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[Cites 15, Cited by 16]

Supreme Court of India

The State Of Madhya Pradesh vs The Gwalior Sugar Co., Ltd.,And ... on 30 November, 1960

Bench: B.P. Sinha, S.K. Das, A.K. Sarkar, N. Rajagopala Ayyangar, J.R. Mudholkar

           PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE GWALIOR SUGAR CO., LTD.,AND OTHERS(AND CONNECTED APPEAL)

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/11/1960

BENCH:


ACT:
Cess-Levy on sugar cane ordered by erstwhile Ruler-Consti-
tutional validity-Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 265, 373.



HEADNOTE:
In order to put the sugar industry on a stable footing,	 for
which  it was necessary to develop the cane area, the  Ruler
of  the erstwhile Gwalior State by an order dated  27-7-1946
sanctioned  the	 levy of cess of one anna per maund  on	 all
sugar  cane purchased by the respondent company.   When	 the
Government  of Madhya Bharat, which was the successor  state
of  the former Gwalior State, made a demand for	 payment  of
the  cess, the respondent filed a petition before  the	High
Court of Madhya ,Bharat challenging the legality of the levy
on  the grounds (1) that the order dated 27-7-1946 was	only
an  executive  order  and not a law under Art.	265  of	 the
Constitution  of  India and that, therefore,  there  was  no
authority  for the imposition of the cess after January	 26,
1950, and (2) that the levy was discriminatory and  violated
Art. 14 inasmuch as while the respondent was made liable  to
pay  the  cess the other sugar factories in the	 State	were
exempt.	  It was found that at the time when cess was  first
levied	there  was  no sugar factory  in  existence  in	 the
Gwalior State other than that of the respondent.
Held, that (i) the Ruler of an Indian State was an  absolute
monarch	 in which there was no constitutional limitation  to
act   in  any  manner  he  liked,  he  being   the   supreme
legislature,  the supreme judiciary and the supreme head  of
the  executive.	 I Consequently, the order  dated  27-7-1946
issued	by  the	 Ruler of Gwalior State amounted  to  a	 law
enacted by him and became an existing law under Art. 372  of
the  Constitution of India.  The levy of cess was  therefore
by authority of law within the meaning of Art. 265;
Madhaorao  Phalke  v. The State of Madhya Bharat,  [1961]  1
S.C.R. 957, followed.
(2)  the levy of cess did not contravene Art. 14 because (a)
the object was cane development in the particular area and a
geographical  classification based upon	 historical  factors
was  a	permissible mode of classification, and	 (b)  a	 tax
could  not  be struck down as discriminatory unless  it	 was
found  that  it was imposed with a deliberate  intention  of
differentiating between
620
(ii) where the order is passed by the Sub-divisional  Animal
Husbandry  Officer,  under  sub-rule (5),  to  the  District
Animal Husbandry Officer and
(iii) where the order is passed by the authority  prescribed
under  sub-rule (1) to the Sub-divisional  Animal  Husbandry
Officer,  if  there is one; if not, to the  District  Animal
Husbandry Officer;
(b)  The appeal shall not be decided against  the  appellant
unless	he has been given a reasonable opportunity of  being
heard."
The  argument on behalf of the petitioners is that they	 are
"Kassais"  by  profession  and they  earn  their  living  by
slaughtering  cattle  only  (not goats or  sheep  which	 are
slaughtered  by	 "Chiks"); that they  have  the	 fundamental
right to carry on their profession and trade; and that s.  3
of   the   Act	 read  with  r.	  3   imposes	unreasonable
restrictions--restrictions  not	 in  the  interests  of	 the
general public-on their fundamental right and therefore they
are  not  saved by cl. (6) of Art. 19 of  the  Constitution.
Some of these arguments were considered by this Court in Md.
Hanif Quareshi v. The State of Bihar (1) and it was  pointed
out  that  the test of reasonableness should be	 applied  to
each  individual statute impugned and no abstract  standard,
or  general pattern, of reasonableness can be laid  down  as
applicable  to	all cases.  It referred to the	decision  in
State of Madras v. V. G. Row (2) and repeated what was	said
therein	 that "the nature of the right alleged to have	been
infringed,  the	 underlying  purpose  of  the	restrictions
