B. Shama Rao Vs. The Union Territory of
Pondicherry [1967] INSC 35 (20 February 1967)
20/02/1967 SHELAT, J.M.
SHELAT, J.M.
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) SHAH, J.C.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA MITTER, G.K.
CITATION: 1967 AIR 1480 1967 SCR (2) 650
CITATOR INFO:
D 1967 SC1895 (20) RF 1968 SC1232 (87) R 1972
SC2205 (26) F 1974 SC 613 (26) RF 1974 SC1660 (6,60,65) RF 1975 SC1389
(11,12,26) RF 1989 SC 222 (4,9) R 1990 SC 560 (13,14,17,21,22) D 1991 SC2160
(26)
ACT:
Madras General Sales Tax Act (1 of
1959)-Extended to Pondicherry by s. 2(1) of Pondicherry General Sales, Tax Act
(10 of 1965)-Date of commencement of Pondicherry Act to be notified under s.
1(2) by Pondicherry Govt. Madras Act Amended-Notification of Pondicherry Govt.
extending amended Madras Act to Pondicherry-If excessive delegation.
HEADNOTE:
The legislative assembly for the Union
Territory of Pondicherry passed the Pondicherry General Sales Tax Act (10 of
1965) which was published on June 30, 1965. Section 1(2) of the Art provided,
that it would come into force on such date as the Pondicherry Government may,
by notification, appoint and s.., 2(1) provided that the Madras General Sales
Tax Act, 1959, as in force in the State of Madras immediately before the
Commencement of the Pondicherry Act, shall be extended to Pondicherry subject
to certain modifications, one of which related to the constitution of the
Appellate Tribunal. The Act also enacted a Schedule, giving the description of
goods, the point of levy 'and the rates of tax. The Pondicherry Government issued
a notification on March 1, 1966, appointing April 1, 1966 as the date of
commencement. Prior to the issue of the notification, the Madras legislature
had amended the Madras Act and consequently it was the Madras Act as amended up
to April 1, 1966 which was brought into force in Pondicherry.
When the Act had come into force, the
petitioner was served with a notice to register himself as a dealer and he
thereupon filed a writ petition challenging the validity of the Act.
After the petition was filed, the Pondicherry
Legislature passed the Pondicherry General Sales Tax (Amendment) Act, 13 of
1966, whereby s. 1(2) of the principal Act was amended to read that the latter
Act ,,shall come into force on the 1st day of April 1966", it was also
provided that all taxes levied or collected and all proceedings taken and
things done were to be deemed valid as if the principal Act as amended had been
in force at all material times.
HELD : (per Subba Rao, C.J., Shelat and
Mitter JJ.) The Act of 1965 was void and still-born and could not be revived by
the Amendment Act of 1966.
The Pondicherry Legislature not only adopted
the Madras Act as it stood at the date when it passed the principal Act, but in
effect also enacted that if the Madras legislature were to amend its Act prior
to the notification of its extension to Pondicherry, it would be the amended
Act that would apply. The Legislature at that stage could not anticipate that
the Madras Act would not be amended nor could it predicate what amendments
would be carried out or whether they would be of a sweeping 651 character or
whether they would be suitable in Pondicherry.
The result was that the Pondicherry
Legislature accepted the amended Act though, it was-not and could not be aware
what the provisions of the amended. Act would be. There was, in these
circumstances, a total surrender in the matter of sales tax legislation by the
Pondicherry Assembly in favour of the Madras Legislature. [660 D-G] The
principal Act was not saved for the reason that it contained certain provisions
relating to the Appellate Tribunal and a Schedule independent of the madras
Act. The core of a taxing statute is the charging section and the provisions
relating to the levy of such taxand defining the persons who are liable to pay
the tax. If that core disappears, the renaming provisions have no efficacy [660
H] In re Delhi Laws Act, 1912, etc. [1951] S.C.R, 747, explained and
distinguished.
Raj Narain Singh v. The Chairman, Patna
Administration Committee & Anr. [1955] 1 S.C.R. 290; Jotindranath Gupta v. State
of U.P. [1949-50] F.C.R. 595; Empress v. Burah 5 I.A., 177; The Referendum
Case, [1919] AC. 935; Hodge v. The Queen, 9 App. Cases 177, referred to.
The Amendment Act was passed on the footing
that there was in, existence a valid Act; it was and was intended to be an
amendment of the principal Act. It could not be construed as an independent
legislation and therefore it could not be said that the Pondicherry Legislature
I re-enacted the principal Act extending the Madras Act as amended up to April
1, 1966, to Pondicherry. [662 E:E-G] Deep Chand v. State of U.P. [1959] Supp. 2
S.C.R. 8 and Mahendra lal v. State of U.P. [1963] Supp. 1 S.C R. 912, referred
to.
Per Shah and Bhargava, JJ.. (dissenting) :
The delegation of power by the Pondicherry Legislature to the Pondicherry
Government was to the extent that the latter could either bring into force the
Madras Act as it stood when the principal Act was published or could, at its
option, enforce, the Madras Act as subsequently amended by the Madras
Legislature,, which would amount to giving it discretion to apply a future law
to be passed by the Madras Legislature. [666 C-D] But even assuming that the
principal Act was bad for excise delegation of powers when it was enacted and
published, the subsequent Amending Act passed by the Pondicherry Legislature
had the effect of bringing into force in Pondicherry a valid Act, under which
proceedings sought to be taken against the petitioner were fully justified.
[668 E] Initially, when the principal Act came into force in Pondicherry with
effect from 1st April, 1966, the amendments made by the Madras Legislature also
became effective in Pondicherry, because the Pondicherry Government notified
that the principle Act was to commence with effect from ist April, 1966; but,
subsequently, when the Amending Act was passed by the Pondicherry Legislature,
that Legislature itself decided that the Madras Act which should come into
force in the territory of Pondicherry cherry should be the amended Madras Act,
and by the retrospective operation of the Amending Act, the effect of any
excessive delegation was, removed. [669 D-E; 670 D-E] Deep Chand v. The State
of Uttar Pradesh and others, [1959]supp. 2 S.C.R. 8; Mahendra Lal Jaini v. The
State of Uttar Pradesh and others [1963] supp. 1 S.C.R. 912 and The State of
South Australia and Another etc. v. The Commonwealth and Another, 65 C.L.R.
373; distinguished 652 Furthermore', there were some provisions in the
principal Act before its amendment which did not contain any element of
delegation of le lative power and which must therefore be held to have betbeen
valid from the beginning If the. principal Act was, to some extent valid, there
could be no to the Pondicherry Legislature amending it retrospectively so as to
validatethose parts of it which might have been invalid on the ground of
excessive delegation of legislative power. [671 F, G]
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 123
of 1966.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of
India for the enforcement of fundamental rights.
