18 April 1975
Supreme Court
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KRISHNA CHANDRA GANGOPADHYAYA ETC. Vs UNION OF INDIA & ORS.

Bench: KRISHNAIYER,V.R.
Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 357 of 1970


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PETITIONER: KRISHNA CHANDRA GANGOPADHYAYA ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT18/04/1975

BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. RAY, A.N. (CJ) MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN

CITATION:  1975 AIR 1389            1975 SCR  151  1975 SCC  (2) 302  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1975 SC2299  (606)  D          1976 SC 714  (74)

ACT: Constitution of India-Seventh Schedule, List I Item 54, List II Item 23. Mines and Minerals (Regulation and  Development) Act,  1957-Section 15--Bihar Land Reforms Act 1950  [Section 10(2)]-Bihar  Minor  Minerals Concession Rules,  1964  [Rule 20(2)]. Interpretation   of  Statutes-Validation   Act-Retrospective effect-Delegated Legislation-Legislation by incorporation.

HEADNOTE: This  Court  in  the case of Baij Nath  Kedia  declared  the second  proviso to section 10(2) of the Bihar  Land  Reforms Act,  1950  unconstitutional on the ground  that  the  Bihar Legislature  had  no  jurisdiction to enact  it  and  that Parliament  alone  was competent to legislate.   This  Court also held that rule 20(2) framed by the Bihar Government  as delegate of the Parliament under section 15 of the Mines and Minerals  (Regulation  and  Development)  Act  of  1957  was unconstitutional  since the rule making power  conferred  by section 15 of the Central Act did not contemplate alteration of  terms of leases already in existence before the Act  was passed. Second  proviso to section 10(2) of the Bihar  Land  Reforms Act reads as under               "Provided   further   that   the   terms   and               conditions  of  the said lease  in  regard  to               minor  minerals  as defined in the  Mines  and               Minerals  (Regulation  and  Development)  Act,               1957  (Act LXVII of 1957) shall, in so far  as               they  are inconsistent with the rules of  that               Act,  stand substituted by  the  corresponding               terms  and  conditions by those rules  and  if               further  ascertainment and settlement  of  the               terms  will  become necessary  then  necessary               proceedings  for that shall be  undertaken  by               the Collector." Rule  20(2) authorises the alteration of the term of  leases which were in existence before the Central Act was passed.

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After the judgment in Baij Nath Kedia’s case was  delivered, the  Parliament  passed a Validation Act of  1969.   Section 2(1) and (2) of the Validation Act reads as under               "21(1).   The laws specified in  the  Schedule               shall  be and shall be deemed always  to  have               been, as valid as if the provisions  contained               therein had been enacted by Parliament.               2(2).  Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or               order of any court, all actions taken,  things               done,  rules  made,  notifications  issued  or               purported  to have been taken, done,  made  or               issued  and rents or royalties realised  under               any  such  laws shall be deemed to  have  been               validly taken, done, made, issued or realised,               as  the  case may be, as if this  section  had               been in force at all material times when  such               notifications,   were  issued,  or  rents   or               royalties were realised, and no suit or  other               proceedings  shall be maintained or  continued               in  any  court  for the  refund  of  rents  or               royalties realised under any such laws." In  the Schedule to the said Validation Act, section  10  of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 and sub-rule (2) of Rule 20 of  the  Bihar Minor Mineral Concession Rules,  1964,  inter alia, have been set out. 10 SC/75-11 152 In  the present petition under Article 32, validity  of  the Validition Act has been challenged by the petitioner on  the grounds :               "If  a  law  is void as  being  passed  by  an               incompetent   Legislature,  validation  by   a               subsequent   Act   passed   by   a   competent               legislature  can  only  be  effected  by   the               subsequent law enacting the provisions of  the               old  Act  expressly or by  incorporation.   It               cannot  be  done by a  competent  Legislature,               laying  down  in the subsequent Act  that  the               former   Act   passed   by   the   incompetent               Legislatam is deemed to be valid.               No  liability to levy rent or royalty  can  be               created retroactively without two clear stages               or  steps:  firstly,  a law  must  be  enacted               creating  the liability; next, such  provision               should be made retrospective.  This  two-stage               procedure  is  absent  in  the  statute  under               attack  and fore the purpose, whatever it  be,               has misfired." The  respondent  contended that the Parliament  adopted  the form  of  incorporation  refrencially to  a  State  Act  and subordinate  legislation  given  in  the  schedule  to   the Validation  Act.   The Validation Act was a product  of  the Parliament It was not a case of Parliament simply validating an  invalid  law  passed  by  the  Bihar  Legislation.   The Parliament  reenacted the Validation Act with  retrospective effect in its own right adding one Central Act to tin Book. Dismissing the appeal, HELD  :  (i)  Incorporation of Acts is  permissible  in  the absence  of other disabling factors.  The Bihar Act qua  the Bihar  Legislature  could not be  resuscited  by  Parliament conferring such power through a law, as far as provisions of second  proviso to section 10(2) of the Bihar  Land  Reforms Act  is concerned.  As far as rule 20(2) is  concerned,  the position  is  different  since  that is  a  rule  framed  by Parliament   through  its  delegate  the  State   Government

