West Ramnad Electric Distribution Co. Ltd., M/s. v. State of Madras, (SC)
BS111576
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
(Large Bench)
Before:- P.B. Gajendragadkar, K. Subba Rao, K. N. Wanchoo, J. C. Shah and N. Rajagopala Ayyangar, JJ.
Civil Appeals Nos. 512 and 513 of 1960. D/d.
2.5.1962.
M/s. West Ramnad Electric Distribution Co. Ltd. - Appellant
Versus
State of Madras - Respondent
For the Appellant :- Mr. M. K. Nambiar, Senior Advocate, (Mr. P. Ram Reddy, Advocates.
For the Respondent :- M/s. R. Ganapathy Iyer and P. D. Menon, Advocates.
For the Intervener No. 1:- Mr. R. Gopalakrishnan, Advocate.
For the Intervener No. 2:- Mr. K. Bhimasankaran, Senior Advocate, (M/s. B. R. G. K. Achar and P. D. Menon, Advocates.
A. Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1954, Sections 24 and 25 - Electricity - Notification - Enactment of Section 25 - Provisions of Section 24 of Act of 1954 is retrospective - There is no doubt that Section 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 carried out by the Legislature by enacting the said Section - Therefore, the argument that Section 24, even if valid, cannot effectively validate the impugned notification, cannot succeed - It is not easy to understand the genesis of Section 25 and the purpose which it is intended to achieve.
[Para 12]
B. Constitution of India, Articles 31(1) and 20 - Law - Notification - Difference between this expression " By authority of Law" and expression "law in force at the time" used in Article 20(1) - The Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1954 is retrospective in operation and Section 24 thereof has been enacted for the purpose of retrospectively validating actions taken under the provisions of the earlier invalid Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1949 - It, therefore, follows by the very retrospective operation of the relevant provisions that at the time when the notification under the prior invalid Act was issued, these provisions of the Act of 1954 were in existence - That is the plain and obvious effect of the retrospective operation of the statute - The expression "law in force" is used in both the parts of Article 20(1) of the Constitution - It indicates that even if a criminal law is enacted by any Legislature retrospectively, its retrospective operation will be controlled by Article 20(1) - A law in force at the time postulates actual factual existence of the law at the relevant time and that excludes the retrospective application of any subsequent law - Article 31(1), on the other hand, does not use the expression "law in force at the time"; it merely says "by authority of law", and so, if a subsequent law passed by the Legislature is retrospective in its operation, it would satisfy the requirement of Article 31(1) and would validate the notification issued under the prior Act.
[Paras 18 and 14]
C. Constitution of India, Articles 245 and 246 - Legislative Competence - Competency of Legislature - Retrospective Laws - Legislature can a pass a law retrospectively validating actions under a law which was void because it contravened fundamental rights where a law is invalid for the reason that it has been passed by a Legislature without legislative competence, and action is taken under its provisions, the said action can be validated by a subsequent law clothed by the same Legislature after it is clothed with the necessary legislative power.
[Para 16]
D. Constitution of India, Article 31(2) (before its amendment in 1955) - Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1954, Section 5 - Electricity - Acquisition at property - Compensation - On which bases compensation to be paid on the acquisition - Compensation payable to a licensee on whom an order has been served under Section 4 or whose undertaking has been taken over before the commencement of the Act, shall be determined under any one of the Bases A, B and C specified by the Section 5, as may be chosen under Section 8 - When a party challenges the validity of a statutory provision like Section 5 it is necessary that the party must adduce satisfactory and sufficient material before the Court on which it wants the Court to hold that the compensation which would be paid under everyone of the three Bases under the impugned statutory provision does not amount to a just equivalent.
[Paras 25 and 27]
Cases Referred :-
Narasaraopeta Electric Corporation Ltd. v. State of Madras, 1951-2 Mad LJ 277.
Rajahmundry Electric Supply Corporation Ltd. v. State of Andhra,1954 SCR 779.
Deep Chand v. State of Uttar Pradesh, 1959 Suppl. (2) SCR 8.
United Provinces v. Mst. Atiqa Begum, 1940 FCR 110 at p. 136.
Piare Dusadh v. Emperor, 1944 FCR 61 at p. 105.
Union of India v. Madan Gopal Kabra, 1954 SCR 541 at p. 554.
M. P. V. Sundararamier and Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh, 1958 SCR 1422.
J. K. Jute Mills Co. Ltd. v. State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1961 Supreme Court 1534.
Mt. Jadao Bahuji v. Municipal Committee, Khandwa, AIR 1961 Supreme Court 1486.
Jadab Singh v. Himachal Pradesh Administration, (1960) 3 SCR 755.
M/s. Raghubar Dayal Jai Prakash v. Union of India, AIR 1962 Supreme Court 263.