S. T. Desai, K. Narayanaswamy, B. Dutta, J.
B. Dadachanji O. C. Mathur and Ravinaer Narain, for the petitioner.
M. C. Setalvad, B. Sen and R. N. Sachthey,
for the respondent.
The Judgment of SUBBA RAO , C. J., SHELAT and
MITTER, JJ.
was delivered by SHELAT, J. The dissenting
Opinion Of SHAH and BHARGAVA J. was delivered by BHARGAVA, J.
Shelat, J. On August 16, 1962 the
administration of Pondicherry became vested in the Government of India by
virtue of de jure transfer. The Pondicherry Administration Act, 42 of 1962
constituted that territory as a separate centrally administered unit and under
the Union' Territories Act, 20 of 1963 a legislative assembly wag set up for
that area.
The assembly under that Act acquired the
power of enacting laws in respect of items in Lists 11 and III of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution. The assembly thereafter passed the Pondicherry
General Sales Tax Act, 10 of 1965 (hereinafter referred to as the Principal
Act) which was published on June, 3, 1965 after receiving the President's
assent on May 25, 1965. Section 1(2) of that Act provided that the Act would
come into force on such date as the Government may notification appoint Section
2(1) provided that:"The Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (No.
1 of 1,959) (hereinafter refered to as the
Act) as in force in the State of Madras immediately before the commencement of
this Act shall extend to and come into force in the Union Territory of
Pondichery subjectto thefollowingmodifications and.
adaptations,............." Then follow
certain modification and adaptations which are not relevant for out purposes
except that cl. (ix.) of sec.
(2)(1) substituted Sec. 30 of the Madras Act and
provided for an Appellate Tribunal. The substituted section laid down that the
Government shall appoint a Judicial officer who is otherwise qualified to be
appointed as a Judge of the Tribunal Superieur d'Appeal to be the Appellate
'Tribunal and to exercise the functions conferred under the Act' The Act also
enacted a Schedule with description of goods, the point of levy and the rates
at which the tax was to be levied. Sec 2(2) provided that the Madras General
Sales Tax Rules, 1959 and 653 any other Rules made or issued under the said Act
and similarly in force were to apply to Pondicherry. As provided by section
1(2)the Pondicherry Government issued a notification dated March 1, 1966
bringing into force the Madras' Act as extended by the Act to Pondicherry as
from April 1, 1966. In the meantime the Madras legislature had amended the
Madras Act and consequently it' was the Madras Act as amended upto April 1,
1966 which was brought into force under the said notification.
The petitioner is a merchant carrying on
business in liquor and would be a dealer within the meaning of the Madras Act.
Upto March 1966 he was liable and was paying
certain taxes similar to the sales tax under the French regulations till then
in force in Pondicherry. With the coming into force of the Principal Act he was
served with a notice to register himself as a dealer. Thereupon he filed this
petition challenging the validity of the Principal Act.
Mr. S. T. Desai for the petitioner contended
that the Principal Act was void and was a still-born legislation by reason of
the Pondicherry legislature having abdicated its legislative function in favour
of the Madras State Legislature, that such abdication resulted from the
wholesale adoption of the Madras Act as in force in the State of Madras
immediately before the commencement of the Principal Act and that Sec. 2(1)
read with sec. 1(2) meant that the legislature adopted not only the Madras Act
as it was when it enacted the Principal Act but also such amendment or
amendments in that Act which might be passed by the Madras Legislature upto the
time of the commencement of the Act, i.e., upto April 1, 1966. Mr. Setalvad, on
the other hand, relied on the majority decision in re. Delhi Laws Act, 1912,
etc. case (1) and in particular on the summary by Bose J. in Raj Narain Singh's
case(2) of the diverse views expressed by the learned Judges in that decision.
As heading (4) in the said summary shows the learned Judges inter alia held by
a majority of 5 to 2 that authorisation to select and apply future Provincial
laws was not invalid. To ascertain the principle deducible from that
conclusion, it becomes necessary to examine the observations made by the five
learned Judges. But before we do that it is also necessary to remind oneself of
the principles governing the exercise of legislative power.
In what has come to be known as the
Referendum case(3), Lord Haldane dealing with see. 92 of the British North
America Act, 1867 observed that that section entrusted the legislative power in
a Province to its legislature and to such legislature only but added that a
body with a power of legislation on the subjects entrusted to it so amply as
that enjoyed by a provincial legislature in Canada could, while preserving its
own capacity intact, seek the assistance (1) [1951] S.C.R. 747.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 290.
(3)[1919] A. C. 935.
654 of subordinate agencies as had been laid
down in Hodge v. The Queen(1), where the legislature of Ontario was held
entitled to entrust to the Board of Commissioners the authority to enact
regulations relating to taverns. But it did not follow that it could create and
endow with its own capacity a new legislative power not created by the Act to
which it owed its existence. The principle laid down by Lord Haldane is stated
in Street's Doctrine of Ultra Vires at p. 430 as follows:"The decision in
this case that the statute was ultra vires did not turn precisely on the ground
of delegation but these remarks suggest that a legislature will not ordinarily
be permitted to shift the onus of legislation, though it my legislate as to the
main principles and leave details to subordinate agencies." Cooley in
"Constitutional Law" (4th ed.) 138, states that the reason against
delegation of power by the legislature is found in the very existence of its
power. "This high prerogative has been entrusted to its own wisdom,
judgment and patriotism and not to those of other persons and it will act ultra
vires if it undertakes to delegate the trust instead of "executing
it." This principle is neither the corollary of the doctrine of separation
of powers nor is it based on the maxim 'delegatus non potest delegare' as sometimes
misunderstood. In Empress v. Burah(2) the Privy Council held that the Indian
legislature had plenary powers within its own field and therefore has the same
power to pass conditional legislation as the Imperial Parliament itself. But
the possession of plenary powers within the ambit laid down only means that
within that particular field it can make any laws on those subjects. It would
not mean that it can shirk its duty by making a law that it shall not operate
on that field but somebody else will operate on its behalf. There was no
dispute in the Delhi Laws Act case(3) about this principle. The questions on
which divergence of opinion arose were as to whether the impugned laws were
delegated legislation, and if they were, whether the legislature could delegate
its legislative power and if so to what extent.
The reference in that case arose because of
the decision in Jotindranath Gupta v. State of U.P.(4) where Section 1(3)',
proviso, of Bihar Act V of 1947 was held invalid on the, ground that. there was
delegation of legislative power to the executive. As summarised by Bose J. in
Raj Narain Singh's case(5) the, reference raised the following problems:"In
each case the Central Legislature had empowered an executive authority under
its legislative control to apply (i) 9 App. Cases 117.
(2) 5 I.A. 178.
(3) [1951] S.C.R. 747 (4) [1949-50] F.C.R.
595.
(5) [1955] S.C. R. 290.
655 at its discretion, laws to an area which
was also under the legislative sway of the Centre.
