H. H. Maharajadhiraja Madhav Rao
Jiwaji Raoscindia Bahad Vs. Union of India [1970] INSC 253 (15 December 1970)
15/12/1970 SHAH, J.C.
SHAH, J.C.
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ) SIKRI, S.M.
SHELAT, J.M.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
RAY, A.N.
DUA, I.D.
CITATION: 1971 AIR 530 1971 SCR (3) 9 1971
SCC (1) 85
CITATOR INFO:
R 1972 SC 202 (7) RF 1973 SC1461
(186,700,703,1100,1609,2152,21 RF 1975 SC2299 (275,637) E 1976 SC1207 (46,546)
D 1977 SC1361 (192) R 1978 SC 803 (30,34) R 1981 SC1284 (1) RF 1982 SC 710 (25)
RF 1986 SC1126 (47) D 1987 SC 522 (51) R 1987 SC1010 (71) RF 1989 SC1534 (11)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-Article
366(22)-Scope ofRecognition of Rulers by President-Order by President
"derecognising" all Rulers--Validity of order-Power, if political-If
exercise of paramountcy rights.
Constitution of India 1950-Article
291-Article if creates an obligation to pay Privy Purse-Repudiation of
obligation if act of State--"Charged on .... the Consolidated Fund of
India", meaning of-Article if a provision relating to" covenant
within the meaning of Article 363.
Constitution of India, 1950-Article
363-Exclusion of jurisdiction of Courts-Scope of exclusionary clausesDetermining
the meaning of articles 366(22), 291, 362 and 363, if within bar of Article
363-"Dispute arising out of provision of the Constitution relating to
covenant", meaning Artic le if "recreation" of paramountcy.
Constitution of India, 1950-Article 362-If a
provision "relating to" Covenent etc. within the meaning of Article
363.
Constitution of India, 1950-Articles 19(1)(f)
and 31 and Article 32-Order of President under Article 366(22)--Order of
President under Article 366(22) "derecognising" RulersRepudiation of
liability to pay Privy Purse and denial of rights and privileges-If violation
of fundamental rightsMaintainability of petition-Privy Purse-If property.
HEADNOTE:
On the promulgation of the Indian
Independence Act, 1947, the Princely States adjoining the Dominion of India merged
with the Dominion of India. The instruments of merger provided for_the
integration of the States and guaranteed to the Rulers the Privy Purse,
succession according to law and custom to the gaddi of the State and personal
rights, privileges, dignities and titles. These instruments were concurred in
and guaranteed by the Dominion of India.
Later, the States integrated with the Union
of India under the Constitution of India, 1950, the Rulers abandoning all
authority in regard to their territories. Special provisions were enacted in
the Constitution regarding Privy Purses and the rights and privileges of the
erstwhile Rulers. By article 291, the sum-, guaranteed by the Dominion of India
to any Ruler as Privy Purse under any covenant or agreement was to be charged
on and paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India and the. sums so paid were to
be exempt from all taxes on income. By article 362 the Parliament, the State
Legislatures and the executive of the Union and the States were enjoined to
have due regard to the guarantees and assurances under the covenants and
agreements between the Governments of the Dominion of India and the heads of
the former Indian States. Also, provisions were made in various statutes
conferring on the "Rulers" certain privileges and benefits. By Art.
366(22) a "Ruler" was defined to mean the prince, chief or other
person by whom covenant and agreements. were entered into and who "for the
time being" was recognised by the President as the Ruler and included any
person who "for the time being" 10 was recognised by the President as
the successor of such Ruler. Article 363 excluded the jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court and all other courts "in respect of any dispute arising out
of any provision of a treaty, agreement, covenant etc." or in any dispute
"in respect of any right accruing under or any liability or obligation
arising out of any of the provisions of the Constitution relating to any such
treaty, agreement, covenant" etc.
On September 2, 1970, a Bill instituted the
Constitution (Twenty Fourth Amendment) Bill 1970, and providing that
"Articles 291 and 362 of the Constitution and clause (22) of article 366
shall be omitted" was introduced in the Lok Sabha. The Bill was declared
passed. On September 5, 1970, the motion for consideration of the Bill did not
obtain in the Rajya Sabha the requisite majority of not less than two-thirds of
the members present and voting as required by Art. 368 of the Constitution. The
motion for introduction of the Bill was declared lost. A few hours thereafter
the President of India, purporting to exercise power under cl. (22) of Art. 366
of the Constitution signed an instrument withdrawing recognition of all the
Rulers. A communication to the effect was sent to all Rulers in India who had
been previously recognised under art. 366(22) of the Constitution.
The petitioners moved this Court under Art.
32 of the Constitution challenging the order of the President
"derecognising" them as unconstitutional, ultra vires and void. They
contended that the President had no power to withdraw recognition of Ruler once
recognised; that assuming the President had such power, exercise of the power
was coupled with duty to recognise his successor; that the order of the
President "derecognsing" all the Rulers en masse amounted to
arbitrary exercise of power for a collateral purpose; that the Order violated
the constitutional mandates in articles 291 and 362; that article 291 created
an obligation in the Union of India to pay the Privy Purse and Privy Purse was
property; and that the Order being one without authority of law infringed the
guarantee of the fundamental rights under Arts. 19(1)(f), 21 and 31 of the
Constitution. The Union of India contended, inter alia, that the petition was
not maintainable, because, the source of the right to receive the Privy Purse
and to be accorded the privileges claimed was a political agreement and the
privy purse was in the nature of a political pension; that in recognising or
derecognising a ruler the President exercised a political power which was a
sovereign power and that the rights and obligations were liable to by varied or
repudiated in accordance with "State policy"; that the jurisdiction
of the Courts to enforce rights and obligations arising out of the covenant was
excluded, because, the rights and obligations arose out of act of state; that
the concept of paramountly of the British Crown was inherited by the Union of
India and therefore recognition of Rulership was a "gift of the
President"; and further that the petitioners stood excluded by article
363, for, they were seeking either to enforce the covenants and agreements or
were seeking to enforce the provisions of the Constitution "relating
to" such covenants.
HELD: Per Hidayatullah, C.J. Shah,
Vaidialingam, Hedge, Grover and Dua, JJ. (Mitter and Ray, JJ. dissenting).
The Order of the President
"derecognising" the Rulers is ultra vires and illegal. [69 G; 100 C]
(Per Hidayatullah, C.J. (1) The action of the President withdrawing recognition
of all Rulers is ultra vires article 366(22) and a nullity. Article 366(22)
neither expressly nor by implication places the power in the hands of the
President to say that although a Ruler is in existence or 11 a successor is
available there shall be no ruler of any particular state. The definition
contemplates the existence of the Ruler "for the time being". The
phrase "for the time being" cannot mean that any person can be
appointed who has no claim whatever or that temporary appointments may be made
or that no appointment need be made. The continuity of a Ruler of an Indian
State is obligatory so long as the Ruler is alive or a successor can be found.
The obligation to recognise a Ruler is bound up with the other guarantees
contained in articles 291 and 362 and the definition in article 366(22) is
merely the key to find a particular Ruler. The withdrawal of recognition from
all the Rulers renders the guarantees, as also the relevant articles of the
Constitution, inoperative. [58 A-H] (ii) The right to recognise a ruler, from
out of several claimants, is not an act of paramountcy. The selection has to be
in accordance with law and custom. The Constitution gave the right to the
President to recognise a Ruler for the time being; but it cannot be stretched
to give a paramountly of the same character as that enjoyed by the British
Crown.
To claim such a paramountcy one has to,
ignore completely the arrangements by which the Rulers parted with their
territories and ruling rights and were assured of their privy purses and
privileges. The rights became constitutionally protected rights which so long
as the Ruler's line was not extinct belonged to the Ruler "for the time
being. In short, when the guarantees were given by the Constitution,
paramountcy if any, went out. Article 362 is the converse of paramountcy
inasmuch as it compels the two limbs of government to have "due
regard"' to the guarantees and assurances given to the Rulers. Nor can
article 363 be said to "recreate" paramountcy. That article was
intended to keep certain matters outside the jurisdiction of the courts. The
Rulers are citizens of India and the President or the Government of India
cannot invoke the doctrine of paramountcy to sustain an illegal inroad upon the
rights of citizens. [51 H-52 B] (iii) The argument based on act of state is not
of any more validity. An 'Act of State' is not available against a citizen. It
is a sovereign act which is neither grounded in law nor does it pretend to be
so. It is "a catastrophic change constituting a new departure". Since
there are no sovereign or political powers under our Constitution every action
of the executive limb of government must seek justification in some law. The
very existence of article 363, which it is said incorporates some kind of
paramountcy or act of state, shows that there is no political power outside the
law; otherwise an additional bar would hardly have been necessary. [53 B]
Salaman v. Secretary of State for India, [1966] I K.B. 613, State of Saurashtra
v. Menon Haji Ismail, [1960] 1 S.C.R.
537 and Secretary of State in Council for
India v. Kamachee Boye Sahaba, [1859] 13 Moore P.C. 22, referred to.
(iv) Covenants and agreements cannot be said
to create "imperfect obligations" since the Constitution takes the
matter into itself and gives them its own guarantees. In so far as those
guarantees became a part of our Constitution and were included in various
statutes they would be enforceable according to the tenor of the Constitution
and other laws subject, of course, to any bar created by article 363. [L55 G]
G. Gibson & Ors. Assignees of J. Mallandaino, Bankrupt v.
The Eas India Co., 132 E.R. 1105, Peter
Pazmany University, (Series A/B No. 61 p. 231) Jurisdiction of the Courts of
Danzing, Advisory Opinion No. 15, Series B. No. 15 and State of Rajasthan v.
Shyam Lal,[1964] 7 S.C.R. 174 referred to.
L744Sup CI/71 12 (v) It is not open to the
petitioner to describe the action of the President as wanting in good faith
without pleading any collateral fact. Further, the reasons for a decision by
the President cannot be probed into in view of articles 74(2) and 361(1). [56
E] (vi) The argument on behalf of the Union of India that article 291 only lays
down the source and manner of payment but creates no right to claim, receive or
enforce payment is a complete misreading of the article. Article 291 makes the
amount payable to the Ruler and, therefore, creates a right in him to demand
it. The words "shall be charged and paid out of etc." make the
payment obligatory and when expanded the words read "shall be charged on and
shall be paid out of" etc. The direction to pay is in no uncertain terms.
The recipient is mentioned in cl. (b) where
the article says 'and the sums so paid to any Ruler' and this shows who is to
be paid. Therefore, the Article in addition to the source and manner also lays
down that it shall be paid and paid free of taxes on income to the Ruler. The
article is self supporting and self-ordaining. The result of charging a sum on
the Consolidated Fund is to provide that this destination shall not be altered
even by vote of Parliament and the charging is sufficiently effective for
ensuring the right application. [62 D-63 B] (vii) Article 363 does not bar
relief to the petitioners. The words provisions of this Constitution' in the
latter part of article 363 arc not left unqualified.
The draftsmen would have referred to the
numbers of the articles if disputes of every kind under those articles stood
excluded. The requirement is that it must be a provision "relating"
to a treaty, covenant etc. The words 'relating to' mean that the provision must
bear upon treaties etc. as its dominant purpose or theme; it is not sufficient
if treaties are mentioned there for some collateral purpose. So tested, [65
D-E] (a) Article 362 is a provision relating to a treaty, covenant etc. Its dominant
theme is 'the rights, privileges and dignities of the Rulers under covenants
and agreements and, therefore the provision is one relating to covenants and
agreements. [65 G-H] (b) Article 366(22) has for its dominant purpose the
selection of Rulers through the application of the covenant and agreements.
When the President acts-within the four corners of his authority the matter is
barred by article 363. What the President has done is to take away recognition
'from all Rulers and such a power does not flow from article 366(22) and the
bar of article 363 does not apply to such a dispute. The dispute arises neither
from the covenants etc. nor from the provisions of the Constitution. Therefore,
it ceases to have the protection of article 363. [66 C H] (c) Article 291 is
not a provision relating to covenants and agreements but a special provision
for the source of payment of Privy Purse by charging them on the Consolidated
Fund and for making the payment free of taxes on income; it does not in its
dominant purpose and theme answer the description in the latter part of article
363. The mention in Art. 291 of covenants and agreements is for its own purpose
so that the amounts need not be specified. [67 H-68 B] [His Lordship did not
express any opinion on the question whether withdrawal of recognition on
grounds which are sound and sufficient is capable of being questioned in a
court of law.] 13 (viii) The petitions are maintainable under article 32 of the
Constitution. The obligation to pay the Privy Purse being absolute the right to
claim when due subsists in each ruler. As soon as an appropriation Act is
passed there established credit-debt and the outstanding Privy Purse becomes
the property of the Ruler in the hands of the government. It is also a sum
certain and absolutely payable. Therefore Privy Purse is property and any
action to deprive the Rulers of their Privy Purses must be an infringement of
articles 19 and 31. [60 F; 62 0. 59 H] H.H. The Maharana Sahib Shri Bhagwat
Singh Bahadur of Udaipur v. The State of Rajasthan, [1964] 5 S.C.R. 1,
Madhaorao Phalka v. State of Madhya Bharat, [1961] 1 S.C.R.
967, State of Madhya Pradesh v. Ranojirao
Shinde & Anr., [1968] 3 S.C.R. 489 and Standard Marine Insurance Co. v. Board
of Assessors, 128 La. 717, referred to.
Langdell, Summary of the Law of Contract, P.
124 Blackstone Commentaries Vol. II XXV pp. 390-398, referred to.
(Per Shah, Sikri, Shelat, Bhargava,
Vaidialingam, Grover and Dua, JJ.) (1) By the provisions enacted in article
366(22), 291 and 362 of the Constitution, the privileges of Rulers are made an
integral part of the Constitution and they cannot be deprived of these
privileges arbitrarily. Granting that under clause (22) of Art. 366 the
President may withdraw the recognition of a person as a Ruler, the power to
nullify important provisions of the Constitution does not flow 'from that
clause. The power conferred by the clause has to be exercised consistently with
and in aid of the constitutional scheme. The power may be exercised, in the
case of first recognition, only in favour of a person who has signed the
Covenant, and in favour of his successor having, regard to the customs and laws
governing the state if the Ruler dies or becomes incapable of functioning or
his recognition is withdrawn. By the use of the expression "for the time
being" in cl. (22) Art. 366 the President is not invested with an
authority to accord a temporary recognition to a Ruler nor with authority to
recognise or not to recognise a Ruler arbitrarily; the expression predicates
that there shall be a Ruler of the Indian State, that if the first recognised
Ruler dies or ceases to be a Ruller a successor shall be appointed and that
there shall not be more rulers at a given time. By the express injunction in
Art. 53(1) the executive power vested in the President is directed to be
exercised in accordance with the Constitution.
Therefore, the power is intended to be
exercised in aid of and not to destroy constitutional institutions. The power
is plainly coupled with duty-a duty. to maintain constitutional institutions,
the constitutional provisions, the constitutional scheme and the sanctity of
the solemn agreements entered into by the predecessor of the Union Government,
which are accepted, recognised and incorporated in the Constitution. An order
merely "derecognising" a Ruler without providing for continuation of
the institution of Ruler ship, which is an integral part of the Constitutional
scheme, is, therefore, plainly illegal. [74 C; 81 H-82 D, E; 83 A] [The Court
did not express any final opinion on the question whether the expression
"for the time being" in relation to the persons who had entered into
covenants or agreements.
and in relation to the successor, implies
that the President has the power in appropriate cases and for adequate reasons
to withdraw recognition. Also, the Court did not decide the question whether in
certain exceptional circumstances the President may in granting recognition to
a successor depart in the larger interest of the country from the strict rule
of custom governing succession to the, gaddi. [74 B-C; 82 GH] 14 (ii) The
President is not invested with any political power, transcending the
Constitution which he may exercise to the prejudice of citizens. The
Constitutional mechanism in a democratic polity does not contemplate existence
of any function which may qua the citizens be designated as political. The
history of negotiations which culminated in the integration of the territories
of the Princely States before the commencement of the Constitution clearly
indicates that the recognition of the status of the Rulers and their rights was
not temporary and also not liable to be varied or repudiated in accordance with
"State policy". Nor does the Constitution invest the executive branch
of the Union with the power to abolish the concept of Rulership, Privy Purse
and the privileges on the plea that these have become incompatible with
"democracy, equality ,and social justice". The power of the President
to determine the status of the Rulers by cancelling or withdrawing recognition
to effectuate the policy of the Government to abolish the concept of Rulership
is therefore liable to be challenged in these petitions. [75 D; 76 B] Rai Sahib
Ram Jawaya Kapur and Others v. State of Punjab, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 225 and Jayantilal
Amritlal Shodhan v. F. N. Rana. [1964] 5 S.C.R. 294, referred to.
Nawab Usman Ali Khan v. Sagarmal, [1965] 3
S.C.R. 201 and Kunvar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India and Others.
[1970] 2 S.C.R. 631 distinguished.
(iii) An action not authorised by law against
the citizens of the Union cannot be supported under the shelter of paramountly.
After the withdrawal of British power and the extinction of paramountcy of the
British the Dominion Government of India. did not and could not exercise any paramountcy
over the States. The functions of the President of India stem from the
Constitution, not from a "concept of the British Crown" identified or
unidentified. What the Constitution does not authorise, the President cannot
grant.
Rulership is therefore not a privilege which
the President may in the exercise of his discretion bestow or withhold.[94 C-D]
(iv) Clause (a) of article 291 which enacts that the Privy Purse "shall be
charged on and be paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India" clearly raise
an obligation to pay the Privy Purse. A charge gives a right to receive payment
out of a specified fund or property in preference over others. In the absence
of clear indications to the contrary it would be difficult to hold that the
expression "charge" used in the context of the financial matters of
the state has a different meaning. The Constitution does not recognise any
sequence of priorities. But that does not alter the fundamental character of a
charge that it specifies a fund out of which satisfaction of the expenditure
charged must be made and that the prescribed expenditure shall have priority in
payment to the person for whose benefit the expenditure is charged on the Fund.
The Constitutional obligation to proceed in the manner set out in Arts. 112,
113 & 114 imposed upon the President and the Parliament, implies, a right
in the person or persons in respect of whom the expenditure is to be incurred.
That view is supported by other provisions in the Constitution.
Clauses (a) & (b) of Art. 291 must be
read with articles 112, 113 and 114; they are parts of a single scheme. They
contemplate that the Privy Purse shall be included in the financial statement
as charged upon the Consolidated Fund;
it shall be beyond the voting power of the
Parliament; its destination shall not be altered: it shall be paid to the Ruler
after the Appropriation Bill is passed, and 15 when paid it shall be free from
liability to pay taxes on income. This is an integrated process, which cannot
be interrupted without dislocating the constitutional mechanism. [87 A; 88 B;
88 E & 89 D] Govind Chandra Pal v. Dwarka Nath Pal, I.L.R. 35 Cal. 837 and
Raja Sri Shiva Prasad v. Beni Madhab, I.L.R. I Pat. 387, referred to.
(v) Article 291 does not merely incorporate
recognition of the obligation to pay privy purse under covenants incurred by
the Government of the Dominion of India; it gives rise to a liability dehors
the covenants. After the Constitution, the obligation to pay privy purse rested
upon the Union of India not because it was inherited from the Dominion of India
but because of the constitutional mandate under Art.
291. The source of the obligation is in Art.
291 and not in the covenants and agreements. Reference to the covenants and
agreements in the article is for defining the privy purse. The obligation which
arose out of the merger agreement and was on that account an act of state stied
its original character on acceptance by the Constitution. The Union of India
cannot plead act of state as defence against claim by the Rulers to Privy
Purse. [89 F; 90 B-D] Doss v. Secretary of State for India in Council, [187]
L.R.
19 Eq. 509, Saleman v. Secretary of State for
India, [1906] I K.B. 613 and Union of India & Ors. v. Gwalior Rayon Silk
Manufacturing (Weaving) Co. Ltd. & Anr., [1964] I S.C.R.
892, held inapplicable.
(vi) An obligation which arises out of a
constitutional provision to pay to the citizens sums of money in recognition of
obligations of the predecessor Government may scarcely be called imperfect. A
perfect obligation pertains to the domain of law and justice and imperfect
obligation to the domain of benevolence. [89 E] (vii) The courts have
jurisdiction to interpret and to determine the true meaning of articles
366(22), 291, 36 2 and 363 and the bar to the jurisdiction of the courts by
article 363 is a limited bar. Article 363 excludes the jurisdiction of the
courts only in respect of the matter specified therein. A provision which
purports to. exclude the jurisdiction of the courts in certain matters and to
deprive the aggrieved party of the normal remedy will be strictly construed,
for, it is a principle not to be whittled down that an aggrieved party will
not, unless the jurisdiction of the Courts is by clear enactment or necessary
implication bar-red, be denied recourse to the courts for determination of his
rights. It is within the province of the Court alone to determine what the
dispute brought before it is, and to determine whether the jurisdiction of the
Court is, because it falls within one of the two limbs of article 363, excluded
qua that dispute.
Jurisdiction to try a proceeding is barred
under the first limb of article 363 if the dispute "arises" out of
the provision of a covenant; it is barred under the second limb of the article
if the court holds that the dispute is with respect to a right arising out of a
provision of the Constitution relating to a covenant. A dispute that an order
of an executive body is unauthorised, or a legislative measure is ultra vires,
is not one arising out of any covenant under the first limb of article 363,
merely because the order or the measure violates the right of the citizen
which, but for the act or measure, were not in question.
The dispute in such a case relates to the
validity of the Act or the vires of the measures. Exclusion of the Court's
jurisdiction by the terms of the relevant words in the second limb of Art. 363
lies in a narrow field. The expression "provisions of this Constitution
relating 16 to" means provisions having a dominant and immediate connection
with; it does not mean merely having a reference to. If the constitutional
provision relating to a covenant is the source of the right claimed to accrue,
or liability claimed to arise, then clearly under the second limb the
jurisdiction of the court to entertain a dispute with respect to the right or
obligation is barred [94 H-95 D; 96 B-E, 99 F] (viii) It cannot be urged that
the jurisdiction of the courts to enforce rights and obligations arising out of
the covenants was excluded because the rights and obligations arose out of acts
of State and by constitutional provision that exclusion was affirmed and
extended after the Constitution. There can be no act of State against its own
citizens by the State. The Rulers who were before integration of their States aliens
qua the Dominion Government are now citizens. Their rights and obligations
which arose from an act of State are now recognised and accepted by the Union
of India. An act of state vanishes when the new sovereign recognises either
expressly or by implication the rights flowing there from. Enforcement of those
rights and obligations is governed by the municipal laws, and unless the
jurisdiction of the Courts is excluded in respect of any dispute, the courts
will be competent to grant relief. [93 A-C] State of Gujarat v. Vora Fidalli
Badruddin Mithibharwala, [1964] 6 S.C.R 461, referred to.
(ix) Article 366(22) is a provision relating
to recognition of Rulers and that is the direct and only purpose of the
provision. It is not a provision relating to a covenant and the reference to
the covenant or the agreement of the nature mentioned in article 291 is only
for determining who may be recognised as a Ruler. The limited exclusion of the,
jurisdiction of courts in article 363 does not operate upon the claim for a
privy purse relying upon article 291. [97 CE; 98 E] Nawab Usman Ali Khan v.
Sagarmal, [1965] 3 S.C.R, 201 and Kunvar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of
India and Others, [1970]S.C.R. 631 distinguished and explained.
[The observations in Nawab Usman Ali Khan
that the essential political character of the guarantee for the payment of
privy purse preserved by article 363, and the obligation cannot be enforced in
any municipal court held unnecessary for the purpose "of the decision in
that case and incorrect.][98 D-E] (x) Reference to the covenant in article 291
merely identifies the sum payable as privy purse; it does not make the article
a provision relating to the covenant. The source of the right to receive the
privy purse is the constitutional mandate; it is not the covenant. A dispute as
to the right to ,receive the privy, purse is therefore not a dispute arising
out of the covenant within the first limb of article 363 nor is a dispute with
regard to a right accruing or obligation arising out of the provisions of a
constitution relating to a covenant. [99 B-C] (xi) Article 362 is plainly a
provision relating to covenants within the meaning of article 363. A claim to
enforce the rights, privileged and dignities under the covenants will therefore
be barred by the first limb of article 363 and a claim to enforce the
recognition of right and privileges recognised by article 362 will be barred
under the second limb of article 363. Jurisdiction of the courts will however
not by excluded where the relief claimed is founded on a statutory provision
enacted to give effect to personal rights under article 362 [99 D] 17 (xii)
Therefore, the Court will give effect to the constitutional mandate in art. 363
only if satisfied that the dispute arises out of any provision of a covenant
which is in force and was entered into or executed before the commencement of
the Constitution and to which "the predecessor of the Government of India
was a party, or that it is in respect of rights, liabilities or obligations
accruing or arising under any provision of the Constitution in relation to a
covenant; but since he right to privy purse arises under article 291 the
dispute in respect of which does not fall in either clause, the jurisdiction of
the court is not excluded. Again, the jurisdiction of the Court is not excluded
in respect of disputes relating to personal rights and privileges which are
granted by statutes. [99 FH] (xiii) Since the order of the President is without
authority of law there is a clear infringement of the guarantee of the
fundamental rights under articles 19(1) (f), 21 and 31 (1) of the Constitution.
[72 H] The Court did not express any opinion (1) on the question whether a
dispute that an executive act or legislative measure operating upon a right
accruing or liability arising out of a provision is invalid, falls within the
second limb of article 363 and (ii) on the plea that the order was made for a
collateral purpose.
On the view taken, the Court did not deal
with the plea that Rulership was "property" and the Order of the
President deprived the petitioners of that property without authority of law.
[73 A] Per Hedge, J. (1) The meaning given to the expression `Ruler' in article
366(22) is only for the purpose of the Constitution and not for any other
purpose. Rulers of Indian States disappeared as soon as their territories were
merged with India and all those quondam Rulers became citizens of India. Their
rulership is merely a status entitling them to Privy Purse and certain
privileges.
Articles 291, 362 and 366(2)(a) and (b)
(before Its deletion), as well as entry 34 of List I of Schedule VII referred
to Rulers and, therefore, it became necessary to define that expression. [160
E-G; 161 A] (ii) Article 366(22) imposes a constitutional duty on the President
and for that purpose has conferred on him certain powers. The power is one
coupled with duty. The President cannot create a successor; he can only
recognise the successor. Recognition means the power to locate. Hence the power
conferred on the President under the second part of article 366(22) is a very
limited power. The power has to be exercised in accordance with law; in other
words it has to be exercised as a quasi-judicial power. The expression
"for the time being" in the second part of the article is relevant as
the question of recognition of a new ruler arises on the death of each Ruler.
The expression contemplates the continuity of Rulership so long as the Ruler
who entered into covenant or agreement or a successor of his is in existence.
[164 G, B-C] (iii) The power to recognise the Rulers does not include the power
not to recognise. The President cannot do indirectly what the legislature
cannot do directly. Ruler as referred to in some of the provisions of the
Constitution is an entity created by the Constitution to further certain
purposes recognised by the Constitution. That entity cannot be abolished either
by the executive or by the legislature.
Therefore, it is not possible to spell out a
power to abolish the Rulership under Article 366(22). [165 G, H] 18 [His
Lordships did not go into the question whether a Ruler once recognised can be
derecognised by the President and, if so, under what circumstances.] (iv) The
power of recognition of the Rulers cannot be claimed to be a facet of the
paramountcy enjoyed by_the British Crown. Paramountcy is the very antithesis of
rule of law and the government of India cannot consider itself a superior,
power in its relationship with the citizens of this country. Nature and scope
of the power exercisable by the President under a provision of the Constitution
must be spelled out from the language of the provision and from the purpose
intended to be served by the provision. [166 E-G] (v) The plea of State policy
is irrelevant in the context of this case. If the Constitution has laid down a
policy, that policy cannot be departed from either by the legislature or by the
executive. Neither the legislature nor the executive, can have a policy which
runs counter to the policy laid down by the Constitution. [159 E] (vi)The stand
taken by the Union of India that the concept of Rulership, Privy Purse and the
privileges guaranteed to the Rulers have become incompatible with
"democracy equity and social justice" raise political issues. This
Court is not the forum for going into political issues, nor is it concerned
with political passions surrounding the issues arising for decision in this
case. [159 B] (vii) Hidayatullah, C.J. concurring). There is nothing like a
political power under our Constitution in the matter of relationship between
the executive and the citizens. The Constitution recognises only three power
viz:, the legislative, judicial and executive. The executive cannot exercise
any sovereignty over its citizens. The legal sovereignty vests with the
Constitution and the political sovereignty with the people. The President is a
creature of the Constitution; he can only act in accordance with the
Constitution. [D-F] Kunwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India & Ors,
[1970] 2 S.C.R. 631. distinguished.
(viii) The President on the advice of the
Cabinet has disregarded the mandate of arts. 53(1), 73(1), 291, 362 and
366(22). That being so, his order must be held to be ultra vires the
Constitution; hence a nullity. [168 B] (ix)The impugned order is also
unconstitutional for the reason that the power conferred under art. 366(22) is
exercised for a collateral purpose. The circumstances under which the impugned
order came to be made show that there was attempt to do indirectly what the
government could not do directly. Such an exercise of power is impermissible
under article 366(22). If the Constitution or any of its provisions have ceased
to serve the needs of the people, ways must be found to change them but it is
impermissible to bypass the Constitution or its provisions. For that reason
also the impugned orders must be held to be ultra vires art.
366(22). [167 B] Balaji v. State of Mysore,
[1963] Supp. 1. S.C.R. 439.
(x)Article 363 has to be read harmoniously
with articles 291 and 366(22). For the purpose of giving necessary direction to
the Union and State executive as well as to the Union and State legislatures.
19 the Constitution recognised the rights
accruing and liabilities and obligations arising under various agreements and
covenants which recognition made those right, liabilities and obligations
enforceable. But without article 363 article 362 would have opened the flood
gate of litigation. The Constituent Assembly evidently wanted to avoid that
situation. That appears to have been the main reason for enacting article 363.
[185 F-G & 186 A-C] Rajendra Singh's case, State of Seraikella v. Union of
India and Anr. etc., [1951] S.C.R. 474, Visweshwar Rao v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh, [1962] S.C.R. 1020, Sri Sudhansu Shekhar Singh Deo v. The State of
Orissa, [1961] I S.C.R.
779, H.H. The Maharana Sahib Shri Bhagwar
Singh Bahadur of Udaipur v. State of Rajasthan & Ors. [1964] 5 S.C.R. I and
State of Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali Badraddin Mithibarwala, [1964] 6 S.C.R. 461,
held inapplicable.
Nawab Usmanali Khan v. Sagarmal, [1965] 3
S.C.R. 201, distinguished.
Nawab Bahadur of Murshidabad v. Karnani
Industrial Bank Ltd., 58 I.A. 215, referred to.
(xi)Article 363 excludes the jurisdiction of
courts only in respect of matters coming under article 362. The contention that
article 363 excludes also the right arising from article 291 because article
291 also protects personal rights falling within the scope of article 362, has
no force. Privy Purse was taken out for special treatment by the Constitution
under article 291 and therefore it is excluded from the general provision in
article 362.
Further, there was no purpose in guaranteeing
the payment of Privy Purse under article 291 and then taking away the right to
recover them under article 363. In the case of most of the Rulers the right
toreceive Privy Purse was an enforceable right even before article 291 came
into force. It is not easy to accept the contention that what was an
enforceable right was made unenforceable by the Constitution. [184 H-185 D]
(xii)The liability undertaken under article 291 is a new liability and not an
affirmation of an existing liability arising under the covenants and
agreements. The article is in no way linked with covenants and agreements. The
covenants and agreements only continue as evidence as to matters mentioned in
the first part of article 291. After article 291 came into force there is no
legal relationship between the covenants and agreements and that article. The
article read with Art. 366(22) constitute a sell contained code in the matter of
payment of Privy Purses and those articles operate on their own force. [177 D,
E] (xiii)It is not possible to accept the contention that the expression
"charged on...... the Consolidated Fund of India" in article 291
merely means that the amounts payable as Privy Purse are not notable and that
the expression neither creates a right in favour of the person in whose benefit
the charge is created nor is the Consolidated Fund pledged for the payment of
the Privy Purse. If an item of expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund
merely means that the expenditure is non-votable then there was no need to
provide in article 113 that "so much of the estimate as relates to
expenditure charged upon the Consolidated Fund of India shall not be submitted
to the vote of Parliament". That part of article 113 was evidently enacted
to make effective the statutory lien over the Consolidated Fund created in
favour of the person to, 20 whom the payment had to be made. It emphasises the
fact that the pledge created in favour of the person for whose benefit the
charge is created by the Constitution, cannot be taken away even by the
Parliament. No sooner the President recognises the Ruler of an Indian State, he
becomes entitled to the Privy Purse guaranteed under article 291 from the date
the Constitution came into force. Every constitutional sanction for payment is
necessarily a mandate to pay if that sanction relates to the discharge of an
obligation; it is an enforceable mandate. Besides the executive cannot take the
stand that it will not respect a mandate of the Constitution unless that
mandate is enforceable in a court of law.
Whether a particular constitutional mandate
is enforceable or not, it is all the same binding on all the organs of the
State. [177 E-H;182 C-D] (xiv)A dispute whether the President has the power to
abolish all Rulers under article 366(22) quite plainly cannot be held to be a
dispute in respect of "any right accruing under or any liability or
obligation arising out of any of the provisions of the Constitution relating to
any such treaty, agreement, covenant........ within the meaning at the second
part of article 363. What is in dispute is the true scope of the power of the
President under article 366(22). Power is an authority whereas a right in the
context in which it is used in article 363 signifies property. A dispute as
regards the interpretation of a provision of the Constitution is not a dispute
within the contemplation of the second limb of article 363 as it is not a
dispute in 'respect of any right, liability or obligation.
The word "relating to" is a word of
wide import but in the context in which it is used in article 363, it must have
a narrower, meaning. The word means "to bring into relation", or
"establish relation between". In other words, the provision of the
Constitution in question must be linked with the merged agreements or covenants
directly and immediately. It must have no independent existence.
Article 366(22) is an independent provision.
It has nothing to do with the agreements and covenants. [186 G-187 G]
(xv)Article 362 clearly links itself with the agreements and covenants and it
has no independent existence apart from the agreements and covenants; [182 G]
[His Lordship did not find it necessary to go into the scope of article 362.] (xvi)The
petitioners have established that their rights under articles 31 and 19(1)(f)
have been contravened. The right to receive the Privy Purse under article 291,
being a legal right, is a right enforceable through the courts of law. That
right is undoubtedly property. The denial of those benefits which had been
afforded the Rulers under statutes is again a contravention of the petitioners'
fundamental right to property. [194 E, G] State of M.P. v. Ranojirao Shinde and
Anr. [1968] 3 S.C.R.
489 and Madhaorao Phalke v. State of Madhya
Bharat. [1961] I S.C.R. 957, referred to:
(Per Mitter. J. dissenting). The Order of the
President though unjustified, is not liable to be challenged, because, article
363 is a bar to the maintainability of the petitions. [152 G-H] (1)Article
366(22) implies not merely a right or power but a duty or obligation to
recognise a person as a Ruler both at the commencement of the Constitution and
even afterwards so long as the line of 21 Rulers lasted and the choice of a
person as a Ruler to succeed another has to be made applying the law and custom
attaching to the gaddi of a particular state. Unless a Ruler can be identified
for the purpose of the Constitution articles 291, 362 and 363 cannot be
applied. Clause (22) fixes the identity of the Ruler for the purposes of the
Constitution as a prince, chief or other person by whom any covenant or
agreement as is referred to in clause (1) of article 291 was entered. into. The
power or duty to withdraw recognition must be confined to cases when the first
recognition was not proper.
Maharaja Pravir Chandra Bhanj Deo Kakatiya v.
The State of Madhya Pradesh, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 501 held inapplicable.
(ii)The power of recognition is not a
political power in the paramountcy field. In strict legal theory whatever
paramountcy there was before the 15th August 1947 in the British Government
lapsed with the passing of the Indian Independence Act. Paramountcy de facto
there undoubtedly was but no legal sanction can be ascribed to such
paramountcy.
Virendra Singh & Others v. State of U.P.,
[1951] 1, S.C.R.
415, Dalmia Dadri Cement Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income tax, [1959] S.C.R. 729, Secretary of State v. Komachee
Boyee Shiba, 7 M.I.A. 476, Doss v. Secretary of State L.R. 19 Equity 509 and
Solomon v. Secretary of the State, [1906] I K.B. 613, distinguished.
(iii) Once the Rulers ceded their territories
and accepted the Constitution of India they became citizens of India and the
plea of continuance of an act of state as against them cannot be accepted.
(iv) The recognition of Rulership is not an
exercise of political power vested in the President:
Kunwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of
India, [1970] 2 S.C.R. 63 1, explained.
(v)Article 291 is meant to put the guarantee
as to payment of Privy Purse contained in the Covenants and agreements on a
firm and sure footing. It is not a mere declaration of pious intention which
the executive could disregard at its whim or pleasure; so long as it finds a
place in the Constitution it is to be acted upon.
(vi)Article 363 imposes an absolute bar on
the jurisdiction of all courts to adjudicate upon disputes covered by it.
The object of the article was as much to save
the Rulers who had entered into covenants or agreements etc. from their rivals
or kinsmen coming to court to upset the covenants or agreements as to shield
the Government of India from attempts on the part of Rulers to rip open the
covenants.
To see whether any dispute falls within the
second limb of the article one must examine the content of the right or the
limit of the liability or obligation arising out of any constitutional
provision which. provision in its turn must relate to any treaty, agreement
etc. The expression relate to" means, inter alia, "stand in some
relation, to have bearing or concern, to pertain, to refer to, bring into
association with or connection with". [127 E-H] 22 State of Seraikella
& Others v. Union of India and Another.
[1951] S.C.R. 174, Sudhansu Shekhar Singh Deo
v. The State of Orissa, [1961] I S.C.R. 779, Nawab Usmali Khan v. Sagarmal,
[1965] 3 S.C.R., 201, Bishambar Nath v. Nawab lmdad Ali Khan, 17 I.A. 181,
Nawab Bahadur of Mushidabad v. Karnani Industrial Bank Ltd., 58 I.A. 215,
referred to.
(vii)Article 291 is a provision of the
Constitution relating to covenants or merger agreements. It is not a provision
merely for finding out the amount of the liability of the Dominion of India by
way of privy purse to a Ruler. It expressly refers to covenants or agreements
entered into by the Rulers under which payment of sums free of tax has been
guaranteed or assured by the government of the Dominion of India as Privy Purse
and gives the term as to Privy Purse a new shape and form. The article seeks to
instill life and vigour into the term for payment of Privy Purse in the
covenant by creating a new channel leading out of the guarantee of the
government of the Dominion of India which was no longer in existence and making
it flow along a constitutional course by putting the liability of the Union of
India for payment of the sums beyond controversy. So considered any dispute as
to payment of privy purse would come under the bar of article 363. [136 G; 140
D; 14t D; 142 D; 143 C] Kunwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India,
[1970] 2 S.C.R. 631, referred to.
(viii) Since the President's power or right
or duty or obligation to recognise a person as a Ruler arises not merely out of
the provisions in article 366(22) but also the covenants, merger agreements or
instruments of accession the dispute is one which arises out a provision of the
Constitution relating to a treaty, agreement, covenant etc.
in terms of article 363. [151 D-E] (ix)It
cannot be urged that if the act complained of is ultra vires or a nullity the
jurisdiction of the courts would not be excluded. Constitutional provision of
the kind of article 363 transcends this kind of consideration. All that the
Court has to see is whether the dispute falls within either limb of the
article. If the dispute is so covered the court is precluded from examining
whether the contention of the party asserting a right was genuine or of real
substance. Equally, the bar will apply where a party denying the right asserted
or contesting the claim put forward is guilty of action which on the face of
things appears to be arbitrary if there be some scope for raising the plea in
denial or contradiction. [151 C] Pratap Singh v. The State of Punjab, [1964] 4
S.C.R. 773 and Makhan Singh v. State of Punjab, [1964] 4 S.C.R. 797, explained.
R.M. Lohia v. State, [1966] I S.C.R. 709, Ram
Swarup v. Shikar Chtind, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 553, Sadanandan v. Kerala [1966] 3
S.C.R. 590, Jaichand Lal v. West Bengal, [1966] Suppl. S.C.R. 464, Raja Anand
v. U.P. Stale, [1967] I S.C.R. 373, Dhulabhai v. Madhya Pradesh,_[1968] 3
S.C.R.
662, The General Assembly of Free Church of
Scotland v. Lord Over Town, [1904] A.C. 515, R. v. Bryant, [1956] I A.E.R.
341, Anismiminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation
Commission and another, [1969] I A.E.R. 208, Secretary of State v. Mask &
Co., 67 I.A. 222, Wolverhampton New Waterworks Co. v.
Hawkesford, [1859] 6 C.B. (N.S.) 336. Neville
v. London "Express" Newspaper, [1919] A.C. 368, Circo's Coffee Co. v.
State of Mysore, 19 S.T.C. 66 and C. T.
Santhulnathan Chettiar v. Madras, C.A. 1045 of 1966 decided on 20th July, 1967,
referred to.
23 Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. v.
Governor-General in Council, 74 I.A. 50, disapproved.
(x)Notwithstanding the wide sweep of the
provision for ousting the jurisdiction of courts as regards disputes covered by
it, article 363 gave ,express power to the President to have the opinion of
this Court to guide himself by, and when disputes of such public importance
were agitating the minds of members of Parliament and of the Cabinet it was not
only his right but his duty to consult this Court. [152 A] Per Ray, J.
(dissenting), that the petitions fail and are dismissed.
(1) Articie 363 embodies the principles of
Acts of state.
The entire relationship of the Dominion of
India vis-a-vis the Indian states was in the domain of Act of State and the
instruments, merger agreements and covenants did not have any constitutional
sanction and obligation and were totally unenforceable in municipal courts.
This Court has in several decisions so held. Article 363 and the other allied
articles really reflect what the makers of the Constitution picked up from the
historical past and inserted in the Constitution. [206 G, 207 H] State of
Seraikella v. Union of India & Anr. [1951] S.C.R.
474, Virendra Singh & Ors. v. The State
of Uttar Pradesh [1955] I S.C.R. 415, M/s. Dalmia Dadri Cement Co. Ltd. V. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, [1959] S.C.R. 729, The State of Saurashtra v. Memon
Haji Ismail Haji, [1960] I S.C.R.
537, Stateof Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali
Badruddin Mithibarwala, [1964] 6 S.C .R. 416 and Nawab Usmanali Khan v.
Sagarmal, [1965] 3 S.C.R. 201, referred to.
(ii)The power of recognition of Rulership is
political, because, it is exercised by the President in relation to prince or
chief by whom any covenant or merger agreement was entered into and the
necessity for recognition arises from the covenants and merger agreements. It
is political also because it is not limited only to the law of succession or
custom. The reasons of state policy will enter the field.
it is not a compulsive power. The
considerations which moves the President are matters on which the Court will
find no standard for resolving it judicially. [210 F] (iii)The rights accruing
under or obligations arising out of the provisions of the Constitution relating
to covenants or merger agreements are imperfect rights. There are no legal
rights as to recognition of rulership, payment of Privy Purse and enjoyment of
rights and privileges. [208 G] (iv)Recognition of a Ruler under article 366(22)
is only for the limited purpose of payment of privy purse and it has no other
reference. There cannot be any legal right to recognition because, the Power of
the president to recognise for the time being repels any concept of legal right
to Rulership Since the obligation to recognise a Ruler arises only from the
covenants and agreements and there cannot be any legal enforceable right to
recognition under the covenant, no legal right to arises under article 366(22)
either. This is political power ship` power belonging to the State, its
government and policy and there is no judicial process to adjudicate upon such
considerations. It is sophistry to speak of Rulership as an institution. When
institutions are recognised the Constitution has specifically designated and
recognied them. The President has power to derecognise. The Constitution does
not say that the President is bound to recognise a Ruler. It follows therefore
that after derecognition he is not equally bound to recognise another person as
Ruler. [213 H; 214 H;
214 C; 26 A] 24 Maharaja Pravir Chandra Bhanj
Deo Kaktiya v. The State of Madhya Pradesh, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 501, Umrao Singh
Ajit Singh Ji & Anr. v. Bhagwati Singh Balbir Singh & Ors., A.I.R. 1956
S.C. 15 and Kunwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. The Union of India & Ors.,
[1970] 2 S.C.R. 631, referred to.
(v) Article 363 is a non obstante clause and
it is a constitutional mandate. The non obstante clause must be allowed to
operate with full vigour in its own field. [211 A; 212 A] N.P. Ponnuswami v.
Returning Officer, Namakkal Constituency & Ors. [1952] S.C.R. 218, Aswini
Kumar Ghosh and Anr. v. Arabind Bose and Anr. [1953] S.C.R. I and Dominion of
India and Anr. v. Shrinbai A.Irani, [1955] I S.C.R. 206, referred to.
(vi)Article 363 is a positive rule of
unenforceability of certain rights and obligations. This Court has held that
the article is a bar in any dispute relating to covenants and merger
agreements, that the privy purse is a political pension and that the article
constitutes a bar to interference by court in a dispute arising by reason of
recognition of Rulership. [209 H] State of Seraikella v. Union of India &
Anr., [1951] S.C.R.
474, State of Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali
Badruddin Mithibarwala, [1964] 6 S.C.R. 416and Kunwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh
v. The Union of India & Ors. [1970] 2 S.C.R.
631, referred to.
(vii)The dispute as to jurisdiction of the
President is not in vacuo but is adispute as to right of recognition of Ruler
for the purpose of paymentof Privy Purse and enjoyment of rights and
privileges. The disputeis whether the President has or has not the power to
make the order impugned in these proceedings. [213 B] United Provinces v.
Governor-General in Council, [1949] F.C.R. 124 referred to.
(viii)Article 366(22) relates to covenants or
agreements.
No person can be recognised as a Ruler until
first be entered into a covenant referred to in article 291, or secondly, he is
recognised by the President as the successor of the Ruler recognised under the
first part of clause (22).
Therefore, the claim to be recognised as a
Ruler can only arise if he or his predecessor signed the covenant and thus
there is express and direct relation to covenants. Article 366(22) has been put
in relation to article 291 and article 362 and one cannot abstract article
366(22) from the collection of those articles. All these three articles viz.,
291 362 and 366(22) stem from the covenants and merger agreements. Ruler in
article 366(22) is description of the person referred to in article 291 and
362. If the petitioner challenges the power of the President to derecognise him
he claims that he has a right to continue as a Ruler and this is a right
related to covenants. [216 E-G, BD] (ix) The proposition that if the order is a
nullity there is no bar of jurisdiction, is inapplicable to the present case
where the question for consideration is of the Constitution which under some
articles confers jurisdiction on this Court and in another article excludes the
jurisdiction of the Court. A private clause of this nature in the Constitution
stands on an entirely different footing from a clause of that nature in other
statutes. The fallacy of the petitioners' submission that because the order of
the President is a nullity the petitioners' property rights are invaded and
hence the jurisdiction of this Court is attracted, is, in totally overlooking
the provisions of article 363 which excludes in express and unambiguous terms
the jurisdiction of this Court "notwithstanding" any provision of the
Constitution. When the Constitution which invests this 25 Court with
jurisdiction with one hand divests it of jurisdiction with another in
specifically designed disputes the attempt to overreach the article which bars
the jurisdiction of the Court will be totally impermeable. [219 C, F-H] Smt.
Ujjam Rai v. State of Uttar Pradesh, [1963] I S.C.R.
778, S. Pratap Singh v. The State of Punjab,
[1964] 4 S.C.R.
733, Makhan Singh v. State of Punjab, [1964]
4 S.C.R. 779, Lala Ram Swarup & Ors. v. Shikar Chand and Anr., [1966] 2
S.C.R. 533, Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation Commission, [1969] 2 A.C.
147, Dhulabhai and 0rs. v. The State of Madhya Pradesh, [1968] 3 S.C.R. 662 and
Communications Assns. v. Douds, 339 U.S. 382, referred to.
(x)Article 291, being a constitutional
recognition of the guarantee regarding Privy Purse mentioned in covenants and
agreements, does not create any new and independent right of payment of Privy
Purse; therefore the article is related to covenants. It embodies the
constitutional recognition for the fulfillment of the guarantees and assurances
given by the Government of India in respect of Privy Purses and provides for
necessary adjustments in respect of Privy Purse entailed by changed
circumstances and conditions. A Ruler of an Indian State without being
recognised a Ruler by the President, cannot prefer any claim to Privy Purse
under article 291. The Ruler of an Indian State mentioned in the first Part of
article 291 is different from Ruler mentioned in 291(b). The latter refers to
the Ruler defined under article 366(22) and recognised by the President. It is
because of the combined effect of articles 291, 366(22) and 363 that this Court
held in Nawab Usman Ali Khan's case the privy purse was paid on political
consideration that it was not a right legally enforceable in any municipal
court and that the political character was preserved by article .363 by taking
privy purse beyond the reach of courts of law.
[221 B, B; 222 E-H] Nawab Usman Ali Khan v.
Sagarmal, [1965] 3 S.C.R. 201 relied on.
Communications Assns. v. Douds, 339 U.S. 382,
H. H. The Maharaja Sahib Shri Bhagwat Singh Bahadur of Udaipur v. The State of
Rajasthan & Ors. [1964] 5 S.C.R. I and Shri Sudhansu Shekhar Singh Deo v.
The State of Orissa and Anr., [1961] I S.C.R. 779, referred to.
(xi)Because the payment of privy purses was
to be free of all taxes under the covenants and agreements whereas under the
Constitution it is exempt from all taxes on income, article 291 cannot be said
to create a new right. The words "the sums so paid" in cl. (b) of the
article relate to the sum guaranteed under the covenants and agreements and to
the same sum charged on the Consolidated Fund. One has to turn to, the
covenants and merger agreement to have all the particulars of persons, sums
guaranteed and assured. The fons et origo is the guarantee in the covenants and
agreements. [227 F] (xii) The words "charged on and paid out of the
Consolidated Fund" in article 291 do not mean that a security is created
in respect of privy purse and therefore a new and independent right is created.
Under the article effect is to be given to the covenants and merger agreements
where payment of any sum has been guaranteed. The charge is only in respect of
the right and obligation under the covenant an it is therefore neither a new
nor an independent right. [223 D] (xiii)The words "charged on and paid out
of the Consolidated Fund" mean that the sums shall not be submitted to the
vote of Parliament and article 113(1) makes a provision to that effect. If it
were a charge it 26 would be a debt which would be; assignable and there cannot
be any legal validity for such assignment. Charge on the Consolidated Fund is
an .accounting arrangement before Parliament and charge is meant for
expenditure. The words "paid out of the Consolidated Fund" denote the
source from which the expenditure would be met. The right to payment ,arises
de-hors the charge on the Consolidated Fund, the right arises from recognition
by article 291 of guarantee of payment of privy purses under a covenant. [224
D; 225 G-H] (xiv) Therefore, article 362 is not the only article which falls within
article 363. Article 363 uses the word provisions of the Constitution. The word
provisions indicate more than one article. It has to be emphasised that article
291, 363 and 366(22) have a most direct and visible relation to article 363.
[228 B-C] (xv)"Rights, liabilities and obligations" in articles
294(b) and 295(1)(b) of the Constitution refer to other legal rights which were
enforceable in a court of law.
Privy purses under the covenants and merger
agreements were no such legal rights enforceable in a court of law for the
obvious reason that if prior to the Constitution the covenants and merger
agreements were sought to be enforced in a municipal court, the government
would have demurred on the plea of Act of State. That plea in bar would be available
to the Government of India as a defence to any claim under articles 294(b) and
295(1)(b). Articles 294(b) and 295(1)(b) deal with devolution of liabilities of
the dominion and part B States respectively. The Constitution has dealt with
privy purses and covenants in separate articles. Therefore,_articles 294(b) and
295(1)(b) can have no application to privy purses and privileges. [229 EF]
Union of India and Ors. v. Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing (Weaving) Co. Ltd.
and Anr., [1964] 7 S.C.R. 892 and The South India Corporation (P) Ltd. v. The
Secretary, Board of Revenue, Trivandram ,and Anr., [1964] 4 S.C.R. 280,
referred to.
(xvi) In sum, the agreement to pay privy
purses and to continue privileges of the Princes which were guaranteed by the
Government of India before the Constitution were all political agreements born
out of political bargains to achieve integration of Indian States with the
Dominion of India. This political bargain was carried into the Constitution by
the insertion of article 291 for payment of privy purse, article 362 for
continuance of privileges and article 366(22) for recognition of Princes, and
the political character was preserved by inserting article 363 which bar the
jurisdiction of the court in respect of disputes arising out of covenants and
agreements and these articles which are related to the covenants and
agreements.
[229 G] (xvii) The petitioners cannot claim
that the Order affects their rights under the various statutes. If the rights
are derived from recognition of rulership by the President under article
366(22) and if the recognition ,cannot be impeached no right arises. [230 E]
(xviii) Recognition of rulership is not a legal right nor is it a right to
property. Privy purses is not a legal right to property and there is no
fundamental right to privy purses. There is no fundamental right to rulership.
The decisions of this Court which have held that article 363 is a bar to rights
to privy purse, personal rights and privileges and recognition of rulership
from being agitated in courts, have spoken the words of the Constitution. [231
C] 27
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos.
376 to 383 of 1970.
Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution
of India for the enforcement of fundamental rights.
N.A. Palkhivala, M. C. Setalvad, B. G.
Murdeshwar, R.
Gopalakrishnan, J. B. Dadachanji, Ravinder
Narain and 0. C.
Mathur, for the petitioners (in W.P. No, 376
of 1970).
M C. Setalvad, B.G. Murdeshwar, R.
Gopalakrishnan, J. B.
Dadachanji, Ravinder Narain, O.C. Mathur and
Suroja Gopalakrishnan for the petitioners (in W.P. No. 377 of 1970).
M.C. Chagla, B. G. Murdeshwar, J. B.
Dadachanji, R. Gopalakrishnan and Suroja Gopalakrishnan, for the petitioners
(in W.P. No. 378 of 1970).
M.K. Nambyar. B G. Murdeshwar. J. B.
Dadachanji and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the petitioners (in W.P. No. 379 of
1970).
N. A. Palkhivala, M. C. Setalvad, B. C.
Murdeshwar, J. B. Dadachanji R. Gopalakrishnan and R. N. Banerjee, for the
petitioners (in W.P. No. 380 of 1970).
M.C. Setalvad, B. G. Murdeshwar. J. B.
Dadachanji and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the petitioners (in W.P. No. 381 of
1970).
M.C. Setalvad, B. G. Murdeshwar. J. B.
Dadachanji and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the petitioner (in W.P. No. 382 of 1970).
M.K. Nambyar, B. G. Murdeshwar, J. B. Dadachanji,
R. Gopalakrishnan Shelandra Swarup and B. Dutta, for the petitioner (in W.P.
No. 383 of 1970).
Niren De, Attorney-General, Jagadish Swarup,
SolicitorGeneral, S. T. Desai, Amiva K. Basu N. H. Hinoorani, R. H. Dhebar, S.
P. Nayar, for the respondents (in W.P. No. 376 of 1970).
Niren De, Attorney-General Jagadish Swarup,
SolicitorGeneral H. R. Gokhale, R. H. Dhebar, S. K. Dholakia and S. P. Nayar,
for the respondents (in W.P. No. 377 of 1970).
Niren De, Attorney-General, Jagadish Swarup,
SolicitorGeneral, V. A. Sevid Muhammad R.H.Debar and S. P. Nayar, for the
respondents (in W.P. No. 378 of 1970).
Niren De, Attorney-General, Jagadish Swarup,
SolicitorGeneral R. H. Dhebar and S. P. Nayar, for respondents (in W.P. No. 379
of 1970).
Niren De. Attorney-General, Jagadish Swarup,
SolicitorGeneral R. H. Dhebar S P Nayar and S. Chakravarti, for the respondents
(in W.P. No. 380 of 1970).
Niren De. Attorney-General, Jagdish Swarup.
SolicitorGeneral, R. R.Dhebar and S. P. Nayar, far the respondent (in W.P. No.
381 of 1970).
Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor General. Rameshwar
Nath and S. P. Nayar, for the respondent (in W. P. No. 382 of 1970).
S.Mohan Kumaramangalam, Ram Murthi. Ram
Panjuwani and S. P. Nayar, for the respondents (in W.P. No. 383 of 1970).
3744Sup CI/71 28 R.M. Hazarnavis, R. N.
Sachthey and Vineet Kumar, for the Advocate-General, Maharashtra.
M.M. Abdul Khadar, Advocate-General of Kerala
and K. M. K. Nail-, for the Advocate-General for the State of Kerala.
Lal Narayan Sinha Advocate-General, for the
State of Bihar, D. P. Singh, R. K. Garg and S. C. Agarwala, for the Advocate
for the State of Bihar.
B. Das, Advocate-General, for the State of
West Bengal, S. S. Ray, G.S. Chatterjee and Sukumar Basu, for the
Advocate-General for the State of West Bengal.
Ashok Das, Advocate-General, for the State of
Orissa, Santosh Chatterjee and G. S. Chatterjee, for the AdvocateGeneral for
the State of Orissa.
G. S. Kasliwal, Advocate-General for the
State of Rajasthan and K. Baldev Mehta, for the Advocate-General for State of
Rajasthan.
H.L. Sijabal, the Advocate-General for the
State of Punjab and R. N. Sachthey, for the Advocate-General for the State of
Punjab.
A.C. Gulati, Rajinder Jain, D. P. Ghosh and
G. Banerjee, for the intervener (in W.P. No. 376 of 1970) HIDAYATULLAH, C.J.
delivered a separate concurring Judgment.
The Judgment of SHAH, SIKRI, SHELAT,
BHARGAVA, VAIDIALINGAM, GROVER and DUA, JJ. was delivered by SHAH, J. HEGDE, J.
delivered a separate concurring judgment.
MITTER and RAY, JJ. gave dissenting Opinions.
Hidayatullah, C.J--On September 6, 1970, the
President of India passed a laconic order in respect of each of the Rulers of
former Indian States. The order was served by a Secretary to Government of
India. A sample order issued to the Ruler of Gwalior State may be read here :
No. 21/14/70-Poll.III Government of India
Ministry of Home Affairs New Delhi the 6th September 1970 ORDER In exercise of
the power vested in him under Article 366(22) of the Constitution, the President
hereby directs that with effect from the date of this Order His Highness
Maharajdhiraja Madhav Rao Jiwaji Rao Scindia Bahadur do cease to be recognised
as the Ruler of Gwalior.
By order and in the name of the President.
Sd./L. P. SINGH Secretary to the Government
of India 29 All these orders were notified together in the Gazette of India of
September 19, 1970, Part II. They resulted in the forthwith stoppage of the
Privy Purses received by the Rulers and the discontinuance of their personal privileges.
These writ petitions under Article 32 of the
Constitution were filed by some of the Rulers as test cases to question the
orders. They ask for a writ, direction or order, declaring the Presidential
Order to be unconstitutional, mala fide, ultra vires and void, and for quashing
it, a writ, direction or order declaring that the several petitioners continue
to be Rulers and thus to be entitled to their respective Privy Purses and
personal rights and privileges and a further writ, direction or order directing
the Union of India to continue to 'pay the Privy Purses as before and to
recognise the personal rights to privileges and to observe the, provisions of
the Covenants and Merger Agreements.
This judgment and order will govern all these
petitions.
Since the issues involved in all the
petitions are common and there are only minor differences in the steps before
the States merged with the Indian Union, it is sufficient if an illustrative
petition is dealt with. In this judgment I shall refer to the petition filed by
the Ruler of Gwalior which is first on my list and embraces almost all the
varying aspects of the question. The other petitions are identical except for
some details which are special to a particular Ruler but are not material for
the discussion of the issues involved.