imposed,  the  extent and urgency of the evil sought  to  be
remedied  thereby, the disproportion of the imposition,	 the
prevailing conditions at the time, should all enter into the
judicial  verdict." 'Another consideration which has  to  be
kept  in mind is that "the legislature is the best judge  of
what is good for the community,. by whose suffrage it  comes
into existence...................... (See The State of Bihar
v.  Maharajadhiraja Sir Kameshwar Singh of  Darbhanga  (3)).
But the ultimate responsibility for determining the validity
of the law must rest with the
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 629.		 (2) [1952] S.C.R. 597.
(3) [1952] S.C.R. 889.
621
Court and the Court must not shirk that solemn duty cast  on
it  by the Constitution.  We must, therefore,  approach	 the
problem	 before us in the light of the principles laid	down
by this Court.
The  most  pertinent question is-having regard	to  all	 the
relevant circumstances, is the age of 25 years laid down  in
s.   3	a  reasonable  restriction  on	the  right  of	 the
petitioners in the interests of the general public ? We	 are
unable to say that it is.  Apart from the affidavits made on
behalf of the petitioners and the respondent State, a  large
volume	of authoritative and expert opinion has been  placed
before us which shows beyond any doubt that a bull,  bullock
or  she-buffalo does not remain useful after 14 or 15  years
and  only  a few of them live up to the age of 25.   In	 the
Report of the Cattle Preservation and Development Committee,
published by the Ministry of Agriculture, it is	 recommended
by the Committee that the slaughter of animals over 14 years
of  age	 and  unfit  for work as also  animals	of  any	 age
permanently  unable  to work owing to injury  or  deformity,
should	be allowed.  In the Report on the Marketing of	Meat
in India (published by the Ministry of Food and Agriculture)
there  is  a  reference to a draft Bill	 circulated  by	 the
Ministry  of  Agriculture  (page 112 of	 the  Report)  which
contains  a  clause that animals over 14 years	of  age	 and
unfit  for work may be slaughtered on a certificate  from  a
Veterinary  Officer.   In  the Report on  the  Marketing  of
Cattle in India, again published by the Ministry of Food and
Agriculture, occurs the following passage as to the price of
animals with reference to their age:
"Young	draught animals up to the age of 4  years-being	 raw
and untrained-fetch comparatively low prices.  Between 4 and
8 years of age, the animals are in the prime of their  youth
and tender best service, and fetch maximum prices.  From the
8th  year onwards old age sets in, and a graded	 decline  is
observed  in their capacity to work and consequently  prices
depreciate considerably." .
In  a Food and Agricultural Organisation study of cattle  in
India and Pakistan (Zebu Cattle of India and
79
622
Pakistan,  page	 94) it is stated that the  active  breeding
life  of  a  bull is estimated to be  about  10	 years.	  In
Black's Veterinary Dictionary (edited by W. C. Miller and G.
P.  West, fifth edition) it is stated that  pedigree  ,bulls
may reach 12 or 14 years of age before being discarded;	 and
cattle seldom live longer than 15 or 16 years, and when they
do,  their  age is usually of no immediate  importance.	  In
another	 publication of the Ministry of	 Agriculture  called
'Problems  of Cattle Insurance' under Indian conditions,  it
is  stated  that the life of cattle  is	 comparatively	much
shorter,  the maximum age being only about 15 years.   There
is an interesting chart relating to the determination of age
in  cattle  in a publication called 'Cattle  Development  in
Uttar Pradesh' by R. L. Kaura, Director of Animal Husbandry;
that  chart shows that at II years incisors  appear  smaller
due  to wearing out; at 12 years space appears	between	 the
teeth,	and  after 12 teeth wear out  constantly  and  roots
remain	far  apart from one another.  As  against  all	this
expert opinion the respondent State has relied on the  chart
embodying some useful data about domestic animals,  prepared
by  Major A. C. Aggarwala, Director of Veterinary  Services,
Punjab,	  and  R.  R.  Gulati,	Superintendent,	  Veterinary
Department,  Jullandur, which shows the sterility age  of  a
buffalo at 15 and average age at 25, and of a cow  sterility
at 15 and 16 years and average life 22 years.



