IN RE: The Berubari Union and Exchange
of Enclaves [1959] INSC 29 (1 April 1959)
ACT:
President's Reference-Indo-Pakistan
Agreement, 1958-Division of Berubari Union and exchange of Cooch-Behar
Enclaves-If involve cession of territory-Implementation-Amendment of
Constitution-Constitution of India, Arts. 1, 3, 368.
HEADNOTE:
As a result of the Radcliffe Award dated
August 12, 1947, Berubari Union No. 12 fell within West Bengal and was treated
as such by the Constitution which came into force on January 26, 195o, and has
since been governed on that basis.
Certain disputes arose between India and
Pakistan subsequent to the Radcliffe Award but Berubari was not in issue before
the Badge Commission set up by agreement between the parties to decide those
disputes. That commission made its award on January 26, 195o. Pakistan raised
the question of Berubari for the first time in 1952 alleging that under the
Radcliffe Award it should form part of East Bengal and was wrongly included in
West Bengal. On August 28, 1949, the Ruler of the State of Cooch-Behar 251
entered into an agreement of merger with the Government of India and that
Government took over the administration of Cooch-Behar which was ultimately
merged with West Bengal on January 1, 1950, so as to form a part of it. It was
found that certain areas which belonged to the State of CoochBehar became
enclaves in Pakistan after the partition, and similarly certain Pakistan
enclaves fell in India.
In order to remove the tension and conflict
caused thereby the Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan entered into an
agreement, called the Indo-Pakistan Agreement on September 10, 1958, and items
3 and 10 of that agreement provided for a division of Berubari Union half and
half between India and Pakistan and for an exchange of Cooch-Behar Enclaves in
Pakistan and Pakistan Enclaves in India.
Doubts having subsequently arisen regarding
the implementation of the said items, the President of India referred the
matter to the Supreme Court under Art. 143(1) of the Constitution:
Held, that item NO. 3 of the Agreement leaves
no manner of doubt that the parties to it were thereby seeking to settle the
dispute apart from the Award, amicably, and on ad hoc basis by dividing the
territory half and half. There is absolutely no indication in it that they were
seeking to interpret the Award and determine the boundary on that basis. The
question relating to Berubari must, therefore, be considered on the basis that
it involves cession of ;1 part of India's territory to Pakistan and this
applies with greater force to the agreement relating to the exchange of the
enclaves.
There can be no doubt that the implementation
of the Agreement would alter the boundary of West Bengal and affect Entry 13 in
the First Schedule to the Constitution, since as a matter of fact Berubari was
treated as a part of West Bengal and governed as such from the date of the
Award and was thus comprised therein before the commencement of the
Constitution. Any argument to the 'contrary cannot be accepted.
The State of Australia v. The State of
Victoria, (1911) 12 C.L.R. 667 and the State of South Australiav. State of
Victoria, [1914] A.C. 283, distinguished and held inapplicable.
Although it may be correct to describe the
preamble as a key to the mind of the Constitution-makers, it forms no part of
the Constitution and cannot be regarded as the source of any substantive power
which the body of the Constitution alone can confer on the Government,
expressly or by implication.
This is equally true of prohibitions and
limitations. It was not, therefore, correct to say that the preamble could in
any way limit the power of Parliament to cede parts of the national territory.
Nor was it correct to say that Art.
1(3)(c) did so.
Article 1(3)(c) correctly construed, confers
no power to acquire foreign territories but merely recognises automatic
absorption of such territories as may be acquired by India in its sovereign
right and, consequently, does not exclude by implication, the power to cede
national territory.
Moreover, the power to amend 252 the
Constitution under Art. 368 gives the Parliament the power to amend Art.
1(3)(c) so as to include the power to cede national territory as well. It was,
therefore, incorrect to suggest that the sovereign State of India lacked the
two essential attributes of sovereignty, namely, the power to acquire foreign
territory and the power to cede national territory, and that no process of
legislation could validate the Agreement in question.
Although such cession of territory, which
amounts in law to a transfer of sovereignty must cause great hardship from the
human point of view, the right of a sovereign State to do so in the exercise of
its treaty-making power and subject to such limitations as the Constitution
may, expressly or by necessary implication, impose, can never be in doubt and
the question as to whether the treaty can be implemented by ordinary
legislation or by constitutional amendment must depend on the provisions of the
Constitution itself.
It may be assumed in construing Art. 3 that
the Constitution contemplated changes of the territorial limits of the
constituent States and there was no guarantee of their territorial integrity.
Broadly speaking, that Article deals with the territorial adjustment inter se
of the Constituent States of India, and not merely their reorganisation on
linguistic or other basis. Article 3(c) deals with the diminution of the area
of a State and it is unreasonable to suggest that it is wide enough to cover
cession of national territory. The true position is that the Constitution does
not expressly provide either for acquisition of foreign territory or for cession
of national territory; powers are inherent in that behalf in every sovereign
State.
Consequently, the Agreement cannot be implemented
by a law relatable to Art. 3 and legislation relatable to Art. 368 would be
inevitable.
It follows, therefore, that the Parliament
acting under Art.
368 can make a law to give effect and
implement the Agreement in question covering both Berubari and the Enclaves or
pass a law amending Art. 3 so as to cover cases of cession of the territory of
India and thereafter make a law under the amended Art. 3 to implement the
Agreement.
ADVISORY JURISDICTION : Special Reference No.
1 of 1959.
Reference by the President of India under
Article 143(1) of the Constitution of India on the implementation of the IndoPakistan
Agreement relating to Berubari Union and Exchange of Enclaves.
The circumstances which led to this Reference
by the President and the questions referred appear from the full text of the
Reference dated April 1, 1959, which is reproduced below: WHEREAS the Boundary
Commission appointed under the Chairmanship of Sir Cyril Radcliffe in 253
accordance with sub-section (3) of section 3 of the Indian Independence Act,
1947, made an Award, hereinafter referred to as "the Radcliffe
Award", a copy whereof is annexed hereto as Annexure 1, determining the
boundaries of the Province of East Bengal and the Province of West Bengal
constituted by clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 3 of the said Act;
AND WHEREAS certain boundary disputes having
arisen out of the interpretation of the Radcliffe Award, the Dominion of India
and the Dominion of Pakistan set up, by agreement, a Tribunal under the
Chairmanship of the Hon'ble Lord Justice Algot Bagge for the adjudication and
final settlement of the said boundary disputes and for demarcating the boundary
accordingly:
AND WHEREAS the said Tribunal gave decisions
on the said boundary disputes, such decisions being hereinafter referred to as
"the Bagge Awards", a copy whereof is annexed hereto as Annexure 11;
AND WHEREAS, with respect to the District of
Jalpaiguri, the demarcation of the boundary line between the Province of West
Bengal and the Province of East Bengal is described in paragraph 1 of the
Schedule forming Annexure A to the Radcliffe Award as follows :"A line
shall be drawn along the boundary between the Thana of Phansidew a in the
District of Darjeeling and the Thana Tetulia in the District of Jalpaiguri from
the point where that boundary meets the Province of Bihar and then along the
boundary between the Thanas of Tetulia and Rajganj; the Thanas of Pachagar and
Rajganj, and the Thanas of Pachagar and Jalpaiguri, and shall then continue
along the northern corner of the Thana Debiganj to the boundary of the State of
Cooch Behar. The District of Darjeeling and so much of the District of
Jalpaiguri as lies north of this line shall belong to West Bengal, but the
Thana of Patgram and any other portion of Jalpaiguri District which lies to the
east or south shall belong to East Bengal";
254 AND WHEREAS a further dispute arose
between the Government of India and the Government of Pakistan whether, having
regard to the above description of the boundary line with respect to the
District of Jalpaiguri, the Radcliffe Award assigned the territory in the said
District known as Beruibari Union No. 12 (being the territory covered by blue
parallel lines in the sector map, a copy whereof is annexed hereto as Annexure
III) to the Province of West Bengal, as contended by the Government of India or
it assigned a major portion of the said territory to the Province of East
Bengal, as contended by the Government of Pakistan ;
AND WHEREAS certain other disputes also arose
between the Government of India and the Government of Pakistan regarding the
interpretation and implementation of certain other parts of the Radcliffe Award
and of some parts of the Bagge Awards;
AND WHEREAS the problem arising from the
existence of enclaves in Pakistan of certain territories of India which formed
part of the territories of the former Indian State of Cooch-Behar (shown in red
in the sector map, a copy whereof is annexed hereto as Annexure IV) and of
enclaves in India of certain territories of Pakistan (shown in blue in the said
sector map) was, along with other border problems, engaging the attention of
the Government of India and the Government of Pakistan;
AND WHEREAS, with a view to removing causes
of tension and resolving border disputes and problems relating to Indo-Pakistan
border areas and establishing peaceful conditions along those areas, the Prime
Minister of India, for and on behalf of the Government of India, and the Prime
Minister of Pakistan, for and on behalf of the Government of Pakistan, entered
into an agreement settling some of the said disputes and problems in the manner
set out in the note jointly recorded by the Common wealth Secretary, Ministry
of External Affairs, Government of India, and the Foreign Secretary, Ministry.