The Ruler of the Gwalior State succeeded to
the gaddi of the State on July 16, 1961 on the demise of his father. On August
15, 1947 the father had signed an Instrument of Accession of his state to the
Dominion of India, as then established, and it was accepted by the
Governor-General of India on the following day. This Instrument of Accession
was similar to those which the other Rulers signed on diverse dates. It is to
be found at p. 165 of the White Paper on Indian States and is exhibited with
the Petition as Ex. A. On April 22, 1948 the father, as Ruler, signed a
Covenant with other Rulers of this area and the United States of Madhya Bharat
was formed on June 15, 1948. On the coming into force of the Constitution of
India, the State of Madhya Bharat became a Part B State. On the passing of the
Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act 1956, Madhya Bharat State ceased to be a
Part B State and was integrated with the State of Madhya Pradesh as provided
under the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956. I shall now say something
in more detail about these several steps.
The Instruments of Accession were executed in
furtherance of the Indian Independence Act, 1947. On June 3, 1947 the 30
British Government announced their plan of transfer of power in India. The
Government of India formed a Ministry of States under Sardar Vallabihbhai Patel
and it was decided to secure the accession of Indian States on three subjects :
External Affairs; and Communications. The Act
provided for lapse of sovereignty of the British Crown in India over the Indian
States` and they were free to accede to any of the two Dominions of India or
Pakistan or to continue as independent sovereigns. A reference to the Indian
Independence Act, 1947 appears necessary at this stage.
The preamble of the Act stated that the Act
was to make provision for the setting up in India of two independent Dominions
and to provide for matters consequential on or connected with the setting up of
those Dominions and-to substitute certain provisions in the Government of India
Act 1935. Section 1 of the Act fixed the 15th day of August, 1947 as the
appointed ate, from which the two independent Dominions were to come into
existence. Section 2 demarcated their territories, but without prejudice to the
generality of the provisions of sub-section (3) of that section, the accession
of Indian States to either of the two Dominions was not to be prevented.
Immediately afterwards the India (Provisional Constitution) Order 1947 was
promulgated and certain substitutions were made in the Government of India Act
1935 by the Governor-General by virtue of subsection (2) of Section 8 read with
section 9 of the Indian Independence Act. Sections 5 and 6 of the Government of
India Act 1935 were replaced by the following sections "5. Establishment
of the Dominion :
(1)The Dominion of India established by the
Indian Independence Act, 1947, shall as from the fifteenth day of August 1947,
be a Union comprising :(a) the Provinces hereinafter called Governors'
Provinces;
(b)the Provinces hereinafter called Chief
Commissioners' Provinces.
(c) the Indian States acceding to the
Dominion in the manner hereinafter provided, and (d) any other areas that may
with the consent of the Dominion be uncured in the Dominion.
(2) The said Dominion of India. is hereafter
in this Act referred to as "the Dominion" and the said fifteenth day
of August is hereafter in this Act referred to as 'the date of the
establishment of the Dominion'.
6. Accession of Indian States(1)An Indian
State shall be deemed to have acceded to the Dominion if the Governor General
has signified his acceptance of an Instrument of Accession executed by the
Ruler thereof whereby the Ruler on behalf of the State :(a) declares that he
accedes to the Dominion with the intent that the Governor-General, the Dominion
Legislature, the Federal Court and any other Dominion authority established for
the purposes of the Dominion shall, by virtue of his Instrument of Accession
but subject always to the terms thereof, and for the purposes only of the
Dominion exercise in relation to the State such functions as may be vested in
them by order under this Act; and (b) assumes the obligation of ensuring that
due effect is given within the State to the provisions of this Act so far as
they are applicable therein by virtue of the Instrument of Accession.
(2) An Instrument of Accession shall specify
the matters which the Ruler accepts as matters with respect to which the
Dominion Legislature may make laws for the State and the limitations, if any,
to which the power, of the Dominion Legislature to make laws for the State, and
the exercise of the executive authority the Dominion in the State, are
respectively to be subject.
(3)A Ruler may, by a supplementary Instrument
executed by him and accepted by the Governor General vary the Instrument of
Accession of his State by extending the functions which by virtue of that
Instrument are exercisable by any Dominion authority in relation to his State.
(4)References in this Act to the Ruler of a
State include references to any persons for the time being exercising the
powers of the Ruler of the State whether by reason of the Ruler's minority or
for any other reason.
(5)In this Act a State which has acceded to
the Dominion is referred to as an acceding State and the Instrument by virtue
of which a State has so acceded 32 construed together with any supplementary
Instrument executed under this section, is referred to as the Instrument of
Accession of that State.
(6)As soon as may be after an Instrument of
Accession or supplementary instrument has been accepted by the Governor-General
under this Section, copies of the Instrument and of the Governor-General's
acceptance thereof shall be laid before the Dominion Legislature and all courts
shall take judicial notice of every such instrument and acceptance." In
furtherance of these new provisions, the Instruments of Accession were executed
on different dates, after negotiations between the Government of India and the
Rulers, but nothing turns upon the date of an Instrument. Many Rulers had
immediately signed Instruments of Merger, transferring full and exclusive
authority, jurisdiction and powers in relation to the governance of their
States to the Government of India. They were merged with the existing Provinces
or were set up as Chief Commissioner's Provinces.
Some others signed Instruments of Accession
first and Instruments of Merger later. The remaining at first formed themselves
into different Unions of States, making over the administration of their States
to a Rajpramukh of the Union of the States vesting in him all rights, authority
and jurisdiction belonging to the Ruler which appertained to or were incidental
to the Government of the Covenanting States.
In this way several Unions of States or
United States emerged. A brief reference to the Instrument of Accession, the
Covenants and the Instruments of Merger is necessary at this stage. The Ruler
of Gwalior, father of the present petitioner, joined the United State of Madhya
Bharat as already indicated. I can therefore conveniently study the Instrument
of Accession and the Covenant executed by him as illustrative of the documents
signed by the Rulers.
I begin with the Instrument of Accession. In
the Preamble to the Instrument the Ruler observed that he was executing it in
the exercise of his sovereignty in and over his State.
He declared that he was acceding to the
Dominion of India and authorised the Governor-General of India, the Dominion
Legislature, the Federal Court and any other Dominion Authority. established
for the purposes of the Dominion to exercise in relation to hi-, State
functions vested in them by or under the Government of India Act 1935 as in
force on the 15th August 1947. On his part he undertook the obligation of
ensuring that effect was given to the provisions of the Government of India Act
1935 in his State. He accented that the Dominion Legislature would make law-,
with respect to matters specified in the Schedule to his Instrument.
33 These topics have only a historical
significance and need no mention here. There were certain reservations,
particularly in regard to any future constitution of India affecting the
continuance or his sovereignty in and over the State, and the exercise of any
powers, authority and rights then enjoyed by him as Ruler. The Governor-General
accepted the Instrument of Accession and signed it in token thereof.
The Ruler of Gwalior next signed a Covenant
with certain Rulers in the former Madhya Bharat area and agreed to form a
United State of Madhya Bharat. The covenant contains 18 articles and 4
schedules. This covenant is a detailed document and is reproduced in the White
Paper and is also exhibited in the. case before me. It is not necessary to
refer to all its terms but. the relevant ones may be noted here. The
Covenanting States agreed to unite and integrate their territories into one
State with common Executive.
Legislature and Judiciary. Room was kept, for
other Rulers to join later if they were so minded. The Covenant established a
Council of Rulers, with a right to elect a President (to be called the
Rajpramukh of the United State) and one Senior Vice-President and two Junior
Vice Presidents. The President and the Senior Vice-President were to hold
office during their lifetime and the Junior Vice-Presidents for a term of five
years. The Rajpramukh was to be aided and advised by a Council of Ministers to
be chosen by him and they were to hold office during his pleasure. July 1, 1948
was fixed for making over the administration of the Covenanting States to the
Rajpramukh including a transfer of all assets and liabilities of the State and
of the Scheduled Areas. The Rajpramukh had jurisdiction to make laws for the
peace and good Government of those areas whether with or without consultation
with his Council of Ministers but subject to direction or instructions of the
Government of India. The Rajpramukh was to execute by 15th June 1948 a fresh
Instrument of Accession in place of the separate Instruments already executed
by the Covenanting Rulers. By that Instrument he was to accept the making of
laws by the Dominion Legislature on all matters mentioned in Lists I and III of
the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act 1935 except the entries in
List I relating to any tax or duty. The Rajpramukh and the Vice Presidents were
to enter upon their duties on 11th May 1948.
The Rajpramukh and the Vice-President were to
be paid Rs. 2,50 000 per year as consolidated allowances and the Junior Vice
Presidents were to be paid such allowances as the Rajpramukh was to fix. The
executive authority of the United State (subject to the provisions of the
Covenant and a Constitution to be framed later) was to be exercised by the
Rajpramukh and the competant Legislature of the United State was to be given
the competence to confer functions upon the subordinate authorities but the
Covenant 34 was not to be deemed to transfer to the Rajpramukh any functions
conferred by any existing law on any Court, Judge, officer or local or other
authority in a Covenanting State.
The Covenant next provided for the setting
up, as soon as possible, of a Constituent Assembly in the manner set out in the
Third Schedule to the Covenant to frame a Constitution of a unitary type for
the United State within the framework of the Covenant and the Constitution of
India and for providing a Government responsible to the Legislature. The
Rajpramukh was to constitute not later than August 1, 1948 an interim
Legislative Assembly for the United State in accordance with the provisions set
out in Schedule, IV till the formation of the Constituent Assembly which was
then to perform legislative functions as well. The Rajpramukh was also given
power to promulgate Ordinances. Articles XI to XV were as follows:
" ARTICLE XI (1) The Ruler of each
Covenanting State shall be entitled to receive annually from the revenues of
the United States for his privy purse the amount specified against that
Covenanting State in Schedule I :
Provided that the sums specified in the
Schedule in respect of the Rulers of Gwalior and Indore shall be payable only
to the present Rulers of these States and not to their successors for whom
provision will be made subsequently.
(2)The said amount is intended to cover all
the expenses of the Ruler and his family including expenses of his residence,
marriages and other ceremonies, etc. and shall subject to the provisions of
paragraph (1) neither be increased nor reduced for any reason whatsoever.
(3)The Rajpramukh shall cause the said amount
to be paid to the Ruler in four equal instalments at the beginning of each
quarter in advance.
(4)The said amount shall be free of all taxes
whether imposed by the Government of the United State or by the Government of
India.
35 ARTICLE XII (1)The Ruler of each
Covenanting State shall be entitled to the full ownership, use and enjoyment of
all private properties (as distinct from State properties) belonging to him on
the date of his making over the administration of that State to the Raj
Pramukh.
(2)He shall furnish to the Raj Pramukh before
the first day of August 1948 an inventory of all immovable properties,
securities and cash balances held by him as such private property.
(3)If any dispute arises as to whether any
item of property is the private property of the Ruler or State property, it
shall be referred to such person as the Government of India may nominate in
consultation with the Raj Pramukh and the decision of that person shall be
final and binding on all parties concerned :
Provided that no such dispute, shall be so
referable after the first day of July 1949.
ARTICLE XIII The Ruler of each Covenanting
State, as also the members of his family, shall be entitled to all the personal
privileges, dignities and titles enjoyed by them, whether within or outside the
territories of the State, immediately before the 15th day of August 1947.
ARTICLE XIV (1)The succession, according to
law and custom to the gaddi of each Covenanting State, and to the personal
rights, privileges, dignities and titles of the Ruler thereof, is hereby
guaranteed.
(2)Every question of disputed succession in
regard to a Covenanting State shall be decided by the Council of Rulers after
referring it to a bench consisting of all the available Judges of the High
Court of the United State and in accordance with the opinion given by the High
Court." Article XV gave complete immunity to the Ruler in respect of past
acts and omissions. The next two articles guaranteed the continuance in
service, of the permanent members of the public service of the States on
conditions not less advantageous than those existing on April 15. 1948 or
payment to them of reasonable compensation. There were other guarantees and
also 36 immunity for past acts or omissions in the execution of duty as a
Public servant. Article XVIII continued in their respective States the
prerogative of suspension, remission or commutation of death sentences enjoyed
by the former Rulers of Gwalior and Indore. Schedule I then stated the Privy
Purses of the Rulers. It was divided into two sections-Salute States and
Non-Salute States. They ranged from Rs. 25,00,000 to the Ruler of Gwalior to
Rs. 6,000 to the Rubber of Mathwar. The rest of the provisions are not material
for my discussion.
The Covenant was signed by all the Rulers of
the Covenanting States and the Government of India endorsed on it their
acceptance thus:
"The Government of India hereby concur
in the above Covenant and guarantee all its provisions. In confirmation whereof
Mr. Vapal Pangunni Menon, Secretary to the Government of India in the Ministry
of States, appends his signature on behalf and with the authority of the
Government of India.
Secretary to the Government of India,
Ministry of States".
Further agreements were devised for each of
such other States as might join later and the Government of India concurred in
the same way with such agreements.
A fresh Instrument of Accession was executed
by the Rajpramukh on behalf of the United State of Madhya Bharat.
Special provisions were made for avoiding
legislative conflict, and for any future agreement between the Rajpramukh and
the Government of India. Such agreements were to form part of the Instrument of
Accession. It was however expressly provided by clause 6 as follows :
"6. The terms of this Instrument of
Accession shall not be varied by any amendment of the Act or of the Indian
Independence Act, 1947, unless such amendment is accepted by the Raj Pramukh of
the United State by an Instrument supplementary to this Instrument." The
Governor-General of India accepted this Instrument of Accession on September
13, 1948. By then 23 Rulers bad joined the United State. On November 24, 1949,
on the passing of the Constitution of India, the Rajpramukh issued a
Proclamation after 37 a resolution of the Covenanting Rulers. It affirmed the
constitutional relationship' between the United State and the Dominion of India
and provided as follows "PROCLAMATION FOR MADHYA BHARAT Gwalior, the 24th
November 1949 WHEREAS with the inauguration of the new Constitution for the
whole of India now being framed by the Constituent Assembly of India, the
Government of India Act, 1935, which now governs the constitutional relationship
between .this State and the Dominion of India, will stand repealed;
AND WHEREAS, in the best interests of the
State of Madhya Bharat, which is closely linked with the rest of India by a
community of interests in the economic, political and other fields, it is
desirable that the constitutional relationship established between this State
and the Dominion of India, should not only be continued as between this State
and the contemplated Union of India but further strengthened, and the
Constitution of India as drafted by the Constituent Assembly of India, which
includes duly. appointed representatives of this State, provides a suitable
basis for doing so;
I, Jiwajirao Madhavrao Scindia, Raj Pramukh
of the Madhya Bharat, now hereby declare and directThat the Constitution of
India shortly to be adopted by the Constituent Assembly of India shall be the
Constitution for the Madhya Bharat as for the other parts of India and shall be
enforced as such in accordance with the tenor of its provisions;
That the provisions of the said Constitution
shall, as from the date of its commencement' supersede and abrogate all other
constitutional provisions inconsistent therewith which are at present in force
in this State.
This in short is the constitutional history
of the States which united to form the United State of Madhya Bharat. It is
apparent that the Instrument of Accession and the Covenants operated as a
constitution in little for the governance of the United State. The identity of
the United State as a semi-independent unit was preserved and the
constitutional framework of this State was indicated. The Covenant was an Act
of State on the part of the Rulers. It may be regarded also as such by the
Government of India although no volition beyond concurrence, of the Government
Played any Part whatever might I have been the diplomatic 38 consultations
between the acceding United State and the Government of India. The Government
of India merely accorded them recognition and guaranteed its provisions. If
treated as an Act of State it ended with the recognition.
It was also an Act of State on the part of
the Rulers who surrendered their lights but the provisions that they evolved
for the joint governance of their territories made a constitution proper of
which the Courts were to take judicial notice and apply according to their
tenor as occasion demanded. From these documents flowed consequences which were
binding alike upon the Covenanting States, the United State of Madhya Bharat
and the Government of India and the Courts-. None of them could avoid these
consequences.
The Merger agreements were much simpler
documents. As an illustration I may refer to the Bilaspur Merger agreement.
It was executed on the 15th August 1948 by
the Raja of Bilaspur. It consisted of five articles. By the first article the
Raja ceded to the Dominion government full and exclusive authority,
jurisdiction and powers for and in relation to the governance of the State,
agreeing to transfer the administration on October 12, 1948. By article 2 the
Raja was to receive annually a sum of Rs. 70,000/as privy purse free of taxes.
The sum included Rs. 10,000/as an allowance for the Yuvraj. These amounts were
to cover all expenses and were not to be increased nor reduced for any reason
whatsoever. By article 3 the Raja was entitled to the full ownership, use and
enjoyment of all private properties (as distinct from State properties)
belonging to him, and he was to furnish an inventory of such properties.
In case of dispute the matter was to be
referred to such officers with judicial experience as the Dominion government
might nominate and the decision was to be binding on both parties. By article
4, the Raja, the Rajmata, the Yuvraj and the Yuvrani were to enjoy all personal
privileges enjoyed by them within and without the territories immediately
before the 15th day of August 1947. By article 5 the Dominion government
guaranteed the succession, according to law and custom. to the gaddi of the
State and to the Raja's perso nal rights, privileges dignities and titles. The
Merger agreement was signed by the Raja and Mr. V. P. Menon, Secretary in the
Ministry of States.
Although the Merger Agreement of the Raja of
Bilaspur sufficiently illustrates the line followed it may be mentioned here
that some of the Merger Agreements had more clauses than the one noticed. In
the Merger Agreement of the Maharao of Kutch there were other articles such as
immunity for past acts of the Maharao in his personal capacity or otherwise and
also a guarantee for continuance in service of the permanent members of the
Public services of Kutch and for their conditions of service, pensions 39 and
leave salaries and immunity for past acts. In the Bhopal Merger Agreement the
Nawab was to receive Rs. 11,00,000/as Privy Purse but each of his successors
was to receive only Rs. 9,00,000/-. Article IV however provided that the income
derived annually from the share of the Nawab in the original investment by
Qudsia Begum in the Bhopal State Railway, which share was agreed to be Rs.
5,50,000, was to be treated as the personal income of the Nawab and to be paid
by the Government of India to the Nawab and his successors. Article VII
provided that the succession to the throne of Bhopal State would be governed by
and regulated in accordance with the provisions of the Act known as "The
succession to the Throne of Bhopal Act of 1947", and then in force in the
Bhopal State. The Government of India further agreed that all rights and
privileges secured by the Agreement to the Nawab would be continued to his
successor.
The course of historical events is different
according to the States emerged in or merely acceded to the Dominion.
The merged States were either incorporated in
the existing Governor's Provinces or, were administered centrally as Chief
Commissioner's Provinces. I am not concerned with these historical events and,
therefore, I refrain from saying anything here.
The next step in the chain of historical
events in regard to Gwalior came with the Constitution which was accepted by
the Rajpramukh in his Proclamation. Special provisions were incorporated in the
Constitution to which reference may be made here. Four Articles in the
Constitution are only relevant and are quoted here. Article 291 was amended by
the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956 by deleting clause (2) but is
quoted here as it was before the Amendment :
"291 (1) Where under any covenant or
agreement entered into by the Ruler of any Indian State before the commencement
of this Constitution, the payment of any sums, free of tax, has been guaranteed
or assured by the Government of the Dominion of India to any Ruler of such
State as Privy Purse.
(a) such sums shall be charged on, and paid
out of, the Consolidated Fund of India; and (b) the sums so paid to any Ruler
shall be exempt from all taxes on income.
(2) Where the territories of any such Indian
State as aforesaid are comprised within a State specified in Part A or Part B
of the First Schedule. there hall be charged on, and paid out of, the
Consolidated Fund of 40 that State such contribution, if any, in respect of the
payments made by the Government of India under clause ( 1 ) and for such period
as may, subject to any agreement entered into in that behalf under clause (1)
of article 278, be determined by order of the President".
This Article does not apply to the State of
Jammu and Kashmir. Article 366 contained a definition in (21) which was deleted
by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act 1956. This definition may be read
here :
"366. In this Constitution, unless the
context 'otherwise requires, the following expressions have the meanings hereby
respectively assigned to them, that is to say(21) "Rajpramukh" means(a)
in relation to the State of Hyderabad, the person who for the time being is
recognised by the President as the Nizam of Hyderabad;
(b) in relation to the State of Jammu and
Kashmir' or the State of Mysore, the person who for the time being is
recognised by the President as the Maharaja of that State; and (c) in relation
to any other State specified in Part B of the First Schedule, the person who
for the time being is recognised by the President as the Rajpramukh of the
State, and includes in relation to any of the said States any person for the
time being recognised by the President as competent to exercise the powers of
the Rajpramukh in relation to that State;" These two repeals were
occasioned by the constitutional readjustment of States when Part B States
disappeared. The definitions became obsolete after the Reorganization and hence
they were deleted. Article 366 contained other definitions in (15) and (22)
which may be quoted:
"(15) 'Indian State' means any territory
which the Government of the Dominion of India recognised as such a State."
" (22) 'Ruler' in relation to an Indian State means the Prince, Chief or
other person by whom any such covenant or agreement as is referred to in clause
(1) of 41 article 291 was entered into and who for the time being is recognised
by the President as the Ruler of the State, and includes any person who for the
time being is recognised by the President as the successor of such Ruler;"
They are intact till today. So also two other Articles, namely, 362 and 363. of
these the former does not apply to the State of Jammu and Kashmir, but the
latter does. They may be quoted here :
"362. In the exercise of the power of
Parliament or of the Legislature of a State to make laws or in the exercise of
the executive power of the Union or of a State due regard shall be had to the
guarantee or assurance given under any such covenant or agreement as is
referred to in clause (1) of article 291 with respect to the personal rights,
privileges and dignities of the Ruler of an Indian State.
363 (1). Notwithstanding anything in this
Constitution but subject to the provisions of article 143, neither the Supreme
Court nor any other court shall have jurisdiction in any dispute arising out of
any provision of a treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or other
similar instrument which was entered into or executed before the commencement
of this Constitution by any Ruler of an Indian State and to which the
Government of the Dominion of India or any of its predecessors Governments was
a party and which has or has been continued in operation after such commencement,
or in any dispute in respect of any right accruing under or any liability or
obligation arising out of any of the provisions of this Constitution relating
to any such treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or other smilar
instrument.
(2) In this article-(a) 'Indian State' means
any territory recognised before the commencement of this Constitution by His
Majesty or the Government of the Dominion of India as being such a State; and
(b) 'Ruler' includes the Prince, Chief or other person recognised before such
commencement of His Majesty or the Government of the Dominion of India as the
Ruler of any Indian State." 42 The intention behind the definitions in
2(a) and (b) specially included here was to bind even those Rulers who were
recognized before and who might not have been recognised by the President under
article 366(22).
The Indian States formed a significant but
separate part of India before they merged with the rest of India. it is common
knowledge that the aim of the Government of India Act, 1935 was to associate
the Indian States with British India as equal partners in a loose federation.
When India became independent by the Indian Independence Act 1947, British
paramountly in respect of the Indian States lapsed.
In theory the Rulers became independent but,
as shown above, in actual fact, almost all the Rulers signed almost
immediately, Instruments of Accession in August 1947 surrendering Defence,
External Affairs and Communications.
The Rulers immediately after Independence
became divided into four classes :
(a) those who had signed Instruments of
Accession;
(b) those who had signed instruments of
Merger;
(c) those who had formed themselves into
Unions and the Unions had signed Instruments of Accession;
(d) Hyderabad, Mysore and Jammu and Kashmir.
The merged States were either directly
administered by the Dominion Government as Chief Commissioner's Provinces or
were handed over to the neighboring Provinces. Thus 216 States merged in the
adjoining Provinces, 61 States were converted into centrally administered areas
and 275 States formed Unions. Only three States retained their integrity;
but when the Constitution came into force,
they too became part of the Union of India on a later date. They were
Hyderabad, Mysore and Jammu and Kashmir.
The Indian States covered about 48 per cent
of the area of the Indian Dominion. The population of this area formed 28 per
cent of the total population of the Dominion. All the Rulers (including the
Rajpramukhs of the Unions) issued proclamations of which reference has earlier
been made in relation to Gwalior. On the merger or integration of the States
with the Union of India the Rulers were left with a Privy Purse and a few of
their personal privileges and properties. The Privy Purses were fixed with due
regard to the incomes of the Rulers, before integration with a ceiling of Rs.
10 lakhs. Eleven Rulers were to be paid more than that sum as a personal Privy
Purse. The total amount of the Privy Purses came to Rs. 58 crores. Today the
highest Privy Purse is Rs. 26 lakhs per annum to the Ruler of Mysore and the
lowest is Rs. 192 per annum to the Ruler of Kotodia.
43 The Privileges of the Rulers included many
items. A memorandum on these privileges was issued by the Ministry of States in
1949. it did not contain an exhaustive list but was drawn up to inform
Provincial and Union Governments about them. It contained an itemised list of
34 privileges.
They included several exemptions from the
operation of Indian Laws, the enjoyment of Jagir and personal property of the
Rulers and members of their families, the payment by the States of the marriage
expenses of the brothers and sisters of the Rulers, immunity from some
processes of courts of law, immunity from requisitioning of the private
properties of the Rulers and their families and so on and so forth.
During the negotiations letters were written
to the Rulers to assure them that the Privy Purse was fixed in prepatuity and
the freedoms enjoyed by them would be continued.
The Privy Purses and the Privileges were
continued till 6th September 1970. Their payment or enjoyment was a part of the
guarantee of the Constitution. However the All India Congress Committee passed
a Resolution on 25th June 1967 for their abolition. In furtherance of this
resolution the Union Home Ministry held several conferences with the
representatives of the Rulers. Although shorn of all but a shadow of their
former power and panoply, the Rulers seemed to regard themselves as something
different from the people or perhaps, as princes in exile. They had their
Concord, their Intendant-General and Conciliar Committee, thereby evoking a
certain measure of hostility among persons who were oblivious of the
constitutional transition in India.
The summary of the proceedings of these
conferences were marked collectively as Annexure A annexed to the affidavit of
the Union of India. It shows six meetings between November 3, 1967 and January
8, 1970. There were perhaps a number of informal meetings and consultations.
Nothing seems to have been achieved. Government of India repeated their
intention of withdrawing the recognition of the Rulers and stoppage of the
Privy Purses and Privileges, and was prepared only for a negotiated settlement
as to the terms on which the abolition should take place. The Concord of
Princes was not prepared to enter into any negotiations and were chary of a
fresh settlement which might be broken just as simply as the past solemn
engagements and assurances.
The Rulers who, before Independence, had
always displayed the sentiment Ego et rex meus had realised that Princes were
not the only people in Whose word trust should not be placed.
The Government of India acted rapidly. The
President in his speech to the Houses gave expression to the policy of
Government. A Resolution recommending the abolition was moved and passed in the
Rajya Sabha. A Bill was then moved in the Lok 4-L744Sup.CI/71 44 Sabha
intituled. The Constitution (Twenty Fourth Amendment) Bill 1970. It consisted
of three clauses and a short statement of Objects and Reasons. 'the Statement
read :
"The concept of rulership, with Privy
Purses and Special Privileges unrelated to any current functions and social
purposes, is incompatible with an egalitarian social order.
Government have therefore decided to
terminate the Privy Purses and Privileges of the Rulers of former Indian
States. Hence this Bill.
14-5-1970 Y. B. CHAVAN" The Address of
the President to the Joint Session of Parliament, the Resolution above referred
to and the Statement of Objects and Reasons all gave identical reasons.
The Bill was voted upon in the Lok Sabha on
September 2, 1970. 332 votes for and 154 votes against it, were cast. It was
considered in the Rajya Sabha ,on September 5, 1970 and was defeated, 149
voting for and 75 against it. It failed in the Rajya Sabha to reach the
requisite majority of not less than two-thirds of the members present and
voting.
The Bill originally gave no indication of the
date when the Act was to come into operation but in the Lok Sabha an amendment
was accepted by which it was to come into force from October 15, 1970. By the
second clause the Bill omitted Article 291 and 362 of the Constitution and the
third clause omitted Article 366(22). The same evening the Cabinet is said to
have met and to have decided to advise the President to withdraw the
recognition of the Rulers.
The same night the President signed at
Hyderabad an instrument withdrawing recognition of all the Rulers.
Separate orders were. issued to all the
Rulers on the 6th September 1970 and they were also notified in the Gazette as
already mentioned.
on September 7, 1970, the Finance Minister
laid on the table of the Rajya Sabha a statement. He claimed that the power of
the President to withdraw the recognition of the Rulers was unquestioned and
had also been suggested as alternative to the amendment of the Constitution,
and that Government was in fact going to use the power after the adoption of
the Bill amending the Constitution. He gave as his reason for the President's
action that the Bill amending the Constitution was lost by a fraction of a vote
in one of the Houses, that there was widespread support against this outmoded
and antiquated system of Privy Purses', that even those who opposed the Bill
supported the abolition and 45 that it was Government's policy to put an and to
the concept of Rulership and the abolition of Privy Purses and the Privileges.
He hinted that arrangements would be made to enable Rulers to make adjustments
in the transitory period.
These petitions were then filed to question
the action of the President and the Government of India.
The petitioners put at the forefront the
sentiments expressed at the time of the Merger of the Indian States.
The Princes were then described as imbued
with imagination, foresight and patriotism and as co-architects of a democratic
and united India. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel as the Minister in the newly formed
Ministry of States made a speech on October 12, 1949 in the Constituent
Assembly (Ex.
C) in which he pointed out that the Madhya
Bharat Rajpramukh alone gave sufficient cash assets which, if invested, would
cover payments to the Rulers as Privy Purses. and that the payments to the
Rulers represented one-fourth of what they were previously enjoying. He said
that there was nothing by which the Rulers could be forced to merge their
States with India and that the Privy Purses were quid pro quo for parting with
the ruling power by the Rulers and the dissolution of their States as separate
units. He regarded this as a small price for the bloodless revolution and avoidance
of mischief. He exhorted the Constituent Assembly that the Indian Peoples on
their part should ensure fully the guarantee given to them and concluded:
"Our failure to do so would be a breach
of faith and seriously prejudice the stabilization of the New' Order".
The same sentiments were reiterated by Mr. V.
P. Menon (who was the Secretary to the Ministry) in his recent book "The
Story of the Integration of the Indian States",(1961) pp.
461 and 462. He cataloged the number of
villages, palaces, museums, buildings, stables garages, fleets of motor cars,
aeroplanes etc. surrendered by the Rulers. He pointed out that cash balances
were to the tune of Rs. 77 crores and that palaces in Delhi alone were worth
several lakhs of rupees. According to him, the price paid as Privy Purses was
not too high for integration and indeed it was insignificant when compared with
what the Rulers had lost.
The petitions are long argumentative
documents and the reply affidavit equally so. The verbosity of the petitions
(which are almost identical) and the reply affidavit (which is common to all
petitions) does not render the-task of the Court in this important case any the
easier. It is, therefore, necessary to place in their proper perspective the
respective cases of the parties.
46 According to the petitioners, the failure
to amend the Constitution resulted in the retention in it, of the articles
relevant to the Rulers' rights. These Articles, particularly Articles 291 and
362 continued the obligation of the Government to pay the Privy Purses and also
to recognise the Privileges. The Privy Purses stood charged on and were to be
paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India and even Parliament could not vote
upon them. The assurances and guarantees being that of the people in the
Constitution, the Executive Government could not by the indirect device of
withdrawing the recognition of the Rulers avoid the obligation created by the
Constitution. These assurances and guarantees of the Constitution, the
Accession and Integration were but steps and the fixation of Privy Purses and
the recognition of the Privileges was not doubt a historical fact but the
guarantees flowed from the Constitution and were independent of the historical
fact, and had thus to be carried out according to the constitutional
provisions. They based their claim not on the agreements or the covenants but
on the constitutional provisions. According to them, the order of the President
was in violation of the spirit and meaning of Articles 366(22), 291 and 362 and
was an affront to Parliament which had turned down the move for amendment of
these articles.
The President's action robbed the articles of
their content which Parliament did not allow to be done and thus the order of
the President indirectly had the effect of amending the Constitution. The
President's order itself was said to be mala fide, ultra vires since his power
was to recognise a Ruler at a time and for the time being or to withdraw
recognition from a Ruler for cogent and valid reasons, naming in his place a
successor, and not to withdraw recognition from all Rules en masse for no
reason except that the concept of Rulership was considered outmoded or that
some persons held the view that it should not be continued. According to the
petitioners the gaddi of a Ruler had to be filled in accordance with the law
and custom of the family and could not be left vacant. The vast power to
withdraw recognition from all the Rulers at the same time without nominating
any successor could not and did not flow from the definition of a Ruler in
Article 366(22) which contemplated the Continuance of a Ruler who had signed
the Merger Agreement or his successor. The President was thus guilty of a
breach of his duties under the Constitution and acted outside his jurisdiction.
The act of the President was thus said to offend Articles 53, 394, 295 291 and
362 of the Constitution.
In supporting their petition under Article
32, the petitioners claimed that important questions of deprivation of property
and of personal liberty were involved. As illustrations the petitioners
contended that the right to receive Privy Purses was a right to 47 property of
which the Rulers stood deprived as also of other personal properties and
benefits of exemptions under diverse laws was also an inroad upon property
rights. Since there was no authority of law and no compensation, the action was
said to offend Articles 19(1)(f) and 31 of the Constitution.
They also claimed that Government was
prevented by promissory estoppel and had acted in breach of a fiduciary duty.
In the reply affidavit filed by Mr. Asoka Sen
(Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Home Affairs) all the allegations and
submissions (besides the patent facts) were denied. The main contentions in
reality were that this Court lacked jurisdiction to enter upon this dispute in
view of the express bar of Article 363 that the petitions did not lie as no
right of property or personal liberty of the petitioners, was jeopardised and
lastly that the action of the President was perfectly valid and binding as it
was a political act in the exercise of the sovereignty of India, as to which
this Court could say nothing being outside its jurisdiction. 'Article 363, it
was claimed, barred the jurisdiction of all Courts (including the Supreme Court
of India) in any dispute arising out of any provision of a treaty, agreement,
covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instrument which was executed
before the commencement of the Constitution and to which the Government of the
Dominion of India or any of its predecessor Governments was a party and which
had,-or had been continued in operation or in any dispute in respect of any
right accruing under or any liability arising out of any of the provisions of
the Constitution relating to any such treaty etc. and the present was such a
dispute. Since the article began with the words "Notwithstanding anything
in this Constitution", the article could only be read by itself and even
the chapter on Fundamental Rights was excluded. The reason given was that these
instruments were political agreements between High Contracting Parties and the
Municipal Courts had no say in matters which were political or Acts of State.
The Covenants were not self-executing and created imperfect obligations and
depended for their enforceability upon the willingness of Governments to implement
them. Since the claim was based upon what was recognised in these instruments,
this Court could not give any relief as it had no jurisdiction to do so. The
President's,powers to recognise a Ruler, which carried with it the power to
withdraw such recognition flowed from Article 366(22) and this power being an
incident of sovereignty and a political act was not questionable in Courts of
Law. The bar of Article 363 covered such a case also because there was nothing
to show that any recognition carrying with it a Privy Purse and Privileges was
ever intended to be perennial even when the State policy demanded an abolition.
The Privy Purse itself being-in the nature of a political pension, a claim to
it was not property and no claim could arise if it was 48 stopped. Article 291
did not create any legal right but only laid down the source and method of
payment of Privy Purse guaranteed by the Dominion of India and even if it were
assumed that it was private property or that other property rights were
affected by the withdrawal of the recognition, the matter was not justiciable
because of the bar of Article 363 which applied to Articles 291 and 362.
The pleadings in the case are long but the
points are few.
The case involves a positive and a negative
approach in so far as this Court-is concerned. The positive approach involves
the consideration of the reliefs that can be granted and the negative approach
the bar operating under Article 363. The first approach requires consideration
of the validity of the action of the President. It is obvious that if the
action of the President is valid and operative, the implications of that action
must necessarily follow. If it is invalid, for any reason, then the question of
the bar of the jurisdiction of the Court to give relief will arise.
The Union Government however places the bar
at the very threshold and contents that the dispute is such as is expressly
barred by Article 363 but the petitioners contend that there is no dispute at
all under Articles 291 and 362 or it is not of the kind contemplated by that
Article. The Union Government asks that the question of jurisdiction be decided
first because in their opinion it is conclusive, while the other side contends
that there is no( dispute once the invalidity of' the President's order is
established, since articles 291 and 362 would then speak for themselves.
I intend considering first the question of
the validity of the order of the President because everything turns on it.
The arguments for and against that action
may, therefore, be considered. According to the Union of India the act is
political and in the exercise of sovereignty and paramountly. It cannot,
therefore, be questioned in a Court of Law. According to the petitioners it is
not, and is a plain executive order open to question like any other such act
and the bar of article 363 does not apply to such a dispute.
The Union government invokes the analogy of
the British Crown Paramountcy which lapsed on the Indian Independence.
In this connection the claim is that the
provisions of Article 363 and 366(15) and (22) preserve the paramountcy of the
Crown in the President. This argument is independent of the question of bar of
jurisdiction under Art. 363. It seeks to put the President's act outside the
jurisdiction of the Court by reason of the nature of the act. A word may,
therefore, be said about the paramountcy of the British Crown and what is
meant. Reference was made in this connection by the Attorney General to the White
49 Paper on Indian States, Mr. V. P. Menon's book already referred to, and the
account contained in a recent book 'The Great Divide' by Mr. Hodson. He traced
the paramountcy of the British Crown in India. I do not consider it necessary
to refer to them. The best exposition of British Paramountcy is to be found in
a famous letter by Lord Reading Viceroy of India addressed to the Nizam of
Hyderabad when the latter claimed rights of kingship. It is printed as Appendix
I to the White Paper. This is what the Viceroy said " The Sovereignty of
the British Crown is supreme in India, and therefore no ruler of an Indian
State can justifiably claim to negotiate with the British Government on an
equal footing. Its supremacy is not based only upon treaties and engagements,
but exists independently of them and, quite apart from its prerogative in
matters relating to foreign powers and policies, it is the right and duty of
the British Government, while scrupulously respecting all treaties and
engagements with the Indian States, to preserve peace and good order throughout
India. The consequences that follow are so well known, and so clearly apply no
less to Your Exalted Highness than to other Rulers, that it seems hardly
necessary to point them out. But if illustrations are necessary. I would remind
Your Exalted Highness that the Ruler of Hyderabad along with other Rulers
received in 1862 a Sanad declaratory of the British Government's desire for the
perpetuation of his House and Government, subject to continued loyalty to the
Crown : that no succession in the Masnad of Hyderabad is valid unless it is
recognised by His Majesty the King-Emperor : and that the British Government is
the only arbiter in cases of disputed succession.
5.The right of the British Government to intervene
in the internal affairs of Indian States is another instance of the
consequences necessarily involved in the supremacy of the British Crown. The
British Government have indeed shown again and again that they have no desire
to exercise this right without grave reason. But the internal, no less than the
external security which the Ruling Princes enjoy is due ultimately to the
protecting power of the British Government, and where Imperial interests are
concerned, or the general welfare of the people of a State is seriously and
grievously affected by the action of its Government, it is with the Paramount
Power that the ultimate responsibility of taking remedial action, if necessary,
must lie. The varying degrees of 50 internal sovereignty which the Rulers enjoy
are all subject to the due exercise by the Paramount Power of this
responsibility. Other illustrations could be added no less inconsistent than
the foregoing with the suggestion that except in matters relating to foreign
powers and policies, the Government of Your Exalted Highness and the British
Government stand on a plane of equality. But I do not think I need pursue the
subject further. I will merely add that the title "Faithful Ally"
which Your Exalted Highness enjoys has not the effect of putting Your
Government in a category separate from that of other States under paramountcy
of the British Crown".
The 1858 Act had recognised all treaties made
by the East India Company with the Rulers, as binding on the Crown.
Lord Canning in his dispatch of April 30,
1860 recommended the Perpetuation of the rule of the Princes over their States.
This was accepted and a special power of adoption was recognised and new sanads
were issued. The policy of annexation started by Lord Dalhousie then ceased.
The Ruler could, thereafter, be punished only for extreme bad conduct but even
so the territory was not annexed. The Ruler was deposed but a successor was
recognized in his place.
This position continued down to 1935. in 1927
the Butler Committee clearly recognised the claim of the Princes that making
any transfer of the Crown's rights and obligations in relation to the States,
to persons not under the Crown's authority, would be conditional on the
agreement of the States. This was particularly directed against an Indian
Government responsible, to the Indian Legislature. To keep the Indian
Government away from the States, after the advent of the Government of India
Act, 1935 the old political department under the charge of the Governor-General
disappeared. Previously the Governor-General's Executive Council had left the
States entirely to the GovernorGeneral. The Act of 1935 formed the basis of a
personal relationship between the States and the rest of India. This meant a
reversal of the policy and the British Indian Executive was slowly deprived of
all constitutional status vis-a-vis the States. A Crown Representative was
introduced as the link between the States and British India. The Government of
India Act 1935 had visualised a federation between British India and the Indian
States but that scheme did not materialise. The Indian States were anxious to
create sovereign States but the Crown prerogatives in respect of them
continued. Lord Linlithgow's declaration promised no commitment about the
States without their consent in any future constitution 51 that the Indians
might frame for themselves. This was implemented by instructions to the
Governor-General not to hand over paramountcy to the future Indian Government
and paramountcy, so long as it lasted was that of the Crown and not of the
Government of India.
When the Constitution came paramountcy had
already lapsed.
The Indian States were able to make several
reservations in their own favour. They were anxious to frame their own
Constitutions but many States could not withstand pressure of the Ministry of
States and thought better of merging.
with such reservations as the Merger
Agreements made in their favour. The other States like Hyderabad, Mysore and
Jammu & Kashmir on the one hand and the United States or Union of States on
the other also dropped the idea of separate Constitutions for themselves
(except Jammu & Kashmir) and integrated with India, accepting the Indian
Constitution. The Rulers were allowed to get a Privy Purse free of taxes on
income and to enjoy personal property and privileges. Articles 291, 362,
366(15) and (22) were included to recognise those conditions on which surender
of power had taken place. Article 363 was included to keep certain matters away
from Courts and now the most important question is what was granted to the
Rulers by the Constitution and how for their rights could be enforced in a
Court of Law. Paramountcy as such was no more as there was no paramount power
and no vassal. The Rulers had lost their territories and their right to rule
and administer them.
They were left only a recognition of their
original title, a privy purse, their private properties and a few privileges.
These rights were the only indicia of their
former soveignty but they enjoyed them by the force of the Constitution
although in every respect they were ordinary citizens and not potentates. The
paramountcy which the Crown exercised over them was different. Then the Crown
had an absolute freedom to make and unmake Rulers in the exercise of
paramountcy. The Constitution ensured the position of the Ruler and his
successor with regard to the Privy Purse and privileges, although leaving the
President the right, to confer that status on a Ruler by recognition. This
result was reached by treaties, covenants and agreements.
The source or origin of paramountcy of the
Crown was not the treaties, sanads or agreements. There were no paramountcy
rights by reason of which the British were paramount but because they were
paramount, therefore, they had paramountcy rights. When paramountcy lapsed it
did not fall on the shoulders of Indian Government. The right to recognise a
Ruler from out of several claimants was not an act of paramountcy. The
selection had to be in accordance with law and custom. It was not the arbitrary
power which made the conferral of Rulership a gift 52 from the Crown. There is
no provision to that effect in the Constitution or even the Covenants and
Agreements. That the Constitution gave the right to the President to recognise
a Ruler for the time being, is apparent enough but it cannot be stretched to
give a paramountcy of the same character as that enjoyed by the British crown.
To claim such a parmountcy one has to ignore completely the arrangements by
which the Rulers parted with their territories and Ruling rights and were
assured of their Privy Purses and privileges. These rights became
constitutionally protected rights which so long as the Ruler's line was not
extinct belonged to the Ruler for the time being. In one sentence when the
guarantees were given by the Constitution, paramountcy, if any, went out. If it
was intended that rightful claims could be disregarded, at any time, a very
clear provision authorising that they be overridden would have been included.
On the other hand article 362 says in admonitory terms that in the exercise of
the power of Parliament or of the Legislature of a State to make laws or in the
exercise of executive power of the Union or, of a State, due regard shall be
had to the guarantee or assurance given in any such Covenant or Agreement as is
referred to in clause (1) of Article 291 with respect to the personal rights,
privileges, and dignities of the Ruler of an Indian State. This provision is
rather the converse of paramountcy in as much as it compels the two limbs of Government
to have 'due regard' to the guarantees and assurances given to the Rulers.
There can be no paramountcy against a citizen
of India and the Rulers today are not potentiates they were. They are citizens
of India like other citizens albeit with some privileges and privy purses which
other citizens do not get.
That is an accident of history and with the
concurrence of the Indian People in their Constituent Assembly. The power that
has been exercised against them must, therefore, be justified under the
Constitution and the laws and not by invoking a nebulous doctrine of
paramountcy which Lord Jowitt describes in his Dictionary of English Law thus
The relationship of the Sovereign as Emperor of India to the rulers of the
native States, terminated by the Indian Independence Act, 1947".
The Attorney General contended that article
363 'recreated' paramountcy. That article was intended to keep certain matters
outside the jurisdiction of the Court. It must be construed according to its
own terms. No meaning, beyond what the words convey, can be attributed to those
words by resorting to the imperial doctrine. What those words mean I shall
consider later but I 53 reject the claim that the President or the Government
of India can invoke the doctrine to sustain an illegal inroad upon the rights
of citizens.
Nor is the argument that this was some kind
of an 'act of State' of any more validity. This Court has ruled on more than
one occasion that an act of State' is not available against a citizen. An act
of State is a sovereign act which is neither grounded on law nor does it
pretend to be so. It was described by me, quoting from Fletcher-Moulton L. J.
Salaman v. Secretary of State for India(1) as 'a catastrophic change
constituting a new departure', in the State of Saurashtra v. Menon Haji
Ismail(2). I have not been able to better that expression. I further pointed
out that 'in civil commotion or even in war or peace, the State cannot act
'catastrophically' outside the ordinary law and there is legal remedy for its wrongful
'acts against its own subjects or even a friendly alien within the State".
I may again reaffirm the observations in that case 'based upon the statement of
the law by Lord Kingsdown in Secretary of State in Council for India v.
Kamachee Boyl Sabha (3). This is what I Said:
"The question thus ,Is always : Did the
State or its agents purport to act "catastrophically' or subject to the
ordinary course of the Law? This question was posed in Secretary of State in
Council for India v.
Kamachee Boye Sahaba by Lord Kingsdown in
these words :
"What was the real character of the act
done in this case? Was it a seizure by arbitrary power on behalf of the Crown
of Great Britain, of the dominations and property of a neighbouring State, an
act not affecting to justify itself on grounds of Municipal Law? Or was it, in
whole or in part, a possession taken by the Crown under colour of legal title
of the property of the late Raja of Tanjore, in trust for those who, by law,
might be entitled to it on the death of the last possessor? If it were the
latter, the defence set up, of course, has no foundation." The defence is
not available if there is only a colour of legaltitle against a citizen. In
that event, the action must fail unless supported by law. Since there are no
sovereign or political powers under our Constitution every action of the
Executive limb of Government must seek justification in some law. The very
existence of article 363, which is said to incorporate some kind of (1) [1966]
I K.B. 613 at 640 (2) [1960] I S.C.R. 537 at 544 (3) [1859] 13 Moore P.C. 22.
54 paramountcy or act of State,, shows that
there is, no political power outside the law, otherwise an additional bar would
hardly have been necessary.
The learned Attorney General when faced by
the rulings on the act of State of this Court and the English Courts, gave up
the attempt for justification as such and pleaded that the Covenants and
Agreements created 'imperfect obligations'. The phrase.'imperfect obligations'
is more often to be met with in the Law of Contract but it was applied by
Tindal, C.J. to political treaties in G. Gibson & Ors. Assignees of J.
Mallandaino Bankrupt v. The East India Co.(1). There the claim was made by a
retired,' Military Officer for pension against the Directors of the East India
Company based on certain treaties. It was held that such agreements lacked
vinculum juris. The Phrase 'imperfect obligations' was thus used in regard to
individuals as subjects of international rights and duties. The recognition in
an international treaty or other instrument of rights inuring to the benefit of
individuals other than the parties to the agreement, is sometimes 'held not to
confer the right of enforceability at the instance of such other persons.
Therefore, the beneficiary under these rights cannot take measures to enforce
them by his own independent steps. In the Peter Pazmany University(1) case the
Permanent ,Court of International Justice observed "It is scarcely
necessary to point out that the capacity to possess civil rights does not
necessarily imply the capacity to exercise those rights oneself".
Thus a rule of International Law formerly
held the field that persons holding such rights are incapable of asserting them
in the international sphere or in the Municipal Courts.
The instrument may make them owners of rights
and yet take away the remedy from them. This is the sense in which Tindal C.J.
used the phrase 'lacking in vinculum jurists This position has now altered and
there is a rethinking on the subject. It is now gradually gaining recognition
that if there be 'some municipal legislation giving enforceability to the
right, then the right can be claimed in a Municipal Court. This change of view
followed the Advisory Opinion of the Permanent Court of International Justice in
the jurisdiction of the Courts of Danzing in the matter of Railway officials in
Danzing. (I) The rights given by a treaty received a broader acceptance there.
This case gave an exposition of the. rights of individuals in the international
(1) 132 E.R. 1105 (2) Series A/B No. 61 p. 231 (3) Advisory Opinion No. 15,
series B No. 15.
55 sphere and the Municipal Courts. The
argument of Poland in the case was that the agreement between Poland and
Danzing regulating the conditions of employment of the Railway officials taken
over in Railway Service, created rights only between Poland and Danzing and as
that agreement was not incorporated in the laws of Poland, it created no rights
for individuals, and that the Danzing Courts had no jurisdiction to decide in
respect of those rights. The Court did not accept the contention. It observed
"It may be readily admitted that, according to a well-established
principle of international law, the Beam-tenabkommen, being an international
agreement, cannot, as such, create direct rights and obligations for private
individuals. But it cannot be disputed that the very object of an international
agreement, according to the intention of the contracting parties, may be the
adoption by the Parties of some definite rules, creating individual rights andobligations
and enforceable by the national Courts. That there is such an intention in the
present case can be established by reference to the terms of the
Beamtenabkommen." (Page 17) Before dealing with the position of the Rulers
themselves, let me illustrate the application of this observation in our
country in relation to third parties, safeguarded by an international
agreement. The Covenants and Merger Agreements contained clauses guaranteeing
continuance of service to the Civil Servants and of their pensions. Those Civil
servants would not have been able to enforce these agreements in Municipal
Courts by their own individual steps if there was no law or the rights were not
otherwise recognised. But when they shared with the Civil servants of the
former British India, the benefits of Articles 309-311 of the Constitution and
the Rules governing such services, it is not possible to deny to them the
benefits that the Constitution and the Rules confer. The Covenants, cannot then
be said to create 'imperfect obligations' since the Constitution takes the
matter into itself and gives them is own guarantees. The individual rights and
obligations no doubt originally flowed from a contract between High Contracting
Parties and might not have create a vinculum juris in favour of third parties
but the Constitution having granted rights and created corresponding
obligations, those rights and obligations are enforceable in our Courts. This
Court has ruled on many occasions that a recognition of rights by law or
otherwise makes them _justiciable : see for example State of Rajasthan v. Shyam
Lal(1).
(1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 174.
56 The case of the Rulers in a fortiori for
they are the contracting parties. In so far as those guarantees became a part
of our Constitution and were included in various statutes passed by Parliament
such as the Income-,tax Act, the Wealth-tax Act etc., they would be enforceable
according to the tenor of the Constitution ,and the other laws (subject of
course to such bar. as the Constitution creates by Article 363). Then no
question of an 'act of,State' or of 'imperfect obligations' arises. To sustain
the President& act repudiating the rights and obligations on the basis of a
discarded theory of 'imperfect obligations' would drain the constitution and
the. laws of their efficacy by an executive act without amendment of the
Constitution or the laws and that cannot be permitted. This is not a right for
enforcement in foro Conscientiae to make good, or of which the performance
could only be sught for by petition, memorial or remonstrance. This is a ,case
for an action in a Court of Law if the dispute is not barred by the
Constitution itself.
Therefore there is no bar to the jurisdiction
of this Court except that created by Article 363. The ambit of that bar will be
worked out by me on the terms of that article later but before that bar can be
applied one must know what is it that is in controversy here. The main dispute
is as to the validity of the action of the President in withdrawing recognition
from the Rulers without an exception. The petitioners question the power,
authority and jurisdiction of the President to do so. They characterise the act
as mala fide, ultra vires and therefore a nullity. I will consider the matter
in the same order.
The charge of mala fide action in this
connection can only mean want of good faith. Good faith according to the
definition in the General Clauses Act means a thing which is in fact done
honestly, whether it is done negligently or not. In other words an act done
honestly must be deemed to, be done in good faith. Mr. Palkhivala described the
act as wanting in good faith and relying on many cases contended that want of
good faith must avoid the act. It is hardly necessary to refer to those cases
here as it is well-settled that lack of bona fides unravels every transaction.
I do not think that it is open to Mr. Palkhivala to describe the act as wanting
in good faith without pleading any collateral fact. Further it is not open to
me to probe the reasons for a decision by the President. To begin with under
Article 74(2) the question, whether any and if so what, advice was tendered by
the Ministers to the President cannot be inquired into by any Court. Again by
Article 361(1) the President is not answerable to any Court for the exercise
and performance of the powers and duties of his office or for any act done or
purporting to be done by him in the exercise of those powers and duties 57
except in an investigation of a charge under Article 61.
All that is saved is that appropriate
proceedings against the government of India can be taken. Therefore, whether
the President acted rightly or wrongly in the matter may be decided against the
Government of India without questioning the conduct of the President. Therefore,
the only question open is whether the act of the President was ultra vires the
Constitution.
The question of ultra vires was put thus by
the petitioners " An executive exercise of power must be in accordance
with the Constitution under Article
53. Article 362 says that the President must
exercise the power with due regard to the guarantees and assurances. The
President in his action has completely disregarded Articles 291 and 362 and by
withdrawing the recognition of the Princes has acted ultra vires the Constitution.
Under Article 73 the Executive power of the Union is co-terminous with the law
making power of Parliament. When Parliament refused to amend the Constitution,
the President's power did not extend that far by executive action. By his
executive act the President has denuded articles 291 and 362 of their content
for ever. The President was required to recognise the Rulers and has with one
stroke withdrawn the recognition. He is trying to do indirectly what Parliament
refused to dot directly that is to say remove articles 291,362 and 366(22) from
the Constitution. This has, been done without a hearing to the Rulers and is in
breach of accepted principles of natural justice. The rule of law prevails and
no unconstitutional act of any authority, unsupported by law, can avail(1).
The action is not only against the
Constitution but it also affects a large body of tax and other concessions.
Prominent among them are Wealth Tax Act 1957 Ss.2(p) and 5(1)(iii), Gift Tax
Act 1958 S. 5(1)(xiv), Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 S. 5(iii), Income tax Act 1922 Section 4(3) (x);
Income-tax Act 1961 S. 10(19), Estate Duty Act 1953, Section 33(1)(1); Part B
States (Taxation Concessions) Order 1950, Clause 15. Sea Customs Act 1878 Section 23. Freedom from prosecutions and Civil suits to a
certain extent is assured respectively by the Code of Criminal Procedure 1898
S. 197A and the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 S. 87A and 87B read with sections
85 and
86. These privileges have fallen with
Rulership and it could not have been (1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 454, 460.
58 intended that these laws would be rendered
nugatory by the expedient of removing the Princes." The power to withdraw
recognition from a Ruler is claimed by the Attorney General to be implicit in
Article 366(22) because it defines a Ruler in terms of recognition 'for the
time being' by the President. It is also contented that the power to recognise,
itself includes the power to withdraw recognition. It is, therefore, necessary
to see how far the President can go on the words of the article. The critical
words in the articles are 'for the time being.' These words show that the Ruler
is a person, who, to be considered as a Ruler must, at any given moment of
time, be recognised by the President whether he be the original signatory of a
Covenant or Agreement or his successor. The words thus indicate that only one
person at a time can be recognised as the Ruler of a State. It also shows a
continuity of succession so that an interregnum is avoided. It does show that
Rulership cannot be permanent since the continuance as Ruler depends upon the
continuance of the recognition. But the definition neither expressly nor by
implication places the power in the hands of the President to say that although
a Ruler was in existence or a successor was available that, there shall be no Ruler
of any particular State. Such a power does not flow from the definition which
contemplates the existence of a Ruler for the time being. The phrase 'for the
time being' cannot mean that any person can be appointed who has no claim
whatever or that temporary appointments may be made or that no appointment need
be made. The continuity of a Ruler of an Indian State is obligatory so long as
the Ruler is alive or a successor can be found. It may be that where the line
becomes extinct (as happened in some cases) or no suitable successor could be
found that no Ruler need be recognised. But where the Ruler exists or there is
a suitable successor the power to recognise a Ruler is implicit just as much as
the power to withdraw recognition in suitable cases. The Union Government
cannot escape this obligation by invoking paramountcy or some state policy. The
obligation to recognise a Ruler is bound up with the other guarantees contained
in articles 291 and 362. The definition in article 366(22) is merely the key to
find a particular Ruler. The withdrawal of recognition from all the Rulers
renders the guarantees as also the relevant articles of the Constitution
inoperative. It could never be the intention of the Constitution that by an
Executive act the operation of those articles would come to a stop. The action
of the President has the indirect effect not only of abrogating these articles
but also of rendering certain provisions in the Income-tax Act, Wealth Tax Act,
the Gift Tax Act, the Codes of Civil and Criminal Procedures etc., completely
otiose. Executive action can never be allowed to have that effect unless 59 the
power is explicitly conferred. The intention of Article 366(22) is exactly the
converse of what the Union Government understands it to be.
The answer of the first question is that the
power of the President was wholly outside Article 366(22). However wide that
power, it does not extend to withdrawing recognition of all the Rulers by a
mid-night order. The President was incompetent to, do so and, therefore, his
act must be treated as a nullity. This question is independent of Article 363
and has no bearing upon: any Covenant etc. It relates only to the power of the
President in behalf of recognition of Rulers and withdrawal of recognition. The
Court is, therefore, free from Article 363 to consider whether the act can be
sustained or not. That Article only applies to acts within the four comers of
the Article and not to acts wholly outside. I will show later how that bar can
operate on Article 366(22) when I consider Article 363.
For the present I state my conclusion that
having considered the matter I am satisfied that the act must be declared to be
ultra vires and a nullity. This, answers the first ground of attack in favour
of the petitioners The question,, is however, reserved for answer whether I am
barred by article 363.
Before I consider the matter from the angle
of the Articles of the Constitution bearing upon the controversy and the bar of
Article 363 I wish to dispose of one, matter which is also, in a manner of
speaking, a bar at the very threshold.
That bar would arise if this is not a
petition coveted by Article 32. The petitioners seem to base their claim to
relief on four grounds (a) That the order of the President is a nullity;
(b) that by the order of the President their
privy pursues are stopped and that is an infringement articles 19(1)(f) and 31;
(c) that the order also deprives them of
their privileges and some are property rights and some affect personal liberty;
and (d) that statutory rights under certain statutes (already mentioned above)
are destroyed and they result in deprivation of property through illegal taxes.
It is sufficient for this purpose to find out
if any right of property is involved. The most outstanding effect of the order
is the deprivation of the Privy Purses. These Privy Purses are charge on and
paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India, free of all taxes on income (Art.
291). If the payments are obligatory and they L744Sup CI/71 60 can be regarded
as property a petition under Article 32 will lie as the action to deprive the
Rulers of their Privy Purses must be an infringement of Articles 19 and 3 1.
Therefore, I need begin only with the Privy
Purses, the stoppage of which is the direct consequence of the order withdrawing
recognition. A preliminary point arises under article 19 whether the Rulers can
be regarded as citizens.
