is the provision meant 597 primarily for the benefit of individuals
or is it for the benefit of the general public ? That distinction has, I think,
been recognised in more than one decision. Take, for example, an ordinary
statutory enactment like s. 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure which says that
no suit shall be instituted against the Government or against a public officer
in respect of any act purporting to be done by such public officer in his
official capacity until the expiration of two months next after a notice in
writing has been given, etc. There is undoubtedly a reason of public policy
behind this provision, but it is open to the party for whose benefit the vision
has been made to waive notice and indeed the party may be estopped by his
conduct from pleading the want of notice. As the Privy Council pointed out in
AL. AR. Villavar Chettiar v. Government of the Province of Madras (1), there is
no inconsistency between the propositions that the provisions of a section are
mandatory and must be enforced by the court and that they may be waived by the
authority for whose benefit they are provided.
The question then is-is there anything in the
statute which militates against the application of the doctrine of waiver to
such right, subject to the safeguards and precautions necessary for the
application of the doctrine, provided the right is for the benefit of
individuals ? I am conscious that rights which the Constitution itself
characterises as fundamental must be treated as such and it will be wrong to
whittle them down. But are we whittling down fundamental rights when we say
that the question of waiver of fundamental rights cannot be answered in the
abstract-by a general affirmative or a general negative; the question must
always depend on (a) the nature of the right guaranteed and (b) the foundation
on the basis of which the plea of waiver is raised. It is to be remembered that
the rights guaranteed by Part III of the Constitution are not confined to
citizens alone. Some of the rights are guaranteed to non-citizens also.
Moreover, they are not all rights relating to justice, liberty, equality and
fraternity; some of the provisions define the rights (A) (1947) L.R. 74 I.A.
223, 228.
698 while others indicate the restrictions or
checks subject to which the rights are granted. Article 33, for example, does
not give any right to any person; on the contrary it gives power to Parliament
to modify the rights conferred by Part III in their application to persons.
Article 34 lays down a conferred by Part III while in any area. It is not,
therefore, quite correct to say that all the provisions in Part III grant fun a
mental rights, though the heading is 'Fundamental Rights'.
There is, I think, a three-fold
classification: (1) a right granted by an ordinary statutory enactment; (2) a
right granted by. the Constitution; and (3) a right guaranteed by Part III of
the Constitution. With regard to an ordinary statutory right there is, I think,
no difficulty. It is well recognised that a statutory right which is for the
benefit of an individual can in proper circumstances be waived by the party for
whose benefit the provision has been made. With regard to a constitutional
right, it may be pointed out that there are several provisions in our
Constitution which do not occur in Part III, but which yet relate to certain
rights; take, for example, the rights relating to the Services under the Union
and the States in Part XIV. I do not think that it can be seriously contended
that a right which is granted to a Government servant for his benefit cannot be
waived by him, provided no question of jurisdiction is involved. I may refer in
this connection to the provisions in Part XIII which relate to trade, commerce
and intercourse within the territory of India. These provisions also impose
certain restrictions on the legislative powers of the Union and of the States
with regard to trade and commerce. As these provisions are for the benefit of
the general public and not for any particular individual, they can not be waived,
even though they do not find place in Part III of the Constitution. Therefore,
the crucial question is not whether the rights or restrictions occur in one
part or other of the Constitution. The crucial question is the nature of the
right given: is it for the benefit of individuals or is it for the general
public? 599 That, in my opinion, is the true test. I may here state that the
source of the right-contractual or statutory --is not the determining factor.
The doctrine of waiver is grounded on the principle that a right, statutory or
otherwise, which is for the benefit of an individual can be waived by him. I am
aware that a right which is for the benefit of the general public must in its
actual operation relate to particular individuals, in the same way as a right
for the benefit of individuals will in its actual operation arise in connection
with individual A or individual B. The test is not whether in its operation it
relates to an individual. The test is -for whose benefit the right has been primarily
granted for the benefit of the general public or for individuals ? Let me now
apply this test to some of the provisions in Part III of the Constitution.
These provisions have been classified under different heads: (1) right to
equality, (2) right to freedom, (3) right against exploitation, (4) right to
freedom of religion, (5) cultural and educational rights, (6) right to property
and (7) right to constitutional remedies. There can be no doubt that some of
these rights are for the benefit of the general public. Take, for example, Art.
23 which prohibits traffic in human beings, etc ; so also Art. 24 'which says
that no child below the age of 14 shall be employed to work in any factory or
mine or engaged in any other hazardous employment. I do not wish to multiply
examples and it is sufficient to state that several of these rights are rights
which are meant primarily for the benefit of the general public and not for an
individual. But can we say the same thing in -respect of all the rights ? Let
us take Art. 31, which says that no person shall be deprived of his property
save by authority of law and that no property shall be compulsorily acquired or
requisitioned save for a public purpose and save by authority of law which
provides for compensation, etc. Take a case where a man's property is acquired
under a law which does not fix the amount of compensation or specify the
principles on which or the manner in which the compensation is to be determined
and given. The man whose 600 property is taken may raise no objection to the
taking of his property under such law. Indeed, he may expressly agree to
Government taking his land for a public purpose under the law in question,
though it does not comply with the requirements as to compensation. Can such a
man after two or three years change his mind and say that the law is invalid
and his land on which a school or a hospital may have been built in the
meantime should be restored to him, because he could not waive his fundamental
right ? In my opinion, if we express the view in the abstract that no
fundamental right can ever be waived, many startling and unforeseen results may
follow. Take another example.