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION:

We are clearly of the view that the almost unanimous opinion of experts is that after the age of 15, bulls. bullocks and buffaloes are no longer useful for breeding, draught and other purposes and whatever little use they may have then is greatly offset by the economic disadvantages of feeding and maintaining unserviceable cattle-disadvantages to which we had referred in much greater detail in Md. Hanif Quareshi's case (1). Section 3 of the Bihar Act in so far as it has increased the age limit to 25 in respect of bulls, bullocks and she-buffaloes, imposes an unreasonable restriction on the fundamental right of the petitioners, a restriction moreover which cannot be said to be in (1) [1959] S.C.R. 629.
623

the interests of the general public, and to that extent it is void. We may here repeat what we said in Chintaman Rao v. The State of Madhya Pradesh (1):

"The phrase 'reasonable restriction' connotes that the limitation imposed on a person in enjoyment of the right should not be arbitrary or of an excessive nature, beyond what is required in the interests of the public. The word 'reasonable' implies intelligent care and deliberation, that is, the choice of a course which reason dictates. Legislation which arbitrarily or excessively invades the right cannot be said to contain the quality of reasonableness and unless it strikes a proper balance between the freedom guaranteed in Art. 19(1)(g) and the social control permitted by clause (6) of Art. 19, it must be held to be wanting in that quality."

As to r. 3 the grievances of the petitioners are these. Under the rule the prescribed authority for the purpose of s. 3 of the Act consists of the Veterinary Officer and the Chairman or Chief Officer of a District Board, Municipality etc. Unless both of them concur, no certificate for slaughter can be granted. It is pointed out that the Chairman or Chief Officer would be a layman not in a position to judge the age or usefulness of cattle. The result would be that the animal in respect of which a certificate is required may have to be shown to the Veterinary Officer as also the Chairman or Chief Officer, who may not be staying at the same place as the Veterinary Officer. If the two differ, the matter has to be referred to the Sub-divisional Animal Husbandry Officer. This procedure, it is contended, will involve the expenditure of so much money and time that it will not be worthwhile for the petitioners to ask for a certificate, or having got a certificate, to slaughter the animal. An animal which is above 15 or which has become useless generally costs much less than a young, serviceable animal. If the petitioners have to incur all the expenditure which the procedure laid down by r. 3 must necessarily cost them, then they must close down their trade. As to the right of appeal from an order refusing to grant a (1) [1950] S.C.R. 759,763.

624

certificate, it is contended that that right is also illusory for all practical purposes. To take the animal to the Deputy Director of Animal Husbandry or the District Animal Husbandry Officer or the Sub-divi sional Animal Husbandry Officer, as the case may be, and to keep and feed the animal for the period of the appeal and its hearing will cost more than the price of the animal itself. We consider that these grievances of the petitioners have substance, and judged from the practical point of view, the provisions of r. 3 impose disproportionate restrictions on their right. It is difficult to understand why the Veterinary Officer, who has the necessary technical knowledge, cannot be trusted to give the certificate and why it should be necessary to resort to a complicated procedure to resolve a possible difference of opinion between two officers, later followed by a still more expensive appeal. We, therefore, hold r. 3 also to be bad in so far as it imposes disproportionate restrictions indicated above, on the right of the petitioners.

