text
stringlengths 2
478k
| case_details
dict |
---|---|
SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed, CJ
Mr. Justice Ijaz ul Ahsan
CIVIL APPEAL NO.10 OF 2021
[Against the judgment dated 11.06.2019, passed by the Federal Service
Tribunal, Islamabad in Appeal No.3343(R)CS/2017 with MPs]
Senior General Manager/CEO, Pakistan
Railways
Headquarters,
Lahore
and
others.
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Abdul Rauf Shamoon.
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
: Mr. Jawad Mehmood Pasha,
ASC
Naveed
Mubashar
Ch.
D.S.
Multan
For the Respondent(s)
: Mr. Zubair Hussain Jarral, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Date of Hearing
: 19.04.2021
O R D E R
GULZAR AHMED, CJ.- The respondent was employed
as an Engine Driver in Pakistan Railways. He was issued charge-
sheet and statement of allegations dated 25.10.2016. He
submitted his reply dated 30.10.2016. Enquiry Committee was
constituted, which conducted the regular enquiry and ultimately
gave finding that the respondent was guilty of commission of
offence and recommended awarding of major punishment to the
respondent. The respondent was dismissed from service vide order
dated 15.04.2017. He filed departmental appeal, which came to be
regretted vide order dated 05.07.2017. The respondent filed
CA.10 of 2021
- 2 -
service appeal in the Federal Service Tribunal, Islamabad (the
Tribunal). The service appeal was heard and vide impugned
judgment dated 11.06.2019, the same was partly allowed by
converting penalty of dismissal from service into that of
compulsory retirement from the date of his dismissal.
2.
Leave to appeal was granted on 08.01.2021, relevant
portion of which is as follows: -
“The learned counsel for the petitioners contends
that the train being driven by the respondent
collided with a stationary goods train and
tremendous loss of Rs.120,000,000/- (Rupees
twelve crore) on that account was caused to the
Pakistan Railways and even the operation of
railways on the line was gravely effected. During
this incident, four persons also lost their lives.
Further contends that such collusion was on
account of respondent’s violating the red signal in
that he was required to stop the train when there
was a red signal but instead he continued driving
the
train
and
ultimately
collided
with
the
stationary/goods train.”
3.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
have also gone through the record of the case.
4.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that
on account of respondent’s misconduct the accident had taken
place and in this regard in the preliminary enquiry so also in the
regular enquiry the respondent was found responsible for the said
accident and pursuant to the recommendation of the regular
enquiry committee, he was imposed penalty and there was no
CA.10 of 2021
- 3 -
occasion for the Tribunal to have interfered with reducing the
penalty from dismissal to that of compulsory retirement.
5.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent
has supported the impugned judgment and contended that
respondent has denied the charges. He has further contended that
it was a case of contributory negligence as other employees were
also proceeded in the same incident, who were awarded minor
penalties. The learned counsel relied upon the case of Jan
Muhammad vs. The General Manager, Karachi Telecomunication
Region, Karachi and another (1993 SCMR 1440).
6.
The Tribunal in the impugned judgment has noted that
collusion of trains has taken place and the respondent was
admittedly a driver of the train, which collided with the stationary
Goods Train. The Tribunal found that the respondent was bound
to follow the signals and while nothing the fact that the signal
man has also been punished concluded that there was a fault in
the entire system and the case being of a contributory negligence,
the respondent cannot be exonerated from his negligent act, at the
same time interfered with the quantum of penalty imposed upon
the respondent considering his 36 years’ service.
7.
The charge against the respondent, as contained in the
statement of allegations, was that while working on 14 Down
(Awan Express) Train on 15.09.2016, he was responsible for
collusion of 14 Down in the rear of stationary Down ZBKC Special
Goods Train at KM 61/2-3 between SSH-SJB stations on Multan
Cantonment-Lodhran Double Line. He was further charged of
being responsible in running the Train at excessive speed after
CA.10 of 2021
- 4 -
passing LXD-4 signal at danger. He did not even apply emergency
brakes resulting in catastrophic accident. He was further charged
that after stopping at LXD-4, which signal was at danger, he was
required to proceed further upto the next auto signal with a
cautious speed. He was further charged that of failure to have
good lookout and to control his Train. He was further charged that
he violated Rules 6 (a) & (b), 122, 259 (b) and 260 of the General
and Subsidiary Rules. The respondent has submitted his reply
dated 30.10.2016, in which he has not denied the allegations
made against him in the statement of allegation but gave his own
version in the following manner:-
“As far as GR-259(b) is concerned the train
stopped at LXD-4 gate signal and afterward the
LXD-4 gate signal change her aspect and train left
for the next block section ahead. Is this action for
stopping the train at LXD-4 signal being red not
sufficient to declare our vigilancy and good
outlook? So these allegations are not attributable
toward the undersigned as far as the question of
accelerating train speed is concerned no hard and
fast orders were issued from time to time in regard
the LXD/LXU signals because they are not falling
under the definition of an automatic signal.
As far as the violation of GR-6 (a) & (b), it is
pointed out that I observed the LXD-4 signal in
danger position and stopped my train at LXD-4
signal, after availing two minutes stoppage I start
my train on hand signal of the gate man. No
sooner my train move LXD-4 signal changed her
aspect to green, so allegation of violation of GR-6
(a) & (b) does not arise.
CA.10 of 2021
- 5 -
As concerned to application of emergency
brakes it is pointed out that the tail lamp of ZBKC
was not burning and the range of head light of
ZCU locomotives is 180 to 200 metres and 9
seconds will take to cover this distance at the
speed of 80 KMPH. Whereas 2 to 3 second will
take for mentally preparation and the brakes of
ZCU locomotives take place in 3 to 5 seconds,
remaining 4 seconds are not sufficient to stop the
train. The burning spots will only appear when the
train braking power will be extra ordinary tight
otherwise no such sign and symptom will be
appear. This is an unexpected incident and
everything is being assumed.”
8.
It is noted that LXD-4 signal was showing red light
that is danger position and respondent seems to have stopped the
train at the said signal. He stopped the train for only two minutes
and then started the train at hand signal of a gate man. Learned
counsel for the respondent was asked to show as to who was the
gate man who gave the hand signal, he stated that such gate man
has not been examined in the enquiry. We may note that
respondent himself having taken defence that he has started the
train on hand signal of a gate man, it was incumbent upon the
respondent to have positively proved this very aspect of his
defence but the respondent did not produce the gate man, who is
said to have given the hand signal for starting the train.
9.
Further, the respondent has stated that no sooner the
train moved, LXD-4 signal changed her aspect to green. Again the
learned counsel for the respondent was asked to show what is the
evidence on the record, which could establish that when the train
CA.10 of 2021
- 6 -
was moved by the respondent, the signal became green. Learned
counsel for the respondent replied that there is no evidence to
substantiate this defence of the respondent.
10.
We may note that the train, which was being driven by
the respondent, met with a catastrophic accident causing
substantial loss to the property of Pakistan Railways so also the
loss of human lives and the respondent in his reply has merely
taken an evasive stand, rather on its close reading appears to
have admitted that he has moved the train while signal was red in
the danger position.
11.
The factum of two defences taken by the respondent of
hand signal of a gate man and signal turning to green having not
been established, it becomes clear that the respondent violated
the red danger signal. Further, the respondent has accelerated the
train to the speed of 80 kilometres per hour and that he did not
apply emergency brakes, these charges have not been denied by
the respondent. The Tribunal in the impugned judgment has not
considered these very important aspects of the matter, which the
respondent has admitted in his reply to the charge-sheet.
12.
As noted in the leave granting order the accident has
caused direct monetary loss of Rs.120,000,000/- (one hundred
and twenty million) to the Pakistan Railways and it also took lives
of four innocent persons and looking at the conduct of the
respondent, there was no ground on the basis of which the
Tribunal could have interfered with the imposition of penalty of
dismissal imposed upon the respondent. No ground whatsoever
were available to the Tribunal for doing so. The judgment relied
CA.10 of 2021
- 7 -
upon by the learned counsel for the respondent deals with the
procedure of holding of an enquiry, to which there is no cavil, but
here the case is one where the respondent in his reply to the
charge-sheet has admitted the facts that he has stopped the train
on the red signal for two minutes and then moved the train when
the signal was red and accelerated it to a speed, where it could not
be stopped by him nor did he apply the brakes. The Tribunal has
also found the respondent responsible for such accident and has
not exonerated him from the same but converted the penalty from
dismissal to compulsory retirement.
13.
In view of the above, we allow the appeal and restore
the order of imposition of penalty of dismissal from service upon
the respondent.
14.
Above are the reasons of our short order of even date.
CHIEF JUSTICE
Bench-I
Islamabad
19.04.2021
‘APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
Rabbani/*
JUDGE
| {
"id": "C.A.10_2021.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE DOST MUHAMMAD KHAN
MR. JUSTICE TARIQ PARVEZ
Civil Appeal Nos.1109 of 2013 to 1111 of 2013 and
Civil Appeal Nos.1424 of 2014 to 1428 of 2014
Nematullah
(in C.A.1109/2013)
Najeebullah
(in C.A.1110/2013)
Faridullah Khan
(in C.A.1111/2013)
Miss Sherin
(in C.A.1424/2014)
Miss Zar Afshan
(in C.A.1425/2014)
Johar Shah & others
(in C.A.1426/2014)
Miss Asfa Gul
(in C.A.1427/2014)
Matiullah
(in C.A.1428/2014)
… Appellants
Versus
Chairman Govt. Body WWB/Secy. To Govt. of KPK Labour Dept. & others
(in C.As.1109/2013 and 1111/2013)
Workers Welfare Fund thr. Chairman, Islamabad & others
(in C.As.1424/2014 to 1428/2014)
...Respondents
For the appellants:
Barrister Masood Kausar, Sr. ASC.
For the respondent:
Nemo.
Mr. Umar Khan, Law Officer, W.W.B.
Date of hearing:
9.3.2016
ORDER
Learned counsel for the respondent has sent an application for
adjournment on the ground that his aunt has expired and he has to
attend her funeral. Adjourned. Let it be fixed after two weeks.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
9th March, 2016
Naveed Ahmad
| {
"id": "C.A.1109_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE SYED MANSOOR ALI SHAH
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1113 TO 1155 OF 2017 AND CIVIL
PETITIONS NO.3124, 387-P, 389-P, 392-P, 393-P, 394-P, 399-P,
400-P, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3138, 3241, 3259, 3260, 3327
AND 3411 OF 2017 AND 3385 OF 2018
(On appeal against the judgments dated 31.05.2017, 28.5.2019, 9.8.2017, 18.8.2017, 21.8.2017,
11.6.2015 passed by the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar in Writ Petition Nos. 2178-P/2015 & 2729
to 2731, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3081, 3082, 3109, 3110, 3111, 3112, 3113, 3118, 3137, 3157, 3216,
3268, 3297, 3413, 3489, 3890 of 2014, 542, 858, 885, 2160 to 2166, 2179 to 2182, 2164 to 2166,
2179 to 2198, 2210 to 2233, 2254, 2263 to 2265, 2287 to 2290, 2305, 2307, 2308, 2329, 2373,
2466 to 2468, 2533, 2556, 2558. 2575, 2576, 2589 to 2591, 2593, 2606, 2607, 2608, 2723, 2820,
2852, 2870, 3133, 3163, 3496, 3881, 3915, 3974, 4074, 4522 of 2015, 19, 165, 1415, 1757, 3569,
3849 of 2016, 1601, 1650, 1849, 3270-P, 33104-P, 3302-P, 2843-P of 2017, 2293-P, 778-A, 2232-P
to 2234-P, 2427-P to 2429-P, 2472-P, 2938-P, 2939-P, 2940-P, 4300-P of 2016, 589-P, 2408-P of
2017, 3085-P/2014)
AND
CIVIL MISC. APPLICATIONS NO. 20, 86, 812, 813, 814, 815,
1022, 2014 OF 2020 AND 8277, 8278, 8279, 3076, 9149, 9186,
9301, 9305, 9521, 9746, 9844, 10608 OF 2019 AND 8497 OF
2018 AND 5307 & 9153 OF 2017
(Applications for Impleadment)
AND
CIVIL MISC. APPLICATIONS NO.5295, 5511, 5635, 5637, 5639,
5641, 5643, 5645, 5647, 5649, 5651, 5678 TO 5686, 5689 TO
5696, 5699, 5701, 5703, 5705, 5707, 5709, 5711, 5713 AND
5715 TO 5721 OF 2017
(Applications for Stay)
Sr.
No.
Party Names
Case No.
1.
M/s Khurshid Soap & Chemical
Industries (Pvt.) Ltd represented
through Mr. Sheikh Muhammad
Ilyas, KPK
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
&
Natural
Resources etc
CA 1113/2017 in
CP 2687/2017
&
CMA 5295/2017
2.
Ghani Glass Limited through Mr.
Zakir Mian, Manager Legal
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad etc
CA 1114/2017 in
CP 2786/2017
&
CMA 5511/2017
3.
AJ Textile Mills Limited through
its Authorized Director
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc.
CA 1115/2017 in
CP 2898/2017
&
CMA 5635/2017
4.
AJ Textile Mills Limited through CA 1116/2017 in
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 2 :-
its Authorized Director
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 2899/2017
&
CMA 5637/2017
5.
(1) Saif Textile Mills Ltd, Peshawar
etc.
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1117/2017 in
CP 2900/2017
&
CMA 5639/2017
6.
(1) Saif Textile Mills Ltd, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad
CA 1118/2017 in
CP 2901/2017
&
CMA 5641/2017
7.
Sarhad
Textile
Mills
Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1119/2017 in
CP 2902/2017
&
CMA 5643/2017
8.
(1) Rahman Cotton Mills Ltd,
Mardan etc
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad
CA 1120/2017 in
CP 2903/2017
&
CMA 5645/2017
9.
Sarhad
Textile
Mills
Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1121/2017 in
CP 2904/2017
&
CMA 5647/2017
10.
M/s Babri Cotton Mills Ltd, Kohat
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad
CA 1122/2017 in
CP 2905/2017
&
CMA 5649/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 3 :-
11.
M/s Bannu Wollen Mills Ltd,
Peshwar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1123/2017 in
CP 2906/2017
&
CMA 5651/2017
12.
M/s Ashraf Industries Pvt Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1124/2017 in
CP 2926/2017
&
CMA 5678/2017
13.
M/s Ashraf Industries Pvt Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1125/2017 in
CP 2927/2017
&
CMA 5679/2017
14.
M/s Khyber Tubaco Co. Ltd,
Mardan
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1126/2017 in
CP 2928/2017
&
CMA 5680/2017
15.
M/s Hussnain Daud Oil & Ghee
Mills Ltd, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1127/2017 in
CP 2929/2017
&
CMA 5681/2017
16.
Royal Textile Mills Limited, Swabi
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1128/2017 in
CP 2930/2017
&
CMA 5682/2017
17.
Swat Tyre & Rubber Co. Pvt Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
CA 1129/2017 in
CP 2931/2017
&
CMA 5683/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 4 :-
Resources, Islamabad etc
18.
(1) M/s Khyber Electric Lamps
Manufacturing Co. Ltd etc
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1130/2017 in
CP 2932/2017
&
CMA 5684/2017
19.
Al Jasmin Pvt Ltd, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1131/2017 in
CP 2933/2017
&
CMA 5685/2017
20.
Pakistan Accumulators Pvt Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1132/2017 in
CP 2945/2017
&
CMA 5686/2017
21.
M/s MB Dyes Chemical & Silk
Industry Pvt Ltd
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1133/2017 in
CP 2946/2017
&
CMA 5689/2017
22.
(1)
M/s
Sarhad
Ceramics
Industries, Mansehra etc
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1134/2017 in
CP 2942/2017
&
CMA 5690/2017
23.
Taj Enterprises Plaster of Paris,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1135/2017 in
CP 2948/2017
&
CMA 5691/2017
24.
MKB
Enterprises
Pvt
Ltd,
Peshawar
CA 1136/2017 in
CP 2949/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 5 :-
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
&
CMA 5692/2017
25.
M/s
Unisa
Pharmaceutical
Industries Ltd
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1137/2017 in
CP 2950/2017
&
CMA 5693/2017
26.
Frontier
Foundry
Pvt.
Ltd,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1138/2017 in
CP 2951/2017
&
CMA 5694/2017
27.
TKM Enterprises, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1139/2017 in
CP 2952/2017
&
CMA 5695/2017
28.
M/s Deans Industries, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1140/2017 in
CP 2953/2017
&
CMA 5696/2017
29.
M/s Amin soap & Oil Industries
Pvt Limited
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1141/2017 in
CP 2954/2017
&
CMA 5699/2017
30.
Brightex Industries Pvt Limited,
Swabi
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
CA 1142/2017 in
CP 2955/2017
&
CMA 5701/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 6 :-
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
31.
Zainab
Textile
Mills
Limited,
Haripur
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1143/2017 in
CP 2956/2017
&
CMA 5703/2017
32.
The
Premier
Sugar
Mills
&
Distillery Co. Limited, Mardan
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1144/2017 in
CP 2957/2017
&
CMA 5705/2017
33.
M/s
Associated
Industries
Limited, Nowshera
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1145/2017 in
CP 2958/2017
&
CMA 5707/2017
34.
Khazana Sugar Mills, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1146/2017 in
CP 2959/2017
&
CMA 5709/2017
35.
Swat Ceramics Company Ltd,
Nowshera.
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1147/2017 in
CP 2960/2017
&
CMA 5711/2017
36.
Peshawar Chemicals, Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1148/2017 in
CP 2961/2017
&
CMA 5713/2017
37.
Peshawar
Ceramics
Pvt
Ltd, CA 1149/2017 in
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 7 :-
Peshawar
Versus
(1)
SNGPL
through
its
M.D,
Lahore etc
CP 2962/2017
&
CMA 5715/2017
38.
(1) M/s Economic Fuels Pt Ltd,
Peshawar etc
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
&
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1150/2017 in
CP 2963/2017
&
CMA 5716/2017
39.
(1) M/s Gas Mahal CNG Filling
Station, Akora Khattak, District
Nowshera etc
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad
CA 1151/2017 in
CP 2964/2017
&
CMA 5717/2017
40.
(1) M/s Khushal CNG Station,
Pabbi etc
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1152/2017 in
CP 2965/2017
&
CMA 5718/2017
41.
(1)
M/s
Orion
Traders
CNG
Station No.2, Jehangira etc
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1153/2017 in
CP 2966/2017
&
CMA 5719/2017
42.
(1) M/S Universal Gas CNG,
Swabi etc
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CA 1154/2017 in
CP 2967/2017
&
CMA 5720/2017
43.
(1) M/s Evergreen CNG Station,
Peshawar etc
CA 1155/2017 in
CP 2968/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 8 :-
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary,
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
&
CMA 5721/2017
44.
(1) Mohsin Match Factory (Pvt.)
Ltd., Peshawar
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 387-P/2017
45.
(1) Wadud Woolen Mills Ltd.,
Peshawar etc
Versus
(1) Govt. of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 389-P/2017
46.
(1)
M/s
Maclone
Lubrication,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 392-P/2017
47.
(1) M/s Bilour Industries Pvt.
Ltd., Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 394-P/2017
48.
(1) M/s AGE Industries Pvt. Ltd.,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 399-P/2017
49.
(1) M/s Elahi Match Pvt. Ltd.,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
CP 400-P/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 9 :-
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
50.
(1) M/s Ejaz Poultry Protein (Pvt.)
Ltd., Haripur
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 3027/2017
51.
(1) M/s Hattar Rendering Plant
(Pvt.) Ltd. Haripur
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 3028/2017
52.
(1) M/s Pan Asia Food Products
(Pvt.) Ltd., Hattar, KPK
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 3029/2017
53.
(1) M/s Pakistan Services Limited
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 3124/2017
54.
(1)
Lucky
Cement
Limited,
Peshawar
Versus
(1) Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Petroleum & Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 3138/2017
55.
(1) M/s Sohail Vegetable Ghee
Mills (Pvt.) Ltd. Peshawar
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
CP 393-P/2017
56.
(1) M/s Usman Ghee Industry CP 3030/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 10 :-
(Pvt.) Ltd., Swabi
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary Ministry of Petroleum &
Natural Resources, Islamabad etc
57.
Khyber Match Factory Pvt Ltd
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad etc
CP 3241/2017
58.
Sana Aluminum Industries Pvt
Ltd
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad etc
CP 3259/2017
59.
Top Star Industries Pvt Ltd
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad etc
CP 3260/2017
60.
M/s Mohsin Enterprises Pvt Ltd
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad etc
CP 3327/2017
61.
M/s Frontier Dextrose Limited,
Haripur
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad
(2)
OGRA
through
Chairman,
Islamabad
(3)
SNGPL
through
its
M.D,
Lahore
(4) G.M. SNGPL, Peshawar
(5) Province of KPK through Chief
Secretary
CP 3385/2018
62.
M/s Abasement Steel Re-Rolling
Mills
CP 3411/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 11 :-
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o Petroleum, Islamabad etc
63.
AJ Textile Mills Limited
Versus
K-Electric Limited
CMA 9153/2017
64.
(1) M/s Alamyar CNG Station,
Lakki Marwat etc
Versus
(1) Federation of Pakistan through
M/o
Petroleum
and
Natural
Resources, Islamabad etc
CMA 3076/2019
in CA 1132/2017
in CA 1113-
1115/17
65.
(1) Iqbal Baig sole proprietor of
M/s
Labaik
CNG
Station,
Hyderabad etc
CMA 9149/2019
66.
M/s Citi CNG Zone, Karachi
CMA
9305/2019
in
CMA
9149/2019 in CP
3138/2017
(For Impleadment
and for deletion of
name)
67.
M/s Habib-ADM Limited, Karachi
CMA 10608/2019
in CP 3138/2017
68.
(1) Prime Coat Pvt Ltd, Karachi
etc
CMA 20/2020 in
CP 3138/2017
69.
(1)
International
Industries
Limited, Karachi
(2) International Steel Limited,
Karachi
(3)
Pakistan
Cable
Limited,
Karachi
(4) Colgate-Palmolive (Pakistan)
Limited, Karachi
(5) M/s Popular Food Industries
Pvt Limited, Karachi
CMA
9746/2019
in CP 3138/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 12 :-
(6) M/s Popular Juice Industries
Pvt Limited, Karachi
(7) M/s Popular Aseptic Packaging
Pvt Limited, Karachi
(8) M/s Popular Fiber Mills Pvt
Ltd, Karachi
(9) M/s Popular Fabrics Pvt Ltd,
Karachi
(10)
M/s
Popular
Match
Industries, Karachi
(11) Ghulam Ali Bhatia proprietor
of M/s S.A. Brothers, Karachi
(12) Asif Kazani proprietor of M/s
Mehboob Re Rolling Mills, Karachi
70.
(1) M/S Model Service Station,
Karachi etc
CMA
8497/2018
in CP 3138/2017
71.
M/s Shahjee CNG Rawalpindi
CMA 8279/2019
72.
M/s
Panthar
CNG
Station,
Peshawar and another
CMA 8278/2019
73.
M/s Daudzai CNG Filling Station,
Peshawar and others
CMA 8277/2019
74.
Fauji
Fertilizer
Company
Ltd,
Rawalpindi
CMA 9186/2019
75.
M/s Enam Industries (Pvt) Ltd etc
CMA 5307/2017
76.
M/s SNGPL
CMA 812/2020
77.
M/s SNGPL
CMA 813/2020
78.
M/s SNGPL
CMA 814/2020
79.
M/s SNGPL
CMA 815/2020
80.
Century Paper & Board Mills
Limited
CMA 1022/2020
81.
M/s Al-Muizz Group CNG Station,
Kohat
CMA 9521/2019
82.
Fauji
Fertilizer
Bin
Qasim
Limited, Islamabad
CMA 9301/2019
83.
M/s
Badhan
CNG
Station, CMA 9844/2019
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 13 :-
Nowshera
84.
M/s Akram Cotton Mills Limited
and another
CMA 2014/2020
85.
M/s Akram Cotton Mills etc
CMA 86/2020
For the appellant(s)/
Applicant(s)/petitioner(s):
Mr. Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC
Mr. Saad Hashmi, Adv.
(In C.As.1150 to 1155/2017)
Mr. Rashid Anwar, ASC (via video link @
Karachi)
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(In C.As.1115 to 1123/2017)
Mr. Isaac Ali Qazi, ASC (via video link @
Peshawar)
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
(In C.As.1124 to 1127, 1133, 1134/17,
CPs.3027-3030 & 3411/17)
Mr. Anwar, Kamal, Sr. ASC
Br. Ahmed Pervaiz
(In CMA 86/20)
Kh. Muhammad Saeed, ASC
(In CA 1114/17)
Syed Haziq Ali Shah, ASC
Mr. M. S Khattak, AOR
(In C.As.1128 to 1131, 1135 to 1140/2017
&
C.Ps.3124, 3259 & 3260/2017)
Sardar Muhammad Ghazi, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(In C.A.1132/2017 & C.M.As.8277, 8278 &
9521/2019)
Ms. Navin Merchant, ASC
(In C.M.A. 9746/2019)
Mr. Abid S. Zuberi, ASC
(In C.M.A. 9153/2019)
Qazi Ghulam Dastgir, ASC
(in C.As.1113, 1141-1149/17, 3076/19)
Salman Akram Raja, ASC (via video link @
Lahore)
Mr. Mehmood A. Sheikh, AOR
(In C.P.3138/2017 & CMA 9186, 9301/19)
Mr. Ijaz Ahmed Zahid, ASC
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 14 :-
Mr. Habib Bhatti, ASC
(in CMA 1022/20)
Mr. Abdul Munim Khan, ASC
Mr. Tasleem Hussain, AOR
(via video link @ Peshawar)
(In C.Ps.387-P, 389-P, 3327/2017)
Mr. Tasleem Hussain, ASC/AOR
(via video link @ Peshawar)
(In C.Ps.392-P to 394-P, 399-P, 400-P &
3241/2017)
Mr. Muneer A. Malik, Sr.ASC
Ch. Atif Rafique, ASC (via video link @ Kar)
Mr. Kassim Mirjat, AOR
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in CMA.8497/18 & 9149/19)
Syed Iqbal Hashmi, ASC
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
(in CMA.9746/19)
For SNGPL:
For SNGPL:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Rana, ASC
(In all Appeals/Petitions)
Br. Mian Belal, ASC
Br. Muhammad Adil Fayyaz
(in CMAs.812-815/20)
For Federation:
For ICT:
Mr. Anwar Mansoor Khan, Attorney General
Ch. Aamir Rehman, Addl. AGP
Mr. Sohail Mehmood, D.A.G.
Mr. Sajjid Ilyas Bhatti, Addl. AG
Mr. Niaz Ullah Niazi, Advocate General
For Govt. of Balochistan:
Mr. M. Ayaz Swati, Addl. AG
Mr. M. Farid Dogar, AAG
For Govt. of Punjab:
For Govt. of KP:
Ch. Faisal Farid, Addl. AG
Mr. Shumail Butt, AG
For Accountant General
for Pakistan:
For OGRA:
Mr. Sardar Azmat Shafi, Accountant Gen. of
Pak.
Mr. Rizwan ul Haq, Sr. Executive Dir.
(Litigation) (OGRA)
Mrs. Taybbah Ahsan, JED, Fin. (OGRA)
Ms. Samia Khalid, ASC (OGRA)
Mr. Aatif Sajjad, Executive Dir. Fin. (OGRA)
Mr. Sajid Zahid Rauf, JED Gas (OGRA)
Syed Faisal Ishtiaq, Law Officer (OGRA))
Dr. Abdul Basit Qureshi, Registrar, OGRA
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 15 :-
For Finance Division,
Govt. of Pakistan:
For ISGCL:
For M/o Petroleum:
Mr. Atif Hussain, JED Fin. OGRA
Mr. Asif, JED (Gas) OGRA
Mr. Anwar, Sr. JS Fin. Div.
Mr. Tanvir Butt, Sr. JS (Budget) Fin. Div.
Mr. Sajjad Azhar, Dy. Secy. Budget Resources
Mr. Javed Iqbal Khan, JS, B-II Fin. Div.
Mr. Mobeen Solat, MD, ISGCL
Mr. Abdul Maqsood Malik, EDG, Dir.
Petroleum
Dates of hearing:
03.02.2020, 10.02.2020, 11.02.2020,
12.02.2020, 13.02.2020, 17.02.2020,
18.02.2020, 19.02.2020 & 20.02.2020
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J. - The appellants as well as the petitioners
and the intervenors all utilize natural gas for their industrial and
commercial activities. Some of them even use natural gas as fuel
for their in-house power generation facilities. Those who own CNG
stations use natural gas for converting it into Compressed Natural
Gas (CNG) at their filling stations and then sell it to their
customers.
2.
Before discussing the controversy involved in the case we
find it appropriate to briefly discuss the background of the laws
that imposed Cess from the year 2011.
3. In the year 2011 the Gas Infrastructure Development Cess
Act, 2011 (GIDC Act, 2011) was legislated through a bill
introduced in the National Assembly as a Money Bill by treating
the imposition thereunder as a specie of ‘tax’ whereby Cess was
imposed on industrial and commercial consumers of natural gas.
This was done to finance the cost which Pakistan has to bear for
laying the overland pipelines through which natural gas was to be
imported into the country from Iran and Turkmenistan. Apart from
import of natural gas from the above two countries, LNG imported
from Qatar on ships, after its discharge at the Karachi port, was to
be gasified and transported up-country through a pipeline called
North-South pipeline. The said Act was challenged by the
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 16 :-
industrial and commercial consumers of natural gas located in the
Province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in the Peshawar High Court in
the year 2011 and they succeeded in seeking a declaration that it
is ultra vires the Constitution in the year 2013. The Federal
Government appealed which was dismissed by this Court on
22.08.2014 after holding that the GIDC Act, 2011 in its character
is a fee-imposing enactment, its bill could not have been
introduced in the National Assembly as a Money Bill under the
provisions of Article 73 of the Constitution. The said Act was thus
declared to be ultra vires the Constitution, which decision has
come to be known as Durrani Ceramics case reported in 2014
SCMR 1630.
4.
Soon after the decision in Durrani Ceramics case, the
President on 25.09.2014 promulgated the Gas Infrastructure
Development Cess Ordinance, 2014 through which Cess on
natural gas was again imposed, which Ordinance was also given
retrospective effect from 15.12.2011, the date when the GIDC Act,
2011 came into effect. While the GIDC Ordinance, 2014 was still in
the field, the Federal Government sought review of Durrani
Ceramics case which was dismissed by this Court vide judgment
dated 15.04.2015 reported as Federation of Pakistan v. Durrani
Ceramics (PLD 2015 SC 354).
5. Within a month of the dismissal of the review petition, the
Parliament
on
15.05.2015
passed
the
Gas
Infrastructure
Development Cess Act, 2015 (GIDC Act, 2015) whereby Cess was
again imposed on all consumers of natural gas excluding the
domestic sector consumers. The purpose of its imposition was the
same as was stated in the GIDC Act, 2011. In terms of Section 8 of
GIDC Act, 2015 the levy and collection of Cess made under the
GIDC Act, 2011 as well as under GIDC Ordinance, 2014 was also
legitimized with retrospective effect.
6.
In this second round of litigation the industrial and
commercial consumers assailed the vires of the GIDC Act, 2015
before the Sindh High Court as well as in the Peshawar High Court
claiming that like GIDC Act, 2011 the GIDC Act, 2015 be also
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 17 :-
declared ultra vires the Constitution as it has been enacted by the
parliament beyond its legislative competence. The Sindh High
Court declared the levy unconstitutional vide judgment dated
26.10.2016 whereas the Peshawar High Court upheld the levy vide
judgment passed on 31.05.2017 declaring the GIDC Act, 2015 to
be intra vires the Constitution. These appeals have arisen from
such decision with the leave of this Court.
7.
On 22.10.2019 when this case came up for hearing, it was
pointed out to us by Mr. Muneer A. Malik, one of the counsel for
the intervenors that 377 suits were filed by invoking Original
jurisdiction of the Sindh High Court in which the vires of GIDC
Act, 2015 were challenged and all were decreed vide common
judgment dated 26.10.2016 whereby the GIDC Act, 2015 was
declared to be ultra vires the Constitution. He further pointed out
that the Federal Government has filed only one appeal bearing
High Court Appeal No. 361 of 2016 against the plaintiff of one suit
and not against the plaintiffs of the remaining 376 suits, including
his client. They were not even made party in the said appeal and
the time for filing appeal against them had already gone by. He
contended that on account of such omission the decision rendered
by the Single Judge has attained finality on the principle of res
judicata for the rest of the plaintiffs and accordingly the GIDC Act,
2015 in their cases is to be treated as ultra vires the Constitution
and Cess cannot be charged from them. In support of this
argument Mr. Muneer A. Malik relied upon the judgment of this
Court rendered in the case of Pir Bukhsh & Others vs. Chairman
Allotment Committee (PLD 1987 SC 145). As these appeals and
connected petitions have emanated only from the decision of the
Peshawar High Court which declared the GIDC Act, 2015 to be
intra vires the Constitution this led us to pass an order on the said
date that in identical matters pending in other High Courts
opportunity be given to such litigants and their counsel to present
their case before us on the merits of the controversy. This was
done so that the challenge to the vires of the said Act be
adjudicated upon once and for all at this Court’s level. Pursuant to
our order dated 22.10.2019 several miscellaneous applications for
joining in these proceedings as party were filed by those who had
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 18 :-
challenged the vires of the GIDC Act, 2015 in various other High
Courts. All of them were given opportunity to present their point of
view on the merits of the controversy. Certain other petitions which
were filed against the judgment of the Peshawar High Court but
did not come up for hearing at the time of grant of leave of these
appeals were also taken up for hearing so that the same could be
decided together with the appeals.
8.
Before we proceed to decide the merits of the main
controversy we prefer to address the plea of res judicata raised by
the intervenors first.
9.
The principle of res judicata is a principle of peace. Once a
controversy with regard to a right in property or a right to office is
adjudicated
upon
and
attains
finality
through
a
judicial
pronouncement of a competent Court of law, it no more remains
open to challenge in any subsequent judicial proceedings between
the same parties on the same subject matter. This principle is
intended not to afford a litigant more than one opportunity for
resolution of a judicial dispute and thus eliminates the chances of
repetitious and successive litigation against a party on the same
issue. The maxim that there should be an end to litigation is
germane to such matters.
10.
Any relief which a litigant seeks in a judicial proceeding with
regard to any power or a right or an obligation connected with
some property or an office which power or right or obligation is not
dependent upon the legitimacy of a legislative enactment and
stands or falls on its own strength then in such cases when the
decision rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction attains
finality, there is no difficulty in applying the principle of res
judicata to such a decision. However, it would be difficult to apply
such a principle in matters where a power or a right or an
obligation solely depend upon the very legitimacy of the enactment
that has come under challenge in a Court of law on the touchstone
of the Constitution. In such a situation the existence of such power
or right or obligation would solely depend on the final adjudication
as to the legal validity of the enactment itself. This could be
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 19 :-
understood from a situation where a controversy as regards
constitutional validity of an enactment has come under challenge
before two High Courts, one declaring the enactment ultra vires the
Constitution and the other intra vires. If the principle of res
judicata is applied to the decision of the High Court that declared
the law ultra vires as the same was not challenged any further by
the Government then two conflicting declarations would stand side
by side on the legitimacy of a legislative enactment, one party
treating the law valid and the other invalid. This would lead to
treating an Act of the parliament valid for some and invalid for
others though both the set of persons are similarly placed. If the
decision rendered by the High Court that declared the law intra
vires the Constitution is only challenged before the Supreme Court
and after examining the merits of the case the enactment is
declared by this Court to be intra vires the Constitution, then in
such peculiar situation when this Court finally validates the
legislative enactment then the same has to be applied uniformly to
every person falling within its ambit. Such final judicial
determination on the legitimacy of a legislative enactment has to be
treated as a judgment in rem regardless of the fact that the
judgment of the High Court that invalidated the very same
enactment was not challenged before this Court. Such a situation
warrants departure from the doctrine of res judicata. Omission of a
public functionary to file appeal cannot put fetters on the universal
application of a legislative enactment declared by this Court to be
constitutionally valid as it would amount to repealing the statute
for some and treating it valid for others. Hence conflicting
decisions on the vires of a legislative enactment of two High
Courts, decision of one remains unchallenged in the hierarchy as
no appeal was preferred and the other is challenged before this
Court, then the verdict of the High Court that went unchallenged,
which is in conflict with the final decision of this Court has to be
treated as outmoded and no longer executable. The Supreme Court
of the United States of America took note of a similar situation in
the case of United States vs. Stone & Downer Co. [274 U.S. 225
(1927)] and held that if some of the persons are released from the
application of a provision of legislative enactment on the principle
of res judicata, it will lead to inequalities and discrimination
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 20 :-
causing injustice and confusion. It was held that in such a
situation the plea of res judicata cannot be sustained. Following
passages from the said judgment of the Supreme Court where it
refused to apply the principle of res judicata in a revenue matter
can be quoted with considerable advantage:
‘………. One large importing house may secure a judgment in its
favor from the Customs Court on a question of fact as to the
merchandise of a particular importation or a question of construction
in the classifying statute. If that house can rely upon a conclusion in
early litigation as one which is to remain final as to it and not to be
reheard in any way, while a similar importation made by another
importing house may be tried and heard and a different conclusion
reached, a most embarrassing situation is presented. The importing
house which has by the principle of the thing adjudged obtained a
favorable decision permanently binding on the government will be
able to import the goods at a much better rate than that enjoyed by
other importing houses, its competitors. Such a result would lead to
inequality in the administration of the customs law, to discrimination
and to great injustice and confusion. In the same way, if the first
decision were against a large importing house and its competitors
instituted subsequent litigation on the same issues with new
evidence or without it and succeeded in securing a different
conclusion, the first litigant, bound by the judgment against it in
favor of the government must permanently do business in
importations of the same merchandise at great and inequitable
disadvantage with its competitors.
These were doubtless the reasons which actuated the Court of
Customs Appeals when the question was first presented to it to hold
that the general principle of res judicata should have only limited
application to its judgments………………………………The fact that
objection to the practice has never been made before in the history of
this court or in history of the Court of Customs Appeals in 18 years
of its life is strong evidence, not only of the wisdom of the practice,
but of general acquiescence in its validity. The plea of res judicata
cannot be sustained in this case.’
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 21 :-
11.
In the case of Pir Bukhsh & others V. Chairman Allotment
Committee (PLD 1987 SC 145), on which much reliance was placed
by Mr. Muneer A. Malik, the learned counsel for one of the
intervenors, the controversy was with regard to a right of allotment
of land which did not depend on the constitutionality of a
legislative enactment. In that case, the principle of res judicata
clearly applied but this principle, as discussed above, cannot be
applied in the same manner to a case where any power or a right
or an obligation of a person solely depend upon the legitimacy of a
legislative enactment without which such power or right or
obligation has no existence of its own. Hence, when the power of
the government to charge and the obligation of the persons to pay
a tax or a fee depends on the determination of vires of a legislative
enactment then the final determination of this Court has to be
uniformly applied on all those upon whom the law was intended to
apply otherwise it would be applied in a discriminatingly manner
to a section of persons belonging to one and the same class of
persons. The final determination of this Court on the legitimacy of
a law has to apply even to those who had succeeded in obtaining a
judgment from a Court lower in the hierarchy that the law is ultra
vires the Constitution, they too would be bound by the judgment of
this Court which being the final Court of the judicature has
through a judicial pronouncement declared a legislative enactment
to be valid. The power of the Federal Government to charge the
Cess and the obligation of the payers to pay under GIDC Act, 2015
would depend upon such final determination by this Court. Such
power or obligation arising from an enactment will not cease to
exist for the reason that the High Court in some other proceedings
has declared the said Act ultra vires the Constitution which
remained unchallenged. We in our minds are therefore clear that
where there are two conflicting adjudications with regard to the
constitutionality of a legislative enactment, standing side by side,
then the one that has the binding effect on the other has to become
the law of the land on the subject without any distinction
whatsoever as an Act of the Parliament in its application cannot be
allowed to be regarded as intra vires the Constitution for one set of
persons and ultra vires for another at the same time when both
belong to the same class of persons. If this is allowed, it would
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 22 :-
result in discrimination as some would be bound to discharge the
obligation arising from the Act of the Parliament thereby putting
them in disadvantageous position against those who are
discharged from the obligation on the principle of res judicata.
Such a position cannot be allowed to be sustained.
12.
The validity of the plea of res judicata can be looked at from
another angle also. The learned Additional Attorney General has
pointed out that one High Court Appeal has been filed against the
common judgment of the Single Judge of the Sindh High Court
rendered in 377 suits and those decree holders who have been left
out in that appeal would be made party in the pending appeal. If
that has already been done then this Court in similar situation has
held in the cases of Mehran Zaibun Nisa etc. versus Land
Commissioner, Multan etc. (PLD 1975 SC 397) and Province of
Punjab versus Muhammad Tayyab (1989 SCMR 1621) that a matter
filed after the period of limitation can also be decided on merits
with a connected case that was filed within time. So belated joining
of some of the parties in the appeal as respondents who were
initially not made party would not be of much consequence. In any
case, the right of the Federal Government to challenge the
judgment of the Single Judge of the Sindh High Court cannot be
said to be altogether lost as one appeal is still pending. So, the
decision of the Sindh High Court cannot be said to have attained
finality in the strict sense of the word. Even otherwise, the right of
the Federal Government to defend the decision of the Peshawar
High Court in these proceedings before us does not get swallowed
by the judgment of the Sindh High Court. That right also still
subsists. There is yet another aspect of the matter. We vide our
order dated 22.10.2019 had decided to hear all the parties who
have challenged the GIDC Act, 2015 in the High Courts so that
their point of view on the controversy could also be heard on
merits. So, as intervenors, not only the plaintiff against whom High
Court Appeal has been filed joined the proceedings and through its
counsel addressed this Court on the merits of the main
controversy but the counsel of those plaintiffs against whom no
appeal was filed have also addressed this Court on merits of the
controversy so that the controversy relating to the validity of GIDC
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 23 :-
Act, 2015 is finally decided. For this reason too the principle of res
judicata would also not come in the way of the Federal
Government. In these circumstances the maxim that there should
be end to litigation once the matter has been finally decided is not
attracted as finality with regard to validity or otherwise of the GIDC
Act, 2015 is yet to be reached in these proceedings. In the peculiar
situation stated above, the plea of res judicata cannot be
sustained.
13.
We shall now proceed to examine the merits of the main
controversy.
14.
The bill of GIDC Act, 2015 was introduced under the
provisions of Article 70 of the Constitution by treating it as a specie
of fee-levying enactment which was accordingly passed by both
houses of the Parliament. This was done for the reason that when
the bill of GIDC Act, 2011 was introduced in the National Assembly
through a Money Bill as a tax-imposing enactment the same was
struck down in Durrani Ceramics case for the reason that the levy
being a fee imposing enactment, its bill could not have been
introduced in the National Assembly under Article 73 of the
Constitution as a Money Bill.
15.
Mr. Makhdoom Ali Khan as lead counsel for the appellants
argued the case, whose arguments were adopted by several
counsel appearing on behalf of the appellants, petitioners and the
intervenors. The counsel who also made additional submissions
were Mr. Muneer A. Malik, Mr. Salman Akram Raja, Mr. Rashid
Anwar, Mr. Isaac Ali Qazi, Mr. Anwar Kamal, Syed Haziq Ali Shah,
Sardar Muhammad Ghazi, Mr. Abid S. Zuberi, Qazi Ghulam
Dastgir, Mr. Ijaz Ahmed, Mr. Abdul Munim Khan and Mr. Tasleem
Hussain. Barrister Mian Bilal argued on behalf of Sui Northern
Gas Pipeline Limited and Chaudhry Aamir Rehman, learned
Additional Attorney General argued on behalf of the Federation.
16.
The arguments that were advanced on behalf of the counsel
for appellants / petitioners / intervenors, which are relevant for
the disposal of these cases on merits of the main controversy can
be summarized as follows:-
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 24 :-
a) The GIDC Act, 2015 would survive only if the Federation can
demonstrate that it is a fee-levying enactment and that too
within the ambit of Entry 2 read with Entry 15 of Part II of the
Federal Legislative List contained in the Fourth Schedule to the
Constitution. The GIDC, Act, 2015 is neither a tax nor a fee
which places it outside the Fourth Schedule, hence ultra vires
the Constitution.
b) Fee can only be levied and collected if the state provides a
service directly in return to the payer otherwise it would be a
tax-imposing enactment. It is the direct nature of the service
which marks the boundary between tax and fee. The Federation
could not show that any direct or special service would be
provided to the appellants as a reward or recompense for
payment of the fee. There is no quid pro quo in the enactment.
c) There can be compulsory exactions but must be based on
services which are available or may be made available
immediately or shortly after the payment of the fee. It is not
necessary that a service is rendered in full immediately on
payment of fee as it can be rendered incrementally. There may
also be a gap between the payment of fee and provision of
service, however the provision of the service cannot be
indefinitely postponed on a hope to be provided in the
unforeseeable future.
d) Section 4 of the Act, 2015 provides that Cess is to be used for
the development of Iran-Pakistan Pipeline Project (IP) as well as
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India
Pipeline
Project
(TAPI). Both projects mentioned in Section 4 of the Act 2015
have neither commenced nor has the government given any
tangible timeframe for their launch or completion. The two
terminals that are operated by Engro and PGPCL at Karachi
port are financed from other sources so the Cess is no longer to
be utilised for LNG and now can only be utilised for IP and TAPI
projects and projects ancillary thereto.
e) Under Section 4 of GIDC Act, 2015, the Cess is a specific
purpose levy, the Federation is not free to use it as it pleases.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 25 :-
There was no evidence of the amount collected towards Cess
ever having been spent for the specified purposes. Between
2011 and 30th June 2019 a sum of Rs.295,402,787,597.67 has
been
collected
out
of
which
Rs.279,575,000
and
Rs.207,664,501 have been spent. The Government has failed to
justify the collection of Cess.
f) Revenue of Cess so far collected has not been put in any special
fund but has been made part of general revenues of the state
and retained in the Federal Consolidated Fund.
g) The Second Schedule to GIDC Act, 2015 only mentions the
maximum rates of tax but the actual rate of tax to be charged
was not specified.
h) The supply of gas in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is in
excess of the demand, therefore, the GIDC Act, 2015 conferred
no benefit on its residents. The shortage was created for
reasons extraneous to the demand in the Province.
i) Section 3(1) of the GIDC Act, 2015 used the terms ‘levied’ and
‘charged’ which indicate that it is a tax imposing enactment and
not ‘fee’ and while enacting GIDC Act, 2011 which is a similar
Act, legislated as a tax-imposing enactment.
17.
In support of their arguments learned counsel for the
appellants / petitioners / intervenors have placed reliance on the
cases of Collector of Customs v. Shaikh Spinning Mills (1999 SCMR
1402), Abdul Majid v. Province of East Pakistan (PLD 1960 Dacca
502), Sohail Jute Mills v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1991 SC 329),
Nishat Tek Ltd, Lahore v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1994 Lahore
347), M/s Fatima Enterprises Ltd. v. Federation of Pakistan (1999
MLD 2889), M/s Coca-Cola Beverages v. Cantonment Board
Chaklala Rawalpindi (2011 MLD 1987), Soneri Bank Ltd v.
Federation of Pakistan (2013 PLC Labour 134), East Pakistan
Chrome Tannery (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Federation of Pakistan and others
(2011 PTD 2643), Pakcom Ltd v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2011
SC 44), Azgard Nine v. Government of Pakistan (2013 PTD 1030),
Tata Textile Mills v. Federation of Pakistan (2013 PTD 1459), M/s
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 26 :-
Shahbaz Garments Pvt. Ltd v. Federation of Pakistan (2013 PTD
969), Associated Industries Ltd v. Government of Pakistan (2015
PTD 193), Workers’ Welfare Funds, M/o Human Resources
Development, Islamabad and others v. East Pakistan Chrome
Tannery (Pvt.) Ltd. and others (PLD 2017 SC 28), Flying Cement
Company v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2016 Lahore 35), Dr.
Mahmood-ur-Rehman Faisal v. Secretary Ministry of Law (PLD 1992
FSC 195), ABN Amro Bank N.V. v. M.D KW&SB (2006 CLC 597),
Kewal Krishan Puri and others v. State of Punjab and others (1980)
1 SCC 416), State of Maharashtra v. Salvation Army (AIR 1975 SC
846), Al-Samrez Enterprises v. Federation of Pakistan (1986 SCMR
1917), The Hingri-rempur Coal Co. Ltd and Ors. v. The State of
Orissa and Ors. (AIR 1961 SC 459), Sona Chandi Oaz Committee v.
State of Maharashtra (AIR 2005 SC 635), FECTO Belarus Tractor
Ltd v. Government of Pakistan (PLD 2005 SC 605), Dr. Mohashir
Hassan v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2010 SC 265), Contempt
Proceedings against Chief Secretary, Sindh (2014 PLC (CS) 82), Pir
Baksh v. the Chairman, Allotment Committee (PLD 1987 SC 145).
Human Rights Case No.14392 of 2013 and Suo Motu Case No.1 of
2013 (2014 PTD 243), Shahtaj Sugar Mills Ltd v. Province of Punjab
(1998 SCMR 2492), The Town Municipal Committee, Amravati v.
Ramchandra Vasudeo Chimote and Another. (AIR 1964 SC 1166),
M/s. Ujagar Prints and others v. Union of India and others (AIR
1989 SC 516), Baz Muhammad Kakar v. Federation of Pakistan
(PLD 2012 SC 923), Kewel Krishan v. State of Punjab (AIR 1980 SC
1008) and State of Maharashtra v. Salvation Army (AIR 1975 SC
846).
18.
Learned Additional Attorney General has placed reliance on
the cases of B.S.E. Brokers’ Forum, Bombay and others v. Securities
and Exchange Board of India and others (2001 (3) SCC 482), Krishi
Utpadan Mandi Samiti v. Ashok Kumar Dinesh Chandra and
another (1996 (10) SCC 100), The City Corporation of Calicut v.
Thachambalath Sadasivan and others (AIR 1985 SC 756), M/s.
Gasket Radiators Pvt. Ltd. v. Employees’ State
Insurance
Corporation and another (AIR 1985 SC 790). Barrister Mian Bilal
has placed reliance on the case of The City Corporation of Calicut v.
Thachambalath Sadasivan (AIR 1985 SC Court 756), Gasket
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 27 :-
Radiators (Pvt.) Limited v. Employees’ State Insurance Corporation
(AIR 1985 SC 790), The Hinger-Ramper Coal Co. Ltd v. The State of
Orissa & Others (AIR 1961 SC 459), Municipal Corporation of Delhi
v. Mohd. Yasin (AIR 1983 SC 617), Sudhindra Thirtha Swamiar v.
The Commissioner for Hindu Religious & Charitable Endowments,
Mysore (AIR 1963 SC 966) and Jaora Sugar Mills (Pvt.) Limited v.
The State of Madhya Pradesh (AIR 1966 SC 416).
19.
Under the Constitution it is the prerogative of the legislature
to raise revenue for the government on matters that fall within its
legislative competence. The legislature enjoys the privilege to
identify the base of the levy i.e. those upon whom the incidence of
the levy would fall and also determine the quantum to be charged
from them, which could either be at a fixed rate or ad valorem.
Under our Constitution the legislature can levy taxes as well as
fees. As GIDC Act, 2015 has been enacted by the Parliament as a
fee-levying enactment, we deem it appropriate to briefly discuss the
legal concept of such enactments.
20.
There are two kinds of fee-imposing legislative enactments
which have been defined in various judicial pronouncements, both
from our as well as foreign jurisdictions. One is based purely on
the principle of quid pro quo i.e. a charge is payable for rendering a
specific service or extending a specific privilege which the payers
can avail subject to the conditions that may be attached to it. In
other words, it can be called as ‘fee-simplicitor’. In such an
enactment there is direct and immediate correlation in absolute
terms between the service that is rendered and the fee that is
charged for it. The other kind of a fee-levying legislation is where
Cess is imposed as a compulsory exaction in the same manner
where taxes are imposed with the distinction that it is imposed for
achieving a specific purpose promised in the enactment itself
which when realized would bring some advantage or benefit for the
payers in future. It can be described as ‘purpose specific’ and in
many judicial pronouncements have been termed as ‘Cess-fee’. In
such a form of levy, the specified purpose is pre-committed to the
payers before the revenue is collected under the legislation. To
quote a few examples, Cess is imposed to meet the extraordinary
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 28 :-
costs involved in providing infrastructure such as construction of
dams or for importing oil or gas from abroad through pipelines or
to build farm to mill roads in order to facilitate marketing of the
agricultural produce or for conducting research and development
in some specialized field. In such a form of levy the rule of quid pro
quo does not exist in the same sense as it exists in a case where an
existing service is rendered or a privilege is extended directly to the
payer for a fee. What needs to be taken into consideration is
whether the enactment has promised some benefit or advantage for
the payers to be made available in future by utilizing the revenue,
making it more akin to a fee then a pure revenue raising measure
like taxes in general are imposed with no precondition attached for
their spending. In a case from the Indian jurisdiction cited by one
of the counsel of the appellants reported as Hinger-Rampur Coal
Co. Ltd and others V. The State of Orissa (AIR 1961 SC 459) the
Supreme Court of India in paragraphs 9 and 10 while discussing a
fee-imposing enactment observed as follows:
‘If specific services are rendered to a specific area or to a
specific class of persons or trade or business in any local
area, and as a condition precedent for the said services or in
return for them cess is levied against the said area or the said
class of persons or trade or business, the cess is
distinguishable from a tax and is described as a fee.
21. In the case of Sona Chandi Oal Committee vs. State of
Maharashtra (AIR 2005 SC 635) the Indian Supreme Court while
describing fee based levy observed as follows:
‘……… The levy does not cease to be a fee merely because
there is an element of compulsion or coerciveness present in it,
nor is it a postulate of a fee that it must have a direct relation
to the actual service rendered by the authority to each
individual who obtains the benefit of the service. Quid pro quo
in the strict sense was not always a sine qua non for a fee. All
that is necessary is that there should be a reasonable
relationship between the levy of fee and the services rendered
and it is not necessary to establish that those who pay the fee
must receive direct or special benefit or advantage of the
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 29 :-
services rendered for which the fee was being paid. It was
held that if one who is liable to pay, receives general benefit
from the authority levying the fee, the element of service
required for collecting the fee is satisfied.’
22. Then in the case of State of West Bengal v. Kesoram Industries
Limited (AIR 2005 SC 1646) the Indian Supreme Court in
paragraph 145 of its judgment observed as under:
‘……. The impugned cess can, therefore, be justified as a fee
for
rendering
such
services
as
would
improve
the
infrastructure and general development of the area, the
benefits whereof would be availed even by the stone-crushers.
23.
Barrister Mian Bilal has placed reliance on the case of M/s.
Gasket Radiators Pvt. Ltd. v. Employees’ State
Insurance
Corporation and another (AIR 1985 SC 790) wherein it has been
held as under:-
“Merely because the benefits to be received are postponed, it
cannot be said that there is no quid pro quo. It is true that
ordinarily a return in praesenti is generally present when fee
is levied but simultaneity or contemporaneity of payment and
benefit is not the most vital or crucial test to determine
whether a levy is a fee or not. In fact, it may often happen that
the rendering of a service or the conferment of a benefit may
only follow after the consolidation of a fund from the fee
levied. Hospitals, for instance, cannot be built in a day nor
medical facilities provided right from the day of the
commencement of the scheme. It is only after a sufficient
nucleus is available that one may reasonably expect a
compensating return. The question of how soon a return may
be expected or ought to be given must necessarily depend on
the nature of the services required to be performed and
benefits required to be conferred.”
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 30 :-
24. The basic difference between the enactment where fee-
simplicitor is imposed and where Cess-fee is imposed is that in the
former a service or a privilege is made available to the payer
directly on the strict principle of quid pro quo whereas in the latter
case, the declared purpose comes with a promise to bring some
benefit or advantage in future which is basically meant for its
payers. Such benefit or privilege once made available on the
ground may be availed by others as well but that would not change
the status of such fee-levying enactment. It would remain a specie
of fee-levying enactment in contradistinction to tax-levying
enactment in which no specific purpose or specific service needs to
be disclosed by the legislature in order to justify its imposition.
25. When Cess as a fee is levied to meet an earmarked financial
exigency spelt out in an enactment, it preserves the levy for such
purpose only even with the change in the government setup. It
cannot be levied as a general revenue collecting tool and the
government would not be justified to collect it if the funds are
diverted to some other expenditure. So it is like a ‘promised
spending’ to be applied to the specific purpose described in the
enactment. Hence, in order to remain as a fee-levying enactment,
the purpose for which the Cess is to be charged should be well
spelled out and defined in the enactments as narrowly as possible
lest it may convert it into a tax-levying enactment. The proceeds of
Cess should be clearly identifiable in the accounts by using
separate accounting codes so that its collection and utilization is
reconcilable with the purposes stated in the enactment. A
correlation between the revenue collected and the expenditure
incurred for the promised specific purpose should always be
maintained. In this manner the earmarked levy also provides
information on the amount collected and spent. This also
inculcates confidence in the payers as it contains the promise that
the revenue would be utilized for the specific purpose only for
which it was collected and they would have a claim to
transparency and accountability of the utilization of the revenue so
collected. They can claim that the revenue cannot be utilized for
any other purpose other than for which they have been charged.
When the revenue can only be utilized for the purpose promised in
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 31 :-
the fee-levying enactment then in that sense the levy could also be
regarded as a temporary levy. Once the purpose for which it was
imposed stands served, the justification for its imposition also
comes to an end. The collection of Cess therefore should be based
on some calculation keeping in view the funding requirements and
as and when the purpose is achieved, the government loses it right
to collect Cess regardless of the fact that the enactment continues
to remain in force.
26.
After discussing the two kinds of fee-levying enactments, we
shall now proceed to examine whether the GIDC Act, 2015 is a fee
or tax-levying enactment and whether it was legislated within the
legislative competence of the Parliament.
27.
The counsel for the appellants in support of their argument
that the Cess levied under GIDC Act, 2015 is a tax, basically made
its comparison with such fee-levying enactments where the
principle of quid pro quo was the only consideration i.e. comparison
was made with service specific enactments describable as ‘fee-
simplicitor’. The controversy in the present case is comparable with
the enactments that impose fee for a specific purpose that is
promised to be achieved for the benefit of the payers in future i.e. a
category described in various judicial pronouncements as ‘Cess-
fee’. In Durrani Ceramics case also it was held that practically the
Federal Government has demonstrated that GIDC Act, 2011 was a
fee imposing enactment, which for its object and purpose was no
different from GIDC Act, 2015. In paragraph 22 of Durrani
Ceramics case it was observed ‘……. Similarly, in the Annual Budget
Statement (Federal Budget 2013-14) that carries a similar worded
preface, 'Gas Infrastructure Development Cess' has again been
listed at C03916 as Non-Tax Revenue. Thus on the Government's
own showing, as reflected in the Annual Budget, GIDC is not a 'tax'.
No argument has been advanced on behalf of the appellants to
explain away the categorization of GIDC as Non-Tax Revenue by the
Government in the Annual Budget… . The above determination is
sufficient to hold that being a 'fee' the same could not have been
imposed through a money bill and on this score the levy was liable
to be struck down.’ Thus what invalidated the GIDC Act, 2011 in
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 32 :-
Durrani Ceramics case, as is evident from its paragraphs 22 was
that GIDC Act 2011 being a fee-levying enactment its bill could not
have been introduced in the National Assembly as a Money Bill
under Article 73 of the Constitution. This is precisely the ratio of
Durrani Ceramics case which is evident from its concluding
paragraph 45 also.
28.
Keeping in mind the above legal infirmity with which the
legislative process suffered in the legislation of GIDC Act, 2011
which led this Court in Durrani Ceramics Case to declare it invalid,
the legislature introduced the bill of GIDC Act, 2015 under Article
70 of the Constitution which was passed by both the houses of the
Parliament as a fee-levying enactment. By recasting the GIDC Act,
2015 as a fee-levying instead of tax-levying enactment the
constitutional requirements that lacked in the GIDC Act, 2011
were met. This Court in several cases has recognized the right of
the legislature to re-enact a law on the same subject, which on
account of legal infirmities in its enactment process had been
declared invalid by a Court of law, by removing the causes that led
to its invalidity. The legislature is also competent to make the re-
enacted law applicable retrospectively in order to bind even the
past transactions that had been declared invalid. In the case of
Molasses Trading & Export (Pvt.) Limited Vs. Federation of Pakistan
(1993 SCMR 1905) this Court at page 1920 held as follows:-
"Before considering this question it would be appropriate to
make certain general observations with regard to the power of
validation possessed by the legislature in the domain of taxing
statute. It has been held that when a legislature intend to
validate a tax declared by a Court to be illegally collected
under an invalid law, the cause for ineffectiveness or
invalidity must be removed before the validation can be said
to take place effectively. It will not be sufficient merely to
pronounce in the statute by means of a non-obstinate clause
that the decision of the Court shall not bind the authority,
because that will amount to reversing a judicial decision
rendered in exercise of the judicial power, which is not within
the domain of the Legislature. It is therefore necessary that
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 33 :-
the conditions on which the decision of the Court intended to
be avoided is based, must be altered so fundamentally, that
the decision would not any longer be applicable to the altered
circumstances. One of the accepted modes of achieving this
object by the Legislature is to re-enact retrospectively a valid
and legal taxing provision, and adopting the fiction to make
the tax already collected to stand under the re-enacted law.
The Legislature can even give its own meaning and
interpretation of the law under which the tax was collected
and by `legislative fiat' make the new meaning biding upon
Court. It is in one of these ways that the Legislature can
neutralize the earlier decision of the Court. The Legislature
has within the bound of the Constitutional Limitation the
power to make such a law and give it retrospective effect so
as to bind even past transaction. In ultimate analysis
therefore a primary test of validating piece of legislation is
whether the new provision removes the defect, which the
Court had found in the existing law, and whether adequate
provisions in the validating law for a valid imposition of tax
were made."
29. In the case of Mamukanjan Cotton Factory Vs. Punjab Province
(PLD 1975 SC 50) this Court at pages 53-54 held as follows:-
“Mr. A. K. Brohi, appearing in support of these two petitions,
frankly conceded, that he did not find it possible to question the
vires of the validating Ordinance on the grounds canvassed in
the High Court. With the permission of this Court, learned
counsel, however, attacked the vires of the Ordinance and the
resultant action of the Provincial Government on a fresh ground.
His argument in nutshell was that the validating Ordinance
purports to enable the Provincial Government to retain and claim,
what according to the judgments of the High Court, the
Government could not have at the material time, levied and
collected. These judgments are rendered by the High Court, in
exercise of its jurisdiction conferred by the Constitution itself. The
validating Ordinance on the other hand, is sub-constitutional
legislation, which according to learned counsel cannot undo or
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 34 :-
destroy, what he described as the "end product" of the
Constitutional jurisdiction.
The argument, in my opinion, is without substance and which
ii accepted would indeed lead to startling results. It would strike
at the very root of the power of Legislature, otherwise competent
to legislate on a particular subject, to undertake any remedial or
curative legislation after discovery of defect in an existing law as
a result of the, judgment of a superior Court in exercise of its
constitutional jurisdiction. The argument overlooks the fact, that
the remedial or curative legislation is also "the end product" of
constitutional jurisdiction in the cognate field. The argument if
accepted, would also seek to throw into serious disarray the
pivotal arrangement in the Constitution regarding the division of
sovereign power of the State among its principal organs; namely,
the executive, the Legislature and the judiciary each being the
master in its own assigned field under the Constitution.
The argument of learned counsel also conveniently overlooks
string of cases, in which the vires of the remedial legislation,
competently made, was upheld by this Court, notwithstanding
the earlier judgments of the Superior Courts, in exercise of their
constitutional jurisdiction, to the contrary effect. The foremost and
exactly in point among these cases is the judgment in Dossa Ltd.
v. The Province of the Punjab, in which as in these cases, the
vires of the validating Ordinance of 1971, was called in question.
It was inter alia observed in that case:-
"The last contention, namely, that the Ordinance of 1971 could
not validate something which was void ab initio in terms of the
Act of1949, loses sight of the fact that it is open to the Legislature
to confer retrospective operation on the laws made by it. A
reference to the provisions of this Ordinance leaves no doubt that
the law maker expressly made its operation retrospective with
the avowed object of conferring validity on a demand which was
not valid under the original Act of 1949.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 35 :-
30.
To the same effect are the judgments of this Court rendered
in the cases of Molasses Trading & Export (Pvt.) Ltd Vs. Federation
of Pakistan (1993 SCMR 1905), FECTO Belarus Tractor Ltd Vs.
Government of Pakistan through Finance Economic Affairs (PLD
2005 SC 605), Dr. Mobashir Hassan Vs. Federation of Pakistan
(PLD 2010 SC 265) and Contempt Proceedings against Chief
Secretary, Sindh (2014 PLC (C.S.) 82).
31.
In many landmark cases this Court has also held that
Courts should lean towards the constitutionality of a legislative
enactment instead of destroying it, keeping in view the rules of
constitutional interpretations. A seventeen member full Court in
paragraph 39 of its judgment rendered in the case Dr. Mobashir
Hassan Vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2010 SC 265) in paragraph
39 stated as follows:-
‘There is another principle of law, which casts duty upon
this Court to the effect that it should normally lean in
favour of constitutionality of a statute and efforts should be
made to save the same instead of destroying it. This
principle of law has been discussed by this Court on a
number of occasions. Reference in this behalf may be made
to the cases of Abdul Aziz v. Province of West Pakistan
(PLD 1958 SC 499), Province of East Pakistan v. Siraj-ul-
Haq Patwari (PLD 1966 SC 854), Inam-ur-Rehman v.
Federation of Pakistan (1992 SCMR 563), Sabir Shah v.
Shad Muhammad Khan (PLD 1995 SC 66), Multiline
Associates v. Ardeshir Cowasjee (PLD 1995 SC 423), Tariq
Nawaz v. Government of Pakistan (2000 SCMR 1956), Asif
Islam v. Muhammad Asif (PLD 2001 SC 499) and
Federation of Pakistan v. Muhammad Sadiq (PLD 2007 SC
133). This principle has been appropriately dealt with in
the case of Elahi Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Federation of Pakistan
(PLD 1997 SC 582) in the following terms:-
"that the law should be saved rather than be destroyed
and the Court must lean in favour of upholding the
constitutionality of legislation, keeping in view that the rule of
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 36 :-
constitutional interpretation is that there is a presumption in
favour of the constitutionality of the legislative enactments
unless ex facie it is violative of a constitutional provision."’
32. As to the legislative competence of the Parliament to pass the
GIDC Act, 2015 as a fee-imposing enactment, in a case from the
Indian jurisdiction reported as Ujagar Prints V. Union of India and
others (AIR 1989 SC 516) cited by one of the counsel of the
appellants the Indian Supreme Court in paragraph 23 while
discussing the application of legislative entries to an enactment
observed that entries to the Legislative Lists are not the source of
legislative power but are merely topics of fields of legislation and
must receive a liberal construction inspired by a broad and
generous spirit and not in a narrow pedantic sense. In paragraph
25 it was further observed that if a legislation purporting to be
under a particular legislative entry is assailed for lack of legislative
competence, the State can always show that the law was
supportable
under
any
other
entry
within
its
legislative
competence. In the case of Elahi Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Federation of
Pakistan (PLD 1997 SC 582) relied upon by one of the appellants’
counsel this Court held that the entries in the Legislative List of
the Constitution are not powers of legislation but only fields of
legislative heads and allocation of the subjects to the lists is not by
way of scientific or logical definition but by way of mere simple
enumeration of broad catalogue.
33. The provision of the Constitution that enables the legislature
to legislate GIDC Act, 2015 is Entry No.54 of Part I of the Federal
Legislative List contained in the Fourth Schedule. This entry states
‘Fees in respect of any of the matters in this Part, but not including
fees taken in any court.’ When we glance through the entries of
Part I of the Federal Legislative List in order to see which specific
entry enables the Parliament to cover the subject stated in the
GIDC Act, 2015, we find Entry No.27. It provides ‘Import and export
across customs frontiers as defined by the Federal Government,
inter-provincial trade and commerce, trade and commerce with
foreign countries; standard of quality of goods to be exported out of
Pakistan’. This entry, inter alia, covers legislation that relates to
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 37 :-
subjects of import into Pakistan and trade with foreign countries
and the mode through which natural gas can be cheaply and
efficiently imported from nearby countries where it is more than
sufficient for their needs is through overland pipeline. This is
exactly the purpose and object of the GIDC Act, 2015 as reflected
by its Section 4 which provides that the revenue that is to be
generated from Cess shall be utilized for facilitating import of
natural gas into Pakistan through two separate transnational
pipelines and for ancillary projects. It states ‘The cess shall be
utilized by the Federal Government for or in connection with
infrastructure
development
of
Iran-Pakistan
Pipeline
Project,
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) Pipeline Project,
LNG or other ancillary projects.’ For such purpose trade agreements
have also been executed with Iran and Turkmenistan separately. In
addition to this Section 4 of the GIDC Act, 2015 also provides that
the Cess was required for the purposes of LNG which under a
trade agreement with Qatar is being imported on ships and after
its discharge at the port of Karachi and gasification, is planned to
be transported upcountry through a pipeline project named ‘North-
South pipeline’. From this it has become evident that the whole
purpose of enacting GIDC Act, 2015 was to facilitate import of
natural gas, a very important source of energy from the nearby
countries under trade agreements executed with them. The fee
imposed under the GIDC Act, 2015 is clearly intended to facilitate
import into Pakistan natural gas on the basis of trade agreements
executed with foreign countries which acts clearly fall within the
ambit of Entry No. 27 of Part I of the Federal Legislative List
contained in the Fourth Schedule to the Constitution.
34.
The industrial and commercial consumers of natural gas of
this country, from whom Cess is being collected, consume about
76% of the total supply of natural gas, which fact was also brought
to the notice of this Court in the Durrani Ceramics case. They
would be mainly benefited once the promised projects are
completed. It does not matter if domestic consumers of natural gas
would also be benefitted. Mr. Salman Akram Raja had argued that
as his client is getting sufficient supply of natural gas from the
wellhead located very near to its installation therefore the imported
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 38 :-
gas would be of no benefit for his client who may be exempted from
the levy of Cess as there exists no quid pro quo. In a legislative
enactment where there is an element of compulsion, which can be
even in an impost such as Cess-fee, the payer does not enjoy the
privilege of avoiding the obligation at his choice. If such a plea is
accepted then every consumer would be able to take it and that
would virtually nullify the Act itself at the choice of the payers. In
the case of Hinger-Rampur Coal Co. Ltd. V. The State of Orissa (AIR
1961 SC 459) the Indian Supreme Court in its paragraph 10 has
observed:-
‘There is, however, an element of compulsion in the imposition
of both tax and fee. When the Legislature decides to render a
specific service to any area or to any class of persons, it is not
open to the said area or to the said class of persons to plead
that they do not want the service and therefore they should be
exempted from the payment of the cess.’
35.
It was also argued that in Section 3(1) of the GIDC Act, 2015
the terms ‘levied’ and ‘charged’ are used which demonstrate that it
is a tax imposing enactment and not ‘fee’. The learned counsel
attempted to strengthen this argument by relying on the stand
which the Federal Government in Durrani Ceramics case took that
the levy in the GIDC Act, 2011 was a tax-imposing enactment.
When the terms like ‘levy’ or ‘charge’ are used in any revenue
raising enactment, it does not mean that it cannot be a fee
imposing enactment. A plea taken by a party on a point of law
which was not accepted by a Court in an earlier round of litigation
cannot be used against such party which on account of such
decision has accordingly changed its plea in subsequent legal
proceedings. In any case the terms ‘levied’ or ‘charged’ mean ‘to
impose by legal authority’. Whether tax is being imposed or a fee, it
entirely depends upon the object of the legislation and has nothing
to do with the use of such terms. Even in Article 279 of the
Constitution the term ‘levied’ is used for tax as well as for fee
imposing legislations. So mere use of terms like ‘levied’ or ‘charged’
cannot be made basis to describe a law as tax imposing enactment.
As the GIDC Act, 2015 contains a well-defined object meant for
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 39 :-
making future availability of natural gas more convenient and
without interruption that would mainly benefit the industrial and
commercial consumers which the appellants, the petitioners and
the intervenors undeniably are, therefore, in pith and substance
the GIDC Act, 2015 is a fee-imposing enactment and use of terms
like ‘levied’ or ‘charged’ would not change the object with which it
was legislated.
36.
It was also argued that in Section 3 (1) of the GIDC Act, 2015
it is stated that Cess shall be levied and charged by the Federal
Government which means that Federal Government has been
empowered to levy it as and when it so decides which decision is
yet to come. It was contended that until the Federal Cabinet so
decides and upon such decision the Federal Government issues
notification in this behalf, Section 3 (1) would remain inoperative.
When an Act of Parliament provides that it will come into force at
once then every provision of it becomes enforceable from the day
the Act receives the assent of the President unless any provision of
the Act itself suggests that it will come into force only when some
authority nominated in this behalf so decides or on the happening
of an event. No such precondition has been attached to Section 3
(1) for its coming into operation. It clearly states that the Cess shall
be levied and charged by the Federal Government from the gas
consumers of the companies which are listed in the First Schedule
and such companies shall be responsible for billing and collection
and making onward payment of the Cess so collected from the gas
consumers to the Federal Government. When such is the
unqualified mandate of Section 3(1) of GIDC Act, 2015 and the
responsibility of billing and collection has already been cast upon
the companies listed in the First Schedule from the day when it
comes into effect then the Cess becomes chargeable from that very
day without leaving it to the Federal Government to first decide
when to bring Section 3(1) into operation. On the other hand,
where the legislature intends to leave a matter for the Federal
Government to decide before it is given effect to then it specifically
states so in the law itself. This can be seen from the contents of
Section 7 of the GIDC Act, 2015 which provides ‘The Federal
Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, make such
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 40 :-
amendments in the First Schedule as it deems fit.’ No such
precondition is contained in Section 3 (1) of the GIDC Act, 2015.
37.
It was also argued that the GIDC Act, 2015 is discriminatory
as the domestic consumers of natural gas have been excluded from
the levy. From the contents of Section 3 (1) of the GIDC Act, 2015
it is evident that the incidence of Cess falls only on commercial and
industrial concerns. In our opinion this may have been for the
reason that the Cess which the industrial and commercial
concerns pay becomes part of the cost of the goods which they sell
or the cost of the services they render and thus is ultimately borne
by the buyers of their goods and services. Same is the case with
the consumers of CNG. The burden of the Cess payable by the
owners of CNG stations on their purchases of natural gas gets
factored in towards fixation of sale price of CNG. Every industrial
and commercial entity using natural gas for its business activity is
entitled to claim the burden of Cess as their business expense,
being part of the cost of their goods sold or services rendered, and
get it adjusted against their business profits. They must have
already done so in their books of account and the annual returns
of their income must have been filed before the Income tax
authorities accordingly. Thus the Cess under GIDC Act, 2015 has
been levied only on those consumers of natural gas who on
account of their industrial or commercial dealings pass on its
burden to their customers/ clients. This is not the case with the
domestic consumers of gas as the question of passing on the
burden in their case obviously does not arise. For this reason, the
domestic consumers may have been treated an altogether different
class of gas consumers and consciously excluded from the levy of
Cess, which reason appears to be very sound. This could be the
only distinction on the basis of which the domestic consumers
were not burdened with the incidence of Cess under GIDC Act,
2015. Needless to point out that the domestic consumers are
indirectly burdened with the incidence of Cess in a way that
whatever product or service they buy/avail from an industrial or
commercial enterprise or purchase CNG from a CNG station, the
element of cost of Cess having already been factored in the price of
their purchases, it ultimately passes on to them. So looking from
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 41 :-
that angle too, the domestic consumer or an ordinary person
becomes the ultimate payer of the Cess that is levied on industrial
or commercial concerns who consume natural gas for their
business activity. What emerges from this is that domestic
consumers of natural gas being treated as a distinct class of
consumers from industrial and commercial consumers, no
discrimination in favour of domestic consumers emerges on
account of their exclusion from the levy of Cess under GIDC Act,
2015.
38.
Whatever Cess has been collected right from the day when
when GIDC Act, 2011 came into force has been accounted for by
the Federal Government in its annual accounts recording it under
separate code numbers and is thus identifiable separately from the
other revenues of the Federal Government. This would facilitate in
seeking information on the amount collected as against the
amount that is going to be spent for the purposes promised in the
GIDC Act, 2015. Thus a correlation between the revenue collected
and the expenditure which is going to be incurred for the promised
specific purpose can be maintained. It matters not if the revenue
so collected forms part of the Federal Consolidated Fund as it is
the mandate of Article 78 of the Constitution itself that all
revenues of the Federal Government has to made part of Federal
Consolidated Fund.
39.
