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1965 DIGILAW 23 (GAU)

Jiban Chandra Sarma, Doloi v. State of Assam

1965-04-17

G.MEHROTRA, S.K.DUTTA

body1965
MEHROTRA, C. J.: By these two peti­tions giving rise to Civil Rules Nos. 58 of 1963 and 59 of 1963 the petitioners have challenged the constitutionality of the Assam State Acqui­sition of Lands Belonging to Religious or Charitable Institution of Public Nature Act, 1959-Assam Act IX of 1961 (hereinafter called 'the impugned Act'). This Act received the assent of the President on the 2nd April 1961. Rule No. 58 arises out of an application filed by one Jiban Chandra Sarma Doloi and Rule No. 59 arises out of an application filed by Pramatha Nath Sarma Doloi and Barada Kanta Sarma Doloi, of Kamakhya Temple. In both these petitions notices have been issued to the petitioners under the impugned Act for sub­mission of particulars of the land held by them in the prescribed form. (2) The validity of the impugned Act has been challenged mainly on three grounds. Firstly it is urged that the impugned Act abridges the fundamental rights guaranteed under Articles 14, 19, 26 and 31 of the Constitution and secondly that the impugned Act is a colourable piece of legislation. The impugned Act exceeds the purpose for which it purports to have been enacted. Lastly it is urged that the impugned Act is an excessive delegation of legislative function. (3) Certain provisions of the impugned Act may he referred to in order to appreciate the points requiring decision. The object of the Act is to provide for the acquisition by the State of lands belonging to religious or charitable institutions of public nature. Sec­tion 3(1) lays down that the State Government may, from time to time, by notification in the official Gazette declare that all rights in land belonging to a Religious or Charitable Institu­tion of Public Nature shall vest in the Stale free from all encumbrances, with effect from the first day of the agricultural year next following the date of publication of such notification. Section 4 enumerates the conse­quences which follow on (he issue of the notification Section 5 specifies the land which the religious 01 charitable institution can retain in its possession after the acquisition of the rest of its lands Section 6 provides for the taking of possession of The land which vests in (he Stale Government on acquisition. Sections 7 and 8 deal with the method of ascer­taining the compensation. Section 11 provides for claims for compensation. Sections 7 and 8 deal with the method of ascer­taining the compensation. Section 11 provides for claims for compensation. Section 13 pro­vides for the claim by the creditors of (he institution to (he compensation amount. Sec-lion 15 provides: "15 Subject to The limitation prescribed under section 4 of the Assam Fixation of Ceiling on Land Holdings Act, 1950 where the land acquired under this Act is in occupation of a raiyat on the date of notification under section 3, it shall be settled with him with the following status: (a) if he has acquired the status of a privileged raiyat under the Assam (Temporari­ly-settled Districts) Tenancy Act, 1935 then the land in his holding as privileged raiyat shall be settled with him with the status of a land­holder as defined in the Assam Land and Revenue Regulation, 1886 and he shall, upon such settlement be absolved from the obliga­tion, if any, of rendering services or making payment of 'bhog" lo the institution concerned in respect of his holding. Provided however that notwithstanding anything contained in the Assam Land and Revenue Regulation, 1885 his right of transfer of such holding shall extend only to persons belonging to the same religion as the institution in which the ownership of the land was vested before the dale of noti­fication under section 3 of this Act; (b) If he has acquired the right of oc­cupancy under any law for the time being in force then the land shall be settled with him with The status of a land-holder as defin­ed in the Assam Land and Revenue Regula­tion, 188fi or of an occupancy raiyat as defin­ed in the Goalpars Tenancy Act, 1929 or the Sylhet Tenancy Act. 1936, as the case may be: (c) if he has not acquired the status of a privileged raiyat or the right of occupancy, then the land shall be settled with him with the status of a settlement-holder (other than the land broker) as defined in the Assam Land and Revenue Regulation, 1886 or of a non-occupancy tenant under the Goalpara Tenancy Act, 1929 or the Sylhet Tenancy Act, 1936 as the case may be." Section 16 deals with the settlement of the land which at the time of acquisition was not in occupation of any tenant. Section 17 pro­vides for the assessment of the land acquired. Sections 18 to 20 deal with the determination and assessment of compensation. Section 17 pro­vides for the assessment of the land acquired. Sections 18 to 20 deal with the determination and assessment of compensation. Section 30 