I have assumed this so far as I cannot see
how otherwise they can be described. In H.H. the Maharana Sahib Shri Bhagwat
Singh Bahadur of Udaipur v. The State of Rajasthan(1) it is laid down that
"The appellant has also, since the Constitution, been a citizen of India,
and his recognition as Ruler under Art. 366(22) of the Constitution has not
altered his status, but as a citizen he is undoubtedly assured a privileged
position." Therefore, the matter can be considered both under Article 1 9
and Article 3 1.
In two cases of the Court Madhaorao Phalka v.
State of Madhya Bharat(2) and State of Madhya Pradesh v. Ranajirao Shinde and
Anr.(3) pensions and cash grants were regarded as property. The reason for the
decision is not as fully given as the importance of the subject required and,
therefore, I permit myself to say a few words here.
I shall show later that the obligation to pay
the Privy Purse to a Ruler is absolute and the right to claim it when due
subsists in each Ruler. This is a petition for the enforcement of Fundamental
Right to property and therefore the petitioners must show that a right to
property is infringed or is in imminent danger of being threatened. The learned
Attorney General questioned the competency of these petitions and the claim
that property rights were involved.
According to him the right is one to continue
to receive a payment de future and no more. A right to receive payment is not,
according to him, a right to property.
The attempt is to equate the periodic
payments as being in the nature of payments of debts. It is said that this
creates a right in personam and not a right in rem.
Therefore, there is enforcement of an
obligation in personam but not a right to reach property which can be said to
belong to the Rulers. I do not accept the contention of the learned
Attorney-General.
(1) [1954] 5 S.C.R. 1, at page 6 (2) [1961] 1
S.C.R. 957 (3) [1968] 3 S.C.R. 489 61 In his summary of the Law of Contract (p.
124) Langdell remarked that 'a debt...... according to the popular conception
of the term, is a sum of money belonging to one person (the creditor), but in
the possession of another (the debtor). He questioned this approach. Blackstone
contrasted property in possession and property in action and held contracts to
be within the latter(1). He was in effect thinking of a debt. According to him
property in action exists :
"Where a man hath not the occupation,
but merely a bare right to occupy the thing in question, the possession whereof
may, however, be, recovered by a suit or action at law.........".
He was of opinion that till then the thing or
its equivalent, remains in suspense, and the injured party has only the right
and not the occupation. It being a thing in potentia and not in esse it is only
a thing in action and not possession. Sohm (The Institutes) also says that till
the fulfillment of the obligations the creditor has right only against the
debtor and not against a thing.
This old concept of property is no longer
held to be true.
Mark by (2) regards the liability of the
promisor as itself a thing which is capable of being bought and sold, assigned
and transferred and if of money value, may itself be regarded as an object of
ownership. An obligation according to him is as much a res as any other
property and the only difference is in the mode of enjoyment. The creditor
realizes this ownership by compelling the debtor to perform his obligation. As
illustration he gives a catalogue of passive 'rights of ownership. Anson
(Principles of Law Contract) supports him by pointing out that an obligation is
a right of control exercisable by one person over others for acts which have a
money value.
The dynamic theory of obligations regards a
debt as a claim to 'an equivalent in a value to a floating charge against the
generality of things which are the properties of the debtor'. From this is
developed the notion of a credit-debt where property rights arise from a promise,
express or implied in respect of ascertained or readily ascertained sums of
money. Thus a debt or a liability to pay money passes through four stages.
First there is a debt not 'yet due. The debt has not yet become a part of the
obligor's 'things' because no net liability has yet arisen. The second stage is
when the liability may have arisen but is not either ascertained or admitted.
Here again the amount due has not become a part of the obligor's things. The
third stage is reached when the liabi(1) (See Commentaries Vol. II XXv pp.
396-398) (2) (Elements of Law 1871 6th Edition p. 320) 62 lity is both
ascertained and admitted. Then it is property proper of the debtor in the
creditor's hands. The law begins to recognise such property in insolvency, in dealing
with it in fraud of creditors, fraudulent preference of one creditor against
another, subrogation, equitable estoppel, stoppage intransitu etc. A
credit-debt is then a debt fully provable and which is fixed and absolutely
owing. The last stage is when the debt becomes a judgment debt by reason of a
decree of a Court. Thus an American Judge held 'outstanding uncollected
accounts' as property. Standard Marine Insurance Co. v. Board of Assessors(1).
It is because of this that the French Law includes such obligations in mobiles.
Applying these tests to the Privy Purses, it
is clear that they would be property. As soon as an Appropriation Act is passed
there is established a credit-debt and the outstanding Privy Purse becomes the
property of the Ruler in the hands of Government. It is also a sum certain and
absolutely payable.
The learned Attorney-General however contends
that Article 291 which charges the Privy Purse on the Consolidated Fund of
India, to be paid to the Ruler, free of all taxes on income does not provide
that it shall be paid and, therefore, the Article only lays down the source and
manner of payment but creates no right to claim, receive or enforce payment. In
my judgment this is a complete misreading of the Article.
The word 'charged', is a term of art. In
general law 'a charge' creates a pledge and also a priority in payment.
The word also denotes in Parliamentary
practice non votability. The latter meaning distinguishes it from those items
which are payable indiscriminately from the same fund.
The result of charging a sum on the
Consolidated Fund is to provide that its destination shall not be altered even
by vote of Parliament and the charging is sufficiently effective for ensuring
the right application. It also sometime,; creates priorities as in the
Constitutions of some other countries. In our Constitution numerous items of
payment are charged on the Consolidated Fund but no priority inter. se is
established. Yet Article 291 makes the.......... amount payable to the Ruler
and, therefore, creates a right in him to demand it. The words of the Article
are 'shall be charged on and paid out of etc'. The article makes the payment
obligatory. The words when expanded read 'shall be charged on and shall be paid
out of etc'. the direction to pay is in no uncertain terms. The article is thus
self-ordaining. The recipient is mentioned in (b) where (1) 123 La 717, 720.
63 the Article says 'and the sums so paid to
any Ruler' and this shows who is to be paid. Therefore, the article in addition
to the source and manner also lays down that it shall be paid and paid free of
taxes on income to the Ruler.
The Article thus not only creates a liability
but also a right in the Ruler. It is self-supporting and self ordaining.
The learned Attorney-General contends that
even accepting all this as a valid construction of the article 291 of the
Constitution, the petitioners must fail because they are seeking either to
enforce the Covenants and Agreements or on seeking to enforce a provision of
the Constitution relating to such Covenants and Agreements. The same argument
is also raised in respect of articles 362 and 366(22). According to him the
petitioners stand excluded by Article 363.
This is the crux of the case before us. The
answer to this question depends on the meaning to be attributed to the four
article in question, and determines the fate of these petitions.
I begin with article 363. That article was
quoted in extenso earlier. The learned Attorney-General used the historical
events as background for his contention that Article 363 must be construed as
giving an exclusive right of determination to the President on the subject of
recognition and withdrawal of recognition. He submitted that just as an act of
State cannot be questioned in a Municipal Court so also the withdrawal of
recognition cannot be called in question. He cited a large number of
authorities in support of his case that an act of State is not subject to the
scrutiny of the Courts.
The question here is not one of an act of
State. Nor can any assurance be drawn from the doctrine of act of State.
What we have to do is to construe the
article. It bars jurisdiction of Courts. It, has no bearing upon the rights of
the Rulers as such. It neither increases. nor reduces those rights by an iota.
I shall presently attempt to find out its meaning. Before I do so I must ,say
that it is a well-known rule of interpretation of provisions barring the
jurisdiction of Civil Courts that they must be strictly construed for the
exclusion of the jurisdiction of a Civil Court, and least of all the Supreme
Court, is not to be lightly inferred. The gist of the present dispute is
whether the article bars the relief to the petitioners although as held by me,
the order of the President is ultra vires.
The article commences with the opening words
'notwithstanding anything in this Constitution'. These exclusionary words are
no doubt potent enough to exclude every consideration arising 64 from the other
provisions of the Constitution including the Chapter on Fundamental Rights, but
for that reason alone we must determine the scope of the articles strictly. The
article goes on to say that jurisdiction of all Courts including the Supreme
Court is barred except that the President may consult the Supreme Court. Having
said this the articles goes on to specify the matters on which the
_jurisdiction is barred. This it does in two parts. The first part is : 'in any
dispute arising out of any provision of a treaty etc. which was entered into or
executed before the commencement of this Constitution by any Ruler of an Indian
State to which the Government of the Dominion of India was a party and which
has or has been continued in operation after such commencement'. This shows
that a dispute relating to the enforcement, interpretation or breach of any
treaty etc. is barred from the Courts' jurisdiction. The words 'arising out of
the provisions, of a treaty etc.' limit the words. Thus if a treaty, covenant
etc. is characterised as forged by any party, that would not be a dispute ,arising
out of any provision of a treaty, covenant etc.. That dispute would be whether
there is a genuine treaty or not. This illustration is given by me to show that
the exclusion is not all-embracing. The dispute to be barred must be arise from
a provision of the treaty etc.
The second part .bars the Courts'
jurisdiction 'in any dispute in respect of any right accruing under or any
liability or obligation arising out of any of the provisions of this
Constitution relating to any such treaty etc.' Here the dispute must be in
respect of a right which accrues under a provision of the Constitution or the
liability or obligation must arise similarly from a provision. The words
'provisions of this Constitution' are not left unqualified.
They could not be left unqualified for then
the latter part would have barred every dispute from the Courts. The provisions
had to be pointed out. The article however does not refer to any article by its
number. If the article had said 'in any dispute in respect of any right accruing
under or any liability or obligation arising out of articles 291,362 and
366(22)' all controversy in this case would have been at an end. But the
article uses a qualifying phrase which does not name but describes the
provisions. A search has, therefore, to be made with a view to determining
which provision answers the description and which does not. In other words, we
have to satisfyourselves, before we deny out jurisdiction, that of the articles
291,362,366(22) which one, or all of them answer the description. The
requirement is that the article must be a provision 'relating to' a treaty
covenant etc. I must therefore examine each of the three articles
291,362,366(22) to discover if all of them and, if not, which of them would fit
in with those words.
65 The learned Attorney-General practically
read every word through some dictionary or other. The words are 'relating to.
They mean that the provisions must bear upon treaties etc. as its dominant
purpose or theme. It is not sufficient if the treaties etc. are mentioned there
for some collateral purpose. During the course of arguments I illustrated my
meaning by referring to Article 102 which provides that a person is
disqualified if he is an un discharged insolvent 'and asked the question
whether the provision could be said to be relating to 'membership' or to
'insolvency' and got obvious answer that it is the former. The fact that it
mentions 'insolvency', 'insanity' etc. does not make it any other than a
provision relating to membership of parliament.
The dominant purpose and theme of the article
is one and one only and that has to be discovered before one can say that it is
'relating to' this or that. A similar illustration is to be found in article
105 (3) where a provision is to be found relating to powers etc. of Indian
Parliament and not to those of the House of Commons. Therefore, in trying to
find out whether any provision is `relating to' a treaty etc. it is not enough
to find a mention of treaty etc. That may be for a subsidiary purpose, not sufficient
to qualify for consideration as the dominant theme. It is the dominant purpose
and theme which alone determines the quality of the provision.
I shall now apply this test to article
291,362 and 366(22) beginning with article 362 since to my mind it is the
plainest of all and is definitely within the description.
It provide directly for the enforcement of
guarantees and assurances by requiring Parliament, the Legislatures and the
Executive Governments of the Union and the States to have 'due regard' for
those guarantees and assurances. The article can only be used to support a
claim to rights, privileges and dignities. Its dominant theme is the rights,
privileges and dignities of the Rulers under Covenants and Agreements and
therefore, the provision is 'relating to' Covenants and Agreements. The
reference to Article, 291 does not influence the application of the test to
Article 291 because that is merely a legislative device and does not tie the
two Articles together. It only saves repetition of certain phrases already used
in Article 291. If Article 362 were earlier in the Constitution the phrase
would have occurred in it and would have been referred to in the other article.
Therefore no conclusion can be drawn from this description in Article 362. Therefore
article 362 is one of the provision relating to a treaty, covenant etc. A
litigant invoking its aid really relies on a provision relating to a Coveant
etc.
I shall now consider Article 366(22). That is
only a definition clause. It is intended to point out who is the Ruler of 66
which State. It does so by saying that a Ruler is a person (a) who entered into
a Covenant or Agreement before the commencement of the Constitution and the
payment of any sum free of tax had been guaranteed or assured by the Government
of the Dominion of India as privy purse or (b) the successor of such Ruler. For
purposes of (a) the same repetition is again avoided by the same legislative
device of referring to article 291 for brevity. This Article renders the
certainty of assumption of Rulership to depend upon recognition and that
recognition is worked out primarily under Covenants and Agreements. The.
,dominant and immediate purpose and application of the Article depends upon
Covenants and Agreements. I have earlier said that the President in recognising
a Ruler or withdrawing his recognition does not act arbitrarily but in the
light of Covenants and Agreements. All such instruments mention law and custom
of the family except the Bhopal Agreement where a local statute has to be
observed. The selection of a Ruler's successor thus has to be worked out under
a Covenant or Agreement. The Article, therefore, has for its dominant purpose
the selection of Rulers through the application of the Covenants and
Agreements. After the President has exercised his jurisdiction and power to
recognise ,a Ruler according to his understanding of the implications of a
,Covenant etc, no one else has jurisdiction to enter upon the same question
unless it can be proved that the act was null and void in to. When the
President acts within the four corners of his authority the matter is barred by
Article 363. If this were not so then the recognition of a Ruler or successor
by the President would be subject to further confirmation by the Courts and that
is not the meaning of article 366(22).
During the course of arguments I pointed out
that if the Maharja of Jhind were recognised as the Nizam of Hyderabad, there
would be no application of Article 366(22) and the action so wholly arbitrary
as not to be protected by Article 363. The answer was that the President would
never do so.
But who would have thought in 1950 that
recognition of. all the Rulers would be withdrawn by a single order? Therefore,
extreme examples are necessary to solve extreme cases. I have questioned the
action of the President because the bar of Article 363 does not operate.
Neither is the recognition of an original signatory of a Covenant or Agreement
involved, nor the recognition of a successor. The act is not even one which the
Court leaves alone because the discretion is exercised in a manner and to the
extent a President in the proper discharge of his functions can go.
What is done is to take away recognition from
all Rulers and as such power does not flow from Article 366(22), the bar of
Article 363 does not apply to such a dispute. It arises neither from the
Covenants etc.
67 nor from the ,provisions of the
Constitution. It ceases to have the protection of Article 363.
Article 363 immediately follows Article 362.
Although not much significance can be attached to the collocation of the
articles, it is to be noticed that the exclusionary article wants us to search
for a provision relating to a treaty etc.
before staying our hands. It does leave the
matter open when it could have ruled out the mystery by naming the articles
under which relief was to be barred. By applying the test, I have indicated,
the provision is located. One such provision is article 366(22) when the
President acts within the discretion given by Covenants and Agreements.
There remains Article 291 to consider. That
article was read and re-read before us. Every word in that article was
commented upon and dictionaries were consulted. I do not propose to refer to
dictionaries at all. The words of the article are plain enough to me and I have
only to discover its dominant and immediate purpose or theme to say whether it
is a provision relating to Covenants or Agreements. It, no doubt, begins by
mentioning Covenants and Agreements but that is not all. We cannot from that
fact alone bar ourselves. The relationship between the dominant purpose of the
provision and the Covenants and Agreements still remains to be established and
their involvement in the dispute must be found. In this connection we must ask
the question : Is this provision in reality and substance a provision on the
subject matter of Covenants and Agreements? It is not enough that it refers to
the Covenants and Agreements. It should make them the subject matter of
enactment and decision.
The Article when carefully analysed leads to
these conclusions : The main and only purpose of the provision is to charge
Privy Purses on the Consolidated Fund of India and make obligatory their
payment free of taxes on income. It narrows the guarantee of the Dominion
Government from freedom from all taxes to freedom only from taxes on income.
Earlier I had occasion to show that the
Princes had guaranteed to themselves their Privy Purses free of all taxes. The
Dominion' Government had guaranteed or assured the same freedom. The
Constitution limits the freedom to taxes on income and creates a charge on the
Consolidated Fund. There were other guarantees as in the Merger Agreements of
Bilaspur and Bhopal (quoted earlier) which are ignored by the Article. The
guarantee of the Dominion Government is thus continued in a modified form. The
reference to Covenants and Agreements is casual and subsidiary. The immediate
and dominant purpose of the provision is to ensure payment of Privy Purses, to
charge them on the Consolidated Fund 68 and to make them free of taxes on
income. The argument of the learned Attorney-General that it indicates only the
source and manner of payment rather destroys the case for the application of
article 363 than lends support to it.
The mention therein of Covenants and
Agreements is for its own purpose so that the amounts need not be specified. In
this connection there is no difference between Art. 290A and 291 although the
learned Attorney-General made much of the mention of the name of the Travancore
Devasom Fund in the former and absence of the names of the Rulers in the
latter, or again the mention of a specific sum in the former and no sum in the
latter. The article is self sustaining and selfordaining. Its purpose is not
relating to Covenants etc.
but to something else. Article 291 differs
from Articles 362 and 366(22) in this that the Privy Purses have already been
settled and one has not to enforce the Covenants at all. One does not enforce
the Covenants but the mandate of the Article itself. Whenever the Privy Purse
is modified under the terms of a Covenant, the Article is again invokedab
extra. That dispute isnot related to Article 291 and the bar of Article 363
operates. That matter is outside the jurisdiction of Courts. It is only when the
Privy Purse is a settled fact of which the Courts can take notice, without
having to construe the Covenants for itself that the bar of Article 363 is
avoided. In that case the Article does not answer the description of 'a
dispute' or of the latter part of Article 363.
My conclusions on articles 291, 362, and
366(22) are that article 291 is not a provision relating to Covenants and
Agreements but a special provision for the source of payment of privy purses by
charging them on the Consolidated Fund and for making the payment free of taxes
on income. It does not in its dominant purpose and theme answer the description
in the latter part of Article 363. Article 362 is within the bar of Article 363
because its dominant purpose is to get recognised the Covenants and Agreements
with Rulers However, in so far as the same guarantees find place in legislative
measures the provisions of Article 362 need not be invoked and the dispute
decided on the basis of those statutes. Such a case may not attract article 362
and consequently the bar of Article 363 may not also apply.
Article 366(22) is within the description so
long as the President in recognising a Ruler or a successor is effectuating the
provisions of a Covenant or Agreement. It may apply when the discretion exercised
is relatable to his powers flowing from the Covenants read with the Article.
However where the President acts wholly
outside the provisions of Article 366(22) his action can be questioned because
the bar applies to bona fide and legitimate action and not to ultra vires
actions.
69 The error in the case of the Union of
India arises from certain circumstances. The first is to think that the
paramountcy of the Crown descended upon the President on Indian Government. In
that paramountcy the recognition of a Ruler was a gift from the Crown. In view
of the history of integration of States and the: provisions of the Constitution
in Articles 291, 362 and 366(22), there is no paramountcy left at all, if
paramountcy could at all. be exercised against citizens. The only discretion
left is to select a suitable successor to a Ruler and perhaps to withdraw
recognition on grounds which are sound and sufficient. Whether such. another
kind of withdrawal of recognition may be equally capable of being questioned in
a Court of law, is a matter on which I do not express an opinion. Therefore the
President cannot claim a total immunity for his acts from the scrutiny of the
Court.
Neither the paramountcy of the Grand Moghul
who could give Subehdarships to his Generals as he pleased nor the paramountcy
of the British Crown has descended to him.
This eorror is further enhanced by too facile
a reading of Article 363. Any tenuous connection between an Article and the
Covenant or Agreement, how-ever remote, is not to be considered sufficient to
make a provision fall within the description in the latter part of Article 363.
Due, regard was not paid to the fact that the draftman would have referred to
numbers of Articles if the disputes of every kind under those article stood
excluded.
The learned Attorney-General relied in
particular on some cases which he said had laid down that the act of
recognition is a political act, that it cannot be questioned before a Court of'
Law. He also referred to cases in which the question of the application of
article 363 had arisen.
My brother Hegde in his judgment has
sufficiently considered them and I am in such agreement with him that I find it
unnecessary to repeat what he has said' there. I adopt his reasoning.
In conclusion I hold the orders of the
President to be ultra vires and declare them to be so. In consequence a writ of
mandamus shall issue not to enforce the orders. The petitions are allowed with
costs.
Shah, J. On August 15, 1947, Maharajadhiraja
Jivaji Rao Scindia of Gwalior--hereinafter called 'Jivaji Rao'--executed in
instrument of accession stipulating that the Governor-General of India, the
Dominion Legislature, the Federal Court of India, and other Dominion
authorities shall for the purpose of the Dominion, exercise in relation to the
State of Gwalior, such functions as may be vested in them by the Government of
India Act, 1935, in respect of Defence, External Affairs, Communications and
matters ancillary thereto.
70 On April 22, 1948, twenty heads of States
in the Madhya Bharat region executed a covenant to form the United State of
Gwalior, Indore and Malwa. The covenant guaranteed to each head of covenanting
State payment of the amount specified therein as his privy purse out of the
revenues of the United State; to full ,ownership, use and enjoyment of all
private properties belonging to him on the date of making over the
administration of the State to the Rajpramukh; to succession to the gaddi of
the State according to law and custom; and to all personal privileges,
dignities and titles enjoyed by him within and outside the territories of his
State immediately before the 15th day of August, 1947.
Five more States joined the United State of
Gwalior, Indore and Malwa (Madhya Bharat) with effect from July 1, 1948.
On .July 19, 1948, Jivaji Rao executed on
behalf of the United State of Gwalior, Indore and Malwa (Madhya Bharat) a
revised instrument of accession. Pursuant to the merger agreements, it was
proclaimed on November 24, 1949, that the United State of .Madhya Bharat
adopted the Constitution of India as the Constitution of the United State. The
Constitution of India was promulgated on November 26, 1949, and was brought
into force (except for certain articles specified in Art. 394) with effect from
January 26, 1950.
The President of India recognized Jivaji Rao
as the Ruler of Gwalior. The Government of India continued to pay the privy
purse and accoredd to him the privileges specified in the instrument of
accession and the merger agreement, except those which were modified by
statutes. After the death of Jivaji Rao the President recognized Madhav
Rao-petitioner herein-as the Ruler of Gwalior.
Under the Madhya Bharat Gangajali Fund Trust
Act, 1954, enacted by the State Legislature the Ruler of the State of Gwalior is
one of the three trustees authorised to manage the Gangajali Fund settled by
the State and to apply the income thereof for charitable purposes.
On September 2, 1970, a Bill instituted the
Constitution.
(Twenty fourth Amendment) Bill, 1970, and
providing that ."Articles 291 and 362 of the Constitution and clause (22)
of Article 366 shall be omitted"was introduced in the Lok Sabha. The Bill
was declared passed with the amendment that the provisions thereof shall come
into oporeation with effect from October 15, 1970. On September 5, 1970, the
motion for consideration of the Bill did not obtain, in the Rajya Sabha, the
requisite majority of not less than twothirds of the Members present and voting
as required by Art.
368 of the Constitution. The motion for 71
introduction of the Bill was declared lost. A few hours there-after the
President of India purporting to exercise power under clause (22) of Art. 366
of the Constitution signed an instruments withdrawing recognition of all the
Rulers. A communication to;, the effect was issued "by Order and in the
name of the President"' was received by the petitioner stating that :
"In exercise of the powers vested in him
under Article 366(22) of the Constitution, the President hereby directs that
with effect from the date of this Order His Highness Maharajadhiraja Madhav Rao
Jivaji Rao Scindia Bahadur do cease to be recognised as the Ruler of
Gwalior." Similar orders were communicated to all other Rulers in-, India
who had been previously recognized under Art. 366(22) of the Constitution.
The Union Finance Minister laid on the table
of the Rajya Sabha, on September 7, 1970, a statement, inter alia, that :
"........ Government is fortified in the
belief that there is widespread, support in the country for putting an end to
an out-moded and antiquated system which permitted the enjoyment of privileges
and privy purses by a small section of our people without any corresponding
social obligations on their part.
As it has been Government's declared policy
to. abolish these privileges and privy purses and also to put an end to the
very concept of Rulership, Government felt they would be justified in
de-recognising the Rulers and thus putting an end to a period of political and'
other uncertainties so undersirable in a matter of this nature. Accordingly,
President has decided to derecognise all the Rulers and thereby terminate their
privy purses and privileges with immediate effect. Orders have been issued in
pursuance of the decision." Madhav Rao Scindia moved a petition on
September 11, 1970, in this Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution
claiming-(a) a declaration that the order dated September 6, 1970 was
"unconstitutional, ultra vires and void" and a direction quashing
that order; (b)a declaration that the petitioner continues to be the Ruler of
Gwalior and to be entitled to privy purse and to, personal rights and
privileges accorded to him as Ruler; and (c) a direction to the Union of India
to continue to pay the privy, 72 purse and to continue to recognise the Rulership
and the personal rights and privileges of the petitioner arid to implement and
observe the provisions of the covenant and the merger agreement. He claimed
that in making the order the President acted without authority of law; that the
order was made for collateral purpose; .and that by the order the rights
guaranteed to the petitioner under Arts. 14, and 19 and 31 of the Constitution
were infringed. The petition was later amended with leave of the Court and it
was claimed that the order infringed the guarantee under Art. 21 of the
Constitution also.
The Union of India by their affidavit
contended, inter alia, that the petition was not maintainable because the
source of the right to receive the privy purse and to be accorded the
privileges ,claimed was a political agreement and the privy purse was in the
nature of a political pension; that Art.
291 did not impose any obligation upon the
Union to pay the privy purse; that Arts. 291 and 362 of the Constitution did
not in-vest the petitioner and the other Rulers with any enforceable rights;
that recognition of the Rulers under Art. 366(22) was a "matter of State
policy" and the President was competent to pass the order dated September
6, 1970; that the order was not made for a collateral purpose as alleged; and
that by the order the guarantee of Arts. 14, 19(1)(f), 31(1) or any other
article of the Constitution was not infringed.
By the order of-the President withdrawing his
recognition as Ruler, the petitioner is denied the right to the privy purse and
to the personal rights, privileges and dignities accorded to him as a Ruler; he
is also denied the benefit of the exemption from liability to pay income-tax
under s. 10(1a) of the Income-tax Act, 1961; Wealth-tax under s. 5 (1) (iii)
& (xiv) of the Wealth-tax
Act, 1957; Gift-tax under s. 5(1)(xiv) of the
Gift-tax, 1958; and of the exemption from liability to pay duty under the Sea
Customs Act, 1878, which remains operative under the
Customs Act, 1961: he is also deprived of the statutory protection that he
shall not be sued without the consent of the Central Government under S. 87-B
of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, and that cognizance of any offence
alleged to have been committed by him shall not be taken by any Court without
the previous sanction under s. 197-A of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898. The
petitioner is also disentitled to the management and administration of the
Gangajali Fund Trust.
By his order dated August 22, 1961, the
President recognised the petitioner as the Ruler of Gwalior. If the order of
the President is without authority of law, as the petitioner contends it is,
there is a clear infringement of the guarantee of the fundamental rights under
Arts. 19(1) (f), 21 and 31 (1) of the Constitution.
73 It is unnecessary in the view we take, to
deal with the plea raised by Mr. Palkhivala that Rulership is
"property" and the order of the President deprives the petitioner of
that property without authority of law.
Validity of the order of the President is
challenged on the grounds that-(1) the President has no power to withdraw recognition
of a Ruler once recognised; (2) exercise of the power to withdraw recognition,
assuming that the President has such power, is coupled with the duty to
recognise his successor and an order made without recognising a successor is
invalid; (3) the order of the President "de-recognising" all the
Rulers en masse amounted to arbitrary exercise of power; and (4) in any event,
the order was made for a collateral purpose, that is, to give effect to the
"policy of the Government" after the Government was unable to secure
the requisite majority in the Parliament to the Constitution Amendment Bill.
Article 366(22) of the Constitution reads
"In this Constitution, unless the context otherwise requires, the
following expressions have the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them,
that is to say(22)"Ruler" in relation to an Indian State means the
Prince, Chief or other person by whom any such covenant or agreement as is
referred to in clause (1) of article 291 was entered into and who for the time
being is recognised by the President as the Ruler of the State, and includes
any person who for the time being is recognised by the President as the
successor of such Ruler." Clause (15) of Art. 366 defines an "Indian
State" as meaning "any territory which the Government of the Dominion
of India recognised as such a State'.-" Article 291, as amended by the
Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, reads as follows:
"Where under any covenant or agreement
entered in by the Ruler of any Indian State before the commencement of this
Constitution, the payment of any sums, free of tax, has been guaranteed or
assured by the Government of the Dominion of India to any Ruler of such State,
as privy purse-(a) such sums shall be charged on, an paid out of, the
Consolidated Fund of India; and (b) the sums so paid to the Ruler shall be exempt
from all taxes on income." 74 The definition of "Ruler" in cl.
(22) of Art. 366 is in two parts : a person is a Ruler if he being (a) a
Prince, Chief or other person who had entered into the covenant or agreement as
is referred to in cl. (1) of Art. 291, is for the time being recognised by the
President as the Ruler; or (b) if he is for the time being recognised by the
President as the successor of the Ruler mentioned in part (a). Use of the expression
"for the time being" in relation to the persons who had entered into
covenants or agreements, and in relation to the successor, may perhaps imply
that the President has the power inappropriate cases and for adequate reasons
to withdraw recognition, but that is a matter on which it is unnecessary for
the purpose of this petition to express any final opinion Granting that the
President may withdraw recognition of a Ruler once granted, the power conferred
by Art. 366(22) is exercisable only for good cause, i.e. because of any
personal disqualifications incurred by a Ruler. By the provisions enacted in
Arts. 366(22), 291 and 362 of the Constitution the privileges of Rulers are
made an integral part of the constitutional scheme. Thereby a class of citizens
are, for historical reasons, accorded special privileges. They cannot be
derprived of those privileges arbitrarily,. for the foundation of our
Constitution is firmly laid in the Rule of Law and no instrumentality of the
Union, not even the President as the head of the Executive, is invested with
arbitrary authority.
In the affidavit on behalf of the Union of
India it was averred that "the concept of Rulership, the privy purse and
the privileges without any relatable function or responsibility have become
incompatible with democracy, equality and social justice in the context of
India of today"; and that since "the commencement of the Constitution
many things have changed, many hereditary rights and unearned income have been
restricted and many privileges and vested interests have been done away with
and many laws have been passed with the object of checking the concentration of
economic power-both rural and industrial, the Union of India have decided that
the concept of Rulership, the privy purse and the privileges should be
abolished." Thereby the executive arrogates to itself power which it does
not possess : our Constitution does not invest the power claimed in the
executive branch of the Union.
The plea that in recognising or
"de-recognising" a person as a Ruler, the President exercises
"political power which is a sovereign power and that after an order of
de-recognition "no erstwhile Ruler can make a claim in respect of the
Rulership or the privy purse or any of the privileges' since the relevant covenants
under which the rights of the Rulers were recognised were 75 " political
agreements" and the rights and obligations thereunder were liable to be
varied or repudiated in accordance with "State policy" in the
interests of the people also receives no countenance from our Constitution.
The first branch of the argument is
inconsistent with the basic concept under our Constitution of division of State
functions; the second is inconsistent with the history of events between 1947
and 1949, and the third receives, for reasons to be presently stated, no
support from the.
relevant constitutional provisions.
Whether the Parliament may by a
constitutional amendment abolish the rights and privileges accorded to the
Rulers is not, and cannot be, debated in this petition, for no such
constitutional amendment has been made. The petitioner challenges the authority
of the President by an order purporting to be made under Art. 366(22) to
withdraw recognition of Rulers so as to deprive them of the rights and
privileges to which they are entitled by virtue of their status as Rulers.
The functions of the State are classified as
legislative, judicial and executive : the executive function is the residue
which does not fall within the other two functions.
Constitutional mechanism in a democratic
policy does not contemplate existence of any function which may qua the
citizens be designated as political and orders made in exercise whereof are not
liable to be tested for their validity before the lawfully constituted courts :
Rai Sahib Ram Jawaya Kapur and Others v. State of Punjab;(1) Jayantilal
Amritlal Shodhan v. F. N. Rana;(1) and Halsbury's Laws of England 3rd Edn.,
Vol. 7, Art. 409, at p. 192.
Observations made in two judgments of this
Court, on which the Attorney-General relied, do not support a contrary view.
In Nawab Usman Ali Khan v. Sagarmal(3) this
Court held, that the amount payable to the Ruler of Jaora "on account of
the privy purse" was exempt from attachment in execution of the decree
Civil Court, because it was a "political pension" within the meaning
of s. 60 (1) (g) of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Court in determining the
true nature of the privy purse, characterised the sanction for payment as
"political and not legal". That has, however, no bearing on the
question in issue here. In Kunvar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India and
Others (4) this Court negatived the claim of an applicant that his right to
property was violated because the President accepted another claimant to the
gaddi of Dholpur as Ruler. The Court observed that the recognition of Rulership
by the President, in exercise of his political power, did not amount to
recognition of any right to private properties of the Ruler. The Court (1)
[1955] 2 S.C.R. 225 (2) [1964] 5 S. C.R. 294 (3) [1965] 3 S.C.R. 201 (4) [1970]
2 S.C.R. 631 --744Sup.CI/71 76 did 'not attempt to classify the exercise of the
Presidential function under Art. 366(22) as distinct from executive functions:
that is clear from the dictum that the exercise of the President's power was
"an instance of purely executive function".
The history of negotiations which culminated
in the integration of the territories of the Princely States before the
commencement of the Constitution clearly indicates that the recognition of the
status of the Rulers and their rights was not temporary, and also not liable to
be varied or repudiated in accordance with "State policy". Power of
the President to determine the status of the Rulers by cancelling or
withdrawing recognition to effectuate the policy of the Government to abolish
the concept of Rulership is therefore liable to be challenged in these
petitions.
The circumstances in which the constitutional
provisions under cls. (15) and (22) of Art. 366, and Arts. 291 and 362 were
incorporated may be briefly set out.
In the era before 1947 the term
"State" applied to a political community occupying a territory in
India of defined boundaries and, subject to a single Ruler who enjoyed or
exercised, as belonging to him, any of the functions and attributes of internal
sovereignty duly recognised by the British Crown. There were-, in India more
than 560 States : forty out of those States had treaty relations with the
Paramount Power : a larger number of States had some form of engagements or
sanads, and the remaining enjoyed in one or the other form 'recognition of
their status by the British Crown. The treaties, engagements and sanads covered
a wide field, and the rights and obligations of the States arising out of those
agreements varied from State to State. The rights that the British Crown as the
Paramount Power exercised in relation to the States covered authority in
matters external as well as internal. The States had no international
personality, the Paramount Power had exclusive authority to make peace or war,
or to negotiate or communicate with foreign States.
The Paramount Power had the right of
intervention in internal affairs which could be exercised for the benefit of
the head of the state of India as a whole, or for giving effect to international
commitments.
The Government of India Act, 1935, was a step
in the direction of achieving a political unity over the entire subcontinent :
it envisaged a constitutional relationship between the Indian States and
Provinces in British India on a federal basis. But the concept of a loose
federation of disparate constituent units in which the power and authority of
the Federation were to differ between one constituent unit and another was soon
abandoned as inherently impracticable. The Second World War awakened 77 a new
consciousness which regarded colonialism as an anachronism. With the object of
transferring power to a Dominion, several schemes were evolved by the British
authorities from time to time. There was the Cripps Plan, followed by the Simla
Conference of 1945, and the Cabinet Mission Plan of 1946. The Cabinet Mission
issued a Memorandum dated May 12, 1946, in regard to the States' Treaties and
to Paramountcy : it affirmed that the rights of the States which flowed from
their relationship with the Crown will no longer exist and that the rights
surrendered by the States to the Paramount Power will revert to the States. The
void caused by the lapse of paramountcy, it was said, may be filled either by
the States entering into a federal relationship, with the successor Government
or Governments in British India, or by entering into a particular arrangements
with it or them. On May 16, 1946, the Cabinet Mission announced its Plan for
the entry of the States into the proposed Union of India. They simultaneously
declared that the paramountcy of the British Crown could not be retained nor
transferred to the new Government.
The British Parliament decided to set up the
two Dominions of India and Pakistan, and promulgated on July 18, 1947, the
Indian Independence Act, 1947. By s. 1, two new independent Dominions of India
and Pakistan were set up as from August 15, 1947, and s. 7 of the Act provided
:
"(1) As from the appointed day(a) His
Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom have no responsibility as respects
the government of any of the territories which, immediately before that day,
were included in British India;
(b) the suzerainty of His Majesty over the
Indian States lapses, and with it, all treaties and agreements in force at the
date of the passing of this Act between His Majesty and the rulers of Indian
States, all obligations of His Majesty at that, date, towards Indian States or
the rulers thereof and all powers, rights, authority or jurisdiction
exercisable by His Majesty at that date in or in relation to Indian States by
treaty, grant, usage, suffrance or other-wise; and "Provided that,
notwithstanding anything in paragraph (b) or paragraph (c) of the subsection,
effect shall, as nearly as may be continued to be given to 78 the provisions of
any such agreement as is therein referred to which relate to Customs, transit
and communications, posts and telegraphs, or other like matters, until the
provisions in question are denounced by the ruler of the Indian State or person
having ,authority in the tribal areas on the one hand, or by the Dominion or
Province or other part thereof concerned on the, other hand, or are superseded
by subsequent agreements, (2)The assent of the Parliament of the United Kingdom
is hereby. given to the omission from the Royal Style and Titles of the words
"Indiae Imperator" and the words "Emperor of India", and to
the issue by His Majesty for that purpose of His Royal Proclamation under the
Great, Seal of the Realm." By the Indian (Provisional Constitution) Order,
1947, ss. 5 & 6 of the Government of India Act, 1935,. were extensively
amended, setting up machinery for the Indian States to accede to the Dominion
of India. Promulgation of the Indian Independence Act generated great political
activity. On July 5, 1947, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Minister for Home Affairs,
made a statement defining the policy of the Government of India, and inviting
the Princes to accede to the Dominion on three subjects-Defence, Foreign
Affairs and Communications, in which the common interests of the country were
involved. He assured the Princes that the policy of the States Department
(which had been set up in place of the Political Department) was not to conduct
the relations with the States in a manner savouring of domination of one over
the other; the domination, if any, would be the domination of mutual interests
and welfare. He expressed the hope that the Princes would bear in mind that the
alternative to cooperation in the general interest was anarchy and chaos which
would overwhelm the great as well as the small in a common ruin, if the States
and Provinces were unable to act together in the minimum of common tasks. On
July 25, 1947, at a special meeting of the Princes, Lord Mountbatten--the Crown
representative--advised. the princes to accede to the appropriate Dominion in
regard to the three subjects of Defence, External Affairs and Communications,
and assured them that their accession on those subjects would involve no
financial liability and in other matters there would be no encroachment on
their internal sovereignty.
The plea for accession met with a favourable
response.
Negotiations for accession of the States were
soon completed and instruments, of accession were executed by the heads of the
Indian States. Simultaneously, Standstill Agreements, the 79 acceptance of
which was made by the Government of India a condition of accession by the
States concerned, were also entered into between the Dominion Government and
the acceding States. The Standstill Agreements recited :
"Whereas it is to the benefit and
advantage of the Dominion of India as well as of the Indian States that
existing agreements and administrative arrangements in the matters of common
concern, should continue for the time being between the Dominion of India or
any part thereof and the Indian States :
Now therefore it is agreed between the State
and the Dominion of India that:"1. (1) Until new agreements in this behalf
are made, all agreements and administrative arrangements as to matters of
common concern now existing between the Crown and any Indian State shall,
insofar as may be appropriate, continue as between the Dominion of India, or,
as the case may be, the part thereof, and the State.
(2) In particular, and without derogation
from the generality of sub-clause (1) of this clause the matters referred to
above shall include the matters specified in the Schedule to this Agreement.
3.Nothing in this agreement includes the
exercise of any paramountcy functions." By the instruments of accession
the Princes were assured that the terms of the instrument will not be varied by
any amendment of the Government of India Act, 1935, or the Indian, Independence
Act, 1947, unless such amendment be accepted by the Prince by a supplementary
instrument; that nothing in the instrument shall be deemed to commit the Prince
in any way to, acceptance of any future Constitution of India or to fetter his
discretion to enter into agreements with the Government of India under any such
future Constitution, and that nothing in the instrument shall affect the
continuance of the Princes sovereignty in and over the State, or, save as
provided by or under the instrument, the exercise of any powers, authority and
rights enjoyed by the Prince as head of the State or the validity of any law in
force in the State.
80 This was a significant step in the
direction of forging a vital ,constitutional link between the Dominion of India
and the States. It was followed by the next phase culminating in integration of
some States in the Provinces, , consolidation of other States into sizable
administrative units, and some other States executing agreements integrating
with the Dominion. The process of integration of States varied from State to
State. 216 out of the States merged with the existing Provinces; 61 States were
taken over as Centrally administered areas; and 275 States were integrated in
five Unions of States, Saurashtra, Madhya Bharat, Rajasthan, Pepsu and
Travancore-Cochin. Merger of the States with the Provinces was achieved
initially in name only, because the authority--executive, legislative and
judicial-was still exercised under the Extra-Provincial Jurisdiction Act by the
Provinces within which the States were initially merged. The merger agreements
of the Unions of States were to operate as their provisional Constitutions.
Even the Centrally administered areas did not become part of the Dominion
territory.
The instruments of merger provided for the
integration of States and for transfer of power from the Princes and guaranteed
to the Princes the privy purse, succession to the gaddi, rights and privileges,
and full ownership, use and enjoyment of all private properties belonging to
them as distinct from State properties. The covenants for establishing Unions
of States and the agreements of merger contained provisions guaranteeing to the
heads of merged States or integrated States payment of privy purses. These
instruments were concurred in and guaranteed by the Government of the Dominion
of India.
The next phase was of assimilation and consolidation
of the unity achieved till then. In the case of the "Provincially
merged" and "Centrally administered" States, authority for
exercising the powers of administration and legislation originally derived from
the Extra-Provincial, Jurisdiction Act, 1947, was later exercisable by virtue
of orders issued under ss. 290A and 290B incorporated in the Government of
India Act, 1935, with effect from January 15, 1949. By an order issued under S.
290A diverse steps were taken for integration of the former State into the
Provinces.
TO ensure an organic unity of India, the
Princes were invited to accede to the Dominion, and later to integrate with
India under a Constitution with a Republican form of Government. The Princes,
some out of patriotism and others from motives of selfinterest, agreed to merge
their territories and to abandon all authority in regard to their territories
in consideration of certain special concessions.
To give constitutional sanction to the merger
agreements, special provisions were expressly incorporated in the 81 draft
Constitution recognising the status of the Princes, the obligation to pay the
privy purse, and the personal rights and privileges guaranteed to them The
territories of the States after integration retained no political or legal
identity. Special recognition was given to the status of the Princes and to
their rights and the obligations of the Union, and for that purpose, Arts.
366(15), 366(22), 291 and 362 were incorporated in the Constitution. In Art.
366(15) the expression. "Indian State" was defined as meaning any
territory which the Government of the Dominion of India recognised as such a
State; and in Art. 366(22) a special definition of the expression
"Ruler" was evolved for the purpose of the Constitution; by Art. 291
the privy purse was charged on, and made payable out of, the Consolidated Fund
of India, and .the sum so paid as privy purse to the Ruler was declared exempt
from all taxes on income. By Art. 362 the Parliament, the State Legislatures
and the executive of the Union and the States were enjoined to have "due
regard to the guarantees and assurances" under the covenants and
agreements between the Government of the Dominion of India and the heads of the
former Indian States.
The stage was then set for the promulgation
of the Constitution. A few days before November 26, 1949, a large majority of
the States proclaimed that the Constitution of India will be the Constitution
for their respective territories, and shall be enforced as such in accordance
with its provisions, and that the provisions of that Constitution shall, as
from the date of its commencement, supersede and abrogate all other existing
constitutional provisions inconsistent therewith. Merger agreements were
executed to give effect to the proclamations. The proclamation and the
execution of the merger agreements resulted in complete extinction of the
States and Unions of States as separate units. The Princes ceased to retain any
vestigage of sovereign rights or authority qua their former States. They
acquired the status of citizens of India.
The plea raised by the Union must be
considered in the light of these developments. The negotiations, the assurances
given by leading statesmen, and the terms of the covenants and agreements were
certainly not intended to be an exercise in futility. The argument that the
parties to the instruments were entering into solemn undertakings intending the
arrangements to be temporary, and liable to be set at naught by the unilateral
act of the Union of India, must be rejected.
In form Art. 366(22) is a definition clause :
It however invests the President with authority to recognize a person as a
Ruler. Granting that under Art. 366(22) the President may withdraw the
recognition of a person as a Ruler, the power to nullify important provisions
of the Constitution does not flow from that clause.
82 The plea raised by the Attorney-General
that recognition of Rulership was a "gift of the President" or was
"in the gift of the President" is not borne out by the position of
and the nature of the powers and functions of the President under our
constitutional scheme. President is made by the Constitution repository of the
power to recognise the Rulers. That power may be, exercised consistently with
and in aid of the constitutional scheme. A democratic Constitution founded in
the Rule of Law does not envisage authority in any instrumentality of the Union
reminiscent of autocracy. The power to recognise a Ruler may be exercised in
the case of first recognition only in favour of a person who has signed the
covenant, and in favour of his successor having regard to the custom and laws
governing the State if the Ruler dies, or becomes incapable of functioning or
his recognition is withdrawn. By the use of the expression "for the time
being" in cl. (22) of Art. 366 the President is not invested with
authority to accord a temporary recognition to a Ruler, nor :with authority to
recognise or not to recognise a Ruler arbitrarily : the expression "for
the time being" predicates that there shall be a Ruler of the Indian
State, that if the first recognised Ruler dies, or ceases to be a 'Ruler, a
successor shall be appointed, and that there shall not be more Rulers than one
at a given time.
By express, injunction in Art. 53(1) of the
Constitution the executive power vested in the President is directed to be
exercised " in accordance with the Constitution". That power is
intended to be exercised in aid of and not to destroy constitutional
institutions. Granting that power to recognise a Ruler carries with it the
power to withdraw recognition of the Ruler, the power must be exercised bona
fide, and in the larger interest of the people consistently with the provisions
of the Constitution to maintain the institution of Rulership. Power may therefore
be exercised in the course of and for recognising another person as a successor
to the Ruler, having regard to the laws and customs governing the State. The
President is not competent to recognise a person as a Ruler who is not by the
custom and laws governing succession to Rulership qualified to be a Ruler. The
President cannot obviously withdraw recognition of a Ruler and recognise
another person as a matter of political patronage. Nor can be lawfully depart
from the laws and customs governing succession so as to introduce a person as a
Ruler who' is not by ties of blood or affiliation related to the previous
Ruler. Whether in certain exceptional circumstances the President may in
granting recognition to a successor depart in the larger interest of the country
from the strict rule or custom governing succession to the gaddi, is a question
which need not be decided. But unquestionably the President is not invested
with authority to recognize a stranger as successor to the gaddi, or not to
recognise any person at all as a successor 83 if he so chooses. The power of
the President is plainly coupled with a duty; a duty to maintain the
constitutional institution, the constitutional provisions, the constitutional
scheme, and the sanctity of solemn agreements entered into by the predecessor
of the Union Government which are accepted, recognised and incorporated in the
Constitution. An order merely "de-recognising" a Ruler without
providing for continuation of the institution of Rulership which is an integral
part of the constitutional scheme is, therefore, plainly illegal.
Clause (22) of Art. 366 is intended to invest
the President with authority to recognise Rulers : see Kunvar Shri Vir Rajendra
Singh v. Union of India("). The clause incorporates the history of momentous
events which took place in India between 1947 and 1949 leaving a lasting
impression upon our national and constitutional structure.
Articles 291, 362 and Part VII of the
Constitution were when incorporated intended to grant recognition to the solemn
promises on the strength of which the former Princes were invited by those at
the helm of affairs to join the experiment for achieving for the millions their
dream of securing a truly democratic form of Government in a united independent
India, and clauses (15) & (22) of Art. 366 were intended to serve the
purpose of identifying the persons who remained entitled to the benefits of
those constitutional guarantees.
A brief reference may be made to what was
said in the Constituent Assembly by the Minister for Home Affairs who was in
charge of the States when he moved for adoption Art.
291. He used memorable words :
"These guarantees (merger agreements)
form part of the historic settlements which enshrine in them the consummation
of the great ideal of geographical, political and economic unification of
India, an ideal which for centuries remained a distinct dream and which
appeared as remote and as difficult of attainment as ever even after the advent
of Indian independence.
Human memory is proverbially short. Meeting
in October, 1949, we are apt to forget the magnitude of the problem which
confronted us in August, 1947. ...... the so-called lapse of paramountcy was a
part of the Plan announced on June 3, 1947, which was accepted by the Congress.
We agreed to this arrangement in the same manner as we agreed to the partition
of India. We accepted it because we had no option to act otherwise. While there
was recognition in the (1)[1970] 2 S.C.R. 631 84 various announcements of the
British Government of the fundamental fact that each State should link up its
future with that Dominion with which it was geographically contiguous, the
Indian Independence Act released the States from all their obligations to the
British Crown. In their various authoritative pronouncements, the British
spokesmen recognised that with the lapse of paramountcy, technically and
legally the States would become independent The situation was indeed fraught
with immeasurable potentialities of disruption, for some of the Rulers did wish
to exercise their technical right to declare independence and others to join
the neighbouring Dominion.
(c) It was against this unpropritious
background that the Government of India invited the Rulers of the States to
accede on three subjects of Defence, External Affairs and Communications. At
the time the proposal was put forward to the Rulers, an assurance was given to
them that they would retain the status quo except for accession on these
subjects. It had been made clear to them that there was no intention either to
encroach on the internal autonomy or the sovereignty of the States or to fetter
their discretion in respect of their acceptance of the new Constitution of
India. These commitments had to be borne in mind when the States Ministry
approached the Rulers for the integration of their States. There was nothing to
compel or induce the Rulers to merge the identity of their States. Any use of
force would have not only been against our professed principles but would have
also caused serious repercussions.
The minimum which we could offer to them as
quid pro quo for parting with their ruling powers was to guarantee to them
privy purses and certain privileges on a reasonable and defined basis. The
privy purse settlements are therefore in the nature of consideration for the
surrender by the Rulers of all their ruling powers and also for the dissolution
of the States as separate units "The Rulers have now discharged their part
of the obligations by transferring all ruling powers and by agreeing to the integration
of their States. The main part of our obligation under these agreements, is to
ensure that the guarantees given by us in respect of privy purse 85 are fully
implemented. Our failure to do so would be a breach of faith and seriously
prejudice the stabilisation of the new order." In the larger interest of
achieving the unity of the country our statesmen chose to appeal to the
patriotism of the Princes and not to rely upon the force of arms or methods of
political agitation within the States. Negotiation of a friendly settlement was
in the circumstances then prevailing the only advisable course. A discontented
group of Princes was a serious threat to a smooth and orderly transition.
The Constituent Assembly resolved to honour,
without reservation, the promises made to the Princes from time to time.
Clauses in the draft Constitution relating to the obligation of the Union to
pay the privy purses and recognising certain rights, privileges and dignities
till then enjoyed by the Princes, were intended to incorporate a just quid pro
quo for surrender by them of their authority and powers and dissolution of
their States.
A legislative mechanism was devised to grant
the benefit to the former Princes by making a provision for recognising them as
Rulers, and of incorporating in the Constitution the guarantees of the privy
purse and personal rights and privileges. The former Princes were accordingly
recognised as a class of citizens with special privileges granted to them
because they had surrendered their powers; privileges and authority. The
argument that the President as the head of the Executive may, in exercise of
his executive power, destroy that institution, is plainly contrary to the
fundamental concept of the Rule of Law.
There are many analogous provisions in the
Constitution which confer upon the President a power coupled with a duty.
We may refer to two such provisions. The
President has under Arts. 341 and 342 to specify Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes; and he has done so. Specification so madecarries for the members of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes certain special benefits, e.g.,
reservation of seats in the House of the People, and in the State Legislative
Assemblies by Arts. 330 and 332, and of the numerous provisions made in Schedules
V & VI. It may be noticed that expressions Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes are specially defined for the purposes of the Constitution by Arts.
366(24) and 366(25). If power to declare certain classes of citizens as
belonging to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes includes power to withdraw
declaration without substituting a fresh declaration, the President will be
destroying the constitutional scheme. The power to specify may carry with it
the, power to withdraw specification, but it is coupled with,, a duty to
specify in a manner which makes the constitutional provisions operative.
86 Article 366(21) before it was deleted by
the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, defined "Rajpramukh"
as meaning :(a)in relation to the State of Hyderabad, the person who for the
time being is recognised by the President as the Nizam of Hyderabad;
(b)in relation to the State of Jammu and
Kashmir, or the State of Mysore, the person who for the time being is
recognized by the President as the Maharaja of that State; and (c)in relation
to any other State specified in Part B of the First Schedule, the person who
for the time being is recognised by the President as the Rajpramukh of that
State, and includes in relation to any of the said States any person for the
time being recognised by the President as competent to exercise the powers of
the Rajpramukh in relation to that State;" The first two clauses
contemplated recognition of the Nizam of Hyderabad and the Maharajas of Jammu
& Kashmir and of Mysore to be the Rajpramukh. There can be no dispute that
the Ruler of Hyderabad was the Nizam, and the Rulers of Jammu and Kashmir and
Mysore were the Maharajas of those States. Assuming that power to recognise a
person as the Nizam or Maharaja may carry with it the power to withdraw
recognition, if carried with it a duty to recognize the successor. If no
successor was recognized the constitutional scheme, of administration of Part B
States would be destroyed. Such a result could never have been contemplated.
By Art. 291 payment of any sum, free of tax
guaranteed or assured under any covenant or agreement with a Ruler of an Indian
State as privy purse, is charged on and is made payable out of the Consolidated
Fund of India, and the sum so paid to any Ruler is exempt from all taxes on
income.
The Attorney-General said that the
recognition by Art. 291 of the existence of the guarantees and assurances under
the covenants and agreements gives rise to no obligation to pay the privy
purse, that, even if the constitutional provisions raise an obligation of the
Union, they do not raise corresponding rights in the Rulers; that in any event
the covenants being acts of State violation of their terms will not because of
Art. 363, first limb and also on general principles of law found an action in
the Municipal Courts.
He finally submitted that the dispute with
respect to the rights claimed to accrue in favour of the Rulers arises out of
the provisions of the Constitution relating to the covenants and on that
account the jurisdiction of the Courts is excluded in regard to that dispute.
87 The Constitution in terms recognizes and
accepts the obligation of the Union to, pay the privy purse to the Rulers.
Clause (a) of Art. 291 enacts that the privy purse shall be charged on and be paid
out of the Consolidated Fund of India. The words clearly raise an obligation of
the Union to pay the privy purse.
The second branch of the argument is also
without force.
Article 266 provides that all revenues
received by the Government of India, all loans raised by the issue of treasury
bills, loans or ways and means advances, and all moneys received in repayment
of loans shall form the Consolidated Fund of India. By Art. 112(2) the
President is required in respect of every financial year to cause to laid
before the Houses of Parliament the annual financial statement of the estimated
receipts and expenditure of the Government of India showing separately-(a) sums
required to meet expenditure charged upon the Consolidated Fund of India; and
(b) sums required to meet other expenditure proposed to be made from the
Consolidated Fund of India.
Clause. (3) of Art. 112 categorizes heads of
expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund of India. So much of the estimates
as relate to expenditure charged upon the Consolidated Fund are by Art. 113(1)
open to discussion in, but not to be submitted to the vote of the Houses of
Parliament. After demands in respect of sums required to meet other expenditure
have been made and assented to by the House of the People, a Bill is introduced
to provide for appropriation out of the Consolidated Fund of India of all
moneys required to meet the expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund of
India and the grants : Art. 114(1). No amendment may be proposed in either
House to vary the amounts or to alter the destination of the grant or the
expenditure charged.
In support of his contention that by using
the expression "charged" in Arts. 291 and II 2(2) it is only intended
to enact that the expenditure is not subject to the vote of the Parliament and
that no priority in payment in respect of expenditure is declared, and in any
event the expression "charged" creates no obligation enforceable at
the instance of the person for whose benefit it is. charged, the Attorney-General
invited our attention to different provisions of the Constitution in each of
which there is both a charge oil the Consolidated Fund of an item of
expenditure and an express direction for payment of the prescribed sum, and
contended that Art. 291 which merely recognizes the obligations of the Union
Government to abide by the preexisting covenants, creates no obligation for
payment of the privy purse to the Rulers He urged that the word
"charge" in the Constitution in dealing with State financial procedure
has the meaning it has in accountancy practice; it merely specifies the source
from which payment is to be made and does not create a right in the Ruler or
any en88 forceable obligation against the Union. Under the general law relating
to transfer of property, a charge does not give rise to a right in rem : the
right is however more than a mere personal obligation, for it is a jus ad rem a
right to payment out of property specified : Govind Chandra Pal v. Dwarka Nath
Pal(1). Raja Sri Shiva Prasad v. Beni Madhab(2). A charge gives a right to
payment out of a specific fund or property, and a right to prior payment; but
it does not create a right in rem in the fund or the property. A charge
therefore gives rise to a right to receive payment,, out of a specified fund or
property in preference over others. In the absence of a clear indication, to
the contrary, it would be difficult to hold that the expression
"charged" used in the context of financial matters of the State, has
a different meaning. Our Constitution-makers borrowed the concept of a
Consolidated Fund from the British system. That has also been adopted in the
Constitutions of Canada, Australia, South Africa and other Commonwealth
Countries. Certain Acts in the United Kingdom and elsewhere prescribe a sequence
of priorities in payment of different heads of expenditure charged on the
Consolidated Fund : s.
1. Consolidated Funds Act, 1816; s. I The
House of Commons (Speaker) Act, 1932, ss. 103, 104 & 105 of the British
North America Act, 1867; ss. 117, 119 Constitution of the Union of South
Africa, 1909; ss. 81 & 82 of the Australian Constitution 1900.
Our Constitution does not recognize any
sequence of priorities. But that does not alter the fundamental character of a
charge that it specifies a fund out of which satisfaction of the expenditure
charged must be made, and the prescribed expenditure shall have priority in
payment to the person for whose benefit the expenditure is charged on the Fund.
The constitutional obligation to proceed in the manner set out in Arts. 112,
113 & 114 imposed upon the President and the Parliament implies a right in
the person or persons in respect of whom the expenditure is to be incurred.
That view is supported by other provisions in the Constitution. The expression
"shall be charged on and paid out of the Consolidated Fund" is used
in Arts. 290, 290A and 291. Articles 290 and 291 do not expressly designate the
payee : Art. 290A designates the payee. Article 273 merely uses the expression
"shall be charged" in dealing with the grants-in-aid to the States of
Assam, Bihar, Orissa and West Bengal, without Any direction for payment.
Article 275(1) deals with grants-in-aid to the revenues of such States as the
Parliament may determine: it is only the provisions dealing with the capital
and recurring sums which refer-to the obligation to pay, but in respect of
these heads of expenditure there is no charge. There are also other provisions
in the Constitution which charge expenditure on the Consolidated Fund, e.g.
Art. 148(6);
(1) I.L.R. 35 Cal. 837, 843.
(2) I.L.R. I Pat. 387 89 Art. 146(3); Art.
299(3) and Art. 332, without any express provisions in the Constitution
relating to payment. By leaving the payee innominate in Art. 291(a) no
intention to raise an obligation without a corresponding right is disclosed.
