Municipal Committee, Amritsar &
Ors Vs. State of Punjab & ANR [1969] INSC 236 (12 September 1969)
12/09/1969 GROVER, A.N.
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION: 1970 AIR 2182 1970 SCR (2) 375 1969
SCC (2) 823
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 31A (1)(b)
and 31(2)--Management schools taken over for limited period--Property
pertaining also acquired-Acquisition in violation of Art. 31(2)--If protected
by Art. 31A(1) (b)--Punjab Municipal Act (3 of 1911), ss. 52(1)(g) and 59
Constitutional validity of--Punjab Local Authorities (Aided Schools) Act (22 of
1959), ss. 3(2) and 6--Scope of--Act retrospective--Whether notification issued
there under also retrospective.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-Committee was constituted under
the Punjab Municipal Act 1911, and was running a number of municipal schools,
for some of which it was getting grant-in-aid from the respondent-State. The
respondent took an administrative decision, without any statutory authority, to
provincialise all the schools run by the local bodies in the State with effect
from October 1, 1957, and till June 1959, various steps in the process of
provincialisation were taken. In June 1959. the Punjab Local Authorities (Aided
Schools) Act, 1959. was passed after obtaining the assent of the President. The
Act was deemed to have come into force with effect from October 1, 1957.
The scheme of the Act is that it is initially
left to the local authority to pass a resolution to transfer the management and
control of aided schools to the State Government. In order to employ compulsive
persuasion the State Government can withdraw the grant-in-aid in respect of the
aided schools if such authority does not pass a resolution in terms of .s. 3
within a period of 3 months from the date of the enactment of the statute.
Section 5 gives power to the State Government to take over aided schools where
the local authority neglects to perform its duty or if it is considered
necessary in public interest to take over the management for a period not
exceeding ten years, but only after giving the local authority a reasonable
opportunity for showing cause. The proviso to the section arms the State
Government with powers, in case of emergency and in the interests of students,
to take over the management straight away after publication of a notification
to that effect. There is no provision, however, for an automatic retransfer of
the property after lapse of the period of 10 years. Section 6 introduces
amendments in ss. 52 and 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act.
Clause (g), introduced in s. 52(1), enables
the State Government to get an annual contribution from the local bodies, and
the amendments to s. 59, vest in the State not only the management of the
schools taken over but also the interests in the movable and immovable properties
pertaining thereto.
As the appellant decided not to. pass the
resolution under s. 3 the respondent issued a notification on September 26,
1960. taking over for a period of 10 year's, the management of the aided
schools specified in the schedule to the notification. On the question of
payment of the contribution it was resolved on January 3, 1962, that the
payment be made with effect from October 1, 1957, while retaining the
proprietary rights in the schools; but the appellant subsequently passed several
resolutions practically rescinding this resolution with respect to the payment
of any 376 contribution. On April 10, 1964, the appellant was required by order
to pay about Rs. 53 lakhs on account of the contribution for the maintenance of
the provincialised schools for the period 1957-58 to 1963-64. Thereupon, the
appellant filed a petition under Arts. 226 and 227 in the High Court,
challenging the orders and the constitutional validity of the Act. The petition
was dismissed.
In appeal to this Court it was contended: (1
) The taking over of the movable and immovable property of the appellant did
not fall within Art. 31A(1)(b) and the action was in direct contravention of
Art. 31(2); (2) The notification dated September 26, 1960, was not protected by
the proviso to s. 5, because, there was no question of any emergency, nor was
such emergency pleaded or proved by the respondent; (3) The notification could
not and did not validate the action prior to the date when it was issued;
(4) Section 6 of the Act which effected
amendments of the provisions of the Punjab Municipal Act could not be
attracted; and (5) Section 3(2) and the amendments which would become operative
under s. 6 in respect of ss. 52(1) and 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act, are void
and unconstitutional.
HELD: (1) Under Art. 31A(1)(b) it is only the
management and control of the aided schools, that could be taken over for a
limited period in the public interest or in order to secure their proper
management, but proprietary interests in movable and immovable properties
pertaining to the schools and belonging to the appellant could not be acquired.
