The document discusses the concept of legislative power and delegation of legislative power under the Indian constitution. It provides two key points:
1) Delegation of legislative power to another body is permissible as long as the legislature lays down an intelligible policy and guidelines to guide the delegatee's exercise of power. The essential legislative functions remain with the legislature.
2) In cases of overlapping legislative entries, the courts examine the 'pith and substance' or true nature of the law to determine validity. A slight transgression of another list is permitted if the law's core substance falls within the enacting legislature's domain.
The document discusses the concept of legislative power and delegation of legislative power under the Indian constitution. It provides two key points:
1) Delegation of legislative power to another body is permissible as long as the legislature lays down an intelligible policy and guidelines to guide the delegatee's exercise of power. The essential legislative functions remain with the legislature.
2) In cases of overlapping legislative entries, the courts examine the 'pith and substance' or true nature of the law to determine validity. A slight transgression of another list is permitted if the law's core substance falls within the enacting legislature's domain.
The document discusses the concept of legislative power and delegation of legislative power under the Indian constitution. It provides two key points:
1) Delegation of legislative power to another body is permissible as long as the legislature lays down an intelligible policy and guidelines to guide the delegatee's exercise of power. The essential legislative functions remain with the legislature.
2) In cases of overlapping legislative entries, the courts examine the 'pith and substance' or true nature of the law to determine validity. A slight transgression of another list is permitted if the law's core substance falls within the enacting legislature's domain.
The document discusses the concept of legislative power and delegation of legislative power under the Indian constitution. It provides two key points:
1) Delegation of legislative power to another body is permissible as long as the legislature lays down an intelligible policy and guidelines to guide the delegatee's exercise of power. The essential legislative functions remain with the legislature.
2) In cases of overlapping legislative entries, the courts examine the 'pith and substance' or true nature of the law to determine validity. A slight transgression of another list is permitted if the law's core substance falls within the enacting legislature's domain.
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Sl.
LEGISLATIVE POWER Bench
No. Strength
17. There is undoubtedly an element of delegation implied in the
provision of Section 27 of the Act, for the Legislature, in a sense, authorises another body, specified by it, to do something which it might do itself. But such delegation, if it can be so called at all, does not in the circumstances of the present case appear to us to be unwarranted and unconstitutional. It was said by O'Connor, J. of the High Court of Australia in the case of Baxter v. Ah Way1: “The aim of all legislatures is to project their minds as far as possible into the future, and to provide in terms as general as possible for all contingencies likely to arise in the application of the law. But it is not possible to provide specifically for all cases and, therefore, legislation from the very earliest times, and particularly in modern times, has taken the form of conditional legislation, leaving it to some specified authority to determine the circumstances in which the law shall be applied, or to what its operation shall be extended, or the particular class of persons or goods to which it shall be applied.” The facts of this Australian case, in material features, bear a striking resemblance to those of the present one. The question raised in that case related to the validity of certain provisions of the Customs Act of 1901. The Act prohibited the importation of certain goods which were specifically mentioned and then gave power to the Governor- General-in-Council to include, by proclamation, other goods also within the prohibited list. The validity of the provision was challenged on the ground of its being an improper delegation of legislative powers. This contention was repelled and it was held that this was not a case of delegation of legislative power but of conditional legislation, of the type which was held valid by the Privy Council in the case of Reg v. Burah2. It can indeed be pointed out that in Burah case what was left to the Lieutenant Governor was the power to apply the provisions of an Act to certain territories at his option and these territories to which the Act could be extended were also specified in the Act. The Legislature could be said therefore to have applied its mind to the question of the application of the law to particular places and it was left to the executive only to determine when the laws would be made operative in those places. According to the High Court of Australia the same principle would apply even Sl. LEGISLATIVE POWER Bench No. Strength
when the executive is given power to determine to what other
