Hari Chand Aggarwal Vs. Batala
Engineering Co. Ltd. [1968] INSC 224 (24 September 1968)
24/09/1968 GROVER, A.N.
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C. (CJ) RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION: 1969 AIR 483 1969 SCR (2) 201
ACT:
Defence of India Act, 1962, ss. 40, 29-Powers
of Central Government under s. 29 delegated to District Magistrates- District
Magistrate whether includes Additional District Magistrate-Effect of
notification issued under s. 10(2) of Code of Criminal Procedure.
HEADNOTE:
By notification under s. 40(1) of the Defence
of India Act, 1962 the powers of the Central Government in respect of certain
sections of the Act including s. 29 thereof were conferred on Collectors,
District Magistrates, Deputy Commissioners and political officers in Nefa. The
Additional District Magistrate of Batala in the Punjab acting under s. 29 of
the Act passed an order requisitioning a shop belonging to the respondent which
was occupied by the appellant as a tenant. The appellant challenged the order
of requisition in a writ petition to the High Court without success. In appeal
before this Court the question that fell for consideration was whether an
additional District Magistrate was empowered under s. 10(2) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure to exercise the powers under s. 29 of the Defence of India
Act delegated by the Central Government to District Magistrates.
HELD: The powers of requisitioning are of a
very drastic nature and involve the fundamental rights in respect of property
guaranteed under Art. 19 ( 1 ) (f) of the Constitution. The Central Government
while making the delegation of its power under s. 29 of the Act must ordinarily
be presumed to be fully conscious of this aspect of the matter and it was for
that reason that an officer or authority of the high status of a District
Magistrate in the District was empowered to exercise that power. There was also
no. reason in the present case to deviate from the normal rule that the
expressions or words used in the notification must be read as such and not in
any other manner unless the context requires that the latter course should be
followed, and the words "District Magistrate" could not be possibly
read as "Additional District Magistrate". [207 B-D] The notification
issued under s. 10(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure could not serve to
confer on the Additional District Magistrate the powers of the District
Magistrate under s. 29 of the Defence of India Act for the same reasons as
prevailed with. the Nagpur High. Court in Prabhulal Ramlal Kabras case in
denying to the Additional District Magistrate the power of the District
Magistrate under R. 26 of the Defence of India Rules. [207 E, 206 E-F]
Prabhulal Ratnlal Kabra v. Emperor, A.I.R. 1944- Nag. 84, approved and applied.
Ajaib Singh v. State of Punjab, [1965] 2
S.C.R. 845, Central Talkies Ltd. Kanpur v. Dwarka Prasad, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 495
and Guru Dutt v. Sohan Singh & Ant. I.L.R. 1965 Punj. 134, referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 681 of 1966.
sup CI/69-14 202 Appeal by special leave from
the judgment and order dated April 22, 1965 of the Punjab High Court in Civil
Writ No. 719 of 1964.
B.P. Maheshwari and Sobhag Mal Jain, for the
appellant.
W.S. Barlingay, Brij Mohan Lal and Ganpat
Rai, for respondents Nos. 1 and 3.
Hardev Singh, R.N. Sachthey, and B.D. Sharma,
for respondents Nos. 2, 4 and 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. This is an appeal by special leave from the judgment of the Punjab
High Court in which the sole question involved is whether the Additional
District Magistrate, Gurdaspur who had been invested with all the powers of the
District Magistrate under s. 10(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure could make
an order under s. 29(1) of the Defence of India Act, 1962, hereinafter called
the "Act", requisitioning a shop belonging to Batala Engineering Co. Ltd.
which was in occupation of the appellant as. a tenant.
The facts may be shortly stated. The
appellant claims to have been carrying on the business of a Commission Agent in
machines in the said shop at Batala for the last 10 years as a tenant on a
monthly rental of Rs. 20. According to the allegations made by the appellant
herein in the petition which he filed in the High Court under Arts. 226 and 227
of the Constitution, Batala Engineering Co. Ltd. (respondent No. 1 herein) had
filed an application for his ejectment in January 1964 before the Rent
Controller, Batala but realising the weakness of its case the said respondent
resorted to the device of getting the shop requisitioned at the instance of the
Labour Commissioner who wrote to the Additional District Magistrate that the
shop was required for setting up a Cooperative Consumer Store. On March 24,
1964, the Additional District Magistrate (respondent No. 2 herein) issued a
requisitioning order purporting to be under s. 29 of the Act requisitioning the
shop in question and directing the tenant to surrender and deliver possession
thereof to the Manager, Cooperative Consumer Store, Batala, within two days of
the service of the order. The requisitioning order was challenged by means of a
writ petition on two grounds; the first was that it had been made mala fide and
the second was that the notification which had been issued under s. 40 (1 ) of
the Act by the Central Government empowering among others the District Magistrate
to exercise powers which were exercisable by the Central Government under s. 29
in addition to other sections (which it is unnecessary to mention) was illegal
and invalid. The petition was resisted by respondents 1 and 2 and the
assertions and contentions of the appellant were controverted.