Suppose a man obtains a permit or a licence
for running a motor vehicle or an excise shop. Having enjoyed the benefit of
the permit for several years, is it open to him to say when action is proposed
to be taken against him to terminate the licence, that the law under which the
permit was granted to him was not constitutionally valid ? Having derived all
the benefit from the permit granted to him, is it open to him to say that the
very Act under which a permit was granted to him is not valid in law ? Such and
other startling results will follow if we decide in the abstract, by a general
negative, that a fundamental right can never be waived. Take Art. 32, which is
a right to a constitutional remedy, namely, the right to move the Supreme Court
by appropriate proceedings for the enforcement of the rights conferred by Part
III. It is now well settled by several decisions of this court that the right
under Art. 32 is itself a fundamental right. Suppose a person exercises that
right and initiates appropriate proceedings for enforcement of a fundamental
right' Later he thinks better of it and withdraws his application. Still later
he changes his mind.
Can he then say that he could not waive his
right under Art.
32 and the order passed on his application
for withdrawal had no legal validity ? We may take still another example.
Under Art. 30(1) of the Constitution, all
minorities, whether based on religion or language, have the right to establish
and administer educational institutions of 601 their choice. Suppose, there is
a minority educational institution and the minority has the right to administer
that institution, but they want grant from Government. The minority may have to
surrender part of its right of administration in order to get Government aid.
Can the minority waive its right? Such a question arose for consideration in
the advisory opinion which we gave in connection with the Kerala Education Bill
and-, so far as I have been able to understand, the effect of our opinion is
that the minority can surrender part of its right of administration of a school
of its own choice in order to get aid from Government. If we now hold that the
minority can never surrender its right, then the result will be that it will
never be able to ask for Government aid.
I do not see any such vital distinction
between the provisions of the American Constitution and those of our
Constitution as would lead me to the conclusion that the doctrine of waiver
applies in respect of constitutional rights guaranteed by the American
Constitution but will not apply in respect of fundamental rights guaranteed by
the Indian Constitution. Speaking generally, the prohibition in Part III is
against the State from taking any action in violation of a fundamental right.
The word 'State' in that Part includes the Government and Parliament of India
as also the Government and Legislature of each of the States and also all local
or other authorities within the territory of India or under the control of the
Government of India. The American Constitution also says the same thing in
effect.
By Art. VI it states that the Constitution
and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof
shall be the supreme law of the land. It is well settled in America that the
first ten amendments to the original Constitution were substantially
contemporaneous and should be construed in pari materia. In many of the
amendments the phraseology used is similar to the phraseology of the provisions
of Part III of our Constitution.
The position under the American Constitution
is 76 602 well settled and a succinct statement of that position will be found
in Rottschaefer on Constitutional Law, pp. 28-29.
The learned author has summarised the
position thus:
" There are certain constitutional
provisions that may be waived by the person for whose protection they were
intended. A person who has waived that protection in a given instance may not
thereafter. raise the issue that his, constitutional rights have been infringed
in that instance, since whatever injury he may incur is due to his own act
rather than to the enforcement of an unconstitutional measure against him.
A person who would otherwise be entitled to
raise a constitutional issue is sometimes denied that right because he is
estopped to do so. The factor usually present in these cases is conduct
inconsistent with file present assertion of that right, or conduct of such
character that it would be unjust to others to permit him to avoid liability on
constitutional grounds. A person may not question the constitutionality of the
very provision on which he bases the right claimed to be infringed thereby, nor
of a provision that is an integral part in its establishment or definition. The
acceptance of a benefit under one provision of an Act does not ordinarily
preclude a person from asserting' the invalidity of another and severable
provision thereof, but there are exceptions to this rule. The.' promoters of a
public improvement have been denied' the right to contest the validity of the
rule apportioning its cost over the benefited lands, and a person who has
received the benefits of a statute may not there-' after assert its invalidity
to defeat the claims of those, against whom it has been enforced in his own
favour. A state is estopped to claim that its own statute deprives it.
of its property without due process of law
but it is permitted to assert that its own statute invades rights that its
constitution confers upon it. Prior inconsistent conduct will not, however
preclude a person from asserting the, invalidity of an act if under all the
circumstances its assertion involves no 603 unfairness or injustice to those
against whom it is raised." The learned Attorney General placed reliance
on the following decisions: (1) Pierce v. Somerset Railway (1); (2) Wall v.
Parrot Silver and Copper Company (2); (3) Pierce Oil Corporation v. Phoenix
Refining Company (3) ; (4) Shepard v. Barron(4) ; (5) United States V.
Murdock(5); (6) Patton v. United States (6) ; and (7) Adams v. United States
(7). The position in America is so well settled that I think it is unnecessary
to examine the aforesaid decisions in detail. I need only refer to the
observations of Frankfurter, J., in William A. Adam's case (supra). The
observations were made in connection with a case where a trial was held without
a jury at the request of the accused person himself in spite of the guarantee
of Amendment VI. The observations were" What was contrived as protections
for the accused should not be turned into fetters. To assert as an absolute
that a layman, no matter how wise or experienced he may be, is incompetent to
choose between judge and jury as the tribunal for determining his guilt or
innocence, simply because a lawyer has not advised him on the choice, is to
dogmatize beyond the bounds of learning or experience." I have not been
able to find any real reason on the basis of which the decisions given above
with regard to the American Constitution can be held to be inapplicable to
similar cases arising under the Indian Constitution.