gives power to frame rules. There is thus a complete code providing for the acquisition of the land belonging to the religious institutions and for settlement of the land which is so acquired and after that vests in the Govern­ment. (4) The contention of the petitioner is that the Act does not provide for compensa­tion and violates Article 26 of The Constitu­tion. Article 2fi of the Constitution reads as follows: "20 Subject lo public order, morality and health, every religious denomination or any section thereof shall have The right- (a) to establish and maintain institutions for religion and charitable purposes; (b) to manage its own affairs in matters of religion (c) to own and acquire moveable and immoveable property: and (d) to administer such property in ac­cordance with Law " The argument of Mr. Lahiri on behalf of The petitioners is (hat (he effect of acquiring The property of the institution is that the institu­tion will not have sufficient income to main­tain itself and to perform its religious obligations. The impugned Act, therefore, contra­venes the provisions of Article 20. II is also urged that people were given lands by the institutions as they undertook to perform certain services and an under the impugned Act after the acquisition they have no obliga­tion lo perform those services, the institutions cannot be maintained and their own affairs in matters of religion cannot be managed. Thus the impugned Act contravenes Article 26. It is also urged that a very valuable property belonging to the petitioners has been acquired and (lie restrictions imposed are not reasonable within I be meaning of Article 19 of the Constitution (5) It is not necessary for us lo examine the contentions raised by Mr Lahiri. By the Constitution (First Amendment) Act 1951 Article 31B was inserted in the Constitution. By the Constitution (First Amendment) Act 1951 Article 31B was inserted in the Constitution. Article 31B reads as follows: "Without prejudice to the generality of The provisions contained in Article 31 A, none of the Acts and Regulations specified in the Ninth Schedule not any of the provisions there­of shall be deemed to be void, or ever to have become void, on the ground that such Act, Regulation or provision is inconsistent with, or takes away or abridges any of the rights conferred by, any provisions of this Part, and notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of any court or tribunal to the contrary, each of the said Acts and Regulations shall, subject to the power of any competent Legislature to repeal or amend it, continue in force." When Article 31B was introduced in the Constitution, the Ninth Schedule did not con­tain the impugned Act. By 17th Constitu­tional Amendment Act Schedule 9 of the Constitution was amended and the impugned Act was adder! to the list of the Acts in respect of which the challenge on the ground of viola­tion of the fundamental rights embodied in Part III of the Constitution was barred. Thus when the Ninth Schedule as amended under the Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment) Act 1964 is read along with Article 31B, it is clear that the petitioners are debarred from challenging the constitutionality of the impugn­ed Act on the ground that it contravenes any of the provisions of Part III of the Constitu­tion. (6) Mr. Lahiri has made two-fold argu­ments in this connection. His first contention Is that the scope of Article 31 B is the same as that of Article 31 A and as Article 31 A debars the challenge of the impugned Act only on the ground that the Act abridges any of the rights conferred by Art. 14, Art. 19 or Art. 31. It is open to the petitioners to challenge the validity of the impugned Act on the ground that it contravenes Article 26. This argument is based on the opening words '"Without prejudice to the generality of the provisions contained in Article 31 A" in Article 31 B. This argument has no substance. It is open to the petitioners to challenge the validity of the impugned Act on the ground that it contravenes Article 26. This argument is based on the opening words '"Without prejudice to the generality of the provisions contained in Article 31 A" in Article 31 B. This argument has no substance. The words "without prejudice to the generality of the provisions contained in Article 31 A" only mean that irrespective of the general words used in Article 31 A the Acts which are specified in the Ninth Schedule cannot be challenged on the ground of breach of the fundamental rights enshrined in Part III. In fine sense the scope of Article 31 A is wider than that of Article 31 B. Article 31A may be attracted in cases of some Acts which are not covered by Article 31 B and in that sense the scope of Article 31 A is wider than that of Article 31 B. In other respects Article 31 B may be considered to be narrower in its ambit and scope than Article 31A, because Article 31A prohibits a challenge of the impugned Act only on the ground that it