of Foreign Affairs and Commonwealth Relations, Government of Pakistan' a copy
whereof is annexed hereto as Annexure V, the agreement as embodied in the said
255 note being hereinafter referred to as "the Indo-Pakistan
Agreement";
AND WHEREAS the Indo-Pakistan Agreement
settles the aforesaid dispute relating to the territory known as Berubari Union
No. 12 in the manner specified in item (3) in paragraph 2 thereof, the
agreement relating to such settlement being hereinafter referred to as
"the Agreement relating to Berubari Union" ;
AND WHEREAS the lndo-Pakistan Agreement
settles the aforesaid problem arising from the existence of Indian enclaves in
Pakistan and Pakistan enclaves in India by exchange of enclaves in the manner
set out in Item (10) read with Item (3) in paragraph 2 thereof, the agreement
relating to such exchange of enclaves being hereinafter referred to as
"the Agreement relating to Exchange of Enclaves";
AND WHEREAS a doubt has arisen whether the
implementation of the Agreement relating to Berubari Union requires any
legislative action either by way of a suitable law of Parliament relatable to
article 3 of the Constitution or by way of a suitable amendment of the
Constitution in accordance with the provisions of article 368 of the Constitution
or both;
AND WHEREAS a doubt has arisen whether a
suitable law of Parliament relatable to article 3 of the Constitution is
sufficient to implement the Agreement relating to Exchange of Enclaves or
whether, in addition or in the alternative, a suitable amendment of the
Constitution in accordance with the provisions of article 368 of the
Constitution is necessary for the purpose;
AND WHEREAS there is likelihood of the
Constitutional validity of any action taken for the implementation of the
Agreement relating to Berubari Union and the Agreement relating to Exchange of
Enclaves being questioned in courts of law, involving avoidable, and protracted
litigation;
AND WHEREAS, in view of what has been
hereinbefore stated, it appears to me that the questions of law hereinafter set
out have arisen and are of such nature and of such importance that it is
expedient that the opinion of the Supreme Court of India should be obtained
thereon;
256 Now, THEREFORE, in exercise of the powers
conferred upon me by clause (1) of article 143 of the Constitution, 1, Rajendra
Prasad, President of India, hereby refer the following questions to the Supreme
Court of India for consideration and report thereon, namely:"(1)Is any
legislative actionnecessary for the, implementation of the Agreement relating
to Berubari Union ? (2) If so, is a law of Parliament relatable to article 3 of
the Constitution sufficient for the purpose or is an amendment of the
Constitution in accordance with article 368 of the Constitution necessary, in addition
or in the alternative ? (3) Is a law of Parliament relatable to article 3 of
the Constitution sufficient for implementation of the Agreement relating to
Exchange of Enclaves or is an amendment of the Constitution in accordance with
article 368 of the Constitution necessary for the purpose, in addition or in
the alternative ?" [Annexures omitted] 1959. December 8, 9, 10 and II. M.
C. Setalvad, AttorneyGeneral of India, C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor General of
India, H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor General of India, G. N. Joshi, R. H.
Dhebar and T.. M. Sen, for the Union of India. It is important to note that the
integrity of the territory of the States is not guaranteed by the Constitution
of India and Parliament is made Supreme even with respect to the questions
relating to the territory.
Part 1 of the Constitution is a
self-contained code with respect to the territory of the Union. The residuary
powers are vested in Parliament. The provisions in the Constitution of the
United States, Australia and Canada are entirely different' The Prime
Ministers' agreement with regard to Berubari Union No. 12 does not involve any
cession of territory, but it merely ascertains the boundary between East Bengal
and West Bengal, which had been left vague by the Radcliffe Award.
As such, this part of the agreement can be
implemented by executive 257 action. Where there is merely settlement of
boundaries, it is not a case of alienation of cession of land. The State of
South Australia v. State of Victoria, 12 C.L.R. 667; Penn v. Baltimore, 1 Ves.
Sen. 444; Gran-dall on Treaties, 1 Edn., pp. 115 and 161 ; The Lessee of
Lattimer et al v. Poteet, 10 L. Ed. 328. The territories of Berubari Union No.
12 were being governed by West Bengal unconstitutionally and did not fall within.
item 3 of the First Schedule to the Constitution.' Berubari Union was
administered by West Bengal as its own territory, though legally it was not
part of its territory and it was not administered " as if it formed part
of West Bengal " within the meaning of item 3 of Sch. 1. The giving of a
part of the Berubari Union to East Bengal under the Prime Ministers' agreement
did not involve any amendment to the First Schedule to the Constitution.
A.I.R. 1959 Cal. 506 at 517 and 518.
The executive power of the Union is
co-extensive with the powers of Parliament with this limitation that the
executive cannot act against the provisions of the Constitution or of any law
made by Parliament. [1955] 2 S.C.R. 225 at 234-237.
The power of making treaties is within the
sovereign power and resides both in the executive and in Parliament. What the
executive can do in respect of treaties and agreements is part of the
Governmental function. The executive can by entering into a treaty or agreement
settle a boundary dispute which does not involve acquisition or cession of
territory.
If the agreement relating to Berubari does
not amount to a mere settlement or delineation of boundary, then legislation by
Parliament relatable to Art. 3 of the Constitution would be sufficient but,
legislation under Art. 368 would be incompetent. Part 1 of the Constitution is
a self-contained code dealing with the territories of the Union. Article 1
defines the territory of India as the territory of the States; the description
of the territories of the States describes the territory of India. Article 2
contemplates addition to the territories of the Union by the admission of new
States or new areas. Article 3(a) contemplates in its last part uniting any
territory to 158 a part of any State and any territory includes foreign
territory that may be acquired. Article 3(b) contemplates increase in the area
of any State which may be by acquiring foreign territory and adding it to that
of the State.
Article 3(c) contemplates the diminishing of
the area of any State which may be by cession to a foreign power. There is no
restriction or limitation placed on the words " increase " or "
decrease in clause (b) and(c) of Art. 3 and they are comprehensive enough to
include increase or decrease by acquisition of foreign territory or cession of
a State territory. See Babulal Parate's case, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 605.
No doctrinaire approach or preconceived
notions should be imported in the interpretation of Arts. 2 and 3 of an organic
instrument like the Constitution. Legislation under Art. 368 of the
Constitution is neither necessary nor proper. Legislation under Art. 368 would
put the States to a disadvantage as under that Article it would not be
necessary, as it would be under Art. 3, to refer the bill to that State for
expressing its views thereon.
The exchange of the Cooch-Behar enclaves does
not involve cession of territory and executive action alone is sufficient to
implement the agreement. An exchange of territory for administrative
considerations as a part of a larger settlement does not amount to cession.
Oppenhiem, 8th Edn., p. 451, Art. 169, p. 548, Art. 216, p. 547;
Halsbury, Vol. 7, Art. 604. Even if the
transaction involves cession of territory, legislation under Art. 3 of the
Constitution will be sufficient to implement the agreement.
The Union has the right to cede territory if
and when the occasion arises. Such a right vests in every Sovereign State and
can be implied even when not specifically conferred by its Constitution.
Willoughby, Vol. 1, p. 572.
S. M. Bose, Advocate-General, West Bengal, B.
Sen, K. C. Mukherjee and P. K. Bose, for the State of West Bengal.
Under the Indian Independence Act the whole
of the district of Jalpaiguri was provisionally given to West Bengal. If the
Radcliffe Award fixed the boundary line, then there can be no dispute and no
necessity for the agreement. But, if the Award 259 did dot fix the line and
left it undetermined, then under the Indian Independence Act, the whole of
Berubari went to West Bengal. The Act contemplate settlement of the boundary by
an Award and not by agreement of the Prime Ministers. If the Award did not
settle the boundary, then the whole of Jalpaiguri belonged to India. The Prime
Ministers' agreement in fact divides Berubari half and half without making any
attempt to clarify the Award. It was wrong to say that the agreement amounts
merely to delineation of the boundary. It involves cession of Indian territory
to Pakistan. The Constitution gives power only to acquire foreign territory and
not to cede Indian territory to foreign powers. First, it would be necessary to
take action under Art. 368 empowering Parliament to make law for cession of
territory and then legislation under Art. 3 can be resorted to. In Art. 3(a)
the words " any territory " are not wide enough to include foreign
territory; they apply what has already been acquired and has become part of the
Union under Art. 1. Parliament has power only to pass law in respect of
territory over which it has jurisdiction.
Article 3 merely deals with the internal
arrangement of the territories of the States and does not deal with acquisition
of foreign territory or cession of the Indian territory to foreign powers.
N.C. Chatterjee with Janardan Sharma for
Krishna Kumar Chatterjee and Ramaprasanna Roy and with U. M. Trivedi, D.
R. Prem, Veda Vyasa, R. Thiagarajan and
Ganapat Rai, for (1) the President, Bharatiya Jana Sangh, Kerala, (2)
Secretary, Jana Sangh, Mandi, (3) Shri Tata Srirama Murthy, Akhila Bharatiya
Jan. sangh, Visakhapatam, (4) Chairman, Bharatiya Jansangh, Mangalore, (5)
Secretary, Bharatiya Jansangh, Sitapur, (6) Shri N. Thamban Nambiar, Bharatiya
Jansangh, Thaliparambu and (7) President, Bharatiya Jansangh, Pattambi
(Cochin). The Prime Ministers' agreement cannot be implemented at all. Indian
territory cannot be ceded at all. Berubari is an integral part of the Union of
India and it was and has all along been under the possession of West Bengal
since the partition of the country in 1947. The true nature of the Prime
Ministers' agreement is that it is not the 260 ascertainment of a boundary in
accordance with the Radcliffe Award, but it is a pure case of cession of
territory to Pakistan. The case reported in The State of South Australia v.
State of Victoria, 12 C.L.R. 667, has no bearing, as in that case there was no
question of giving of any territory to a foreign power. Similarly, Penn v.
Baltimore, Ves.
Sen. 444, was not concerned with the cession
of any territory. There are certain implied prohibitions in our Constitution
and it is not a completely amendable Constitution. The preamble to the
Constitution does not permit the dismemberment of India and preserves the
integrity of the territory of India. Article 4, s. 3, para.
2, of the United States Constitution gives a
specific power to cede territory. It does not flow necessarily from the concept
of sovereignty that the Government must have power to cede its territory. 33 L.
Ed. 642; 1933 U. S. 258. The express mention of the power of acquisition in
Arts. 1 and 2 excludes the power to cede. The maxim " expression unius
exclusio alterius " is applicable to statutes also. Brooms Legal Maxims,
10th Edn., p. 452; Craies, 5th Edn., p. 240;
1951 U. S. 914; Willoughby, Vol. 1, p. 518.
The Indian Parliament is not sovereign and it is prohibited from changing or
dismembering or whittling down the territory of India. [1951] S.C.R. 744, 968.
The preamble is the key to open the minds of the makers. 8 E.R. 1034; A.I.R.
1956 S.C.
246; [1950] S.C.R. 1098. In the transfer of
the areas of Berubari to Pakistan, the fundamental rights of thousands of
persons are involved. The rights of franchise and citizenship cannot be taken
away by executive action.