In the present case in view of the terms of the resolution of January 3, 1962
and the subsequent resolutions of the appellant it could not be said that the
resolution fell within the first part of s. 3 and that action was taken by the
State pursuant to such resolution. The action was taken by the respondent only
under s. 5 and when once action was so. taken all the properties, movable and
immovable, belonging to the local body pertaining to the schools taken over,
became the property of the State, by virtue of the amendments made in s. 59 of
the Punjab Municipal Act. When the proprietary interest in the movable and
immovable property pertaining to the schools and belonging to the Committee is
thus acquired, the action is not protected by Art. 31A(1)(b) as it is nothing
short of compulsory acquisition within the meaning of Art. 31(2) of the
Constitution and is in violation of that .Article when there is no provision
for payment of compensation. [386; A---F;
387 F--G] (2) In the notification there was
no indication that the management of the schools was being taken over because
any emergency existed. The State could not show by placing material before the court
that it was a case of emergency justifying the action under the proviso, to s.
5. when no foundation in that behalf had been laid, in the writ petition. [388
B--C; D--E] (3) The mere fact that the Act in terms was retrospective would not
make the notification issued under the proviso. to s. 5, retrospective, in the
absence of express words or appropriate language from which retroactivity would
be implied. The notification only meant that the management was taken over from
the date of the notification and not from any prior date. Therefore.
whatever was done before the date of the
notification regarding the assumption of management and vesting of the
Committee's property was void and illegal. [389 A--C] (4) Under s. 6 of the Act
it is only after the local authority has passed a resolution under s. 3 or the
State Government has taken over management of the aided schools under s. 5,
that ss. 52 and 59 of the ' Punjab Municipal Act would be deemed to have been
amended in the 377 manner specified in the Schedule with effect from October 1,
1957. If the notification in the present case, could. not be given
retrospective operation, the amendments in the Punjab Municipal Act would be
effective only after the date of the notification and not for the prior period.
Thus, even on the assumption that the provisions of the Act are valid the State
could not ask for any contribution from the Committee for the period prior to
the date of the notification. [389 D--F] (5) By asking the Committee to make
contributions from its funds under the newly introduced el. g in s. 52(1), to
the cost of the schools which have been taken over by the State, part of its
funds are being compulsorily acquired by the State, which could not be done
except in accordance with the provisions contained in Art. 31(2). [390 C--D,
E-F] When the State Government makes a direction under s.
3(2) that the aided schools shall be taken
over, the proprietary and ownership rights of the Committee also vest in the
State Government. Further, s. 6 comes into operation as soon as a local
authority has passed a resolution under s. 3 or the State Government has taken
over management under s. 5, and the provisions relating to acquisition of
property of the Committee as also of its funds by way of contribution, come
immediately into operation by virtue of the amendments effected in ss. 52(1)
and 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act. [391 A--D] Since there is no. provision for
compensation in the Aided Schools Act or s. 59 of the Municipal Act, s. 3(2).of
the Aided Schools Act and the amendments in ss. 52(1) and 59 of the Punjab
Municipal Act are void and unconstitutional.
[391 D] Hence, the order by which, the
movable and immovable property of the Committee has been transferred to the
State contribution was sought be recovered, and the sum of Rs. 53 lakhs was
demanded, is illegal, [391 D--E] Municipal Committee, Amritsar v. State o!
Punjab, [1969] 3 S.C.R. 447, followed.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 1321 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave ,from the judgment
and order dated November 15, 1965 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ No.
878 of 1964.
Niren De, Attorney-General and Naunit Lal,
for the appellants.
Hardev Singh and R.N. Sachthey, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Grover,
J. This is an appeal by special leave from a judgment of the Punjab High Court
dismissing a petition under Arts. 226 and 227 of the ConStitution which had
been filed by the appellant Municipal Committee challenging the taking over by
the State of all the schools which were being run by it together with all the
buildings in which the schools were functioning and other movable and immovable
properties connected with these institutions 378 which belonged to the
Committee. The order of the State for payment of an annual contribution which
upto the date of the filing of the writ petition i.e. May 10, 1964 had reached
the figure of 53 lakhs was also challenged.
The appellant Committee is a first class.