abridges the rights con­ferred by Article 14, Article 19 or Article 31 while Article 31B debars the challenge of the impugned Act of the ground that it takes away or abridges any of the rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution. (7) It was then urged that the 17th Constitutional Amendment Act expressly makes section 2 of that Act retrospective and thus the other parts cannot be held to be retros­pective and as the impugned Act was passed prior to the Constitution (Seventeenth Amend­ment) Ac!, 1904, the amendment will not save the impugned Act. This argument is not sound. Article 31 B has been made retrospective and the Seventeenth Constitutional Amendment Act by adding the impugned Act to the list of the Acts given in the Ninth Schedule has only made Article 31B applicable to it and thus as soon as Art. 31B is attracted the bar will be operative in respect of the Acts which were passed prior to the coming in force of the Seven-teenth Constitutional Amendment Act. The Impugned Act thus cannot be challenged on the ground that it abridges the right conferred under Art. 26 of the Constitution of the petitioners. The Impugned Act thus cannot be challenged on the ground that it abridges the right conferred under Art. 26 of the Constitution of the petitioners. (8) The next point urged also, in our opinion, has no substance. The scope and the ambit of the doctrine of colourable legislation has been authoritatively laid down by their Lordships of the Supreme Court in the case of Ganapati Narayan Deo v. Stale of Orissa, AIR 1953 SC 375 . The following observation at p. 379 of the report is ap­posite: "It may be made clear at the outset that the doctrine of colourable legislation does not involve any question of 'bona fides' or 'mala fides' on the part of the legislature. The whole doctrine resolves itself into the question of competency of a particular legislature to enact a particular "law. If the legislature is compet­ent to pass a particular law, the motives which impelled it to act are really irrelevant. On the other hand, if the legislature lacks competency, the question of motives does not arise at all. Whether a statute is constitutional or not is thus always a question of power .” If the Constitution of a State distributes the legislative powers amongst different bodies, which have to act within their res­pective spheres marked out by specific legis­lative entries, or if there are limitations on the legislative, authority in the shape of funda­mental rights, questions do arise as to whe­ther the legislature in a particular case has or has not, in respect to the subject-matter of the statute or in the method of enacting it, trans grossed the limits of its constitutional powers. Such transgression maybe patent, manifest or direct, but it may also be disguised, covert and indirect and it is to this latter class of cases that the expression 'colourable legislation' has been applied in certain judicial pronouncements. Such transgression maybe patent, manifest or direct, but it may also be disguised, covert and indirect and it is to this latter class of cases that the expression 'colourable legislation' has been applied in certain judicial pronouncements. The idea conveyed by the expression is that although apparently a legislature in passing a statute purported to act within the limits of its powers, yet in substance and in reality it transgressed these powers, the transgression being veiled by what appears on proper examination, to he a mere pretence or dis­guise." The courts can examine the substance of the Act in order to find out whether under the guise of the exercise of a valid power, the legislature has exercised a power which it did not possess, a power which is now conferred on it under any of the items of the List or is contrary to the fundamental rights conferred to a citizen under Part III Essentially thus it is a question of power. Entry 42 List III of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution is 'acquisition and requisitioning of property'. Thus this entry gives ample power to the State Legislature to enact a law providing for acqui­sition of the land and unless it can be said that though the impugned Act purports to be one enacted in the exercise of its power under entry 42 List III of the Seventh Schedule, in effect it is the exercise of power under some other entry in respect of which the State legislature is not competent to enact or that the item is not covered by entry 42 or that it infringes any of the fundamental rights, it cannot be struck down. The ground that it infringes any of the fundamental rights is not open to the petitioner in view of the provision of Arti­cle 31B. It cannot be said that the impugned Act comes either ostensibly or actually under any entry other than entry 42 List III of the 7th Schedule. The argument of Mr. Lahiri is that the purpose of the impugned Act was real­ly to deprive the petitioners of their rights to manage the religious