The expression "shall be charged on, and paid out of the Consolidated
Fund" in Art. 291, is intended to enact that the privy purse "shall
be charged-. on, and shall be paid out of the Consolidated Fund". The expression
"sums so paid to any Ruler" does not mean "sums if paid to any
Ruler" : it means that "sums when paid to any Ruler". Clauses
(a) and (b) of Art. 291 read with Arts. 112, 113 & 114 are, in our
judgment, parts of a single scheme; they contemplate that the privy purse shall
be included in the financial statement as charged upon the Consolidated Fund :
it shall be beyond the voting power of the
Parliament : its destination shall not be altered : it shalt be paid to--the
Ruler after the Appropriation Bill is passed, and when paid it shall be free
from liability to pay taxes on income.
This is an integrated process, which cannot
be interrupted without dislocating the constitutional mechanism.
The Attorney-General said that Art. 291
raises an "imperfect obligation". An imperfect obligation is used to
describe a moral duty-for instance, a duty to pay a debt of honour, or a debt
barred by limitation, but is properly left to the free will of him whose duty
it is to discharge the obligation. A perfected obligation pertains to the
domain of law & justice : an imperfect obligation to the domain of
benevolence. An obligation which arises out of a constitutional provision to
pay to the citizens sums of money in recognition of obligations of the
predecessor Government may scarcely be called imperfect.
Article 291 does not merely incorporate,
recognition of the obligation to pay the privy purse under covenants incurred
by the Government of the Dominion of India : it gives rise to a liability
dehors the covenants. Under the covenants and agreements the obligation to pay
the privy purse was undertaken in the case of all Princes (bar the heads of the
States of Bhopal, Hyderabad and Mysore) to be made out of the revenues of their
respective States. The Government of India concurred in and guaranteed payment
of the amount of the privy purse under the terms of the agreements constituting
the Unions. By the States Merger (Governors' Provinces) Order, 1949, this
liability was imposed upon the Provinces when the States merged with those Provinces.
In the case of a Union of States the liability to pay the privy purse to a head
of State lay upon the Union of States to be discharged out of the revenues of
the State. In the case of Centrally merged States the Dominion Government had
to pay the privy purse out of the revenues of the State.
90 Even after the integration of States, the
obligations under the covenants were to be met out of the revenues of the
respective States. The covenants and the various stages through which ultimate
integration was achieved probably remained acts of State. The rights and
obligation accruing or arising under those acts of State could be enforced only
if the Union of India accepted those rights and obligations.
After the Constitution the obligation to pay
the privy purse rested upon the Union of India, not because it was inherited
from the Dominion of India; but because of the constitutional mandate under
Art. 291. The source of the obligation was in Art. 291, and not in the
covenants and the agreements. Reference to the covenants and agreements in Art.
291 was for defining the privy purse : the obligations of the Provinces in
respect of the "Provincially merged States", and obligation of the
Union of States in respect of the States merged in such Unions, ceased by
recognition to retain their original character. The obligation which arose out
of the merger agreement and was on that account an act of State shed its
original character on acceptance by the Constitution. The entity obliged to pay
the privy purse did not after the Constitution remain the same; the source out
of which the obligation was to be satisfied was not the original source; the
incident relating to exemption from payment of tax was vitally altered, and the
amount also was in some cases different. Whereas the liability to pay the privy
purse to the Rulers under the merger agreements was assured by the Dominion
Government, the Constitution imposed upon the Union Government a directive to
pay the privy purse.
In support of his contention that even if
Art. 291 itself gives rise to a fresh obligation, the Union of India has the
same defences against the claim by the Rulers which the predecessor Government
had, and on that account if the Dominion Government could plead an act of State
as a defence, the Union of India could do so, the Attorney General relied upon
two decisions : Doss v. Secretary of State for India in Council;(1) and Saliman
v. Secretary of State for India(1). The e cases were decided on the
interpretation of the Government of India Act, 1958, which by S. 67 enacted
that treaties and all contracts, covenants, liabilities and engagements of the
East India Company made before the Act ,of 1858 were declared enforceable
against the Secretary of State as they might have been by and against the East
India Company, if the Government of India Act, 1858, had not been passed. There
is no such reservation in Art. 291, or in Art. 294(1) (b) and 295(1)(b) of the
Constitution. The cases of Doss (supra) and Salaman (supra) have therefore no
application.
(1) [1871] L.R. 19 Eq. 509 (2) [1906] 1 K.B.
613 91 The judgment of this Court in Union of India & Ors. v.
Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing (Weaving)
Co. Ltd. & Another(1) has also no bearing on the character of the
obligation arising by virtue of Art. 291. In that case a company which had
entered into an agreement with the State of Gwalior in 1947, whereby the State
of Gwalior granted exemption from liability to taxation of certain industries
started in the State, claimed to enforce that right against the Union of India
after integration of the State. This Court held that by virtue of the agreement
the Central Legislature was not deprived of its legislative power to impose
taxes, and on that account after the extension of the Income-tax Act, 1922, the
exemption granted under the agreement of 1947 must fall and that the Company
was entitled only to such concessions as may be provided by the State law
applicable thereto after the integration.
The structure of Art. 362 is somewhat
different. That Article imposes restrictions upon the exercise of legislative
and executive functions. Recognition of the personal rights and privileges of
the Rulers arising out of the covenants is not explicit, but the, injunction
that in the exercise of legislative and executive power due regard shall be had
to the guarantees, clearly implies acceptance and recognition of the personal
rights, privileges and dignities. The Constitution thereby affirms the binding
force of the guarantees and assurances under the covenants, of personal rights,
privileges and dignities, but unlike the guarantee of payment of the privy
purse in Art. 291, the guarantee under Art. 362 is of the obligations under the
original covenants and agreements executed by the Rulers, barring those
regarding which there is express legislation enacted to give effect to certain
personal rights and privileges, e.g., Wealth-tax Act, 1957, Gift-tax Act, 1958,
notifications under the Sea Customs Act, 1878, Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 and Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898. A Ruler seeking
to enforce privileges which parliamentary statutes have recognised relies for
right to relief upon the mandate of the statutes, and not of the covenant.
Article 363 of the Constitution provides
" (1) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution but subject to the
provisions of article 143 neither the Supreme Court nor any other court shall
have jurisdiction in any dispute arising out of any provision of a treaty,
agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instrument which was
entered into or executed before the commencement of this Constitution (1)[1964]
7 R.C.R. 892 --L744 SupCI/71 92 by any Ruler of an Indian "State and to
which the Government of the Dominion of India or any of its predecessor
Governments was a party and which has or has been continued in operation after
such commencement, or in dispute in respect of any right accruing under or any
liability or obligation arising out of any of the provisions of this
Constitution relating to any such treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement,
sanad or other similar instrument.
(2) In this article-(a) "Indian
State" means any territory recognised before the commencement of this
Constitution by His Majesty or the Government of the Dominion of India as being
such a State; and (b) "Ruler" includes the Prince, Chief or other person
recognised before such commencement by His Majesty or the Government of the
Dominion of India as the Ruler of any Indian State." Exclusion of the
jurisdiction of the Courts is emphasized by the non-obstante clause with which
the Article commences.
Notwithstanding the investment of
jurisdiction upon this Court by Art. 32, notwithstanding the jurisdiction
conferred upon the High Courts by Art. 226, and notwithstanding the competence
of all Civil Courts to decide disputes in respect of the obligations of the
Union, it is declared that the Courts have no jurisdiction in respect of the
two classes of disputes. The exception carved out of the exclusion in respect
of the jurisdiction conferred upon this Court by Art. 143 is not a real
exception for the jurisdiction of this Court under Art. 143 is merely advisory.
The non obstante clause however does not enlarge the field of exclusion of
judicial authority.
The Attorney-General urged that the
jurisdiction of the Courts to enforce rights and obligations arising out of the
covenants entered into by the Rulers to which the Government of the Dominion or
the predecessor Governments were parties, was excluded, because the rights and
obligations arose out of acts of State, and by constitutional provision that
exclusion was affirmed and extended after the Constitution.
An act of State need not, it is true, arise
out of war or conquest : It may be the result of an agreement, and the terms of
the agreements and the obligations flowing only from such agreements may not be
enforced in the Municipal Courts of either State, unless the rights and
obligations 93 are recognized and accepted by the States, or unless the
document evidencing the act of State is itself the Constitution of the State or
States. But there can be no act of state against its own citizen by the State.
The Rulers who were before integration of their States aliens qua the Dominion
Government are now citizens. Their rights and obligations which arose from an
act of state are now recognized and accepted by the Union of India. Enforcement
of those rights and obligations is governed by the, municipal laws, and unless
the jurisdiction of the Courts is excluded in respect of any dispute, the
Courts will be competent to grant relief. An act of state vanishes when the new
sovereign recognizes either expressly or by implications the rights flowing
there from : State of Gujarat v. Vora Fiddalti Badruddin Mithibarwala(1).
We are unable to agree with the
Attorney-General that "old unidentified concept of paramountcy of the
British Crown" was inherited by the Union, by reason of the instruments of
accession and merger agreements, and that "recognition of Rulership was a
'gift of the President', and not a matter of legal right, existing as it did in
the area of paramountcy and remaining with the Government of India". The
British Crown did not acquire paramountcy rights by any express grant, cession
or transfer:it exercised paramountcy because it was the dominant power.
Paramountcy had no legal origin, and no fixed concept: its dimensions depended
upon what in a given situation the representatives of the British Crown thought
expedient. Paramountcy meant those powers which the British authorities by the
might of arms, and in disregard of the sovereignty and authority of the States
chose to exercise. But that paramountcy lapsed with the Indian Independence
Act, 1947: even its shadows disappeared with the integration of the States with
the Indian Union. After the withdrawal of the British power and extinction of
paramountcy of the British power the Dominion Government of Indian did not and
could not exercise any paramountcy over the States. In clause 3 of the
Standstill Agreement it was expressly recited that "Nothing in the
agreement includes the exercise of any paramouncy functions". The
relations between the States and the Dominion Government were strictly governed
by the instruments executed from time to time.
Subject to the power conferred in respect of
certain matters of common interest to legislate and exercise executive
authority, the Princes had sovereignty within their territories. With the
advent of the Constitution the States ceased to exist, and the Princes and
Chiefs who were recognized as Rulers were left with no sovereign authority in
them. It is difficult to conceive of the (1) [1964] 6 S.C. R. 401 94 government
of a democratic Republic exercising against its citizens
"paramountcy" claimed to be inherited from an Imperial Power. The
power and authority which the Union may exercise against its citizens and even
aliens spring from and are strictly circumscribed by the Constitution.
The fundamentals on which paramountcy
rested-i.e. the compulsion of geography and the essentials for ensuring
security and special responsibility of the Government of India to protect all
territories in India survived the enactment of the Indian Independence Act, for
between August 15, 1947 and the date of integration, of the various States, the
Government of India was the only fully sovereign authority. But paramountcy
with its brazen-faced autocracy no longer survived the enactment of the
Constitution. Under our Constitution an action not authorised by law against
the citizens of the Union cannot 'be supported under the shelter of
paramountcy. The functions of the President of India stem from the
Constitution-not from a "concept of the paramountcy of the British
Crown" identified or unidentified. What the Constitution does not
authorise, the President cannot grant. Rulership is therefore not a privilege
which the President may in the exercise of his discretion bestow or withhold.
-Jurisdiction of the Courts in matters
specified is excluded not because the Union of India is a successor to the
paramountcy of the British Crown,, nor because the rights and obligations
accepted and recognized by the Constitution may still be regarded as flowing
from acts of State : it is only excluded in respect of specific matters by the
express provision in Art. 363 of the Constitution. Jurisdiction of the Courts
even in those matters is not barred "at the threshold" as contended
by the Attorney-General. The President cannot lay down the extent of this
Court's jurisdiction. He is not made by the Constitution the arbiter of the
extent of his authority, nor of the validity of his acts. Action of the President
is liable to be tested for its validity before the Courts unless their
jurisdiction is by express enactment or clear implication barred. To accede to
the claim that the jurisdiction of the Court is barred in respect of whatever
the executive asserts is valid, is plainly to subvert the Rule of Law. It is
therefore within the province of the Court alone to determine what the dispute
brought before it is, and to determine whether the jurisdiction of the Court
is, because it falls within one of the two limbs of Art. 363, excluded qua that
dispute.
In dealing with the dimensions of exclusion
of the exercise of judicial power under Art. 363, it is necessary to bear in
mind certain broad considerations. The proper forum under our Constitution for
determining a legal dispute is the Court which is by 95 training and
experience, assisted by properly qualified advocates, fitted to perform that
task. A provision which purports to exclude the jurisdiction of the Courts in
certain matters and to deprive the aggrieved party of the normal remedy will be
strictly construed, for it is a principle not to be whittled down that an
aggrieved party will not, unless the jurisdiction of the Courts is by clear
enactment or necessary implication barred, be denied recourse to the Courts for
determination of his rights. The Court will interpret a statute as far as
possible, agreeably to justice and reason and that in case of two or more
interpretations, one which is more reasonable and just will be adopted, for
there is always a presumption against the law maker intending injustice and
unreason. The Court will avoid imputing_to the Legislature an intention to
enact a provision which flouts notions of justice and norms of fairplay, unless
a contrary intention is manifest from words plain and unambiguous. A provision
in a statute will not be construed to defeat its manifest purpose and general
values which animate its,, structure. In an avowedly democratic polity,
statutory provisions ensuring the security of fundamental human rights including
the right to property will, unless the contrary mandate be precise and
unqualified, be construed liberally so as to uphold the right. These rules
apply to the interpretation of constitutional and statutory provisions alike.
Article 366(22) defines a "Ruler"
as a Prince, Chief or other person who has entered into a covenant or agreement
as is referred to in Art. 291, and is recognized for the time being by the
President and includes the successor of such Ruler. Article 291 in defining the
sum guaranteed or assured to the Ruler as privy purse refers to covenants and
agreements entered into by the Rulers which guarantee or assure the payment of
sums as privy purse free from tax. It was contended on behalf of the Union that
the expression "relating to in Art. 363 means " referring to",
and since Arts. 291, 362 and 366(22) refer to covenants, the Courts have no
jurisdiction to entertain disputes with respect to rights arising from those
provisions. In support of that argument counsel for the Union referred us, to
the diverse meanings in which the expression "relating to" is used.
But a constitutional provision will not be interpreted in the attitude of a
lexicographer, with one eye on the provision and the other on the lexicon. The
meaning of a word or expression. used in the Constitution often is coloured by
the context in which it occurs: the simpler and more Common the word or
expression, the more meanings and shades of meanings it has. It is the duty of
the Court to determine in what particular meaning and particular shade of
meaning the word of expression was used by the Constitution makers, and in
discharging the duty the Court will take 96 into account the context in which
it occurs, the object to serve which it was used, its collocation, the general
congruity with the concept or object it was intended to articulate and a host
of other considerations. Above all, the Court will avoid repugnancy with
accepted norms of justice and reason. The expression "provisions of this
Constitution relating to" in Arts. 363 means provisions having a dominant
and immediate connection with": it does not mean merely having a reference
to. A wide meaning of the expression may exclude disputes from the jurisdiction
of the Courts in respect of rights or obligations, however indirect or tenuous
the connection between the constitutional provision and the covenant may be.
Jurisdiction to try a proceeding is barred
under the first limb of Art. 363 if the dispute arises out of the provision of
a covenant : it is barred under the second limb of Art.
363 if the Court holds that the dispute is
with respect to a right arising out of a provision of the Constitution relating
to a covenant. A dispute that an order of an executive body is unauthorised, or
a legislative measure is ultra vires, is not one arising out of any covenant
under the firm limb of Art. 363, merely because the order or the measure
violates the rights of the citizen which, but for the act or measure, were not
in question. The dispute in such a case relates to the validity of the act or
the vires of the measure. Exclusion of the Court's jurisdiction by the terms of
the relevant words in the second limb lies in a narrow field. If the
constitutional provision relating to a covenant is the source of the right
claimed to accrue, or liability claimed to arise, then clearly under the second
limb the jurisdiction of the Court to entertain a dispute arising with respect
to the right or obligation is barred.
We need in the present case express no
opinion on the question whether a dispute that an executive act or legislative
measure operating upon a right accruing or liability arising out of a provision
is invalid falls within the second limb of Art. 363.
As a quid pro quo for agreeing to surrender
their power and authority, it was enacted in the Constitution that the Princes
who had signed the covenant of the nature specified will be recognized as
Rulers. But under the treaties, covenants and agreements executed by the former
Princes, there was no provision for recognition of Rulers. The President was
invested by the Constitution with power to recognise Rulers under Art. 366(22).
The status of the Rulers under the Constitution is not the status which the
Princes had: their rights, privileges and functions are fundamentally different
from those of the former Princes.
Some degree of obscurity is introduced by the
use of the expression "Ruler" and "Ruler of an Indian
State" in the Articles. But the meaning is reasonably plain. Ruler as
defined in Art. 366(22) is a former Prince, Chief or other person who was on or
after January 26, 1950, recognised as a Ruler, he having signed the covenant,
or his successor. The Ruler of an Indian State means a Prince, or Chief who was
recognized before the, Constitution by the British Crown. The Ruler of an
Indian State had sovereign authority over his State. The Ruler recognized by
the President rules over no territory, and exercises no sovereignty over any
subjects. He has no status of a potentate and no privileges which are normally
exercised by a potentate. He is a citizen of India with certain privileges
accorded to him because he or his predecessor had surrendered his territory,
his powers and his sovereignty.
Article 366(22) is, in our judgment, a
provision relating to recognition of Rulers: that is the direct and only
purpose of the provision. It is not a provision relating to a covenant. The
qualification of a person being recognized as a Ruler is undoubtedly that he is
a Prince, Chief or other person who had entered into a covenant or agreement as
is referred to in Art. 291, or that he is the successor to such a Ruler.
Reference to the covenant or the agreement of the nature mentioned in Art. 291
is for determining who may be recognized as a Ruler. Because of that reference
the provision enacted with the object of conferring authority upon the
President to recognize a Ruler, will not be deemed one relating to the covenant
or agreement.
The Attorney-General urged that this Court
has decided that the Courts have no jurisdiction to determine whether the order
of the President under Art. 366(22) is valid, and that the Court will not be
justified in unsettling the law. The decisions relied upon are: Nawab Usman Ali
Khan v. Sgarmal (supra) and Kunvar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India
(supra). In our judgment, in neither of these cases the question about the bar
to the Court's jurisdiction by virtue of Art. 363 was directly in issue. In
Nawab Usman Ali Khan's case (supra) this Court upheld the claim that the privy
purse payable to the Ruler of Jaora was exempt from attachment under s. 60 (1)
(g) of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Court in that case considered the
nature of the privy purse and held that it was a "political pension"
within the meaning of s. 60(1) (g) of the Code of Civil Procedure. Bachawat,
J., speaking for the Court, after setting out the history of integration and
absorption of States, summarised the provisions of Arts. 291, 362, 363 and
366(22) of the Constitution and observed (at p. 208):
"Now, the Covenant entered into by the
Rulers of Madhya Bharat States was a treaty entered into by the Rulers of
independent States by which they gave 98 up their sovereignty over 'their
respective territories and vested it in the new United State of Madhya Bharat.
The Covenant was an act of State, and any violation of its terms cannot form
the, subject of any action in any municipal courts. The guarantee given by the
Government of India was in the nature of a treaty obligation contracted with
the sovereign Rulers of Indian States and cannot be enforced by action in
municipal courts.
Its sanction is political and not legal. On
the coming into force of the Constitution of India, the guarantee for the
payment of periodical sums as privy purse is continued by Art. 291 of the
Constitution, but its essential political character is preserved by Art. 363 of
the Constitution, and the obligation under this guarantee cannot be enforced in
any municipal court. Moreover, if the President refuses to recognise the person
by whom the covenant was entered into as the Ruler of the State, he would not
be, entitled to the amount payable as privy purse under Art. 291." The
dictum that the essential political character of the guarantee for the payment
of periodical sums as privy purse is preserved by Art. 363, and the obligation
cannot be enforced in any municipal Court was not necessary for the purpose of
the decision, and is, in our judgment, not correct. Article 363 prescribes a
limited exclusion of the jurisdiction of Courts, but that exclusion does not
operate upon the claim for a privy purse, relying upon Art 291. The question as
to the jurisdiction of the Courts to entertain a claim for payment of privy
purse did not fall to be determined in Nawab Usman Ali Khan's case (supra).
The, only question raised was whether the privy purse was not capable of
attachment in execution of the decree of a Civil Court, because of the specific
exemption of political pensions under s. 60 (1) (g) of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
In Kanvar Shri Vir Raiendra Singh's (supra)
the Court did not express any opinion that Art. 366(22) was a provision
relating to a covenant within the meaning of Art. 363. In that case the
petitioner who was not recognised as a Ruler by the President abandoned at the
hearing of his petition his claim to the privy purse payable to the Ruler of
Dholpur, and pressed his claim by succession under the Hindu Law to the private
property of the former Ruler. The Court was not called upon to decide and did
not decide that Art.
366(22) was a provision relating to a covenant
within the meaning of Art. 363. It is difficult to regard a word, a clause or a
sentence occurring in a judgment of this Court, divorced from its context, as
containing a full exposition of the law on a question when the question did not
,even fall to be answered in that judgment.
99 In the view we have expressed, the
argument raised by Mr. Palkhivala that even if cl. (22) of Art. 366 is a
provision relating to the covenants, the jurisdiction of this Court under Art.
32 to grant relief against an invalid exercise of power withdrawing recognition
of the Rulers is not barred, needs no consideration.
The source of the right to receive the privy
purse is for reasons already stated the constitutional mandate : it is not in
the covenant. Reference to the covenant in Art. 291 merely identifies the sum
payable as privy purse : it does not make Art. 291 a provision relating to the
covenant. A dispute as to the right to receive the privy purse, is therefore
not a dispute arising out of the covenant within the first limb of Art. 363,
nor is it a dispute with regard to a right accruing or obligation arising out
of a provision of the Constitution relating to a covenant.
The personal rights (other than the right to
the privy purse) privileges and dignities are recognized by Art. 362 of the
Constitution and the Legislature and the executive are enjoined to have due
regard to those personal rights, privileges and dignities, in exercising their
respective power. Article 362 is plainly a provision relating to covenants
within the meaning of Art. 363. A claim to enforce the rights, privileges and
dignities under the covenants will therefore be barred by the first limb of
Art.
363 and a claim to enforce the recognition of
rights and privileges recognized by Art. 362 will be barred under the second
limb of Art. 363. Jurisdiction of the Courts will, however, not be excluded
where the relief claimed is founded on a statutory provision enacted to give
effect to personal rights under Art. 362 We are accordingly of the view that
the Courts have jurisdiction to interpret and to determine the true meaning, of
Arts. 366 (22), 291, 362 and 363. The bar to the jurisdiction of the Courts by
Art. 363 is a limited bar : it does not arise merely be cause the Union of
India sets up a plea that the dispute falling within Art. 363 is raised.
The Court will give effect to the
constitutional mandate if satisfied that the dispute arises out of any
provision on of a covenant which is in force, and was entered into or executed
'before the commencement of the Constitution and to which the predecessor of
the Government of India was a party, or that it is in respect of rights,
liabilities or obligations accruing or arising under any provision of the
Constitution relating to a covenant. But since the right to the privy purse
arises under Art. 291 the dispute in respect of which does not fall within
either clause, the jurisdiction of the Court is not excluded. Again, the
jurisdiction of the Court is not excluded. in respect of disputes relating to personal
rights and privileges which are granted by statutes.
100 We further hold that the President is not
invested with any political power transcending the Constitution, which he may
exercise to the prejudice of citizens. The powers of the President arise from
and are defined by the Constitution.
Validity of the exercise of those powers is
always amenable to the jurisdiction of the Courts, unless the jurisdiction is
by precise enactment excluded. Power of this Court under Art. 32, or of the
High Courts under Art. 226, cannot be bypassed under a claim that the President
has exercised political power.
On the view we have expressed, it is
unnecessary to express any opinion on the plea that the order was made for a
collateral purpose.
A writ will therefore issue declaring that
the order made by the President on September 6, 1970 "do-recognising"
the Rulers is illegal and on that account inoperative, and the petitioner will
be entitled to all his preexisting rights and privileges including the right to
the privy purse, as if the order had not been made. The petitioner will get his
costs of the petition.
Writ petitions Nos. 377 to 383 of 1970 raise
the identical question which is raised in the main petition. For reasons set
out in the principal petition a similar writ will issue.
Each petitioner will get his costs of the
petition. One hearing fee in those, petitions in which the petitioners have
appeared through the same counsel.
Mitter, J. On the 6th September, 1970 there
was issued in the name of the President an order of the following text :
"In exercise of the powers vested in him
under Art. 366 (22) of the Constitution of India, the President hereby directs
with effect from the date of this order His Highness Maharajadhi Raj Madhav Rao
Jiwaji Rao Scindia Bahadur do cease to be recoginised as a Ruler of
Gwalior." Admittedly this followed the signing of an instrument by the
President on the night of 5th September 1970 purporting to withdraw recognition
of all the Rulers. Orders like the above were issued in the case of each and
every individual Ruler of an Indian State numbering over three hundred and
sixty. The petitioner in Writ Petition No. 376 of 1970 is the person to whom
the above order was directed. He is a national and citizen of India and was recognised
by the President of India as a Ruler on 16th July 1961 as the successor to the
gaddi of the State of Gwalior on the death of the preceding Ruler of the State.
The late Ruler had signed an instrument of Accession on the 15th August 1947
which was accepted by the then Governor-General of India on the 16th 101 August
1947. On 22nd April, 1948 the said preceding Ruler of the State had signed a
covenant with the other Rulers of various States in Central India which led to
the formation of the Madhya Bharat State on the 15th June 1948. As such Ruler
the petitioner was being paid a privy purse of Rs.10,00,000. per year and was
also entitled to certain rights and privileges under various statutes.
The recognition as a Ruler was not an empty
formality.
Different Articles of the Constitution
provide for and deal with the rights and privileges of the Rulers. The forenost
among them is Art. 291 which after its amendment as a result of the Seventh
Amendment of the Constitution Act, 1956, runs as follows "Where under any
covenant or agreement entered into by the Ruler of any Indian State) before the
commencement of this Constitution, the payment of any sums, free of tax, has
been guaranteed or assured by the Government of the Dominion of India to any
Ruler of such State as privy purse-(a) such sums shall be charged on, and paid
out of, the Consolidated Fund of India;
(b) the sums so paid to any Ruler shall be
exempt from all taxes on income." Art. 362 of the Constitution in its
present form deals with the rights and privileges of Rulers of Indian States
other than the privy purse and reads :
"In the exercise of the power of
Parliament or of the Legislature of a State to make laws or in the exercise of
the executive power of the Union or of a State, due regard shall be had to the
guarantee or assurance given under any such covenant or agreement as is
referred to in article 291 with respect to the personal rights, privileges and
dignities of the Ruler of an Indian State." The only article in the
Constitution which mentions the recognition of a person as a Ruler is Art. 366
which is a key to the meaning of various words and expressions used throughout
the Constitution. Clause 22 of the article provides "In this Constitution
unless the context otherwise, requires, the following expressions have the
meaning hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say102
(22)"Ruler" in relation to an Indian State means the Prince, Chief or
other person by whom any such covenant or agreement as is referred to in clause
(1) of article 291 was entered into and who for the time being is recognised by
the President as the Ruler of the State, and includes any person who for the
time being is recognised by the President as the successor of such Ruler;"
Clause (15) of Art. 366 defines an Indian State as any territory which the
Government of the Dominion of India recognised as such a State Clause (21) of
Art. 366 (now deleted) provided as follows :-"Rajpramukh" means(a)in
relation to the state of Hyderabad the person who for the time being is
recognised by the President as the Nizam of Hyderabad;
(b)in relation to the State of Jammu and
Kashmir or the State of Mysore, the person who for the time being is recognised
by the President as the Maharaja of that State; and (c)In relation to any other
state specified in Part B of the First Schedule, the person who for the time
being is recognised by the President as the Rajpramukh of that State and
includes in relation to any of the said States any person for the time being
recognised by the President as competent to exercise the powers of the
Rajpramukh in relation to that State;" To complete the account of the
provisions of the Constitution with regard to Rulers it is necessary to set out
Art. 363 of the Constitution,, the interpretation of which is the most
important point in the series of petitions presented by a number of Rulers ,of
Indian States to this Court with identical prayers.
"363(1) Notwithstanding anything in this
Constitution but subject to the, provisions of article 143, neither the"
Supreme Court nor any other court shall have jurisdiction in any dispute
arising out of any provision of a treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement,
sanad or other similar instrument which was entered into or executed before the
commencement of this Constitution by any Ruler of an Indian State and to which
the Government of the Dominion of India or any of its predecessor Governments
was a party and which has or has been con103 tinued in operation after such
commencement, or in any dispute in respect of any right accruing under or any
liability or obligation arising out of any of the provisions of this
Constitution relating to such treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or
other similar instrument.
(2) The grievance of the petitioner in this series
of petitions is the same' as the rights asserted by them flow from more or less
similar transactions.
We have to delve into the past history of
India in order to appreciate the setting in which these persons or their
ancestors who were formerly Rulers of territories in India wore brought within
the fold of the Constitution. Though not sovereign within the meaning of that
expression in International Law these former Rulers had certain attributes of
sovereignty during the days preceding the independence of India.
As is well known to all students of history
the achievement of setting up a British Empire in India was "in its early
stages at any rate, brought about by the agents of the East India Company in
India." The Company entered into treaties with Indian States in the early
stages aiming at no more than securing for the Company a privileged position in
trade against its rivals. For the first time the Parliament of England asserted
its authority and control over the East India Company's activities both in.
India and in England by the Regulating Act of 1773, under which the Governor of
Bengal became the Governor-General in Council with a certain amount of control
over the Presidencies of Bombay and Madras. The Marquis of Wellesley as the
Governor-General felt convinced when he came to India in 1798 and saw the state
of affairs here that the British must become the one paramount power in the
country. He set up a system under which no Indian State which had accepted
subsidiary alliance with the British could make any war or carry on
negotiations with another State without the Company's knowledge and consent. It
was during his time. that the British Dominion in India expanded considerably.
He had practically eliminated the French influence in India and brought many
States under the subsidiary alliance, the notable instances being Hyderabad,
Travancore, Mysore, Baroda and Gwalior.
Under this system of subsidiary alliance the
bigger states were to maintain armies commanded by British officers for
preservation of the public peace and their rulers were to cede certain
territories for the upkeep of these forces; the smaller States were to pay a
tribute to the Company. In return the Company were to 104 protect them, one and
all, against external aggression and internal rebellion. A British Resident was
also installed in every State that accepted the subsidiary alliance. This
process was carried on during the regime of Hastings and Dalhousie. The Marquis
of Hastings who came out as a Governor-General in 1813 crushed the Pindaris and
finally broke the Mahratta power and carried the spread of the British dominion
over northern and central India to a stage which it was only left for Lord
Dalhousie, a quarter of a century later, to complete. He resumed Wellesley's
policy by extending the Company's supremacy and protection over almost all the
Indian States. By the time he left the country in 1823, the British empire in
India had been formed and its map in essentials drawn. Every State in India
outside the Punjab and Sind was under the Company's control.
The influence of the company over the
internal administration of the States rapidly increased ,during the period
following the retirement of Lord Hastings. Residents became gradually
transformed into diplomatic agents representing a foreign power into executive
and controlling officers of a superior government. The Charter of 1833
abolished the Company's trading activities and the Company assumed the
functions of the Government of India. Lord Dalhousie acquired vast territories
for the Company conquering the Punjab and pushing the frontiers to the natural
limits of India i.e. the base of the mountains of Afghanistan. Whatever may
have been the cause which led to the Mutiny of the year 1857 it was realised by
the British people that the Indian States could play a vital role as one of the
bulwarks of British rule. An Act of 1858 intituled "An Act for the Better
Government of India" provided by the 67th section that "all treaties
made by the Company shall be binding upon Her Majesty". In her
proclamation Queen Victoria made it clear that the Government would respect the
rights, dignity and honour of Native Princes. The policy of annexation
vigorously pursued by Dalhousie gave way to the perpetuation of the States as
separate entities. Lord anning carried this new policy to its next logical step
by recommending that the integrity of the States should be preserved by
perpetuating the rule of the Princes whose power to adopt heirs should be
recognised. The Secretary of State for India agreed to this recommendation and
sanads were granted to the Ruler under which in the event of the failure of the
natural heirs, they were authorised to adopt their successors according to
their law and custom. These sands were intended to remove mistrust and
suspicion and knit the Native Sovereigns to the paramount power. The new policy
was to punish the ruler for extreme misgovernment and if necessary to depose
him but not to annex his State for misdeeds. The Indian States thus became part
and parcel of the British Empire in India. In The words of Lord Canning :
105 "The territories under the
sovereignty of the Crown became at once as important and as integral a part of
India as territories under its direct domination. Together they form one direct
care and the political system which the Moghuls had not completed and the
Maharattas never contemplated is now an established fact of history." The
next five decades were occupied with the task of evolving a machinery for
controlling the States. A political department was set up under the direct
charge of the Governor-General. It had at its disposal a service known as the
Indian Political Service, manned by officers taken from the Indian Civil
Service and the Army. It had a police force which was maintained partly by the
revenues of the Central Government and partly by contributions made by the
States. The Political Department had Residents and Political Agents in all
important States and groups of States. The Secretary of State kept a close
control over the activities of the Political Department mainly because of the
interest of the Crown in matters affecting the rights and privileges of the
Rulers.
Constitutionally the States were not part of
the British India nor were their inhabitants British subjects.
Parliamentary had no power to legislate for
the States or their people. The Crown's relationship with the Indian States was
conducted by the Governor-General in Council and since he was in charge of the
political Department, his Executive Council tended in practice to leave States'
affairs to him which meant that the Political Department came gradually to
assume the position of a government within a government.
With the building up of a strong Political
Department the Crown started asserting rights never claimed by the East India
Company and even at times cutting across treaties.
The most outstanding example and at the same
time one of far-reaching consequence, in the relations of the paramount power
with the Rulers was the prerogative assumed of recognising succession in the
case of natural heirs. The first ruling in this behalf was laid down by the
Government of India in 1884 in a letter addressed to the Chief Commissioner of
the Central Provinces in which it was stated that succession to a native State
is invalid until it receives in some form the sanction of the British
authority.
In the view of the Secretary of State
expressed in 1891 it was admittedly the right and duty of Government to settle
successions in the protected States in India. This right it was claimed flowed
essentially from the-position of the British as the Supreme power responsible
for maintaining law and order throughout the country. That power alone had the
necessary sanction to enforce decisions regarding 106 disputed successions. The
Ruler thus did not inhert his gaddi as of right but as a gift from the
paramount power.
A definite pattern of the Government of
India's relationship with the States had been developed b the time the first
world War broke out in 1914. The Rulers rallied to fight for the Empire, and
the organisation of the war effort involved closer coordination of
administrative activity in the States as well as in the Provinces.
Throughout the country the tide of national
aspirations was rising fast. Although Britain claimed to be fighting a war to
defend freedom and democracy the system of government by which she continued to
hold India in imperial thrall was clearly at variance with her professed aims.
The British Government recognised that the situation needed now handling. In
1917 Montagu, the Secretary of State for India, announced that the policy of
His Majesty's Government with which the Government of India was in complete
accord, was that of an increasing association of Indians in every branch of the
administration and the gradual development of self-governing institutions with
a view to progressive realisation of responsible government in India as an
integral part of the British Empire.
The Secretary of State for India and the
Viceroy Lord Chelmsford published a joint report on Constitutional Reforms
which was the first major investigation into the relations of the States with
the rest of India and with the paramount power. The authors of the report
visualised that the Provinces would ultimately become self-governing units held
together by a Central Government which would deal solely with matters of common
concern to all of them.
With regard to the Rulers the authors of the
report felt that the time had come to end their isolation and that steps should
be taken for joint consultations by them for the furtherance of their common
interest. There was a conference of ruling Princes and Chiefs in 1919 which
recommended that the rulers of States having full and unrestricted powers of
civil and criminal jurisdiction in their States, and the power to make their
own laws should be termed sovereign Princes as against those who lacked such
powers. This was however not favoured by the Government of India. In 1921 a
Chamber of Princes was brought into being by a Royal Proclamation which
announced that the Viceroy would take counsel of the Chamber freely in matters
relating to that territories of Indian States generally and in matters which
affected these territories jointly With British India or with the rest of the
Empire. The Chamber of Princes would have no concern in the internal affairs of
individual States or relations of Individual States with 107 the Government of
India while the existing rights of these states and their freedom of action
would in no way be prejudiced or impaired.
In the years following the first World War
the Nationalist Movement in India gained, considerable impetus. Lord Irwin who
came out as Viceroy in 1926 felt that the political situation in the country
demanded some gesture on the part of Britain. In March 1927 an announcement was
made for appointing a statutory Commission to enquire into the working of the
Government of India Act 1919 and to make recommendations regarding further
constitutional advancement. At or about this time the Rulers of the Indian States
also demanded an impartial enquiry into the whole relationship between
themselves and the paramount power.
The Secretary of State appointed a Committee
of three members headed by Sir Harcort Butler to enquire into the relationship
between the States and the paramount power and to suggest means for the more
satisfactory adjustment of the existing economic relations, between the States
and the British India.
On behalf of the States it was contended
before the Committee that all original sovereign powers except those which had
been transferred with their consent to the Crown were still possessed by them
and that such transfers could be effected only by the consent of the States and
that the paramountcy of the British Crown was limited to certain matters-those
relating to foreign affairs and external and internal security. The Committee
was not prepared to accept this and held that none of the States over had any
International status. Ile committee refused to define paramountcy but asserted
that paramountcy must remain paramount; it must fulfill its obligations
defining or adopting itself according to the shifting necessities of the time
and the progressive development of the States. They however observed that if
any Government in the nature of Dominion Government should be constituted in
British India such Government could clearly be a new Government resting on a
new written Constitution. The Committee noted the grave apprehension of the
Princes on this score and recorded a strong opinion that in view of the fact of
the historical nature of the relationship of the paramount power and the
Princes the latter should not be transferred without their agreement to a
relationship with a new Government in British India responsible to an Indian
Legislature. This really laid the foundation of a policy whereby in later years
a wedge was effectively driven between the States and the British India.
The Rulers were certainly disappointed with
the findings of the Butler Committee with regard to their main hopes of being
freed from the unfettered discretion of the Political Department
8-L744Sup.CI/71 108 to intervene in their internal affairs. Nationalist opinion
in the country viewed the recommendations of the, Butler Committee with grave
apprehension and emphatic protests were entered in the report of a committee
presided over by Pandit Motilal Nehru and an All Parties Conference was
arranged in 1928 to frame a Dominion Constitution for India. It gave a warning
that it was inconceivable that the people of the states who were fired by the
.same ambitions and aspirations as the people of British India would quietly
submit to existing conditions for ever, or that the people of British India
bound by the closest ties of family, race and religion to their brethren on the
other side of an imaginary line would .never make common cause with them. The
Viceroy Lord Irwin who had conferred with the British Government in 1929 made
an official pronouncement on his return to India to the effect that the natural
issue of India's constitutional progress was the attainment of Dominion Status.
He also announced that the British Government had accepted the suggestion of
Sir John Simoh for a Round Table Conference. There was a series of these
conferences which debated on many and various points including Federation of
the States with the Provinces of British India.
Then came the Government of India Act 1935
which provided for a constitutional relationship between the Indian States and
British India on a federal basis. A special feature of the scheme 'Was that
whereas in the case of the provinces accession to the Federation was to be
automatic in the case of the states it was to be voluntary. A State was to be
considered to have acceded when its Ruler executed an Instrument of Accession
and after it was accepted by His Majesty the King of England. The Government of
India Act 1935 other than the Part relating to Federation, came into force on
the 1st April 1937. From that date the functions of the Crown in the relations
with the States were entrusted to the Crown Representative; those functions
included negotiations with the Rulers after accession to the Federation: The
Federation however never took shape,.
An important announcement in the
Constitutional set up of India which came after the Second World War had broken
out was the Draft Declaration known as Cripp's Plan. This accepted the
principle of self-determination but it contained numerous pitfalls which
imperilled the future of India. The Mission failed but its failure gave a new
turn to India's political struggle. In spite of the deepening crisis of war no
further serious effort was made .to resolve the political dead lock in India
until the Simla Conference of 1945. This also proved abortive. After the
assumption of power by the Labour Government in England a Parliamentary
delegation visited India and later the Secretary of State announced the
Government's decision to send a delegation of three Cabinet 109 Ministers to
India. In May 1946 the Cabinet Mission issued the memorandum dated 12th May 1946
in regard to States' treaties and paramountcy; it affirmed that the rights of
the States which flowed from the relationship of the Crown would no longer
exist and that the rights surrendered by the States to the Paramount Power
would revert to the States. The plan provided for the entry of the States to
the proposed Union' of India in the following manner :
(a) Paramountcy could neither be retained by
the British Crown nor transferred to the new Government. But according to the
assurance given by the Rulers that they were ready and willing to do so, the
States were expected to co-operate in the new development of India.
(b) The precise form which the co-operation
of the States would take must be a matter for negotiation during the building
up of the new constitutional structure.
(c) The States were to retain all subjects
and powers other than those ceded to the Union, namely, Foreign Affairs,
Defence and Communications.
(d) In the preliminary stage the States were
to be represented 'on the Constituent Assembly by a Negotiating Committee.
The Viceroy Lord Mountbatten made it clear
that the British Government resolved to transfer power by June 1948 and a
solution had to be found in a few months' time. On June 3, 1947 he announced
that His Majesty's Government would be prepared to relinquish power to two
Governments of India and Pakistan Oil the basis of Dominion Status and this
relinquishment of power would take place much earlier than June 1948. In regard
to States the plan laid down that the policy of His Majesty's Government
towards the Indian States contained in the Cabinet Mission Memorandum of May
1945 remained unchanged. 'At a Press Conference held by him Lord Mountbatten
gave it out that the date of transfer of power would be about 15th August, 1947.
The Indian Independence Act enacted for the
purpose of giving effect to the plan envisaged as above, received the Royal
Assent on 18th July 1947. It provided for the setting up of two independent
Dominions as and from the 15th August 1947. Section 2 of the Act defined what
the territories of the two Dominions would be S. 6 provided that the
Legislature of each of the new Dominions would have power to make laws for that
Dominion. Under s. 7(1)(b) the suzerainty of His Majesty over the Indian States
would lapse and with it all treaties and agreements in force at the date of the
passing of the Act between His Majesty and the Rulers of Indian States, all
functions exercisable by His 110 Majesty at that date with respect to Indian
States, all obligations of His Majesty existing at that date towards Indian
States or the Rulers thereof. Under cl. (c) any treaties or agreements in force
at the date of passing of this Act between His Majesty and any person having
authority in the tribal areas were also to lapse. Section 9 empowered the
Governor-General, to promulgate orders for making such provisions as appeared
to him to be necessary or expedient for bringing the provisions of the Act into
effective operation, for dividing between the new Dominions, and between the
new Provinces to be constituted under the Act, the powers, rights, property,
duties and liabilities of the Governor-General in Council, etc. Even before the
passing of the Act Lord Mountbatten was debating the States' problems with
Indian leaders. He put forward to them a peaceful settlement he had in mind,
namely to allow the Rulers to retain their titles, extra territorial rights.
and personal property and civil list in return for which they would join a
Domiion-most of them India, and a few like Bahawalpur Pakistan only three
subjects of defence external affairs and communications being reserved for the
Central Government. A draft Instrument of Accession was prepared in the States
Department of the Dominion of India. The Instrument of Accession took three
forms according to the existing status and powers of the various States. By the
Instrument of Accession the States were to accede to the Dominion of India on
the three subjects, Defence, External Affairs and Communications and their
content being as defined in Schedule VII of the Government of India Act, 1935.
Shortly before the 15th August 'with the helpful efforts of Lord Mountbatten
negotiations were concluded and barring Hyderabad, Kashmir and Junagadh all the
States within the geographical limits of the Indian Union had acceded to the
Indian Dominion by the 15th August. The accession of the Indian States to the
Dominion of India established a new organic relationship between the States and
the Government of India.
The second phase which rapidly followed
involved a process of two-fold integration, consolidation of States into
sizable administrative units and their democratization.
With the advent of independence in India the
popular urge in the States for attaining the same measure of freedom as was
enjoyed by the people in the Provinces gained momentum and unleashed strong
movements for the transfer of power from the Rule to the people.
So far as the larger units were concerned
democratization of administration could be a satisfactory solution of their
constitutional problem. However in the case of small States responsible
Government could have only proved a farce. The Rulers of smaller States were in
no position to meet the demand. for equating 111 the position of their people
with that of their countrymen in the Provinces. Without doubt the smaller State
units could not have continued in modern conditions as separate entities;
integration provided the only approach to the problem.
The integration of States did not however
follow a uniform pattern. Merger of States in the Provinces geographically
continuous to them was one form of integration; the second was conversion of
States into Centrally administered areas;
and the third form was the creation of new
viable units known as Unions of States. Each of these forms was adopted
according to size, geo graphy and other factors relating to each State or group
of States.
The problem of integration was first faced in
Orissa where the States formed scattered bits of territory with no geographical
contiguity. After long discussions with the Rulers of the States and the
Minister of the State Department it was eventually decided to integrate the
small States with the adjoining Provinces. Agreements were signed by the Rulers
of these States in December 1947 and on subsequent dates providing for cession
by them to the Dominion of India full and exclusive authority, jurisdiction and
power in relation to the governance of their States.
There were several groups of States which
with due regard to geographical, linguistic, social and cultural affinities of
the people could be consolidated into sizable and viable units consisting
entirely of States. In such cases, territories of States were united to form
Unions of States on the basis of full transfer of power from the Rulers to the
people. A special feature of these Unions was the provision for the Rajpramukh
as the constitutional head of the State who was to be elected by a Council of
Rulers. The United State of Gwalior, Indore and Malwa and other small States
came to be known as Madhya Bharat of which the Ruler of Gwalior became the
Rajpramukh. Integration of Rajputana was completed in three stages.
As a result of the application of the various
merger and integration schemes 216 States were merged in Provinces, 61 States
were taken over as Centrally administered areas and 275 States were integrated
into the Union of States.
The process of the merger of the States with
the Provinces or their constitution into Centrally Administered areas, transfer
of power to the people was automatic in that the merged States became part of
the Administrative units which were governed by the popular Government of the
Provinces and the Centre as the case might be. So far as the Provincially
merged States were concerned, under the arrangements made virtually by the
statutory 112 orders issued under S. 290-A of the Government of India Act 1935
provision was made for the representation of the people of the merged States in
the Provincial Legislature. As regards the Unions of States wherever
practicable popular interim ministries were set up to conduct their
administration.
The Instruments of Merger and the covenants
establishing the various units of States were in the nature of overall
settlements with the Rulers who had executed them. While they provided for the
integration of States and for the transfer of powers from the, Rulers they also
guaranteed to the Rulers privy purses succession to the gaddi, rights and
privileges and full ownership, use and enjoyment of all private properties belling
to them as distinct from State properties.
The above is a thumb-nail sketch of the
political developments and the major political events between 1773 and 1948 or
1949. Most of the historical account is taken verbatim from V. P. Menon's
"Story of Integration of Indian States" and the White Paper on Indian
Constitution-both of which were freely referred to by counsel appearing in the
case. In the above setting I now propose to examine the implications of the
important documents to which the Ruler of Gwalior became a party.
An Instrument of Accession was signed by the
Ruler of Gwalior on the 15th August, 1947 in the exercise of his sovereignty in
and over his State containing inter-alia the following material terms:"I
declare that I accede to the Dominion of India. with the intent that the
Governor-General of India, the Dominion Legislature, the Federal Court and any
other Dominion authority established for the purpose of the Dominion shall, by
virtue of this instrument of Accession but subject always to the terms thereof,
and for the purposes only of the Dominion exercise in relation to the
State...... such functions as may be vested in them by of under the Government
of India Act, 1935.
Clause 31 accept the matters specified in the
Schedule hereto as the matters with respect to which the Dominion Legislature
may make laws for the State. (The schedule mentioned contained several matters
of which the main were defence, external affairs and communications).
Clause 5. The terms of this Instrument of Accession
shall not be varied by any amendment of the Act (Government of India Act) or
the Indian Independence Act, 1947 unless such amendment is accepted by me, by
an instrument supplementary to this instrument.
Clause 7. Nothing in this Instrument shall be
deemed to commit me in any way to acceptance of any future constitution of
India 113 or to, fetter my discretion to enter into arrangements with the
Government of India under any such future constitution.
Clause 8. Nothing in this Instrument affects
the continuance of my sovereignty in and over this State, or, save as provided
by or under this Instrument, the exercise of any powers, authority and right,,,
now enjoyed by me as Ruler of this State or the validity of any law at present
in force in this State.
Clause 91 hereby declare that I execute' this
Instrument on behalf of this State and that any reference in this Instrument
to. me or to ;The Ruler of the State, is to be construed as including a
reference to my heirs and successors." This Instrument was accepted by the
Governor-General of India and signed by him.
On 22nd April 1948 a document was executed by
the Ruler of Gwalior, Indore and certain other States in Central India for the
formation of the United State of Madhya Bharat. The recitals to the document
show that the Rulers were entering into a covenant on the terms mentioned
therein as they were convinced that the welfare of the people of the region
could best be secured by the establishment of a State with a common executive,
legislature and judiciary, and they were resolved to entrust to a Constituent
Assembly consisting of elected representatives of the people the drawing up of
a democratic constitution of the State within the framework of the Constitution
of India. By Article II the Covenanting States agreed to unite and integrate
their territories into one State with a common executive, legislature and
judiciary and to include therein any other State the Ruler of which agreed with
the approval of the Government of India to the merger of his State in the
United State. Article III provided for the constitution of a Council of Rulers
with a President known as the Rajpramukh. Article IV provided inter alia for
payment of a sum of Rs. 2,50,000 to the Rajpramukh from the revenues of the
United State as consolidated allowance. Under Art. V there was to be a Council
of Ministers to aid and advise the Rajpramukh in the exercise of his functions.
Under Art. VI the Rulers of each Covenanting State agreed as soon as possible
and not later than the 1st July 1948 to make over the administration of his
State to the Rajpramukh whereupon all rights, authority and jurisdiction
belonging to the Ruler which pertained to or were incidental to the Government
of the Covenanting State were to vest in the United State and all the assets
and liabilities of the Covenanting State were to be the assets and liabilities
of the United State. Under Art. VIII the Rajpramukh was to execute on behalf of
the United State, as soon as practicable and in any event not later than 15th
June 1948 an Instrument of Accession in accordance with the provisions of s. 6
of the 114 Government of India Act, 1935 and he was to accept as matters with
respect to which the Dominion Legislature might make laws for the United State
all the matters mentioned in List I and List III of the Seventh Schedule to the
said Act, except the entries in List I relating to any tax or duty, by such
instrument. Under Article XI the Ruler of each Covenanting State was to be
entitled to receive annually from the revenues of the United State for his
privy, purse the amount specified against that Covenanting State in Schedule I
: provided that the sums specified in the Schedule in respect of the Rulers of
Gwalior and Indore were to be payable only to the Rulers of these States and
not to their successors for whom provision was to be made subsequently. The
said amount was intended to cover all expenses of the Ruler and his family
including expenses of his residence, marriage and other ceremonies and subject
to the provisions of paragraph I were neither to be increased nor reduced for
any reason whatever. Under paragraph 3 the Rajpramukh was to cause the said
amount to be paid to the Ruler in four equal installments at the beginning of
each quarter in advance. Under paragraph 4 the said amount was to be free of
all taxes whether imposed by the Government of the United State or by the
Government of India. Under Art.
XII the Ruler of each Covenanting State was
to be entitled to the full ownership, use and enjoyment of all private
properties (as distinct from State properties) belonging to hi-in on the date
of his making over the administration of that State to the Rajpramukh. Under
paragraph 3 of this Article if any dispute arose as to whether any item of
property was the private property of the Ruler or State Property, it was to be
referred to such person as the Government of India might nominate in
consultation with the Rajpramukh and his decision was to be final and binding.
Art. XIH ran as follows ." The ruler of
each Covenanting State, as also the members of his family, shall be entitled to
all the personal privileges, dignities and titles enjoyed by them, whether
within or outside the territories of the State immediately before the 15th day
of August, 1947." Art. XIV provided (1) The succession, according to law
and custom to the gaddi of each Covenanting State, and to the personal rights,
privileges, dignities and titles of the Ruler thereof, is hereby guaranteed.
(2) Every question of disputed succession in
regard to a Covenanting State shall be decided by the Council of Rulers after
referring it to a Bench consisting of all the available Judges of the High
Court of the United State and in accordance with the opinion given, by that
High Court.
115 The document ends with the following
paragraph "The Government of India hereby concur in the above Covenant and
guarantee all its provisions. In confirmation whereof Mr. V. P. Menon,
Secretary to the Government of India in the Ministry of States, appends his
signature on behalf and with the authority of the Government of India." On
July 19, 1948 'the Ruler of Gwalior who had then become the Rajpramukh of the
United State of Madhya Bharat executed a revised Instrument of Accession
reciting the covenant of April 1948 referring in particular to Art. VIII of the
same and declaring. that he as Rajpramukh was acceding to the Dominion of India
with intent that the Governor-General of India, the Dominion Legislature the
Federal Court and any other Dominion authority established for the purpose of
the Dominion would by virtue of the instrument of Accession but subject always
to the terms thereof and for the purposes only of the Dominion exercise in
relation to the United State such functions as may be vested in them or under
the Government of India Act, 1935. By cl. (2) he assumed the obligation of
ensuring that due effect was given to the provisions of the Act (the Government
of India Act 1935) within the United State so far as they were applicable by
virtue of the Instrument of Accession. By cl. (3) he accepted all matters
enumerated in List I and List III of the Seventh Schedule to the Act as matters
in respect of which the Dominion Legislature might make laws for the United
State. This was of course subject to some provisos which it is not necessary to
set out. Under cl. (6) the terms of the Instrument of Accession were not to be
varied by any amendment of the Act or the Indian Independence Act 1947 unless
such amendment was accepted by the Rajpramukh.
Under cl. (8) it was made clear that nothing
in the instrument was to be deemed too commit the United State in any way to
acceptance of any future Constitution of India or to fetter the discretion of
the Government of the United State to enter into arrangements with the
Government of India under any such future Constitution.
This Instrument of Accession was duly
accepted by the Governor-General of India.
The Constituent Assembly was in session about
this time and the future Constitution of India was being discussed and given a
final shape and form.
The provisions of the Constitution had been
finally settled before the 24th November 1949, the date on which the Rajpramukh
made a solemn declaration that the Constitution of India shortly 116 to be
adopted by the Constituent Assembly of India was to be the Constitution for
Madhya Bharat, as for the other parts of India and was to be enforced as such
in accordance with the tenor of its provisions. The preamble to the
proclamation shows that the Rajpramukh took the step in the best interest of
the, State, of Madhya Bharat which was closely linked with the rest of India by
the community of interests in the economic. political and other fields and it
was felt desirable that the Constitutional relationship established between the
State of Madhya Bharat and the Dominion of India should not only be continued
but further strengthen and the Constitution of India as drafted by the
Constituent Assembly of India, which included duly appointed representatives of
the, States provided a suitable basis for doing so.
The Constitution of India was finally adopted
by the Constituent Assembly on the 26th November 1949. Under Art. 394 of the
Constitution fifteen of its articles were to come into force at once and the
remaining provisions of the Constitution were to come into force on the 26th
day of January 1950 referred to in the Constitution at the commencement of the
Constitution. By Art. 395 the Indian Independence Act 1947 and the Government
of India Act 1935 together with all enactments amending or supplementing the
latter were repealed.
The above gives a fairly complete picture of
the disappearance of the former Indian States which formed the combination of
the United State of Madhya Bharat with the commencement of the Constitution of
India as also the rights and privileges of the Rulers save as expressly
provided otherwise in the Constitution itself, or the covenants agreements 'etc
to the extent necessary.
The above pattern did not however apply to
all the Indian States. A number of small States of Orissa executed Merger
agreements which were confirmed on behalf and with the authority of the
Governor-General by the Secretary. to the Ministry of States. These agreements
were entered into in December 1947. By Art. I of the agreement the Raja of the
State ceded to the Dominion Government full and exclusive authority,
jurisdiction and powers for and in relation to the governance of the State and
agreed to transfer the administration of the State to the Dominion Government
on the 1st January, 1948. As from that date the Dominion Government was to be
competent to exercise the said powers and authority and jurisdiction in such
manner and through such agency as it might think fit. Under Art. 11 the Raja
was to be entitled to receive from the revenues of the State annually for the
privy purse a certain sum of money which was to cover all the expenses of the
Ruler and this family etc. Under Art. III he was to be 117 property (as
distinct from State properties) belonging to him on the date of the agreement.
'Under Art. IV the Raja and certain other persons were to be entitled to all
personal privileges enjoyed by them whether within or outside the territories
of the State immediately before the 15th August, 1947. By Art. V the Dominion
Government guaranteed the succession according to law and custom to the gaddi
of the State and to the Ruler's personal rights privileges, dignities and
titles.
Similar Merger agreements were signed by the
Rulers of Gujarat and Deccan States. The terms of the agreements were on
similar lines.
There were however departures from the above
in some cases.
For instance, the Nawab of Bhopal executed a
Merger agreement on the 30th April, 1949 whereby the administration of the
State of Bhopal was to be taken over and carried on by the Government of India
and for a period of five years next after the date of transfer the State was to
be administered as a Chief Commissioner's Province. The personal rights and
privileges and the privy purse were secured as in the case of other Rulers.
With regard to succession to the throne of Bhopal State it was agreed that the
same would be governed and regulated in accordance with the provisions of the
Act known as the Succession to the Throne of Bhopal Act 1947. It may be
mentioned that in the case of Bhopal Art. III of the agreement provided that
although. the then Ruler was to get a sum of Rs. 11 lakhs per annum free of all
taxes, each of his successors with effect from the date of succession was to be
entitled to receive for his privy purse a sum of Rs. 9 lakhs per annum free of
all taxes.
There was some similar provision in the cases
of Mysore and Hyderabad but it is hardly necessary for the purpose of this
series of petitions to go into the differences. There were separate agreements
with the Nizam of Hyderabad regarding the privy purse, private property and
rights and privileges entered into on the 25th January 1950. Under Art. I of
the agreement with the Nizam the said Ruler was to be entitled to receive
annually for his privy purse a sum of Rs. 50 lakhs free of all taxes. But with
regard to his successors provision was to be made subsequently by the
Government of India. Under Art. IV the Government of India guaranteed the
succession according to law and custom to the gaddi of the State. A very
similar agreement was entered into with the Maharaja of Mysore on the 23rd 1
January 1950. The then Maharaja was to receive Rs. 26 lakhs free of all taxes
as and by way of privy purse per annum but provision was to be made
subsequently by the Government of India with regard to his successor.
118 For another instance of integration
through Merger Agreement I may refer to the Kutch Merger Agreement dated 4th
May, 1948 between the Governor-General of India and the, Maharao of Kutch. The
preamble shows that the agreement was being entered into in the best interests
of the State of Kutch as well as of the Dominion of India to provide for the
administration of said State by or under the authority of 'the Dominion
Government. Under Art. I the, Maharao ceded to the Dominion Government full and
exclusive authority, jurisdiction and powers for and in relation to the
governance of the State and agreed to transfer the administration of the State
to the Dominion Government on the 1st day of June 1948. As from that day the Dommion
Government was to be competent to exercise the said powers, authority and
jurisdiction in such manner and through such agency as it might think fit. By
Art. 2 the Maharao was to be entitled to continue the same personal rights,
privileges, dignities and titles which he would have enjoyed had the agreement
not been made. Under Art.. 3 the Maharao was to be entitled with effect from
the said day to receive from the revenues of the State annually for his ,privy
purse the sum of Rs. 8 lakhs free of all taxes. The Government of India
undertook that the said sum of Rs. 8 lakhs would be paid to the Maharao in four
equal installments in advance.