Municipal Committee and has been in existence from a long time. It has been
managing its local affairs through the elected representatives from the city
who are called Municipal Commissioners. It is constituted and functions under
the provisions of the Punjab Municipal Act 1911. A number of primary schools were
being run by the Committee within the municipal limits of the town of Amritsar
for which it was getting grant-in-aid from the Punjab Government. It was,
however, running schools upto the middle and high standards for girls and boys
for which all the expenses were incurred by itself without any grant from the
Government. The primary liability, however, for incurring the extra expenditure
even in connection with the aided schools was of the Committee. The Punjab
Government took an administrative decision. to provincialise all the schools
run by all local bodies in the State with effect from October 1, 1957. This
information was conveyed by means of a letter dated July 19, 1957 by the
Secretary to the Government, Education Department, through the Deputy Commissioners
in Jullundur and Ambala Divisions. At a meeting of the appellant Committee held
on July 31, 1957 a resolution was passed that a strong representation be made
to the Government against the decision to provincialise the schools run by the
local bodies. On September 26, 1957 the Assistant Director of Schools wrote to
the District Inspector that "as all the local body schools are being
provincialised with effect from October 1, 1957 the tuition fees etc. to be
realized in such schools after that date should be credited to the Government
in the treasury under the head ......... " Without enacting any
legislation the State took over all the schools run by the local bodies on
October 1, 1957. A memorandum from the Director of Public Instructions, Punjab
to the District" Inspector of Schools sent on October 5, 1957 conveyed the
following direction:
"All the erstwhile Local Body Schools
which have been provincialised with effect from the 1st October, 1957 will
henceforth be known. as Government High/ Middle/Primary Schools for Boys or
Girls as the case may be".
The Executive Officer of the appellant
Committee (appointed under the Punjab Municipal Executive Officers Act 1931)
wrote to the Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar on November 21, 1957 that no formal
orders had been received from the Government requiring the Committee to give up
possession of the schools and it appeared 379 that no procedure had so far been
devised in that behalf or for the settlement of terms and conditions on which
the buildings, furniture, fittings and other materials were to be transferred.
He pressed for proper steps being taken.
The Secretary to the Government, Punjab,
Health and Local Government Department sent a memorandum dated September 10,
1958 to all the Deputy Commissioners saying that the work of proper maintenance
of the buildings of the provincialised schools of the local bodies would be
entrusted to the Public Works Department, Buildings and Roads. A letter was
addressed by the same authority dated September 30,/October 4, 1958 to the
Deputy Commissioners requesting them to supply immediate information showing
the contributions actually deposited into the treasuries by the local bodies in
respect of the provincialisation of the schools. This was followed by the
memorandum dated December 12, 1958 to the effect that all local bodies "be
advised to execute the transfer notes in respect of the school buildings etc.
by their respective Engineering Establishments in favour of the Superintending
Engineers concerned". By means of another memorandum dated December 26,
1958 orders of the Government were conveyed that immediate steps should be
taken for getting the contribution from local bodies and also for obtaining
transfer of buildings and equipment. The. Deputy Commissioners were? requested
to get the requisite resolutions passed by the local bodies in the prescribed
form. The appellant Committee at its meeting held on January 10, 1959 decided
not to pay any contribution for the time being. It was also resolved that the
Committee was not in favour of transferring the proprietary rights in movable
and immovable property which was in possession of the schools.
It appears that up till June 17, 1959 the
State continued the process of provincialisation of the schools mentioned
before without any authority of law. There was no statutory provision which
entitled the State to take over the schools of the local bodies including the
buildings in which the schools were being run as. also furniture etc. which
belonged to the local bodies. Moreover the extraordinary step of demanding
annual contribution was also taken without any sanction or authority of law.
The appellant Committee which is one of the biggest Committees in the State
seems to have resisted the attempt on the part of the Government to take over
the schools and acquire or requisition its properties in the manner in which it
was done. Legislation was for the first time enacted in the shape of the Punjab
Local Authorities (Aided Schools) Act 1959, (Act No. XXII of 1959), hereinafter
called the Act.
It received the assent of the President on
June 9, 1959.