The variations occur in the type of laws
which the executive authority was authorised to select and in the modifications
which it was empowered to make in them. The variations were as follows:
(1)Where the executive authority was
permitted at its discretion, to apply without modification (save incidental
changes such as name and place), the whole of any Central Act already in
existence in any part of India under the legislative sway of the Centre to the
new area;
(2)Where the executive authority was allowed
to select and apply a Provincial Act in similar circumstances;
(3)Where the executive authority was
permitted to select future Central laws and apply them in a similar way."
The learned Attorney-General had canvassed the proposition that a plenary.
legislative power included in it the power of delegation. The divergence of
opinion on that question was (1) as to whether the British theory of
"supremacy within limits" could apply after the Constitution came
into force; (2) whether the impugned legislation was, delegated or conditional
legislation and (3) if it was delegated legislation whether such delegation
could be only of subsidiary and ancillary power. Kania C. J. and Mahajan J.
(as he then was) reiterated their views
expressed in Jotindranath Gupta's case(1), the learned Chief Justice holding
that section 7 of the Delhi Laws Act and section 2 of the Ajmer-Merwara Act,
1947 were ultra vires to the extent that power was given thereunder to the
Government to extend Acts other than the Central Acts inasmuch as to that
extent the Central legislature had abdicated its function and delegated it to
the executive government and Mahajan J.
holding that the said sections were ultra
vires (i) inasmuch as they permitted the executive to apply to Delhi and AjmerMerwara
laws enacted by legislatures not competent to make laws for those' territories
and which those legislatures might make in their own legislative field, and
(ii) inasmuch as they clothed the executive with coextensive legislative
authority in the matter of modification of laws made by legislative bodies in
India. (see pp. 794 to 797 and 938 and 946 of the report)'. Patanjali Sastri
and Das jj. (as they then were) took the other extreme view accepting the
Attorney,General's contention. Patanjali Sastri J. held that the Indian
legislature enjoyed plenary powers of legislation of the same nature and
amplitude as the British Parliament and no constitutional limitation on the
delegation of legislative power to a subordinate unit was to be found in the
Constitution Acts from 1861 to 1935 or the present Constitution and therefore
it was competent for the Indian legislature to make a law delegating legislative
power, both quantitatively and qualitatively, as it was for the British (1)
[1949-50] F.C.R. 595.
656 Parliament to do so, so long as it acted
within its field.
Das J. held that the principle of
non-delegation of legislative powers founded either on the doctrine of
separation of powers or the theory of agency has no application to the British
Parliament or the legislature constituted by an Act of British Parliament, that
the operation of the act performed under delegated power is directly and immediately
under and by virtue of the law by which the power is delegated and its efficacy
is preferable to that antecedent law, that if the legislature acts within its
prescribed sphere there is no limit to its power of delegation, it being for
'the legislature to determine how far it should seek the aid of subordinate
agencies. The only limitation to such power is that the legislature may not
abdicate or efface itself, that is, it may not, without preserving its own
capacity intact create a new legislative power not constituted by the Act under
which it is set up.
He was also of the view that the impugned
legislation could be supported as an instance of conditional legislation as
held in Empress v. Burah(1). Fazl Ali J. on the other hand was of the view that
the legislature itself must formally discharge its primary function and not
through others but that it can utilise outside agency to any extent it fnds
necessary to do things which it. is not able to do itself or finds it
inconvenient to do. He upheld the validity of the impugned laws but on the
ground that the delegation was not of legislative but of ministerial power. He
did not accept the contention that there was inherent in the legislativ power
the power to delegate the legislative function.
Mukherjea J. took up an intermediate posture
holding that essential legislative function consists in determination of
legislative policy or of formally enacting that policy into a binding rule of
conduct. This policy must be laid down in definite terms so as to guide the
delegate in implementing it. If that is done the court is not concerned with
its merits. At p. 977 of the report he laid down the principle that abdication
of. legislative function can be whole or partial or even with reference to a
particular matter and does not necessarily mean either the creation of a
parallel legislature or total effacement and rejected the proposition that
legislative power necessarily includes power of delegation. (cf. observations
at pages 982, 984, 985, 997 and 1000 of the report). Bose J. adopted what he
called a pragmatic and a practical view declining to join in the juristic
differences between delegated legislation and conditional legislation. So far
as the Delhi Laws Act and the Ajmer-Merwara Act were concerned, he based his
opinion on the decision in Empress v. Burah(1) and the view therein that
according to the British theory the Indian legislature under' the Constitution
Acts from 1861 to 1935 had plenary powers, that within its field it was as
supreme as the British Parliament and could exercise its power in any manner it
thought best. Therefore it could take the assistance of outside (1) 5 LA. 178.
657 agencies in exercise of its legislative
power and to delegate that power to any extent possible, Regarding the C States
laws, however, he thought that on, the one hand the Constitution-makers had the
experience before them of the aforesaid British theory and on the other the
experiences of the American and other federal constitutions. On this reasoning
lie upheld the. validity to adopt existing laws or the authority to alter even
in essential features laws already in existence. (see observations at pages
1121 to 1124). Thus, amongst the five learned judges.who upheld the validity
either wholly or partially, Fazal Ali, Mukherjea and Bose JJ,. who. tipped the
balance were not wholeheartedly with Patanjali Sastri and Das JJ. who accepted
the contention that power of delegation was inherent in legislative power. Even
amongst these three learned Judges there was considerable variance both of
opinion and reasoning. Fazl Ali J. was of the opinion that abdication was not
permissible but authorisation short of it was permissible The opinion of
Mukherjea J. was that delegation of essential legislative function was not
permissible and that abdication need not be total but can be partial and even
in regard to a particular matter and Bose J. founded his view on the fact that
the Privy Council would have decided the case in the same way as it did in the
Burah's case(1) basing its decision on the theory of supremacy within limits
and that that theory was presumably recognised by the Constitution makers.In
view of the intense divergence of opinion except for their conclusion partially
to uphold the,validity of the said laws it is difficult to deduce any general
principle which on the principle of state decision can be taken as binding in
for future cases. It is trite to say that a decision is binding not because of
its conclusion but in regard to its ratio and the principle laid down therein.
The utmost therefore that can be said of this decision is that the minimum on
which there appears to be consensus was (1) that legislatures in India both
before and after the Constitution had plenary power within their respective
fields; (2) that they were never the delegates of the British Parliament; (3)
that they had power to delegate within certain limits not by reason of such a
power being inherent in the legislative power but because such power is
recognised even in the United States of America were separatist ideology
prevails on the ground that it is necessary to effectively exercise the
legislative power in a modem state with multifarious activities and complex
problems facing legislatures and (4) that delegation of an essential,
legislative function which amounts to abdication even partial is not
permissible. All of them were agreed that it could be in respect of subsidiary
and ancillary power., It is not without significance that three of them
emphasised the extraordinary situation existing in the newly formed Part C
States. At page 838 Fazl Ali J. stated as follows:
(1) 5 I.A. 178.