State of West Bengal v. Mrs. Bela Banerjee 1954 SCR 558.
JUDGMENT
Gajendragadkar J. - The principal question which arises in these two appeals is related to the validity of Section 24 of the Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1954 (XXIX of 1954) (hereinafter called the Act). That question arises in this way. The appellant, the West Ramnad Electric Distribution Co. Ltd., Rajapalayam, was incorporated in 1935 to carry on, within the State of Madras and elsewhere, the business of an electric light and power company, to construct, lay down and establish and carry on all necessary installations, to generate, accumulate, distribute and supply electricity under a licence granted under the Indian Electricity Act of 1910. On the 24th January, 1950, the Madras Legislature passed an Act (XLIII of 1949) for the acquisition of undertakings supplying electricity in the Province of Madras. Under the said Act, the Government was empowered to acquire any electrical undertaking on payment of compensation according to the relevant provisions of the said Act. In pursuance of the provisions of section 4(1) of the said Act. the respondent, State of Madras passed an Order G. O. M/s. No. 2059 no the 17th May, 1951, declaring that the appellant undertaking shall vest in the respondent from the 21st September, 1951. Thereafter, the respondent appointed the Chief Electrical Inspector as the Acquisition Officer, and on the appointed day, the said Officer took over possession of the appellant and all its assets, records and account-books. The appellant then appointed the liquidator as its Accredited Representative for the purposes of the Act in order to claim compensation under the Act. The respondent then paid over to the appellant Rs. 6 lakhs on the 24th October, 1952 and Rs. 2,34,387-1-0 on the 5th July, 1953, as compensation. According to the appellant, Rs. 98,876-15-0 still remained to be paid to it by way of compensation under the Act, whereas the respondent suggested that only Rs. 6,000 was the balance due to the appellant. That is how the appellant undertaking went into possession of the respondent and the appellant was paid partial compensation.
2. It appears that owners of some of the electrical undertakings in Madras which had been taken over by the respondent in accordance with the provisions of Section 4(1) of the 1949 Act, filed writ petitions in the High Court of Madras impugning the validity of the said Act. These writ petitions however, failed and by its judgment in Narasaraopeta Electric Corporation Ltd. v. State of Madras, 1951-2 Mad LJ 277, the Madras High Court upheld the validity of the impugned Act in so far as it related to the licensees other than municipalities. The said licensees then moved this Court and their appeal succeeded. By its decision in the Rajahmundry Electric Supply Corporation Ltd. v. State of Andhra,1954 SCR 779, this Court held that the impugned Act of 1949 was ultra vires. This decision was based on the ground that the Act was beyond the legislative competence of the Madras Legislature inasmuch as there was no entry in any of the three Lists of the Seventh Schedule of the Government of India Act, 1935 relating to compulsory acquisition of any commercial or industrial undertaking. This Court observed that although Section 292(2) of the said Constitution Act contemplated a law authorising compulsory acquisition for public purposes of a commercial or industrial undertaking a corresponding entry had not been included in any of the three Lists and so, the Madras Legislature was not competent to pass the impugned Act. This decision was pronounced on the 10th February, 1954.
3. Meanwhile, the Constitution came into force on the 26th January, 1950 and the position of the legislative competence of the Madras Legislature in respect of the compulsory acquisition of commercial or industrial undertakings for public purposes has been materially altered. Entry 36 in List II of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution refers to acquisition or requisitioning of property, except for the proposes of the Union, subject to the provisions of Entry 42 of List III whereas Entry 42 of List III deals with he principles on which compensation for property acquired or requisitioned for the purposes of the Union or of a State for any other public purpose is to be determined, and the form and the manner in which such compensation is to be given. That is how the two entries read at the relevant time.
4. After the decision of this Court was pronounced in the case of Rajahmundry Electric Supply Corporation Ltd. (supra), the Madras Legislature passed the Act and it received the assent of the President on the 9th October, 1954; and was published in the Government Gazette on the 18th October, 1954. The Act incorporated the main provisions of the earlier Act of 1949 and purported to validate action taken under the said earlier Act. After the Act was passed, the respondent issued a new Government Order No. 4358 on the 14th December, 1954, appointed the Chief Electrical Inspector to be the Acquisition Officer of the appellant concern for purposes of the Act. As a result of this order, the appellant undertaking which had been taken over by the respondent on the 21st September, 1951, continued to be in the possession of the respondent. It is under these circumstances that the appellant filed its writ petition No. 326 of 1955 on the 26th April, 1955.