Two subsidiary reasons have been given for
holding that the position under the Indian Constitution is different. One is
that ours is a nascent democracy and, therefore, the doctrine of waiver should
not apply. With respect, I am unable to concur in this view. I do not think
that we shall be advancing the cause of democracy by converting a fundamental
right into a fetter or using it as a means for getting out of an (1) (1898) 171
U.S. 641.
(2) (1917) 244.U.S.407.
(3) (1922) 259.U.S.125.
(4) (1904) 194.U.S.553.
(5) (1931) 284.U.S.141.
(6) (1930) 281.U.S.276.
(7) (1942) 317.U.S.269.
604 agreement freely entered into by the parties.
I appreciate that waiver is not to be light heartedly applied, and I agree that
it must be applied with the fullest rigour of all necessary safeguards and
cautions. What I seriously object to is a statement in the abstract and
"in absolute terms that in no circumstances can a right given by any of
the provisions in Part III of the Constitution be waived.
Another point taken is that the provisions in
Part III embody what are called natural rights' and such rights have been
retained by the people and can never be interfered with. I am unable to
acquiesce in this. The expression natural rights' is in itself somewhat vague.
Sometimes, rights have been divided into natural rights' and civil rights', and
natural rights' have been stated to be those which are necessarily inherent or
innate and which come from the very elementary laws of nature whereas civil
rights are those which arise from the needs of civil as distinguished from
barbaric communities. I am unable, however, to agree that any such distinction
is apparent from the provisions in Part III of our Constitution: all the rights
referred to therein appear to be created by the Constitution. I do not think
that Locke's doctrine of natural rights', which was perhaps the authority for
the American Declaration of Independence, played any part in the enactment of
the provisions of Part III of our Constitution. The doctrine which has long
since ceased to receive general acceptance, has been thus explained by E. W.
Paterson (see Natural Law and Natural Rights, Southern Methodist University
Press, Dallas, 1955, p. 61):
" The theory of natural rights, for
which we are indebted to the seventeenth-century English philosopher, John
Locke, is essentially different from the theories of natural law just discussed
in that it lacked the two important characteristics above -mentioned: the
concept of an immutable physical order and the concept of divine
reason............ He begins with the purpose of justifying the existence of a
government with coercive powers. What inconveniences would arise if there were
no government? Men would live in a " stage of nature'; to avoid confusion
with the 605 political state I shall call this a condition of nature'.
In such a condition man would be free to
work, to enjoy the fruits of his labour, and to barter with others; he would
also be free to enforce the law of nature (whose precepts Locke did not define)
against every other man. Since Locke was an optimist about human nature he
thought men would get along pretty well in this lawless condition. Yet the
condition of nature is for Locke a fiction like the assumption of a
frictionless machine in mechanics. The chief disadvantages that men in this
condition would suffer were, he thought, the absence of an established law,,
the absence of a known and impartial magistrate to settle disputes, the absence
of a. power sufficient to execute and enforce the judgment of the magistrate.
Moved by these inconveniences, men would enter into a social compact with each
other whereby each would transfer to a third person, the government, such
rights over his person and property as the government must have in order to
remove these inconveniences. All other rights, privileges, and immunities he
reserved, as a grantor of land conveys the fee simple to his son and reserves a
life estate to himself.
These reserved rights were natural' rights
because they had originated in the condition of nature and survived the social
compact." There are, in my opinion, clear indications in Part III of the
Constitution itself that the doctrine of ' natural rights' had played no part
in the formulation of the provisions therein. Take Arts. 33, 34 and 35 which
give Parliament power to modify the rights conferred by Part III.
If they were natural rights, the Constitution
could not have given power to Parliament to modify them. Therefore, I am of the
view that the doctrine of 'natural rights' affords nothing but a foundation of
shifting sand for building up a thesis that the doctrine of waiver does not
apply to the rights guaranteed in Part III of our Constitution.
The true position as I conceive it is this:
where a right or privilege guaranteed by the Constitution rests in the
individual and is primarily intended for his benefit and does not impinge on
the right of others, it 606 can be waived provided such waiver is not forbidden
by law and does not contravene public. policy or public morals.
In the case before us, I have held that there
is no foundation on facts to sustain the plea of waiver.
Therefore, I would allow the appeal with
costs. The order of the Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi, dated January 29,
1958, must be set aside and all proceedings now pending for implementation of
the order of the Union Government dated July 5, 1954, must be quashed.
SUBBA RAO, J.-I have had the advantage of
perusing the judgments of my Lord the Chief Justice and my learned brother, S.
K. Das, J. I agree with their conclusion, but I would prefer to express my
opinion separately in regard to the question of the applicability of the
doctrine of waiver to the fundamental rights.
This case raises a most serious and important
question, viz., whether the doctrine of waiver operates on the fundamental
rights enshrined in the Constitution, a question not confined to the immediate
purpose of this litigation, but to the public in general. The question is bound
to arise frequently, and the varying observations already expressed by the
learned Judges of this Court would lend scope for conflicting decisions
involving parties in unnecessary litigation and avoidable hardship. The
question was directly raised and fully argued before us. In the circumstances,
I cannot share the opinion of my learned brother, S. K. Das, J., that this
Court should avoid a decision on this question and leave it to be decided in a
more appropriate case.
The facts have been fully stated by my Lord
the Chief Justice in his judgment and I need not restate them.