203 The Division Bench of the High Court (the
writ petition had been referred by a learned Single Judge to a Division Bench)
held that the allegation of mala fides had not been proved. It further held
that the Additional District Magistrate was competent to make the
requisitioning order since he had been empowered to exercise the powers of a
District Magistrate under s. 10(2) of the Cr. P. Code. The writ petition was
consequently dismissed.
It is necessary first to notice certain
provisions of the Act. Section 29 empowers the Central Government or the State
Government to requisition any immoveable property in the circumstances
mentioned in the section by an order in writing. Section 40 which provides for
the power to delegate may be set out in entirety:
"S. 40( 1 ) The Central Government may,
by order, direct that any power or duty which by this Act or by any rule made
under this Act is conferred or imposed upon the Central Government shall, in
such circumstances and under such conditions, if any, as may be specified in
the direction, be exercised or discharged also-- (a) by any officer or
authority subordinate to the Central Government, or (b) whether or not the
power or duty relates to a matter with respect to which a State Legislature has
power to make laws, by any State Government or by any officer or authority
subordinate to such Government, or (c) by any other authority.
(2) The State Government may, by order,
direct that any power or duty which by this Act or by any rule made under this
Act is conferred or. imposed on the State Government or which, being by this
Act or any such rule conferred or imposed on the Central Government, has been
directed under sub- section (1) to be exercised or discharged by the State
Government, shall, in such circumstances and under such conditions, if any as
may be specified in the direction, be exercised or discharged by any officer or
authority not being (except in the case of a Union territory) an officer or
authority subordinate to the Central Government." On December 13, 1962 the
Central Government promulgated a notification delegating its power under
certain sections of the Act including s. 29. This notification need not be set
out in extensor. Its material part is as follows :-- 204 "G.S.R. 1716---In
exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) of s. 40 of the Defence of
India Act 1962 (5 of 1962) and of all other powers enabling it in this behalf,
the Central Government hereby directs that the powers exercisable by it under
the provisions the said Act specified in column (2) of the Schedule hereto
annexed shall also he exercisable by each of the authorities mentioned in the
corresponding entry in column (3) of the said schedule in respect of any
immovable property situated within its jurisdiction.
Schedule S.No. Provision of the Act
Authorities.
------------------------------------------------------------
1 2 3 ------------------------------------------------------------ 1.Section
29,30(ex- All collectors, District Mag- cept the provise the- istrates and
Deputy Commission reto),31,32,33,35, and ers in the State and all politi 36 and
sub-ss.(1)and (3) officers in Nefa.
of s. 37.
It is necessary now to turn to. the relevant
provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code in order to. determine whether the
Additional District Magistrate would be one of the authorities mentioned in
column 3. In Part II which is headed 'Constitution and Powers of Criminal
Courts and Offices', s. 6 gives the classes of criminal courts and s. 7 deals
with Sessions, divisions and districts. Section 9 provides for establishment of
court of Session. Section 10 lays down that in every district outside the
presidency towns the State Government shall appoint a Magistrate of the first
class who shall be called the District Magistrate. It is further provided that
the State Government may appoint any Magistrate of the first class to be an
Additional District Magistrate and such Additional District Magistrate shall
have all or any of the powers of a District Magistrate under the Code or under
any other law for the time being in force as the State Government may direct.
It may be mentioned that in the State of Punjab after the separation of
judiciary from the executive by the Punjab Separation of Judicial & Executive
Functions Act, 1964 (Act XXV of 1964) certain amendments were made in s. 10 but
in the present case we are not concerned with them because the impugned order
requisitioning the shop in question was made before the said Act (XXV of 1964)
came into force.
It is well known that the object of
appointing an Additional District Magistrate is to relieve the District
Magistrate of some 205 of his duties and that he is subordinate to the District
Magistrate to the extent specified in sub-s. (3) of s. 10.
It is equally well known that the District
Magistrate occupies a very important position in the district and is the head
of the Executive there and he exercises powers of superintendence and control
over the other Magistrates in the district. Apart from the powers which have
been conferred by the Code of Criminal Procedure on him the District Magistrate
is also. known as the Collector for purposes of revenue laws. He is variously
called Collector in some States and Deputy Commissioner in other States.