658 .lm15 "The situation with which the
respective legislatures were faced when these Acts were passed, was that there
were certain State or States with no local legislature and a whole bundle of
laws had to be enacted for them. It is clear that the legislature concerned,
before passing the Acts, applied their mind and decided firstly, that the situation
would be met by the adoption of laws applicable to the other provinces inasmuch
as they covered a wide range of subjects :and hence the requirements of the
State or States for which the laws had to be framed could not go beyond those
for which laws had already been framed by the various legislatures, and
secondly, that the matter should be entrusted to an author by which was
expected to be familiar and could easily make itself familiar with the needs
and conditions of the State or States for which, the laws were to be made.
'Thus, everyone of the Acts so enacted, was a complete law, because it embodied
a policy, defined a standard, and and directed the authority chosen to act
Within certain prescribed limits and not to go beyond them.
Each Act was a complete expression of the
will of the legislature to act in a particular way and of its command as to how
its will should be carried out." This passage suggests that the impugned
legislation was a ,conditional' legislation as in Empress v. Burah(1) aid the
power 'conferred on the government was ministerial and not legislative. The
following observations of Mukherjea J.
also indicate that he reached his conclusion
from the same situation. At p. 1001 of the report he observed :
"The policy behind the Delhi Laws Act
seems to be that in a small area like Delhi which was constituted a separate
province only recently and which had neither any local legislature of its own
or was considered to be of sufficient size or importance to have one in the
future, it seemed to the legislature to be quite fit and proper that the laws
validly passed and in force in other parts of India should be applied to such
area, subject to such restrictions and. modifications as might be necessary to
make the law suitable to the local conditions.
He too held that the impugned Acts contained
a policy with sufficient precision as to furnish guidance to the executive who
was to implement them. The delegation of legislative power thus was not
controlled or unguided. At page 1121 Bose J. remarked:"Had it not been for
the fact that this sort of practice was blessed by the Privy Council as far
back as 1878 and has been endorsed in a series of decisions ever since, and
(1),51.A. 178.
659 had it not been for the practical
necessities of the case, I would have held all the three Acts ultra
vires".
Thus it would not be incorrect to say that
three of the learned Judges out of five who held in favour of validity did so
because of the necessity of the situation. One of them held that the
legislation was complete and the power therefore was conditional as held in
Burah's case(1) and the other held that there being a precise policy the
delegation was not outside permissible limits.
We may at this stage observe that such was
not the situation in Pondicherry as the Pondicherry legislature was at all
material times already functioning. Indeed, it was in the purported exercise of
its legislative function that it sought to extend the Madras Act.
The question then is whether in extending the
Madras Act in the manner and to the extent it did under sec. (2)(1) of the
Principal Act the Pondicherry legislature abdicated its legislative power in
favour of the Madras legislature. It is manifest that the Assembly refused to
perform its legislative function entrusted under the Act constituting it. It
may be that a mere refusal may not amount to abdication if the legislature
instead of going through the full formality of legislation applies its mind to
an existing statute enacted by another legislature for another jurisdiction,
adopts such an Act and enacts to extend it to the territory under its
jurisdiction. In doing so, it may perhaps be said that it has laid down a
policy to extend such an Act and directs the executive to apply and implement
such an Act. But when it not only adopts such an Act but also provides that the
Act applicable to its territory shall be the Act amended in future by the other
legislature, there is nothing for it to predicate what the amended Act would
be. Such a case would be clearly one of non-application of mind and one of
refusal to discharge the function entrusted to it by the Instrument
constituting it. It is difficult to see how such a case is not one of
abdication or effacement in favour of another legislature at least in regard to
that particular matter.
But Mr. Setalvad contended that the validity
of such legislation has been accepted in Delhi Laws Act's case(2) and
particularly in the matter of heading No. 4 as summarised by Bose J. in Raj
Narayan Singh's case(3). In respect of that heading the majority conclusion no
doubt was that authorisation in favour of the executive to adopt laws passed by
another legislature or legislatures including future laws would not be invalid.
So far as that conclusion goes Mr. Setalvad is right. But as already stated, in
arriving at that conclusion each learned Judge adopted a different reasoning.
Whereas Patanjali Sastri and Das JJ.
accepted the contention that the plenary
legislative power includes power of (1) 5 LA. 178.
(3) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 29).
M2Sup.CI/67-13 (2) [1951] S. C. R. 747.
660 delegation and held that since such a
power means that the legislature can make laws in the manner it liked if it
delegates that power short of an abdication there can be no objection. On the
other hand, Fazl Ali J. upheld the laws on the ground that they t contained a
complete and precise policy and the legislation being thus conditional the
question of excessive delegation did not arise. Mukherjea J. held that
abdication need not be total but can be partial and even in respect of a
particular matter and if so the impugned legislation would be bad. Bose J.
expressed in frank language his displeasure at such legislation but accepted
its validity on the ground of practice recognised ever since Burah's case (1)
and thought that that practice was accepted by the Constitution-makers and
incorporated in the concept of legislative function. There was thus no
unanimity as regards the principles upon which those laws were upheld.
All of them however appear to agree on one
principle, viz., that where there is abdication or effacement the legislature
concerned in truth and in fact acts contrary to the Instrument which
constituted it and the statute in question would be void and still-born.
In the present case it is clear that the
Pondicherry legislature not only adopted the Madras Act as it stood at the date
when it passed the Principal Act but also enacted that if the Madras
legislature were to amend its Act prior to the date when the Pondicherry
government would issue its notification it would be the amended Act
which--would apply.
The legislature at that stage could not
anticipate that the Madras Act would not be amended nor could it predicate what
amendment or amendments would be carried out or whether they would be of a
sweeping character or whether they would be suitable in Pondicherry. In point
of fact the Madras Act was amended and by reason of section 2(1) read with
section 1(2) of the Principal Act it was the amended Act which was brought into
operation in Pondicherry. The result was that the Pondicherry legislature
accepted the amended Act though it was not and could not be aware what the
provisions of the amended Act would be. There was in these circumstances a
total surrender in the matter of sales tax legislation by the Pondicherry
Assembly in favour of the Madras legislature and for that reason we must agree
with Mr. Desai that the Act was void or as is often said.Stillborn.' It was
however argued that the Act cannot be said to be stillborn as it contained
certain provisions independent of the Madras Act, viz., the section which
provides for the Appellate Tribunal and the said Schedule. But the core of a
taxing statute is in the charging section and the provisions levying such a tax
and defining persons who are liable to pay such tax. If that core
disappears" (1)5 1. A. 178.
661 the remaining provisions have no
efficacy. In our view, Act 10 of 1965 was for the reasons aforesaid void and
stillborn.