The learned Attorney General contended that
in the American Law the principle of waiver was applied to rights created by the
Constitution except in cases where the protection of the rights was based upon
public policy and that, by the same analogy, if no public policy was involved,
even in India, the person 607 affected by the infringement of the fundamental
rights could waive the constitutional protection guaranteed to him. It was said
that in the present case the appellant waived his fundamental right under Art.
14 of the Constitution as the right was only in respect of his liability to tax
and he could legitimately waive it. To, appreciate this argument it would be
convenient at the outset to notice the American Law on the subject. Certain
rights, which are sometimes described as the Bill of Rights, have been
introduced by the Amendment; to the Constitution of America. They declare the
rights of the people of America in respect of the freedom of religion speech,
press, assemblage and from illegal seizurs.
They guarantee trial by jury in certain
criminal and civil matters. They give protection against self-incrimination.
The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution of
the United States prescribes that no person shall be deprived of life., liberty
or property without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for
public use without just compensation. The Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution introduces the rule of due process as a protection against the
State action. The said amendments are intended as a protection to citizens
against the action of the Union and the States. Though the rights so declared
are general and wide in their terms, the Supreme Court of America, by a long
course of -judicial, interpretation, having regard to the social conditions' in
that country, has given content to those rights and imposed limitations thereon
in an attempt to reconcile individual rights with social good, by evolving
counterbalancing doctrines of police power, eminent domain,,. and such others.
During the course of the evolution. of the law, attempts were made to apply the
doctrine of waiver to the provisions of the Constitution of America. American
Courts applied the doctrine with great caution and in applying the same, laid
down definite principles.
The said principles were culled out from the
various decisions and clearly summarized in the authoritative, textbooks on the
Constitution of America under different heads:
608 WILLIS ON 'CONSTITUTIONAL LAW':
1. Self-incrimination:
The privilege against self-incrimination'
like-any other privilege, is one which may be waived.
2. Double jeopardy:
Double jeopardy is a privilege and may be
waived expressly or impliedly.
3. Immunity against unreasonable searches and
seizures:
The immunity is one which may be waived and
by consent one can make a search and seizure reasonable.
4. Jury Trial:
The United States Supreme Court......... held
that neither a jurisdictional question nor the interest of the State was
involved, but only the privilege and right of the accused, and that these were
subject to waiver in accordance with the usual rules.
5. Due Process of Law as a matter of jurisdiction:
In order to delimit personal liberty by
exercising social control, the branch of the government undertaking to do so
must have jurisdiction. If it does not have jurisdiction, it is taking personal
liberty (life, liberty or property) without due process of law. To this rule
there are no exceptions. It cannot be waived.
'COOLEY'S CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATIONS':
Where a constitutional provision is designed
for, the protection solely of the property rights of the. citizen, it is
competent for him to waive the protection, and to consent to such action as
would be invalid if taken against his will.
In criminal cases the doctrine that a
constitutional privilege may be waived must be true to a very limited extent
only. A party may consent to waive rights of.
property, but the trial and punishment for.
public offences are not within the provinces of individual con. sent or
agreement.
CORPUS JURIS SECUNDUM:
It has been stated supra (p. 1050, note 32)
that the doctrine of waiver extends to rights and privileges 609 of any
character, and since the word ' waiver' covers every conceivable right, it is
the general rule that a person may waive any matter which affects his property,
and any alienable right or privilege of which he is the owner or which belongs
to him or to which he is legally entitled, whether secured by contract,
conferred by statute, or guaranteed by constitution, provided such rights and
privileges rest in the individual, are intended 'for his sole benefit, do not
infringe on the rights of others, and further provided the waiver Of the right
or privilege is not forbidden by law, and does not contravene public policy,
and the principle is recognized that everyone has a right to waive, and agree
to waive, the advantage of a law or rule made solely for the benefit and
protection of the individual in his private capacity, if it can be dispensed
with and relinquished without infringing on any public right and without
detriment to the community at large.........
As a general rule, rights relating to procedure
and remedy are subject to waiver, but if a right is so fundamental in its
nature as to be regarded by the state as vitally integrated in immemorially
established processes of the administration of justice, it cannot be waived by
anyone.
The cases cited at the Bar illustrate the
aforesaid principles. The doctrine was applied to the obligations under a
contract in Pierce v. Somerset Railway (1); to deprivation of property without
due process of law in Pierce Oil Corporation v. Phoenix Refining Company(2) and
Shepard v. Barron (3) to trial by jury in Patton v. United States (4) and Adams
v. United States(5); and to selfincrimination in United States v. Murdock (6).
It is true, as the learned counsel for the appellant contended, that in some of
the aforesaid decisions, observations are in the nature of obiter, but they
clearly indicate the trend of judicial opinion in America.
(1) (1898) 43 L. Ed316; 171 U.S. 641.
(2) (1922) 66 L.Ed. 855; 259 U.S. 125.
(3) (1904) 48 L. Ed. 1115 ; 194 U. S. 553.
(4) (1930) 74 L. Ed. 854; 281 U.S. 276.
(5) (1942) 87 L. Ed. 268.
(6) (1931) 76 L. Ed 210; 284 U.S. 141.
77 610 The American Law on the subject may be
summarized thus: The doctrine of waiver can be invoked when the Constitutional
or Statutory guarantee of a right is not conceived in public interest or when
it does not affect the jurisdiction of the authority infringing the said right.
But if the privilege conferred or the right created by the statute is solely
for the benefit of the individual, he can waive it. But even in those cases the
Courts invariably administered a caution that having regard to the nature of
the right some precautionary and stringent conditions should be applied before
the doctrine is invoked or applied.