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although  rule was ultra vires being in excess of the  power conferred by section 15 of the Central Act.  The  Parliament had, therefore, passed a Validation Act to validate the void provisions  of  Bihar Land Reforms Act and the  ultra  vires sub-rule  2  of rule 20 as well as action taken  and  things done in connection therewith.  The power of a Legislature to pass  a  law  obviously  includes  the  power  to  pass   it retrospectively.  Earlier, the Bihar Act or Rules framed  by the  State Government under the Central Acts do not have  to be  valid  for  sustaining the Validation Act  made  by  the Parliament. [162E-F, 163B] (ii)What  is  the intention of Parliament is mainly  to  be gathered from the language used, tested by approved  cannons of construction.  Unhappy  wording, infelicitous  expression of  imperfect  or inartistic drafting  may  not  necessarily defeat  for  that  reason alone the obvious  object  of  the validating  law  and its retrospective  content.   The  real question  is  whether the Court can  speculate  on  presumed intent  of  the  Parliament and  rewrite  that  object  with implicit  sense.  We listen largely to the language  of  the Statute  but  where,  as  here,  clearing  up  of   marginal obscurity  may  make  interpretation  surer  if  light  from dependable sources were to beam in, the Court may seek  such aid.   In  the  instant  case, we  are  satisfied  that  the Parliament  desired  to validate  retrospectively  what  the Bihar Legislation had ineffectually attempted.  It has  used words  plain enough to implement its object and,  therefore, the  validating  Act as well as the consequential  levy  are good.  Rule 20(2) of the Mineral Concession Rules stands  on an  assured  footing.  This sub-rule has been  made  by  the Bihar   Government  purely  as  a  delegate  of   Parliament Therefore,  Parliament  could validate it and has  done  so. [166AB, 156H] (iii)Under   our   scheme  of   distribution   of   the legislative  powers, particularly when subjects of  national and  provincial  concern are involved, an and the  States  a lesser role, the present case of mines and minerals being an instance in point. [155CD] (iv)The  impugned legislation, levy and other  actions  are good. [168B]                             153

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL  JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 357 to  359  of 1970. Petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India. A. K. Sen, P.  K. Chatteriee and G. S. Chatterjee for  the petitioners. L.   N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India, S. N. Prasad,  R. N. Sachthey, and M. N. Shroff, for respondent no. 1. S.K. Sinha and K. K. Sinha, for respondent Nos. 2-5 (in W.P. No. 359/70). L.  N.  Sinha, Solicitor General of India and U.  P.  Singh, for respondent no. 2. (in W.P. No. 357/70. L.N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India add D.  Goburdhan, for respondent Nos. 2-4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KRISHNA IYER, J.-The central issue in these petitions  deals with  the  question  whether a statute and  a  rule  earlier declared by the Court unconstitutional or otherwise invalid, can  be  retroactive through  fresh  validating  legislation enacted  by the competent Legislature.  More pointedly,  the constitutionality   of.  r.  20(2)  framed  by   the   Bihar

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Government under s. 15 of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation and  Development) Act, 1957 (Act LXVII of 1957) (for  short, the Central Act) and the second proviso to S. 10 (2) of  the Bihar  Land Reforms Act, 1950 (for brevity, the  Bihar  Act) has  been challenged on various grounds in the petitions,  a validating  statute  by Parliament  transforming  them  into Central  legislation, as will be presently  explained.   The subject  of the litigation is minor minerals, and the  right of  the  petitioners  adversely  affected  by  the  impugned legislation,  is-to quarry stones etc., on the  strength  of leases  granted  to  them  by  erstwhile  proprietors  whose ownership  vested in the State by virtue of the  Bihar  Act. By the combined operation of the second proviso to S.  10(2) of  the Bihar Act and r. 20(2) (framed by the State  Govern- ment)  of  the Bihar Miner Mineral  Concession  Rules,  1964 (hereinafter  called the Rules) the petitioners were  called upon to pay certain rents and royalties in respect of mining operations,  but  the power of the State, clothed  by  these provisions,  was  put  in  issue  in  the  first  round   of litigation   by  lessees  of  quarries,   which   culminated disastrously  against the State in Baij Nath Kedia v.  State of Bihar(1).  This Court, in that case, held that the  Bihar Legislature had no jurisdiction to enact the second  proviso to  S.  10(2) of the Bihar Act, because it went  further  to hold that s. 15 of the Central Act, read with s. 2  thereof, had appropriated the whole field relating to minor  minerals for Parliamentary legislation.  This Court proceeded to  lay down  that  the second sub-rule, added by  the  Notification dated December 10, 1964 to r. 20 of the rules did not affect leases  in  existence prior to the enactment of  the  rules. The upshot of the decision was that the (1)  [1970] 2 SCR 100.                             154 action taken by the Bihar Government, in modifying the terms and  conditions  of  the  leases  which  were  in  existence anterior to the rules and the levy sought to be made on  the strength   of   the  amended  Bihar  Act   and   rule   were unsustainable.  Thereupon the State persuaded Parliament  to enact the validation Act of 1969 with a view to remove the road-blorks  which  resulted  in  the  decision  in  Kedia’s Case(1). The   preamble  and  the short Act  (now  impugned) provide thus               "An   Act  to  validate   certain   provisions               contained in the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950,               and the Bihar Minor Mineral Concession  Rules,               1964,  and  action taken and  things  done  in               connection therewith."                 Section  I  gives  the  title  of  the  Act.               Section 2 of the Act runs thus               "2. Validation of certain Bihar State laws and               action   taken  and  things   done   connected               therewith.               (1)The laws specified in the Schedule shall               be and shall. be deemed’ always to have  been,               as  valid  as if the provisions  ID  contained               therein had been enacted by Parliament.               (2)Notwithstanding any judgment, decree  or               order of any court, all actions taken,  things               done,  rules  made,  notifications  issued  or               purported  to have been taken, done,  made  or               issued  and rents or royalties realised  under               any  such  laws shall be deemed to  have  been               validly taken, done, made, issued or realised,               as  the  case may be, as if this  section  had               been in force at all material times when  such