Under s. 11 of the Code whenever in
consequence of the office of District Magistrate becoming vacant, any officer
succeeding temporarily to the Chief executive administration of the district
such officer also exercises all the powers and performs all the duties conferred
and imposed by the Code on the District Magistrate. The Additional District
Magistrate as has previously been noticed, can similarly exercise all or any of
the powers of a District Magistrate if the State Government makes a direction
under s. 10(2) of the Code but even an officer who heads the chief executive
administration of the district temporarily under s. 11, exercises all the
powers of a District Magistrate. The scheme of s. 10 of the Code leaves no,
room for doubt that the District Magistrate and the Additional District
Magistrate are two different and distinct authorities and even though the
latter may be empowered under sub-s. (2) to exercise all or any of the powers
of a District Magistrate but by no stretch of reasoning can an Additional
District Magistrate be called the District Magistrate which are the words
employed in sub-s. (1) of s. 10.
The argument which prevailed in the High
Court and which the appellant has had to seriously meet in this Court, is that
the Additional District Magistrate when invested by the State Government under
s. 10 (2) of the Code with all or any of the powers of the District Magistrate
under the Code or under any other law for the time being in force, would
squarely fall within the expression "District Magistrate" employed in
column 3 of the notification dated December 13, 1962 by means of which the
Central Government delegated its power under certain sections of the Act
including s. 29.
The reasoning of the High Court was that on a
proper construction of the notification it was clear that the "Central
Government was desirous of delegating its power in favour of the officers in
fact and actually discharging duties and functions in exercising the powers of
Collectors, District Magistrates and Deputy Commissioners.
The High Court also looked at the other
provisions in respect of which the powers had been delegated and drew the
conclusion that the delegation was not confined only to officers appointed as
such under s. 10(1 ) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Learned counsel for the
appellant has assailed the decision of the High Court principally on two
grounds for which he has sought support from a decision of the Nagpur High
Court in Prabhulal Ramlal Kabra v. Emperor(1). In that case an order had been
made under Rule 26 of the Defence of India Rules by the Additional District
Magistrate of Raipur directing the detention of one Bharatchandra Kabra. That
Rule conferred power of detention on the Central Government and the Provincial
Government but by virtue of the provisions relating to delegation the District
Magistrate had been empowered by the Provincial Government to exercise those
powers. The Additional District Magistrate who made the order of detention had
been conferred powers under s. 10(2) Cr. Pt. Code almost in similar terms as
are to be found in the present case. In other words he could exercise all the
powers of a District Magistrate under the Code or under any other law for the
time being in force. Two points were agitated before the Nagpur court; the
first was that the word "law" in "any other law" occurring
.in s. 10(2) of the Code was not meant to include an executive order but only
legislative enactments, and rules, regulations or orders which had the force of
law. The second was that the Act and the Rules made there under were special
laws enacted to meet an emergency and they conferred extraordinary and drastic
powers on the executive and it was precisely for that reason that it was
imperative that those powers must be exercised with due sense of responsibility
and with circumspection by an officer or authority of a certain status and
experience and, therefore, that power had been delegated to the District
Magistrate. Both these contentions prevailed with the Nagpur High Court and it
was held that the Additional District Magistrate could not exercise powers
under Rule 26 of the Defence of India Rules simply by virtue of the
notification under s. 10(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. There is an
exhaustive discussion on the first point in the Nagpur judgment but it is
altogether unnecessary to examine its correctness because we are of the opinion
that most of the reasons given in support of the determination of the second
point are clear and cogent and must be accepted as correct. These reasons may
be summarised as follows (i) very wide, 'almost autocratic, powers are
conferred on the Government in the matter of detention .and therefore they must
be exercised with a due sense of responsibility and circumspection by an
officer of a certain status and experience; (ii) when the Government delegates
its power to an officer or authority subordinate to it, is not unreasonable to
assume that it fully considers the fitness of the delegate before making the
order in respect of delegation: (iii) the Additional District Magistrate who is
invested with the powers of a District Magistrate does not thereby attain the
status of a District Magistrate as there can be only one person (1) A.I.R. 1944
Nag. 84.
207 in the district who can be a District
Magistrate and (iv) the Government when it conferred the power on the District
Magistrate conferred it on the officer actually holding the office of the
District Magistrate and no one else.