5. In its writ petition, the appellant alleged that to the extent to which the Act purports to validate acts done under the earlier Act of 1949, it is ultra vires, ineffectual and inoperative. It was further urged that the three bases of compensation as laid down by the Act are inconsistent with the requirements of Article 31 of the Constitution and so, the operative provisions of the Act are unconstitutional. On these grounds, the appellant prayed for a writ of Certiorari or any other appropriate writ, or order, or direct on calling for the records relating to G. O. Ms. No. 2059 issued on the 17th May, 1951 and quashing the same. Later, the appellant filed another writ petition No. 107 of 1956 on the 31st January, 1956, and it added a prayer that a writ of Mandamus or any other writ or order or direction should be, issued directing the respondent to restore possession of the appellant undertaking with all its assets along with mesne profits from 21st September, 1951 or pay the market value of the said undertaking as on list September, 1951 and interest thereon at 6 per cent per annum, and to direct payment of costs and pass such other orders as may be appropriate and just in the circumstances of the case.
6. The claim thus made by the appellant was denied by the respondent. The respondent's case was that the Act is valid and Section 24 which operates retrospectively has validly and effectively validated actions taken under the earlier Act, with the result that the possession of the appellant undertaking which was taken on the 21st September, 1951, must be deemed to have been taken under the provisions of the Act and so, the claim made by the appellant either for a writ of certiorari or mandamus could not be granted. It was also urged that it would not be open to the appellant to claim possession of the undertaking or to ask for mesne profits in writ proceedings.
7. Mr. Justice Rajagopalan who heard the two writ petitions, rejected the contentions raised by the appellant and dismissed the said petitions. He held that having regard to the fact that the appellant had accepted compensation under the earlier Act, no real relief could be granted to it even if its contention that Section 24 of the Act was invalid is upheld. In other words, the learned judge took the view that even if the challenge made by the appellant to the validity of Section 24 was found to be justified, in the present writ proceedings he would not be prepared to grant it the relief either of possession or of mesne profits. Even so, the learned judge proceeded to examine the several prints urged by the appellant in support of its contention that Section 24 was invalid, and rejected them. In his opinion, the Act was valid and Section 24 being retrospective in operation, validated the actions taken by the respondent under the earlier Act. The argument that the compensation award able under the Act was inconsistent with Article 31(1) and 3 (2) was not accepted inter alia, on the ground that no material had been placed before the Court on which the appellant's plea could be sustained. The learned judge has also recorded his conclusions on some either points urged before him, but it is unnecessary to refer to them. After this decision was pronounced, the appellant moved the learned judge for a certificate under Article 132(1) of the Constitution and it is with the certificate thus granted to it under the said Article that the present appeals have been brought to this Court.
8. The first point which Mr. Nambiar has raised before us on behalf of the appellant is that Section 24 which purports to vaildate action taken under the earlier Act is, in law ineffective to sustain the order issued by the respondent on the 17th May, 1951. It would be recalled that by this order, the respondent obtained possession of the appellant undertaking for the first time under the relevant provisions of the earlier Act. The argument is that there is no specific or express provision in the Act which makes the Act retrospective and so, Section 24 even it 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. The impugned order had recited t at the appellant concern shall vest in the Government on the 21st September, 1951 and it directed that under Section 1(2) of the earlier Act the said order shall be published in the Gazette. Under the said order, a further direction had been issued appointing the Chief Electrical Inspector to the respondent to be the Acquisition Officer, and the appellant was requested to take action for the appointment of an accredited representative in accordance with Section 8 of the earlier Act and to submit the inventories and all particulars required under S:17 of the said Act. Mr. Nambiar contends that this order amounts to a notification which must be held to be a law under Article 13 of the Constitution. For the purpose of the present appeals, we will assume that the said order is a notification and amounts to a law under Article 13. Mr. Nambiar further contends that this notification was invalid for two reasons; it was invalid because it had been issued under the provisions of an Act which was void as being beyond the legislative competence of the Madras Legislature, and it was void for the additional reason that before it was issued, the Constitution of India had come into force and it offended against the provisions of Article 31 of the Constitution, an so, Article 13(2) applied. Section 24 of the Act, no doubt, purported or attempted to validate this notification, but the said attempt has failed because the Act being prospective, Section 24 cannot have retrospective operation. That in substance, is the first contention raised before us.
9. 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 appropriate provisions have been made by the Act to provide for the acquisition of undertakings and to lay down the principles for paying compensation for theren.