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             action  was  taken, things  were  done,  rules               were,  made,  notifications  were  issued,  or               rents or royalties were realised, and no  suit               or  other proceedings shall be  maintained  or               continued in any court for the refund of rents               or royalties realised under any such laws.               (3)For the removal of doubts, it is  hereby               declared that nothing in sub-section (2) shall               be  construed  as preventing any  person  from               claiming refund of any rents or royalties paid               by  him in excess of the amount due  from  him               under any such laws."   In the Schedule, section 10 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950  (Bihar Act XXX of 1950), as amended by the Bihar  Land Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1964 (Bihar Act IV of 1965) and  by the  Bihar Land Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1965 (Bihar Act  VI of 1965), and two other sections, namely, sections 10-A  and 31,  of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, as amended by  the various amending Acts, are mentioned.  Sub-rule (2) of  Rule 20  of  the Bihar Minor Mineral Concession Rules,  1964,  as inserted  by  the  Bihar  Minor  Mineral  Concession  (First Amendment) Rules, 1964, published under the Bihar Government Notification  No. A/MM-109964 (pt.) 7700/M, dated  the  19th December, 1964, in the Gazette of Bihar (Pt. 11), dated  the 30th December, 1964 is also mentioned therein. (1)[1970] 2 S.C.R. 100. 155 The legal question canvassed before us is as to whether  the Amending  Act in question has been an exercise  in  futility because  of an unconstitutional essay and foggy drafting  or has  achieved  the  purpose I set  by  Parliament  which  is transparent  from  the legislative history Shri A.  K.  Sen, counsel  for the petitioner, has turned the focus mainly  on one  or  two  deficiencies in the enactment of  the  Act  by Parliament.   Shri Sen’s submission is that  notwithstanding the  validating  measure the right claimed by the  State  to alter the terms of the lease or to impose a new levy has not validly acquired. Case History Mines and minerals, as topics of legislation, fall under the Union and the State Lists.  Under our scheme of distribution of   legislative  powers,  particularly  when  subjects   of national  and  provincial concern ,arc involved,  an  inter- locking  arrangement  is provided whereby the  Union  has  a dominant say and the States a lesser role, the present  case of  mines  and  minerals being an instance  in  point.   The relevant  entries in the VII Schedule are item 54 of List  I and  item  23  of List II.  The  latter  is  expressly  made subject  to  the  provisions  of  List  I  with  respect  to regulation  and development under the control of  the  Union arid the Union’s powers extend to regulation and development of  mines  and  minerals  ’to  the  extent  to  which   such regulation and development under the control of the Union is declared by Parliament by law to be expedient in the  public interest’.   In the exercise of the above power,  the  Union Parliament  passed the Central Act which covered not  merely the  field of major minerals but also occupied the  area  of minor minerals, as is evident from ss. 15 and 16 of the Act. (The necessary declaration visualised in Entry 54 of List  I is  made  by  sec.  2 of the  Central  Act).   Although  the legislation  was made by Parliament, 15 conferred  power  on the  State  Government  as its delegate  to  make  rules  in respect of minor minerals. The Bihar State which had on its statute book a land reforms law,  sought to acquire control over mines and minerals  and

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in  that  behalf added a second proviso to  s.  10(2)  which reads thus (Bihar Act 4/65)               "Provided   further   that   the   terms   and               conditions  of  the said lease  in  regard  to               minor  minerals  as defined in the  Mines  and               Minerals  (Regulation  and  Development)  Act,               1957  (Act LXVII of 1957) shall, in so far  as               they  are inconsistent with the rules of  that               Act,  stand substituted by  the  corresponding               terms  and  conditions by those rules  and  if               further  ascertainment and settlement  of  the               terms  will  become necessary  then  necessary               proceedings   for  that,  purpose   shall   be               undertaken by the Collector." The  apparent  legal result was that  the  State  Government could ’shape the terms and conditions of the leases  granted by  the  quondam proprietors and this was  done  by  framing rules  under  s. 15 of the Central Act as  the  delegate  of Parliament.  Faced with a demand for 156 higher levyput forward by the State which had been armed by the amendmentof  the Land Reforms law and  the  rules under s. 15 of the CentralAct,  mineral prospectors  and quarries moved petitions under Art. 226 of the  Constitution in  the  Patna  High Court, Although  those  petitions  were dismissed,  appeals  were carried to this  Court  which,  as earlier  stated, ended in success.  It is important to  note the  reasons which weighed with this Court in striking  down the  two pieces of legislation, one amending the  Bihar  Act and  the other, adding a sub-rule under the Central Act,  so that   an   insight  into  the  infirmities  of   the   said legislations  may be gained and the need and object  of  the validation appreciated. Hidayatullah, C. J. in Baij Nath Kedia(1), speaking for  the Court,  pointed  out that the  declaration  contemplated  by Entry  54 of List I was contained in s. 2 of Act  67/57  and thus the Central Government assumed control over  regulation of  mines and mineral development to the extent provided  in the Central Act.  Since s. 15 of the Central Act went on  to state   that  the  State  Government  may  make  rules   for regulating  the  grant of prospecting  licences  and  mining leases  in  respect  of  minor  minerals  and  for  purposes connected  therewith,  the  whole  subject  of   legislation regarding minor mineral was also covered by the Central  Act and,  to  that extent, the powers of the  State  Legislature stood  excluded.   No  scope  was  therefore  left  for  the enactment of the second proviso to s. 10(2) of the Bihar Act which related to mining and minerals and was for that reason ultra  vires.   The fate of sub-rule 20(2)  was  no  better, according  to the learned Chief Justice.   Vested  interests cannot  be  taken  away except by law made  by  a  competent Legislature.  Since the Bihar Legislature had lost power  to legislate  about  minor minerals, Parliament  was  the  sole source  of  power in this behalf.  Rule 20(2) of  the  Bihar Minor  Minerals Concession Rules, 1964 was  ineffective  for modifying  leases  granted  earlier.  It  could  not  derive sustenance  on the second proviso to s. 10(2) of  the  Bihar Act  which had been held ultra vires not  could  legislative support  be derived from s. 15 of the Central Act since  the rulemaking  power  conferred  by  that  provision  did   not contemplate  alteration  of  terms  of  leases  already   in existence before the Act was passed. The  direct lessons from Kedia(1) were drawn  by  Parliament and  suitable  legislative action taken,  according  to  the Solicitor General, resulting in the present validation  Act.