According to the preamble the Act was enacted
to provide for the management and control of local authorities' schools
receiving grants in aid from the. State of Punjab. By a deeming provision 380
the Act was to come into force with effect from October 1, 1957. Section 2 gave
the definition of "aided schools", "local authority". and
"school". "School" has been defined to include land,
buildings, play-grounds and hostels of the school and the movable property such
as furniture, books, apparatus, maps and equipment pertaining to the school.
The following provisions of the Act as amended may be reproduced:
S. 3 "Power of local authorities to
transfer management and control of aided schools to State Government.
(1) A local authority may pass a resolution
to transfer the management and control of aided school to the State Government
and communicate the same to the State Government.
(2) On receiving such a resolution, the State
Government may direct that the aided schools shall be taken over under its
management and control and thereafter all rights and interests including the
right of maintenance, management and control shall be transferred to and vest
in the State Government and the rights and interests of the local authority in
respect of such schools shall cease." S. 4 "Power to withdraw
grant-in-aid.--The State Government may withdraw the grant-in- aid from any
local authority in respect of aided schools if the resolution mentioned in
section 3, has not been passed and communicated to the State Government within
a period of three months from the date on which this Act is published in the
Official Gazette." S. 5 "Power to take over aided schools where local
authority neglects to perform duty.--(1) Whenever the State Government is
satisfied that a local authority has neglected to perform its duties in respect
of aided schools or that it is necessary in public interest to take over their
management for a period not exceeding ten years, it may after giving the local
authority a reasonable opportunity for showing cause against the proposed
action, make an order to take over the management:
Provided that in cases of emergency, where
the State Government is satisfied that such a course is necessary in the
interests of the students, it may, without giving such notice, take over the
management of such schools after publication _of a notification to that effect
in the.
Official Gazette." :
(2) & (3) ..............................
381 S. 6 "Amendment of Punjab Acts No.
III of 1911 and No. XX of 1883.--Where a local authority has passed a
resolution under s. 3 or the State Government has taken over management of
aided schools of a local authority under section 5, the Punjab Municipal Act,
1911, and the Punjab District Boards Act, 1883, shall be deemed to have been
amended in the manner specified in the Schedule appended to this Act with
effect from the 1st October, 1957." Section 52(1) of the Punjab Municipal
Act relates to the setting apart of the municipal funds and apply the same for
different purposes as mentioned in clauses (a) to (f). By means of the Schedule
to the Act after clause (f) of sub-s.
(1), cl. (g) was added which is in the
following terms:
"(g) seventhly, such sum to be paid
annually by the committee to the State Government by way of contribution as is
equivalent to-- (i) the total provision made in the budget for the year 1957-58
under the main head 'Education' excluding educational grants and the provision
made for 'original works' relating to schools; and (ii) a sum representing one
per centum of the total income from its own resources for the year 1957-58, in
lieu of the deductions made for 'original works' made under clause (i):
Provided that in respect of the financial
year 1957-58 the committee shall make a payment to the State Government of the
sums which have remained unexpended on 31st March, 1958, out of the provisions
under the head 'Education' in the budget of 1957-58".
Section 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act
provides that the Committee may with the sanction of the State Government
transfer to the Government any property vesting in the Committee under s. 56 or
s. 57 but not so as to affect any trusts or public rights subject to which the
property is held. A proviso was added to the section by the Schedule which was
as follows :-- "Provided that where a committee has passed a resolution
under section 3 of the Punjab Local Authorities (Aided Schools) Act, 1959, or
the State Government has taken over the management of aided schools of a
committee under section 5 of that Act, all rights and interests in the
establishment, maintenance and management of the aforesaid schools immediately
before the 1st October 1957, including all interests in the lands, 382
buildings, play grounds, hostels of the said schools as also in the movable
properties like furniture, books, apparatus, maps and equipment pertaining
thereto shall be deemed to have been transferred to the State Government on
that date, and all unspent balances in respect of grants and contributions
received for the maintenance and promotion of these schools shall be deemed to
have been surrendered to the State Government." After the promulgation of
the above legislation the appellant Committee passed a resolution on February
24, 1960 reiterating the decision taken in the Local Bodies Conference held at
Jullundur and its own decision to request the Punjab Government to restore the
schools run by the local bodies to them. At another meeting held on June 9,
1960 the appellant Committee decided not to pass the resolution under s. 3 of
the Act transferring its schools and property to the State Government. The
Punjab Government, however, issued a notification dated September 26, 1960
saying that the Governor was satisfied that it was necessary in the interests
of the students to take over for a period of ten years the management of the
schools specified in the schedule and administered by the Municipal Committee,
Amritsar, and therefore in exercise of the powers conferred by the proviso to s.