The background of the legal history of the controversy in
question can be traced back to 2011, when the levy under GIDC
Act, 2011 was challenged before the Peshawar High Court which in
2013 declared the levy as ultra vires the Constitution and struck
down the GIDC Act, 2011. The Islamabad High Court followed the
same course in its judgment in 2014. As a result of these
decisions, the matter came before this Court in the case which has
come to be known as Durrani Ceramics case. This Court in its
judgment refused to interfere with the decision rendered by the
Peshawar High Court and declared the GIDC Act, 2011 as
unconstitutional, holding that the levy in question was in fact a fee
and not a tax, hence, it could not have been imposed through a
Money Bill. The case came before this Court again in review, which
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 42 :-
was dismissed in 2015. Later, the Government enacted the GIDC
Act, 2015 as a fee imposing enactment. The constitutional validity
of the said Act was also challenged before the High Courts. The
Sindh High Court declared the levy unconstitutional vide its
judgment dated 26.10.2016 whereas the Peshawar High Court
upheld the constitutionality of the new Act vide its judgment dated
31.05.2017.
While
several
other
similar
matters
awaited
adjudication before other High Courts issue came before this Court
for a second time, in which we vide order dated 22.10.2019 allowed
the parties concerned to join the present proceedings as
intervenors so that they can have a chance to assist us in the
present proceedings and get an opportunity to present their
version of the case before us. If we look at this matter in retrospect,
there
has
been
continuous
litigation
pertaining
to
the
constitutional validity of the GIDC cess right from 2011 till July
2020 when we are finally deciding the controversy in these
proceedings. Apart from continuous litigation on the issue, we were
also told that due to international sanctions on Iran, the response
to international tender for EPC contract was very poor as no
contractor was willing to undertake the project. On TAPI it is
stated that land acquisition proceedings is at an advance stage
however work on laying of the pipeline could not start in
Afghanistan on account of the insurgency in Afghanistan. It is also
stated at the bar that now there are signs that work on laying the
pipeline in Afghanistan may commence soon as the final draft of
TAPI Project Land Management Law is on final review of the
Government of Afghanistan. Hence the delay in the commencement
of work on laying the pipelines on account of continuous
proceedings in the High Courts as well as before this Court and the
levy under both the enactments having been struck down as
unconstitutional in the year 2013 and 2016, geopolitical situations
in the neighboring countries which are beyond the control of the
Federal Government. This means that the projects have not been
deliberately abandoned and there is also no material on record to
doubt the intentions of Federal Government in this behalf. The
Executive, therefore, cannot be blamed for not laying down the
pipelines in question. In such a situation where work has not yet
started on the laying of the pipelines and no contract has been
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 43 :-
awarded it would also be premature to ask for laying any report
before the National Assembly.
40.
At this stage, we like to refer to Entry No.51 of Part I of the
Federal Legislative List contained in the Fourth Schedule to the
Constitution. It reads ‘Taxes on mineral oil, natural gas and minerals
for the use in generation of nuclear energy.’ As regards generation of
nuclear energy is concerned, the scientific reality is that it originates
from splitting of atoms of the uranium which generates heat. This
process of splitting the atoms of uranium is called fission. The heat
so generated helps in producing steam which is then used to
operate turbines to generate electricity. As nuclear energy is
produced only through the process of fission, fuels such as mineral
oil or natural gas cannot be used for such purpose. Resultantly, no
greenhouse gas emissions are produced while generating nuclear
energy, hence it is also a clean source of energy. There are several
other primary sources of generating energy such as fossil fuels like
coal, petroleum, natural gas and sources like hydroelectric, solar
and wind. None can be used as nuclear fuel to generate nuclear
energy except uranium and its by-product plutonium. When such is
the scientific reality then mineral oil and natural gas appearing in
Entry No.51 on which the process of fission cannot apply to
generate nuclear energy are to be read disjunctively, as both are
sources of energy other than nuclear energy.
41.
While discussing the scope of Entry No.51 of Part I of the
Federal Legislative List contained in the Fourth Schedule to the
Constitution which was also examined in Durrani Ceramics case, we
feel the need to highlight the fact that prior to the framing of the
1956 Constitution the subject of mineral development was under the
exclusive domain of the Federal Government for legislation which was
administered under the federal law i.e. ‘The Regulation Mines and Oil
Fields and Mineral Development (Government Control) Act, 1948.
Hence legislation with regard to all minerals before 1956 Constitution
came into force, fell within the domain of the Federal Government.
Under the 1956 Constitution only two sources of energy, the mineral
oil and natural gas were exclusively retained by the Federal
Legislature as is evident from its Entry No.15 and iron, coal and
other minerals were placed under Entry 12 of the Part II of the
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 44 :-
Concurrent List and under Entry No.41 regulation of mines and
mineral development, excluding those mentioned in the Federal and
Concurrent Lists fell in the Provincial List. Now for the first time an
item described as ‘mineral resources for generation of nuclear energy’
was added in the 1962 Constitution under Entry No. 23 of the
Federal Legislative List and mineral oil and natural gas were listed
under Entry No.24 of the Federal Legislative List. This also recognizes
the fact that mineral oil and natural gas though being sources of
energy are distinct from the source that generates nuclear energy. In
the 1973 Constitution mineral oil, natural gas and minerals for use
in generation of nuclear energy were clubbed together under Entry
No.51 for the simple reason that all three denote a common feature
i.e. these are all sources of energy which the Federal legislature
continued to retain for itself for legislation. Placing all three items
under one and the same Entry is understandable. However, mere
mention of all three sources of energy in one and the same entry does
not mean that scientific reality has changed and the first two sources
of energy i.e. mineral oil and natural gas can now also be used to
generate nuclear energy. In the Durrani Ceramics case all items
contained in Entry No.51 were read conjunctively, meaning thereby
that Federal Government can levy tax on natural gas and mineral oil
only if these sources of energy can be used to generate nuclear
energy. It appears that no proper assistance on scientific lines was
rendered by the law officers to this Court during the hearing of the
Durrani Ceramics case hence the scientific fact that it was not
possible to generate nuclear energy from mineral oil and natural gas,
as these sources cannot be used as nuclear fuel was not taken into
consideration. In view of the fact that nuclear energy can only be
generated from uranium and its by-product plutonium and not from
natural gas or mineral oil, the National Assembly was fully competent
to impose tax on natural gas through a Money Bill on the strength of
Entry No.51 of the Federal Legislative List. However, in these
proceedings we leave this aspect at that as the law which was the
subject matter of the controversy in Durrani Ceramics case is not in
existence anymore and in light of decision in that case, the Federal
Government also changed its stance and opted to impose fee.
42.
From what has been discussed above it can be concluded
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 45 :-
that the whole purpose of enacting GIDC Act, 2015 was to facilitate
import into the country a very important source of energy i.e.
natural gas / LNG from nearby countries in order to meet the ever
expanding energy needs of the country as our own resources of
energy are fast depleting and the cheapest way to import it is
through overland transnational pipelines. The supply of imported
LNG to various parts of the country after its import on ships
through trans-provincial pipeline is also a project of the Federal
Government. The incidence of the cost involved in doing so falls on
the industrial and commercial consumers whose consumption
account for more than three-fourth of the total supply of natural
gas, which fact was also brought to the notice of this Court in
Durrani Ceramics case. Such consumers, apart from being major
beneficiaries of the imported gas, would on account of their
business activity pass on the burden to their clients/customers
being part of the cost of their goods or services which they sell to
their customers / clients. The object which the Parliament has
promised in the GIDC Act, 2015 is clearly ‘purpose based’ which is
distinctly defined and carries with it an element of quid pro quo,
making it a fee-imposing enactment instead of a pure revenue
raising measure like taxes in general are imposed with no
precondition attached for their spending. After seeing the purpose
of the enactment clearly and the fact that its revenue is duly
accounted for and has also not been diverted to any other use, we
hold that the imposition of Cess under GIDC Act, 2015 is not a
tax-imposing enactment. It was passed through a bill moved in the
Parliament under Article 70 of the Constitution deriving its
legislative competence from Entry 54 read with the enabling Entry
No. 27 of Part I of the Federal Legislative List contained in the
Forth Schedule to the Constitution thereby curing the defect which
lead to the invalidation of the GIDC Act, 2011 in Durrani Ceramics
case. The provisions of Section 8 of the Act, which give
retrospective effect to the charge and recovery of ‘Cess’ levied from
the year 2011 are also declared to be valid being within the
legislative competence of the Parliament. Exercise of such a power
has been recognized by this Court in the Case of Mamukanjan
Cotton Factory Vs. Punjab Province (PLD 1975 SC 50). The levy
imposed under Gas Infrastructure Development Cess Act, 2015 is
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 46 :-
therefore in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution.
However, keeping in view the ground realities discussed in the
preceding paragraph and the fact that around 295 billion rupees
have already been collected towards Cass-revenue and together
with the outstanding amount the total sum by the end of this
month would be in the vicinity of seven hundred billion rupees,
which is more than what is the estimated cost of the projects
mentioned in Section 4 of the GIDC Act, 2015, we are constraint to
issue following directions: -
(i)
From the date of this judgment, we restrain the Federal
Government from charging Cess which power of the Federal
Government shall remain suspended until the Cess-revenue
collected and that which is accrued so far but not yet
collected is expanded on the projects listed in Section 4 of
the GIDC Act, 2015.
(ii)
In the remaining period of the financial year 2020-21 while
considering fixation of sale price of CNG, OGRA shall not
take into consideration the element of Cess under GIDC Act,
2015 as one of the cost of sale of GNG.
(iii)
As all industrial and commercial entities which consume gas
for their business activities pass on the burden to their
customers / clients therefore all arrears of ‘Cess’ that have
become due upto 31.07.2020 and have not been recovered
so far shall be recovered by the Companies responsible
under the GIDC Act, 2015 to recover from their consumers.
However, as a concession, the same be recovered in twenty-
four equal monthly installments starting from 01.08.2020
without the component of late payment surcharge. The late
payment surcharge shall only become payable for the delays
that may occur in the payment of any of the twenty-four
installments.
(iv)
The Federal government shall take all steps to commence
work on the laying of the North-South pipeline within six
months and on TAPI pipeline as soon as its laying in
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 47 :-
Afghanistan reaches the stage where the work of laying
pipeline on Pakistan soil can conveniently start and on IP
pipeline as soon as the sanctions on Iran are no more an
impediment in its laying. In case no work is carried out on
North-South pipeline within the prescribed time and for
laying any of the two other major pipelines (IP and TAPI)
though the political conditions become conducive, the
purpose of levying Cess shall be deemed to have been
frustrated
and
the
GIDC
Act,
2015
would
become
permanently in-operational and considered dead for all
intents and purposes.
43.
Subject to the directions contained herein above, all
these appeals and connected petitions are dismissed. In the light of
this decision and the directions contained therein all listed
applications also stand disposed of.
JUDGE
JUDGE
I with respect disagree with the reasoning and conclusion of
the majority judgment and have therefore appended my own
judgment separately.
JUDGE
Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Announced on 13.08.2020 by Justice Mushir Alam
Khurram
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 48 :-
Syed Mansoor Ali Shah, J.-
44.
I have had the privilege of reading the judgment authored by
my learned brother Faisal Arab J. with which my learned brother
Mushir Alam J. has concurred (“Majority Judgment”). I, with
respect, do not agree with the reasoning and conclusion of the
Majority Judgment. I look at the issue somewhat differently. The
principal question that concerns me is whether a fiscal levy
imposed for a service to be rendered – a service dependent on the
completion of long-term multinational infrastructural projects tied
to the vagaries of international politics, exist without a reasonable
timeline ? Is reasonable time, therefore, an essential constituent of
quid pro quo? Can a fee levying legislation, resting on reciprocity,
impose a one sided obligation on the gas consumers to pay the levy
while providing no timeline nor any consequences for failure to
deliver the proposed service ? I venture to examine the
constitutionality of the impugned levy (GIDC) in this background.
45.
Constitutionality
and
legality
of
Gas
Infrastructure
Development Cess ("GIDC”) imposed under the Gas Infrastructure
Development Cess Act, 20151 ("Act") has come up for our
consideration. Two provincial High Courts have expressed
contrary views; Sindh High Court has struck down the levy and the
Act, as being unconstitutional, vide judgment2 dated 26.10.2016,
whereas, Peshawar High Court has upheld the levy, vide judgment3
dated 31.05.2017. Matters are still pending in other Provincial
High Courts.
46.
GIDC is levied and charged4 by the Federal Government from
the gas consumers5, other than the domestic sector consumers.
According to the Act, GIDC is to be utilized6 by the Federal
Government for infrastructure development of Iran Pakistan
Pipeline Project (IP), Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India
(TAPI) Pipeline Project, LNG or other ancillary projects.
1 ACT IV of 2015 which received the assent of the President on 21.05.2015 and was published in
the Gazette of Pakistan Extraordinary, part-1 on 23.05.2015.
2 M/s Century Paper & Board Mills Ltd and others vs. Federation of Pakistan and others.
3 Passed in W.P 2178/2015, etc titled M/s Umair Steel vs. Federation of Pakistan and others, etc.
4 section 3 of the Act
5 Defined in section 2(a) of the Act.
6 Section 4 of the Act.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 49 :-
47.
As a matter of background almost similar Cess (GIDC) was
earlier imposed under The Gas Infrastructure Development Cess
Act, 2011 (“Act, 2011”).7 Considering it to be a “tax” under item
no.51 of Part I of the Federal Legislative List of the Constitution8, it
was passed as a Money Bill under Article 73 of the Constitution. It
was soon challenged after its promulgation by the gas consumers,
primarily on the grounds; that GIDC was infact a Fee and could
not have been introduced through a Money Bill bypassing the
bicameral legislative procedure provided under Article 70 of the
Constitution; and that the Parliament did not enjoy the legislative
competence to impose “Tax” on “natural gas.”
48.
Peshawar and Islamabad High Courts struck down the Act,
2011 and declared the levy of GIDC as being unconstitutional in
Ashraf Industries (Pvt) Ltd9 and Master Textile Mills.10 Finally, the
matter came up before this Court in Durrani Ceramics11. This
Court also declared the law unconstitutional on the ground that
GIDC under Act, 2011 was not a Tax but a Fee and therefore could
not have been passed as a Money Bill. Review filed against the
same was also dismissed in Durrani Ceramics -II.12
49.
The Gas Infrastructure Development Cess Act, 2015 was
promulgated on 21.05.2015 with modifications once again
imposing GIDC (Cess) on all the gas consumers other than the
domestic sector consumers. It drew its legislative competence from
item no. 213 of Part II of the Federal Legislative List. The new Act is
substantially a repeat of the previous Act, 2011 except that its
legislative routing is through both the Houses of the Parliament in
terms of Article 70 of the Constitution. The new legislation does not
set out the essential constituents of the new levy (Fee) to show that
GIDC is no more a Tax but a Fee. Perhaps the legislature simply
7 ACT No. XXI of 2011. Received the assent of the President on 13.12.2011 and was published
for general information in the Gazette of Pakistan Extraordinary on 15.12.2011.
8 Item 51: Taxes on mineral oil, natural gas and minerals for use in generation of nuclear energy.
9 Ashraf Industries (Pvt) Ltd. vs. Federation of Pakistan through Secretary, Ministry of Petroleum
and Natural Resources, Control Secretariat and 3 others (2013 PTD 1732).
10 Master Textile Mills & 275 others vs. Federation of Pakistan & others (PLD 2014 Islamabad 83)
11 Federation of Pakistan through Secretary M/o Petroleum and Natural Resources and another vs.
Durrani Ceramics and others (2014 SCMR 1630). [three member bench]
12 Federation of Pakistan through Secretary Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources and
another vs. Durrani Ceramics and others (PLD 2015 SC 354).
13 Item no.2: Mineral oil and natural gas; liquids and substances declared by Federal law to be
dangerously inflammable.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 50 :-
banked on the declaration given in Durrani Ceramics and thought
that no additional legislative design was required.
50.
The constitutionality and legality of the new Act was
challenged before the provincial High Courts in the country. Sindh
High Court vide judgment dated 26.10.2016 struck down the levy
as being unconstitutional, however, the Peshawar High Court
upheld the levy in its judgment dated 31.05.2017. Litigation is still
pending in other Provinces, therefore, this bench vide order dated
22.10.2019 had allowed parties in pending matters to join these
proceedings as intervenors so that their contention and viewpoint
can be heard. The matter has now come up before us for final
determination.
Grounds of challenge
51.
Several legal questions of varying complexities were raised
before us in the startling backdrop of this case; the more
fundamental and pivotal being; whether the Act imposes a Fee
under
our
constitutional
framework,
especially
when
the
corresponding service or quid pro quo is to be rendered in some
distant future; whether different Cess rates provided in the Second
Schedule to the Act are discriminatory; the failure to seek prior
approval of the Federal Cabinet before initiating the legislative
process of the Act; whether the Parliament can legislate without
first allowing Council of Common Interest (CCI) to deliberate on the
subject of natural gas which falls in Part II of the Federal
Legislative List and without considering its recommendations. And
in the absence of any notification and specification of the rates
under section 3 of the Act, whether GIDC could be levied and
charged; and finally whether the validation provision under section
8 of the Act holds water and GIDC for the period prior to the Act
was lawfully charged. I deal with the constitutionality of the Fee
imposed and therefore some of the questions raised are not
required to be answered in this case.
52.
I have had the opportunity of hearing the learned counsel for
the parties and the intervenors extensively over days. I have
examined the record of the case; the current status of the
infrastructure development gas projects on the ground; the recent
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 51 :-
trends in the sub-continental comparative jurisprudence on the
subject of Tax and Fee; and tried to understand the contemporary
concept and meaning of Fee (with future service), now used for
raising public finance for large infrastructure projects and have
examined its constitutionality and legality under our living
Constitution.
OPINION
Concept of Fee
53.
Summarizing the sub-continental jurisprudence14 on Tax
versus Fee, I see that normatively, theoretically and legislatively
three prominent tasks have been entrusted to taxation, namely;
revenue augmentation, redistribution of wealth in society and
regulatory function to ensure expected economic behaviour. Fee,
on the other hand, has a narrower scope and is premised on a
corresponding service in return or quid pro quo. While tax is
14 See: Haji Dossa Limited, Karachi vs. Province of Punjab through Collector,
Sahiwal and others (1973 SCMR 2), Workers' Welfare Funds, M/O Human
Resources Development, Islamabad through Secretary and others vs. East
Pakistan Chrome Tannery Pvt. Through G.M. Finance Lahore and others (PLD
2017 SC 28), Sheikh Muhammad Ismail & Co. Ltd., Lahore vs. The Chief Cotton
Inspector, Multan Division, Multan and others (PLD 1966 SC 388), Pakistan
Flour Mills Association and another vs. Government of Sindh and others (2003
SCMR 162), Hirjina Salt Chemicals (PAK.) Ltd. vs. Union Council, Gharo and
others (1982 SCMR 522), Noon Sugar Mills Ltd. vs. Market Committee and
others (PLD 1989 SC 449), Azad Government of the State of Jammu & Kashmir
through Chief Secretary, Azad Kashmir Government, Civil Secretariat,
Muzaffarabad vs. Haji Mir Muhammad Naseer and others (1999 PLC (C.S.)
1173), Pakcom Limited and others vs. Federation of Pakistan and others (PLD
2011 SC 44), Collector of Customs and others vs. Sheikh Spinning Mills (1999
SCMR 1402), The Hingir-Rampur Coal Co vs. The State of Orissa (1961 SCR (2)
537), Sreenivasa General Traders vs. State of Andhra Pradesh (AIR 1983 SC
1246), Upaj Mandi Samiti vs. Orient Paper and Industries (1995 RRR (1) 327),
Bangalore Development Authority vs. Air Craft Employee Society (2012 (1) JLJR
503), H.H. Sudhundra Thirtha Swamiar and others vs. The Commissioner for
Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments, Mysore and another (AIR 1963 SC
966), Southern Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals, Trichur and others vs. State of
Kerala and others (AIR 1981 SC 1863), The Chief Commissioner, Delhi and
another vs. The Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. and others (AIR 1978 SC
1181), Calcutta Municipal Corporation and others vs. Shrey Mercantile Pvt.
Ltd. and others (AIR 2005 SC 1879), Bhagwan Dass Sood vs. State of Himachal
Pradesh and others (AIR 1997 SC 1549), Bangalore Development Authority vs.
Air Craft Employee Society (2012 (1) JLJR503), Kewal Krishan Puri and another
vs. State of Punjab and others (AIR 1980 SC 1008), Agriculture Market
Committee, Rajam and others vs. Rajam Jute and Oil Millers Association, Rajam
(AIR 2003 SC 1742), Upaj Mandi Samiti vs. Orient Paper and Industries (1995
(1) RRR 327), The City Corporation of Calicut vs. Thachambalath Sadasivan and
others (AIR 1985 SC 756), Kishan Lal Lakhmi Chand vs. State of Haryana
(1993 Supp (4) SCC 461), The Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments,
Madras vs. Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt (AIR 1954 SC
282), The State of West Bengal and another vs. Kesoram Industries Ltd. and
others (AIR 2005 SC 1646), Municipal Corporation of Delhi and others vs. Mohd.
Yasin (AIR 1983 SC 617) and Gasket Radiators Pvt. Ltd. vs. Employees' State
Insurance Corporation and another (AIR 1985 SC 790).
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 52 :-
devoid of quid pro quo, it is a sine qua non for Fee. Tax and Fee
both properly belong to the world of public finance.15
54.
A tax is a compulsory contribution to the government,
imposed in the common interest of all, for the purpose of defraying
the expenses incurred in carrying out the public functions or
imposed for the purpose of regulation, without reference to the
special benefits conferred on the one making the payment.16 As a
corollary, tax being instrumental in revenue augmentation, its
quantum need not commensurate with costs incurred by such
public authority. Further, tax is devoid of any quid pro quo. Even
where any benefit seems to flow, in case of tax, it is merely
incidental and not primary. In other words, there exists no
connection, whether direct and immediate or broad and casual
between the contributor of tax and benefits.
55.
In a glaring contrast, Fee, is generally defined to be a charge
for a special service rendered to individuals by some governmental
agency. Ordinarily, Fees are uniform and no account is taken of
the varying abilities of different recipients to pay. A Fee may either
be regulatory or compensatory. Where a Fee is commensurate with
the cost of rendering the service, though not in exact arithmetical
equivalence, it is a compensatory Fee. On the other hand a Fee
charged to regulate or control, is validly classifiable as regulatory
Fee, provided it is not excessive or not dominantly intending to
raise revenues for the public authority. Whilst both tax and Fee are
compulsory exactions of money by public authority, their real
distinction comprise in primarily what is known as quid pro quo
test and proportionality of amount test.
56.
Accordingly a levy to be identified as Fee must have an
element of quid pro quo between the payer and the public authority
that imposed it. This quid pro quo or service rendered in return
envisages an intimate and immediate relationship between
rendition of service and the payer, who is direct beneficiary of such
service, on a one-on-one basis. This proximity between the
15 Pathak, Neha: “SLIPPERY SLOPES OF COMPENSATORY TAX AND FEE” – Journal of the
Indian Institute 56
16 Martin T Crowe, The Moral Obligation of Paying Just Taxes 12 (Catholic University of
American Press, Washington D.C, 1944)
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 53 :-
beneficiaries and services can also be categorized for simplicity as
“proximate quid pro quo.17” So the classical approach of Fee
comprises the following: a) proximate quid pro quo i.e., rendition of
certain services to the payers by government agency which
amounts
to
special
benefit/advantage
to
the
payer;
b)
proportionality i.e., the amount imposed ought to commensurate
with cost of services to be rendered; c) specific fund that ensures
dedicated spending from an earmarked fund for specific purpose of
that service. Merger of proceeds with general revenue to be spent
for general purposes was not acceptable; d) primary objective that
is to enquire whether the primary purpose of imposing levy is
rendition of services and it is not merely incidental to
augmentation of revenue. If latter predominates, it acts as negative
restriction and the levy will be a tax18.
57. As the economy grew, Fee was imposed to render services to
a large class of people or specified sector or area as a whole. In
such cases, the relationship between the beneficiary and the
services rendered became more generic, broad and remote. This is
because such a service is to reach a general class of people or a
specified sector or a designated area and not to an individual per
se and therefore the service may also extend to free riders who are
not the payers of Fee, hence the bond of proximity stands diluted.
This shift has also been termed as “remote quid pro quo”19 which is
used to describe the situation where services target beneficiaries
which is a generic class comprising of a certain free riders but
inclusive of payers. The shift from proximate to remote quid pro
quo overtime does not mean that the service to be rendered to the
payers of Fee would be any different or in any manner less. The
scope and depth of service to be rendered depends on the nature of
the service. Like in the instant case, the service of continuous and
increased supply of natural gas, inspite of being a generic service,
extending to a class of gas consumers including those who are not
payers of GIDC, must still reach all the industrial gas consumers
paying GIDC (Fee).
17 phrase used by Pathak, Neha (supra note 15)
18 supra note 15
19 ibid
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 54 :-
58.
The requisite earmarking of funds stands diluted in
subsequent case law. Merely because collections for services
rendered or grant of a privilege or license are taken to the
consolidated fund of the state and not separately appropriated
towards the expenditure for rendering the service is not by itself
decisive.
59.
With proximate quid pro quo test replaced with remote quid
pro quo test and the specific fund test being considered non-
determinant factor, the only test that remained untouched from
the classical package was proportionality test. This test coupled
with primary object test became new determinants of Fee. The
modern approach to Fee therefore consists of three point check: (a)
Primary object test- whether the plenary objective of the levy is
rendition of service to specified class and this service is something
other than something merely incidental; (b) Remote quid pro quo
test- whether the payer receives a general benefit from the
authority imposing levy; (c) Proportionality test - whether there
exists a broad and generic co-relationship between services
rendered and the amount of Fee charged20.
Durrani Ceramics I and II
60.
In Durrani Ceramics this Court held that GIDC was not a Tax
but a Fee and declared Act, 2011 to be unconstitutional for having
been passed as a Money Bill. Relevant extracts are as under:-
19. Upon examining the case-law from our own and other
jurisdictions it emerges that the 'Cess' is levied for a
particular purpose. It can either be 'tax' or 'fee' depending
upon the nature of the levy. Both are compulsory exaction
of money by public authorities. Whereas 'tax' is a common
burden for raising revenue and upon collection becomes
part of public revenue of the State, 'Fee' is exacted for a
specific purpose and for rendering services or providing
privilege to particular individuals or a class or a community
or a specific area. However, the benefit so accrued may not
be measurable in exactitude. So long as the levy is to the
advantage of the payers, consequential benefit to the
community at large would not render the levy a 'tax'. In the
20 ibid.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 55 :-
light of this statement of law it is to be examined whether
the GIDC is a 'tax' or a 'fee'.
20. To recapitulate the 'Cess' collected is to be utilized for
specific purposes, namely, development of infrastructure of
Iran Pakistan Pipeline Project, Turkmenistan Afghanistan
Pakistan India (TAPI) Pipeline Project, LNG or other projects
or for price equalization of other imported alternative fuels
including LPG. An annual report regarding utilization of the
amount so collected is to be regularly placed before the
House after three months of the end of each fiscal year (See
S. 4 of GIDC Act). The levy therefore is to be utilized only for
the purposes mentioned in the GIDC Act. The same is not a
common burden for raising revenue generally. The money
so collected from the levy is to be utilized for a specific
purpose for the advantage and benefit of the consumers of
gas. The 'Cess' is basically to be levied on all consumers of
gas
with
certain
exemption,
mainly
for
domestic
consumers. This exemption is by way of relief to such
consumers. Even otherwise the data so provided to us
regarding consumption of gas by different sectors shows
that the domestic sector consumes only 20.3% of the total
gas whereas 76 % of the total gas is consumed by those
from whom the 'Cess' is collected (see Pakistan Energy Year
Book, 2012. The latter sector has invested in development
of the infrastructure for utilization of gas for their respective
concerns. As envisaged in section 4 of GIDC Act, the 'Cess'
is mainly to be utilized for development of the pipelines
from other countries and other similar projects in order to
ensure continuous and increased supply of gas to this
sector. Undoubtedly other consumers of country as a whole
would also benefit from such Projects but the same is
inconsequential compared to the advantage that will accrue
to the payers.
…..
22. Another formidable argument on behalf of the
respondents was based upon the National Assembly for the
Financial Years 2012-13 and 2013-14….This Annual
Budget Statement along with money bill is to be
simultaneously transmitted to the Senate so that it may
make recommendations to the National Assembly. Page-6 of
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 56 :-
the Statement contains list of Non-Tax Revenue, which
under the Object Code C03916 includes 'Gas Infrastructure
Development Cess'. Similarly in the Annual Budget
Statement (Federal Budget 2013-14) that carries a similar
worded preface, 'Gas Infrastructure Development Cess' has
again been listed at C03916 as Non-Tax Revenue. Thus on
the Government's own showing, as reflected in the Annual
Budget, GIDC is not a 'tax'. No argument has been
advanced on behalf of the appellants to explain away the
categorization of GIDC as Non-Tax Revenue by the
Government in the Annual Budget. This is not a mere
accounting procedure as urged by Mr. Salman Akram Raja,
Advocate Supreme Court, who in this context had relied
upon Sheikh Muhammad Ismail & Co. v. Chief Cotton
Inspector Council (supra), but were part of the Annual
Budget Statements. As submitted by Mr. Makhdoom Ali
Khan, Senior Advocate Supreme Court, the possible reason
why the levy has been reflected as Non-Tax Revenue in the
Budget was to exclude it from the divisible pool under the
National Finance Commission (NFC) Award. The above
determination is sufficient to hold that being a 'fee' the
same could not have been imposed through a money bill
and on this score the levy was liable to be struck down.
….
31. Entry 51 mentions three items, namely 'mineral oil',
'natural gas' and 'minerals' which are followed by the words
"for use in generation of nuclear energy". The basic rule for
interpretation of statutes is to give the words their ordinary
and
natural
meaning.
Deviation
from
this
rule
is
permissible only when it becomes necessary, for example to
avoid or overcome absurdity or render certain words
meaningless. This exercise is undertaken when assigning
the words their ordinary meaning does not reflect the true
intention of the Legislature. By the use of 'and' in between
'natural gas' and 'minerals' in Entry 51, all the three items
are to be read conjunctively with the words following them.
In the said Entry 'and' could have been substituted by 'or'
only if without the change absurd consequences would
have followed. Restricting 'mineral oil' or 'natural gas' to
their use in the generation of nuclear energy would not lead
to any absurdity….After all the Constitution is a living
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 57 :-
document which caters for future development and
progress. Thus Entry 51 can only be accorded its natural
meaning and the same shall be read conjunctively.
Similarly the Last Antecedent Rule is of no help to the
appellants when the plain reading does not admit of any
other interpretation but that only such items mentioned
therein can be subjected to tax that are used in the
generation of nuclear energy.
….
34. Admittedly 'natural gas' is subject to levy of Sales Tax
and GIDC Act does not appear to suggest that it is another
instance of Sales Tax levied by the Parliament on the supply
of natural gas. As held in the above cited judgment, double
taxation can be imposed only by clear and specific language
and not by implication.
35. Thus under section 2(46) of the Sales Tax Act, 1990 the
'Cess' is one of the cost added to the price of the product for
the calculation of sales tax. It cannot therefore be termed as
another Sales Tax.
….
36. Coming to Entry 52, Mr. Salman Akram Raja, Advocate
Supreme Court, had not urged that the GIDC can be levied
under the said Entry. The learned Attorney General initially
made submissions with regard to the said Entry but
ultimately did not seriously press the same. Mr. Makhdoom
Ali Khan, Senior Advocate Supreme Court, in response to
the said argument submitted that Entry 49 imposing Sales
Tax on 'natural gas' and other commodities and Entry 52
empowering the imposition of tax on capacity are mutually
exclusive. That since the 'natural gas' has already been
subjected to Sales Tax no additional tax can be levied on
the capacity. The learned counsel in this context had
referred
to
Kohinoor
Industries
Ltd., Faisalabad
v.
Government of Pakistan (ibid), Central Board of Revenue v.
Seven-Up Bottling Company (Pvt.) Ltd. (ibid) and Ellahi
Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Federation of Pakistan (supra). The
above authorities clearly lay down, with reference to Entry
52 and other Entries in Part-1 of the Federal Legislative
List, that tax cannot be levied under the said Entry if the
goods or activity has already been subjected to tax or duty
under any other Entry. It follows that the GIDC is not
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 58 :-
covered by either of the three Entries, i.e. 49, 51 or 52 of
Part-I of the Federal Legislative List. It was admitted on
behalf of the appellant that for a 'tax' to fall under the said
Federal Legislative List it must be covered by Entries Nos.
43 to 53. Apart from the said three no other Entries were
pressed in service on behalf of the appellants for declaring
the 'Cess' as 'tax'. On this count too the 'Cess' could not
have been introduced through a money bill under Article 73
of the Constitution.
….
42. It was pointed out on behalf of the respondents that the
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources was of the
view that the issue of levy of the 'Cess' may be placed for its
approval before the Council of Commons Interest, which
represents all the federating units. Similar was the opinion
expressed
by
the
Ministry
of
Law,
Justice
and
Parliamentary Affairs. This fact was expressly averred in the
Constitution Petitions filed before the Peshawar High Court
and was not denied by the Federal Government. True that
such an advice or opinion or non-reference of the matter to
the Council of Common Interest would not render the levy
illegal or invalid, nevertheless it would have been
appropriate had the federating units been taken into
confidence, particularly in the context of Article 160(3) of
the Constitution.
….
45. To conclude the GIDC is a fee and not a tax, in the
alternative it is not covered by any Entry relating to
imposition or levy of tax under Part-I of the Federal
Legislative List. On either counts the 'Cess' could not have
been introduced through a money bill under Article 73 of
the Constitution. The same was, therefore, not validly levied
in accordance with the Constitution.
61.
Durrani
Ceramics
declared
that
setting
up
of
the
infrastructure development gas projects would ensure continuous
and increased supply of gas for the gas consumers, thereby
constituting a service against the Fee (GIDC) charged. The
continuous and increased supply of gas to the gas consumers was
an assumption drawn by the Court, as no such legislative promise
is borne out from Act, 2011. However, this assumption remained
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 59 :-
unchallenged in the review (Durrani Ceramics-II) by the parties and
came to be the service rendered or quid pro quo under Act, 2011.
The argument of the appellants that Durrani Ceramics has a
limited precedential value, as it was restricted to the question of
Tax and the legislative procedure of Money Bill, is not correct. This
Court in answering these questions has also declared that GIDC is
a Fee. This declaration was re-affirmed in review filed by the
Federal Government. In the background of the jurisprudence
discussed above, I see no reason to take a view different from that
of Durrani Ceramics which simply holds that the concept of
infrastructure development of gas pipeline projects leading to
continuous and increased gas supply in the country constitutes
service or quid pro quo for the appellants. The ground reality of the
gas projects at the time of Durrani Ceramics was not so noticeable
or stark as it is now (discussed hereunder) and, therefore, the
delivery or actualization of the service, has come to be of critical
importance.
62.
Moved by the facts on the ground, I feel it necessary to re-
examine the meaning and concept of Fee and the scope and extent
of its inbuilt reciprocity - quid pro quo. The question, regarding
“future service” which is of pivotal importance to this case, though
raised in Durrani Ceramics, was not addressed or answered. I now
move beyond Durrani Ceramics to grapple with the question of
future service and look for a more contemporary meaning of quid
pro quo.
FUTURE SERVICE & TIMELINE
63.
Existing jurisprudence informs us that it is not that all the
required services against a Fee must be in place before a Fee can
be levied.21 Merely because the benefits to be received are
postponed, it cannot be said that there is no ‘quid pro quo’. It is
true that ordinarily a return in praesenti is generally the case when
Fee is levied but simultaneity or contemporaneity of payment and
benefit is not the most vital or crucial test to determine whether a
levy is a Fee or not, especially in long-term projects. In fact, it may
21 Agriculture Market Committee, Rajam and others vs. Rajam Jute and Oil Millers Association,
Rajam (AIR 2003 SC 1742)
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 60 :-
often happen that the rendering of a service or the conferment of a
benefit may only follow after the consolidation of a fund from the
Fee levied. Hospitals, for instance, cannot be built in a day nor
medical facilities or gas supply provided right from the day of the
commencement of the scheme. It is only after infrastructure
development is available that one may reasonably expect a
compensating return. How soon a return may be expected or ought
to be given must necessarily depend on the nature of the services
required to be rendered and benefits required to be conferred.22 So
while “service to be rendered” or quid pro quo in future is
permissible it is equally important that the prospects of such a
future service are certain, as if tied in time, with the payment of
Fee. I come to this important question later in the judgment.
- Instant case and its unique facts
64.
Let’s leapfrog from 2011 (imposition of GIDC) to 2014
(Durrani Cermaics) and finally to 2020 (current case). The facts and
figures of this case are admitted and show that utilization of GIDC
as per the earlier and the recent statute is for setting up
infrastructure development of Iran Pakistan Pipeline Project (IP),
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) Pipeline Project,
LNG or other ancillary projects. These projects were financed
through the imposition of GIDC (Fee), used as a tool of public
finance. The gas consumers have been paying GIDC for almost a
decade, as is established from the accounts and the status of the
projects placed before us by the Interstate Gas System (Pvt) Ltd,
which we are informed, is the company that is to set up these
projects on behalf of the Federal Government. The figures
hereunder undisputedly reveal that there has been no work on the
ground and these gas projects have no physical existence,
whatsoever,
in
Pakistan.
Letter
of
the
Finance
Division,
Government of Pakistan dated 18.02.2020 signed by the Deputy
Secretary (Budget Resources) filed23 in Court reveals that the total
amount of GIDC accrued, collected and outstanding as on
22 M/s. Gasket Radiators Pvt. Ltd. v. Employees' State Insurance Corporation & another (AIR
1985 SC 790)
23 through CMA 1259/2020 in CA Nos. 1113 to 1155/2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 61 :-
30.6.2019 is as under and does not include Late Payment
Surcharge under section 3(3) of the Act.
TOTAL COLLECTION OF GIDC
Levy and Collection of GIDC
Rs. In Million
Sr.#
Sector
GIDC
Accrued
GIDC
Collected
GIDC
Outstanding
1
Fertilizer Feed (old)
192,240.31
111,814.62
80,425.69
2
Fertilizer Feed (New)
68,281.71
1,142.89
67,138.82
3
Fertilizer – Fuel
31,772.12
15,205.66
16,566.46
4
General Industry
70,729.64
24,402.27
46,327.37
5
IPPs
60,845.19
51,713.50
9,131.69
6
KESC
40,421.05
3,912.18
36,508.87
7
GENCO/WAPDA
67,317.33
44,753.78
22,563.55
8
Captive Power
119,247.65
17,522.73
101,724.92
9
CNG Region-I
53,420.68
11,765.63
41,655.05
10
CNG Region-II
48,073.10
13,169.51
34,903.59
Grand Total
752,348.78
295,402.77
456,946.01
The details of the funding and expenditure are as follows:-
INTER STATE GAS SYSTEM (PVT.) LIMITED
Summary of expenditure and funding of gas infrastructure projects:24
Project
Iran
Pakistan
(IP) Gas
Pipeline
Project
TAPI
Pipeline
Project
North
South Gas
Pipeline
Project
Underground
Gas Storages
Total
All amounts in PKR
Estimated
Project
Cost
271
billion
1,500
billion
405 billion
75 billion
2,251
billion
Pakistan share
271
billion
31.353
billion
20.25
billion
75 billion
397.6
billion
Development
Phase expenditure
– already incurred
funded
through
GIDC
(received
todate)
Nil
0.483
billion
Nil
Nil
0.483
billion
24 1. No funds have been released to date for above gas infrastructure projects
from GIDC except GOP equity contribution in TAPI Pipeline Company Limited
(TPCL). The amount released is only PKR 482.57 million, an equivalent of USD
4.1 million in respect of two cash calls (First and second financial closing) from
TPCL for TAPI Project. The first tranche of USD 2.65 million was released in
May 2016 and the second tranche of USD 1.45 million was in June 2019. ECC
of the Cabinet approved to inject 5% equity into TAPI Project vide case
No.ECC-164/23/2015 dated 18th December, 2015.
2. As a stopgap arrangement, financing from GHPL for projects have been
arranged by ECC.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 62 :-
Development Phase
expenditure-
already
incurred
funded by GHPL
3.3
billion
0.756
billion
0.135
billion
0.040 billion
4.2
billion
Total development
and
construction
cost- to be funded
through GIDC
271
billion
30.513
billion
20.250
billion
75 billion
396.7
billion
65.
The Letter further states that a meeting was held in the
Petroleum Division attended by relevant officers of Petroleum
Division and Finance Division and the proposal for the way
forward was that “the amount of GIDC (Rs. 295.403 billion) shall
be utilized against projects to be submitted by Petroleum Division
through budgetary mechanism in line with GIDC enactments.”
This proposal was to be approved by ECC/Cabinet. This was the
state of affairs on 18.02.2020, almost nine years after the levy of
GIDC.
66.
Status of these projects has been attached with Letter dated
11.02.2020 issued by the Interstate Gas Systems (Pvt) Ltd and
filed in Court.25 The Project Brief on Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-
Pakistan-India (TAPI) Gas Pipeline Project does not mention about
the actual development of the pipeline infrastructure in Pakistan or
the date when supply of gas will be made available. And the Project
Brief on Iran-Pakistan (IP) Gas Pipeline Project mentions that “the
current status of the Project is that Pakistan’s contractual
obligations are suspended under the Agreement, however, the
legally binding agreement is still in place and the Government of
Pakistan is still committed with the Project. The two sides have
recently given themselves a further period of five years for the
implementation of the Project by signing Amendment Agreement
No. 3 of GSPA on 5th September, 2019.” The details of the Projects
as given by the Federal Government are as follows:-
INTER STATE GAS SYSTEM (PVT.) LIMITED
a.
Turkmenistan – Afghanistan – Pakistan-India (TAPI) Pipeline Project
Description
USD
PKR3
Estimated Project Cost
10,000 million
1,500,000 million
Pakistan share @ 5% equity share under
Investment Agreement
209.02 million
31,353 million
Development Phase expenditure-already
25 Through CMA 1058/2020 in CA Nos. 11113 to 1155 /2017
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 63 :-
incurred
Project development Cost – Paid by GoP through
Supplementary Grant
1.5 million
153 million
Project development cost – funding through
GIDC
4.1 million
483 million
Project development and operational
expenditure – funded by GHPL
4.02 million1
603 million1
Future development cost – to be incurred
5 million2
750 million2
Future construction Cost – to be incurred
194.4 million2
29,160 million2
Total development and construction cost –
to be funded through GIDC
203.42 million 30,513 million
1
The other development and operational costs were funded by GHPL, the parent company
of ISGS, hence require replenishment from GIDC to settle the same with GHPL.
2
Development and construction expenditure are expected to be incurred in next 24
months.
3
All amounts have been converted @ PKR 150/US$.
________________________________________
INTER STATE GAS SYSTEM (PVT.) LIMITED
b.
Iran Pakistan (IP) Gas Pipeline Project:
Description
USD
PKR3
Estimated Project Cost
1,806 million
270,900 million
Development
Phase
expenditure-already
incurred
Project development cost – funded from GIDC
Nil
Nil
Project development and operational cost –
Funded by GHPL
22.06 million1
3,300 million1
Development cost – to be incurred
5 million2
750 million2
Construction Cost – to be incurred
1.779 million2
266,850
million2
Total development and construction cost –
to be funded through GIDC
1,806.06
million
270,900
million
1
The project development and operation costs were funded by Government Holding
Private Limited (GHPL), the parent company of ISGS, hence require replenishment from
GIDC to settle the same with GHPL.
2
Construction of the project will take 36 months after awards of construction contract,
subject to easement of International sanctions on Iran.
3
All amounts have been converted @ PKR 150/US$.
___________________________________________________
INTER STATE GAS SYSTEM (PVT.) LIMITED
c. North South Gas Pipeline Project (NSGP)
Description
USD
PKR3
Estimated Project Cost
2,700 million
405,000 million
Pakistan share of Cost @ 5% equity share
135 million
20,250 million
Development
Phase
expenditure-already
incurred
Project development cost – funded from
GIDC
Nil
Nil
Project development and operational Cost –
funded by GHPL
0.9 million1
135 million1
Future development cost – to be incurred
4 million
600 million
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 64 :-
Future construction cost – to be incurred
130.1 million
19,515 million
Total development and construction cost –
to be funded through GIDC
135 million2
20,250
million2
1 The other development and operational costs were funded by GHPL, the parent company
of ISGS, hence require replenishment from GIDC to settle the same with GHPL.
2 Development and construction expenditure are expected to be incurred in next 2 to 3
years.
3 All amounts have been converted @ PKR 150/US$.
___________________________________________________
INTER STATE GAS SYSTEM (PVT.) LIMITED
d.
Underground Gas Storages
Description
USD
PKR3
Estimated Project Cost
500 million
75,000 million
Development
Phase
expenditure-already
incurred
Project development cost – funded from
GIDC
Nil
Nil
Project development and operational Cost –
funded by GHPL
0.27 million1
40 million1
Future development cost – to be incurred
3 million
450 million
Future construction cost – to be incurred
497 million
74,550 million
Total development and construction cost –
to be funded through GIDC
500 million2
75,000
million2
1
he other development and operational costs were funded by GHPL, the parent company
of ISGS, hence require replenishment from GIDC to settle the same with GHPL.
2
evelopment and construction expenditure are expected to be incurred in next 2 to 3
years.
3
ll amounts have been converted @ PKR 150/US$.
___________________________________________________
67.
The above record undisputedly reveals that no development
phase expenditure has taken place and that project development
cost funded by GIDC is Nil.26 Even though, there is nothing on the
ground, these projects were announced in 2011 and GIDC is since
then being collected. The representatives of the concerned
Ministries were at sea when asked to give a definite timeline for the
service in return.
-Position of the Projects in the Pakistan Economic Survey
26 except the initial payment made in TAPI
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 65 :-
68. The Pakistan Economic Survey 2014-1527 mentioned that
the Government is taking steps to overcome the shortfall of natural
gas by, inter alia, importing natural gas from Iran and
Turkmenistan. It further provides as follows;
The two transnational gas pipelines that Pakistan has
pursued for over two decades have been delayed due to
reasons beyond control. The 750 MMCFD Iran-Pakistan
(IP) gas pipeline has been delayed due to international
sanctions (although there is hope for removal of the
sanctions) and
the
1,325
MMCFD
Turkmenistan-
Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) pipeline has been
delayed due to the security situation in Afghanistan
and structural issues with project transaction.
The Government of Pakistan is now successful to
import 500 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd) of LNG
from Qatar.
The same Survey (2014-15)28 further states:
During the recent visit of the Prime Minister to
Turkmenistan….the
review
of
Turkmenistan-
Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) pipeline and energy
security remained main focus of the meeting. The
project is expected to be materialized by end of 2017
will be providing the gas of 1.3 billion cubic feet to
Pakistan.
69.
There is no mention of IP or TAPI pipeline projects in the
Pakistan Economic Surveys of 2015-16, 2016-17, 2017-18, 2018-
19 and 2019-20. And Chapter-14 on “Energy” in the latest
Pakistan Economic Survey 2019-20 states as follows29:
Pakistan is successfully overcoming energy crisis, which
has direct and indirect impact on all sectors of the
economy. Presently, Energy Sector is confronted with
demand supply gap….in terms of energy-mix, Pakistan’s
reliance on thermal which includes imported coal, local
coal and RLNG and natural gas has been decreasing over
the last few years. Pakistan’s dependence on natural
gas in the overall energy mix is on decline and the
reduction of its share in the energy mix may be
attributed to declining natural gas reserves as well as to
the introduction of LNG since 2015.
Gas Sector
Natural Gas is a clean, safe, efficient and environment
friendly fuel. Its indigenous supplies contribute about 38
percent in total primary energy supply mix of the country.
Pakistan produces around four (4) Billion Cubic Feet Per
Day
(Bcfd)
of
indigenous
natural
gas
against
an
unconstrained demand of over six (6) Bcfd. To meet the
shortfall, the GoP has initiated the import of LNG.
(emphasis supplied)
27 pp. 241 & 242.
28 P. 236
29 pp. 273 & 276
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 66 :-
70.
Pakistan Economic Survey is silent regarding these projects
since 2015 and shows that the shortfall in natural gas is being
successfully
plugged
through
the
import
of
LNG,
which
surprisingly, is not a GIDC funded Project. The above documents
show that after a decade of charging GIDC from gas consumers
and after having collected Rs 295.40 billion to-date there is no sign
of development of the gas pipeline projects in Pakistan. Absence of
the said projects and emphasis on the import of LNG in the latest
Pakistan Economic Survey hazards a guess that the Government of
Pakistan is either not willing to or is unable to complete these
projects and therefore the shortfall in gas supply is being
increasingly plugged through LNG imported from Qatar.
- Annual Reporting to the Parliament under section 4(2) of the Act &
Parliamentary Practice.
71.
The Act, in its wisdom, considering the long-term nature of
the infrastructure development gas pipeline projects required the
Federal Government to inform both the Houses of the Parliament
regarding the utilization of GIDC by tabling an Annual Report
under Section 4 (2) of the Act, which provides as follows:
The annual report in respect of the utilization of the
cess shall be laid before the both houses of Majlis-e-
Shoora (Parliament) after three months at the end of
each fiscal year.
72.
This is the closest the Act came to realizing that the levy of
Fee is not contemporaneous and entails a time-lag and therefore
requires a Parliamentary oversight on the utilization of GIDC. This
was to ensure that the Government delivers the promised service of
continuous and increased gas supply, to the gas consumers, at the
earliest and also to check that the funds collected are earmarked
and utilized for these projects only. It is an admitted position that
not a single Annual Report was tabled before the Houses of the
Parliament except the one placed before the Parliament on
30.06.2019 after the filing of these cases. The Government has
unabashedly and successively hoodwinked the Parliamentary
oversight, paying little heed to the Energy crisis in the country; the
interest of the gas consumers who have been regularly paying
GIDC and the welfare of the general public. More disturbingly, the
Parliament itself, inspite of acute Energy crisis in the country,
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 67 :-
never took the Federal Government to task and allowed a decade to
pass by. The Executive and the Legislature both have failed the
appellants and public expectations besides wasting valuable time
and opportunity to utilize and divert the money collected to some
other projects to alleviate the gas shortage in the country. I
completely disagree with Majority View that the Executive has not
been at fault. Had the Executive apprised the Parliament under the
Act, legislative intervention may have followed, saving everyone
this long drawn litigation and better financial management and
use of Rs.295 Billion, which is sitting unused with the Federal
Government.30
73.
According to the legislative design behind section 4(2) of the
Act, these Annual Reports would have disclosed the status of the
projects and their funding to the Parliament. In case of inordinate
delay or non-development of the projects the Parliament could take
appropriate action. Under the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of
Business of the National Assembly, 2007 (“Rules”) these Annual
Reports under section 4(2) of the Act would stand referred to a
Standing Committee concerned under Rule 181 read with Rules
198, 201 and 235 of the Rules. The Rules provide that the
Standing Committees can examine the expenditure, administration
and policies of the Ministry concerned and may forward its report
of findings and recommendations to the Ministry to submit its
reply to the Committee. This never happened as the Government
admittedly failed to submit Annual Report regarding GIDC and the
Projects to the Parliament. Timely interference by the Parliament
would have borne different results.
74.
It might not be out of place to mention that Parliament today
has become more and more a multi-functional institution
performing variety of roles. Some of the cardinal roles and
functions of the Parliament are: Legislation, Oversight of the
Government
actions
and
Financial
Accountability
of
the
Government and the public sector. Parliament makes laws,
authorizes the Government to spend public money, scrutinizes the
Government activities and is a forum for debate on national issues.
30 Subject to some payments made as indicated above.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 68 :-
75.
The worst thing that the Government in a parliamentary
system can do is to deny information to the Parliament. The
Executive is answerable to the Parliament. Article 91(6) of the
Constitution declares it in unequivocal terms that the Cabinet,
together with the Ministers of State, shall be collectively
responsible to the Senate and the National Assembly. It is the
function of Parliament to exercise political and financial control
over the Executive. To call for information is perhaps the greatest
power of Parliament. Even otherwise, it is the duty of the
Government itself to feed Parliament with information, which is
full, truthful, precise and supplied in time. This is seen by
Ministers making statements on the floor of the House, laying
reports and papers on the Table of the House. All these constitute
a wealth of information, which becomes immediately public and
can be issued to raise discussion in the House.31 Nothing of the
sort took place in the Parliament on GIDC and almost ten years
passed without a whimper. This failure on the part of the two
prime institutions of the country reflects poor governance and
unsatisfactory performance of their constitutional duties, to say
the least.
Timeline – essential requirement for quid pro quo
76.
I now re-visit the constitutional concept of Fee, a levy which
appears as “Fee for any service rendered” in Articles 72(3)(a),
115(3)(a), 165(3) and as “Fee” in Articles 203B(c), 270AA(7), 279
and item nos. 54 and 15 of Parts I and II of the Federal Legislative
List, respectively. In the present case, Fee is being charged as a
tool of public finance for raising funds for the infrastructure
development of gas projects, with the corresponding service of
continuous and increased supply of natural gas for the gas
consumers, to meet the energy shortfall in the country. It is
axiomatic that, in this case, service rendered in return or quid pro
quo will materialize after the gas pipeline projects are set up, hence
the service will be rendered after a time-lag and will therefore be a
future service.
77.
It is jurisprudentially settled that the concept of Fee, as
opposed to Tax, is premised on a service in return or quid pro quo.
31 Subhash C Kashyap, Parliamentary Procedure. Universal. 2006 pp. 19, 23 & 25
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 69 :-
This essential constituent of Fee needs further elaboration in the
backdrop of the present case. Examination of the existing
jurisprudence shows that courts have over time laboured to
determine whether in a particular case there existed a service in
return in order to justify the levy as a Fee as opposed to a Tax. The
question never arose regarding the actual delivery of the service,
perhaps for the reason that in most of the cases either the service
was available or was easily made available in short span of time, so
the payer never had a concern regarding the actual delivery of the
service. This dimension of time has not come up for discussion in
the existing jurisprudence or writings on “Tax vs Fee” in any detail.
The facts of the present case have prompted me to consider the
time dimension of service to be rendered in return for the payment
of a Fee. It cannot be denied that words and phrases take colour,
shape and character in a context and mean differently in different
contexts. It is worthwhile to remember that there is a living content
behind words and phrases, which breathes, and so, expands and
contracts with changing times.
78.
The staggering facts of this case beg the question whether
the fundamental constituent of Fee i.e., service in return or quid
pro quo or future service should have a certain timeline? Service in
return or quid pro quo seems to exist at two levels. First, at the
theoretical level - the examination of the legislative design should
show that there is a quid pro quo or service to be rendered in
return for the Fee. Second, at the applied level - this deals with the
actual delivery of the service or a definite timeline for the delivery
of future service. The legitimization of Fee requires the existence of
service at both the levels: theoretical, as well as, applied. It will be
absurd and illogical to conceive that a payer of Fee, who is subject
to compulsory exaction of money by the State, is left to grope in the
dark, guessing when the promised service is to be rendered. Fee is
a constitutional levy against a service rendered, which cannot be
structured on assumptions, suppositions, expectations and verbal
commitments of the Executive but require a clear, crisp and
certain statutory timeline. For the Fee to have a constitutional
existence, the service to be rendered in return or the quid pro quo
must be certain, clear, unambiguous and within a definite time-
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 70 :-
frame. Durrani Ceramics settles the case at the theoretical level
only. The case did not touch the applied level, because the facts of
the case in the year 2014 did not necessitate the examination of
this aspect, as the Court and the parties assumed at that time that
the service would be rendered in a reasonable period of time.
79.
The underlying theme of a Fee is based on relationship of
reciprocity and mutuality- the quid pro quo. The legislation that
imposes a Fee must cater for this reciprocity and guard this
relationship premised on quid pro quo. While there is an obligation
of the payer to deposit Fee on time which is subject to a surcharge
for late payment, there must also be a corresponding obligation on
the State or the authority responsible to provide the service in
return, to do the same within a definite timeline. Without this
corresponding obligation, the legislation fails to recognize the core
ingredient of a Fee – the quid pro quo. It is by all means a legitimate
expectation of the payer of Fee to know when will the service be
delivered. His rights to property, trade and business under the
Constitution require it. The payment of Fee by the payer cannot be
towards a service that floats in a timeless zone; is open-ended and
uncertain. Any service to be rendered in such like cases becomes a
disservice. The relationship in a Fee must exist till the end. Failure
in providing future service within reasonable timeline, deprives the
Fee of its essential character, sheds its complexion as a Fee and
gives that of a Tax, as such failure and the uncertainty of time
diminishes the requisite degree of correlation between the payment
of Fee and provision of service in return. This indefiniteness
negates the concept of Fee and partakes the character of a Tax.
Therefore, service against a Fee is not simply a theoretical
recognition of the service to be rendered but must also have
certainty in its applied form i.e., the timeline for the actual
delivery. The theoretical and applied constituents of the levy must
exist in the legislative design, for the levy to stand as a Fee under
the Constitution otherwise it passes for a Tax.
80.
The Act is silent on these counts and therefore passes for
colourable legislation as it actually imposes a levy unknown to the
constitution in the garb of a Fee. The Act does not provide a level-
playing field for the parties and is devoid of the basic fairness,
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 71 :-
protection and due process that is required to be meted out to a
payer who is the source of the public finance required for funding
these long-term gas projects. Such a law offends and renders
constitutional protections of right to property, business and non-
discrimination, absolutely hollow and meaningless.
81.
This unexpected delay and uncertainty in the supply of gas
(service to be rendered or quid pro quo) is both a Legislative and an
Executive failure. The Federal Government should have tabled
Annual Reports before both the Houses of the Parliament under
section 4(2) of the Act and apprised the Parliament of the delay and
its reasons or furnished a timeline for the completion of these
projects. Irrespective of these responsibilities, Executive is there
only to implement the law and if the law is silent regarding the
timeline of delivery of service, the Executive carries no obligation to
provide the service, except an expectation or assumption of a
reasonable time, which is not actionable under the law, as the law
envisages no penalty for such an omission. There is even no
penalty for not tabling the Annual Reports before the Parliament by
the Executive. In the absence of any statutory obligation and
corresponding penalty, the real failure is of the legislative design.
-nature of fiscal statute
82.
The above discussion becomes more nuanced when
considered in the backdrop of a fiscal statute. The principles of
interpretation of a fiscal statute apply equally to a Fee as they do
to a Tax - both being compulsory exactions of money by the State.
It was expressed by Rowlatt J. in Cape Brandy Syndicate v. IRC32
that ‘in a taxing statute, one has to look at what is clearly said.
There is no room for any intendment. There is no equity about a
tax. There is no presumption as to a tax. Nothing is to be read in,
nothing is to be implied. One can look fairly at the language
used33.’ It is settled that interpreting a taxing statute, equitable
32 Cape Brandy Syndicate vs. IRC ([1921] 1KB 64).
33 Pakistan Television Corporation Limited vs. Commissioner Inland Revenue
(Legal), LTU, Islamabad and others (2017 SCMR 1136), Commissioner of Income
Tax and another vs. Baluchistan Concrete and Block Works Ltd. and others
(2017 SCMR 1), Chairman, Federal Board of Revenue, Islamabad vs. Al-
Technique Corporation of Pakistan Ltd. and others (PLD 2017 SC 99),
Commissioner of Income Tax Legal Division, Lahore and others v. Khurshid
Ahmad and others (PLD 2016 SC 545), Zila Council Jehlum through District
Coordination Officer vs. Pakistan Tobacco Company Ltd. and others (PLD 2016
SC 398).
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 72 :-
consideration are entirely out of place. Nor can taxing statute be
interpreted on any presumptions or assumptions. The court must
look squarely at the words of the statute and interpret them. The
court cannot imply anything that is not expressed, it cannot
import provisions in the statutes so as to supply an assumed
deficiency.34 A taxing statues, if it professes to impose a charge, its
intention
must
be
expressed
in
clear,
unequivocal
and
unambiguous language. A hunt into the intention to find a charge
is impermissible. No equitable construction of a charging section is
to be applied. The charging section is to be construed strictly
regardless of its consequences that may appear to the judicial
mind to be. It is not the function of the court to hunt out
ambiguities
by
strained
and
unnatural
meaning.35
Fiscal
legislation requires that any law that levies a Fee must first
unambiguously and clearly spell out the nature of the service to be
rendered in return (quid pro quo) and then provide for a reasonable
and definite timeline for the delivery of such service. The
legislature must also consider the entire mechanism at work
behind this relationship of reciprocity – for example, the
obligations of the provider of Fee, the consequences of delay and
failure to render service including refund.
- Our Constitution and the living tree doctrine
83.
I know that the Constitution is organic and a living
testament of the aspirations of the people it governs. The “living
tree” doctrine36 allows the Constitution to change and evolve over
time while still acknowledging its original intentions. The doctrine
achieves a balance between two seemingly contradictory goals:
predictability and flexibility. To be effective, the Constitution must
34 Bechu Company vs. Assistant Commissioner. (2003 STC (132) 68) (also See N.S. Bindra’s –
Interpretation of Statutes. p.863 (12th Edition).
35 Film Exhibiter’s Guild vs. State of Andhra Pardesh (AIR 1987 AP 110) (also See N.S. Bindra’s
– Interpretation of Statutes. p.863-864 (12th Edition).
36 The Living Tree doctrine was first conceived of in a 1929 decision, Edwards vs
Canada otherwise known as the ‘Persons Case’, issued by the Canada’s highest
court at the time, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (JCPC) in Britain.
After analyzing the Constitution’s use of the term ‘persons’, which had always
referred to men, the JCPC decided that both men and women were now
‘persons’, and therefore could be equally called to sit in the Canadian senate.
According to the historically celebrated words of Justice Sankey, while
constitutional stability and integrity are of crucial importance, the Constitution
‘also planted in Canada a living tree capable of growth and expansion within its
natural limits’. Women may not have been able to vote or hold office in 1867,
but times had changed and so had to change constitutional interpretation: the
decision led women to gain a measure of equality to men in the political arena36.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 73 :-
consist of a predictable set of rules. On the other hand, flexible
interpretation accommodates the realities of changing modern life.
If the Constitution could not be interpreted this way, it would be
frozen in time and become more obsolete than useful. Therefore,
contemporary interpreters must focus on what the originators
intended it to accomplish rather than what the text actually states
before allowing the Constitution to evolve or remain unchanged.37 I
know that stability without change is degeneration. Change
without stability is anarchy. The role of a judge is to help bridge
the gap between the needs of the society and the law without
allowing the legal system to degenerate or collapse into anarchy.
The judge must ensure stability with change, and change with
stability. Like the eagle in the sky, which maintains its stability
only when it is moving, so too is the law stable only when it is
moving. The life of law is complex. It is not mere logic. It is not
mere experience. It is both logic and experience together.38 As
Roscoe Pound said “the law must be stable, yet it cannot stand
still.”39 Progressive interpretation is to preserve the vitality of the
constitution: unless interpreted in this way, it would be frozen in
time and become more obsolete than useful. Our courts have
repeatedly underlined that our Constitution is a living document
and encouraged its progressive interpretation.40 Therefore, the
word “Fee” and the phrase “service rendered in return” or “quid pro
quo” must also evolve to meet the new fiscal realities of the State.
Fee, therefore, under the Constitution today would mean a fiscal
levy that clearly and unambiguously describes the service rendered
in return, so that Courts don’t have to unnecessarily hunt the
meaning and nature of the levy in the letter of the law. Secondly,
37 Living Tree Doctrine, Centre for Constitutional Studies. Also see: Edwards vs. Canada
(Attorney General) (1930 AC 124) and Reference Re Same Sex Marriage, (2004 SCC 79)
(CanLII)[Same-Sex]
38 Barak, The Judge in Democracy. Princeton University Press. 2006
39 “Hence all thinking about law has struggled to reconcile the conflicting demands of the need to
stability and of the need of change. Law must be stable and yet it cannot stand still.”
Interpretations of Legal History 1 (1923)
40 Sindh Revenue Board through Chairman Government of Sindh and another vs. The Civil
Aviation Authority of Pakistan through Airport Manager (2017 SCMR 1344), Lahore
Development Authority through D.G. and others vs. Ms. Imrana Tiwana and others (2015 SCMR
1739), Province of Sindh through Chief Secretary and others vs. M.Q.M. through Deputy
Convener and others (PLD 2014 SC 531), Reference by the President of Pakistan under Article
186 of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 (PLD 2013 SC 279); Rana Aamer
Raza Ashfaq and another vs. Dr. Minhaj Ahmad Khan and another (2012 SCMR 6); Al-Raham
Travels and Tours (Pvt) Ltd and others vs. Ministry of Religious Affairs, Hajj, Zakat and Ushr
through Secretary and others (2011 SCMR 1621), Arshad Mehmood and Others vs. Government
of Punjab through Secretary, Transport Civil Secretariat, Lahore and others (PLD 2005 SC 193);
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 74 :-
the reciprocal service to be rendered in return or the quid pro quo
must be structured to have a reasonably certain and definite
timeline. If the constituent of time is missing (the applied part), the
service becomes practically non-existent and the levy no more
retains the character of Fee and becomes a Tax rendering the levy
unconstitutional.
Distinguishing Durrani Ceramics
84.
The factual matrix of the instant case is very different from
that of Durrani Ceramics. It is settled law that if a new case is
dissimilar to an earlier case in ways that seem important, the court
will ‘distinguish” it and reach a result different from what the
precedent would otherwise suggest or even dictate. In common
parlance, either the precedent or the pending case may be said to
be “distinguished” from the other.41 In this way, the former
decision might be said to be “rerationalized42.” A precedent,
whether persuasive or binding, need not be applied or followed if it
can be distinguished; that is, there is a material distinction
between the facts of the precedent case and the case in question.
According to Zander, ‘distinguishing between factual situations
and applying the appropriate rule of law is one of the lawyer’s and
judge’s most crucial functions.”43 The technique of distinguishing
past case is a powerful engine of legal change.44 Distinguishing
means that each case was decided correctly based solely on its own
facts because the facts were materially different. Joseph Raz
argues that the boundaries of distinguishing “are far from fixed,”
he asserts that, the [boundaries] undergo continual change.”45 The
crucial question is: Are there any material differences between the
facts of the case at bar and the facts of the prior cases to warrant
the rule being different? In principle, the distinguishing of an
apparent decision presents no problem for the doctrine of
precedent.46 The facts of this case, showing that the gas projects
have not even started for almost a decade yet the Fee is being
constantly charged since 2011 present us with new facts that were
41 Bryan A Garner. The Law of Judicial Precedent, 2016 p.97
42 Joseph Raz, The Authority of Law 186 (1979)
43 Zander, The Law, p.270 (Also see Muhammad Munir, Precedent in Pakistan Law, Oxford,
2014)
44 Theodore, The Rule of Precedent, op cit. p. 99
45 Raz, The Authority of Law, p. 185
46 Muhammad Munir, Precedent in Pakistan Law, Oxford, 2014. P.219
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 75 :-
not so gravely present at the time of Durrani Ceramics, hence the
said precedent is clearly distinguishable and stands on its own
facts.
Cess Rates- discriminatory
85.
The Act provides for the following rates for different
Industrial Gas consumers:-
SECOND SCHEDULE OF THE ACT
S.No.
Sector
Maximum Rate of Cess
(Rs./MMBTU)
(1)
(2)
(3)
1.
Fertilizer-Feed (Old)
300.00
2.
Fertilizer-Feed (New)
300.00
3.
Fertilizer-Fuel
150.00
4.
Captive Power
200.00
5.
Industry
100.00
6.
KESC/GENCO
100.00
7.
IPPs
100.00
The purpose of the Act is to raise public finance for the
infrastructure development of the gas projects mentioned in
section 4 of the Act through levy of Fee on the above-mentioned
gas consumers. There appears to be no intelligible differentia
amongst the different gas consumers mentioned in the Schedule
for the purposes of the Act. One justification for charging different
rates from amongst the industrial gas consumers could have been
their overall consumption of natural gas. The data provided by the
latest Pakistan Energy Year Book 201847 shows as follows:
Natural Gas Consumption by Sector 2017-2018
Sr. No.
Industry
Consumption(%)
Maximum Rate of Cess
(Rs./MMBTU)
1.
Fertilizer
(feedstock)
12.49%
300
2.
Fertilizer (fuel)
4.57%
150
3.
Power
37.44%
200 (captive power); 100
(IPPs); 100
(KESC/GENCO)
4.
Gen. Industry
18.84%
100
5.
Transport (CNG)
4.84%
263.56 (Region-1) and
200 (Region-II)
47 Issued by Ministry of Energy (Petroleum Division) and Hydrocarbon Development Institute of
Pakistan.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 76 :-
The above shows that the differentiation of rates is not based on
the consumption pattern of the gas consumers. The rates of GIDC
fixed
for
different
gas
consumers
are,
therefore,
ex-facie
discriminatory and cannot be allowed to stand.
86.
I, therefore, hold that any fiscal legislation that imposes a
Fee, must clearly spell out the nature of service to be rendered and
the reasonable timeline for the delivery of such service. The
legislation (including subordinate legislation) must provide a
complete mechanism including the consequences of stoppage of
collection of Fee or extension of time or refund of Fee in case the
project is delayed or cannot be executed in the proposed timeline,
respectively. The legislation must safeguard and protect the
reciprocity behind a Fee (unlike a tax) by providing corresponding
obligations and duties on the parties to the levy. The present Act
does not meet this fundamental requirement of a Fee levying
legislation, resulting in imposing an unconstitutional levy in the
garb of a Fee. This unlawful exaction (levy) offends the rights to
property, trade and non-discrimination of the appellants and is
hereby declared to be unconstitutional and illegal in its present
form.
Refund of the amount collected
87.
As a consequence, the amount of GIDC collected over the
years should be returned and refunded to the payers in full, unless
in some cases, it is impractical to so do. The Federal Government
shall constitute a Committee to work out a mechanism for refund
of GIDC so that payers of GIDC are fully restituted; be it the gas
consumers under the Act or the final consumers (people of
Pakistan). Even if the gas consumers have passed on the Fee to its
customers, technology may be available to credit such customers,
so that there is no unjust enrichment on the part of the State. The
amount of GIDC that cannot be refunded after exploring all other
avenues, shall remain earmarked and be utilized only for the
infrastructure development of the gas sector.
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 77 :-
Refund after Six Months
88.
I cannot lose sight of the fact that Energy is vital to
industry,
transport,
infrastructure,
information
technology,
agriculture, household users and more. Any nation with a growing
economy and improving living standards must secure a robust
energy supply. The future of economic development hinges on
energy security. Shortage of natural gas in the country is still a
reality and the Energy Sector is confronted with demand supply
gap which needs to be filled up. According to the latest Pakistan
Economic Survey, 2019-20 the indigenous natural gas contributes
around 38% in total primary energy supply mix of the country.
Pakistan produces around 4 Billion Cubic Feet Per Day (Bcfd)
against an unconstrained demand of 6 (Bcfd); the gas pipeline
projects in question are based on bilateral and multilateral
international agreements with other countries; a sum of Rs.295
billion has been collected as GIDC for the last almost 10 years.
Keeping these facts in mind, and especially the issue of energy
security, in the larger national interest, I allow the Federal
Government a period of six months to initiate appropriate
legislation in the light of the principles settled in this judgment
including a clear description of the services being rendered,
provision of a reasonable timeline for the delivery of service (supply
of natural gas) to the gas consumers and a statutory mechanism of
obligations and consequences that may arise, if the service is
delayed or is not delivered at all. In case the Federal Government
fails to do so, it shall refund the amount of GIDC, in the manner
mentioned above.
89.
These appeals are allowed in the above terms and the
petitions are converted into appeals and also allowed.
Islamabad,
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
Iqbal
Judge
Civil Appeals No.1113 to 1155 of 2017 etc.
-: 78 :-
ORDER OF THE COURT
By majority of two to one (Syed Mansoor Ali Shah, J
dissenting), all these appeals and petitions are dismissed. In the
light of this decision and the directions contained therein all listed
applications also stand disposed of.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
13th of August, 2020
| {
"id": "C.A.1113_2017.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE SAJJAD ALI SHAH
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1120 OF 2009
(On appeal against the judgment dated
05.06.2008 passed by the Islamabad High
Court, Islamabad in RFA No. 72/1998)
Capital Development Authority through its Chairman
… Appellant
VERSUS
Rana Munawar Khan
… Respondent
For the Appellant:
Malik Javed Iqbal Wains, ASC
For the Respondent:
Mr. Abdur Rashid Awan, ASC
Date of Hearing:
07.12.2020
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI, J.- This
appeal with leave of the Court has been directed against the
judgment dated 05.06.2008 passed by the learned Islamabad High
Court, Islamabad whereby the Regular First Appeal filed by the
appellant Capital Development Authority was dismissed and the
judgment and decree dated 06.09.1998 passed by the learned Civil
Judge 1st Class, Islamabad, was maintained.
2.
Briefly stated the facts of the matter are that on
21.01.1996 respondent filed a suit for declaration and permanent
injunction before the Senior Civil Judge, Islamabad, alleging that
he is allottee of plot No. 3-G, I/10 Markaz, Islamabad measuring
487.55 square yards through open auction being highest bidder of
Rs.34,61,605/-, which was accepted vide letter dated 15.12.1987;
that thereafter respondent immediately deposited 25% of the total
amount i.e. Rs.8,65,401/- and the balance amount was to be paid
Civil Appeal No. 1120/2009
2
in four installments; that according to clause (6) of the allotment
letter, the possession of the plot free from all encumbrances and
ready for construction was to be delivered to the respondent within
a period of one month i.e. on or before 14.01.1988 but the same
was delivered on 27.02.1988 without removing high tension wires,
electric poles, which were passing through all the commercial plots
of that area; that the respondent could not start construction well
within time due to the reason that possession of the plot was given
late, therefore, could not deposit the first installment, which was
due
on
01.03.1988;
that
respondent
made
numerous
representations to the appellant CDA for removing of high tension
wires etc but no heed was paid to his request; that on 25.04.1989,
the appellant issued notice to the respondent to deposit the
installments or in failure the plot would stand cancelled. This led
to filing of a suit by the respondent for declaration with the prayer
that appellant CDA may be directed to remove the high tension
wires from the plot and in the meanwhile the appellant may be
restrained to cancel the plot. However, the respondent withdrew
the said suit and submitted a complaint before the Wafaqi
Mohtasib (Federal Ombudsman) for rescheduling of payment and
waiving of the interest and delayed payment charges, which was
accepted by the Ombudsman and pursuant to the letter issued by
the Wafaqi Mohtasib Secretariate dated 26.09.1994, the appellant
CDA rescheduled the installment plan on 27.10.1994. It was the
claim of the respondent that after rescheduling, he had paid all the
installments within time but despite that the appellant CDA has
demanded an amount of Rs.26,01,099.46/- on account of delayed
payment charges vide letters dated 07.03.1995 and 03.01.1996.
Civil Appeal No. 1120/2009
3
The learned Trial Court vide its judgment dated 06.06.1998
decreed the suit. Being aggrieved, the appellant CDA filed Regular
First Appeal before the Islamabad High Court, but the same has
been dismissed vide impugned judgment. Hence, this appeal with
leave of the Court.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant inter alia contended
that the impugned judgment passed by the learned High Court is
non-speaking, suffers from misreading and non-reading of the
evidence and is based on misinterpretation of allotment letter,
which is not sustainable in law; that the evidence led by the
appellant has not been considered in its true perspective, which
has resulted into miscarriage of justice; that the learned courts
below misinterpreted clause (6) of the allotment letter, which does
not cast a duty on appellant to deliver possession, free from all
encumbrances, within one month of the issuance of letter rather it
was the duty of the respondent to take possession within one
month; that the second suit filed by the appellant was barred by
res judicata and the same was not proceedable; that the delayed
payment charges to the tune of Rs.26,01,099.46/- were due from
the respondent and the contention of the respondent that the same
have been waived off by Wafaqi Mohtasib is incorrect and that if
the delayed payment charges are waived off, the appellant would
suffer a great financial loss. He lastly contended that keeping in
view the facts and circumstances of this case, the suit of the
respondent is liable to be dismissed and the judgment of the
learned High Court may be set aside.
4.
Learned counsel for the respondent, on the other
hand, opposed the contentions of the learned counsel for the
Civil Appeal No. 1120/2009
4
appellant. He contended that both the suits filed by the respondent
were filed on different cause of action, therefore, the principle of
res judicata would not apply; that the rescheduling was made on
the direction of Federal Ombudsman and the respondent
accordingly paid the entire amount; that after payment of the dues
after rescheduling, the mater became past and closed transaction
and the respondent could not have been again asked to pay the
late payment charges. He lastly contended that the learned courts
below after considering the evidence led by him have rightly
decreed the suit, to which no exception can be taken.
5.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties and
have perused the case file.
6.
The main emphasis of the respondent as to why he did
not pay the installments well within time after allotment of plot is
that according to clause (6) of the lease agreement dated
15.12.1987, the possession of the plot free from all encumbrances
and ready for construction was to be delivered to him within a
period of one month i.e. on or before 14.01.1988 but the same was
delivered on 27.02.1988 without removing high tension wires and
electric poles, which were passing through all the commercial plots
of that area. It would be advantageous to reproduce the said clause
for ready reference. The same reads as under:-
“6.