This leads me to the question whether the
fundamental rights enshrined in the Indian Constitution pertain to that
category of rights which could be waived. To put it differently, whether the
Constitutional guarantee in regard to the fundamental rights restricts or ousts
the jurisdiction of the relevant authorities under the Constitution to make
laws in derogation of the said rights or whether the said rights are for the
benefit of the general public. At the outset I would like to sound a note of
warning. While it is true that the judgments of the Supreme Court of the United
States are of a great assistance to this Court in elucidating and solving the
difficult problems that arise from time to time, it is equally necessary to
keep in mind the fact that the decisions are given in the context of a
different social, economic and political set up, and therefore great care
should be bestowed in applying those decisions to cases arising in India with
different social, economic and political conditions. While the principles
evolved by the Supreme Court of the United States of America may in certain
circumstances be accepted, their application to similar facts in India may not
always lead to the same results. It is therefore necessary to consider the
nature of the fundamental rights incorporated in the Indian Constitution, the
conditions of the people for whose benefit and the purpose for which they were
created, and the effect of the laws made in violation of those rights. The
Constitution of India in its preamble promises to secure to all citizens
justice, social, economic and 611 political; liberty of thought, expression,
belief, faith and worship; equality of status and of opportunity; and to
promote among them all fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual and
the unity of the nation. One of the things the Constitution did to achieve the
object is to incorporate the fundamental rights in the Constitution.
They are divided into seven categories: (i)
right to equality-Arts. 14 to 18; (ii) right to freedom-Arts. 19 to 22; (iii)
right against exploitation-Arts. 23 and 24; (iv) right to freedom of religion
Arts. 25 to 28 ; (v) cultural and educational rights Arts. 29 and 30; (vi)
right to property-Arts. 31, 31 A and 31B; and (vii) right to Constitutional
remedies Arts. 32 to 35. Patanjali Sastri, J., as he then was, pointed out, in
Gopalan v. The, State of Madras(1), that fundamental rights contained in Part
III of the Constitution are really rights that are still reserved to the people
after the delegation of rights by the people to the institutions of Government
both at the Centre and in the States created by the Constitution. Article 13
reads :(1) All laws in force in the territory of India immediately before the
commencement of this Constitution, in so far as they are inconsistent with the
pro. visions of this Part, shall, to the extent of such inconsistency, be void.
(2) The State shall not make any law which
takes away or, abridges the rights conferred by this Part and any law made in
contravention of this clause, shall, to the extent of the contravention, be
void." This Article, in clear and unambiguous terms, not only declares
that all laws in fore before the commencement of the Constitution and made
thereafter taking away or abridging the said rights would be void to the extent
of the contravention but also prohibits the State from making any law taking
away or abridging the said rights. Part III is therefore enacted for the
benefit of all the citizens of India, in an attempt to preserve to them their
fundamental rights against infringement by the institutions created by the
Constitution; for, without that safeguard, the objects (1) [1950] S. C. R. 88.
612 adumbrated in the Constitution could not
be-achieve,-]. For the same purpose, the said chapter imposes a limitation on
the power of the State to make laws in violation of those rights. The entire
part, in my view, has been introduced in public interest, and it is not proper
that the fundamental rights created under the various Articles should be
dissected to ascertain whether any or which part of them is conceived in public
interest and which part of them is conceived for individual benefit. Part III
reflects the attempt of the Constitution makers to reconcile individual freedom
with State Control. While in America this process of reconciliation was allowed
to be evolved by the course of judicial decisions, in India, the fundamental
rights and their limitations are crystallized and embodied in the Constitution
itself; while in America a freehand was given to the judiciary not only to
evolve the content of the right but also its limitations, in the Indian
Constitution there is not much scope for such a process. The Court cannot
therefore import any further limitations on the fundamental rights other than
those contained in Part III by any doctrine, such as " waiver " or
otherwise. I would, therefore, hold that the fundamental rights incorporated in
Part III of the Constitution cannot be waived.
It is said. that such an inflexible rule
would, in certain cases, defeat the very object for which the fundamental
rights are created. I have carefully scrutinized the Articles in Part III of
the Constitution of India, and they do not, in my view, disclose any such
anomaly or create unnecessary hardship to' the people for whose benefit the rights
are created. Article, 14 embodies the famous principle of equality before the
law and equal protection of the laws, and Arts. 15 to 18 and Art. 29(2) relate
to particular applications of the rule. The principle underlying these Articles
is the mainspring of our democratic form of government and it guarantees to its
citizens equal protection in respect of both substantive and procedural laws.
If the doctrine of waiver is engrafted to the said fundamental principles, it
will mean that a citizen can agree to be discriminated.' When one realizes the
unequal 613 positions occupied by the State and the private citizen,
particularly in India where illiteracy is rampant, it is easy to visualize that
in a conflict between the State and -a citizen, the latter may, by fear of
force or hope of preferment, give up his right. It is said that in such a case
coercion or influence can be established in a Court of law, but in practice it
will be well nigh impossible to do so. The same reasoning will apply to Arts.
15 and 16. Art.