5 of the Act the Government took over for a period of ten years the management
of the said schools. The schedule contained the list of 42 such schools. The
question of the payment of the contribution which was being demanded by the
Government came up for consideration at a meeting of the appellant Committee on
January 3, 1962. It was decided that the payment be made on the basis of a
formal laid down by the State Government in that behalf with effect from
October 1, 1957 but that the proprietary rights of the Committee in the school
buildings be retained and the use of these buildings free of charge be allowed
to the Government for the purpose of running the schools. At a subsequent
meeting held on March 28, 1963, the appellant Committee, however, revised its
previous decision in view of a resolution passed in the meeting of the Standing
Committee of Urban Local Bodies Conference held on June 21, 1962. It was
decided that the State Government was not entitled to charge contributions from
the Municipal Committee. On April 10, 1964 the Deputy Commissioner, Amritsar,
made an order in exercise of the powers vested in him under s. 234(1) of the
Punjab Municipal Act requiring the appellant Committee to pay an amount of Rs.
53,66,146/- on account of contribution for the maintenance of the
provincialised schools for the period 1957-58 to 1963-64 failing which
realization was to be made under sub-s. (2) of that section. Thereupon the
petition under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution was filed by the appellant
Committee in which apart from other matters the validity and constitutionality
of the Act were challenged. In the 383 return filed on behalf of the State
reliance was placed on the pro-visions of the Act, the resolution passed by the
Committee itself on. January 3, 1962 agreeing to pay the contribution and allow
the use of school buildings to the Government free of charge and the
notification which had been issued under s. 5 of the Act on September 26, 1960
whereby the management of the schools of the: Committee had been taken over for
a period of 10 years.
The High Court was of the view that since the
Government had taken over the control and management of the aided schools it
was considered necessary that the property in possession of these institutions
should also be taken over and managed for a limited period. of 10 years. Since
no compensation was being paid for what may be called compulsory acquisition
the legislation could be struck down as being in contravention of Art. 31(2) of
the Constitution.
In the present case, however, the management
of the property in possession of the schools was being taken over for a period
of 10 years in the public interest by virtue of the provisions of Art.
31A(1)(b), and the contravention of Art.
31(2) was of no consequence. The argument
raised on behalf of the State that the resolution of the appellant Committee
dated January 3, 1962 consenting to the payment of the contribution with effect
from October 1, 1957 had been passed m terms of s. 3 of the Act was refuted. As
regards the notification issued on September 26, 1960 under the Act the High
Court was of the opinion that although it did not contain any provision for
retrospective operation it should be considered that it had retroactive effect
since the Act itself had been enforced from October 1, 1957. It was conceded
before the High' Court that the notification did not apply to. those schools
which did not receive any aid from the Government.
The learned Attorney General for the
appellant Committee, raised the following main contentions: (1) The material
provisions of the Act were ultra vires Art. 31 (2) of the Constitution (2) The
taking over of movable and immovable property of the Committee could not
possibly fail within Art. 31A(1)(b) and such action was in direct contravention
of Art. 31(2). (3) The notification dated September 26, 1960 could not have
been issued under the proviso to s. 5 because there was no question of any
emergency nor such an emergency has been pleaded or proved by the State. (4)
The said notification could not and did not validate the action taken prior to
the date when it was issued nor s. 6 of the Act could be attracted which
effected amendments of the provisions of the Punjab Municipal Act as per the
Schedule. (5) The annual contributions which were being demanded from the
appellant Committee were wholly illegal and could not be levied on account of
legislative incompetence.