The lessee shall take over possession of the
land within one month from the date of issue of this
letter, failing which possession shall be deemed to
have been taken over and execute an agreement
within one month from the date of possession and get
the same registered at his/her own cost. The lessee
shall submit building plans/drawings duly prepared
by any of the approved/registered/licensed Architect
of the CDA. However, in case of lessee desires to get
Civil Appeal No. 1120/2009
5
the building designed from CDA, same would be
arranged by the Deputy Director General (Design)
CDA on payment of designing fee @ 3% or designing
and top supervision fee @ Rs.6% of the estimated cost
of the building.
7.
There is nowhere mentioned in this clause that the
appellant Authority was bound to deliver the possession after
removing of high tension wires etc. However, it appears from the
noting portion of the CDA that Town Planner-I vide his memo
dated 23.01.1988 had informed that a overhead electric line is
encroaching the commercial plots in the south of I-10 Markaz but
the same was removed and the possession was handed over to the
respondent without any further encroachment. This finds force
from the possession letter dated 27.02.1988, wherein the
respondent has himself admitted that “there is no encroachment on
my plot”. The respondent has himself signed the possession letter
and certified that he has seen his plot and all its corners, there is
no encroachment on his plot, and no service line is passing within
his plot. Although possession was delivered to him late but the
delay was only of 40 to 45 days. The respondent had to pay the
first installment by 01.03.1988 but despite the fact that possession
was handed over to him on 27.02.1988, he did not pay the same.
The appellant CDA issued him a letter dated 08.04.1989 to make
the payment but instead of complying, he filed a suit for
permanent injunction on 17.04.1989, which prima facie shows
that he wanted to avoid payment accrued towards him. In the
written reply, it was the claim of the CDA that the respondent has
already made construction and removal of electric poles was just a
lame excuse with malicious intent. This stance of the appellant
Civil Appeal No. 1120/2009
6
CDA could not be denied by the respondent. The respondent had
also filed stay application in the earlier suit but the same was
dismissed on 11.07.1990. This suit was ultimately dismissed as
withdrawn vide order dated 22.02.1994. It appears that the only
purpose of the respondent was to evade payment while buying
time. Even after dismissal of his stay application on 11.07.1990,
he did not pay any installment. The proceedings before the Civil
Court in the earlier suit continued for a period of five years and
when the respondent saw that he would not be able to get a
favourable order, he withdrew the suit and approached the Federal
Ombudsman. The only basis on which the Federal Ombudsman in
its letter dated 26.09.1994 had directed rescheduling was that the
Vice Chairman CDA had already agreed vide para 89/ante of
noting portion dated 01.01.1994 that the case of the respondent
deserves re-scheduling. However, we have noted that although the
Vice Chairman CDA was of the view that the case of the
respondent deserves rescheduling but the same was without any
approval of the CDA Board. From the noting portion, it is clearly
apparent that the proposal of the Vice Chairman was resisted by
the other members rather the same was not approved. However, so
far
as
the
payment
of
delayed
charges
amounting
to
Rs.26,01,099/- is concerned, the CDA Board duly gave its
permission, which is available at page 162 of CMA No. 503 of
2020. So far as the plea of the appellant’s counsel that the
subsequent suit filed by the respondent was hit by res judicata, we
are reluctant to make any observation regarding this aspect
because we have been informed that the lease period is going to
expire on 15.12.2020, hence, any finding at this stage would be a
Civil Appeal No. 1120/2009
7
futile exercise whereas the case of the respondent is squarely a
case of high handedness against a statutory authority. This Court
cannot lose sight of the fact that both the courts below have
misread and misinterpreted evidence as well as clause (6) of the
agreement and came to the wrong conclusion.
8.
For what has been discussed above, we are of the
considered view that the judgments of the two courts below suffer
from misreading and non-reading of the evidence. Consequently,
we allow this appeal and set aside the impugned judgments.
9.
The above are the detailed reasons of our short order
dated 07.12.2020.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
7th of December, 2020
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1120_2009.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME CO-URT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk, HCJ
Mr. Justice Amir Hani Muslim
Mr. Justice Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhry
Civil Appeals No.1122, 1123, 1107 of 2013
& 173 and 174 of 2015.
(On appeal from judgment dated 9.5.2013 of the
Peshawar High Court, Peshawar, passed in
W.Ps.No.2987, 2764 of 2011 & 818-P/2012). And
against judgment dated 10.9.2014 of the Peshawar
High
Court,
Abbottabad
Bench,
passed
in
W.Ps.No.3219 & 475-P of 2014).
The Commandant, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Constabulary,
Headquarters Peshawar and another.
…Appellants.
(in all Appeals)
VS
Muhammad Nasir and others. (in C.A.No.1122/2013).
Sarad Khan and others (in C.A.No.1123/2013).
Muhammad Arif and others (in C.A.No.1107/2013).
Najeebullah and others (in C.A.No.173/2015).
Zakirullah and another (in C.A.No.174 of 2015)
…Respondents.
For the Appellants:
Ms. Shireen Imran, ASC.
Syed Rafaqat Hussain Shah, AOR.
(in C.As.No.1122, 1123 and 1107 of 2013).
Mian Shafaqat Jan, ASC.
Mr. M.S. Khattak, AOR.
(in C.As.No.173 & 174/2015).
For the respondents:
Hafiz S.A. Rehman, Sr.ASC.
1-40 in C.A.No.1122/2013)
1-34 in C.A.No.1123/2013)
1-18, 20-25, 27, 28, 30, 31
Mr. Abdul Latif Afridi, ASC.
33, 35, 37, 38, 40, 41, 43-51,
53-65 in C.A.No.173/2015
and for Respondent No.1 in
C.A.No.174/2015).
Date of hearing:
31.3.2015.
C.As.No.1122/13 etc.
2
JUDGMENT
AMIR HANI MUSLIM, J. – The relevant facts for the
purpose of disposal of these Appeals are that the Appellants were posted in
different Platoons of Frontier Constabulary which were deployed in different
areas of F.R Peshawar and F.R Kohat. They were dismissed from service on
the allegations of insubordination and cowardice. The Respondents filed
Appeals before the Federal Service Tribunal, Islamabad, which were
allowed, by various judgments passed on different dates and they were
reinstated in service with direction to the Appellants to hold de novo
inquiries against them and conclude the same within four months, providing
them full opportunity of hearing.
2.
After receipt of the judgments of the Federal Service Tribunal,
the Appellants without formally reinstating the Respondents, conducted de
novo inquiry in the light of directions of the Tribunal and dismissed all the
Respondents from service. The record shows that a second de novo inquiry
upon the direction of the Tribunal was conducted against some of the
Respondents, but they too were dismissed. The record further reveals that
even 5th de novo inquiry was conducted against some of the Respondents,
who were dismissed after such inquiries.
3.
Feeling aggrieved, this time the Respondents approached the
High Court, pleading therein that the orders of dismissal from service were
illegal and passed without affording them opportunity of hearing. The
learned High Court allowed all the Writ Petitions holding as under:-
“In case in hand, no doubt serious allegation were levelled
against the Petitioners but the standard of proof as well as
C.As.No.1122/13 etc.
3
the procedure adopted by the respondents, which is
otherwise too noticeable, from the comments filed by
respondents
before
this
Court,
without
proper
documentation and proper and elaborate answer to the
objections raised by the petitioners in their writ petitions
give no other reference but to hold that dismissal orders
resulted into miscarriage of justice. The remand of these
writ petitions would serve no good purpose too as
respondents have already conducted a number of inquiries
against the petitioners and another de novo inquiries would
do nothing except to increase more agonies while
petitioners have already suffered for more than four years
which was a sufficient punishment for any lapses on their
part (if any).
30.
This while allowing these writ petitions, we set
aside the impugned orders of dismissal of the petitioners
from their services and order their re-instatement into
service from the date when they were dismissed with all
consequential benefit of the posts from the said date except
the salary as there is no proof that petitioners remained
jobless for the whole duration of their dismissal.
4.
The Appellants challenged the judgments of the learned High
Court before this Court and leave was granted in these appeals, inter alia, to
consider whether the Respondents are Civil Servants. Hence these Appeals.
5.
The learned Counsel for the Appellants has contended that the
Respondents are Civil Servants and the jurisdiction of High Court was
barred under Article 212 of the Constitution. He submitted that once the
Respondents had obtained relief from the Federal Service Tribunal, they
could not have approached the High Court for the same relief. He next
contended that the findings of the High Court were erroneous on the point
that the Appellants had failed to comply with the provisions of Rule 18 of
the North West Frontier Constabulary Rules, 1958. In support of his
C.As.No.1122/13 etc.
4
submissions, he has relied upon the case of I.G Frontier Corps and others vs
Ghulam Hussain (2004 SCMR 1397).
6.
On the other hand, the learned Counsel for the Respondents
have contended that the Respondents are not Civil Servants and their terms
and conditions of service are regulated by the North-West Frontier
Constabulary Act, 1915, and the Rules framed there-under. They contended
that the learned High Court did have the jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the
matters relating to terms and conditions of service of the Respondent. They
next contended that the Appellants had recorded findings in violation of the
procedure prescribed under Rule 18 of the North West Frontier Constabulary
Rules of 1958 (hereinafter referred to as the Rules of 1958), therefore, the
learned High Court was justified in ordering their reinstatement.
7.
The Respondents’ Counsel next contended that the Appeals are
barred by time and should have been dismissed on the point of limitation, as
the grounds taken for condonation of delay are not plausible.
8.
We have heard the learned Counsel for the parties at length and
have perused the record. The Appellants are not Civil Servants as their terms
and conditions of service are regulated by the provisions of the North West
Frontier Constabulary Rules of 1958. The case law cited by the learned
Counsel for the Appellants is not relevant after the judgment of this Court in
the case of Muhammad Mubeen-us-Salam and others vs. Federation of
Pakistan (PLD 2006 SC 602), where this Court has held that the status of a
Civil Servant cannot be conferred on an employee of the organization by a
deeming clause which has its own statutory service Rules. The terms and
C.As.No.1122/13 etc.
5
conditions of service of the Respondents are regulated by the Act of 1915
which authorizes the Appellants to frame Rules. The Rules were framed in
1958 and are duly notified which regulates the terms and conditions of
service of the Respondents. The plea of the Appellants that the Respondents
are Civil Servants is without force in view of the judgment in the case of
Muhammad Mubeen-us-Salam and others (supra)
9.
The contention of the learned Counsel for the Appellants that
proper procedure was followed while dismissing the Respondents from
service, we have examined the procedure provided in Rule 18 (ibid) and the
material brought on record by the parties. The orders which were impugned
before the learned High Court are indicative of the fact that procedure as
defined in Rule 18 of the Rules of 1958 was not followed. Even the learned
High Court has observed in the impugned judgment that de novo inquiries
were conducted by the Appellants without following the procedure provided
in Rule 18 of the Rules of 1958. Once the learned High Court has held that
the procedure prescribed in Rule 18 (ibid) has not been followed while
dismissing the Respondents from service, it should have remanded the
matter to the department after reinstating the Respondents in service for de
novo inquiry.
10.
We, therefore, while partly allowing these Appeals remand the
matters to the departmental Authority of the Appellants to hold de novo
inquiry after reinstating the Respondents in service, by strictly following the
procedure provided in Rule 18 of the Rules of 1958 and pass appropriate
orders within four months from the date of communication of this judgment.
C.As.No.1122/13 etc.
6
11.
Since the points raised in the Appeals are of public importance,
therefore, the delay in filing the Appeals is condoned on the grounds taken
in the Applications for condonation of delay. The above are the reasons for
our short order of even date which reads as under:-
“For reasons to be recorded later, these appeals are
partially allowed and the impugned judgments of the High
Court are set aside to the extent of setting aside the order
of dismissal of the respondents by the Commandant
Frontier Constabulary. However, since the procedure laid
down in Rule 18 of the NWFP Frontier Constabulary
Rules, 1958, had not been followed during the inquiry
conducted against the respondents, a de novo inquiry
according to the said Rule may be conducted against the
respondents. In order to hold the inquiry the respondents
have to be reinstated. Since three inquiries have already
been held, the fresh inquiry shall be concluded within a
period of four months.”
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Islamabad the,
25th March 2015.
Approved for Reporting.
Sohail/**
| {
"id": "C.A.1122_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE GULAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1125 OF 2007
(On
appeal
against
the
judgment
dated
18.1.2005 of the High Court of Sindh, Karachi
passed in CP No.D-516 of 2004)
The Federation of Pakistan and others
…
Appellants
Versus
M/s Delta Innovations Ltd.
…
Respondent
For the appellants:
Dr. Farhat Zaffar, ASC.
Raja M.Iqbal, ASC
Mr.Asaf Fasihuddin Verdak, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR.
For the respondent:
Mr.Tariq Javed, ASC.
Date of hearing:
21.4.2015
JUDGMENT
MAQBOOL BAQAR, J.- Through the above appeal the
appellants have assailed the judgment dated 18.1.2006 of a
learned Division Bench of the High Court of Sindh, Karachi
whereby Constitution Petition No.D-516 of 2004, filed by the
respondent, was allowed.
2.
The respondent is engaged in the business of
manufacture and assembly of motorcycles in Pakistan. For the
said purpose, he imports parts/components of motorcycles. The
controversy in the matter is, as to whether the parts/ components
imported by the respondent for manufacture and assembly of his
motorcycles are amenable to custom duty @ 25% ad-voleram
under PCT heading 87.14, as claimed by the respondent, or @
90% as prescribed under PCT heading 87.11, as contended by the
appellants.
3.
The respondent has contended that since he imported
parts/components of motorcycles that fall within PCT heading
87.14 which provides for duty @ 25% ad-voleram and do not fall
within the description of PCT heading 87.11 which provides for
duty @ 90% ad-voleram, his consignments are chargeable to duty
@ 25% ad-voleram only.
4.
It is indeed true that parts/accessories of vehicles,
including that of motorcycles are chargeable to duty as prescribed
under PCT heading 87.14, but at the same time PCT heading
87.11, which provides for duty on motorcycles @ 90% ad-voleram,
also provides for 30% exemption on such duty in respect of
components for manufacturing of motorcycles in terms of SRO
No.436(1)/2001 dated 18.6.2001, as follows:-
“Assessable rates on account of Exemption or Regulatory Duty etc.
Exemption: (a) Components for the manufacture of motorcycles
falling under heading 87.11 [See S.R.O.No.436(1)/2001, reported
as PCTL 2001 St.950]
30% ad.val”
And therefore, it can clearly be seen that prescription under PCT
heading 87.14 is not available to parts/components imported for
the manufacture/assembly of motorcycles and such consignments
are amenable to duty under heading 87.11, however, with partial
exemption, where the same is available in terms of SRO
436(1)/2001, whereas the duty provided under heading 87.14 is
for commercial imports only. The above arrangement/scheme as
shall be discussed herein later has been designed to encourage
indigenization of the local automotive industry.
5.
The respondent, in view of the foregoing, cannot
successfully claim to be falling under PCT heading 87.14 and his
subject imports are clearly chargeable to duty under heading
87.11. He may, however, avail exemption under the aforesaid SRO
upon meeting the pre-requisite therefor and if he qualifies for the
same.
6.
We have noted that contrary to his present stance, that
duty on his imports is leviable under heading 87.14, the
respondent, way back in the January 2003, has himself applied
for availing the concession/partial exemption under the aforesaid
SRO, and was in fact so keen to avail the same that he obtained
an order from the learned Lahore High Court for issuance of the
requisite survey certificate to enable him to avail the SRO,
through writ petition No.307 of 2004, and in pursuance of the
said order, a provisional survey certificate was issued to the
respondent.
7.
Since, as noted above, the respondent has been issued
requisite survey certificate and has also obtained a deletion
programme in terms of the aforesaid SRO, and since the
appellants have alleged violation and non-adherence to the terms
of the SRO. We first need to examine the relevant aspects of the
SRO and note the allegations, before issuing any directive in the
matter.
8.
According to the appellants, the Government of
Pakistan in order to promote indigenization of automotive
industry,
introduced
concessionary
regime
through
SRO
No.436(1)/2001 dated 18.6.2001. In terms of the said SRO, and
subject to certain conditions prescribed thereby, the automotive
industry has been granted partial exemption in customs duty on
their import of components for the vehicles manufactured by
them. To avail the above concession, the recognized assemblers
has to obtain an approved deletion programme from Engineering
Development Board (EDB), which programme is devised after a
survey of the manufacturing facility by the Federal Board of
Revenue, whereupon a survey certificate is issued. The exemption
is granted in respect only of such components which are not
manufactured locally and are imported for the manufacture of
vehicles falling under PCT heading 87.11, including motorcycles.
Amongst the various conditions prescribed under the SRO is the
condition that manufacturer shall chalk out an indigenization
programme spreading over a maximum period of five years, within
which period, he shall achieve such minimum indigenization of
the manufacture of vehicle as approved by the indigenization
committee of the EDB and that in case of any default in the
indigenization programme, the components imported in violation
of the indigenization programme shall attract statutory duty
chargeable on the relevant CBU vehicles.
9.
The appellants, have alleged that the respondent
imported parts/components as an exempted importer and got
them cleared as spare parts @ 25% duty, and it was only after
they realized that the customs authorities are no more oblivious of
his clandestine import of CKD kits, the respondent approached
EDB and the FBR and applied for provision of deletion programme
and the survey certificate. The respondent was issued provisional
survey certificate along deletion programme on 13.3.2004.
However, instead of observing the said deletion programme, the
respondent again attempted to clear his goods on lower rate of
duty of 25% instead of 30% as provided under the aforesaid SRO.
It is further alleged that through the consignment in question, the
respondent has imported Main switch assembly R/L Chain, and
Handle Bar Pipe upper/lower, to be used in the assembly of
motorcycles and claimed assessment thereof under tariff head
87.14 which according to the appellants is prescribed for
commercial import and not for the industrial import, and that the
said consignment, if not covered under the aforesaid SRO is
chargeable to duty @ 90%.
10.
In the circumstances, and having already held that the
parts/components
being
imported
by
the
respondent
are
chargeable to duty under PCT heading 87.11 and that the
concession under the SRO 436(1)/2001 shall only be applicable to
the respondent in case he fully adhere to the terms and conditions
thereof. We, feel it appropriate to remand the matter to the
concerned adjudication office of the FBR to decide the same
accordingly.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad the
21st April 2015
(Aamir Sh.)
‘NOT APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
| {
"id": "C.A.1125_2007.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
In the Supreme Court of Pakistan
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali, HCJ
Mr. Justice Amir Hani Muslim
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Civil Appeals No.1125 & 1126 of 2014.
(On appeal from judgment of Lahore High Court, Rawalpindi Bench
dated 10.4.2014, passed in RFAs No.144 & 145 of 2003, respectively)
Sheikh Muhammad Ilyas Ahmed, etc
(in CA-1125/14)
Hamid Bashir, etc
(in CA-1126/14)
…Appellants
Versus
Pakistan through Secretary Ministry of Defence, Islamabad, etc
… Respondents
For the appellant:
Mr. Altaf Elahi Sheikh, Sr. ASC
For the Federation:
Mr. Sohail Mehmood, DAG.
Sqd. Ldr. Farhat Rafiq.
Date of hearing:
29.10.2015
JUDGMENT
Anwar Zaheer Jamali, C.J. – For the reasons set out in the
applications for condonation of delay, the delay in filing of these
appeals is condoned and the appeals are taken up for hearing on merit.
2.
At the outset, learned ASC for the appellants has made a
statement at the bar that in view of announcement of judgment by this
Court today in connected Civil Appeals No.1120 to 1124 of 2014, the
appellants are not pressing these appeals for seeking further
enhancement in the amount of compensation, but only to the extent of
non awarding of interest on the amount of compensation, as mandated
C.A No.1125/2014, etc
2
under section 34 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (in short “the Act of
1894”), which has been withheld for no valid reasons.
3.
A bare reading of above referred provision of the Act of
1894 reveals that awarding of such interest is statutory in nature, which
cannot be withheld. Thus, the appellants are fully entitled for grant of
compound interest at the rate of eight percent per annum from the
date of taking possession of acquired land till the date of payment of its
compensation, but for no valid reasons, such relief has escaped the
sight of the two Courts below.
4.
This being the position, these appeals are partly allowed to
the extent that the appellants will also be entitled for compound
interest at the rate of eight percent per annum from the date when
possession of the acquired land was taken over from them till the time,
compensation in terms of the impugned judgment dated 10.4.2014, is
paid to them.
Islamabad,
29th October, 2015.
Approved for reporting.
تﻗادﺻ
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
| {
"id": "C.A.1125_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR
Civil Appeal No.1127 of 2011
Against judgment dated 26.05.2009 passed by
the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar in T.R.
No.85 of 2007.
Commissioner of Income Tax (legal)
Regional Tax Officer, Peshawar.
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Safeer Jan
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Rehman Ullah, ASC
For the respondent(s):
Syed Mudassar Ameer, ASC
Date of Hearing:
05.11.2019
O R D E R
IJAZ UL AHSAN, J.- This appeal by leave of the
Court is directed against a judgment of the Peshawar High
Court, Peshawar dated 26.05.2009 (“impugned judgment”).
Through the impugned judgment, Income Tax Reference
No.85 of 2007 filed by the appellant was dismissed.
2.
Leave was granted by this Court on 13.12.2011.
For ease of reference, the leave granting order is reproduced
below:
“Leave of the Court is sought on the ground that
where the statute has provided a mode and mechanism for
money transaction any side way or by way to defeat such
mode and mechanism would tend to defeat the soul and
spirit of the law.
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1127 OF 2011
2
We, in this view of the matter, grant leave to consider
the point mentioned above.”
3.
The brief facts necessary for decision of this lis are
that the Respondent is an individual deriving income from
salary and agriculture. Return was filed declaring the income
at Rs.65,000/- for the assessment year 2001-02 and
Rs.230,000/- for the assessment year 2002-03. In view of the
fact that the declared income was not supported by
documentary proof and it was found that the source of
income and investment had swelled up exponentially, the
Department came to the conclusion that the Respondent had
concealed his income. Therefore, notice under Section 61 of
the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979 (since repealed) [hereinafter
to be referred as “the Ordinance”] alongwith detailed memo
was issued. The Respondent contested the notice and
produced wealth reconciliation statement, record of land
revenue, accounts of M/s Khalil Enterprises (a partnership
Firm), gift deeds from Mrs. Jani Begum, Mr. Ali Raza, Ms. Jan
Parwana and Mrs. Sarwat Mehmood. The said documentation
was produced to justify the accretion of Rs.11,490,640/-. The
Taxation Officer did not accept the contention of the
Respondent regarding withdrawal of the amount of Rs.2.9
million from the Firm and added the same under Section
13(1)(aa) of the Ordinance. Similarly, the amount of gifts
received from various members of the family was also added
under Section 12(18) of the Ordinance.
4.
As far as the addition of Rs.2.9 million withdrawn
from the account of the Firm is concerned, it was found that
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1127 OF 2011
3
the said amount was the share of the Respondent out of the
income of the Firm namely, M/s Khalil Enterprises. The said
Firm was an existing assessee of the Circle. The amount was
fully explained as reflected in the Wealth Statements and
Wealth Reconciliation Statements. Since the Respondent had
fully explained the amount in question as his share out of the
income of the Firm that accumulated over the years. This fact
was duly supported by the record including audited balance
sheet showing that the said amount was fully tax paid.
Consequently, no addition under Section 13(1)(aa) of the
Ordinance could be made. The said issue is not before us.
5.
As far as the amount gifted to the Respondent by
other share holders of the Firm through gift deeds executed
between the partners is concerned, the Assessing Officer had
added the said amount under Section 12(18) of the Ordinance
for the reason that the transaction had not been undertaken
through banking channels. The said finding of the Taxation
Officer was challenged before the Commissioner of Income
Tax (Appeals), who set aside the same, vide order dated
15.09.2005. This order was upheld by the Income Tax
Appellate Tribunal and was not disturbed by the learned High
Court.
6.
The learned counsel for the Appellant has
repeated the same argument to the effect that the Taxation
Officer was justified in adding the amounts allegedly received
by the Respondent by way of gifts from other partners of the
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1127 OF 2011
4
Firm in view of the fact that the transactions in question were
not through banking channels.
7.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties
and examined the record. Section 12(18) of the Ordinance
appears to be relevant in the present case. For ease of
reference, the said provision of law is reproduced below:
“Where any sum claimed, or shown, to have been received
as loan or advance or gift by an assessee during any income
year commencing on or after the first day of July, 1998, from
any person, not being a banking company, or a financial
institution notified by the Central Board of Revenue for this
purpose, otherwise than by a crossed cheque drawn on a
bank, or through a banking channel from a person holding a
National Tax Number, the said sum shall be deemed to be
the income of the assessee for the said income year
chargeable to tax under this Ordinance.”
8.
A plain reading of Section 12(18) of the Ordinance
shows that the said provision is attracted when loans,
advances and gifts are received in cash. However, in the case
before us, admittedly, no cash exchanged hands. Members of
the AOP had only authorized the Respondent to withdraw a
certain amount from their share in the AOP. As such no cash
had been paid or received which fact has clearly been
mentioned in the gift deeds executed between the partners.
The transaction was ex facie reflected in book entries made in
the records of the AOP. Further, the language of the gift deeds
is clear that the amount gifted was liable to be withdrawn by
the donee (Respondent) from the share of donors in M/s
Khalil Enterprises which further lends support to the findings
recorded by three lower fora that only a right was given to the
Respondent to withdraw the amounts in question from time
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1127 OF 2011
5
to time from the share of the donors in the AOP and that no
transaction which could be interpreted as immediate and
actual transfer of funds had taken place.
9.
This being the position, we are in no manner of
doubt that the provisions of Section 12(18) of the Ordinance
were not attracted in this case and the Commissioner of
Income Tax as well as the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and
the learned High Court were correct in recording findings to
that effect. Learned counsel for the Appellant has not been
able to persuade us to take a different view from the one
taken by the lower fora.
10.
For the afore-noted reasons, we do not find any
merit in this appeal. The same is accordingly dismissed. No
order as to costs.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
ISLAMABAD, THE
05.11.2019
ZR/*
‘Not Approved For Reporting’
| {
"id": "C.A.1127_2011.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE DOST MUHAMMAD KHAN
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
Against order dated 04.4.2012 passed
by Lahore High Court, Lahore in W.P.
No.3974 of 2005
Major ® Pervez Iqbal
Appellant(s)
Versus
Muhammad Akram Almas, etc.
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mian Ashaq Hussain, ASC
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
For Respondent No.1:
Mian Asrar ul Haq, Sr. ASC
For Respondent No.3:
Tehseen Sadiq, Addl. Commissioner (FBR)
For Respondent No.5:
Nemo
Date of Hearing:
10.01.2017
JUDGMENT
Mushir Alam, J-. Appellant has impugned order dated
04.4.2012 whereby the learned Judge in Chambers of the Lahore High
Court, Lahore dismissed the CMA No.2565 of 2009, under section
12(2) of the CPC, challenging the judgment of the very Court dated
25.4.2007, whereby Writ Petition No.3974 of 2005, filed by one
Muhammad Akram Almas, Respondent No.1 herein, seeking writ of
mandamus, against the Income Tax Authorities to issue sale certificate
and possession of the property of tax defaulter, purchased by him in
open auction and, further direction to the Military Estate Officer (MEO)
and others to affect mutation of said property in his favour, which was
allowed.
2.
Leave in the matter was granted vide order dated
5.9.2013, which reads as follow:-
“Submits that respondent No.1 filed a constitution petition seeking a
direction that the Income Tax Department should issue a sale
certificate in his favour pursuant to the auction of petitioner’s
property measuring 7 Kanals at a paltry amount of Rs.20,54,047/-
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
2
not withstanding the fact that the sale in auction had abated in view
of Rule 150 read with Rule 111 of the Income Tax Rules, 1982; that
respondent himself gave incorrect address of the petitioner in the
writ petition filed by him, on account of which petitioner was neither
served nor heard by the learned High Court while passing the
judgment dated 25.4.2007.
2. Having heard petitioner’s learned counsel at some length, leave
is granted inter alia to consider the issue raised.”
3.
In order to appreciate the controversy raised in the instant
appeal, it would be necessary to recapitulate facts forming matrix of
controversy.
4.
Appellant, adjudged tax defaulter, after service of a show
cause notices as required under the law, he was arrested on
22.8.2000; he was released on commitment to clear the dues in
installments. However, on his failure to adhere to such payment
schedule, he was again arrested and produced before the Tax
Recovery Officer (TRO) on 23.12.2000. The appellant in order to earn
his release, per rules disclosed the property subject matter of instant
proceedings, gave consent in his own writing for the attachment and
auction of the property, for the recovery of tax dues, as a result
thereof, subject property was attached and put to auction after
fulfilling all the requirements of Rules 141 & 142 of IT Rule, 1982.
Auction succeeded second time and the respondent No.1 was declared
successful on 31.5.2001, entire amount of Rs.64,25,000/- was
deposited within time. Auction purchaser also paid additional amount
of Rs.1,92,750/- as gain tax on the sale of this property, which
otherwise was payable by the appellant.
5.
From the record it seems that Military Estate Officer
(MEO), requested for the deferment of the sale on the ground, inter
alia; that the property has not been mutated in the name of the
appellant. The matter shuttled between the TRO, MEO and Station
Commander Head Quarter, Sialkot Cantt without any resolution. From
the record it appears that the appellant succeeded in obtaining a
decree dated 21.12.1994 in a Civil Suit No.761/1993, for specific
performance in respect of subject property held on old grant by the
previous owners. In execution proceedings, conveyance deed dated
2.3.2000 was executed in his favour, however, for obvious reasons he
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
3
did not followed up his application for the mutation of subject property
in his favour from the MEO, apparently, for this reason his name was
not recorded in the General Land Register (GLR) maintained by the
MEO, which provided a cause to the MEO, to make request to defer
the auction.
6.
Respondent No.1, when failed to obtain the sale certificate
from TRO, needed for effecting mutation of the property in his name,
as a last resort filed Writ Petition No.3974 of 2005, which as noted
above was allowed on 25.4.2007 and the Income Tax Authorities were
directed to issue sale certificate, which was issued in favour of the
Respondent No.1, on 2.5.2007. MEO was also directed to consider the
application for mutation of the auction purchaser in accordance with
law. MEO unsuccessfully challenged the order of the High Court, before
this Court through Civil Appeal No.529-L of 2009, which was dismissed
vide order dated 20.7.2011; however, right of the appellant to pursue
his Application under section 12(2) CPC; (filed on 01.6.2009) then
pending before the learned Lahore High Court was preserved. The
application, was ultimately heard and dismissed, vide impugned order,
essentially on the ground that the appellant had neither challenged
nor, availed the remedy against the auction in terms of Rule 127 of
Income Tax Rules, 2002 (contemporary Rule 106 of IT Rules 1982).
7.
Mian Ashiq Hussain, learned ASC appearing for the
appellant, vehemently contended that on the application made by the
MEO/Station Commander, the TRO had deferred the sale vide order
dated 30.6.2001 available at page No.86 of the main paper book,
which according to learned ASC amounted to setting aside of the
auction sale in terms of Rules 111, 141 and 150 of IT Rules, 1982
requiring fresh proclamation, which was not issued. Therefore, auction
if any, is of no consequences. To a specific query of the Court, learned
counsel candidly conceded that the appellant did not challenge the
auction sale held on 31.5.2001. He however, maintained that under
the law auction sale could be challenged by any person and in instant
case it was challenged by the MEO, in accordance with IT Rules, 1982.
It was next urged that, impugned judgment of the High Court is a
result of fraud and misrepresentation, correct address of the appellant
was not disclosed by the Respondent No.1, appellant has not been
heard, impugned judgment is liable to be setaside.
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
4
8.
Mian Asrar ul Haq, learned Senior ASC appearing for the
respondent No.1 vehemently opposed the appeal. According to him
auction was held with the consent of appellant. Auction, succeed in
second attempt on 31.5.2001. Respondent No.1/Auction purchaser
had deposited the entire sale consideration within time. It was urged
that since the auction purchaser was denied the sale certificate on the
intervention of MEO, on wholly unjustified grounds, who otherwise had
no interest in the property, therefore he was compelled to file writ
petition, which was allowed. It was argued that appellant consented to
the attachment and auction of subject property. According to him, Sale
Certificate was issued on 2.5.2007 on the directions of High Court;
appellant had a right to challenge the auction/sale within 30 days from
the date thereof under the IT Rules 1982, which he failed. He cannot
be allowed to challenge the auction, through ‘collateral proceedings’
under section 12 (2) CPC filed on 1.6.2009 after more than 8 years.
9.
Mr.
Tehseen
Sadiq,
Additional
Commissioner
(FBR)
representing Tax Authorities, also supported the impugned order.
According to him, attachment and auction of the appellant’s property
was carried out strictly in accordance with Income Tax Act, 1979 and
IT Rules, 1982. The appellant was given several opportunities to clear
his dues, which he failed. Appellant volunteered the attachment and
auction, which was held twice, to his knowledge, which he never
challenged before the TRO and or the hierarchy provided under the IT
Rules 1982.
10.
We have heard the arguments and perused the record.
Admittedly appellant was adjudged a tax defaulter, Certificate to such
an effect in terms of sub section (1) of section 93 of the Income Tax
Ordinance, 1979 read with Rule 100 of the IT Rules 1982 was issued
by the Income Tax Officer to the TRO, to effect the recovery, by
attachment, arrest and sale of the property of the defaulter/Appellant.
There is also no dispute as to the service of the show cause notice
under section 93 (1) of Income Tax Act, 1979 read with Rule 162(1) of
the Income Tax Rules, 1982. It is not denied by the appellant that he
was arrested and he agreed to pay dues in installments, which
commitment he could not adhered. It is a matter of record that he was
again arrested and produced before the TRO on 23.12.2000 and, in
order to earn his release, the appellant disclosed his whole of the
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
5
property and placed the same at the disposal of TRO for the recovery
of tax dues in terms of Rule 167 (1) of IT Rules 1982, which reads as
follows:-
“167. Release--(1) The Tax Recovery Officer may order
the release of a defaulter who has been arrested in
execution of a Certificate upon being satisfied that he
has disclosed the whole of his property and has placed it
at the disposal of the Tax Recovery Officer and that he
has not committed any act in bad faith.”
The appellant in terms of above rule also authorised the TRO to
auction the said property and recover the amount due, endorsement in
his writing reads as under:-
�� � � � م� �اذ ے�" ��رذ � �ا� ۔� � دا�� ���
� � ٹ�� ل� ت� �ا٧٣ � م� ے� � � ٹ��
�ر�٢٠٠٠۔٠٣۔٠٢� �� ى�ر � �ر � � �� � ى�ر � �
Attach�ر� ��� � � ��ا� سا ۔ں�
سا � � ىر�ر �ا � �
�Auction �
� سا ۔�� � ضا�ا �� � � ے Attachment
�ا �
"۔� �د� �د جآ د� � � � ��
11.
Consequently, his property was attached second time, in
terms of rule 137 of the IT Rules 1982. It is a matter of record that, an
attempt to obtain stay from Civil Court failed and so also Lahore High
Court in Civil Revision No.1261 of 2001 declined any indulgence to
stay the auction vide order dated 7.06.2001. Subject property was
auctioned on 31.5.2001; Respondent No.1 was declared the successful
bidder. Appellant was fully aware of the auction, chose not to avail the
remedy under Rule 111, 149 and or Rule 150 of IT Rules 1982 and did
not challenged the auction till before 1.6.2009, that too in a collateral
proceedings under section 12 (2) CPC.
12.
In terms of scheme of IT Rules 1982, where no application
is made for setting aside the sale of the attached property under Rule
149 or 150 of the Rules ibid; or where any such application is made
and is dismissed, the TRO, in terms of Rule 152 ibid is obliged, on
payment of entire bid amount, to confirms the sale, which than
becomes absolute and consequently TRO is further obligated in terms
of Rule 154 of the IT Rules 1982 to issue the Sale Certificate.
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
6
13.
The Respondent No.1 being declared successful bidder
having paid the entire bid amount in the sum of Rs.64,25,000/- on
14.6.2001 and further sum of Rs.1,92,750 as gain tax due and
payable by the appellant. Respondent was denied sale certificate and
became victim of brawl between the TRO and MEO, filed W.P No.3974
of 2005 dated 11.3.2005, before the Lahore High Court seeking writ of
mandamus against the TOR and MEO, to perform their legal duties,
which Writ Petition was allowed on 25.4.2007, consequently TRO
issued Sale Certificate to the Respondent No.1 on 2.5.2007.
14.
It may be observed that sub-section (4) of section 93 of
the Ordinance, 1979 bestows on the TRO similar power as are vested
in a Civil Court for the recovery of amount under a decree. Provisions
contained in Chapter IX (Rules 99 to 190) of the IT Rules, 1982 are
complete Code akin to provisions of Order 21 rule 82 to rule 104 CPC,
whereby the tax defaulter and or any person having any right or
interest in the property attached and or sold pursuant to attachment
order for the recovery of arrears of tax, may seek stoppage of sale,
(Rule 111 ibid) challenge such auction/sale, before the TRO, (as
provided for under Rule 149 and 150 respectively of Rules ibid).
Against any order of sale hierarchy of appeal under Rule 173, which is
subjected to Revision under Rule 174 and Review under Rule 175 ibid;
is provided, thus elaborate procedure for attachment and sale of
immovable property of the defaulter and host of remedies pre and post
auction/sale are provided under the Income Tax Rules, 1982. It is
settled position in law that where special law provides elaborate
mechanism and procedure to challenge certain action under the
scheme of special law, recourse to general law and or challenge to
such action, that too through collateral proceedings are not approved.
Neither the Appellant nor any other respondents herein filed any
application against the auction of the subject property within the
contemplation of IT Rule 1982. In instant case rule 111 ibid, which
may justify stoppage of sale, on satisfactory proof of payment of tax
dues, before the hammer is struck down in favour of the highest
bidder, was not availed by the appellant, thus it cannot be pressed into
service.
15.
Arguments of learned ASC for the appellant, that the
objections filed by the MEO could always be treated as an application
Civil Appeal No.1129 of 2013
7
under Rule 149 or Rule 150 ibid; are flawed for the simple reasons
that sale under referred rules could only be annulled on meeting twin
conditions set down therein; with a rider that such challenge is made
within 30 days from the date of sale. First condition is the deposit of
the amount mentioned in the proclamation of sale with 8% interest
and second is to pay a sum equal to 10% of the purchase money to
the purchaser, admittedly such conditions as noted herein were neither
met by the MEO nor by the appellant, therefore, the objections of
MEO, which even otherwise, were on altogether different premise,
could not be treated as challenge to auction sale under the referred
rules. The appellant cannot question sale on the ground of irregularity
in service in terms of Rule 150 ibid; when he himself had authorised
the attachment and sale of his property as noted above. It may be
observed that any error or irregularity in or in publishing or conduct of
sale of immoveable property in terms of Rule 134 does not vitiate sale.
Even otherwise, all such grounds, if at all available could have been
raised before the form and hierarchy provided under the IT Rules 1982
and not in collateral proceedings under section 12(2) CPC.
16.
As noted above, elaborate provisions contained in Chapter
IX of the IT Rules, 1982 are self contained code, providing elaborate
procedure for the recovery of tax arrears, attachment, arrest and sale
of property of defaulter and challenge to sale by the defaulter and or
any other person having interest in the attached and sold property.
Admittedly, the appellant who was adjudged tax defaulter in contested
legal proceedings up to the High Court. Appellant failed to challenge
the sale before a competent forum in the manner provided as
discussed above, cannot be allowed to challenge the sale, in a
collateral proceedings arising out of a writ of mandamus against the
Income Tax Authorities and MEO for the issuance of Sale Certificate
and effecting mutation in his name.
17.
In this view of the matter, finding no merits in this appeal,
it is accordingly dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
ISLAMABAD, THE
10th January, 2017
arshed/*
Approved for Reporting
| {
"id": "C.A.1129_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Mian Saqib Nisar
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Maqbool Baqar
Civil Appeal No.1132 of 2007
Against judgment dated 08.11.2005 of High
Court
of
Sindh
at
Karachi,
passed
in
Constitution Petition.No.D-687 of 2004.
Hyderabad Cantonment Board
Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Raj Kumar & others
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Anwar Mansoor Khan, Sr. ASC
For Respondents#7-12:
Mr. Qasim Mir Jat, Addl. AG, Sindh
Dr. Saeed Ahmed Qureshi, Focal
person for Chief Secretary of Sindh
Ms. Lubna Salahuddin, Addl. Secy.
Local Government.
Date of Hearing:
20.05.2015
JUDGMENT
Mushir Alam, J-. Leave to appeal was granted on
17.04.2007 to consider the following:-
“After hearing the learned counsel for the parties, we find
that the question as to whether the Cantonment Executive
Officer is empowered under Cantonment Act, 1924 to
charge the service fee from the vehicles being used as public
transport for use of the facilities provided for the
convenience of passengers at halting places fixed under
Motor Vehicle Ordinance, 1965 read with Motor Vehicle
Rules, 1969 would require consideration in the light of
relevant provision in the above referred statutes and the
rules framed thereunder. Therefore, we grant leave in this
petition to consider the above question.”
2.
Backdrop forming matrix of instant appeal appears to
be that the appellant-Hyderabad Cantonment Board levied parking
fee on commercial vehicles plying within Hyderabad city on each and
every stop i.e. general bus stand situated in the cantonment area of
Hyderabad through its contractors, which action was successfully
challenged before the High Court of Sindh through Constitution
Petition No.D-687 of 2004 and a learned Division Bench of the High
Court vide impugned judgment dated 08.11.2005, also reported as
Raj Kumar v. Hyderabad Cantonment Board (2006 MLD 549), on
C. A.No.1132 of 2007
2
examining various provisions of the Cantonment Act, 1924 including
Sections 25, 60, 61, 62 and 200 thereof came to the conclusion that
“since there was no provision in the Cantonment Act, 1924
empowering the Cantonment Board to charge parking fee, such
levy was without lawful authority”.
3.
Mr. Anwar Mansoor Khan, learned Sr.ASC, representing
the appellant-Hyderabad Cantonment Board, has contended that the
Appellant-Cantonment Board, has established Bus Stands at various
halting places which maintain waiting rooms and wash rooms for
ladies and gents and further facilities for the bus owners to park
their buses for the purpose of collecting the passengers. It was urged
that on account of such services, a nominal fee was imposed and was
being collected through contractors. According to him, the
Appellant-Cantonment Board, under Section 200 of the Cantonment
Act, 1924 is fully empowered to impose such fee. To support his
contention he has placed reliance on the case of Federation of
Pakistan v. Durrani Ceramics (2014 SCMR 1630). It was urged
that fee is charged in respect of services provided, therefore, no
exception to it could be taken.
4.
It may be observed that said case does not support the
case of the appellant-Cantonment Board. In the cited case validity of
Gas Infrastructure Development Cess Act, 2011 was successfully
challenged in the High Court being ultra vires to the Constitution.
On examining the legality of the Act, 2011 this Court came to a
conclusion that subject Cess was not a tax and was not covered by
the Entry relating to imposition of levy of tax under Part-1 of the
Federal Legislative List, and it was accordingly held; not validly
levied in accordance with the Constitution.
5.
Mr. Anwar Mansoor, learned ASC for the Appellant-
Cantonment Board has fairly brought to the notice of this Court a
judgment of House of Lord reported as McCarthy & Stone
(Development) Ltd. v. London Borough of Richmond Upon Thames
(1994 SCMR 1393), which goes against the Appellant. In the cited
case, the Appellant were charged fee under Section 87 (1) of the
Local Government Planning and Land Act, 1980, which was
unsuccessfully challenged before the Council, being beyond the
C. A.No.1132 of 2007
3
scope of the referred Act of 1980, the Appellant failed in the Court of
Appeals, which issue was then taken to the House of Lords. The
House of Lords considered the legality of the policy of the Council of
the respondent London Borough of Richmond upon Thames (the
Council), which it adopted on 2nd July 1985 and under which it had
made a charge for consultations concerning speculative development
or redevelopment proposal between the developers and the
Council’s. Developer engaged into preliminary consultation prior to
making formal application for planning permission, he was charged.
Such charges were paid twice for the consultation under protest,
developer made unsuccessful representation before the Council
followed by unsuccessful appeal before the Court of Appeals (1990 2
WLR 1294), which was challenged. House of Lords, on examining
the power and function of the Local Authority came to a conclusion
that fee within the contemplation of the Act, 1980 relates only to
planning application and not to any pre-application inquiries or
consultations. It was accordingly held that local government cannot
charge for services unless it is required by statute to provide such
services.
6.
Charging
provisions
in
any
statute
are
strictly
construed. It was conceded by the learned ASC for the Appellant-
Cantonment Board that any pecuniary burden, by whatever
nomenclature it may be inflicted may it be in the name of tax, cess,
fee, toll, or rate etc could only be inflicted, provided it has a valid
statutory sanction.
7.
Mr. Anwar Mansoor Khan, learned Sr.ASC for the
appellant has placed reliance on Section 200 of the Cantonment Act,
1924, which according to him provides legal backing for the subject
fee. The said provision for ease of reference is reproduced as under:-
“200. Levy of stallages, rents and fees.- A [Board]
may-
(a) charge for the occupation or use of any stall, shop,
standing, shed or pen in a public market, or public
slaughter-house, or for the right to expose goods for sale in
a public market, or for weighing or measuring goods sold
therein, or for the right to slaughter animals in any public
slaughter-house, such stallages, rents and fees as it thinks
fit; or
(b) with the sanction of the [Competent Authority], farm the
stallages, rents and fees leviable as aforesaid or any portion
thereof for any period not exceeding one year at a time; or
C. A.No.1132 of 2007
4
(c) put up to public auction, or with the sanction of the
[Competent Authority], dispose of by private sale, the
privilege of occupying or using any stall, shop, standing,
shed or pen in a public market or public slaughter-house for
such term and on such conditions as it thinks fit.”
8.
Extraction of money in any form may it be a tax, cell,
toll fee, charge or rate or levy by whatever nomenclature it is
classified could be extracted by the government and or public
authority under a valid legislative instrument by the competent
legislature (one may refer to Article 70 read with Article 73 (1A)(3)
(a), Article 77 read with Article 141 read with Entry No.54 of the
Federal Legislative List). A bare perusal of the provision of Section
200 of the Act, 1924 as reproduced above, shows that it is “levy of
stallages rent and fee” for providing stall, shop, standing shed, pen
and for other defined commercial activities on the vendors dealing in
goods and for the slaughter of animals in public market or public
slaughter houses respectively and that too subject to sanction by the
competent authority. Parking fee is not envisioned under the
referred provision. Cantonment Board has no authority to enlarge
the scope of charging section and include, conjecture and or read
some activity which is not envisioned or is not the contemplation of
the charging Section 200 ibid as relied upon by the learned ASC for
the appellant-Cantonment Board.
9.
In a case reported as “Exide Pakistan Limited Vs.
Cantonment Board (2012 CLC 1124)”, imposition of “Shop Board
Fee” under Section 200 of the Cantonment Act, 1924 was challenged.
The High Court examined various provisions of the Act of 1924 and
came to a conclusion that “Shop Board Fee” appears to be an entirely
different genre of fee more akin to advertisement/Signboard [fee] of
the shop, which did not fall within the contemplation of stallages,
rent and fee within the sanction of Section 200 of the Cantonment
Act, 1924.”
10.
Learned counsel was not able to point out any other
provisions of Cantonment Act, 1924 that could empower and or
authorize the Cantonment Board to charge the subject parking fee.
Mr. Anwar Mansoor Khan, learned ASC for the appellant-
Cantonment Board, vainly attempted to argue that under the
Cantonment Ordinance, 2002, the Cantonment Board is specifically
empowered to levy parking fee in terms of Section 243 read with
C. A.No.1132 of 2007
5
Entry No.9 of the first schedule which provides “fee for parking of
vehicles on site provided by the Cantonment administration”.
11.
Indeed, such power to impose parking fee is available
under the Cantonment Ordinance, 2002. But it is of no avail to the
Appellant for the simple reason that such Ordinance has not as yet
been enforced. In terms of subsection (3) of section 1 of the
Ordinance, 2002, the Ordinance, or any provision thereof, will
become operational only on such date as may be notified by the
Federal Government. Mr. Anwar Mansoor Khan has fairly conceded
that no such notification has been issued so far. Such arguments
failed before the High Court. That being the legal position, he cannot
rely on any law to justify impugned parking fee, which is still in
hibernation and not implemented as yet. No other contention was
raised. No infirmity in the impugned judgment is found.
12.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed.
Judge
Judge
Judge
ISLAMABAD, THE
20th of May, 2015
Not Approved For Reporting
M.Zubair/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1132_2007.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1137 OF 2008
(Against the judgment dated 25.4.2006 of the
Lahore High Court, Lahore passed in LPA
No.169 of 1968)
M/s Beach Luxury Hotels, Karachi
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
M/s Anas Muneer Ltd. etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
For respondent No.1:
Mr. Najam-ul-Hassan Kazmi, Sr. ASC
Date of hearing:
19.11.2015
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- This is an appeal filed against the judgment
delivered by a division bench of the Lahore High Court in ICA 169 of 1968 in terms
whereof the judgment delivered by a learned single judge of the High Court was set
aside and the case was decided in favour of the present Respondent. CPLA No.665
of 2006 was filed against the said judgment. The Respondent appeared before this
court and unsuccessfully opposed the grant of leave to appeal, inter alia, on the
ground that an appeal lay as of right in the present case and hence leave to appeal
should not be granted. It was, however, contended on behalf of the Appellant that the
value at which the disputed property was transferred showed the transfer price as
being Rs.44,790.0 which is below Rs.50,000 and on the basis thereof his objection
was over ruled. A review petition has been filed against the said order. However, it
is not necessary to re-examine the question as to whether the transfer price was below
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 2 :-
Rs.50,000 or not since this court has already granted a moratorium in relation to such
petitions.
2.
On the merits, the main objection raised on behalf of the Respondent before us
was that the order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner in terms whereof the matter
was re-opened disregarded the fact that prior thereto Ordinance No.II of 1962 had
come into force with effect from 13.1.1962 and in terms thereof the provision of sub-
section (2) and (4) of Section 20 of the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act, 1958 stood omitted. It was accordingly argued that the
Settlement Department did not have the jurisdiction to re-open the case.
3.
The essential facts of the case may now be considered. The property known
as Nedous Hotel was transferred by means of a public auction. The auction notice
states that the evacuee property known as Nedous Hotel would be sold on
21.08.1961. The auction was to be conducted by the Additional Settlement
Commissioner, Lahore and presided over by the Settlement Commissioner (in
dispute). The highest bid was tendered by Mr. Avari (hereinafter referred to as the
Appellant) in the sum of Rs.1,21,00,000/- and in consequence thereof a Permanent
Transfer Certificate was duly issued to him in which the area of the property was
specified as being 96 kanals, one marla and 12 sq. feet. The boundaries were also
specified as being on the north , PIA plot, WPIDC plot, Transport House and CSC
Office and in the south Upper Mall, on the east Al-Hamra Arts Council and on the
west WAPDA House. The Appellant’s bid of Rs.1,21,00,000 had earlier been
accepted by the Chief Settlement Commissioner on 7.9.1961. Although the
permanent transfer certificate was issued on 6.10.1964 much prior thereto on
9.1.1962 the Appellant submitted a written application. By means of this letter it was
submitted that at the time the possession of Nedous Hotel was given to him it was
brought to the notice of the officer delivering possession that an area measuring
approximately 530 sq. yards, or about 1½ kanals, belonging to Nedous Hotel and
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 3 :-
lying between the Mall and the northwestern wing of the Hotel, had been enclosed by
a wall and it was occupied by a service station. It was stated that at that time an
assurance was given that the said area occupied by the service station would be
recovered and possession handed over to him. It was further stated that the matter
was also brought to the notice of the Settlement Commissioner to whom the letter
was addressed and he repeated the same assurance. It was requested therefore that
the appropriate action should be taken. Reliance was placed by the Appellant on a
further letter as well dated 11th April which was addressed to the Chief Secretary,
Government of the West Pakistan. This complained that his earlier letter had not
evinced any response either from the Chief Settlement Commissioner or any other
functionaries. The request was repeated that the said land should be handed over to
him so that the total area of 96 kanals one marla and 12 sq. feet would be handed
over to him. The Hotel was opened on 12th February 1962 as a going concern. Since
the Government wanted the Hotel to start functioning urgently because of the
shortage of accommodation the request was therefore made that the Chief Settlement
Commissioner should hand over the area in question after an actual measurement and
by removing the encroachment by M/s. Shahnawaz Limited, the occupant (i.e. Anas
Muneer Limited, the Respondent) as soon as possible.
4.
By means of a letter dated 29.1.1962 which was sent by the Settlement
Commissioner to the Additional Settlement Commissioner the matter was re-opened.
This letter is important and is reproduced below:
“OFFICE OF THE
CHIEF SETTLEMENT & REHABILITATION COMMISSIONER
PAKISTAN
11-Egorton Road,
Lahore
No. 106-F&M-Reh/62
Dated 29.1.1962
From
Settlement Commissioner (Industries)
Lahore.
To
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 4 :-
Addl: Settlement Commissioner,
Lahore.
Sub:- Disposal of the big mansions & hotels
Property Nos. S-19-R-85 known as Nedous Hotel,
Upper Mall, Lahore.
Two units bearing Nos. S-10-R-85A (Khasra No. 1048) and S-19-R-
85A (2) Khasra No. 1047 have been transferred to M/S Shahnawaz Serving
station Ltd. The Mall, Lahore against one NS from. Only one unit could be
transferred to then. The Unit No. S-19-R-85A(2) Khasra No. 1047 is a part of
the Nedous Hotel which has since been auctioned. The transfer of this unit in
favour of M/S Shahnawaz Ltd. is illegal and calls for immediate cancellation.
2.
The Chief Settlement Commissioner, Pakistan has order that you may
please re-examine the case and pass necessary or after hearing the parties
under intimation to this office.
3.
The relevant file of the Deputy Settlement Commissioner Lahore of
this case containing pages 1 to 45 also sent herewith.
DEPUTY SETTLEMENT COMMISSIONER (1)
for,
Settlement Commissioner (Industries)
Lahore.
No. 106-F-F&M-Reh/62
Dated ___________________1962
5.
The foundation of the above letter is the clear cut legal position as set out in
the Act in terms of which only one property could be transferred to a non-evacuee.
The question, therefore, was whether the Respondent had obtained more than one
property. If so, the transfer would be illegal and would lead to cancellation.
6.
At this stage it would be appropriate to examine the title of the Respondent.
The record indicates that the Respondent obtained a Provisional Transfer Order dated
8.1.1960. Apparently no permanent transfer order was ever issued to him. The
Provisional Transfer Order issued by the Deputy Settlement Commissioner describes
in the Schedule thereto the properties being transferred, as being not one but two
properties. The said Schedule states that property No.S.E 19-R-85A and 85A(2), The
Mall Lahore was being transferred. Subsequently the Respondent got the property
numbers changed by the Deputy Settlement Commissioner to read as SE.19.R.85/A
and SE.19.R.85/A(ii) instead.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 5 :-
7.
The record indicates that not merely were these two different properties but in
fact even the owners were different. Prior to getting to the said properties allotted it
appears that the Respondent was occupying the same in his capacity as a tenant. In
this connection, it is necessary to refer to a letter dated 13.11.1956 (i.e. much before
the transfer of ownership to the Respondent) which was issued by the Settlement
Department to the Respondent which is important and relevant. The said letter is
reproduced hereinbelow:
No. DRC/ACS/RA/5961
Dated 13.11.1956
From
M.S. Zaman Esq. M.A. (Alig)
Deputy Rehabilitation Commissioner,
(Rent and Repairs) Lahore.
To
The Shahnawaz Servicing Station Ltd.
1, Charing Cross, The Mall,
Lahore.
Sub:
Recovery of Rent of property No. SE-19-R/85 A, Lahore.
1.
Reference your letter dated 6-11-1958 on the subject noted above.
2.
There are two different properties i.e. SE-19-R-85(A) and SE-19-R-
85 (E) belonging to two different owners named, K.S. Sathi and R.B.L. Jodhe
Mal respectively. The rent of the properties has also been fixed separately @
Rs. 10/- p.m. and Rs. 83/5/- P.M. Gross. You are therefore requested to
please pay the rent of the aforesaid properties separately.
3.
All the amounts paid by you have been shown on the reverse of the
rent bills which are enclosed herewith.
Sd. M.S. Zaman
Deputy Rehabilitation Commissioner,
(Rent and Repairs) Lahore.
Encl: Two
Rent Bills.
No. DRC/ACS/RA ____________ Dated Nov 1956
Copy to:
The Rehabilitation Officer,
Civil Lines, Lahore, for information.
Deputy Rehabilitation Commissioner,
(Rent and Repairs) Lahore.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 6 :-
The letter speaks for itself and leaves no doubt in the matter that these were two
different properties belonging to two different owners and in relation to which rent
was being separately paid to the Settlement Department by the Respondent.
However, to proceed with the narration of events thereafter the matter was taken up
by the Additional Settlement Commissioner who passed a detailed order dated
9.11.1965.
8.
The properties which were transferred to the Respondent consist of a petrol
pump located on Khasra No.1048 and measuring 13 Marlas. The other property
consists of a service station measuring 1½ kanals located on Khasra No.1047 and it is
the case of Appellant that this was an integral part of Nedous Hotel which is located
on the said Khasra. The Additional Settlement Commissioner directed that necessary
enquiries should be made with the assistance with Mr. Agha Ali Hussain, Land
Acquisition and Control Officer, in relation to the questions involved of title and
possession. He reported that the Appellant had been handed over possession in full
except the segment in the possession of Shahnawaz Service Station i.e. on Khasra
1047. On behalf of the Appellant it was contended before him that, being an integral
part of Khasra No.1047. the Respondent was not entitled to claim the said plot of 1½
kanal and, in any event, there was no question of his being entitled to two properties
on the basis of one Application Form alone.
9.
In reply various defences were raised by the Respondent. According to him
the land bore one number while the construction thereon bore another number. In
relation to the ownership question the Respondent produced copies of the tax
assessments by the Municipal Corporation which showed property bearing
No.85/A(i) to be owned by one Mr. Sobti which was assessed at Rs.108 and the other
property namely, 85/A(ii) was owned by M/s. R.B. Ram Saran Dass and R.B. Jodha
Mall Kuthalia which was assessed at Rs.720. It appears to us that this argument does
not advance the cause of the Respondent in any manner whatsoever but on the
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 7 :-
contrary demolishes it completely. Insofar as the entitlement of the Appellant is
concerned, he contended that the Settlement Patwari had submitted a report dated
5.6.1963 according to which the Appellant was in possession of 96 kanals 17 marlas
and hence was not entitled to any further land. We will examine this report, which is
important, closely in a later part of this judgment.
10.
The Additional Settlement Commissioner after hearing both parties came to
the conclusion that there had been a multiple transfer of the same property in favour
of both Shahnawaz Service Limited (the Respondent) as well as Mr. D.B. Avari (the
Appellant). He however, wanted to satisfy himself further as to Mr. Avari’s
entitlement and directed that a fresh examination of the same should be carried out by
a team of five expert officials. He incorporated their findings in his order and we
will further consider this at a later stage in this judgement. It will suffice to observe at
this time that the report was in Mr. Avari’s favour.
He then discussed the reliance by the Respondent on the earlier report of the
Settlement Patwari and held that an examination of the said Patwari’s report did not
render any assistance to the Respondent since the report was vague. In the
circumstances the matter was decided in favour of the Appellant and the transfer in
favour of the Respondent was cancelled.
11.
Against this order an appeal was filed before the Settlement Commissioner
which was dismissed by means of an order dated 25.3.1968. This also concluded that
possession of Nedous Hotel which was delivered indicated that the small area in the
possession of the Respondent should also have been handed over at the same time to
him. He concluded that the area in dispute was an integral part of Nedous Hotel and
also that, in any event, the Respondent was not entitled to two properties by any
stretch of the imagination.
12.
After the Respondent had lost in both forums before the Settlement
Department he approached the Lahore High Court by means of Writ Petition No.423-
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 8 :-
R-68. The case came up before a learned Single Judge who passed an order dated
22.5.1968 in terms of which the Settlement Commissioner was directed to produce
the complete file of the allotment and disposal of the properties which he then
proceeded to examine personally. On a perusal of the record he concluded that
Property No.85-A(i) was owned by Mr. Sobti while the portion designated 85-A(ii)
was owned by Mr. Jodha Mall and that the property owned by Mr. Sobti had an area
of 12 marlas whereas the property owned by Mr. Jodha Mall was a separate property
with an area of 1½ kanals.
13.
It is material to note that it was conceded before him by the Respondent that
the petrol pump was located on the property bearing No.85-A(i) while the Service
Station (i.e. the disputed plot) was situated on 85-A(ii) and that the latter was
enclosed by a separate boundary wall. He then examined the record further and came
to the conclusion that the Respondent, on his own showing, was not entitled to the
property in question for an additional reason as well. This was that it was admitted
that originally on the plot there was no pacca construction and the katcha
construction had disintegrated and it was he who had subsequently constructed the
pacca room. He concluded therefore that insofar as the property in dispute, which
was owned by Mr. Jodha Mall was concerned, it could not be classified as a “shop”
in terms of section 2(12) of the Displaced Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation)
Act 1958 and hence could not be transferred thereunder to the Respondent. It was
merely an evacuee plot of land. The petition was accordingly dismissed since the
Respondent had failed to establish his entitlement to the plot in question.
14.
The question of more than one shop or property being transferred to a person
is covered by the Schedule to the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act, 1958. If reference is made to para 9 of the said Schedule it will
be seen that it provides as under:
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 9 :-
9.
A shop in possession of a non-claimant displaced
person and which the non-claimant desires to retain, shall be
transferred to him on payment of the prevailing market value :
Provided that not more than one shop shall be transferred to
any one non-claimant under this paragraph :
Provided further that if there is more than one applicant for the
transfer of the same shop, the shop shall be transferred to the
non-claimant who obtained prior possession.
It is therefore clear that in no circumstances whatsoever could the Respondent have
had more than one property transferred to him.
15.
We now turn to the judgment of the learned division bench of the High Court
which has been impugned before us. By means of this the Respondent’s appeal was
accepted and the matter was decided in his favour. Before the learned division bench
a new legal point was urged for the first time. Reliance was placed on Ordinance II of
1962 which was issued on 13th of January, 1962 and in terms of which by means of
section 5 thereof, sub-section (2) and (4) of Section 20 were omitted. Section 20, as
unamended is reproduced hereinbelow:
20.
Revision.-(1) The Central Government at any time
may call for the record of any case or proceeding under this
Act in which the Chief Settlement Commissioner or a
Settlement Commissioner or an Additional Settlement
Commissioner or a Deputy Settlement Commissioner or an
Assistant Settlement Commissioner has passed an order for
the purpose of satisfying itself as to the correctness, legality
and propriety of such order, and may pass such order in relatin
thereto as it thinks fit.
(2)
The Chief Settlement Commissioner at any time may,
and shall on being directed by the Central Government, call
for the record of any case or proceeding under this Act in
which a Settlement Commissioner or an Additional Settlement
Commissioner or a Deputy Settlement Commissioner or an
Assistant Settlement Commissioner has passed an order, for
the purpose of satisfying himself as to the correctness, legality
or propriety of such order, and may pass such order in relation
thereto as he thinks fit.
(3)
A Settlement Commissioner specially empowered in
this behalf by the Chief Settlement Commissioner may at any
time call for the record of any case or proceeding under this
Act in which an Additional Settlement Commissioner or a
Deputy Settlement Commissioner or an Assistant Settlement
Commissioner under his jurisdiction has passed an order, for
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 10 :-
the purpose of satisfying himself as to the correctness, legality
or propriety of such order, and may pass such order in relation
thereto as the thinks fit.
(4)
An Additional Settlement Commissioner specially
empowered in this behalf by the Chief Settlement
Commissioner may at any time call for the record of any case
or proceeding under this Act in which a Deputy Settlement
Commissioner or an Assistant Settlement Commissioner under
his jurisdiction has passed an order, for the purpose of
satisfying himself as to the correctness, legality or propriety of
such order, and may pass such order in relation thereto as he
think fit.
(5)
No order under this section shall be passed revising or
modifying any order affecting any person without giving such
person a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
In these circumstances it was submitted that the power to reopen the question of title
had been taken away and hence the Settlement Department had no legal authority to
interfere in the matter.
16.
There is, however, an additional amendment which also took place. This was
by means of Ordinance XIII of 1962 dated 17th of March, 1962. This amendment
was effected with retrospective effect from 13th of January, 1962. Section 2 of the
Ordinance provides that the following new section shall be inserted, and shall be
deemed to have been always so inserted, as Section 7:
“7.
Savings. For the removal of doubts it is herby
declared that omission by this Ordinance of sub-sections
(2) and (4) of Section 20 and sub-sections (1), (1A) and
2) of Section 21 of the said Act shall not affect any case
or proceedings the record of which called for under sub-
section (2) of Section 20 of the said Act, or any review
proceeding under sub-section (1) of Section 21 thereof,
which
was
pending
immediately
before
the
commencement of this Ordinance:
Provided that no revision or review under any of
the provisions omitted by this Ordinance shall lie against
any order made in any such case or proceedings.”
17.
It will be recollected that, as narrated hereinabove, on 9th January, 1962 the
Appellant had sought to have the matter re-opened. This was before the critical date
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 11 :-
namely 13th January, 1962. But this fact is not sufficient to enable the Appellant to
take advantage of the amendment. The further question which arises is at what point
of time did the Settlement authorities actually take cognizance of the matter and
decide to re-open the same. In relation to this the record is silent. All that we have
on the record is a letter dated 29.1.1962 sent to the Additional Settlement
Commissioner in terms of which it is stated that the Chief Settlement Commissioner
has ordered that he should re-examine the case and pass the necessary orders after
hearing the parties under intimation to this office. Thus it is manifest that the Chief
Settlement Commissioner had passed an order prior to the said date. This order was
obviously passed at some point of time between 9th January, 1962 and 29th January,
1962. However, this earlier order is not part the of record before us. In these
circumstances, since it was the duty of the Respondent, which was seeking to rely on
this for the first time, and that too at a belated stage, who should have made an
endeavour to have the entire record brought before the court. Since he failed to do
there is no factual foundation on which we can proceed to decide the point in the
Respondent’s favour. Accordingly this finding of the learned division bench falls to
the ground.
18.
It is necessary to point out, however, that over and above the above aspect of
the matter, there is an additional fact of the utmost importance. As pointed out
earlier the Respondent only had a Provisional Transfer Order in his favour. This
Provisional Order contains the following clause (vi) which is pertinent and is
reproduced below:
“(vi) The President shall be entitled to resume the whole
or any part of the said property if the Central Government
or any officer authorized by the Central Government in
this behalf is at any time satisfied and records a decision
in writing to that effect that the transfer of the said
property or any other compensation in any form
whatsoever under the aforesaid Act has been obtained by
fraud, false representation or concealment of any material
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 12 :-
fact on the part of the transferee or his predecessor-in-
interest.”
It can be seen that this is an independent power conferred on the Settlement
Authorities, quite apart from the statutory power of revision. The Respondent only
had a provisional title and that also was subject to the above mentioned condition. It
necessarily follows that in case the Settlement Department found that he had made
any false representation, or concealment of a material fact, or fraud, it would be
entitled to resume the property.
19.
Further support to the above is provided by a plethora of case law including
numerous judgments of this court which state that in case of fraud or
misrepresentation an inherent power vests in the Settlement Authorities to recall the
impugned order. Indeed the learned division bench had itself recognized the
existence of this power and specifically held that even independently of the power of
revision this was an inherent power of the Settlement Department. The relevant
passage of the judgment of the learned division bench is reproduced below:
“The only ground and basis of reopening of the matter
has been where the transfer had been procured and was
result of fraud and misrepresentation. That is the import
of the Chief Settlement Commissioner, Lahore vs. Raja
Muhammad Fazal Khan and others (PLD 1975 SC 331).
In the instant case however there is not even any
allegation or fraud or misrepresentation addressed to the
Appellant (i.e. the Respondent herein) in seeking the
transfer of the property not to say of any material.”
20.
We confess that we have read the above finding with great surprise. In fact,
right from the beginning the only contention before the Settlement Authorities was
the misrepresentation, or fraud, on the basis of which the Respondent had claimed
two properties instead of one. There was no other matter before the court. The
learned division bench has correctly stated the applicable principle of law but
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 13 :-
thereafter has committed an error which is manifest on the face of the record. In
these circumstances this finding can also not be upheld.
21.
At this point of time it is necessary to deal with one additional point which has
been raised before us on behalf of the Respondent. We noticed that the Respondent’s
counsel it difficult to justify the judgment of the learned division bench on the merits.
Indeed, insofar as the judgment of the learned single bench of the High Court is
concerned, he did not advance any proposition whatsoever to impugn its validity.
He, however, adopted another stance, namely, to call in question the title of the
Appellant. The main thrust of his submission was that the Appellant was only
entitled to an area of 80 kanals and not 96 kanals, one marla 12 sq. feet. This
contention was based by him on a map which is on the record as well as two
additional documents filed by him. While we are going to examine his submission in
some depth in what follows it is however necessary to clarify one point right at the
inception.
22.
The only question before the Settlement Authorities related to the title of the
Respondent to the plot bearing No.85/A(ii) ad-measuring 1½ kanals. He claimed that
he was entitled both to this plot (originally owned by Mr. Jodha Mal which is located
on Khasra No.1047) as well as the smaller plot bearing No.85/A(i) originally owned
by Mr. Sobti admeasuring about 12 kanals which is located on Khasra No.1048. In
case this point is decided against him the matter comes to an end insofar as he is
concerned. He has no locus standi to challenge the title or entitlement of Mr. D.B.
Avari. Since we have already come to the conclusion that he has manifestly failed to
establish his title in relation thereto his interest in the matter comes to a definitive
end. He cannot be heard to challenge the title of Mr. D.B. Avari, which stems from
an independent order passed by the Settlement Authorities in his favour, and which
has never been challenged by anyone upto now despite the lapse of half a century.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 14 :-
Having said that, since the matter is before us, we turn to examine the submissions
which have been made on his behalf on the merits.
23.
We may note, at the inception, that the heart of the problem in cases such as
this stems from the fact that no title deeds are available. This is not uncommon in
cases of evacuee property. The owners had fled, presumably carrying with them
their documents of title or else they were misplaced. We have to therefore proceed
on the basis of whatever material there is available on the record. The map which
has been referred to above shows the area as being 9.92 acres (approximately equal
to 80 kanals). It, however, also mentions the Khasra No. as being 1047 which is
shown to be 96 kanals, 1 marla and 12 sq. feet. Thus the map gives two figures, 9.92
acres and 96 kanals, 1 marla and 12. Sq. feet. The Respondent’s counsel’s
contention however is that there are 600 sq. yards in a 1 kanal and if we convert 9.92
acres the result is 80 kanals and hence the Appellant is only entitled to this amount
and not 96.1.12 sq. feet. There is more than one error in this contention. The first
question is how many sqare yards are there in one kanal. The answer is that it
depends on the location of the land. In agricultural areas there are not 600 but 605 sq.
yards in one kanal but in Lahore a different practice is followed and there are 500 sq.
yards in 1 kanal. There was no dispute on the point, in the entire proceedings before
the Settlement Authorities, that apart from the 1 ½ kanals of Khasra No.1047, the rest
of the area was the entitlement of Mr. Avari and if the 1 ½ kanals are added the total
area of Khasra 1047 comes to 96 kanals, 1 marla, 12 sq. feet and not 80 kanals. If we
convert 9.92 acres into sq. yards we get the figure of 48,012 sq. yards and if we
divide this by 500 we get 96.0256 kanals or 96 kanals, 1 marla 12 sq. feet which is
precisely the basis on which the Settlement Authorities have proceeded in the case,
without any objection from the Respondent or anyone else upto now. Thus the entire
argument is based on a misconception and, as we will observe in a later part of this
judgement, the Settlement Patwari’s report, on which the Respondent had placed
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 15 :-
prime reliance before the Additional Settlement Commissioner and which he has
relied on before us as an additional document comes to exactly the same conclusion.
It is only if we proceed on the basis of 1 kanal equals 605 sq. yards (which is
inapplicable) that we get a figure of not 80 kanals, but a little over 79 kanals. The
argument therefore has to be rejected.
24.
Two other documents have been filed by the Respondent and we will now
consider them. The first is a copy of the Lahore Municipal Corporation Provisional
Assessment List which reveals that Nedous Hotel has been given the number SE 19
R-87 for purposes of identification (i.e. in relation to imposition of municipal tax)
which has been assessed at Rs.34,193/-. It describes the area of the site as being 80
kanals. The second is a copy of the Settlement patwari’s report on which principal
reliance was placed by the Respondent before the Settlement Department and was
once again relied upon before us.
25.
As is obvious from the above the Provisional Assessment List on which
reliance has been placed relates to tax assessment. For this purpose the Municipality
maintains its records of property. In fact, there are a number of additional documents
also which are relevant in this context. By way of illustration we may refer to the
Lahore Municipal Corporation assessment for the year 1946 in relation to the
property bearing SE-19-R-85 A(i). This is the property owned by Mr. K.S. Sobti as
stated in the document. This is the property on which the petrol pump is located
which measures approximately 12 marlas. The annual value for purpose of tax
payment has been assessed at Rs.108. This is the property which covers Khasra
No.1048. Similarly, we also have the Lahore Municipal Corporation assessment for
the same year in relation to the adjoining property, namely SE-19-R-85 A(ii) on
Khasra No.1047. This is the property which admeasures approximately 1 ½ kanals.
The name of the owner is disclosed in the assessment form as being R.B.L. Sarain
Das for the owner Jodha Mall Kuthiala. This property has been assessed at Rs.720
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 16 :-
for tax purposes. This is of course the property which had been illegally allocated to
the Respondent and which allotment was subsequently cancelled by the Settlement
Department. The occupier of this property, it is interesting to note, is shown as Mr.
Sobti. We also have the Lahore Municipal Corporation Preliminary Assessment List
for the year 1946, which shows the owner to be Mr. Jodha Mall with as many as five
different names given by way of occupiers presumably from time to time. The
names of the occupiers are reproduced below:
1.
M/S Azam & Sons 2 Halls 2 Small rooms 1
gallery 1 bath.
2.
J.C. Shamdia Locked
3.
Post office 3 R + IV Ib1
4.
Mr. Rafiullah 4R 1K IV 1F (Haroons)
5.
Ch. Murtaza Sahib 5R 1K 1B 1F
26.
It is interesting to note from the above that at one time even the Post Office
was there. The Final Assessment List for the year shows the following names as
occupiers:
1.
Remington & Co.
2.
J.C. Bendhier
3.
Post Office
27.
Thus although Mr. Jodha Mal remained the owner throughout the occupiers of
some of the land kept changing from time to time. Taking all these documents
together we can now get a reasonably good idea as to how the confusion may have
arisen. The primary interest of the Lahore Municipal Corporation was to carry out an
assessment for purposes of levying municipal tax. It was never to determine the
question of title, which it was not entitled to do. In the absence of the title deeds for
this purpose we have to go to the Revenue records. As is obvious from the above,
Mr. Jodha Mal used to allow various individuals/entities to occupy part of the
Nedous Hotel lands which were not for the time being required by the Hotel.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 17 :-
28.
What emerges from a perusal of the documents is that the number given for
purposes of identification of the property (as stated therein) is that number which has
been given by the Lahore Municipal Corporation and this number has been given for
purposes of tax assessment. As we have already commented, the title deeds however
are missing since it was evacuee property. The question therefore arises what exactly
was the title of the property owner and what area did it extend to. It is
understandable that when a hotel is being assessed for tax purposes the Municipality
would simply proceed on the number given by it and also focus essentially on the
hotel building which is really the important building for purposes of tax assessment.
Now it seems that Mr. Jodha Mall was in the habit of renting out parts of his property
to various people or entities or at least to allow them to occupy it temporarily. The
area owned by him which was on Khasra No.1047 was 96 kanals, one marla and 12
sq. feet. Out of this area he had, for example, given Mr. Sobti, 1 ½ kanals to be used
for purposes of a service station. Similarly he had apparently allowed other persons
also to utilize parts of the property. Thus it is possible that these parts of the land
could easily and conveniently have been disregarded by the Municipality for
purposes of tax assessment. The Municipal Tax record is not really the critically
important document in order to establish title. For that we have to look to the
Revenue records which fortunately are available with us. There is on the record
available a copy of the Revenue records for the pre-partition period. The record
relating to the year 1946 is decisive in the matter. This shows an entry in urdu for
what is described as (ﺎﮐوﺪـــﻧ) Hotel (i.e. Nedous Hotel) and the area shown is not 80
kanals but 96 kanals, one marla and 12 sq. feet. Since this goes back to the pre-1947
period, when there was no question of any evacuee property, this was the single
strongest piece of evidence in relation to the title and ownership. It is important to
note that this indicates not only the ownership of Mr. Jodha Mall but also that this
entire area had been assigned and used for purposes of the hotel and hotel alone.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 18 :-
Thus it can logically be inferred that the area of the hotel was 96 kanals, one marlas
and 12 sq. ft. which corroborates our earlier conclusion. This is the reason why the
official map gives the area as 9.92 acres and also specifies 96 kanals, 1 marla, 12 sq.
feet which exactly correspond to each other on the basis that one kanal equals 500 sq.
yards.