17 illustrates the evil repercussion of the
doctrine of waiver in its impact on the fundamental rights. That Article in
express terms forbids untouchability; obviously, a person cannot ask the State
to treat him as an untouchable. Article 19 reads:"(1) All citizens shall
have the right(a) to freedom of speech and expression;
(b) to assemble peaceably and without arms;
(c) to form associations or unions;
(d) to move freely throughout the territory
of India ;
(e)to reside and settle in any part of the
territory of India;
(f) to acquire, hold and dispose of property
; and (g) to practice any profession, or to carry on any occupation, trade or
business." The right to freedom is the essential attribute of a citizen
under democratic form of government. The freedoms mentioned in Art. 19 are
subject to certain restrictions mentioned in cls. (2) to (6) of that Article.
So far as the freedoms narrated in sub-cls. (a) to (g) of Cl. (1) of Art. 19
are concerned, I cannot visualise any contingency where a citizen would be -in
a worse position than he was if he could not exercise the right of waiver. In
regard to freedom to acquire, hold and dispose of property, a plausible
argument may be advanced, namely, that a citizen should have a right to waive
his right to acquire, hold and dispose of property ; for, otherwise he might be
compelled to acquire and hold his property, even if he intended to give it up
There is an underlying fallacy in this argument.
The Article does not compel a citizen to
acquire, hold and 614 dispose of property just as it does not compel a per. son
to do any of the acts covered by the other freedoms. If he does not want to
reside in any part of the territory of India or to make a speech or to practise
any profession, he is at liberty not to do any of ,,these things. So too, a
person may not acquire the property at all or practise any profession but if he
seeks to acquire property or practise any profession, he cannot be told that he
has waived his right at an earlier stage to acquire property or practise the
profession. A freedom to do a particular act involves the freedom not to do
that act. There is an essential distinction between the non-exercise of a right
and the exercise of a right subject to the doctrine of waiver. So understood,
even in the case of the right covered by sub-cl. (f) of cl. (1), there cannot
be any occasion when a citizen would be worse off than when he had no
fundamental rights under the Article. The preservation of the rights under Art.
19 without any further engrafting of any limitations than those already imposed
under the Constitution, is certainly in the interest of the public ; for, the
rights are essential for the development of human personality in its diverse
aspects. Some comment is made in regard to the right covered by el. (3) of Art.
20, and it is asked that if a person has no liberty to waive the protection
under that clause, he could not give evidence even if he wanted to give it in
his own interest. This argument ignores the content of the right under cl. (3)
of Art. 20. The fundamental right of a person is only that he should not be
compelled to be a witness against himself. It would not prevent him from giving
evidence voluntarily. Under Art. 21, no person shall be deprived of his life or
personal liberty except according to procedure established by law and Art. 22
gives protection against arrest and detention in certain cases. I do not think
that any situation can be conceived when a person could waive this right to his
advantage. Article 23(1) prohibits traffic in human beings and forced labour.
It is not suggested that a person can waive this Constitutional protection. So
too, the right under Art. 24, which prohibits employment 615 of children in
factories, cannot be waived. That apart, so far as this Article is concerned,
no question of waiver can arise as a child cannot obviously waive his right
under this Article. Article 25 gives guarantee for religious liberty subject to
certain restrictions contained therein. It declares that all persons are equally
entitled to freedom of conscience and the right freely to profess, practise and
propagate religion. This right is certainly conceived in the public interest
and cannot be waived. So too, freedom to manage religious affairs, freedom as
to payment Of taxes for promotion of any particular religion and freedom as to
attendance at religious instruction or religious worship in certain educational
institutions are all conceived to enforce the religious neutrality of the State
and it cannot be suggested that they are not in public interest. The cultural
and educational rights of the minorities and their right to establish and
administer educational institutions of their choice are given for the
protection of the rights of the minorities and it cannot be said that they are
not in public interest. Article 31, which prohibits the State from depriving a
person of his property save by authority of law or to acquire any property
without paying compensation, is intended to protect the properties of persons
from arbitrary actions of the State. This Article is conceived in the interest
of the public and a person cannot say that he can be deprived of his property
without authority of law or that his land can be acquired without compensation.
It is suggested that if a person, after
waiving his fundamental right to property and allowing the State to incur heavy
expenditure in improving the same, turns round and claims to recover the said
property, the State would be put to irreparable injury. Firstly, no such
occasion should arise, as the State is not expected to take its citizens'
property or deprive them of their property otherwise than by authority of law.
Secondly, if the owner of a property intends to give it to the State, the State
can always insist upon conveying to it the said property in the manner known to
law. Thirdly, other remedies may be open to the 616 recover compensation or
damages for the improvements bonafide made or the loss incurred, having regard
to the circumstances of a particular case. These considerations, in my view,
are of no relevance in considering the question of waiver in the context of
fundamental rights. By express provisions of the Constitution, the State is
prohibited from making any law which takes away or abridges the rights
conferred by Part III of the Constitution. The State is not, therefore,
expected to enforce any right contrary to the Constitutional prohibition on the
ground that the party waived his fundamental right. If this prohibition is
borne in mind, no occasion can arise when the' State would be prejudiced. The
prejudice, if any, to the State would be caused not by the non-application of
the doctrine of waiver but by its own action contrary to the Constitutional
prohibition imposed on it.
It is then said that if the doctrine of
waiver is to be excluded, a person can apply to the Supreme Court under Art.
32 of the Constitution for the relief
provided therein, withdraw the petition, get the order of the Supreme Court
dismissing it and then apply over again for issue of a writ in respect of the
same right. The apprehension so expressed is more imaginary than real; for, it
has no foundation either in fact or in law. When an application is dismissed,
for whatever reason it may be-whether on merits or on admission-, the order of
the Court becomes final and it can be reopened only in the manner prescribed by
law. There is no scope for the application of the doctrine of waiver in such a
cage.
