Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 13, Cited by 42]

Supreme Court of India

H. Anraj And Others Etc vs State Of Maharashtra on 23 January, 1984

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 781, 1984 SCR (2) 440, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 781, 1984 UJ (SC) 909, (1984) 97 MAD LW 49, (1984) 1 ORISSA LR 4, (1984) 1 SCWR 293, 1984 (2) SCC 292

Author: O. Chinnappa Reddy

Bench: O. Chinnappa Reddy, E.S. Venkataramiah, R.B. Misra

           PETITIONER:
H. ANRAJ AND OTHERS ETC.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA

DATE OF JUDGMENT23/01/1984

BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
MISRA, R.B. (J)

CITATION:
 1984 AIR  781		  1984 SCR  (2) 440
 1984 SCC  (2) 292	  1984 SCALE  (1)93
 CITATOR INFO :
 E	    1984 SC1542	 (1)
 RF	    1986 SC  63	 (7)


ACT:
     Constitution of India 1950
     Articles 73  and 298-Government  of State-Whether could
organise lotteries-Whether  competent to ban sale of tickets
of lotteries conducted by other State Governments.
     Entry 40  List I  VIII Schedule,  Entry 34 List II VIII
Schedule & Articles 246(1) and (3).
     State Legislature	whether competent  to  enact  a	 law
touching lotteries organised by the Government of India or a
State Government.
     Lotteries Sale  of tickets	 of lotteries  conducted  by
other State Government-State Government-Whether competent to
ban within its own State.



HEADNOTE:
     By a  press  release,  the	 Government  of	 Maharashtra
declared that  the sale	 of lottery  tickets of States other
than the  State of  Maharashtra was  unlawful and warned the
public that no lottery ticket of other States should be sold
within the State.
     The petitioners who were agents for the sale of tickets
for lotteries  conducted by  various State Governments other
than the  State	 of  Maharashtra  contended  in	 their	writ
petitions, that	 the aforesaid	ban that  was sought  to  be
imposed had  no	 legal	authority.  Under  the	Constitution
lotteries organised  by	 the  Government  of  India  or	 the
Government of  a State	was a  subject which  was within the
exclusive legislative  competence of  Parliament and that it
was not	 open to  the Government  of any State purporting to
Act in exercise of its executive power to impose such a ban.
On  behalf   of	 the   State  Government-respondent  it	 was
contended that	the Union  Government's executive  power was
co-extensive with the power to make laws, that the President
in exercise  of his power under Article 258(1) had entrusted
to the	State Government  the executive	 power of  the Union
through a  Presidential order dated April 2, 1969 in respect
of  lotteries  run  by	the  State,  and  therefore  it	 was
competent for the State Government to impose the ban.
     Allowing the writ petitions,
^
     HELD: 1.  The Government  of Maharashtra cannot purport
to ban the
441
sale of	 lottery tickets  of other  State by  virtue of	 the
entrustment  of	  power	 under	 Article   258(1)   of	 the
Constitution. [447 D]
     2. Entry  40 of  List I  of the  VIIIth Schedule to the
Constitution is	 "Lotteries organised  by the  Government of
India or  the Government of a State". Entry 34 of List II of
VIIIth	Schedule  is,  "Betting	 and  gambling".  Since	 the
subject 'Lotteries  organised by  the Government of India or