29.
The above record is further supported by the documentary evidence which is
on the record. It needs to be borne in mind that since Nedous hotel was a well known
hotel occupying a large area of land the Settlement Department exercised great care
for and in relation to the auction. The auction notice states not merely that the
auction would be conducted by the Additional Settlement Commissioner, Lahore, but
the Settlement Commissioner himself would preside over the proceedings. Pursuant
to the auction having taken place in which Mr. Avari was the highest bidder, (and it
is important to note that no allegations have been made for and in relation to the
manner in which the auction was conducted) initially a Provisional Transfer Order
was issued in his favour on 29.1.1962. This Provisional Transfer Order contains the
identical clause (vi) which is to be found in the title deed of the Respondent and
states that if it is found that any fraud, misrepresentation or concealment has taken
place the Government would be entitled to resume the property. However, no such
fraud was either alleged by anyone or found by the Settlement Department to have
taken place. Thus what is important to note, is that when the final transfer order was
issued namely, the Permanent Transfer Certificate, which shows specifically the area
of the property as being 96 kanals, one marla and 12 sq. feet on 6.10.1964, clause
(vi), which had already served its purpose, was omitted in the normal course by the
Government. This was a final title deed and accordingly conferred a permanent title
on him in the normal course of events. It obviously could not grant a qualified or
conditional title. That would be against the clear policy of the law relating to
immovable property.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 19 :-
30.
Not merely do the above facts speak for themselves, but there is in addition an
extremely important circumstance which is further corroborative of the view
expressed in the above. When the matter was re-opened the Additional Settlement
Commissioner re-examined all the facts pertaining not merely to the title of the
Respondent but also of Mr. Avari from the very inception and passed a very lengthy
and detailed order which sets out at length the arguments advanced on behalf of the
Respondents for purposes of examination thereof. He recorded the fact that the
property auctioned in favour of Mr. Avari spread over Khasra No.1047 which was
transferred to him on payment of the sum of Rs.1,21,00,000 and the title was duly
confirmed by the issuance of the Permanent Transfer Certificate. He described the
boundaries of the plot which are consistent with the fact that it extends to the whole
of Khasra No.1047. It had already been noted by the Settlement Department by
means of Office Memorandum dated 13.6.1962 that Mr. D.B. Avari had been handed
over possession of the entire area sold to him except for the small segment which was
in the possession of the Respondent. Mr. Avari’s contention as advanced by his
counsel, was that he had admittedly not been handed over possession of this small
portion measuring 1½ kanals which was admittedly located on Khasra No.1047
which belonged to Mr. Jodha Mall. Accordingly his contention was that, being an
integral part of the big mansion, the Respondent had no legal right or title thereto.
31.
However, since the Respondent was adamant in insisting that he was entitled
to the 1 ½ kanal plot the Additional Settlement Commissioner had to decide the issue
whether or not a multiple transfer of the same property had taken place i.e. to Mr.
Avari, as being the successful auction purchaser of Nedous Hotel spread over Khasra
No.1047 on the one hand, and the Respondent on the other hand, who was in physical
possession of 1½ kanals of that very khasra number. He accordingly called for the
entire record and re-examined the same. The following passage from his order speaks
for itself: “By going into the facts of the case as presented by both the learned
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 20 :-
counsels and those available on the record of the case I am of the view that there has
been a multiple transfer of the same property in favour of Mr. D.B. Avari auction
purchaser on the one hand and M/s. Shahnawaz Service Limited transferee under
Settlement Scheme No.1 on the other. This point is established from a reference to
the plan of the premises known as Park Luxury Hotel wherein the segment at present
in occupation of Shahnawaz Service Station Limited is shown included the premises
so exhibited on the plan were disposed of to Mr. D.B. Avari through auction since
finalized by way of issue of a Permanent Transfer Certificate. Auction of the
property has without doubt been as that of a big mansion. The arguments by the
learned counsel for Mr. D.B. Avari in this behalf that no part of the property since
treated as big mansion was transferrable to third person unless of course as decided
by the CS and RC do carry weight.” Thus, it is clear, that the Settlement authorities
examined the official plan of the premises on the basis of which the auction was held
before concluding the matter in favour of Mr. Avari.
32.
The Additional Settlement Commissioner, in view of the importance of the
case, did not however, decide the matter merely on the above basis. He decided to set
up a team of five dealing persons as is revealed by another extract from the said
order which is reproduced below:
“As far as the point whether or not the said segment
which is now in suit did form part of the premises sold in
favour of Mr. D.B. Avari, the plan as referred to above,
has also been examined vis a viz the position obtaining at
site. This examination as stated earlier, necessitated by a
request by Mr. D.B. Avari for delivery of possession of
the premises transferred to them was made through the
technical assistance of the Land Acquisition and Control
Officer, a Naib Tehsildar, a Revenue Patwari, and a
Revenue Qaungo s\aided further by the Settlement
Patwari. As per his report dated 27.5.1963 actual
measurement of the total area of Khasra No. 1047 in
relation to the plan thereof which plan in turn was the
subject matter of auction, was carried out at site and as a
result of which an area of 1 Kanal and 2 marlas of
Khasra No. 1047 was found in occupation of M/S
Shahnawaz Service station Ltd.” [Emphasis added]
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 21 :-
33.
In our opinion these findings are conclusive in establishing what had actually
happened. However, there is additional material available as well which further
strengthens our conclusion.
34.
When the case went up in appeal before the Settlement Commissioner the
above findings were upheld. What is interesting to note is that the Respondent
counsel’s contention was that Mr. Avari was entitled to 96 kanals, 1 marla and 12 sq.
feet and that he already had possession of the same as a perusal of the following
passage of the order of Settlement Commissioner reveals:
“The counsel for the petitioner (i.e. the present
Respondent) further asserted that a total area of 96
kanals, one marla and 12 sq. feet were promised to
Respondent by sale and that according to the documents
produced before the Additional Settlement Commissioner,
it was proved beyond doubt that Respondent enjoyed full
possession of 96 kanals, one marlas and 12 sq. feet.”
This then was the Respondent’s case. He cannot now be allowed to radically alter it.
35.
After considering the arguments advanced on behalf of both parties the
Settlement Commissioner decided that the critical point was the entitlement of the
Respondent – whether he had obtained one property or two, and since it had been
established that there was no doubt about the fact that his legal entitlement only
extended to one property hence the following finding was given: “It has been rightly
held by the lower court that the Appellant is the transferee of two properties and that
the portion of property No.SE-19-R-87 purchased by the Respondent in open auction
had also been transferred to the Appellant by the Deputy Settlement Commissioner in
an illegal manner. The appeal has no force and is dismissed herewith.”
36.
Thus it can be seen that the Respondent signally failed in order to establish his
entitlement and the case was decided against him accordingly. This was in fact the
major question before us. Thereafter the Respondent sought to challenge the
concurrent findings of fact before a learned single judge of the Lahore High Court.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 22 :-
This has already been discussed by us at some length, and as noted above, the
Respondent failed on an additional point as well that under the law in no
circumstances whatsoever was he entitled to a transfer since he had claimed the
transfer as a “shop” whereas in fact on the basis of his own admission it was clear it
was an open plot of land. The finding of the Settlement Department on the facts was
reiterated by the learned single judge.
37.
We now turn to the final document in the case which we have not examined so
far. As stated earlier, the Respondent has filed before us a copy of the Settlement
Patwari’s report which he had relied on earlier unsuccessfully before the Additional
Settlement Commissioner. This is an extremely document which conclusively
demolishes his case. In the earlier part of this report he suggests that Mr. Avari has
already been given possession of 96 kanals, 17 marls and then proceeds to give his
assessment of the matter. The relevant passage (in urdu) is reproduced below
alongwith an English translation:
(X-7)
It has been found from the new record that the area of Khasra No 1047 is 96-1-12 and as per
the above measurement it is 96-17 (96 Kanals 17 marlas) i.e. 15-213 is in excess.
Workshop’s khasra may be different because this workshop is connected with Khasra 1048
since earlier. Area covered by the Hotel is left at 96-1-12. Therefore, it is submitted that
from the above measurement it is proved that the total area of the Hotel is left at 96-1-12
which is in possession of the Hotel and it is this area which was auctioned by the
Government. (Dated 5-6-1962).
Shaukat Ali Patwari
Lahore.
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 23 :-
38.
Bearing in mind all the above facts and circumstances certain points are clear
beyond any doubt: Firstly, insofar as the legal entitlement of the Respondent is
concerned, this is primarily a question of law and there can be little doubt about the
fact that he had illegally obtained two plots of land instead of one and hence the
Settlement Department was entitled to cancel one of the two plots while the leaving
the other in his possession and ownership. In fact, since there was only one order of
the Deputy Settlement Commissioner which transferred both to the Respondent at
one and the same time it was possible for the department even to have cancelled both
at the same time but, we think, viewing everything in the proper perspective, that the
department acted fairly and equitably in leaving title of one plot to him and
restricting the cancellation to the other plot. Secondly, the question of Mr. Avari’s
entitlement really did not arise per se. The main thrust of the argument of the
Respondent was in all prior stages upto the hearing of this appeal, that Mr. Avari
already had the full 96 kanals, one marla and 12 sq. feet and hence was not entitled to
the additional 1½ kanals which was in his occupation. This question of Mr. Avari’s
entitlement being limited to 80 kanals were never raised by him either before the
Settlement Department or before the learned single judge and nor is it borne out by a
consideration of all the facts and circumstances.
39.
We have already commented on the fact that the Respondent has no locus
standi to independently challenge the entitlement of Mr. Avari. We have, on our own,
examined all the record in order to arrive at the conclusion which has been set out in
the above. It may, however, be added that in any case it would be really
extraordinary if a title which has been unchallenged and is supported by a Permanent
Transfer Certificate issued more than half a century ago should now be allowed to be
re-opened for the first time and that too in appeal on the allegations made by a person
who has committed fraud. This is really something which we do not think would be
proper or appropriate. The policy of the settlement law, has been to not to allow
C.A.1137 of 2008.doc
-: 24 :-
questions of title, involving fatal disputes to be re-opened ever since the 1960s. This
is the reason that revisional powers were taken away. In the present case the
Settlement Department has also not challenged the title at any stage.
In the circumstances the appeal is allowed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 16.12.2015 at Islamabad
Not Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1137_2008.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhry
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Sardar Tariq Masood
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
Against
judgment
dated
28.05.2015
of
Lahore High Court, Lahore, passed in Intra
Court Appeal No.67 of 2015.
National Electric Power Regulatory Authority
Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Faisalabad Electric Supply Company Limited
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
:
Mr. Munawar-us-Salam, ASC
Syed Rafaqat H. Shah, AOR
For the Respondent(s) :
Mir Afzal Malik, ASC
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
Date of Hearing
:
08.12.2015
JUDGMENT
Mushir Alam, J-. Through this appeal by leave of
the Court, the Appellant-National Electric Power Regulatory
Authority (NEPRA) has impugned the Judgment dated
28.05.2015, passed by a learned Division Bench of Lahore
High Court, Lahore in ICA No.67 of 2015, also reported as
National Electric Power Regulatory Authority v. Faisalabad
Electric Supply Co. Ltd (PLD 2015 Lahore 661), whereby
Judgment dated 15.12.2014 passed by a learned Single
Judge in Writ Petition No.28681 of 2014 was maintained
setting aside the order dated 16.6.2014 made on a ‘Motion for
Leave to Review’ by three members Authority of NEPRA, as
against total strength of five members and the Appeal was
dismissed on the ground inter alia that “it is clear from
perusal of the Rule 16(6) of the NEPRA (Tariff Standards
Procedure) Rules, 1998 that the law mandates for hearing of a
Motion for Leave to review to be heard by the “full strength of
the Authority”.
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
2
2.
Brief facts of the case appear to be that the
NEPRA, appellant herein, is an Authority, constituted under
Section 3 of the Regulation of Generation, Transmission and
Distribution of Electric Power Act, 1997, responsible for
determining of tariffs and other terms and conditions for the
supply of electricity
by generation, transmission and
distribution companies. It also confers jurisdiction for
determination of the process and procedures for reviewing
tariff and recommending tariff adjustment. The Authority is
comprised of a Chairman to be appointed by the Federal
Government and four members, one from each Province, to be
appointed by the Federal Government after considering the
recommendations of the respective Provincial Governments.
Vice Chairman of the Authority is appointed from amongst
the members for a period of one year by rotation. Sub Section
(6) of Section 3 of the Act provides that no act or proceeding
of the Authority shall be invalid by reason only for the
existence of a vacancy in, or defect in, the constitution of the
Authority. Section 5 ibid provides that meetings of the
Authority shall be presided over by the Chairman or, in his
absence, the Vice-Chairman. Three members shall constitute
a quorum for meetings of the Authority requiring a decision
by the Authority. Decision of the Authority is by majority of
its members present, and in case of a tie, the person
presiding the meeting has a casting vote. Section 6 mandates
that all orders, determinations and decisions of the Authority
are in writing and shall identify the determination of the
Chairman and each member.
3.
The Respondent-FESCO, under Rule 3(1) of the
NEPRA
Tariff
Standards
and
Procedure
Rules,
1998,
(hereinafter referred to as NEPRA Rules, 1998) filed a Petition
for the determination of Consumer Tariff for the Financial
Year 2013-14 dated 28.06.2013. The matter was heard and
decided by a three members Authority on 6.2.2014.
Respondent being not satisfied, filed a “Motion for Leave to
Review, as provided under sub rule (6) of Rule 16 of the
NEPRA Rules, 1998. Review motion was admitted for hearing
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
3
and after hearing the Respondents-FESCO, Order on Review
Motion was rendered on 16.6.2014 by the Vice Chairman
(Sindh), and two members one from Balochistan and other
from Punjab.
4.
This order dated 16.6.2014 by the Authority, was
challenged by the Respondent-FESCO. Contentious issue was
the competence of the Authority to decide “Motion for leave to
Review”, on the ground that the order has been passed by
three members of the Authority, while Rule 16 (6) of the
NEPRA Rules, 1998 requires that the Motion for Leave to
Review was to be determined by “full strength of Authority”. A
learned Single Judge in Chambers in the High Court quoted
Rule 16 ibid which reads as follows:-
“16. Decisions, etc., by the Authority. — (1) All orders,
determinations and decisions of the Authority shall be
taken in writing.
(2)..
(3)…
(4)…
(5)…
(6) Within ten days of service of a final order,
determination or decision of the Authority, a party may
file a motion for leave for review by the full strength of
the Authority of such final order, determination or
decision, as the case be.
(7) A motion for leave for review shall specify the
grounds on which review is sought by the party. Parties
to the proceedings shall be afforded a reasonable
opportunity, orally or in writing as deemed fit by the
Authority, to respond to a motion for leave for review.
(8) The Authority shall act upon a motion for leave for
review within ten days of receipts of such motion unless
it gives notice to the parties, in writing that a longer
period of time will be required and specifies the
additional length of time necessary to consider the
motion.
(9) The Authority may refuse leave for review if it
considers that the review would not result in the
withdrawal
or
modification
of
the
final
order,
determination or decision.
(10) The Authority may grant leave for review on such
conditions as deemed appropriate by the Authority
including, without limitation, the conditions pertaining to
any limits on time or additional evidence proposed to be
presented in review.”
In paras 5 & 6 of the Judgment, dated
15.12.2014, it was held as under:-
“5.
It is clear from a perusal of the Rule 16(6) that
the law mandates for the hearing of a Motion for Leave
to Review to be heard by the ‘full strength’ of the
Authority. The term ‘full strength’ of the Authority does
not present a complicated issue of construction of
statute. It simply means that the said proceedings shall
be taken and decided by all the members of the
Authority sitting together and deciding such review.
There is no cavil with the proposition that in the instant
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
4
case the law does not even refer to a quorum but
without equivocation requires the hearing by the ‘full
strength’ of the Authority. It is settled as a basic canon
of interpretation that if the intent of the legislature can
be clearly gleaned then it must be given effect to
without demur. In this case, there can be no two
opinions on the requirement of the law and the meaning
of the term ‘full strength’. A dictionary meaning given to
the term shall suffice. In Oxford Advanced Learner’s
Dictionary, 8th Edition, it is described thus:
‘5[usually before noun] complete; with
nothing missing’
and strength as:
‘10 [uncountable] the number of people in a
group, a team or an organization’.
6.
There also seems to be a purpose for laying it as
a condition that the Motion for Leave to Review be heard
by the full strength of the Authority. And that seems to
be that such a review is in the nature of an appeal and,
therefore, the hearing should be by a complete strength
of members sitting and deciding the review. This will
lend due process to the entire procedure.”
5.
The writ petition was accepted. The Appellant-
NEPRA challenged the judgment of the learned Single Bench
through ICA No.67 of 2015 and a learned Division Bench,
vide judgment dated 28.05.2015, concurred with the above
judgment of Single Bench and in paragraphs 12 TO 14
thereof and it was held as follow:-
“12.
The term full strength under Rule 16(6) of the
Tariff Rules is not the available strength but the
statutory strength as provided under Section 3 of the
Act i.e., five Members including a Chairman because
under the said Rule, the Authority discharges one of its
essential functions. Rule 16(6) simply reiterates this
principle that the Authority has to act with full strength
in matters which fall within the core essential functions
of
the
Authority
and
where
delegation
is
not
permissible. It is important to highlight that it is not only
at the time of hearing a motion for leave for review that
the Authority must have full strength, but the full
strength of the Authority must be there when the tariff
is to be determined by the Authority or while performing
the other functions issued under Section 12 of the Act.
The Authority has other administrative Powers and
functions listed under Section 7 of the Act. These
administrative functions and its decisions are taken in
the meetings of the Authority. Section 5 deals with this
administrative character of the Authority and its
secretarial provision, regulating the procedures for
holding a meeting. These meetings and the decisions
taken thereunder have no co-relation with the core and
essential quasi-judicial powers and functions of the
Authority e.g., the determination of tariff or deciding the
motion for leave to review. Hence, the argument that if
the quorum is complete the Authority can call a meeting
and determine tariff, is hopelessly misconceived as it
incorrectly
mixes
two
different
functions
of
the
Authority. Section 5 deals with administrative meetings
and is a secretarial provision with no nexus with the
determination of tariff which is a quasi-judicial function
of the Authority.
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
5
Learned counsel for the Appellant has relied on Section
3(6) of the Act to argue that decisions of the Authority
cannot be declared to be void if only three Members
have made the determination of tariff or have decided
the motion for leave to review: Section 3 (6) provides:
No act or proceeding of the Authority shall be
invalid by reason only of the existence of a
vacancy in, or defect in, the constitution of
the Authority.
This is an operational provision which applies once the
Authority has been duly constituted in terms of Section
3 and its composition is complete. The reference to the
terms “vacancy” and “defect” pertain to absence of the
member or a procedural defect or irregularity in the
membership. Both these disqualifications assume that
the Authority has been fully constituted. Section 3(6)
addresses a temporary problem and, therefore, protects
the acts or proceedings of the Authority to allow smooth
operability of the Authority. There could be a situation
where a duly appointed member refused to attend the
proceedings of the Authority for tariff determination or
some irregularity in the appointment of any member
who is part of these proceedings. The purpose of Section
3(6) is to ensure that such hiccups do not derail the
Authority or its decisions. In the case of determination
of tariff, while full strength is mandatory, there could be
a situation where the Member is genuinely not able to
attend the meeting or his appointment suffers from any
irregularity making it difficult for him to attend, in such
a situation, which should be duly recorded in the
minutes of the proceedings, the Authority can proceed
and determine the tariff or decide the motion for leave
for review. This exception is few and far between but in
the present case, Section 3(6) has no relevance as the
Authority was not properly and lawfully constituted to
begin with, as the Chairman and one other Member had
not been appointed. Section 3(6) does not empower the
Authority to proceed without proper constitution in terms
of Section 3 of the Act. Any such interpretation can lead
to absurd results, as the Chairman or a few Members,
under the garb of Section 3(6) can proceed on their own
and continue to determine tariff for the longest time. In
such an eventuality, the Federal Government will have
no incentive of obligation to appoint Members under the
Act or complete the constitution of the Authority. Any
such interpretation is also violative of the fundamental
rights and the Constitutional vision as discussed
above.”
6.
It was contended by learned ASC that the Original
order was passed by the Authority comprised of two members
and a Vice Chairman, and order on Motion for Leave to
Review was also heard and decided by same set of members
and a Vice Chairman. It was vehemently argued that in terms
of Section 5(2) of the Act, 1997 three member quorum is
provided for the decision by the Authority which is a statutory
requirement of the Act of 1997. It was urged that the Rules
providing otherwise are to be read in conformity with the
provisions of parent law and not in derogation thereto. It was
urged that the learned Division Bench of the High Court has
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
6
taken a very strict view of sub rule (6) of Rule 16 of the
NEPRA Rules, 1998 providing for the review by the “full
strength of the Authority” should have been read in
conjunction with Section 3(6) of the Act, 1997 whereby the
Act, 1997 expressly provides and save the proceedings of the
authority in event of the vacancy in, or defect in, constitution
of the authority and in terms of Section 5(2) of the Act, 1997,
which provides quorum of three members for decision of
NEPRA. It was, therefore, argued with vehemence that Rule
16(6) of the NEPRA, 1998 not governs the Act, but it is vice
versa, as power to Review was conferred on Authority under
Clause (g) of sub-section (2) of Section 7 of the Act, 1997
through an Amendment in Act of 2011. In support of his
contentions, he has placed reliance on Managing Director,
SSGC Ltd v. Ghulam Abbas (PLD 2003 SC 724 @ 751);
Reference No.1 of 2012 (PLD 2013 SC 279 @ 329 and 330);
Muhammad Ashraf Tiwana v. Pakistan (2013 SCMR 1159 @
1192); and Pakistan v. Aryan Petro Chemical Industries (Pvt)
Ltd (2003 SCMR 370 @ 388).
7.
It was further urged that decisions of the
Authority are merely recommendatory and under Section 31
of the Act, 1997 it is upto the Federal Government to decide
as it is or may require the Authority to reconsider its
determination,
and
after
such
exercise
within
the
contemplation of sub-section (4) of Section 31 of the Act, it is
published in the Official Gazette. It was stated at bar that the
Federal Government has accepted the determination on
01/11/2014, and further revision in tariff was made on
10.6.2015 to which the Respondent-FESCO has taken no
exception.
8.
Learned ASC for the Respondent-FESCO heavily
relied upon sub-rule (6) of Rule 16 of the NEPRA Rules, 1998,
reproduced hereinabove. According to him, for the purpose of
Leave to Motion in Review per sub Rule (6) has to be
determined by the full strength that is to say all five
members. According to him, said sub-rule (6) ibid must
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
7
receive literal interpretation otherwise it would amount to
violating the spirit of the law. In support of his contention, he
relies on Sindh High Court Bar Association v. Federation of
Pakistan (PLD 2009 Supreme Court 879).
9.
We have heard the arguments of learned counsel
for the parties and perused the record. Leave to Appeal was
granted on 06.11.2015 in the following terms:-
“Inter alia contends that under Section 5(2) of
the NEPRA Act any decision in respect of the functions
under the NEPRA Act can be taken by the petitioner in a
duly convened meeting wherein minimum of three
members of the petitioner are present; that Section 5(4)
of the Act specifically mandates that the decision shall
be taken by the majority of its present members; that
the Act do not create a distinction or imposes a
restriction for the purposes of tariff determination to be
undertaken by the full statutory strength of the
petitioner and that the above aspects of the matter have
not been taken into consideration by the learned High
Court.
2.
Having heard learned counsel for the petitioner
at some length, leave is granted in this petition inter alia
to consider the issues raised. Since a short point is
involved, office is directed to fix the main appeal on
26.11.2015.”
10.
Entire
controversy
revolves
round
the
interpretation of sub-rule (6) of Rule 16 ibid; which runs as
follows:-
“(6) Within ten days of service of a final order,
determination or decision of the Authority, a party may
file a motion for leave for review by the full strength of
the Authority of such final order, determination or
decision, as the case be.”
In order to examine the purport of the above rule,
it would be advantageous to keep in sight the relevant
provisions of the Act, 1997 that is to say Sections 3 to 6 of the
Act, 1997 which read as follows;
“3. Establishment of the Authority. (1) As soon as
may be, but not later than thirty days after the
commencement of this Act, the Federal Government
shall, by notification in the official Gazette, establish a
National Electric Power Regulatory Authority consisting
of a Chairman to be appointed by the Federal
Government and four members, one from each Province,
to be appointed by the Federal Government after
considering the recommendations of the respective
Provincial Governments.
(2) There shall be a Vice-Chairman of the Authority,
appointed from amongst the members for a period of
one year, by rotation, in the following order, namely: (i)
the member representing the Province of Baluchistan; (ii)
the member representing the Province of North-West
Frontier; (iii) the member representing the Province of
the Punjab; and (iv) the member representing the
Province of Sind.
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
8
(3) [The Chairman shall be an eminent professional of
known integrity and competence with at least twenty
years
of
related
experience
in
law,
business,
engineering, finance, accounting, economics, or the
power industry].
(4) Every member shall be a professional of known
integrity and competence with at least fifteen years of
related experience in law, business, engineering,
finance, accounting, economics or the [power] business.
(5) The Chairman and a member shall, unless he
resigns or is removed from office earlier as hereinafter
provided, hold office for a term of four years and shall
be eligible for reappointment for similar term: Provided
that a Chairman or a member shall not be appointed
under sub-section (1) if he has attained the age of sixty-
five years.
(6) No act or proceeding of the Authority shall be invalid
by reason only of the existence of a vacancy in, or
defect in, the constitution of the Authority.
(7) The principal office of the Authority shall be in
Islamabad and it may set up offices at such place or
places as it may deem appropriate.
4. Resignation and removal of Chairman, etc. (1)
The Chairman, or a member may, by writing under his
hand, resign from his office.
(2) The Chairman or a member may be removed by the
Federal Government from his office if, on an inquiry by
the Federal Public Service Commission, he is found
incapable of performing the functions of his office by
reason of mental or physical incapacity or has been
found guilty of misconduct.
5. Meetings of the Authority, etc. (1) The meetings of
the Authority shall be presided over by the Chairman
or, in his absence, the Vice-Chairman.
(2) Three members shall constitute a quorum for
meetings of the Authority requiring a decision by the
Authority.
(3) The members shall have reasonable notice of the
time and place of the meeting and the matters on which
a decision by the Authority shall be taken in such
meeting.
(4) Decision of the Authority shall be taken by the
majority of its members present, and in case of a tie, the
person presiding the meeting shall have a casting vote.
6.
Decisions
of
the
Authority.
All
orders,
determinations and decisions of the Authority shall be
taken in writing and shall identify the determination of
the Chairman and each member.”
11.
NEPRA Rules, 1998 are framed by the Authority
under Section 46 of the Act, 1997 with the approval of the
Federal Government. Rules and or Regulations are the
progeny or off spring of a Statute and are to be strictly in
conformity with the provisions of the Statute where under
same are framed. It is settled proposition of law that the rules
framed under a Statute are to remain within the precinct of
the Statute itself and cannot transgress the limits and
parameters of the parent Statute itself. All efforts are to be
made to interpret the rules so as to bring it in conformity and
without injuring the intent and spirit of the Statute, where it
is not possible then the rules in as much as it is injuring the
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
9
very intent and spirit which must yield to the Statute. This
view finds support from a case reported as Ziauddin v. Punjab
Local Government (1985 SCMR 365 @ 368), wherein it was
held as under:-
“Rules framed under the statute could not go
beyond and over reach the statute itself. To make
implementation
of
statutory
provision
consistent
harmonious
directory
effect
must
be
given
to
requirement of Rule”.
12.
In another case reported as Pakistan v. Aryan
Petro Chemical Industries (Pvt) Ltd (2003 SCMR 370) in
paragraph 11 of the judgment, it was held that “This is a
settled principle that a statutory rule cannot enlarge the scope
of the section under which it is framed and if a rule goes
beyond what the section completes, the rule must yield to the
statute. The authority of executive to make rules and
regulations in order to effectuate the intention and policy of the
Legislature, must be exercised within the limits of mandate
given to the rule making authority and the rules framed under
an enactment must be consistent with the provisions of said
enactment. The rules framed under a statute if are inconsistent
with the provisions of the statue and defeat the intention of
Legislature expressed in the main statute, same shall be
invalid”.
13.
In somewhat similar situation, in a case reported
as Isa Ammal v. Rama Kudumban (AIR 1953 Madras 129),
where the Petitioner applied for the issuance of a writ of
certiorari to quash the proceedings and the decision of the
Estates Abolition Tribunal at Madurai dated 22nd May 1950 in
Revenue Appeal No.54 of 1950, on the ground inter alia that
only two members of the Tribunal heard and disposed of the
appeal filed by the petitioner under Section 9(4) of Madras Act
XXVI of 1948 when the Tribunal as constituted by the
Government was consisted of three members. The Settlement
Officer Ramnad, acting under Section 9 of Madras Act XXVI of
1948 held an enquiry and declared the village not to be an
inam estate as defined in Section 2 (7) of the said Act. Against
his decision there was an appeal to the Estates Abolition
Tribunal at Madurai by a ryot of the village. Two members of
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
10
the Tribunal set, heard and reversed the decision of the
Settlement Officer and declared the village to be an inam
estate. The Tribunal under Section 2 (14) of Madras Act XXVI
of 1943 is constituted and in terms of Section 8 (2) each
Tribunal shall consist of three members; one of them (who
shall be its chairman) shall be a District Judge or an officer
eligible to be appointed as a District Judge, another shall be a
Subordinate Judge or an officer eligible to be appointed as a
Subordinate Judge, and the third shall be a Revenue
Divisional Officer or an officer eligible to be appointed as a
Revenue Divisional Officer. In terms of Section 9 (4) (a) any
person deeming himself aggrieved by a decision of the
settlement Officer under Sub-section (3) may appeal to the
Tribunal, whereupon the Tribunal hears the Appeal and gives
decision [Section 9 (4) (b)]. Besides the jurisdiction to decide
appeals from the decision of the Settlement Officer under
Section 9, the Tribunal is also entrusted with several
important duties and for carrying them out, large powers
have been conferred on the Tribunals. Section 67 empowers
the Government to make rules to carry out the purposes of
the Act, and in particular rule 1 as regards the Tribunal
provided, inter alia that “Not less than two members shall be
necessary to constitute a sitting of a Tribunal”. In rule 2 it
was provided that any matter before it, shall be decided
according to the opinion of the majority of the members. If
any matter has been heard by only two of the members and
the members are divided in opinion as to the decision to be
given, the matter shall be referred to the third member and
decided according to the opinion which along with his
constitutes the opinion of the majority, in rule 3 it was
provided that when the Chairman of a Tribunal is ill or absent
for any other reason the Second Judicial Member of the
Tribunal shall act as the Chairman." Argument raised before
the Court was that said rules, in so far as they purport to
authorise two members of a Tribunal to sit and dispose of
matters arising for the decision of the Tribunal are invalid as
being ultra vires to the provisions of the Act. The Madras High
Court on examining the provision of the Act and the Rules as
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
11
quoted above held that “on a plain reading of the language of
the material sections this contention must prevail. Under
Section 9 (4) (b) it is the "Tribunal" which must hear and give its
decision in an appeal preferred to it under Section 9 (4) (a). The
Tribunal, according to the definition, means a Tribunal
constituted under Section 8 and under Section 8 (2) it is
expressly provided that each Tribunal shall consist of three
members. When the substantive provision in the Act clearly
lays down that the Tribunal shall consist of three members it is
not open for the Government to provide by a rule that a
Tribunal may consist of less than three members”.
14.
It is to be noted that composition of the
“Authority”, the Quorum, required to attend and make
decisions both administrative and or quasi judicial, as is
required to be taken by any regulatory Authority, within the
contemplation of Section 3 of the Act of 1997, is with great
deal of flexibility from the strict rules of rigidity. Important
nature of functions and duties of the Authority, that is
required to take administrative and quasi judicial functions
and duties, with promptitude desired informality and
flexibility in its composition so that the working of the
Authority may not be stifled and or strangulated in the rigors
of strict norms of its composition and effect its performance of
functions and duties. Section 5(1) thereof provides that
meeting of the authority shall be presided over by the
chairman or, in absence, the Vice chairman. And Section 5(2)
ibid provides in clear terms that three members shall
constitute a quorum for meetings of the Authority requiring
decisions by the Authority. In order to dispel any doubt as to
the effect and or merit of any act and or proceedings by the
Authority, legislature has taken due care of eventuality in
case where there happens to be any vacancy in, or defect in,
the constitution of the Authority. Subsection (6) of Section 3
provides legal cover and any such act or proceedings could
not be invalidated on such count. Object of sub-section (6) of
section 3 ibid, is to keep the authority functional in all
respects in performance of its all functions irrespective of any
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
12
vacancy but subject to maintaining minimum strength of
quorum as three. There is no dispute that at the time when
the original decision was rendered on 6.2.2014 and even at
the time when the decision dated 16.6.2014 on Motion for
Leave to Review was handed down, the Authority was
comprised of two Members and a vice Chairman, that met the
minimum requirement of three members quorum set down in
terms of Section 5 (2) of the Act, 2007.
15.
The Authority that has been conferred power
under clause (g) of sub-section (2) of Section 7 to “review its
order, decision, or determination”. Power to Review was
conferred on the authority as noted above under the
Regulation of Generation, Transmission and Distribution of
Electric Power (Amendment) Act, 2011 and Rules were framed
on 23 December 1998. Therefore, rules providing any other,
strength of members for exercising its authority may it be
executive, administrative and or quasi judicial, different than
what is set down in the parent Statute itself, unless of course,
such is permissible and provided for under the Act itself,
must yield to the present Statute.
16.
Every provision of the Act, 1997 is to be read
harmoniously and rules are to be read keeping in sight the
parameters of the parent statute. Therefore, rule 16(6) of the
Rules 1998 requires order, determination on motion for leave
for review is to be made by “full strength”, within the
contemplation of Rule 16(6) ibid means strength as set down
in the Statute itself, that is minimum of three members
within the contemplation of section 5 (2) of the Act, 1997. Act
of 2007 does not admit of any classification of Authority viz.
statutory strength and or full strength, and none should be
created when the parent Statute does not permit so. One
must not lose sight of the fact that rules are subservient to
the Statute. Rules must be interpreted in a manner that it
remains within the confine of the Statute itself and any
interpretation that may outstretch the rules to take it out of
pale of Statute should be avoided.
Civil Appeal No.1149 of 2015
13
17.
In view of the above discussion, we have no
hesitation in holding that decision by as many members as
were present not below quorum as required under Section 5(2)
of the Act, 1997 is the “the full strength” of the Authority
within the preview of the Rule 16(6) of the Rules, 1998. The
decision of the Authority dated 6.2.2014 was therefore, well
within the competence
of the
Authority. Accordingly,
impugned Judgment dated 28.5.2015 passed by a learned
Division Bench of the High Court in ICA No.67/2015
maintaining the judgment of the learned Single Judge dated
15.12.2014 is set aside. Resultantly, the appeal is allowed.
Judge
Judge
Judge
ISLAMABAD, THE
8th of December, 2015
ZR/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1149_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
.4-
SUPREME COURT OF p
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed, CJ
Mr. Justice Jjaz iii Ahsan
•__I
-a
t
--
[Against the judgment dated 22.09.2020, passed by the
Sindh Service Tribunal, Karachi in Appeal No.1009 of 20191
Abdul Sattar Jatoj son of Saaduiiah Jatoi,
Muslim, Adult, Director (Administration,
Accounts & Development) (BPS -2 0),
resident of House No.29..A, Jatol Haven,
Samanabad, Near Marzjj ?own, Qasimabad
Hyderabad.
Versus
. . . Appellant(s)
Chief Minister Sindh through Principal
Secretary, Chief Minister Secretariat,
K arachi and others.. .
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s) Mr. M.M. Aqil Awan, Sr.ASC
For Respondents No. 1-4
Syed M. Saulat Rizvi,
(Govt of Sindh)
Add]. Advocate General, Sindh
(via video link from Karachi)
Respondent No.5 In person
Date of Hearing
90 fli r)nni
JUDGMENT
This civil appeal is by leave of the :J
Court vide order dated 03.12.2020.
2.
Facts of the matter are that Respondent No.5-Au
Abbas (the respondent) and appellant Abdul Sattar Jatoi were
appointed on 16.03.1992 as Planning Officers (BPS-I?) in the
Health Department,Government of Sindh on the recommendation
of the Sindh Public Service Commission, which contained the
merit list, where the name of Respondent No.5 was
mentioned at
Serial No.5, while the name of the appellant was mentioned at
.1
-
Cilil Appeal No 1167 of 2020
- 2
Serial No.9. Both the respondent and the appellant were ptomoted :1
as Deputy District Officer (P&D) (BPS-] 8) vide Notification dated J
1 1.10.2004, wherein the name of the respondent was mentioned t
at Serial No-3, while that of the appellant at Serial No-5. Seven
Deputy District Officers (P&D) (BPS-18) were promoted as District I
Officer (Administration, Accounts & Development) ( BPS-19) and 1
one as Additional Director Development by the Provincial Selection
Board No.11 held on 27.01.2010, wherein name of respondent is
mentioned at Serial No.2, while the appellant at Serial No.5,
3. It seems that the post of District Officer
(Administration, Accounts & Development) (BPS-19) was
abolished Vide Notification dated 07.11.2012, the appellant, an
officer in BPS- 19 in the Health Department, was declared surplus H
with immediate effect and under Rule 9-A of the Sindh Civil
Servants (Appointment, Promotion & Transfer) Rules, 1974 (the
Rule of 1974), his service was placed at the disposal of the a
surplus-pool
of Services,
General Administration and I
Coordination Department (SGA&CD), Government of Sindh.
Through a further Notification dated 1 0.01.2013, the appellant
was absorbed / inducted in the Provincial Secretariat Set-vice cadre
against an equivalent post of BPS- 19 with immediate effect.
1r
Through further Notification dated 02 .07.2013, the absorption of
the appellant in the Provincial Secretariat Service was withdrawn.
The appellant made an application dated 25.07.2013 addressed to
the Chief Secretary, Government of Sindh requesting that he may :J
be posted/absorbed back against non-cadre position at Liaquat 1
University Hospital Hyderabad/Jamshoro by re-designating post I
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2020
-
of BPS- 19, as Director (Administration, Accounts and
Development). The summary dated 12.12.2013 for the approval of
the Chief Minister, Sindh was initiated recommending re-
designation of one post on non-clinical side as Director
(Administration, Accounts & Development) (BPS- 19) for absorption
of the appellant. Vide Notification dated 09.01.2014, the appellant
was posted as a Project Director, Project Management &
Implementation Unit (PMIU), Education & Literacy Department.
Through the order of the Health Department, Government of
Sindh dated 09.11.2016, one post of Additional Medical
Superintendent (BPS-19), Liaquat University Hospital, Hyderabad
was sanctioned and re-designated as Director (Administration,
Accounts & Development) (BPS-19) on non-clinical side for
absorption of the appellant. Through Notification dated
25.11.2016, the appellant was absorbed as Director
(Administration, Accounts & Development) (BPS-19), Liaquat
University Hospital, Hyderabad. Through further Notification
dated 06.03.201.8, rules for appointment were amended and a
person specific post of Director (Administration, Accounts and
Development) in BPS-20 was created for the appellant in the
Health Department, Government of Sindh. Through further
Notification dated 01.06.2018, the appellant was promoted to the I
post of Director (Administration, Accounts & Development) in
BPS-20 on regular basis with immediate effect. The respondent
was aggrieved of this last mentioned Notification and thus,
submitted a departmental appeal. The respondent did not receive
response to the departmental appeal, therefore, he filed Service
Civil Appeal No. 1 167 of 2020
Appeal No.993 of 2018 in the Sindh Service Tribunal, Karachi (the
Tribunal). He made the appellant as Respondent No.4 in the said
service appeal and prayed that the promotion of the appellant as
Director (Administration, Accounts & Development) in BPS-20 be
cancelled and withdrawn, and the said post be filled up amongst
the most senior officers on the basis of seniority-cum-fitness and
in accordance with law. This service appeal of the respondent was
dismissed as premature vide order dated 30.08.20 19 and he was
allowed to file departmental appeal and then to file service appeal
within 90 days of filing of the departmental appeal. The
respondent seems to have filed departmental review
appeal/petition and getting no response on the same, again filed a
service appeal in the Sindh Service Tribunal. The appellant was
impleaded as Respondent No.5 in this service appeal. After
hearing the learned counsel for the parties, the Tribunal through
its impugned judgment dated 22.09.2020, disposed of the appeal
by noting, inter a/ia, as follows:-
"17. It was told to us that currently the
respondent No.05 has been relieved of the charge
of the post of BS-20 Liaquat University Hospital,
Hydcrabad/Jamshoro and he has reported to
Health Department. He is therefore to stay there
and be treated and posted in BS-19 like his
batch-mates obeying the judgment of the Hon'ble
Supreme Court in letter and spirit. His promotion
to BS-20 is set aside."
As noted above, the Tribunal has set aside the promotion of
the appellant as an Officer of BPS-20.
4.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that
the very service appeal filed by the respondent before the Tribunal
Civil Appcal No.] 367 012020
was not maintainable and in this regard made reference to Section
4(b) of the Sindh Service Tribunals Act, 1973. He further
contended that the officers of the Health Department were
H
Considered for promotion by the Provincial Selection Board No.11 H
held on 27.1.2010 and the appellant so also the respondent and
other five officials were granted promotion from the post of Deputy
District Officer (Planning & Development) (BPS-18) to the post of
District Officer (Administration, Accounts and Development) (BPS-
19) and one as Additional Director Development. He further
contended that through the Sindh (Repeal of the Sindh Local
Government Ordinance, 2001 and Revival of the Sindh Local
Government Ordinance, 1979) Act, 2011 (the Act of 2011), the
Sindh Local Government Ordinance, 2001 was repealed and the i
Sindh Local Government Ordinance, 1979 was revived, and
further on Promulgation of the Act of 201 1, the posts held by the
appellant and the respondent were abolished and while the
appellant was placed in the surplus-pool the respondent
continued to work in the Health Department in BPS-19. He
contended that under Rule 9-A of the Sindh Civil Servants
(Appointment, Promotion and Transfer) Rules, 1974, the SGA&CD
being parent Department was competent to post the appellant in
any other department and could also be re-designated. He further
contended that having been posted as Additional Medical :1
Superintendent (BPS-1 .9) in Liaquat University Hospital,
Hyderabad and re-designated as Director (Administration
Accounts and Development) (BPS- 19) on non-clinical side, and the
said Hospital being attached department of the Health
Civil Appeal NO. 1167 of 2020
- 6
Department,in terms of the recruitment rules, the post of Director
(Administration, Accounts and Development) (BPS-20) was Created
and the appellant was promoted to the said post. He contended
that there was no illegality in the promotion of the appellant and
in this respect relied upon the Cases of Shaft Muhammad Mughaj
V. SPrrc'tnn,
'-.4-.-7-u_y - - -
(2001 SCMR 1446),
others (1995 SCMR 881), Miss Zubaicia Khatoon v: Mrs. Tehmjna
Safid Sheikh and others (2011 PLC (C.S.) 596), Messrs Associated
ccjrnt Companies Ltd v. Pakjctnn thrn,,1 a7--
!L! YJ!t L2Lore Range Lahore and 7 others (PLD 1978 SC
151), Dr.
Hag v. The Province of Pun lab and others (1980
SCMR 972), A-b-d
ul Sattar v. Pprlc'rntinn
(2013 SCMR 911),
(1995
SCMR 1505), The Chairman, P.LA.0 and others v
(PLD 1990 SC 951),
M.A. Ghafoor, Senior Mechanical OfJicer, H
Lahore v. Islamic Republic
QLE2±i5t4zithrough Secretary Establishment Division, Government
QstanJslamabadd24 others (2002 PLC (C.S.) 164]) and
Government of Balochistan throuq Secrptnn, Cnn ,:-,---
-
1Y4
seer (2009 PLC (C.S.) 513).
5. The learned Additional Advocate General, Sindh
appearing for the official respondents did not Oppose the
Contentions of the learned counsel for the appellant
.1
H
Civil Appeal No. J 167 of 2020
-7-
6.
The respondent appeared in person and argued his !
case himself. He has Supported the impugned judgment and
contended that the appellant was junior to him since the initial
appointment and at no point of time the appellant was ever made
senior to him. He contended that a person specific post of Director
I
(Administration, Accounts and Development) in BPS-20 was
created for the appellant and on the desire of the appellant, he
was also promoted to such post. He further contended that all
along special rules have been made for the appellant and he has
been favoured by the official respondents and in doing so, the
official respondents committed grave illegality, for that, he being
senior to the appellant in BPS-] 9 in the Health Department,his
case for promotion was not considered for the post of BPS-20.
7.
The learned counsel for the appellant in the end has
contended that the very service appeal filed by the respondent
before the Tribunal was time barred.
8.
We have considered the submissions made by the
learned counsel for the appellant as well as the learned Additional
Ii
Advocate General, Sindh and the respondent who appeared in
person, and have also gone through the record of the case.
:t
9.
We will take up the question of limitation of filing of
service appeal by the respondent before the Tribunal in the first j
place. From the impugned judgment, we note that there is no
discussion by the Tribunal on the point of limitation of the service
appeal filed by the respondent before it but as the question of
limitation being also a question of law, we would like to address
the same. The appellant in the very memo of his service appeal
Civil Appeal No. 1167 or 2070
before the Tribunal has raised grievance against the order dated
01.06.2018 of promotion of his junior/batch-mate i.e. the
appellant from BPS- 19 to BPS-20 and has alleged that he has filed
appeal in the Office of the Secretary Health through proper
channel with an advance copy in the Office of the Worthy Chief
Minister and Secretary, SGA&CD but as no response was
received, he filed Service Appeal No.993 of 2018, in the Tribunal,
which was decided by the Tribunal vide its order dated
30.08.2019, which is as follows:-
"Learned Additional Advocate General present for
the respondents. He files statement whereby the
respondent No.] & 3 have adopted the written
statement filed by the respondent No.02. The
same is taken on record, copy supplied to the
appellant. When pointed out to the appellant that
the preliminary objections have been raised by the
respondents that his departmental appeal has
been filed before wrong forum and also the
appellant did not file the service appeal
immediately within the period of 30 days after the
lapse of 90 days of his departmental appeal.
Therefore he is supposed to wait for the final
decision in the departmental appeal.
After getting apprised of those objections, the
appellant request for passing any appropriate
order. The appeal being premature is dismissed.
The appellant shall be at liberty to correct his
steps under law and file appeal/review before the
competent authority to decide it. He shall be at
liberty to file appeal before this Tribunal in ease
his proper petition/review/appeal is not disposed
of within 90 days of the institution thereof.
Appellant has expressed his apprehension that
his fresh review/petition may not be received by
Cvil Appeal No. 1 167 of 2020
-9
the competent authority on that the learned
Additional Advocate General, Sindh assures that
when the Petition/ review/ appeal is ready for the
presentation he shall get it received by the
concerned authority."
10.
Pursuant to the order of the Tribunal, the respondent
appears to have filed a review appeal/petition for cancellation of
promotion order of the appellant and having received no response,
again filed the service appeal before the Tribunal with the prayer
seeking, inter alia, that promotion of the appellant as Director
(Administration, Accounts and Development) (BPS-20) vide
Notification dated 01.06.2018 may be cancelled/withdrawn and
Promotion be made amongst the senior most officers, including
the respondent on seniority-cum-fitness basis. The contention of
the learned counsel for the appellant is that the limitati7n has to
be counted from 01.06.2018 , on which date the Notification of
Promotion to the post of BPS-20 of the appellant was issued. He
has contended that review appeal was filed by the respondent on
1 3-09.2019, was barred by one ye, three months and 12 days.
Though such a submission has been made by the learned counsel
for the appellant but has not taken into consideration that earlier
too the respondent had filed Service Appeal No.993 of 2018 and
the Tribunal vide its order dated 30.08.2019 dismissed the same
as premature and allowed the respondent to file appeal/review
before the competent authority and then he was at libert y to file
the appeal before the Tribunal within 90 days of filing of the
appeal/review. It is apparent from the document available at page-
91 of the paper book that the respondent has submitted the
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2020
- lo-
review appeal/petition and the same was forwarded by the
Medical Superintendent, Peoples Medical College Hospital,
Nawabshah (Shaheen Benazir Abad) under his covering letter
dated 13.09.2019 to the Secretary, Government of Sindh, Health
Department, Karachi. Going through the order of the Tribunal
dated 30.08.2019, in which the appellant was duly represented
but he did not challenge the same, the respondent having
submitted the review appeal/petition in terms of the order of the
Tribunal and then filed the service appeal before the Tribunal on
24,12.2019, we are unable to find the service appeal to be time
barred as claimed by the learned counsel for the appellant.
11. The submission of the learned counsel for the
appellant that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain the
service appeal filed by the respondent revolves around Section 4(b)
of the Sindh Service Tribunals At, 1.973 (the Act of 1973), which
provides that no appeal shall lie to a Tribunal against an order or
a decision of a departmental authority determining the fitness or
otherwise of a person, to be appointed to or hold a particular post
or, to be promoted to a higher post or grade. The respondent in
his service appeal before the Tribunal has made the following
prayer:
"Under the circumstances it is humbly prayed in
the interest of justice.
i.
The promotion of Mr. Abdul Sattar
Jatoi as Director Administration Accounts &
Development BPS-20 be cancelled
immediately from 01.6-2018 and the same
may be filled by the way of promotion from
amongst the seniors including appellant on
the basis of fitness cum seniority in
accordance with law by modification of
rules of promotion.
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2020
ii.
The post of Director Administration
Accounts & Development/ Director
Development & Evaluation BPS-20 may be
created in any of similar institution viz Civil
Hospital
Karachi/ PMC
Hospital
Nawabshah / C MC Hospital Uarkana/
Directorate General Health Services Sindh,
Hyderabad as created at LMC Hyderabad
for promotion of Seniors with financial
benefits of same date (01 .06.20 18)
including appellant based on fitness cum
seniority in accordance with law.
iii.
Any other relief may be awarded as
deemed just and proper."
The above prayer shows that the respondent has challenged
the promotion of the appellant as Director (Administration,
Accounts & Development) (BPS-20) and has sought cancellation of
notification dated 01.06.2018 by which the appellant was
promoted. The respondent has also prayed that the post of
Director (Administration, Accounts & Development) (BPS-20) be
filled up by way of promotion from amongst the seniors including
the respondent on the basis of seniority-cum- fitness and in
accordance with law by modification of rules for promotion. The
respondent has also prayed that the post of Director
(Administration, Accounts & Development/ Director Development
& Evaluation (BPS-20) may be created in any of the similar
institutions viz Civil Hospital Karachi / PMC Hospital
Nawabshah / CMC Hospital, Larkana/ Directorate General Health
Services Sindh, Hyderabad, as is created in LMC Hyderabad.
12. It is to be noted that proviso (b) of Section 4 of the Act
of 1973, as noted above, bars filing of a service appeal before the
Tribunal against an order or a decision of a departmental
authority determining the fitness or otherwise of a person to be
appointed to or hold a particular post or to be promoted to a
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2070
- 12
higher post or grade. This provision deals with a situation that the
departmental authority has dealt with the matter of promotions of
all the employees eligible for promotion to a post and having found
a certain employee to be fit for promotion, promoted him the
remaining civil servants whose case for promotion was considered
but found not fit to be promoted, such civil servants' service
appeals before the Tribunal were not lie. In the present case, no
such order or decision, determining the fitness or otherwise of a
person to be appointed, has either been made by the departmental
authority nor the question of fitness of the appellant to be
promoted has at all been raised. The grievance: in the service
appeal filed by the respondent before the Tribunal was that the
departmental authority did not at all consider the case of the
appellant's own batch-mates including the respondent who were
working in the post of BPS-19 in the Health Department for
promotion to the post of BPS-20, in that, only the appellant was
picked up by the departmental authority for grant of promotion to
him in BPS-20 and the senior batch-mates of the appellant have
altogether not been considered for granting of promotion to the
post of BPS-20. Had the departmental authority considered the
case of promotion of all the batch-mates of the appellant working
in BPS-19 in the Health Department and the respondent having
been found not fit for promotion to the post of BPS-20 by the
departmental authority, the service appeal on such question
would have been barred before the Tribunal, such is not the case
in hand before the Court.
U
Civil Appeal No.1 167 of 2020
'IL
13. The next submission of the learned counsel for the
appellant is that on repeal of the Act of 2011, the post of District
Officer Planning and Development (BPS-19) in the Health
Department was abolished and the appellant was justifiably
placed in surplus-pool and being available in the surplus-pool
SGA&CD was competent to post the appellant in any other
department and on any other post.
14.
We note that although the Act of 2011 was repealed
but the Health Department continued to operate, in that, as
contended by the learned counsel for the appellant himself, the I
respondent continued to serve the said department It seems that
out of all the District Officers (Administration, Accounts &
Development) (BPS-19) only the appellant's name appears to have
been put in surplus-pool, upon which the wish list of the
appellant started and through notification dated 02.07.2013, the
competent authority eagerly complied with such wish of the
appellant by inducting him in the Provincial Secretariat Service
cadre in the equivalent post of BPS-19 by notification dated
10.01.201.3. Such absorption/ induction of the appellant was
withdrawn on 02.07.2013, upon which the appellant himself
made an application dated 25.07.2013 to the Chief Secretary
I
Government of Sindh requesting that he may be posted/absorbed
back against non-cadre Position at Liaquat University Hospital,
Hyderabad/J500 by re-designating his existing post of BPS-
19 as Director (Administration, Accounts and Development). On
this request of the appellant, summary dated 12.12.2013 was
floated for the approval of the Chief Minister, Sindh,
K,
Civil Appeal No. 1167 o12020
- 14
recommending that one post of Additional Medical Superintendent
(BPS-19) in Liaquat University Hospital, Hyderabad may be re-
designated on non-clinical side as Director (Administration,
Accounts & Development) (BPS-19) and the appellant be absorbed
against such post. Vide notification dated 09.01.2014, the
appellant was posted as Project Director, Project Management &
Implementation Unit (PMIU), Education & Literacy Department.
This notification was cancelled /withdrawn vide notification dated
20.08.20 14 and the appellant was asked to report to his parent
department as District Officer (Administration, Accounts &
Development) (BPS-19). Through an order dated 09.11.2016, one
post of Additional Medical Superintendent (BPS-49), Liaquat
University Hospital, Hyderabad was sanctioned and re-designated
as Director (Administration, Accounts & Development) (BPS-19)
on non-clinical side for specific absorption of the appellant.
Through notification dated 25.11.2016, the appellant was
absorbed as Director (Administration, Accounts & Development)
(BPS-19) in the Liaquat University Hospital, Hyderabad. The wish
list of the appellant did not end there and the departmental
authority continued to be too eager to accommodate him to the
post of appellant's own desire. For doing so, through notification
dated 06.03.2018, the rules were amended, so that the appellant
could be appointed to the post of Director (Administration,
Accounts & Development) in BPS-20 in the Health Department.
This amendment in the rules was made person specific to
accommodate the appellant alone and the appellant, out of so
many other batch-mates in BPS-19 in the Health Department,
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2020
- '
-
was granted promotion vide notification dated 01.06.2018 from
BPS-19 to BPS-20 and the post of Director (Administration,
Accounts & Development) was shown to be the post of BPS-20.
15.
The law regarding grant of promotion by the competent
authority is well settled that the competent authority while
considering grant of promotion is duty bound and obliged under
the law to consider merit of all the eligible candidates and after
due deliberations, to grant promotion to such eligible candidates
who are found to be most meritorious among them. The law does
not permit to the competent authority to just pick one specific
person and amend the rules for him and then create a post and
oblige and grant promotion to that one person. The rule is that the I
competent authority is bound to consider all eligible candidates
for promotion on merit. This is the requirement of Article 4 of the
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973, which lays
down as a command that to enjoy the protection of law and to be
treated in accordance with law is the inalienable right of every
citizen, whoever he may be. Further Article 25 of the Constitution
as a Fundamental Right, prohibits discrimination and requires
that all citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal
protection of law.
16.
As noted above, the respondent and the appellant were
appointed on 16.03.1992 as Planning Officers (BPS-17) in the
Health Department, Government of Sindh on the recommendation Fc
of the Sindh Public Service Commission, which contain the merit
list where the name of the respondent was mentioned at Serial
No.5, while the name of the appellant was mentioned at Serial
ii
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 9.020
No.9. They were promoted together as Deputy District Officers
(P&D) (BPS-18) vide notification dated 11.10.2004, in which the H
name of the respondent was at Serial No.3, while that of the
appellant was at Serial No.5. The respondent and the appellant
were again promoted together as District Officers (Administration,
Accounts & Development) (BPS-19) by the Provincial Selection
Board No.11 on 27.10.201.0, wherein the name of the respondent
was at Serial No.2, while the appellant was at Serial No.5. They
continued to remain in BPS-19 while through the impugned
notification dated 01.06.2018, only the appellant was granted
promotion to the post of BPS-20 and that too by making specific
amendment in the rules and creating a post of Director
(Administration, Accounts & Development) in BPS-20.
17. It is an admitted fact that both the respondent and the I
appellant belong to one and the same cadre in the Health
Department, Government of Sindh and at the time when the
appellant was promoted to the post of BPS-20, the other batch-
mates of the appellant in BPS-19 in the Health Department who
were even senior to him from the very beginning of their service
career, were ignored, in that, their cases of promotion were not
put up before the competent authority for determination of their
merit for promotion to the post in BPS-20. It was not at all argued
before us that the respondent was not eligible to be considered for
promotion to the post of BPS-20 when the appellant was granted
promotion to the post of BPS-20. Right to promotion is not an
illusionary nor a perfunctory right which could be ignored
casually. Non-considering of an officer being equally eligible for
Civil Appeal No.] 167 of 2020
-17-
promotion is a serious matter and not only undermines discipline
but creates serious bad blood and heart burning among the rank
and file of civil service. In the matter of civil service, there should
not at all be any instance where the competent authority is found
to be accommodating any one civil servant for grant of promotion
and availing of better service benefits leaving all other equals and
even seniors abandoned.
18.
This Court in the case of Secretary Agriculturç
Government of the Punjab, Lahore vs. Muhammad Akram (2018
SCMR 349) has specifically held that the creation of a specific post
for the benefit of one specific civil servant was illegal. In the matter
of Contempt of Court Proceedings against Chief Scctary, Sindh
and other (2013 SCMR 1752) this Court has held that "the
impugned legislation on absorption is persons/class specific as it
extends favours to specific persons infringing the rights
guaranteed to all the civil servants under the service structure
provided under Articles 240 and 242 of the Constitution. ... In the
case in hand the impugned legislation, prima facie, has been
made to protect, promote and select specific persons who are close
to centre of power, and has altered the terms and conditions of
service of the civil servants to their disadvantage in violation of
Article 25 of the Constitution". It was also held that "no civil Ii
servant of a non-cadre post can be transferred out of cadre to be J
absorbed to a cadre post which is meant for recruitment through
competitive process". In the case of Baz Muhammad Kakar and
others vs. Federation of Pakistan and others (PLO 2012 SC 870)
1
this Court observed as follows:
I
Civil Appeal No, 1167 or 2020
18-
"The legislature cannot promulgate laws which
are persons/class specific as such legislation
instead of promoting the administration of justice
caused injustice in the society amongst the
citizens, who were being governed under the
Constitution."
19. In the famous case of Tang Aziz-ud-Din and others
(2010 SCMR 1301) leading with the question of promotion to civil
servants, this Court has observed as follows:
"27. ... It is a settled principle of law that object
of good governance cannot be achieved by
exercising discretionary powers unreasonably or
arbitrarily and without application of mind but
objective can be achieved by following the rules of
justness, fairness and openness in consonance
with the command of the Constitution enshrined
in different articles including Articles 4 and 25.
Once it is accepted that the Constitution is the
supreme law of the country, no room is kit to
allow any authority to make departure from any of
its provisions or the law and the rules made
thereunder."
It was further observed as under:
"it is the duty and obligation of the competent
authority to consider the merit of all the eligible
candidates while putting them in juxtaposition to
find out the meritorious amongst them otherwise
is one of the organs of the State i.e. Executive
could not survive as an independent organ which
is the command of the Constitution. Expression
'merit' includes limitations prescribed under the
law. Discretion is to be exercised according to
rational reasons which means that; (a) there be
Finding of primary facts based on good evidence;
and (b) decisions about facts be made, for reasons
which serve the purposes of statute in an
p
0
Civil Appeal No 1167 of 2070
- 19-
intelligible and reasonable manner. Actions which
do not meet these threshold requirements are
considered arbitrary and misuse of power
20. We have also gone through the case law cited by the
learned counsel for the appellant and note that in Shafi
Muhammad Mughal's ease (supra) the DPC has considered the
ease of promotion of the petitioner therein along with respondent
No.6 therein and while he was superseded, respondent No.6 was
granted promotion to the rank of Superintendent of Police (BPS-
18), and while referring to the ease of Muhammad Anis and others
vs. Abdul Haseeb (PLD 1994 SC 539), the Court held as follows:
"1.3. Thus, it would seem that the expression
"eligibility" and "fitness" are distinct and are for
different purposes. The Legislature in its wisdom
has left the issue of fitness at the discretion of the
competent authority for the obvious reason that
the authority looking background and the
performance would be in a better position to
determine the issue of fitness than the Tribunal or
the Court. In this particular case, as is evident
from the report, referred to earlier, it is clear that
general reputation of the petitioner in the past
was not satisfactory, rather it was poor. Nothing
material has also been brought on record to
substantiate the plea that said Vigilance Report
H
was false."
In Zafar igbal's case (supra) the petitioner was denied
promotion by the Departmental Promotion Committee on the
ground that he was not found fit for promotion, against which he
filed a service appeal before the Service Tribunal with the prayer of
granting him promotion on the basis of seniority. The Service
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2020
20
Tribunal dismissed his service appeal, which order of the Tribunal
was maintained and leave was refused by this Court. In Miss
Zubaida Khatoon's case (supra) the Selection Board considered
the case of promotion of the respondent therein and found her
unfit for promotion, whereas the Selection Board promoted the
appellant therein. The respondent challenged the non-promotion
by the Selection Board by filing of a writ petition in the High Court
which was allowed and the notification issued by the Selection
Board was set aside. Leave to appeal was granted in the matter
and after elaborate consideration, this Court observed as follows:
"18. Learned counsel was specifically confronted
with the service profile of the respondent,
reproduced in paragraph 17 of the impugned
judgment and the comparative service record of
both the parties as given in paragraph 25 of the
impugned judgment. He could neither controvert
the factual aspect of the said comparative chart
nor could he join issue with the observations
made by the court which have been reproduced in
the preceding para. He mainly reiterated the
argument that the learned High Court could not
have embarked upon factual inquiry as the same
was neither tenable under Article 199 of the
Constitution nor permissible in view of the
specific bar contained in Article 212 of the
F
Constitution. The argument of bar of jurisdiction
has already been repelled in above paragraphs. So
far as the contention that the learned High Court
could not undertake a factual inquiry is
concerned, the same is misplaced, first because
the High Court was not recording any new
evidence but was proceeding on the basis of the
admitted facts and second, if having examined the
admitted facts, it had come to the conclusion that
the authority had passed the order in colourable
Civil Appeal No. 1167 of 2020
exercise of powers conferred on it, or an authority
having power to promote or appoint to a
particular post had done so against the law or
without jurisdiction or while doing so as for mala
fide reasons had not taken into consideration the
relevant record, it could come in aid of person
aggrieved to redress the wrong. The impugned
judgment on that score is unexceptionable.
However, we find that after annulling the
notification which had been impugned before the
learned High Court, the court could not have
directed promotion of respondent No. 1 and
instead should have left the matter to be decided
by the Promotion Committee afresh as the said
authority was competent to pass appropriate
order after de novo exercise.
19. For what has been discussed above, this
appeal is partly allowed and while upholding the
impugned judgment insofar as it annulled the
notification dated 13-8-2001, we direct the
concerned Promotion Committee to decide the
matter afresh within two months of the receipt of
this judgment."
The cited cases on the question of jurisdiction of the
Tribunal are distinguishable on the sole ground that neither the
ease of respondent was placed before Departmental Promotion
Committee nor did it consider the case of promotion of the
respondent, who was eligible for being Considered for promotion
along with the appellant to the post of BPS-20. No fitness for
promotion of the respondent was at all determined.
21.
Messrs Associated Cement Companies Ltd's ease
-21
(supra) and Dr. Ehsan-ul ..J-{aq's ease (supra) have been relied upon
by the learned counsel for the appellant to contend that the
respondent was not an aggrieved person and his terms and
Bench-I
'APPROVE]) FOR REPORTING'
Mahtab H. Sheikh/*
Announced on 10 61 2ø22 at
c.I
a
Civil Appeal No.] 167 of 9,020
22-
conditions of service were not adversely effected. We may note that
the very non-consideration of the respondent for grant of
promotion to the post of BPS-20 along with his batch-mates,
which included the appellant, whose case only out of the total
number of his batch-mates was considered for promotion and also
granted promotion by making amendments in the rules and
creating the post specifically for him, did make the respondent an
aggrieved person for that his right to be considered for promotion
along with his batch-mates was at all not dealt with by the
competent authority. The rule laid down in the two cited
judgments, therefore, does not apply to the case in hand.
22.
Abdul Sattar's case (supra), Anwarul Hag's case
(supra), the Chairman, PIAC's case (supra), M.A. Ghafoor's case
(supra) and Government of Balochistan's case (supra) are all relied
upon on the point of limitation of the service appeal filed by the
respondent. Such aspect of the matter has already been dealt with
hereinabove and apparently, the cited judgments have no
application to the case in hand.
23.
For what has been discussed above, we find no
illegality in the impugned judgment of the Tribunal and are notj
persuaded to interfere with the same. The appeal is, therefore,
dismissed.
| {
"id": "C.A.1167_2020.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Mian Saqib Nisar
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Maqbool Baqar
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
Against judgment dated 05.08.2014 of Election
Tribunal, Lahore, passed in Election Petition No.226
of 2013.
Ch. Muhammad Ashraf Warraich
Appellant (in CA#1169/14)
Muhammad Nasir Cheema
Appellant (in CA#1192/14)
VERSUS
Muhammad Nasir Cheema, etc
Respondents (in CA#1169/14)
Ch. Muhammad Ashraf Warraich, etc
Respondents (in CA#1192/14)
For the Appellant(s):
Ch. Aamir Rehman, ASC
(in CA#1169/14)
Ch. Khurshid Anwar Bhindar, ASC
(in CA#1192/14)
For Respondent No.1:
Ch. Khurshid Anwar Bhindar, ASC
(in C.A.No.1169/14)
Ch. Aamir Rehman, ASC
(in CA#1192/14)
Date of Hearing:
11.05.2015
JUDGMENT
Mushir Alam, J-. Through this single judgment, we
intend to decide the listed Civil Appeal No.1169 of 2014, filed by
Ch. Muhammad Ashraf Warraich, and Civil Appeal No.1192 of
2014, filed by Muhammad Nisar Cheema.
2.
Muhammad Ashraf Cheema, also Respondent No.1
in Civil Appeal No.1192 of 2014 (hereinafter referred to as the
‘Returned Candidate’), has been non-seated by the learned
Election Tribunal, Lahore, vide the impugned decision dated
05.08.2014 and at the same time it directed the Election
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
2
Commission of Pakistan to take necessary steps for holding
Bye-Elections in 33 polling stations of the Constituency of PP-
97, Gujranwala. Second mentioned Appeal has been filed by
Muhammad Nasir Cheema, who is Respondent No.1 in first
mentioned Civil Appeal, (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Election
Petitioner’), is also aggrieved by the portion of the same
impugned decision, declining to declare him elected member
from the said constituency, has prayed for modification of the
impugned decision of the Election Tribunal to such an extent.
3.
Briefly stated the facts appear to be that the
elections for Provincial Assembly for Constituency PP-97,
Gujranwala-VII, comprising 120 polling stations were held along
with general elections throughout the Province of Punjab on
11.05.2013. Both the contestants along with 28 other
candidates contested for the Constituency, official result of the
election was declared on 13.06.2013 (Ex.PW.33/H). As a result
of the count in form XVI, first three candidates secured votes as
follows: -
i. Ch. Muhammad Ashraf Warraich,
Returned candidate secured……………..29,756 votes;
ii. Muhammad Nasir Cheema
Election Petitioner secured ……………..22, 335 votes;
iii. Ghulam Sarwar
Resp.No.25/Runner up secured……..23, 871 votes.
4.
None other than the Election Petitioner, Muhammad
Nasir Cheema challenged the election through Election Petition
No.226 of 2013 essentially on the ground summarized in the
impugned decision of the Election Tribunal as follows: -
“GROUND OF ATTACK NO.1
That the petitioner defeated all his political rivals
including the returned candidate and the runner up at 33
polling stations of the Constituency fully particularized in
the statement, Ex.PW-33/E; that his polling agents
received copies of statements of the count in form XIV
regarding said 33 polling stations from the Presiding
Officers and passed on to the petitioner, according to
which the petitioner secured 26,769 votes whereas the
returned candidate obtained 25,473 votes and that the
Returning Officer tempered with the statements of the
count in form XIV and reduced the votes polled to the
petitioner from 26,769 to 22,335.
GROUND OF ATTACK NO.2
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
3
That the General Election-2013 from Constituency No.PP-
97, Gujranwala-VII was not conducted in accordance
with delimitation of the constituencies approved and
notified under the Delimitation of Constituencies Act,
1974;
that
according
to
notified
delimitation
of
constituencies vide notification dated 28th June, 2002
and notification dated 08th April, 2013, Gujranwala
Cantt.
was
included
in
Constituency
No.PP-96-
Gujranwla, that villages Baddoke, Hardo Amin Pur,
Bhaghat Garh and Dhippha were made part of
Constituency No.PP-97 by the District Returning Officer
through poling scheme despite the fact that the above
said villages being located within the territorial limits of
Cantonment, Gujranwala should have been made part of
Constituency No.PP-96, Gujranwala and that the election
held on 11.05.2013 at the polling stations of aforesaid
villages under the said polling scheme being offensive to
the notified delimitation of constituencies, was null and
void.”
5.
However, serious challenge before this Court was
confined to first mentioned ground. From the record, it is
evident that Election Petitioner and the Returned Candidate
participated in the in the proceedings and other contesting
candidate were proceeded against ex-parte.
6.
After exchange of the pleadings, the learned Election
Tribunal framed the issues as follows: -
“1.
Whether the election petition is actuated by bad faith,
if so its effect. OPR1
2.
Whether the election petition is hit by the provisions
contained in section 55(1)(B) of the Representation of
People Act 1976? OPR1
3.
Whether the petitioner is estopped by his conduct to
file this petition OPR1
4.
What is effect of preliminary objections number A to D
and F of the written statement OPR1
5.
Whether the election of respondent No.1 is liable to be
declared as void and the petitioner is entitled to be
declared as Returned Candidate for the reasons
mentioned in the election petition? OPR1
6.
Relief”
7.
Issues No.1 to 4 were not contested by the Returned
Candidate, therefore, were decided in favour of the Election
Petitioner. Issue No.5, being pivotal, was seriously contested by
the disputants. Since burden to prove subject issue was on the
Election Petitioner, he examined himself as RW.33 and
produced his 30 polling agents, (PW-1 to PW-32) who
supported his case that they had collected the copies of
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
4
statements of count in form XIV issued by the Presiding Officers
of their respective polling stations. He produced consolidated
result of 33 polling stations Ex.P-33/E (available at pages 316 to
319 of CA#1169/2014) which shows total vote casted in his
favour whereby he secured 26,769 votes as against 25,473 votes
polled by the Returned Candidate. The Election Petitioner
produced the count of form XIV of all the 33 polling stations
himself and through his witnesses at trial. The Returned
Candidate (RW-33) examined 32 out of 33 Presiding Officers
(RW1-RW32) from the disputed polling stations. He and his
witnesses produced copies of the statements of the vote counts
in form XIV. Result of the counts as claimed by the disputant
candidates emerged as follows:-
Sr.No. Polling
station
No.
Number
of
poled
votes
to
the
petitioner as
per
statement of
the
count
relied upon
by
the
petitioner
Number
of
polled votes to
the
petitioner
as
per
statement
of
the
count
relied upon by
the
returned
candidate
Number
of
polled votes
to
the
returned
candidate
as
per
statement
of the count
relied upon
by
the
petitioner
Number
of
polled votes to
the
returned
candidate
as
per
statement
of
the
count
relied upon by
the
returned
candidate
1.
2
170
70
171
271
2.
4
238
138
174
274
3.
4
359
249
367
477
4.
6
285
135
145
295
5.
8
368
218
279
429
6.
9
397
297
374
474
7.
17
577
377
461
661
8.
59
306
156
480
630
9.
62
317
214
175
278
10.
78
135
35
152
252
11.
79
130
30
106
206
12.
80
259
59
260
460
13.
81
202
52
202
352
14.
82
132
32
120
220
15.
85
278
178
264
364
16.
87
226
26
159
359
17.
88
134
34
137
237
18.
91
287
87
175
375
19.
92
161
61
195
295
20.
93
189
39
223
373
21.
94
169
19
183
333
22.
97
133
33
165
265
23.
98
275
75
263
463
24.
99
190
40
173
323
25.
100
169
49
162
282
26.
101
140
40
146
246
27.
105
434
334
141
241
28.
106
364
264
157
257
29.
110
313
213
70
170
30.
113
471
271
210
410
31.
114
151
00
180
180
32.
115
430
230
306
506
33.
117
599
499
260
360
Grand Total
8988
4554
7035
11318
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
5
8.
It was noted by the learned Election Tribunal that
the statements of the count in form XIV as relied upon by the
Returned Candidate falls to the ground, if the statement of the
count adduced by the Election Petitioner is taken into
consideration. Conversely, if the result of the vote counts relied
upon by the Runner Up is taken as true, the Election of
Returned Candidate will not be open to any exceptions.
9.
Since the vote count in Form XIV produced by the
contesting parties was conflicting. To resolve the controversy
learned Election Tribunal, at the behest of the Election
Petitioner, in exercise of powers under Section 46 of the
Representation of People Act, 1976 (RoPA, 1976) deemed it
expedient to appoint a Commission (Mr. Sultan Ahmad,
Additional District and Sessions Judge, (Retd.), to examine the
election record of 33 challenged Polling Stations and submit
report. The Commission completed the exercise in presence of
contestants and also appeared as Tribunal Witness (TW-1). He
produced the Report as Ex. TW1/A and Ex. TW1/B. He deposed
that all the bags containing the election material including
statutory forms were not sealed when received by the
Commission.
10.
To examine the effect of the unsealed bags and to
ascertain the circumstances, how and when such bags were de-
sealed, learned Election Tribunal also examined Mr. Rehan
Bashir, Returning Officer as TW-2, Mr. Shakeel Ahmed, the
then District Accounts Officer, Gujranwala as TW.3 and Syed
Safdar Raza, Head Treasurer, Gujranwala as TW.4. On the
strength of the evidence so adduced, the learned Election
Tribunal in paragraph 16 observed that “After coming to the
conclusion that the Returning Officer deposited unsealed election
bags with the returning Officer attempted to conceal the factual
position from this election Tribunal, which persuaded him to
deposit unsealed election bags with the District Accounts Office is
open to serious exception.” It was thus concluded that “Here I
would say that the reasons and motive behind deposit of the
unsealed election bags in the district Treasury is shrouded in
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
6
mystery. Hence I feel no difficulty in concluding that the record
found by the Commission from unsealed Bags is worthless”.
11.
Learned Election Tribunal, took into consideration,
statements of the Presiding Officer of polling station No.6, Dr.
Shaheen Naqvi (RW.3), Presiding Officer of polling station 78,
Mr. Abdul Hameed Khalid (RW.8), Dr. Imtiaz Husain, Presiding
Officer (RW.10) of polling station No.80 (PP-97), Ms. Rakshanda
Iqbal (RW.14) Presiding Officer of polling station No.99, Ms.
Faiza Khan (RW.15) Presiding Officer of polling station No.101
and Mr. Muhammad Bilal (RW.30), Presiding Officer of polling
station No.59. It was noted that all the six Presiding Officers,
who were produced by the Returned Candidate, owned the
statement of count prepared by them in form XIV, confronted to
them by the Election Petitioner. They had no satisfactory
explanation to offer to the contradictory statement of count
contained in form XIV prepared by them and produced by the
Returned Candidate. Learned Election Tribunal also carefully
examined the report of the Commission (Ex.TW.1/A and
Ex.TW.1/B) constituted under Section 46 of RoPA, 1976. It has
also come on record that the Returning Officer, Rehan Bashir
(TW-2) “did not carry out the exercise of consolidation of results
qua the rejected votes in terms of section 39(3) of the Act, 1976”
and that “he failed to discharge his legal obligation”. Thus the
Election Tribunal observed that the all the six presiding officers
erroneously deposed that they had correctly prepared the
statements of the counts as presented to the Election Tribunal.