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So much so the purpose of the enactment was obvious, the law laid  down  by  this  Court was  obeyed  and  the  resultant referential  legislation  must therefore be  interpreted  to further  and fulfil-not to frustrate or foil-the  intendment of retroactive validation of earlier inoperative legislative and executive action taken by the Bihar State. Statutory conspectus and meaning Substantially this history of the impugned Act is not  under serious  challenge.   The vital conflict is as  to  whether, whatever may have been in the mind of Parliament, the  Court can speculate on presumed intent (1)  [1970] 2 S.C.R.100. 157 and  read that object with implicit sense, According to  Sri Sen,  what  has  been legislated has to  be  judged  on  the language  used  which, in his view, was  hardy  adequate  to create  power  to vary the leases or cast liability  to  pay largr and royalties retrospectively. We listen largely to the language of the statute but  where, as  here,,  clearing  up  of  marginal  obscurity  may  make interpretation  surer if light from dependable sources  were to  beam  in, the Court may seek such aid.   What  has  been described as the sound system of construction, excluding all but the language of the text and the dictionary ad the  key, hardly  holds  the field especially if the enactment  has  a fiscal or other mission, its surrounding circumstances speak and  its history unfolds the mischief to be  remedied.   The Court,   in  its  comings  with  the  Legislature,   strives reasonably  to  give meaningful life  and  avoid  cadaverous consequence We have set out the story of the rebirth, as  it were,  of  the law of minor mineral royalty  levy  to  drive home,  the propriety of this method of approach.  No  doubt, there is some remissness in the drawing up of what professes to  be  a validating law and the neglected art  of  drafting bills is in part the reason for subtle length of submissions where better skill could have make the sense of the  statute luscious  and  its  validity  above-board.   Informed  by  a realistic idea of shortfalls in legislative drafting and  of the  social perspective of the statute but guided  primarily by  what  the  Act  has  said  explicitly  or  by  necessary implication  we will examine the meaning and its  impact  on counsel’s contentions. The main Propositions of law Kedia’s Case(1) has held void both proviso 2 to s. 10 of  the Bihar Act and Rule 20 (2) made under the Central Act.   Shri A.  K.  Sen did not dispute the  legislative  competence  of Parliament, by specific enactment, to validate retroactively otherwise invalid legislation   or incorporate into a Central Act a void State legislation since mines and minerals, minor and  major,  had been taken over by the  Centre.  His  chief submission was that the well-known legislative mechanics  to resurrect statutorily earlier Acts or rules declared dead by Court  had  not been adopted here, so much  so  the  fiction introduced  by the deeming provision has failed  to  achieve what  is  being  claimed by the  State  as  the  legislative object.  Mr. Sen’s proposition, shortly stated, is               "If  a  law  is void as  being  passed  by  an               incompetent   Legislature,  validation  by   a               subsequent   Act   passed   by   a   competent               Legislature can only be effected by the subse-               quent  law enacting the provisions of the  old               Act expressly or by incorporation.  It  cannot               be done by a competent Legislature laying down               in  the  subsequent Act that  the  former  Act               passed  by  the  incompetent  Legislature   is

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             deemed to be What  is moot is not the proposition but its application  to our legislative situation. (1)[1970] 2 S.C.R. 100. 158 Relaince  for  this proposition was placed,  inter  alia  on Jaora  Sugar  Mills  v. State(1) ; Jawaharmal  v.  State  of Rajasthan(2) ; Shama Rao v. Pandicherry(3) and Gwalior Rayon Mills  v.  Asstt.  Commissioner, S.T.(1). To take  the  last case  first,  we may state that the  problem  tackled  there related  to  excessive delegation and abdication  of  legis- lative power and did not bear upon the issue of  legislation by   reference  or  incorporation.   Of  course,  there   is consideration of Shama Rao(3) in the judgment of Mathew  J., but  it  is difficult to make out how  the  observations  to which  our attention was invited bear upon the issue  before us.  The  learned Judge’s containment of the principle in  Shama Rao(:’)  with which we respectfully concur, may be  set  out here (p. 1679)               "We think that the principle of the ruling  in               [1967]  2  SCR 650 (viz., Shama Rao)  must  be               confined  to  the facts of the  case.,  It  is               doubtful   whether   there  is   any   general               principle which precludes either Parliament or               a  State legislature from adopting a  law  and               the  future  amendments  to  the  law   passed               respectively   by  a  State   legislature   or               Parliament  and  incorporating  them  in   its               legislation.   At  any rate, there can  be  no               such  prohibition when the adoption is not  of               the entire corpus of law on a subject but only               of  a provision and its future amendments  and               that for a special reason or purpose. The  kernel of Gwalior Rayon (4) is the ambit of  delegation by  Legislatures,  and  the  reference  to  legislation   by adoption  or incorporation supports the competence and  does not  contradict the vires of such a process-not  an  unusual phenomenon in legislative systems nor counter     to     the plenitude   of  powers  constitutional  law  has   in   many jurisdictions  conceded  to such  instrumentalities  clothed with plenary authority.  The Indian legislatures and  courts have  never  accepted any inhibition against  or  limitation upon enactment by incorporation, as such. The dispute is not whether Parliament         can  legislate into validity  State  Act which is outside the  State  List. If s. 2 of the impugned  Act merely validates invalid  State law  by         Parliament’s action, it is doomed  to  fail. It  is  for  the Constitution,  not  Parliament,  to  confer competence on State Legislatures.  The observations in Jaora Sugar  Mills(1) on which Shri A. K. Sen laid  great  stress, silence the question               "...  . . . If it is shown that  the  impugned               Act purports to do nothing more than  validate               the  invalid State statutes’, then of  course,               such  a  validating Act would be  outside  the               legis-               (1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 523, 531.               (2)[1966] 1 S.C.R. 890, 901, 904.               (3)[1967] 2 S.C.R. 650, 662.               (4)A.I.R. 1974 S.C. 1660, 1681.                                    159               lative competence of Parliament itself Where a               topic is not included within the relevant List               dealing with the legislative competence of the