Now the scheme of the Act is that it is
initially left to the local. authority to pass a resolution to transfer the management
and control of aided schools to the State Government. In order to employ
compulsive persuasion the State Government can withdraw the grant-in-aid from
any local authority in respect of aided schools if such authority does not pass
a resolution in terms of s. 3 within a period of three months from the date of
enactment of the Act (vide s. 4). Section 5 gives the power to the State
Government to take over aided schools where the local authority neglects to
perform the duty but that can be done only after the local authority has been
given a reasonable opportunity for showing cause against the proposed action
and also if it is considered necessary in public interest to take over the
management for a period not exceeding 10 years. The proviso, however, arms the
State Government with powers in case of emergency and in the interests of
students to take over the management straightaway after publication of a
notification to that effect. The amendments which are effected in ss. 52 and 59
of the Punjab. Municipal Act enable the State Government to get an annual
contribution from the local bodies and further to vest in the State not only
the management of the school taken over but also all interests in the lands,
buildings etc. of the school along with the movable properties pertaining
thereto which shall be deemed to have been transferred to the State. There is
no provision whatsoever for an automatic retransfer of these properties after a
lapse of a period of 10 years for which the taking over of the schools can be
effective. This means that once action is taken under s. 5 which can be done
pursuant to a resolution passed under s. 3 or after giving a notice to the
local authority or without giving such notice in case of emergency all the
properties movable and immovable belonging to the local body pertaining to the
schools. taken over become the property of the State. This is nothing short of
compulsory acquisition within the meaning of Art. 31(2) of the Constitution.
Under that Article no' property can be so acquired or requisitioned unless it
is under an authority of law which either fixes the amount of compensation or
specifies the principles on which and the manner in which the compensation is
to be determined and given. There is no.
provision in the Act or in the amendment of
s. 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act made by the Act for payment of any
compensation. On the assumption that taking over of the property for a period
of 10 years would be an act of requisitioning, the requirements of Art. 31(2)
must be satisfied to sustain the validity of the law. The High Court
entertained no doubt that under that Article property could not be acquired or
requisitioned without complying with its provisions but it fell into an error
in applying Art. 31(A)(1)(b) to the provisions under consideration.
Under the above Article. it is only the
management of any property which can be taken over for a limited period either
in the public interest or in order to secure its proper management. Ac- 385
cording to the High Court the Committee was indisputably the: owner of the
property which was being taken over by the State: but P.C. Pandit J, who
delivered the judgment of the division bench proceeded to say :-- "In the
present case, the management of the property in possession of the schools was
being taken over for ten years in public interest and, as such, by virtue of
the provisions of Article 31 A ( 1 )(b ), the contravention of Art. 31(2) was
of no.
consequence. Learned Counsel for the
petitioner submits that Art. 31A(1)(b) does not apply to the facts of the
instant case, because here the management and control of an institution namely,
the school, was being taken over by the Government, whereas this Article
applied where the management of any property was being taken over by the
Government for a limited period in the public interest. This argument is
without any merit, because the property may belong to anybody, whether it be an
individual, or a Committee or an industrial or commercial undertaking or any
kind of other institution. In all these cases, where the management of the
property is taken over for a limited period in public interest, this Article
would be attracted and the legislation would not be hit by the provisions of
Article 31 of the Constitution".
Clause (b) in Art. 31A(1) came to be inserted
for the first time by the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act 1955. It was
intended apparently to counteract the effect of the decisions in the two
Sholapur cases, Charanjit Lal Chowdhuri v. The Union of India & Ors.(1) and
Dwarkadas Shrinivas of Bombay v. The Sholapur Spinning & Weaving Co. Ltd.,
& Ors.(2). The purpose. therefore, of inserting this provision was to
remove any legislation from the pate of attack on the ground of contravention
not only of Art. 3 but also of Arts. 14 and 19. Although management and control
of the aided schools under the impugned legislation could be taken over for a
limited period in the public interest it is not possible to understand how even
the proprietary interests in the movable and immovable property pertaining to
the schools, which have been found to belong to the Committee, could have been
acquired under clause (b) of Art.
31-A(1). With all deference to the High Court
we have not been able to. properly appreciate the decision on this point given
in the paragraph extracted above. The High Court did not consider the true
import and effect of the amendment made in s. 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act by
virtue of which all rights and interests in the lands, buildings, playgrounds,
hostels of the schools as also in the movable property like furniture, books,
apparatus, maps and equipment pertaining thereto (1) [1950] S.C.R. 869. (2)
[1954] S.C.R.476.
