The greatest
virtue of Law is in its adaptability and flexibility. Law made for the society and there fore it
has to be applied , depending upon is situation , for the benefit of society
(Balbir Kaur vs . steel authority of India )
,(2000)6 SCC 493.
“Law is a
social engineering to remove the existing imbalance and to further the progress
, serving the needs of the Socialist Democratic Bharat under the rule of
law. The prevailing social conditions
and actualities of life are to be taken into account in adjudging whether or
not the impugned legislation would subserve the purpose of the society. ( Ashok
Kumar Gupta vs State of U.P., (1997)5 SCC
(L&S)1299:.
“Law is a means
to an end and justice is that end. But
in actuality, law and justice are distant neighbours; sometimes even strangely
hostile. If law shoots down paralyses
development, disrupts order and lawlwssness paralyses development, disrpts
order and retards progress. High Court
of Judicature at Bombay
v. Shirishkumar Rangrao Patil,(1997)6SCC339: 1997 SCC (L&S)1486: AIR 1997
SC 2631: (1997) 4 SLR 321: (1997) 2 LLN 470:
“Law has been
variously defined by various individuals from different points of view and no
wonder there is no unanimity of opinion
regarding the real nature of law, by various writers.”
‘’A law is a
rule of conduct, administered by those organs of a political society which it
has ordained for that purpose and imposed in the first instance at the will of
the dominating political authority in that society in pursuance of the
conception of justice which is held by that dominating political authority or
by those whom It has committed the task of making such rules’. (Keeton)
“A set of rules
imposed and enforced by a society with regard to the distribution and exercise
of power over persons and things”.
(Vinogradoff)
“Law is the
command of sovereign, containing a common rule of life for its subjects and
obliging them to obedience”. (Erskine)
“Law is the
body of principles recognized or enforced by public and regular tribunals in
the administration of justice.” (Pound)
“The law of the
state or of any organized body of men is composed of the rules which the
courts-that is, the judicial organs of that body- lay down for the
determination of legal rights and duties”.
(Gray)
“Law is that
portion of the established thought and habit which has gained distinct and
formal recognition in the shape of uniform rules backed by the authority and
power of Government”. (Wilson)
“Law is the
system of rights and obligations which the State enforces”. (Green)
According to
Salmond,” Law may be defined as the bdy of principles recognised and applied by
the State in the administration of justice”.
Courts may misconstrue a statute or reject a custom. It is only the urling of the curt that has
binking force as law. The highest court
of a State wilfully misconstrues an Act
of the Legislature, the interpretation put on the Act would be law as there is
no higher judicial tribunal with
jurisdiction and authority to reverse it.
The result is that the true test of law is enforceability in a court of
law”.
According to
Justice Holmes,” The life of law has not been logic. It has been experience. The law will become consistent when it ceases
to grow. The felt necessities of the
time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy,
avowed or unconscious; even the prejudices which judges share for their
fellowmen have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the
rules by which man should be governed.
The law embodies the story of a nation’s development through many
centuries and it cannot be dealt with as if it contained only the axioms and
corollaries of a book of mathematics. In
order to know what it is, we must know what it has been and what and what it
tends to become”. Again, “Logic gives
science of law resides in the elegantia-juries or logical cohesion of part with
part. The truth is that the law is always approaching and never
reaching consistency. It is for ever
adopting new principles from life at one end and it always retains old one from
history at the other. It will become
entirely constant only when it ceases to grow”
The fast
changing scenario of economic, social order with scientific development spawns
innumerable situations which the legislature possibly could not foresee.The
delegate is entrusted with power to meet such exigencies with in the in built
check or guidance and in the present case to be with in the declared
policy. So the delegate has to exercise
its powers with in this controlled path to sub serve the policy and to achieve
the objectives of the Act . A situations
may arise, in some cases where strict adherence to any provision of the statute
or rules may result in great hardship, in a given situation, where exercise of
such power of exemption is to remove this hardship without materially affecting
the policy of the Act, viz., development in the present case then such exercise
of power would be covered under it. All
situations cannot be culled out, which have to be judiciously judged and
exercised, to meet any such great hardship of any individual or institution or
conversely on the interest of the
society at large. Such power is meant
rarely to be used.(Para 18). Consumer Action Group v. State of T.N.,( 2000) 7 SCC 425.
“In the
interpretation of the Constitution, words of width are both a framework of
concepts and means to achieve the goals in the Preamble. Concepts may keep changing to expand and
delongate the rights. Constututional
issues are not solved by mere appeal to the meaning of the words without an
acceptance of the line of their growth.