Art 4 provided for the retention by the
Maharao of full ownership, use .and enjoyment of all private properties (as distinct
from State properties). Under Art. 6 the Dominion Government guaranteed the
succession of the State according to law and custom of the gaddi of the State
and to the Maharao his personal rights, privileges, ,dignities and titles. As
the original Government of India Act 1935 did not provide for any Merger
agreement steps had already been taken towards-that end. The Extra Provincial
Jurisdiction Act 1947 was passed giving power to the Central Government to
,exercise extra Provincial jurisdiction over a State only if it had by a treaty
agreement etc. acquired full and exclusive authority and jurisdiction and power
for an in relation to the governance of the State. The Government of India Act
1935 was also amended by insertion of section 290A and 290-B.
The States' Merger (Governors' Provinces)
Order, 1949 was promulgated on the 27th July 1949 under s. 290-A of the
Government of India Act for the administration of the States specified in the
Schedule together with the adjoining Governors' Provinces, Under Cl. 3 the
States specified in each of the Schedules were to be administered as from the
appointed day in all respects as if they formed part of the Provinces specified
in the heading of that Schedule and, accordingly, any reference to an Acceding
State, in the Government of India Act, 1935, or in any Act or Ordinance made on
or after the appointed day was to be construed as not 119 including a reference
to any of the merged States, and any reference in any such Act or Ordinance as
aforesaid to Provinces specified in that Schedule. Under Cl. 4 all the law in
force in a.,. merged State or in any part thereof immediately before the
appointed day including orders made under section 3 or section 4 of the
Extra-ProvincialJurisdiction Act, 1947 was to continue in force until repealed,
modified or amended by a competent Legislature or other competent authority
Under Cl. 5 all property wherever situate which, immediately before the
appointed day was vested in the Dominion Government for purposes of the governance
of a merged State was as from that date to vest in the Government of the
absorbing Province unless the purposes for which the property was held
immediately before the appointed daywere central purposes.
Another Order known as the Stages Merger
(Chief Commissioners' Provinces) Order, 1949 was promulgated on the 29th July
1949. The State of Kutch along with other States was to be administered by and
under this Order in all respects as if they were a Chief Commissioner's
Province to be known as the Chief Commissioner's Province of Kutch.
The unification of India however thus
achieved was not as a result of negotiations across the table nor was it
accomplished overnight in the way ordinary contracts and engagements are
entered into after some deliberation. Full credit for the same goes not only to
the Ministry of States led by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel but also to the Rulers
of the hundreds of Indian States who realised that in the interest of the
people of their States as also their personal interest it was necessary for
them to come to terms with the Government of India. They agreed to part with
their States and the territories so far governed by them on the basis of the
assurances and guarantees given by the Dominion of India before the
commencement of the Constitution by the Government of India as contained in the
Constitution itself. It will not be out of place to set out what Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel said in the Constituent Assembly on 12th October 1949 in
regard to the settlements with the Rulers. A portion of his speech is quoted as
below "In the past, in most of the States there was no distinction between
the expenditure on the administration and the Ruler's privy purse.
Even where the Ruler's privy purse had been
fixed no effective steps were taken to ensure that the expenditure expected to
be covered by the privy purse was not, directly or indirectly charged on the
revenues of the State. Large amounts, therefore, were spent on the Rulers on
the members of the ruling families . . . . the privy purse settlements made,
120 by us will reduce the burden of the expenditure, on the Rulers to at least one
fourth of the previous figure. Besides, the States have benefited very
considerably from the process of integration in the form of cash balances
inherited by them from the Rulers. . . . I shall now come to the political and
moral aspect of the settlements.
In order to view the payments guaranteed by
us' in their correct perspective, we have to remember that they are linked with
the momentous developments affecting the most vital interests of this country.
These guarantees form part of the historic settlements which enshrine in them
the consummation of the great ideal of geographical, political and economic
unification of India, an ideal which for centuries remained a distant dream and
which appeared as remote and as difficult of attainment as ever even after the
advent of Indian independence . . . Human memory is proverbially short. Meeting
in October 1949, we are apt to forget the magnitude of the problem. which
confronted us in August 1947 . . . . the so-called lapse of paramountcy was a
part of the plan announced on June 3, 1947 which was accepted by the Congress.
We agreed to this arrangement in the same manner as we agreed to the partition
of India. We accepted it because we had no option to act otherwise. While there
was recognition in the various announcements of the British Government of the
fundamental fact that each State should link up its future with that Dominion
with which it was geographically continuous, the Indian Independence Act
released the States from all their obligations to the British Crown..........
They (the British Crown) even conceded that theoretically the States were free
to link their future with whichever Dominion they liked, although, in saying
so, they referred to certain geographical compulsions which could not be
evaded. The situation was indeed fraught with immeasurable potentialities of
disruption, which some of the Rulers did wish to, exercise their technical
right to declare independence and others to join the neighboring Dominion. If
the Rulers had exercised their right in such an unpatriotic manner, they would
have found considerable support from influential elements hostile to the
interests of this country . . . . It was in this unpropitious background that
the Government of India invited the Rulers of the States to accede on three
subjects of Defence, External Affairs and Communications. At the time the
proposal was put forward to the Rulers, an assurance was given to them that
they would retain the status quo except for accession on these 121 subject. . .
. There was nothing to compel or induce the Rulers to merge the identity of
their States. Any use of force would have not only been against our professed
principles but would have also caused serious repercussions.
If the, Rulers had elected to stay out, they
would have continued to draw the heavy Civil Lists which they were drawing
before and in a large number of cases they could have continued to enjoy
unrestricted use of the State revenues. The minimum which we could offer to
them as quid pro quo for parting with their ruling powers was to guarantee to
them privy purses and certain privileges on a reasonable and defined basis. The
privy purse settlements are therefore in the nature of consideration for the
surrender by the Rulers of all their ruling powers and also for the dissolution
of the States as separate units . . . . The capacity for mischief and trouble
on the part of the Rulers if the settlement with them would not have been
reached on a negotiated basis was far greater than could be imagined at this
stage. Let us do justice to them; let us place ourselves in their position and
then assess the value of their sacrifice. The Rulers have now discharged their
part of the obligations by transferring all ruling powers and by agreeing to
the integration of their States.
The main part of our obligation under these
Agreements is to ensure that the guarantees given by us in respect of privy
purses ire fully implemented. Our failure to do so would be a breach of faith
and seriously prejudice the stabilization of the new order." it may not be
out of place to quote from the debates in the Constituent Assembly which bear
upon the interpretation of Art. '363. Before the Constitution finally took
shape in the draft, this article was numbered as 302-AA and article 143 was
numbered as 119 Shri T. T. Krishnamachari who moved for the insertion of Art.
302-AA said in the course of his speech :
" .....it is self explanatory. The idea
is to bar the jurisdiction of the courts including the Supreme Court in regard
to adjudicating in respect of any disputes that might arise out of any treaty,
agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instruments that might
have been entered into by the Government of the Dominion of India or by any
predecessor Government. " Questioned by a member as to who would decide,
T. T. Krishnamachari replied 122 The idea is that the court shall not decide in
this particular matter. It is subject only to the provisions of Art. 119 by
which the President may refer the matter to the Supreme Court and ask for its
opinion and the Supreme Court would be bound to communicate its opinion to the
President on any matter so referred by him. The House will also remember that
there are a few articles in the Constitution, specifically 302-A (the present
Art. 291) and 267-A (the present Art. 362) where there are references to these
agreements, covenants, sanads etc. and even these are precluded from
adjudication by any court. The House will recognise that it is very necessary
that matters like these should not be made a matter of dispute that goes before
a court and one which would well nigh probably upset certain arrangements that
have been recommended and agreed to by the Government of India in determining
the relation between the rulers of States and the Government of India in the
transitory period.
After the Constitution is passed, the
position will be clear. Practically all the States have come within the scope
of Part VI-A and they will be governed by the provisions of this Constitution
and, excepting so far as certain commitments are positively mentioned in the
Constitution, and as I said the two Articles 267-A and 302-A the covenants will
by and large not affect the working of the Constitution; and it is therefore
necessary in view of the vast powers that have been conceded in this
Constitution to the judiciary that anything that has occurred before the
passing of this Constitution and which might incidentally be opera table after
the passing of the Constitution must not be a subject matter of a dispute in a
court of law. I think that Members of this House will understand that it is a
very necessary provision so as to save unnecessary disputes by people which might
feel that they have been affected or injured and who would rush to a court to
make the court recognise such rights and other similar matters which have been
practically extinguished by the provisions of this Constitution excepting in so
far as certain articles of the Constitution preserved them." There was
also some discussion with regard to the definition of "Ruler" and
"Rajpramukh" which figured in Art. 303 of the draft Constitution.
According to Dr. B. R. Ambedkar the definition of 'Ruler' was intended only for
the limited purpose of' making payments out of the privy purse. It had no other
reference at all. He also said that the expression was deliberately used in
order to give the power of recognition to the President.
123 After referring to the historical
background of the settlement in W.P. No. 376 of 1970 takes note of the attempt
made to amend the Constitution by the Constitution (Twenty Fourth Amendment),
Bill 1970 passed by the Lok Sabha on 2nd September 1970. It was however
rejected by the Rajya Sabha on the 5th September, 1970. The same night the
President signed an instrument withdrawing recognition of all the Rulers and
orders were issued for and on his behalf to each and every Ruler in the
country. According to The petition the order of the 6th September violated
Articles. 14, 19 (1) (f), 21 (as per amendment allowed) and 31 (1 ) and. (2) of
the Constitution. The order was dubbed as unconstitutional, ultra vires, void
and inoperative, arbitrary, malafide and a fraud on the Constitution on various
grounds formulated in paragraph 20, the notable ones being as follows :(1) Art.
291 embodied the Constitutional acceptance and recognition of the guarantees or
assurances regarding tax-tree privy purses., The privy purse guaranteed by the
Government under the Merger agreements or Covenants were further assured and
guaranteed by the Constitution and charged on the Consolidated Fund of India.
Arts. 291 and 362 themselves created new and independent rights. The pledge to
pay privy purses and the guarantee regarding privileges etc. are in severable
from these accessions and mergers. The obligation to pay privy purses and the
said guarantee regarding privileges etc. which are inseverable from the
accession and merger cannot be abolished by any law, much less by any executive
action.
(ii) (1) The President of India passed the
order withdrawing the recognition of the petitioner and the other Rulers
without applying his mind to the question of legality or propriety of the
Order. The whole and only object of the Order was to deprive the petitioner and
the other Rules of their privy purses and their personal rights and privileges.
The derecognition of all the Rulers en masse
is itself the clearest possible proof that the whole object is to abolish the
institution of Rulership altogether and all the rights and. privileges attached
thereto.
(iv) Under the agreements executed between
the Dominion of India and the Rulers and the covenants concurred in and guaranteed
by the Dominion of India, a Ruler is entitled to privy purse of a stipulated
amount and to rights and privileges which he enjoyed before the 15th August
1947 and succession to his 'gaddi" in accordance with the law and custom
of the family was guaranteed. Once the President has recognised a person as
entitled to receive privy purse and to be accorded rights and privileges due
to, him as a Ruler, there can be no interference with his right to re744Sup.CI/71.
124 ceive the privy purse or with his other
rights and privileges. The Constitution contains no substantive provision
conferring on the President a right to recognise or not to recognise a Ruler or
to withdraw recognition. All that the Constitution requires is an indication of
the Indian States which are recognised as such under Art.
366(15) and a Ruler with reference to such a
State under Art. 366(22). Arts. 366(22) and 366(15) cast upon him a power or
authority but a constitutional duty to recognise an existing fact and continue
to do so in accordance with the provisions of the covenants and agreements. The
Order being in clear contravention of Arts. 291, 362 and 366(22) was also in
contravention of Art 53(1) which required that the executive powers of the
Union vesting in the President be exercised by him in accordance with the
provisions of the Constitution.
(v) The right to receive privy purse and
other rights of Rulers constitute property within the meaning of Art.
19(1)(f) and 31. Deprivation of privy purses
and other rights without authority of law contravenes Art. 31(1) as the
petitioner was to be expropriated of his moneys and his right to receive money
periodically by way of privy without any compensation.
(vi) The Privy purse was in substance and in
reality compensation for the transfer by Rulers of inter alia their properties.
(vii) There was a duty cast upon the
Government of India to respect and implement the provisions of the Merger
agreements and the Covenants.
The petitioner's further contentions were
that the order left the Merger agreements and covenants untouched and did not
in any way abrogate or affect any of the assurances, guarantees and obligations
under the agreements and covenants. According to the petition Art. 363 covered
cases of a dispute arising out of a settlement with a Ruler or a dispute in
respect of a right or obligation founded on a provision of the Constitution
relating to such a settlement but it did not cover the case of policy embodied
in legislative or administrative action to abolish altogether the institution
of Rulership and its rights and privileges and of privy purses.
The prayers formulated in the petition were
as follows (a) A writ, direction or order under Art. 32 of the Constitution
declaring-the Order dated 6th September 1970 to be unconstitutional, ultra
vires and void and further to quash the Order;
(b) a writ, direction or order declaring that
the petitioner continues to be the Ruler and continues to be entitled to the
privy purse and to his personal rights and privileges as a Ruler;
(c) a writ, direction or order directing the
Union of India to continue to pay the privy purse to the petitioner and to
continue' 125 to recognise the Rulership and the personal rights and privileges
of the petitioner and to implement and observe the provisions of the
covenant/Merger agreement entered into with the petitioner.
In the forefront of the counter affidavit of
the Joint Secretary to the Government of India in the Ministry of Home Affairs
is the contention that "by reason of the provisions of Art. 363 of the
Constitution this Court has no jurisdiction to entertain the petition".
The main propositions out forward in the said counter affidavit are as follows
.(a) By the petition disputes had been raised which arose directly out of the
provisions of the relevant covenant as also his alleged rights accruing under
the provisions of the Constitution.
(b) The covenant was a political agreement
among High Contracting Parties and an act of State and as such could not form
the subject matter of any proceeding in any municipal court. The guarantee
given by the Dominion of India was only a political act and not a legal one.
(c) Neither the covenants nor the Merger
agreements nor any provision of the Constitution relating to the covenants or
the Merger agreements confer any legal right on the petitioner or on any
erstwhile Ruler.
(d) The covenant being a political agreement,
the alleged rights and obligations thereunder could not be and were not
perennial and were inherently temporary in character and liable, to be varied
or repudiated in accordance with State policy in the interests of the people.
(g) The power of the President to recognise
or not to recognise a person as a Ruler was political in character and an
incident of sovereignty. The power included the power to recognise and the
power to cease to recognise any person as a Ruler.
(k) The relevant covenant being a political
agreement among High Contracting Parties and an-act of State, the petition has
no legal right to the gaddi or the privy purse or any of the said privileges
and as such neither the gaddi nor the privy purse or any of the said privileges
is property within the meaning of Art. 19(1)(f) or Art. 31(1) or Art. 31(2) of
the Constitution.
(1) If the State policy changed and the State
decided not to pay such political" pension in future, a dispute arising
from such decision was not justiciable in a municipal court.
(m) Rulership or the succession thereto, the
privy purse and the said privileges were inter alia the subject matter of an
agreement and an agreement could not confer on the petitioner any fundamental
right under the Constitution.
126 (n) Art. 291 of the Constitution did not
create any legal right in a person. It only laid down the source and method of
payment of the privy purse. The article in laying down that the privy purse shall
be charged on and paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India meant no more than
that these sums would be sums within the meaning of Arts. 112(2)(a) and 113(1)
of the Constitution and would not be submitted to the vote of Parliament. And
secondly that such sums would be exempt from all taxes on income. Even if the
article created a legal right in a person recognised by the President as a
Ruler, to receive payment of privy purse Art.
363 barred the enforcement of such right.
(o) Art. 362 of the Constitution did not
create or impose any legal obligation on Parliament or the Legislature of a
State or the Union executive or the State executive in respect of the said
privileges and even with respect thereto Art. 363 barred jurisdiction of all
courts in India.
(p) The concept of Rulership, the privy
purses and the said privileges unrelated to any current functions and social
purposes have become incompatible with democracy, equality and social justice
in the context of India today. Since the commencement of the Constitution many
things have changed, many hereditary rights and unearned incomes have been
restricted and many privileges and vested interests have been done away with.
The question continuance of covenants and Merger agreements had been exercising
the minds of the Congress Party for many years past and the Constitution
(Twenty Fourth Amendment) Bill was introduced with that object.
All the grounds set forth in paragraph 20 of
the petition were controverted. In particular it was said (a) Art. 291 did not
cast an obligation on the Government to pay the privy purse and the obligation,
if any; was not a legal obligation.
(b) The Order of 6th September 1970 did not
violate Art.
291 or Art. 362. To recognise or not to
recognise any person as a Ruler was exercise of a political power which was not
dependent on any provision of the Constitution.
(c) The covenants and Merger agreements were
and continued to be political agreements and acts of State which could not be
enforced in a court of law by reason of Art. 363.
(d) Art. 366(22) impliedly conferred a power
on the President to recognise or not to recognise a person as a Ruler and such
a 127 power was a political power. There was no provision in the Constitution
which conferred-on the petitioner or any of the erstwhile rulers any rights to
be recognised as Ruler and continues to be recognised as such or to privy purse
or any of the privileges.
(e) As neither the petitioner nor any
erstwhile Ruler had or now has any legal right to the privy purse or to any of
the privileges or to any of the alleged other rights enforceable in a court of
law, there could be no question of the impugned order infringing Art. 19(1)(f),
Art. 31(1) or Art. 31(2) and that in any event Art. 363 barred the enforcement
of any such alleged right.
(f) The Rulers entered into the covenants and
Merger agreements by reason of political compulsion and in their own interests
and not on the faith of any undertaking or guarantee on the part of the then
Dominion of India.
Neither the petitioner nor any erstwhile
Ruler acted upon any assurance or guarantee on the part of the Government of
India. On the other hand a fiduciary duty was cast upon the respondent
Government not to continue Feudal institutions and anachronistic systems
against the interests of the people.
(g) The petitioner has no fundamental right
as claimed and Art. 363 barred adjudication by a court of law with respect to
the rights claimed.
The crucial question in the petition is
whether the petitioner is entitled to a declaration that the order withdrawing
his recognition as a Ruler is beyond the scope of any executive action of the
President. The only provision in the Constitution in which the recognition of a
person as a Ruler appears is Art. 366(22). The article being a Code to the
meaning of the words used in the Constitution we have to see exactly what it
proposes to do and what it achieves. Unless a ruler can be identified for the
purposes of the Constitution Art. 291, Art. 362 and Art. 363 cannot be applied.
Clause (22) fixes the identity of the Ruler for the purposes of the
Constitution as a Prince, Chief or other person by whom any covenant or
agreement as is referred to in cl. 1 of Art. 291 was entered into.
Obviously before a person can be a Ruler
under this limb of the article he must be a person who had entered into the
kind of agreement just now mentioned. But in order to be a Ruler for the
purpose of the Constitution he is also to be recognised by the President as a
Ruler of a State. This means that at the commencement of the Constitution
claims of the former Rulers to be recognised as the Rulers of the respective
States had to be considered. Clearly the Constitution did not contemplate the
eventuality of the President not choosing to recognise anybody as a Ruler or
choosing only those whom he liked. In the setting in which the Rulers accepted
the Constitution as binding on them and their States it 128 must have been in
their contemplation as also of the Constitution makers that all of them who
were alive at the commencement of the Constitution would get such recognition.
So much for the time when the Constitution
became effective to start with. But as Rulers are human beings and are not
immortal the Constitution had to provide for the continuity of the line of Rulers
and to lay down who would be a Ruler after the first set of Rulers was no more.
This was done by providing that the President would recognise someone as a
successor of the Ruler who had departed this life. The expression "for the
time being" was not inserted for the purpose of giving power to the
president to recognise a person or withdraw recognition from him as his fancy
dictated. It was put in for the purpose of fixing the identity of the Ruler at
a given point of time and to emphasise the fact that there could be only one
Ruler for a State at any point of time. Read as a whole the clause proceeds on
the assumption that the President had the right, power or duty or obligation to
recognise some person as a Ruler both at the commencement of the Constitution
and ever afterwards so long as the line of Rulers lasted and so long as these
provisions were in the Constitution. A duty or power or right or obliation to
recognise someone as successor to the Ruler is also embedded in the clause. If
there were no covenants or agreements to guide him or bind him, the President
could probably recognise and derecognise or withdraw recognition at his will
and pleasure. Clearly however the grant of such a power was not in the minds of
the Constitution-makers. At the time when they entered into covenants and
agreements, a solemn assurance or guarantee was given by the Dominion of India
that succession to the gaddi of each Ruler would be according to law and custom
of the State. It would appear that invariably the rule of lineal male
primogeniture coupled with the custom of adopting a son prevailed in the case
of Hindu Rulers who composed of the bulk of the body. When on the eve of the
Constitution being finally adopted the Rulers with the exception of two or
three accepted the same as binding upon them and their States, it must follow
that they accepted and adopted the Constitution of India because they thought
and were assured that the provisions in it regarding themselves and their
successors were to their satisfaction and were binding in nature. They
certainly never imagined that they would be the play-things of the executive
Government of the Union of India to be thrown out like pawns off the chequer
board of politics at any moment when the Government felt that their presence
was irksome or that they were anachronistic in the democratic set up of India.
This democratic set up was what the Constitution ushered in albeit with a
shadow of the past in the Rulers with attenuated pomp and pelf. The choice of a
person as a Ruler to succeed another-on his death was certainly not left to the
mere caprice of the President. He had to 129 find out the successor and this he
could do not by applying the ordinary rules of Hindu Law or Mohamedan Law but
by the law and custom attaching to the gaddi of a particular State.
That the Government of India had no doubts
about it is exemplified by several instances where on a question of disputed
succession a reference was made to a very high judicial officer to find out the
rightful successor with the help of other Rulers. I may mention only two such
instances, namely, the appointment of Shri H. V. Divatia, Chief Justice of the
Saurashtra High Court and a retired Judge of the Bombay High Court and their
Highnesses the Maharaja of Jaipur and the Maharao of Kotah as members, to
enquire into and report on the rights of the various claimants to the gaddi of
Sirohi and the validity of the succession of His Highness Maharao Shri
Tejsinghji Bahadur who was recognised as the Maharao of Sirohi by the Crown Representative
in May 1946 on the death of His Highness Shri Sarupramsinghji who left no male
heir of the body or adopted son. The insertion in the Gazette of India
Extraordinary under date 7th October 1950 refers to this as also to the
activities of the Committee and its conclusion that there was no such valid
adoption of Shri Tejsinghji into the Bajawat family as deprived him of his
legal status as a member of the ruling family. The notification ends with the
following :"Having carefully considered the report, the President accepts
the findings of the Committee of Enquiry in their entirety.
Accordingly in exercise of the powers vesting
in him under Art. 366(22) of the Constitution, the President is pleased to
recognise Shri Abhaisinghji as the Ruler of Sirohi in place of the present
minor Maharao Shri Tejsinghji Bahadur who shall cease to be recognised as such
with effect from the date of this Order." This clearly shows that the
President, did not act in any arbitrary manner. The claims were investigated into
with the help of one of the highest judicial officers of the land and reported
on to the President The President thereupon withdrew recognition from Shri
Tejsinghji Bahadur and recognised Shri Abhaisinghji as the Ruler of Sirohi. To
my mind Art. 360'(22) read with the rules of succession in the Merger
agreements and the covenants was given full effect.
Recognition was given to the person lawfully
entitled to be declared the successor to the gaddi and the same was withdrawn
from a person who was held not entitled to it. The Act was certainly executive
but in nature it was based on a judicial scrutiny and not on any political
consideration or in an arbitrary fashion.
Another instance of applying the law and
custom of succession is afforded by the case of Dholpur which was enquired into
by Shri 130 K. N. Wanchoo, Chief Justice of the Rajasthan High Court (as he
then was) forming a Committee with two Rulers.
To my mind the Merger agreements and
covenants did not become waste paper on the commencement of the Constitution to
be consigned to the record room or any museum. So long as the above provisions
enure in the Constitution a Ruler will have to be found for a State and such
finding must be on the basis of the law and custom of the State. That is the assurance
which was given to the Rulers when they accepted the Constitution and I see no
reason why the Constitution should be interpreted in a way to set that .at
naught.
In the light of the above, my view is that
Art. 366(22) implied not merely a right or power but a duty or obligation to
recognise a person as a Ruler i.e. a duty or obligation to do so and the power
,or duty to withdraw recognition must be confined to cases when the first
recognition was not proper as in the case of the Sirohi succession.
But the learned Attorney-General would
interpret the same differently. He put forward his contention in the following
propositions :(a) Recognition was only for the purpose of fixing the identity
of a person for payment of privy purse and grant of privileges pursuant to the
Constitutional provisions in Arts. 291 and 362.
In support of this he relied on the Debates
in the Constituent Assembly to which reference has already been made. He relied
on a decision of this Court in Maharaja Pravir Chandra Bhanj Deo Kakatiya v.
The State of Madhya Pradesh(1). There the appellant was the Ruler of the State
of Bastar and had entered into an agreement with the Government of India
whereby he had ceded the State of Bastar to the Government of India to be
integrated with the Central Provinces and Berar. He challenged the
applicability to him of Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary Rights
(Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950 (Madhya Pradesh Act I of 1951)
meant to provide for the acquisition of the rights of proprietors in estates,
mahals, alienated villages and alienated lands in Madhya Pradesh which was
applicable to a person described as an ex-Ruler of an Indian State merged with
Madhya Pradesh. The appellant's contention was that he was still a sovereign Ruler
and absolute owner of the villages to which the Act was sought to be applied.
In the course of the judgment of this Court there is an observation at p. 506
reading (1) [1951] 2 S.C.R. 501 131 "The effect of the Merger Agreement is
clearly one by which factually a Ruler of an Indian State ceases to be a Ruler
but for the purpose of the Constitution and for the purposes of the privy purse
guaranteed, he is a Ruler as defined in Art. 366(22) of the Constitution.
There is nothing in the provisions of Art.
366(22) which requires a court to recognise
such a person as a Ruler for the purposes outside the Constitution."
Earlier in the judgment at page 504 it was said "The expression 'Ruler' as
defined in Art.
366(22) of the Constitution applied only for
interpreting the provisions of the Constitution." In my view these
observations do not advance the contention of the Respondent as the Court was
not there concerned with the question of power to recognise or withdraw
recognition from a Ruler. The only question before the Court was whether the
appellant was an exRuler for the purposes of the Act., Reference may be
usefully made to paragraph 241(3) at page 129 of the White Paper on Indian
States under the heading "Recognition of Rulers" reading :
"The Rulers of the merged and integrated
States have been guaranteed succession according to law and custom. In the
Covenants and some of the Agreements of Merger, provision has been made for the
procedure to be observed for the, settlement of the cases of disputed succession.
In the case of Rulers of States forming Unions, every question of disputed
succession is to be decided by the Council of Rulers after referring to the
High Court of Union and in accordance with the opinion of that Court." The
above is followed by the quotation of Art.
366(22) and according to the White Paper
"it is expected that in according recognition to Rulers, the President
will show due regard to the provisions of the Covenants and Agreements of
Merger in respect of the cases to which these provisions apply." (b) The
learned Attorney-General then submitted that the power of recognition was a
political power in the paramountcy field to which the Dominion Government and
thereafter the Union Government under the Constitution succeeded and for this
he referred to White Paper, paragraph 266 at p. 143 reading:
"In spite of the declaration regarding
the lapse of paramountcy, the fundamentals on which it rested remained. The
essential defence and security requirements of the country and the compulsions
of geography 132 did not cease to be operative with the end of British rule in
India. If anything, in the context of world events, they have become more
imperative. The Central Government in India which succeeded the British was
unquestionably the paramount power in India both de facto and, de jure and that
Government, alone was the only completely independent sovereign in India."
To my mind the British Crown was the paramount power in India because of the
might of its power. Its power was so great compared to,that of the Rulers of
the Indian States that it could annex any territory at any time and bring under
subjugation all the Rulers by compulsion or subsidiary alliances. There was no
sanction of (International law behind it. Paramountcy after the British had
come to be the foremost power in the. country was one of their own creation. In
strict legal theory whatever paramountcy there was before the 15th August 1947
in the British Government lapsed with the passing of the Indian Independence
Act.
Thereafter the Dominion of India was free to
do what it liked subject to world opinion and their own conscience.
Paramountcy de facto there undoubtedly, was
but speaking for myself I cannot ascribe any legal sanction to such
paramountcy. The Rulers of Indian States submitted or agreed to the cession of
their territory and the government of their people by the Government of the
States with which they merged and ultimately *the Government of the Union of
India because they felt that it was in the best interests of their people and
also of themselves.
(c)The learned Attorney-General argued that
paramountcy continued and the advent of the Constitution did not put an end to
it and the debates of the Constituent Assembly with regard to Art. 302-AA
(present article 363) that the disputes covered by the said article were beyond
the pale of adjudication of courts of law only recognised the same.
According to him the old concept of
paramountcy was virtuallyinherited by the Dominion of India before January 1950
by reason of the Instruments of Accession, Covenants and Merger agreements :
the recognition of a Ruler which was the gift of Paramount power was not the
matter of a legal right and was exercised as an act of paramountcy and retained
the same character. He cited various decisions of this Court to show that
covenants,and Merger agreements have always been so interpreted, e.g. Virendra
Singh & others v. State of U.P.(1), Dalmia Dadri Cement Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income Tax(2) and a number of other cases.
He argued further that a plea which was
available to the Dominion of India can now be put forward by its, successor
government and in support of his contention relied on, the cases of Secretary
of State V.
(1) [1955] 1 S. C.R. 4 5 at 429 (2) [1959]
S.C.R. 729 at 744 133 Kamachee Boys Sahaba(1), Doss v. Secretary of State(2),
Solmon v. Secretary of State (3) and several others. In the first case the
British Government acting as sovereign power had seized the whole of the Raj of
Tanjore as an escheat on the ground that the dignity of Rajah was extinct for
want of male heir and this being on act of State the Supreme Court of Madras
had no jurisdiction. In Doss's case (Supra) what was sought to 'be enforced was
the liability of an ex-Ruler of Oudh which was annexed by the Government of
India in 1856 on inter alia the ground that the claim was a charge upon the
revenues of Oudh. The plaintiffs who filed the Bill in the English Court of
Chancery sought to rely upon a statement of Lord Stanley, President of the
Board of Cotrol in the House of Commons that "the transfer of the revenues
of the Kingdom of Oudh carried with it a liability for such debts on the former
government and were justly contracted".
The plea in, demurer that the seizure of the
property was an, act of State and that it was not liable to any review by a
court of law or equity was upheld. The above and cases of the type to my mind
are easily distinguishable. Once the Rulers ceded their territory and accepted
the Constitution of India as the Constitution of their States they became
citizens of India on the commencement of the Constitution and the plea of
continuance of an act of State as against them cannot be accepted. The Rulers
became citizens of India like millions of others but in recognition of the past
the Constitution gave them certain special rights like privy purses and assured
them of continuance of personal privileges in terms of articles 291 and 362.
(d) The learned Attorney-General submitted
that the recognition of Rulership was an exercise of political power vested in
the President on the strength of certain observations in Kunwar Shri Vir
Rajendra Singh v. Union of India (4) In that case the petitioner claimed to be
entitled to the private properties left by Maharaja Rana Udaibhan Singh of
Dholpur on the basis that it was an impartible estate and he was entitled
thereto according up the law and custom of lineal primogeniture. There was a
WI-it petition to this court as also an appeal from a judgment of the High
Court which were dealt with by a common judgment of this Court. The last Ruler
of Dholpur died in 1954 leaving him surviving no direct male heir but he had
left his daughter who was married to the Maharaja of Nabha. His widow adopted a
grandson, viz., one of the sons of the daughter and thus arose a controversy as
to who was entitled to the Rulership of Dholpur and the Government of India by
notification dated December 22,.
(1) 7 M.I.A. 476 (2) L.R. 19 Equity 509 (3)
[1906] 1 K.B. 613 (4) [1970] 2 S.C.R. 631 134 1954 constituted a Committee, as
already mentioned, to examine the contentions of various claimants and no the
basis of the report of that Committee, the President recognised His Highness
Maharaja Rana Shri Hemant Singh as the Ruler of Dholpur from 22nd October,
1954. The contentions put forward on behalf of the petitioner, the appellant to
this Court were (1) The handing over or authorising the taking over of private
properties was by executive flat and was ex facie bad as infringing Art. 19 (1)
(g) and Art. 31 of the Constitution; (2) that the recognition of a Ruler even
if it was an instance of exercise of political power was itself an insignia of
property and therefore it could only be by authority of law and would have to
yield to fundamental rights. (3) After the commencement of the Constitution
recognition of the Ruler was not an exercise of political power and that such
recognition under cl. (22) meant recognising a fact that a person was a Ruler
and the clause did not empower the President to create a fact of bringing into
effect a Ruler by recognising a person as a Ruler. (4) If there was any power
to recognise the Ruler it was an arbitrary and unguided power and infringing
the fundamental right to property, and (5) As there was no dispute regarding
the covenant inasmuch as succession did not arise out of the covenant Art. 363
of the Constitution was not attracted.
The right to succession to private property
was said to be independant of any covenant. The above contentions were turned
down by this Court. Referring to the notification published in the Gazette of
India on 22nd December 1956 the Court said that it did not state that the Ruler
thereby became entitled to private properties of the late Ruler. It was
observed :
"The recognition of the Ruler is a right
to succeed to the gaddi of the Ruler. This recognition of Rulership by the
President is an exercise of political power voted in the President and is thus
an instance of purely executive jurisdiction of the President. The act of
recognition of Rulership is not, as far as the President is concerned,
associated with any act of recognition of right to private properties." It
was also said :
"The words 'is recognised by the
President' indicate beyond any doubt that the power of the President to
recognise a Ruler is embedded and inherent in the clause itself. Again, the
words "for the time being" indicate that the President has power not
only to recognise but also the withdraw recognition whenever occasion arises .
. . . . . . . . .
135 The recognition of Rulership is one of
'personal status. It cannot be said that claim to recognition of Rulership is
either purely a matter of inheritance or a matter of descent by devolution. Nor
can claim to recognition of Rulership be based only on covenants and treaties.
;That is why Article 363 of the Constitution constitutes a bar to interference
by Courts in a dispute arising out of treaties and agreements. No claim to
recognition of Rulership by virtue of a Covenant is justiciable in a Court of
law.
The Constitution, therefore, provided-for the
act of recognition of the Rulership by the President 'as a political
power." Some of the above observations undoubtedly sustain the contention
of the learned Attorney-General but they must be limited to the facts of the
case. The petitioner-cumappellant before this Court did not claim any right to
the gaddi. He only claimed to, be entitled to the private properties of the
deceased Ruler according to law and custom of lineal primogeniture. His
complaint against the notification under cl. (22) of Art. 366 was not accepted
mainly because the notification made no reference to the private properties of
the late Ruler. The Court held that the petitioner had not been able to
establish any claim to any private property belonging to the last Ruler.
There have 'however been instances where the
President did not act strictly in accordance with what conceive to be his
power, duty or obligation to recognise or to withdraw recognition to a Ruler. A
notable instance of this occurred soon after the commencement of the
Constitution when recognition was withdrawn from Sir Pratap Singh, the Ruler of
Baroda and his eldest son Yuvaraj Fatehsingh was purported to be recognised as
the Ruler of Baroda under the powers conferred by Art. 366(22). The order was
served on Sir Pratap Singh on April 12, 1951. The trouble in this case
originated with Sir Pratap Singh's attempt to foment trouble against the Union
of India and his design to challege the merger of Baroda. Full details of this
episode are given in Mr. Menon's book from page 403 onwards. Some instances
where there was no recognition of any successor to an erstwhile Ruler occurred
in the case of Baudhraj of Orissa, Nandgaon of Madhya Pradesh and Delath of
Himachal Pradesh. In the first case the widow of the Raja was informed in May
1958 that "after consideration of the report submitted by Shri B. C. Das
the President has decided not to recognise any successor to the late Raja
Narayan Prasad Roy". There was no statement that the Rulership had lapsed.
In the other two cases Rulership was said to
have lapsed.
136 (e) The learned Attorney-General also
argued that the rights .given by Art. 291 and Art. 362 at best were imperfect
obligations not enforceable in a court of law. In view of my conclusion on
article 363 I do not think it necessary to examine the, decisions cited by him
or make any pronouncement on his contention.
(f) The learned Attorney-General next
submitted that assuming Art. 366(22) gave a right to be recognised as a Ruler
and obligation to recognise, the enforcement of such right or obligation was
barred by Art. 363. According to him, claim to recognition arose from the
covenant and not from Art. 366(22). The covenant was signed by the Ruler as
Ruler and it was guaranteed by the Government of India. I have already dealt
with the scope and content of Art. 366(22) and held that it is inextricably
linked with the covenants, Merger agreements etc.
On the basis of the above contentions it
cannot be said that the Government of India has not raised a dispute with
regard to the right, power, obligation or duty to recognise and a co-related
power or duty etc., to withdraw recognition.
However, in the light of historical facts
i.e. the events preceding the Constitution, the covenants and the Merger
agreements entered into by the Rulers uniformly providing for succession to the
gaddi by the law and custom of the particular State, the guarantee thereof by
the Government of the Dominion of India and the provisions of the Constitution
perpetuating the payment of privy purses and mandate of the regard to the
personal rights and privileges of the Rulers, the contention of the learned
Attorney-General cannot find favour in a court of law. The covenants and Merger
Agreements were undoubtedly political acts entered into by High Contracting
Parties and as such-they could not be enforced in a court of law. But once the
Constitution of India took the field and the Rulers became citizens of India
there could be no acts of State as against such citizens living in India.
The question however remains as to whether
these are matters which can be adjudicated upon by the municipal courts in
India.
This point would fall to be considered under
'Art. 363 but before that one must refer to Art. 291 which is the prop and
pillar to the claim of privy purse. This 'article places the payment of privy
purse on a constitutional foundation.
It expressly refers to the covenants or
agreements entered into by a Ruler of an Indian State before the commencement
of the Constitution and provides for the disbursement thereof by directing that
the sums shall be charged on and paid out of the Consolidated 'Fund of India.
In effect it means that the guarantee given by the Government of India for the
payment of sums free of taxes by way of 137 privy purse under convenants or
agreements etc., is to be worked out and discharged by ensuring that the said
sums shall be charged on and paid out of the Consolidated Fund.
According to Mr. Palkhivala.
(1) Art. 291 is mandatory. It creates new and
independent rights and obligations by being engraved in the Constitution and as
such beyond the reach of the Legislature and the Executive. This new and
independent right makes the article a self-ordaining and self-sustaining one.
In cases where there is no dispute about the amount of the privy purse no
question of any reference to the covenant arises.
(2) The amounts of privy purse guaranteed by
Art. 291 are the same as mentioned in the covenants but in other vital respects
the provisions of Art. 291 constitute a marked departure from the provisions of
the covenants.
(3) First, whereas the liability under the
covenant was that of the relevant State or the United State, it is made a
liability of the Central Government under Art. 291;
secondly, the amounts of privy purses are
charged on the Consolidated Fund of India for the first time; thirdly, the
amounts are guaranteed to be exempt from all taxes on income whereas under the
covenants the amounts were to be free of all taxes whether imposed by the
Government of the United State or Government of India.
(4) The covenants are referred to in the
article only for the limited purpose of identifying the privy purses which are
the subject matter of Art. 291. The article cannot be said to elate to
convenants merely because it refers to them for the limited purpose of
identifying the privy purses.
(5) Once Art. 291 is held to be mandatory
there can be no dispute as to whether the privy purse will or will not be paid.
In other words Art. 363 only refers to bonafide disputes and not disputes which
would merely amount to a mockery of the Constitution.
(6) The principle of harmonious construction
would have to be applied. Art. 363 cannot be so construed as to violate the
effect and mandate of articles 112, 113, 114, 291 and 366(22). Article 366(22)
would be violated because one of the main legal effects of recognition under
that article is to entitle the recognised Ruler to the privy purse and denial
of the privy purse would stultify one of the main objects of recognition.
(7) The second limb of Art. 363 read along
with the first makes it clear that the whole object is to prevent disputes
arising from covenants being raised in the garb of enforcing a right 138
conferred by a provision of the Constitution. In the present series of cases
Art. 363 does not apply since there is no dispute as to rights arising from the
covenant and the constitutional provisions merely guarantee that right.
(8) In any view of the matter any decision to
repudiate the obligations under Art. 291 would be malafide and ultra vires. The
power or jurisdiction cannot avail an authority to make an order or decision
which is malafide and ultra vires because such an order or decision is a
nullity and the-bar of jurisdiction under Art. 363 cannot be pleaded to protect
a nullity.
The submissions of the learned
Attorney-General were (a) The right to privy purse which accrues under Art. 291
clearly relates to a covanant : hence Art. 363 bars any dispute in respect of
such a right or recognition. The Constituent Assembly Debates go to show that
this article was meant to give constitutional recognition to guarantees given
by the Government of India and provided for the expenditure being charged on
the Central revenues subject to such recoveries as might be made from time to time
from the Provinces and States in respect of these payments. It did not create
any new and independent right unrelated to the covenant.
(b) The second limb of Art. 363 bars any
dispute under Art. 291 as would be apparent from the correspondence between
Shri V. P. Menon, the Secretary to the Ministry of States and S. N. Mukherjee.
(c) Art. 291 which gave constitutional
guarantee to those demands embodied constitutional sanction for the due
fulfilment of the Government of India's guarantees and assurances in respect of
privy purses.
(d) The covenant was an act of State and any
violation of its terms cannot form the subject of any action in any municipal
courts. The guarantee given by the Government of India was in the nature of a
treaty obligation contracted with the sovereign Rulers of independent States
and cannot be enforced by action in municipal courts; its sanction is political
and not legal; on the coming into force of the Constitution of India the
guarantee for payment of periodical sums as privy purse is continued by Art.
291 of the Constitution but its essential political character is preserved by
Art. 363 of the Constitution. Art. 363 in effect recreated paramountcy and
barred the adjudication of any dispute which had its seed in act-% of State by
any court of law.
139 (e) A charge on the Consolidated Fund of
India only means that it shall not be submitted to the vote of Parliament as
provided in Art. 113(1). It does not by itself create an independent right in
the recipient.
(f) Art. 291 arose out of an act of State to
give constitutional recognition to a right which was previously unenforceable.
(g) Assuming that Art. 291 by itself created
a new right and a new obligation the article related to a covenant on the face
of it and as such is barred by Art. 363.
In my view, it is not necessary to examine
all the contentions raised for and against the petitioner for the final
conclusion to be arrived at. There can be no doubt that the provision of Art.
291 was not a mere declaration of pious intention which the executive could
disregard at its whim or pleasure. So long as it finds a place in the
Constitution it was meant to be acted upon. It was meant to assure the. Rulers
that the privy purses which were contained in the covenants and agreements
guaranteed by the Government of the Dominion of India were to be fully honoured
and not cast away on a false morass of public opinion or buried under acts of
State. No doubt the covenants or Merger agreements were acts of State but when
the framers of the Constitution came to provide for the Rulers by giving them
assurance of continuance of the payment of privy purse and regard to their
personal rights and privileges by enshrining them in the Constitution, in my
view they never contemplated that the same was to be the play-thing of the
executive. It was by the incorporation of Arts. 291 and 362 that the
Constitution-makers were able to get the willing consent and co-operation of
the Rulers to be brought within the fold of the Constitution. As observed by Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel the settlements with the Rulers were overall settlements
taking all the pros and cons of the situation into consideration the
aspirations and ambitions of the people of the States, their wish and desire to
get independence of the same type which their brethren in the erstwhile British
India had obtained, their right and determination to have a voice in the
administration of the country through their elected representatives, their zeal
for getting out of the arbitrariness of some of the Rulers, no less than the
wish and desire of the Rulers to honour and accept the desires and ambitions of
their people coupled with a desire, to live in peace at least with a part of
their denuded status, their decimated right to property and a fraction of the
personal privileges to which they were previously entitled. As Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel put it :
"The privy purses and the guarantee as
to personal rights and privileges was the quid pro quo for the parting of their
powers and their huge States by the Rulers and was the minimum which could be
afforded to them." 10-L744 Sup CI/71 140 Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel speaking
in 1949 said that human memory was proverbially short and that in October 1949
people might not remember what had taken place in the years preceding, namely,
the tremendous upheaval in the country since 1946 and the possibility of the
Rulers taking sides with States or peoples not favourably disposed towards
India. Only twenty years have passed since then-too short a period to sweep overboard
all that took place during the memorable years preceding the commencement of
the Constitution. The old order must change yielding place to new but the
change should not be cataclysmic. at the sacrifice of the interests of fairly
large number of persons who had helped to consolidate India in a manner far
different from anything that had taken place in the past.
However that may be we are only concerned
with the legal aspect, the morals being for the country at large through their
elected representatives to decide.
Article 291 was undoubtedly meant to put the
guarantee as to payment of privy purses contained in the covenants and
agreements on a firm and sure footing. But it was not completely dissociated
from the covenants. It has a link with the covenants which were
partially-projected into the Constitution. This article has its base in the
covenants.
Its object was to give a lasting and
permanent setting to the term in the covenants as to payment of privy purses. I
find myself unable to hold that the article does not relate to a covenant. 'In
my view it deals with a portion-the main portion of the entire stream of the
covenant and makes it flow along a particular and well-defined channel--a
channel which is not only well-defined but with a solid foundation and sides.
Counsel on both sides were at pains to show
what the effect of the expression 'charged on and paid out of the Consolidated
Fund or India' meant. According to the learned Attorney-General and Mr. Mohan
Kumara Mangalam who followed him, the expression "charged on" was
only a form of expression used for the purpose of financial estimates and
Appropriation Bills. It was meant to distinguish certain items in the
Appropriation Bills from grants which were votable at the will of Parliament
and the further direction for paying out thereafter did not advance matters. According
to Mr. Palkhivala who referred to some of the financial provisions in the
Constitution, a security was created thereby on, the Consolidated Fund, that
there was something akin to a pledge of it for the payment of the privy purse
giving rise to a new right.. in my view whatever the nature of their right itis
related to the covenants and as such within the fold of Art. 363.
Before referring to any decisions on the
point it may be useful to make an attempt to define the scope of Art. 363 as if
it was a case of first impression. The article purports to over-ride all 141
other provisions of the Constitution excepting Article 143.
in respect of recourse to any court of law
for settlement of any disputes. covered by it. Article 143 is a provision
enabling the President of India to obtain the opinion of this Court by a
reference on any question of law or fact of such public importance as merits a
scrutiny by the highest court of the land. Article 143 is only anenabling
provision but its scope, is so wide that on any question, of public
importance-be it one of law or fact-the President may. refer to this Court for
its opinion. Save for the power of the President to refer a matter to this
Court for its opinion under Art. 143, Art. 363 imposes an absolute bar on the
jurisdiction of all courts to adjudicate upon disputes covered by it. of
necessity,, the bar must apply to Art. 32 also. Under the last mentioned
article the Constitution reserves to everybody entitled to any right. covered
by Part III i.e. the fundamental rights, to move this Court., The amplitude of
the right and the kind of directions which may be issued to enforce that right
are contained in various clauses of the article. None of these clauses
over-ride the all-embracing, provision of Art. 363. Rights, be they fundamental
or otherwise which form the subject of any dispute covered by this article
must, alike come under its bar.
The disputes which fall within this bar may be
of two kinds., Under the first limb of the article any dispute arising out of
any provision of a treaty, engagement, covenant, sanad or other similar'
instrument which was entered into or executed before the 26th January 1950 by
any Ruler of an Indian State and to which the Dominion of the Government of
India or any of its predecessor Governments was a party and which is or has
been continued in operation after the said date, are not to be the subject
matter of any judicial proceedings.
Clearly, therefore, any one seeking to have
his rights adjudicated upon on the basis of a covenant or agreement or Merger
agreement or Instrument of Accession would be debarred from coming to court and
ventilate his grievance about any violation of. his right.
Under the second limb of the article fall
disputes in respect of-. any right accruing under or any liability or
obligation arising out. of any provisions of the Constitution relating to any
treaty, agreement etc. To see whether any dispute falls within this limb one
must examine the content of the right or the limit of the liability or
obligation arising out of any constitutional provision which provision in its
turn must relate to any treaty, agreement etc. Dispute means any contradiction
or controversy.
Whenever a person asserts or claims a right
in respect of a subject matter and another person contradicts it or denies it,
there is a dispute. Disputes may 142 be many and of various kinds. it may
relate to a question of fact ,or a question of law which again may be a very
simple or a complicated one. A question of law may arise about the
interpretation of a contract; equally it may arise, about the interpretation of
the provisions of the Constitution.
But whatever be the quality or the nature of
the controversy it would be a dispute short of somebody trying to raise a
contention which was absurd on the face of it e.g., ,that 'black means white.
The right, liability or obligation in dispute
must arise out of the provisions of the Constitution which has any bearing on
any treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement etc. The expression " relating
to" means inter alia "stand in some relation, to have bearing or
concern, to pertain, to refer, to bring into association with or connection
with." In my view Art. 291 is undoubtedly a provision of the Constitution
relating to covenant, agreement etc. As I have already indicated Art. 291 is
not merely a provision for finding out the .amount of the liability of the
Dominion of India by way of privy purse to a Ruler. It expressly refers to
covenants or agreements ,entered into by the Ruler under which payment of sums
free of tax had been guaranteed or assured by the Government of the Dominion of
India as privy purse and gives the term as to privy purse a new shape and form
Article 291 not refers to the covenant, engagement etc.
but certainly has a bearing on or concern
with the same and is brought into association or connection with the same.
As already indicated, the article seeks to
instill life and vigour into the term for payment of privy purse in the
covenant by creating a new channel leading out of the guarantee of the
Government of the Dominion of India which was no longer in existence and making
it flow along a constitutional course by putting the liability of the Union of
India for payment of the sums beyond any controversy.
The article places the payment beyond the
reach of voting by Parliament and expressly directs that the moneys shall be
paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India and that the sums so paid shall be
exempt from all taxes of income. I find myself unable to accept the argument of
Mr. Palkhivala that for the purpose of Art. 29.1 a reference to the covenants
is only called for to find out the amount of privy purse. If that was the sole
object of the article it might well have been achieved by using the following
words or words to the like effect "all sums of money mentioned as privy
purse of Rulers of Indian States in any engagements entered into by them and to
which the Government of the Dominion of India was a party, shall be charged on
and paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India." If one was asked whether
and if so, how the Constitution had dealt with the rights of the Rulers of
Privy purses contained in the covenants and Merger agreements guaranteed by the
Government of India, the answer would have to be that the same has been
recognised and perpetuated in Art. 291 making assurance doubly sure by
directing the charging of the Consolidated Fund with the amounts thereof and
payment there out without deduction of income-tax. So considered Art. 291 must
be held to be an, article of the Constitution relating to covenants or Merger
agreements and any dispute as to payment of privy purse would come, under the
bar of Article 363.
Article 363 has come up for consideration
before this Court in a number of cases and reference has been made to this
article quite frequently in several decision.
In one of the earliest decisions of this
Court in State of Seraikella & others v. Union of India & another(1)
the Court had to consider whether a suit filed on the 15th January 1950 (before
the commencement of the Constitution) under the Original, Jurisdiction of the
Federal Court for a declaration that the various orders under which the State
of Seraikella came to be administered as a part of Bihar and the laws under
which those orders were made were ultra vires and the Province of Bihar had no
authority to carry on the administration of the State, was dismissed by a
majority of the Judges of this Court as being barred by Art. 363. Among the
contentions urged there was one that the suit which was filed before the 26th
January 1950, stood transferred to Supreme Court under Art. 372(2) of the
Constitution and that the Bar of Art. 363 was only prospective and of
retrospective. Kania, C.J. observed that the all embracing opening words of
Art. 363 over-rode the operation of Art.
374(2). The learned Chief Justice also said
"If the plaintiff contends that that agreement (agreement of 15th December
1947) is not binding on it, it cannot enforce its rights under the original
jurisdiction of the Court.
If the plaintiff has a grievance and a right
to a relief which the defendants contend it has not, the forum to seek redress
is not the Supreme Court exercising its original jurisdiction on the transfer
of the suit from the Federal Court." (1) 1951 S.C.R. 174 144 In Sudhansu
Shekhar Singh Deo v. The State of Orissa(1) the Ruler of the erstwhile State of
Sonepur in orissa which had merged with Orissa complained of a violation of his
rights and privileges by the inclusive definition of a "person' in s. 2(i)
of the Orissa Agricultural Income Tax Act, 1947 (Orissa Act 24 of 1947). His
case in substance was that as a Ruler of a State he had been immune from
payment of agricultural income-tax when it was imposed in 1947 and by articles
IV and V of the Merger agreement executed by, him, the Dominion of India had
guaranteed to him all his personal rights, privileges etc. a nd so the attempt
to tax his private property violated that guarantee. In dismising his appeal
this Court referred to Art. 362 'and observed :
"If despite the recommendation that due
regard shall be had to the guarantee or assurance given under the covenant or
agreement, the Parliament or the Legislature of a State makes laws inconsistent
with the personal rights, privileges and dignities of the Ruler of an Indian
State, the exercise of the legislative authority cannot, relying upon the
agreement or covenant, be questioned in any court, and that is so expressly
provided by Art. 363 of the Constitution.".
Nawab Usmanali Khan v. Sagarmal (2 ) was a
case where the respondent had taken execution on proceedings in enforcement ,of
an award and a prohibitory order under Or. 21 r. 46 Civil Procedure Code was
passed in respect of the sums payable to the appellant by the Central
Government on account of privy purse. One of the contentions urged on behalf of
the appellant was the privy purse was a political pension within the meaning of
s. 60 ( 1 ) (g) of the Civil Procedure Code and as such protected from the
execution proceedings. Relying upon the decisions of the Judicial Committee in
Bishambar Nath v. Nawab Imdad Ali Khan(3) and Nawab Bahadur of Murshidabad v.
Karnani Industrial Bank Ltd.(4) the Court came to the conclusion that privy purses
were political pensions. That Court also referred to Arts. 291--and 363 of the
Constitution and observed that "the covenant entered into by the Rulers of
Madhya Bharat State was a treaty entered into by the Rulers of independent
States by which they gave up their sovereignty over. their respective
territories and vested it in the new United State of Madhya Bharat. The
covenant was an act of State, and any violation of its terms cannot form the
subject of any action in any municipal courts. The guarantee given by the
Government (1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 779.
(2) [1965] 3 S.C.R.,201 <3) 17 I.A. 181
(4) 58 I.A. 215 145 of India was in the nature of I treaty obligation
contracted with the sovereign Rulers of Indian States and cannot be enforced by
action in municipal courts. Its sanction is political and not legal. On the
coming into force of the Constitution of India, the guarantee for payment of
periodical sums as privy purse is continued by Art. 291 of the Constitution,
but its essential political character is preserved by Art. 363 of the
Constitution and the obligation under this guarantee cannot be enforced in any
municipal court." With all respect, it appears to me that all the above
was not strictly necessary for the decision of the case and it would have been
enough to say that privy purse was a pension--a word which according to the
Oxford Dictionary means, "a periodical payment made specially by a Government,
company, employer etc."-which was political in nature because it was based
on a political settlement.
However it was not the expression of opinion
of only one learned Judge but the unanimous view of three learned Judges of
this Court. In Kanwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India(1) a Bench of
another five learned Judges of this Court have pronounced on the
non-enforceability of the provision for payment of 'privy purse under Art. 291
by resort to legal proceedings. In my view, on the reasoning already given by
me it must be held that the payment of privy purse although placed on a pedestal
which defies annihilation or fragmentation as long as the abovementioned
constitutional provisions endure is still subject to the constitutional bar of
non-justiciability and cannot be upheld or secured by adjudication in a court
of law including this Court.
Mr. Palkhivala however tried to cut across
the argument of the learned Attorney-General that a dispute which fell under
either limb of Art. 363 of the Constitution was not justiciable by urging that
if the act complained of was ultra vires or a nullity, the jurisdiction of the
courts of law would not be excluded and this would apply with greater force to
denial of a petitioner's right to the property of privy purse i.e. a
fundamental right and the solemn duty of this Court to uphold the same. To
support this plea under this,, head he referred to a fairly large number of
decisions of this Court where it had been held that than an order which was a
nullity or which was malafide or ultra vires would not stand in the way of the
exercise of jurisdiction of a court of law to strike it down. The notable
decisions of this Court arethe following : Pratap Singh v. The State of
Punlab(2), Makhan Singh v. State of Punjab (3), R. M. Lohia v. State(4) , Ram
Swarup v. Shikar Chand(5), Sadanandan v. Kerala (1) [1970] 2 S C.R. 631.
(2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 773 (3) [1964] 4 S.C.R.
797.
(4) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 709.
(5) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 553.
146 State(1), Jaichand Lal v. West Bengal(2),
Raja Anand v. U.P. State(3), Dhulabhai v. Madhya Pradesh(4). He also relied on
several English decisions, namely, The General Assembly of Free Chaurch of
Scotland v. Lord Over Town(5), R. v. Bryant(6) and Anismiminic Ltd. v. Foreign
Compensation Commission and another (7) .
The first case S. Pratap Singh v. The State
of Punjab(8) was one where the appellant who was a civil surgeon in the
employment of the State of Punjab challenged the legality of the orders of
suspension, revocation of leave, retention in service after the date of
superannuation and institution of the departmental enquiry against him inter
alia on the ground that the same were mala fide passed at the instance of the
Chief Minister who was personally hostile to him in order to wreak vengeance on
him. The power exercised the Government in that case rested on service rules
the proper application of which is always subject to scrutiny by courts of law.
Examining the content of the power vested in the Government to pass the
impugned orders the Court observed that "the use of that power for
achieving an alien purposewreaking the ministers vengeance on the officer would
be mala fide and a colourable exercise of that power, and would therefore be
struck down by the Courts". The second case Makhan Singh v. State of
Punjab(9) was one where the appellants contended that sections 3 (2) (15) (1)
and 40 of the Defence of India Act, 1962 and r. 30(1) (b) of the Defence of
India Rules were unconstitutional and invalid as they contravened the
fundamental rights of the appellants inter alia under Arts. 14, 21 and 22. The
petitions had been dismissed by the High Court on the ground that the
Presidential Order which had been issued under Art. 359 of the Constitution
created a bar which precluded them from moving the High Court under s. 491 (1)
(b) of the Cr.P.C.
This Court held (p. 827) :
"If in challenging the validity of this
detention order, the detenu is pleading any right outside the rights specified
in the Order, his right to move any court in that behalf is not suspended
because it is outside Art. 359(1) and consequently outside the Presidential
Order itself." (1) [1966] 3 S.C.R. 590 (2) [1966] Supp. S.C.R. 464 (3)
[1967] 1 S.C.R. 373 (4) [1968] 3 S.C.R. 662 (5) [1904] A.C. 515 (6) [1956] 1
A.E.R. 341 (7) [1969] 1 A.E.R. 208 (8) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 773 (9) [1964] 4 S.C.R.
797 147 The observation amounts to saying that the Presidential Order
suspending the right to move a court of law can only apply within the proper
ambit of the President's power and the same cannot be used by the executive as
a cloak to shield any misuse of that power.
With regard to the allegation of malafides it
was observed that It is hardly necessary to emphasise that the exercise of a
power malafide is wholly outside the scope of the Act conferring the power and
can always be successfully challenged." The third case R. M. Lohta v.