(2) We now proceed to consider the Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter (Amendment) Act, 1958. After the decision of this Court in Md. Hanif Quareshi v. The State of Bihar (1) an Ordinance was passed called the Uttar Pradesh Prevention of Cow Slaughter (Amendment) Ordinance, 1958. This Ordinance was later repealed and replaced by the Act. The petitioners say that in the Bill as originally drafted the age limit below which slaughter was not permissible was put at 15 years; but the Select Committee increased it to 20 years. It will probably be best, for clearness sake, to set forth not the whole provisions of the Act, for that would be too lengthy, but those which form most directly the subject matter on which the controversy turns. Section 3 of the Act reads (omitting portions not relevant for our purpose)-

"S. 3(1) Except as hereinafter provided, no person shall slaughter or cause to be slaughtered or offer or cause to be offered for slaughter-
(a).......................................... (1) [1959] S.C.R. 629.
625
(b) a bull or bullock, unless he has obtained in respect thereof a certificate in writing, from the competent authority of the area in which the bull or bullock is to be slaughtered, certifying that it is fit for slaughter... (2) No bull or bullock, in respect of which a certificate has been issued under sub-section (1)(b) shall be' slaughtered at any place other than the place indicated in the certificate or within twenty days of the date of issue of the certificate.
(3) A certificate under sub-section (1)(b) shall be issued by the competent authority, only after it has, for reasons to be recorded in writing, certified that(a) the bull or bullock is over the age of twenty years; and
(b) in the case of a bull, it has become permanently unfit and unserviceable for the purpose of breeding and, in the case of a bullock, it has become permanently unfit and unserviceable for the purposes of draught and any kind of agricultural operation:
Provided that the permanent unfitness or unserviceability has not been caused deliberately.
(4) The competent authority shall, before issuing the certificate under sub-section (3) or refusing to issue the same, record its order in writing. Any person aggrieved by the order of the competent authority, under this section, may, within twenty days of the date of the order, appeal against it to the State Government, which may pass such orders thereon as it may deem fit.
(5) The State Government may, at any time, for the purposes of satisfying itself as to the legality or propriety of the action taken under this section, call for and examine the record of any case and may pass such orders thereon as it may deem fit.
(6) Subject to the provisions herein contained any action taken under this section, shall be final and conclusive and shall not be called in question."

On behalf of the petitioners it has been argued that s. 3 imposes a number of unreasonable restrictions. Firstly, it is urged that the age-limit with regard to bulls or bullocks is put too high, viz. at 20 years. This is an 626 aspect which we have already considered in relation to the Bihar Act. What we have said about the age s limit in that connexion applies equally to the Uttar Pradesh Act. The 8th Live-stock Census, 1956 shows that in Uttar Pradesh bulls and bullocks over 3 years of age, not in use for breeding or work, numbered as many as 126,201 in 1956 as compared to 162,746 in 1951. The Municipal Manual, Uttar Pradesh, Vol. 1, contains a direction that for slaughter of animals, bullocks and male buffaloes in good state of health below ten years of age should be included. Secondly, it is pointed out that not being content with fixing an unreasonably high age-limit, the impugned provision imposes a double restriction. It says that the animal must be over twenty years in age and must also be permanently unfit and unserviceable; and in the case of a bullock, the unfitness must be for "any kind of agricultural operation" and not merely for draught purposes. The result of this double restriction, it is stated, is that even if the animal is permanently unserviceable and unfit at an earlier age, it cannot be slaughtered unless it is over twenty years in age. Before a certificate can be given, the animal must fulfil two conditions as to (1) age and (2) permanent unfitness. We consider this to be a demonstrably unreasonable restriction. In Md. Hanif Quareshi's case (1) this Court had said that a total ban on the slaughter of bulls and bullocks after they had ceased to be capable of breeding or working as draught animals was not in the interests of the general public. Yet this is exactly what the impugned provision does by imposing a double restriction. It lays down that even if the animal is permanently unserviceable, no certificate can be given unless it is more than 20 years in age. The restriction will in effect put an end to the trade of the petitioners.