It has not been disputed that the powers of
requisitioning are of a very drastic nature and involve the fundamental rights
in respect of property guaranteed under Art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution. The
Central Government while making the delegation of its power under s. 29 of the
Act must ordinarily be presumed to be fully conscious of this aspect of the
matter and it was for that reason that an officer or authority of the high
status of a District Magistrate in the district was empowered to exercise that
power.
Apart from these considerations we see no
reason to deviate from the normal rule that the expressions or words which have
been used in the notification must be read as such and not in any other manner
unless the context requires that the latter course should be followed. In the
present case the words "District Magistrate" could not possibly be
read as Additional District Magistrate and it is only by resorting to the
notification issued under s. 10(2) of the Code that the Additional District
Magistrate can be said to have empowered to exercise the powers of the District
Magistrates. The reasons which prevailed with the Nagpur court and which have
already been summarised adequately meet the contrary view that the Additional
District Magistrate should be held to be competent to act under s. 29 of the
Act even though the Nagpur case was one of detention.
Coming to. the decisions of this Court not
much assistance can be derived from them. In Ajaib Singh v. State of Punjab(1)
the Additional District Magistrate of Amritsar who had been invested with the
powers of a District Magistrate under s. 10(2) of the Code was incharge of the
office of the District Magistrate when the latter was transferred. He passed an
order detaining a person under Rule 30(1)(b)of the Defence of India Rules 1962.
It was held that the Act and the Rules showed unmistakably that the powers of
detention could be exercised only by the State Government or by an officer or
authority to whom it might be delegated but who. shall, in no case, be lower in
rank than a District Magistrate. The Additional District Magistrate was below
the rank of a District Magistrate and even though he had been invested with all
the powers under the Code and also under any other law for the time being in
force he was still not the District Magistrate unless the Government appointed
him as such under s. 10(1). This case would have been most apposite for the
present case but for the clear distinction that in provisions (1) [1965] 2
S.C.R. 845.
208 under which the detention was made it was
provided that the powers could be delegated to no one who. was lower in rank
than a District Magistrate. There is no such provision in the matter of
delegation in the present case. One rule, however, emerges quite clearly which
is even otherwise unexceptionable that unless a person has been appointed under
s. 10( 1 ) of the Code he cannot be called a District Magistrate and that an
Additional District Magistrate is below the rank of a District Magistrate.
The Central Talkies Ltd. Kanpur v. Dwarka
Prasad(1) on which reliance was placed by the counsel for the respondents
related to interpretation of certain provisions of the U.P. (Temporary) Control
of Rent and Eviction Act 1947. Section 3 of that Act enabled a landlord to file
a suit for eviction of the tenant with the permission of the District
Magistrate. Section 2(d) defined District Magistrate as including an officer
authorised by the District Magistrate to perform any of his functions under the
Act. By a notification issued under s. 10(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
one Mr. Seth was appointed as an Additional District Magistrate with a, Il the
powers of the District Magistrate. The landlord applied to the District
Magistrate for permission to file a suit for ejectment against the tenant. The
District Magistrate transferred that application to the Additional District
Magistrate who granted permission. The tenant challenged the same on the ground
that the permission granted by the Additional District Magistrate was invalid
as the District Magistrate mentioned in s. 3 of the aforesaid Act was persona
designate. This contention was repelled by this Court and it was observed that
a persona designate was a person selected as an individual in his private
capacity, and not in his capacity as filling a particular character or office.
This case is clearly distinguishable on the ground that under s. 3 of the U.P.
Act the District Magistrate himself could authorise any officer to perform any
of his functions. That showed that the legislature did not intend that the
functions to be performed under s. 3 must be performed by the District
Magistrate alone and by no one else. Counsel for the appellant has called
attention to a Bench decision of the Punjab High Court in Guru Datt v. Sohan
Singh & Another(2) in which a question arose whether the Deputy
Commissioner for the purposes of an election petition under the Punjab
Panchayat Samities and Zila Parishads. Act 1961 and the Rules framed thereunder
was a persona designate and it was held that it was the Deputy Commissioner
alone who could perform the functions which the statute and the rules conferred
on him even though the Governor had made an order declaring the ex-cadre posts
of Additional Deputy Commissioners to be equivalent in (1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 495.
(2)I.L.R. 1969 Punj.
209 status to the cadre posts of Deputy Commissioners.
This decision may be open to some criticism owing to the observations made in
Central Talkies' case(1). However, in the present case we are not basing .our
decision by taking into consideration the line of argument of persona
designata.
For the reasons which have already been
stated the appeal is allowed with costs, with the result that the writ petition
filed in the High Court succeeds and the impugned order shall stand quashed.
G.C. Appeal allowed.
(1) [1961] 3 S.C,R. 495.
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