State(1) was one in which the petitioner moved this Court under Art. 32 of the
Constitution challenging the order of a District Magistrate and asking for his
release on various ground, inter alia that though an order of detention could
be made to prevent acts prejudicial to the maintenance of public order it could
not be made to preventacts which were only prejudicial to law and order as
distinct from public order. It was.
there observed by our present Chief Justice
that :
"where statutory powers are conferred to
take drastic action against the life and liberty of a citizen, those who
exercise it may not depart from the purpose. Vast powers in the public interest
are granted but under strict conditions. If a person, under colour of
exercising the statutory power, acts from some improper or ulterior motive, he
acts in bad faith. The action of the authority is capable of being viewed in
two ways. Where power is misused but there is good faith the act is only ultra
vires but where the misuse of power is in 'bad faith there is added to the
ultra vires character of the act, another vitiating circumstance. Courts have
always acted to restrain a misuse of statutory power and the more readily when
improper motives underlie The provision of law which came up for consideration
there was the Defence of India Rules and his Lordship laid down that powers
given by such rules could be used only within the limits prescribed. Lala Ram
Swarup v. Shikar Chand (2) was a case in which the appellants complained of
refusal of permission to sue their tenants by the District Magistrate under s.
3(1) of the U.P. Act 3 of 1947. The said section provided that (1) [1964] 1
S.C.R. 709 (2) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 553 148 .lm15 "Subject to any order passed
under sub-section (3) no suit shall, without the permission of' the District
Magistrate, be filed in any Civil Court against a tenant for his eviction from
any accommodation, except on one or more of the following grounds."
Sub-section (2) enabled the party aggrieved by the order of the District
Magistrate to go up in revision to the Commissioner and section 7-E provided
for revisional powers to the State Government n very wide terms. Section 16 of
the Act in terms provided that the order made under the Act to which S. 3(4)
applied was not to be called in question in any court. There it was observed:
"but the exclusion of the jurisdiction
of the civil courts must be made by a. statutory provision which expressly
provides for it, or Which necessarily and invariably leads to that inference. In
other words, the jurisdiction of the civil courts can be excluded by a
statutory provision which is either express in that behalf or which inevitably
leads to that inference." The bar of jurisdiction of the court of law came
up for consideration in two notable cases decided by the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council. Secretary of State v. Mask & Co.(1) was a case in which
a suit was filed by the respondent to recover the excess amount collected from
them, under protest, by levying duty upon a tariff and not an ad valorem basis.
The main question for determination in the appeal was whether the order passed
by the Collector of Customs under the provisions of S. 183 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 against the assessment of duty by the officer of Customs
and which was subsequently affirmed on revision under the provisions of s. 191
of the Act, constituted a final adjudication or whether the civil courts had
jurisdiction to entertain the suit of the respondents.
Section 188 provided that :
" every order passed in appeal under
this section shall, subject to the power of revision conferred by section 191,
be final'.
While rejecting the respondents' contention
including inter alia that an exclusion of the subject's right of resort to the
civil courts would be ultra vires of the Indian Legislature in view of the
provision of S. 32 of the Government of India Act 1915 the Board referred to
the well known principle of law laid down in (1) 67 I.A. 222 149 Wolverhampton
New Waterworks Co. v. Hawkesford(1) approved by the House of Lords in Neville
v. London "Express" Newspaper, Ltd.(2) and adopted on the basis of
these decisions the dictum that "Where a liability not existing at common
law is created by 'a statute which at the same time gives a special and
particular remedy for enforcing it".
the party must adopt the form of remedy given
by the statute. It was also observed :
"It is settled law that the exclusion of
the jurisdiction of the civil courts is not to be readily inferred, but that
such exclusion must be either by explicitly expressed or clearly implied. It is
also well settled that even if jurisdiction is so excluded, the civil courts
have jurisdiction to examine into cases where the provisions of the Act have
not beep complied with, or the statutory tribunal has not acted in conformity
with the fundamental principles of judicial procedure." In Raleigh
Investment Co. Ltd. v. Governor General in Council(1) the bar of jurisdiction
of civil courts in regard to income-tax proceedings was contained in s., 67 of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 providing "no suit shall be brought in
'any civil court to set aside or modify any assessment made under this Act, and
no prosecution suit or other proceeding shall lie against any officer of the
Crown for anything in good faith done or intended to be done under this
Act." The argument for the appellant was that an 'assessment was not
"made under the Act" if it gave effect to a provision which was ultra
vires the Indian Legislature and that in law such a provision was 'a nullity
and nonexistent. The Board held that there was ample provision in the
Income-tax Act by which an assessee could question the validity of any taxing
provision in the statute which provided effective and proper machinery for
review on grounds of law of any assessment. Further according to the Board
" . . assessment made under this Act" is an assessment finding its origin
in an activity of the assessing officer acting as such. The circumstance that
the assessing officer has taken into account an ultra vires I provision of the
Act is in this view immaterial in deter(1) [1859]6 C.B. (N.S.) 336 (2) [1919]
A.C. 368 (3) 741.A. 50.
150 mining whether the assessment is
"made under this Act ".......... Jurisdiction to question the
assessment otherwise than by the use of the machinery expressly provided by the
Act would appear to be inconsistent with the statutory obligation to pay
arising by virtue of the assessment." It may be noted that this authority
has not found favour with this Court.
Most of the other decisions which were cited
by Mr. Palkhivala were cases where liability under various Sales Tax Acts was
questioned.
I do not find it necessary to examine these
cases in any detail because of the lucid exposition of the law on the subject
in Dhulabhai v. Madhya Pradesh(1), a case arising out of the Madhya Pradesh
Sales Tax Act 30 of 1950 which by s. 17 provided that "Save as is provided
in s. 13, no assessment made and no order passed under this Act, or the rules
made hereunder by the assessing authority, appellate authority or the
Commissioner shall be called in question in any Court and gave as is provided
in sections 11 and 12 no appeal or application for revision shall lie against
any such assessment or order." In the unanimous judgment of this Court it
was observed:
" . . jurisdiction of the civil court is
all embra cing except to the extent it is excluded expressly by clear
intendment arising from such law." Referring to Mask & Co.'s case
(supra) and Raleigh Investment Co.'s case (supra) it was said that :
"Both these cases thus appear to be
decided on the basis of provisions in the relevant Acts for the correction,
modification and setting aside of assessments and the express bar of the
jurisdiction of the civil courts. The presence of a section barring the
jurisdiction was the main reason and the existence of an adequate machinery for
the same relief was the supplementary reason." Referring to the dicta in
Circo's Coffee Co. v. State of Mysore(1) and C. T. Santhulnathan Chettiar v.
Madras(s) the learned Chief Justice observed the question of validity of the
taxing laws is always open to the civil courts for it cannot be (1) [1968] 3
S.C.R. 662 (2) 19 S.T.C. 66 (3) C.A. 1045 of 1966 decided on 20th July, 1967
151 the implication of any provision to make such a decision final or that even
void or invalid laws must be enforced without any remedy." The result of the
enquiry into the views expressed by this Court in ,a large number of cases was
summed up at pages 682-683 in seven propositions. It is not necessary to set
out the propositions as they all relate to exclusion of jurisdiction of the
civil court by express provisions of law or clear implications there from.
But a constitutional provision of the kind of
Art. 363 transcends this kind of consideration. All that the Court has to see
is whether the dispute falls within either limb of the article. If the dispute
is so covered the court is precluded from examining whether the contention of
the party asserting a right was genuine or of real substance. Equally the bar
will apply where a party denying the right asserted or contesting the claim put
forward is guilty of action which on the face of things appears to be arbitrary
if there be some scope for raising the plea in denial or contradiction. I have
taken the view that the President's power or right or duty or obligation to
recognise a person as a Ruler arises not merely out of the provisions in Art.
366(22) but also the covenants, Merger agreements or Instruments of Accession
the dispute is one which arises out of a provision of the Constitution relating
to a treaty, agreement, covenant etc. in terms of Art. 363 of the Constitution.
A dispute as to right to privy purse, as already examined, attracts the same
bar.
With regard to Art. 366(22) read with Art.
363 it may be safely asserted that it could have never crossed the minds of the
makers of the Constitution that in devising a key for the recognition of the
Rulers and at the same time protecting them and the Government of India from
disputes based on or about pre-Constitution covenants, agreements etc. they
were forging a weapon with which the Government of the day could destroy them
all and seek shelter be-hind a total embargo on litigation to vindicate their
rights. The debates of the Constituent Assembly to which reference has already
been made show that Art. 363 was inserted for the Purpose of giving a quietus to
any dispute which anyone might seek to raise on the basis of covenants and
Merger agreements or rights flowing there from. In my opinion, the object was,
as much to save the Rulers who had entered into covenants or agreements etc.
from their rivals or kinsmen coming to court to upset the Covenants, agreements
etc. as to shield the Government of India from attempts on the part of rulers
to rip open the covenants. agreements or to seek recourse to law for
establishing their rights.
152 I also take the opportunity of remarking
that if ever there was an occasion for the President to make a reference to
this Court the present was eminently suited to the purpose.
Notwithstanding the wide sweep of the
provision for ousting the jurisdiction of courts as regards disputes covered by
it Art. 363 gave express power to the President to have the opinion of this
Court to guide himself by and when disputes of such public importance were
agitating the minds 'of members of Parliament and of the Cabinet it was not
only his right but his duty to consult this Court.
I do not think it necessary to express any
opinion on the rights or privileges covered by Art. 362 of the Constitution
because prima facie they are relatable to the guarantees or assurances given
under the covenants or agreements referred to in Art. 291. How much regard
Parliament or Legislature of States are to pay to such guarantees or assurances
is for the appropriate Legislatures to consider. I may only add that the
Constitution makers could not have contemplated exemption from the impositions
such as those under the Wealth Tax Act and the Gift Tax Act inasmuch as such
taxing provisions probably were not contemplated at the time. The Government of
India in its graciousness saw fit to exempt the Rulers from the operation of
these and many other statutes which are still on the statute book. The occasion
for considering such statutes has not arisen yet and they may be left for
future consideration.
Mr. Patkhivala's plea that the act of the
President resulted in the destruction of the institution of Rulers and as such
was invalid does not bear scrutiny. The orders if valid would operate in the
case of each Ruler and have been challenged by the petitioning Rulers in their
individual capacity. No body of persons known to law can be called an
institution of Rulers According to the figures given by Mr. Palkhivala himself
Rulership of. over one hundred States has lapsed during the last twenty years
'and the process may go on till no Rulers are left. In this case we are concerned
with the rights of individual Rulers and not of them as a class.
In the result I have to hold that this series
of petitions is not maintainable remarking, at the same time, that the action
of the President appears to be unjustified. The President may, if he, chooses,
guide himself by the exposition of the law as made above. What a stroke of the
pen has done may be undone by another stroke of it.
"Because right is right", the
President it is hoped, would "follow right" as "wisdom in the
scorn of consequence". I would leave the parties to bear their own costs.
153 Hegde, J. These petitions under Art. 32
of the Constitution present for decision common questions of law. In each of
these petitions the petitioner therein prays for the following reliefs (1) a
writ, direction or order declaring the order of the President dated the 6th
September, 1970 to be unconstitutional, ultra vires and void and further to
quash the same;
(2) a writ, direction or order declaring that
the petitioner continues to be the Ruler and as such continues to be entitled
to the Privy Purse and to his personal rights and privileges as a Ruler;
(3) a writ, direction or order directing the
Union of India to continue to pay to the petitioner the privy purse to which
the petitioner is entitled and to continue to recognize his Rulership and the
personal rights and privileges and to implement and observe the provisions of
the Covenant/ Merger Agreement entered into between the Ruler of Gwalior and
the Government of India; and (4) such other further orders as the nature and
circumstances of the case may require.
For pronouncing on the questions arising for
decision it is sufficient if I refer to the facts pleaded in any one of the
cases. Hence I shall deal with the facts and pleas put forward in Writ Petition
No. 376 of 1970. Therein the petitioner's case is as follows His father was the
Ruler of Gwalior prior to August 15, 1947. He signed the Instrument of
Accession on August 15, 1947. The same was accepted by the Governor General of
India on August' 16, 1947. Under the Instrument of Accession, he made over to
the Dominion of India. three subjects viz. Defence, External Affairs and
Communications.
On April 24, 1948, he signed a Covenant with
several other Rulers as a result of which the State of Madhya Bharat came to be
formed on June 15, 1948. Thereafter Madhya Bharat merged with the Union of
India. After the Constitution of India came into force, the President
recognised the father of the petitioner under Art. 366(22) of the Constitution as
the Ruler of Gwalior. After the death of the petitioner's father, the
petitioner succeeded to the Gaddi on July 16, 1961 and thereafter he was duly
recognised by the President under Art. 366(22). Ever since the merger of the
State with the Union of India, the petitioner's father and later on the
petitioner was being paid the privy purse guaranteed 154 under Art. 291 of the
Constitution. The petitioner is entitled to a ,privy purse of Rs. 10 lacs per
year. He is also entitled to other rights and privileges arising from the
Covenants.
Prior to August 15, 1947, the Ruler of
Gwalior was a Sovereign though his sovereignty was subject to the paramountcy
of the British Crown; but that paramountcy lapsed on August 15, 1947 as a
result of the Indian Independence Act, 1947. Consequently the Ruler ,of Gwalior
as well as other Rulers became absolute Sovereigns. In law they were free to
accede to either of the two Dominions of India and Pakistan or to remain
independent. But by stages the Indian States adjoining the Dominion of India
merged in the Dominion of India. After their merger the Rulers of those States
had ,no ruling powers. They had only such rights and privileges as were
recognized or created under the Covenants entered into by them with the
Government of India and those embodied in the Constitution. On the coming into
force of the Constitution all the former Rulers of the Indian States that had
merged with the Dominion of, India as well as their quantum subjects became
citizens of India having all the rights and duties of citizens of this country.
From about 1967, there was a move in the ruling party to abolish the privy
purses guaranteed to the Rulers under the Constitution as well as the
privileges guaranteed to them under the Covenants and agreements and recognised
in Art. 362. Consequently the Government moved in the Lok Sabha on September 2,
1970, the Constitution (Twenty fourth) Amendment Bill, 1970 to delete certain
provisions of the Constitution relating to the guarantees given to the Rulers
about their privy purses as well as privileges. That bill was passed in the Lok
Sabha but it failed to get the requisite majority in the Rajya Sabha. The
motion for consideration of the bill was rejected at about 4-30 p.m. on
September 5, 1970. The same evening the Union Cabinet met and decided to advise
the President to withdraw the recognition of the Rulers so that the privy
purses and privileges guaranteed to the Rulers may be abolished. On the same
night, the President purporting to act under cl .(22) of Art. 366 of the
Constitution signed in his Camp at Hyderabad an Instruments withdrawing
recognition of all the Rulers. After obtaining his signatures, the concerned
document or documents were flown back to Delhi the same night and the impugned
orders issued on September 6, 1970.
On the strength of these orders, the
Government of India asserts that all the Rulers in India had been derecognized
and consequently none of them is entitled to the rights and privileges to which
they were entitled as Rulers.
It is contended on behalf of the petitioners
that in exercise of his powers under Art. 366(22) of the Constitution, the
President is not competent to abolish Rulers as a class and therefore the
impugned orders are nullity. The farther contention of the peti155 tioners is
that the rights conferred on them under Arts. 291 and 362 of the Constitution
as well as under various statutory provisions or rules having the force of law
are fundamental rights and as such they cannot be abolished by an executive
order. It is said the impugned orders contravene Axts. 19(1) (f), 21, 31 (1),
31(2), 51(3) and 73(1) of the Constitution. According to the petitioners Arts.
291 is a mandatory provision and it is not open to the Government to refuse to
obey the mandate of the Constitution. The petitioners also complain that in
making the impugned orders, the President not only acted outside the scope of
Art. 366 (22) of the Constitution but he also thereby violated Art. 53 (1), 60,
73(1), 362, 291, 112 to 114 of the Constitution. The petitioners' further
grievance is that under various statutes as well as under the Merger Covenants
they are entitled to certain privileges; the President by purporting to take
away those privileges has contravened Arts. 14 and 21 of the Constitution. It
is also said that the Council of Ministers were guilty of mala fides in
advising the President for making the impugned orders for collateral reasons
and for the, sake of political exigencies. According to the petitioners, Art.
363 of' the Constitution does not bar the jurisdiction of the Court in granting
the reliefs prayed for by them.
The respondent in its reply does not deny
that the object of the impugned orders was to abolish the Rulers as a class.
It contends that the present policy of the
Government is not to have any Rulers in this country or to allow them any
rights or privileges as Rulers. It is contended that the respondent has right
to abolish Rulership in exercise of its power under Art. .366(22) which
power_according to it is a sovereign power; the decision of the Government to
abolish Rulership is a political decision and as such the same is not open to
be questioned in municipal courts; the rights conferred under the relevant
Covenants are not perennial and are inherently temporary in character and are
liable to be varied or repudiated in accordance with the State Policy in the
interests of the people. It is further pleaded that a fiduciary duty is cast
upon the Government not to continue feudal institutions and anachronistic
systems against the interests of the people; to respect and give effect to the
needs and wishes of the people and to the will of the representatives of the
people, the impugned orders have been passed. According to the respondent this
Court is precluded from going into the validity of the impugned orders in view
of Art.363. As regards Art.291 the plea taken by the respondent is; that it
confers no legal right on the Rulers.
That Article merely lays down the source and
method of payment of the privy purses. The respondent takes the stand that this
Court cannot go into the scope or effect of Art.
291, in view of Art. 363. So far as the
Covenants and Agreements are concerned it is urged on its behalf that the
rights, liabilities or obligations arising there from are outside the 'jurisdiction
of this Court firstly 11-L744SUP.CI/71 156 because they arise from political
agreements between High Contracting Parties and secondly because of the bar
under Art.363. It is next contended on behalf of the respondent that neither
under the Covenants nor under any of the provisions of the Constitution any
fundamental right was conferred on any Ruler and hence the, petition under Art.
32 is not maintainable. It is 'also urged on, behalf of the respondent that
Art. 362 of the Constitution does not confer any right on the Rulers and any
failure to obey the direction given in that Art. does not lead to any violation
of the: provision of the Constitution.
From the pleadings, the following issues
arise for decision (1) What is the scope of Cl. (22) of Art.
366 ? Does it confer on the President power
to abolish Rulership ? Are the impugned orders invalid for any of the reasons
mentioned in the Writ Petitions ? (2) Does Art. 291 impose any mandatory duty
on the Government and confers corresponding rights on the Rulers ? (3) What is
the scope of Art. 362 ? (4) Does Art. 363 exclude the jurisdiction of this
Court from considering whether the impugned orders are ultra vires the powers
of the President andwhether there has been any violation of Arts. 291 and 362
of the Constitution ? (5) Are these petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution
maintainable ? What fundamental rights of the petitioners, if any, have been
infringed and (6) What relief, if any, the petitioners are entitled to in these
petitions ? Before proceeding to consider and pronounce on the issues
formulated above, it would be useful to briefly refer to the historical
background leading to the merger of the Indian States in the Indian Union as
both the petitioners and the respondent have laid great stress on the same.
During the time of the British rule. there were over 500 Indian States
possessing varying degrees of sovereignty. In the matter of internal
administration, most of the Rulers had complete freedom. But their sovereignty
was subject to the treaties, engagements and sanads entered into by them with
the British Crown and also the paramountcy of the British Crown.
Paramountcy was an undefined concept. It was
an all pervading power. The Butler Committee declined to define its scope but 157
said that "paramoutcy was paramount'. Paramountcy meant just what the
British Government choose, it to mean. It was a convenient fiction devised by
the imperial power to further its imperial interest. Paramountcy did not flow
from treaties or international law. The sanction behind it was the British
military strength. Subject to the Imperial needs the Rulers of Indian States
were left free to govern their 'States as they thought best though in few
cases, when the Rulers were guilty of gross atrocities the paramount power
intervened even in their internal administration.
Government of India Act, 1935 visualised a
Federation consisting of provinces as well as Indian States. The States were
expected to accede to the Federation on limited number of subjects retaining
their sovereignty in respect of other subjects. But the States were so jealous
of their rights that it was not possible to persuade them to join the
Federation. Hence, the Federal part of the Constitution visualised by the
Government of India Act, 1935 did not come into being. After World War 11 when
it became inevitable for the British Government to grant freedom to this
country, the question as to the future relationship of the Indian States with
the Dominion of India assumed importance. As there was no agreement between the
concerned parties, the British Government under the Independence Act, 1947
divided the then British India into two parts, India and Pakistan.
So far as the Indian States were concerned,
it allowed its paramountcy to lapse and those States were asked, if they so
choose, to enter the new relationship with one or the other of the Dominions or
remain independent. The paramountcy of the British Crown was not inherited
either by India or by.
Pakistan. It was allowed to lapse. This
situation created a crisis. There was an imminent threat to the unity of India,
politically as well as economically. The situation called for the highest
degree of. statesmanship on the part of our leaders. Naturally the Rulers of
the Indian States were anxious to remain as independent sovereigns but they
could not have been oblivious of the internal and external dangers to their
authority. It was a highly explosive situation.
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel with his political
sagacity and pragmatic approach, availing himself. of the co-operation of Lord
Mountbatten and the assistance of his energetic and tactful Secretary, V. P.
Menon first persuaded practically all the Rulers to accede to India on three
subjects viz.
Defence, External Affairs and Communications
and thereafter stage by stage drew them closer to the Dominion of India and
finally persuaded them to merge with the Dominion of India.
All this was done in the course of about two
years, a feat unparalled in history. The saga of the integration of the Indian
States into the Dominion of India will remain the most exciting and most
glorious chapter in the history of our country. This mighty achievement could
not have been had peacefully but 158 for the patriotism and farsightedness of
many of the Rulers of the Indian States. Sardar Patel told the Constituent
Assembly that the Rulers of the Indian States were the coarchitects of India's
unity.
But it was said on behalf of the respondent
that the Rulers merged, their States in the Dominion out of sheer necessity and
not out of any patriotism, they were not in a position to resist the compulsion
of geography and pressure of their subjects in favour of self Government and
therefore they merely made a virtue of necessity. It may be that they acted in
self-interest. But there can be ,no doubt that it was enlightened
self-interest. Sardar Patel told the Constituent Assembly on October 12, 1949 :
"There was nothing to compel or induce the Rulers to merge the identity of
their States. Any use of force would have not only been against our professed
principle but would have also caused serious repercussions. If the Rulers had
elected to stay out, they would have continued to draw the heavy civil list
which they were drawing before and in large, number of, cases. they could have
continued to. enjoy unrestricted use of the State revenues. The minimum which
%ye could offer to them. as quid pro quo for parting with their ruling powers
was to guarantee to them _privy purses an certain privileges on a reasonable
and defined basis." Proceeding further the Sardar exhorted the Constituent
Assembly. "The capacity for mischief and trouble on the part of the Rulers
if the settlement with them would not have been reached on a negotiated basis
was far, greater than could be imagined at this stage. Let us do justice to
them, let us place ourselves in their position 'and then assess the, value of
their sacrifice. The Rulers have now discharged their part of the obligations
by transferring all the ruling powers and by agreeing to the integration of
their States. I The main part of our obligation under these Agreements is to
ensure that-the guarantees given by us in respect of privy purses are fully
implemented. Our failure to do so would be a breach of faith and seriously
prejudice the stabilisation of the new order". Even quite recently, both
our President and the 'Home Minister acknowledged with gratitude the sacrifice
made by, the 'Indian Rulers. But it was argued onbehalf of the respondent that
we should not take those utterances at their face value. It was indirectly
suggested that those expressions were platitudes intended to achieve some
political purposes. If that be so, all that one can say is, mysterious are the
ways of politics.
The respondent in its counter-affidavit has taken
the stand that the people of this country having become conscious of their
social. and economic rights would not tolerate any longer the concept of
Rulership or the privy purse or any of the privileges 159 incorporated in the
Covenants and Merger Agreements. Therefore it was the duty of the Government to
give effect to the will of the people. It has also taken the stand that the
concept of Ruler ship, privy purse and the privileges guaranteed to, the Rulers
without any relatable function and responsibility have become incompatible with
democracy, equity and social justice in the context of India of today.
These contentions raise political issues.
This Court is not the forum for going into these issues nor is it concerned
with the political passions surrounding the issues arising for decision in this
case. Our primary function in this case. is to interpret the relevant provision
of the Constitution and to see. whether the complaint of the petitioners that
some of their fundamental rights have been infringed is correct.
It is also not for this Court, except to the
extent it bears on the question of interpretation of the Constitution, to go
into the historical background of any constitutional provision. If the meaning
of a provision is plain and unambiguous, its historical background becomes
irrelevant.
But if there is any ambiguity, 'in
interpreting the same, it is. permissible, for the Court to take into
consideration the object intended to be achieved by that provision as well as
the surrounding circumstances which may bring out the intention of the
Constituent Assembly.
The respondent, though in a somewhat vague
way, has raised the plea of State policy. That plea appears to me to be
irrelevant in the context of this case. If the Constitution has laid down a
policy, as is contended on behalf of the petitioners, with respect to matters
with which we are concerned, that policy cannot be departed from either by the
legislature or by the executive. Neither the legislature nor the executive can
have a policy which runs counter to the policy laid down by the Constitution.
In this country the voice of the Constitution is paramount. On matters on which
the Constitution speaks, no one else can speak Every organ of the State in this
country has to function within the limits prescribed by the Constitution. It
has no power dehors that derived from the Constitution. Its powers are only
those The learned Attorney-General in the course of his arguments, time and
again, tried to impress on us that the will of the people has to be respected
and as it is the desire of the people that Rulership should be abolished, it
had become imperative for the Government to advise the President to make the
impugned orders. The petitioners deny that there is any such public opinion. We
are not in a position to go into this controversy. Our duty is to obey the
Constitution. The question of public opinion is not relevant for our purpose.
Many of the safeguards provided in 160 the Constitution are for the benefit of
the minorities. The Government might have acted with the best of intentions.
But the real question is whether it has acted
within the powers conferred on it by the Constitution. In this connection it
would be worthwhile to borrow and adapt some (1) the observations of Chief Justice
Patanjali Sastri in State of Madras v. V. G. Row(1). If the courts in this
country face up to, important and none too easy task of declaring void any of
the important policy decisions taken by the Government it is not out of any
desire to tilt at executive authority in a crusader's spirit, but in the
discharge of a duty plainly laid upon them by the Constitution. This is
especially true as regards the fundamental rights, as to which this Court has
been assigned the role of a sentinel on the quivive. In these cases as in other
cases we do not seek to sit in judgment on Government's policies. They are the
concern of the legislative and the executive organs of the State. But the
Constitution has imposed a special duty on this Court to preserve and protect
the Constitution--we, only seek to discharge that duty.
Now coming to the scope of cl. (22) of Art.
366, it is necessary to notice that Art. 366 is an article which defines 30,
expressions appearing in one or more of the articles in the Constitution. That
article starts by saying that "In this Constitution, unless the context
otherwise requires, the following expressions have the meanings hereby
respectively assigned to them.......".
From this it is clear that the meaning given
to the expressions mentioned in that article are only for the purpose of the
Constitution and not for any other purpose as he ld by this Court in Maharaja
Pravir Chandra Bhanj Deo Kakatiya v. State of Madhya Pradesh (2 ). Clause (15)
of Art. 366 defines an "Indian State" as meaning "any territory
which the Government of the Dominion of India recognised 'as such a
State". It may be noted that no "Indian State" as such exists
after the Constitution came into force. But yet as that expression has been
used in the Constitution in some places for certain purposes, it became
necessary to define, that expression and not because that there is an Indian
State now. Similarly Rulers of Indian States disappeared as s oon as their
territories were merged in India and all those quandum Rulers became citizens
of India-see Bhanj Deo's case (supra) and H. H. Maharaja of Udaipur v. State of
Rajasthan and ors.(3) The Rulers referred to in Art. 366(22) have no kingdom or
subjects to rule. They have no ruling power. They do not have dual capacity
firstly 'as citizens of India and secondly as Rulers. Their rulership is merely
a status entitling them to privy purse and (1) [1952] S.C.R. 597 at p. 605.
(3) [1964] 5, S.C.R. I (2) [1961] 2, S.C.R,
501.
161 certain privileges. As Arts. 291, 362,
366(21)(a) and (b) (before its deletion) as well as Entry 34 of List I of Sch.
VII refer to Rulers, it became necessary to
define that expression.
Art. 366(22) defines "Ruler" thus:
"Ruler" in relation to an Indian
State means the Prince, Chief or other person by whom any such covenant or
agreement as is referred to in clause (1) of Art. 291 was entered into and who
for the time being is recognised by the President as the Ruler of the State and
include any person who for the time being is recognised by the President as the
successor of such Ruler.
" This clause has two parts namely :
(1) the Prince, Chief or other person of an
Indian State who had entered into any Covenant or Agreement as is referred to
in cl. (1) of Art. 291 and who is for the time being recognised by the
President as the Ruler of the State; and (2) any person who for the time being
is recognised by the President as the successor of such a Ruler namely the
Ruler who entered into the Covenant or Agreement referred to earlier and
recognised by the President.
The words "other person" in the
first part of Art. 366(22) means someone analogous to a Prince or Chief of a
former Indian State who had entered into the Covenant or Agreement referred to
in that clause. It cannot be some third person because, no person other than a
ruler of an Indian State had entered into any Covenant or Agreement with the
Dominion of India. The words "other person" should be read ajusidem
genesis with the words "other person" should be read ejusidem genesis
with the words were known by various names such as Maharana,, Maharaos,
Maharaja, Nizam etc. To avoid listing all those names in Art. 366(22), the
draftsman has used the words "other person" but the, meaning of those
words has been made clear by the words accompanying the words "other
person' viz. by whom any such agreement as is referred to in cl. (1) of Art.
291 was entered into and who for the time being is recognised by the President
as Ruler.
Now coming to the second part of that clause,
'here again the words "any person" refers to the person who at the
relevant time is the successor of the person who entered into the Covenant or
Agreement. This is made clear by the expression "for the time being is
recognised by the President as the successor of such Ruler", such Ruler
being the Ruler referred to in the first limb of the clause.
Art. 366(22) contemplates two classes of
persons who are to be recognised by the President as Rulers. The first group
162 consists of those persons who entered into the Covenant with the Dominion of
India and the second group their successors.
Coming to the first group, the President has
no power to recognise any one other than who had entered into the Covenant or
Agreement and so, far as the second group is concerned, he can only recognise
the successor of the person who had entered into the Covenant or the Agreement.
"Successor" is a term of law.
Succession is regulated by law or custom. It, is no doubt true that it "or
the President to decide as to who is the, successor for the time being ,of the
person who had entered into the Covenant or Agreement. The President cannot
create a successor. He can only recognise the successor. His power is only to
find out who is the successor at the relevant time of the Ruler who entered
into the Covenant ,or Agreement. Recognition is not the same thing as
appointment. Recognition means the power to locate and not a power to create.
Hence the power conferred on the President under the second part of Art.
366(22) is a very limited power. That power
is no doubt an executive power but the same has to be exercised in accordance
with law. In other words it has to be exercised as a ,quasi-judicial power. SD
far as the first part is concerned, the President has no power to recognise any
person other than the Ruler who entered into the Covenant or Agreement with the
Dominion of India. We shall presently see that he has a constitutional duty to
recognise, the Ruler of an Indian State. Hence the words ",for the time
being" in the first part of Art. 366 can only come into play if there was
any error in locating the person who entered into the Covenant or Agreement,
the condition for, the recognition being that the person recognised must be the
person who entered into the Covenant or Agreement. So far as the second part is
concerned the expression "for the time being" is relevant as the
question of recognition of a new Ruler arises on the death of each Ruler. On
each of those occasions, the President has to find out as to who is the
successor according to law and in the absence of law, according to custom, of
the Ruler who ,entered into the Covenant or Agreement. The procedure of
recognition of Rulers appears to have been intended as a status symbol and also
to avoid the necessity of hunting up Covenants and Agreements at the time of
payment of privy purses and while afford ding other privileges and rights.
Art. 366(22) contemplates that for each
Indian State, there shall be a Ruler at any given point of time. That Article
does not say that the, President may recognise a Ruler. On the other hand it
speaks of the Ruler who "for the time being is recognised by the
President", an expression which contemplates the continuity of Rulership
and not merely of its possible existence. A Rulership of an Indian State can
only disappear if both the original, Ruler who entered into the Covenant or
Agreement as well his success ors 163 cease to exist as in that case President
cannot recognise any one as the Ruler of that State. From the above discussion
it follows that the power of the President under Art. 366(22) is fully
regulated.
In this context we may refer to the
definition of the "Ruler" in s. 311 (1) of the Government of India
Act, 1935 which says ""Ruler" in relation to an Indian State
means the Prince, Chief or other person recoginised by His Majesty as the Ruler
of the State". The power to recognise given to His Majesty,under this
section is blanket power. It is subject to no limitation. Under that section
Any one could have been recognised as the Ruler of an Indian State. No such
power is conferred on: the President under Art..
366(22).
I shall now proceed to consider whether the
President has power to say that he will not recognise a Ruler for an Indian
State. It was urged on behalf of the respondent that a power to recognise
includes a power not to recognise.
Evidently this contention is based on s. 21
of the General, Clauses Act which Says "Where, by any Central Act or
Regulation, a power to issue notifications, orders, rules or bye-laws is
conferred, then that power includes a power, exercisable 'in the like manner
and subject to the like sanction and conditions if any, to add to, amend, vary
or rescind any notifications, orders, rules or bye-laws so issued." In
view of Art. 367 of the Constitution unless the context .otherwise requires,
the General Clauses Act, subject to any adaptations and modifications made
therein under Art. 372 applies for the interpretation of the Constitution as it
applies for the interpretation of an Act of the legislature of the Dominion of
India. I have not thought it necessary to go into the question whether the
recognition referred to in Art. 366(22) can be considered as a power to issue
notifications or orders as in my opinion that clause imposes a constitutional
duty on the President.
No discretion. is left to the President to
recognise or not to recognise the Ruler of an Indian State. In that view, s. 21
of the General
Clauses Act, 1897 is irrelevant. We have already.
seen that Art. 366(22) contemplates that each Indian State must have a Ruler,
at all times so long as the Ruler who entered into the Covenant or Agreement or
a successor of his is in existence otherwise Arts.291 and 362 will become
meaningless. They will be empty shells if "Ruler" referred to in Art.
291 (b) Art. 362 and Entry 34 of List I of the Seventh Schedule must
,necessarily be that person who is recognised as Ruler by the President under
Art. 366(22). If the President fails to or declines to discharge his function
under Art. 366(22), 164 Arts. 291 and 362 would become inoperative. In effect
the benefit conferred by those Arts. will be denied to the person entitled to
be recognised as a Ruler of a particular Indian State. Further the legislative
power given under Entry 34 of List I of the Seventh Schedule would disappear.
It is to give meaning to Arts. 291, 362 and Entry 34 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule, a duty is imposed on the President to recognise the Ruler of each
Indian State. In my opinion Art. 366(22) imposes a constitutional duty on the
President.
To enable him to discharge that duty, certain
limited powers are; conferred on him. While discharging his duty under the
first part of Art. 366(22), he has to locate the person who according to law
can be said to have entered into the Covenants or Agreements and under the
second limb his duty is to find out the successor of the Ruler coming within
the scope of the first limb. As mentioned earlier the recognition of the Ruler
who executed the Covenant or Agreement is a mere formality. So far as the
recognition of the successor of that Ruler is concerned, in case of dispute, it
becomes the duty of the President to decide as to who is the successor of the
Ruler who executed the Covenant or Agreement at the relevant time. Evidently
the Constitution makers were of the opinion that any dispute as to who is the
"Ruler" for the purpose of the Constitution should not be left to be
decided by courts of law because such a procedure would involve years of delay
in determining the person who is entitled to the benefit of the privy purse and
the privileges. Hence that question was left to the exclusive decision of., the
President. Despite the fact that exclusive power was given to the President to
recognise the successor of the original Ruler, the procedure that invariably
adopted in case of disputed succession was to act on the basis of the
recommendation of either of 'a High Court judge who had inquired into the
matter or of a committee presided over by a High Court judge, set up for that
purpose. That is what happened when disputes arose as to the succession to the
Rulers of the States, of Sirohi and Dholpur. In my opinion Art. 366 (22)
imposes a duty on the President and for that purpose has conferred on him
certain powers. In other words the power conferred on the President under that
provision is one coupled with duty. There are similar powers conferred on the
President under the Constitution. Under Chap. XVI of the Constitution certain
special provisions were made for the benefit of the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes. Seats were reserved for them both in the Parliament as well
as in the State Assemblies. Certain other benefits were also secured to them in
the matter of appointments to services and posts in connection with the affairs
of the Union or of a State. But the Constitution did not specify which castes
were Scheduled Castes and which Tribes were Scheduled Tribes. Under Arts.
341 (1) and 342(1) of the Constitution, the
President was given power to specify the castes which he considered to be
Scheduled Castes and the Tribes which he considered to be Scheduled Tribes.
Though both the Articles say the President "may" specify the Castes
which he considers as Scheduled and Tribes which he considers Scheduled, it is
clear that a constitutional duty was imposed on him to specify which castes
were Scheduled Castes and which Tribes were Scheduled Tribes for the purpose of
the Constitution. The word "may" in those clauses must be read as
"must" because if he had failed or declined to.
specify the Castes and Tribes, Arts. 330,
332, 334, 335, 338 and 340 would have become inoperative and the constitutional
guarantees given to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes would have become
meaningless. At this stage it may be noted that under Art. 366(24) and (25)
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are defined as such Castes, races,
tribes, tribal communities or their parts or groups within them as are deemed
under Art 341 and 342 respectively.
Again under 'cl. (7) of Art. 366, the
President is given power to determine for the purpose of the Constitution the
"corresponding Provinces" "corresponding Indian State" or
"corresponding State" in case of doubt. This, again is a duty imposed
on the President. He cannot refuse to discharge that duty.
Now coming to the contention that power to
recognise the:
Rulers includes power not to recognise, we
shall test the correctness of that contention with reference to some other
Articles in the Constitution which deal with certain constitutional duties of
the President. The power to appoint the Election Commission is that of the
President.
The Election Commission alone can hold the
elections of the President, Vice-President, members of that Parliament and the
State legislatures. The President cannot decline to appoint the Election
Commissioners. It is not in the power of the cabinet to advise the President
not to appoint one or more of Election Commissioners even if some future
cabinet should think that the elections are trappings of feudalism.
Similarly the cabinet cannot advise the
President not to appoint a Governor and thus destroy the federal structure of
our Constitution or not to appoint the Chief Justice of Supreme Court or of the
High Courts and' thereby remove those courts and thus make a mockery of the
fundamental rights. The President cannot do indirectly, what the legislature
cannot do directly. It is wrong to mistake a duty for a right. Ruler as
referred to in some of the Provisions of the Constitution is an entity created
by the Constitution to further certain, purposes recognised by the
Constitution. That entity cannot be abolished either by the executive or by the
legislature. Therefore the argument advanced on behalf of the respondent that
the power to recognise the Ruler includes within itself the Power not to
recognise is clearly a fallacious one. It is not necessary for our 166 present
purpose to go into the question whether a Ruler once recognised can be
de-recognised by the President and if so under what circumstances. We were told
that there was one instance of de recognition of a recognised Ruler namely that
of the former Ruler of Baroda. That derecognition was not challenged before any
court. Hence its validity remains undecided. In this case we are concerned not with
de recognition of one or more Rulers for some reason or.
other but of the abolition of Rulership. For
the reasons mentioned earlier, it is not possible to spell out a power to
abolish the Rulership under Art. 3 66 (22).
It was strenuously argued by the learned
Attorney General that the power of recognition of the Rulers found in Art.
366(22) is a facet of the paramountcy enjoyed
by the British Crown before the 15th August, 1947. No such plea was taken in
the counteraffidavit. The argument of the learned Attorney General on this
point was somewhat indefinite. He was hesitant to call the power embodied in
Art. 366(22) as a paramount power but yet he was repeatedly asserting that it
contains certain aspects of paramountcy. It is strange that the learned Attorney
General representing the Union of India should have claimed that the Government
of India inherited any aspects of the paramountcy exercised by the British
Crown. Paramountcy as claimed by the British Rulers was one of the
manifestation of imperialism. It is surprising that the Government of this
country whose people had fought imperialism for years and who are even today
supporting both morally as well as materially the countries which are fighting
imperialism should claim to have inherited even a fraction of impeperialism
should claim to have inherited even a fraction of impemountcy is the very
antithesis of rule of law. It was a power exercised by a superior sovereign
over the subordinate sovereigns. I fail to see how the Government of India can
consider itself as a superior power in its relationship with the citizens of
this country. The doctrine of paramountcy even during the days of the Imperial
rule had nothing to do with the British Government's relationship with its
subjects. Herein we are concerned with the power exercisable by the President
under a provision of the Constitution. Nature and scope of that power must be
spelled out from the language of the provision and from the purpose intended to
be served by that provision. it is an insult to our Constitutionl to say that
any facet of imperialism has crept into it. One should have thought that
paramountcy so far as this country was concerned was dead and was deeply buried
as far back as on the 15th August 1947. Its resurrection in any form is
repugnant to our 'Constitution. It is true that even after August, 1947, on
some occasions some of our leaders, referred to the existence of paramountcy.
But that reference is not to the paramountcy which was the insignia of
imperialism but the paramountcy of geographical 167 compulsions, economic
compulsions, the compulsions, of public opinion and need for common defence,
all operating in favour of the unity of India. The effect of these forces was
pithly described, as a sort of paramountcy. But that paramountcy has nothing to
do with paramountcy claimed by the British.
The impugned orders are also unconstitutional
for the reason that the power conferred under Art 366(22) is exercised for a
collateral purpose. As seen earlier, power to recognise Rulers was conferred
for the purpose of implementing some of the provisions of the Constitution and
not for denuding the contents of those provisions. We have earlier seen how the
impugned orders came to be made. The Government of India sought to amend the
Constitution by deleting Arts. 291, 362 and clause 22 of Art. 366. But as the
bill seeking the amendment of the Constitution failed to get the required
majority in the Rajya Sabha, that attempt failed. Within hours after the said
bill was rejected, the cabinet met and advised the President to pass the
impugned orders. This is clearly an, attempt to do indirectly what the
Government could not do directly. Such an exercise of power is impermeable
under Art. 366(22). Exercise of a constitutional power for collateral' reasons
has been considered by this Court in several decisions as a fraud on that
power-see Balaji v. State of Mysore(-). Breach of any of the Constitutional
provisions even if made to further a popular cause is bound to be dangerous
precedent.
Disrespect to, the Constitution is bound to
be broadened from precedent to precedent and before long the entire
Constitution may be treated with contempt and held up to ridicule. That is what
happened to the Weimar, Constitution. If the Constitution or any of its provisions
have ceased to serve the needs of the people, ways must be found to change them
but it is impermissible to by-pass the Constitutions its provisions. Every
contravention of the letter or the spirit of the Constitution is bound to have
chain reaction. For that reason, also the impugned orders must be held to be
ultra vires Art. 366(22).
The impugned orders also violate Art. 53 (1 )
of the Constitution which directs the President that the executive power of the
Union shall be exercised by him either directly or through the, officers
subordinate to him in :accordance with the Constitution. Further Art. 73(1)
prescribes that the executive power-of the Union must be exercised subject to
the provisions of the Constitution. The executive is bound to obey this
mandate. It, has no, competence to exercise the executive power in violation of
the mandates given by the Constitution. Art. 291 gives a mandate to the
executive to pay the privy purses guaranteed to the Rulers exempt from all
taxes on income. Art. 366 (22) (1) (1963). Suppl. 1. S.C.R. 439.
168 imposes a constitutional duty on the
President to recognise the Rulers of the Indian States. Art. 362 requires the
executive that due regard should be given to the guarantees and assurances
given under the Agreements or Covenants entered into with the former Rulers of
the Indian States.
The President on the advice of the cabinet
has disregarded the mandate of Arts. 53(1), 73(1), 291,362 and 366(22).
That being so his order must be held to be
ultra vires the Constitution, hence a nullity.
It was urged on behalf of the petitioners
that the members of the cabinet who advised the President to issue the impugned
orders were bound by their oath to bear true faith and allegiance to the
Constitution; but they have shown scant respect for their oath, treating the
same as a mere formality; they have thereby not only broken their oath but have
damaged the Constitution as well. It is not necessary to pronounce on this
contention.
In my opinion it is not open to, the executive
or for that matter to any of the organs of the State to disregard the
provisions ,of the Constitution merely because those provisions do not accord
,with its views. The mandate of every provision of the Constitution is a
binding mandate.
No one has power to depart from that mandate
or circumvent it, whatever his views about the appropriateness of the mandates
may be. If the Constitution or any part of it has now become out of tune with
the present day society of ours, appropriate steps may be taken to alter the
Constitution.
It is no virtue to uphold the Constitution
when it suits vs.
What is important, nay necessary, is to
uphold it even when it is inconvenient to do so.
It was contended on behalf of the respondent
that the impugned orders were made in exercise of the political power of the
State which according to it, is an incident of the sovereignty. In support of
that contention reliance was placed on the decision of this Court in Kunwar
Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v. Union of India and Ors. (1) The facts of that case
are :
After the death of the previous Ruler of
Dholpur who had been recognised by the President under Art. 366(22), there was
dispute as regards his successor. That dispute was inquired into by a committee
presided over by the Chief Justice of the Rajasthan High Court. On the
recommendation of that committee, the President was pleased to recognise
Maharaja Rana Shri Hemant Singh as the successor of the previous Ruler. Kr.
Shri Vir Rajendra Singh challenged that decision by means of a .writ petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution.' That petition was dismissed by the High
Court. In appeal this Court affirmed(1) [1970] 2, S.C.R. 631 169 the decision
of the High Court. I was a party to that decision. In that decision, it was
held that the recognition granted by the President under Art. 366(22) could not
be challenged in court of law. The only point in dispute in that case was as to
who was ;the successor to the deceased Ruler. This Court came to the conclusion
that under the circumstances of that case the decision of the President was not
open to challenge. In the course of the judgment it was observed :
'The recognition of the Ruler is a right to
succeed to the gaddi of the Ruler. This recognition of Rulership by the
President is an exercise of political power vested in the President and is thus
an instance of purely executive jurisdiction of the President.' What is said in
that case is that the President while acting under Art. 366(22) is exercising
his executive jurisdiction and that jurisdiction was described as
"political power".
That expression may be inappropriate but that
is not the ratio of the decision. It was a casual observation. There is nothing
like a political power under our Constitution in the matter of relationship
between the executive and the citizens. Our Constitution recognises only three
powers viz. the legislative power, the, judicial power and the executive power.
It does not recognize any other power. In our country the executive cannot
exercise any 'sovereignty over the citiznes. The legal sovereignty in this
country vests with the Constitution and the political sovereignty is with the
people of this country. The executive possesses no sovereignty. There is no
analogy between our President and the British Crown. The President is a
creature of the Constitution. He can only act in accordance with the
Constitution. It is true that some aspect of the executive power of the
Government is for the sake of convenience called political power but it is
nonetheless an executive power derived from the Constitution.
It was next urged that we cannot go into the
validity of the impugned orders or even as to the scope of Art. 366(22) in view
of Art. 363. We shall, while examining the ambit of Art. 363 see the hollowness
of this contention.
Earlier, I have in a general way, referred to
some of the political events that took place in the years 1947 to 1949.
In order to consider some of the contentions
raised by the Counsel for the parties, relating to the scope and effect of Art.
291, it is now necessary to refer in some detail to some aspects of those
events. I have earlier referred to the instruments of Accession executed by
various Rulers of Indian States. By means of those Instruments, the concerned
Indian States became federating units of the Dominion of India though under
those Instruments, powers were conferred on the Dominion legislature, executive
and judiciary only in respect of three subjects viz. Defence, External Affairs
and Communications. But nonetheless as a result of the accession, the concerned
Indian States became parts of the Dominion of India. At the time those
Instruments were executed, no question of either guaranteeing the privy purses
to Rulers or preserving their privileges arose.
Hence those Instruments did not refer to any
rights and privileges of the Rulers. Very soon after the execution of the
Instruments of Accession other developments took place in quick I succession.
Most of the small Indian States fully merged in the Dominion of India. Under
the merger Agreements the privileges then enjoyed by the Rulers, their right to
get the, privy purses fixed under the agreement as well as some of the rights
of the third parties referred to in the agreements were guaranteed. Excepting
in the case of Bhopal, the privy purses to be paid to the Rulers were to be
paid from out of the revenues of their former States. Under the Merger
Agreement entered into between the Governor General and the Nawab of Bhopal,
the Nawab was entitled to receive the privy purse stipulated therein from the
Government of India. It is not stated in the agreement that the same has to
come out from the revenues of Bhopal State.
The privy purses payable to all those Rulers
were free of all taxes. In some of the Merger Agreements rights were also
created in favour of the third parties, such as guaranteeing the continuity of
the services of the permanent members of the Public Service of those States as
well as the payment of pensions due to the retired civil servants. In several
of the Merger Agreements it is provided that if there was any dispute as to
whether a particular item of property is the private property of the Ruler or
the property of the State, that dispute was to be decided by an authority to be
appointed as provided in those agreements.
In most of those agreements, it is provided
that the succession to the Rulership should be according to law and custom.
That provision was a redundant provision as succession means succession
according to law or custom. No one can succeed to a deceased person excepting
according to law or custom. Those agreements also provide that no enquiry
should be made by or under the authority of the Government of India and no
proceedings should be taken in any court in their former States in respect of
anything done or omitted to be done by the Rulers or under their authority,
whether in a personal capacity or otherwise during the period of their
administration of their States.
In those agreements, it is further provided
that no suit should be brought against the Rulers of the merged States in any
of the Courts in the Dominion except with the previous sanction of the
Government of India.
Under the Merger Agreement executed by the
Ruler of Bilaspur, the Ruler was entitled to a privy purse of Rs.
7,0,000/per year 171 but that included a sum
of Rs. 10,000/as allowance to the Yuvraj. Under the Merger Agreement executed
by the Nawab of Bhopal, the State of Bhopal was merged into the Dominion of
India for a period of five years only. Art. IV of the Merger Agreement provided
that the income derived annually from the share of the Nawab in the original
investment by Qudsia Begum in the Bhopal State Railway, which share was agreed
to be Rupees five lakhs and fifty-five thousand, shall be treated as the personal
income of the Nawab and shall be paid by the Government of India to the Nawab,
and his successors. Article VII of the Agreement provided that the succession
to the Throne of Bhopal State shall be governed by and regulated in accordance
with the provisions of the Act known as 'the Succession to the Throne of Bhopal
Act of 1947' which was in force in the State at the time of the agreement.
Under the Merger Agreement entered into by the Maharaja of Manipur, he was
given a right to the use of the Residences known as 'Redlands' and 'Les
Chatalettes' in Shillong and the property in the town of Gauhati known as
"Manipuri Basti" though all those properties were considered as the
State properties. Then came the States Merger (Governors' Provinces) Order
1949, an order made under s.
290(A) of the Government of India Act, 1935.
Under this Order, several of the States that had merged in the Dominion of
India were added on to one or the other of the Provinces.
Thereafter those States became a part of
those Provinces.
Section 7(1) of that Order provides "All
liabilites in respect of such loans, guarantees and other financial obligations
of the Dominion Government as arise out of the governance of a merged State,
including in particular the liability for the payment of any sums to the Ruler
of the merged State on account of his privy purse or to other persons in the
merged State on account of political pensions and the like, shall as from the
appointed day, be liabilities of the absorbing province, unless the loan, guarantee
or other financial obligation is relatable to central purposes." This
Order was made on July 27, 1949. Under this Order fifty-five Indian States
merged in the Bombay Province, three in Madras, two in Bihar, fifteen in
Central Provinces and Berar, three in East Punjab and twenty-four in Orissa.
It was not disputed that the Merger Order is
a legislative measure. Its validity was not challenged before us. In view of
that Order, the liability to pay the privy purses of the Rulers whose former
States had been added to any particular Province, became the liability of that
Province,a liability imposed by law. Whatever might have been the nature of the
liability undertaken by the Govern-L744 Supment. CI/71 172 of the Dominion of
India under the various Merger Agreements those liabilities came to be
recognised by law and made a part of the Municipal law and thereafter they
became enforceable as against the concerned Province. It may be noted that this
Order was made long before the Constitution came into force. This Order was
subsequently amended and a few more Indian States were included in one or the
other of the Provinces. From the foregoing, it is seen that before the
Constitution came into force, the liability to pay the privy purses to several
of the Rulers whose States had directly merged with the Dominion of India
became that of some of the Provinces and ceased to be that of the Dominion of
India. Under the Merger Agreements excepting in the case of Bhopal, the privy
purses to the former Rulers were payable from the revenues of their former
States. But after the Merger Order they became payable from the revenues of the
concerned provinces. At this stage we may also note that under the Merger
Agreements, the privy purses payable to the Rulers were free of all taxes. We
may further note that under the Merger Agreements, there were several other
rights created either in favour of the concerned Rulers or in favour of the
third parties. The Merger Order is silent about those rights.
Now we come to those States which formed
unions. There were five such unions namely 1. United States of Kathiawar;
2. United States of Gwalior, Indore and Malwa
(Madhya Bharat).
3. Patiala and East Punjab States Union.
4. United States of Rajasthan and 5. United
States of Travancore and Cochin.
Those unions were formed on regional basis.
Various Indian States in a particular region merged together and formed a
union. The concerned States entered into a Covenant under which the union was
formed. To those Covenants, the Dominion of India was not a party. Under those
covenants, the covenanting States agreed to entrust to the Constituent Assembly
to be formed in accordance with the provisions of the covenant the work of
framing a Constitution for the union. Each of those unions were to have a
Rajpramukh who was to be the head of the union.' There were provisions in those
covenants for the formation of a Council of Ministers to aid and advise the
Rajpramukh in the exercise of some of his functions. Under those covenants, the
Ruler of each of the covenanting State was entitled to receive a fixed privy
purse annually from 173 the revenues of the concerned union. That amount was to
be free of all taxes, whether imposed by the Government of the concerned union
or by the Government of India. In the matter of raising, maintaining and
administering the military force of the concerned union, the Rajpramukh was to
act subject to any directions and instructions that may from time to time be
given by the Government of India. The covenants provided that the Rulers of the
covenanting States as also the members of their families should continue to be
entitled to all their personal privileges, dignities and titles enjoyed by
them. The succession to the Gaddis was to take place according to law and
custom. Questions of disputed succession in regard to covenanting Salute State
were to be decided by the Council of Rulers on the recommendation of a Judicial
Tribunal to be constituted in accordance with the provisions of the covenants.
The Secretary, Ministry of States on behalf of the Government of India
concuffed to the covenants and guaranteed to all its provisions. The
concurrence of the Government of India to the covenants was necessary as, the
covenanting States had earlier acceded to the Dominion of India. In view of the
formation of unions, in the place of old Indian States new units were to come
into existence and therefore it was necessary for them to execute fresh
Instruments of Accession and that could be done only with consent of the Dominion
of India. So far as the guaranteeing of these covenants is concerned it could
only mean a political guarantee and not a guarantee in the sense of undertaking
any financial obligations. What the Dominion of India guaranteed was the
provisions of the covenant which included provision relating to the formation
of the Constituent Assembly, the appointment of Council of Ministers etc. Under
the covenants the liability to pay the privy purses of the covenanting Rulers
was that of the concerned union and not that of the Dominion of India. Further
the privy purses to be paid to the Rulers were to be paid free of all taxes.
From these it is seen that before Arts.
291,362, 363 and 366(22) came into force, the Dominion Government had no
liability in the matter of payment of privy purses to Rulers of the covenanting
States. Even in the matter of deciding any dispute as regards succession, the
Dominion of India had no responsibility. That had to be decided by the agencies
created under the covenants. Under some of the covenants some of the
covenanting Rulers were given special rights e.g. under Art. XVIII of the
covenant under which Madhya Bharat union was formed, it was provided
"Notwithstanding anything in the preceding provisions of this covenant,
the Rulers of Gwalior and Indore shall continue to have and exercise their
present ,powers of suspension, remission or commutation of 174 death sentences
in respect of any person who may have been or is hereinafter, sentenced to
death for a capital offence committed within the territories of Gwalior or of
Indore, as the case may be." Under Art. VIII of the covenant entered into
by the Rulers of Travancore and Cochin forming the United State of Travancore
and Cochin, it was provided that the obligation of the covenanting State of
Travancore to contribute from its general revenue a sum of Rs. 50 lakhs every
year to the Devaswom fund shall from the appointed day be the obligation of the
United State and the said amounts shall be payable there from and the
Rajpramukh shall cause the said amount to be paid every year to the Travancore
Devaswom Board and the Executive Officer referred to in sub-clause (b) of that
article respectively.
In respect of the administration of
Padamanahhaswamy Temple the right of the Ruler of Travancore was preserved
under Art. VIII(b) of the covenant. Similarly the existing rights of the Rulers
of Travancore and Cochin as regards the management of certain temples and funds
were preserved.
They were also given a right to nominate some
members to some of the statutory Boards. From the foraging it is seen that
under the various covenants, several rights in addition to the right of
receiving privy purses had been created in favour of the Rulers of some of the
covenanting States.
In the draft Constitution, there were no
articles similar to Arts. 291, 362, 363 and 366(22). Sometime before October
14, 1949 the Ministry of States, which was instrumental in bringing about the
merger of the States with the Union of India wrote to the drafting committee
that the guarantees given to the Rulers in regard to privy purses should be
given constitutional section. Further it desired that so far as the privileges
and other rights of the Rulers are concerned, the same must find recognition in
the Constitution though it may not be possible to give any constitutional
guarantee in respect of them. It is in pursuance of this request the drafting
committee introduced Art. 267(A) (present Art. 291), Art. 302-A (present Art.
362) on October 13, 1949 Art. 303(1) (present
Art, 366) (22) on October 14, 1949 and Art. 302(A) (present Art. 363) on
October 16, 1949 into the draft Constitution.
Art. 291 of the Constitution as it now stands
after its amendment by the 7th Amendment Act reads :
"Where under any covenant or agreement
entered into by the Ruler of any Indian State before the commencement of this
Constitution, the payment of any 175 sums, free of tax, has been guaranteed or
assured by the Government of the Dominion of India to any Ruler of such State
as privy purse-(a) such sums shall be charged on and paid out of the
Consolidated Fund of India; and (b) the sums so paid to any Ruler shall be
exempt from all taxes on income." Dealing with Art. 291, this is what the
White Paper says in paragraph 238 :
"Art. 291, thus, embodies constitutional
sanction for the due fulfillment of the Government of India's guarantees and
assurances in respect of privy purses and provides for the necessary
adjustments in respect of privy purse payments necessitated by changed
conditions." Art. 291, has four principal ingredients namely (1) the
conditions giving rise to the liability to pay the privy purses;
(2) charging of the privy purses payable on
the Consolidated Fund of India;
(3) the payment of the same from out of the
Consolidated Fund; and (4) the sums so paid to any Ruler to be exempt from all
taxes on income.
According to Mr. Palkhiwala, learned Counsel
for some of the petitioners, Art. 291, guarantees the payment of privy purses
referred to in various Merger Agreements and Covenants to the concerned Rulers,
charges the same on the Consolidated Fund of India and makes them payable out
of that fund to the Rulers, exempt from all taxes on income.
He contended that Art. 291 confers a legal
right on a Ruler to claim the privy purse to which he is entitled to, from the
Dominion of India. He asserts that the right created in favour of the Rulers,
is enforceable in court of law. But according to the learned Attorney-General,
Art. 291 does not create any legal right in favour of the Rulers. That Art.
merely gives a moral assurance to the Rulers
that the privy purses guaranteed under the Covenants and Agreements will be
paid by the Union of India. He further contended that Art.
291 merely recognizes the obligation
undertaken by the Dominion of India either under the Merger Agreements or under
the Covenants and it does not create any new right or obligation. According to
him the expression that "such fund shall be charged on the Consolidated
Fund of India" does not mean that a lien 176 on the Consolidated Fund is
created for the payment of privy purses; it only means that the amount payable
as privy purses is not votable. He asserted that the expression "paid out
of" in cl. (b) of Art. 291 merely refers to the Fund out of which the
payment is to be made and not that it should be paid to any person. Clause (b)
of Art. 291 does not according to him give any direction to the Union
Government to pay to the Rulers the agreed privy purse but it merely says that
the privy purse, if and when paid to any Ruler will be exempt from all taxes on
income.