C.B. Agarwala and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the
Secretary, Jalpaiguri Revolutionary Socialist Party, the Secretary, All India
Forward Bloc, Calcutta and Shri Nirmal Bose of Jalpaiguri. The agreement cannot
be implemented by executive action. The Government is not dealing with its own
property but with the property of the States. Even legislation under Art. 3 would
not be sufficient. The right of citizenship cannot be taken away except by
legislation under Art. 1 1. In the implementation of the agreement the
fundamental rights guaranteed by Part III of the 261 Constitution are involved
and the citizens of that part of Berubari which has to be given to Pakistan
will be deprived of all such rights. Citizens of India cannot be deprived of
their fundamental rights by legislation under Art. 3. The agreement cannot be
implemented even by legislation under Art. 368 as there are limitations on the
power to amend imposed by the preamble. Such an agreement can only be
implemented with the consent of the people by referendum.
D.R. Prem (with the permission of the court).
Article 3 deals with the formation of new States and alterations of areas,
boundaries or names of existing States as indicated in the marginal note.
Article 3 makes the same provisions in the present Constitution as s. 290 did
in the Government of India Act, 1935. Both deal with internal arrangement and
not with foreign territory.
M.C. Setalvad, in reply. The description of
the boundary line in the Radcliffe Award is not clear and the provision in the
agreement that the division would be horizontal only means that the division is
to be by means of a line running east to west dividing the territory half and
half. The preamble cannot control the unambiguous language of the Articles of
the Constitution. Willoughby, Vol. 1, p. 62.
Constitution of the United States of America,
1952 Edn, p. 59. The preamble is not a part of the Constitution. The language
of Art. 368 is perfectly clear and no limitations can be placed upon it on
account of the preamble. The rights of citizenship and the fundamental rights
do not affect the power under Art. 368. It is only by legislation under Arts. 2
or 3(a) that foreign territory can be acquired and can become part of India.
There is no reason or warrant to restrict the language or the scope of Art. 3.
Clause (a) of Art. 3 clearly deals with foreign territory and there is no warrant
for considering clauses (b) and (c) in any other way as not relating to foreign
territory. Every other provision in Part 1 of the Constitution envisages two
kinds of territory-Indian and foreign-and there is no reason to envisage only
one kind of territory in cls. (b), (c), (d) and (e) of Art. 3. The Court should
not construe the 34 262 provisions in such a manner as would make adjustments
of boundary difficult. It is of the essence of sovereignty to cede and to
acquire territory. Willoughby,. Vol. 1, pp.
575 and 576, Willis, pp. 254 to 255. There is
no specific provision regarding cession of territory in any Constitution. The
power to cede territory in the United States is included in its treaty making
power and is not conferred by Article 4, section 3, part 2 of the United States
Constitution as stated by Shri N. C. Chatterji.
Willoughby, Vol. I, p. 90. Parliament has
been empowered under Art. 1 1 to take away the rights of citizenship. A law
under Arts. 3 and 4 will deal with " supplemental and incidental "
provisions and may contain provisions under Art. 11 for taking away the rights
of citizenship also.
Cession of territory necessarily affects the
nationality and rights of the inhabitants of the ceded territory. Anson's Law
and Custom of the Constitution, 4th Edn. Vol. 2, Part 11, p. 141. Fundamental
rights cannot exist when there is transfer of allegiance consequent upon
cession of territory.
cur. adv. vult.
1960. March 14. The Opinion of the Court was
pronounced by GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-In accordance with the directives issued by
the Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan, on September 10, 1958, the
Commonwealth Secretary, Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India and
the Foreign Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Commonwealth, Government
of Pakistan, discussed 10 items of dispute between the two countries and signed
a joint note recording their agreement in respect of the said disputes and
submitted it to their respective Prime Ministers; and with a view to removing
causes of tension and resolving border disputes and problems relating to
Indo-Pakistan Border Areas and establishing peaceful conditions along those
areas, the Prime Ministers, acting on behalf of their respective Governments,
entered into an agreement settling some of the said disputes and problems in
the manner set out in the said joint note. This agreement has been called the
Indo-Pakistan 263 Agreement and will be referred to hereafter as the Agreement.
In the present Reference we are concerned
with two items of the Agreement; item 3 in paragraph 2 of the Agreement reads
as follows:(3) Berubari Union No. 12.
This will be so divided as to give half the
area to( Pakistan, the other half adjacent to India being retained by India.
The Division of Berubari Union No. 12 will be horizontal, starting from the
northeast corner of Debiganj Thana. The division should be made in such a
manner that the Cooch-Behar Enclaves between Pachagar Thana of East Pakistan
and Berubari Union No. 12 of Jalpaiguri Thana of West Bengal will remain
connected as at present with Indian territory and will remain with India. The
Cooch-Behar Enclaves lower down between Boda Thana of East Pakistan and
Berubari Union No. 12 will be exchanged along with the general exchange of
enclaves and will go to Pakistan." Similarly item 10 of the Agreement is
as follows:" (10) Exchange of Old Cooch-Behar Enclaves in Pakistan and
Pakistan Enclaves in India without claim to compensation for extra area going
to Pakistan, is agreed to." It appears that subsequently a doubt has
arisen whether the implementation of the Agreement relating to Berubari Union
requires any legislative action either by way of a suitable law of Parliament
relatable to Art. 3 of the Constitution or by way of a suitable amendment of
the Constitution in accordance with the provisions of Art. 368 of the
Constitution or both; and that a similar doubt has arisen about the
implementation of the Agreement relating to the exchange of Enclaves; and it
further appears that there is a likelihood of the constitutional validity of
any action taken for the implementation of the Agreement relating to Berubari
Union as well as the Agreement relating to the exchange of Enclaves being
questioned in courts of law involving avoidable and protracted litigation; that
is why the President thought that questions of law which have arisen are of
such nature and of such importance that it is expedient that the 264 opinion of
the Supreme Court of India should be obtained thereon; and so, in exercise of
the powers conferred upon him by cl. (1) of Art. 143 of the Constitution, he
has referred the following three questions to this Court for consideration and
report thereon:(1)Is any legislative action necessary for the implementation of
the Agreement relating to Berubari Union? (2)If so, is a law of Parliament
relatable to article 3 of the Constitution sufficient for the purpose or is an
amendment of the Constitution in accordance with article 368 of the
Constitution necessary, in addition or in the alternative ? (3)Is a law of Parliament
relatable to article 3 of the Constitution sufficient for implementation of the
agreement relating to Exchange of Enclaves or is an amendment of the
Constitution in accordance with article 368 of the Constitution necessary for
the purpose, in addition or in the alternative ? Before dealing with the
questions thus referred to this Court it is necessary to set out briefly the
historical, political and constitutional background of the Agreement.
On February 20, 1947, the British Government
announced its intention to transfer power in British India to Indian hands by
June 1948 On June 3, 1947, the said Government issued a statement as to the
method by which the transfer of power would be effected. On July 18,1947, the
British Parliament passed the Indian Independence Act, 1947. This Act was to
come into force from August 15, 1947, which was the appointed day. As from the
appointed day two independent Dominions, it was declared, would be set up in
India to be known respectively as India and Pakistan. Section 2 of the Act
provided that subject to the provisions of sub-ss. (3) and (4) of s. 2 the
territories of India shall be the territories under the sovereignty of His
Majesty which immediately before the appointed day were included in British
India except the territories which under sub-s. (2) of s. 2 were to be the
territories of Pakistan. Section 3, sub-s. (1), provided, inter alia, that as
from the appointed day the Province of Bengal as constituted under the
Government of India Act, 1935, shall cease to exist 265 and there shall be
constituted in lieu thereof two new Provinces to be known respectively as East
Bengal and West Bengal. Sub-section (3) of s. 3 provided, inter alia, that the
boundaries of the new Provinces aforesaid shall be such as may be determined
whether before or after the appointed day by the award of a boundary commission
appointed or to be appointed by the Governor-General in that behalf, but until
boundaries are so determined, (a) the Bengal District specified in the First
Schedule of this Act...................... shall be treated as the territories
which are to be comprised as the new Province of East Bengal; (b) the remainder
of the territories comprised at the date of the passing of this Act in the
Province of Bengal shall 'be treated as the territories which are to be
comprised in the new Province of West Bengal. Section 3, sub-s. (4), provided
that the expression "award" means, in relation to a boundary
commission, the decision of the Chairman of the commission contained in his
report to the Governor-General at the conclusion of the commission's
proceedings. The Province of West Bengal is now known as the State of West
Bengal and is a part of India, whereas the Province of East Bengal has become a
part of Pakistan and is now known as East Pakistan.
Berubari Union No. 12, with which we are
concerned, has an area of 8.75 sq. miles and a population of ten to twelve
thousand residents. It is situated in the police station Jalpaiguri in the
District of Jalpaiguri, which was at the relevant time a part of Rajashahi
Division. It has, however, not been specified in the First Schedule of the
Independence Act, and if the matter had to be considered in the light of the
said Schedule, it would be a part of West Bengal. But, as we shall presently point
out, the First Schedule to the Independence Act did not really come into
operation at all.
On June 30, 1947, the Governor-General made
an announcement that it had been decided that the Province of Bengal and Punjab
shall be partitioned. Accordingly, a boundary commission was appointed, inter
alia, for Bengal consisting of four judges of High Courts and a Chairman to be
appointed later.
266 Sir Cyril Radcliffe was subsequently
appointed as Chairman.