The Judges, therefore, should respond to the human situations to meet
the felt necessities of the time and social needs; make meaningful the rights
to life nad give effect to the Constitutions and the will of the legislature. The Supreme Court as the vehicle of
transforming the nations life should respond to the nation’s needs, interpret
the law with pragmatism to further public welfare to make the constututional
animations a reality and interpret the Constitution broadly and liberally
enabling the citizens to enjoy the rights. (Ashok Kumar Gupta v. State of U.P., (1997)5 SCC
(L&S)
The principle
is that all statutory definitions have
to be read subject to the qualification variously expressed in the definition
clauses which created them and it may be that even where the definition is
exhaustive inasmuch as the word defined is said to mean a certain thing, it is
possible for the word to have a some what different meaning in different
sections of the Act depending upon the subject or context. That is shy all definitions in statutes
generally begin with the qualifying words similar to the words used in the
present case, namely” unless there is anything repugnant in the Act where the
meaning may have to be departed from on account of the subject or
context”. Thus there may be sections in
the act where the meaning may have to be departed from on account of the
subject or context in which the word had been used and that will be giving
effect to the opening sentence in the
definition section, namely “unless there is anything repugnant in the subject
or context”. In view of this
qualification, the court has not only to look at the words but also to look at
the context, the collocation and the object of such words relating to such matter
and interpret the meaning intended to be conveyed by the use of the words
“under those circumstances”. Whirlpool
Corpn.v. Registar of Trade Marks,(1998) 8 SCC1.
“By
interpretation or construction is meant”, says SALMOND,”By which the courts
seek to ascertain the meaning of the Legislature through the medium of
authoritative forms in which it is expressed”.
“Interpretation differs from construction in that the former
is the art of finding out the true sense of any
form of words; that is, the sense which their author intended to convey;
and of enabling others to derive from them the same idea which the author
intended to convey. The drawing of
conclusions, respecting subjects that lie beyond the direct expression of the
text from elements known from and given in the text; conclusions which are in
the spirit though not with in the letter of the law.” (AIR 1963 SC 1760,p.
1794)
“In common
usage interpretation and construction are usually understood as having the same
significance”.(211 US
370,p.386)
“The duty of
judicature is to act upon the true intention of the Legislature-the men or
sentential legis”. (AIR 1966 SC 346
,p.348)
“The function
of the courts is only to expound and not to legislate. The numerous rules of interpretation or
construction formulated by courts are expressed differently by different judges
and support may be found in these formulations for apparently contradictory
propositions.”
“The
Legislature can no doubt amend or repeal any previous statute or can declare
its meaning but all this can be done only by a fresh statute after going
through the normal process of law making “.
“Surprise to
find that an open platform having no all or roof is a building”.(AIR 1966
SC 991)
“ The building
of High Court is a ‘structure’ may itself be debated. Unsuccessfully argued in the House of Lords
that a large substantial permanent two stereo building was not a structure.(AIR
1921 PC 240)
“The question
is essentially one of degree and that it is impossible to fix any definite
point at which ‘maintenance’ ends and ‘repair’ begins”. There is no possibility of mistaking midnight for noon; but at what precise moment twilight
becomes darkness is hard to determine.” With in or outside the purview of the
relevant words of the statute, after laying down a working line or more
appropriately some general working principles. (AIR 1960 SC 610)
Legislation in
a modern State is actuated with some policy to curb some public evil or to
effectuate some public benefit. Information derived from past and present
experience. It may also be designed by
use of general words to cover similar
problems arising future.
“If the word
used n a fiscal statute is understood in common parlance or in the commercial
world in a particular sense, it must be taken that the Excise Act has used that
word in the commonly understood sense.