12.
Learned Election Tribunal, in paragraph 18 of the
impugned Decision, also took stock of the fact that as per
statements of count in Form XVI, of the six (06) challenged PS
namely PS No.2, (271 vote) PS No.17, (votes 661), PS No. 62,
(278 vote), PS No. 81, (votes 352) PS No.91(375 votes) and PS
No. 93 (373 votes) total 2260 votes were not found. It was thus
concluded that the ‘Returned Candidate’ could not substantiate
that he secured (2260) votes from said six challenged PS. In
paragraph 19 of the impugned Decision it was noted that Form
XIV were missing in bags of nine (09) challenged PS No.2, 17,
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
7
62, 81, 82, 91, 93 101 and 114 for the comparison with the
conflicting statements contained in form XIV, relied upon by the
disputant. In paragraph 20 of the Decision, it was noted that
from the bags of five (05) challenged PS (No.2, 80, 85, 93 and
94), not a single counterfoil was available though the form XVI
reflected that 4,302 votes were polled at the subject polling
stations. Thus, the validity of the 4,302 polled votes was held to
be seriously questionable.
13.
Learned
Election
Tribunal,
thoroughly
and
meticulously thrashed out the evidence led by the parties and
took note of the fact that the number of polled ballots did not
tally with the available record, as could be seen from the
tabulation of 33 challenged polling stations (Typed Page 20 of
the impugned judgment). It shows that total votes casted in
favour of the contesting candidates as per consolidated
statement in form XVI were recorded as 34,229. Whereas, total
number of votes actually found in the bags were only 19,300.
There is no explanation of shortage of 14,929 votes missing
from the bags. Learned Election Tribunal, also found that total
number of counterfoils did not tally with total number of polled
ballot papers found from the bags. It was admitted by the
Returning Officer (TW.2) at trial that he did not re-examine the
rejected votes, excluded from the count by the Presiding Officer
as was required under section 39(3) of the RoPA, 1976.
Discrepancy in total number of rejected votes as per Form XIV
were 728, whereas only 497 rejected votes were physically found
in the bags. The state of available and missing record as noticed
in various tabulated statements as discussed in the Decision
and as noted and discussed above, demolished the cause of the
Returned Candidate. On the strength of evidence as discussed
above, the learned Tribunal came to the following conclusion: -
“26. Keeping in view the above discussed factual and
legal position, the credibility, legality and transparency
of the election of returned candidate from 33 polling
stations of the Constituency have been eroded. According
to the consolidated statement of the count under
challenge the returned candidate was ahead of the
runner up by 5,885 votes, whereas the returned
candidate defeated the petitioner by 7,421 votes. The
returned candidate claimed to have obtained 11,291
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
8
votes at 33 polling stations. After coming to the
conclusion that election of the returned candidate from
33 polling stations is null and void with no legal effect,
the result of election favourable to the retuned candidate
falls to the ground mathematically and automatically. I,
therefore, declare election of the returned candidate to be
void. Resultantly, the position of respondent No.1 as
Member, Provincial Assembly, Punjab from the above
said constituency has ceased to exist. Issue No.5 is
answered to the above effect.
27.
Onus to prove issues No.1 to 3 and 4 was on the
respondent No.1/retuned candidate. During the course of
arguments, learned counsel for the returned candidate
did not utter a single word regarding these issues, which
are disposed of as having not been pressed.
28.
The Election Commission of Pakistan shall take
necessary steps for holding bye-election from the above
said 33 polling stations of the constituency (mentioned in
the list, Ex.PW-33/E) in accordance with law. The
District Returning Officer shall prepare polling scheme of
Constituency No.PP-97, Gujranwala afresh strictly in line
with delimitation of the constituencies already notified by
the Election Commission of Pakistan.”
14.
Learned ASC for the Returned Candidate, since non-
seated, contended that after the evidence of the parties was
concluded, in a bid to make fishing enquiry, the Election
Petitioner applied to the Election Commission for inspection of
record, said application was dismissed by the Election
Commission on 21.4.2013, which order was challenged and is
still subjudice before the High Court in Writ Petition
No.11615/14. It was, therefore, contended that learned Election
Tribunal fell into error by considering such request under
section 46 of the RoPA, 1976 vide its order dated 15.5.2014.
15.
It may be observed that candidature of a candidate
could be challenged under the RoPA, 1976 at three different
stages, right from the day of nomination till 45 days after the
declaration of the official result. First stage is pre-election
challenge at the time of scrutiny of nomination papers.
Challenge to the candidature could be thrown by any of the
contesting candidate, their agents, proposer, seconder, electors
by filing objections against any of the candidate before the
Returning Officer, on the grounds enumerated in clauses (a) to
(d) to subsection (3) and subsection (5A) of Section 14 of the
RoPA. Any decision rejecting or accepting nomination paper,
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
9
passed by the Returning Officer, is subject to right of appeal
before the Tribunal comprised of not less than two and not
more than three High Court Judges. Appeal is required to be
decided summarily within prescribed time, if time lapses,
appeal by virtue of deeming provision subsection (6) thereof is
deemed to be rejected. Second stage is post-election challenge
to the election of returned candidate before the Election
Commission of Pakistan, under Section 103 AA of the RoPA,
1976. Election Commission, after such summary enquiry as to
grave illegality or violation of the provisions of RoPA, 1976 or
the rules framed there under, may declare the poll in any
constituency as void and may call upon constituency to elect
member, but such jurisdiction to declare the poll void, could be
exercised before the expiry of sixty (60) days after the
publication of result of the election (per section 42 of RoPA),
where after, the Election Commission, becomes functus officio,
and the returned candidate is deemed to be elected, but subject
to the decision of Election Tribunal, constituted Section 57 of
RoPA. Provided such challenge is thrown, by any of the
contesting candidate. Third opportunity to challenge the
election of the returned candidate becomes available post-
election, to be made by any candidate of the subject
constituency, before the Election Tribunal constituted under
Section 57 ibid, within forty five (45) days from the date of
publication in the official gazette of the name of the returned
candidate, of the subject constituency in the manner provided
under the RoPA, 1976 itself.
16.
In cases of allegation of misconduct, the Returning
Officer on the application of a contesting candidate or on the
direction of Election Commission, has power under Section
39(3) of RoPA, 1976 to open packets, examine and inspect the
ballot papers in presence of contesting parties or their
representatives. Such request was made by the Election
Petitioner on the following day of election, but it was declined
by the Presiding Officer [Ex.P-33/F, available at page 320 of
CA#1169/14]. After the consolidation of result, such power
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
10
rests with Election Commission, which was moved on 18.5.2013
[Ex.P-33/G, available at pages 322 of CA#1169/14] to
scrutinize result of 33 polling stations but, was also rejected by
the Election Commission, through order dated 13.6.2013, on the
ground inter alia “that the election Tribunal, which have been
established and have commenced their work. If the Petitioner
approaches the election Tribunal for the redress of his grievances
his case would be decided expeditiously.”
17.
Election Commission of Pakistan, issued Notification
dated
22.5.2013
declaring
the
Petitioner
as
Returned
Candidate. On 03.6-2013, Election Tribunals were also set up
in Province of Punjab under section 57 of RoPA, for the trial of
election disputes. Consequently, Election Petitions was filed,
subject matter of instant Appeal.
18.
It was urged by the learned ASC, for the Petitioner,
that the appointment of the Commission, to examine the bags of
the 33 Polling Stations was not justified, as similar request was
declined by the Returning Officer and so also by the Election
Commission, for the recount of the votes in 33 Polling Station. It
was contended that it was the duty of the polling staff to
observe the law and the rules on the subject and on failure of
the same, the appellant cannot be penalized. According to
learned counsel, the election was held in large number of
polling stations, in a peaceful manner, and no objection to
majority of the polling stations was taken.
19.
Adverting to the contention of the learned ASC, for
the Appellant that after the dismissal of application of the
Election Petitioner by the Returning Officer and the Election
Commission of Pakistan as noted above, the Election Tribunal,
committed grave illegality to allow such application under
Section 46 of the RoPA, 1976 appointing Commission to inspect
the record of the 33 challenged Polling Stations is concerned. It
may be observed that the Election Tribunals are bestowed power
to inspect and examine the ballot papers of all sorts i.e. polled,
rejected, or spoiled etc. Such powers could not be invoked by
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
11
any party to the election Petition on mere ipsi dixit nor, could be
exercised by the Election Tribunal on its own whims and fancy
and or mechanically. Party seeking such recourse or inspection
and examination of counted ballot paper has to demonstrate
and show to the satisfaction of the Election Tribunal that there
had been improper, reception, refusal, or rejection of votes had
affected the outcome of the election materially. Election
Tribunal, enjoys elaborate and extensive authority to carry out
the exercise of examination of polled ballot either himself or,
through commission and may order inspection and or to
recount of the ballot papers, however, same are to be exercised
with circumspection and care by application of mind on the
strength of tangible and material evidence, prima facie
establishing that there had been wrong inclusion or exclusion
of the ballot paper in the course of ballot count that had direct
and martial bearing on the final outcome of the result of the
election.
20.
As noted above, since the Election Tribunals in
Punjab were already notified and after expiry of statutory period
of 60 days from notification of returned candidate, the Election
Commission, had no authority to adjudicate upon the
controversy as to the examination of the ballot record of
challenged Polling Stations and had rightly directed the election
Petitioner
to
approach
the
Election
Tribunal.
Similar
controversy came up before this Court, in the case cited as
“Ehsanullah Reki v. Abdul Qadir Baloch (2010 SCMR 1271),
this Court, while examining the power of Election Tribunal,
under Section 46 of RoPA, 1976, held that “the Election Tribunal
cannot only appoint a Commission but also direct opening of
packets of counterfoils and certificates or the inspection of any
counted ballot papers with a rider that in carrying into effect an
order for inspection of ballot papers, care shall be taken that no
vote shall be disclosed until it has been held by the Election
Tribunal to be invalid”. Subsection (3) of Section 46 RoPA, 1976
attaches great deal of sanctity to the production of a document
by the Commission appointed by the Election Tribunal, which is
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
12
treated as conclusive evidence that the document relates to the
election specified in the order and any endorsement made by
the Commission, on any ballot paper or packet of ballot paper or
documents so produced shall be prima facie evidence that the
ballot papers or documents are what the endorsement states
them to be. Therefore, contention of the learned ASC for the
Petitioner that the Election Tribunal had no jurisdiction to
appoint the Commission for the purpose of examination of
polled ballot or to undertake such exercise itself, in view of
discussion
made
above,
and
under
given
facts
and
circumstances, is devoid of merits.
21.
The Commission, as appointed by the Election
Tribunal, was also examined as the Tribunal Witness TW-1.
Lengthy cross examination by the Returned Candidate could
not demolish the credibility of the Report EX-TW-1/A and Ex-
TW-1/ B, nor was he able to point out any error in the
tabulated statement of votes count actually found and as relied
upon by the disputants. Learned ASC for the Returned
Candidate, could not bring home the objections as to authority
and jurisdiction of the Election Tribunal to appoint “the
Commission” and empowering “the Commission” to examine the
Bags of the challenged Polling stations and submit report.
22.
Before
adverting
to
examine
the
power
and
jurisdiction of the Election Tribunal under Section 67 ibid and
other enabling provision to declare “the election of returned
candidate void”, would amount to “declaring the election as a
whole void” and as a consequence; direct the election of whole of
the constituency or “partial poll” could be ordered, as has been
done in the instant case. We have noted that the “Election
Commission,” in post election scenario, though for a limited
period within 60 days after declaration of official result has to
some extent concurrent jurisdiction and power to declare the
“poll in any constituency” void under section 103-AA ibid, which
power, is akin to the power of the Election Tribunal under clause
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
13
(b) of section 67 of the RoPA, “declaring the election of the
returned candidate to be void”
23.
In numbers of cases, various High Courts and so
also this Court had the occasion to examine the power of the
Election Commission to declare the poll, in any constituency to
be void and whether such powers, includes declaring and to
direct re-poll partially in some of the polling station and not in
the entire constituency. In the case of Ghulam Ali v. Election
Commission (PLD 1991 Karachi 396), learned Division Bench
maintained the order of re-poll in 3 polling station, made by the
Election Commission. In the case reported as Salahuddin Tirmizi
v. Election Commission of Pakistan (2008 YLR 1624), learned
Division Bench of the Peshawar High Court, maintained the
order of the Election Commission of Pakistan, ordering re-poll in
two polling stations including one female polling station. In the
case of Wahid Bukhash Khan Bhayo v. Ghous Bukhash Maher
(CLC 2012 Karachi 39), learned single judge of the Sindh High
court relying on the case of Aftab Shaban Merani v. Muhammad
Ibrahim (PLD 2008 SC 779), maintained the order of Election
Commission directing re-poll in only 47 polling stations. In the
case of Behram Khan v. Abdul Hameed Khan Achakzai (PLD
1990 SC 352), this Court upheld the order of the High Court,
maintaining order of the Election Commission directing re-poll in
some of the challenged Polling Station. In the case of Manzoor
Hussain v. Election Commission (2004 SCMR 672) in which case,
the Election Commission, ordered re-polling in one of the Polling
Station, which was shifted on the day of election without any
intimation, such order was unsuccessfully challenged in the
High Court and this Court refused leave to appeal. Five member
bench of this court in the case reported as Aftab Shaban Mirani
v. Muhammad Ibrahim (PLD 2008 SC 779), had the occasion to
examine the power of the Election Commission to declare the poll
in any constituency void, under Section 103-AA and other
enabling provisions of the RoPA, 1976 read with Article 225 of
the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973, and at page 814; held that
the “power of declaring the election partly void and re-polling at
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
14
some polling station is included in the power of declaring election
of the constituency as a whole void”. And at page 817
interpreted the expression “in the constituency void” as used in
section 103-A ibid, is not only referable to the whole constituency
rather its true import is election in the constituency as a whole or
at one or more polling station”.
24.
Now adverting to more serious a challenge to the
power and authority of the Election Tribunal to order partial poll
in any constituency, it would be beneficial to glance through
relevant provision, where under the Election Tribunal is
conferred power to make host of orders after conclusion of trial
of an election Petition, section 67 (1) of the RoPA, 1976, which
reads as under: -
“67. Decision of the Tribunal. (1) The Tribunal
may, upon the conclusion of the trial of an
election petition, make an order-
(a)
dismissing the petition;
(b)
declaring the election of the returned candidate
to be void;
(c)
declaring the election of the returned candidate
to be void and the petitioner or any other
contesting candidate to have been duly elected;
or
(d)
declaring the election as a whole to be void.
25.
Power of the Election Tribunal, to order re-poll in
some of the Polling station, is not some thing that has come up
for the first time, controversy came up in the case of Mohinder
Singh Gill and another v. The Chief Election Commissioner, New
Delhi and others (AIR 1978 SC 851). Indian Supreme Court,
while examined various provisions including section 98 and 100
of the (Indian) Representation of Peoples Act, 1951, (which
provisions are analogous to Section 67 and section 68
respectively of RoPA), at page 391, came to a conclusion that the
Election (High) Court (Election Tribunal herein) has power to
make all sort of order including partial poll in furtherance to
achieve free and fair election.
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
15
26.
Recently in the case cited as Raja Aamer Zaman v.
Omar Ayub Khan (2015 SCMR 890), this Court had the
opportunity to examine the non observance or breach of duty on
the part of the Returning Officer and other polling staff
entrusted to conduct election in free, fair and transparent
manner in accordance with RoPA and Rules framed there
under. In a situation where it is found that that the result of
election is dependent on count of vote at the challenged polling
station, than the Election Tribunal is within its jurisdiction not
to declare the election as a whole void in terms of clause (d) of
section 67 read with section 70 of the RoPA, but to declare the
election of the returned candidate to be void to the extent of few
challenged polling Station in terms of clause (b) of Section 67
ibid. It is under such circumstances not necessary to declare the
election as a whole to be void per section 67 (d) of the RoPA; It
was further held that the Election Tribunal, however was not
denuded of the jurisdiction to grant partial relief of declaring the
election at a few polling stations to be void and, directing re-poll
there at. The question, as to which of the two available courses
is to be followed would depend on the facts and circumstances of
each case.
27.
It may be observed that the Election Tribunal are
constituted as mandated under Article 225 of the Constitution,
of Pakistan, 1973 under section 57 of the RoPA to adjudicate all
and each nature of election dispute. Election Tribunals in terms
of section 64 ibid is deemed to be a Civil Court, has absolute
jurisdictions to decide all question or dispute pertaining to
election to either of the House or Provincial Assembly and is
bestowed comprehensive power as is enjoyed by the Civil Court
trying a suit under Code of Civil Procedure 1908. it is absolutely
permissible for the ‘Election Tribunal’ to grant all or any of the
reliefs wholly or partly as set out in section 67 of the RoPA and
to direct the Election Commission to take such ancillary and
incidental steps as may be necessary to ensure honest, just,
and fair election in accordance with law and further to ensure
corrupt practice are guarded against. Where a Court or Tribunal
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
16
is conferred jurisdiction and power to grant large relief also has
jurisdiction to grant smaller relief under the law. The Election
Tribunal like a Court in consideration of ground realities,
circumstances of each case may suitably mould the relief as
may be appropriate, just, proper and fair.
28.
Examining the case in hand as act of omission and
commission of election staff was successfully established in
respect of 33 polling stations of the subject constituency, and
the vote count of the subject station had material bearing on the
eventual out come of the result of the election. In the instant
case as could be noted the difference between the appellant and
runner up is only 5,885 votes and between the appellant and
respondent No.1 Muhammad Nasir Cheema, the Election
Petitioner comes to 7,421 votes only. It may be observed as
noted by the Election Tribunal in paragraph 22 of the impugned
Decision that total number of votes casted in favour of all the
contesting candidates as per consolidated statement in form
XVI in 33 challenged Polling Station come to 34, 229- whereas
only 19,500- polled votes were recovered from the bags of said
33 polling stations, there is staggering difference of 14,929=
votes which is more than double the difference between the
contestant parties. Thus it could be seen that the total votes
cast in the 33 polling stations will in fact determine the fate of
Contesting candidate in accordance with the will of the people.
It was established on record that only the result of 33 polling
stations was stained and soiled by non performance of statutory
duties by the Returning and Presiding Officers as noted in detail
above. There is no challenge as to majority of the polling
stations. It may be observed that where the result of few
challenged polling station does not materially affect the over all
result of the election than no order of invalidating the election
either as a whole or in part would be justified or warranted.
However, where the ultimate result of the election is dependent
on the out come of the ballot count of even one or few polling
station, than order “declaring the election of the returned
candidate to be void” in terms of clause (b) of section 67 read
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
17
with Section 70(a) ibid; may be justified and ordering partial poll
to the extent of such challenged polling station only would be
necessitated, instead of “declaring the election as a whole to be
void” per clause (d) of section 67 ibid. In instant case learned
election Tribunal, was justified to declare the election of the
Returned Candidate void, for the simple reasons, if the vote
count of challenged polling station are excluded, over all result
would not be reflective of the true will of electors of the
constituency.
29.
After examination of the evidence that has come on
record, learned Election Tribunal rightly concluded that “the
credibility, legality and transparency of the election of returned
candidate from 33 polling stations of the Constituency” was
successfully
demolished
by
the
Election
Petitioner.
Consequently, the conclusion drawn by the Election Tribunal
that “the result of election favorable to the retuned candidate falls
to the ground mathematically and automatically”. Therefore
impugned decision of the learned Election Tribunal declaring
“election of the returned candidate to be void” calls for no
interference, resultantly C.A No. 1192/14 being devoid of merits is
dismissed.
30.
Now adverting to merits of C.A 1169/2014 filed by
the Election Petitioner, seeking his declaration as duly elected
in place of returned candidate, since de-seated. It is not
necessary that whenever the election of a returned candidate is
declare “wholly void”, the Election Petitioner, as a matter of
right could be declared elected. No doubt Section 67 (1)(c) read
with section 69 of RoPA, do empower the learned Election
Tribunal to declare the election Petitioner or any of the
contesting candidate to be declared as elected in event, the
election of the returned candidate is annulled, that the Election
Petitioner and or any of the Respondent has so prayed and
secondly in cases where the Election “Tribunal is satisfied” that
the election Petitioner or such other contesting candidate was
“entitled” to be declared elected. Thus it is clear that swapping
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
18
of Election Petitioner and or any other contesting candidate is
neither automatic nor a natural corollary to the invalidation of
election of returned candidate, but is subject to two qualifying
conditionalities as noted herein. What constitute “Tribunal is
satisfied” and when the election Petitioner or other contesting
candidate becomes “entitled” to be declared elected are neither
elucidated nor any parameters are provided either under the
RoPA or rules framed thereunder as against the contemporary
provisions of section 101 of the (Indian) Representation of
Peoples Act, 1951. However, satisfaction of the Election
Tribunal to exercise power under Section 67 (1)(c) read with
section 69 of the RoPA, 1976, is to be based on rational criteria,
guided by good conscience. One of the rational consideration
may be where on the basis of recount of total votes and or on
re-examination of valid and invalid vote count in ultimate
analysis the Election Petitioner and or any other contesting
candidate who so ever had secured highest number of total
valid vote counts as against the returned candidate or there
may be a situation, where votes of certain polling station for any
reason have not been correctly added up in the total vote count,
in such like situation the outcome, is clear leaving no doubt and
ambiguity in determining who has emerged successful. The
Election Tribunal could declare the candidate; whosoever may it
be the Election Petitioner or any other contesting candidate,
having secured highest number of vote as duly elected. It is not
so in the instant case. As noted in detail in preceding
paragraphs more particularly in paragraph 13 and 28 above
that the returned candidate was shown to have secured 7,421
vote more than the Election Petitioner, and he his lead was even
narrow i.e merely 5, 885 votes as against the runner-
up/respondent No.25. It may be observed that the election of
the returned candidate was not declared “whole to be void” in
terms of section 67(1)(d), ibid rather on account of discrepancy
or missing valid votes count of actual vote casted in 33
challenged polling station, that persuaded the learned Election
Tribunal to declare the election of the returned candidate as
void within the contemplation of section 67(1)(b ) of the RoPA,
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
19
1976. Since contesting parties before the learned Election
Tribunal were the Election Petitioner and the returned
candidate, even the runner-up chose to remain away from the
dispute. Total number of vote casted in all 33-challenged polling
station, as per consolidated statement of votes count in form
XVI comes to 34,229, whereas, only 19,500- polled votes were
recovered from the bags of all such polling stations. There is no
explanation as to where 14,929- votes disappeared. Since
difference of votes count between the returned candidate since
unseated, the runner up/respondent No.25 and the Election
Petitioner is much less than the missing number of votes. Under
the given facts and circumstances none of the parties to dispute
could claim nor it could be determined as to which of the
contesting candidate command the confidence of the majority of
the electorate in the subject constituency. Election Petitioner,
was not able to make out any case whereby he could become
“entitled to be declared elected” within the contemplation of
section 69 of the RoPA, 1976.
31.
As observed above, the creditability, legality, and
transparency of the election in 33 challenged polling stations
were successfully demolished. It is the votes that may be polled
in said 33 polling stations would be decisive as to which of the
contesting candidates commands the confidence of majority of
the electorate, and unless they are given free and fair
opportunity to the electorate of subject polling stations to
express their free will, it cannot be concluded that the Election
Petitioner had secured the winning number of votes, even if
total vote casted in said constituency are counted towards the
Returned Candidate. Such being the position, the Election
Petition filed by the Election Petitioner was rightly dismissed. In
this view of the matter, we do not find any merit in C.A
No.1169/2014 filed by the Election Petitioner, is accordingly
dismissed.
32.
In view of the discussion made above, we do not find
any factual and or legal infirmity in the impugned decision.
Civil Appeals No.1169 & 1192 of 2014
20
Both the listed Appeals, being without merits are accordingly
dismissed.
Judge
Judge
Judge
ISLAMABAD, THE
11th May, 2015
Arshad/*
NOT APPROVED FOR REPORTING
| {
"id": "C.A.1169_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1171 TO 1192 OF 2013.
(On appeal from the judgment dated 26.8.2013 of the KPK
Subordinate Service Tribunal, Peshawar passed in Service
Appeals No. 2/2009, 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 6, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16 of
2010, 2 of 2009, 1, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 27 of 2010).
Registrar, Peshawar High Court
…in C.A.1171/2013
Registrar, Peshawar High Court
…in C.A.1172/2013
Muhammad Arif-II and others
…in C.A.1173/2013
Syed Zamurd Shah and others
…in C.A.1174/2013
Mrs. Sofia Waqar Khattak
…in C.A.1175/2013
Muhammad Zafar and others
…in C.A.1176/2013
Shoaib Khan and others
…in C.A.1177/2013
Muhammad Rauf Khan and others
…in C.A.1178/2013
Aurangzeb Khattak and others
…in C.A.1179/2013
Muhammad Aamir Nazir and others
…in C.A.1180/2013
Ihsan Ullah Mahsud and others
…in C.A.1181/2013
Ashfaque Taj and others
…in C.A.1182/2013
Jehanzeb Shinwari and others
…in C.A.1183/2013
Qamar Sohail Lodhi
…in C.A.1184/2013
Azhar Khan
…in C.A.1185/2013
Muhammad Asif-II and others
…in C.A.1186/2013
Syed Zamurd Shah and others
…in C.A.1187/2013
Mrs. Sofia Waqar Khattak and others
…in C.A.1188/2013
Muhammad Rauf Khan and others
…in C.A.1189/2013
Aurangzeb Khattak and others
…in C.A.1190/2013
Shoaib Khan and others
…in C.A.1191/2013
Muhammad Aamir Nazir and others
…in C.A.1192/2013
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Shafiq Ahmad Tanoli and others
…in C.A.1171/2013
Sardar Muhammad Irshad and others
…in C.A.1172/2013
Muhammad Amin Kundi and others
…in C.A.1173/2013
Rajab Ali Khan and others
…in C.A.1174/2013
Muhammad Hussain and others
…in C.A.1175/2013
Liaquat Ali Khan Marwat and other
…in C.A.1176/2013
Nasrullah Khan Gundapur and others
…in C.A.1177/2013
Madad Khan and others
…in C.A.1178/2013
Salahuddin and others
…in C.A.1179/2013
Rafiullah Khan and others
…in C.A.1180/2013
Jamal-ud-Din and others
…in C.A.1181/2013
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
2
Muhammad Iqbal Khan and others
…in C.A.1182/2013
Muhammad Zubair and others
…in C.A.1183/2013
Shafiq Ahmed Tanoli and others
…in C.A.1184/2013
Sardar Muhammad Irshad and others
…in C.A.1185/2013
Muzzamil Shah Khattak and others
…in C.A.1186/2013
Ikhtiar Khan and others
…in C.A.1187/2013
Ahmed Sultan Tareen and others
…in C.A.1188/2013
Naveed Ahmed Khan and others
…in C.A.1189/2013
Gohar Rehman and others
…in C.A.1190/2013
Sajjad Ahmad and others
…in C.A.1191/2013
Mehmood-ul-Hassan and others
…in C.A.1192/2013
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Qazi Muhammad Anwar, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in C.As.1171 to 1176, 1181 to 1188/2013)
Mr. Farooq H. Naek, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in C.As.1178 & 1189/2013)
Mr. Muhammad Munir Paracha, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in C.As.1174 & 1186/2013)
Mr. Mushtaq Ali Tahir Kheli, ASC
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
(in C.As.1179, 1180, 1190 & 1192/2013)
Mr. Tariq Aziz, ASC/AOR
(in C.A.1191/2014)
For the respondent(s):
Mr. Muhammad Akram Sheikh, Sr. ASC
Syed Safdar Hussain, AOR
(in C.As.1173, 1174, 1177, 1179, 1180, 1182,
1183, 1186, 1187, 1189 to 1192/2013)
Mr. Anwar Kamal, Sr. ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
(in C.As.1176 & 1188/2013)
Mir Adam Khan, AOR
(in C.A.1181/2013)
For Peshawar High Court:
Imran Ullah, Legal Draftsperson, P.H.C.
Muhammad Saeed, Assistant Director,
KPK Public Service Commission
Date of hearing:
24.02.2015 (Judgment Reserved)
…
J U D G M E N T
EJAZ AFZAL KHAN, J.- These appeals with leave of the
Court have arisen out of the judgment dated 26.8.2013 of the KPK
Subordinate Judiciary Service Tribunal Peshawar, whereby it partially
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
3
allowed the appeals filed by the respondents. The points raised and
noted at the time of grant of leave read as under:-
“2. It is, inter alia, contended by the learned
counsel for the petitioners that the learned Tribunal
has failed to appreciate the Order dated 13.8.2009
passed by the Hon’ble Chief Justice of Peshawar
High Court was not appealable, hence the learned
Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain the
appeals in question. It is further contended that the
prescribed procedure was not complied with nor
questions of law were formulated by the learned
Tribunal. It is added that the learned Tribunal has
failed to take into consideration its own order
dated 18.12.2012, as a consequence whereof, the
impugned judgment is invalid and liable to be set
aside. The learned counsel further urged that the
learned
Tribunal
has
misapplied
and
misinterpreted Rule 10 of KPK Judicial Service
Rules, 2001. Furthermore, by way of the impugned
judgment, the learned Tribunal has presumed
authority and jurisdiction of the Administrative
Committee, which is not vested therein by law.
3. The contentions raised by the learned counsel
require consideration, therefore, these petitions are
accepted and leave to appeal is granted, inter alia,
to consider the aforesaid contentions.”
2.
Learned ASC appearing on behalf of the appellants
contended that the appointing authority, according to section 5 of the
Civil Servants Act, 1973 is the Governor or a person authorized by the
Governor in this behalf; that the Governor, conferred this power on the
Chief Justice vide Notification No. SOR-IV(E&AD)/3-11/2001 dated
28.8.2001 and that the Chief Justice being the appointing authority
shall cause a seniority list of the members of such service, cadre or
post, to be prepared, under section 8 of the Act. He next contended that
though according to Rule 4 and 10 of the KPK Judicial Service Rules,
2001, the appointing authority and the authority determining seniority
is the High Court but this being in conflict with the parent statute
cannot override the latter. In case, the learned ASC maintained, the
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
4
Rules are allowed to override the parent statute, no departmental
authority would be left for appeal, or representation.
3.
Learned ASC appearing on behalf of the respondents
contended that the appointing authority to a post, according to rule 4 of
the Rules, is the High Court and not the Chief Justice; that such
authority being executive and administrative is exercised by the
Administration Committee in view of Rule 1 Part A of Chapter 10 of the
High Court Rules and Orders Volume V, therefore, the impugned
judgment projecting such interpretation cannot be caviled at.
4.
We have gone through the record carefully and considered
the submissions of the learned ASCs for the parties.
5.
Before we appreciate the controversy canvassed before us,
it would be imperative to refer to the relevant provisions of the Civil
Servants Act and the Rules made thereunder. The relevant provision of
the Act read as under:-
“5. Appointment: Appointment to a civil service of the
Province or to a civil post in connection with the affairs
of the Province shall be made in the prescribed manner
by the Governor or by a person authorized by the
Governor in that behalf.
8. Seniority:- (1) For proper administration of a service,
cadre or {post}, the appointing authority shall cause a
seniority list of the members for the time being of such
service, cadre or {post} to be prepared, but nothing
herein contained shall be construed to confer any
vested right to a particular seniority in such service,
cadre or {post} as the case may be.
(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (1), the
seniority of a civil servant shall be reckoned in relation
to other civil servants belonging to the same service or
[cadre] whether serving the same department or office
or not, as may be prescribed.
(3) Seniority on initial appointment to a service, [cadre]
or post shall be determined as may be prescribed.
(4) Seniority in a post, service or cadre to which a civil
servant is promoted shall take effect from the date of
regular appointment to that post;
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
5
Provided that civil servants who are selected for
promotion to a higher post in one batch shall, on their
promotion to higher post, retain their inter-se seniority
as in the lower post.
(5) The seniority lists prepared under sub-section (1),
shall be revised and notified in the official Gazette at
least once in a calendar year, preferably in the month of
January.”
6.
The Rules relevant in this behalf read as under:-
“2. Definitions: In these rules, unless there is anything
repugnant in the subject or context:
(a) “Administration Committee of the High Court” means
Committee constituted under High Court Rules and Orders,
volume-V, Chapter 10-A.
(b) “Appointment on contract basis” means appointment made
for a specified period in accordance with the policy of Govt:
applicable to appointment on contract basis.
(c) “Chief Justice” means the Chief Justice of Peshawar High
Court Peshawar.
(d) “Commission” means the North West Frontier Province
Public Service Commission.
(e) “Departmental promotion committee” means the Committee
constituted under High Court Rules and Orders Volume-V,
chapter 10-A.
(f) “Government” means the Government of North West Frontier
Province.
(g) “High Court” means Peshawar High Court Peshawar.
(h) “Initial appointment” means appointment made otherwise
than by promotion or transfer from another service,
department or post;
(i) “Provincial Judicial Selection Board” means a Board
comprising the Administration committee or such number of
Judges of the High Court as may be nominated by the
Administration Committee;
(j) “Recognized University” means the University established
by or under a law in Pakistan or any other University which
may be declared by Government to be a recognized University
for the purpose of these rules;
(k) “Selection Authority” means the Commission or, as the case
may be, the Provincial Judicial Section Board; and
(l) “Service” means the North West Frontier Province Judicial
Service.
4. Appointing Authority:-Appointment to a post shall be
made by the High Court.
10. Seniority: The seniority inter-se of the members of the
service in the various pay scales thereof shall be determined by
the High Court, subject to the following conditions:
(a) In the case of members appointed by initial recruitment, in
accordance with the order of merit assigned by the Selection
Authority as mentioned in Rule-5; provided that persons
selected for the service in an earlier selection shall rank senior
to the persons selected in a later selection.
(b) In the case of members appointed by promotion, seniority in
a post, service or cadre to which a Civil Servant promoted shall
take effect from the date of regular appointment to that post;
provided that Civil Servants who are selected for promotion to a
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
6
higher post in one batch shall, on their promotion to higher post,
retain their inter-se seniority as in the lower post.
Explanation-I If a Jr. officer in a lower grade is promoted
temporarily to a higher grade in the public interest, even though
continuing later permanently in the higher grade, it would not
adversely affect the seniority in the interest of his/her senior
officer in the fixation of his/her seniority in the higher grade.
Explanation-II If a Jr. officer in a lower grade is promoted to a
higher grade by superseding a Sr. officer and subsequently
that officer is also promoted, the officer promoted first shall
rank senior to the officer promoted subsequently.
13. General Rules: In all matters not expressly provided for in
these rules, members of the Service shall be governed by such
rules as have been or may hereafter be prescribed by
Government and made applicable to their employees, with such
modifications and changes as the High Court may prescribe.”
7.
According to section 5 of the Civil Servants Act and Rule 4
of the KPK (Appointment, Promotion and Transfer) Rules, 1989, the
appointing authority to a civil post in connection with the affairs of the
Province is the Governor or a person authorized by him. In 2001, the
Governor by amending Rule 4 of the KPK (Appointment and Promotion)
Rules, 1989 vide Notification No. SOR-IV(E&D)/3-11/2001 authorised
the Chief Justice, Peshawar High Court, to appoint Judicial Officers
Sub-ordinate to the High Court with immediate effect. But this
notification being a stopgap arrangement remained in force only till the
enforcement of the KPK Judicial Service Rules, 2001. The Rules, so
enacted and enforced deal with qualification, eligibility, method of
recruitment, appointment, seniority and matters ancillary thereto.
According to Rule 4 and 10 of the said Rules, the appointing authority
for a civil post and the authority determining the inter se seniority of the
members of the service shall be the High Court and not the Chief
Justice. The expressions ‘High Court’ and Chief Justice’ being distinct
from each other are not interchangeable from any angle of vision. The
appointing authority and the authority determining seniority for the
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
7
purposes of sections 5 & 8 of the Act is therefore the High Court and
not the Chief Justice.
8.
What does the expression “High Court” mean in the scheme
of the relevant rule, enactments and Constitutions? Rule 2(g) of the
Rules, 2001, defines the expression ‘High Court’ as Peshawar High
Court Peshawar. However, according to the East India (High Court of
Judicature) Act, 1861, the Government of India Act, 1915, the
Government of India Act, 1935, the Constitution of Islamic Republic of
Pakistan 1956, the Constitution of 1962 and the Constitution of 1973,
the expression “High Court” means High Court consisting of Chief
Justice and Judges. If we go by this definition then the appointing
authority shall not be the Chief Justice but the High Court consisting of
Chief Justice and other Judges.
9.
What has been regulating the executive and administrative
work of the High Court ever since its establishment? Such work of the
High Court, if we see in the historical perspective, has been regulated
by the Acts which have been enforced from time to time and Rules and
Orders made and issued thereunder. The first Act enforced in this
behalf was the Punjab Courts Act, 1884. The High Court under the said
Act was called the Chief Court. The relevant section of the Act reads as
under :-
“8 (1) Except as by this Act or by any other enactment for
the time being in force otherwise provided, the Chief Court
may make rules to provide, in such manner as it thinks fit
for the exercise by one or more of its Judges of any of its
powers.
ii)………..
(iii)……….”
The relevant rule framed thereunder provides as follows:-
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
8
“I. The powers of the Courts, as a Court of control, shall be
exercisable by all the Judges, and shall be allotted in such
manner as the Judges in monthly meeting may from time
to time determine.
II.
(i) A meeting of the Judges shall be held monthly on
such day as the Chief Judge may from time to time fix in
that behalf, for the disposal of references relating to the
Judicial administration or matters affecting the working of
the Court, and all such business, not of a judicial
character, as a Judge may refer to the meeting.
(ii) The meeting shall ordinarily be held on the first
Friday (not being a holiday) of every month.
III.
The Registrar shall convene the monthly meetings
and regulate the business to be considered thereat, in such
manner as the Chief Judge may from time to time direct.”
10.
In 1914 Punjab Courts Act (III) of 1914 was promulgated. It
also provided for exercise of any of the powers of the said Court by one
or more of its Judges. The relevant section in this behalf merits a
reference which reads as under:-
“SECTION 8 OF PUNJAB COURT ACT, 1914.
8 (1). Except as by this Act or by any other enactment for the time
being in force otherwise provided, the Chief Court may make rules to
provide, in such manner as it thinks fit for the exercise by one or more
of its Judges of any of its powers.
(2) The Chief Court may make rules, declaring what number of
Judges, not being less than three, shall constitute a Full Bench of the
Court, and may by these rules prescribe mode of determining which
Judges shall sit as a Full Bench, when a Full Bench sitting becomes
necessary.
(3) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), the Senior Judge may
determine which Judge in each case shall sit alone, and which Judges
of the Court shall constitute any Bench”
11.
Rules framed pursuant to the said provision of the Act read
as follows:-
“Part A---RULES FOR THE DISPOSAL OF EXECUTIVE AND
ADMINISTRATIVE BUSINESS
1.
Administrative Business.--- The Administrative and executive
work of the High Court shall be controlled by a Committee of Judges
to be known as the Administration Committee.
Provided that the work of the Benches at Karachi and Peshawar
shall be conducted in such manner as the Chief Justice may direct.
Provided further that those matters which are the executive concern
of the Chief Justice, namely, the constitution of Benches and the
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
9
appointment and control of the High Court Establishment, shall be
dealt with in accordance with such instructions as may from time to
time be issued by the Chief Justice.]
2.
Constitution
and
appointment
of
Administration
Committee.----The Administration Committee shall consist of seven
Judges. The Chief Justice and the Senior Puisne Judge shall be ex-
officio members and the Chief Justice shall annually nominate the
other five members of the Committee.]
3.
Quorum of Administration Committee.--- At all meetings of
the Administration Committee, three Judges shall form a
quorum.
4.
(a) Each member of the Administration Committee shall act
as an Administration Jude and the powers and duties of each
Administration Judge shall be defined by the Chief Justice
from time to time.
(b)
The following matters shall invariably be referred by an
Administration Judge to the Administration Committee:-
(i)
All cases which are to go before a meeting of all the
Judges.
(ii)
All cases involving the amendment of the Rules and
Orders of the Court other than purely routine
amendments.
(iii)
The issue of circular letters and instructions to the
Subordinate Courts in other than purely routine
matters.
(iv)
All circulars issued by District and Sessions Judges
and District Magistrates for the guidance of Courts
subordinate to them.
(v)
All proposals for the confirmation or promotion of
District and Sessions Judges and Subordinate Judges.
(vi)
The grant of permission to Subordinate Judges to
cross efficiency bars.
(vii)
All pension cases of District and Sessions Judges and
Subordinate Judges.
(viii) All cases in which disciplinary action is to be taken
against District and Sessions Judges and Subordinate
Judges, and all cases in which there is a question of
the recovery from an officer of any loss suffered by
Government.
(ix)
The selection of officers for deputation, and
magisterial commercial or special training.
(x)
Recommendation for the direct appointment of
Government
servants
as
Extra
Assistant
Commissioners.
(xi)
The fitness of officers for appointment as District and
Sessions Judges.
(xii)
The monthly returns of work done by District and
Sessions Judges.
(xiii) All cases in which lawyers seek relaxation of the High
Court Rules applicable to them, other than those in
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
10
which the Judges or the Administration Committee
have laid down a policy to be followed.
(xiv) All proposals for the execution of Civil Major works in
the Judicial Department.
(xv)
All cases in which the opinion of all the Judges is
sought by Government.
[(xvi) Recording of annual confidential report on the work
and conduct of a Civil Judge or Magistrate where:-
(a)
it is intended to comment unfavourably on his conduct
and work; or
(b)
another reporting authority has recorded adverse
remarks.
(xvii) All cases of conferment of civil and criminal powers on
Subordinate Judges and Magistrates except:-
(a)
Powers under the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act.
(b)
Powers under the Guardians and Wards Act.
(c)
Permission to exercise powers under the Provincial
Insolvency Act already conferred by Punjab Government
Notification No. 780, dated the 15th July 1914.
(d)
First class powers on stipendiary magistrates after the
exercise of second class powers for six months.
(xviii) All cases not specifically provided for which, in the
opinion of the Administration Judge, involve questions
of principle of policy.
(c)
All administrative work for which there is no
explicit provision in the Rules and Orders of the Court or
in the rules made by the Administration Committee,
shall be disposed of under the orders of the
Administration Judge who may refer to the Committee
any matter on which he could pass orders.
(d)
The Administration Judge shall pass orders on
the postings and transfers of judicial officers serving
under the High Court, and after orders have issued they
shall be circulated to all members of the Administration
Committee.”
12.
In 1918 the Punjab Courts Act was re-enacted while that of
1914 was repealed. Section 3 of this Act is relevant which reads as
under:-
“3. (1) Enactment of provisions relating to
Courts in the Punjab- (a) the provision contained in
Part-II of this Act are hereby enacted, and shall be
deemed to have had effect on and from the first day
of August, 1914.
(b) The Punjab Courts Act, 1914, and Punjab Act IV
of 1914, or so much of them as may be valid are
repealed on and from the first day of August,
1914.
(2) Validation of acts done—All things done under
the Punjab Courts Act, 1914, as amended by Punjab
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
11
Act, IV of 1914, shall be deemed to be in every way
as valid as if the Punjab Courts Act, 1914, as
amended by Punjab Act IV of 1914, had been of full
force and effect on and from the first day of August,
1914:
Provided firstly, that any appeal which may have
been decided by the Chief Court in the exercise of
jurisdiction purporting to be exercised under Section
39(1)(b) of the Punjab Courts Act, 1914, shall be
deemed to have been validly decided, and shall not
be called in question by reason of anything
contained in this Act;
And, secondly that any appeal which before the
commencement of this Act has been presented to the
Chief Court under Section 39(1)(b) of the Punjab
Courts Act, 1914, and which should not have been
so presented if the said sub-section had run as set
out in Section 39 of Part II of this Act shall if it has
not been decided be transferred by the said Court for
disposal to the District Court having jurisdiction;
And thirdly, that any appeal which would have
laid to the Chief Court under section 39(1)(b) of the
Punjab Courts Act, 1914 but which lies to the District
Court under the provisions of this Act and when if
presented to the Chief Court at the commencement of
this Act would be within time, shall be deemed to be
presented within time if presented to the District
Court within sixty days from the commencement of
this Act.”
Another relevant provision is section 8 of the Act which reads as under:-
“SECTION 8 OF PUNJAB COURT ACT, 1918.
8 (1). Except as by this Act or by any other enactment for the
time being in force otherwise provided, the Chief Court may
make rules to provide, in such manner as it thinks fit for the
exercise by one or more of its Judges of any of its powers.
(2) The Chief Court may make rules, declaring what number
of Judges, not being less than three, shall constitute a Full
Bench of the Court, and may by these rules prescribe mode of
determining which Judges shall sit as a Full Bench, when a
Full Bench sitting becomes necessary.
(3) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), the Senior
Judge may determine which Judge in each case shall sit alone,
and which Judges of the Court shall constitute any Bench”
13.
In 1955, the High Court of West Pakistan (Establishment)
Order GGO XIX of 1955 was promulgated. High Court, Lahore, the
Chief Court of Sind, the Judicial Commissioners Court of NWFP and
Balochistan and any other Court functioning as High Court in relation
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
12
to the territories ceased to exist and all said powers were conferred on
the West Pakistan High Court. The relevant provision reads as under:-
“Article 3. Establishment of the High Court of West
Pakistan. (I) As from the commencement of this Order
there shall be established a High Court of Judicature
for the Province of West Pakistan, to be called the
High Court of West Pakistan (hereinafter referred to
as the High Court), and the Lahore High Court,
Lahore, the Chief Court of Sind, the Judicial
Commissioner’s Court in the North-West Frontier
Province and Balochistan, and any other Court
functioning as High Court in relation to the territories
or are as now included in the Province of West
Pakistan shall cases to exist.
(2) The High Court shall have such original, appellate
and other jurisdiction and such powers and
authority in respect of the territories included in the
Province of West Pakistan as the Lahore High Court
Lahore, had immediately before the commencement
of this Order in respect of the territories in relation to
which it exercised appellate jurisdiction.
(3) The High Court and the Judges and Divisional
Courts thereof shall sit at Lahore, but the High Court
shall have Benches at Karachi and Peshawar and
Circuit; Courts at other places within the Province of
West Pakistan, consisting of such of the Judges as
may from time to time be nominated by the Chief
Justice.”
14.
In 1956 through Correction Slip No. 120/II.D.4 dated 2nd
January, 1956, the following rule was inserted:-
“CHAPTER 10
Miscellaneous
PART A—RULES FOR THE DISPOSAL OF EXECUTIVE AND
ADMINISTRTIVE BUSINESS
[1. The administrative and executive work of the High Court
shall be controlled by a Committee of Judges to be known as
the Administration Committee:
Provided that those matters which are the exclusive
concern of the Chief Justice, namely, the constitution of
Benches and the appointment and control of the High Court
Establishment shall be dealt with in accordance with such
instruction as may from time to time be issued by the Chief
Justice.
2.
Constitution
and
appointment
of
administration
Committee.—The Administration Committee shall consist of
seven Judges. The Chief Justice and the Senior Puisne Judge
shall be ex-officio members and the Chief Justice shall
annually nominate the other five members of the Committee].
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
13
3.
Quorum of Administration Committee.—At all meetings
of the Administration Committee, three Judges shall form a
quorum.
4.
(a) Each member of the Administration Committee
shall act an Administration Judge and the powers and duties
of
each
Administration
Judge
to
the
Administration
Committee:--
(b) The following matters shall invariably be referred
by an Administration Judge to the Administration committee:-
-
i) All cases which are to go before a meeting of the
Judge.
ii) All cases involving the amendment of the Rules
and Orders of the Court other than purely routine
amendments.
iii) The issue of circular letters and instructions to the
Subordinate Courts in other than purely routine matters.
iv) All circulars issued by District and Sessions Judge
and District Magistrates for the guidance of courts
subordinate to them.
v) All proposals for the confirmation or promotion of
District and Sessions Judge and [Civil Judges].
vi) The case of move-over and grant of selection grade
of Judicial Officers].
vii) All pension cases of District and Sessions Judges
and [Civil Judges].
viii) All cases in which disciplinary action is to be
taken against District and Sessions Judges and Subordinate
Judges, and all cases in which there is a question of the
recovery from an officer of any loss suffered by government.
ix) The selection of officers for deputation, and
magisterial commercial or special training.
…………………………………………………….”
15.
Another rule was inserted through Correction Slip No.
141/IV.Z.8, dated 30th May, 1958 which reads as under :-
“16. (i) [Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Chapter, the administrative and executive work of High Court
shall be controlled by three Committees of Judges to be
known as the Administration Committees functioning at
Lahore, Karachi and Peshawar.
ii) These Committees shall be Advisory Committees and final
decision in all administrative matters shall rest with the
Chief Justice, except matters which are the statutory
responsibility of the High Court as a whole.
iii) The Administration Committee at Karachi shall consist of
four Judges. The Senior Judge shall be ex officio member and
the other three members shall be nominated annually by the
Senior Judge from the remaining Judges of that Bench.
iv) At all meetings of the Administration Committee, three
Judges shall form a quorum.
v) Each member of the Administration Committee shall act
an Administration Judge and the powers and duties of each
Administration judge shall be defined by the Senior Judge of
the Bench from time to time.
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
14
vi) The Administration Committee at Peshawar shall consist
of the Senior Judge and Judge/Judges of Peshawar Bench.
vii) Each Judge shall act as an Administration Judge and
the powers and duties of each Administration Judge shall be
defined by the Senior Judge of the Bench from time to time.”
16.
The above quoted rule, by affirming that administrative and
executive work of the High Court shall be controlled by the
Administration Committee, draws a line of distinction between
administrative and statutory matters and the nature of decision taken
them. In the former case, the decision of the Committee being advisory
in nature shall be subject to final decision of the Chief Justice. In the
latter case, it being mandatory shall be binding on the Chief Justice.
Therefore, it can be said without any fear of contradiction that in
statutory matters decision of the Chief Justice cannot override the
decision of the Administration Committee.
17.
In 1962 West Pakistan Civil Courts Ordinance 1962 was
promulgated. All the previous enactments were repealed by the
Ordinance. But despite repeal of the enactments mentioned in the
schedule, everything done, action taken, obligation, liability, penalty or
punishment incurred, inquiry or proceeding commenced, officer
appointed or person authorized, jurisdiction or power conferred, rule
made and order issued under any of the provisions of the said
enactments continued in force if not inconsistent with the provisions of
the Ordinance. The relevant provision reads as under:-
“28. Repeal and savings.
(1)…..
(2)……….
(3)………
(4)………
(5) Notwithstanding the repeal of the enactment
mentioned in the Schedule, everything done, action
taken, obligation, liability, penalty or punishment
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
15
incurred, inquiry or proceeding commenced, Officer
appointed or person authorized, jurisdiction or power
conferred, rule made and order issued under any of
the provisions of the said enactments shall, if not
inconsistent with the provisions of this Ordinance,
continue in force and, so far as may be deemed to
have
been
respectively
done,
taken,
incurred,
commenced, appointed, authorized, conferred, made
or issued under this Ordinance.”
18.
This set up continued up to 1970 when the High Court
(Establishment) Order 1970 was promulgated. By virtue of Article 3 of
the Order, three new High Courts were established namely; (a) A High
Court for the North-West Frontier Province to be called the Peshawar
High Court with the principal seat at Peshawar; (b) a High Court for the
Province of the Punjab and the Islamabad Capital Territory to be called
the Lahore High Court with its principal seat at Lahore; and (c) a High
Court for the Province of Balochistan and Sind to be called the Sind and
Balochistan High Court with its principal seat at Karachi. The relevant
Article reads as under:-
“3. Establishment of High Courts for new Provinces.
(1) As from the 1st day of July, 1970, hereinafter
referred to as the appointed day, there shall be
established the following new High Courts, namely:-
(a) A High Court for the North-West Frontier Province
to be called the Peshawar High Court within the
principal seat at Peshawar (b) a High Court for the
Province of the Punjab and the Islamabad Capital
Territory to be called the Lahore High Court with its
principal seat at Lahore; and (c) a High Court for the
Province of Balochistan and Sind to be called the
Sind and Balochistan High Court within its principal
seat at Karachi,
(2) Each new High Court shall be a Court of Record
and shall have such original, appellate and other
jurisdiction and such powers and authority in
respect of the territories for which it is established as
the High Court of West Pakistan, immediately before
the appointed day, had in respect of the territories in
relation to which it exercised appellate jurisdiction.
(3) Each new High Court and Judges and Divisional
Courts thereof shall sit at its principal seat but may
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
16
hold Circuit Courts at places within its territorial
jurisdiction other than its principal seat consisting of
such of the Judges of the High Court as the Chief
Justice may from time to time nominate.”
19.
The law in force immediately before the appointed day,
relating to the powers of the Chief Justice and of Single Judges and
Divisional Courts of the High Court of West Pakistan and with respect
to all matters ancillary to the exercise of those powers, was made
applicable with necessary modifications in relation to each of the new
High Courts. The relevant Article providing for application of such law
reads as under:-
“7. Powers of Chief Justice and other Judges.- The
law in force immediately before the appointed day
relating to the powers of the Chief Justice and of
Single Judges and Divisional Courts of the High
Court of West Pakistan, and with respect to all
matters ancillary to the exercise of those powers,
shall with the necessary modifications, apply in
relation to each of the new High Courts.”
20.
Disciplinary actions against the District & Sessions Judges
and Sub-ordinate Judges ever since 1884 have been taken by the
Provincial Government as the Provincial Government was the
appointing authority. It continued as such under the Govt. of India Act,
1935, Constitution of 1956, the West Pakistan Government Servants
(Discipline and Efficiency) Rules, 1959, the West Pakistan Government
Servants (Efficiency and Discipline) Rules, 1960 and then under KPK
Government
Servants
(Efficiency
and
Discipline)
Rules,
1973.
Administration Committee, under Rule 4(b)(viii) of the High Court Rules
and Orders made under section 8 of Punjab Courts Act, 1914 and Rule
4(b)(viii) of High Court Rules and Orders inserted through Correction
Slip No.141/IV.Z.8, dated 30th May, 1958 could take action in terms of
recommendations against District and Sessions Judges and Sub-
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
17
ordinate Judges but approval for such action at initial and final stage
rested with the appointing authority.
21.
On separation of the Judiciary from the Executive pursuant
to the mandate of Article 175 of the Constitution, the authority under
the Efficiency & Discipline Rules was conferred on the Chief Justice
vide Notification No. SORII(S&GAD)5/(29)/86 dated 16th of January
1992. The said notification along with the table reads as under:-
“POWER OF CHIEF JUSTICE AS AUTHORITY UNDER NWFP GOVERNMENT
SERVANTS (E&D) RULES, 1973.
NOTIFICATION
PESHAWAR, DATED 16TH JANUARY, 1992.
No.SORII(S&GAD)5(29)/86:- In exercise of the powers conferred by clauses (b)
and (c) of rule 2 of the North-West Frontier Province (Efficiently and Discipline) Rules,
1973, and in supersession of this department’s Notification No. SOSIII(S&GAD)1-80/73,
dated the 28th January, 1975, the Governor of the North- West Frontier Province is
pleased to direct that the officers specified in column 3 and 4 of the table below shall
respectively be the “Authority” and “Authorized Officer” for the purpose of the said rules
in respect of civil servants specified against each in column 2 of the said table.-
S.No.
Basic Pay Scale of Govt. Servant
Authority
Authorized
Officer
1
2
3
4
1.
Officers
of
former
Provincial
Civil
Secretariat Service and ex-Provincial
Civil Service (Executive Branch) in Basic
Pay Scale 17.
Chief Minister
Chief Secretary
2.
Officers of former Provincial Civil Service
(Judicial Branch) in Basic Pay Scale 17
and above.
Chief Justice
As Authorized by
the authority.
3.
Deputy Superintendent of Police in basic
Pay Scale 17.
Chief Secretary
Inspector
General
of Police.
4.
Officers in BPS-17 in the Education
Department.
Chief Secretary
Director
of
Education
concerned.
5.
Other Officers in Basic Pay Scale-17
(other than Members of All Pakistan
Unified Grades).
Chief Secretary
Administrative
Secretary.
6.
Offices in BPS-18 in the Education
Department.
Chief Minister
Administrative
Secretary.
7.
Other Officers in BPS-18 and above
(other than Members of All Pakistan
Chief Minister
Chief Secretary.
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
18
Unified Grade).
8.
Sectt: Officers in BPS-16.
Chief Secretary
Secretary S&GAD
9.
Government servants in BPS-16 on the
Establishment of Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar.
Chief Justice
As authorized by
the authority.
10.
Government servants in BPS-16 serving
on the Establishment of Board of
Revenue and the offices subordinate to
it.
Senior Member
Board
of
Revenue.
Secretary BOR.
11.
Government servants in BPS-16 serving
in the office of Divisional Commissioners
and Officers subordinate to them.
Commissioner
of the Division
concerned.
As authorized by
the authority.
12.
Government servants in BPS-16 serving
in the Directorate of Local Fund Audit.
Secretary
Finance
Director,
Local
Fund Audit.
13.
Government servants in BPS-5 to 16
serving
in
the
Public
Service
Commission.
Chairman of the
Commission.
Secretary
of
the
Commission.
14.
Other Government servants in BPS-16.
Head
of
Attached
Department.
As authorized by
the authority.
15.
Government servants in BPS-5 to 15
serving in the Secretariat.
Administrative
Secretary
concerned.
Dy. Secy. (Admn)
of the Department
concerned.
16.
Government servants in BPS-1 to 4
serving in the Secretariat.
Dy.
Secy.
(Admn) of the
Department
concerned.
Section
Officer
(Admn)
of
the
Department
concerned.
17.
Government servants in BPS-1 to 14
serving in Public Service Commission.
Secretary of the
Commission.
As authorized by
the authority.
18.
Other Government Servants in BPS-1 to
15.
Appointing
authority.
As authorized by
the authority.
19.
Government Servants in BPS-1 to 4
serving
in
the
Chief
Minister’s
Secretariat.
Deputy
Secretary-II
of
C. M’s Sectt:
Section
Officer
(Coord:)
Chief
Minister’s Sectt:
According to this notification, the Chief Justice could exercise all the
powers conferred on the Governor of the Province without the approval
of the latter at initial or final stage.
22.
In a meeting held on 18.12.1976 the Chief Justice and
Judges of the Peshawar High Court resolved that administrative and
executive work shall be controlled by an Administration Committee of
the Judges; that the Administration Committee shall consist of four
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
19
Judges; that in all matters of the Administration Committee at least two
will form a quorum; that if any member of the Administration
Committee is not available, the work assigned to him will be disposed of
by the Senior Puisne Judge and in case the Senior Puisne Judge is not
available, by the Chief Justice and that each member of the
Administration Committee shall act as an Administration Judge and the
powers and duties of each Administration Judge shall be as follows :-
“1. CHIEF JUSTICE.
Rosters and cause-lists, Constitution of Benches and the
appointment and control of High Court Establishment,
except reimbursement of medical charges and G.P. Fund
Advance cases.
Appointment, transfers, promotions, deputations etc. of the
members of subordinate Judiciary. Conferment of powers
on Civil Judges and Magistrates.
2. SENIOR PUISNE JUDGE
Rules of Procedure in civil and Criminal Courts. Statistics
for the purpose of annual notes on the administration of
civil and Criminal Justice.
All matters relating to lower Court’s establishment. Budget,
Accounts and appointment of Oath Commissioners.
3. SECOND JUDGE
Library and Law Reports. Matters relating to Legal
Practitioners. Record room and Loss of Record.
High Court Building, Garden and Compound and other
minor works. Petition-Writers, Commissioner and Letter of
Request. Stationery and forms of the High Court and Civil
Courts. Expenses of witnesses.
4. THIRD JUDGE
Reimbursement of medical charges, and G.P. Fund Advance
cases of High Court Establishment. Notice under section 80
C.P.C. Insolvency work. Guardian and Wards Work. Official
Receiver. Copying Agency. Transfer of Prisoners.
23.
According to the decisions taken in the Administration
Committee the Rosters and Cause Lists, constitution of Benches and
appointment and control of the High Court Establishment (except
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
20
reimbursement of Medical Charges and G. P. Fund) advance cases,
appointments, transfers, promotions and deputations etc of the
members of subordinate Judiciary and conferment of powers of Civil
Judges and Magistrates lay in the domain of the Chief Justice. Rules of
procedure in Civil and Criminal Courts, statistics for the purpose of
annual notes on the Administration of Civil and Criminal Justice and
all matters relating to lower Court’s establishment, budget, accounts
and appointments of Oath Commissioners lay in the domain of Senior
Puisne Judge. Library and Law Reports, matters relating to Legal
Practitioners, Record Room, loss of record, High Court building, garden,
compound
and
other
minor
works
including
petition
writers,
Commissioner and Letter of Request, stationery and forms of the High
Court and Civil Courts including expenses of witnesses lay in the
domain of the 2nd Judge. Reimbursement of medical charges and G. P.
Fund, advance cases of High Court establishment, notice under section
80 CPC, insolvency work, guardian and wards work, official receiver,
copying agency and transfer of prisoners lay in the domain of the 3rd
Judge.
24.
Now the question arises whether appointment of members
of District Judiciary and determination of their seniority is an
administrative or statutory responsibility in terms of Rule 16(ii) of the
High Court Rules and Orders quoted above? The answer is statutory
because it is regulated by section 5 & 8 of the KPK Civil Servants Act
and Rule 5 and 10 of the KPK Judicial Service Rules, 2001. When
statutory it is to be exercised by the Administration Committee, as
explained above. The Chief Justice cannot do anything on his own in
the scheme of the Rules of 2001 and High Court Rules and Orders.
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
21
Therefore, any decision taken by the Administration Committee shall be
binding on the Chief Justice.
25.
The Rules of 2001 envisaging the High Court as appointing
authority and authority determining seniority have not introduced
something new or unheard of. They have indeed affirmed what has been
provided by the High Court Rules and Orders and practiced ever since
the establishment of the High Court. Therefore, Rule 4 and 10 of the
Rules cannot be held to be in conflict with the parent statute. As a
matter of fact, the Governor by approving the Rules framed under
section 26 of the Civil Servants Act abdicated his authority and
conferred it on the High Court. Therefore, the argument that the rules
are in conflict with the parent statute is misconceived on the face of it.
The argument that in case the rules are allowed to override the parent
statute no departmental authority would be left for appeal or
representation is also misconceived; firstly because the Rules don’t
override the parent statute by any means and secondly because a
situation highlighted by the learned ASC for the appellant is fully
catered for by the 2nd proviso to Rule 3 of the KPK Civil Service Appeal
Rules, 1986 which clearly provides that “where the order is made or
penalty is imposed by the High Court or the Chief Justice as the case
may be, there shall be no appeal but the member of the service may
prefer a review petition before the authority passing the order or imposing
the penalty”.
26.
When considered in this background, we don’t think the
view taken by the KPK Sub-ordinate Judiciary Service Tribunal is open
to any exception. We, therefore, dismiss these appeals.
Civil Appeals No. 1171 to 1192/2013.
22
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court at Islamabad on____________
JUDGE
Not Approved For Reporting
K.Anees/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1171_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1171, 1179 TO 1187, 1190 TO
1192, 1198 TO 1236, 1242, 1255, 1274 TO 1276,
1502 TO 1515 OF 2017 AND 114 OF 2013
(Against the judgments dated 3.8.2017 and 30.4.2012 of the
High Court on Sindh, Karachi and Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar passed in H.C.As.No.83/2015, 263, 268, 271, 264,
266, 274, 276, I.C.A.No.281/2016, H.C.As.No.306, 265, 278,
275, 269, 270, 272, 273, 277, 283, 285, 321, 322, 338,
288/2016, 85, 84/2015 and C.R.No.215/2008)
AND
CIVIL MISC. APPLICATIONS NO.6517, 6204,
6207, 6936 TO 6940, 8195, 8196, 6723, 6725,
6727, 6729, 6731, 6735, 6747, 6721, 6733, 6737,
6741, 6743, 6745, 8394, 8395, 6739 OF 2017
(Applications for impleadment)
M/s Searle IV Solution (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1171/2017
M/s Naveena Industries Ltd.
In C.A.1179/2017
M/s Artistic Denim Mills (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1180/2017
M/s Monnoowal Textile Mills, Ltd.
In C.A.1181/2017
M/s Artistic Fabric Mills (Pvt.) Ltd.
In C.A.1182/2017
M/s Rizwan enterprises
In C.A.1183/2017
M/s Maksons Textile Ltd
In C.A.1184/2017
M/s Naveena Industries Ltd
In C.A.1185/2017
M/s Sapphire Textile Mills Ltd
In C.A.1186/2017
M/s Umair Spinning Mills (PVT) Ltd.
In C.A.1187/2017
M/s Kassim Textile Mills (PVT) Ltd.
In C.A.1190/2017
M/s Kassim Textile Mills (PVT) Ltd.
In C.A.1191/2017
M/s Khas Textile Mills (PVT) Ltd.
In C.A.1192/2017
Unilever Pakistan Ltd.
In C.A.1198/2017
K- Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1199/2017
I.G.I. Insurance Ltd., Karachi
In C.A.1200/2017
E.N.I. Pakistan Limited etc.
In C.A.1201/2017
Standard Chartered Bank (Pakistan) Ltd.
In C.A.1202/2017
National Foods Ltd.
In C.A.1203/2017
Schlumberger Seaco Inc. etc.
In C.A.1204/2017
Tapal Tea (Pvt.) Ltd.
In C.A.1205/2017
Pakistan Petroleum Ltd. & another
In C.A.1206/2017
Reckitt Benckiser Pakistan Ltd.
In C.A.1207/2017
Vision Holdings Middle East Ltd. & another
In C.A.1208/2017
Engro Corporation Ltd. Karachi etc.
In C.A.1209/2017
Atlas Honda Ltd.
In C.A.1210/2017
Abbott Laboratories (Pakistan) Ltd.
In C.A.1211/2017
Engro Foods Ltd.
In C.A.1212/2017
J.S. Bank Ltd. & another
In C.A.1213/2017
Habib Metro Pakistan (Pvt.) Ltd. etc.
In C.A.1214/2017
Liberty Power Tech Ltd.
In C.A.1215/2017
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 2 :-
I.B.M. Italia S.P.A. Pakistan
In C.A.1216/2017
United Energy Pakistan Limited & another
In C.A.1217/2017
Sabre Travel Network Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1218/2017
M/s Zaman Textile Mills, Ltd.
In C.A.1219/2017
M/s Al-Karam Towel Industries(Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1220/2017
M/s Mekotex (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1221/2017
M/s Artistic Fabric Mills (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1222/2017
M/s Khas Textile Mills (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1223/2017
M/s Sapphire Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1224/2017
M/s Hantax Karachi
In C.A.1225/2017
M/s Umer Spinning Mill Ltd. etc.
In C.A.1226/2017
M/s Latif Textile Mills (Pvt) Ltd. & another
In C.A.1227/2017
M/s N.P. Cotton Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1228/2017
M/s Diamond International Corporation Ltd.
In C.A.1229/2017
M/s Kidney Centre Postgraduate Training
Institute
In C.A.1230/2017
M/s Gul Ahmed Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1231/2017
M/s Proctor & Gamble Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd.
In C.A.1232/2017
M/s Ismail Industries, Karachi
In C.A.1233/2017
M/s Akram Cotton Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1234/2017
M/s Sapphire Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1235/2017
BGP (Pakistan) International
In C.A.1236/2017
Qasim
International
Container
Terminal
Pakistan Limited & another
In C.A.1242/2017
Amreli Steels Ltd.
In C.A.1255/2017
M/s Shazeb Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.
In C.A.1274/2017
M/s A - Z Pharmaceutical Ltd.
In C.A.1275/2017
M/s Unisa Pharmaceutical Ltd.
In C.A.1276/2017
Al Baraka Bank (Pakistan) Limited etc.
In C.A.1502/2017
Independent Media Corporation Pvt. Ltd.
In C.A.1503/2017
Lucky Cement Ltd. & another
In C.A.1504/2017
M/s Fatima Fertilizer Co. Ltd.
In C.A.1505/2017
Pakistan State Oil Company Ltd.
In C.A.1506/2017
Byco Petroleum Pakistan Ltd.
In C.A.1507/2017
Dawood Hercules Corporation Ltd.
In C.A.1508/2017
M/s Ericsson Pakistan Pvt. Ltd.
In C.A.1509/2017
M/s A.F. Ferguson & Co etc.
In C.A.1510/2017
Shamoon
Sultan
through
Authorized
Representative
In C.A.1511/2017
M/s Matiari Sugar Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1512/2017
M/s Mekotex Pvt. Ltd. etc.
In C.A.1513/2017
Team A-Venture Pvt. Ltd.
In C.A.1514/2017
Pakistan International bulk Terminal Ltd.
In C.A.1515/2017
Collector
of
Customs
Model
Customs
Collectorate Peshawar etc.
In C.A.114/2013
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Federation of Pakistan and others
In C.A.1171/2017
Federal Board of Revenue thr. its Chairman etc.
In C.As.1179, 1181,
1185, 1187, 1180 to
1192 and 1219 to
1235/2017
The Collector, Model Customs Collectorate Port
M. Bin Qasim, Karachi etc.
In C.As.1180, 1182
to
1184,
1186,
,
1198 to 1218, 1236,
1242, 1255, 1274 to
1276 and 1502 to
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 3 :-
1515/2017
M. S. Khyber Spinning Mills Gadoon Ltd. though
its Chief Executive and another
In C.A.1182/2017
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)/
Applicant(s):
In C.A.1171/2017
Mr. Abdul Sattar Pirzada, ASC
In C.As.1179 to 1187,
1190, 1192, 1219 to
1235/2017
Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC
Mr. Rashid Anwar, ASC
In C.As.1198 to 1218,
1236, 1242, 1255/2017
and C.M.As.6204, 6207,
6936 to 6940, 8195 &
8196/2017
Mr. Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC
Mr. M. Kassim Mirjat, AOR
In CAs 1274 to
1276/2017
Mr. Zaheer-ul-Hassan Minhas, ASC
In C.A.114/2013
Dr. Farhat Zafar, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
In C.As.1502 to
1515/2017
Dr. Farough Naseem, ASC
Mr. Mehmood A. Sheikh, AOR
In C.M.As.6517, 6723,
6725, 6727, 6729, 6731,
6735, 6747, 6721, 6733,
6737, 6741, 6743, 6745,
6735, 6739/2017
Dr. Farough Naseem, ASC
Mr. Mehmood A. Sheikh, AOR
For the Respondent(s):
For Collector of Customs
Karachi (in all cases)
Mr. Kafil Ahmed Abbasi, ASC
For Collector of Customs
Port Qasim Karachi (in
all cases)
Raja Muhammad Iqbal, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
In C.As.1182, 1186, 1187,
1192 & 1220/2017
Mr. Khalid Mehmood Siddiqui, ASC
In C.A.1274 to
1276/2017
Ms. Misbah Gulnar Sharif, ASC
For FBR
Mr. M. Sarfraz Metlo, ASC
In C.A.1198/2017
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, ASC
Assisted by Mr. M. Asad Lada, Adv.
In C.A.1504/2017
Mr. Rehmanullah, ASC
In C.A.1192/2017)
Dr. Raana Khan, AOR
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 4 :-
In C.A.114/2013
Mr. Abdul Latif Afridi, ASC
Commission IR
(Corporate) Multan
Mr. Salman Bhatti, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
Date of Hearing:
21.2.2018
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.- The questions of law and fact
involved in all the civil appeals in the instant matter are similar thus the
same are being disposed of through this single judgment. Appellants,
being importers of different raw materials, had earlier claimed exemption
of sales tax/customs duties under certain SRO(s) issued in terms of the
Customs Act 1969 (Customs Act) and the Sales Act, 1990 (Sales Act), or in
some cases under certain Schedules in the Sales Tax Act which the
relevant authorities/Assessment Officer(s) under the relevant taxing
statutes denied them, thereby passing adverse orders to this extent/effect.
Amongst other things, in some of these appeals the parties are also in
dispute as to the legal provision under which these orders were passed;
whether they were passed under Section 32 or Section 80 of the Customs
Act. Although Section 9 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC) places a
limitation on the pecuniary jurisdiction of the civil courts in terms whereof
the cognizance to try a suit of civil nature is expressly or even impliedly
barred by the governing law or Statute in the matter concerned, and there
being an express bar of this nature in Section 217(2) of the Customs Act,
yet the appellants proceeded to approach the Single Bench of the Sindh
High Court at Karachi in exercise of its civil jurisdiction for the redressal
of their grievance against these adverse orders, despite the fact that other
forums for redressal of their grievances (and subsequent appeals) were
available with regards to such orders within the mechanism/scheme of
the Statute (the Customs Act). In doing so the appellants mainly claimed that
they fell under the exemption(s) laid out in a plethora of judgments of this
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 5 :-
Court whereby inter alia an order tainted with mala fide or one made
beyond jurisdiction conferred could be challenged through a civil suit
despite there being an express bar to the cognizance of the same by a civil
court. These suits were decreed in favor of the respondents by the learned
Single Bench of the High Court at Karachi in exercise of its civil
jurisdiction, on merits, holding that the same were maintainable on
account of falling within the exemptions carved out by the law laid down
by this Court on the matter, whereas the Division Bench, without going
into the merits, held that the said suits of the appellants were not
maintainable and in the same breath held that no suit lay against any
order, notification etc. relating to a taxing statute, including the Sales Tax
Act, the Income Tax Ordinance 2001, the Federal Excise Act 2005 and the
Sindh Sales Tax on Services Act 2011, unless all the grievance redressal
remedies provided therein had been exhausted. An ancillary observation
made by the learned High Court in the judgment impugned is that the bar
of jurisdiction under the taxing statutes including Section 217(2) of the
Customs Act is only to the extent of the exercise of the original civil
jurisdiction by “civil courts”, which it held, includes the Single Bench of
the High Court in its exercise of the same, however, the Division Bench of
the High Court can exercise jurisdiction in respect of disputes arising or
relatable to special laws of taxation under its reference jurisdiction as
conferred by law under Section 217 of the Customs Act, 1969, Section 51 of
the Sales Act, Section 227 of the Income tax Ordinance, 2001, and Section
41 of the Federal Excise Act 2005 under lawful instituted proceedings, and
also in appropriate cases, under its extra ordinary constitutional
jurisdiction under Article 199 of the Constitution. The appellants now
include those in appeal against the impugned judgment as well as those
affected
thereby
under
the
blanket
bar
of
civil
suits
from
orders/notifications etc. of all taxing statutes. Amongst other contentions,
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 6 :-
the counsels for the appellants in unanimity submit that the Division
Bench, through this blanket bar to civil jurisdiction against actions of
authorities under all taxing statutes, has gone beyond the scope of the
relief sought by considering laws other than the issue under consideration
before it, thus in consonance with the principle laid down in H.M. Saya &
Co. Karachi Vs. Wazir Ali Industries Ltd. Karachi and another (PLD
1969 SC 65), their applications for permission to file the appeals are
allowed.
The following questions of law arose which shall be considered in
this judgment:
I.
Whether the appellants fall within the exceptions created by
the case law to a bar to jurisdiction of civil courts in light of
the ouster clause in Section 217(2) of the Customs Act, read
with the limitation to the jurisdiction of civil courts in Section
9 of the CPC? Whether the suits of the appellants in the civil
jurisdiction were maintainable?
II.
Whether the exercise of the original civil jurisdiction by the
Single Bench of the Sindh High Court is ultra vires of the
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan (Constitution) in
light of Article 25 thereof? And further, whether the exercise of
this civil jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the Sindh High
Court will render it a ‘civil court’ for the purposes of the
ouster clause in Section 217(2) of the Customs Act?
III.
Whether the appellants are entitled to the relief sought?
The questions of law formulated hereinabove are individually addressed
below and for purposes of convenience and comprehension the arguments
of the learned counsel of the parties as well as the issues chalked out by
them have been incorporated therein:
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 7 :-
I.
Whether the appellants fall within the exceptions created by a plethora of case
law to a bar to jurisdiction of civil courts in light of the ouster clause in
Section 217(2) of the Customs Act, read with the limitation to the jurisdiction
of civil courts in Section 9 of the CPC? Whether the suits of the appellants in
the civil jurisdiction were maintainable?
2.
Mr. Khalid Anwar Sr. ASC, appearing on behalf of the
appellants, at the outset submits that even though, undoubtedly, there is
a bar against the civil courts taking cognizance of the issue concerned in
light of Section 217(2) of the Customs Act read with Section 9 of the CPC,
however, certain exceptions have been carved out against a bar of such
nature. The settled law in the judgments reported as Punjab Province v.
The Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1956 FC 72), The Burmah Oil
Company (Pakistan Trading) Ltd. Chitagong v. The Trustees of the
Port of Chitagong (PLD 1962 SC 113), Abdul Rauf and others v. Abdul
Hamid Khan and others (PLD 1965 SC 671), Muhammad Jamil Asghar
v. The Improvement Trust, Rawalpindi (PLD 1965 SC 698)¸ Mian
Muhammad Latif v. Province of West Pakistan (PLD 1970 SC 180),
and particularly in Abbassia Cooperative Bank v. Hakeem Hafiz
Muhammad Ghaus and 5 others (PLD 1997 SC 3) is that where the
jurisdiction of the Civil court is challenged on the ground of ouster of
jurisdiction it must be shown that, (a) the authority or tribunal in the
Statute creating such a bar is validly constituted (b) where the order
passed or action taken by the authority is not tainted with mala fide; (c)
where the order or action taken was such which could be passed or taken
under the law which conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the authority or
tribunal; or (d) where in passing the order or taking the action, the
principles of natural justice were not violated. If one or more of these four
conditions are violated an exception is carved out for the Civil Court to
assume jurisdiction. According to him, in the present appeals ground (b)
and (c) have been attracted, as in passing the adverse order(s) the
authority/Assessment Officer acted beyond the jurisdiction conferred
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 8 :-
upon it and the same was tainted with mala fide since the corruption
prevalent in the Customs House/departments leads its officers to
discriminate against those not willing to pay over and above what is due
under the law.
3.
Mr. Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC, while concurring with the
above submission further relied upon the judgments of this Court in
Chalna Fibre Company Limited, Khulna and others v. Abdul Jabbar
and others (PLD 1968 SC 381) at page 387(B), Samiullah v. Fazle Malik
(PLD 1996 SC 827) at page 830(A), Azra Masood v. Noshaba Moeen
(2007 SCMR 914) at page 918(A) and particularly Hamid Hussain v.
Government of West Pakistan (1974 SCMR 356) at page 359(B) which
fortifies the exceptions created where special laws entail ouster clauses to
jurisdiction of civil courts, providing in its concluding paragraph that “It is
a well settled principle that even where the jurisdiction of civil (courts is)
barred and conferred upon special tribunals, Civil courts being courts of
ultimate jurisdiction will have the jurisdiction to examine acts of such
forums to see whether their acts are in accordance with law or are illegal
and even mala fide”. Furthermore, he stated that the learned Division
Bench in impugned judgment with regard to the finding that such an
exemption from bar to jurisdiction has only so far been granted in non-tax
law related judgments, has failed to take notice of the fact that the
judgments of Mian Mohammad Latif v. Province of West Pakistan
(supra) and The Province of Punjab v. Federation of Pakistan (supra) are
in fact tax cases wherein it was specifically held that where an act of an
income tax officer is extraneous to what was mandated under the statute,
a suit shall lie despite an ouster clause. Thus, there being no cavil with
the interpretation of this ouster clause, the contentions of the learned
counsel for the appellants in unanimity dilated upon the illegality of the
adverse orders on account of not having being made in consonance with
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 9 :-
the provisions of the Custom Act and on account of the mala fide of the
authorized officials (Collector Customs and Additional Collector Customs,
respondents No. 3 and 4 respectively), and thus they claimed that the suits filed
by them were maintainable since the appellate forum provided within the
Customs Act is only the forum for appeal where the orders made are not
tainted with mala fide or illegality. Although these judgments have been
referred to in the impugned judgment, learned counsel submitted that this
has only been done in passing and without explaining as to why the
present cases do not fall under the exceptions carved out in the
precedents above which clearly provided that in certain circumstances a
suit in the Civil Court is maintainable, notwithstanding the existence of an
ouster clause in this regard. On the other hand, Mr. Khalid Anwar took
strong exception to the fact that the impugned judgment outrightly does
away with the idea of even entertaining the possibility of an exemption to
be granted where an ouster clause exists, instead stating that even if an
issue of mala fide etc is to be raised, the same should be done after the
hierarchy provided in the statute itself is exhausted and even then the
learned Division Bench can take cognizance of the same. This approach,
he submitted, renders the entire purpose of raising a claim of mala fide in
the decisions of the authorized officials, redundant. It is only upon an
examination of the merits of the present case that the Court below could
have determined whether it fell under any of the exemptions carved out by
the judgments of the Supreme Court and the Division Bench of the same
court, but not only did the said Court refrain from going into the merits of
the case, at the very outset in paragraph 5 of the impugned judgment, the
Court had limited the very scope of the case to merely the questions of
maintainability of the suits. This in effect, deprived the appellants of the
exceptions provided by the precedents cited hereinabove. Another plea
raised by the counsel for the appellants was that if the SRO’s and/or
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 10 :-
Schedules of the Sales tax Act relied on by the appellants were to be
interpreted correctly, the appellants would have been found to be entitled
to the same. According to the learned counsel, it is perhaps only the
inability or rather the lack of willingness of the authority passing the
adverse orders denying such exemption, that the benefit of the same was
not extended to the appellants. Fortifying this argument, the learned
counsel emphasized that it was customary in the past decade or so that
such exemptions were extended to the products imported by the
appellants.
4.
Mr. Farogh Naseem, learned ASC, strenuously argued that in
light of the judgments cited above, there can be no two opinions that
where an impugned order or notice of a statutory authority is in breach of
natural justice, premised upon mala fides or is extraneous to the statute,
be it in a tax statute or otherwise, a suit would be maintainable. He
emphasized that even under taxing statutes, what is protected by an
ouster clause is an action “under the statute”. Obviously then, when an
action is beyond the parameters of the statute or is mala fide or without
jurisdiction or in breach of natural justice, the action cannot be reckoned
to be one “under the statute” and thus cannot be saved under the garb of
the ouster clause. He also relied on the judgment of Muhammad Jamil
Asghar’s case (supra) although the facts of the same are not similar to the
present appeals. Mr. Farogh Naseem, concurred with the above
submissions, additionally submitting that the Division Bench also missed
the elementary principle that there are two types of mala fide, i.e. mala
fide in law and mala fide in fact, and it is the former that the appellants
rely on since the act of the authorities in not extending the benefit of an
exemption to the appellants, which is clearly provided under the law is an
action extraneous to the law and thus a mala fide in law, for which a civil
suit should be maintainable and relied on the principle of ‘Boni Judicis est
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 11 :-
Ampliare Jurisdictionem’ which means that it is the duty of a good Judge
to extend his jurisdiction, in which regard he cited River Steam
Navigation Co v. The Commissioners for the Port of Chittagong (PLD
1961 Dacca 412). Concluding his arguments he stated that the Division
Bench further erred in law in holding that in light of the clarification by
the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to the effect that the appellants were
not entitled to the claimed exemptions, resort to departmental proceedings
would not be an exercise in futility despite the fact that departmental
proceedings could not possibly go against such clarification from a forum
much higher in the hierarchy.
5.
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, learned ASC appearing on behalf of
the Respondent-FBR, focused his arguments mainly on the contention of
the appellants’ counsel that the adverse orders of the Respondent
Collectorate were without jurisdiction. In this context he strenuously
relied on Justice Kaikaus’ words in Badrul Haque Khan v. The Election
Tribunal, Dacca and others (PLD 1963 SC 704) that where there is
jurisdiction to decide a particular matter then there is jurisdiction to decide it
rightly or wrongly and the fact that the decision is incorrect, does in no
manner render it without jurisdiction. The customs officials therefore, in
passing the concerned adverse orders/decisions, cannot be held to have
acted without jurisdiction merely because they may have committed an
error in interpretation of the law. In this regard he relied on the judgment
in Badrul Haque Khan’s case (supra), wherein at page 736 it was held that
“Unless a case of mala fides or a mere colorable exercise of jurisdiction
could be made out, the decision cannot be without lawful authority” and a
mere error in law or fact alone cannot render a decision without
jurisdiction. In Muhammad Hussain Munir and others v. Sikandar and
others (PLD 1974 SC 139) at page 142, in consonance with the judgment
in Badrul Haque Khan’s case (supra), and quoting it with approval it was
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 12 :-
held that “it will be going too far to say that every little breach of a rule by
allowing, evidence to coming, which in strict law might not be thought
admissible, would constitute an act without jurisdiction”. The same was this
Court’s view in Zulfikar Khan Awan v. Secretary, Industries and
Mineral Development, Gov. of Punjab & others (1974 SCMR 530) as
well as Raunaq Ali etc. v. Chief Settlement Commissioner and others
(PLD 1973 SC 236), Abdul Rehman Bajwa v. Sultan and others (PLD
1981 SC 522). However, he further clarified in this context that where a
decision made is held to be made without the proper application of the law
in place, the remedy for such a defect can only be sought by taking such
decision to the prescribed grievance redressal forum, which in the present
case is to be found in the appeal to the Collector under Section 193 or the
Appellate Tribunal under Section 194 (as the case may be) since any
determination under a special law such as the Customs Act, requires a
certain level of knowledge and expertise which must be taken advantage of
by approaching the abovesaid forums first and only after exhausting these
remedies can the High Court be approached under Section 196 of the
Customs Act. In support of this argument he relied on the judgements of
Ms. Binaco Traders v. Federation of Pakistan (2006 PTD 1491), as well
as Ms. Rohi Ghee Industries (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Collector of Customs (2007
PTD 878). To jump the gun by filing a civil suit directly would render such
forums redundant. On the other hand he submitted that the decision with
regards to the entitlement of exemption from duty and taxes or reduction
in tax liability in respect of a person or establishment, otherwise, includes
scrutiny and determination of disputed facts by the specialized forums
and the authorities provided under the taxing statutes, including Customs
Act, hence, it does not fall within the domain of original civil jurisdiction of
the Civil Court particularly, in view of the specific bar in terms of Section
217 of the Customs Act.
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 13 :-
6.
Barrister Sarfaraz Ali Metlo, ASC, learned counsel for the FBR
submitted a list of judgments specific to tax law wherein in the presence of
a statutory remedy, a suit on the civil side was held to be barred which
include; Raleigh Investment v. Governor General (PLD 1947 Privy
Council 19) at page 25(G), CIT v. The Tribune Trust (PLD 1947 Privy
Council 247) at para 3 on page 255, The Batala Eng. V. I.T.O. (1973
SCMR 282) page 283(A), Tahir A. Khan v. CBR Sindh (2003 YLR 196) at
page 199 (C, D, E & G), Chemitex Ind. V. Sup. S.T. (1999 PTD 1184) at
page 1187(A), Aluminum Processing v. FOP (2003 PTD 1411) at page
1428(G), Binaco Traders’ case (supra) at page 1499(E & H), Rohi Ghee
Industries’ case (supra) at page 885(C), Malik A Qayyum v. DG Int.
(SBLR 2015 Sindh 969), Collector v. Universal Gateway (2005 SCMR
37) at page 44(A&B) Amin Textile Mills v. CIT (2000 SCMR 201) at page
203 para 3, Federation of Pakistan v. M/s Millennium Pharma (2011
PTD 690) etc. However, learned counsel largely adopted the arguments of
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, ASC.
7.
In order the appreciate the minutiae of the issue of
maintainability of the civil suits filed by the appellants against the
decisions of the taxing authorities/Assessing Officer under the special law
of the Customs Act, it would be advantageous to reproduce the pivotal
provisions viz. Section 217(2) of the Customs Act which bars the
cognizance of the same by the civil courts under Section 9 of the CPC as
well as Section 9 (ibid.) itself:
“Section 9 of the CPC:
9. The Courts shall (subject to the provisions herein
contained) have jurisdiction to try all suits of a civil nature
excepting suits of which their cognizance is either expressly or
impliedly barred.
Section 217(2) of the Customs Act:
S.217. (2) No suit shall be brought in any civil court to set
aside or modify any order passed, any assessment made, any
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 14 :-
tax levied, any penalty imposed or collection of any tax made
under this Act.”
There is not an iota of doubt that Section 9 of the CPC provides that the
civil courts shall have jurisdiction to entertain any suit in relation to any
civil matter except when the same is expressly or impliedly barred by the
law. A plain reading of Section 217(2) reflects that the jurisdiction of the
“civil courts” has in fact been barred for any assessment made, any tax
levied, any penalty imposed or collection of any tax made “under the Act”.
The two operative terms to determine such a bar of jurisdiction, therefore,
are “civil court” and “under this Act”. The gist of the contentions of the
counsel for the appellants boils down to just one aspect; that the actions
of the statutory authorities being challenged are not made “under the Act”
and hence the ouster clause does not apply. This is where the exceptions
carved out from the bar to jurisdiction of the civil courts under the various
judgments of this Court come into play. The judgments in Punjab
Province v. The Federation of Pakistan (supra) Burmah Oil Company’s
case (supra), Abdul Rauf’s case (supra), Jamil Asghar v. The
Improvement Trust (supra), Mian Muhammad Latif’s case (supra),
Hakeem Hafiz Muhammad Ghaus’ (supra) Chalna Fibre v. Abdul
Jabbaru (supra), Samiullah’s case (supra), Azra Masood’s case (supra) and
Hamid Hussain’s case (supra) categorically provide exemptions to such a
bar to jurisdiction. An articulate illustration of these exceptions can be
found in the judgment of Hakeem Hafiz Muhammad Ghaus’ case (supra)
in the following words:
“It is also well-settled law that where the jurisdiction of the
Civil court to examine the validity of an action or an order of
executive authority or a special tribunal is challenged on the
ground of ouster of jurisdiction of the Civil court, it must be
shown (a) that the authority or the tribunal was validly
constituted under the Act; (b) that the order passed or action
taken by the authority or the tribunal was not mala fide; (c)
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 15 :-
that the order passed or action taken was such which could be
passed or taken under the law which conferred exclusive
jurisdiction on the authority or the tribunal; and (d) that in
passing the order or taking the action, the principles of natural
justice were not violated.”
8.
The
impugned
judgment
incorrectly
states
that
such
exemption has not been granted in tax statutes as the judgments of Mian
Muhammad Latif’s case (supra) and Province of Punjab v. Federation of
Pakistan (supra) clearly contradict such an untenable conclusion. However
the burden then lies on the appellants to prove that they fall within the
above exceptions in order to circumvent this bar to the jurisdiction of the
civil courts. Since the appellants’ counsel mainly relied on the exemption
from the general bar to jurisdiction on the ground of the orders/actions
taken by the authority/Assessment Officer being beyond jurisdiction, first
the precise scope of the jurisdiction of the Assessment Officer/authority
needs to be determined. The relevant provisions of the Customs Act in this
regard are reproduced below:
“32. False statement, error, etc.- (1) If any person, in
connection with any matter of customs,-
(a)
makes or signs or causes to be made or signed, or
delivers or causes to be delivered to an officer of
customs any declaration, notice, certificate or other
document whatsoever, or
(b)
makes any statement in answer to any question put to
him by an officer of customs which he is required by or
under this Act to answer, or
(c )
submits any false statement or document electronically
through automated clearance system regarding any
matter of Customs
knowing or having reason to believe that such document or
statement is false in any material particular, he shall be guilty
of an offence under this section.
…..
(3) Where, by reason of any inadvertence, error or
misconstruction, any duty taxes or charge has not been levied
or has been short-levied or has been erroneously refunded, the
person liable to pay any amount on that account shall be
served with a notice within three years of the relevant date
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 16 :-
requiring him to show cause why he should not pay the amount
specified in the notice;
80. Checking of goods declaration by the Customs.- (1) On
the receipt of goods declaration under section 79, an officer of
Customs shall satisfy himself regarding the correctness of the
particulars of imports, including declaration, assessment, and
in case of the Customs Computerized System, payment of duty,
taxes and other charges thereon.
(2) An officer of Customs may examine any goods that he may
deem necessary at any time after the import of the goods into
the country and may requisition relevant documents, as and
when and in the manner deemed appropriate, during or after
release of the goods by Customs;
(3) If during the checking of goods declaration, it is found that
any statement in such declaration or document or any
information so furnished is not correct in respect of any matter
relating to the assessment, the goods shall, without prejudice
to any other action which may be taken under this Act, be
reassessed to duty, taxes and other charges levied thereon.
……
193. Appeals to Collector (Appeals).- (1) Any person
including an officer of Customs aggrieved by any decision or
order passed under sections 33, 79, 80 and 179 by an officer
of Customs below the rank of Additional Collector may prefer
appeal to the Collector (Appeals) within thirty days of the date
of communication to him of such decision or order:
Provided that an appeal preferred after the expiry of thirty
days may be admitted by the Collector (Appeals) if he is
satisfied that the appellant has sufficient cause for not
preferring the appeal within that period.
…..
194. Appellate Tribunal.- (1) The Federal Government shall
constitute an Appellate Tribunal to be called the Customs
Appellate Tribunal consisting of as many judicial and
technical members as it thinks fit to exercise the powers and
discharge the functions conferred on the Appellate Tribunal by
this Act.
196. Reference to High Court. – (1) Within ninety days of the
date on which the aggrieved person or Collector or Director
of Intelligence and Investigation, or Director of Valuation, as
the case may be, was served with order of the Appellate
Tribunal under sub-section (3) of section 194B, the aggrieved
person or any officer of Customs not below the rank of an
Additional Collector or Additional Director, authorized by the
Collector or Director in writing, may prefer an application, in
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 17 :-
the prescribed form along with a statement of the case, to the
High Court, stating any question of law arising out of such
order.”
The facts of the present appeals do not involve any aggrieved party
approaching the Collector (Appeals) under Section 193, or the appellate
Tribunal under Section 194. Thus the jurisdiction, to be determined with
regards to the exception granted under the Hakeem Hafiz Muhammad
Ghaus’ case (supra) etc. is the jurisdiction of the Assessment
Officer/authority either under Section 32 or Section 80 of the Customs
Act. The contention of the appellants is that the adverse actions/orders
were under Section 32 whereas the respondents insist that in fact the
adverse orders were reassessment orders made under Section 80 of the
Customs Act. This difference in stance is vital because if the said
actions/order were initiated/passed under Section 32 ibid, then as per
sub-Section (3) thereof, no show cause notice in this regard was ever
served upon the appellants. It has been the case of the appellants that the
demand cannot be claimed to be a reassessment order since it lacks the
basic features/characteristics/attributes of the same as provided for and
required under Section 24 of the General Clauses Act 1897. A perusal of
the adverse orders reveals the use of the words “assessment” in
determining the tax liability of the appellants, therefore, in the absence of
any evidence produced on the part of the appellants to prove that the
order/actions were made under Section 32 ibid, it can be assumed that
the said adverse orders were reassessment orders under Section 80 ibid
and thus in conformity with the law. Even otherwise, the precedent laid
down in Badrul Haque Khan’s case (supra) with regard to an action/order
being beyond jurisdiction is that it will be going too far to say that every
little breach of a rule would constitute an act “without lawful authority”.
So far as the nature of the act/action was such that it can be said to be
made within the powers given to it (the authority passing the order or
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 18 :-
taking the action) for determination/assessment under the Statute, it
cannot be said to be beyond jurisdiction. The nature of the power
exercised by the authority/Assessment Officer was within its powers to
assess, reassess and determine the tax liability of a person, and since the
same is in consonance with the spirit of Section 80 ibid, it cannot be said
to be beyond jurisdiction. This approach finds further support in the
judgment in Badrul Haque Khan’s case (supra) wherein it was held that “I
do not see any difference in a case where the question of law decided is a
matter on which two opinions can easily be held and a case where the
decision on a question of law appears to be clearly erroneous.”. The same
view was held in Muhammad Hussain Munir’s case (supra), Zulfikar
Khan Awan’s case (supra) as well as Raunaq Ali’s case (supra), Abdul
Rehman Bajwa’s case (supra) as well as in Ms. Friend Engineering
Corporation v. Government of Punjab (1991 SCMR 2324) wherein this
Court held that by “jurisdiction” is meant a power to hear and decide a
legal controversy between parties, and if the order is contrary to the law
that would not render it as one without jurisdiction. We, therefore, hold that
the
adverse
orders/actions
by
the
Assessment
Officer/Customs
authorities cannot be said to be beyond jurisdiction and thus fail to
circumvent the bar to jurisdiction of civil courts imposed on the civil
courts under Section 217(2) of the Customs Act. Although the appellants
have also relied on the exception where an action/order is tainted with
mala fide, no proof or tangible argument in this regard has been raised
besides blowing smoke of the allegedly prevalent corruption in the
Customs Department. Therefore we conclusively hold that the appellants
do not fall within the ambit of the exceptions carved out by the judgments
of this court with respect to a bar to the jurisdiction of civil courts.
However, this does not mean that a wrong interpretation of the law cannot
be corrected thus leaving the aggrieved remedy-less; as correctly
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 19 :-
highlighted
in
the
impugned
judgment,
the
grievance
redressal
mechanism in the Customs Act as well as other taxing statutes and the
hierarchy of appellate forums created thereunder are remedies available to
the person/entity aggrieved by an adverse order of the Assessment
Officer/Customs Officer, and only after the exhaustion of the same should
the Division Bench of High Court be approached under Section 196 of the
Customs Act. A crisp overview of the assessment of duty on imported
goods under the Customs Act and the grievance redressal system provided
in the statute for objections to such assessment is as follows: Section 80
ibid prescribes the manner in which an officer of Customs shall satisfy
himself as to the correctness of the good declaration made by or on behalf
of the importer whereas under sub-section (3) thereof the officer of
Customs has the power to reassess the duty, taxes or other charges levied
under
the
Customs
Act;
any
person
aggrieved
of
such
assessment/reassessment may appeal to the Collector under Section 193
of the Customs Act, and the next forum of appeal from this is the
Appellate Tribunal under Section 194 of the Customs Act. Any person
aggrieved of the orders of the Appellate Tribunal may then file a reference
to the High Court pursuant to Section 196 of the Customs Act, subsection
(4) of which stipulates that such reference may be heard by no less than
two judges of the High Court.
9.
The question as to whether cognizance of a suit against such
adverse orders may be taken by the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court
at Karachi in exercise of its civil jurisdiction, and whether it also falls
within the definition of “civil courts” for the purposes of Section 217(2) of
the Customs Act, is addressed in the second formulation below.
II.
Whether the exercise of the original civil jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the
Sindh High Court is ultra vires of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan (Constitution) in light of Article 25 thereof? And further, whether the
exercise of this civil jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court will
render it to be a civil court for the purposes of the ouster clause in Section 217(2)
of the Customs Act?
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 20 :-
10.
An ancillary submission made Mr. Khalid Anwar, learned Sr.
ASC is that the suits which were taken up in exercise of the civil
jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court for the District of
Karachi, are saved from the ouster clause in Section 217(2) of the
Customs Act which only bars the jurisdiction of the Civil courts to set
aside or modify any order passed, any assessment made, any tax levied,
any penalty imposed or collection of any tax made under the said Act.
Therefore, the exercise of original civil jurisdiction by the Single Bench of
the Sindh High Court remains unaffected by the said ouster clause.
Reading out the bar contained in Section 217(2) of the Customs Act, he
emphasized on the words “civil court”, thus stating that it is only
cognizance by the ordinary civil courts which is barred, perhaps on
account of the lack of expertise that a Civil Judge may have in the matter;
however, cognizance by the Single Bench of the High Court is by no means
barred under the said Section.
11.
With regards to the constitutionality of the exercise of civil
jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court at Karachi, by
way of providing a background of the origin of the same, he read out the
language of Section 2 of the Bombay Act No.1 of 1906 which established
the Court of the Judicial Commissioner in Sindh, which he submitted was
the highest Court of Appeal in civil and criminal matters for the Province
of Sindh and it was a District Court and Court of Sessions for Karachi.
This Court of the Judicial Commissioner, he stated, continued to function
until the enactment of the Sindh Courts Act 1926 (Act of 1926) which came
into force in 1940, by way of a notification published in the official gazette
by the Sindh Government. Section 3 of the Act of 1926 established a Chief
Court of Sindh; Section 8 of this Act empowered the Chief Court of Sindh
to be the highest civil and criminal court of appeal and revision for Sindh.
He then read out Section 8 of the Act of 1926 which he categorically
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 21 :-
submitted cannot be read in isolation without reading it with Section 22 of
the same Act. The latter Section provides that there shall be in each civil
district other than, that of Karachi a district court and the Provincial
Government shall appoint a district judge to each such court. He specifically
highlighted that from the constitutional perspective the most important
thing to note is that the Act of 1926 is a provincial statute hence prima
facie it appears that the status of the Chief Court can only be seen as a
provincial Court i.e., civil/criminal Court for the District of Karachi.
Relying heavily on the judgment of this Court reported as Province of
Sindh v. Haji Razzaq (PLD 2017 SC 207) (which he submitted has also been
followed by this Court in the judgment of Mian Akbar Hussain v. Mst. Alishbai (PLD 1991 SC
985)) he stated that the original conception of the law was that this Court
was merely the creation of a Provincial Statute, whereby the Single Bench
of the High Court was exercising the power of a District Court therefore it
essentially had the same status but has been given an elevated
designation. Radical changes followed thereafter; referring to Section 219
of the Government of India Act, 1935 which defines a “High Court” to
include the Chief Court in Sindh, stressing on the words “deemed to be a
High Court”. Reading out the proviso to the same, he pointed out that on
this date there were already a certain number of High Courts for example
in Calcutta, Lahore, Madras, etc., and these Courts in Sindh, etc., could
have been converted into High Court(s). He conceded that this proviso was
deleted in the year 1955 by the Order of 1955(supra). In 1955 it was
constituted as the Karachi Bench of the West Pakistan High Court, it is no
longer as it was previously, deemed to be a High Court under Section
219(ibid), and now it is of the same status as the Lahore High Court. Thus,
after perusal of this decisive constitutional change, there remains no
doubt about the constitutionality of the Single Bench of the Sindh High
Court which pursuant to Section 219 was given the status of a High
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 22 :-
Court. Mr. Farogh Naseem, ASC, who also appeared on behalf of the
appellants, relying upon the same judgment in Haji Razzaq’s case (supra)
presented a completely contrasting contention, stating that the Single
Bench of the Sindh High Court in Karachi was in fact exercising a special
jurisdiction as opposed to an ordinary civil jurisdiction. Concentrating
particularly on the historical background of this exercise of civil
jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the High Court, in this regard he relied
heavily on the judgment in Firdos Trading Corporation v. Japan
Cotton & General Trading Co. Ltd. (PLD 1961 Karachi 565) wherein
Mr. Waheeduddin J. held that “it is therefore perfectly clear that this
jurisdiction is of special nature and is not the ordinary civil jurisdiction of
the West Pakistan High Court....”. He further relied upon page 222 of the
judgment in Haji Razzaq’s case (supra) wherein Waheeduddin J.’s view
was again concurred with in holding that:
“The scheme of the Establishment of West Pakistan Act, 1955,
clearly shows that as a special measure Karachi Bench was
allowed to continue to perform the duties of the principal civil
Court of original jurisdiction in Karachi, which is a special
jurisdiction and by no stretch of argument can be considered
as the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of the West Pakistan
High Court as is generally known. The history of the
establishment of the High Courts in this sub-continent shows
that there were only three Courts which were conferred
ordinary original civil jurisdiction within certain limits under
their Letters Patent. No other High Court established under
the High Courts Act of 1861 or under the Government of India
Act, 1915 or under the Government of India Act, 1935 was
invested with powers of ordinary civil jurisdiction. The Chief
Court of Sindh was no doubt a High Court within the meaning
of section 219 of the Government of India Act, but the
jurisdiction which it exercised in the civil district of Karachi
was not that of an ordinary original civil jurisdiction of the
High Court but it was only performing the duties of the
principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction within the district
of Karachi under a special statute viz. section 8 of Sindh
Courts Act, 1926.” [Emphasis supplied]
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 23 :-
Thus he concluded stating that cognizance of a civil suit by the Single
Bench of the Sindh High Court at Karachi in this special jurisdiction, is
not barred under Section 217(2) of the Customs Act.
12.
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, ASC supported the view in the
impugned judgment in this regard, submitting that there can be no cavil
with the assertion that the Learned Single Bench at Karachi in exercising
original civil jurisdiction, in effect acts in the capacity of a civil court and
therefore, to say that the bar to jurisdiction of civil courts under Section
217(2) does not apply to the Single Bench is absolutely untenable.
Fortifying this argument, he read out Section 8 of the Act of 1926,
whereby the Chief Court at Sindh was established and under Section 8
thereof the civil and criminal jurisdiction of the Chief Court was outlined
in that “The Chief Court shall be the highest civil Court of appeal and
revision ….and the principal civil Court of original jurisdiction for the civil
district of Karachi and shall be the Court of Session and shall exercise the
powers and perform the duties of a Sessions Judge in the Sessions Division
of Karachi”. Thus there can be no ambiguity in the fact that the principle
original jurisdiction of Sindh High Court at Karachi is neither the ordinary
nor the extra ordinary civil jurisdiction of the Court, but simply the civil
court's jurisdiction. Concurring with the view laid out in the impugned
judgment, he submitted that the restrictions and qualification imposed in
terms of Section 9 of CPC, are equally applicable in respect of a suit before
High Court in exercise of original civil jurisdiction.
13.
In light of the above arguments, it is evident that in this
context, the only judgment of this Court in the field which carefully
examines the exercise of the civil jurisdiction by the Single Bench at
Karachi and the implications of the same on its status is found in Haji
Razzaq’s case (supra) wherein on page 219 a brief background of the
origin of such jurisdiction is comprehensively explained:
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 24 :-
“Accordingly the Governor-General by G.G. Order No.19 of
1955 created the West Pakistan High Court with its seat at
Lahore and Benches at Karachi and Peshawar and Circuit
Courts at other places within the Province consisting of such
Judges as may from time to time be nominated by the Chief
Justice. Para 3 of this Order provided that the High Court shall
have such original, appellate and other jurisdiction and such
powers and authority in respect of the territories included in the
Province of West Pakistan as the High Court of Judicature at
Lahore had immediately before the commencement of this
Order, in respect of the territories in relation to which it
exercised appellate jurisdiction. The Letters Patent of the
Lahore High Court was also applied to West Pakistan High
Court subject to such modification and alteration as the
provisions of the Establishment of West Pakistan Act, 1955 or
any order made thereunder or any other law for the time being
in force may warrant. Under para 5 of the said Order it is laid
down that notwithstanding anything in this or in any other law
for the time being in force, the Bench of the High Court at
Karachi shall have the same original civil jurisdiction for the
civil district of Karachi and the same criminal jurisdiction and
powers of the Court of Session for the Sessions Division of
Karachi, as
were exercisable, immediately before the
commencement of this Order, by the Chief Court of Sindh under
section 8 of the Sindh Courts Act, 1926, subject to the power of
the Governor-General to direct that, as from a specified date
such jurisdiction and powers shall cease to be exercisable by
that Bench and as from that date that Bench shall cease to
exercise that jurisdiction and powers.”
From the above articulate synopsis of the historical background of the
Sindh High Court, it transpires that the Governor General through the
High Court of West Pakistan (Establishment) Order (Order No.XIX) of 1955
(Order of 1955) created the High Court of West Pakistan with its seat inter
alia at Karachi. Under para 5 of the said Order it has been provided that
notwithstanding any other law for the time being in force, the Bench of the
High Court at Karachi shall have the same original jurisdiction for the civil
district of Karachi as was exercised prior to the commencement of this
Order under the Act of 1926; the jurisdiction thus is the same but the
status has been elevated. Prior to the Order of 1955, the “Chief Court” by
virtue of Section 219 of the Government of India Act, 1935, was deemed to
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 25 :-
be a High Court, whereas after the enactment of this Order of 1955 the
same had been given the permanent status of a High Court bringing it at
par with other High Courts. The Single Bench of the Sindh High Court is
therefore a “High Court” and cannot be equated with any other civil court
and hence falls outside of the ambit of the ouster clause. This view finds
support in Haji Razzaq’s case (supra) wherein this Court came to the
conclusion that the Chief Court of Sindh was not a District Court within
the meaning of section 2(4) of the Civil Procedure Code. The definition of
“District Court” has been given at page 223 of the Haji Razzaq’s case
(supra) wherein it was held that:
“It will be pertinent to refer here to the definition of "district" in
section 2(4) of the Civil Procedure Code. In this definition a
clear distinction is made between the local limits of the
jurisdiction of a principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction
and the local limits of the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of
the High Court. It reads as under:
'District means the local limits of the jurisdiction of a principal
Civil Court of original jurisdiction (hereinafter called a 'District
Court') and includes the local limits of the ordinary original
civil jurisdiction of a High Court.'
This distinction also appears from the definition of "District
Judge" in section 3(17) of the General Clauses Act, which is in
the following terms:-
District Judge shall mean the Judge of a principal Civil
Court of original jurisdiction, but shall not include a
High Court in the exercise of its ordinary or
extraordinary original civil jurisdiction."
It appears to me that the expression "Principal Civil Court of
original jurisdiction" is not so much a description of any
particular class of Courts, as a designation thereof. But there
can be no doubt that this jurisdiction is distinct from the
ordinary civil jurisdiction of the High Court.”
14.
This Court thus agreed with the finding in para No.12 of the
judgment of Thadani, J. reported as In the Matter of Muhammad Osman
Sumro (AIR 1948 Sindh 89) wherein he observed that 'It is not disputed
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 26 :-
that this Court is a High Court. But … as I have pointed out before, if this
Court is a district Court, when exercising its original civil jurisdiction, by
reason of section 2(4), C.P.C., the right of appeal would also be governed by
the Code of Civil Procedure from a decision of a single Judge of this Court.
In view of section 14, Sindh Courts Act, 1926, however, I do not think such
an interpretation is permissible”. Therefore, even prior to the Order of
1955, this Court, in light of Section 14 of the Act of 1926, was a “High
Court” merely exercising the original civil jurisdiction for the District of
Karachi. As insisted upon by the learned counsel for the appellants, we
are convinced by the argument that in light of the above, the Single Bench
of the Sindh High Court, regardless of what jurisdiction it exercises, is a
"High Court” and will always remain a High Court because it is a
constitutional Court and is not a District Court, therefore the two cannot
be equated by any stretch of imagination.
15.
Obviously, a literal interpretation of Section 217(2) would lead
to the conclusion that only “civil courts” are barred from taking
cognizance of civil suits arising out of disputes regarding the claim of
entitlement to exemption from tax duties under the Customs Act. Had it
been the intention of the Legislature to bar the cognizance of any court
exercising civil jurisdiction, the language of the said provision would have
used the words “civil original jurisdiction” and not simply used the term
“civil courts”. This approach can be grasped better when looked at with
the rich history of this exercise of civil jurisdiction by the Single Bench of
the High Court, an overview of which has been beautifully encapsulated in
the judgement of Haji Razzaq’s case (supra); the Legislature was aware of
such exercise of special jurisdiction and thus had its intention been to
place a complete bar on cognizance by any court exercising such
jurisdiction, it would have used language that clearly reflected its intent.
The question of the status of the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court at
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 27 :-
Karachi, stands conclusively decided in the judgment of Province of
Sindh v. Haji Razaq judgment(supra) which relies almost entirely on
Justice Waheeduddin Ahmed, J’s judgment in Firdous Trading
Corporation v. Japan Cotton and General Co. Ltd. (supra) wherein he
had in unequivocal words stated that:
“I have not the slightest doubt on the language of section 3 of
Sindh Act, 1926 and the definition of "District" in section 2(4)
of the Civil Procedure Code, that it was exercising District
Court jurisdiction in contradistinction to the ordinary original
civil jurisdiction of the High Court. In my opinion the mere
fact that the Sindh Chief Court later on was included within
the definition of High Court under section 219 of the
Government of India Act, did not change the nature of this
jurisdiction”
This view, being the conclusive view of this Court ever since Haji Razzaq’s
case (supra) as the settled law on the matter shall prevail. We therefore
hold that the High Court of Sindh, is a ‘High Court’ and for this reason,
the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court was correct in holding the suits
of the appellants to be maintainable. A statutory provision must be
interpreted within the meaning that is attributed to it by the language and
specific words used by the Legislature, and the principles of law dictate
that redundancy cannot be attributed to any word used therein. Section
217(2) therefore, only bars the cognizance of suit filed under the civil
jurisdiction exercised by the civil courts, and this bar cannot be extended
to include the exercise of the same jurisdiction by the Single Bench of the
Sindh High Court at Karachi. As for the question regarding whether,
Article 25 of the Constitution can be said to have been violated by allowing
such special jurisdiction to the Sindh High Court while the same is not
available to other Provinces is concerned, suffice it to say that such
jurisdiction has been exercised by the Sindh High Court at Karachi as far
back as the pre-partition era. Striking a careful balance between the
fundamental right to be treated in accordance with the law under Article 4
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 28 :-
of the Constitution and Article 25 thereof, the principles of justice would
require that the litigants in Sindh High Court at Karachi are not deprived
of this forum of grievance redressal which is limited to only Karachi, as
this right to approach such forum has accrued to them over decades and
the law mandates certainty in the judicial administration system.
III.
Whether the appellants are entitled to the relief sought?
16.
In the present appeals, the appellants have successfully been
able to obtain interim injunctions some of which date back to as long as
ten years ago, thus in the process the Federal Exchequer has been
deprived of tax money worth millions of rupees. When this situation was
pointed out to the learned counsel for the parties, the appellants’ counsel
Mr. Khalid Anwar, was quick to respond and stated that in terms of
monetary gains, filing of writ petitions and approaching the courts in fiscal
matters is in fact more expensive for importers/appellants than it is to pay
the required tax applicable under the law. However, he stated that if he
were
to
today
take
a
pebble
and
throw
it
at
the
Custom
House/Department at Karachi, there is an 80% probability that it will hit
a corrupt official. Corruption has become a plague in the Custom
House/Department and no one has any faith in its officials. Secondly he
submitted that as opposed to the High Court in Lahore where writ
petitions are heard by a Single Bench, in Karachi writ petitions are heard
by Division Benches and there are only two Division Benches hearing tax
related matters. If a uniform system is introduced and more Division
Benches of the High Court at Sindh start hearing tax matters, the civil
jurisdiction of Single Bench of the Sindh High Court at Karachi will no
longer be invoked by parties. If the same cannot be done, in the
alternative those aggrieved by the orders of tax authorities under taxing
statutes such as the Customs Act should be allowed to continue to
approach the Singh Bench at Karachi in its civil jurisdiction with a
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 29 :-
guideline given to the same to dispose of tax disputes expeditiously within
a period of a year or less. While the real picture may not be as grim as
painted by the counsel for the appellant to advance his case, the counsel
for the respondents could offer no concrete argument to refute such
claims of prevailing corruption. In order to grow economically, it is
imperative that even the ugliest truths be acknowledged in order to
commence the journey of curbing, correcting and reducing this
unfortunate menace that not only our country, but all of South Asia faces.
17.
Keeping in view the alarming allegations made above, it is
directed, that while the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court at Karachi
may still take cognizance of any suit arising out of an action/order of the
tax authorities/Customs Officers, such jurisdiction must be sparingly
exercised by the Single Bench and the suits must be expeditiously decided
within the period of one year or less so that these suits are not used by
aggrieved parties as a means to deprive the Public Exchequer of the taxes
due for years on the basis of interim injunctions. Furthermore, as a
guiding principle, to bring some certainty and uniformity in the treatment
of such suits, the suits filed and those that have already been filed must
only be entertained on the condition that a minimum of 50% of the tax
calculated by the tax authorities is deposited with the authorities as a
goodwill gesture, so that on conclusion of the suit, according to the correct
determination of the tax due or exempt (as the case may be), the same may be
refunded or the remaining balance be paid.
18.
For the foregoing reasons, while allowing these appeals, it is
held and directed as under:-
(1)
the
adverse
orders/actions
by
the
Assessment
Officer/Customs authorities cannot be said to be
beyond jurisdiction and thus fail to circumvent the bar
to jurisdiction of civil courts imposed under Section
217(2) of the Customs Act;
Civil Appeal No.1171 of 2017 etc.
-: 30 :-
(2)
the Single Bench of the Sindh High Court, regardless of
what jurisdiction it exercises, is a “High Court” and will
always
remain
a
High
Court
because
it
is
a
constitutional Court and is not a District Court.
(3)
Section 217(2) ibid only bars the cognizance of suit(s)
filed under the civil jurisdiction exercised by the civil
courts, and this bar cannot be extended to include the
exercise of the same jurisdiction by the Single Bench of
the Sindh High Court at Karachi;
(4)
allowing such special jurisdiction to the Sindh High
Court, while the same is not available to other
Provinces, does not violate the provision of Article 25 of
the Constitution;
(5)
the suits of the appellants filed before the Single Bench
of the Sindh High Court at Karachi are maintainable;
(6)
despite the fact that the Single Bench of the Sindh High
Court at Karachi can take cognizance of any suit arising
out of an action/order of the tax authorities/Customs
Officers, such jurisdiction must be sparingly exercised
and the suits must be expeditiously decided within the
period of one year or less; and
(7)
the suits, which are already pending or shall be filed in
future, must only be continued/entertained on the
condition that a minimum of 50% of the tax calculated
by the tax authorities is deposited with the authorities.
19.
As the main appeals are allowed, the applications for
impleadment are disposed of accordingly.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 27.6.2018 at Islamabad
Approved for reporting
Waqas Naseer
| {
"id": "C.A.1171_2017.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1178 OF 2008
(On appeal against the judgment dated 03.11.2006
passed by the High Court of Balochisan, Quetta in
REA Nos. 26 & 27/1999)
Haji Baz Muhammad Khan & Haji Dad Muhammad Khan
… Appellants
VERSUS
Noor Ali and Shakil Ahmed
… Respondents
For the Appellants:
Mr. Kamran Murtaza, Sr. ASC
For the Respondent (1): Mr. Zulfiqar Khalid Maluka, ASC
For the Respondent (2): Ex-parte
Date of Hearing:
24.05.2018
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- The respondent No. 1 was tenant of
respondent No. 2 in a shop bearing Municipal No. 4-24/14
situated in Liaqat Bazar, Quetta. In the year 1992, the respondent
No. 2 orally agreed to sell this shop to respondent No. 1 for a sale
consideration of Rs.3,10,000/-. The terms of the oral agreement
that have come in evidence were that respondent No. 1 paid a sum
of
Rs.50,000/-
as
advance
and
the
balance
amount
of
Rs.260,000/- was required to be paid within a period of three
months. When respondent No. 1 failed to make payment within the
stipulated time, the time to complete the transaction was enhanced
by a period of 1/2 years. However, even within such extended
period, respondent No. 1 did not fulfill his contractual obligation.
Subsequently, a dispute arose between the parties who then
Civil Appeal No. 1178/2008
2
agreed to refer the matter to arbitrators for settlement. The
arbitrators gave their award on 26.09.1995, in terms whereof
respondent No. 1 was to vacate the shop under his tenancy and
hand it over to respondent No. 2 by 26.10.1995 and in
consideration thereof respondent No. 2 was to pay a sum of
Rs.1,400,000/- to respondent No. 1. This decision rendered by the
arbitrators was not challenged by any of the parties in any legal
proceedings. As respondent No. 1 did not handover the possession
of the shop, the respondent No. 2 thereby also did not pay him the
amount determined by the arbitrators. Respondent No. 2 then sold
the shop to the appellants, who filed eviction proceedings against
respondent No. 1 after which respondent No. 1 on his part filed a
suit for specific performance of the contract in 1996 on the basis of
the oral agreement to sell arrived at in 1992. It is this suit, which
is the subject matter of the present proceedings. The suit was
decreed in favour of respondent No. 1 vide judgment dated
02.04.1999. The appellants and respondent No. 2 filed their
respective appeals in the Balochistan High Court but the same
were dismissed vide the impugned judgment. Hence, this appeal
with leave of the Court.
2.
The legal effect of the arbitrators’ decision, which
remained unchallenged was that the respondent No. 1 gave up
both his right to seek specific performance of the contract under
the oral agreement as well as his tenancy rights on the condition of
receiving Rs.1,400,000/- from respondent No. 2, the original owner
of the shop in question. In such circumstances, the respondent
No.1 could not have sought specific performance of the oral
Civil Appeal No. 1178/2008
3
agreement that stood novated on terms reflected in the arbitrators’
award signed and acknowledged by both the parties. Once a party
novates a contract then enforcement of the earlier agreement
cannot be sought in terms of Section 62 of the Contract Act unless
it is expressly stipulated in the fresh agreement that his rights in
the original agreement will not be prejudiced. Thus the oral
agreement to sell came to an end and in consequence thereof the
respondent No. 1 was only entitled to receive Rs.1,400,000/- and
handover the possession of the shop to respondent No. 2. Thus the
suit for specific performance was not maintainable. The key
principle of such an effect is discussed in the case of Habib Ahmad
Vs. Meezan Bank Ltd (2016 CLC 351) whereby it was held as
under:-
“Novation would mean and be construed when contract
already in existence is extinguished and a new contract is
created where-under new rights emerge in favour of the
parties. Unless the rights under the old contract are explicitly
relinquished, no new contract comes into force. The
procrastination by a party to abide by terms of the contract,
which in the present context appears to gain benefit out of it,
would not mean novation of the contract; it comes about
where parties to the contract mutually agree to substitute it
with the new contract. Therefore if a party alleges novation of
a contract, it has to establish these prerequisites. For
reliance the case of Mrs. Mussarat Shaukat Ali v. Mrs. Safia
Khatoon, etc. reported in NLR 1995 SCJ 19 is referred to.”
3.
We, therefore, vide our short order directed respondent
No. 2 to deposit Rs.1,400,000/- in this Court within a period of
sixty days which shall then be paid to respondent No. 1. We have
already mentioned in our short order that there shall be no
Civil Appeal No. 1178/2008
4
extension in time for any reason whatsoever and failure to deposit
the amount within this period shall result in dismissal of this
appeal and the respondent No. 1 shall be entitled to retain the
possession of the shop in his capacity as tenant of the appellants
who are the successor-in-interest of respondent No. 2. Within
fifteen days of such deposit, the respondent No. 1 was required to
handover vacant peaceful possession of the property to the
appellants. If the respondent No. 1 fails to do so, the appellants
shall be at liberty to file an application before Executing Court,
which shall issue writ of possession without notice and put the
appellants in possession of the property. The respondent No. 1
shall be entitled to receive the amount deposited in this Court after
the possession of the property is handed over to the appellants.
4.
The above are the detailed reasons of our short order
of even date vide which we allowed this appeal and set aside the
impugned judgment.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
24th of May, 2018
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1178_2008.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali
Mr. Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Civil Appeal No.1184 of 2011
Against
judgment
dated
14.01.2011
of
Federal Service Tribunal, Islamabad passed
in Appeal No.325(P)CS/2010.
Mst. Basharat Jehan
Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Director General, Federal Government Education,
FGEI (C/Q) Rawalpindi & others
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
For the Respondent(s):
Mr. Sajid Ilyas Bhatti, DAG
Date of Hearing:
11.07.2014
JUDGMENT
MUSHIR ALAM, J-. Instant Civil Appeal is pursuant to
leave granting order dated 7.12.2011 which reads as follows;
“Inter alia contends that the learned Service Tribunal did not
appreciate that in terms of Chapter II of National Command
Authority Rules, para 7 (k), for initial appointment, the age
prescribed was “not be less than 18 years or more than 35 years of
age”. However, it was specifically stipulated therein that the said
limit “may be relaxed in exceptional cases upto the maximum of
forty five years by the Competent Authority as mentioned in the
Delegation of Powers”.
2. Having heard petitioner’s learned counsel at some length, leave is
granted inter alia to consider whether while dismissing petitioner’s
appeal, the learned Tribunal considered the afore-referred.”
2.
Facts that form basis for the above order appear to be that
Appellant aggrieved by judgment dated 14.1.2011 passed by the Federal
Service Tribunal, Islamabad, whereby Service appeal filed by the
Appellant, challenging her removal from service vide order dated
20.3.2010 under Removal of Service (Special Power) Ordinance, 2000
(herein after referred as RSO, 2000) on the ground of misconduct for
allegedly not providing the proof of relaxation in age limit as required
in her appointment letter dated 14.07.2007.
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
2
3.
In response to advertisement in news papers dated
January 2007, Appellant applied for the position of Assistant Librarian
(BPS-09). Beside other educational qualifications, upper age limit for
the said post in the advertisement was 35 years. Last date for the
application was 31.01.2007.
4.
Appellant applied for the said post, she appeared and
qualified the written test, which was held on 18.2.2007. She appeared
in interview and was selected on merits. She was issued appointment
letter dated 14.07.07 and accordingly joined the Federal Government
Girls High School, Risalpur, along with her joining she furnished
certificate of age relaxation to the School, per certificate at (page-60).
After joining the School, her qualifications were also got verified on
11.8.2007 (Page-61). It is the case of the appellant, that to her utter
surprise she received a letter dated 21.9.2007 notifying cancellation of
her appointment on the ground of being over aged. Appellant
challenged the order before the Federal Service Tribunal. The Service
Tribunal vide its order dated 2.2.2010 set aside the termination order
being against the principle of natural justice and without any show
cause notice.
5.
Appellant was accordingly issued another Show Cause
Notice dated 20.2.2010 on the same ground as mentioned in preceding
paragraph. Appellant in response relied upon Notification dated
28.11.2011 whereby age was generally relaxed by 05 years over and
above 35 years of age as advertised against said post. She was however
removed from services, under RSO, 2000, which order was also
challenged through impugned Judgment dated 14.1.2011 passed by
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
3
learned Federal Service Tribunal, whereby her Service Appeal was
dismissed.
6.
Learned ASC for the appellant, contended that as per
appointment letter dated 14.7.2007 of which condition No.(d) and (f)
are relevant reads as follows:
“d. The appointee will have to provide age relaxation proof (covered
under the Federal Government age relaxation Policy) in case he/she
is born before 01.08.1978.
f. The appointees will draw pay/allowances as fixed by the Federal
Government and will be regulated by such rules/orders as are in
force or may be made by the Federal Government/Department from
time to time.” (underlined to emphasize).
7.
It was urged by the learned ASC for the Appellant that
qualifying age against the subject post of Assistant Librarian (BPS-09),
was clearly mentioned in the advertisement as 35 years, which was also
as per Notification issued under Civil Servant (Appointment,
Promotion and Transfer) Rule, 1973 dated 3rd June 2004, whereby age
limit was revised from 25 years to 35 years (Page-62 0f the file).
8.
It was urged that the Appellant was of 37 years of age at
the time of applying for said position and was entitled for general
relaxation of 05 years of age as per Government Policy, which was
applicable on all the department under the Federal Government, under
Office Memorandum No.F.9/2/9 R5 dated 28th November, 2000. It
was further urged that one Shahnaz Parveen appointed as M.TT was 39
years of age at the urdu medium Girls Middle School, Malir Cantt,
Karachi was also appointed and no exception to her being over aged
was taken, thus Appellant is being discriminated.
9.
It was argued by the learned ASC for the appellant that in
the first place no relaxation in age was required in view of the policy
decision of the Federal Government, through Memorandum mentioned
herein. It was next urged that if it was required, such was submitted at
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
4
the time of joining and so also alongwith reply to Show Cause Notice
(Page-40). It was stated that the policy decision as to age relaxation
was being followed by various departments under the Federal
Government, including Federal Directorate of Education/Respondents.
To buttress his arguments he has drawn our attention to various
advertisements including those issued by respondents for the similar
post for subsequent years to show that maximum age for the
appointment to various position including BPS-09, to which post the
Appellant was appointed as per condition No.6 thereof is 35 years and
it was specifically mentioned ”maximum age limit is 35 years, as per
government policy relaxation of 05 years is given, therefore all such
persons who are 40 years of age on the cut of date of application”,
copies of such advertisements are available at pages No.44, 45, 46 and
47. It was argued that Federal Service Tribunal did not advert to such
aspect of the matter, which rendered the impugned judgment
erroneous.
10.
Mr. Sajid Ilyas Bhatti, learned DAG urged that the
maximum age for the subject position was 25 years and after giving
relaxation of 05 years therefore for the subject post age was 30 years.
According to him last date for the receipt of the applications is
31.01.2007, appellant was 37 years 04 months and 14 days. Therefore,
on the date of application, she was over aged and was nor eligible for
the appointment without obtaining age relaxation from the competent
authority as required, which she failed. According to learned DAG,
appellant was rightly removed from services.
11.
When attention of learned DAG was drawn to the order of
this Court dated 05.09.2013 which reads as follows;
“We have heard learned counsel for the appellant and learned
Deputy Attorney General at some length. Learned Deputy Attorney
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
5
General has not been able to respond as to how the appellant was
overage because admittedly she was 37 years of age at the time of
appointment and in terms of the advertisement issued in the
newspaper the maximum age limit was 35 years but there was
relaxation of five years in terms of the notification No.F.9/2/9 R5
dated 28.11.2000. Let the concerned official of the Ministry of
Defence not below the rank of a Joint Secretary appear in Court for
a date in the week commencing from 16.09.2013.” (Underlined to
add emphasis)
12.
In response he has drawn our attention to Cabinet
Division’s decision dated 10.9.1997 and Notification dated 13.02.2013,
respectively made available through CMA.No.2105 of 2014 whereby,
through first mentioned decision; the management and control of
Educational Institutions which include Schools and Colleges in
Cantonment and Garrison, now vest in Director Army Education, GHQ.
And as per later Notification dated 13.02.2013, qualifying eligibility for
the Librarian is 05 years experience as Assistant Librarian (BPS-09).
He has attempted to show by comparative chart placed on record
through referred CMA that originally age for the advertised position
was 25 years and giving benefit of the subject notification it was 30
years, but in the advertisement by typo error it was mentioned as 35
years, as such petitioner cannot be extended further age relaxation.
According to learned DAG, since 10.9.77 Control and management of
all the School and Colleges in Cantonment and Garrison have been
transferred to the DAE, GHQ Rawalpindi therefore all appointments,
transfer and posting are to be carried out under such directive.. It may
be noted that such placement of Schools and Colleges under the
Administrative and Management control of the Respondents would not
them take them out of the pale of Department of Federal Government;
and would be bound by all the policy directive. It is not the case of the
Respondents that Respondents have become autonomous body and
therefore not bound by the directives of the Federal Government.
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
6
13.
The documents as relied upon in the CMA 2105/14 do not
answer any quarry raised in the order reproduced in the preceding
paragraph nor, as noted in the leave granting order as noted in the
opening part of this judgment. Learned DAG admits that the age given
against the advertised post of Assistant Librarian (BPS-09) was
mentioned in the advertisement was 35 years. It was also admitted that
no corrigendum to such purported error was issued. Learned DAG
though state that age relaxation of 05 years was given by the Federal
Government, but according to him it was already extended to the
Petitioner and no further age relaxation is possible.
14.
As it could be gleaned from the record and as per
Notification dated 28.11.2000, referred to in the order of this Court,
noted above, age was revised and all the departments of the Federal
Government were required to specifically mention such fact in the
advertisement. As noted, in various advertisements placed on record,
such fact finds mention. Relevant paragraph of the notification reads
as follows: -
“The maximum age limit prescribed or initial appointment under
any rules for the time being in force shall be relaxed for a period of
five years.
2. the above cited relaxation is with reference to the upper age limit
prescribed in the recruitment rules of posts made under sub rule
(2) of rule 3 of the Civil Servants (Appointment, promotion and
Transfer) Rules, 1973 and is not applicable to the case of
competitive Central Superior services Examination conducted by
the Federal Public Service commission.
3. All ministers/Divisions/Departments and the Federal public
Service commission are, therefore, requested to clearly indicate in
their advertisements that government has allowed general
relaxation upto five years over the age limit prescribed in the
recruitment rules of posts and given in the advertisement.”
15.
As noted in the narrative above, as per Notification issued
under Civil Servant (Appointment, Promotion and Transfer) Rule, 1973
dated 3rd June 2004, original age limit fixed for the appointment to the
post of BPS-09 was 25 years, which was revised to 35 years. In this view
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
7
of the matter it cannot be said that she was over aged as she did not
obtained age relaxation, as none was required. As noted above, if there
was any lapse it was on the part of the Respondents. If the
Notification/memorandum as noted above had gone unnoticed by
them, it is not the fault of appellant. It is not the case of the
Respondents that she procured the appointment letter through dubious
means. Since appellant cannot be attributed any wrong on her part,
respondents cannot be allowed to take benefit of their own oversight,
lapse or ignorance of law (i.e. Notification/Memorandum of relaxation
of general age dated 28.11.2000).
16.
The representation of the Appellant was dismissed on the
ground inter-alia, that the qualifying age was wrongly mention in the
advertisement as 35 years instead of 25 neither can be attributed to the
appellant, nor any corrigendum was published in the newspapers to
such an effect. Such position, taken now appears to be an after-thought.
Appellant as noted above had joined the services after appearing in the
qualifying test and so also qualified the interview. From the date of
application dated 31.01.2007 till letter dated 14.07.2007 calling upon
her to join and take charge on 1.8.2007 for seven months it did not
occurred to the Respondents that she is over aged by two years
(37.years) as against the age of 35 as advertised. We have also noted
that in terms of Chapter-II of National Command Authority Rules,;
para 7(K) for initial appointment the age prescribed was “not less than
18 years or more than 35 years of age”. However it was specifically
stipulated therein that the said limit “may be relaxed in exceptional
cases upto 45 by the competent authority as mentioned in the
Delegation of Powers” said Notifications/Policy directives were neither
considered by the respondents nor by the Service Tribunal.
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
8
17.
Appellant served the Respondent-department to the
satisfaction of the authority. It is not the case of the Respondents that
the appellant did not possessed the required qualification for the
relevant post of Librarian and or that she did not serve the department
to their satisfaction. She had applied for the advertised post giving her
full particulars, including her qualification and age. Even if it is
presumed that the competent authority over sighted her age, it would
be deemed to have been relaxed in exercise of power vested in the
Authority. There is no denial that one Shehnaz Parveen was also
appointed as MIT in a school at Malir, Karachi was of 39 years of Age
and no exception to her being over age was taken. If that be the case,
Appellant is justified to urge that she has been discriminated. since she
was issued joining letter on 14.7.2007 she joined the school at
Risalpur on 1.8.2007 as required. At the time of joining she submitted
the age relaxation certificate at the time of joining the School, such
certificate to such effect was placed on record (page-59).
18.
Under these facts and circumstances a right had come to
vest in the appellant on issuance of appointment letter and more so
after joining the service. In the case of Ghulam Murtaza v. Federation
of Pakistan (2011 PLC (CS) 709) passed by learned Division Bench of
Sindh High Court placing reliance on the case of Jabbar Malik v.
Province of Sindh and others, last mention judgment was also upheld
by this Court in Civil Petition No.426-K to 436-K of 2008, it was held
that once a person is appointed after fulfilling all the codal formalities,
appointment letter is issued, it was held that a vested right is created
and appointment letter could not be withdrawn. Similar view was taken
in the earlier decision of the same Court by another learned Bench
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
9
reported as Muhammad Farooq m Memon v Government of Sindh
(1986 CLC 1482).
19.
As noted, above, general benefit of age relaxation extended
to the employees of the Federal Government across board and extend
to all departments under the Federal government pursuant to any
policy decision cannot be denied on the assumption that particular
department is not bound by such decision as it has its own rule. Such
course is dangerous and amounts to challenge the authority of Federal
Government, which course is not approved. Nothing was brought on
record to show that such directive/policy decision expressed through
Memorandums/ Notifications were not applicable to the respondents.
Age relaxation of upper age limit for the direct recruitment to the
advertised Post (of Librarian BPS-09) in the Directorate of Education
in GHQ, which is also under the Federal Government, has not been
denied by the respondents such benefit cannot be denied without any
justifiable reason, which regretfully was not brought to the notice of
this Court.
20.
Once a right is accrued to the appellant by appointment
letters issued after complying with all the codal formalities could not be
taken away on mere assumption and or supposition and or whims and
fancy of any executive functionary. Such right once vests, cannot be
destroyed or withdrawn as legal bar would come into play under the
well doctrine of locus poenitentiae, well recognized and entrenched in
our jurisprudence (One may refer to Director, Social Welfare, NWFP,
Peshawar v. Sadullah Khan (1996 SCMR 1350).
C. A.No.1184 of 2011
10
21.
In view of the forgoing reasons impugned judgment of
Federal Service Tribunal (FST) dated 14.01.2011 is set aside and Civil
Appeal is allowed in following terms: -
(i).
Appellant shall be given joining within one month
from date of receipt of copy of this judgment.
(ii).
Seniority will be counted from the date of
appointment letter dated 14.07.2007.
(iii). However, no back benefit will be extended to the
appellant for the period she remained out of office
one month from the date of this order.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
11th July, 2014
Not approved for reporting
Sarfraz Ahmad/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1184_2011.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed
Mr. Justice Qazi Faez Isa
Mr. Justice Yahya Afridi
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1189 OF 2014
[on appeal against the Judgment dated 19.03.2014 passed by the Lahore High
Court, Lahore, in W.P.No.21698 of 2011]
Habib Bank Limited
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Gulzar Khan & others
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
: Mr. Faisal Mehmood Ghani, ASC
For the Respondent(s)
: Mr. Zulfiqar Khalid Maluka, ASC
Date of Hearing
: 11.04.2019
JUDGMENT
GULZAR AHMED, J.— This appeal is by leave of the Court dated
10.09.2014. Brief facts of the matter are that respondent No.1
(the respondent), who was working as an Officer Grade-II (OG-II)
and Manager HBL, Sharifabad Branch, District Jhang, allegedly
mishandled the bank funds. Show-cause notice was issued to the
respondent, who filed its reply. Thereafter, a regular inquiry was
conducted against the respondent in which he was found guilty of
the commission of said offence. Second show-cause notice dated
20.11.2006 was issued to the respondent and thereafter vide letter
dated 26.06.2007, a major penalty of compulsory retirement from
service was imposed on him. The respondent then filed Grievance
Petition in Punjab Labour Court No.5, Sargodha Camp at Jhang,
praying for his reinstatement with all back benefits. The appellant
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 2 -
contested the said Grievance Petition of the respondent by filing its
written statement in which one of the objections taken was about
the maintainability of the Grievance Petition on the basis that he
was not a ‘workman’ for that he was employed as OG-II and
Manager of the branch. The Labour Court, after full trial, vide its
order dated 23.02.2009 allowed Grievance Petition filed by the
respondent. On appeal, the Punjab Labour Appellate Tribunal (the
Tribunal), after hearing both parties, allowed the appeal vide
judgment dated 08.07.2011, by setting aside the order of the
Labour Court. The respondent, however, challenged judgment of
the Tribunal by filing Writ Petition No.21698 of 2011 before the
Lahore High Court, Lahore. Such Writ Petition of the respondent
was dismissed in limine vide order dated 30.09.2011 passed by the
learned Judge in Chambers of the Lahore High Court, Lahore. The
respondent approached this Court by filing Civil Petition No.1965-L
of 2011, wherein order dated 20.12.2012 was passed remanding
the Writ Petition to the High Court for decision afresh. Pursuant to
the remand order, the learned Judge in Chamber of the Lahore
High Court, Lahore, passed the impugned order dated 19.03.2014
and while allowing the Writ Petition of the respondent the matter
was remanded to the Tribunal for decision of the controversy on
merits.
2.
Mr. Faisal Mehmood Ghani, learned ASC for the
appellant, at the outset, has contended that the Tribunal in its
judgment has considered all relevant evidence as well as the case
law and thereafter concluded that the respondent was not a
‘workman’ and thus the order of the Labour Court was set-aside.
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 3 -
He further contended that the High Court, in the impugned
judgment, has dealt with the question of respondent being a
‘workman’ or not, and has given a finding that he is a ‘workman’.
He next contended that the evidence, on record, amply
demonstrated that the respondent, who was employed as OG-II
and Manager of the branch was not a ‘workman’ and thus the
Labour Court could not have exercised jurisdiction of entertaining
his Grievance Petition. He contended that the High Court, by way
of impugned judgment, had misread the evidence available on
record so also the legal position pronounced by this Court and
have thus reached the conclusion that the respondent is a
‘workman’, which is not sustainable by law.
3.
Mr. Zulfiqar Khalid Maluka, learned ASC, on the other
hand, has contended that by the impugned judgment the High
Court has merely remanded the matter to the Tribunal and thus
the remand order could not have been challenged by the appellant.
He conceded that the High Court while remanding the matter, by
the impugned judgment, has given a specific finding that the
respondent is a ‘workman’ and thus his Grievance Petition before
the Labour Court was maintainable and the matter was remanded
only for decision on merits by the Tribunal. Learned ASC further
contended that the evidence on record so also the legal position
amply established that the respondent was a ‘workman’ and in this
regard supported the impugned judgment of the High Court.
4.
We have considered the submissions of learned ASC
for the parties and have also gone through the record with their
assistance. The foremost question is as to whether jurisdiction
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 4 -
was available to the Labour Court to adjudicate and decide the
matter and once it is established that the Labour Court had the
jurisdiction, then the Labour Appeal before the Tribunal, as a
consequence, would be maintainable and decided on its own
merits. The history of this case shows that the Labour Court has
already dealt with the matter at full length and passed its order.
Thereafter, the matter has been dealt with by the Tribunal, the
High Court and then by this Court, when it was remanded to the
High Court to decide the Writ Petition filed by the respondent
afresh. In our view, where this Court, while remanding the matter
to the High Court, has directed to decide the matter afresh,
perhaps such direction of this Court did not provide enough room
to the High Court to further remand the matter to the Tribunal for
deciding the same on merits. In our view, in terms of the order
passed by this Court, the High Court ought to have decided the
case afresh not only on the point of jurisdiction but also on merits.
Be that as it may, as the High Court has decided only the question
of jurisdiction of the Labour Court by determining the respondent
to be a ‘workman’, so we are mainly concerned with this question,
which has been elaborately argued by the learned ASC appearing
for the parties. So far as the evidence available on record is
concerned, we have noted that the respondent has recorded his
evidence as PW-1 before the Labour Court where he admitted that
on 01.07.2005 he was promoted as OG-II by the appellant and that
he worked as Manager of Sharifabad branch of the appellant-bank
for one year and three months. He also admitted that he was
drawing a salary of Rs.18,324/- plus other allowances, as
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 5 -
admissible to him. He further admitted, in his evidence, that his
duty included issuing of drafts, issuing of cheques, opening of
accounts, closing of cash with signature of second officer,
depositing of cash in the strong room and locking the same. Such
admission by the respondent, in his evidence, amply demonstrated
that the nature of work being performed by the respondent as OG-
II and Manager of the branch was not of a clerical nature and did
not fall within the ambit of term ‘workman’ as defined in the
Industrial
and
Commercial
Employment
(Standing
Orders)
Ordinance, 1968 so also under the Industrial Relations Ordinance,
2002. It is not necessary for us to give here the definition of the
term ‘workman’ in these two laws for that besides the evidence
available on record, the legal aspect is also clinched by various
judgments pronounced by this Court in relation to the bank
employees, who were employed as OG-II and Manager of the
branch. We may note that though the respondent did not have
Power of Attorney with him, he was still Manager of the branch
and all affairs of the branch were under his management and
control, even the entire cash and record of the bank relating to the
branch as well as all communications of the branch were also
under his supervision, upon which he was required to take
decisions as to how the same has to be dealt with in the best
interest of the appellant-bank. The term ‘Manager’ even otherwise
is defined in the Black’s Law Dictionary, 9th Edition, as follows:
“A person who administers or supervises the affairs of a
business, office, or other organization”
5.
Learned ASC for the appellant has cited a number of
cases on the point as to whether the respondent being OG-II and
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 6 -
Manager of the branch could be considered as a ‘workman’ and in
this regard has referred to the case of National Bank of Pakistan v.
Punjab Labour court No.5, Faisalabad & 2 others [1993 SCMR 672],
where this Court dealt with the case of OG-II of the National Bank
of Pakistan, who had filed Grievance Petition before the Labour
Court. The bank has taken an objection that OG-II was not a
‘workman’ as he was predominantly performing managerial and
administrative work. This Court dealt with the issue as follows:
“11.
… … Admittedly, respondent No.3 was drawing,
according to his own showing, salary of Rs.1,150 per month.
He was an officer of Grade-II and, therefore, if he was
employed at the relevant time in a supervisory capacity not
necessarily mainly in a managerial or administrative
capacity, he would fall within the first category of clause (b)
referred to hereinabove. It is a well-settled proposition of law
that a person who approaches a Court on the basis of
averment that he is a workman within the definition of
clause (xxviii) of section 2 of the IRO, the burden of proof lies
on him and not on the employer. In the present case as
pointed out hereinabove, the Labour Court has not examined
the above question, but the Tribunal relied upon the
statement of respondent No.3 in his examination-in-chief to
the effect that “I was Second Officer in the branch when I
was dismissed. I was not Manager at the relevant time. My
job was of clerical nature. I was not entrusted with
managerial or supervisory job.” The Tribunal was also
influenced by the factum that no cross-examination was
directed in this regard. In our view, simpliciter statement of
respondent No.3 that “I was not performing supervisory job”,
but at the same time, admitting the factum that he was
Grade-II Officer, was not sufficient for discharging the above
burden of proof. The Tribunal as well as the learned Judge
in chamber wrongly placed burden of proof on the appellant
by holding that they had failed to produce the evidence to
show the duties of respondent No.3. In our view, it was for
respondent No.3 to have stated what were the duties of a
Grade-II Officer. It is also incorrect to conclude that the
appellant had not directed any cross-examination on the
above question. In the cross-examination, it was suggested
that respondent No.3 was performing the duties of Manager,
which suggestion was denied by him.”
After examining the case law on the point, this Court ultimately
reached at the following conclusion:
“15.
… … The question, whether a person is a workman
within the purview of clause (xxviii) of section 2 of the IRO,
can be determined not on the basis of the designation of his
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 7 -
post, but on the basis of the duties which he was performing.
In the present case, we have already held that burden of
proof that respondent No.3 was a workman, was on him,
which he failed to discharge.”
Further, in the case of National Bank of Pakistan & another v.
Anwar Shah & others [2015 SCMR 434], this Court was confronted
with the question as to whether OG-I, OG-II and OG-III were
workmen and could become members of the employee’s union and
participate in such union election process, and observed as
follows:
“8.
… … The 'worker' and the 'workman' defined in the
Act mean person not falling within the definition of 'employer'
who is employed as a supervisor or as an apprentice but
does not include a person who is employed mainly in
managerial or administrative capacity. On the other hand,
the 'employer' as defined in the Act includes a person who is
proprietor, director, manager, secretary, agent or officer or
person concerned with the management of the affairs of the
establishment. The term 'officer' is specifically mentioned in
the definition of term 'employer'. However, as has been noted
from the case-law cited by the learned counsel for the
parties, the Courts have not considered the designation of a
person to be a factor determining his status of employment in
an establishment to be that of an officer or a workman rather
the Court has always considered the nature of duties and
functions of a person to be the factor which will determine
his status as to whether he is a workman or not. In this
respect, we may refer to the case of National Bank of
Pakistan v. Punjab Labour Court No.5, Faisalabad (1993
SCMR 672), which was a case relating to an Officer Grade-I1
of NBP against whom disciplinary action was taken. He
approached the Labour Court for redressal of his grievance
claiming himself to be a workman. The matter came up to
this Court and it was held that the designation per se is not
determinative of a person being a workman rather the nature
of duties and function determine his status and the burden is
on him to establish that he is a workman. As the Officer
Grade-II failed to discharge his burden, he was held not to be
a 'workman' and his grievance petition was dismissed. The
ratio of this case and also of the other cases that have been
relied upon by the learned counsel for the parties is that the
person who approaches a Labour Court for redressal of his
grievance claiming himself to be a workman and such status
of workman being denied by the employer, it becomes a
bounden duty of a person who approaches the Labour forum
to demonstrate through evidence that his nature of duties
and functions were that of a workman and not that of a
managerial or administrative capacity and that he was not
an employer. Unless such categoric evidence is led by him,
he will not be considered to be a workman and his grievance
petition will not be maintainable before the Labour forum. It,
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 8 -
therefore, implies that the officer cannot be assumed to be
workmen nor such can be declared on mere asking. The
argument that officers Grade-I to III are performing
supervisory function in itself means that this has to be
established by evidence. In this view of the matter, on a
solitary claim of the union no blanket declaration can be
given that the Officers Grade-I to III in the establishment of
NBP are workmen.”
Moreover, in the case of Muslim Commercial Bank Ltd. and others
v. Muhammad Shahid Mumtaz and another [2011 SCMR 1475] =
[2009 PLC 281] this Court has dealt with the issue as follows:
“7.
In the light of the above definition, we need to examine
as to whether the respondent was a workman or not. Before
discussing the factual aspects of the question, we may point
out that both the Courts erred in placing burden on the Bank
to provide that the respondent was not a workman. This
Court has already held in the case of National Bank of
Pakistan v. Punjab Labour Court No.5 (supra) that a person,
who approaches a Court on the basis of averment that he is
a workman, the burden of proof lies on him and not on the
employer. The respondent, was a Manager at the relevant
time of the Khakwani Cloth Market Branch of the appellant-
Bank. This was his second posting as Manager as he has
earlier posted in the same capacity in Khiali Gate Branch,
MCB, Gujranwala. The power of attorney was executed by
the Bank in his favour on 20th August, 1996, four years prior
to the present incident. This power of attorney was given to
him on his first posting as Manager. It was duly notarized by
a Notary Public and signed by the President of the Bank and
attested by two Vice-Presidents of the Bank. There is no
reason to doubt its authenticity and we are unable to
understand as to how the trial Court had ruled out of
consider the power simply on the ground that there was no
evidence to show that the same was ever delivered to the
respondent. In view of its notarization and execution by the
most responsible official of the Bank, in the absence of any
convincing evidence to the contrary, it is unbelievable that
the same would have been fabricated only to counter the
respondent's claim of being the workman. We have also
noticed that this aspect was not discussed by the learned
Judge in Chambers in the High Court.
8.
The powers conferred on the respondent by the power
of attorney are material for fixing his status in the context as
to whether or not he was a workman. For this purpose, all
the powers conferred are relevant but the most significant
ones are the following:--
(2)
To engage, employee, control and dismiss
Clerks, Servants and others whether engaged by the said
Attorney or by the Bank or otherwise.
(4)
To settle and adjust all average and other
losses and claims under Policies of Insurance of All kinds
and all other accounts and reckonings whatsoever and to
compromise and compound all debts and claims whatsoever
claimable by the Bank and to submit to Arbitration all
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 9 -
differences and disputes whatsoever.
(6)
To take on lease or other tenancy any land,
houses, buildings for the purposes of officers or premises
suitably for carrying on the said business or any of them and
to build, alter and furnish any office, house or premises.
(8)
To make, sign, seal, execute, deliver and
endorse all receipts, deeds, redemption of mortgage deeds,
conveyance, transfers and instruments.
(12)
To draw, accept, endorse, sign and negotiate
all Bills of Exchange, Dividend Warrants and any orders for
payment of money in which the Bank is or may be interested
or concerned and to which its endorsement or signature may
be necessary or requisite.
(17)
AND GENERALLY to do all such acts, deeds
and things not specifically mentioned hereinabove but which
are necessary or expedient to carry on and manage the
business of the Bank and all such other acts which are
incidental to the promotion of Banking business.”
9. The above powers, particularly the one of hire and fire in
para 2, sufficiently demonstrates the nature of his duties
and functions as managerial and supervisory and not
clerical in nature, as claimed by him.”
Again, in the case of Javaid Hussain Naqi v. Member Board of
Directors, MCB and others [2009 PLC 260], this Court was
confronted with the question as to whether the Branch Manager
of the Bank could fall within the term ‘workman’ as defined
under the labour laws. Such question was dealt with by this
Court as follows:-
“3. The present petitioner also is a Branch Manager of
Muslim
Commercial
Bank,
performing
the
duties
of
managerial and supervisory nature. It is not in the last
Branch alone but, according to para. No.3 of his grievance
petition (pp.65), he has all along been working as Branch
Manager at different stations since November, 1979. Learned
High Court was, therefore, justified in holding, in the light of
the above referred judgment of this Court, that the petitioner
was not a "workman"' and hence the Labour Court lacked
jurisdiction to entertain his petition under section 25-A of the
Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969.
4. The arguments of the learned counsel that the branch in
which the petitioner was last posted, was a small branch, is
altogether out of context. The size of a branch has no nexus
with the nature of duties of the Manager, which always
remain of managerial and supervisory nature. It would be
ridiculous to observe that the Manager of a large branch
would not be a "workman" and that of a small branch would
be. There being no force in the petition, it is hereby dismissed
and leave to appeal refused.”
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 10 -
6.
On the other hand, learned ASC for the respondent
has refereed to the case of Mahmood Hussain Larik and others v.
Muslim Commercial Bank Limited [2009 SCMR 857]. This case was
heard by a three-member bench of this Court where two of the
members who were in majority, inter alia, dealt with the question
as to whether OG-III in the bank could be considered as a
‘workman’ or not and came to the conclusion that such officers, in
view of the nature of work performed by them were not ‘workman’.
However, his lordship Sabihuddin Ahmed, J., one of the members
of the said bench gave his dissenting note. Learned ASC for the
respondent has relied upon this dissenting note to support his
case. Reliance of the learned ASC for the respondent on the
dissenting note against the majority view, cannot give a foundation
to this Court to base its decision in considering as to what was the
decision of this Court in the case, the Court will always consider
the majority view that prevailed in the case and not the dissenting
note given by one of the judges of the bench. This is well
established law and it is unnecessary to cite any precedent for it.
7.