So far as Bengal was concerned the material
terms of reference provided that the boundary commission should demarcate the
boundaries of the two parts of Bengal on the basis of ascertaining the
contiguous areas of muslims and non-muslims; in doing so it had also to take
into account other factors. The commission then held its enquiry and made an
award on August 12, 1947, which is known as the Radcliffe Award (hereinafter
called the award). It would be noticed that this award was made three days
before the appointed day under the Independence Act. The report shows that the
Chairman framed seven basic questions on the decision of which the demarcation
of a boundary line between East-West Bengal depended. Question No. 6 is
relevant for our purpose; it was framed in this way:
" C. 6. Which State's claim ought to
prevail in respect of the districts of Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri in which the
muslim population amounted to 2.42 of the whole in the case of Darjeeling and
23.08 of the whole in the case of Jalpaiguri but which constituted an area not
in any natural sense contiguous to another non-muslim area of Bengal?" It
appears that the members of the commission were unable to arrive at an agreed
view on any of the major issues, and so the Chairman had no alternative but to
proceed to give his own' decision. Accordingly the Chairman gave his decision
on the relevant issues in these words:" The demarcation of the boundary
line is described in detail in the schedule which forms annexure A to the award
and in the map attached thereto, annexure B. The map is annexed for the
purposes of illustration, and if there should be any divergence between the
boundary as described in annexure A and as delineated on the map in annexure B
the description in annexure A is to prevail." Paragraph 1 in annexure A is
material. It provided that " a line shall be drawn along the boundary
between the Than&' of Phansidewa in the District of Darjeeling and the
Thana Tetulia in the District of 267 Jalpaiguri from the point where that
boundary meets the Province of Bihar and then along the boundary between the
Thanas of Tetulia and Rajganj, the Thanas of Pachagar and Rajganj and the
Thanas of Pachagar and Jalpaiguri, and shall then continue along with northern
corner of Thana of Debiganj to the boundary of the State of Cooch-Behar the
district of Darjeeling and so much of the district of Jalpaiguri as lies north
of this line shall belong to West Bengal, but the Thana of Patgram and any
other portion of Jalpaiguri District which lies to the east or south shall
belong to East Bengal." Since the award came into operation three days
before the day appointed under the Independence Act the territorial extent of
the Province of West Bengal never came to be determined under Schedule 1 to the
said Independence Act but was determined by the award. There is no dispute that
since the date of the award Berubari Union No. 12 has in fact formed part of
the State of West Bengal and has been governed as such.
Meanwhile the Constituent Assembly which
began its deliberations on December 9, 1946, reassembled as the Sovereign
Constituent Assembly for India after midnight of August 14, 1947, and it began
its historic task of drafting the Constitution for India. A drafting committee
was appointed by the Constituent Assembly and the draft prepared by it was
presented to the Assembly on November 4, 1948.
After due deliberations the draft passed
through three readings and as finalised it was signed by the President of the
Assembly and declared as passed on November 26, 1949.
On that date it became the Constitution of
India; but, as provided by Art. 394, only specified articles came into force as
from than date and the remaining provisions as from January 26,1950, which day
is referred to in the Constitution as the commencement of the Constitution.
Article 1 of the Constitution provides, inter
alia, that India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States and that the
States and the territories thereof shall be the States and their territories
specified in Parts A, B and C of the First Schedule. West Bengal was shown as
one of the States in Part A ; and it was provided that the 268 the territory
which immediately before the commencement of the Constitution was comprised in
the Province of West Bengal. In the light of the award Berubari Union No. 12
was treated as a part of the Province of West Bengal and as such has been
treated and governed on that basis.
Subsequently, certain boundary disputes arose
between India and Pakistan and it was agreed between them at the Inter Dominion
Conference held in New Delhi on December 14, 1948, that a tribunal should beset
up without delay and in any case not later than January 31, 1949, for the
adjudication and final decision of the said disputes. This tribunal is known as
Indo-Pakistan Boundaries Disputes Tribunal, and it was presided over by the
Hon'ble Lord Justice Allot Badge.
This tribunal had to consider two categories
of disputes in regard to East-West Bengal but on this occasion no issue was
raised about the Berubari Union. In fact no reference was made to the District
of Jalpaiguri at all in the proceedings before the tribunal. The Bagge Award
was made on January 26, 1950.
It was two years later that the question of
Berubari Union was raised by the Government of Pakistan for the first time in
1952. During the whole of this period the Berubari Union continued to be in the
possession of the Indian Union and was governed as a part of West Bengal. In
1952 Pakistan alleged that under the award Berubari Union should really have
formed part of East Bengal and it had been wrongly treated as a part of West
Bengal. Apparently correspondence took place between the Prime Ministers of
India and Pakistan on this subject from time to time and the dispute remained
alive until 1958. It was under these circumstances that the present Agreement
was reached between the two Prime Ministers on September 10, 1958. That is the
background of the present dispute in regard to Berubari Union No. 12.
At this stage we may also refer briefly to
the background of events which ultimately led to the proposed exchange of Cooch-Behar
Enclaves between India and Pakistan. Section 290 of the Government of India 260
Act, 1935, had provided that His Majesty may by Order-in Council increase or
diminish the area of any Province or alter the boundary of any Province
provided the procedure prescribed was observed. It is common ground that the
Government of India was authorised by the Extra-Provincial Jurisdiction Act of
1947 to exercise necessary powers in that behalf. Subsequently on January 12,
1949, the Government of India Act, 1935, was amended and s. 290A and s. 290B
were added to it. Section 290-A reads thus :" 290-A. Administration of
certain Acceding States as a Chief Commissioner's Province or as part of a
Governor's or Chief Commissioner's Province:(1)Where full and exclusive
authority, jurisdiction and powers for and in relation to governance of any
Indian State or any group of such States are for the time being exercisable by
the Dominion Government, the Governor-General may by order direct(a)that the
State or the group of States shall be administered in all respects as if the
State or the group of States were a Chief Commissioner's Province ; or (b)that
the State or the group of States shall be administered in all respects as if
the State or the group of States formed part of a Governor's or a Chief
Commissioner's Province specified in the Order;".
Section 290-B(1) provides that the
Governor-General. may by order direct for the administration of areas included
within the Governor's Province or a Chief Commissioner's Province by an
Acceding State, and it prescribes that the acceding area shall be administered
in all respects by a neighboring Acceding State as if such area formed part of
such State, and thereupon the provisions of the Government of, India Act shall
apply accordingly.
After these two sections were thus added
several steps were taken by the Government of India for the merger of Indian
States with the Union of India.
35 270 With that object the States Merger
(Governors' Provinces) Order, 1949, was passed on July 27, 1949. The effect of
this order was that the States which had merged with the Provinces were to be
administered in all respects as if they formed part of the absorbing Provinces.
This order was amended from time to time. On August 28, 1949, an agreement of
merger was entered into between the Government of India and the Ruler of the
State of Cooch-Behar and in pursuance of this agreement the Government of India
took over the administration of Cooch-Behar on September 12, 1949 ; Cooch Behar
thus became apart of the territory of India and was accordingly included in the
list of Part C States as Serial No. 4 in the First Schedule to the
Constitution.
Thereafter, on December 31, 1949, the States
Merger (West Bengal) Order, 1949, was passed. It provided that whereas full and
exclusive authority, jurisdiction and power for and in relation to the
governance of the Indian State of Cooch Behar were exercisable by the Dominion
Government, it was expedient to provide by the order made under s. 290A for the
administration of the said State in all respects as if it formed part of the
Province of West Bengal. In consequence, on January 1, 1950, the erstwhile
State of Cooch-Behar was merged with West Bengal and began to be governed as if
it was part of West Bengal. As a result of this merger Cooch Behar was taken
out of the list of Part C States in the First Schedule to the Constitution and
added to West Bengal in the same Schedule, and the territorial description of
West Bengal as prescribed in the First Schedule was amended by the addition of
the clause which referred to the territories which were being administered as
if they formed part of that Province. In other words, after the merger of
Cooch-Behar the Territories of West Bengal included those which immediately
before the commencement of the Constitution were comprised in the Province of
West Bengal as well as those which were being administered as if they formed
part of that Province. Subsequently a further addition has been made to the
territories of West Bengal by the inclusion of Chandernagore but it is not
necessary to refer to the said addition at this stage, 271 It appears that
certain areas which formed part of the territories of the former Indian State
of Cooch-Behar and which had subsequently become a part of the territories of
India and then of West Bengal became after the partition enclaves in Pakistan.
Similarly certain Pakistan enclaves were found in India. The problem arising
from the existence of these enclaves in Pakistan and in India along with other
border problems was being considered by the Governments of India and of
Pakistan for a long time. The existence of these enclaves of India in Pakistan
and of Pakistan in India worked as a constant source of tension and conflict
between the two countries. With a view to removing these causes of tension and
conflict the two Prime Ministers decided to solve the problem of the said
enclaves and establish peaceful conditions along the said areas. It is with
this object that the exchange of enclaves was agreed upon by them and the said
adjustment is described in item 10 of paragraph 3 of the Agreement. That in
brief is the historical and constitutional background of the exchange of
enclaves.
On behalf of the Union of India the learned
Attorney-General has contended that no legislative action is necessary for the
implementation of the Agreement relating to Berubari Union as well as the
exchange of enclaves. In regard to the Berubari Union he argues that what the
Agreement has purported to do is to ascertain or to delineate the exact
boundary about which a dispute existed between the two countries by reason of
different interpretations put by them on the relevant description contained in
the award; the said Agreement is merely the recognition or ascertainment of the
boundary which had already been fixed and in no sense is it a substitution of a
new boundary or the alteration of the boundary implying any alteration of the
territorial limits of India. He emphasises that the ascertainment or the
settlement of the boundary in the light of the award by which both Governments
were bound, is not an alienation or cession of the territory of India, and
according to him, if, as a result of the ascertainment of the true boundary in
the light of the award, possession of some land has had to be 272 yielded to
Pakistan it does not amount to cession of territory; it is merely a mode of
settling the boundary.
The award had already settled the boundary
but since a dispute arose between the two Governments in respect of the location
of the said boundary the dispute was resolved in the light of the directions
given by the award and in the light of the maps attached to it. Where a dispute
about a boundary thus arises between two States and it is resolved in the light
of an award binding on them the agreement which embodies the settlement of such
a dispute must be treated as no more than the ascertainment of the real
boundary between them and it cannot be treated as cession or alienation of
territory by one in favour of the other. According to this argument there was
neither real alteration of the boundary nor real diminution of territory, and
there would be no occasion to make any alteration or change in the description
of the territories of West Bengal in the First Schedule to the Constitution.