the Government	of a  State' has  been taken  out  from	 the
legislative field  comprised by	 the expression "Betting and
gambling" and  reserved to  be	dealt  with  by	 Parliament,
within its  exclusive legislative competence it must follow,
in view	 of Article  246(1) and (3) that no legislature of a
State. can  make a  law touching  lotteries organised by the
Government of India or the Government of a State. [444 D-E]
     3. Article	 73 extends the executive power of the Union
to the matters with respect to which Parliament has power to
make laws. But the executive power of the Union, by the very
opening words  of Art.	73 is  "subject to the provisions of
the Constitution".  It therefore  follows that the executive
power of  the Union  with respect  to lotteries organised by
the Government	of a  State has	 necessarily to be exercised
subject to  the provisions  of the  Constitution,  including
Art. 298, which expressly extends the executive power of the
State to  the carrying	on of  any trade or business subject
only to	 legislation by	 Parliament if the trade or business
is not	one with  respect to which the State Legislature may
make laws. [447G-H; 440A-B]
     4.	 Reading   and	considering   Articles	73  and	 298
together, it is clear that the executive power of a State in
the matter of carrying on any trade on business with respect
to which  the State legislature may not make laws is subject
to legislation	by Parliament  but is  not  subject  to	 the
executive power	 of the	 Union. The Government of a State is
not  required	to  obtain   the  permission  of  the  Union
Government in  order  to  organise  its	 lotteries,  in	 the
absence of  Parliamentary legislation.	Even  assuming	that
such permission	 is necessary,	a condition  imposed by such
permission that lottery tickets of one State may not be sold
in another  State cannot be enforced by the other State. The
other State  has no  power to  make any	 laws in  regard  to
lotteries organised by the first State. Its executive power,
by virtue  of Article 298, extends to lotteries organised by
itself but  not to  lotteries organised	 by the other State.
[448C-E]
     5. If  a State  acts in breach of the condition imposed
by the President while entrusting power under Article 258 it
is open to the President to revoke the permission or to take
such further  or other	action as  may	be  constitutionally
permissible but	 it cannot possibly enable the Government of
the other  State to  do anything about it except to complain
perhaps to the Union Government. [448 E-F]
     In the  instant case the source of power for the ban is
claimed to  be the  entrustment of  power by  the  President
under Act  258(1) through  the Residential order Dated April
2, 1969. But the terms of the entrustment do not justify the
claim The  entrustment of  power  is  only  'in	 respect  of
lotteries organised  by	 that  Government'.  The  expression
'that Government' in the context of the entrustment of power
to  the	  Government  of   Maharashtra	can  only  mean	 the
Government of Maharashtra and no other. [447 B-C]
     L.B. Paradise  Lottery Centre  v. State, AIR 1975 AP 50
Shri Indravadan	 Chaman Lal  Thacker v.	 State	of  Gujarat,
S.C.A. 1309/70 approved.
442
Komal Agency  v. State, AIR 1971 Bombay 332 and H.G. Jain v.
State of Tamilnadu, AIR 1973 Madras 402; over-ruled.