Articles 33 and 34 contain some of the
Constitutional limitations on the application and the enforcement of the
fundamental rights. The former. Article confers power on Parliament to modify
the rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution in their application to
facts and the latter enables it to impose restrictions on the rights conferred
by' that Part, while martial law is in force in any area.
These two Articles, therefore, do not create
fundamental rights, but impose limitations thereon and I 617 cannot appreciate
the argument that their presence in Part III either derogates from the content
of the fundamental rights declared therein or sustains the doctrine of waiver
in its application to the said rights. Article 35 confers on the Parliament,
the power to legislate for giving effect to the provisions of Part III to the
exclusion of the Legislatures of the, States. This Article also does not create
a fundamental right, but provides a machinery for enforcing that right.
A startling result, it is suggested, would
flow from the rejection of the doctrine of waiver and the suggestion is sought
to be illustrated by the following example : A person takes a permit for
several years from the State for running a motor vehicle or an excise shop.
Having enjoyed the benefit for several years and when action is proposed to be
taken against him to terminate the licence, he contends that the law under
which the permit was granted to him offended his fundamental rights and
therefore constitutionally not valid. It is asked whether it would be open to
him to say that the very Act under which the permit was granted to him was not
valid in law. To my mind, this illustration does not give rise to any anomaly.
Either a person can run a motor vehicle or an excise shop with licence or
without licence. On the basis the law is valid, a licence is taken and the
motor vehicle is run under that licence and if that law offends his fundamental
right and therefore void, he continues to ran the business without licence, as
no licence is required under a valid law. The aforesaid illustration does not,
there. fore, give rise to any anomaly and even if it does, it does not affect
the legal position.
I have considered the various provisions
relating to the fundamental rights with a view to discover if there is any
justification for the comment that without the aid of the doctrine of waiver a
citizen, in certain circumstances, would be in a worse position than that he
would be if he exercised his right. I have shown that there is none. Nor is
there any basis for the suggestion that the State would irreparably suffer
under certain contingencies; for, any resulting hardship would be its 78 618
own making and could be avoided if it acted in accordance with law.
A large majority of our people are
economically poor, educationally backward and politically not yet conscious of
their rights. Individually or even collectively, they cannot be pitted against
the State organizations and institutions, nor can they meet them on equal
terms. In such circumstances, it is the duty of this Court to protect their
rights against themselves. I have, therefore, no hesitation in holding that the
fundamental rights created by the Constitution are transcendental in nature,
conceived and enacted in national and public interest, and therefore cannot be
waived.
That apart, I would go further and hold that
as section 5(1) of the Act XXX of 1947 was declared to be void by this Court in
M. Ct. Muthiah v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (1), the appellant
can. not, by the application of the doctrine of waiver, validate the enquiry
made under the said Act. It is suggested that there is a distinction between a
case where the enactment is beyond the legislative competence Of the
Legislature which made it and the case where the law is unconstitutional on the
ground of existence of a constitutional limitation, that while in the former
case the law is null and void, in the latter case the law is unenforceable and
may be revived by the removal of the limitation by an amendment of the
Constitution. On this distinction an argument is sought to be built to the
effect that as in the present case s. 5(1) of the Act XXX of 1947 was declared
to be invalid only on the ground that it was hit by Art. 14 of the
Constitution, the law must be deemed to be on the statute book and therefore
the appellant was within his right to waive his constitutional guarantee. I am
unable to appreciate this, argument.
The scope of Art. 13(1) of the Constitution
was considered by this Court in Keshavan Madhava Menon v. The state of Bombay
(2). This Court by a majority held that Art. 13(1) of the Constitution does not
make (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 228.
619 existing laws which are inconsistent with
the fundamental rights, void ab initio, but only renders such laws
unenforceable and void with respect to the exercise of the fundamental rights
on and after the date of commencement of the Constitution. Mahajan, C. J., who
was a party to that decision, explained the word ,void' in Art. 13(1) of the
Constitution in Behram Khurshed Pesikaka v. State of Bombay (1). He observed at
page 652 thus:" It is axiomatic that when the law-making power of a State
is restricted by written fundamental law, then any law enacted and opposed to
the fundamental law is in excess of the legislative authority and is thus a
nullity. Both these declarations of unconstitutionality go to the root of the
power itself and there is no real distinction between them.
They represent but two aspects of want of
legislative power.
The legislative power of Parliament and the
State Legislatures as conferred by Arts. 245 and 246 of the Constitution stands
curtailed by the fundamental rights Chapter of the Constitution." This
decision in clear and unambiguous terms lays down that there cannot be any
distinction on principle between Constitutional incompetency and Constitutional
limitation.
In either case, the Act is void, though in
the latter case, the pre-constitutional rights and liabilities arising under
the statute are saved. This Court again dealt with the meaning of the word
void' in Bhikaji Narain Dhakras v. State of Madhya Pradesh (2). There the
question was whether an Act 'Which was declared void on the ground of inconsistency
with the Constitution, can be revived by any subsequent amendment to the
Constitution removing the inconsistency.
This Court answered the question in the
affirmative. Das, acting C.; J., observed at page 598 thus:" As explained
in Keshavan Madhava Menon's case, the law became void not in toto or for all
purposes or for all times or for all persons but only to the extent of such
inconsistency that is to,say, to the extent, it became inconsistent with the
provisions of Part (1) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 613.