It is also faintly suggested by the learned
Attorney-General that the exchange of Cooch-Behar Enclaves is a part of the
general and broader agreement about the Berubari Union and in fact it is
incidental to it. Therefore, viewed in the said context, even this exchange
cannot be said to involve cession of any territory.
On this assumption the learned
Attorney-General has further contended that the settlement and recognition of
the true boundary can be effected by executive action alone, and so the
Agreement which has been reached between the two Prime Ministers can be
implemented without any legislative action.
In support of this argument the learned
Attorney-General has relied upon certain provisions of the Constitution and we
may at this stage briefly refer to them.
Entry 14 in List 1 of the Seventh Schedule
reads thus : " Entering into treaties and agreements with foreign
countries and implementing of treaties, agreements and conventions with foreign
countries ". Article 253 occurs in Part XI which deals with relations
between the Union and the, States,. It provides 273 that " notwithstanding
anything in the foregoing provisions of the said Chapter Parliament has power
to make any law for the whole or any part of the territory of India for implementing
any treaty, agreement or convention with any other country or countries or any
decision made at any international conference, association or other body
". This power is conferred on Parliament by reference to Entry 14.
Besides there are three other articles in the
same part which are relevant. Article 245(1) empowers Parliament to make laws
for the whole or any part of the territory of India;. Article 245(2) provides
that no law made by Parliament shall be deemed to be invalid on the ground that
it would have extra-territorial operation; Article 246 prescribes the
subject-matter of laws which Parliament can make; and Art. 248 provides for the
residuary powers of legislation in Parliament. Article 248 lays down that
Parliament has power to make any law with respect to any matter not enumerated
in the Concurrent List or State List.
There is thus no doubt about the legislative
competence of Parliament to legislate about any treaty, agreement or convention
with any other country and to give effect to such agreement or convention.
It is, however, urged that in regard to the
making of treaties and implementing them the executive powers of the Central
Government are co-extensive and co-incidental with the powers of Parliament
itself. This argument is sought to be based on the provisions of certain
Articles to which reference may be made. Article 53(1) provides that the
executive power of the Union shall be vested in the President and shall be
exercised by him either directly or through officers subordinate to him in
accordance with the Constitution. Article 73 on which strong reliance is placed
prescribes the extent of the executive power of the Union.
Article 73(1) says " that subject to the
provisions of this Constitution the executive power of the Union shall extend
(a) to the matters with respect to which Parliament has power to make laws; and
(b) to the exercise of such rights, authority and jurisdiction as are
exercisable by the Government of India by virtue of any treaty or agreement
provided that 274 the executive power referred to in sub-cl. (a) shall not,
save as expressly provided in this Constitution or in any law made by
Parliament, extend in any State to matters with respect to which the
Legislature of the State has also the power to make laws "; and Article 74
provides that there shall be a Council of Ministers with the Prime Minister at
the head to aid and advise the President in the exercise of his functions; and
Article 74(2) lays down that the question whether any, and if so what, advice
was tendered by the Ministers to the President shall not be inquired into in
any court. According to the learned Attorney-General the powers conferred on
the Union executive under Art. 73(1)(a) have reference to the powers
exercisable by reference to Entry 14, List 1, in the Seventh Schedule, whereas
the powers conferred by Art. 73(1)(b) are analogous to the powers conferred on
the Parliament by Art. 253 of the Constitution.
Indeed the learned Attorney-General contended
that this position is concluded by a decision of this Courtin Rai Sahib Ram
Jawaya Kapur & Ors. v. The State of Punjab (1).
Dealing with the question about the limits
within which the executive Government can function under the Indian
Constitution Chief Justice Mukherjea, who delivered the unanimous decision of
the Court, has observed that " the said limits can be ascertained without
much difficulty by reference to the form of executive which our Constitution
has set up ", and has added, " that the executive function comprised
both the determination of the policy as well as carrying it into execution.
This evidently includes the initiation of legislation, maintenance of order,
the promotion of social and economic welfare, the direction of foreign policy,
in fact the carrying on or supervision of the general administration of the
State ". It is on this observation that the learned Attorney-General has
founded his argument.
Let us then first consider what the Agreement
in fact has done.' Has it really purported to determine the boundaries in the
light of the award, or has it sought to settle the dispute amicably on an ad
hoe basis by dividing the disputed territory half and half ? Reading the
relevant portion of the Agreement it is (1) [1955) 2 S.C.R. 225.
275 difficult to escape the conclusion that
the parties to it came to the conclusion that the most expedient and reasonable
way to resolve the dispute would be to divide the area in question half and
half. There is no trace in the Agreement of any attempt to interpret the award
or to determine what the award really meant. The Agreement begins with the
statement of the decision that the area in dispute will be so divided as to
give half the area to Pakistan, the other half adjacent to India being retained
by India. In other words, the Agreement says that, though the whole of the area
of Berubari Union No. 12 was within India, India was prepared to give half of
it to Pakistan in a spirit of give and take in order to ensure friendly
relations between the parties and remove causes of tension between them.
Having come to this decision the Agreement
describes how the decision has to be carried out. It provides that the division
of the area will be horizontal starting from the northeast corner of Debiganj
Thana. It also provides that the division should' be made in such manner that
the CoochBehar Enclaves between Pachagar Thana of East Pakistan and Berubari
Union No. 12 of Jalpaiguri Thana of West Bengal will remain with India. This
again is a provision for carrying out the decision of dividing the area half
and half. Yet, another provision is made as to the division of Cooch-Behar
Enclaves lower down between Boda Thana of East Pakistan and Berubari Union No.
12 and it is provided that they shall be exchanged along with the general
exchange of enclaves and will go to Pakistan. In our opinion, every one of the
clauses in this Agreement clearly and unambiguously shows that, apart from, and
independently of, the award, it was agreed to divide the area half and half and
the method of effecting this division was specifically indicated by making four
material provisions in that behalf. If that be so, it is difficult to accept
the argument that this part of the Agreement amounts to no more than
ascertainment and delineation of the boundaries in the light of the award.
It is no doubt suggested by the learned
Attorney-General that an examination of the description in 276 annexure A in
the Schedule to the award in relation to police station boundaries revealed a
lacuna in it, inasmuch as there was DO mention in it of the boundary between
police station Boda and police station Jalpaiguri; and the argument is that the
result of this description was that the two points were specified, one on the
western boundary of the Berubari Union (the extremity of the boundary between
the Thanas of Pachagar and Jalpaiguri) and the other on itseastern boundary
(the northern corner, of the Thana of Debi.
ganj where it meets Cooch-Behar State)
without giving an indication as to how these boundaries were to be connected.
It is also pointed out that the line as drawn
in the map, annexure B , in the Schedule to the award would, if followed
independently of the description given in Schedule A in the annexure to the
said award, mean that almost the whole of the Berubari Union would have fallen
in the territory of East Bengal and that was the claim made by the Government
of 'Pakistan, and it is that claim which was settled in the light of the award.
In this connection it is relevant to remember
the direction specifically given by the Chairman in his award that the map is
annexed for the purpose of illustration and that in case of any divergence
between the map, annexure B, and the boundary as described in annexure A, the
description in annexure A has to prevail, and so no claim could reasonably or
validly be made for the inclusion of almost the whole of Berubari Union in East
Bengal on the strength of the line drawn in the map. Besides, the lacuna to
which the learned Attorney-General refers could have been cured by taking into
account the general method adopted by the award in fixing the boundaries. Para.
graph 3 in annexure A shows that the line which was fixd by the award generally
proceeded along the boundaries between the Thanas, and this general outline of
the award would have assisted the decision of the dispute if it was intended to
resolve the dispute in the light of the award. The line which was directed to
be drawn in paragraph 1 of annexure A has " to continue" along the
northern corner of Thana Debi ganj to the boundary of the State of Cooch-Behar,
and 277 this in the context may suggest that it had to continue by reference to
the boundaries of the respective Thanas. It is principally because of these
considerations that the territory in question was in the possession of India
for some years after the date of the award and no dispute was raised until
1952.
We have referred to these facts in order to
emphasize that the agreement does not appear to have been reached after taking
into account these facts and is not based on any conclusions based on the
interpretation of the award and its effect. In fact the second clause of the
Agreement which directs that the division of Berubari Union No. 12 will be
horizontal starting from the north-east corner of Debiganj Thana is not very happily
worded. The use of the word " horizontal " appears to be slightly
inappropriate; but, apart from it, the direction as to this horizontal method
of division as well as the other directions contained in the Agreement flow
from the conclusion with which the Agreement begins that it had been decided
that India should give half the area to Pakistan. We have carefully considered
all the clauses in the Agreement and we are satisfied that it does not purport
to be, and has not been, reached as a result of any interpretation of the award
and its terms; it has been reached independently of the award and for reasons
and considerations which appeared to the parties to be wise and expedient.
Therefore, we cannot accede to the argument urged by the learned Attorney-General
that it does no more than ascertain and determine the boundaries in the light
of the award. It is an Agreement by which a part of the territory of India has
been coded to Pakistan and the question referred to us in respect of this
Agreement must, therefore, be considered on the basis that it involves cession
or alienation of a part of India's territory.
What is true about the Agreement in respect
of Berubari Union No. 12 is still more emphatically true about the exchange of
Cooch-Behar Enclaves. Indeed the learned Attorney-General's argument that no
legislation is necessary to give effect to the Agreement in respect of this
exchange was based on the assump 36 278 tion that this exchange is a part of a
larger and broader settlement and so it partakes of its character. Since we
have held that the Agreement in respect of Berubari Union No. 12 itself
involves the cession of the territory of India a fortiori the Agreement in
respect of exchange of CoochBehar Enclaves does involve the cession of Indian territory.
That is why the question about this exchange
must also be considered on the footing that a part of the territory of India
has been ceded to Pakistan; besides it is clear that unlike questions 1 and 2
the third question which has reference to this exchange postulates the
necessity of legislation.