After the petitioner filed this writ petition
the Pondicherry legislature passed the Pondicherry General sales Tax
(Amendment) Act, 13 of 1966. It received the President's assent on November 2,
1966 and was published on November 7,1966. This Act amended the principal Act
in several matters. The title of the Amendment Act is the Pondicherry Sales Tax
(Amendment) Act 1966 and was passed "further to amend the Pondicherry
General Sales Tax Act, 1965" therein called the principal Act. The Amendment
Act altered sec. 1(2) of the Principal Act by sec. 2 so as to read as follows
-"It shall come into force on the 1st day of April 1966".
Section 2(1) of the principal Act was
likewise amended and instead of the words "commencement of this Act"
words "1st day of April 1966" were substituted. Section 2(2) Was also
amended and so amended it reads as follows:
"The Madras General Sales Tax Rules,
1959 and any other Rules made or issued under the said Act and similarly in
force in so far as their application is required for the purpose of effectively
applying the provisions of the said Act shall also extend to and be in force in
the Union territory of Pondicherry until such time rules are framed under' Sec.
53 of the said Act." Section 1(2) of the Amendment Act provides that the
Amendment Act shall be deemed to have come into force on April 1, 1966 except
certain clauses which were to come into force at once. Section 5 of the
Amendment Act provides that all taxes levied or collected in pursuance of the
Principal Act and all acts, proceedings or things done in connection with the
levy or collection of such taxes shall, for all purposes, be deemed, to be and
to have always been validly levied or collected, as if the principal Act as
amended by the Amendment Act had been in force at all material times.
The effect of the amending section 1(2) and
sec. 2(1) of the principal Act was that it would come into force not by reason
of the notification issued by the Government but by reason of the deeming
Provisions of sections 1(2) and 2(i) of the Amendment Act.
Mr. Desai's contention was that since the
principal Act was a initio void, the Amendment Act cannot resuscitate that
which was still-born. In support of this contention he relied on the decisions
in Deepchand v. State of U.P.(1) and Mahendralal v. State of U.P.(2) Against
that contention it was submitted that assuming that the,, principal Act
suffered from the said defect the said defect was removed by the Amendment Act
in as much as the Pondicherry legislature re-enacted the said Act extending the
Madras Act as (1) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 8.
(2) [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 912.
662 amended up to April 1, 1966 to
Pondicherry. Put it,, differently, the contention was that the Amendment Act
was an independent legislation , that the Pondicherry Assembly has Dower to
enact a retrospective law and has re-enacted the provisions of the principal
Act extending as from April 1, 1966 the Madras Act Is amended upto that date.
But the question is can the Amendment Act be
said to be an independent re-enactment of the principal Act and has the
Pondicherry legislature extended the Madras Act by this Act? If that was what
the legislature intended to do it would have either repealed principal Act or
even without repealing it on the footing that it Was void enacted the Amendment
Act as an independent legislation extending the Madras Act 'retrospectively as
from April 1, 1966. The Amendment Act, is is clear from its long title was
passed to amend the Principal Act. That can only be on the footing that it was
a valid Act and still on the statute book. Under sec. 2 what the legislature
purports to do is to amend sec. 1(2) of 'the principal Act by substituting the
words "It shall co 'me into force in the Official day of April 1966"
in place of the words "It shall come into force on , Such date as the
Government may by notification in the Official Gazette appoint". The only
result is that instead of the principal Act having been. , brought into force
under the said' notification, it is deemed to have come into force, on April 1,
1966. This is done by a deeming provision as if the new clause was there from
the beginning when the Act was passed.
That being so, it is as if the Pndicherry
legislature had extended the Madras Act together such amendments which might be
made into that Act upto April 1, 1966. Since the Amendment Act was thus passed
on the footing that, there was in existence a valid Act, viz., the said
principal Act, it is impossible to conceive that it was or intended to be 'an
independent legislation extending there under the Madras Act.
The, Amendment Act was and was intended to be
an amendment of the principal Act and it would be stretching the language of
the Amendment Act to a breaking point to construe it as an independent
legislation whereby the Madras Act was retrospectively brought Into operation
as from April 1, 1966. That being so, and on the view that the principal Act
was still-born, theattempt to revive that which was void ab mine was frustrated
and such an Act could have no efficacy. In that view, the petition is allowed
with costs.
One heating fee only.
Bhargava, J. The petitioner, B. Shama Rao, is
a merchant, carrying on the business of selling liquor in Pondicherry, and'.has,
by' this petition, challenged proceedings being taken against him under the
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (Act 1 of 1959) hereinafter referred to as
"the Madras Act") as applied to Pondicherry by the Pondicherry
General Sales Tax Act, 1956 (Act No.
663 10 of 1965) (hereinafter referred to as
"the principal Act"). Pondicherry was a French possession, but was
transferred to the suzeranity of the Government of India.
The de jure transfer became effective on 16th
August, 1962, when the administration of the territory vested in the Government
of India. On 5th December, 1962, Parliament enacted the Pondicherry
Administration Act (No. 42 of 1962) constituting it as a separate
centrally-administered Unit.
On 10th May, 1963, a Legislative Assembly was
set up for Pondicherry under the Government of Union Territories Act (No. 20 of
19 63). Under section 18(1) of this Act, the Legislative Assembly was given the
power of making laws for the territory of Pondicherry in respect of matters
enumerated in Lists 11 and III of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. In
pursuance of this power, the Legislative Assembly enacted the principal Act
which received the assent of the President on the 25th May, 1965. It was
published in the Gazette on 30th June, 1965. Sub-S. (2) of s.1 of the principal
Act lays down that the Act shall come into force oh such date as the Government
may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint. Under sub-s.
(1) of S. 2 of the principal Act, it was laid
down that the Madras Act as in force in the State of Madras immediately before
the commencement of the principal Act shall extend to -and come into force in
the Union Territory of Pondicherry, subject to the modifications and
adaptations enumerated therein. Amongst the modifications and adaptations laid
down, two provisions contained in S. 2 (1)(ix) and S. 2 (1)(x) substituted a
new section 30 for the original section 30 of the Madras Act and a new First
schedule for the First schedule to the Madras Act respectively. Section 2(2) of
the principal Act laid down that "the Madras General Sales Tax Rules, 1959
and any other rules made or issued under the said. Act and similarly in force,
in so far as their application is required for the purpose of effectively
applying the provisions of the said Act, are also hereby applied to, and shall
be in force, in the Union Territory of Pondicherry." Section 3 of the
principal Act permitted the Government of Pondicherry to make provisions or
give directions as may be necessary for removal of difficulty, in giving effect
to the provisions of the Madras Act in so far as the provisions made or the
directions issued were not inconsistent with the provisions of the Madras Act
or the Rules made there under.