Thirdly, the impugned provision provides (1) that the animal shall not be slaughtered within 20 days of the date of the issue of the certificate and (2) that any person aggrieved by the order of the competent authority may appeal to the State Government within 20 days. It is to be noted that the right of appeal is not (1) [1939] S.C R. 629.

627

confined to a refusal to grant a certificate as in the Bihar Act, but the right is given to any person aggrieved by the order of the competent authority. In other words, even when a certificate is given, any person, even a member of the public, who feels aggrieved by it may prefer an appeal and hold up the slaughter of the animal for a long time. From the practical point of view these restrictions really put a total ban on the slaughter of bulls and bullocks even after they have ceased to be useful, and we must hold, following our decision in Md. Hanif Quareshi's case (1) that s. 3 of the Uttar Pradesh Act in so far as it imposes unreasonable restrictions on the right of the petitioners as to slaughter of bulls and bullocks infringes the fundamental right of the petitioners and is to that extent void.

(3) Now, we come to the Madhya Pradesh Act. Several provisions of this Act have been challenged before us as imposing unreasonable restrictions on the fundamental right of the petitioners. Section 4 deals with prohibition of slaughter of agricultural cattle. The expression 'agricultural cattle' means an animal specified in the schedule: it means cows of all ages; calves of cows and of she-buffaloes; bulls; bullocks; and male and female buffaloes. As we have stated earlier, we are concerned in these cases with the validity of the restrictions placed on the slaughter of bulls, bullocks and buffaloes. Now, s. 4 is in these terms:

"S. 4(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force or in any usage or custom to the contrary, no person shall slaughter or cause to be slaughtered or offer or cause to be offered, for slaughter-
(a) cows, calves of cows, or calves of she-buffaloes, or
(b) any other agricultural cattle unless he has obtained in respect of such cattle a certificate in writing issued by the Competent Authority for the area in which the cattle is to be slaughtered that the cattle is fit for slaughter. (1) [1959] S.C.R.29.
628
(2) No certificate under clause (b) of sub-section (1) shall be issued by the Competent Authority .unless the Veterinary Officer after examining the cattle certifies that-
(a) the cattle is over twenty years of age and is unfit for work or breeding or has become permanently incapacitated from work or breeding due to age, injury, deformity or an incurable disease; and
(b) the cattle is not suffering from any disease which makes its meat unwholesome for human consumption. (3) The Competent Authority shall, before issuing or refusing to issue a certificate under this section, record its order in writing. Any person aggrieved by the order of the Competent Authority under this section, may, within ten days of the date of the order, prefer an appeal against such order to the Collector of the district or such other officer as may, by notification, be authorised in this behalf by the State Government, and the Collector or such other officer may pass such orders thereon as he thinks fit. (4) Subject to the orders passed in appeal, if any, under sub-section (3), the order of the Competent Authority shall be final and shall not be called in question in any Court."

Section 5 places a restriction as to the place and time for slaughter and the objection taken before us relates to the time rather than to the place of slaughter. It says in effect that no cattle in respect of which a certificate has been issued under s. 4 shall be slaughtered within ten days of the date of issue of the certificate and where an appeal is preferred against the grant of such certificate, till the time such appeal is disposed of. The provision of appeal is contained in sub-s. (3) of s. 4 of the Act which we have quoted earlier. That sub-section lays down that any person aggrieved by the order of the Competent Authority, may, within ten days of the date of the order, prefer an appeal against the order to the Collector of the district or such other officer as may, by notification, be authorised in this behalf by the State Government.

629

Section 6 imposes a restriction on the transport of agricultural cattle for slaughter and reads:

"S. 6. No person shall transport or offer for transport or cause to be transported any agricultural cattle from any place within the State to any place outside the State, for the purpose of its slaughter in contravention of the provisions of this Act or with the knowledge that it will be or is likely to be, so slaughtered."

Section 7 prohibits the sale, purchase or disposal otherwise of certain kinds of animals. It reads-.