That sense cannot be taken away by attributing a technical meaning to
the word. But if the legislature itself
has adopted a technical term, then that technical term has to be understood in
the technical sense. In other words, if
in the fiscal statute, the article in question falls with in the ambit of a
technical term used under particular entry, then that article cannot be taken
away from that entry and placed under the residuary entry on the pretext that
the article, even though it comes with in the ambit of the technical term used
in a particular entry, has acquired some other meaning in market parlance.(AIR
1997 SC 3414)
“The judiciary
can never regain its lost respect and esteem if faith in judiciary can never
regain its lost respect and esteem if faith in judiciary is forfeited. The conduct of every judicial officer should
be above reproach. He should be
conscientious, studious, thorough, courteous, patient, punctual, just,
impartial, fearless of public clamor, regardless of public praise, and
indifferent to private, political or partisan influences; he should administer
justice according to law, and deal with his appointment as a public trust; he
should not allow other affairs or his private interests to interfere with the
prompt and proper performance of his judicial duties, nor should he administer
the office for the purpose of advancing his personal ambitions or increasing
his popularity. If he tips the scales of
justice, its rippling effect would be disastrous and deleterious. High Court of Judicature at Bombay v. Shirishkumar Rangrao Patil.(AIR
1997 SC 2631)
“The theory of
Sovereign power which was propounded in Kasturi Lal’s case (AIR 1965 SC 1039)
has yielded to new theories and is no longer available in a welfare State. It may be pointed out that functions of the
Govt. in a welfare State are manifold, all of
which cannot be said to be the activities relating to exercise of
Sovereign powers. The functions of the
State not only relate to the defense of the country or the administration of
justice, but they extend to many other spheres as, for example education,
commercial, social, economic, political and even marital. These activities can not be said to be
related to Sovereign power.” Smt.
Hanuffa Khatoon, who was not the citizen of this country but came here as a
citizen of Bangladesh
was, nevertheless, entitled to all the constitutional rights available to a
citizen so far as “Right to Life” was concerned. She was entitled to be treated with dignity
and was also entitled to the protection of her person as guaranteed under Art.
21 of the Constitution. As a national of
another country , she could bot be subjected to a treatment which was below
dignity nor could she be subjected to physical violence at the hands of govt.
employees who outraged her modesty. The
right available to her under art. 21 was thus violated. Consequently, the State was under the
constitutional liability to pay compensation to her. The judgement passed by the Calcutta High
Court, therefor, allowing compensation to her for having been gang raped,
cannot be said to suffer from any infirmity.”
“Rape was
committed on a woman by railway employees and a practicing advocate of a High
Court filed a petition under Art. 226 which included not only the relief for compensation but many other relief’s as,
for example, relief for eradicating anti-social and criminal activities of
various kinds at Howrah Railway Station and the true nature of the petition,
therefore, was that of a petition filed in public interest, the writ petition
was maintainable. In such a case, it
could not be said that she could not file that petition as there was nothing
personal to her involved in that petition.”
It has been
held in case of Chairman, Railway Board v. Chandrima Das (AIR 2000 SUPREME
COURT 988)- “The employees of the Union of India who are deputed to run the
Railways and to manage the establishment, including the Railway Stations and
Yatri Biwas, are essential components of the Govt. machinery which carries on
the commercial activity. If any of such
employees commits an act of tort, the Union Govt., of which they are the
employees, can, subject to other legal requirements being satisfied, be held
vicariously liable in damages to the person wronged by those employees. It was so when instant case was case under
Public Law domain and not in a suit instituted under Private Law domain against
persons who, utilizing their official position, got a room in the Yatri Niwas
booked in their own name where the act complained of was committed.
However in case
of Hussain v. State of Kerala, (2000) 8 SCC 139.The appellant is unlawfully
deprived of his personal liberty for such a long period of 5 years on account
of inadequate legal representation
andWrong conviction and thereby overlooking the aforesaid facts and the legal
position. We acquit the appellant and
direct him to be set at liberty forthwith.
In this case, we are not considering the question of awarding
compensation to the appellant but he is free to resort to his remedies under
law for that purpose. Similarly in case of death by electrocution, the
Maintainability of the writ petitions is denied on the ground of Disputed
questions of fact involved in case reported in (2000) 4 SCC 543.
In the book
written by our Uttaranchal Pradesh chief Justice Ashok A. Desai namely “
Justicing the people “- “Judiciary is independent. It does not mean judges are equally
independent. They are bound by the
limitations of law . Common man may not
be able to see it. The judicial system
has to maintain certainty and uniformity in the discharge. If the judges are allowed to settle the
extent of justice according to their notion, or concept, then the system cannot
achieve either of them. Intellectualism
has more diversity. With the Judicial Activism, justice will vary according to
the concept of individual Judge. That
will cause a severe damage, not only to the system, but also to very foundation
of justice. It will also create
difficulty in guiding the Society. Law
is always notified for the guidance of public but notions of justice of a Judge
are not visible. This creates
jeopardy. It would lead to, not only the
Government by judiciary but by the Judges.
The Democratic Society will never approve this.”
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