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition Nos. 2333 or 2336 of 1983.

(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India). Advocates for the Petitioners.

L.M. Singhvi, A.M. Singhvi, Vimal Dave and Krishan Kumar.

T.S. Krishnamurthy Iyer, Naresh Kumar Sharma and Vineet Kumar.

Dr. Y.S. Chitale, (Not present) Mrs. Sadhana Ramchandran and Raju Ramchandran and Harjinder Singh (Not present) Advocates for the Respondents:

A.V. Rangam and Mrs. Sarla Chandra for the State of Tamilnadu.
N.H. Gurusahani, Ashwani Kumar, N.N. Keshwani and M.N. Shroff and A.S. Nambiar Not Present.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. The several petitioners in these writ petitions are agents for the sale of tickets for the lotteries conducted by the Governments of various States other than Maharashtra. They question the ban sought to be imposed by the Government of Maharashtra on the sale within the State of Maharashtra of tickets of lotteries conducted by the Government of other States. They, generally, seek a writ in the nature of a Mandamus directing the State of Maharashtra to forbear from interfering with the sale or distribution of lottery tickets in respect of the lotteries organised' by the Governments of States other than Maharashtra.
There is no express notification or order of the Government of Maharashtra imposing a ban on the sale of lottery tickets of other. States in the State of Maharashtra. The ban is sought to be spelt out from a Press release of the Director of Publicity, Sachivalaya, Bombay dated September 24, 1969 and a communication' dated August 24, 1981 addressed by the Government of Maharashtra, 443 Finance Department, to some of the petitioners individually. The Press release is as follows:
SALE OF LOTTERY TICKETS OF OTHER STATES UNLAWFUL Warning to Public On September 16, the Minister for Finance in a Press conference, followed by a press note, made it clear to agents who are selling lottery tickets that the sale of lottery tickets of other States in this State is unlawful. The Government of India, in giving permission for conducting State lotteries had made a condition that the lottery tickets should not be sold in another State, without the express consent of that State, No such permission has been given in Maharashtra for the sale of outside State lottery tickets. Despite the warning given by the Minister, unauthorised sales of lottery tickets, of outside States continues, and the Government is therefore taking steps to stop these obviously unlawful practices by seizing all stocks of tickets of other States' lotteries, The public are warned that no tickets other that the Maharashtra State Lottery tickets can be sold within the Maharashtra State".
The communications addressed to the petitioners are in the following terms:
Sir, I am directed to refer to your letter No. DA/PL/81/622, dated 22.6.1981 on the above mentioned subject and to state that there is ban on the sale of other State Lottery tickets in State of Maharashtra. It is, therefore, regretted that your request to permit you to sell your State Lottery tickets in this State cannot' be accepted.
Yours faithfully, Sd/-
State Lottery Officer, Finance Department The basic submission on behalf of the petitioners is that there 444 is no legal authority for the imposition of the ban. It is argued that ' under the Constitution, 'Lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State' is a subject which is within ' the exclusive legislative competence of Parliament and that it is not open to the Government of any State purporting to act in exercise of its executive power to impose such a ban as that sought to be imposed by the Government of Maharashtra. On the other hand, it is sought to be argued on behalf of the Government of Maharashtra that the Union Government's executive power is co-extensive with the power of Parliament to make laws, that the President in exercise of his power under Art. 258(i) has entrusted to the Government of Maharashtra the executive power of the Union in respect of lotteries run by the State and therefore, it was competent for the Government of Maharashtra to impose the ban.
Entry 40 of List I of the VIIth Schedule to the Constitution is "Lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State". Entry 34 of List IT of VIIth Schedule is, "Betting and gambling". There is no dispute before us that the expression "Betting and gambling" includes and has always been understood to have included the conduct of lotteries. Quite obviously, the subject 'Lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State' has been taken out from the legislative field comprised by the expression "Betting and gambling" and is reserved to be dealt with by Parliament. Since the subject 'Lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State' has been made a subject within the exclusive legislative competence of Parliament, it must follow, in view of Act. 246(1) and (3), that no legislature of a State can make a law touching lotteries organised by the Government of India of the Government of a State. This much is beyond controversy and the Maharashtra legislature has acknowledged the position, as indeed it must, in Sec. 32 of the Bombay Lotteries (Control and Tax) and Prize Competitions (Tax) Act, 1958. It is an Act to control and tax lotteries and to tax prize competitions in the State of Maharashtra. Section 32(b) expressly provides that nothing in the Act shall apply to "a lottery organised by the Central Government or a State Government". This, as we said, is but a recognition of the prevailing situation under the Constitution. The Constitutional position cannot be altered by an act of the State legislature.