The very evidence which the respondent recorded
before the Labour Court, as read by us, did not refer to any
function of the respondent that could be considered to be mainly of
manual or clerical nature rather the functions which he performed
and also stated in his evidence were of OG-II and Manager of the
branch and those were mainly of managerial and supervisory
nature and under no circumstance could they be considered to be
that of a ‘workman’ more particularly, when the respondent in his
evidence has stated that he was issuing drafts and cheques,
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 11 -
opening of accounts, closing of cash with signature of second
officer, depositing of cash in strong room and locking the same are
the those which need independent application of mind and making
of decisions for that the drafts and cheques are not issued in
routine when they are also to be signed. Similarly, opening of
bank accounts, depositing of cash in the strong room and locking
the same are the functions which are mainly of the Manager and
not that of a ‘workman’. Further, during arguments, provision of
Section 9 of the Financial Institutions (Recovery of Finances)
Ordinance, 2001, was also referred to, which provides as follows:
“9(1) Where a customer or financial institution commits a
default in fulfilment of any obligation with regard to any
finance, the financial institution or, as the case may be, the
customer, may institute a suit in the Banking Court by
presenting a plaint which shall be verified on oath, in the
case of a financial institution by the Branch Manager or such
other officer of the financial institution as may be duly
authorized in this behalf by power of attorney or otherwise”.
This provision shows that the branch Manager of the bank is
competent to file a suit on behalf of the bank and the person, who
is authorized by law to file a suit on behalf of a bank in the Court
of law could not be considered to be a ‘workman’. In this regard,
reference may further be made to the provision of Rule 1 Order
XXIX CPC, which is as follows:
“Subscription and verification of pleading: In suits by or
against a corporation, any pleading may be signed and
verified on behalf of the corporation by the secretary or by
any director or other principal officer of the corporation who
is able to depose to the facts of the case.”
8.
The cumulative effect of the evidence available on
record, judgments of this Court referred to above, the provision of
the Financial Institutions (Recovery of Finances) Ordinance, 2001
and Rule 1 Order XXIX CPC amply establish that the respondent,
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 12 -
as an officer OG-II and Manager of the branch, was not a
‘workman’. Thus, the Labour Court did not have jurisdiction to
entertain his Grievance Petition, which on this very ground was
liable to be dismissed. Having come to conclusion that the Labour
Court did not have jurisdiction in the matter, thus, the Tribunal
also lacked jurisdiction to deal with the matter and, therefore, the
very exercise of remanding the case to the Tribunal for deciding the
same on merits will be a futile exercise.
9.
For all the above reasons, we are of the considered
view that the impugned judgment was not in consonance with the
evidence available on record, the law pronounced by this Court
and other legal provisions cited above, thus the same is not
sustainable. Consequently, the appeal is allowed and the
impugned judgment dated 19.03.2014 passed by the High Court is
set-aside.
JUDGE
Bench-II
ISLAMABAD
11.04.2019
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
JUDGE
*Hashmi*
JUDGE
C.A.No.1189 of 2014.doc
- 13 -
In the very evidence which the respondent recorded before the
Labour Court, as read by us, did not at all refer to the work that he
actually performed in that Bank as OG-II and Manager of the
branch was predominantly of manual or clerical nature, which is
the requirement under the law for holding a person to be as
‘workman’ rather as noted above, the function that he has
admitted to be performing as OG-II and branch Manager
predominantly shows that he was performing work that of an
officer and manager which under no circumstance to be considered
to that of a ‘workman’.
| {
"id": "C.A.1189_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1189 OF 2017
(On appeal against the judgment dated 13.03.2017
passed by the High Court of Sindh, Karachi in C.P.
No. D-4291/2015)
Syeda Sakina Riaz
… Appellant
VERSUS
Federation of Pakistan and another
… Respondents
For the Appellant:
Syed Fiaz Ahmed Shah, ASC
For the Respondent (1): Mr. Sohail Mahmood, DAG
For the Respondent (2): Mr. Shoaib M. Ashraf, ASC
Date of Hearing:
22.05.2018
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- When appellant’s late husband
died in a fatal car accident on 11.01.2012 he was working as an
Assistant Controller in BPS-18 in the examination department of
the University of Karachi. By then he had served the university
only for about five years so his tenure in office was well short of the
minimum qualifying service which would have made her widow
eligible to claim family pension under the University of Karachi
Service Pension Statute, 1972. To seek family pension, the
appellant sought recourse to the Prime Minister’s Family
Assistance
Package
notification
No.7/40/2005-E-2
dated
13.06.2006 which inter alia granted a lump-sum payment as well
2
Civil Appeal No.1189/2017
as enhanced pensionary benefits to the families of the federal
government employees who die while in service. This package was
made applicable to the families of the university’s employees as
well by virtue of its adoption by the syndicate of the university on
15.01.2008. The appellant was though paid the lump-sum grant of
Rs.800,000/- as provided in the package but the claim for grant of
family pension was denied for the reason that her husband had
not put in the minimum qualifying service of ten years as
envisaged under Section 26 of the University of Karachi Service
Pension Statute, 1972.
2.
Having failed to seek family pension on the basis of the
family assistance package, the appellant invoked the constitutional
jurisdiction of the High Court of Sindh seeking directions to the
University to grant her family pension. Such relief was not only
sought under the family assistance package that was in force at
the time of her husband’s death but in terms of family assistance
package that was subsequently revised by the federal government
on 20.10.2014. The university contested her claim primarily on the
ground that her husband had not put in the minimum of ten year
qualifying service to make his service pensionable so she was not
entitled to claim any concession towards pension under the family
assistance package. The appellant’s petition was dismissed. The
reasons that prevailed with the High Court in denying the relief to
the appellant was that her petition was not maintainable as the
university’s pension law was not statutory and that her deceased
husband had not put in minimum qualifying service as envisaged
3
Civil Appeal No.1189/2017
under Section 26 of University of Karachi Service Pension Statute,
1972 in order to become entitled for family pension.
3.
Right to claim pension is a right connected with the
tenure of service which under the applicable pension rules has to
be served by an employee in order to make him eligible for pension.
Where a deceased employee has put in pensionable service, only
then his family becomes entitled to pension. So in order to claim
pension, a minimum qualifying service is the threshold that has to
be first crossed which would then entitle an employee or his family
after his death to claim pension. The right to claim pension cannot
be equated with an insurance policy that becomes enforceable due
to an event that occurs even before its maturity date as right to
claim pension is always attached to a specified term of office which
an employee has to put in i.e. it is a benefit which is earned by an
employee as a result of giving service to an employer for a specified
number of years. Employees do die before completing qualifying
length of service. It has been happening in the past and is likely to
happen in the future. Unfortunately, those who do not cross the
threshold of minimum qualifying service, their service falls short of
being regarded as pensionable service. It’s very disappointing for
the families of the employees who die while in service without
completing
minimum
qualifying
service.
Nevertheless,
this
principle of completing minimum qualifying service is ingrained in
every law that grants pension to the employees or after their death
to their families. Thus this principle is based on ‘quid pro quo’,
which mandates that an employee must put in minimum
4
Civil Appeal No.1189/2017
qualifying years of service before he becomes entitled to claim
pensionary benefits.
4.
The above discussed principle is clearly depicted in the
provisions of the University of Karachi Service Pension Statute,
1972 which provides four categories or classes of pension. These
have been described as (i) Superannuation Pension which
becomes payable on attaining 60 years of age; (ii) Retiring Pension,
where an employee opts to retire after putting in 25 years
qualifying service or such less time as has been prescribed for any
special class of employees or is compulsorily retired by the
authority competent to remove him from service; (iii) Compensation
Pension which is granted to an employee on account of abolition of
his permanent post or on account of change in the nature of duties
of his post and who has not opted to accept another post and (iv)
Invalid Pension where an employee on account of bodily or mental
infirmity has been permanently incapacitated from rendering
further service. The death of an employee before his retirement can
be equated with this last category i.e. Invalid Pension. For all these
four categories of pension, the condition precedent is rendition of
minimum length of service. It is for this reason that Section 26 of
the University of Karachi Service Pension Statute, 1972 proceeds
by stating “After a qualifying service of not less than 10 years, full
superannuation, retiring, invalid or compensation pension may be
granted…..” Therefore, rendering of qualifying service is a
prerequisite for claiming pension. Unless an employee of the
university renders minimum qualifying service his family upon his
death cannot become entitled to claim family pension or any other
5
Civil Appeal No.1189/2017
privilege that is attached with pensionary rights. The family
assistance package, in so far as it relates to pension, has only
enhanced the quantum of family pension that is payable under the
law of pension. It cannot be read to convert a non-pensionable
service into a pensionable service.
5.
In the present case admittedly the late husband of the
appellant had put in only about five years of service, well short of
rendering qualifying length of service which only would have
entitled his widow to claim any concession granted towards the
quantum of pension. As stated earlier, only where a person renders
qualifying service under pension rules that he becomes eligible for
any further concession that may be granted towards pension from
time to time. Thus the University’s family assistance package, in so
far as it relates to enhanced pensionary benefits, was payable to
the family of such deceased employee who had rendered minimum
qualifying service in his lifetime under the provisions of the
University of Karachi Service Pension Statute, 1972. This appeal,
therefore, fails, which is hereby dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
Announced on 01.06.2018 by Hon’ble Mr. Justice Faisal Arab
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1189_2017.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Asif Saeed Khan Khosa
Mr. Justice Sardar Tariq Masood
Mr. Justice Tariq Parvez
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
(Against the judgment dated 09.12.2015 passed by the Islamabad
High Court, Islamabad in Writ Petition No. 3980 of 2015)
Abdul Hameed Dogar
…Appellant
versus
Federal Government through the Secretary, Ministry of
Interior and two others
…Respondents
For the appellant:
Syed Iftikhar Hussain Gilani, Sr.
ASC
For respondent No. 1:
Mr. Salman Aslam Butt, Attorney-
General for Pakistan
For respondent No. 2:
Mr. Farogh Nasim, ASC
For respondent No. 3:
Nemo.
Dates of hearing:
23.02.2016 & 24.02.2016
JUDGMENT
Asif Saeed Khan Khosa, J.: A
criminal
case
against
respondent No. 2 namely General (Retd.) Pervez Musharraf on the
charge of committing high treason is presently pending trial before
a Special Court constituted under the Criminal Law Amendment
(Special Court) Act, 1976 and, therefore, we shall be circumspect
in what we observe in the present judgment lest any observation
made by us may prejudice the trial of the said case and shall
endeavor to confine our comments mainly to what has already
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
2
been said or declared on the subject by different courts of the
country, including this Court, and the legal position relevant to the
issues raised through the present appeal.
2.
During the pendency of his trial before the Special Court
respondent No. 2 had filed a miscellaneous application seeking a
direction to the Federal Government to investigate all those
persons who had aided or abetted the said respondent in allegedly
committing the crime in issue and to submit an amended or
additional statement as well as a statement of formal charges
before the Special Court against such other persons in terms of
sections 5(1) and 5(3)(a) of the Criminal Law Amendment (Special
Court) Act, 1976. On 21.11.2014 the said application filed by
respondent No. 2 was disposed of by the Special Court through a
majority decision and a direction was issued to the Federal
Government to treat Mr. Shaukat Aziz and Mr. Zahid Hamid, who
held the offices of the Prime Minister and the Federal Minister for
Law on 03.11.2007 respectively, and the present appellant namely
Mr. Abdul Hameed Dogar, a Judge of this Court on the said date,
as co-accused of respondent No. 2 and to submit an amended or
additional statement as well as a statement of formal charges in
terms of the above mentioned provisions of the Criminal Law
Amendment (Special Court) Act, 1976 against them. The present
appellant challenged the said order passed by the Special Court
before the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad through Writ Petition
No. 5010 of 2014 and the said writ petition was heard by a learned
Division Bench of that Court along with some other writ petitions
and Intra-Court Appeals. During the pendency of those matters a
consensus emerged between all the parties, including the Federal
Government, that the role of “any person” as an aider or abettor of
respondent No. 2 may be properly investigated “at large” and that
all such persons may be provided “full opportunity of hearing” by
the investigating agency. On the basis of such consensus the
learned Division Bench of the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad
set aside the impugned order dated 21.11.2014 passed by the
Special Court and disposed of all the matters, including the writ
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
3
petition filed by the present appellant, on 10.11.2015 with a
clarification that “The parties to the present litigation shall not be
prejudiced by the impugned order or any adverse view drawn
therein. Likewise, I.O, Investigating Agency or JIT whatever the
case may be shall not be influenced by such observations made in
the impugned order.”
3.
The ensuing date of hearing before the Special Court was
27.11.2015 and on that date the Special Court passed an order
which has generated the controversy that has been brought before
this Court through the present appeal. The relevant portions of the
order passed by the Special Court on 27.11.2015 are reproduced
below:
“3.
Mr. Muhammad Akram Sheikh, while appearing on behalf
of the prosecution stated before us in clear and unequivocal
terms that fresh investigation in this case has to take place. ------
4.
From the contents of the judgment it appears that all the
parties gave consent before the Islamabad High Court that the
matter be reinvestigated as the investigation that was carried out
earlier was not conclusive and hence defective. -------
---------------------
6.
Let the process of the investigation commence. The
Investigation Team shall record statements of Mr. Pervaiz
Musharraf, Mr. Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar, Mr. Shoukat Aziz
and Mr. Zahid Hamid afresh. -------”
4.
The appellant assailed the said order passed by the Special
Court before the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad through Writ
Petition No. 3980 of 2015 but the said writ petition was dismissed
by the said Court in limine on 09.12.2015. Hence, the present
appeal by leave of this Court granted on 27.01.2016.
5.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties at some
length and have perused the relevant record of the case with their
assistance. It has been pointed out by the learned counsel for the
appellant that it was for the first time that through the order dated
21.11.2014 the Special Court had introduced the appellant as an
accused person in the case of high treason which order had
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
4
subsequently been set aside by the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad on 10.11.2015 but despite setting aside of its earlier
order dated 21.11.2014 the Special Court had reintroduced the
appellant as a suspect in the said criminal case through its order
dated 27.11.2015 and a writ petition filed by the appellant against
the said order had been dismissed by the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad on 09.12.2015. It has been argued by the learned
counsel for the appellant that after setting aside of its order dated
21.11.2014 the Special Court was left with no basis or material
whatsoever for reintroducing the appellant as a suspect in the
relevant case for the purposes of investigation qua his involvement.
It has also been contended by the learned counsel for the appellant
that in a number of judgments handed down by this Court as well
as by some High Courts it had categorically been held and declared
that it was General (Retd.) Pervez Musharraf alone who was
responsible for imposition of emergency in the country on
November 03, 2007 and that introduction of the appellant as a
suspect in the said matter by the Special Court was not only
purely speculative in nature but was also based upon no material
whatsoever. In support of this contention the learned counsel for
the appellant has placed reliance upon the cases of Sindh High
Court Bar Association through its Secretary and another v.
Federation of Pakistan through Secretary, Ministry of Law and
Justice, Islamabad and others (PLD 2009 SC 879), Gen. (R.) Parvez
Musharraf v. Nadeem Ahmed (Advocate) and another (PLD 2014 SC
585) and Moulvi Iqbal Haider and others v. Federation of Pakistan
through Secretary M/o Law and Justice and others (2013 SCMR
1683). He has further argued that the Special Court had no
jurisdiction to add the appellant as a co-accused of respondent No.
2 in the trial of the relevant criminal case instituted by the Federal
Government or to direct that the appellant was to be associated
with any fresh investigation of the said case to be conducted by an
investigating agency. The learned counsel for respondent No. 2
started his arguments by contesting this appeal with reference to
some parts of the judgments rendered by this Court in the cases of
Justice Hasnat Ahmed Khan and others v. Federation of
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
5
Pakistan/State (PLD 2011 SC 680), Gen. (R.) Parvez Musharraf v.
Nadeem Ahmed (Advocate) and another (PLD 2014 SC 585) and
Ghulam Abbas Niazi v. Federation of Pakistan and others (PLD
2009 SC 866) but he has finally submitted that he has no
objection to acceptance of this appeal, setting aside of the
impugned order passed by the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad
on 09.12.2015 and removal of the names of the appellant and two
others from the impugned order passed by the Special Court on
27.11.2015. He has, however, prayed that this Court may clarify
that the Federal Government may associate any person with the
fresh investigation being conducted into the matter of the alleged
commission of high treason. The learned Attorney-General for
Pakistan has referred to the provisions of section 5 of the Criminal
Law Amendment (Special Court) Act, 1976 and has maintained
that in “a case” regarding commission of high treason it lies within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal Government to determine
as to against whom a complaint is to be forwarded to the Special
Court for trial, who is to be included in the list of accused persons
to be tried in “the case”, what are to be the charges against the
persons to be tried and who would be the witnesses to be produced
in support of the charges. He has gone on to submit that the
Special Court has no jurisdiction to introduce any person to be
tried in such a case or to require any person to be associated with
investigation of such a case. Upon a query made by the Court the
learned Attorney-General has categorically stated that the Federal
Government firmly stands by its written comments submitted
before the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad in connection with the
appellant’s Writ Petition No. 5010 of 2014. In the said comments
the Federal Government had clearly maintained that the Special
Court had no jurisdiction to name the appellant and two others as
co-accused of respondent No. 2 and that “This will tend to defeat
the ends of justice and trial against the only accused and
beneficiary of the Emergency”.
6.
After hearing the learned counsel for the parties and going
through the record of the case we have straightaway observed that
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
6
the confusion prevailing with the Special Court as well as the
Islamabad High Court, Islamabad over the issue of aiders and
abettors of respondent No. 2 in the alleged commission of high
treason by him would have been removed or would have become
easier to resolve if the relevant extracts of different judgments
handed down by this Court and the High Court of Sindh, Karachi
read out before us by the learned counsel for the appellant and
reproduced in the following paragraphs had been adverted to by
those courts.
7.
In the case of Sindh High Court Bar Association through its
Secretary and another v. Federation of Pakistan through Secretary,
Ministry of Law and Justice, Islamabad and others (PLD 2009 SC
879) a 14-member Bench of this Court had categorically held on
31.07.2009 as follows:
“80.
Seen in the above perspective, the actions of General
Pervez Musharraf dated 3rd November, 2007 were the result of
his apprehensions regarding the decision of Wajihuddin Ahmed's
case and his resultant disqualification to contest the election of
President. Therefore, it could not be said that the said actions
were taken for the welfare of the people. Clearly, the same were
taken by him in his own interest and for illegal and unlawful
personal gain of maneuvering another term in office of President,
therefore, the same were mala fide as well. The statement made
in Proclamation of Emergency that the situation had been
reviewed in meetings with the Prime Minister, Governors of
all the four Provinces, and with Chairman, Joint Chiefs of
Staff Committee, Chiefs of the Armed Forces, Vice Chief of
Army Staff and Corps Commanders of the Pakistan Army, and
emergency was proclaimed in pursuance of the deliberations
and decisions of the said meetings, was incorrect. The
Proclamation of Emergency emanated from his person, which was
apparent from the words "I, General Pervez Musharraf...." used in
it.”
(Underlining and bold letters have been supplied for emphasis)
The said portion of the judgment rendered in the case of Sindh
High Court Bar Association was reproduced and reiterated by
another 14-member Bench of this Court in the later case of Gen.
(R.) Parvez Musharraf v. Nadeem Ahmed (Advocate) and another
(PLD 2014 SC 585) decided on 30.01.2014.
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
7
8.
In the above mentioned case of Gen. (R.) Parvez Musharraf v.
Nadeem Ahmed (Advocate) and another (PLD 2014 SC 585) decided
by a 14-member Bench of this Court on 30.01.2014 Jawwad S.
Khawaja, J. had, in his concurring separate opinion, concluded as
follows regarding the persons placed in the appellant’s position:
“15. Nowhere in the above quoted texts is the former Chief
Justice mentioned as the cause for declaring the emergency and
he was certainly not the only one affected by it. In a narrow
context, all judges of the superior courts in office on November
3rd, 2007 were directly affected by the Proclamation of
Emergency. The majority of these judges suffered from this act, as
they were unlawfully prevented from performing the duties of
their Constitutional office. The remaining judges in the
minority who decided to take the unconstitutional oath of
office, on the other hand, could be perceived as beneficiaries
of the aforesaid act of the petitioner. -------”
(Underlining and bold letters have been supplied for emphasis)
The difference between an aider/abettor and a beneficiary is quite
obvious. A person aiding or abetting another in an act is privy to
the act itself but a beneficiary takes benefit or advantage of the act
after the event and he may not necessarily be a party to the act
itself.
9.
In the case of Sindh High Court Bar Association (supra) this
Court had concluded and declared that emergency had been
imposed by respondent No. 2 on 03.11.2007 while acting on his
own and in his personal interest. The following extracts from the
judgment delivered in that case are relevant in this regard:
“60.
From the contents of the letter of the Prime Minister, it
cannot be said that he issued any direction to the Armed Forces
in terms of Article 245 of the Constitution to act in aid of the civil
power, nor the actions of General Pervez Musharraf of 3rd
November, 2007 could be said to have been taken or done while
acting in aid of the civil power. Even otherwise, the letter was
addressed to the President of Pakistan and not to the Chief of
Army Staff. But for the sake of argument, it may be stated that
even if the letter was addressed to the Chief of Army Staff, it could
not be construed to give to the latter any power to take the kind
of steps that he took in pursuance of the aforesaid letter. -------
In the instant case too, no power vested in the Chief of Army Staff
General Pervez Musharraf under the Constitution and the law to
issue Proclamation of Emergency and PCO No. 1 of 2007 on a
letter of the Prime Minister written to the President bringing to his
notice the national security situation, which was worsening on
account of terrorism, extremism, militancy, suicide attacks and
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
8
the erosion of trichotomy as a result of suo motu actions being
taken by some members of the superior judiciary. If the President,
on receipt of such a letter, wanted to take any action including
imposition of emergency, the same would have been in terms of
constitutional provisions on emergency. Nowhere the Prime
Minister asked the President to take the actions that he took
on 3rd November, 2007. In any case, it was not an advice
tendered by the Prime Minister in terms of Article 48 of the
Constitution. Neither on receipt of such a letter, could the
President have authorized Chief of Army Staff to take that
kind of steps. The Constitution does not empower the President
to issue an Oath Order, which he did in pursuance of
Proclamation of Emergency and PCO No.1 of 2007. Instead of
upholding the Constitution in terms of the oath taken by him as
member of the Armed Forces he violated the Constitution,
suspended it, assumed to himself unconstitutional and illegal
powers and imposed upon the country unconstitutional and
illegal emergency and PCO No. 1 of 2007. Likewise, in terms of
his oath as President of Pakistan, instead of preserving,
protecting and defending the Constitution, and performing his
functions, honestly, to the best of his ability, faithfully in
accordance with the Constitution and the law, and always in the
interest of the sovereignty, integrity, solidarity, well-being and
prosperity of Pakistan, issued Oath Order, 2007, illegally
assumed to himself power to remove Judges of the superior
Courts in violation of Articles 2A and 209 of the Constitution,
which respectively required the securing of independence of
judiciary and the guaranteeing of the tenure of the Judges of the
Supreme Court and the High Courts.
---------------------
80.
Seen in the above perspective, the actions of General
Pervez Musharraf dated 3rd November, 2007 were the result of
his apprehensions regarding the decision of Wajihuddin Ahmed's
case and his resultant disqualification to contest the election of
President. Therefore, it could not be said that the said actions
were taken for the welfare of the people. Clearly, the same were
taken by him in his own interest and for illegal and unlawful
personal gain of maneuvering another term in office of President,
therefore, the same were mala fide as well. The statement made in
Proclamation of Emergency that the situation had been reviewed
in meetings with the Prime Minister, Governors of all the four
Provinces, and with Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee,
Chiefs of the Armed Forces, Vice Chief of Army Staff and Corps
Commanders of the Pakistan Army, and emergency was
proclaimed in pursuance of the deliberations and decisions of the
said meetings, was incorrect. The Proclamation of Emergency
emanated from his person, which was apparent from the
words "I, General Pervez Musharraf...." used in it.
---------------------
82.
As to the constitutionality and the legality of the
acts/actions of 3rd November, 2007, General Pervez Musharraf
himself, in an interview to a foreign TV news channel (BBC)
admitted that he had taken unconstitutional steps. Relevant
portion from his interview, as reported in the Daily DAWN of 18th
November, 2007 is reproduced below:
The daily DAWN, Islamabad, 18th November, 2007
NO ILLEGAL STEP TAKEN BEFORE NOV.
PRESIDENT:
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
9
"Before March, I was very good. Suddenly did I go
mad after March or suddenly my personality
changed, am I Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde or
what is it?" He said.
"Am I such a person?
"Please go into the details, the causes. What I am
doing? Have I done anything unconstitutional, yes,
I did it on Nov. 3.
"Did I do it before? Not once."
---------------------
85.
In the light of the above discussion, the actions of
General Pervez Musharraf dated 3rd November, 2007, viz.,
Proclamation of Emergency, PCO No. 1 of 2007 and Oath
Order,
2007,
etc.
are
held
and
declared
to
be
unconstitutional, illegal, mala fide and void ab initio. -------
---------------------
176. It has already been held that Abdul Hameed Dogar, J, and
other Judges who made oath, or were appointed, in violation of
the order dated 3rd November, 2007 passed by a seven-member
Bench of this Court in Wajihuddin Ahmed's case were not even de
facto Judges, inter alia, on the ground that the actions taken by
General Pervez Musharraf from 3rd November, 2007 to 15th
December, 2007, including the appointments and/or oaths of
such Judges, were mala fide as the same were taken by him
for his own benefit, and did not fall within the scope of his
authority under the Constitution and the law and in any case,
they were not taken in the interest of the State, or for the welfare
of the people.”
(Underlining and bold letters have been supplied for emphasis)
In his separate and concurring opinion recorded in that case
Jawwad S. Khawaja, J. had observed as under:
“3.
For reasons which have been spelt out in the main
judgment, there can be no doubt at all that the aforesaid actions
of 3rd November, 2007 were un-Constitutional. It is for this
obvious reason that General Musharaf, lacking legitimate
authority abused the office of Chief of Army Staff and relied
on the physical force which had been placed under his
command. -------”
(Underlining and bold letters have been supplied for emphasis)
After such conclusions reached and declarations made by this
Court in the said case it was for the Federal Government to
consider the advisability or otherwise of getting a fresh
investigation conducted for tracing out or identifying the aiders
and abettors of respondent No. 2 in the matter but it was surely
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
10
not for the Special Court or the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad
to require or approve a fresh investigation for the search of such
phantoms or apparitions.
10.
In the subsequent case of Moulvi Iqbal Haider v. Federation of
Pakistan & others (Constitution Petition No. D-454 of 2009 decided
on 14.10.2010) a learned Division Bench of the High Court of
Sindh, Karachi had unmincingly declared as follows:
“11.
------- We are also of the opinion that the proclamation of
PCO dated 03.11.2007, promulgated by Rtd. General Pervaiz
Musharraf clearly shows that certainly he is the person who is
responsible for abrogation and subversion of the Constitution
and is liable to be prosecuted for committing high treason. ---
----”
(Underlining and bold letters have been supplied for emphasis)
The said judgment passed by the High Court of Sindh, Karachi had
been challenged before this Court but a 3-member Bench of this
Court had disposed of the civil petition for leave to appeal filed in
that regard on 03.07.2013 without interfering with the impugned
judgment. A reference in this respect may be made to the case of
Moulvi Iqbal Haider and others v. Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary M/o Law and Justice and others (2013 SCMR 1683).
Later on in the case of Gen. (R.) Parvez Musharraf v. Nadeem
Ahmed (Advocate) and another (PLD 2014 SC 585) this Court had
noticed in the above mentioned context as under:
“11. During the course of arguments, Raja Muhammad
Ibrahim Satti admitted, on Court query, that petitioner General
(R) Pervez Musharraf had a notice of the petition filed by Moulvi
Iqbal Haider before the Sindh High Court through citation
published in Daily Dawn and further that after dismissal of the
said petition by the said Court Moulvi Iqbal Haider challenged the
order before the Supreme Court in which General Musharraf was
represented by him (Raja Muhammad Ibrahim Satti). The case is
reported as Moulvi Iqbal Haider v. Federation of Pakistan through
Ministry of Law and Justice (2013 SCMR 1683).”
It is not denied that after fixing of the entire and exclusive
responsibility of committing high treason upon him by the High
Court of Sindh, Karachi respondent No. 2 herein had never
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
11
challenged the same before this Court despite having the requisite
knowledge in that regard.
11.
The following portions of the later judgment handed down by
a 14-member Bench of this Court on 30.01.2014 in the case of
Gen. (R.) Parvez Musharraf v. Nadeem Ahmed (Advocate) and
another (PLD 2014 SC 585) had made the matter even simpler:
“12. The petitioner had proclaimed State of Emergency
pursuant to a letter received from the then Prime Minister of
Pakistan (letter reproduced in PLD 2009 SC 879 supra at page
1035 para 58). At this stage, the Court asked him as to
whether the Prime Minister advised the President to act in
violation of the Constitution to which the answer was no. The
Court further asked him whether the Prime Minister had
given any advice to impose State of Emergency or the
petitioner acted in his own discretion, to which Mr. Satti
replied that the petitioner acted in his own discretion. -------
---------------------
37. ------- in fact, petitioner's learned counsel frankly
admitted, on Court query, first that the then Prime Minister
Mr. Shaukat Aziz had written a letter to the President of
Pakistan and not to the Chief of Army Staff; second that the
Prime Minister had not advised him to impose the State of
Emergency
rather
"the
petitioner
acted
in
his
own
discretion". This frank admission by his counsel has further
weakened his case for review. How could petitioner in his capacity
as Chief of Army Staff or even as President act on his own
discretion. He had no power under the law to impose State of
Emergency and make Judges of the Supreme Court and High
Courts dysfunctional notwithstanding the mandate of Article 48
of the Constitution -------”
(Underlining and bold letters have been supplied for emphasis)
12.
We have reproduced above what this Court and the High
Court of Sindh, Karachi have already observed and declared in
various judgments and such observations and declarations are
relevant to the issue of aiders and abettors of respondent No. 2 in
the alleged commission of high treason by him brought before us
through the present appeal. As the trial of respondent No. 2 for the
said offence is presently pending before the Special Court,
therefore, we have restrained ourselves from recording our own
opinions on the issue lest any opinion expressed by us may
prejudice the case of the said respondent before the Special Court.
The observations and declarations made by this Court and the
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
12
High Court of Sindh, Karachi in the cases mentioned above have
already attained finality and they are in the public domain and,
thus, any reference to the same by us in the present judgment may
not be inappropriate.
13.
Another critical aspect of the case in the context of the
present appeal is that it was for the first time that through the
order dated 21.11.2014 the Special Court had introduced the
present appellant and two others as accused persons in the case of
high treason against respondent No. 2 which order had
subsequently been set aside by the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad on 10.11.2015 but despite setting aside of its earlier
order dated 21.11.2014 the Special Court had reintroduced the
appellant and two others as suspects in the said criminal case
through its order dated 27.11.2015 and a writ petition filed by the
appellant against the said order had been dismissed by the
Islamabad High Court, Islamabad on 09.12.2015. We have found
the learned counsel for the appellant to be quite justified in
maintaining that after setting aside of its order dated 21.11.2014
the Special Court was left with no occasion whatsoever for
reintroducing the appellant and two others as suspects in the
relevant case for the purposes of investigation qua their
involvement in commission of the alleged offence. Conducting
investigation into the matter was surely a prerogative of the
Federal Government and the Special Court had no jurisdiction to
direct the investigating agency to associate the appellant or any
other particular person with such investigation.
14.
Section 5 of the Criminal Law Amendment (Special Court)
Act, 1976 contemplates commencement of the proceedings of the
Special Court through forwarding of a complaint in writing to it by
the Federal Government against particular accused person or
persons. By virtue of the provisions of section 202 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1898, which Code is applicable to a Special
Court to some extent by virtue of the provisions of Section 6(1)
read with section 2(a) of the Criminal Law Amendment (Special
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
13
Court) Act, 1976, a court, on receipt of a complaint of an offence of
which it is authorised to take cognizance may postpone the issue
of process for compelling the attendance of the person or persons
complained against and either inquire into the case itself or direct
an inquiry or investigation to be made “for the purpose of
ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the complaint”. This clearly
shows that a court seized of a complaint may or may not direct an
inquiry or investigation to be made and if it does so direct then the
direction can only be for ascertainment of truth or falsehood of “the
complaint”, i.e. the allegations leveled against the person or
persons complained against by the complainant. There is no
jurisdiction available with such court under the said provisions of
the law to direct an inquiry or investigation against a person or
persons not formally complained against before the court by the
complainant. Apart from that an inquiry or investigation can be
directed by a court to be conducted under the said provisions of
the law before the issuance of process against the person
complained against and not at a stage where the trial of the person
complained against has already commenced and is nearing its
conclusion, as in the present case.
15.
For what has been discussed above this appeal is allowed
and all references to the present appellant and two others in the
impugned orders passed by the Special Court and the Islamabad
High Court, Islamabad on 27.11.2015 and 09.12.2015 respectively
as suspects to be associated with any fresh investigation into the
offence of high treason allegedly committed by respondent No. 2
are set aside. A fresh investigation into the said offence by
associating any person with the same lies within the prerogative of
the Federal Government but the Special Court or the Islamabad
High Court, Islamabad could not name any individual to be
associated with any such investigation. There is no provision in the
Criminal Law Amendment (Special Court) Act, 1976 requiring the
Special Court to await the result of any fresh investigation or to
postpone the trial of an accused person till an amended or
additional statement of the case or list of accused persons or the
Civil Appeal No. 118 of 2016
14
charge is submitted by the Federal Government after such fresh
investigation. The Special Court is, therefore, expected to proceed
with the trial of respondent No. 2 with all convenient dispatch and
without any unnecessary delay.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Announced in open Court at Islamabad on 26.02.2016.
Judge
Islamabad
February 26, 2016
Approved for reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.118_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE/CONSTITUTIONAL JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
(On appeal against the judgment dated 20.05.2015
passed by the Lahore High Court, Lahore in Writ
Petition No. 1146/2010)
(Constitution Petition filed to challenge the conviction
of the petitioner by the Field General Court Martial)
Ex. Col. Muhammad Azad Minhas
(In CA 1191/2016)
Col. Inayatullah Khan and another
(In Cnst.P. 18/2000)
… Appellant/Petitioners
VERSUS
Federation of Pakistan through Secretary
Ministry of Defence etc
(In both cases)
… Respondents
For the Appellant/Petitioners:
In person
(In both cases)
For the State:
Mr. Sajid Ilyas Bhatti, Addl. Attorney Gen
Barrister Hassan Adeel
Major Haider Sultan, JAG Branch
Major Zeeshan Zaman
Dates of Hearing:
24.09.2020,
01.10.2020,
15.12.2020,
01.03.2021,
27.04.2021,
27.05.2021,
30.11.2021, 18.01.2022 & 15.02.2022
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI, J.- Through this consolidated
judgment, we intend to decide Civil Appeal No. 1191/2016 & Constitution
Petition No. 18/2000, as common questions of law and facts are involved
in both these matters.
2.
Precisely the facts of the matter pertaining to Civil Appeal
No. 1191/2016 are that appellant Muhammad Azad Minhas joined
Pakistan Military Academy as cadet and passed out as commissioned
officer on 14.11.1971. Over the time, he became Colonel on 06.07.1995
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
2
and was posted as Colonel General Staff to Corps Mangla Cantt HQ 1.
Whereas, the petitioner Inayatullah Khan in Constitution Petition No.
18/2000 passed out from PMA Kakul in December, 1971. He also became
Colonel with the efflux of time and was serving as Colonel Staff 17 Infantry
Division, Kharian Cantt. On 26.09.1995 both of them were taken into
custody along with two others by the intelligence agencies and as such
they were thoroughly investigated. During course of interrogation, both of
them were sent to face the following charges before the court under the
Pakistan Army Act, 1952:-
First Charge:-
Under Section 59 of
PAA 1952
(Against all accused)
Committing a civil offence, that it is
to say, conspiring to wage war
against
Pakistan,
an
offence
punishable under Section 121-A of
the Pakistan Penal Code, in that
they
together
at
Rawalpindi,
Mangla and elsewhere, between
the period from May 1995 to
September 1995, alongwith PA-
12680 Colonel Liaqat Ali Raja and
others, conspired to wage war
against Pakistan so as to overthrow
the
Federal
Government
of
Pakistan by means of criminal
force.
Second Charge:-
Under Section 55 of
PAA 1952
(Alternative to the
first charge against
accused No. 1 only
i.e.
Maj.
General
Zaheer ul Islam)
Conduct to the prejudice of good
order and military discipline, in that
he, at the places and period
mentioned in the first charge,
knowing
the
existence
of
a
conspiracy mentioned in the first
charge, improperly did not report
the matter to higher authorities
concerned.
Third Charge:-
Under Section 55 of
the PAA 1952
(Alternative to the
first charge against
accused No. 3 only
i.e.
the
appellant
Colonel Muhammad
Azad Minhas)
Conduct to the prejudice of good
order and military discipline, in that
he, at the places and period
mentioned in the first charge,
knowing
the
existence
of
a
conspiracy mentioned in the first
charge, improperly did not report
the matter to higher authorities
concerned.
Fourth Charge:- Under Section 55 of
the PAA 1952
(Alternative to the
first charge against
Conduct to the prejudice of good
order and military discipline, in that
he, at the places and period
mentioned in the first charge,
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
3
accused No. 4 only
i.e.
petitioner
Inayatullah Khan)
knowing
the
existence
of
a
conspiracy mentioned in the first
charge, improperly did not report
the matter to higher authorities
concerned.
Fifth Charge:-
Under Section 31(d)
of the PAA 1952
(Against accused No.
2 only i.e. co-accused
Brigadier Mustansar
Billah)
Attempting to seduce any person in
the military forces of Pakistan from
his allegiance to the Government of
Pakistan, in that he, at Quetta,
during May 1995, attempted to
seduce
PA-12621
Colonel
Muhammad Iqbal of Electronic
Warfare Directorate, GHQ, from his
allegiance to the Government of
Pakistan by asking him to prepare a
plan to neutralize the existing
telephone communication system
at Rawalpindi so as to enlist his
(Colonel
Muhammad
Iqbal’s)
support for furthering the design of
the conspiracy mentioned in the
first charge.
3.
The appellant/petitioner filed Constitution Petition Nos. 8 &
9/1996 before this Court under Article 184(3) of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973, challenging the validity of their arrest,
detention and trial by the Field General Court Martial but the same stood
dismissed vide judgment dated 14.05.1996. Thereafter, the trial
proceeded and at the conclusion of the trial, they were found guilty to the
extent of third and fourth charge for having knowledge of the conspiracy
and failing to report the same to the higher authorities, which conduct of
them was prejudicial to good order and military discipline. Vide order
dated 30.09.1996 they were ordered to be dismissed from service and to
further suffer rigorous imprisonment for two years & four years
respectively. Their conviction was also confirmed by the Chief of Army
Staff vide order dated 28.10.1996. Both of them filed appeals before the
Court of Appeal but the same were also dismissed vide order dated
06.11.1997. Pursuant to the conviction, their membership in the Army
Officers Housing Scheme for allotment of a house at the time of
retirement along with allotment of plots in Army Welfare Housing Scheme
were ordered to be cancelled. Thereafter, the petitioner Inayatullah Khan
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
4
filed Constitution Petition No. 18/2000 before this Court whereas the
appellant Muhammad Azad Minhas filed Writ Petition No. 1146 of 2010
before the Lahore High Court, Lahore, which was dismissed vide order
dated 20.05.2015. Being aggrieved by the judgment of the High Court, he
filed Civil Petition No. 1234/2015 before this Court wherein leave was
granted, consequently, Civil Appeal No. 1191/2016 has arisen.
4.
The appellant and the petitioner before us argued in person.
During the course of arguments, the main contentions raised by them are
precisely that when they were accused of principal offence i.e. First
Charge, they could not have simultaneously been made accused of the
alternate charge/offence. Contends that it is mandatory for the
prosecution to prove the main offence before starting the trial on the
alternative charge. Contends that the charge framed under the Pakistan
Army Act is without jurisdiction and illegal as the same exclusively relates
to misconduct or omission committed on the basis of assigned military
duty. Contends that the impugned order of the Field General Court Martial
was based upon mala fides, being coram non judice, as such, was without
jurisdiction, therefore, the same is not sustainable in the eyes of law.
Contends that their plots in Army Welfare Housing Scheme and
memberships in Army Housing Scheme were cancelled illegally, without
any backing of law, Rules or Regulations, which could authorize
confiscation of their properties, therefore, the same is violative of Article
13 of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973. Lastly
contends that the constitutional bar of limitation is not applicable to the
proceedings conducted under Article 199 or Article 184 of the
Constitution, as such, any delay in filing the Constitutional petitions either
before this Court or before the High Court is of no avail to the
respondents.
5.
On the other hand, learned Additional Attorney General
argued that any person charged during Court Martial with any offence
punishable under Section 59 of the Army Act may be found guilty of any
other offence to which he might have been found guilty. Contends that
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
5
the entire proceedings of the Field General Court Martial were well within
the recognized principles of criminal justice and the same are
unexceptionable. Contends that the Pakistan Army Act has complete
mechanism and jurisdiction to charge and proceed against any army
personnel found involved in commission of any illegal act, as such, any act
committed by them can be tried under the relevant law i.e. Pakistan Army
Act, 1952. Contends that the allocation of plots and membership in the
housing society are the privileges, which are only assigned for army
officers but after dismissal from service the appellant/petitioner have lost
right to retain such a privilege. Lastly contends that as a general principle
Constitutional bar of limitation is not strictly applicable to the proceedings
under Article 199 and 184 of the Constitution, however, it is not absolute
as the same should be initiated promptly and within a reasonable time to
avoid the question of laches.
6.
We have heard both appellant/petitioner and the learned
Law Officer at considerable length and have perused the case record. The
questions which crop up for our consideration are as follows:-
i)
Whether the appellant/petitioner were subject to Pakistan
Army Act and the proceedings carried out by the forum
constituted under Pakistan Army Act, 1952, were based upon
mala fides, coram non judice, hence, passed without
jurisdiction in violation of fundamental rights?
ii)
Whether an accused can be convicted under alternative
charge/offence in case the main offence is not proved?
iii)
Whether the Constitution Petition No. 18/2000 filed before
this Court is maintainable?
iv)
Whether the inordinate delay of about 13 years in filing the
Constitutional Petition before the High Court can be
condoned?
v)
Whether after dismissal from service, the appellant &
petitioner are entitled for perks & privileges, which are
meant for Army Personnels?
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
6
7.
In order to adjudicate the question (i) supra, it seems
essential to evaluate the intent of the Legislature while legislating the
aforesaid Act i.e. Pakistan Army Act, 1952, wherein it is categorically
stated “whereas it is expedient to consolidate and amend the law
relating to Pakistan Army”. Section 2 of the said Act provides that
following persons shall be subject to this Act. Relevant portion of the said
provision reads as under:-
“2. Persons subject to the Act.- (1) The following persons shall be
subject to this Act, namely:-
(a) officers, junior commissioned officers and
warrant officers of the Pakistan Army;”
8.
The plain reading of the afore-referred provision of law
depicts that the persons subject to Pakistan Army Act, 1952, either in any
of the capacity as an officer, junior commissioned officer or warrant officer
during service at the relevant point of time are subject to Pakistan Army
Act, 1952, and whenever an act violating any provision of said enactment
is committed by them, the same would be exclusively dealt with by the
provisions contained in the aforesaid Pakistan Army Act, 1952. There is no
denial to this fact that both the appellant/petitioner were serving officers
of
Pakistan
Army
at
the
time
when
in
pursuance
of
confidential/intelligence information regarding violation of the provisions
of said enactment, they were taken into custody. During course of
interrogation, the accusation against them was found to be correct and as
such they were rightly dealt with under the law on the subject and as such
their argument that the action taken by the authorities in pursuance of the
material collected and the proceedings before the Court constituted under
Pakistan Army Act, 1952, may be declared to be based upon mala fides has
no legal justification. The enactment referred above does not disclose any
exception to the general principle that any serving officer of military if
found violating the law relating to its discipline would be dealt otherwise
except under the Pakistan Army Act, 1952. Hence, the argument of the
appellant/petitioner that their trial before the Field General Court Martial
was an abuse of process has no sanctity and the same is vehemently
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
7
discarded. All the grievances of the appellant/petitioner regarding their
apprehension, custody and prosecution before the Field General Court
Martial are the steps, which can be taken by the order of the Commanding
Officer subject to receipt of tangible information regarding the violation of
any provision of Pakistan Army Act, 1952. Even under Section 549 of Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1898, on receipt of an information from any source,
the said provision can be pressed into to initiate proceedings to bring any
subject to Army Act to face the attire of said enactment if there is an
information regarding its breach/violation. Under this provision of law, the
word “from any source” includes information supplied by armed forces of
those who are falling within the jurisdiction of Pakistan Army Act, 1952 but
their whereabouts are not traceable to them after their absence or being
fugitive from law. In the instant case, both the appellant/petitioner were
not falling within this category rather they were directly saddled with
accusation falling squarely within the ambit of Pakistan Army Act, 1952,
hence, the same was justifiably applicable in the given circumstances. In
Ex. Gunner Muhammad Mushtaq Vs. Ministry of Defence (2015 SCMR
1071), this Court held the custody, trial and conviction of the accused
army personnel by the Field General Court Martial to be held in
accordance with law. The question whether a serving Army Officer is
subject to Army Act and is triable by Field General Court Martial also came
under discussion in Asim Bashir Vs. Federation of Pakistan (2021 SCMR
1176) wherein this Court candidly held as under:-
“Given his status as an Army Officer, his apprehension, custody
and prosecution before a Field General Court Martial are the
steps taken within the remit of section 549 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1898 (the Code) which unambiguously
authorizes such a prosecution on the option of Commanding
Officer, a choice that is in line with the concurrent jurisdiction
of Court Martial and Criminal Courts on the discretion of
"Prescribed Officer" as contemplated by sections 94 and 95 of
the Act ibid, laying down the procedure in such an eventuality,
therefore, the argument that the petitioner was not liable to be
treated as subject to the Act in view of the nature and venue of
the crime is entirely beside the mark. We are also not
impressed by the contention that the petitioner ought not to
have been tried in Bahawalpur Cantonment and that
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
8
proceedings of Field General Court Martial stood vitiated on
this score alone.”
(Underlined to lay emphasis)
9.
In the case of Said Zaman Khan Vs. Federation of Pakistan
(2017 SCMR 1249) this Court has extended the view of this Court in Ex-
Gunner Muhammad Mushtaq supra case wherein a civilian found in
combat with army personnel was held liable to be tried under the Pakistan
Army Act, 1952. One Said Zaman who was a civilian but was engaged in
combat with the soldiers of the Pakistan army being a member of
religiously motivated terrorist organization was found involved in
attacking Armed Forces with deadly weapons causing death of Army
personnel. This Court held that accused was involved in the commission of
an offence under Section 2(1)(d)(iii) of the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, as
incorporated by the Pakistan Army (Amendment) Act, 2015, hence, by
operation of law he became subject to the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, and,
therefore, became liable to trial by a FGCM. The Court further held that
the offence with which the accused was charged was obviously punishable
under the ordinary law of the land triable by a Criminal Court, hence,
constituted a "civil offence" as defined by subsection (3) of Section 8 of
the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, and was liable to be tried by the Field
General Court Martial in view of the provisions of Section 59 of the said
Act.
10.
The concept of duty/obligation assigned to a military officer
does necessarily relate to duty/responsibility assigned for a particular task,
as argued before us if accepted correct it would amount to a narrow
interpretation regarding responsibilities of members of disciplined force. A
military officer of either of the rank is under bounden duty to execute
momentary obligations assigned or not in order to uphold dignity,
reputation, discipline and above all maintain order of the institution in
letter and spirit. Any act or omission, which hampers integrity/discipline of
the institution would definitely be accountable considering it an act triable
under the Army Act. During the course of arguments, we have noticed that
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
9
the appellant/petitioner had already voiced their grievances while filing
Constitutional Petition Nos. 8 & 9/1996 before this Court while calling in
question the validity of their arrest, detention and trial by the Field
General Court Martial convened under the provisions of Pakistan Army
Act, 1952. However, this Court after discussing all aspects in detail and the
relevant provisions of Law and the Constitution held that the
appellant/petitioner along with other co-accused were subject to Pakistan
Army Act and the trial held against the military officers before the Field
General Court Martial was in accordance with law. All the objections
raised before us are in-fact dealt with by this Court in a concrete manner
while considering each and every aspect of the case with reference to “fair
trial”, “due process” eliminating any scope of exploitation and dignity of
the man while attending all requirements of justiciability and fairness to
broaden the scope of safe administration of criminal justice. This judgment
was reported as Shahida Zahir Abbasi Vs. President of Pakistan (PLD 1996
SC 632). It would be advantageous to reproduce the relevant portion of
the judgment, which reads as under:-
‘From the above quoted passage, it is quite clear that the rules of
procedure applicable for trial of a person in a criminal case before
a Military Court do not violate any accepted judicial principle
governing trial of an accused person. With the assistance of
learned Attorney-General and the learned counsel for the
petitioners we have gone through various provisions of the Act
governing the procedure of trial before a Military Court and after
going through the same, I am of the view that the procedure
prescribed for trial before Military Courts is in no way contrary to
the concept of a fair trial in a criminal case, I may also add here,
that unlike the previous position when no appeal was provided
against the conviction and sentence awarded by a Military Court,
the Act now provides an appeal against the conviction and
sentence awarded by a Military Court before an appellate forum.”
11.
In
the
second
round
of
litigation,
both
the
appellant/petitioner exhausted all legal remedies available to them under
the Pakistan Army Act up to the level of Chief of Army Staff and the Court
of Appeals. It was afterwards, that they again invoked the Constitutional
jurisdiction of this Court as also of the learned High Court by filing
Constitutional petitions calling in question all those preliminary questions
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
10
already dealt by this Court. As far as maintainability of these petitions is
concerned, though this Court in a number of cases has already held that
Article 199 (3) of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan clearly
ousted the jurisdiction of High Courts from making an order in relation to
affairs of matter of a person who is member of the Armed Forces of
Pakistan, or who is for the time being covered by any special law relating
to any of such forces, or in respect of any action taken in relation to such
person as a member of the Armed Forces, or a person subject to such law
and under this clause of Article 199(3) the jurisdiction of the High Court if
assailed is barred with reference to the conviction or sentences recorded
by the Field General Court Martial. However, a view contrary to earlier
stance has now developed, which is recent in all fairness that the superior
Courts have jurisdiction to interfere in the orders of the authorities
relating to the Armed Forces if the same are found to be either result of
mala fide or the same are coram non judice. In Said Zaman supra, this
Court has held that any proceedings, convictions and sentences awarded
by the Field General Court Martial (FGCM) can be called into question
before the Constitutional Courts on the ground of mala fides, if tainted
with bias or taken for a collateral purpose to cause damage to a person
without legal justification while ignoring all settled principles of decency
and fairness. Specific allegations of the collateral purpose or an ulterior
motive must be made to hilt and proved to the satisfaction of the Court.
However, this new concept of interference is still holding very bleak
ground to interfere in the presence of express provisions of Constitution.
However, in the instant case we have not been able to find out any
element of mala fides on the part of the prosecution or authority to
entertain these petitions in the given circumstances. Therefore, in absence
of any element of mala fides on the part of competent fora, the conviction
and sentences inflicted to the appellant/petitioner by the Field General
Court Martial cannot be stamped to be result of coram non judice. The
argument that the order of Field General Court Martial was violative of
fundamental rights has no legal sanctity because firstly there is no material
available to substantiate such aspect. Further both of them joined Pakistan
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
11
Army as of their own, with free will and after serving as commissioned
officers for considerable time, they were reported for an act as such being
subject to Pakistan Army Act, 1952, proceedings were initiated against
them in lieu of violation of law, hence it cannot be termed as infringement
of any fundamental right, which actually was not specifically pointed out
during the course of proceedings. Otherwise these aspects qua
proceedings before us have already been dealt in the afore-referred
salutary judgment of this Court. Otherwise, the “code of procedure” of the
Field General Court Martial was even brought under the judicial scrutiny of
this Court in another famous case titled F.B. Ali Vs. The State (PLD 1975 SC
506) and the same was found to be in conformity with the generally
accepted and recognized principles of administration of criminal justice. In
Shahida Zaheer Abbasi case mentioned supra, this Court after thoroughly
analyzing the provisions of Pakistan Army Act, Pakistan Army Rules and the
Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan has candidly reiterated while
holding that the “Army Act, 1952 is one of those pieces of legislation which
is protected under Article 8(3)(a) of the Constitution from being challenged
on the grounds of its consistency with the provisions contained in Chapter I
of Part II of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Rules of
procedure applicable for trial of a person in a criminal case before a
Military Court do not violate any accepted judicial principle governing trial
of an accused person. Procedure prescribed for trial before Military Courts
is in no way contrary to the concept of a fair trial in a criminal case.” These
judgments were upheld by this Court in a subsequent judgment reported
as District Bar Association Vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2015 SC 401)
and it was held that the provisions of Pakistan Army Act cannot be
invalidated for offending against fundamental rights including Article 25 of
the Constitution. Similarly Article 10-A also cannot be pressed into service
to challenge the provisions of Pakistan Army Act, 1952. All these questions
were determined by this Court in the earlier round of litigation, which has
been pointed out in the preceding paragraphs. Furthermore, the case of
the appellant/petitioner has become more sensitive by way of conviction
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
12
recorded against them and further it was served out, which makes them
previous convicts.
12.
Now the “pivotal question” raised during arguments is as to
whether an accused person under the Pakistan Army Act can be convicted
for an alternative charge/offence in case the principal charge/offence is
not proved. The concept of alternative charge is not unknown in the
sphere of Pakistan Army Act. Sections 111(5) of the Pakistan Army Act and
Rules 21(4) and 51(7) & (8) speak about the framing and punishment of an
accused under alternative charge/offence. The bare perusal of the charge
sheet reveals that both the appellant/petitioner were not only charge
sheeted for the main offence but also for the alternative charges/offences
and it was well within the knowledge of both of them. It is now well
settled without second thought that if an accused is charged with one
offence but from the evidence it appears to have committed a different
offence for which he might have been charged under the said provisions of
law, he may be convicted for the offence he is found to have committed,
although he was not charged with the same. However, in the present case,
the appellant/petitioner were not only charged for the main offence but
for the alternative charges as well, which is spelled out from bare reading
of charge sheet. All courts after evaluating the evidence led by the
prosecution found that the main offence could not be proved against
them but as there was sufficient evidence to sustain their conviction under
the alternative charge, hence, they were convicted accordingly. Needless
to mention that when appellant/petitioner had filed Constitutional
petitions before this Court in the year 1996, although charge had been
framed at that time but they never raised this objection before any court
including this court at that juncture of time as to why they have been
charge sheeted for the alternative offences, rather they failed to bring on
record an iota of material in their defense except instant contention at
belated stage, which has no legal value in the eyes of law. The concept of
conviction under alternative charge in the absence of conviction under the
main charge is a well established/recognized principle of criminal justice
system as provided in Sections 236 to 240 of the Code of Criminal
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
13
Procedure. In Jiand Vs. The State (1991 SCMR 1268), this Court held that
cumulative effect of Sections 236/237 Cr.P.C. is that if an accused is
charged with one offence but from the evidence it appears to have
committed an alternative offence for which he might have been charged
under the provisions of that section, he may be convicted for an offence
which he is shown to have committed, if supported by record, although he
was not charged with the same. Even this aspect is not absolute, in
absence of any alternative charge he can be convicted for any offence if it
covers the ingredients of said offence.
13.
Now, we would advert to the question as to whether
Constitution Petitions before this Court and the High Court were
maintainable. Before dealing with this question, it would be in order to
discuss as to whether the jurisdiction exercised by the Supreme Court
under Article 184(3) of the Constitution is analogous to the power
available to the High Court under Article 199 of the Constitution. In
Shahida Zahir supra case, this aspect of the matter was considered at
length and this Court while relying on an earlier judgment of this Court in
Benazir Bhutto Vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1988 SC 416), which is
perhaps considered as the judgment of first impression laying down the
parameters within which the power and jurisdiction of this Court under
Article 184(3) of the Constitution is exercised, held as follows:-
“I would, however, like to make it clear that the power conferred
on the Supreme Court by Article 184(3) is distinct and has its
origin in Article 22 of the 1956 Constitution and is exerciseable on
its own terminology. The impression, if there is, that the trappings
of sub Articles 1(a) and I (c) of Article 199 are also to be read into
this Article appears to me to be without substance as there are no
words in Article 184 (3) to incorporate them except, of course, the
words make an order of the nature mentioned in the said Article,
which are specifically referable to the nature of the order in
sub-Article 199(c) of Article 199 giving such directions as may be
appropriate for the enforcement of any of the Fundamental
Rights. The nature of the order, however, is the end product of
the Judicial power exercised. Therefore, it will not control or
regulate, in any way, the exercise of power so as to make it
exercisable only at the instance of the 'aggrieved party' in the
context of adversary proceedings.
…………………………
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
14
On the language of Article 184(3), it is needless to insist on a rigid
formula of proceedings for the enforcement of the Fundamental
Rights. If the framers of the Constitution had intended the
proceedings for the enforcement of the Fundamental Rights to be
in a strait-jacket, then they would have said so, but not having
done that, I would not read any constraint in it, Article 184(3)
therefore, provides abundant scope for the enforcement of the
Fundamental Rights of an individual or a group or class of persons
in the event of their infraction.
Unlike in Article 199, the Framers of the Constitution placed no
limitation nor prescribed any condition or stipulation for obtaining
relief and redress under Article 184(3). No strait-jacket formula
was prescribed for the enforcement of the Rights, the obvious
reason that can be spelled out is that in case the Supreme Court
was itself of the view in a given case that a question of public
importance with reference to the enforcement of any of the
Fundamental Rights conferred by Chapter 1 of Part II is involved, it
should directly interfere, and any rigid formula or strait-jacket
formula prescribed for enforcement of the Rights would be
self-defeating."
14.
In District Bar Association Vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD
2015 SC 401), this Court has held that in our Constitution, fundamental
rights have been guaranteed to the citizen; specific provisions have been
inserted in the Constitution to reinforce such protection and where there
is a violation in this behalf by the Executive or the Legislature, the remedy
available to an aggrieved person is to approach the Courts for the
redressal of his grievances and enforcement of his Fundamental Rights, as
is evident from Articles 184 and 199 of the Constitution. It is, therefore,
clear that although powers conferred upon this Court and the High Courts
under Articles 184 (3) and 199 of the Constitution are distinct but an
aggrieved party, whose fundamental rights have been infringed, can knock
the doors of the Court for redressal of its grievances. However, it is also
settled that any order passed or sentence awarded during a Court Martial
or other forums under the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, is subject to judicial
review both by the High Courts and the Supreme Court only on the ground
of mala fides including malice in law, without jurisdiction or coram non
judice. Before invoking the jurisdiction of this Court or the High Court, the
test to pass is strictly confined as to whether the order/sentence passed
during Court Martial is suffering from mala fides, without jurisdiction and
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
15
coram non judice. In absence of any mala fide on the part of the
prosecution,
the
conviction
and
sentences
awarded
to
the
appellant/petitioner by the Field General Court Martial cannot be stamped
to be coram non judice, which otherwise is a rare phenomenon, therefore,
it can safely be said that the Constitutional petitions filed by the
appellant/petitioner either before this Court or before the High Court in
the given circumstances as disclosed in detail were not maintainable. Even
otherwise, petitioner Inayatullah Khan by filing Constitution Petition No.
18/2000 had challenged his conviction after lapse of more than three
years. Same is the case with appellant Muhammad Azad Minhas, who had
challenged his conviction before the High Court after delay of more than
13 years. It is established principle that delay defeats equity and equity
leans in favour of vigilant. Any person may have an enforceable right but if
he fails to enforce such right within the time stipulated by law then the
right becomes unenforceable. Law of limitation is not considered a mere
formality and is required to be observed being of mandatory nature. Law
of laches takes away right of the party to have the right enforced, which
otherwise, is enforceable under the law because law requires that one
having an enforceable right should seek enforcement whereof within time
specified by law. Although as a general principle bar of limitation is not
applicable to the proceedings under Article 199 and 184 of the
Constitution but insistence is placed on initiating proceedings promptly
and within a reasonable time to avoid the question of laches. Reliance is
placed on Dr. Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri Vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD
2013 SC 413). In the said case, this Court while placing reliance on an
earlier judgment of this Court reported as Jawad Mir Muhammadi vs.
Haroon Mirza (PLD 2007 SC 472) held that laches per se is not a bar to the
constitutional jurisdiction and question of delay in filing would have to be
examined with reference to the facts of each case; question of
delay/laches in filing constitutional petition has to be given serious
consideration and unless a satisfactory and plausible explanation is
forthcoming for delay in filing constitutional petition, the same cannot be
overlooked or ignored subject to facts and circumstances of each case. In
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
16
S.A. Jameel v. Secretary to the Govt. of the Punjab (2005 SCMR 126), this
Court held that question of laches has to be examined on equitable
principles for the reason that the exercise of Constitutional jurisdiction is
always discretionary with the Court and the relief so granted is always in
the nature of equitable relief. In case the Court finds that the party
invoking Constitutional jurisdiction is guilty of contumacious lethargy,
inaction, laxity or gross negligence in the prosecution or a cause for
enforcement of a right, the Court would be justified in non- suiting such
person on the premise of laches. Both the appellant/petitioner could not
give sufficient reason as to why they remained silent for years and did not
invoke the Constitutional jurisdiction well in time, therefore, on this score
alone, their Constitutional petitions are liable to be dismissed.
15.
The only question which remains in the field is whether after
dismissal from service, the appellant/petitioner are still entitled for the
privileges i.e. membership in the housing scheme, allotment of plots and
further all amenity services, which are meant for the army personnel.
Further, that the withdrawal of all these facilities does fall within the ambit
of dictum ‘double jeopardy’? It is settled that dismissal from service
squarely takes away all the perks, privileges and amenity services from an
army personnel conferred in lieu of his induction into the Pakistan Army.
All these benefits are subject to service and any action contrary to service
structure takes away not only perks and privileges rather the privilege of
salary, pension, gratuity etc for which he was otherwise entitled. Soon
after the action taken by the military authorities against the
appellant/petitioner, their services were terminated resulting into
depriving them of all the benefits and in pursuance of that order, which
was upheld to the highest forum, the benefits attached to the service i.e.
plot, house, amenity services etc had been withdrawn. There is no second
cavil to this proposition that after dismissal from service, the
appellant/petitioner cannot claim any benefit because of the reason that
their termination was in pursuance of the defiance of the discipline and
order of the institution discretely. We have repeatedly asked them to
show any law or precedent wherein the perks, privileges and amenity
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1191 OF 2016 AND
CONSTITUTION PETITION NO. 18 OF 2000
17
services were continued to be enjoyed by a person, who was dismissed
from service after facing court martial but they failed to do so. Apart from
this, to consider whether it amounts to ‘double jeopardy’, it would be in
order to reproduce Section 403 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and
Article 13(a) of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973,
which read as under:-
“403. Persons once convicted or acquitted not to be tried for the same
offence. (1) A person who has once been tried by a Court of competent
jurisdiction for an offence and convicted or acquitted of such offence
shall, while such conviction or acquittal remains in force, not to be liable
to be tried again for the same offence, nor on the same facts for any
other offence for which a different charge from the one made against
him might have been made under section 36, or for which he might have
been convicted under section 237.
13. No person— (a) shall be prosecuted or punished for the same offence
more than once”
16.
A close analysis of the above said provisions discloses that
the case of the appellant/petitioner does not fall within the ambit of these
provisions of law and the Constitution. The concept of double jeopardy is
placed upon entirely different premises which are meant for entirely
different situations which are squarely missing in this case, hence, the
claim of the appellant/petitioner that they are victim of double jeopardy is
without any legal foundation, consequently it is immensely rebutted.
17.
For what has been discussed above, the appeal and
Constitution petition are dismissed being without merit.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
Announced on 12.09.2023
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1191_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
In the Supreme Court of Pakistan
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali
Mr. Justice Dost Muhammad Khan
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Civil Appeals No.1194 to 1197 of 2014
(On appeal from judgment of Peshawar High Court, Peshawar dated
21.7.2014 passed in R.F.A. Nos.6-P, 16-P/2014 & C.R. 105-P & 106-P/2014)
Zafeer Gul (in all appeals)
Appellant
Versus
Dr. Riaz ali & others (in C.A. No.1194/2014)
Anar Gul & others (in C.A. No.1195/2014)
Mst. Farzana Javed & others (in C.A. No.1196/2014)
Haji Sattar Gul & others (in C.A. No.1197/2014)
Respondents
Appellant (in all appeals):
In person
For respondents No.1,3-7: Qazi Jawwad Ehsanullah, ASC
(in C.A. No.1194-1195/2014)
For respondents No.3-6: Qazi Jawwad Ehsanullah, ASC
(in C.A. No.1196-1197/2014)
Date of hearing:
14.5.2015
Judgment
Anwar Zaheer Jamali, J – These four connected
appeals arise out of the common judgment dated 21.7.2014,
passed by learned Single Judge in Chambers of the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in R.F.A. Nos.6-P of 2014, 16-P of
2014, and C.R. Nos.105-P of 2014 & 106-P of 2014. In these
cases the order dated 16.12.2013, passed by the learned
Additional District Judge, Peshawar, thereby ordering return
of the memo of two civil appeals, was challenged by the
respondents on the ground that looking to the valuation of the
suit in the plaint and the pecuniary jurisdiction of the Court of
C.A. No.1194 of 2014 etc.
2
Additional District Judge, Peshawar at the time of filing civil
appeals No.58 of 2013 and 59 of 2013, on 5.10.2011, and in
view of the relevant provisions of the Suit Valuation Act 1887
and the Civil Courts Ordinance, 1962, such remedy was
rightly availed. Therefore, the order for return of memo of
appeals for its presentation before the concerned forum was
uncalled for and illegal.
2.
We have heard the arguments of the appellant
in person and the respondents’ learned ASC and have perused
the case record, which reveals that through impugned
judgment, relying upon the ratio of the judgment in the case of
Muhammad Ayub & four others versus Dr. Obaidullah and six
others (1999 SCMR 394) and some other case law, the
Peshawar High Court set aside the order dated 16.12.2013,
impugned before it and remanded the case to the appellate
Court, which at the relevant time had pecuniary jurisdiction to
hear these appeals and decide the same on merits and in
accordance with law. In doing so, the High Court has aptly
taken into account the fact that as the civil suit for partition in
respect of the disputed property, instituted before the trial
Court, was valued at Rs.230 for the purpose of jurisdiction
and Rs.15 for the purpose of Court fee, therefore, in terms of
section 18 of the Civil Courts Ordinance, 1962, such valuation
disclosed in the plaint was to be considered the value of the
suit property for determining the forum of appeal qua
pecuniary jurisdiction of the appellate Court.
C.A. No.1194 of 2014 etc.
3
3.
To expound the legal position in relation to the
valuation of a suit for partition and separate possession for the
purpose of jurisdiction, it will be pertinent to mention here
that every co-sharer in the immovable property is legally
deemed to be in its joint possession to the extent of his
undivided share. Therefore, in a suit of such nature, law
permits him tentative valuation of his share in the immovable
property as specified in the plaint for the purpose of pecuniary
jurisdiction, which is subject to final determination by the
Court; till then the valuation shown in the plaint is to be
deemed as proper value of the suit property for the purpose of
availing the remedy of appeal qua determining the forum of
appeal. For further guidance see: Ajiruddin Moudal and
another versus Rahman Fakir and others (PLD 1961 S.C.
349).
4.
As a result of above discussion, no exception
could be taken to such findings in the impugned judgment
enunciating the above legal position.
5.
Accordingly, above captioned four appeals are
dismissed.
Announced at Islamabad
On 25th May, 2015
Judge
Approved for reporting.
Riaz
Judge
Judge
Judge
C.A. No.1194 of 2014 etc.
4
| {
"id": "C.A.1194_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE SARDAR TARIQ MASOOD
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1203 OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 18.10.2012
passed by the Peshawar High Court, D.I. Khan
Bench in Writ Petition No. 841/2010)
WAPDA through its Chairman and another
… Appellants
VERSUS
Mst. Parizada
… Respondent
For the Appellants:
Mian Shafaqat Jan, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For the Respondent:
Mr. Arshad Zaman Kayani, ASC
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
Date of Hearing:
11.07.2018
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- Naseeb Khan, the deceased
husband of the respondent was appointed by the petitioner as
office Chowkidar on 02.10.1982. He died during service on
05.06.1992 after putting in 9 years and 8 months of service. After
his death, his widow was paid group life insurance and other
financial benefits but was denied pension. The respondent-widow
then claimed that her husband being Chowkidar and died after
serving for a period of about 10 years, she is entitled to get pension
under Wapda Pension Rules. Her claim for pension was denied by
the department on the ground that her deceased husband was
only a work charge employee. The respondent then wrote a letter to
the Hon’ble Chief Justice of Peshawar High Court, which was
treated as Writ Petition. The learned High Court after taking into
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1203 OF 2014
2
consideration the fact that respondent’s husband was working as
office Chowkidar and during his service was given annual
increments, as were permissible to the regular employees and
upon his death, respondent-widow was also given all other
financial benefits except the pension, vide impugned judgment
held that respondent-widow is entitled to pensionary benefits.
Aggrieved by such decision, petitioner department filed Civil
Petition No. 346/2013 wherein leave was granted to consider
whether as per the claim of the petitioner, the late husband of the
respondent was a work charge employee.
2.
After examining the record, we are of the view that
respondent’s deceased husband was appointed as Chowkidar,
which is a permanent post and that is the reason that he had been
given annual increments and upon his death, her wife was given
all financial benefits including group life insurance etc but was
denied pension. From the nature of job and the period
respondent’s husband had served, it cannot be said that he was a
work charge employee. There was every likelihood that he would
have continued to serve had he lived longer. Learned counsel for
the petitioners in the alternative argued that even otherwise, the
respondent’s husband has not put in the minimum ten years
service in terms of pension table contained in Rule 6 of the
Pakistan Wapda Pension Rules, therefore, the claim of pension
even on the basis of a permanent employee was not permissible in
law. In rebuttal, learned counsel for the respondent referred to
Volume-II of Wapda Compendium of important directives/office
orders issued by the authority. He specifically pointed out
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1203 OF 2014
3
paragraph 2(c)(5) of Serial Number 2 under the heading ‘Payment
of Dues’ of Wapda, which clearly provides that “pension as well as
Commutation (25%) is to be paid, if service is 9-1/2 years or more.”
In the present case, the respondent’s husband had admittedly put
in 9 years and 8 months service. Hence, he being not a work
charge employee and has been working on a permanent post until
his death, her widow was entitled to receive pension. We, therefore,
find no justification to interfere in the impugned judgment. This
appeal having no merit is accordingly dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
11th of July, 2018
Not Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1203_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE DOST MUHAMMAD KHAN
Civil Appeal No.1207 of 2004
a/w CAs 1208/04 and CAs No.577-578 of 2006
(On appeal from the judgment dated 17.04.2001, passed by the Lahore
High Court, Lahore in C.R.s No.376-377 of 1998)
Mohammad Ijaz
(in CAs No.1207-1208/04)
Muhammad Hussain
(in CAs No.577-578/06)
….Appellants
Versus
Mohammad Shafi (decd.) through L.Rs.
..Respondent in all cases
For the appellants:
Ch. Mushtaq Ahmad Khan, Sr. ASC
(CAs 1207-1208)
Mr. Ishfaq Qayyum Cheema, ASC
(CAs 577-578):
Mr. Muhammad Siddique Khan Baloch, ASC
For respondents No.1-2:
Mr. Taki Ahmed Khan, ASC
(CAs No.1207-1208)
For respondent No.3:
Ex-parte
(in call cases)
Date of hearing:
06.1.2016
JUDGMENT
Dost Muhammad Khan, J.— This single judgment shall also
decide CA No.1208/04 and CAs No.577-578/06 because all have arisen
from almost the same judgment of the Lahore High Court dated
17.04.2001, through which Civil Revision Petitions No.376-D and 377-
D of 1987 were allowed and two separate suits for possession through
exercise of right of pre-emption were decreed by reversing the
judgment and decrees of the learned Additional District Judge, Camp
at Narowal.
2.
Leave to appeal in all the four cases was granted to
consider as to whether the suits, filed by the respondents/preemptors
were presented to the competent court on 30.05.1963 and if it was not
CAs 1207/04 etc.
2
so then, whether these had become time barred on the date when the
same were received by the competent forum/Civil Judge, Narowal,
after the said Court reopened for judicial work.
3.
The epitome of the relevant facts of the present
controversy is that, the appellants in these two sets of appeals
purchased land through two different transactions. In the first
transaction, the land measuring 53-K, 4-M was purchased on
31.05.1962 through mutation No.675 for sale consideration of
Rs.4,000/-. Through the second transaction, the remaining land of the
vendor, measuring 41-K, 16-M was purchased on 21.12.1962.
4.
The respondents herein, on the basis of superior right of
pre-emption, instituted two separate suits on 30.5.1963, but before
the then Tehsildar of the area, due to the absence of the Civil Judge.
These suits were transmitted by the Tehsildar to the learned Civil
Judge, who received the same on 5.6.1963 and were duly registered.
5.
The appellants/vendees contested both the suits on
various legal and factual grounds however, after holding trial, both the
suits were decreed by the Trial Court vide judgment and decrees dated
10.12.1985. On appeals, filed by the appellants, the learned Additional
District Judge, Camp at Narowal held that the suit, through which the
first transaction of sale was pre-empted, was barred by time as in his
view these were not presented or filed in a competent court while
about the second suit the learned District Appellate Court held that
after dismissal of the first suit, the vendees i.e. the present appellants
had become co-owners in the suit property thus, they were possessing
equal right of pre-emption and in this way superior right of pre-
CAs 1207/04 etc.
3
emption could not be claimed by the respondents/preemptors, thus,
the second suit was also dismissed and both the appeals were allowed.
6.
The learned Judge in Chamber of the Lahore High Court,
Lahore through the above Civil Revision Petitions, reversed the
findings of the learned Additional District Judge and restored the
judgments and decrees of the Trial Court and decreed both the suits.
7.
The entire controversy needed to be resolved is, the one
discussed in para-2 of this judgment.
8.
Learned counsel for the parties also addressed arguments
on this point alone.
We have considered their valuable arguments and have carefully
perused the record as well.
9.
It is an admitted fact that only one Civil Judge was posted
at Narowal, which by then was having the status of Tehsil, or to say,
sub-division. The filing of the suits before the Tehsildar in the absence
of the Civil Judge from the station, was a regular practice therefore,
filing of the present suits before him could not be taken as an
exception.
10.
Learned ASC for the appellants argued with considerable
vehemence that notification No.157/C-II-26 dated 10.02.1969, issued
by the learned District Judge, Sialkot, who was competent to issue the
same, could not be given retrospective effect to cover the presentation
or filing of the present suits before the then Tehsildar, Narowal
therefore, it was wrongly relied upon by the learned Judge in Chamber
of the Lahore High Court.
CAs 1207/04 etc.
4
To clarify the factual position for the purpose of drawing
legitimate inference there-from, the said notification is reproduced
below:-
“I hereby authorize the Tehsildars Narowal and
Shakargarh Tehsils who are receiving plaints in the
absence of a Civil Judge in that area to sign challan forms
for the deposit of rent and other amounts in consequent
(consequence) of orders passed by the Civil Judge in that
behalf.”
The words employed in the notification strongly suggest to an
unrebuttable extent that the Tehsildars Narowal and Shakargarh, both
were already authorized in receiving plaints in the absence of Civil
Judge in that areas however, through this notification they were
conferred upon additional powers to sign challan forms for the deposit
of rent and other amounts in consequence of orders passed by the
Civil Judge in that behalf.
11.
Neither the appellants have brought on record any
evidence to the contrary nor the learned Additional District Judge, who
reversed the judgments and decrees of the Trial Court, has taken
pains to probe into the matter in a legal manner by tracing out the
origin of the authorization of Tehsildars by the District Judge of the
Sessions Division, under Rule 7(c) of the High Court (Lahore) Rules
and Orders, Chapter-I, Part-B, read with section 23 of the Civil Court
Ordinance, 1962.
12.
It must always be kept in mind that the establishment of
judicature has been ordained by Article 175 of the Constitution. In
Sub-Article (3) of Article 175 ibid it was mandatory for the State to
separate the Judiciary from the Executive progressively within the
initial period of five years however, this period was extended to
CAs 1207/04 etc.
5
fourteen years by the then Martial Law Administrator, by inserting the
amendment through Presidential Order No.14 of 1985 however, after
the landmark judgment of this Court in the case of Government of
Sindh v. Sharaf Faridi (PLD 1994 SC 105) the Judiciary was
ultimately separated from the Executive Branch in 1994-95 due to the
written undertakings, given by the Federal Government and all the
Provincial Governments.
13.
The reported precedents of this Court would show that
presentation of plaints before the Tehsildar, where no other judicial
officer of low grade was available, was a consistent practice in vogue
in the said days when the Executive limb of the State was also
exercising judicial powers. It may not be out of place to mention that
Tehsildar possesses and exercises two-fold jurisdiction. Under the Land
Revenue Act, he acts as a Revenue Officer which falls within the
administrative province of the revenue authorities however, the same
Tehsildar was graded as 1st Class or 2nd Class Magistrate/Revenue
Courts under the provisions of The Punjab Tenancy Act, 1887. In
this regard, reference may be made to the case of Elahi Bakhsh v.