(2) [1955] 2 S. C. R. 589.
620 III which conferred the fundamental
rights on the citizens.
It did not become void independently of the
existence of the rights guaranteed by Part III...... In Short, Article 13(1)
had the effect of nullifying or rendering the existing law which had become
inconsistent with Art. 19(1)(g) read with clause (6) as it then stood
ineffectual, nugatory and devoid of any legal force or binding effect only with
the exercise of the fundamental right on and after the date of the commencement
of the Constitution..................... It is only as against the citizens
that they remained in a dormant or moribund condition. In our judgment, after
the amendment of clause (6) of Art. 19 on the 18th June, 1951, the impugned Act
ceased to be unconstitutional and became revivified and enforceable against
citizens as well as against non-citizens." This judgment does not say
anything different from that expressed in Keshavan Madhava Menon's case (1) nor
does it dissent from the view expressed by Mahajan, C. J., in Behram Khurshed's
case (2). The problem that confronted the learned Judges was a different one
and they resolved it by applying the doctrine of "eclipse'. The legal
position, vis-a-vis, the law declared to be void either on the ground of
legislative incompetence or for the reason of constitutional limitation, as
stated in the earlier decisions, -remains unshaken by this decision. So long as
the inconsistency remains the law continues to be void, at any rate vis-a-vis
the fundamental rights of a person. We are not concerned in this case with the
doctrine of revival; for the inconsistency of s. 5(1) of the Act with the
fundamental right under Art. 14 of the Constitution has not been removed by any
amendment of the Constitution. So long as it is not done, the said section is
void and cannot affect the fundamental rights of the citizens. In M. Ct.
Muthiah v.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (3),
it was declared that s. 5(1) of Act XXX of 1947 was unconstitutional on the
ground that it infringed the fundamental rights of the citizens under Art. 14
of the Constitution.
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 228. (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R.
613.
(3) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
621 Under Art. 141 of the Constitution, the
law declared by the Supreme Court is binding on all the Courts in India. It
follows that the Income-tax Commissioner had no jurisdiction to continue the
proceedings against the appellant under Act XXX of 1947. If the Commissioner
had no jurisdiction, the appellant could not by waiving his right confer
jurisdiction on him.
The scope of the doctrine of waiver was
considered by this Court in Behram Khurshed's case(1). There a person was
prosecuted for an offence under s. 66(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act and he
was sentenced to one month's rigorous imprisonment. One of the questions raised
there was whether s. 13(b) of the Bombay Prohibition Act, having been declared
to be void under Art. 13(1) of the Constitution in so far as it affected the
consumption or use of liquid medicinal or toilet preparation containing
alcohol, the prosecution was maintainable for infringement of that section. The
Court held that in India once the law has been struck down as unconstitutional
by the Supreme Court, no notice can be taken of it by any Court, because, after
it is declared as unconstitutional, it is no longer law and is null and void.
Even so, it was contended that the accused
had waived his fundamental right and therefore he could not sustain his
defence. Mahajan, C. J., delivering the judgment of the majority, repelled this
contention with the following observations at page 653:" The learned
Attorney General when questioned about the doctrine did not seem to be very
enthusiastic about it.
Without finally expressing an opinion on this
question we are not for the moment convinced that this theory has any relevancy
in construing the fundamental rights conferred by Part III of our Constitution.
We think that the rights described as fundamental rights are a necessary
consequence of the declaration in the preamble that the people of India have
solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign democratic republic and
to secure to all its citizens justice, social, economic and political ; liberty
,of thought, expression, belief, faith and worship;
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 613.
622 equality of status and of opportunity.
These fundamental rights have not been put in the Constitution merely for the
individual benefit though ultimately they come into operation in considering
individual rights. They have been put there as a matter of public policy and
the doctrine of waiver can have no application to provisions of law which have
been enacted as a matter of Constitutional policy.
Reference to some of the articles, inter
alia, Articles 15(1) 20, 21, makes the proposition quite plain. A citizen
cannot get discrimination by telling the State 'You can discriminate', or get
convicted by waiving the protection given under Articles 20 and 21." On
the question of waiver, Venkatarama Aiyar, J., in his judgment before review,
considered the American decisions and was inclined to take the view that under
our Constitution when a law contravenes the provisions intended for the benefit
of the individual, it can be waived. But the learned Judge made it clear in his
judgment that the question of waiver had no bearing to any issue of fact
arising for determination in that case but only for showing the nature of the
right declared under Art. 19(1)(f) and the effect in law of a statute
contravening it. Das, J., as he then was, in his dissenting judgment, did not
state his view on this question but expressly reserved it in the following
words:" In coming to the conclusion that I have, I have in a large measure
found myself in agreement with the views of Venkatarama Aiyar, J., on that part
of the case. I, however, desire to guard myself against being understood to
agree with the rest of the observations to be found in his judgment,
particularly those relating to waiver of 'unconstitutionality, the fundamental
rights being a mere check on the legislative power or the effect of the
declaration under Art. 13(1) being relatively void'. On those topics prefer to
express no opinion on this occasion." I respectfully agree with the
observations of Mahajan, C. J. For the aforesaid reasons, hold that the
doctrine of waiver has no application in the case of fundamental rights under
our Constitution.
623 ORDER The appeal is allowed. The order of
the Income Tax Commissioner, Delhi, dated January 29, 1958, is set aside and all proceedings now pending for implementation of the order of Union
Government dated July 5, 1954, are quashed.
The appellant shall get costs of this appeal.
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