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             State  Legislatures, Parliament, by  making  a               law, cannot attempt to confer such legislative               competence on the State Legislatures." It  is  a far constitutional cry from this position  to  the other  proposition that where Parliament has power to  enact on a topic actually legislates within its competence but, as an  abbreviation  of drafting, borrows into the  statute  by reference the words of a State Act not qua State Act but  as a convenient shorthand, as against a longhand writing of all the  sections into the Central Act, such legislation  stands or  falls on Parliament’s legislative power, vis -a-vis  the subject  viz., mines and minerals.  The distinction  between the  two  legal lines may sometimes be fine  but  always  is real.   Jaora  Sugar  Mills  (supra)  illumined  this  basic difference  with  reference to s. 3 of  the  Act  challenged there, by observing :               "......  What Parliament has done by  enacting               the  said  section  is  not  to  validate  the               invalid  State  statutes, but to  make  a  law               concerning the cess covered by the said Statu-               tes  and  to provide that the said  law  shall               come into operation retrospectively.  There is               a   radical   difference   between   the   two               positions.   Where  the Legislature  wants  to               validate   an  earlier  Act  which  has   been               declared  to  be  invalid for  one  reason  or               another,  it proceeds to remove the  infirmity               from the said Act and validates its provisions               which  are free from any infirmity.   That  is               not  what Parliament has done in enacting  the               present   Act.   Parliament  knew   that   the               relevant  Statutes were invalid,  because  the               State Legislatures did not possess legislative               competence  to  enact them.   Parliament  also               knew  that it was fully competent to  make  an               Act  in respect of the subject-matter  covered               by   the   said   invalid   State    Statutes.               Parliament, however, decided that rather  than               make elaborate and long provisions in  respect               of the recovery of the, cess, it would be more               convenient  to  make a  compendious  provision               such  as  is  contained in  S.  3.  The  plain               meaning of Section 3 is that the material  and               relevant  provisions of notifications,  orders               and  rules  issued  or  made  thereunder   are               included  in Section 3 and shall be deemed  to               have  been included at all material  times  in               it.   In other words, what section 3  provides               is that by its order and force, the respective               cesses  will be deemed to have been  recovered               because  the  provisions in  relation  to  the               recovery   of  the  said  cesses   have   been               incorporated  in the Act itself.  The  command               under which the cesses would be deemed to have               been   recovered  would,  therefore,  be   the               command   of  Parliament,  because   all   the               relevant  sections, notifications, orders  and               rules  have been adopted by the  Parliamentary               statute itself." No  Parliamentary , omnipotence    to re-draw.   Legislative Lists in the VII Schedule can be arrogated to confer on  the State compe- 160 tence  to  enact on a topic where it is outside  its  Lists. But  if parliament has the power to legislate on the  topic,

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it  can  make  an Act on the topic by  any  drafting  means, including by referential legislation. The  learned  Solicitor  General,  in  the  course  of   his submissions made it clear that he did not want to  vindicate the levy by any validation of the invalidated portion of  s. 10 of the Bihar Act.  He based his case on the success  with which   Parliament  had  legislated  for  itself,   although adopting a shorthand form of incorporation referentially  of a  State Act and subordinate legislation given in the  Sche- dule  to  the validation Act.  He also made  it  clear  that r.20(2) had nothing to do with the Bihar Legislature but was the  product of Parliamentary legislation by  delegation  in favour  of  State  Government.   Thus,  in  his  view,   the Parliament legislated for itself and statutorily adopted for itself the second proviso to s. 10 of the Bihar Act and  the otherwise  ultra  vires sub-rule (2) of r. 20.  If  the  re- enacting   technique   adopted  for   the   referential   or incorporating  legislation  was  insufficient  in  law,   he failed.   Otherwise,  the Act and rules referred to  in  the Schedule   to   the  validation  Act  revived   and   became operational,  retroactively.  There is force in the  submis- sion  that taking a total view of the circumstances  of  the validation  Act Parliament did more than simply validate  an invalid law passed by the Bihar Legislature but did  reenact it  with  retrospective effect in its own  right  adding  an amending Central Act to the statute book. Shri A. K. Sen pressed passages from Jawaharmal (supra), but some  care in scrutiny will reveal that  Jawaharmal  (supra) does not clash with Jaora Sugar Mills (supra). We may briefly deal with that decision and explain it.  Art, 255  of the Constitution insists on Presidential assent  for certain  Acts of the State Legislature, although  subsequent assent  is  curative of the infirmity caused by  absence  of previous  assent.  In Jawaharmal (supra), one of the  points that  fell  for decision was the efficacy of  a  Legislative declaration  that  an  earlier  invalid  Act  (for  want  of Presidential  assent) be deemed to be valid  by  reenactment and  subsequent assent of the President to the  second  Act. This  would virtually mean that by the  re-enacting  device, Presidential  assent could be by-passed by the  Legislature, Negativing   this  submission,  the  Court  observed,   with reference   to  the  Rajasthan  Act  which  attempted   this unconstitutional exercise :               "In other words, the Legislature seems ’to say               by Section 4 that even though Article 255  may               not  have  been complied with by  the  earlier               Finance Acts, it is competent to pass  Section               4 whereby it win prescribe that the failure to               comply  with  Article  255  does  not   really               matter. and the assent of the President to the               Act  amounts to this that the  President  also               agrees  that the Legislature is  empowered  to               say  that  the infirmity resulting  from  non-               compliance  with Article 255 does not  matter.               In our opinion, the Legislature is incompetent               to  declare  that the failure to  comply  with               Article  255 is of no consequence;  and,  with               respect, the                                    161               assent  of the President to  such  declaration               also   does  not  serve  the   purpose   which               subsequent  assent by the President can  serve               under Article 255 . . ."               x           x          x           x               we  have  tried s.4 as favourably  as  we  can