Under section 1(2) of the principal Act, a
notification was issued by the Government of Pondicherry on the 1st of March,
1966, directing that the principal Act shall come into force with effect from
1st April, 1966. Thereafter, various proceedings were sought to be taken under
the Madras Act as applied to Pondicherry in respect of persons covered by the
principal Act, including the petitioner. The petitioner then moved this
petition on 4th May, 1966. In the petition, the validity of the proceedings was
challenged on the ground that the principal Act was 664 void because of
excessive delegation of legislative functions by the Pondicherry Legislature to
the Madras Legislature. In fact, it was urged that the Pondicherry Legislature
had, by enacting the principal Act in the form mentioned above, abdicated its
legislative functions and had given the power to the Madras Legislature to
enact for Pondicherry, because, after the principal Act had been enacted on
25th May, 1965, and before it was enforced on 1st April, 1966, it was open to
the Madras Legislature to make any amendments it liked in the Madras Act, and
by virtue of s.2 (1) of the principal Act, the Madras Act that was to come into
force in Pondicherry would be as amended by the Madras Legislature and not as
it was originally at the time when the principal Act was enacted. The
submission was that the principal Act, on this ground, was a nullity and a dead
letter. It was further urged that material parts of the principal Act were
vague and unintelligible and, therefore, void. The principal Act being void, it
was claimed that proceedings being taken under it for imposition of sales-tax
on the petitioner amounted to proceedings for depriving him of property without
any authority of law and, consequently, infringed the fundamental right of the
petitioner guaranteed by Article 31 of the Constitution.
It may, however, be mentioned that,
subsequent to the filing of this writ petition, the Pondicherry Legislature
passed the Pondicherry General gales Tax (Amendment) Act, 1966 (No. 13 of 1966)
(hereinafter referred to as "the Amending Act") which received the
assent of the President on 2nd November,1966 and was published in the Gazette
dated 9th November, 1966. By this Amending Act, ;a number of amendments were
made in the principal Act. Sub-s.(2) of s.
1 of the principal Act was altered by s. 2 of
the Amending Act so as to read as follows:"(2) It shall come into force on
the 1st day of April,' 1966." A number of amendments were made in s. 2 of
the principal Act also by s. 3 of the Amending Act. One of the amendments was
that for the words "commencement of this Act" in sub-s. (1) of s. 2
of the principal Act, the words "1st day of April, 1966" were
substituted. There were a few other amendments in sub-s.(1) of s. 2 by which
various clauses were added, the effect of which was to make alterations in the
provisions of the Madras Act as applied to Pondicherry by the principal Act. A
further amendment substituted the following for sub-s. (2) of s. 2 of the
principal Act:
"(2) The Madras General Sales Tax Rules,
1959 and any other rules made or issued under the said Act and similarly in
force, in so far as their application is required for the purpose of
effectively applying the provisions of the said Act, shall also extend to 665
and be in force in the Union Territory of Pondicherry until such time rules are
framed under section 53 of the said Act".
By section 5 of the Amending Act, provision
was made for validating imposition of taxes, its collection and other
proceedings taken in pursuance of the principal Act which had been brought into
force on 1st April, 1966, and it was laid down that all such action taken shall
be deemed to be, and to have always been, validly levied and collected, as if
the principal Act, as amended by the Amending Act, had been in force at all
material times. Sub-s.(2) of s. 1 of the Amending Act further laid down that
this Amending Act shall be deemed to have come into force on 1st April, 1966,
with the exception of two sub-clauses of sub-s. (1) of section 3 of the
Amending Act which are not material to the present case. The effect of this
provision was that the Amendments introduced by sections 2, 3 and 4 of the
Amending Act (with the exception of the amendments introduced by the two sub clauses
mentioned above) in the principal Act took effect from 1st April, 1966. When
this petition came to be argued, Mr. S. T. Desai on behalf of the petitioner
challenged the validity of the Amending Act also on the ground that this
Amending Act could not revive the principal Act which was already null and void
and which had to be treated as stillborn. A further point taken on behalf of
the petitioner was that, even if the Amending Act be otherwise valid, the
amended sub-section (2) of s. 2 of the principal Act must still be held to be
void, because, even after the amendment, the power was allowed to vest in the
Madras Government to frame Rules under s. 53 of the Madras Act.
The main stay of the challenge to the
validity of the principal Act on behalf of the petitioner was that the effect
of sections 1(2) and 2(1) of that Act, as originally enacted and published on
30th June, 1965, was that the Madras Legislature had the op(ion. of amending
the Madras Act at any time before the commencement of the principal Act under
the notification issued by the Pondicherry Government, and this amounted to
delegation by the Pondichery Legislature of its power of legislating on this
subject for Pondicherry to the Madras Legislature., It appears to us that this
submission is not quite correct. Under sub-s. (2) of s. 1 the delegation was to
the Pondicherry Government to fix, the commencement of the Act by specifying
the date by a notification issued by it. The Pondicherry Government could
always choose such a date for bringing into force the principal Act that it
should fall before any amendment in the Madras Act could be made by the Madras
Legislature. If the Madras Legislature proposed any amendment in the Madras Act
after the publication of the principal Act, the Pondicherry Government would
certainly come to know 666 as soon as the Bill for the purpose of that
amendment was introduced in the Madras Legislature, and in such circumstances,
the Pondicherry Government had the option of immediately issuing a notification
commencing the operation of-the principal Act, wherepon the un-amended Madras
Act would have come into force. In the alternative, the Pondicherry Government
could wait till the Madras Legislature passed the Act amending the Madras Act,
in which case, by a subsequent notification, the Pondicherry Government could
ensure that the Madras Act which came into force in Pondicherry would be as
thus amended by the Madras Legislature. The choice as to the nature of the
Madras Act which should come into force in Pondicherry was, therefore, at the
option of, the Pondicherry Government and not at the option of the Madras
Legislature. It is thus clear that there was delegation of power by the
Pondicherry Legislature to the Pondicherry Government to the extent that the
latter could either bring into force the 'Madras Act as it" stood when the
principal Act was published on 30th June; 1965 or could, at its option, enforce
the Madras Act as subsequently amended by the Madras Legislature, which would
amount to giving it the discretion to apply a, future law to be passed by the,
Madras Legislature. In these circumstances, Mr. Setalvad, appearing on behalf
of the respondent. relied on the views of this Court expressed in In re the Delhi
Laws Act'. 1912, the Ajmer-Merwara (Extension of Laws) Act 1947, the Part C
States (Laws) Act, 1950 (1). In that case, the seven learned Judges of this
Court constituting the 'Bench' delivered separate opinions, but the effect of
their opinions was subsequently summarised by this Court in Rajnarain Singh v,
The Chairman, Patna Administration Committee, Patna and Another(2). In that
case ' Bose J., speaking for the Court, summarised the views of the Court in re
The Delhi Laws Act, 1912(1) as follows "The Court had before it the
following problems. In each case, the Central Legislature had empowered an
executive authority under its legislative control to apply, at its discretion,
laws to an area which was also under the relative sway of the Centre. The
variations occur in the type' of laws, which the executive authority was
authorised to select and in the modifications which it was empowered to make in
them. The variations were as follows:
(1) Where the executive 'authority was
permitted. at its discretion, to apply without modification (save incidental
changes such as name and place), the whole of any Central Act already in
existence in any Dart of India under the legislative sway of the Centre to the
new area:
This was upheld by a majority of six to one.
