Document Fragment View

Matching Fragments

"The status of a person must be either that of a sovereign or a subject. There is no tedium quid. The law does not recognise an intermediate status of a person being partly a sovereign and partly a subject and when once it is admitted that the Bhomicharas had acknowledged the sovereignty of Jodhpur their status can only be that of a subject. A subject might occupy an exalted position and enjoy special privileges, but he is none the less a subject..."

(Emphasis added)

50. In State of Rajasthan vs. Sajjanlal Panjawat AIR 1975 SC 706 it was held that Rulers of the erstwhile Indian States exercised sovereign powers, legislative, executive and judicial. Their firmans were laws which could not have been challenged prior to the Constitution. Court relied on its earlier two decisions in Director of Endowments, Govt. of Hyderabad vs. Akram Ali, AIR 1956 SC 60, and Sarwarlal vs. State of Hyderabad, AIR 1960 SC 862.