It is quite clear that the scheme of the Act was to bring within the purview of its material provisions undertakings in respect of which no action had been taken under the earlier Act and those in respect of which action had been so taken. In fact, as we will presently point out, several provisions made by the Act clearly referred to both types of undertakings and leave no room for doubt that both types of undertakings are intended to be governed by it. The definition of an 'accredited representative' prescribed by Section 2(b) shows that the accredited representative means the representative appointed or deemed to have been appointed under Section 7. Similarly, Section 2 (j) which defines a licensee provides that in relation to an undertaking taken over or an undertaking which has vested in the Government under Section 4, it shall be the person who was the licensee at the time when the undertaking was taken over or vested in the Government, as the case may be, or his successor in-interest. Section 2(1) defines an undertaking taken over as meaning an undertaking taken over by the Government after the 1st January, 1951 and before the commencement of this Act. The 'vesting date' under Section 2(m) means in relation to an undertaking, the date fixed under Section 4(1) as the date on which the undertaking shall vest in the Government or in the case of an undertaking taken over, the date on which it was taken over. These definitions thus clearly point out that the Act was intended to apply to undertakings of which possession would be taken after the Act was passed as well as undertakings of which possession had already been taken under the relevant provisions of the earlier Act.
10. Section 3 which deals with the application of the Act, provides that it shall apply to all undertakings of licensees including; (a) undertakings in respect of which notice for compulsory purchase has been served under Section 7 of the Electricity Act, such undertakings not having been taken over before the commencement of this Act; and (b) undertakings taken over. Similarly, Section 4 which gives power to the respondent to take over any undertaking clearly says that that power can be exercised in respect of any undertaking which had already not been taken over. In dealing with the appointment of sole representative, Section 7, subsecs. (3) and (5) bring out the same distinction between undertakings already taken over and those which had yet to be taken over. The same distinction is equally clearly brought out in Section 10(3), Section 11 sub-secs, (2), (5) and (11), and Section 14(3). 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 operative 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 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 Section 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.
11. Let us then construe Section 24 and decide whether it serves to validate the impugned notification issued by the respondent on the 21st September, 1951.
Section 24 reads thus:-
"Orders made, decisions' or directions given, notifications issued, proceedings taken and acts or things done, in relation to any undertaking taken over, if they would have been validly made, given issued, taken or done, had the Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act, 1949 (Madras Act XLIII of 1949), and the rules made thereunder been in force on the date on which the said orders, decisions or directions, notifications, proceedings acts or things, were made, given, issued, taken or done are hereby declared to have been validly made, given, issued, taken or done, as the case may be, except to the extent to which the said orders, decision, directions, notifications, proceedings, acts or things are repugnant to the provisions of this Act."
The first part of the Section deals, inter alia with notifications which have been validly issued under the relevant provisions of the earlier Act and it means that if the earlier Act had been valid at the relevant time, it ought to appear that the notifications in question could have been and had in fact been made properly under the said Act, in other words, before any notification can claim the benefit of Section 24 it must be shown that it was issued properly under the relevant provisions of the earlier Act, assuming that the said provisions were themselves valid and in force at that time. 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 "hereby 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 th e 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 Section 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.
12. No doubt, Mr. Nambiar suggested that Section 14 does not seem to validate actions taken under the earlier Act on the basis that the earlier Act was void and non est and in support of this argument, he relies on the fact that the notifications falling under the first part of Section 24 are referred to as validly made and the earlier Act and the rules made thereunder are assumed to have been in force on the date on which the said notification was issued. He also relies on the provisions of Section 25 which purports to repeal the said Act and that, no doubt gives room for the argument that the Legislature did not recognise that the said Act was non est and dead right up from the start. It is not easy to understand the genesis of Section 25 and the purpose which it is intended to achieve. The only explanation given by Mr. Ganapati Aiyer on behalf of the respondent is that since the earlier Act was in fact on the statute book, the legislature may have though that for the sake of form, it may have to be repealed formally and so, Section 25 was enacted. But even if the enactment of the said Section be held to be superfluous or unnecessary, that cannot assist the appellant in the construction of Section 24. we have no doubt that Section 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 carried out by the legislature by enacting the said Section. Therefore, the argument that Section 24, even if valid, cannot effectively validate the impugned notification, cannot succeed.
13. Mr. Nambiar then contends that the impugned notification is invalid and inoperative because it contravenes Article 31(1) of the Constitution. Article 31(1) provides that no person shall be deprived of his property save by authority of law. It is urged that this provision postulates the existence of an antecedent law before a citizen is deprived of his property. The notification was issued on the assumption that there was an antecedent law, viz., the earlier Act of 1949; but since the said Act was non est, the notification is not supported by the authority of any pre-existing law and so, it must be held to invalid and ineffective. In our opinion, this argument is not well founded. If the Act is retrospective in operation and Section 24 has been enacted for the purpose of retrospectively validating actions taken under the provisions of the earlier Act, it must follow by the very retrospective operation of the relevant provisions that at the time when the impugned notification was issued, these provisions were in existence. That is the plain and obvious effect of the retrospective operation of the statute. Therefore, in considering whether Article 31(1) has been complied with or not, we must assume that before the notification was issued, the relevant provisions of the Act were in existence and so Article 31(1) must be held to have been complied with in that sense.