In my opinion the contentions advanced by the
learned Attorney-General are falacious. The liability undertaken under Art. 291
is a new liability and not an affirmation of an existing liability. As seen
earlier, the liability to pay the privy purses of most of the Rulers who merged
their States with the Dominion of India had been transferred to one or the
other provinces. The liability to pay privy purses to the Rulers who entered
into Covenants for forming unions was that of the concerned union and not that
of the Dominion of India. In the case of most of the Rulers of States which
merged in the Dominion of India until Art. 291 came into force, the Dominion of
India had no liability to pay the privy purses.
For the first time after Art. 291 came into
force, the privy purses were made payable from out of the Consolidated Fund of
India. Till then they were payable firstly out of the revenues of the concerned
State which merged into the Dominion of India and later on by one or the other
provinces from out of its revenues and in the case of the covenanting States,
the privy purses payable to the covenanting Rulers were payable from out of the
revenues of the concerned union. As seen earlier, the privy purses payable
either to the Rulers of the merged States or to those of the covenanting
States, were free of all taxes. But the privy purses payable under Art. 291 are
only exempt from all taxes on income and riot all taxes. To summarize, under
Art. 291, the Union of Indian for the first time undertook the liability to pay
the privy purses in respect of most of the Rulers of the Indian States. The
fund from which the privy purses are made payable under Art. 291 is different
from those from which they were payable earlier. The terms of payment, to some
extent are also different inasmuch as the privy purses provided under the
Merger Agreements and Covenants were free of all taxes but the privy purses
guaranteed under Art. 291 are exempt only from tax on income.
In support of his contention that the
liability undertaken under Art. 291, is merely a continuation of the earlier
liability the learned Attorney-General strongly relied on the first part of
Art. 291 which says :
177 "Where under any covenant or
agreement entered into by the Ruler of any Indian State before the commencement
of this Constitution, the payment of any sums, free of tax, has been guaranteed
or assured by the Government of the Dominion of India to any Ruler of such
State as privy pure........" From this he wants us to conclude that the
liability undertaken under Art. 291 is nothing but a continuation of the
liability arising under the Covenants and Agreements. Here again the learned
Attorney-General is not correct. That part of Art. 291 does not create any
liability. It is only a legislation by incorporation. That part of the Article
points out the person who is entitled to the privy purse and the amount payable
to him. It was a legislative device adopted for the convenience of drafting. It
would have been a cumbersome process to list all the names of the Rulers who
are entitled to privy purses and the amount payable to each of them. To avoid
that difficulty, relevant portions of Agreements and Covenants were bodily life
from those documents and incorporated into Art. 291. This is a well known
drafting device. Art. 291 is no way linked with the Agreements and Covenants.
The Convenants and Agreements only continue as evidence as to matters mentioned
in the first part of Art. 291. After Art. 291 came into force, there is no
legal relationship between the Covenants and Agreements and that Article. That
Article read with Article 366(22) constitute a self-contained code in the
matter of payment of privy purses. Those Articles operate on their own force.
In several provisions of the Constitutions, the device of legislating by
incorporation has been adopted-see Art. 105(3), Art. 106, cls. 2, 3, 7, 8, 9(5)
and 12(3) of the second Schedule.
I am also unable to accept the contention of
the learned Attorney-General that the expression "charged on........ the
Consolidated Fund of India" in Art. 291 merely means that the amounts
payable as privy purse are not votable and that expression neither creates a
right in favour of the person in whose benefit the charge is created nor is the
Consolidated Fund pledged for the payment of the privy purse. The Constitution
does not define the word "charge".
Therefore we must understand that word as it
is understood in law. According to law the creation of a charge over a fund in
respect of an item of payment to a person means a conferment of a legal right
on that person to get the amount in question on the pledge of the fund. If an
item of expenditure charged on the consolidated fund merely means that that
expenditure is non-votable then there was no need to provide in Art. 113 that
"so much of the estimate as relates to expenditure charged upon the
Consolidated Fund of India shall not be submitted to the vote of
Parliament." That part of Art.
178 113(1) was evidently enacted to make
effective the statutory lien over the Consolidated Fund created in favour of
the person to whom the payment has to be made. It emphasises the fact that the
pledge created in favour of the person for whose benefit the charge is created
by the Constitution cannot be taken away even by the Parliament.
The learned Attorney-General and Mr. Mohan
Kumaramangalam read to us passages from May's Parliamentary Practice and other
treatises on Parliamentary Practice and Procedure to show how the practice of
charging certain items of expenditure on the Consolidated Fund of England came
into being. They also invited our attention to some of the statutes passed by
the British Parliament. Neither the treatises on which they relied nor any of
the statutes to which they referred show that the charging of an item of
expenditure on the Consolidated Fund in favour of a person does not create a
legal right in him to get that amount or that the same does not pledge the
Consolidated fund for the payment of that amount. In fact some of the Statutes
referred to by them do show that some of the items of expenditure charged on
the Consolidated fund were required to be paid in preference to the other
items. On the other hand Mr. Palkhiwala referred to us to the Dictionary of
English law by Earl Jowitt (1959 Ed) Vol. 1, page 459, wherein the meaning of
the expression 'charged on the consolidated fund' is explained thus
"Consolidated Fund, a repository of public money which now comprises the
produce of custom, excise stamps and several other taxes, and some small
receipts from the royal hereditary revenue, surrendered to the public use. It
constitutes almost the whole of the public income of the United Kingdom
(Consolidated Fund Act, 1816). This fund is pledged for the payment of the
whole of the interest of the national debt of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland (National Debt Act, 1870s. 6); and besides this, is liable to several
other specific charges imposed upon it at various periods by Act of Parliament,
such as the civil list, and the salaries of the judges and ambassadors and
other high official persons; after payment of which the surplus is to be
indiscriminately applied to the service of the United Kingdom under the
direction of Parliament" Section 6 of the National Debt Act, 1870 reads
"6. Stock Charged an consolidated fund.--The annuities and dividends
aforesaid shall continue to be charged on and payable out of the consolidated
fund." 179 The language of this section is similar to that of Art. 291 so
far as the creation of "charge' 'is concerned. Section 6 of the National
Debt Act, 1870 is according to Earl Jowitt pledges the consolidated fund of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland for the payment of the whole of the interest
of the national debt of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. If that is the true
effect of s.6 of the National Debt Act, 1870 the same must be the position
under Art. 291. From the passage quoted above from the Dictionary of English
law by Earl Jowitt, it is seen that as soon as an item of expenditure is
charged on the consolidated fund, the said act creates a legal obligation to
pay out of the consolidated fund that item of expenditure to the person for
whose benefit the charge is created. Secondly that item has to be paid before
paying the non-charged item of expenditure. And lastly the charge created,
pledges the consolidated fund for the payment of that item of expenditure. The
practice of creating charges on the consolidated fund was started for the first
time in this country under the Government of India Act, 1935 which Act was
passed by the British Parliament evidently following the British practice.
Arts. 112 to 115 of the Constitution are similar to the corresponding Sections
in the Government of India Act, 1935.
The contention of the learned Attorney
General that the expression "paid out of" in cl. (a) of Art. 291
refers to the fund out of which it is to be paid out and not to the person to
whom it is payable is also not correct. Under Art. 291 as it now stands, there
is only one fund and that is the Consolidated fund of India. Therefore there is
no question of pointing out the fund from out of which the payment is to be
made. If some amount is required to be paid out of the Consolidated Fund of
India, it must be paid out to somebody. There cannot be any paying out in
abstract. To whom that payment is to be made is made clear by cl. (b) of Art.
291. it is to be paid to the Ruler as defined in Art. 366(22).
Even before Art. 291(2) was deleted the privy
purses were to be paid out of the Consolidated fund of India though some of the
States had a liability to reimburse the Union to a certain extent. According to
the learned Attorney-General on the date when Art. 291 came into force, no
Ruler had been recognised under Art. 366(22). Therefore we cannot spell out any
commitment under Art. 291. We have earlier seen while discussing the scope of
Art. 366(22) that the President has a constitutional duty to recognise a Ruler.
Art. 291 proceeds on the basis that President
has to recognise a Ruler to each one of the Indian States contemplated by Art.
366(15). By recognising the President merely locates the Ruler. He does not
appoint or create a Ruler. No sooner the President recognizes the Ruler of an
Indian State, 180 he becomes entitled to the privy purse guaranteed under Art.
291 from the date the Constitution came into
force. We are told that as a fact most of the Rulers who entered into the
Covenants and Agreements were recognised only in the year 1952 but yet they
were being paid the amounts agreed to be paid as privy purses ever since the
Constitution came into force and the privileges guaranteed to them were also
extended to them even before they were recognised.
Similarly, we were told that in the case of
successors of the Rulers when there was no dispute as to succession, they were
treated as Rulers for all purposes though they were recognised several months
after they succeeded to the Gaddi.
This shows that the recognition under Art.
366(22) was considered as a mere formality except in the case of disputed
succession.
To my mind Art. 291 is plain and unambiguous.
It says in the clearest possible language that the privy purses payable to the
Rulers under the Merger Agreements as well as under the Covenants are charged
on the Consolidated fund of India and that they shall be paid out to the Rulers
exempt from all taxes on income. No provision of a statute much less a
provision of a constitutional statute should be read in a pedantic way. Nor is
it justifiable to hair split the clauses in a provision and quibble about their
words. A constitutional provision is not to be interpreted by taking words of
the provisions in the one hand and the dictionary in the other or by taking the
meaning given in a decision to a word in different setting. Each provision must
be read as a whole and its meaning understood.
We have earlier seen that under the Merger
Agreements and Covenants, various rights, liabilities and obligations mere
created. What the Constituent Assembly did was to separate two obligations out
of them and give those obligations constitutional sanction or guarantee. As
seen earlier, under the Convenants entered into by the Rulers of Travancore and
Cochin certain contribution was to be made every year to the Devaswom Fund.
This payment is guaranteed under Art. 290 (A). , Under Art. 291 the payment of
the privy purses is similarly guaranteed Arts. 290(A) and 291 are more or less
similarly worded.
If the mandate contained in Art. 291 is an
unenforceable mandate, similar would be the position so far as Art. 290(A) is
concerned. If the mandates contained in these Articles are unenforceable these
Articles can only have ornamental value. It is difficult to believe that the
Constituent Assembly would have indulged in an exercise in futility. We
repeatedly asked the learned Attorney General that if Art.
291 did not create a legal 181, right, what
purpose that Article was intended to serve and why did the Constituent Assembly
put that article, in the Constitution. His answer was that under Art. 291 while
the payment of privy purse received a constitutional sanction, it received no,
constitutional guarantee. This distinction to my mind appears, to be a
distinction without difference.
Every constitutional sanction for payment is
necessarily a mandate to pay if that sanction relates to the discharge of an
obligation. It is an enforceable mandate. As seen earlier that a fair reading
of Art. 291 shows that there is a direction to pay the privy purses to
the'Rulers. The contention of learned Attorney General was that by Art. 291 the
Constituent Assembly merely wanted to give some sort of assurance to the Rulers
about the payment of privy purses to them in future so as, to allay their
apprehensions that may not be paid privy purses in future but in reality, no
legal right was created in favour of the Rulers nor any binding obligation
imposed on the Union of India. It is difficult to understand this Argument. It
will be an uncharitable insinuation to make against the founding fathers that
all that they wanted was to, create an illusion in the mind of the Rulers while
in reality giving them no guarantee as regards the future payment of the privy
purses. If all that the Constituent Assembly desired was to, give some
assurance about the payment of privy purses in the future then Art.
362 would have served that purpose. In a
general sense the words "personal rights" include privy purse. Even
if the Constituent Assembly wanted to make things clear they could have easily
said in Art. 362 "personal rights including privy purse" instead of
wasting a whole article. Further there was nor purpose in charging the privy
purses on the Consolidated fund or giving a constitutional exemption from
payment of all taxes on income in respect of privy purse.
No word in the Constitution can be considered
as superfluous.
During the hearing some the members of the
Bench felt that it may not be necessary to go into the scope and effect of Art.
191 in the present proceedings. It was felt that if the Court came to the
conclusion that the impugned orders are valid orders then there is an end of
the matter. If on the other hand, the Court came to the conclusion that those
orders are violative of the Constitution then status quo ante would be
restored. But both the learned Attorney General and Mr. Palkhiwala insisted
that we should pronounce on the scope and effect of Art. 291, each one for his
own reason. The learned Attorney General repeatedly made it plain to us that
even if we come to the, conclusion that the impugned orders are invalid, the
privy purses will not be paid by the Government, unless we hold that the right
given to the Rulers under Art. 291 is an enforceable one. This, 182 is a
strange stand particularly in view of the fact that even according to him the
Constitution has recognised the liability to pay the privy purses to the Rulers
and the obligation in question has received constitutional sanction.
It is clear from the stand taken by him that
the Government will not respect the mandate of the Constitution if that mandate
is not enforceable by law.
We have to proceed on the basis that the
learned Attorney General made that submission on the strength of the
instructions received by him from the respondent. But yet, it is difficult to
believe that the executive which is a creature of the Constitution, whose head
(the President) and the members of the cabinet had taken the oath of allegiance
to the Constitution would take the stand that they will not respect a mandate
of the Constitution unless that mandate is enforceable in a court of law. The
enforceability of a constitutional mandate is one thing, the existence of such
a mandate is another. Whether a particular constitutional mandate is
enforceable or not, it is all the same binding on all the organs of the State.
No organ of the State can choose to disregard any of the mandates of the
Constitution.
There are many mandates in the Constitution
which are not enforceable through courts of law. If the executive or the
legislature or the judiciary refuse to comply with those mandates they will be
not only breaking the oath taken by them but they will be breaking the
Constitution itself. I doubt whether the grave implications of the stand taken
on behalf of the Government have been realised.
I shall now proceed to Art. 362. That Article
reads "In the exercise of the power of Parliament or of the legislature of
a State to make laws or in the exercise of the executive power of the Union or
of a State, due regard shall be had to the guarantee or assurance given under
any such covenant or agreement as is referred to in article 291 with respect to
the personal rights, privileges and dignities of the Ruler of an Indian
State." This article clearly links itself with the Agreements and
Covnants. It has no independent exercise apart from the Agreement and
Covenants. Mr. Palkhiwala conceded that Art. 362 is a provision of the
Constitution relating to the Agreements and Covenants.
Therefore, it follows that if any dispute
arises in respect of anyright accruing under or any liability or obligation
arising out of Art. 362 then the same would be covered by the second .part of
Art. 363. But Mr. Palkiwala sought to place his own interpretation on the word
"dispute" found in Art. 363. it is 183 not necessary for us in this
case to decide what controversy relating to Art. 362 can be considered as a
"dispute" under Art. 363. At present we have no concrete complaint
before us relating to the contravention of Art. 362.
It is not proper to decide the scope of an
article in the Constitution in abstract. The scope of Art. 362 as well as the
meaning of the expression "dispute" in Art. 363 can be best
considered when a proper case comes up for decision. In this view, I have not
thought it necessary to go into the scope of Art., 362.
This takes me to Art. 363(1). That Article
reads "Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution but subject to the
provisions of article 143, neither the Supreme Court nor any other court shall
have jurisdiction in any dispute arising out of any provision of a treaty,
agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instrument which was
entered into or executed before the commencement of this Constitution by any
Ruler of an Indian State and to which the Government of the Dominion of India
or any of its predecessor Governments was a party and which has or has been
continued in operation after such commencement, or in any dispute in respect of
any right accruing under or any liability or obligation arising out of any of
the provisions of this Constitution relating to any such treaty, agreement,
covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instrument." Under cl. (2) of
that Article "Indian State" is defined for the purpose of that
article as meaning any territory recognised before the commencement of the
Constitution by His Majesty or the Government of the Dominion of India as being
such a State, and the "Ruler" for the purpose of that article is
defined thus " "Ruler" includes the Prince, Chief or other
person recognised before such commencement by His Majesty or the Government of
the Dominion of India as the Ruler of any Indian State." Art. 363 has two
parts : the first part deals with disputes arising out of any provisions of a
treaty, agreement or covenant etc., and the second part with dispute in respect
of any right accruing under or any liability or obligation arising out of any
of the provisions of the Constitution, relating to any such treaty, agreement,
covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instrument.
184 Dealing with Art. 362 and 363 this is
what the White Paper says in paragraph 240 (at p. 125) "Guarantees
regarding rights and privileges. Guarantees have been given to the Rulers under
the various Agreements and Covenants for the continuation of their rights,
dignities and privileges. The rights enjoyed by the Rulers vary from State to
State and are exercisable both within and without the States. They cover a
variety of matters ranging from the use of the red plates on cars to immunity
from Civil and Criminal jurisdiction and exemptions from customs duties etc.
Even in the past it was neither considered desirable nor practicable to draw up
an exhaustive list of all these rights. During the negotiations following
introduction of the scheme embodied in the Government ,of India Act, 1935. The
Crown Department had taken the position that no more could be done in respect
of the rights and privileges enjoyed by the Rulers than a general assurance of
the intention of the Government of India to continue them.
Obviously, it would have been a source of
perpetual regret if all these matters had been made as justiciable. Article 363
has, therefore been embodied in the Constitution which excludes specifically
the Agreements of Merger and the Covenants from the jurisdiction of Courts
except in cases which may be refered to the Supreme Court by the President. At
the same time, the Government of India considered it necessary that
constitutional recognition should be given to the guarantees and assurances
which the Government of India have given in respect of the rights and
privileges of Rulers. This is contained in Art. 362, which provides that in the
exercise of their legislative and executive authority, the legislative and
executive organs of the Union and States will have due regard to the guarantees
given to the Rulers with respect to their personal rights, privileges and
dignities." From the above passage, it is clear that according to the
Government's understanding of Art. 363, that article merely deals with matters
coming under Art. 362. That is also the contention of the petitioners. But
according to the learned Attorney 'General that article excludes from the
jurisdiction of all courts including this Court not merely those matters that
fall within the 'scope of Art. 362 but also the right arising from Art. 291. It
185 was urged by him that Art. 291 also protects only. a personal right.
Therefore it is a matter that falls within the scope of Art. 362, Consequently
any dispute relating thereto is excluded from the jurisdiction of this Court
under Art. 363. Privy purse was taken out for special treatment by the Constitution
under Art. 291. Therefore it is excluded from the general provision in Art.
362. Arts.
291 and 362 have to be construed
harmoniously. It is a well known rule of construction that a special provision
excludes the general provision. Hence I have to reject the contention that Art.
363 includes the right to get privy purses because it also comes within the
scope of Art. 362.
If it is otherwise, there was no need to
enact Art. 291.
Further there was no purpose in guaranteeing
the payment of privy purses under Art. 291 and then taking away the right to
recover them under Art. 363. We have earlier seen that in the case of most of
the Rulers, the right to receive privy purse was an enforceable right even
before Art. 291 came into force. it is not easy to accept the contention that
what was an enforceable right was made unenforceable under the Constitution. If
the contention advanced on behalf of the respondent is correct the, purpose of
Art. 291 was to take away an existing enforceable right, at any rate in the
case of several Rulers and substitute the same by a recognition, devoid of all
legal contents. To say that is to be cynical about the august body i.e. the
Constituent Assembly. the Constituent Assembly could not have enacted Art 291
to show its contempt for the Rulers of Indian States as well as for the
recommendation of States Ministry headed by Sardar Patel, the maker of modern
India. If two or more provisions in the Constitution deal with one group of
topics, those provisions have to be read together and interpretted
harmoniously. It is not proper to say that the Constitution is speaking in two
voices, as the learned Attorney General wants us to do or that it takes away by
the right hand what is gave by the left hand. Therefore we have to read Art. 363
harmoniously with Art. 291. That is equally true of Arts. 363 and 366(22). The
rule of harmonious construction is a well known rule. If the aforementioned
articles are harmoniously interpretted then the position becomes clear. The
purpose of Art. 363 is made clear in the White Paper. Under the Merger
Agreements as well as under the Covenants, various rights were conferred and
privileges assured to the Rulers. Some of the agreements entered into between
the former Rulers and His Majesty's Government or the Dominion of India are
undoubtedly acts of State. So far as the Covenants ,are concerned, the question
whether they were acts of State or constitutional documents is a highly
debatable question. Rights accruing as well as liabilities and obligations arising
under acts of State were not enforceable in the municipal courts unless 186
they were recognised by the new sovereign. For the purpose of giving necessary
direction to the Union and State executives as well as to the State and Union
legislatures, the Constitution recognised the rights accruing and liabilities
and obligations arising under various Agreements and Covenants which
recognition made. those rights, liabilitie and obligations enforceable. But the
Constituent Assembly did not want to open up the Pandora's box. Without Art.
363,Art. 362 would have opened the flood gates of litigation. The Constituent
Assembly evidently wanted to avoid that situation. That appears to have been
the main reason for enacting Art. 363. Evidently there were other reasons also
for enacting Art. 363. Some of the Rulers who had entered into Merger
Agreements were challenging the validity of those agreements, even before the
draft of the Constitution was finalised. Some of them were contending that the
agreements were taken from them by intimidation;
some others were contending that there were
blanks in the agreements signed by them and those blanks had been filled in
without their knowledge and to their prejudice. The merger process went on
hurriedly. The Constitution makers could not have ignored the possibility of
future challenge to the validity of the Merger Agreements. Naturally they would
have been anxious to avoid challenge to various provisions in the Constitution
which are directly linked with the Merger Agreements.
As seen earlier Art. 363 has two parts. The
first part relates to disputes arising out of Agreements and Covenants etc. The
jurisdiction of this Court as well as of other courts is clearly barred in
respect of disputes falling within that part. Then comes the second part of
Art. 363 which refers to disputes in respect of any right accruing under or any
liability or obligation arising out of any of the provisions of the
Constitution relating to any agreement, covenant etc. We are concerned with
this part of Art. 363. Before a dispute can be held to come within the scope of
that part, that dispute must be in respect of a right accruing under or
liability or obligation arising out of a Provision of the Constitution and that
provision of the Constitution must relate to agreements, Covenants etc.
The principal dispute with which we are
concerned in these cases is whether the President has the power to abolish all
Rulers under Art. 366(22). Quite plainly this dispute cannot be held to be
dispute in respect of a right accruing or a liability or obligation arising
under any provision of the Constitution. Herein we are not concerned with any
right, liability or obligation. We are concerned with powers of the President
under Art. 3 66 (22). What is in dispute is the true scope of the power of the
President under Art. 366(22). That dispute does not fall within Art.
363.
187 Power is not the same thing as right.
Power is an authority whereas a right in the context in which it is used in
Art.
363, signifies property. The fact that the
court's decision about the scope of the power of the President under Art.
366(22) may incidentally bear on certain
rights does not make the dispute, a dispute relating to any right accruing
under any provision of the Constitution. A dispute as regards the
interpretation of a provision of the Constitution is not a dispute within the
contemplation of the second part of Art. 363 as it is not a dispute in respect
of any right, liability or obligation. The contention of the petitioners is that
the impugned orders are ultra vires the powers of the President, hence null and
void. Such a dispute does not come within Art. 363.
It cannot be said that Art. 366(22) is a
provision relating to Merger Agreements and Covenants. The word 'relating to' is
a word of wide import but in the context in which it is used in Art. 363 it
must receive a narrower meaning otherwise all rights accruing or liabilities
and obligations arising under one of other of the provisions of the
Constitution to the former Rulers of Indian States as well as to their subjects
has to be held to come within the mischief of Art. 363 because they became
Indian citizens as a result of the merger of the Indian States in the Dominion
of India in pursuance of Merger Agreements. Nothing so startling could have
been intended by the Constituent Assembly. If it is otherwise, the life,
liberty and property of that section of our citizens would be under the mercy
of our Government because if they complain against any high handedness on the
part of the Government, the Government can seek shelter under Art. 36. The word
'relating' in Art. 363, in my judgment means "to bring into relation"
or "establish relation between". In other words the provision of the
Constitution in question must be linked with the Merger Agreements or Covenants
directly and immediately. It must have no independent existence. That is not
the position under Art. 366(22). It is an independent provision. It has nothing
to do with the Agreements and Covenants. It does not take any strength from the
Covenants and Agreements. The power to recognise the Rulers is a new power
conferred on the President by the Constitution. There was no such power under
the Agreements and Covenants. Between 1947 and 25th of January, 1950 there was
no question of recognising the Rulers of Indian States.
In respect of several of the Indian States,
the Dominion of India had no right to decide the question of successorship.
The provision in the Merger Agreements that
succession will be according to law and custom is merely a statement of the
legal position. The same cannot be considered as a part of the 13-L744 Sup
CI/71 188 Agreement. The reference to Agreements and Covenants through Art. 291
is a convenient drafting device. Even if all the Agreements and the Covenants
are abrogated the provision will stand intact.
Mr. Mohan Kumaramangalam, appearing on behalf
of the respondent contended that Arts. 291, 362 and 363 should be considered as
one group of Arts. which group together relates to Agreements and Covenants;
Art. 3 66 (22) was enacted to effectuate Arts. 291 and 362; Articles 291 and
362 are related to Agreements and Covenants; therefore Art.
366(22) must also be held to be related to
Agreements and Covenants. I have earlier considered the meaning of the word
'relating' in Art. 363. Further I have held that Art.
291 is not related to Art. 363 as it not
linked with the Agreements and Covenants; it is an independent provision. I
have also held that the definition of "Ruler" in Art.
366(22) is not merely for the purpose of Art.
291 and Art.
362 but also for the purpose of supplying
contents for the legislative ,entry 34 of of List I of Sch. VII of the
Constitution. Hence the group relation theory ingenuously advanced by Mr. Mohan
Kumaramangalam cannot be accepted.
Art. 363 speaks of "any provision of the
Constitution relating" to Agreement and Covenants. If the contention of
Mr. Mohan Kumaramangalam is analysed, it means that at Art.
366(22) is related to the Agreements and
Covenants through Art. 2912 and 362. In other words that Art. is a relation of
the relations of the Agreements and Covenants. That is the type or relationship
contemplated by Art. 363. That article contemplates direct relationship between
the concerned articles and the Agreements and Covenants. The further contention
of Mr. Mohan Kumaramangalam that in finding out whether an article is related
to Agreements and Covenants, we should look to its origin or genesis, is not
correct. If it is otherwise it must be held that all the articles of the
Constitution in so far as hey deal with the former Rulers of Indian States and
their subjects are concerned are related to Agreements and Covenants as they
had their origin or genesis in the Agreements and Covenants. If that is so Art.
363 becomes all pervasive. We have earlier noticed the far reaching
implications of such conclusion.
The petitioners contend that the plea of the
respondent that Art. 291 does not confer a legal right on the Rulers to get
privy purses cannot be considered as raising a genuine dispute and that
contention is a mere manoeuvre to oust the jurisdiction of this Court and hence
the same cannot be considered as dispute within Art. 363. According to the
petitioner the said plea of the respondent is a mere pretence and not a dispute
because dispute in law means a triable issue and not an assertion which is ex189
facie untenable. It is not necessary to examine these contentions.
The basic issue arising for decision in these
cases is of far greater significance than it appears at first sight.
The question whether the Rulers can be
derecognised by the President is of secondary importance. What is of utmost
importance for the future of our democracy is whether the executive in this
country can flout the mandates of the Constitution and set at night legislative
enactments at its discretion. If it is held that it can then our hitherto held
assumption that in this country we are ruled by laws and not by men must be
given up as erroneous.
Before, proceeding to consider the decisions
relied on by the learned Attorney General and Mr. Kumaramangalam in support of
their contention that the disputes with which we are concerned in these cases
are disputes falling within the ambit of Art. 363, it is necessary to mention
at the very outset that the question whether the orders similar to the impugned
orders are within the powers of the President under Art. 366(22) did never come
before these Court for decision.
No such orders had been passed by the
President in the past.
There was just one derecognition in the past
i.e. that of the former Ruler of Baroda. That matter did, not come before
courts. Hence there was no occasion for this Court or for that matter any court
in this country to consider the scope of Art. 366(22). The observations made by
this Court in Rajendra Singh's case (supra) had been considered by me earlier.
Even the scope of Art. 291 had not directly arisen for consideration in any of
the decisions of this Court. It is true that there are a few observations in
some of the decisions to which I shall presently refer about the nature of the
right guaranteed under that Art. 291 and the impact of Art. 363 on that right.
Let me now consider the decisions relied on
by the learned Attorney General. The first decision relied on by him is State
of Seraikella v. Union of India and anr. etc.(1).
Therein certain States which had acceded to
the Dominion of India and which had merged in the Province of Bihar and
administered as part of that Province instituted suits in the Federal Court of
India 'before the 26th January 1950 for a declaration that various orders under
which States came to be administered as part of Bihar and the laws under which
those orders were made were ultra vires and void and the Province of Bihar had
accordingly no authority to carry on the administration of the States. Those
suits stood transferred to the Supreme Court of India under Art. 374(2) of the
Constitution after the Constitution camping force.
(1) [1951] S.C.R.474 190 In those suits the
principal question that fell for decision was whether the dispute as regards
the validity of the merger could be gone into by this Court in view of Art. 363
of the Constitution. This Court held that as the suits were really to enforce
the plaintiffs' right under the Instruments of accession and the dispute
between the parties really arose out of those instruments, in view of Art.
363(1) is court had no jurisdiction to hear
the suits. The principal controversy in that case came squarely, within the
ambit of the first part of Art. 363(1). Hence that decision is not relevant for
our present purpose.
The next case referred to is Visweshwar Rao
v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1). Therein the dispute was about the validity
,of some of the Provisions of the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietory
Rights (Estates Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act (1 of 1951). One of the
contentions advanced on behalf of the petitioner in that case was that by the
terms of the Merger Agreement, the properties concerned in that case were
declared as the, petitioner's private properties and were protected from State
legislation by the guarantee given under Art. 363 of the Constitution and hence
the impugned Act was bad as that contravenes the provisions of that Art. The
Court rejected that contention with these observations :
"It is true that by the covenant of
merger the properties of the petitioner became his private properties as
distinguished from properties of the State but in respect of them he is in no
better position than any other owner possessing private property. Article 362
does not prohibit the acquisition of properties declared as private properties
by the covenant of merger and does not guarantee their perpetual existence. The
guarantee contained in the article is of a limited extent only. It assures that
the, Rulers properties declared as their private properties will not be claimed
as State properties. The guarantee has no greater scope than this. That
guarantee has been fully respected by the impugned statute, as it treats those
properties as their private properties and seeks to acquire them on that
assumption. Moreover it seems to me that in view of the comprehensive language
of article 363 this issue is not justiciable." From this it is clear that
the decision in question does not bear on the points in controversy in these
cases.
The learned Attorney-General next relied on
the decision in Sri Sudhansu Shekhar Singh Deo v. The State of Orissa and (1)
[1962] S.C.R. 1020.
191 Anr.(1). Therein a former Ruler of an
Indian State challenged the levy of agricultural income-tax on his agricultural
properties under the Orissa Agricultural Income-Tax Act, 1947 (Orissa Act 24 of
1947). He contended that in view of the guarantees given to him under cls. (4)
and (5) of the merger agreement entered into between him and the Dominion of
India, no agricultural income-tax can be levied on the income from his private
agricultural properties. That contention was repelled by this Court holding
that the privileges granted under cls. (4) and (5) of the Agreements of Merger
were his personal privileges as an ex-Ruler and those privileges did not extend
to his private properties and that the claim made by him of immunity from
taxation relying upon the Agreement of Merger was not justiciable. The ratio of
that decision is of no assistance in these cases. But the learned
Attorney-General relied on the observations found at pp. 785 and 786 of the
Report. Those observations are :
"Even though Art. 362 is not restricted
in its recommendation to agreements relating to the privy purse and covers all
agreements and covenants entered into by the Rulers of Indian States before the
commencement of the Constitution whereby the personal rights, privileges and
dignities of the Ruler of an Indian State were guaranteed, it does not import any
legal obligation enforceable at the instance of the erstwhile Ruler of a former
Indian State. If, despite the recommendation that due regard shall be had to
the guarantee or assurance given under the covenant or agreement, the
Parliament or the Legislature of a State makes laws inconsistent with the
personal rights, privileges and dignities of the Ruler of an Indian State the
exercise of the legislative authority cannot, relying upon the agreement or
covenant, be questioned in any court and that is so expressly provided by Art.
363 of the Constitution." The only remark in the above observation
relevant for the purpose of the present cases is : "Even though Art. 362
is not restricted in its recommendation to agreements relating to the privy purse"
thereby meaning that guarantee as regards the privy purse also comes within the
scope of Art.
362. This is a casual remark. In that case
the Court had no occasion to consider the scope of Art. 291 or Art. 362.
The decision of this Court in ('H. H. The
Maharana Sahib Shri Bhagwat Singh Bahadur of Udaipur v. State of Rajasthan and
Ors., referred to by the learned Attorney-General during the (1) [1961] 1,
S.C.R. 779 (1) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 1.
192 course of his arguments does not in the
least bear on the point under consideration. Therein Shah, J. speaking for the
Court merely set out the arguments of the parties as to the scope of Arts. 291,
362 and 363 but declined to go into them as those Arts had not been relied on
in the High Court.
The next decision relied on by the learned
Attorney-General is the decision of this Court in State of Gujarat v. Vora
Fiddali Badruddin Mitniberwala(1). The material facts of that case were that
the Ruler of the, State of Sant had issued a Tharao dated 12th March, 1948
granting full right and authority to the jagirdars over the forest in their
respective villages. Pursuant to the agreement dated March 19, 1948 the. State
of Sant merged with the Dominion of India. At the time of the merger, it was
expressly agreed that no order passed or action taken by the Maharana before
the day of April 1, 1948 would be questioned but after the merger the
Government of Bombay in which province the former State of Sant had merged in
consultation with the Government of India cancelled the Tharao in question
holding that it was not a bona fide grant. The jagirdars challenged the
validity of that order and in support of their case they relied on the relevant
clauses in the Merger Agreement.
This Court held that the guarantees given
under the Merger Agreements cannot be relied on by the Municipal Courts in view
of Art. 363.
The last case relied on by the learned
Attorney-General is Nawab Usmanali Khan v. Sagermal (2 ). In that case a
creditor of a former Ruler sought to attach the privy purse payable to the Ruler
under Art. 291. The Ruler objected to the same on the ground that attachment is
invalid in view of cl. (g) to the Proviso of s.60(1), C.P.C, which provision
says that political pensions are not liable to be attached.
The word "pension" in s.60(1) (g)
implies periodical payment of money by the Government to the pensioners-see
Nawab Bahadur of Murshidabad v. Karnani Industrial Bank Ltd. (3).
In Bishambhar Nath v. Nawab Imdad Ali
Khan(4), Lord Fatson observed "A pension which the Government of India has
given a guarantee that it will pay, be a treaty obligation contracted with
another sovereign power, appears to their Lordships to be, in the strictest
sense a political pension. The obligation to pay as well as the actual payment
of the pension, must in such circumstances, be ascribed to reasons of State
Policy.
(1) [1964] 6, S.C.R. 461 (2) [1965] 3, S.C.R.
201.
(3) [58] 1. A. 215;
(4) [1890] L.A. XVII 18.
193 Relying on these decisions and taking
into consideration the nature of the liability in relation to the payment 'of
privy purse, this Court held that Privy Purse is a political pension and as
such, the same is not liable to be attached.
This, in short is the ratio of the decision.
If the decision had said nothing more it would not have advanced the case of
the respondent. But in the course of the judgment Bachawat J. who spoke for the
Court after summarising Arts. 291, 362 and 363 observed as follows "On the
coming into force of the Constitution of India the guarantee for the payment of
periodical sums, as privy purse is continued by Art. 291 of the Constitution
but it’s essential political character is preserved by Art. 363 of the
Constitution, and the obligation under this guarantee cannot be enforced in any
municipal court. Moreover, if the President refuses to recognise the person by
whom the covenant was entered into as the Ruler of the State, he would not be
entitled to the amount payable as privy purse under Art. 291. Now, the.
periodical payment of money by the Government ,to a Ruler of a former Indian
State as privy purse on political considerations and under political sanctions
and not under a right legally enforceable in any municipal court is strictly a
political pension within the meaning of s.60(1) (g) of the Code of Civil
Procedure." But these observations are obiter. The learned judges in that
case had no occasion to consider nor did they go into the scope of Art. 291 or
Art. 363. Every observation of this Court is no doubt, entitled to weight but
an obiter, cannot take the place of the ratio.
Judges are not oracles. In the very nature of
things, it is not possible to give the same attention to incidental matters as
is given to the actual issues arising for decision. Further much depends on the
way the case is presented to them.
In the State of Orissa v. Sudhansu Sekhar
Misra and Ors.(1) dealing with the question as to the importance to be attached
to the observations found in the judgments of this Court. this is what this
Court observed "A decision is only an authority for what it actually
decides. What is of the essence in a decision is its ratio and not every
observation found therein nor what logically follows from the various
observations made in it. On this topic this is what Early of Halsbury LC said
in Quinn v. Leathem (1901) A.C 495 :
"Now before discussing the case of Allen
v. Flood 1898) A:C.1 and what was decided therein, there are (1) [1968] 2,
S.C.R. 154.
194 two observations of a general character
which I wish to make, and one is to repeat what I have very often said before;
that every judgment must be read as applicable to the particular facts proved
or assumed to be proved, since the generality of the expressions which may be
found there are not intended to be expositions of the whole law, but governed
and qualified by the particular facts of the case in which such expressions are
to be found. The other is that a case is only an authority for what it actually
decides. I entirely deny that it can be quoted for a proposition that may seem
to follow logically from it. Such a mode of reasoning assumes that the law is
necessarily a logical code, whereas every lawyer must acknowledge that the law
is not always logical at all." It is not a protable task to extract a
sentence here and there from a judgment and to build upon it.
In my opinion none of the questions of law
arising for decision excepting that relating to the petitioners' right to move
this Court under Art. 32 is res Integra.
The only question remaining for consideration
is whether the petitioners have been able to establish any construction of
their fundamental rights in order to entitle them to move this Court under Art.
32. This question need not detain us for long. The petitioners have complained
that the rights under Arts. 14, 19, 21 and 31 have been contravened. As I am
satisfied that the rights under Arts. 31 and 19 (1) (f) have been contravened
it is not necessary to examine the alleged contravention of other rights.
I have earlier come to the conclusion that
the right to get the privy purse under Art. 291 is a legal right. From that it
follows that it is a right enforceable through the courts of law. Thai right is
undoubtedly a property. A right to receive cash grants annually has been
considered by this Court to be a property-see State of M.P. v. Ranojirao Shide
and Anr(1). Even if it is considered as a pension as the same is payable under
law namely Art. 291, the same is property-see Madhaorao Phalke v. State of
Madhya Bharat(2).
We have also earlier seen that certain
benefits have been conferred on the Rulers under the Wealth Tax Act. As a
result of the impugned orders, all those benefits are purported to have (1)
[1968] 3, S.C.R. 489 (2) (1961) 1, S.C.R. 957 195 been taken away. The denial
of those benefits which had been afforded to the Rulers under law is again a
contravention of the petitioners' fundamental right to property. It was
conceded by the learned Attorney General that an illegal deprivation of any
pecuniary benefit to which a person is entitled under any law is. a deprivation
of his fundamental right. In view of this concession it is not necessary to
refer to decided cases.
For the reasons mentioned above, I allow
these petitions with costs, quash the impugned orders which means that the
status quo ante is restored. The declaration asked for in relief No. 2 is
unnecessary. There is no need at present to go into the, other reliefs asked
for.
Ray, J. These are eight petitions. The
petitioners are described as Rulers of Gwalior, Udaipur, Nabha, Nalagarh,
Kutch, Dhrangadhra, Patna and Benaras.
On 6 September, 1970 in exercise of the
powers vested in the President under Article 366(22) of the Constitution, the
President directed that with effect from the date of the said order His
Highness Maharajdhiraja Madhav Rao Jiwaji Rao Scindia Bahadur do cease to be
recognised as a Ruler of Gwalior.
Similar orders were made by the President in
regard to the other seven petitioners.
All the petitions are in substance the same.
It will not, therefore, be necessary to refer to all the petitions separately.
The case of the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 376 of 1970 can be arbitrary,
malafide and a fraud on the Constitution.
The petitioner challenges the aforementioned
order (hereinafter referred to as the order) as violative of Articles 14, 19(1)
(f) and 31(1) and (2) of the Constitution. The order is also challenged to be
unconstitutional,. ultra vires, void, inoperative,, arbitrary, malafide and a
fraud on the Constitution.
The grounds for challenge alleged in the
petition are these First, the privy purses have been guaranteed under Merger
Agreements and Covenants. Merger Agreements and Covenants are inextricably
linked up with Instrument of Accession.
There pledge to pay privy purses and the
guarantee regarding privileges are inseparable from accession and merger. The
obligation to, pay privy purse and the guarantee regarding privileges cannot be
abolished by an executive order. The whole purpose of the order is to deprive
the petitioner of privy purse and privileges, guaranteed under the Covenants and
Merger Agreements and also guaranteed and asured by Articles 291 and 362 of the
Constitution. The whole object of the order is to override and overrule 196 the
Constitution on the point of Rulers rights, privileges and privy purses after
the rejection of the Constitution (24th Amendment) Bill by the Rajya Sabha.
Secondly, derecognition of all the Rulers en
masse is itself .the clearest possible proof that the whole object is to
abolish the institution of Rulership altogether and the rights and privileges
.attached thereto including the right to privy purse. Under-the Merger Agreements
and Covenants a Ruler is entitled to privy purse, rights and privileges enjoyed
before 15 August, 1947 and succession to the gaddi in accordance with the law
and custom of the family. The Government of India in discharge of the
obligation to ensure the fulfillment of these rights has been recognising
successors to Rulers and paying privy purses to the Rulers and to their
successors. 'The procedure of recognition of the persons, so entitled by the
President for the purpose of Articles 291 and 362 has to be read with the
contractual obligation which still survived between the Union of India and the
Ruler. Once the President has recognised a person who is entitled to receive privy
purse and to be accorded rights and privileges as a Ruler, there can be no
interference with the right to receive privy purse.
Thirdly, there is no substantive provision in
the Constitution .conferring on the President a right to recognise or not to
recognise a Ruler or to withdraw recognition. Once the procedure of recognition
has been exhausted the President becomes functus officio and has no further
authority to withdraw the recognition which he has accorded. In recognising a
Ruler the President has to ,conform to the fact of a certain person being Ruler
or to the fact of succession in accordance with the position under the
Covenants and Merger Agreements and in accordance with law and custom of the
family. Article 366(22) imposes a constitutional duty on the President to
recognise an existing fact in accordance with the provisions of the Covenants
and Merger Agreements and the President has no power or authority independent
of such facts. The President is bound by contractual obligations in the Covenants
and Merger Agreements and by the Constitutional duty imposed upon him to
recognise a person entitled to receive privy purse. The order derecognising
Ruler en masse brings the institution of Rulership to an end. The order is in
contravention of Articles 291, 362, 366(22) and 53(1).
Fourthly, the order violates Article 14,
because it singles out the Rulers for hostile discrimination and deprives them
of their valuable rights to property without compensation and violates solemn
agreements and the express provisions of the Constitution. 'There is deliberate
defiance of the Constitution by wilful repudiation of contractual obligations
against a class of citizens.
197 Fifthly, the right to receive privy purse
and other rights constitutes property within Articles 19 ( 1 ) (f ) and 31 and
the order seeks to deprive the petitioner of his right to privy purse and other
rights in violation of Article 19(1) (f). The right to taxfree privy purse and
other rights are properties of the petitioner and the petitioner is deprived of
the same without authority of law in violation of Article 31(1). The privy
purse is in substance and in reality compensation for the transfer by Rulers of
inter alia their properties and it is not competent to the Government to
abolish the right without compensation in the form of privy purse.
Sixthly, the Rulers, it is alleged, acted on
the faith of the undertakings and guarantee given by the Government of India
regarding privy purses and preservation of Rulership and of personal rights and
privileges. The Rulers acted to their detriment by giving away vast properties.
The Government is, therefore, estopped by the doctrine of promissory estoppel
from refusing to pay the privy purse. A fiduciary duty is cast on the
Government of India to respect and implement the provisions of the Merger
Agreements and the Covenants: The Government is bound by its pledged words to
pay privy purse and to recognise Rulership.
Alternatively, the order leaves the Merger
Agreements and Covenants untouched and the Union is bound to pay privy purse
and to recognise the personal rights and privileges and to discharge all
obligations under the Covenants and Merger Agreements and the Constitution.
Finally, the petitioner alleged that Article
363 does not cover the case of a policy to abolish the institution of Rulership
and rights and privileges and privy purses of Rulers. The questions whether en
masse derecognition of Rulers is ultra vires Article and whether the Government
by executive action can abolish the institution of Rulership and wipe out
Articles 291 and 362 by policy decisions are said to be outside Article 362.
On these allegations in the petition the
petitioner seeks three declarations; First that the order is ultra vires,
secondly, that the petitioner continues to be a Ruler and continues to be
entitled to privy purse and privileges, and thirdly, a. writ 'under Article 32
directing the Government to pay privy purse, recognise Rulership and pay
compensation.
The respondent denies that the petitioner is
legally entitled to privy purse and privileges or that the Government is bound
to pay privy purse and accord the privileges by reason of the Covenants or
Merger Agreements.
The Government denies that the petitioner is
entitled to privy purse or to privileges or that the Government is bound to pay
privy purse or accord privileges under Arti198 cles 291 and 362 respectively.
The Government denies that the alleged obligation to pay privy purse or the
alleged guarantee regarding privileges cannot be abolished by executive order.
The Government denies that independently of Article 366(22) the petitioner is
entitled to privy purse or to privileges. The Government denies that the
President is bound by contractual obligations or constitutional duty to
recognise a person to be entitled to privy purse. The Government denies that
the Government has no right to refuse to pay privy purse or to derecognise
Rulers. The Government denies that the order violates Articles 19 and 31 or
that the petitioner has been deprived of privy purse or privileges because of
the grounds alleged. The Government denies that Article 366(22) imposes any
duty on the President to recognise any existing fact in accordance with the
Covenants or that any existing Ruler is an existing fact for recognition.
The Government denies that the order is ultra
vires or there is any institution of Rulership. Finally, the Government denies
that derecognition is outside Article 363 or that questions of abolition of
Rulership or wiping out Articles 291 and 362 are outside Article 363.
The Attorney General raised the plea of the
bar of jurisdiction of this Court under Article 363 at the threshold. Article
363 is as follows :
"363. (1) Notwithstanding anything in
this Constitution but subject to the provisions of Article 143, neither the
Supreme Court nor any other court shall have jurisdiction in any dispute
arising out of any provision of a treaty agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad
or other similar instrument which was entered into or executed before the
commencement of this Constitution by any Ruler of an Indian State and to which
the Government of the Dominion of India or any of its predessor Governments was
a party and which has or has been continued in operation after such
commencement or in any dispute in respect of any right accruing under or any
liability or obligation arising out of any of the provisions of this
Constitution relating to any such treaty,, agreement, covenant, engagement,
sanad or other similar instrument.
(2) In this Article(a) "Indian State
means any territory recognised before the commencement of this Constitution by
His Majesty or the Government of the Dominion of India as being such a State;
and 199 (b) "Ruler" includes the Prince, Chief or other person
recognised before such commencement by His Majesty or the Government of the
Dominion of India as the Ruler of any Indian State".
The first bar is in any dispute arising out
of any provision of a treaty, agreement, covenant entered into before the
commencement of the Constitution and which has continued in operation after
such commencement. The second bar is in any dispute in respect of any right
accruing under or any liability or obligation arising out of any provision of
the Constitution relating to any treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad
and other similar instruments.
It is, therefore, vitally necessary to
ascertain first whether there are disputes; secondly, as to what those disputes
are; and, thirdly, whether the disputes fall within Article 363.
The reason why I referred to the rival
allegations is to indicate the nature and character of disputes. Mr. Palkhivala
on behalf of the petitioner contended that there was no dispute as to privy
purse or to recognition of a Ruler and the only contention was that the order
of the President was a nullity. It is indisputable that no one comes to a court
of law unless disputes have arisen. When the petitioner alleges that the order
is a nullity and the Government alleges that the order is valid a dispute
arises at once.
Mr. Palkhivala contended that the first limb
of Article 363 was clearly not applicable because there is no dispute arising
out of any Covenant or Merger Agreement and the bar under the second limb was
not attracted for four reasons.
First, rights, liabilities and obligations
are not to be confused with powers or jurisdiction or limits of legislative or
executive powers or jurisdiction. Any executive or legislative action which
goes beyond the scope of Article 366(22) or violates Article 291 or Article 362
would raise a question as to the limits of executive or legislative competence
and it cannot be said to raise a dispute as to any right, liability or
obligation. It was emphasised that the only dispute is whether the President's
order is a nullity and it is a dispute as to the limits of the President's
jurisdiction and not a dispute in respect of any right, liability or
obligation. Secondly, it was said that Articles 291 and 362 are mandatory
Articles and if the Government chose to raise disputes about those Articles it
would amount to saying that the Government was disputing the very obligation
enacted by those Articles in the Constitution. Dispute in Article 363 was said
not to cover a dispute the raising of which was expressly prohibited by the
other provisions of the Constitution. Thirdly, any executive action in
violation of Arti200 cles 291 and 362 or beyond the ambit of Article 366 (22)
would be a violation of Articles 53 and 73 of the Constitution and the latter
Articles did not at all relate to Covenants or Merger Agreements. The refusal
to pay privy purse was said to be in viola 4 of Articles 112, 113 and 114.
Again it was said that if a law was passed in violation of Articles 291 or
Article 362 it would be a breach of Articles 245 and 246 which Articles were not
related to Covenants or Merger Agreements at all.
Fourthly,, an executive action which is ultra
vires or mala fide is a nullity and the bar of jurisdiction under Article 363
would apply only where the action is bona fide and cannot apply where the order
is ultra vires and nullity.
Article 363 bars the jurisdiction of all
courts in respect of any dispute covered by the Article. It is seriously
challenged and controverted by the Government that Articles 291 and 362 have
any mandatory character as alleged by the petitioner. It is disputed that the
order is a nullity. It is. equally disputed that there cannot be any dispute as
to rights or liabilities or obligations under the Articles aforesaid. If both
parties say that an order is bona fide there can be no dispute. It is only when
one party alleges the order to be a nullity and the other party affirms the
order to be valid that parties will have a dispute. The petitioner's
contentions bristle with disputes which in the ultimate analysis resolve into
keenly debated disputes as to rights of Rulership and Privy Purse. The dispute
as to jurisdiction of the President under Article 366(22) is not in vacuo but
is a dispute as to rights of recognition of Ruler for the purposes of payment
of Privy Purse and enjoyment of rights and privileges. Mr. Palkhivala submitted
that he did not want any relief as to Privy Purse now and if the petitioner
succeeded in getting a declaration that the order is nullity and if the
Government thereafter did not pay Privy Purse the petitioner would then apply
for that relief. This position indicates beyond any doubt that the heart of the
matter is dispute as to Privy Purse which is stopped by the Order of the
President. The order is for purposes of payment of Privy Purse and that is what
the petitioner is seeking to enforce.
In order to appreciate the true scope and
content of Article 363 it is necessary to find out as to why this Article and
Articles 291, 362, 366(22) (hereinafter referred to collectively as the allied
Articles) found place in the Constitution. These allied Articles deal with
privy purses, princely privileges guaranteed under the Covenants and Merger
Agreements entered into by Rulers of Indian States and recognition of Rulers by
the President under Article 366(22). The roots of these Articles lie deep in
the past.
Therefore, the history and chronicle of
events will have to be told. The transition from the British Rule to the Indian
201 Independence and the establishment of the Republic of our country is a
great constitutional development. The Constitution which was evolved
represented the national ethos forged by the aims and aspirations of the,
people throughout the length and breadth of our country. A great problem which
awaited solution on the eve of our independence was the relation between our
country and the Indian States. The British Cabinet Mission came to India in the
month of March, 1946. The Mission came to bring about a change in the British
policy towards India. Imperialism was crumbling after the Second World War. The
Cabinet Mission in no uncertain terms said that when India was going to be an
independent country it was not only necessary but also desirable that the
Indian States should combine with free India for security, stability and
solidarity. The Rulers of Indian States also realised the importance of such a
measure in an advised age when the leaders of our country impressed upon the
Rulers the wisdom. of such a course of action to avert the upheaval and upsurge
of the people in the Indian States which were also tottering with the decline
of British imperialism. It is in this background that the Cabinet Mission
declared in May, 1946 that paramountcy of the British Crown which provided the
basis of relations between British India and the Rulers of Indian States could
neither be retained by the British Crown nor transferred to the new Government
of India. The paramount power in British India was derived from the Royal
Prerogative. The rights which the paramount power claimed in exercise of the
functions of the Crown in relation to the State covered both external and
internal matters in the States. The Indian States had no international status.
The paramount power under the British Regime recognised succession to the gaddi
and settled disputes as to succession and imposed the duty of loyalty to the
Crown. The Indian States Committee in 1927 had expressed the view that
'paramountcy must remain paramount, it must fulfil its obligations, defining or
adapting itself according to the shifting necessities of the time and the
progressive development of the States". This was the essence of the
doctrine of paramountcy in British India.
Paramountcy could not be defined. It was an
imperialist imposition on the Rulers of Indian States.
The Cabinet Mission issued a Memorandum dated
12 May, 1946 and announced a plan on 16 May, 1946 later on known as the Cabinet
Mission Plan. In the memorandum the Cabinet Mission affirmed that the rights of
the Indian States which flowed from their relations with the British Crown
would no longer exist when the British would leave India and that the rights
surrendered by the States to the paramount power would revert to these States.
The Cabinet Mission Plan was a statement embodying suggestions 202 and
recommendation towards the speedy setting up of a new Constitution for India.
Referring to the States, the Cabinet Mission Plan said that with the attainment
of the Independence of our country, the relationship which had existed between
the States and the British Crown would no longer be possible and paramountcy
,could neither be retained by the British nor transferred to the new
Government. The Plan further said that the Rulers had given assurances that
they were ready and willing to cooperate in the new development of India. On 3
June, 1947 the British Government superseded the Cabinet Mission Plan in so far
as it referred to the States and made it clear that the decisions announced
related only to British India and the British policy towards Indian States
contained in the Cabinet Mission memorandum of 12 May, 1946 remained unchanged.
As a prelude to the transfer of power from
the British Crown to our country the Government of India decided to set up a
Department called the States Department to conduct their relations with the
States in matters of common concern. On 5 July, 1947 Sardar Patel defined the
policy of the Government of India by stating that "the people of India
were knit together by bonds of blood and feeling no less than of
self-interest" and "no impassable barriers could be set up between
us" and he said that the alternative to cooperation was anarchy and chaos.
There was special meeting of the Rulers on 25 July, 1947. The then Crown representative
Lord Mountbatten in the course of his address to the Rulers advised them to
accede to the appropriate Dominion in regard to three subjects of Defence,
External Affairs and Communications and assured them that their accession on
these subjects would involve no financial liability and in other matters there
would be no encroachment on their internal sovereignty. Barring three States
the other Indian States acceded to the Dominion of India by 15 August, 1947.
The Indian Independence Act was to come into
existence on '15 August, 1947. Section 7 of the Indian Independence Act, 1947
provided that with the lapse of suzerainty of the Crown over Indian States all
treaties and agreements between the Crown and the Rulers of Indian States, all
functions exercisable by the Crown with respect to India in States, all
obligations of the Crown towards Indian States or Rulers thereof and all
powers, rights, authority or jurisdiction exercisable by the Crown on that date
in or in relation to Indian States by treaty, grant, usage, suzerainty or
otherwise would also lapse. The proviso to section 7 of the Indian Independence
Act, 1947 was that notwithstanding the lapse of suzerainty and lapse of
treaties, effect shall, as nearly as might 'be, continued to be given to the
provisions of any such agreement 203 referred to in section 7 (b) of the Act
which related to customs. transit, communications, posts and telegraphs or
other like matters until the provisions in question were denounced by the Ruler
of the Indian State or by the Dominion or Province or were superseded by
subsequent agreements.
The Instruments of Accession executed by the
Rulers of Indian States declared accession to the Dominion of India on three
subjects, viz., Defence, External Affairs and Communications. In the
Instruments of Accession the Rulers provided that nothing in the instrument wag
to be deemed to commit the Ruler in any way to acceptance of any future
Constitution of India or to fetter a Ruler's discretion to enter into
arrangements with the Government of India under any such future Constitution.
The Instrument concluded by stating that nothing in the Instrument would affect
the continuance of the Ruler's sovereignty in and over the State or save as
provided by or under the Instrument, the exercise of any powers, authority and
rights then enjoyed by him as a Ruler of the State or the validity of any law
then in force in his State.
The Instrument of Accession was followed by
Stand Still Agreement. The Stand Still Agreement between the Ruler and the
Dominion of India provided that until new agreements were made all agreements
and administrative arrangements as to matters of common concern then existing
between the Crown and the Indian States should, in so far as might be
appropriate, continue as between the Dominion of India or as the case might be,
the part thereof, and the State. In a Schedule were enumerated the various
matters of common concern. The important matters were, inter-alia, Air
communications, Arms and equipment, Currency and coinage Customs, Indian States
Forces, External Affairs, Extradition, Import and Export Control, Irrigation
and Electric Power, Motor vehicles, National Highways, Posts, Telegraphs and
Telephones, Railways, Salt, Central Excises and 'Wireless.
The pattern of integration of Indian States
was not uniform in all cases. There were 562 Indian States whereof 216 merged
in Provinces, 61 were taken over as centrally administered areas and 275
integrated in different Unions of States. The Merger Agreements were entered
into by the Rulers with the Dominion of India. The two important clauses in the
Merger Agreements were one whereby the Ruler, was to be entitled to receive
from the revenues of the State annually for his privy purse the sum mentioned
therein free of taxes and the other whereby the Dominion Government guaranteed
succession according to law and custom to the gaddi of the State and to the
Ruler's personal rights, 14L744supCI/71 204 privileges,, dignities and titles.
These two principal clauses are to be found in all Merger Agreements. There
were differences in the Merger Agreements as to the amount of privy purse and
in some cases as to the rights of successors to Rulers with regard to privy
purses. The Rulers of Centrally merged States also entered into similar
agreements with the Dominion of India. Those agreements also had two similar
principal clauses for privy purse the sum mentioned free of taxes and
guaranteed succession according to law and custom to the gaddi of the State and
to the Ruler's personal rights, privileges, dignities and titles. The third
type of integration was the formation of a Union of States whereby certain
States described as the Covenanting States entered-into a Union of States with
a common executive, legislative and judiciary. These Covenants provided for a
Council of Rulers with the Rajpramukh as the President of the Council. These
Covenants also had similar provisions with regard to privy purses and
succession. The Ruler of each Covenanting State was to be entitled to receive
annually from the revenues of the United State for his privy purse, the amount
mentioned free of all taxes. The succession according to law and custom to the
gaddi of each Covenanting State and to the personal rights, privileges,
dignities and titles to the Rulers was guaranteed. The Government of India
concurred in the Covenants and guaranteed all the provisions. The Covenant for
the United State of Madhya Bharat came into existence in the month of April,
1948. The other Unions also came into existence near about the same time. The
Merger Agreements came into existence near about the months of April and May,
1948.
In the month of September, 1948 the Rulers of
Covenanting States executed revised Instruments of Accession, and these were
signed by the Rajpramukhs of the different Unions of States. These Unions
accepted all matters enumerated in List I and List III of the Seventh Schedule
of the Government of India Act, 1935 as matters in respect of which the
Dominion Legislature might make laws for the Union of States other than items
relating to any tax or duty in the territories of the United State. These
Revised Instruments of Accession were accepted by the Governor-General on
behalf of the Dominion of India. In the month of November, 1948 the Unions of
States by their Rajpramukhs issued proclamations accepting the Constitution of
India.