institution properly, though ostensibly the impugned Act purports to be the acquisition of the lands belonging to the petitioners (9) There are two-fold answers to the petitioners' argument. The argument of Mr. Lahiri is that the purpose of the impugned Act was real­ly to deprive the petitioners of their rights to manage the religious institution properly, though ostensibly the impugned Act purports to be the acquisition of the lands belonging to the petitioners (9) There are two-fold answers to the petitioners' argument. Firstly, even assuming that the object of the Act is to interfere with The right of the petitioners to administer the in­stitutions, it will only be violation of Arti­cle 26 of the Constitution and thus it is not open to the petitioners to attack the validity of the Act on that ground and secondly, it may be the indirect effect of the working of the impugned Act but it cannot be said to be the object of the impugned Act. (10) II was then urged that the impugned Act has been enacted to implement the policy of agrarian reform. Its object is to provide for acquisition of agricultural land and confer rights on the tillers of the soil. But the language of the impugned Act is wide enough to cover the acquisition of town lands. Thus the scope of the Act is wider than the object of I lie Act and that being so, the Act must be struck down as a colourable piece of legislation. We do not think that there is any sub stance in this contention. The object of the impugned Act is the acquisition of the land So long as the legislature was competent to en­act a law, it cannot be said that the law is a colourable piece of legislation, merely because the impugned Act in its ambit is wider than the supposed object or purpose of the Act. (11) The other argument is that item 42 only provides for acquisition and the word 'acquisition' itself excludes the idea of confisca­tion. Unless the acquisition is for a public purpose on payment of compensation, it is confiscation. There are two-fold answers to this contention. Firstly the ground that the impugned Act does not provide for payment of adequate compensation and thus it is confiscatory, is in effect attacking the validity of the impugned Act on the ground that it abridges the right conferred under Article 31 of the Constitution which cannot be agitated by the petitioners. There are two-fold answers to this contention. Firstly the ground that the impugned Act does not provide for payment of adequate compensation and thus it is confiscatory, is in effect attacking the validity of the impugned Act on the ground that it abridges the right conferred under Article 31 of the Constitution which cannot be agitated by the petitioners. Secondly on a careful reading of the provisions of the impugned Act it cannot be said that the impugned Act does not provide for compensation or that it is not for a public purpose. The institutions have been given a permanent annuity on the basis of net income. After the land has vested in the State, the State as the owner has got right to deal with the property in any proper manner and if the impugned Act provides for settle­ment of the land with the persons who are in occupation, or in the case of the lands not in occupation of any tenant with persons who are landless, it cannot be said that the object of the impugned Act is to make profit out of the land and the legislature has resorted to this indirect method of making such a profit. There were some lands which were given !o persons who performed Seva and Puja and if those lands have been acquired and they are settled with persons in occupation of the lands on pay­ment of certain rent, it was absolutely neces­sary that the tenants .should be relieved of their obligation to perform the services and it cannot be said that by this either the compen­sation of the petitioners has been affected or that The rights of the tenants who were given lands in lieu of performing certain services have at all been affected. The same argument applies in cases of lands which though given to Dolois for performing certain Seva and Puja were sublet to the tenants by them. (12) Reliance was placed on The follow­ing passage in The case of Sonapur Tea Co. Ltd v. Deputy Commissioner and Collector of Kamrup. AIR 1962 SC 137 at p. 140 . " Faced with this difficulty Mr. (12) Reliance was placed on The follow­ing passage in The case of Sonapur Tea Co. Ltd v. Deputy Commissioner and Collector of Kamrup. AIR 1962 SC 137 at p. 140 . " Faced with this difficulty Mr. Chatterjee attempted to argue that the Act is a colourable piece of legislation and should lie struck down as such, his argument is that though osten­sibly II purports to be a measure of agrarian reform its principal object and indeed its pith and substance is lo acquire The property cover­ed by its provisions and make profits by dispos­ing of the same in the manner provided by Chapter III. Mr Chatterjee seemed lo suggest that the legislature should