"S. 7. No person shall purchase, sell or otherwise dispose of or offer to purchase, sell or otherwise dispose of or cause to be purchased, sold or otherwise disposed of cows, calves of cows or calves of shebuffaloes for slaughter or knowing or having reason to believe that such cattle shall be slaughtered."

Section 8 relates to possession of flesh of agricultural cattle and is in these terms: "S. 8. Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force, no person shall have in his possession flesh of any agricultural cattle slaughtered in contravention of the provisions of this Act."

Section 10 imposes a penalty for a contravention of s. 4(1)(a) and s. 11 imposes penalty for a contravention of any of the other provisions of the Act.

On behalf of the petitioners it has been pointed out, and rightly in our opinion, that cl. (a) of sub-s. (2) of s. 4 of the Act imposes an unreasonable restriction on the right of the petitioners. That clause in its first part lays down that the cattle (other than cows and calves) must be over 20 years of age and must also be unfit for work or breeding; and in the second part it says, "or has become permanently incapacitated from work or breeding due to age, injury, deformity or an incurable disease." It is a little difficult to understand why the two parts are juxtaposed in the section. In any view the restriction that the animal must be over 20 years of age and also unfit for work or breeding is an excessive or unreasonable restriction as we have 80 630 pointed out with regard to a similar provision in the Uttar Pradesh Act. The second part of the clause would not be open to any objection, if it stood by itself. If, however, it has to be combined with the agelimit mentioned in the first part of the clause, it will again be open to the same objection; if the animal is to be over 20 years of age and also permanently incapacitated from work or breeding etc.,then the agelimit is really meaningless. Then, the expression 'due to age' in the second part of the clause also loses its meaning. It seems to us that cl. (a) of sub- s. (2) of s. 4 of the Act as drafted is bad because it imposes a disproportionate restriction on the slaughter of bulls, bullocks and buffaloes it is a restriction excessive in nature and not in the interests of the general public. The test laid down is not merely permanent incapacity or unfitness for work or breeding but the test is something more than that, a combination of age and unfitness' Learned Counsel for the petitioners has placed before us an observation contained in a reply made by the Deputy Minister in the course of the debate on the Bill in the Madhya Pradesh Assembly (see Madhya Pradesh Assembly Proceedings, Vol. 5 Serial no. 34 dated April 14, 1959, page 3201). He said that the age fixed was very much higher than the one to which any animal survived. This observation has been placed before us not with a view to an interpretation of the section, but to show what opinion was held by the Deputy Minister as to the proper agelimit. On behalf of the respondent State our attention has been drawn to a book called The Miracle of Life (Home Library Club) in which there is a statement that oxen, given good conditions, live about 40 years. Our attention has also been drawn to certain extracts from a Hindi book called Godhan by Girish Chandra Chakravarti in which there are statements to the effect that cows and bullocks may live up to 20 or 25 years. This is an aspect of the case with which we have already dealt. The question before us is not the maximum age upto which bulls, bullocks and buffaloes may live in rare cases. The question before us is what is their average longevity and at what age 631 they become useless. On this question we think that the opinion is almost unanimous, and the opinion which the Deputy Minister expressed was not wrong.

Section 5 in so far as it imposes a restriction as to the time for slaughter is again open to the same objection as has been discussed by us with regard to a similar provision in the Uttar Pradesh Act. A right of appeal is given to any person aggrieved by the order. In other words, a member of the public, if he feels aggrieved by the order granting a certificate for slaughter, may prefer an appeal and hold up for a long time the slaughter of the animal. We have pointed out that for all practical purposes such a restriction will really put an end to the trade of the petitioners and we are unable to accept a restriction of this kind as a reasonable restriction within the meaning of cl. (6) of Art. 19 of the Constitution.