The Government of India Act, 1935 was amended
in the year 1947 to effect necessary changes on the passing of the Indian
Independence Act, 1947. Sections 5 and 6 of the Government of India Act, 1935
as amended in 1947 provided first for the accession of Indian States to the
Dominion and secondly that an Indian State was to 'be deemed to have acceded to
the Dominion if the Governor-General signified his acceptance of an instrument
of 205 accession making a declaration in terms of section 6 thereof. Accession
was to be subject to the terms of the instrument. It has already been noticed
earlier that all Rulers of Indian States executed Instruments of Accession but
some Indian States thereafter merged with the Governors' Provinces and some
were centrally administered areas after merger and then formed Unions of
States.
It should be noticed that the Government
India Act, 1935 did not provide for any Merger Agreement. These Merger Agreements
in the case of Provincially merged and Centrally merged States did not have any
legal basis and sanction under the Government of India Act, 1935. The Extra
Provincial Jurisdiction Act 'was therefore passed in the year 1947 giving power
to the Central Government to exercise extra provincial jurisdiction over a
Provincially merged or a Centrally merged State only if the Centre had by
treaty, agreement, acquired full and exclusive authority and jurisdiction and
power for and in relation to the governance of the State. The administration of
the merged Indian States could not be done either under the Government of India
Act, 1935 or the Instrument of Accession. The Extra Provincial Jurisdiction
Act, 1947 was passed for exercising powers of administration and legislation in
regard to provincially merged and centrally merged States. The Extra Provincial
Jurisdiction Act was really a half way house between complete separateness and
full integration. A law passed by the Dominion Parliament did not automatically
apply to the merged States but had to be made applicable by a notification
under the Extra Provincial Jurisdiction Act, 1947. That is why sections 290A
and 290B were inserted by the Government of India Act Amendment Act, 1949 into
the Government of India Act, 1935 for effecting integration of merged States.
Section 290A of the Government of India Act,
1935 provided for administration of certain Acceding States as Chief
Commissioners' Provinces or as part of a Governor's or Chief Commissioner's
Province. Section 290B provided for administration of areas included within a
Governor's Province or a Chief Commissioner's Province by an Acceding State.
Under the said section 290A there came into existence the States Merger
(Governors' Provinces) Order, 1949 issued on 27 July, 1949. This order was
applied to the provincially merged States with effect from 1 August, 1949.
Under the States Merger (Governors'
Provinces) Order, 1949 the provincially merged States were to, be administered
in all respects as if they formed part of the absorbing Provinces and all laws
including orders made under the Extra Provincial Jurisdiction Act, 1947 were to
continue in force until repealed or modified. Under the States Merger Order,
1949 206 provision was made for representation of the merged States in the
Legislature of the absorbing Province,, the apportionment of assets and
liabilities as between the Centre and the Provinces and the institution of
suits and other proceedings against the Government and the continuance of
pending proceedings. A similar order known as the States' Merger (Chief
Commissioners' Provinces) Order 1949 was made applicable to the centrally
merged States with effect from 1 August, 1949. The provisions of the States'
Merger (Chief Commissioners' Provinces) Order, 1949 were simil ar to the States
Merger (Governors' Provinces) Order, 1949. With the issue of the States Merger
(Government Provinces) and 'States Merger (Chief Commissioners' Provinces)
Orders, 1949 the position of the provincially merged States became to all
intents and purposes, the same as that of the provinces. Similar progress was
also made in the direction of improving the administrative machinery of the
Chief Commissioner's Provinces which :assimilated the centrally merged States.
Mr. Palkhivala on behalf of the petitioner
contended that the developments and integration of Indian States on the basis
of the Instruments of Accession and the Covenants and Merger Agreements were
constitutional developments and provided constitutional obligations. The
Attorney General on the other hand rightly contended that the entire
relationship of the Dominion of India vis-a-vis the Indian States was in
the-domain of Acts of State and the Instruments, Merger Agreements and
Covenants did not have any constitutional sanction and obligation and were
totally unenforceable in municipal courts. The British Crown as Sovereign State
dealt with the Indian States and either conquered or annexed their territories
or Rulers of these States ceded their territors or some Rulers entered into
alliances with the British ,Crown. Such action of the British Crown was held by
long series ,of decisions to be an Act of State and treaties and stipulations
arising out of Acts of State could not be enforced in municipal courts.
This Court has in several decisions held that
Covenants and Merger Agreements with the Indian States are Acts of State and
not enforceable under municipal law. L see State of.Seraikella v.Union of India
& Anr.(1) Virendra Singh & Ors. v. The State of Uttar Pradesh (2 ) M/s.
Dalmia Dadri Cement Co. Ltd. v. 'The Commissioner of Income-tax (3) , The State
of Saurashtra v. Memon Haji Ismail Haji (4), State of Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali
Badruddin Mithibarwala(5) and Nawab Usmanali Khan v. Sagar. mal(61).
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 474. (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R.
415.
(3) [1959] S.C.R. 729. (4) [1960] 1 S.C.R.
537.
(5) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 416. (6) [1965] 3 S.C.R.
201.
207 Mr.Palkhivala contended that on the
accession of Indian States there could be no Act of State between the Dominion
of India and the Rulers who acceded to the Dominion and thereafter between the
Republic of India and the Rulers who were citizens. This argument is also
fallacious. This Court in the same case, State of Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali
Badruddin Mithibarwala(1) "interpreted the integration of Indian States
with the Dominion of India as an Act of State and has applied the law relating
to an Act of State as laid down by the Privy Council in a long series of cases.
.......... The Act of State comes to an end only when the new sovereign
recognises either expressly or impliedly the rights of the: alliens.........
This Court further said "we are not concerned with the succession of India
from the British Crown but with State: succession between Sant State and India
and there was no second succession in 1950.
Whatever had happened had already happened in
1948, when Sant State merged with the Dominion of India. The Act of State which
began in 1948 could continue uninterrupted even beyond 1950 and it did not
lapse or get replaced by another Act of State". In State of Gujarat v.
Vohra Fiddali(1) the citizen claimed right on the basis of a Tharao granted by
the Ruler before the merger. Apart from the fact. that the Government of Bombay
cancelled the right this Court held that the right granted by the Ruler was not
recognised before 1950 and the Constitution gave support to those rights which
were extant on 26 January 1950. Fiddali failed on both the grounds of
recognition and existing law. The Act of State is illustrated by the making of
peace and war, the annexation or cession of territory, the recognition of a new
State or new Government of an old State. Such acts have been held not to form
the basis of action because they form the subject of political action in an Act
of State. 'The sanction of an Act of State is political to all sovereign powers
and that is why municipal courts accepted that position.
It is in this background that the Attorney
General described Article 363 as embodying the concept of paramountcy being
recreated in the form of a constitutional provision excluding interference by
Courts in disputes relating to Instruments of accession,. Covenants and Merger
Agreements.
The Attorney General did not submit that
there was any paramountcy between the Republic and its citizens nor that there
was any doctrine of paramountcy subsisting in our country after 1950 or that it
survived as a constitutional provision. Article 363 and the other allied
Articles really reflect what the makers of the Constitution picked up from the
historical past and inserted in the Constitution. The Constitution provided for
recognition of Rulers by the President. This recognition was necessary because
without it the Rulers could not be paid privy purses or enjoy their rights and
privileges.
(1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 416.
208 These four Articles in the Constitution
appear to be slightly unrealistic or anachronistic in a Republican Constitution
as it deals with citizens and the sovereignty of the people being reposed in
the Republic. The founding fathers inserted these four allied Articles as rich
hangings in a homely house. The real basis for Article 363 was that when the
Constitution recognised the ,guarantee of privy purses and succession to the
gaddi in the Merger Agreements and Covenants it was appreciated that if any
dispute in regard to such agreements or covenants or any dispute as to any
right accruing under or any obligation arising out of any pro-vision of the
Constitution relating to such covenants or agreements were allowed to be
brought in a court of law, the entire political relationship of the Dominion of
India with the Indian States in an aegis of Act of State might be upset and
upturned by such litigation in municipal courts and there would be room for
regret on many courts. If Article 363 were not inserted litigations would have
gone on endlessly as some of the, Orissa Rulers commenced in the State of
Seraikella(1) case to undo the Orissa merger agreements.
The Constitution contemplated political power
of the President to recognise Rulers. If people or disgruntled contenders for
Rulership were allowed to litigate by challenging either the recognition or by
preferring a claim of recognition, the courts would not be capable of
adjudicating these disputes because the character and content of, the
President's power of recognition of Rulers is political and is not limited by
the personal law of succession. Again, if the President withdrew recognition of
a Ruler and the latter came to a court of law it would be equally impossible
for .courts to decide in an area which was consigned to the President as an
inheritance of political power from the domain of Acts of State and privileges
of Paramountcy. That is why Article 363 really embodied the principles of Acts
of State which regulated and guided the rights and obligations under the
covenants or merger agreements by incorporating the doctrine of unenforceability
of covenants or merger agreements coming into existence as Acts of State.
The other reason for insertion of Article 363
was that the rights accruing under or obligations arising out of provisions of
the Constitution relating to covenants or merger agreements were imperfect
rights. A question was posed that if there were rights as to succession, privy
purse and privileges there should be a remedy. In the first place, there are no
legal rights to recognition of Rulership, payment of privy purse and enjoyment
of rights and privileges. Prior to the Constitution, the Rulers of Indian
States could not start proceedings in municipal courts to enforce agreements or
obligations arising out of covenants or merger (1) [1951] S.C.R. 474.
209 agreements because such rights and
obligations were unenforceable on the ground of dealings under Acts of State.
The Constitution gave recognition to
guarantees under covenants and agreements by the allied Articles 291, 363 and
366(22). The Attorney General characterised the payment of privy purse,
enjoyment of rights and privileges and the recognition of Rulership as
imperfect rights and obligations. Whatever rights and obligations are to be
found in the merger agreements and covenants were recognised by the Constitution
in relation to those covenants and agreements. But the Constitution made such
rights unenforceable in a Court of law. That is why these rights and
obligations are called imperfect rights and imperfect obligations. Examples can
be found of such imperfect legal rights when claims are barred by lapse of time
or claims are unenforceable because of lack of registration. These imperfect
rights and obligations are described in Salmond on Jurisprudence, 12 Ed. at
pages 233-234 to be exceptions to the maxim ubi jus ubi remedium because
"the customary union between the rights and the rights of action has been
for some special reasons severed" Salmond warns against confusing
obligatriness with enforceability. It is "because of unenforceability"
that "these rights are sometimes termed imperfect". Take for instance
an ordinary contract of a merchant with the Government. If the contract is not
in compliance with Article 299 it is unenforceable. The merchant has a mere
imperfect right. "The ordinary imperfect right is unenforceable because
some rule of law declares it to be so. One's rights against the State are unenforceable,
not in this legal sense but in the sense that the strength of the law is none
other than the strength of the State and cannot be turned or used against the
State whose strength it is". Imperfect rights are not based on morality.
Many rights are wrecked on the rock of unenforceability. Act of indemnity is
one illustration. Duty is legal, when sanction is attached to its breach.
Sanction means the appointed consequences of disobedience Sanctionless duties
are imperfect obligations. Really speaking imperfect rights and obligations are
what authors of Jurisprudence describe as no claim in the jural opposites of
claim and no claim". A statute barred debt cannot be recovered in a court
of law but if for some reason the debtor pays it he cannot later sue to recover
it. The creditor had no liability but only liberty to pay. Liberty or privilege
begins where duty ends and no right exists.
These imperfect rights are thus in the
category of "no claim" because of lack of legal sanction for
enforcement by the bar of unenforceability laid down in the Constitution.
In our Constitution Article 363 is a positive
Rule of unenforceability of certain rights and obligations. The Constitution is
supreme and the provisions cannot be circumvented. This Court held in the
Seraikella case(1) that Article 363 is a bar in any (1) [1951] S.C.R. 474.
210 dispute relating to covenants and merger
agreements. In State of Gujarat v. Vahra Fiddali(1) this Court held that
Article 363 precluded the municipal courts from considering and adjudicating
upon any right under the Merger Agreement and guarantees were matters for the
political department of the State and were thus outside the jurisdiction of
this Court.
Again, in Usman Ali Khan;s(2) case, this
Court held 'that the privy purse was a political pension and the payment was in
relation to covenants and Merger Agreements, and, therefore, Article 363 was a
bar. in a recent decision of this Court in Kunwar Shri Vir Rajendra Singh v.
The Union of India's OrS. (3) it has been held that the recognition of
rulership by the President is not an indicia of property but it entitles the
Rulers to the enjoyment of Privy Purse contemplated in Article 291 and the
personal rights, privileges and dignities mentioned in Article 362 of the
Constitution. It was also held that the recognition of rulership by the
President was an executive and political power and Article 363 constitutes a
bar to interference by courts in a dispute arising by reason of recognition of
rulership.
Mr. Palkhivala submitted that there was no
political power of the President who had only executive power. The words
"political power" denote power belonging to the State,, its government
and policy. The Executive power has the political facet in many cases. To
illustrate the exercise of rights, authority and jurisdiction by virtue of any
treaty or agreement (Article 73); Foreign Affairs (Entry 10 in List I; of the
Seventh Schedule) Entering into treaties and agreements with foreign countries
and implementing of treaties, agreements and conventions in foreign countries
(Entry 14 in List I of the Seventh Schedule); War and Peace (Entry 15 in List I
of thE Seventh Schedule) and Foreign jurisdiction (Entry 16 in List I of the
Seventh Schedule):
The power of recognition of Rulership is
political because it is exercised by the President in relation to Prince or
Chief by whom any Covenant or Merger Agreement was entered into and the
necessity for recognition arises from the Covenants and Merger Agreements. It
is a political power because it is not limited only to the law of succession or
'custom. The reasons of State Policy will enter the field.
It is also a political power because it is
not a compulsive power. If the scope of the power permits the President to
recognise some one who is not entitled by law and custom then law and custom
does not control it. By political power is meant that the consideration which
moves the President is a matter on which the Court will find no standard for
resolving, it judicially. "There is no judicial process to adjudicate upon
such political consideration".
(1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 416.
(2) [1965] 3 S.C.R. 201. (3) [1970] 2 S.C.R.
631.
211 Article 363 is a non-obstante clause. It
is a constitutional mandate. The prefatory words in Article, 363
"notwithstanding anything in the Constitution" exclude all other
provisions of the Constitution from being attracted in disputes which fall
within Article 363. There have been decisions of this Court on the meaning of
the words "notwithstanding anything in this Constitution" occurring
in Article 363 and in Article 329. In the State of Seraikella(1) case this
Court held that Article 363 overrides all provisions of the Constitution. In
N.P.
Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer. Namakal
Constitutency & Ors.(2) Article 329 was construed to mean that the
jurisdiction of the High Court under Article 226 to interfere in regard to
rejection of a nomination paper could not be challenged by a writ of certiorari
to quash the proceedings. This Court, observed the difference between the words
"subject to the provisions of this Constitution" occurring in Article
328 and "notwithstanding anything in this Constitution" occurring in
Article 329 and held that the words in Article 328 could not exclude the
jurisdiction of the High Court. The effect of a non-obstante clause was also
considered by this Court in Aswini Kumar Ghosh and Anr.
v. Arabind Bose and Anr.(3). In that case
section 2 of the Supreme Court Advocates Act, 1 provided that notwithstanding
anything contained in the Bar Councils Act, 1926 or in any other law regulating
the conditions, subject to which a person not entered in the roll of Advocates,
of a High Court might be permitted to practise in that High Court every
Advocate of the High Court shall be entitled as of right to practise in any
High Court whether or not he is an Advocate of' that High Court. The petitioner
in that case insisted on the right to practise as an Advocate in the High Court
at Calcutta by virtue of his being an Advocate of the Supreme Court. He made an
application under Article 226. The High Court of Calcutta rejected the
application. There was an appeal as well as a writ petition under Article 32.
This Court observed that the High Court had not correctly approached the
construction of section 2 by enquiring what the provisions were which that
section sought to supersedeand then place upon the section such a construction
as would make the rights conferred by it co-extensive with the disability
imposed by the superseded provisions. This Court observed that first it would
be ascertained as to what the enacting part of the section provides on a fair
construction of the words used according to the natural and ordinary meaning
and the non-obstante clause, was to be understood as operating to set aside as
no longer valid' anything contained in relevant existing laws which were
inconsistent with the new enactment.
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 474.
(3) [1953] S.C.R. 1 (2) [1952]S.C.R. 218.
212 The non-obstante clause must be allowed
to operate with full vigour in its own field. In The Dominion of India and Anr.
v. Shrinbai A. Irani & Anr.(1) section 3
of Ordinance No. 19 of 1946 contained a non-obstante clause with the words
"notwithstanding the expiration of the Defence of India Act, 1939, and the
rules made thereunder, all requisitioned lands shall continue to be subject to
requisition-until the expiry of this Ordinance and the appropriate Government
may use or deal with any requisitioned land in such manner as may appear to it
to be expedient". The non-obstante clause was invoked in support of the
submission that only those orders which would have ceased to be operative and
come to an end on the expiration of the Defence of India Act and the Rules were
the orders which were intended to be continued under section 3 of the
Ordinance. This Court held that although ordinarily there should be a close
approximation between the non-obstante clause and the operative part of the
section, the non-obstante clause need not necessarily and always be
co-extensive with the operative part, so as to have the effect of cutting down
the clear terms of an enactment.
The, non-obstante clause was held not to cut
down the construction and restrict the scope of the operation of the enactment,
but was to be understood to have been incorporated in the enactment by way of
abundant caution and not by way of limiting the ambit and scope of the
operative part of the enactment. The result was that all immoveable properties
which when the Defence of India Act expired were subject to any requisition
effected under the Defence of India Act and Rules thereunder were to continue
to be subject to requisition until the expiry of the Ordinance.
Mr. Palkhivala submitted that the
petitioner's contention that the order of the President was a nullity was not a
dispute within Article 363. The ordinary meaning of dispute is a contention, a
controversy, a difference of opinion, a conflict of claims, and assertion of
right on one side and the denial of it by the other. In Stroud's Judicial
Dictionary it will appear that dispute as to whether a thing is ultra vires is
nonetheless a dispute within an arbitration clause. In United Provinces v.
Governor-General in Council(2) the plaintiff asked for a declaration that
certain, provisions of the Cantonment Act, 1924 were ultra vires. The
,Governor-General in Council denied that the provisions were invalid and
further contended that the dispute was not justiciable before the Court. It was
h.-,Id that section 204 (1 ) of 'the Government of India Act, 1935 conferred
exclusive jurisdiction on the Federal Court in any dispute. between the
Governor-General in Council and any province if and in so far as the dispute
involves any question (whether of law or fact) on which the exist(1) [1955] 1
S.C.R. 206.
(2) [1959] F.C.R. 124 213 ence or extent of a
legal right depends. The law in that case was challenged to be ultra vires. The
plaintiff denied the validity of the law and the respondent asserted its
validity. It was, therefore, a dispute on which the existence of a legal right
depended. In the present case the dispute is whether the President has or has
not the power to make the order impugned in these proceedings'.
The next question Which falls for
consideration is the meaning of the words "right accruing under",
"any liability or obligation arising out of", "any of the
provisions of the Constitution". It is obvious that if any right is said
to accrue under or liability is said to arise out of any provision of the
Constitution, the matter ends there as far as those words are concerned. The
contention' of the petitioner that the President has no power under Article
366(22) to make an order for derecognition is a right asserted by the petitioner
under the provisions of the Constitution and it is also the petitioner's
contention that the President has no right arising out of Article 366(22) not
to make an order of derecognition. It is necessary to have recourse to Article
366(22) and Article 291 to find out the nature of the petitioner's claim, the
extent of the petitioner's right on the one hand and the nature of the order of
the President and the extent of the right of the President on the other.
The most crucial words in Article 363 are
"the provisions of the Constitution relating, to any such treaty,
agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or other similar instruments".
Mr. Palkhivala's contention was that the
order of the President under Article 366(22) did not give rise to a dispute in
respect of a right accruing under the provisions of the Constitution relating
to any agreement or covenant.
Ordinarily, the word "relate" means
to bring a thing or person in relation to another, to connect, establish a
relation between, to have reference to, to be related, having relation to and
to stand in some relation to another thing. This is the dictionary meaning. Mr.
Palkhivala submitted that the provisions of the Constitution, viz., Articles
366(22), 291 and 362 might have reference to the Covenant but were not related
to the Covenant. That is a mere verbal subterfuge because the word relate is
synonymous with the word refer.
When Article 366(22) was introduced in the
Constituent Assembly as will appear from the Constituent Assembly Debates, Vol.
10 it was said that "the form in which the Rulers find recognition in the
new Constitution in no way impairs the democratic set up of the States".
Recognition of a Ruler was necessary for the limited purpose of payment out of
privy purse and it had no other reference. In Maharaja Pravir Chandra Bhanj Deo
Kakatiya 214 v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1) the Ruler of the State of Bastar
contended that he was still a sovereign Ruler and an absolute owner of certain
villages and that the provisions of the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary
Rights Act did not apply to him. The Ruler of Bastar ceded to the Government of
India full and exclusive authority in relation to the governance of the State
and this Court held that the effect of the merger agreement was that a Ruler
ceased to be a Ruler of an Indian State and under Article 366(22) of the
Constitution a Ruler was recognised for the purpose of privy purse guaranteed
under Article 291. In the Dholpur case (supra) the claim to recognition of
Rulership is said to be neither a matter of inheritance nor a matter of descent
by revolution. This power of recognition of Rulership is not traceable to any
statutory authority and it is not a power vested in the executive by virtue of
a statute. This power is political power in the field of paramountcy to which
the Dominion Government and thereafter the Union Government succeeded. Between
the execution of the covenants and the commencement of the Constitution the
Rajpramukh exercised the power of recognition upon political consideration.
(See Umrao Singh Ajit Singh Ji & Anr. v.
Bhagwati Singh Balbir Singh & OrS.,(2).
The Constitution does not mention any right to be recognised nor any obligation
to recognise Ruler. In Article 366(22) which is a definition clause is embedded
only the political power to recognise a Ruler.
Succession to Rulership is not automatic in
the sense that one who claims succession by law or custom is bound to be
recognised. If it were so, the Constitution would have provided. Again, the
words "for the time being" indicate that the recognition is neither
for any fixed duration nor even for the life time of any person nor is, a line
of succession is perpetuated.
The power of recognition of Rulers, existed
during the British days. Between the Indian Independence Act, 1947 and the
coming into effect of the Constitution Rulers were so described in covenants
and agreements which were unenforceable in municipal courts on the ground of
those being Acts of State. It cannot be said that there is any right to Rulership
because the Constitution does not enact that there shall be Rulers or that the
President shall recognise Rulers. Therefore, there is no constitutional mandate
of what was contended by the petitioner to be an institution of Rulership.
There cannot be said to be a legal right to recognition, because the power of
the President to recognise for the time being repels any concept of a legal
right to Rulership. The claim to recognition can only arise from the covenant
or the Constitution. The claim to recognition arises (1)[1961]2S.C.R.501.
(2) A.I. R. 1956 S.C. 15.
215 from the covenants and merger agreements
and not from Article 366(22), because the covenants and merger agreements were
signed by the Rulers and guaranteed by the Government.
Under Article 366(22) it was that Ruler or
his successor who could be recognised. The guarantee regarding succession to
the gaddi according to law and custom is in the covenants and agreements. Such
succession can only mean succession to the Ruler who signed the covenant. When
the covenant guaranteed the succession, it was guarantee of succession to the
Ruler who signed the covenant. Therefore, the obligation to recognise a Ruler
arises only from the covenants and agreements. There is no legal enforceable
right to recognition under the co ant. No legal right to Rulership arises under
Article 366(22)either. If there were legal right, Article 366(22) would have
said that a Ruler means the Prince by whom any covenant was entered into and
who shall be recognised by the President as a Ruler.
The recognition of Rulership does not exist
in splendid isolation. The recognition of Rulership is intended only for the
purpose of Article 291 and Article 362 in relation to covenants and merger
agreements and for no other purpose.
Therefore, Article 366(22) is a necessary and
ancillary provision relating to Articles 291 and 362. Without recognition of
Ruler under Articles 366(22) no effect can be given to payment of privy purse,,
guaranteed in the covenants and agreements, When counsel for the petitioner
submitted that the order of the President was intended to abolish the concept
of Rulership, he was reading into the Constitution, a permanent constitutional
mandate for continuance of Rulers under the rubric of recognition of Rulers. Analogies
between the President, Vice-President, the Chief Justice and the Judges of this
Court, the Judges of the High Court, the Public Service Commission and the
Election Commission and the Rulers were drawn to support the theory that
Rulership was an institution like the offices mentioned by way of illustration.
These are constitutional offices recognised by the Constitution. The sanction
of these offices is the Constitution. It is sophistry to speak of Rulership as
an institution. When institutions are recognised the Constitution has
specifically designated and recognised them by names, like Devaswom in Article
290A, the National Library, the Indian Museum, in List I Entry 62 of the
Seventh Schedule, the Banaras Hindu University, the Aligarh Muslim University,
the Delhi University in List I Entry 63 of the Seventh Schedule. Article
366(22) has no significance apart from Articles 291 and 362. Inasmuch as there
is no legal right to recognition it makes no difference whether there is
derecognition of one Ruler or derecognition, of all the Rulers. It was said
that there is no 216 power of derecognition. This Court has held in the Dholpur
case (supra) that there is power to derecognise. The Constitution does not say
that the President is bound to recognise a Ruler. It follows therefore that
after derecognition he is not equally bound to recognise another person as
Ruler.
The second limb of Article 363 speaks of
rights accruing under or liability or obligation arising out of the provision
of the Constitution relating to covenants or agreements. It is, therefore, to
be seen whether Article 366(22) relates to covenants or agreements. No person
can be recognised as a Ruler under Article 366(22) until first he entered into
a covenant, referred to in Article 291 or secondly he is recognised by the
President as the succession of the Ruler recognised under the, first part of
Article 366(22). Therefore, the claim to be recognised a Ruler can only arise
if he or his predecessor signed the covenant.
There is express and direct relation to
covenants. Counsel for the petitioner submitted that if the dominant and
immediate purpose was not the enforcement of the covenant neither Article 291
nor Article 366(22) could be said to be related to the covenants or merger
agreements. These words "dominant immediate purpose of enforcement of the
covenant" are new words and therefore these words can neither be read into
the Constitution nor the meaning of the words 'relate to" be allowed to
have such a constricted meaning by the introduction of alien words.
It was said that the covenants and merger
agreements were meant only for the purpose of identifying the Rulers.
Article 366(22) has been put in relation to
Art. 291 and Art. 362 and one cannot abstract Article 366(22) from the collocation
of those Articles. All these three Articles 291, 362 and 366(22) stem from the
covenants and merger agreements and but for the covenants and merger agreements
these Articles would have not been there in the Constitution. The entire
concept of recognition comes from the covenants and merger agreements, and
cannot be divorced from Articles 291 and 362. The object of Article 366(22) was
to subserve Articles 291 and 362 for understanding and giving effect to them.
Ruler in Art. 366(22) is description of the person referred to in Articles 291
and 362. If the petitioner challenges the power of the President to derecognise
him he claims that he has a right to continue as a Ruler which is a right
related to covenants.
It was said that if the President derecognises
one the President was bound to recognise another person as his successor. In
1956 the Ruler of Baudh in Orissa died. The President decided not to recognise
any successor to the Ruler. The widow was granted an allowance and a suitable
residence was allotted to her use for her life-time. Again in 1958 when Mahant
Digvijay Das of Nandgao died the Rulership of Nandgaon was 217 allowed to
lapse. The widow was granted allowance. No successor to the Ruler was
recognised. In the year 1968 when the Ruler of Delath died no successor to the
Ruler was recognised. In the month of August, 1970 the Rulership of Malpur was
also allowed to lapse. In the case of Baroda the Ruler was. De recognised and
during his lifetime his successor was recognised as a Ruler. That was on
grounds of misconduct. These cases indicate that no legal right to Rulership
was asserted. The President in recognising a Ruler need not follow law of
succession and above all there is no legal obligation on the President to
appoint a Ruler.
The Attorney General and Mr. Mohan
Kumarmangalam rightly said that the character and quality of recognition by the
President was such that no duty was cast on the President to recognise any
person as Ruler after he derecognised one since Article 366(22) did not contain
words of compulsion that a Ruler must be recognised for each State: and' there
must always be a Ruler for each State.
It was said that the power of the President
was used afterthe Constitution Amendment Bill was rejected" by the Rajya
Sabha. That is a totally irrelevant consideration and cannot prejudice or alter
the Constitution. If the President has the power to derecognise, the power will
speak and hold good.
Mr. Palkhivala relied on the decisions of
this Court as also the recent decision of the House of Lords in support of the
proposition that if the order was a nullity there was no bar of jurisdiction.
The decisions are Smt. Ujjam Bai v. State of Uttar Pradesh(1), S. Pratap Singh
v. The State of Punjab (2), MakhanSingh v. State of Punjab(3), Lala Ram Swrup
& Ors. v. Shikar Chand and Ani.(4) and Anisminic Ltd. v.
Foreign Compensation Commission(5). It is a
general rule that where Parliament has created new rights and duties and has
appointed a specific Tribunal for their enforcement recourse must be had to
that Tribunal alone. The jurisdiction of the courts of Law in those cases is
ousted until the statutory process has been completed except in so far as the
courts may prohibit the Tribunal from proceeding on the ground that it had no
jurisdiction to determine a particular matter. In situations, where the courts
have no jurisdiction to intervene, they may nevertheless review the validity of
the final determination by the chosen Tribunal either on the, ground that the
authority was not the one designated by the Act or where it was empowered to
determine an issue it did not address itself to the matter committed to it or
where it violated the rule, of natural justice.
All the decisions relied on by Mr. Palkhivala
(1)[1963] 1 S.C.R. 778 (2) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 733 (3) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 779 (4)
[1966]2 S.C.R. 553, (5) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 147 218 dealt with, the power of the
Court to interfere where a statute is impeached as ultravires or action under
the statute is said to be without jurisdiction or where the action is said to
be procedurally ultra vires as in the case of Ujjam Bai (supra) or where the
executive act was malafide and for alien purpose as in Pratap Singh's case
(supra) or where an order of detention under the Defence of India Act was
challenged in violation of the Act and also on the ground that it was malafide
as in Makhan Singh's case (supra). The decision of this Court in Dhulabai and
others v. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1) on which Counsel for the petitioner
relied is again illustrative of the type of cases where Courts have interfered
on the ground that the appointed 'Tribunal did not comply with provisions of
the statute or exceeded jurisdiction or failed to observe principles of natural
justice.
The decision of the House of Lords in the
Foreign Compensation Commission case (supra) on which the petitioner relied
contained a clause in a statute called the Foreign Compensation (Determination
and Registration of Claims) Order which provided for determination of
compensation by the Commission and contained a section that the determination
by the .Commission of 'any application made to them under the Act was not to be
called in question in any court of law. It was held that a finality clause of
the nature in that statute protected determination which was not a nullity. The
English Company owned property in Egypt.
The property was sequestrated under the
provisions of a proclamation by the Egyptian Authorities. The plaintiff company
sold the sequestrated property to an Egyptian Organisation. The English Company
made an application to the Foreign Compensation Commission and claimed that
they were entitled in the Egyptian Compensation Fund in respect of their
sequestrated property. The Commission made a determination that the plaintiff
company failed to establish a claim. The plaintiff company then brought an
action for a declaration that the determination was a nullity by contending
that the Commission had misconstrued the order in finding that the Egyptian
Organisation to whom the plaintiff had sold the property was the plaintiff's
successor in title. The House of Lords held that the word
"determination" was not to be construed as including everything which
purported to be a determination but was not in fact a determination because the
Commission had misconstrued the provisions of the order defining their
jurisdiction. The ratio of the decision of the House of Lords was not whether
the Foreign Compensation Commission made a wrong ,decision but whether the
Commission enquired into and decided (1) [1968] 3 S.C.R. 662 219 a matter which
they had no right to' consider. The Foreign Compensation Commission in that
case, held that the Egyptian Organisation to whom the plaintiff company had
sold the property was the successor-in-title and as the Egyptian Organisation
was not a British National, the Commission rejected the claim of the English
Company. These decisions deal with the jurisdiction of the appointed Tribunal,
viz., whether the Tribunal has exceeded its jurisdiction or has failed to
exercise its jurisdiction.
In the present case,, the question for
consideration is the provision of the Constitution which under some Articles
confer jurisdiction on this Court and in another Article excludes' the
jurisdiction of the Court. A privative clause of this nature in the
Constitution stands on an entirely different footing from a clause of that
nature in other statutes. In ordinary statues, statutory authorities are
entrusted with powers and duties. When a finality clause appears in such
statutes, the courts interfere with acts or decisions of such statutory bodies
or authorities,by issuing writs of mandamus, prohibition or certiorari, on the
grounds of commanding them to exercise their jurisdiction or not to exceed
their jurisdiction or not to usurp any jurisdiction they do not possess or to
observe the principles of natural justice or where the courts find that the
acts of decisions are tainted by extraneous consideration or collateral reasons
or malafide or fraud.
In the present case, the petitioners have
invoked the jurisdiction of this Court under Article 32. Article 32, is
excluded by the opening words in Article 363. It was said by counsel for the
petitioner that the order of the President was a nullity, the petitioners
property rights were invaded, and,' therefore, the jurisdiction of this Court
was attracted. The fallacy of the petitioner"s submission is in totally
overlooking the provisions of Article 363 which exclude in express and
unambiguous terms the jurisdiction of this Court notwithstanding any provision
of the Constitution. The courts normally leap in favour of stretching the
jurisdiction but when the Constitution which invests this Court with
jurisdiction with one hand divests it of jurisdiction with another in
specifically designated disputes the attempt to overreach the Article which
bars jurisdiction of courts will be totally impermissible. It is at this stage
that the words of Holmes C. J. in Communications Assns. v. Douds(1) will throw
light.
"The provisions of the Constitution are
not mathematical formulae having their essence in their form; they are organic
living institutions transplanted from English soil.
Their significance is Vital, not formal; it
is to be gathered not simply by (1) 339 U.S. 382 L744Sup.CI/71 220 taking the
words and a dictionary, but by considering their origin and the line of
growth". Therefore, if the Constitution has placed a restriction on the
jurisdiction of this Court, it will he trifling and tinkering with the
Constitution if this Court interfered, in matters which were excluded from
jurisdiction. It is well-settled that what is forbidden directly cannot be
achieved indirectly.
In interpretting these four allied Articles
when this Court finds that it has no jurisdiction it will say so and in saying
so, the jurisdiction of this Court is not whistled down in any manner.' The
jurisdiction of this Court is all pervasive and all embracing in regard to
fundamental rights of citizens. The petitioners are citizens but the rights
they claim are recognition of rulership, payment of privy purse and enjoyment
of princely privileges which are not fundamental rights on account of
unenforceability. These special rights belong to a world of their own and that
is, why the makers of the Constitution intertwined Article 363 with the allied
Articles 291, 363, 366(22) as the forbidden frontiers of Courts.
It is now to be found out whether there are
disputes with regard to payment of privy purses and whether such disputes can
be said to arise out of the provisions of this Constitution, and thirdly
Whether the provisions of the Constitution in Article 291 relate to covenants
and merger agreements.. Mr. Palkhivala contended that there were no disputes as
to payment of privy purses. This submission is unacceptable. The petitioner's
claim in the petition to continue to be recognised a Ruler is for the purpose
of payment of privy purse. It is not suggested that a recognition, of Ruler is
in the abstract. A recognition of a Ruler is not by itself property. When there
has been an order of recognition of a Ruler the Ruler then becomes, entitled to
payment of privy purse and enjoyment of other rights and privileges mentioned
in Articles 291 and 362 respectively. For days there were discussions, debates
and disputes at the Bar as to whether there were disputes as to privy purses.
The pleading and the affidavit evidence point with unerring accuracy that the
petitioners claim privy purse, assert title to privy purse and insist on
payment of privy purse guaranteed in covenants and merger agreements and
recognised in Article 291 and by reason of provisions contained in Article
366(22) which speaks of recognition of Rulers they ask for relief with regard
to continuance of recognition of Rulers and payment of privy purses. It is
indisputable that the merger agreements and covenants not only speak of payment
of privy purse but also mention guarantee of the Government in that behalf.
These covenants and 221 merger agreements were totally unenforceable prior to
the Constitution. Article 291 is a constitutional recognition of the guarantee
regarding privy purse mentioned in the Covenants and agreements. Article 291
does not create any new 'and independent right of payment of privy purse.
Article 291 is related to the covenant and is
not unrelated to the covenants and merger agreements.
When Article 291 was introduced in the
Constituent Assembly as Article 267 it was said to give constitutional
recognition to those guarantees and to provide for the expenses being charged
on the central revenues subject to such recoveries as might be made from time
to time from the States in respect of these payments. Article, 291(2) as it
stood at the time of the commencement of the Constitution indicated that where
territories of any Indian State are comprised within a State specified in Part
A or Part B of the First Schedule, there shall be charged. on and paid out of
the consolidated fund of that State such contribution, if any, in respect of
the payments made by the Government of India under clause (1) and for such
period as, may, subject to any agreement entered into that behalf under clause
(1) of Article 278 be determined by order of the President.
Article 278 of the Constitution as it stood
in 1950 provided that the Government of India might, subject to the provisions of
clause (2) of Article 278 enter into an agreement with the Government of the
State specified in Part B of the First Schedule with respect to inter alia the
contribution by such State in respect of any payment made by the Government of
India under clause (1) of Article 291 and when an agreement was so, entered
into the provisions of Chapter I of Part XII of the Constitution (Articles 264
to 291 under the title Finance) shall in relation to such States have effect
subject to the terms of such agreement. Article 278 and Article 291 (2) were
omitted, by the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956 in the year 1956. By
the same Constitution (Seventh Amendment Act, 1956 the First Schedule to the
Constitution 'as it originally stood consisting of Parts A, B and C in regard
to the States and the, territories of India was repealed and substituted by the
First' Schedule containing the States and the Union territories. These
provisions in the Constitution as they stood in 1950 indicated that Article 291
embodied the constitutional recognition for the fulfilment of the guarantees
and assurances given by the Government of India in respect of privy purses and
provided for necessary adjustments in respect of privy purse entailed by
changed circumstance and conditions.
222 This Court has held in H. H. The Maharana
Sahib Shri Bhagwat Singh Bahadur of Uaipur v. The State of Rajasthan and
Ors.(1) that in order to give constitutional recognition to the guarantees and
assurances under the Covenants and Merger Agreement Articles 362, 363, 131
proviso and 291 were incorporated in the Constitution. The Covenants and Merger
Agreements did not have any legal sanction inasmuch as neither the Government
of India Act, 1935 provided for the same nor were these enforceable in municipal
courts. The sanction of the Covenants and Merger Agreements was purely
political. The treaties in the United States are enforced as law. It is not so
in our Constitution nor is it so under the British law. During the British Rule
in India political pensions were given to persons in Indian States.
They were given because of reasons of State
policy. When the Constitution came into force the guarantee for the payment of
the sums of money as privy purse contained in the Covenants and Agreements was
continued by Article 291 but the esential political character of the privy
purse was preserved by Article 363 by enacting that the guarantee could not be
enforced in municipal courts.
It might be asked here as to whether any
Ruler of an Indian 'State without being recognised a Ruler by the President
could I prefer any claim to privy purse under Article 291.
The answer would be. in the negative, because
the words of Article 291 in the Constitution predicate that where under any
agreement or covenant entered into by the Ruler of an Indian State before the
commencement of the Constitution the payment of any sum free of tax has been
guaranteed or assured to any Ruler of such State, as privy purse (a) such sums
shall be charged on and paid out of the consolidated fund of India and (b) the
sums so paid to any Ruler shall be exempt from all taxes on income. The Ruler
of an. Indian State mentioned in the first part of Article 291 is different to
the Ruler mentioned in Article 291 (b). The latter refers to the Ruler defined
under Article 366(22) and recognised by the President. At once the provisions
of Article 366(22) are attracted to find out as to who that Ruler is. It is a
Ruler who is recognised by the President 'as the Ruler of the State. It is
because of the combined effect of Articles 291. 366(22) and 363 that this Court
in Nawab Usman Ali Khan A v. Sagarmal (supra) held that privy purse was paid
for political ,consideration and was not a right legally enforceable in any,
municipal court and the political character was preserved by Article-363 by
taking privy purse beyond the reach of courts of law. In Sri sudhansu Shekhar
Singh Deo v. The State of Orissa ,and Anr. (2) this Court said on a
consideration of Articles 291 (1) [1964] 5 S.C.R. 1 (2) [1971] 1 S.C.R. 779 223
and 362 that if in disregard of the guarantee or assurance given under the,
covenant or agreement any legislation were made it could not be questioned in
Court because of Article 363. It is true that Article 362 speaks of guarantee
of rights other than that of privy purse.
It was said on behalf of the petitioner that
the words "charged on and paid out of the consolidated fund" in
Article 291 meant that a security was created in favour of the petitioner in
respect of privy purse, and, therefore, a new and independent right was
created. It was said that Article 291 was a self sustaining or self ordaining
provision. Article 291 draws its sustenance and vitality from covenants and
merger agreements. If payment has not been guaranteed under the covenants or merger
agreements, Article 291 does not come into operation at all. Under Article 291
effect is to be given to the covenants and merger agreements where payment of
any sum has been guranteed. Each covenant has to be examined and construed to
give effect to the guarantee mentioned in the covenant 'and recognised in the
Article. It will be utterly wrong to equate the words "charged on the
consolidated fund" with "a charge by way of security", because
Article 291 only gives effect to guarantees in the covenants and agreements by
charging the payment on the consolidated Fund. Article 291 cannot be said to
create a new right or a new obligation by charging the sum on the consolidated
fund because the charge is only in respect of the right and obligation under
the covenant and it is therefore neither a new nor an independent right. It was
said that the covenants and merger agreements were merely to be referred to for
the purpose of identifying the Rulers and the privy purse. The identification
is a verbal subterfuge. Assuming Article 291 were a right enforceable a Ruler
would have to prove first that he was a Ruler who was recognised by the
President and thus entitled to privy purse the payment of whereof was
guaranteed by the covenant or the merger agreement.
Secondly, he would have to prove the covenant
whereby he claimed 'a privy purse. For that again be would have to prove on the
strength of the covenant or the merger agreement. Proof is in aid of title.
Proof is not dissociated from claim. Claim will fail without proof.
Therefore, covenants and merger agreements
are indissolubly bound up with Article 291.
Again, there were different merger I
agreements with different Rulers providing for different sums for payment to
the Rulers and also in some cases for payment of different sums to successors.
The Orissa and Chattisgarh Merger Agreement did not mention about payment of
privy purse to the successors to Rulers. The Tehri Garhwal Merger Agreement
mentioned also 224 the heirs 'and successors of the Maharaja for payment of
privy purse. The Rampur Merger Agreement mentioned certain amount as privy
purse for the Nawab and a different sum for payment to the successors. The
Bhopal Merger Agreement mentioned a certain sum for the Nawab and a different
sum for the Nawab and a different sum for his successor. The Agreement of
Himachal Pradesh Rulers mentioned a certain sum for the Ruler but did not
mention 'about successors. The Bilaspur Merger Agreement mentioned a certain
sum as privy purse of. the Raja which was to include the allowances of the
Yuvraja but did not mention anything about successors.
These difference illustrate that Article 291
is vitally related to the covenants and merger agreements and draw substance
from them.
The words "charged on and paid out of
the consolidated fond" in Article 291 mean that the sum shall not be
submitted to the vote of Parliament, and Article 113(1) makes a provision to
that effect. Article 291 does not by itself create any independent right of any
Ruler to be paid any sum out of any charged fund. If it were a charge, it would
be a debt which would be assignable. It a Ruler were to 'assign or mortgage or
create a charge in respect of his privy purse in favour of another person there
would have been no legal validity for such assignment and mortgage or charge.
The reason is that there is no vested legal right in praosenti in favour of a
Ruler. Again, a privy purse is a payment of a political character and is
legally unenforceable. There is no right either in rem or in personam in favour
of a Ruler in regard to payment of privy purse. Supposing the privy purse were
reduced would it be competent to a Ruler to maintain an action for payment of
the entire sum. Article 363 would be an impediment and no court would be able
to adjudicate the question. The words "charged on and paid out of the
consolidated fund" are technical Parliamentary expressions for payment out
of public revenues. These words have been borrowed from English Parliamentary
Practice.
These words have a specific legal history
since 1816 when Consolidated Fund Act was passed in England and in 1854 the
English Act provided in 2 Schedules as charges, payable out of the consolidated
Fund and charges upon which vote would lie.
Prior to 1935 the system of presenting
accounts before the legislature was under four heads, i.e. transferred
subjects, reserved subjects voted 'and non-voted items. In 1935 the Government
Act, 1935 used the expressed "charged" in replacement of the
expression "voted". After the Constitution came into existence the
same system continued for presentation of the Annual Financial Statement under
Article 112(2) and Appropriation Bill under Article 114(1).
The Estimates under Article 113(1) 225 were
(a) sums required to meet the expenses as expenditure charged upon the
consolidated fund and (b) the sum required to meet the other expenditure
proposed to be met from the consolidated fund. The Appropriation Bill means (a)
the grants made by the House of the People; and (b) the expenditure charged on
the consolidated fund but not exceeding in any case the amount shown in the
statement previously laid before Parliament. Article 113 says that so much of
the estimates as relates to expenditure charged upon the, consolidated fund
shall not be submitted to the vote of Parliament but there is nothing to
prevent discussion in either House of Parliament of any of those estimates. The
expenditure is charged and removed from the vote of Parliament.
In the English Parliamentary Practice what is
charged is the expenditure that is to be made without vote of Parliament.
These are first, a sum appropriated to a
particular service which cannot be spent on another service, secondly, the sum
appropriated is the maximum sum, and thirdly, it is available only in respect
of charges which have arisen during one of the years to which the relevant
Appropriation Act applies (See May Parliamentary Practice, 17th ed. 713).
The tests used to determine whether the
expenditure involves a charge on the consolidated fund are that a charge must
be new and distinct, that it must be payable out of the exchequer and it is to
be effectively imposed. In England it will appear that the Ministers of the
Crown Act, 1937 in section 4 enacts that a pension under that section is
payable as of :right. Section 7 of that English Act of 1937 used the expression
"shall be charged and payable out of the consolidated fund". These
provisions in the English Act show first that the right to be paid is under
section 4 and the creation of a charge on the consolidated fund is under
section 7.
The words "charged on the Consolidated
fund" in Article 291 mean that the expenditure is non-votable and these
are terms of public finance. Charge on the Consolidated Fund is an accounting
arrangement before Parliament. Certain expenditure is authorised out of public
revenue as independent of Parliamentary control. Charge is meant for
expenditure.
The words "paid out of the consolidated
fund" denote the source from which the expenditure will be met. The words
"charged and paid out of the consolidated funs' do not create any legal
right in a party. The right to payment arises dehors the charge on the
consolidated fund. The charge on the consolidated Fund is for purposes of
payment in 'accordance with the guarantee and assurance of payment under the
covenants and merger agreements. The right to payment of privy purse arises
from recognition by Article 291 of guarantee of payment of privy 226 purse
under a covenant. The scheme of Article 291 is similar to Article 290 where the
expenses of any court or commission or pension payable to any person who served
before or after the commencement of the Constitution in connection with the
affairs of the Union or the State are charged on the Consolidated fund. Article
290A which speaks of a sum of Rs. 46,50,000 to be charged on and paid out of
the Consolidated Fund of the State of Kerala every year to the Travancore
Devaswoin Fund is a different provision because it speaks of payment to a
designated person as a part of the Constitution. No such comparable words are
to be found in Article 291, namely, that the sums shall be paid to the Rulers.
The reasons are two-fold. First, payment of privy purses is under covenants or
merger agreements and secondly these payments were charged on the Consolidated
Fund of India because the payment was not out of the Consolidated Fund of any
State.
Originally, Article 291 contained the
expression "paid out of" in both sub-clause (a) of clause (1) and
clause (2) of Article 291 for the purpose of integration of finances, assets,
and liabilities of the new Constitution as between Federal Government at the
Centre and the Indian States which guaranteed payment of Privy Purse under
covenants and merger agreements. The original Article 291 was the result of the
decision of the Constituent Assembly regarding sharing between the Consolidated
Fund of India and the Consolidated Fund of Part A and Part B States regarding
privy purse.
Counsel on behalf of the petitioner submitted
that unless the words "charged on and paid out of the consolidated
fund" mean security and right to be paid neither the President, nor the
Chairman or Deputy Chairman, nor the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker, nor the
Judges of the Supreme Court, nor the Comptroller and Auditor General would have
security as to payments. But, these persons do not derive their right to be
paid from any covenant or merger agreement. Secondly, these persons hold
offices under the Constitution whereas the Rulers do not. Thirdly, Articles
59(3), 97, 125, 148(3) indicate in no uncertain terms that they shall be
entitled to such emoluments and allowances and privileges as may be determined
by Parliament by law. In the case of the President, the Chairman, the Deputy
Chairman of the Council of States, the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker of the
House of the People Articles 59 (3) and 97 provide that there, shall be paid to
them such allowances and salaries as may be fixed by Parliament, by law and
until the provision in that behalf is so made such salaries and allowances as
are specified in the Second Schedule. As for the Judges of this Court Article
125(1) enacts that there shall be paid to the Judges of this Court, such 227
salaries as are specified in the Second Schedule. Article 148(3) enacts that
the salaries and other conditions of the Comptroller and Auditor General shall
be such as may be determined by Parliament and until they are so determined,
shall be as specified in the Second Schedule. Therefore, it was an unfortunate
comparison made by Mr. Palkhivala between these persons and the Rulers. To
illustrate, some of these persons become entitled to salaries by virtue of
provision in the Constitution, e.g. Article 1.25 directing payment of their
salaries and therefore the charge on the Consolidated Fund. in respect of such
salaries e.g. in Article 112 (d) (i) cannot be intended again as a diction for
payment.
It was said on behalf of the petitioner that
in the covenants and merger agreements, the payment of privy purse was to be
free of all taxes whereas under the Constitution privy purse was to be exempt
free of all taxes on income and therefore there was a new right. This is
totally misreading Article 291 (b) where it is said that "the sums so paid
to any Ruler shall be exempt from all taxes on income". The words "so
paid' relate to the slum guaranteed under the covenants and the agreements and
to the same sum charged on the Consolidated Fund It is only when payment is
made to a Ruler that it shall be exempt from taxes on income That is why the
words "so paid to any Ruler" in Article 291 (b) indicate that when
the sums are paid to a Ruler out of the Consolidated Fund the sums shall be
exempt from all taxes.
The Constitution does not mention payment of
Privy Purse to any particular person. One has to turn to the covenant and the
merger agreement to have all the particulars of persons, sums guaranteed and
assured. Article 291 does not create any new and independent right but it
merely gives constitutional recognition to guarantees under covenants and
merger agreements which Were and are unenforceable as those arise, out of Acts
of State. (See State of Gujarat v. Vohra Fiddali (supra). Article 291 is strung
with the covenants because such sums in Article 291 (a) mean the sums
guaranteed under covenants and merger agreements. The fons et origo is the
guarantee contained in the Covenants and Agreements.
Another argument was advanced on behalf of
the petitioner that there was a substitution of rights under covenants and
merger agreements by Article 291. The rights guaranteed under the covenants and
merger agreements are matters to which Article 291 relates. The guarantee of
payment under the covenants and merger agreements is recognised under Article
291. This Article gives effect to the covenants and agreements and it is
related to these.
There were some arguments that if the amount
charged on the consolidated fund on account of privy purse were not paid, 228
the same would be carried over, in the Consolidated Fund from year to year.
That is not so because any sum charged on the consolidated fund is not carried
to the next year but it lapses.
Article 362 has been held by this Court in
Udaipur case (supra) to fall within Article 363. Article 291 has also been held
by this Court to fall within the bar of Article 363 in Nawab Usman Ali Khan's
case (supra). It was suggested that the only Article which could fall within
Article 363 was Article 362 which was in closest proximity.
That would be an erroneous approach to
interpret the Constitution. Article 363 uses the words "provisionsof the
Constitution". The word "provisions" indicate more than one
Article. Even at the risk of repetition it has to be stated that Articles 291,
362 and 366(22) have a most direct and visible relation to Article 363.
Mr. Palkhivala contended that the petitioner
had existing rights to privy purge and privileges prior to the Constitution and
that such existing rights were incorporated in the Constitution by Articles 294
(b) and 295 (1 ) (b) of the Constitution. It. has been consistently held by
this Court that till recognition, either express or implied, is granted by the
new sovereign, the Act of State continues (See State of Gujarat v. Vohra
Fiddali (supra). Therefore, the covenants and merger agreements were outside
the jurisdiction of municipal courts. The administration of the provincially
merged and centrally merged States was by reason of the Extra Provincial
Jurisdiction Act 1947 which applied the laws of the Dominion of India to those
merged States. It was only by reason of the-merger agreement that the Dominion
of India exercised such extra provincial jurisdiction. The Instruments of
Accession did not confer such authority. Even when sections 290A and 290B were
introduced in the Government of India Act, 1935 administration in the
provincially merged States was still carried on the strength of the merger
agreement. (See Seraikela case (supra). The merged States were not yet
completely integrated with India.
The States Merger (Governors' Provinces)
Order, 1949 stated that as from the appointed day, i.e.,the date of the commencement
of the order 1 August, 1949, the States specified in the Schedule "shall
be administered in all respects as if they form part of the provinces specified
in the heading of the Schedule". Again in section 7 of the States Merger
(Governors' Provinces) Order, 1949 it is stated that all liabilities in respect
of loans, guarantees and other financial obligations of the Dominion Government
as arise out of covenants, of a merged State, including in particular the
liability for the payment of any sums to the Ruler of the merged State on
account of his privy purse or to persons in the merged State on account of
political pensions and 229 the like shall as from the appointed day be
liabilities of the absorbing Provinces unless the loan, guarantee or other
financial obligation is relateable to central purpose. The privy purse is
mentioned separately to and independently of loans, guarantees and other
financial obligations. The character of the liability regarding privy purse is
not changed by the States (Merger Governors' Provinces) Order, 1949. The Act of
State which commenced with the Instruments of Accession continued even after
the merger agreements as has been held by this Court in Vohra Fiddali's case
(supra).
The liabilities in Articles 294 (b) and 295
(1 ) (b) of the Constitution refer to other legal rights which were enforceable
in a court of law. Privy purses under the covenants and merger agreements were
no such legal rights enforceable in a court of law for the obvious reason that
if prior to the Constitution the covenants and merger agreements were sought to
be enforced in a municipal, court the Government would have demurred on the
plea of Act of State. That plea in bar would be available to the Government of
India as a defence to any claim under Articles 294 (b) and 295 (1) (b). (See
Union of India and Ors. v. Gwalior Rayon Silk Manufacturing (Weaving) Co. Ltd.
and Anr.) (1) Furthermore, Article 295 (1 ) (b) cannot apply because neither
privy purse nor privileges are matters enumerated in the Union List. Articles
291 and 362 are special provisions dealing with privy purses and privileges.
Articles 294(b) and 295(1) (b) deal with
revolution of liabilities of the Dominion and Part B States respectively.
The Constitution has dealt with privy purse
and privileges in separate Articles. Therefore, Articles 294(b) and 295 (1 )
(b) can have no application to privy purses and Privileges. (See The South
India Corporation (P) Ltd. v. The Secretary, Board of Revenue, Trivandrum and
Anr.) 2 ) where this Court held that Article 372 was a general provision and
Article 277 was a special provision and a special provision was to be given
effect to the extent of its scope, leaving -the general provision to control
cases where the special provision does not apply. The petitioner's contention
on existing rights prior to the Constitution as well as continuance thereof
falls.
Agreement to pay privy purses and to continue
privileges of the Princes which were. guaranteed by the Government of India
before the Constitutionwere all political agreements born out of political
bargains to achieve integration of Indian States with the Dominion of India.
This political bargain was carried into the Constitution by the insertion of
Article 291 for payment of privy purse, Article 362 for continuance of
privileges and Article 366(22) for recognition of princes, and the political
character was preser[1] [1964] 7 S.C.R. 892 at 908 [2] [1964] 4 S.C. R. 280 at
297 230 ved, by inserting Article 363 which bar the jurisdiction of the court
in respect of disputes, arising out of covenants and agreements and these
Articles which are related to the covenants and agreements.
Mr. Palkhivala contended that the order
affected the rights of the petitioner under the Wealth Tax Act, the Income-tax
Act, the Gift Tax Act, the Hindu Succession Act, the
Estates Duty Act, Customs Regulation, Code of Civil Procedure, Code of Criminal
Procedure and Madhya Bharat Gangajali Trust Fund Act, 1954. The Wealth Tax Act,
1957 defines a Ruler as defined in clause (22) of Article 366 of the
Constitution and enacts certain exemptions in respect of certain assets namely
the official residence in the occupation of the Ruler. The right of the petitioner
under the Wealth Tax Act is dependent on being recognised as a Ruler by the
President under Article 366(22). If the order cannot be challenged for the
reasons given above, the petitioner can have no right under the Wealth Tax Act,
because the right under the Wealth Tax Act is derived only from his recognition
as a Ruler under Article 366(22). Under the Income Tax Act, 1922 (,section
4(3)(x)) and the Income Tax Act, 1961 (section 10(19) amount received by a
Ruler as privy purse is not inclued as income. Under Income Tax Part B States
Taxation concessions Order, 1950 the bonafide annual value of the palaces
declared by the Central Government as official residence of the Ruler is
exempted from taxation.
Therefore, if the rights are derived from
recognition of Rulership by the President under Article 366(22) and if the
recognition cannot be impeached no right arises. Under the Gift Tax Act, tax is
not leviable on gifts out of privy purse for maintenance of relatives or for
performance of official ceremonies. If no privy purse is paid no question of
any gift out of privy purse arises. Under the Hindu Succession Act the Act shall not apply to any estate which descends to a
single heir by the terms of any covenant or agreement. Succession is a right
which can be claimed by heirs of the petitioners. The petitioners cannot have
any fundamental right of any such right under the Hindu Succession Act. Under the Estates Duty Act, exemption is given in respect
of any building in the occupation of a Ruler declared by the Central Government
as his official residence. If the petitioner disposes of his property he will
not be affected. The duty will have to be paid by someone who will inherit or
succeed. As for the Customs Regulations exemption is available only to Rulers
recognised by the President. When he ceased to be recognised no exemption
applies. The trust properties arise only in the case of Madhya Bharat Gangaiali
Fund Trust Act, 1954. The Ruler of Gwalior is one of the trustees and is the
President. The Trust will not fail. The trustees wilt continue and the Act may
have to be amended in a suitable manner.
231 The Civil Procedure Code grants exemption
to Rulers from being sued. Exemption from being sued is not personal liberty
within the meaning of Article 21. Exemption from being sued is pro-cedural
advantage which will no longer be available. Again, s. 197 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure is a procedural advantage. In all these cases the petitioner
cannot complain in this Court because the position is derived from the
recognition of Rulership and Art. 363 is an insurmountable and impenetrable
bar.
Recognition of Rulership is not a legal
right. It is not a right to property. Privy purse is not a legal right to
property. There is no fundamental right to privy purse.
There is no fundamental right to Rulership.A
series of decisions of this Court have held that Article 363 is a bar to rights
and privileges, recognition of Rulership from being agitated in courts. These
decisions have spoken the words of the Constitution.
The petitions, therefore, fail and are
dismissed. Each party will pay and bear its own costs.
ORDER In accordance with the opinion of the
majority the petitions are allowed and writs will issue declaring that the
orders made by the President on September 6, 1970 challenged here, were illegal
and on that account inoperative and the, petitioners will be entitled to all
their pre-existing rights and privileges including right to privy purses, as if
the orders have not been made. The petitioners will get their costs of the
petitions. One hearing fee in those petitions in which the petitioners have
appeared' through the, same counsel.
K.B.N.
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