14. In this connection, it would be relevant to refer to the provisions of Article 20(1), because the said provisions illustrate the point that where the Constitution desired to prevent the retrospective operation of any law, it has adopted suitable phraseology to carry out that object. Article 20(1) provides that no person shall be convicted of any offence except for violation of a law in force at the time of the commission of the act charged as an offence, nor be subjected to a penalty greater than that which might have been inflicted under the law in force at the time of the commission of the offence. By using the expression "law in force" in both the parts of Article 20(1), the Constitution has clearly indicated that even if a criminal law was enacted by any, legislature retrospectively, its retrospective operation would be controlled by Art, 20 (1). A law in force at the time postulates actual factual existence of the law at the relevant time and that excludes the retrospective application of any subsequent law, Article 31(1), on the other hand, does not use the expression "law in force at the time"; it merely says "by authority of law", and so, if a subsequent law passed by the legislature is retrospective in its operation, it would satisfy the requirement of Article 31(1) and would validate the impugned notification in the present case. Therefore, we are not satisfied that Mr. Nambiar is right in contending that the impugned notification is invalid for the reason that at the time when it was issued there was no law by whose authority it could be sustained.
15. That takes us to the larger issue raised by Mr. Nambiar in the present appeals. He contends that the power of the legislature to make laws retrospective cannot validly be exercised so as to cure the contravention of fundamental rights retrospectively. His contention is that the earlier Act of 1949 being dead and non existent, the impugned notification contravened Article 31(1) and this contravention of a fundamental right cannot be cured by the legislature by passing a subsequent law and making it retrospective. In support of this argument he has relied on the decision of this Court in Deep Chand v. State of Uttar Pradesh, 1959 Suppl. (2) SCR 8 In that case, one of type questions which arose for decision was whether the doctrine of eclipse applied to a law which was found to be invalid for the reason that it contravened the fundamental rights, and the majority decision held that it did not apply to such a law, in dealing with the question as to the applicability of the doctrone of eclipse, a distinction was drawn between a law which was void either for want of legislative power at the time when it was passed, or because it contravened fundamental rights on the one hand, and the law which was valid when it was passed but subsequently bacame invalid because of supervening circumstances on the other in the latter case, the law was valid when it was passed and became invalid because a cloud was cast on its validity by supervening circumstances. That being so, if the constitutional amendment subsequently made removes the cloud, the validity of the law is revived. That is the effect of application of the doctrine of eclipse; but there can be no scope for the application of the said doctrine to a law which is void and non est either for want of legislative competence or because it contravenes fundamental rights. That, in substance, is the effect of the majority decision in Deep Chand's case, In the present appeals it is not disputed that the earlier Act of 1949 was dead and void from the start, and that no doubt, is consistent with the majority decision in Deep Chand's case. But the question as to whether the legislature can retrospectively validate actions taken under a void law did not arise for consideration in Deep Chand's case, The only point which was decided was that the removal of the cloud by a subsequent constitutional amendment will not automatically revive a law which was void from the start but that obviously is not the case before us. What we are called upon to decide in the present appeals is whether or not it is competent to the legislature to pass a law retrospectively to validate actions taken under a void Act, and in deciding this question, Deep Chand's case, would not afford us any assistance.
16. Mr. Nambiar did not dispute the position that in enacting laws in respect of topics covered by appropriate entries in the relevant Lists of the 7th Schedule to the Constitution, the legislatures would be competent to make the provisions of the laws passed by them retrospective. He however, seeks to import a limitation on this legislative power where the contravention of fundamental rights is involved. No authority has been cited in support of the plea that the legislative power of the legislature is subject to any such limitation even where the contravention of fundamental rights is involved. On principle, it is difficult to appreciate how such a limitation on the legislative power can be effectively pleaded. If a law is invalid for the reason that it has been passed by a legislature without legislative competence, and action is taken under its provisions the said action can be validated by a subsequent law passed by the same legislature after it is clothed with the necessary legislative power. This position is not disputed. If the legislature can by retrospective legislation cure the invalidity in actions taken in pursuance of laws which were void for want of legislative competence and can validate such actions by appropriate provisions, it is difficult to see why the same power cannot be equally effectively exercised by the legislature in validating actions taken under laws which are void for the reason that they contravened fundamental rights. As has been pointed out by the majority decision in Deep Chand's case, the infirmity proceeding from lack of legislative competence as well as the infirmity proceeding from the contravention of fundamental rights lead to the same result and that is that the offending legislation is void and non est. That being so, if the legislature can validate actions taken under one class of void legislation, there is no reason why it cannot exercise its legislative power to validate actions taken under the other class of void legislation. We are, therefore, not prepared to accept Mr, Nambiar's contention that where the contravention of fundamental rights is concerned, the legislature cannot pass a law retrospectively validating actions taken under a law which was void because it contravened fundamental rights.