(1) [1951] S. C. R. 747.
(2) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 290 667 (2) Where the
executive authority was allowed to select and apply a Provincial Act in similar
circumstances: This was upheld, but this time by a majority of five to two.
(3) Where the, executive authority was
permitted to select future Central laws and apply them in a similar way:
This was upheld by five to two.
(4) Where the authorisation was to select
future. Provincial laws and apply them as above:
This was also upheld by five to two.
(5) Where the authorisation was to repeal
laws, already in force ' in the, area and either substitutes nothing in their
places or substitute other laws, Central or Provincial, with or without
modification:
This was held to be ultra vires by a majority
of' four to three.
(6) where the authorisation was to apply
existing laws, either Central or Provincial, with alterations and
modifications; and (7) Where the authorisation was to applyfuture laws under
the same conditions:
The views of the various members of the Bench
were not as clear cut here as in the first five cases, so it will be necessary
to analyse what each Judge said." Mr. Setalvad relied on proposition No.
(4) which was to the effect that where the authorisation to a Government was to
select future Provincial laws and apply them to the Centrally-administered
territory; the provision containing that authorisation was upheld by a majority
of 5 Judges to
2. It was urged by him that this, decision is
binding on us and, on its basis, we should hold that the delegation of its legislative
power, amounting to authorisation to the Pondicherry Government to choose
whether the Madras, Act should come into force in Pondicherry unamended or as
subsequently amended, was valid. Apart from the fact that attempt was made to
cast doubt on the correctness of this proposition relied upon by Mr. Setalvad,
Mr. Desai on behalf of the petitioner referred to the decision of this Court in
Vasantial Maganhaiv Sanjanwala v. The State of Bombay and Others(1) and urged
that the principal Act should be held invalid on the:
(1) [1961] 1 S. C. R. 341.
668 principle laid down in that case on the
ground that, in the case before us, the legislation passed by the Pondicherry
Legislature :amounted to complete abdication of its functions in favour of the
Madras Legislature. It was further urged by Mr. Desai that in ,re the Delhi
Laws Act, 1912 case(1) at least two of the Judges, who enunciated the
proposition relied upon by the respondent, had emphasised the aspect that
delegation of power in the three Acts, which came up for consideration in that
case, was justified on the ground that the power was being granted to Governments
of new or small territories which had no proper legislative machinery and for
which it was not possible to make detailed provision providing for a
legislative machinery and procedure separately. He drew our attention to the
fact that, in Pondicherry, a Legislature had already been brought into
existence by s. 18(1) of the Government of Union Territories Act No. 20 of
1963, and, consequently, the basis on which the opinion in re the Delhi Laws
Act, 1912 case(1) was expressed did not exist in Pondicherry. It was also
argued by him that the decision in that case should be read in the background
of the facts of that case which showed that the principle laid down was meant
to apply to small pockets of land spread all over India, viz., the State of
Delhi, Ajmer, Merwara and Part C States, and should not be read as laying down
a principle of general applicability.
In our opinion, it not at all necessary for
us to enter into this controversy in the present case, because of our view
that, even if it be held that the principal Act was bad for excessive
delegation of powers when it was enacted and published, the subsequent Amending
Act passed by the Pondicherry Legislature had the effect of bringing into force
in Pondicherry a valid Act, under which proceedings sought to be taken against
the petitioner were fully justified. We proceed to give our reasons for this
view.
The Amending Act, as we have indicated
earlier, was brought into operation retrospectively with effect from 1st April,
1966, except in respect of two sub-clauses of s. 3(1). The two important
amendments introduced in the principal Act by the Amending Act were those in
s.1 (2) and s. 2(1) of the principal Act which had the effect that the
principal Act was to come into force in Pondicherry not by virtue of the
notification issued by the Pondicherry Government, but by virtue of the terms
contained in that Act itself When the Pondicherry Government issued the
notification on 1st March, 1966, laying down that the Principal Act was to come
into force with effect from 1st April, 1966, that power did, in fact, vest in
the Pondicherry Government under that Act as it stood at that time. However, on
1st April, 1966, the position completely changed as a result of the
retrospective operation of the Amending Act. On that date, s. 1(2) of the
principal Act, because of the retrospective operation of the Amending Act, had
to be read as if it laid down that (1) [1951] S. C. R. 747.
669 that Act was to come into force on 1st
April, 1966 as a result of the amendment of S. 2(1) of that Act. It has not
been urged before us and could not be urged on behalf of the petitioner that
the Pondicherry Legislature did not have the power to legislate
retrospectively. This retrospective legislation thus resulted in the
notification issued by the Pondicherry Government on 1st March, 1966 becoming
ineffective and inoperative. After this legislation, it has to be held that the
principal Act came into force in Pondicherry not as a result of the
notification, but as a result of the provision contained in that Act itself in
s.1(2). Similarly, the effect of the retrospective amendment of s. 2(1) of the
principal Act was that the Madras Act which was to be extended to Pondicherry
was as it stood on 1st April, 1966, and this policy was laid down by the
Pondicherry Legislature itself by passing the Amending Act subsequently in
November, 1966. It is true that the Madras Act was in fact amended to some
extent by the Madras General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) ' Act, 1965 (No. 3 of
1965) which came into force with effect from 1st December, 1965.
Initially, when the principal Act came into
force in Pondicherry with effect from 1st April, 1966, this Amendment Act
passed by the Madras Legislature also became effective in Pondicherry, because
the Pondicherry Government notified that the principal Act was to commence with
effect from 1st April, 1966; but, subsequently, when the Amending Act was
passed by the Pondicherry Legislature, it became clear that the Pondicherry
Legislature itself decided that the Madras Act which should come into force in
the territory of Pondicherry should be as it stood amended by the Madras
General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act No. 30 of 1965.
Thus, the effect of this subsequent Amending
Act was that the Pondicherry Legislature unequivocally and in clear terms
itself laid down the policy as to the provisions of the Madras Act which were
to be extended to Pondicherry and were to govern the levy of sales tax in that
territory. There was, therefore, no uncertainty left as to the intention of the
Pondicherry Legislature. The Act, as ultimately applicable to Pondicherry, was
the Act which the Pondicherry Legislature approved of in the Amending Act
enacted subsequently in November, 1966. Our attention was also drawn to the
Madras General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1966 (No. 18 of 1966) which
was passed by the Madras Legislature on 22nd November, 1966, under which a
retrospective amendment was made in the Madras Act to take effect from 1st
April, 1959 It was urged that this retrospective amendment made by the Madras
Legislature would be effective in Pondicherry also, because the Madras Act,
which was brought into force in Pondicherry by the principal Act, must be
deemed to have stood amended in accordance with this Act with effect from 1st
April, 1959. We are unable to accept this contention. The Madras Act, which was
extended to Pondicherry, was as it stood on let April, 1966, and the
Pondicherry Legislature made it effective in Pondicherry 670 by passing the
retrospective Amending, Act, which Act itself as. published On 9th November,
1966. Any subsequent amendment made by the Madras Legislature, even. if it
purported to be retrospective, could only apply to the Madras Act as it:
continued in four, in, Madras and could not, thereafter, have any effect on the
Madras Act which had already been brought into force-, in Pondicherr-y with
effect from 1st April, 1966.