It appears that the Government of Maharashtra and various other State Governments requested the Union Government to authorise them to conduct lotteries for the purpose of 'finding funds 445 for financing their development plants'. Such authorisation was, of course, strictly, not necessary in the absence of a law made by Parliament pursuant to Entry 40 of List I of the VIIth Schedule to the Constitution. Article 298 of the Constitution extends the executive power of the Union and each State to the carrying on of any trade or business and to the acquisition, holding and disposal of property and the making of contracts for any purpose, with the stipulation that if the trade, business or purpose is not one with respect to which Parliament may make laws, the said executive power of Parliament shall be subject in each State to legislation by the State and if the trade, business or purpose is not one with respect to which the State legislature may make laws, the said executive power of the State shall be subject to legislation by Parliament. Thus, while the Government of a State is free to carry on any trade or business in respect of which it may not have the power to make laws the power to carry on such trade or business shall be subject to legislation by Parliament. Therefore, the Government of a State has the right to conduct lotteries subject to legislation by Parliament. Since there is at present no legislation by Parliament on the subject of lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State, the Government of every State has the unrestricted right to organise lotteries of its own. We will consider the effect of the impact of Art. 73, Art. 258(1) and Entry 40 of List I read with Art. 246 on this right a little later.
To continue the expose of facts, in response to the request of the several State Governments, the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India, addressed a communication dated July 1,1968 to the Chief Secretaries to the Government of all States. It was stated in the letter that though the Central Government was opposed to the idea of lotteries being conducted by Governments, they had decided to authorise the State Governments to conduct lotteries in view of the representations of some of the State Governments that it would help them 'to mobilise savings and to find funds far financing their development plans'. However, it was added :
"At the same time, it is also felt that suitable steps should be taken to safeguard the interests of such State Governments, who, as a matter of policy, do not desire to start State Lotteries or permit sale of tickets of lotteries organised in other States, within their jurisdiction. In order to avoid objections from such States, it has been decided that the Central Governments permission for conducting State Lotteries is available on the condition that tickets to such a lottery will 446 not be sold in another State without the express consent of the State Government concerned. I am to add that in order to achieve this object an amendment of Section 294-A IPC is being undertaken to make sale of tickets, without the consent of the State Government concerned, a penal offence".
We may mention here that the proposal to amend Section 294-A IPC to achieve the object of preventing the sale of lottery tickets of one State being sold in States which are opposed to the conduct of lotteries as a matter of policy has remained a static proposal and no such amendment has so far been attempted to be made.
The communication dated July 1, 1968 from the Government of India was followed by Presidential order under Art. 258(1) of the Constitution. The Presidential order relating to the State of Maharashtra with which we are concerned. is as follows:-
No. 29/29/63-P.IV Government of India Ministry of Home Affairs New Delhi, the 2nd April, 1969.
ORDER Whereas the Government of Maharashtra propose to organise a State lottery;
And whereas the Central Government has no objection to it:
Now, therefore, the President is pleased to permit the Government of Maharashtra to conduct a State lottery, subject to the condition that the tickets of the lottery shall not be sold in another State without the permission of the Government of that State. The President is further pleased to entrust to the Government of Maharashtra under clause (1) of Article 258 of the Constitution the executive power of the Union in respect of lotteries organised by that Government.