17. In this connection, it may be useful to refer to some decisions which deal with the legislature's powers to pass retrospective law. In United Provinces v. Mst. Atiqa Begum, 1940 FCR 110 at p. 136, Gwyer, C. J observed that "the validation of doubtful executive acts is not so unusual or extraordinary a thing that little surprise would be felt if Parliament had overlooked it, and it would take a great deal to persuade me that the legislative power for the purpose has been denied to every Legislature, including the Central or Federal legislature, in India." "It is true", he added, "that 'validation of executive orders' or any entry even remotely analogous to it is not to be found in any of the three Lists; but I am clear that legislation for that purpose must necessarily be regarded as subsidiary or ancillary to the power of legislating on the particular subjects in respect of which the executive orders may have been issued." The same principle was stated by Spens C. J. in Piare Dusadh v. Emperor, 1944 FCR 61 at p. 105 ).
18. This question has been considered by this Court in several decisions to some of which we will now briefly refer. In Union of India v. Madan Gopal Kabra, 1954 SCR 541 at p. 554, this Court had occasion to consider the validity of certain amendments made in the Income Tax Act by Section 3 of the Finance Act (XXV of 1950). These amendments had the effect of applying retrospectively the charging Sections of the Taxing Act and their validity was impeached. In rejecting the argument that the levy authorised to be imposed by the amendments was ultra vires, Patanjali Sastri C. J. observed that
"while it is true that the Constitution his no retrospective operation, except where a different intention clearly appears, it is not correct to say that in bringing into existence new Legislatures and conferring on them certain powers of legislation, the Constitution operated retrospectively. The legislative powers conferred upon Parliament under Articles 245 and 246 read with List I of the Seventh Schedule could obviously be exercised only after the Constitution came into force and no retrospective operation of the Constitution is invoved in the conferment of those powers. But it is a different thing to say that parliament in exercising the power thus acquired is precluded from making a retroactive law." And so, the conclusion was that Parliament was competent to make a law imposing a tax on the income of any year prior to the commencement of the constitution.
19. In M. P. V. Sundararamier and Co. v. State of Andhra Pradesh, 1958 SCR 1422, the validity of the Sales Tax Laws Validation Act, 1956 (7 of 1956) was questioned and the majority of the Court held that the said Act was in substance one lifting the ban on taxation of inter-State sales and within the authority conferred on the Parliament under Article 286(2) and further that under that provision, it was competent to the parliament to enact a law with retrospective operation. This conclusion also proceeded on the basis that the power of a legislature to pass a law included a power to pass it retrospectively, and so, the argument that the impugned Act was bad on the ground that it was retrospective in operation was rejected. The same principle has been again enunciated by this Court in J. K. Jute Mills Co. Ltd. v. State of Uttar Pradesh, AIR 1961 Supreme Court 1534. It has been held in this case that the power of the legislature to enact a law with reference to a topic entrusted to it is unqualified, subject only to any limitation imposed by the Constitution in the exercise of such a power, and that it would be competent for the Legislature to enact a law which is either prospective or retrospective, vide also Mt. Jadao Bahuji v. Municipal Committee, Khandwa, AIR 1961 Supreme Court 1486, Jadab Singh v. The Himachal Pradesh Administration, (1960) 3 SCR 755 and M/s. Raghubar Dayal Jai Prakash v. Union of India, AIR 1962 Supreme Court 263. Therefore, there is no doubt about the competence of the Legislature to enact a law and make it retrospective in operation in regard to topics included within the relevant Schedules of the Constitution. Our conclusion, therefore, is that the appellant's contention that it was beyond the competence of the Madras Legislature to make the Act retrospective so as to validate the impugned notification, cannot be accepted.