persons or goods the law shall be extended besides those specifically mentioned therein. Whether a provision like this strictly comes within the description of what is called “conditional legislation” is not very material. The question is, whether it exceeds the limits of permissible delegation. As was said by O'Connor, J. himself in the above case, when a Legislature is given plenary power to legislate on a particular subject there must also be an implied power to make laws incidental to the exercise of such power. It is a fundamental principle of constitutional law that everything necessary to the exercise of a power is included in the grant of the power. A Legislature cannot certainly strip itself of its essential functions and vest the same on an extraneous authority. The primary duty of law making has to be discharged by the Legislature itself but delegation may be resorted to as a subsidiary or an ancillary measure. Mr Chatterjee contends that the essential legislative function is to lay down a policy and to make it a binding rule of conduct. This legislative policy, he says, is not discernible anywhere in the provisions of this Act and consequently there is no standard or criterion to guide the administrative authority in the exercise of the subsidiary legislative powers. We do not think that this is the correct view to take. The legislative policy is apparent on the face of the present enactment. What it aims at, is the statutory fixation of minimum wages with a view to obviate the chance of exploitation of labour. The Legislature undoubtedly intended to apply this Act not to all industries but to those industries only where by reason of unorganized labour or want of proper arrangements for effective regulation of wages or for other causes the wages of labourers in a particular industry were very low. It is with an eye to these facts that the list of trades has been drawn up in the schedule attached to the Act but the list is not an exhaustive one and it is the policy of the Legislature not to lay down at once and for all time, to which industries the Act should be applied. Conditions of labour vary under different circumstances and from State to State and the expediency of including a particular trade or industry within the schedule depends upon a variety of facts which are by no means Sl. LEGISLATIVE POWER Bench No. Strength
uniform and which can best be ascertained by the person who is
placed in charge of the administration of a particular State. It is to carry out effectively the purpose of this enactment that power has been given to the “appropriate Government” to decide, with reference to local conditions, whether it is desirable that minimum wages should be fixed in regard to a particular trade or industry which is not already included in the list. We do not think that in enacting Section 27 the legislature has in anyway stripped itself of its essential powers or assigned to the administrative authority anything but an accessory or subordinate power which was deemed necessary to carry out the purpose and the policy of the Act. The second contention of Mr Chatterjee cannot therefore succeed.
Edward Mills Co. Ltd. v. State of Ajmer, AIR 1955 SC 25
8. After the dictum of Lord Selborne in Queen v. Burah1, oft-quoted and applied, it must be held as settled that the legislatures in our Country possess plenary powers of legislation. This is so even after the division of legislative powers, subject to this that the supremacy of the legislatures is confined to the topics mentioned as Entries in the lists conferring respectively powers on them. These Entries, it has been ruled on many an occasion, though meant to be mutually exclusive are sometimes not really so. They occasionally overlap, and are to be regarded as enumeratio simplex of broad categories. Where in an organic instrument such enumerated powers of legislation exist and there is a conflict between rival lists, it is necessary to examine the impugned legislation in its pith and substance, and only if that pith and substance falls substantially within an entry or entries conferring legislative power, is the legislation valid, a slight transgression upon a rival list, notwithstanding. This was laid down by Gwyer C.J. in Subramanyam Chettiar v. Muthuswamy Goundan2 in the following words: “It must inevitably happen from time to time that legislation, though purporting to deal with a subject in one list, touches also on a subject in another list, and the different provisions of the enactment may be so closely intertwined that blind adherence to a strictly verbal interpretation would result in a large number of statutes being Sl. LEGISLATIVE POWER Bench No. Strength
declared invalid because the legislature enacting them may appear to
have legislated in a forbidden sphere. Hence the rule which has been evolved by the Judicial Committee whereby the impugned statute is examined to ascertain its ‘pith and substance', or its ‘true nature and character', for the purpose of determining whether it is legislation with respect to matters in this list or in that.” This dictum was expressly approved and applied by the Judicial Committee in Prafulla Kumar Mukherjee v. Bank of Commerce, Ltd., Khulna3, and the same view has been expressed by this Court on more than one occasion. It is equally well settled that the power to legislate on a topic of legislation carries with it the power to legislate on an ancillary matter which can be said to be reasonably included in the power given.
State of Rajasthan v. G. Chawla, AIR 1959 SC 544
22. McDowell14 however makes it clear that so far as the validity of a statute is concerned, the same can be judged by applying the principle of proportionality for finding out whether the restrictions imposed by the statute are permissible and within the bounds prescribed by our Constitution. McDowell14 referred to this exception as follows: (SCC pp. 738-39, para 43) “43. ... It is one thing to say that a restriction imposed upon a fundamental right can be struck down if it is disproportionate, excessive or unreasonable and quite another thing to say that the Court can strike down enactment if it thinks it unreasonable, unnecessary or unwarranted.” (emphasis supplied) That a statute can be struck down if the restrictions imposed by it are disproportionate or excessive having regard to the purpose of the statute and that the Court can go into the question whether there is a proper balancing of the fundamental right and the restriction imposed, is well settled. [See Chintaman Rao v. State of M.P.16; State of Madras v. V.G. Row17; Indian Express Newspapers Bombay (P) Ltd. v. Union of India18.] (The principle of “proportionality” is applied in Australia and Canada also19 to test the validity of statutes.) Sl. LEGISLATIVE POWER Bench No. Strength
Union of India v. G. Ganayutham, (1997) 7 SCC 463
LIST OF JUDGMENTS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.