In this connection we may also deal with
another argument urged by the learned Attorney-General. He contended that the
implementation of the Agreement in respect of Berubari Union would not
necessitate any change in the First Schedule to the Constitution because,
according to him, Berubari Union was never legal1y included in the territorial
description of West Bengal contained in the said Schedule.
We are not impressed by this argument either.
As we have already indicated, since the award was announced Berubari Union has
remained in possession of India and has been always treated as a part of West
Bengal and governed as such. In view of this factual position there should be
no difficulty in holding that it falls within the territories which immediately
before the commencement of the Constitution were comprised in the Province 'of
West Bengal.
Therefore, as a result of the implementation
of this Agreement the boundaries of West Bengal would be altered and the
content of Entry 13 in the First Schedule to the Constitution would be
affected.
Before we part with this topic we ought to
refer to the decision of the Australian High Court in The State of South
Australia v. The State of Victoria (1) on which reliance has been placed by the
learned Attorney-General. In that-case the boundary between the State of South
Australia and the State of New South Wales was by Act 4 & 5 Will. IV, c. 95
and the Letters Patent issued under that Act defined to be the 141st meridian
(1) (1911) 12 C.L.R. 667.
279 of East Longitude. In 1847, by the
authority of the Governors of New South Wales and South Australia and with the
knowledge and approval of the Secretary of State a line was located and marked
on the ground as being the 141st meridian, but it was discovered in 1869 that
the said line was in fact about two miles to the westward of that meridian. The
line marked in 1847 had, however, been proclaimed by the respective Governors
as the boundary and was the de facto boundary thenceforward. In dealing with
the dispute which bad arisen in respect of the true boundary between the two
States Griffith, C.J., referred to the fixation of the boundary in 1847 and
observed that "the real transaction is the ascertainment of a fact by
persons competent to ascertain it, and a finding of fact so made, and accepted
by both, is in the nature of an award or judgment in rem binding upon them and
all persons claiming under them" (p. 701). The said dispute was
subsequently taken to the Privy Council and it was held by the Privy Council
that "on the true construction of the Letters Patent it was contemplated
that the boundary line of the 141st meridian of East Longitude should be
ascertained and represented on the surface of the earth so as to form a boundary
line dividing the two colonies, and that it therefore implicitly gave to the
executive of the two colonies power to do such acts as were necessary for permanently
fixing such boundaries " (1). The Privy Council also observed that "
the material facts showed that the two Governments made with all care a sincere
effort to represent as closely as was possible the theoretical boundary
assigned by the Letters Patent by a practical line of demarcation on the
earth's surface. There is no trace of any intention to depart from the boundary
assigned, but only to reproduce it, and as in its nature it was to have the
solemn status of a boundary of jurisdiction their Lordships have no doubt that
it was intended by the two executives to be fixed finally as the statutable
boundary and that in point of law it was so fixed ". It would thus be
clear that the settlement of the boundaries which was held not to amount to an
alienation in that case had been (1)[1914] A.C. 283. 309.
280 made wholly by reference to, and in the
light of, the provision of the parliamentary statute to which reference has
already been made. What was done in 1847 by the parties who had authority to
deal with the matter was to locate 'and mark a line on the ground which was
held to be the 141st meridian though it is true that in 1869 it was discovered
that the line so fixed was about two miles to the westward of the meridian.
This was not a case where contracting parties independently determined the line
with a view to settle the dispute between the two respective States. What they
purported to do was to determine the line in accordance with the provisions of
the parliamentary statute. In the present case, as we have already pointed out,
the position of the Agreement is essentially different; it does not purport to
be based on the award and has been reached apart from, and independently of,
it. Therefore, we do not think that the learned Attorney-General can derive any
assistance from the decision in the case of The State of South Australia v. The
State of Victoria (1) in support of his construction of the Agreement.
In view of our conclusion that the agreement
amounts to cession or alienation of a part of Indian territory and is not a
mere ascertainment or determination of the boundary in the light of, and by
reference to, the award, it is not necessary to consider the other contention
raised by the learned Attorney-General that it was within the competence of the
Union executive to enter into such an Agreement, and that the Agreement can be
implemented without any legislation. It has been fairly conceded by him that
this argument proceeds on the assumption that the Agreement is in substance and
fact no more than the ascertainment or the determination of the disputed
boundary already fixed by the award. We need not, therefore, consider the
merits of the argument about the character and extent of the executive
functions and powers nor need we examine the, question whether the observations
made by Mukherjea, C.J. in the case of Rai Sahib Ram Jawaya Kapur (2) in fact
lend support to the said argument, and if they do, whether the question should
not be reconsidered.
(1) [1911] 12 C.L.R. 667.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 225.
281 At this stage it is necessary to consider
the merits of the rival contention raised by Mr. Chatterjee before us. He urges
that even Parliament has no power to cede any part of the territory of India in
favour of a foreign State either by ordinary legislation or even by the
amendment of the Constitution; and so, according to him, the only opinion we
can give on the Reference is that the Agreement is void and cannot be made
effective even by any legislative process.
This extreme contention is based on two
grounds. It is suggested that the preamble to the Constitution clearly
postulates that like the democratic republican form of government the entire
territory of India is beyond the reach of Parliament and cannot be affected
either by ordinary legislation or even by constitutional amendment. The makers
of the Constitution were painfully conscious of the tragic partition of the
country into two parts, and so when they framed the Constitution they were
determined to keep the entire territory of India as inviolable and sacred. The
very first sentence in the preamble which declares that " We, the people
of India, having solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign
democratic Republic ", says Mr. Chatterjee, irrevocably postulates that
India geographically and territorially must always continue to be democratic
and republican. The other ground on which this contention is raised is founded
on Art. 1(3)(c) of the Constitution which contemplates that " the
territory of India shall comprise such other territories as may be acquired
", and it is argued that whereas the Constitution has expressly given to
the country the power to acquire otter territories it has made no provision for
ceding any part of its territory; and in such a case the rule of construction,
viz., expressio unius est exclusio alterius must apply. In our opinion, there
is no substance in these contentions.
There is no doubt that the declaration made
by the people of India in exercise of their sovereign will in the preamble to
the Constitution is, in the words of Story, "a key to open the mind of the
makers" which may show the general purposes for which they made the
several provisions in the Constitution; but 282 nevertheless the preamble is
not a part of the Constitution, and, as Willoughby has observed about the
preamble to the American Constitution, " it has never been regarded as the
source of any substantive power conferred on the Government of the United
States, or on any of its departments. Such powers embrace only those expressly
granted in the body of the Constitution and such as may be implied from those
so granted ".
What is true about the powers is equally true
about the prohibitions and limitations. Besides, it is not easy to accept the
assumption that the first part of the preamble postulates a very serious
limitation on one of the very important attributes of sovereignty itself. As we
will point out later, it is universally recognised that one of the attributes
of sovereignty is the power to cede parts of national territory if necessary.
At the highest it may perhaps be arguable that if the terms used in any of the
articles in the Constitution are ambiguous or are capable of two meanings, in
interpreting them some assistance may be sought in the objectives enshrined in
the preamble.
Therefore, Mr. Chatterjee is not right in
contending that the preamble imports any limitation on the exercise of what is
generally regarded as a necessary and essential attribute of sovereignty.
Then, as regards the argument that the
inclusion of the power to acquire must necessarily exclude the power to cede or
alienate, there are two obvious answers. Article 1(3)(c) does not confer power
or authority on India to acquire territories as Mr. Chatterjee assumes. There
can be no doubt that under international law two of the essential attributes of
sovereignty are the power to acquire foreign territory as well as the power to
cede national territory in favour of a foreign State. What Art. 1(3)(c)
purports to do is to make a formal provision for absorption and integration of
any foreign territories which may be acquired by India by virtue of its
inherent right to do so. It maybe that this provision has found a place in the
Constitution not in pursuance of any expansionist political philosophy but
mainly for providing for the integration and absorption of 283 Indian
territories which, at the date of the Constitution, continued to be under the
dominion of foreign States; but that is not the whole scope of Art. 1(3)(c). It
refers broadly to all foreign territories which may be acquired by India and
provides that as soon as they are acquired they would form part of the
territory of India. Thus, on a true construction of Art. 1(3)(c) it is
erroneous to assume that it confers specific powers to acquire foreign
territories.
The other answer to the contention is
provided by Art. 368 of the Constitution. That article provides for the
procedure for the amendment of the Constitution and expressly confers power on
Parliament in that behalf The power to amend Constitution must inevitably
include the power to amend Art. 1, and that logically would include the power
to cede national territory in favour of a foreign State; and if that is so, it
would be unreasonable to contend that there is no power in the sovereign State
of India to cede its territory and that the power to cede national territory
which is an essential attribute of sovereignty is lacking in the case of India.
We must, therefore, reject Mr. Chatterjee's contention that no legislative
process can validate the Agreement in question.
What then is the nature of the treaty-making
power of a sovereign State ? That is the next problem which we must consider
before addressing ourselves to the questions referred to us for our opinion. As
we have already pointed out it is an essential attribute of sovereignty that a
sovereign state can acquire foreign territory and can, in case of necessity,
cede a part of its territory in favour of a foreign State, and this can be done
in exercise of its treaty-making power. Cession of national territory in law
amounts to the transfer of sovereignty over the said territory by the
owner-State in favour of another State.
There can be no doubt that such cession is
possible and indeed history presents several examples of such transfer of
sovereignty. It is true as Oppenheimer has observed that " hardship is
involved in the fact that in all cases of cession the inhabitants of the
territory who remain lose their old citizenship and are handed over to so new
sovereign whether they like it or 284 not" (1); and he has pointed out
that "it may be possible to mitigate this hardship by stipulating an
option to emigrate within a certain period in favour of the inhabitants of
ceded territory as means of averting the charge that the inhabitants are handed
over to a new sovereign against their will " (p. 553). But though from the
human point of view great hardship is inevitably involved in cession of
territory by one country to the other there can be no doubt that a sovereign
state can exercise its right to cede a part of its territory to a foreign
state. This power, it may be added, is of course subject to the limitations
which the Constitution of the state may either expressly or by necessary
implication impose in that behalf; in other words, the question as to how
treaties can be made by a sovereign State in regard to a cession of national
territory and how treaties when made can be implemented would be governed by
the provisions in the Constitution of the country. Stated broadly the
treaty-making power would have to be exercised in the manner contemplated by
the Constitution and subject to the limitations imposed by it. Whether the
treaty made can be implemented by ordinary legislation or by constitutional
amendment will naturally depend on the provisions of the Constitution itself We
must, therefore, now turn to that aspect of the problem and consider the
position under our Constitution.