20. That takes us to the last argument raised by Mr. Nambiar before us. He contends that Section 5 of the Act which provides for the payment of compensation to the licensees whose undertakings are taken over, is invalid because it is inconsistent with Article 31(2). It is common ground that the provisions of Article 31(2) with which we are concerned in the present appeals are those as they stood before the 4th Constitutional Amendment came into force. Article 31(2) then provided, inter alia, that no property shall be compulsorily acquired save for the public purpose and save by authority of law which, provides for compensation for the property so acquired and either fixes the amount of the compensation or specifies the principles on which, and the manner in which the compensation is to be determined and given. In support of his argument, Mr. Nambiar has relied on the decision of this Court in State of West Bengal v. Mrs. Bela Banerjee 1954 SCR 558 (AIR 1954 Supreme Court 170). In dealing with the question about the scope and effect of the provisions of Article 31(2) in so far as they referred to the payment of compensation, this Court observed that though entry 42 of List III conferred on the Legislature the discretionary power of laying down the principles which should govern the determination of the amount to be given to the owner of the property acquired Article 31(2) required that such principles ensure that what is determined as payable must be compensation', that is, a just equivalent of what the owner has been deprived of. That is why in considering the validity of any statute in the light of Article 31(2) it would be open to the court to enquire whether all the elements which make up the true value of the property acquired have been taken into account in laying down the principles for determining compensation. It appears that Section 8 of the West Bengal Land Development and Planning Act, 1948 (XXI of 1948) which was impugned in that case limited the amount of compensation so as not to exceed the market value of the land on December 31,1946 no matter when the land was acquired. This part of Section 8 was struck down as invalid because it was held that in fixing the market value on December 31, 1946, as the celling on compensation, the legislature had patently ignored the fact that prices of lands had considerably risen after the said date and that tended to show that the compensation awardable under the said provision could not be said to be just equivalent of what the owner would be deprived of . Mr. Nambiar, therefore, contends that since Section 5 does not authorise the payment of compensation which can be treated as just equivalent of the property which would be taked over under its provisions, it must be struck down as inconsistent with Article 31(2). It may be conceded that the 4th Constitution amendment which substantially changed the provisions of Article 31(2) would be inapplicable in the present case and that the High Court was in error in making a contrary assumption.
21. In support of this argument Mr. Nambiar has also referred us to Section 7A of the Indian Electricity Act 1910 (No. 9 of 1910) as it then stood. Section 7A(2) of the said Act lays down that in purchasing undertakings under Section 7A(1), the value of such lands, buildings, works, materials, and Rant shall be deemed to be their market value at the time of purchase due regard being had to the nature and condition for the time being of such lands, buildings, materials and plant and the state of repair thereof and to the circumstance that they are in such position as to be ready for immediate working and to the suitability of the same for the purpose of the undertaking. The proviso to Section 7A lays down that to the value determined under sub-section (2) shall be added such percentage, if any, not exceeding twenty per centum of that value as may be specified in the licence on account of compulsory purchase. Mr. Nambiar suggests that the provisions made in Section 7A(2) and the proviso to Section 7A of this Act give a fair picture of what could be regarded as a reasonable compensation that should be paid to the undertakings before they are acquired.
22. Before dealing with this argument it is necessary to examine the scheme of Section 5 which provides for the compensation to be paid to the licensees. Section 5 provides that the compensation payable to a licensee on whom an order has been served under Section 4 or whose undertaking has been taken over before the commencement of the Act, shall be determined under any one of the Bases A, B and C specified by the Section, as may be chosen under Section 8. Then follow detailed provisions about the three Bases A, B and C. Under Basis A, the compensation payable shall be an amount equal to twenty times the average net annual profit of the undertaking during a period of five consecutive account years immediately preceding the vesting date. The explanation makes it clear that the net annual profit shall be determined in the manner laid down in Part A or Part B, as the case may be, of Schedule I. It is also clear that this basis shall nor apply to an undertaking which has not been supplying electricity for five consecutive account years immediately preceding the vesting date..
23. Under Basis B, the compensation payable shall be the aggregate value of all the shares constituting the share capital of the undertaking, reckoned as indicated in clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) thereof. These respective clauses have reference to the dates on or before which the shares of the undertaking have been issued, for instance, clause (a) provides that in the case of shares issued on or before the 31st March, 1946, the value of each share shall be reckoned at its average value as arrived at from the quotations for the shares as given in the official list of the Madras Share Market on the 15th day of each month and where such market was closed on that day, the quotations on the next working day, during the period of three years commencing on the 1st April, 1946, and ending on the 31st March, 1949. Under clause (b) it is provided that in the case of shares issued on or before the 31st March, 1946, if clause (a) does not apply but there have been bona fide transfers in each of the different classes of shares in every one of the three years aforesaid, and such transfers have been duly registered in the appropriate books of the licensee, the value of each share of each such class shall be reckoned at one third of the aggregate of its three annual average values for the three years, the average value for each year being determined from the transactions in that year. It is not necessary to set out clauses (c) and (d). The explanation to this Basis provides that it shall not apply unless clause (a) or clause (b) is applicable,
24. Under Basis C, the compensation payable shall be the aggregate value of the amounts specified in clauses (i) to (viii). These clauses refer respectively to the book value of all completed works in beneficial use pertaining to the undertaking and handed over to the Government less depreciation as specified; the book value of all works in progress; the book value of all stores; the book value of all other fixed assets; the book value of all plant, and equipment; the book value of all intangible assets to the extent such value has not been written off in the books of the licensee; the amount due from consumers as specified in clause (vii); and any amount paid actually by the licensee in respect of every contract referred to in Section 6(2)(a) (iii). Where Basis C is applied, an additional sum by way of solatium is required to be paid as specified in clauses (a) and (b) to clause (ix). The explanation to Basis C explains how the book value of any fixed asset has to be ascertained. That, in broad outlines, is the nature of the three Bases prescribed by Section 5 for assessing the compensation to be paid to a licensee.