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             while appreciating the argument of the learned               Advocate  General; but the words used  in  all               the  three  parts of Section 4 are  clear  and               unambiguous;    they   indicate    that    the               Legislature  thought that it was competent  to               it  to cure, by its  own legislative  process,               the   infirmity   resulting  from   the   non-               compliance with Article 255 when it passed the               earlier  Finance Acts in question, and it  was               probably  advised  that  such  a   legislative               declaration  would  be  valid  and   effective               provided   it  received  the  assent  of   the               President.In   our   opinion,  the   approach               adopted by the Legislaturein   this  case               is entirely misconceived. The Legislature,no               doubt,  can validate an earlier Act  which  is               invalid byreason   of   non-compliance   with               Article  255 and such an Act may  receive  the               assent  of the President which will  make  the               Act   effective.   The   Legislature   cannot,               however,   itself  declare  by   a   statutory               provision  that  the failure  to  comply  with               Article 255 can be cured by its own  enactment               even if the said enactment received the assent               of  the President.  In our opinion,  even  the               assent of the President cannot alter the  true               constitutional  position under Art. 255.   The               assent   of  the  President  cannot,  by   any               legislative  process, be deemed to  have  been               given to an earlier Act at a time when in fact               it was not so given.  In this context there is               no scope for a retrospective deeming in regard                             to the assent of the President.  It is  somewhat               unfortunate   that  the  casual  drafting   of               Section 2 leaves the period covered by Act  11               of 1962 and the notification issued thereunder               as  unenforceable as before, and  the  omnibus               and general provisions of Section 4 are of  no               help in regard to the said period." In  dismissing  a  similar contention  based  on  Jawaharmal (supra),  to challenge the identical statute with  which  we are  here  concerned,  the Patna  High  Court  observed,  in Dhabhum T & I Ltd. v. Union of India (1) ;               "In  that  case,  the  validating  law  merely               declared that the original invalid legislation               was  valid  in spite of the  contravention  of               Article  255  of  the  Constitution.   In  the               instant  case,  Parliament has not  sought  to               declare  that the failure to comply  with  the               requirements    of   Article   255   of    the               Constitution is of no consequence." The  crucial demarcation between Jaora Sugar  Mills  (supra) and   Jawaharmal   (supra)  is  important  and   cannot   be overlooked.  The latter (1)  AIR 1972 Pat. 364, 373 162 case dealt with a State Legislature ineffectually overcoming invalidity   caused  by  absence  of  Presidential   assent. Validation  by a legislature must necessarily be of what  it could validly have done and not of what someone else had  to do.  The assent of the President could not be made up for by the  validating process adopted by the legislature.   So  it was  that  Jawaharmal  (supra)  suffered  from   legislative incompetence a second time.

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It is important to notice, however, that the alleged vice of the  legislation in the present case relates to a  radically different area.  What is within the competence of Parliament it seeks to do-validation by incorporation of a  legislation on  a topic within its purview.  The device adopted  of  re- enacting  by validation is familiar to the Indian  draftsman as to his Anglo-American counterpart.  We have no doubt that incorporation of Acts is permissible in the absence of other disabling factors.  It is one thing to say that  retroactive validation by a competent legislature is impermeable; it  is another to contend that there has not been a valid execution of this process or rather Parliament has not, in the present case,  done  what  the  draftsman  ought  to  have  done  to effectuate the ostensible purpose of creating a new power to levy royalty and to alter the terms of the mining cases and- then to give such newly created liability anterior effect. The controversy now shifts to the effectiveness or otherwise of   the   legislative  device  in   achieving   retroactive validation.  We have already noticed that the second proviso to  s.10(2)  of the Bihar Act and sub-r.(2) of r.20  of  the Mineral  Concession Rules, 1964 were void, as held  by  this Court.  We have therefore to treat them as non est.  We have already  held that the Bihar Act qua Bihar nation could  not be resuscitated by Parliament conferring such power  through a  law.  The position may be different so far as rule  20(2) is  concerned  since  that is a rule  framed  by  Parliament through  its  delegate, the State Government,  although  the rule  itself being in excess of the power conferred by  s.15 of  the Central Act was ultra vires.  In  this  invalidatory situation,  Parliament  passed an Act to validate  the  void provision of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 and the  ultra vires  sub-rule of r.20 of the Mineral Concession  Rules  as well  as  the  action taken and things  done  in  connection therewith.   ’The  Act is itself short and consists  of  two sections,  of which the ,latter is the only  important  one. It validates the laws specified in the schedule by a deeming device.  Secondly, it brings into force, back-dating it, all action  taken, rents and royalties realised and  rules  made ’notwithstanding  any  judgment,  decree  or  order  of  any Court’.   The  problem  before us is whether  the  Act  has achieved its purpose of creating retrospective liability for rents,  royalties etc., and validating  retrospectively  the impugned  provisions  of  the  Bihar  Act  and  the  Mineral Concession Rules. Shri  A.  K.  Sen’s  criticism has to  be  noticed  in  this background; for he urges that in the light of the rulings of this  Court  no  liability to levy rent or  royalty  can  be created  retroactively without two clear stages or  steps  : firstly,  a  law must be enacted  creating  the  liability-, next,  such  provision should be made  retrospective.   This two-stage  procedure is absent in the statute tinder  attack and therefore the pur-                             163 pose,  whatever  it be, has misfired,. argues  Mr.  Sen.  In plain  terms  the  present  case  raises  the  question   of enactment by reference and incorporation.  It is correct  to contend  that  curative-statutes and  validating  exercises, unless  the  process  is  explicit  enough  and  permissible otherwise,  cannot be given ex post facto effect by  courts. What is the intention of Parliament is mainly to be gathered from  the  language  used,  tested  by  approved  canons  of construction. The  profusion of precedents touched upon at the Bar  leaves us  with  a  few  which  were  stressed  as  having   direct pertinence  to  the  points  in  debate.   The  power  of  a