386 shall be deemed to have been transferred
to the State Government with effect from October 1, 1957. We are, therefore,
unable to uphold the view which leads to the result that property can be
acquired while taking over management and control under Art. 3l-A (1)(b) in
complete negation and contravention of Art. 31(2) of the Constitution.
The next question is whether there was due
compliance with the provisions of the proviso to s. 5 of the Act. In the
notification which was issued on September 26, 1960 there is no indication that
the management of the schools was being taken over because of certain emergency
having arisen. If any emergency existed it was the creation of the government
itself which had proceeded to take over management and control of the aided
schools along with the properties pertaining to them without any authority of
law prior to the enactment of the Act. That was the reason why the Act had to
be given retrospective operation. According to the High Court the moment the
State Government was satisfied that it was in the interest of the students to
take over the management of the schools it became a case of emergency. It also
relied on the principle that it was not necessary to mention the actual
emergency which had arisen in the notification itself or to make a recital that
an emergency had arisen. The State could not show by placing material before
the court that it was a case of emergency justifying the action under the
proviso to s. 5 because no foundation in this behalf had been laid in the writ
petition. The third point pressed by the learned Attorney General, therefore,
cannot be acceded to.
The fourth point of the. learned Attorney
General may now be considered. There was some argument before the High Court
and the same has been repeated before us on behalf of the State that the
question of validity of the notification and the action taken there under did
not arise because. the Committee itself had passed a resolution on January 3,
1962 which should be regarded as having been passed under the provisions' of s.
3 transferring the management and control of the schools to the Government and
agreeing to pay the contribution with effect from October 1, 1957. The High
Court has rightly pointed out that a reading of the resolution would show that
the Committee agreed to the payment of contribution with effect from October 1,
1957 in accordance with the formula laid down by the State Government. It was,
however, made clear that the proprietary rights of the Committee in the movable
and immovable property pertaining to the schools would be retained by it. The
Committee had subsequently passed several resolutions which had the effect of
almost rescinding the previous resolution. The submission on behalf of the
State that the resolution dated January 3, 1962 passed by the Committee fell
within the first part of s. 3 of the Act is wholly devoid of merit and has
rightly not been accepted.
387 As regards the notification having
retrospective operation we are unable to agree with the High Court that any
such effect could be given to it. There is nothing to indicate in the
notification that it was intended to operate retroactively. The mere fact that
the Act in terms was retrospective would not make the notification issued under
the proviso to s. 5 retrospective in the absence of express words or
appropriate language from which retrospectivity would be implied. All that the
notification says is that the Governor of Punjab is taking over for a period of
10 years. the management of the schools of the Committee. in exercise of the
powers conferred by the proviso to s. 5 of the Act. This clearly means that the
management is taken over from the date of the notification and not from any
prior date. It would follow that whatever was done before the date of the
notification regarding the assumption of management and vesting of the
Committee's properties was wholly void and illegal.
Under s.6 of the Act it is only after the
local authority has passed a resolution under s.3 or the State Government has
taken over management of the aided schools under s.5 that ss. 52 and 59 of the
Punjab Municipal Act would be deemed to have been amended in the manner
specified in the schedule with effect from October 1, 1957 or from the date
aided schools are taken over as the case may be. If the notification dated
September 26, 1960 could not be given retrospective operation the amendments in
the aforesaid provisions of the Punjab Municipal Act would be effective only
after the date of the notification and not for the prior period. Thus even on
the assumption that the provisions of the Act are valid the State could not ask
for any contribution from the committee for the period prior to the date of the
notification. But, the addition of cl.(g) after cl.(f) in sub-s.(1) of s.52 of
the Punjab Municipal Act is void and wholly ineffective for the reasons which
will be presently noticed.
Chapter IV of the Punjab Municipal Act
relates to municipal fund and property. Section 51 deals with the constitution
of the municipal fund. Section 52 provides for the application of the fund.