25. It is true that in none of the three bases does the Legislature refer to the market value of the undertaking, but that itself cannot justify the argument that what is intended to be paid by way of compensation must necessarily mean much less than the market value. The failure of the legislature to refer to the fair market value cannot, in our opinion, be regarded as conclusive or even presumptive evidence of the fact that what is intended to be paid under Section 5 does not amount to a just equivalent of the undertaking taken over. After all, in considering the question as to whether compensation payable under one or the other of the Bases amounts to just equivalent, we must try to assess what would be payable under the said basis.
26. On this point, the real difficulty in the way of the appellant is that it has produced no material before the Court on which its plea can be sustained. As the High Court has pointed out, in the absence of any satisfactory material it would be difficult for the court to come to any definite conclusion on the question as to whether just equivalent is provided for by Section 5 or not, Mr. Nambiar, no doubt, attempted to suggest that in the Madras High Court oral evidence is not allowed to be adduced on questions of fact in writ proceedings. That may be so; but it is quite clear that the affidavit made by the appellant in support, of its petition could have easily set forth all relevant facts showing that the compensation payable under Section 5 was so inadequate that it could not be regarded as a just equivalent of the property acquired. In the absence of any material we do not see how we can assess the validity of Mr. Nambiar's contention that Section 5 contravenes Article 31(2) of the Constitution. It is true that in its petition the appellant made a general allegation that the market value of its assets at the relevant time would be Rs. 16,49,350 but no satisfactory material was placed in the form of proper affidavits made by competent persons to show how this market value was determined. In fact, the appellant did not state before the High Court and was unable to state even before this Court what principles should have been laid down by the legislature in determining a just equivalent for the undertaking taken over by the respondent. The general argument that Section 5 does not provide for the payment of market value cannot in the absence of material help the appellant at all in challenging the validity of Section 5.
27. In this connection it must be borne in mind that Section 8 of the Act leaves it to the option of the licensee to intimate to the Government in writing which basis of compensation it wants to be adopted and so it is not as if the choice of the basis is left to the Government in every case. Take for instance Basis A: the compensation payable under this Basis is an amount equal to twenty times the average net annual profit of the undertaking during a period of five consecutive account years preceding the vesting date. Now in determining the fairness or otherwise of the compensation awardable under basis A, it cannot be ignored that what is acquired is an undertaking which is a going commercial concern and so it would prima facie, be inappropriate to attempt to determine its value solely or mainly by reference to the buildings it owns or the machinery it works. It would also be relevant to remember that undertakings of this kind cannot claim a general market in the sense in which lands can claim it. That being so if the legislature thought that giving the undertaking twenty times the average net annual profit would amount to a just equivalent prima facie it would be difficult to hold that the basis adopted by the legislature is such as could be held to be inconsistent with Article 31(2). The Basis B may or may not be satisfactory, but Basis C may prima facie be satisfactory in respect of new undertakings and in any case the option in most cases would be with the undertaking itself. Therefore in the absence of any material we are unable to hold that on looking at the scheme adopted by Section 5 itself, in the appellants' argument that what is offered by way of compensation is not a just equivalent, can be accepted. It may be that in some cases Basis B may work hardship and conceivably even Basis A or Basis C may not be as satisfactory as it should be ;but when a party challenged the validity of a satisfactory provision like Section 5 it is necessary that the party must adduce satisfactory and sufficient material before the Court on which it wants the Court to hold that the compensation which would be paid under everyone of the three Bases under the impugned statutory provision does not amount to a just equivalent. Looking merely at the scheme of the Section itself it is impossible to arrive at such a conclusion. That is the view taken by the Madras High Court and we see no reason to differ from it. Therefore the challenge to the validity of the Act on the ground that its important provisions contained in Section 5 often against Article 31(2) must be rejected. That being our view we must hold that the High Court was right in rejecting both the writ petitions filed by the appellant. On that view it is unnecessary to consider whether the appellant would have been entitled to get the relief of possession or mesne profits which it purported to claim by its two petitions.
28. The appeals accordingly fail and are dismissed with costs, one set of hearing fees.
Appeals dismissed