In this connection, Mr. Desai urged that the
principal Act being void on the ground of excessive delegation of powers, it
should be treated as still-born and nonexistent and, consequently the Amending
Act could not; revive it and should also be held' to be ineffective. This point
raised, by him. fails on two grounds. One ground is that the effect of the Amending
Act was to amend the principal Act before that principal Act could become void,
one the ground of excessive delegation of powers. It is true that that Act was
published on June 30, 1965, 'but it did not come into operation, on that date.
Its commencement was postponed and, con sequently, it was brought into
operation with effect: from 1st April, 1966. By the time that it, was brought
into effect, the so-called defect of excessive delegation of powers was already
removed because of the retrospective operation of the Amending Act. On 1st
April, 1966, when the principal Act came into force by virtue of the amendment
made in s. 1(2) by the Amending Act the defect of excessive delegation already
stood cured. The principal Act must, therefore, be held to have been brought
into force only after the defect of excessive delegation had already been
re-moved and, consequently, it cannot be said that the Amending Act could not
validly operate and cure the defect'.
Mr. Desai referred us to the decisions of
this Court in Deep Chand v. The Stare of Uttar Pradesh and Others,(1) and
Mahendra Lai Jaini v. The State of Uttar Pradesh and Others(2) where it was
held that a law made contravention of Art. 13(2) of the Constitution was void
ab initio and the defect could not be cured even by a subsequent amendment of
the Constitution. For the same principle, reference: 'was Also made to the case
of' the State of South' Australia 'and Another etc. v. :The Commonwealth and.
Another(3)' The principle laid down in these cases is not applicable to the
case before us. In those cases, the 1 law that came up for consideration was void,
because it had been made by the Legislature in excess of its: legislative
powers.. In the present case the principal Act was clearly, within the
competence, of the Pondicherry Legislatureand is being attacked as void only on
the ground that it was defective inasmuch as it contained excessive delegation
of its, legislative empowers by the Pondicherry Legislature to. the Madras
Legislature. There (1) [1959]supp 2 S.C.R. 8.
(2) [1963] SUPP. I. S.R.912 (3)65 C.L. R. 373
671 is nothing in the Constitution which prohibits the substitution of a
defective law by a law which is not subject to any infirmity.
The second ground is that, in any case, it
cannot be held that the whole of the principal Act was void even when it was
published on 30th June, 1965 and was purported to be brought into force by the
notification of the Pondicherry Government dated 1st March', 1966. Under the
principal Act, there was no doubt, the general provision that the Madras Act
was to be extended to pondicherry as it stood immediately before the
commencement, of the principal Act, but there were at least some provisions of
the Madras Act which were to-come into force, in Pondicherry in the form laid
down by the Pondicherry. Legislature in the principal Act itself, and any
amendments made in those provisions by the Madras Legislature in the
interregnum would have been totally ineffective. By s. 2(1) (ix) of the
principal Act, for. section 30 of the Madras Act, an entirely new section 30
was substituted. Similarly, a new First Schedule was substituted for the First
Schedule contained in the Madras Actby s. 2(1) (x) of the principal Act. The
result was that, even if the Madras Legislature had made any amendments in s.
30 and the first Schedule of the Madras Act, those amendments would not have
been effective in Pondicherry, because, on the commencement of the principal
Act in Pondicherry, under the notification issued by the.
Pondicherry Government, section 30 and the
First, Schedule of the Madras Act, as extended to Pondicherry, were to stand in
the form laid down in the principal Act itself and, not either in the form in
which they were originally contained in the Madras Act, or in the form in which
they might have stood as a result of a subsequent amendment made by the
Madras.Iegislature before the commencement of the principle Act. Consequently,
it must be hold that at least the provisions contained in s. 2(1)(ix) and s.
2(1.)(x) of the principal Act did not contain any element of delegation of
legislative power and must, therefore, be held to have been valid from the very
beginning. If at least these provisions of the principal Act were valid, the
whole of the principal Act could not I be treated as still-born and void ab
initio.
Some parts of that Act I were validly in
force when the Amending Act was passed in November, 1966. If the principal Act
was, to some extent, validly en forced, there could be no bar to the
Pondicherry Legislature amending it retrospectively so as to validate those
parts of, the principal Act which might, have been invalid on the ground of
excessive delegation of legislative power. The Amending Act, thus, effectively
cured the defect in the principal Act on the basis of which. its validity was
challenged on behalf of the petitioner before us.
Lastly, Mr. Desai challenged the validity of
sub-s.(2) of section 2 of the principal Act as it now stands after the
enforcement of the Amending Act on the ground that, even under this provision
there is delegation of legislative power to the Madras Government 672 which is
totally unjustified. His submission was that under the amended sub-s. (2) of
s.2 of the principal Act, the power to frame fresh Rules under the Madras Act
as extended to Pondicherry is still vested in the Madras Government.
This submission is based on the fact that the
amended sub-s.
(2) of s. 2 lays down that the Madras General
Sales Tax Rules, 1959, were to remain in force until such time as Rules are
framed under s.53 of the "said Act". Reliance is placed on the
expression "of the said Act", because the expression "said
Act" under sub-s. (1) of s. 2 of the principal Act is indicated as
referring to the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959. We do not, however, think
that this interpretation sought to be placed by Mr. Desai is correct. When the
amended sub-s. (2) of the principal Act refers to the Madras Act by using the
expression " said Act" at the end of that provision, it is clear that
the reference is to the Madras General Sales Act, 1959 as extended to the
territory of Pondicherry, and, under s. 2(1)(ii), the reference in the Madras
Act as extended to Pondicherry to "Government" has to be construed as
a reference to the "Administrator" appointed by the President under
Article 239 of the Constitution of India for 'Pondicherry. The result is that,
under the amended provisions of the principal Act, the Rules are to be framed
by the Administrator of the Territory of Pondicherry and not by the Madras
Government.
No such defect, as urged by learned counsel,
thus remains after the enforcement of the Amending Act.
The result is that we must hold that the
principal Act as amended by the Amending Act now in force in the State of
Pondicherry is validly in force and the proceedings that were taken against the
petitioner, which were challenged by this petition have been validated by s. 5
of the Amending Act and are no longer open to challenge. The petition fails and
is dismissed with costs.
ORDER In accordance with the opinion of the
majority, the petitions are allowed with costs. One hearing fee.
R.K.P.S.
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