Section 6 standing by itself, we think, is not open to any serious objection. It is ancillary in nature and tries to give effect to the provision of the Act prohibiting slaughter of cattle in contravention of the Act. Section 7 relates to the prohibition of sale, purchase etc., of cows and calves and inasmuch as a total ban on the slaughter of cows and calves is valid, no objection can be taken to s. 7 of the Act. It merely seeks to effectuate the total ban on the slaughter of cows and calves (both of cows and she-buffaloes). Section 8 is also ancillary in character and if the other provisions are valid no objection can be taken to the provisions of s. 8. Sections 10 and 11 impose penalties and their validity cannot be seriously disputed.

However, we must say a few words about s. 12 of the Act which has also been challenged before us. Section 12 is in these terms:

"S. 12. In any trial for an offence punishable under section 11 for contravention of the provision of sections 5, 6 or 7 of this Act the burden of proving that the slaughter, transport or sale of agricultural cattle was not in contravention of the provisions of this Act shall be on the accused."

The argument is that s. 12 infringes the fundamental 632 right of the petitioners inasmuch as it puts the burden of proof on an accused person not only for his own knowledge or intention but for the knowledge or intention of other persons. We do not think that this contention is correct. The accused person, so far as ss. 5 and 7 are concerned, must be the person who has slaughtered the animal or who has purchased, sold or otherwise disposed of the animal etc. Therefore, the only question will be his knowledge and the legislature was competent to place the burden of proof on him. So far as s. 6 is concerned, it specifically refers to the knowledge of the person who has transported or offered for transport or caused to be transported any agricultural cattles from any place within the State to any place outside the State. Therefore, when the section talks of knowledge, it talks of the knowledge of that person who has transported or offered for transport etc. The knowledge of no other person comes into the purview of s. 6. We are, therefore,' of the view that s. 12 is not invalid on the ground sug- gested by the petitioners.

Therefore, the result of our examination of the various provisions of the Act is that the impugned provisions in cl.

(a) of sub-s. (2) of s. 4, in sub-s. (3) of s. 4 relating to the right of appeal by any person aggrieved by the order, and in s. 5 relating to the time of slaughter, impose unreasonable and disproportionate restrictions which must be held to be unconstitutional.

As to the Madhya Pradesh Agricultural Cattle Preservation Rules, r. 3 says "that an application for a certificate under s. 4 shall be made to the competent authority," and r. 4 says that on receipt of the application, the competent authority shall by an order direct the person keeping the animal to submit it for examination by the Veterinary Officer Rule 5 reproduces the provisions of cls. (a) and (b) of sub-s. (2) of s. 4 and in so far as we have held that the provision in el. (a) of sub-s. (2) of s. 4 is unconstitutional, the rule must also fall with it. There is one other aspect of these cases which has been emphasized before us, to which a reference must 633 now be made. It is open to the legislature to enact ancillary provisions to give effect to the main object of the Act, namely, the prevention of slaughter of animals like bulls, bullocks or buffaloes which are still useful for the purposes for which they are generally used. It is pointed out that acts innocent in themselves may be prohibited and the restrictions in that regard would be reasonable, if the same were necessary to secure efficient enforcement of valid provisions. For example, it is open to the legislature, if it feels it necessary, in order to reduce the possibilities of evasion to a minimum, to enact provisions which would give effect to the main object of the legislation. We have not ignored this aspect and have kept in mind the undisputed right of the legislature to decide what provisions are necessary to give effect to the main object of the legislation. In these cases the petitioners have complained that the main object of the impugned provisions is not the prohibition of slaughter of animals which are still useful; the impugned provisions as they are worded really put a total ban on the slaughter of bulls, bullocks and buffaloes and for all practical purposes they put a stop to the profession and trade of the petitioners. We have held that this complaint is justified in respect of the main provisions in the three Acts.

We, therefore, allow the three writ petitions and direct, as we directed in Md. Hanif Quareshi's case (1) the respondent States not to enforce the Acts or the rules made thereunder in so far as they have been declared void by us. The petitioners will be entitled to their costs of the hearing in this Court.

Petitions allowed.

(1) [1959] S.C.R. 629.

634