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legislature  to pass a law obviously includes the  power  to pass  it  retrospectively.   Minor  minerals,  as  explained already, being a topic withdrawn and confided to  Parliament for   legislation,  the  validating  Act  cannot  fail   for incompetence.   But before a levy expost facto is made,  the legislation must first create the fiscal liability and  then project it retrospectively.  This is the broad trend of  Sri A.  K. Sen’s submission.  He relies heavily on Kamrap(1)  to urge that a legislation cannot by a simple ’deeming’  device render valid what is unconstitutional. The  following observations were emphasized by  counsel  (p. 580 of the report) :               "It  is to be seen that the core of Assam  Act               21  of  1960 is the deeming provision  of  s.2               under  which  certain lands are deemed  to  be               acquired  under  the  earlier  Act.   As  this               deeming  provision is invalid, all  the  other               ancillary provisions fall to the ground  along               with it.  The later Act is entirely  dependent               upon the continuing existence and validity  of               the  earlier  Act.   As  the  earlier  Act  is               unconstitutional  and has no legal  existence,               the  provisions  of  Act No. 21  of  1960  are               incapable of enforcement and are invalid." The  ratio is apt to be misunderstood for, in  its  essence, the  judgment  merely  holds that where the  later  Act  is- entirely dependent upon the valid continuance of the earlier Act,  which  has  been held  unconstitutional,  the  deeming provision  cannot produce the desired effect.   The  learned Solicitor General, however, argues that the situation in the present case is altogether different.  The earlier Bihar Act or the rules framed by the State Government under the Act do not have to be valid for sustaining the amending Act made by Parliament.   The constitutionality of the earlier  law  has not  to be posited for the survival of the Central  amending Act.   In this submission the learned Solicitor  General  is right  and so the proposition in Kamrup(1)  is  inapplicable here. In  Hari  Singh(2), Kamrup(1) was approved but there  is  no quarrel  over the correctness of the proposition there,  its application being inept in the context of the present  case. However, Ray J. (as he then was), made certain  observations which were pressed before us by Mr. Sen (1)  [1968] 1 SCR 561. (2)  [1973] 1 SCR 515.                             164               "The  ratio is that the 1960 Act has no  power               to  enact  that an acquisition  made  under  a               constitutionally  invalid Act was valid.   The               1960 Act did not stand independent of the 1955               Act.   The deeming provision of the  1960  Act               was that land was deemed to be acquired  under               the   1955   Act.   If  the   1955   Act   was               unconstitutional, the 1960 Act could not  make               the 1955 Act constitutional." With  great  respect  we agree with  the  position  but,  as earlier  stated,  the statutory complex  confronting  us  is something  different.   In  the  present  case,  the   Bihar Legislature  is not legislating into validity, by a  deeming provision, what has been declared ultra vires by the  Court. It is Parliament, whose competency to legislate on the topic in question is beyond doubt, that is enacting the  ’deeming’ provision.  It follows that Hari Singh (supra) also  cannot salvage the appellant. We reach the twilight of legislative area when we move  into

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West  Ramnad  Electric Distribution Co. Case(1)  which  also dealt with a validating Act.  The Madras Electricity  Supply Undertakings  Act.  1949  clothed the State  with  power  to acquire  Electricity Supply Undertakings.  The  validity  of the  said  Act was challenged and this Court  held  the  law ultra vires.  In consequence, the Madras Legislature  passed Madras Act 29/54 which incorporated the impugned  provisions of  the  earlier Act of 1949 and purported to  validate  the action taken under the earlier Act.  The affected  appellant assailed the new Act to the extent to which it purported  to validate  acts done under the earlier Act of 1949 which  had been  declared inoperative by the Court.  The facet of  that decision which relates to the point under discussion  before us establishes that validation, with retrospectively  super- added,   is   perfectly  competent  for   the   Legislature. Gajendragadkar, J. (as he then was), observed :               "The argument is that there is no specific  or               express  provision in the Act which makes  the               Act retrospective and so, s.24, even if it  is               valid,  is  ineffective  for  the  purpose  of               sustaining   the  impugned  order   by   which               possession   of  the  appellant  concern   was               obtained by the respondent."               x          x           x          x               "Before  dealing with this argument, it  would               be necessary to examine the broad features  of               the  Act  and understand its  general  scheme.               The   Act  was  passed  because   the   Madras               Legislature  thought it expedient  to  provide               for the acquisition of undertakings other than               those  belonging to and under the  control  of               the State Electricity Board constituted  under               section  5  of the Electricity  (Supply)  Act,               1948  in  the State of Madras engaged  in  the               business  of  supplying  electricity  to   the               public.   It is with that object  that  appro-               priate provisions have been made by the Act to               provide  for the acquisition  of  undertakings               and  to  lay down the  principles  for  paying               compensation for them.  It is quite clear that               the scheme of the Act was to bring within  the               purview    of    its    material    provisions               undertakings in respect               (1)   [1963] 2 S C.R. 747.                                    165               of  which no action had been taken  under  the               earlier  Act  and those in  respect  of  which               action had been so taken."               x          x           x           x               "It  is thus clear that the Act, in terms,  is               intended  to  apply to undertakings  of  which               possession  had already been taken,  and  that               obviously  means that its material and  opera-               tive  provisions are  retrospective.   Actions               taken under the provisions of the earlier  Act               are  deemed  to  have  been  taken  under  the               provisions  of  the Act and  possession  taken               under the said earlier provisions is deemed to               have been taken under the relevant  provisions               of  the Act.  This retrospective operation  of               the  material  provisions of the Act  is  thus               writ large in all the relevant provisions  and               is an essential part of the scheme of the Act.               Therefore,  Mr. Nambiar is not right  when  he               assumes  that the rest of the Act is  intended