not have made it necessary1 for the tenants to exercise an option for larking settlement under Section 16 because the exercise of the said option involves the liability to pay the prescribed amount though in five installments, and that, according to Mr. Chatterjee, indicates that the Stale wanted to make profit out of the bargain Mr. Chatterjee's grievance is against the provisions of Section 18 also under which a tenant who does not opt for settlement is liable lo be evicted. We are not impressed by this argument. The doctrine of colourable legislation really post­ulates that legislation attempts to do indirectly what it cannot do directly. In oilier words, though the letter of the law is within the limits of the powers of the Legislature. in substance the Law has transgresses those powers and by doing so it has taken the precaution of conceal­ing its real purpose under the cover of apparently legitimate and reasonable provi­sions. * * * * * * * * Is Mr. Chatterjee. however, right when he contends that the pith and substance of the Act and indeed its main object is to acquire property and dispose of it at a profit ? " From this passage it is contended that if the petitioners are able to show that the real object of the enactment was to acquire the land and dispose of it on profit, the impugned Act is a colourable piece of legislation. If the law was not so. their Lordships should not have considered the provisions of that Act in order to satisfy themselves whether any such hidden intention was discernible. There are two answers ito this contention. If the law was not so. their Lordships should not have considered the provisions of that Act in order to satisfy themselves whether any such hidden intention was discernible. There are two answers ito this contention. Firstly the observation does not extend to the doctrine of colourable legislation. liven assuming that the hidden purpose of the impugned Act is different from the ostensible purpose, unless it can be said that the hidden purpose makes the impugn­ed Act beyond the competence of the legisla­ture, it cannot be struck down on the ground that it is a colourable legislation. Moreover on a close examination of the provisions of the impugned Act, it cannot be said that the object of the impugned Act was to acquire land for the purpose of making profit out of it. (13) Reference is then made to the case of 'Kavalappara Kottarathi Kochuni v. States of Madras and Kerala, AIR 1960 SC 1080 and reliance is placed on the following passage at p. 1086 : " The object of the amendment relevant to the present enquiry was only to enable the State to implement its next objective in the land reform, namely, the fixing of limits to the ex lent of agricultural lands that may be own­ed or occupied by any person, the disposal of any land held in excess of the prescribed maximum and the further modification of the rights of land owners and tenants in agricul­tural holdings. The object was therefore, to bring about a change in Use agricultural economy but not to recognize or confer any title in the whole or a part of an estate on junior members of a family. " That case was one in which the provisions of Article 31-A were interpreted and in order to find out whether the Act related to the acqui­sition of an estate within the meaning of Article 31-A, the objects of the Act were taken into consideration (14) There is no substance in the last point urged that the impugned Act is hit by excessive delegation. No part of the impugned Act provides for delegation of any essential legislative function to the executive. Refer­ence has been made to Section 25 of the impugned Act which lays down that the State Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, delegate any of its powers or functions under this Act. No part of the impugned Act provides for delegation of any essential legislative function to the executive. Refer­ence has been made to Section 25 of the impugned Act which lays down that the State Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, delegate any of its powers or functions under this Act. other than those specified in Section 3 and sub-section (4) of Section 20 to such officer or authority subor­dinate to it, and subject to such conditions, restrictions and limitations, as may be specifi­ed in the notification This section only gives power to the Government to delegate its func­tions to any of its officers Wherever under the Act the Government has to perform certain acts, it has to do it through some of its officers and thus such a provision had to be made in the impugned Act under which the Govern­ment could delegate such powers to its officers. But this is neither a delegation by the legisla­ture of its legislative function to the executive, nor a delegation of any essential legislative function. In the result, therefore, there is no force in these petitions and they are rejected. No orders as to the costs of these petitions. Petitions dismissed.