Before the amendment made by the Act sub-s.(1) had six clauses containing the
provisions for the application of the fund. It is noteworthy that although the
State Government has been empowered to require the Committee to make
contributions but in each case that is confined to an eventuality or a
situation where certain cost has been incurred by the Government which had to
be defrayed by the Committee, e.g., clauses (b), (d) and (f). According to
clause (e), however, the Committee may be required by the State Government to
contribute towards the maintenance of pauper lunatics or lepers sent from any
place in the State to mental hospitals or public asylums 388 whether in or
outside the State. Sub-section (2) says that subject to the charges specified
in sub-s. (1 ) the municipal fund shall be applicable to the payment of the
matters set out in clause (a) to (1 ). Clause (c) is in these terms:
"the constitution; establishment and
maintenance of schools, hospitals and dispensaries, and other institutions for
the promotion of education or for the benefit of the public health
...................... " In the context of s.52 it is difficult to
envisage that the municipal fund of a particular Committee could be diverted to
such institutions which had no connection with the Committee. We are, however,
not called upon to pronounce upon the true scope, ambit and validity of all the
provisions in s. 52. Clause (g) which has now been inserted by means of s. 6 of
the Act has to be tested by the guarantees in Part Ill of the Constitution. By
asking the Committee to make contributions from its funds to the cost of the
schools which have been taken over by the State part of its funds are being
compulsorily acquired by the State.
This is something which could not be done
except in accordance with the provisions contained in Art. 31(2) of the
Constitution. In Writ Petition No. 295 of 1968, Municipal Committee, Amritsar
v. State of Punjab(1) in which the provisions of the Punjab Cattle Fairs
(Regulation) Act 1968 came up for examination, it was laid down by this Court
that the State was incompetent to declare land belonging to the Municipal
Committee as falling within the fair area and to take possession of that land
in exercise of the power conferred by the Act without providing for payment of
compensation guaranteed by Art. 31(2). Clause (g), therefore, which has been
inserted in s. 52 of the Punjab Municipal Act is void and illegal as it
contravenes Art. 31 (2) of the Constitution.
It may be mentioned that the learned Attorney
General has also pointed out that the State legislature did not have the
competence, under any of the entries in List II of the Seventh Schedule, to
enact legislation of the nature embodied in clause (g) which was inserted in s.
52 relating to compulsory contribution by the Committee to the State
Government. Counsel for the State has sought to rely on entries 5 and 1 l in
List II which relate to local government and education. It is unnecessary to
decide this matter since it has been held by us that the impugned provisions
with regard to contribution contravene Art, 31 (2) of the Constitution.
We may now determine the provisions of the
Act which are unconstitutional and invalid. There is nothing in ss. 3(1), 4 and
5 of the Act per se which would bring them into conflict with the
constitutional provisions, particularly, in view of Art. 31 A ( 1 )(b) (1)
[1969] 3 S.C.R. 447.
389 under which the management of the schools
could be taken over by the State for a limited period in public interest.
But the difficulty arises about ss. 3(2) and
6 which have to be read together. When the State Government makes a direction
under s. 3(2) that the aided schools shall be taken over. all rights and
interests of the Committee including the right of maintenance, management and
control shall be transferred to and vest in the State Government.
This essentially has reference to proprietary
and ownership rights apart from the rights pertaining to management and
control. Section 6 comes into operation as soon as a local authority has passed
a resolution under s. 3 or the State Government has taken over management under
s. 5. Then the provisions relating to acquisition of property of the Committee
as also of its funds by way of contribution come immediately into operation by
virtue of the amendments effected in ss. 52(1) and 59 of the Punjab Municipal
Act.
These provisions are clearly unconstitutional
as they contravene Art. 31 ( 2 ) of the Constitution.
In the result the appeal is allowed with
costs and the judgment of the High Court is set aside. It is declared that s.
3(2) of the Act and the amendments which would become operative under s. 6 in
respect of ss. 52(1) and 59 of the Punjab Municipal Act are void and
unconstitutional.
The orders by which the movable and immovable
property of the Committee have been transferred to the State are hereby quashed
and such transfers are declared to be wholly void.
The respondents are further directed not to
recover any contribution in accordance with clause (g) of s. 52 of the Punjab
Municipal Act as also the sum of Rs. 53 lakhs mentioned in the order of the.
Deputy Commissioner dated April 10, 1964 From the appellants Committee.
Appropriate writs and directions. shall issue in this behalf.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
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