In dealing with this aspect we are proceeding
on the assumption that some legislation is necessary to implement the Agreement
in question. It is urged on behalf of the Union of India that if any legislative
action is held to be necessary for the implementation of the Agreement a law of
Parliament relatable to Art. 3 of the Constitution would be sufficient for the
purpose; and if that be so, there would be no occasion to take any action under
Art. 368 of the Constitution. The decision of this question will inevitably
depend upon the construction of Art. 3 itself The learned Attorney-General has
asked us to bear in mind the special features of the basic structure of the
Constitution (1) Oppenheim's ,International Law by Lauterpacht, Vol. 1,P. 551.
(8th Ed.) 285 in construing the relevant provisions of Art. 3. He contends that
the basic structure of the Constitution is the same as that of the Government
of India Act, 1935, which had for the first time introduced a federal polity in
India.
Unlike other federations, the Federation
embodied in the said Act was Dot the result of a pact or union between separate
and independent communities of States who came together for certain common
purposes and surrendered a part of their sovereignty. The constituent units of
the federation were deliberately created and it is significant that they,
unlike the units 'of other federations, had no organic roots in the past.
Hence, in the Indian Constitution, by contrast with other Federal
Constitutions, the emphasis on the preservation of the territorial integrity of
the constituent States is absent. The makers of the Constitution were aware of
the peculiar conditions under which, and the reasons for which, the States
(originally Provinces) were formed and their boundaries were defined, and so
they deliberately adopted the provisions in Art. 3 with a view to meet the
possibility of the redistribution of the said territories after the integration
of the Indian States. In fact it is well-known that as a result of the States
Reorganization Act, 1956 (Act XXXVII of 1956), in the place of the original 27
States and one Area which were mentioned in Part D in the First Schedule to the
Constitution, there are DOW only 14 States and 6 other Areas which constitute
the Union territory mentioned in the First Schedule. The changes thus made
clearly illustrate the working of the peculiar and striking feature of the
Indian Constitution. There may be some force in this contention.
It may, therefore, be assumed that in
construing Art. 3 we should take into account the fact that the Constitution
contemplated changes of the territorial limits of the constituent States and
there was no guarantee about their territorial integrity.
Part 1 of the Constitution deals with the
Union and its territories, and in a sense its provisions set out a self
contained code in respect of the said topic. Just as Part 11 deals with the
topic of citizenship, Part 1 deals 37 286 with the territory of India. Art. 1
deals with the name and territory Of India. It reads thus :1.(1) India, that is
Bharat, shall be a Union of States.
(2)The States and the territories thereof
shall be as specified in the First Schedule.
(3) The territory of India shall comprise(a)
the territories of the States;
(b) the Union territories specified in the
First Schedule;
and (c) such other territories as may be
acquired.
Art. 1 as it now stands is the result of
amendments made by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956. Before its
amendment, Art. 1 referred to the territory of India a,;
comprising the territories of the States
specified in Parts A, B and C as well as the territories specified in Part D of
the Schedule and such of the territories as might be acquired. Then a separate provision
had been made by Art.
243 in Part IX for the administration of the
territories specified in Part D and other territories such as newly acquired
territories which were not comprised in the First Schedule. The Constitution
Amendments of 1956 made some important changes in Art. 1. The distinction
between Parts A, B and C and territories specified in Part D was abolished and
in its place came the distinction between the territories of States and the
Union territories specified in the First Schedule. In consequence Art. 243 in
Part IX was deleted. That is how under the present Article the territory of
India consists of the territories of the States, the Union territories and such
other territories as may be acquired. We have already referred to Art. 1(3)(c)
and we have observed that it does not purport to confer power on India to
acquire territories; it merely provides for and recognises automatic absorption
or assimilation into the territory of India of territories which may be
acquired by India by virtue of its inherent right as a sovereign State to
acquire foreign territory. Thus Art. describes India as a Union of States and
specifies its territories.
Article 2 provides that Parliament may by law
admit into the Union or establish, new States on such 287 terms and conditions
as it thinks fit. This Article shows that foreign territories which after
acquisition would become a part of the territory of India under Art. 1(3)(c)
can by law be admitted into the Union under Art. 2. Such territories may be admitted
into the Union or may be constituted into new States on such terms and
conditions as Parliament may think( fit; and as we shall presently point out
such territories can also be dealt with by law under Art. 3(a) or (b). The
expression " by law " used in Arts. 2 and 3 in this connection is
significant. The acquisition of foreign territory by India in exercise of its
inherent right as a sovereign State automatically makes the said territory a
part of the territory of India. After such territory is thus acquired and
factually made a part of the territory of India the process of law may
assimilate it either under Art.
2 or under Art. 3 (a) or (b).
As an illustration of the procedure which can
be adopted by Parliament in making a law for absorbing newly acquired territory
we may refer to the Chandernagore Merger Act, 1954 (Act XXXVI of 1954), which
was passed on September 29, 1954, and came into force as from October 2,1954.
Chandernagore, which was a French possession, was declared a free city, and in
June 1946 the French Government, in agreement with the Government of India,
stated that it intended to leave the people of the French establishments in
India a right to pronounce on their future fate and future status. In pursuance
of this declaration a referendum was held in Chandernagore in 1949, and in this
referendum the citizens of Chandernagore voted in favour of the merger of the
territory with India. Consequently, on May 2, 1950, the President of the French
Republic effected a de facto transfer of the administration of Chandernagore to
India, and as from that date the Government of India assumed control and
jurisdiction over Chandernagore under s. 4 of the Foreign Jurisdiction Act,
1947 (Act 47 of 1947). Relevant notification was issued by the Government of
India under the said section as a result of which certain Indian laws were made
applicable to it. The said notification also provided that the corresponding
288 French laws would cease to apply with effect from May 2, 1950. This was
followed by the treaty of cession which was signed at Paris and in due course
on June 9, 1952, Chandernagore was transferred de to the Government of India on
the ratification of the said treaty. The result was Chandernagore ceased to be
a French territory and became a part of the territory of India; and the Foreign
Jurisdiction Act was no longer applicable to it. Article 243(1) which was then
in operation applied to Chandernagore as from June 9, 1952, and in exercise of
the powers conferred under Art.
243(2) the President promulgated a regulation
for the administration of Chandernagore which came into force from June 30,
1952. The Government of India then ascertained the wishes of the citizens of
Chandernagore by appointing a commission of enquiry, and on receiving the
commission's report that the people of Chandernagore were almost unanimously in
favour of merging with West Bengal, the Government introduced in Parliament the
Chandernagore Merger Act in question. After this Act was passed Chandernagore
merged with the State of West Bengal as from October 2,1954.
This Act was passed by Parliament under Art.
3 of the Constitution. As a result of this Act the boundaries of West Bengal
were altered under Art. 3(d) and by s. 4 the First Schedule to the Constitution
was modified. We have their briefly referred to the history of the acquisition
and absorption of Chandernagore and its merger with West Bengal because it
significantly illustrates the operation of Art.
1(3)(c) as well as Art. 3(b) and (d) of the
Constitution.
That take-, us to Art. 3 which deals with the
topic of formation of new States and alteration of areas, boundaries or names of
existing States; but before we construe Art,. 3 it would be convenient to refer
to Art. 4. Article 4 reads thus 4.(1) Any law referred to in article 2 or
article 3 shall contain such provisions for the amendment of the First Schedule
and the Fourth Schedule as may be necessary to give effect to the provisions of
the law and may also contain such supplemental, incidental and consequential
provisions (including provisions as to representation in Parliament and 289 in
the Legislature or Legislatures of the State of States affected by such law) as
Parliament may deem necessary.
(2)No such law as aforesaid shall be deemed
to be an amendment of this Constitution for the purposes of article 368.
The effect of Art. 4 is that the laws
relatable to Art. 2 or Art. 3 are not to be treated as constitutional
amendments for the purpose of Art. 368, which means that if legislation is
competent under Art. 3 in respect of the Agreement, it would be unnecessary to
invoke Art. 368. On the other hand, it is equally clear that if legislation in
respect of the relevant topic is Dot competent under Art. 3, Art. 368 would
inevitably apply. The crux of the problem, therefore, is:
Can Parliament legislate in regard to the
Agreement under Art. 3 ? Let us now read Art. 3. It reads as follows:"
Art. 3. Parliament may by law(a)form a new State by separation of territory
from any State or by uniting two or more States or parts of States or by
uniting any territory. to a part of any State;
(b) increase the area of any State;
(e) diminish the area of any State;
(d) alter the boundaries of any State;
(e) alter the name of any State;
Provided that no Bill for the purpose shall
be introduced in either House of Parliament except on the recommendation of the
President and unless, where the proposal contained in the Bill affects the
area, boundaries or name of any of the States the Bill has been referred by the
President to the Legislature of that State for expressing its views thereon
within such period as may be specified in the reference or within such further
period as the President may allow and the period so specified or allowed has
expired." Prima facie Art. 3 may appear to deal with the problems which
would arise on the reorganisation of the constituent States of India on linguistic
or any other basis; but that is not the entire scope of Art. 3. Broadly stated
it deals with the internal adjustment inter so of the territories of the
constituent States of 290 India. Article 3(a) enables Parliament to form a new
State and this can be done either by the separation ,if the territory from any
State, or by uniting two or more States or parts of States, or by uniting any
territory to a part of any State. There can be no doubt that foreign territory
which after acquisition becomes a part of the territory of India under Art..