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             to be prospective and so, section 24 should be               construed in the light of the said prospective               character  of  the Act.  On the  contrary,  in               construing  s.24, we have to bear in mind  the               fact   that  the  Act  is   retrospective   in               operation and is intended to bring within  the               scope of its material provisions  undertakings               of which possession had already been taken."               x           x           x          x               "The  third part of the section provides  that               the  statutory declaration about the  validity               of  the  issue of the  notification  would  be               subject  to  this  exception  that  the   said               notification  should not be inconsistent  with               or repugnant to the provisions of the Act.  In               other  words,  the effect of this  section  is               that   if  a  notification  had  been   issued               properly  under the provisions of the  earlier               Act  and  its  validity could  not  have  been               impeached   if   the  said   provisions               were  themselves valid, it would be deemed  to               have been validly issued under the  provisions               of  the  Act, provided, of course, it  is  not               inconsistent with the other provisions of  the               Act.  The section is not very happily  worded,               but  on its fair and reasonable  construction,               there  can  be no doubt about its  meaning  or               effect.    It  is  a  saving  and   validating               provision  and it clearly intends to  validate               actions taken under the relevant provisions of               the  earlier  Act which was invalid  from  the               start.   The fact that s. 24 does not use  the               usual   phraseology  that  the   notifications               issued  under the earlier Act shall be  deemed               to  have been issued under the Act,  does  not               alter  the position. that the second  part  of               the  section has and is intended to  have  the               same effect."               x          x           x           x               "We  have no doubt that s.24 was  intended  to               validate  actions taken under the earlier  Act               and  on its fair and reasonable  construction,               it must be held that the intention has been  166  carried  out by the legislature  by  enacting               the said section.    Therefore,  the  argument               that  s.24 even if valid,  cannot  effectively               validate  the  impugned  notification,  cannot               succeed." The  ratio of West Ramnad (supra) is clear. The  Legislature can retrospectively validate what otherwise was  inoperative law or action.      Unhappy wording, infelicitous expression or imperfect or inartistic    drafting  may not  necessarily defeat,  for  that reason alone, the obvious object  of  the validating law and its retrospective content. In fairness to counsel for the appellant, we must state that the  proposition in Jadao Bahuji’s Case(1) about the  powers of the    Legislature, including within itself the power  to make retrospective       laws, was not canvassed. Indeed, to urge that Indian Legislatures      were  subject to  strange and unsual prohibition against retrospective      legislation’ is  as late as it is presumptuous. However, Jadao  Bahuji(1) itself contained some valuable observations of relevance for this case      which we may here extract (p. 640) :               "Retrospective  laws,  it has been  held,  can

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             validate an     Act,   which   contains   some               defect in its enactment. Examples   of               Validating  Acts which  rendered  inoperative,               decrees   or   orders   of   the   Court    or               alternatively made them valid and   effective,               are  many. In Atiqux Begum’s Case [(1940)  FCR               110],  the power of validating  defective  law               who held to be  ancillary  and  subsidiary  to               the powers conferred by the En tries and to be               included in those powers." We  have  said  enough  to  establish  that  no  substantial objection  to  the  Act in question can be  pressed  on  the strength of incompetence of inoperative retroactivity.  That is why the appellant’s submission   was switched largely  on the gross inadequacy of the language of s. 2 of the impugned Act to confer power on the State Government to validate  the rule  20(2)  or s.10 of the Bihar Act.  To be  precise,  the highlight of Sri Sen’s arguments runs thus:               "  The  core  of the Act on  which  the  State               Government  might issue rules is s. 15 of  the               Central Act, 1957.  Section 15 of the 1957 Act               did  not  authorise the  State  Government  to               enact  r.20 for modifying the existing  leases               as was found in the earlier case.  The present               s.2 does not confer any such power nor does it               enact the provisions of the Bihar Act to  this               effect.   It only provides that the Bihar  Act               shall be considered to be valid as if it  were               passed by Parliament.  Section 2 being a  core               of the present Act and that being invalid  and               being found not to amount to any incorporation               of  the Bihar Act, action taken under r.20  or               r.20  itself  passed under the old  Act  would               still remain void and inoperative." In  this  connection, considerable emphasis  was  placed  on Jawaharmal (supra) and on Shama Rao (supra). (1)[1962] 1 S.C.R. 631.                             167 Passing  reference was also made to Jagannath v.  Authorized officer Land Reforms (1). The  first of these decisions Jawaharmal  (supra)  seemingly supports  Mr.  Sen’s proposition, although the  others  fall wide  off the mark.  In West Ramnad (supra), referred to  by counsel  this  Court  made  some  observations  which   have relevance   to   the  topic  under  discussion.    There   a legislative  validation,  retrospective  in  operation,  was challenged.  The  latter  legislation  used  the  expression Thereby  declared’.  The observations made by this Court  in that connection are instructive and may be extracted:               "The second part of the section provides  that               the  notifications covered by the  first  part               are declared by this Act to have been  validly               issued  ;  the  expression  Thereby  declared’               clearly means ’declared by this Act’ and  that               shows  that the notifications covered  by  the               first  part would be treated as  issued  under               the  relevant provisions of the Act and  would               be  treated as validly issued under  the  said               provisions.   The  third part of  the  section               provides that the statutory declaration  about               the validity of the issue of the  notification               would  be subject to this exception  that  the               said  notification should not be  inconsistent               with  or  repugnant to the provisions  of  the               Act.   In  other  words, the  effect  of  this

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             section  is  that if a notification  had  been               issued  properly under the provisions  of  the               earlier  Act and its validity could  not  have               been  impeached  if the said  provisions  were               themselves  valid, it would be deemed to  have               been  validly issued under the  provisions  of               the  Act,  provided,  of  course,  it  is  not               inconsistent with the other provisions of  the               Act.  The section is not very happily  worded,               but  on its fair and reasonable  construction,               there  can  be no doubt about its  meaning  or               effect.    It  is  a  saving  and   validating               provision  and it clearly intends to  validate               actions taken under the relevant provisions of               the  earlier  Act which was invalid  from  the               start.   The fact that s.24 does not  use  the               usual phraseology that the notification issued               under the earlier Act shall be deemed to  have               been issued under the Act, does not alter  the               position  that the second part of the  section               has and is intended to have the same effect." It follows that, variant phraseology apart, the meaning  and intent  must  be unmistakable.  In the present case  we  are fully   satisfied  that  Parliament  desired   to   validate retrospectively what the Bihar legislation bad ineffectually attempted.  It has used words plain enough to implement  its object  and  therefore  the validating Act as  well  as  the consequential levy are good. Rule  20(2) of the Mineral Concession Rules, which has  been validated by s.2 of sub-s. (1) and figures as item 4 of  the Schedule  to the :Impugned enactment, stands on  an  assured footing.  This (1) (1971) 2 SCR 893. 10 SC/75-12 168 sub-rule  is  made  by  the Bihar  Government  purely  as  a delegate  of  Parliament,  though beyond the  scope  of  the delegation.  Therefore Parliament could validate it and  has done so.  The source of the authority for rule-making  being of  Parliament, it is indubitable that the power to give  it life  retrospective exists.  Thus the impugned  legislation, levy and other actions are good. For  the  reasons  set  out  above,  we  dismiss  the   writ petitions, but in the circumstances, without costs. Petitions dismissed. P.H.P. 169