Sd/-

(D.D. JOSHI) Deputy Secretary to the Government of India 447 It was after this entrustment of executive power of the Union to the Government of Maharashtra 'in respect of lotteries organised by that Government' that the Government of Maharashtra proceeded to issue the Press release and thereafter the individual communications, earlier referred to, making it known that the sale of lottery tickets of other States was banned in the State of Maharashtra.

The source of power for the ban is claimed to be the entrustment of power by the President under Art. 258(1) of the Constitution. But the terms of the entrustment do not justify the claim. The entrustment of power, as is seen, is only 'in respect of lotteries organised by that Government'. The expression 'that Government' in the context of the entrustment of power to the Government of Maharashtra can only mean the Government of Maharashtra and no other. Nor can it ever be that such executive power as the Union Government may possess in respect of the trading, business or, for that matter, any other activity of the Government of one State may be entrusted to the Government of another State. That would be destructive of the very scheme and structure of our Constitution. The Government of Maharashtra cannot therefore purport to ban the sale of lottery tickets of Other States by virtue of the entrustment of power under Article 258(1) of the Constitution.

It is then said that the permission granted to each State to conduct its lotteries is expressly subject to-the condition that the tickets of the lottery shall not be sold in another State without the permission of the Government of that State. We have already pointed out that Article 298 of the Constitution extends the executive power of every State to the carrying on of any trade or business even if such trade or business is one with respect of which Parliament alone has the exclusive power to make laws, subject to the stipulation that such executive power of the State shall be subject to Parliamentary legislation. It is true that in view of Entry 40 of List I of the VIIth Schedule to the Constitution Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with respect to "Lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State", that Article 73 of the Constitution extends the executive power of the union to the matters with respect to which Parliament bas power to make laws and, therefore; the executive power of the Union must extends to the subject "Lotteries organised by the Government of India or the Government of a State". But the executive power of the union, by the very opening words of Article 73, is "subject to the provisions of this Constitution". It follows that the executive power of the Union with respect to lotteries 448 organised by the Government of a State has necessarily to be exercised subject to the provisions of the Constitution, including Article 298, which expressly extends the executive power of the State to the carrying on of any trade or. business subject only to legislation by Parliament if the trade or business is not one with respect to which the State legislature may make laws. It is to be noted that Article 298 does not open with the words 'subject to the provisions of the Constitution', as does Article 73. Reading and considering Articles 73 and 298 together, as they should indeed be read and considered, it is clear that the executive power of a State in the matter of carrying on an; trade or business with respect to which the State legislature may not make laws is subject to legislation by Parliament but is not subject to the executive power of the union, That is why we mentioned earlier that the Government of a State is not required to obtain the permission of the Union Government in order to organise its lotteries, in the absence of Parliamentary legislation. Even assuming that such permission is necessary, we do not see how a condition imposed by such permission that lottery tickets of one State may not be sold in another State may be enforced by the other State. The other State has no power to make laws in regard to the lotteries by the first State. Its executive power, by virtue of Article 298, extends to lotteries organised by itself but not to lotteries organised by the other State. If a State acts in breach of the condition imposed by the President while entrusting power under Article 258, it is open to the President to revoke the permission or to take such further or other action as may be constitutionally permissible but it cannot possibly enable the Government of the other State to do a thing about it except to complain, perhaps, to the Union Government. The Government of India is quite obviously alive to the position that there is no way of enforcing the stipulation that lottery tickets of one State shall not be sold in another except by Parliament making a law in that behalf. The awareness is revealed by the last sentence in the letter dated July 1, 1968 which says, "I am to add that in order to achieve this object an amendment of Section 294-A IPC is being undertaken to make sale of tickets, without the consent of the State Government concerned, a penal offence". The proposed amendment is yet to see the light of day.

A submission which appears to have found favour with the 449 High Court of Bombay in Kamal Agency v. State and the High Court of Madras in H.G. Jain v. State of Tamil Nadu was that in Entry 40 of List I and the respective local Acts, a lottery organised by a State must be construed to refer to a lottery lawfully organised by a State and that if a lottery is not lawfully organised by a State it would not fall within Entry 40 of List I but would fall under the head 'gambling' under Entry 34 of List II and the State legislature would then be empowered to legislate in respect of the same. Where the State Legislature could thus legislate, it was said, the State Government could take executive action in respect of lotteries organised by another State if they were unlawful. The Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh High Courts have dissented from this view. In Special Civil Application No. 1309 of 1970 Bhagwati, C.J. presiding over a Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court and in L.B. Paradise Lottery Centre v. State one of us sitting singly in the Andhra Pradesh High Court have explained that there is no justification for first reading the word 'lawfully' into Entry 40 of List I and then proceeding to interpret the expression 'Lottery lawfully organised' as meaning a lottery organised persuant to the entrustment of executive power of the Union under Article 258 of the Constitution. It was observed "legislative power cannot be fed into Entry 34, by feeding the word 'lawful' into Entry 40 or List I and thus artificially restricting the cope of Entry 40". It was pointed out that if the Government of a State organised a lottery without the entrustment of executive power as contemplated by Article 258 or in disregard or defiance of any condition that may have been imposed while entrusting executive power under Article 258 it would never be a matter for the legislature of one State to take upon itself the power to declare unlawful the lottery run by the Government of another State; and even less so could the Government of a State declare unlawful a lottery run by the Government of another State and thereafter ban the sale of the tickets of the lotteries organised by that State. In the Madras case it was also observed that the entrustment order carried with it all powers which the State Government might take to realise the maximum collection. We cannot subscribe to this view. That would really amount to the entrustment of vital legislative powers to the State Government which would be constitutionally, impermissible. We do not think it necessary to refer in any further detail to the decisions of the Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh Bombay and Madras decisions 450 except to say that we generally agree with the reasoning in the Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh decisions and disagree with the reasoning in the Bombay and Madras decisions. In the result we allow the Write petitions and direct the State of Maharashtra to forbear from giving effect to the ban on the sale or distribution of tickets of lotteries organised by other States. There is no order regarding to costs. N.V.K. Appeal allowed.

451