1(3)(c) is included in the last clause of Art. 3(a) and that such territory
may' after its acquisition, be absorbed in the new State which may be formed
under Art. 3(a). Thus Art. 3(a) deals with the problem of the formation of a
new State and indicates the modes by which a new State can be formed. Article
3(b) provides that a law may be passed to increase the area of any State. This
increase may be incidental to the reorganisation of States in which case what
is added to one State under Art. 3(b) may have been taken out from the are&
of another State. The increase in the area of any State contemplated by
Art.-3(b) may also be the result of adding to any State any part' if the
territory specified in Art. 1(3)(c). Article 3(d) refers to the alteration of
the boundaries of any State and such alteration would. be the consequence of
any of the adjustments specified in Art.
3(a), (b) or (c). Article 3(e) which refers
to the alteration of the name of any State presents no difficulty, and in fact
has no material bearing on the questions with which we are concerned. We have
yet to consider Art. 3(c) the construction of which will provide he answers to
the questions under reference; but before we interpret Art. 3(c) we would like
to refer to one aspect relating to the said Article considered as a whole.
It is significant that Art. 3 in terms does
not refer to the Union territories and so, whether or not they are included in
the last clause of Art. 3(a) there is no doubt that they are outside the
purview of Art. 3(b), (c), (d) and (e). In other words, if an increase or
diminution in the areas of the Union territories is contemplated or the
alteration of their boundaries or names is Proposed, it cannot be effected by
law relatable to Art. 3. This position would be of considerable assistance in
interpreting Art. 3(c).
291 Article 3(c) deals with the problem of
the diminution of the area of any State. Such diminution may occur where the
part of the area of a State is taken out and added to another State, and in
that sense Arts. 3(b) and 3(c) may in some cases be said to be co-related but
does Art. 3(c) refer to a case where a part of the area of a State is taken out
of that State and is not added to any other State but is banded over to a foreign
State The learned Attorney-General contends that the words used in Art. 3(c)
are wide enough to include the case of the cession of national territory in
favour of a foreign country which causes the diminution of the area of the
State in question. We are not impressed by this argument. Prima facie it
appears unreasonable to suggest that the' makers of the Constitution wanted to
provide for the cession of national territory under Art.
3(c). If the power to acquire foreign
territory which is an essential attribute of sovereignty is not expressly
conferred by the Constitution there is no reason why the power to cede a part
of the national territory which is also an essential attribute of sovereignty
should have been 'provided for by the Constitution. Both of these essential
attributes of sovereignty are outside the Constitution and can be exercised by
India as a sovereign State. Therefore, even if Art. 3(c) receives the widest
interpretation it would be difficult to accept the argument that it covers a case
of cession of a part of national territory in favour of a foreign State. The
diminution of the area of any State to which it refers postulates that the area
diminished from the State in question should and must continue to be a part of
the territory of India; it may increase the area of any other State or may be
dealt with in any other manner authorised either by Art. 3 or other relevant
provisions of the Constitution, but it would not cease to be a part of the
territory of India It would be unduly straining the language of Art. 3(c) to
hold that by implication it provides for cases of cession of a part of national
territory.
Therefore, we feel no hesitation in holding
that the power to cede national territory cannot be read in Art. 3(c) by
implication.
292 There is another consideration which is
of considerable importance in construing Art. 3(c). As we have already
indicated Art. 3 does not in terms refer to the Union territories, and there
can be no doubt that Art. 3(c) does not cover them; and so, if a part of the
Union territories has to be ceded to a foreign State no law relatable to Art.
3 would be competent in respect of such
cession If that be the true position cession of a part of the Union territories
would inevitably have to be implemented by legislation relatable to Art 368 ;
and that, in our opinion, strongly supports the construction which we are
inclined to place on Art. 3(c) even in respect of cession of the area of any
State in favour of a foreign State., It would be unreasonable, illogical and
anomalous to suggest that, whereas the cession of a part of the Union
territories has to be implemented by legislation relatable to Art. 368, cession
of a part of the State territories can be implemented by legislation under Art.
3. We cannot, therefore, accept the argument of the learned Attorney General
that an agreement which involves a cession of a part of the territory of India
in favour of a foreign State can be implemented by Parliament by passing a law
under Art 3 of the Constitution. We think that this conclusion follows on a
fair and reasonable construction of Art. 3 and its validity cannot be impaired
by what the learned Attorney General has described as the special features of
the federal Constitution of India.
In this connection the learned Attorney
-General has drawn our attention to the provisions of Act XLVII of 1951 by
which the boundaries of the State of Assam were altered consequent on the
cession of a strip of territory comprised in that State to the Government of
Bhutan. Section 2 of this Act provides that on and from the commencement of the
Act the territories of the State of Assam shall cease to comprise the strip of
territory specified in the Schedule which shall be ceded to the Government of
Bhutan, and the boundaries of the State of Assam shall be deemed to have been
altered accordingly. Section 3 provides for the consequential amendment of the
first paragraph in Part A of the First Schedule to the Constitution relating to
the territory of Assam. The argument is 293 that when Parliament was dealing
with the cession of a strip of territory which was a part of the State of Assam
in favour of the Government of Bhutan it has purported to pass this Act under
Art. 3 of the Constitution. It Appears that the strip of territory which was
thus ceded consisted of about, 32 sq. miles of the territory in the Dewangiri
Hill Block being a part of Dewangiri on the extreme northern boundary of Kamrup
District. This strip of territory was largely covered by forests and only
sparsely inhabited by Bhotias. The learned Attorney-General has not relied on
this single statute as showing legislative practice. He has only cited this as
an instance where the Parliament has given effect to the cession of a part of
the territory of Assam in favour of the Government of Bhutan by enacting a law
relating to Art. 3 of the Constitution. We do not think that this instance can
be of any assistance in construing the scope and effect of the provisions of
Art. 3.
Therefore our conclusion is that it would not
be competent to Parliament to make a law relatable to Art. 3 of the
Constitution for the purpose of implementing the Agreement.
It is conceded by the learned
Attorney-General that this conclusion must inevitably mean that the law
necessary to implement the, Agreement has to be passed under Art. 368.
Art. 368 reads thus:" Art. 368. An
amendment of this Constitution may be initiated only by the introduction of a
Bill for the purpose in either House of Parliament, and when the Bill is passed
in each House by a majority of the total membership of that House and by a
majority of not less than two-thirds of the members of that House present and
voting, it shall be presented to the President for his assent and upon such
assent being given to the Bill, the Constitution shall stand amended in
accordance with the terms of the Bill:
Provided that if such amendment seeks to make
any change in(a)article 54, article 55, article 73, article 162 or article 241,
or 38 294 (b)Chapter IV of Part V, Chapter V of Part VI, or Chapter 1 of Part
XI, or (c) any of the Lists in the Seventh Schedule, or (d) the representation
of States in Parliament, or (e) the provisions of this article, the amendment
shall also require to be ratified by the Legislatures of not less than one-half
of the States * * * by resolutions to that effect passed by those Legislatures
before the Bill making provision for such amendment is presented to the
President for assent." We have already held that the Agreement amounts to
a cession of a part of the territory of India in favour of Pakistan;
and so its implementation would naturally
involve the alteration of the content of and the consequent amendment of Art. 1
and of the relevant part of the First Schedule to the Constitution, because
such implementation would necessarily lead to the diminution of the territory
of the Union of India. Such an amendment can be made under Art.
368. This position is not in dispute and has
not been challenged before us; so it follows that acting under Art.
368 Parliament may make a law to give effect
to, and implement, the Agreement in question covering the cession of a part of
Berubari Union No. 12 as well as some of the Cooch-Behar Enclaves which by
exchange are given to Pakistan. Parliament may however, if it so chooses, pass a
law amending Art. 3 of the Constitution so as to cover cases of cession of the
territory of India in favour of a foreign State. If such a law is passed then
Parliament may be competent to make a law under the amended Art. 3 to implement
the Agreement in question. On the other hand, if the necessary law is passed
under Art. 368 itself that alone would be sufficient to implement the
Agreement.
It would not be out of place to mention one
more point before we formulate our opinion on the questions referred to us. We
have already noticed that under the proviso to Art.
3 of the Constitution it is prescribed that
where the proposal contained in the Bill affects the area, boundaries or name
of any of the States, the Bill has to be referred by the President to 295 the
Legislature of that State for its views thereon within such period as is
therein prescribed. It has been urged before us by the learned Attorney General
that if it is held that Parliament must act under Art. 368 and not under Art. 3
to implement the Agreement, it would in effect deprive the Legislature of West
Bengal of an opportunity to express its views on the cession of the territory
in question. That no doubt is true; but, if on its fair and reasonable
construction Art. 3 is inapplicable this incidental consequence cannot be
avoided. On the other hand, it is clear that if the law in regard to the
implementation of the Agreement is to be passed under Art. 368 it has to
satisfy the requirements prescribed by the said Article; the Bill has to be
passed in each House by a majority of the total membership of the House and by
a majority of not less than two-thirds of the House present and voting; that is
to say, it should obtain the concurrence of a substantial section of the House
which may normally mean the consent of the major parties of the House, and that
is a safeguard provided by the Article in matters of this kind.
In this connection it may incidentally be
pointed out that the amendment of Art. 1 of the Constitution consequent upon
the cession of any part of the territory of India in favour of a foreign State
does not attract the safeguard prescribed by the proviso to Art. 368 because
neither Art. 1 nor Art. 3 is included in the list of entrenched provisions of
the Constitution enumerated in the proviso. It is not for us to enquire or
consider whether it would not be appropriate to include the said two Articles
under the proviso. That is a matter for the Parliament to consider and decide.
We would accordingly answer the three
questions referred to us as follows: Q. 1. Yes.
Q.2. (a) A law of Parliament relatable to
Art. 3 of the Constitution would be incompetent;
(b)A law of Parliament relatable to Art. 368
of the Constitution is competent and necessary;
(c)A law of Parliament relatable to both Art.
368 and Art.
3 would be necessary only if Parliament
chooses first to pass a law amending Art. 3 296 as indicated above; in that
case Parliament may have to pass a law on those lines under Art. 368 and then
follow it up with a law relatable to the amended Art. 3 to implement the
agreement.
Q. 3. Same as answers (a), (b) and (c) to
Question 2.
Reference answered accordingly.
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