Mst. Balqees Begum [1992 PSC 1655(b)], therefore, we are
unable to subscribe to the plea taken by the learned counsel for the
appellants.
14.
As already pointed out that for the resolution of civil,
criminal and revenue disputes, different classes of courts have been
constituted through different enactments. In some categories of cases,
these different categories of courts exercise almost the same and
similar jurisdiction but procedure for that is differently provided. In
this regard, reference may be made to a revenue court where a title
dispute is raised then the revenue officer or the Collector may frame
CAs 1207/04 etc.
6
any issue and decide the title himself or in the alternative, may refer it
to the Civil Court for determination. Similarly, with regard to the
dispute over immovable property, Magistrate of 1st Class exercises
powers to regulate the possession of it and confers it on the other
party like the Civil Court does it u/Ss. 8 and 9 of the Specific Relief
Act, 1877.
15.
As the present suits were instituted in the early days when
Sessions Divisions were few in the then West Pakistan and only camp
courts were held at Tehsil Headquarters at different intervals, hence
we entertain no amount of doubt that on the crucial date, the lonely
Civil Judge posted at Narowal, was not present and similarly the
Tehsildar was much earlier authorized to receive the plaints, however,
through the ibid notification of 1969 extra powers were conferred upon
him to deal with urgent matters because of the temporary absence of
Civil Judge.
16.
The litigants are the major stakeholders in the justice
system. It is because of the court fee paid, different types of fine
recovered and cost imposed upon them, a handsome revenue is
generated for the State from their pockets thus, it is the constitutional
and legal obligation of the State to provide the maximum facilities to
the litigants for the redressal of their grievance through different
courts duly constituted. It was in this background that the Lahore High
Court had authorized the District & Sessions Judges to confer upon any
officer, powers of receiving plaints to sign and endorse forms for the
deposit of rent and other amounts in the temporary absence of the
Civil Judge from the Tehsil Headquarters.
CAs 1207/04 etc.
7
17.
Just for a moment, if it is assumed, albeit not correct, that
the then Tehsildar was not competent to receive the plaint and the
learned District & Sessions Judge of District Sialkot had also not issued
any notification or public notice to directly receive such plaints, etc.
then, for such omission the respondents/plaintiffs cannot be blamed
nor they can be held to be at fault because it was/is the legal
obligation of the court to facilitate the litigants, approaching the courts
conveniently. There is a well-known maxim “Actus Curiae Neminem
Gravabit” (an act of the court shall prejudice no man) thus, where
any court is found to have not complied with the mandatory provision
of law or omitted to pass an order, required by law in the prescribed
manner then, the litigants/parties cannot be taxed, much less
penalized for the act or omission of the court. The fault in such cases
does lie with the court and not with the litigants and no litigant should
suffer on that account unless he/they are contumaciously negligent
and have deliberately not complied with a mandatory provision of law.
(see PLD 1972 SC 69). Even if it is held that filing of the plaint before
the Tehsildar was not valid then, section 4 of the Limitation Act and
Rules of Propriety will come into play and no limitation shall run
against such party till the date, the competent court i.e. of Civil Judge
reopened for judicial work.
The provision of S.4 of the Limitation Act does not extend or
enlarge the period of limitation, prescribed under the law however, it
certainly stops the clock to tic forward to the prejudice of the litigant
due to closure of the Court and permit him/them to file the
plaint/appeal/application on the re-opening of the Court, albeit the
period of limitation provided there-for had expired on the day when
the court was closed. In the present case, the evidence does furnish
CAs 1207/04 etc.
8
proof that the Presiding Officer was on tour to another Tehsil/District
and was holding Camp Court there, obliging the present respondent to
have approached him in case he was reachable for the filing of the
plaints. In any case, the respondents/plaintiffs cannot be held to have
committed any fault or default in presenting the plaint to the
Tehsildar, who was regularly receiving the same, duly authorized by
the District & Sessions Judge by then.
18.
In this case, the learned Civil Judge without any exception
or reservation received the plaints from the Tehsildar and registered
the same in the relevant register, which is another fact, suggesting
that the practice of receiving the plaints by the Tehsildar was well in
the field and was duly acknowledged, therefore, in our considered view
the contention of the learned ASC for the appellants is absolutely
unfounded and liable to be rejected. In this regard, reference may be
made to the case of Rashad Ehsan and others v. Bashir Ahmad
(PLD 1989 SC 146). Similar proposition was resolved by this Court in
the above manner in the case of Muhammad Yar v. Muhammad
(2003 SCMR 1772) where a plethora of authorities, right from the
Indian jurisdiction upto 1968 were relied upon.
19.
We fully endorse the view taken by the learned Judge in
Chamber of the Lahore High Court that on one hand the learned
Additional District Judge held almost a similar view but jumped at the
conclusion without any justification by holding that because due to
dismissal of the 1st suit, the vendees/appellants herein had become co-
owners in the suit land and have equal right therefore, the superior
right of preemption of the respondents/plaintiffs has been brought to
naught and was not enforceable. This was rightly held to be a wrong
CAs 1207/04 etc.
9
conclusion against the statutory provisions of law and was rightly set
aside by the High Court.
20.
During the course of hearing of these appeals, we have
observed that right from the beginning upto this Court, the
appellants/vendees have taken shelter behind mere technicalities to
defeat the right of pre-emption of the respondents/plaintiffs, although
certain technicalities of law, where right is vested in the opposite party
by efflux of time or where public policy demands so, may become
relevant however, the same cannot be given any preference by
defeating the ends of justice, depriving a party of substantive rights,
which accrued to it under the law and principle of justice.
In this regard the famous principle laid down in the case of
Imtiaz Ahmad v. Ghulam Ali (PLD 1963 SC 382) is reproduced
below:
“…the proper place of procedure in any system of
administration of justice is to help and not to thwart the
grant to the people of their rights. All technicalities have
to be avoided unless it be essential to comply with them
on grounds of public policy…..Any system which by giving
effect to the form and not the substance defeats
substantive rights (and) is defective to that extent.”
21.
Judged and discussed from all angles, we are entertaining
no amount of doubt that the learned Judge in Chamber of the Lahore
High Court has fairly comprehended the correct legal position,
according to the facts and circumstances of the case and has applied
the correct principle of law to it, to which no exception can be taken on
any ground whatsoever.
CAs 1207/04 etc.
10
22.
Accordingly, all these appeals are found bereft of legal
merits, both on factual and legal premises. Thus, the same are
dismissed, with no order as to costs.
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
6th January, 2016
Nisar /-‘
Approved For Reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.1207_2004.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE DOST MUHAMMAD KHAN
Civil Appeal No.1208 of 2011
(On appeal from the judgment dated 29.11.2010
passed by the Lahore High Court Lahore in Civil
Revision No.29/2008)
Malik Muzaffar Ahmed
…Appellant
Versus
Majlis-e-Ilmi Society thr. Muhammad Zubair
..Respondent
For the appellant:
Khawaja Saee-uz-Zafar, ASC
For the respondent:
Raja Muhammad Irshad, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
Date of hearing:
15.12.2015
JUDGMENT
Dost Muhammad Khan, J.— This appeal has been filed
against the impugned judgment of the learned Judge in Chamber of
the Lahore High Court, Lahore rejecting the plaint of the appellant
under Order-VII, Rule-11 CPC after setting aside the order of the Trial
Judge, who rejected the application and held that after recording some
evidence the question of exemption from pre-emption then would be
decided.
2.
Learned ASC for the appellant vehemently contended that
the learned High Court has fallen in error due to misinterpretation of
the language of clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 23 of the
Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991, which only provides exemption from
exercise of right of pre-emption to the sale of Waqf Property or
property used for charitable, religious or public purposes. To
understand the scope and true language of the said provision of law, it
is reproduced below:-
CA 1208/11
2
“23. No right of pre-emption in respect of certain
properties. –(1) No right of pre-emption shall exist in
respect of sale of—
(a)
Waqf property or property used for charitable,
religious or public purposes.”
The learned ASC made attempt to take benefit of the defective
language of the Statute without making efforts to discover the true
intent of the Legislature, rather avoided to attend to that proposition
despite quarries, made by the Court.
3.
The facts of the case are that, the respondent, Majlis-e-
Ilmi Society, purchased land measuring 123-K, 3-M, described in the
heading of the plaint, from one Shoaib Ahmed for a sale consideration
of Rs.47,00,000/-. This sale of land was pre-empted by the appellant
being adjacent owner however, the respondent filed an application
under Order-VII, Rule-11 CPC for rejection of the plaint on the
strength of the provision of S.23 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991,
as according to them the same was exempt from the pre-emption
right. The application was dismissed as stated above however, the
learned Judge in the High Court allowed the same and rejected the
plaint.
4.
True, that the provision of S.23 ibid suffers from absurdity,
ambiguity and inadvertent omission on the part of the drafter because
along with the sale the word, ‘purchase’ was not added to the said
provision.
5.
According to the NWFP (KPK) Pre-emption Act, 1987 this
omission is not occurring there. The same is reproduced as under:-
CA 1208/11
3
“23. No right of pre-emption in respect of certain
properties. –(1) No right of pre-emption shall exist in respect
of sale or purchase of—
(a)
A waqf property or a property used for charitable,
religious or public purpose.”
In view of the judgment in the case of Government of NWFP v.
Malik Said Kamal Shah (PLD 1986 SC 360) majority of the
provisions of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913 and that of NWFP
(KPK) Pre-emption Act, 1950 were declared against the injunctions of
Islam and the governments were directed to amend the law according
to the guidelines, given therein so to bring it in conformity with the
injunction of Islam. To achieve the object, the Government of the day
referred the matter to the Islamic Ideology Council to provide the law
for all the provinces, also keeping in view the customs and traditions
of each province, not against the injunctions of Islam and after
consultation with the Law Division, Government of Pakistan had to
forward the same to the governments so that the new draft law is
enacted through Legislature.
6.
The
Islamic
Ideology
Council,
after
considerable
deliberations with Jurists on “Islamic Fiqa” with regard to right of pre-
emption, all ancillary and allied matters and after consultation with the
Law Division drafted the proposed law for the provinces and forwarded
the same to their respective governments. It was in this background
that, the new Pre-emption Act of NWFP (KPK) was notified on
26.04.1987. While the Government of Punjab in the first instance
through an Ordinance dated 27.08.1990 promulgated by the Governor
of Punjab, enacted the new law, which after making some
amendments therein, was passed by the Provincial Legislature and
after getting assent of the Governor of the Province, the same was
CA 1208/11
4
issued on 6th April, 1991 in the extraordinary Gazette of Punjab
Province.
7.
In both the Acts of the two provinces, the provision of S.23
thereof provides protection from right of pre-emption to “Waqf”
property or a property used or attached to charitable or religious
institutions however, in the provision of the NWFP (KPK) Pre-emption
Act, as cited above, the words “sale and purchase” both are used
however, the word “purchase” is missing from the similar provision of
the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991. In the same provision of the Punjab
Pre-emption Act, S.23(2), the property purchased or acquired by the
Federal or the Provincial Government or local authority is also given
exemption from pre-emption. This provision was challenged along with
some other provisions of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991 before the
Federal Shariat Court on the plea that the same were against the
injunctions of Islam.
A larger Bench of the Federal Shariat Court in the case of
Muhammad Ismail Qureshi v. Government of Punjab (PLD 1991
Federal Shariat Court 80) has held as under:-
“That the provision of section 23(2) is not
repugnant to injunction of Islam as property, which
is to be pre-empted, must be owned by a person.
That is why, the properties which are Waqf or used
for charitable, religious and public purposes are not
pre-emptible. On this analogy, the State-owned
properties also are not pre-emptible because they
are not property of a person. Extending the
principle further, a property acquired by the State
for public purposes does not remain property of a
person or an association of persons. Therefore, a
property for public purposes, as envisaged in
Shariah, is not pre-emptible.”
CA 1208/11
5
8.
The learned Judge of the Lahore High Court in the case of
Muhammad Farooq v. Muhammad Amin Trust Chakwal (PLD
2007 Lahore 431) also held that “the record did not deny that
vendee was a trust or Waqf and purchased the property as such---
Deed of trust was produced which was a registered document------
Purposes of trust were setting up of a hospital on modern lines and
to serve people of locality around--- Chairman of vendee Truest
appeared as witness and stated that the land was purchased for
constructing a hospital.” This statement was not challenged in cross-
examination thus, it was held that, “plain reading of S.23(1)(a) of
Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991 showed that prohibition was regarding
sale of waqf property or property used for charitable purposes---
Intention however, clearly appeared to save the property purchased
for charitable user from rigours of exercise of right of pre-emption.”
9.
Now it is to be seen in light of the universally
acknowledged cannon of interpretation and construction of Statutes as
to what was the intent and object of the Legislature by enacting the
provision of S.23 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991.
After going through the injunctions of Islam, as already held by
the Federal Shariat Court, exemption from right of pre-emption given
to the properties, purchased by the charitable or religious institutions,
was the clear intent and object of the Legislature. This was correctly
perceived and the drafter has not committed any error while drafting
S.23 of the NWFP (KPK) Pre-emption Act, where the words, sale and
purchase” both are used.
10.
The primary object of the provision of law of the Punjab
Pre-emption Act was to protect and save from pre-emption also the
properties purchased by these institutions because the property
CA 1208/11
6
purchased by it, is used for charitable, religious and public benefit
connected therewith and not for monitory or financial gain. If the
interpretation, the learned ASC for the appellant suggested, is placed
on the said provision of law, in our view, the very intent and object of
the Legislature would be defeated. This would be destructive to its
implied intent and object it wanted to achieve.
11.
Now the question is, whether the Court can supply the
omissions through necessary inference till the amendments are made
in the relevant provision of S.23 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act. In this
regard, the famous Jurists and celebrated Judges of the superior
courts of different countries have consistently held that, if there is an
occasion where there is inadvertent omission on the part of the drafter
and if interpretation on that account is placed in a way to give effect to
the omission, not only it will defeat the intention of the Legislature but
will also result into harmful drastic consequences. Therefore, in such a
case, it becomes imperative for the Courts to fill-up the gap and to
supply the omission, so to avoid the obvious destructive effect on the
true intent of the Legislature. It is also a bedrock principle of
interpretation and construction of Statutes that in a case of ambiguity
and absurdity or inadvertent omission, the Court has to make
departure from the plain meaning of the Statute and to adopt a
construction, which would further and carry the object of the
Legislature into effect by resorting to drawing inference therefrom.
12.
In the comprehension of a Statute, certain factors cause
objective doubts as to the meaning of Legislative text. These are called
doubt-factors. The drafters, either due to inadvertent omission or
deliberately, avoid to use unnecessary words for the object of brevity.
This technique is called ellipsis, meaning thereby that the obvious is to
CA 1208/11
7
be provided by implication in such a case. The Courts have the powers
to fill-up the lacuna in the Statute through necessary implied addition.
13.
It is also a cardinal principle with regard to interpretation
of Statute that the Courts have the powers, in cases where there is a
manifest contradiction of the apparent purposes of the enactment or
the way, the literal construction is likely to lead to a result, not
intended by the Legislature, to modify the meaning of the words or to
supply the obvious omission due to result of inadvertent mistake on
the part of the drafter. This is called a secondary construction of the
Statute, where primary construction defeating the purpose of
enactment shall be departed from, so to make the Statute sensible by
giving effect to the legislative intent. In the cases of inadvertent
legislative omissions, defeating the very object of the whole scheme of
law, the Courts have the powers to supply the omissions, making the
Statute purpose oriented, workable and sensible, by giving effect to
the legislative intent. This principle was firmly adopted in wide sense
by the Supreme Court in the famous case of Al-Jehad Trust v. The
Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1996 SC 324). Similar view was held
by the Supreme Court in the case of Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif
v. President of Pakistan (PLD 1993 SC 473).
14.
In view of the principles, discussed above, and after
reading the provision of S.23 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1991 and
the entire scheme of the law, we entertain no amount of doubt that
the word, “purchase” which is mentioned in the similar provision of
the NWFP Pre-emption Act, 1987, has been omitted from the said
provision of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, due to mistake, albeit
inadvertently on the part of the drafter and while following the above
construction and interpretation of Statute on the above principles on
CA 1208/11
8
the controversy in issue, it is felt fully justified to supply the omission,
rendering the said provision of law meaningful, workable and sensible,
so to give effect to the intent of the Legislature.
15.
Accordingly, the word “purchase” must be read in the
provision of S.23 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act and in the head-notes
appended to it.
16.
As a result of above conclusion and findings, this appeal is
found devoid of all legal merits. Hence the same is dismissed. The
impugned judgment of the High Court is upheld.
Note: Before concluding this judgment we
deem it appropriate that copy of this judgment
be sent to the Law and Parliamentary Affairs
Department/Ministry, Government of Punjab
with the recommendation to bring necessary
amendments in the provision of S.23 of the
Punjab Pre-emption Act, by adding the word,
‘purchase’ so to avoid future unnecessary
litigation in this regard. Early action on the
part of the government of Punjab would be
appreciated.
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
15th December, 2015
Nisar /-‘
Approved For Reporting
| {
"id": "C.A.1208_2011.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT: Mr. Justice Mian Saqib Nisar
Mr. Justice Amir Hani Muslim
Mr. Justice Iqbal Hameedur Rahman
Civil Appeals No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
(On appeal against the judgment dated 28.05.2014
passed by the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar,
in W. Ps. No. 3857 & 4423/2010)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secretary,
Peshawar, etc.
(in both cases)
Appellant(s)
Versus
Hayat Hussain, etc.
(in C. A. 1213/2015)
Abdul Basir, etc.
(in C. A. 1214/2015)
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
(in both cases):
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG.
For the Respondent(s):
In-person.
Date of Hearing:
25.02.2016.
JUDGMENT
Iqbal Hameedur Rahman, J: - Through this single judgment, we
intend to decide the listed appeals. The instant appeals are directed against
the judgment dated 28.05.2014 passed by the Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar, in W. Ps. No. 3857 & 4423/2010 whereby the said petitions filed
by the respondents have been accepted.
2.
Through the above mentioned writ petitions, the respondents had
sought a declaration that orders dated 18.08.2010, 09.09.2010 &
04.10.2010 be declared as illegal, unconstitutional, without lawful
authority, ultra vires to their rights and based on malafides and also sought
that a direction be given to the appellants to proceed with the process as per
the advertisement dated 20.07.2010. The precise facts are that the
appellants requisitioned 53 posts in BPS-17 in the Provincial Management
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
2
Service (PMS). The said requisition was forwarded to the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Public Service Commission (hereinafter to be referred as “the
Commission”), who thereafter advertised the said posts on 20.07.2010.
Pursuant to the advertisement, the respondents, Hayat Hussain,
Superintendent, KPK Public Service Commission, Peshawar, and Abdul
Basir, Office Assistant, Board of Revenue, KPK Peshawar, applied under
10% reserved quota for ministerial staff as per the Provincial Management
Service Rules. Later on vide order dated 18.08.2010 it was conveyed by the
KPK Establishment Department to the Secretary of the Commission that
the matter with regard to 10% reserved quota in PMS (BPS-17) had been
examined by the KPK Establishment Department and it is clarified that the
same is meant only for ministerial staff serving in the Administrative
Departments of KPK Civil Secretariat excluding the employees of attached
departments/subordinate offices. The said letter was followed by another
letter dated 09.09.2010 wherein it was intimated to the Commission that
requisition of 53 posts of PMS officers (under 10th in-service quota) is
withdrawn by issuing notification dated 04.10.2010 through which Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Management Service Rules, 2007 (hereinafter to
be referred as “the Rules”) have been amended and 10% reserved quota had
been restricted to persons holding substantive posts of Superintendents,
Private
Secretaries,
Personal
Assistants,
Assistant
Senior
Scale
Stenographers, Stenographers, Data Entry Operators, Computer Operator,
Senior and Junior Clerks borne on the cadres strength of Secretariat who
possess post graduate qualification from a recognized University with at-
least five years service as such. The said orders and notification gave rise to
a grievance to the respondents, who being employees of attached
departments and who have been excluded from 10% reserved quota as
previsouly provided in the Rules as such they had challenged the said
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
3
orders and notification before the High Court by filing writ petitions
contending therein that discriminatory treatment is being given to the them
in violation of Article 25 of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of
Pakistan, 1973, as they were performing the same functions as that of
Secretariat employees as such they cannot be excluded because they
fulfilled the qualification and experience. The High Court took their
contentions into consideration and vide impugned judgment held that they
being similarly placed persons have been treated differently as such it
constituted a sheer discrimination and further held that it was not a case
where rules have been challenged by a person in service rather it was a case
where blessings have been given to a class of employees by depriving
others through special amendment introduced in the Rules in the garb of
interpretation and misinterpretation of rules, which smacks of malafide on
the part of the appellants and accordingly struck down the notification
dated 04.10.2010 and restored earlier rules framed in the original form as
per rule-3 of Schedule-I of the Rules, which entitled the respondent to
compete on 10% reserved quota on the basis of competitive examination to
be conducted by the Commission from amongst the persons holding
substantive posts of Superintendents, Private Secretaries, Personal
Assistants, Assistant Senior Scale Stenographers, Stenographers, Data
Entry Operators, Computer Operator, Senior and Junior Clerks who possess
post graduate qualification from a recognized University with at least five
years service under the Government. Being aggrieved, the appellants
approached this Court by filing Civil Petitions No. 442-P & 443-P/2014
wherein leave was granted vide order dated 20.11.2015, the relevant portion
therefrom is reproduced herein below: -
“
The learned Additional Advocate General appearing on behalf of
the petitioners contended that it is well beyond the domain of jurisdiction
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
4
of the High Court under Article 199 of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan to sit in judgment over the vires of the rules or
notifications in view of the judgment rendered in the case titled I. A.
Sharwani vs. Government of Pakistan (1991 SCMR 1041) and that the
High Court could not impute mala fides to the legislature when there was
absolutely nothing on the record as could even remotely suggest that the
rules were amended to benefit one and impair the rights of the other.”
3.
It would be pertinent to reproduce here the relevant portions of the
Rules prior to amendmnet as provided in Schedule-I: -
S.
No.
Nomencl
ature of
posts
Minimum
qualificatio
n for
appointmen
t by initial
recruitment
Age
limi
t for
initi
al
recr
uitm
ent
Method of recruitment
1
2
3
4
5
1
PMS
(BS-17)
as per
detail at
Schedule
-II
2nd Division
Bachelor
Degree
from a
recognized
University.
21-
30
year
1)
Fifty per cent by initial recruitment on the
recommendations of the Commission based on the
result of competitive examination to be conducted by it
in accordance with the provisions contained in
3Schecule-VII.
2)
Subject to rule7, by promotion in the following
manner:
(a)
twenty percent from amongst
Tehsildars, who are graduates, on
the basis of seniority-cum-fitness,
having five years service as
Tehsildar and have passed the
prescribed Departmental
Examination; and
(b)
twenty percent from amongst the
Superintendents/Private Secretaries
on seniority-cum-fitness basis, who
are graduate and have undergone a
training course of 9-weeks at the
Provincial Management
Academy/Provincial Staff Training
Institute. A joint seniority list of
the Superintendents and Private
Secretaries shall be maintained for
the purpose of promotion on the
basis of their continuous regular
appointment
to
the
respective
posts.
3)
Ten percent by selection on merit, on the basis of
competitive examination, to be conducted by the
Commission in accordance with the provisions
contained in 4Schedule-VII, from amongst persons
holding substantive posts of Superintendents, Private
Secretaries, Personal Assistants, Assistant Senior Scale
Stenographers, Stenographers, Data Entry Operators,
Computer Operator, Senior and Junior Clerks who
possess post graduate qualification from a recognized
University with at least five years service under the
Government.
That according to the original Rules, 10% of selection on merit on the basis
of competitive examination was to be made from amongst the persons
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
5
holding substantive posts of Superintendents, Private Secretaries, Personal
Assistants, Assistant Senior Scale Stenographers, Stenographers, Data
Entry Operators, Computer Operator, Senior and Junior Clerks who possess
post graduate qualification from a recognized University with at least five
years service under the Government. From the perusal of the same it is
apparent that the same had not been restricted only to Secretariat
employees. The Rules have been amended through notification dated
04.10.2010, which reads as under: -
“
GOVERNMENT OF KHYBER PAKHTUNKHWA
ESTABLISHMENT DEPARTMENT
Date Peshawar, the 04.10.2010
NOTIFICATION
No. SOE-II(ED) 2(14)/2009:
In exercise of the powers conferred by
Section 25 of the North-West Frontier Province Civil Servants Act, 1973,
(NWFP Act No. XVIII OF 1973), the Chief Minister of the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa is pleased to direct that in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Provincial Management Service Rules 2007, the following further
amendments shall be made, namely:
AMENDMENT
In Schedule I, against Serial No. 1 in Column No. 5 for Clause
(3) the following shall be submitted, namely:
(3)
Ten per cent by Selection on merit, on the basis of competitive
examination to be conducted by the Commission in accordance
with the provisions contained in Schedule VII, from amongst the
persons holding substantive posts of Superintendents, Private
Secretaries,
Personal
Assistants,
Assistant
Senior
Scale
Stenographers, Stenographers, Data Entry Operators, Computer
Operator, Senior and Junior Clerks who possess post graduate
qualification from a recognized University with at-least five
years service as such.
CHIEF SECRETARY
KHYBER PAKHTUNKHWA”
By virtue of the above mentioned amendment, the respondents being
employees of attached departments have been excluded to be eligible for
10% quota selection on the basis of competitive examination.
5.
The learned Additional Advocate General for the appellants argued
that the said amendment had been made in order to clarify that
appointments to the posts of PMS (BPS-17) in 10% quota was meant only
for the ministerial staff of the Secretariat so as to encourage talented lower
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
6
staff. Moreover, the respondents could still compete in open merit as such
there was no discrimination. He further argued that the appellants were duly
competent to amend the Rules and the Rules were amended strictly in
accordance with law.
6.
On the other hand, the respondents appearing in-person submitted
that through the amendment they were deprived of their right. They further
submitted that the Secretariat employees are already covered under
Schedule-I subsection 2)(b) for promotion as such the 10% quota actually
meant for other attached departments.
7.
In the facts and circumstances of the case and in the light of the
arguments advanced by the learned Additional Advocate General as well as
the respondents in-person, it is to be considered whether amendment in the
Rules could be effected by the Government regarding restricting the
reservation of 10% quota only for ministerial staff of Civil Secretariat KPK
and whether it is justifiable, secondly, whether amendment was malafidely
made in order to exclude and deprive the respondents from future prospects
of their promotion moreso when they are performing the same functions
and duties as such whether it is a discrimination and do the respondents
have a vested right to challenge the same. In the above perspective, whether
the High Court has the jurisdiction in the matter to strike down rules
relating to Civil Servants regarding their appointment and promotions and
amendments made therein. The stance of the appellants is that amendment
in the relevant provisions of the Rules was quite justified as the employees
of attached departments get sufficient chances of promotion in their cadres
against the quota reserved specifically for them under their respective
service rules, whereas the employees of Civil Secretariat cannot appear in
those examinations, for instance the Sub Accountants in the District
Accounts Offices accorded promotion after qualifying SAS examination.
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
7
Similarly, the Junior Instructors (BS-14) of Technical Education
Department with diploma of Engineering i.e., equal to FA/F.Sc are
promoted to BS-17 within 5 to 10 years period. Likewise, Sub-Engineers
(BS-11) of C&W, PHE and Irrigation Department having B.A. degree are
considered or accelerated promotion to the post of Assistant Engineer (BS-
17) after qualifying the departmental exam prescribed under their respective
service rules, as such the respondents are entitled to get further promotion
to the post of PMS BS-17 in their own service cadre. Further justification
given by the appellants was that the ministerial staff of Civil Secretariat is
transferable in different departments of Civil Secretariat which make them
well acquainted with the nature of job of PMS Officers. Whereas, the
employees of other departments/cadre are experts in their own field and
their job profile is quite different from that of PMS Officers. Thus reserving
10% quota for ministerial staff of Civil Secretariat is justified as these posts
cannot be used as learning place for others.
8.
It is a settled proposition of law that the Government is entitled to
make rules in the interest of expediency of service and to remove anomalies
in Service Rules. It is the Service Rules Committee which has to determine
the eligibility criteria of promotion and it is essentially an administrative
matter falling within the exclusive domain and policy decision making of
the Government and the interference with such matters by the Courts is not
warranted and that no vested right of a Government employee is involved
in the matter of promotion or the rules determining their eligibility or
fitness, and the High Court has no jurisdiction by means of writ to strike it
down as held by this Court in the case of The Central Board of Revenue,
Government of Pakistan vs. Asad Ahmad Khan (PLD 1960 SC 81), the
relevant portion therefrom is reproduced herein below: -
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
8
“
In our opinion the High Court made the above order without
taking into consideration all the factors relevant to the case, namely, in
the first place the taking out of the post of Deputy Superintendent of the
category of class III, to which the petitioners belong amounted to
abolition of the post and its upgrading on a higher scale of pay to a
creation of the new post; appointment to which required a stricter test of
efficiency by a competitive examination. Besides, all the Inspectors were
given the right to sit in the examination for any number of times to
qualify themselves for promotion. At the same time the pay scale of
those, who could not succeed, was raised to the limit of Rs. 350, namely,
the same pay as that of a Deputy Superintendent when it was a class III
post. In the circumstances it cannot be said that any rights of the
petitioners were infringed, which they could enforce by a writ petition.
The Government has every right to make rules to raise the efficiency of
the services, and if no vested right is denied to a party, the High Court
had no jurisdiction to interfere by means of a writ.” (emphasis supplied)
As far as the contention of the respondents that the rules could not be
changed to affect them adversely is concerned, the said proposition has also
been settled by this Court in the case of Muhammad Umar Malik and
others vs. Federal Service Tribunal and others (PLD 1987 SC 172),
wherein the proposition that the rules of promotion could not have been
changed so as to affect adversely those already on the eligibility list i.e.,
combined list of U.D.Cs and S.G.Cs, was repelled by observing that, “No
such vested right in promotion or rules determining eligibility for
promotion exists”, and held as under: -
“
Mr. Abid Hasan Minto, Advocate, when called upon to address
arguments on merits, urged that the rules of promotion should not have
been changed so as to affect adversely those already on the eligibilities
list i. e. the combined list of the U.D.Cs. and S.G.Cs. In other words he
was claiming a vested right in promotion for all the U.D.Cs. borne on the
joint cadre on the date of its separation. The position of law on the
subject is clear in view of numerous decisions of this Court, e.g.
Government of West Pakistan v. Fida Muhammad Khan (1) Central
Board of Revenue, Government of Pakistan v. Asad Ahmad Khan (2),
Province of West Pakistan v. Muhammad Akhtar (3), Manzur Ahmad v.
Muhammad Ishaq (4). No such vested right in promotion or rules
determining eligibility for promotion exists.”
C. As. No. 1213 & 1214/2015.
9
9.
In the facts and circumstances of the case and in the light of the case
law cited above, it is quite apparent that the advertisement earlier made had
subsequently been withdrawn and thereafter an amendment was made in
the Rules and as yet the respondents have not appeared either in the
examination or in any interview or selection, therefore, there appears to be
no vested right created in their favour, and accordingly any change made in
the Rules cannot furnish a cause to the respondents. Moreover, the
amendment was made in the Rules in order to clarify certain anomalies,
which had duly been taken care of, as such no malafide can be attributed to
the Government and as per the settled principle the determination of
eligibility of the respondents through amendment fully falls within the
domain and policy decision of the Government which does not warrant
interference by the Courts. Resultantly, these appeals are allowed and the
impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside.
Judge
Judge
Judge
ISLAMABAD
25.02.2016
(Farrukh)
Approved for Reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.1213_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE SARDAR TARIQ MASOOD
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1219 OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 19.9.2014
passed by the Election Tribunal-II, Quetta in
Election Petition No. 178/2013)
Khalid Hussain Magsi
… Appellant
VERSUS
Mir Abdul Rahim Rind and others
… Respondents
For the Appellant:
Kh. Saeed-uz-Zafar, ASC
Mr. Muhammad Dawood Kasi, ASC
For the Respondent (1): Syed Iftikhar Hussain Gillani, Sr. ASC
Date of Hearing:
03.02.2016
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- In the General Elections that were held on
11.5.2013, the appellant and respondent No. 1 were the main
contesting candidates from National Assembly seat NA-267 Kachi-
cum-Jhal
Magsi.
For
1,47,595
registered
voters
of
this
constituency, the Election Commission setup 165 polling stations.
In all 90728 votes were polled out of which 2448 were rejected for
one reason or the other, leaving the tally of valid votes to 88280.
The appellant bagged 42240 votes (48%) and the respondent No. 1
bagged 38915 votes (44%). Between them they both bagged 92% of
the total valid votes that were cast in the constituency. Leading
with a margin of 3325 votes the appellant was declared returned
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
2
candidate. The respondent No. 1 was not satisfied with the result.
He alleged rigging on the part of the appellant and filed an election
petition before the Election Tribunal, Quetta. The challenge was
mainly based on two grounds i.e. (i) at the behest of the appellant,
the District Returning Officer and Returning Officer were changed
without prior notice to any of the contesting candidates and (ii)
polling agents of respondent No1 were detained for the entire
duration of the polling time which facilitated the appellant to cast
bogus votes on 40 polling stations.
2.
During
pendency
of
the
election
petition,
the
respondent No.1 filed an application before the Election Tribunal
seeking verification of thumb impressions of the voters of 40
disputed polling stations through biometric system of NADRA. This
application was granted. Record reflects that the counterfoils and
the ballot papers of 39 polling stations were dispatched to NADRA
for verification. NADRA then submitted its report. In the report, it
was stated that out of 30,649 votes that were cast on 39 disputed
polling stations, there were no CNIC numbers on 2143
counterfoils; 40 votes were not even registered in the constituency;
783 votes were found to be issued more than once; counterfoils of
151 votes did not have fingerprints on them and fingerprints on
4438 counterfoils could not be authenticated through biometric
system. Hence, doubt was cast on 7555 votes by NADRA that were
polled on 39 disputed polling stations. The Election Tribunal after
recording evidence and hearing both the parties, allowed the
election petition and ordered fresh election in the constituency.
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
3
Aggrieved by this decision, the appellant has filed the present
appeal.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant raised preliminary
objection to the maintainability of respondent No.1’s election
petition before the Election Tribunal on the ground that the same
was not verified on oath before the oath commissioner as required
under Section 63 of the Representation of the Peoples Act, 1976.
He relied upon judgments rendered in the cases of S.M.Ayub Vs.
Yusuf Shah (PLD 1967 Supreme Court 486), Iqbal Zafar Jhagra Vs.
Khalilur Rehman (2000 SCMR 250) and Ghazanfar Abbas Shah
Vs. Mehr Khalid Mehmood Sargana (2015 SCMR 1585). Learned
counsel for the appellant elaborated his argument on the
preliminary objection by stating that election petition was signed
on 2.7.2013 whereas the verification stamp of the oath
commissioner is dated 3.7.2013, which clearly shows that the oath
was not administered to the respondent before the oath
commissioner. On merits, learned counsel for the appellant argued
that the allegation against the appellant was that his two brothers
detained the polling agents of the respondent No. 1 from going to
their respective polling stations, which was practically not possible
as two persons cannot prevent 40 polling agents from going to
their respective polling stations of the constituency which was
spread over about 200 kilometres. He also argued that the doubt
cast by the NADRA on the validity of about 7555 votes does not
mean that these votes were cast in favour of the appellant or that it
was the appellant who indulged in any kind of rigging.
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
4
4.
In response to the maintainability of election petition,
the learned counsel for the respondent No. 1 argued that many a
times date is printed on the petition but the same is presented for
verification on oath on any subsequent date, therefore, the
difference of one day between the printed date and the date on
which the petition was actually verified on oath does not mean that
no oath was administered to the respondent by the oath
commissioner. He contended that the words ‘sworn before me’
superimposed on the last page of the memo of election petition
sufficiently demonstrate that the petition was duly verified. He
further contended that not only this but a separate affidavit of
service was also sworn by the respondent on oath, which was
appended to the election petition and this also clearly establishes
that all the requirements of law with regard to the verification of
election petition were fulfilled.
5.
With regard to the preliminary objection, all that we
have to see is whether the memo of petition do reflect that the
same was verified on oath and this is duly confirmed from the
endorsement of the oath commissioner. The memo of petition
clearly reflects the date of verification in the handwriting of the
oath commissioner and also contains his stamp ‘sworn before me’.
Hence, the election petition is to be taken as duly verified on oath.
6.
As to the merits of the allegation, no doubt that
nothing has come on record to establish that respondent No. 1’s
polling agents were physically prevented from going to the polling
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
5
stations. However, we have scrutinized the data of Form XVI which
is a consolidated statement of the results of the vote-count of the
entire constituency. From the consolidated statement it is apparent
that on 54 polling stations, where one of the two contesting
candidate had obtained no vote at all, the other contesting
candidate had obtained almost all votes that were polled. It would
be of considerable advantage to reproduce the data of the above
referred 54 polling stations with the percentiles of votes that were
cast in favour of each of the two main contesting candidates and
then analyze the same.
Result of 21 out of above referred 54 polling stations where
appellant obtained zero votes:
S. No.
Polling station
Appellant’s
Votes
Respt No1
Votes
Total
of
valid
votes cast
Percentage of
rspdt No. 1’s
Votes
1
Dispensary Rind Ali Balina (Female) (P)
0
242
277
87.3%
2
Girls M/s Challgari (Female) (P)
0
415
443
93.7%
3
Haft Wali Balina (Combined) (P)
0
319
321
99%
4
P/S Kot Misri (Combined) (P)
0
1034
1034
100%
5
P/s Siah Pad (Combined) (P)
0
1056
1057
99.9%
6
P/S Sarkandhar (Combined) (P)
0
2399
2400
99.9%
7
Dispensary Shoran (Male) (P)
0
799
799
100%
8
Girls P/S Shoran (Female) (P)
0
469
469
100%
9
P/S Chalwani (Combined) (P)
0
623
623
100%
10
Boys H/S Shoran (High Section (Combined) (P)
0
1497
1497
100%
11
Boys H/S Shoran (High Section (Combined) (P)
0
1140
1140
100%
12
M/S Muan Shoran (Combined) (P)
0
1290
1292
99.9%
13
Boys P/S Azadi (Combined) (P)
0
1000
1000
100%
14
P/S Esbani (Female) (P)
0
567
650
87.2%
15
Improvised Eisbani (Male) (T)
0
900
900
100%
16
P/S Eri Tunia (Combined) (P)
0
2143
2145
99.9%
17
P/S Tendo Gulab (Combined) (P)
0
1237
1240
99.8%
18
P/S Godri (Combined) (P)
0
1033
1037
99.6%
19
P/S Arzi (Combined) (P)
0
2540
2540
100%
20
P/S Jhok Shahbaz (Combined) (P)
0
1505
1505
100%
21
P/S Siyanch (Combined) (P)
0
749
749
100%
Total votes
23118
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
6
Result of 33 out of above referred 54 polling stations where
respondent No.1 obtained zero votes:
S. No.
Polling station
Appellant’s
Votes
Respondt
No.1’s
Votes
Total
valid
votes cast
Percentage
of
votes
secured by
rspdt No. 1
1
P/S Mehr Ghar (Combined)
225
0
228
98.7%
2
Girls H/S Mithri (Female) (P)
898
0
899
99.89%
3
Boys H/S Jhall Magsi (Male) (P)
1340
0
1340
100%
4
Girls H/S Jhall Magsi (Female) (P)
1261
0
1261
100%
5
Boys M/S Jhall Magsi (Combined) (P)
1483
0
1498
99%
6
Boys H/S Sarghani (Male) (P)
702
0
702
100%
7
Basic Health Unit Sargani (Female) (P)
698
0
698
100%
8
Boys M/S Kabbar (Combined) (P)
747
0
756
98.8%
9
Govt
P/S
Kochho
(Ghulam
Rasool
Burghrani) (Combined) (P)
494
0
496
99.9%
10
P/S Khas Kheli (Combined) (P)
960
0
960
100%
11
Boys M/S Khichi Jadeed (Combined) (P)
740
0
740
100%
12
Boys P/S Amir Abad (Combined) (P)
724
0
724
100%
13
Boys M/S Band Mehmood (Combined) (P)
427
0
427
100%
14
Boys M/S Shahmir Khan (Combined) (P)
733
0
735
99.7%
15
Boys H/S Sakhani (Combined) (P)
1177
0
1177
100%
16
Boys H/S Kot Magi (Combined) (P)
1104
0
1104
100%
17
Boys H/S Chokhi (Combined) (P)
837
0
837
100%
18
Boys M/S Panjuk (Combined) (P)
1007
0
1008
99.9%
19
Boys M/S Khan Pur (Combined) (P)
315
0
315
100%
20
Boys P/S Bet Siddique (Combined) (T)
625
0
625
100%
21
Boys M/S Safrani (Combined) (P)
878
0
883
99.4%
22
Boys
P/S
Mat
Kaloo
Goth
Shafi
Mohammad (Combined) (T)
559
0
559
100%
23
Boys M/S Hathyari (Combined) (P)
1428
0
1430
99.9%
24
Boys M/S Matt Sindhurr (Combined) (P)
1038
0
1044
99.4%
25
Boys H/S Barjia (Combined) (P)
1161
0
1163
99.8%
26
Girls P/S Barjia (Combined) (P)
800
0
801
99.9%
27
Boys H/S Shambani (Combined) (P)
933
0
933
100%
28
Boys P/S Kohna Shadiharr (Combined) (P)
592
0
597
99.1%
29
Boys P/S Korjia (Combined) (T)
781
0
781
100%
30
Boys P/S Saif Abad (Male) (P)
1156
0
1156
100%
31
Civil Dispensary Saif Abad (Female) (P)
500
0
500
100%
32
Boys M/S Dhorri (Combined) (P)
840
0
840
100%
33
Boys M/S Mitho (Combined) (P)
589
0
589
100%
Total votes 27806
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
7
7.
From the above two tables containing vote count of 54
polling stations, it is surprising to note that on 21 polling stations
where the appellant obtained not a single vote, the respondent
No.1 bagged 98.4% of the total votes that were cast. Similarly, on
the remaining 33 polling stations where respondent No. 1 obtained
not a single vote, the appellant bagged 99.8% of the total votes
cast. It is also surprising to note that in the above discussed 54
polling stations, in all 50,922 votes were polled, the average of vote
count comes to 943 votes per polling station whereas in the rest of
111 polling stations, where the remaining 37,358 votes were
polled, this average stands at only 337 votes per polling station.
The first question that comes to our mind is why on the above
referred 54 polling stations where one contesting candidate had
not even bagged a single vote, the percentage of polled votes in
fovour of the other is phenomenal i.e. around 99%. The other
question that arises is why on these 54 polling stations the turnout
was almost triple in comparison to turnout on the rest of 111
polling stations i.e. the percentage of turnout on the above
mentioned 54 polling stations was 96% whereas turnout in the
remaining 111 polling stations stood around 40% only. These
unimaginable differences in the voting pattern on 54 polling
stations as against the remaining 111 polling stations cannot be a
simple case of mere coincidence, given the fact that both the
contesting candidates were not candidates with marginal following.
They were politically popular figures of the constituency as 92% of
the total votes that were polled went to both of them only. When
the issue is analysed from this perspective, the preponderance of
Civil Appeal No. 1219/2014
8
probabilities leads us to believe that both the candidates must
have exerted their respective political clout in their respective areas
of influence in order to bag maximum number of votes.
8.
The analysis of above referred data, gathered from
Form XVI, overshadows the submissions of the counsel of both the
parties which they had advanced in favour of their respective
clients as the polling data speaks louder than the words. This
analysis of Form XVI coupled with the findings of NADRA in its
report, where 7555 votes have been made doubtful as against
returned candidate’s winning margin of only 3325 votes, confirms
the prevalence of illegal practice at the election. We are, therefore,
satisfied that the election to the National Assembly seat NA-267
Kachi-cum-Jhal Magsi was not conducted in fair manner and is
liable to be declared as a whole void in terms of Section 70(b) of the
Representation of the Peoples Act, 1976. This appeal fails and is
hereby dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
Announced on ______________
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1219_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Mr. Justice Yahya Afridi
CIVIL APPEALs NOs.1219 TO 1222 OF 2015
(On appeal from the judgment/order dated 30.07.2015 passed
by Federal Service Tribunal, Islamabad in Appeal No.460(R)CS to
461(R)CS of 2013)
&
CIVIL APPEALs NOs.248 TO 251 OF 2018
Chairman, Federal Board of Revenue,
Islamabad
… Appellant
(CAs.1219 -1220 of 2015
& C.As.248-251 of 2018)
Muhammad Mohsin Rafiq & others
… Appellants
(CAs.1221&1222 of 2015)
Versus
Mrs. Naureen Ahmed Tarar and others
… Respondents
(in CA.1219 & 1221/2015)
Mrs. Ambreen Ahmed Tarar, etc.
… Respondents
(in CA.1220 & 1222/2015)
Muhammad Junaid Jalil and others
… Respondents
(in CA.248/2018)
Syed Shakeel Shah & others
… Respondents
(in CA.249/2018)
Dr. Iftikhar Ahmed & others
… Respondents
(in CA.250/2018)
Muhammad Saleem & others
… Respondents
(in CA.251/2018)
For the appellants
(CAs.1219 -1220 of 2015 &
C.As.248-251 of 2018)
: Hafiz S.A.Rehman, Sr. ASC.
For the appellants
(CAs.1221 -1222 of 2015)
: Mr. Mahmood Ahmed Qazi, ASC.
Respondent No.1
(CA.1219 & 1221 of 2015)
: In-person.
For respondents (20-21)
(CA.1219-1220 of 2015)
: Ch. Abdul Sattar, ASC.
Respondents (No.3, 5, 7,
13, 17-19, 22, 23)
(CA.1219-1220 of 2015)
: Ex-parte
CA.1219/2015, etc.
2
For Respondent No.1
(CA.1220 &1222 of 2015)
: Rana Asif Saeed, ASC.
For Respondents (No.2, 4,
6, 8-12, 14-16)
(CAs.1219-1220 of 2015)
: Mr. Mehmood Ahmed Qazi, ASC.
For respondents (11&12)
(CA.1221 of 2015)
: Ch. Abdul Sattar, ASC.
Respondents (No.2-10, 13)
(CA.1221 of 2015)
: Ex-parte
For respondents (10&11)
(CA.1222 of 2015)
: Ch. Abdul Sattar, ASC.
Respondents (No.2-9 &
12-14) (CA.1222 of 2015)
: Ex-parte
For Respondent No.1
(CA.248-251 of 2018)
: Mr. M. Shoaib Shaheen, ASC.
For Respondents (7-8)
(CA.248-250 of 2018)
: Kh. M. Farooq, Sr. ASC.
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR.
For Respondents (5-6)
(CA.251 of 2015)
: Kh. M. Farooq, Sr. ASC.
Syed Rif aqat Hussain Shah, AOR.
Date of hearing
: 20.02.2019.
O R D E R
UMAR ATA BANDIAL, J. C.M.As. NOs.1560 & 1562
OF 2019. These Misc. Applications for setting aside ex-parte order
dated 10.12.2012 passed against the respondents mentioned
therein are allowed. The respondents may join these proceedings
subject to all just and legal exceptions.
2.
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1219 TO 1222 OF 2015. Leave
was granted in these appeals vide order dated 23.11.2015 in the
following terms:
“We have read the relevant rules. The question
whether determination of seniority could in any way
be linked with the passing of exams in first, second
and third attempt or it is their qualification
CA.1219/2015, etc.
3
simpliciter, which matters in this behalf. The points
raised require consideration. We, therefore, grant
leave in these cases.”
3.
The dispute between the parties concerns the seniority
of probationers qualifying in the 25th Common Group who have
been placed in the Customs & Excise Group. Their terms and
conditions of service as probationers is laid down in Section 6 of
the Civil Servants Act, 1973 (“Act”). Section 25 of the Act
empowers the competent authority to frame rules for carrying out
the purposes of the Act. The Occupational Groups and Services
(Probation, Training and Seniority) Rules, 1990 (1990 Rules) were
framed by the competent authority, inter alia, for regulating the
fixation of the seniority among probationers after their Final
Passing Out Examination (“FPOE”). At the time when the initial
appointment of the members of 25th Common Group was notified
on 11.07.1998, the 1990 Rules as originally framed were still in
vogue. However, during the period of probation of the 25th
Common Group commencing in July, 1998 and ending on
13.08.2003, these rules underwent amendment on 28.04.2001. A
substantial change in the method of reckoning seniority was
introduced by the amendment. This was done by including the
number of attempts availed by a probationer to clear the three
specialized training examinations as one of the criteria for
determining seniority. The relevant amendment was made in sub-
Rule (2) of Rule 6 of the 1990 Rules which is reproduced below:
(2)
A probationer who does not qualify in the Final
Passing Out Examination shall:
(a)
lose his one increment if he fails in the first
attempt.
CA.1219/2015, etc.
4
(b)
be relegated in seniority to the bottom of his
batch if he fails in the second attempt; and
(c)
be discharged from the service under clause
(a) of sub-section (2) of section 6 of the Civil
Servant Act, 1973, if he fails in the third
attempt.”
4.
Prior thereto the seniority of the probationers at the
end of successful passing of their training examinations was
provided in Rule 7(4):
7.
Seniority.
…
(4)
For the purpose of determining the inter-se
seniority
of
the
probationers
who
commence
their
training
with
initial
training programme the marks obtained by
a
probationer
in
the
competitive
examination of the Commission or his
notional marks, as the case may be, shall
be added to the marks obtained by him in
the initial training programme, specialized
training
programme
and
the
marks
obtained by qualifying the Final Passing
Out Examination in his first attempt.
5.
The additional criterion of the number of attempts
availed by a probationer for fixing his seniority in the batch was
implemented in the present case by the provisional seniority list
issued on 03.06.2008. The same criteria were adopted again for
arriving at the final seniority list issued on 21.12.2012 by the
appellant-department. These seniority lists were challenged by
respondent No.1 in appeals before the departmental authority and
thereafter before the learned Service Tribunal. The Tribunal held in
favour of the respondents on the ground that the amendment in
the Rules had been applied retrospectively. More particularly, the
private respondents in the present lis are all members of the
CA.1219/2015, etc.
5
Customs & Excise Group from the 25th Common. They were
promoted to BS-18 by FBR on regular basis vide notification dated
13.08.2003. Therefore, it is contented that the 1990 Rules which
deal with probationers had ceased to apply to them. Consequently,
the two seniority notifications referred to above had been wrongly
framed. It may be pointed out that the promotion notification dated
13.08.2003 was based solely on the result of the first CSS exam
notified by Federal Public Service Commission and made no
reference to the results secured by the probationers in the
subsequent examinations held during their probationary training
to assess their merit and capability.
6.
Before us, the only dispute is whether the amendment
made on 28.04.2001 in the 1990 Rules (“2001 amendment”)
reproduced above applies to the present case or not? The
respondent No.1, who has addressed the Court in-person,
however, went further to claim that the 1990 Rules should not be
applied to determine inter se seniority of the batch mates. Instead
the result of the CSS examination should be treated as the basis of
seniority of the probationers as already done by notification dated
13.08.2003 pursuant to which the batch as a whole was promoted
to BS-18.
7.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties.
Just to give an idea of the several anomalies that are apparent in
the final seniority list dated 21.12.2012, a copy thereof is placed
herein below:
CA.1219/2015, etc.
6
Perusal of the above list reveals that respondent No.1 is at Sr.
No.18 thereof. She secured a total of 1748.35 marks in the (CSS,
CTP, STP and FPOE) competitive examinations that were held. On
the strength of her total marks she ought to be at Sr. No.10 of the
list, next after Muhammad Jamil Nasir, who secured a total of
1751.63 marks. However, on account of the weightage attached to
the number of examination attempts by the 2001 amendment, the
respondent No.1 was relegated to Sr. No.18 because she passed
her
FPOE
in
the
second
attempt.
Another
respondent,
Mrs.Ambreen Tarar, stands at Sr. No.23 of the list having secured
a total of 1744.1 marks, but is placed below Mr. Khaleel Ibrahim
Yousfani, who secured a total of 1629.1 marks. If the seniority
CA.1219/2015, etc.
7
position was to be based purely on the number of total marks,
then Mrs. Ambreen Tarar would have ranked at Sr. No.11 just
below Mrs. Naureen Ahmad Tarar. However, she is at Sr. No.23
because she passed the FPOE in her 3rd attempt.
8.
The learned Service Tribunal has also commented
upon the disproportionate weightage given to the number of
attempts resulting in a substantial change in the final seniority
position of the probationers. However, we are of the considered
view that the present matter may be decided on a fair basis solely
by considering the legal aspects and implications of the
probationary period of the private respondents that started on
11.07.1998 and concluded on 13.08.2003. The 2001 amendment
whereby the number of attempts was made a criterion of seniority
was promulgated on 28.04.2001 during the term of the
probationary period of the private respondents. As a result of the
2001 amendment the seniority position of the private respondents
is claimed to have been affected adversely. Seniority in service is a
valuable right and the private respondents in the present lis had a
legitimate expectancy that the probationary service law prevalent
at the time when they entered their probation shall remain in force
until their confirmation. The principle of legitimate expectancy
aims at enforcing fairness and preventing arbitrariness. It was
cogently articulated by the UK House of Lords in the case of
Council of Civil Service Unions and others vs. Minister for
the Civil Service [1984] 3 All ER 935 wherein it was held that:
“To qualify as a subject for judicial review the
decision must have consequences which affect some
person … either (a) by altering rights or obligations of
CA.1219/2015, etc.
8
that person which are enforceable by or against him
in private law or (b) by depriving him of some benefit
or advantage which either (i) he has in the past been
permitted by the decision-maker to enjoy and which
he can legitimately expect to be permitted to
continue to do until there has been given an
opportunity to comment or … advancing reasons for
contending that they should not be withdrawn.”
9.
This
rule
of
fairness
and
non-arbitrariness
is
recognised in our jurisprudence to mean that an advantage or
benefit derived from a competent legal dispensation, departmental
practice or established procedure that has been extended to and
enjoyed by a person may legitimately be expected to remain
available unless notice or opportunity to defend or adjust his
position is given to that person. Discussion on the subject is
available in Regarding pensionary benefits of the Judges of
Superior Courts (PLD 2013 SC 29 at p.1008) and Al-Jehad Trust
vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1996 SC 324). A useful
discourse is also made in Union of India vs. Hindustan
Development Corporation (AIR 1994 SC 988).
10.
There is no doubt that the ranking of passing
probationers on the basis of the number of their attempts made to
clear the prescribed examinations imposes a penal liability through
loss of seniority. The change in law by the 2001 amendment
therefore causes adverse consequences for the probationers. These
consequences infringe the legitimate expectancy of the serving
probationers by altering the legal dispensation under which firstly,
their service rights are determined for the future and secondly, for
changing the rules under which private respondents commenced
CA.1219/2015, etc.
9
their probationary training. Though procedural in content, the
2001 amendment affected a substantive right of the probationers,
namely, their seniority in the batch and in this respect by altering
an accrued status, the said amendment had retrospective effect.
Resultantly it is burdensome to implement the 2001 amendment
upon the probationers who had already entered their probationary
period prior to the enforcement of the said amendment.
11.
There is also the additional fact that one of the
examinations envisaged in the 1990 Rules, namely, the STP, could
not be held. This failure makes the categorization of the total result
on the basis of number of examination attempts to be irrational
and
lopsided.
The
existing
circumstances
of
incomplete
examinations to test the probationers and the enforcement of the
disputed 2001 amendment to an ongoing probationary course,
have resulted in harsh and untenable consequences both in law
and fact. This in itself provides justification to exclude the 2001
amendment from application in the present case. However, it
cannot mean, as opined by the learned Tribunal, that the 1990
Rules should as a whole cease to apply to determine the inter se
seniority of probationers on the eve of their confirmation. The 1990
Rules are specially framed to deal with service terms and
conditions of probationers. Their application is necessary for
determining the rights and ranking of probationers at the time of
their confirmation. Therefore, these Rules being a special law
cannot be excluded from operation. However, on the principle of
legitimate expectation and for the fact of the failure by the
administrative authorities to complete the examination process
CA.1219/2015, etc.
10
envisaged in the 1990 Rules, it is harsh and unfair to implement
amended Rule 6 of the 2001 amendment in its totality.
12.
As a result, we hold that the 1990 Rules in their
(unamended) form as at the commencement of the probationary
period in July, 1998 shall remain applicable for reckoning the
seniority of the private respondents on the completion of their
probation in BS-17. The judgment of the learned Service Tribunal
is accordingly modified to the foregoing extent. The observations
made by the learned Service Tribunal about the workability of the
1990 Rules post the 2001 amendment are endorsed and for this
purpose, the Federal Government needs to apply its mind to
remove the salient anomalies highlighted by the learned Tribunal
that exist in the application and implementation of the said rules.
These appeals are partially allowed in above terms.
11.
CIVIL APPEALs NOs.248 OF 251 OF 2018. Since
distinct questions of law and facts, as compared to the one raised
and decided herein above, are involved in these appeals, therefore,
they are adjourned to be heard separately.
JUDGE
Islamabad,
20.02.2019.
Irshad Hussain/*
JUDGE
APPROVED FOR REPORTING.
| {
"id": "C.A.1219_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE QAZI FAEZ ISA
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1242 TO 1245 OF 2013
(On appeal from the judgment dated 26.2.2013
passed in Writ Petition Nos. 5992 of 2010, 8870
of 2010, 8873 of 2010, 4162 of 2010 and 31331
of 2012 passed by the Lahore High Court,
Lahore)
Tariq Khan Mazari
(in C.A. No. 1242/2013)
M/s Punjnad Sugar Mills Limited
(in C.A. No. 1243/2013)
Arshad Javed Ahmed
(in C.A. No. 1244/2013)
Begum Syeda Iqbal
(in C.A. No. 1245/2013)
….Appellants
Versus
1.
Government of Punjab through Secretary Industries and others
2.
Secretary Industries, Lahore
3.
Assistant Economic Advisor-III,
4.
JDW Sugar Mills Limited, Lahore.
….Respondents
(in all cases)
For the Appellants
:
Khawaja Muhammad Farooq,
(in CA.Nos. 1242 & 1244/2013)
Senior Advocate Supreme Court
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, Advocate-on-Record
For the Appellant
:
Mr. Noor Muhammad Chandia,
(in CA No. 1243/2013)
Advocate Supreme Court
Ch. Muhammad Anwar Khan,
Advocate-on-Record (absent)
For the Appellant
:
Mr. Haq Nawaz Chattha, Advocate Supreme Court
(in CA No. 1245/2013)
Mr. Faiz-ur-Rehman, Advocate-on-Record
For Respondent Nos. 1 & 3 :
Mr. Mudassar Khalid Abbasi,
Assistant Advocate General Punjab
Rao Muhammad Yousaf Khan,
Advocate-on-Record (absent)
For Respondent No.4
:
Mr. Sikandar Bashir Mohmand,
Advocate Supreme Court
Mr. Tariq Aziz, Advocate-on-Record (absent)
On Court Notice
:
Mr. Sohail Mehmood, DAG
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
2
In Attendance
:
Mr. Aitzaz Ahsan, Senior Advocate Supreme Court
:
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, Advocate Supreme Court
Dates of hearing
:
22nd & 23rd June 2016
JUDGMENT
QAZI FAEZ ISA, J.- Through a common judgment dated 26th February 2013 of the
Lahore High Court at Lahore a number of writ petitions were dismissed including
those filed by the appellants herein. This Court through the following order granted
leave to appeal against the impugned judgment:
“Leave is granted to consider the scope of the provisions of
Sections 3 and 11 of the Punjab Industries (Control on
Establishment
&
Enlargement)
Ordinance,
1963
(the
Ordinance, 1963); whether the government has any power
under the aforesaid provisions of law to impose a ban upon the
establishment/enlargement of sugar industry as has been done
by notification dated 6th December, 2006 and in this context the
application of the petitioner has been dismissed by the
Secretary, Government of Punjab, Industries Department on
24.1.2011; the correctness of the law enunciated in the
judgment reported as Madina Sugar Mills Vs. Secretary,
Ministry of Industries and others (PLD 2001 Lahore 506) and
the effect of the judgment reported as Arshad Mehmood and
others Vs. Government of Punjab through Secretary, Transport
Civil Secretariat, Lahore and others (PLD 2005 SC 193) upon
the facts of this case in relation to the Ordinance, 1963.”
It may however be clarified that The Punjab Industries (Control on
Establishment and Enlargement), Ordinance, 1963 was promulgated by the Governor
of West Pakistan on 25th January 1963 and was approved by the Provincial Assembly
of West Pakistan with amendments on 27th March 1963 and after receiving the assent
of the Governor was published in the West Pakistan Gazette (Extra Ordinary) dated
27th March 1963 at pages 1269-1272 as The Punjab Industries (Control on
Establishment and Enlargement), Act, 1963.
Notices were also issued to the Attorney General for Pakistan and the
Advocate General of Punjab under Order XXVII-A of the Code of Civil Procedure.
2.
Khawaja Muhammad Farooq, the learned senior counsel representing the
appellants in C.A. Nos. 1242 and 1244 of 2013, Mr. Noor Muhammad Chandia, the
learned senior counsel representing the appellant in C.A. No. 1243 of 2013 and Mr.
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
3
Haq Nawaz Chattha, the learned counsel representing the appellant in C.A. No.
1245/2013, have assailed the judgment of the High Court. They stated that the
appellants had challenged the Notification dated 6th December 2006 (“the impugned
Notification”) issued by the Industries Department of the Government of Punjab,
which had imposed a complete ban on the setting up of new sugar mills and enlarging
the installed capacity of existing sugar mills in the Province of Punjab. This was done
by inserting a new clause 3 in the earlier Notification dated 17th September 2002. The
learned counsel stated that though the impugned Notification was issued under section
11 read with section 3 of the Punjab Industries (Control on Establishment and
Enlargement), Act, 1963 (“the Act”) neither of these sections of the Act, or for that
matter any other section, envisaged such a ban therefore the same was ultra vires of
the Act and of no legal effect. It was next contended that an application, seeking
permission to establish or expand an industrial undertaking, should be dealt with under
section 3 of the Act and can only be rejected after first giving a person an opportunity
of showing cause against it or if the grant of the permission is prejudicial to the
national interest or it is either injurious to health or could be a source of nuisance for
the residents of the local area in which the industrial undertaking is proposed to be set
up or expanded and not by simply referring to the impugned Notification.
3.
Mr. Noor Muhammad Khan, the learned counsel for the appellant in C.A. No.
1243 of 2013, added to the above contentions by stating that his client had placed
reliance upon the Notification dated 15th July 2005, which had permitted the
establishment of new sugar mills up to a capacity of 16,000 TCD (tons crushing per
day), consequently, the appellant-company was set up to establish a sugar mill with a
capacity of 8,000 TCD and it had purchased 255 kanals of land, had applied to a
financial institution for provision of finances, and made payment of an amount of two
hundred thousand rupees to the financial institution as processing fee. He also
referred to the earlier Writ Petition No. 8473/2007 filed by the appellant-company
before the Lahore High Court which was dismissed vide order dated 16th April 2008,
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
4
by holding that the appellant had, “an alternate remedy of filing an appeal before the
competent authority”. The order of the High Court was impugned in Intra Court
Appeal No. 130/2008 which was disposed of vide order dated 26th May 2008, the
operative part whereof is reproduced hereunder:
“2.
Having examined the writ petition file and the
impugned judgment, we find that the original order i.e. dated
27.8.2007 (Annex-B to the writ petition) is subject to a revision
or an appeal under section 7 of the Punjab Industries (Control
on Establishment and Enlargement) Ordinance, 1963. The
learned counsel was confronted accordingly. He has tried to
argue that the order does not fall under section 3 of [sic]
section 4 of the said Ordinance.
3.
Upon our query, the learned counsel has frankly
conceded that the said impugned order has the effect of
stopping or obstructing of the Industrial Project proposed to be
installed by the appellant. This being so, the matter squarely
falls under section 3 of the said Ordinance which is subject to a
revision under the said section 7. Needless to state that section
3 of the Law Reforms Ordinance, 1972, lays down that the
instant ICA would not be competent where the law under
which the original order has been passed provides that, inter
alia, a revision against the same. The ICA is not competent
and is accordingly disposed of.”
The appellant aggrieved by the above orders approached this Court in Civil Appeal
No. 310-L/2011 which was disposed of vide order dated 30th January 2012,
reproduced hereunder:
“According to the learned counsel for the appellant the
notification dated 6.12.2006, on the subject, has also been
challenged by the appellant in another writ petition which is
still pending before the High Court.
2.
In this view of the matter, we are of the opinion that the
adjudication of the question involved in this matter is only of
academic nature and the adjudication of the substantive
notification dated 6.12.2006, is pending in the High Court, this
appeal is dismissed.
3.
The decision in the writ petition shall not be prejudiced
by any finding of the instant appeal.”
4.
Mr. Mudassar Khalid Abbasi, the learned Assistant Advocate General of the
Government of Punjab (hereinafter “AAG” and “Government” respectively), stated
that none of the appellants had availed of the alternate remedy of filing a revision or
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
5
an appeal under section 7 of the Act therefore the writ petition was not maintainable
before the High Court in terms of clause (1) of Article 199 of the Constitution of the
Islamic Republic of Pakistan (“the Constitution”). He also relied upon the above
mentioned judgment of the High Court dated 16th April 2008 passed in Writ Petition
No. 8473 of 2007 and the order of the Division Bench dated 26th May 2008 passed in
ICA No. 130/2008, which had categorically held that the Act provided a venue for the
redressal of grievances by filing an appeal or a revision under section 7 and that this
Court had not set-aside the said finding, consequently, the writ petitions from which
these appeals arise are not maintainable.
He next contended that section 3 of the Act did not permit the establishment of
an industrial undertaking without the prior permission in writing of the Government
and such permission had not been granted to any of the appellants. He stated that it
was within the executive domain of the Government to ensure organized and planned
growth of industry and the impugned Notification was issued pursuant to the
recommendations of experts and decisions made by committees constituted on the
subject which could not be assailed in Court. He further stated that the hitherto before
approach of granting permission or declining permission on a case to case basis had
created misgiving and had also been castigated by the Lahore High Court in the
judgment in the case of Madina Sugar Mills v Secretary, Ministry of Industries (PLD
2001 Lahore 506) and the impugned Notification was in line with the said judgment.
By referring to the judgment in the case of Arshad Mehmood v Government of Punjab
(PLD 2005 Supreme Court 193) he said that Article 18 of the Constitution, which
attends to the freedom of trade and business, does not curtail the power of the
Government to restrict any particular industry which was against the national or public
interest. He referred to a number of documents to show that sugarcane crop consumed
considerably more water than cotton or wheat and that the installed capacity of the
existing sugar mills was under utilized, therefore, if additional sugar mills were set up
or the existing ones expanded it would encourage farmers to grow sugarcane in their
vicinity which would be bought by the sugar mills and the growing of cotton or other
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
6
crops would be discouraged. By referring to the documents on record, he stated that
the cotton industry adds considerable value to the harvested cotton and a sizeable
portion of the textiles manufactured from it are exported, earning considerable foreign
exchange for the country, but the same benefits do not accrue by growing sugarcane
and manufacturing sugar. Documents were also referred to show that there was, and
is, a considerable shortage of cotton in the country which is adversely impacting the
textile industry which has on the one hand reduced foreign exchange earnings and on
the other resulted in valuable foreign exchange being spent on the import of raw
cotton for consumption by the textile industry. Reference was also made to reports to
show that sugarcane as compared to other crops attracts more bacteria and insects
which have an adverse impact on other crops. Under such circumstances the
Government had decided to stop the erection of new sugar mills as well as the
expansion of existing ones and this decision of the Government, incorporated in the
impugned Notification, was in the national interest, which was also one of the stated
factors to be taken into account when considering an application under section 3 of the
Act. Therefore, since every application for the setting up of a new sugar mill or the
expansion of an existing one, would be contrary to the national interest, good
governance and transparency mandated the issuance of the impugned Notification
which had removed all discretion and prevented either favouritism or victimization.
Responding to the criticism of the impugned Notification on the ground that
neither section 3 nor section 11 contemplated issuance of such a Notification, the
learned AAG stated that even if for the sake of argument, but without conceding, this
was accepted the appellants still could not set up sugar mills without the prior written
permission of the Government and each and every one of the applications could be
rejected on the abovementioned grounds.
He next contended that the decision to permit new sugar mills or expand
existing sugar mills was a policy matter and the courts have always declined to
interfere with policy matters particularly when no mala fide or ulterior motive was
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
7
alleged, let alone demonstrated. In this regard reliance was placed on the cases of
Nazar Muhammad Choohan v Faiza Asghar (PLD 2011 Lahore 120) and Government
of Pakistan v Zamir Ahmad (PLD 1975 Supreme Court 667). The later judgment was
also relied upon to contend that Article 18 of the Constitution permits the imposition
of a complete ban on any profession, trade or business. In interpreting a similar
provision in the Indian Constitution the Supreme Court of India was also of the same
view in the case of Narendra Kumar v Union of India (AIR 1960 Supreme Court 430).
The learned AAG responded to Mr. Noor Muhammad Khan Chandia’s
contention with regard to the Notification dated 15th July 2005 and stated that it had
held the field for a period of only one year and five months and both prior to the
issuance of the said Notification and after its withdrawal the prior written permission
of the Government was required. As regards the amount spent by Mr. Chandia’s
client he stated that only some land was acquired, the value of which had gone up; and
the payment of two hundred thousand rupees, which was the only other amount spent
by the said appellant, cannot be categorized as a significant investment to create any
vested right in the circumstances of the case.
The learned AAG also referred to the comments filed in the writ petition from
which Civil Appeal No. 1245/2013 arises, which had set out the reasons for issuing
the impugned Notification, as under:
“The rationale behind this restriction are given below:
At present, 46 sugar mills exist in the province and there is a
deficit of about 35% between requirement and production of
sugarcane crop. All the existing sugar mills are working below
the installed capacity. The Punjab Province is already over
crowded with regard to sugar mills, therefore, sanction for
establishment of new sugar mills would not be feasible and
lead to over investment.
Cotton is the backbone of our economy. It ensures economic
security as its value added products contribute 60% to foreign
exchange earnings.
Sugarcane crop poses threat to cotton growing areas as it has
very strong substitution effect for cotton. Proliferation of
Sugar Mills in the Province would adversely affect production
of cotton. Government of the Punjab constituted and notified a
Location Policy committee headed by the Chief Secretary,
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
8
Punjab to deliberate upon the policy of Government regarding
establishment of new sugar mills to maintain a balance
between production of sugar and protection of cotton growing
areas of the Proving in the public interest. On recommendation
of committee, ban was imposed on establishment of new sugar
mills and enhancement of capacity of existing sugar mills
throughout the
province
vide
Industries
Department’s
Notification dated 6.12.2006, which is reproduced as under:
“No new sugar mill shall be set up and no
enlargement in capacity of the existing Sugar Mills is
allowed in the Province.”
Prime Minister’s Secretariat (Public) Islamabad, vide U.O No.
3 (2)/E-I-II/08 dated February 9, 2008, also advised the
provincial governments to consider imposing complete ban on
new installation and expansion of sugar mills for at least 5
years owing to following cogent reasons (Annex-F):
i)
Sugarcane is water intensive crop requiring 18-20
irrigations for proper growth. Ground water sources
are already depleted; increase in sugarcane area will
only worsen the situation.
ii)
Sugarcane is already substituting cotton and wheat in
many areas.
(iii) Sugarcane crop nourishes pests and bacteria,
detrimental to cotton crop.
In response, Industries Department vide letter dated 24.3.2008,
endorsed the concerns of Prime Minister’s Secretariat and
informed that government of the Punjab has already banned
establishment of new sugar mills throughout the province.
It is added here that in view of growing number of prospective
entrepreneurs in the sugar sector, a summary was moved to the
Chief Minister (Annex-G), who was pleased to constitute a
High Powered Committee headed by Senior Advisor to the
Chief Minister to examine the issue regarding lifting of ban
imposed on establishment of new sugar mills and enlargement
in the capacity of existing sugar mills. The committee met on
08.04.2011 (Annex-H). After thorough deliberations, the
committee recommended continuing the ban on establishment
of new sugar mills and enlargement in the capacity of existing
sugar mills throughout the Punjab.”
5.
Mr. Aitzaz Ahsan, the learned senior counsel was permitted to make
submissions on behalf of the Pakistan Cotton Ginners Association, supported the
submissions of the learned AAG and supplemented his contentions by stating that
districts of Southern Punjab were traditionally cotton growing areas and in recognition
of this fact notifications, including Notifications dated 4th September 2003, 9th October
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
9
2003, 1st April 2004, 12th October 2004, and finally the impugned Notification, were
issued stopping the setting up of new sugar mills and expanding the installed capacity
of the existing ones to ensure that cotton crop is not substituted with sugarcane.
Attending to the Notification of 15th July 2005, on which certain appellants placed
reliance, he stated that it was an aberration and was issued contrary to the advice of the
experts and could be categorized as mala fide as it was designed to benefit certain
parties and on such an aberration, which was against the national interest, a case for
the sugar industry could not be raised. According to him prior to the issuance of the
impugned Notification the matter was attended to in an arbitrary manner by allowing
the applications of some while disallowing those of others and at times for ulterior
reasons.
He further contended that the expansion of the areas growing sugarcane has
been economically, agriculturally and ecologically, disastrous. The cotton industry is
the backbone of industrialized Pakistan, making value addition to the raw material
(cotton) and earning considerable foreign exchange for the country, which heavily
relies on such earnings. By referring to a number of documents he stated that it is
established there is a huge shortfall of raw cotton in the country which is adversely
impacting the production of yarn and textiles which has also reduced the foreign
exchange earning potential of the country. As regards the agricultural benefit of
growing cotton, as compared to sugarcane, the learned counsel stated that land on
which sugarcane has been planted cannot be utilized for a second crop since the
stubble remain rooted to the soil whereas the land on which cotton is grown can be
utilized. He referred to the reports of experts who had determined that the food
security of the country is undermined when sugarcane is grown. On the ecological
front he contended that sugarcane used excessive water, as compared to other crops,
and since Pakistan is a water-stressed country this should be discouraged. He also
referred to the judgment in the case of East and West Steamship Co. v Pakistan (PLD
1958 Supreme Court 41) to state that the power to regulate any industry, trade or
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
10
business includes the power to prohibit it if it is aimed at preserving the public
interest.
Many of the documents and reports referred to by the learned counsel were
somewhat dated, therefore, we queried whether the economic, agricultural and
ecological factors which had prevailed with the Government at the time of issuance of
the impugned Notification were still applicable. In response the learned counsel stated
that the situation had exacerbated further and referred to an article / report published in
daily Dawn on 3rd June 2016 which was based on the ‘Pakistan Economic Survey
2015-2016’, published by the Government of Pakistan, wherein it was stated that
cotton constituted 21 per cent of the economy, however, it had recorded a growth of
only 0.19 per cent in the said financial year on account of insufficient cotton crop,
production of which had dropped by 6.25 per cent and the country managed to
produce only 10.07 million bales of cotton whereas the previous years’ production was
13.96 million bales.
6.
Mr. Sikandar Bashir Mohmand, was permitted to make submissions on behalf
of JDW Sugar Mills Limited, supported the contentions of the learned AAG and those
of Mr. Aitzaz Ahsan. He stated that the Act provides for a regulatory framework for
the sustainable growth of industry in an organized and planned manner and the
impugned Notification was in accordance therewith, which even otherwise was in the
exclusive domain of the executive authority of the Government. He further stated that
even under the proviso to section 3 of the Act an application for setting up of a new
sugar mill or expanding an existing one can be rejected if it is contrary to the national
interest. The documents on record show that there was sufficient material to support
the decision of the Government taken in the national interest, which had culminated in
the issuance of the impugned Notification. He also relied on the judgment in the case
of East and West Steamship Co. v Pakistan (above) which had interpreted Article 12
of the earlier Constitution, which was similar to Article 18 of the 1973 Constitution,
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
11
and in doing so had concluded that the words “lawful trade or business” envisaged the
imposition of a ban on any business or trade if it was in the public or national interest
to do so.
7.
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, the learned ASC, had submitted an application
(CMA No. 2977/2016) on behalf of Ittefaq Sugar Mills Limited to be impleaded as a
party, as according to him a decision in this matter may adversely affect the said
company as it had sought the relocation of its sugar mills installed in District
Pakpattan to District Bahawalpur at a place near the border with District Rahim Yar
Khan. Without granting the said application we permitted him to make his
submissions on behalf of the said Company. JDW Sugar Mills Limited and Hamza
Sugar Mills Limited, presumably the competitors of Ittefaq Sugar Mills Limited, had
filed Writ Petition No. 12879 of 2015 seeking to restrain the said shifting whereas
Ittefaq Sugar Mills Limited had filed Writ Petition No. 18827 of 2015 wherein the
impugned Notification has been assailed though in the alternative it has been stated
that the impugned Notification does not restrict the relocation of existing sugar mills.
Both these petitions we are told are still pending before the Lahore High Court. The
petitioners in Writ Petition No. 12879/2015 are opposing the proposed shifting as it
would increase the installed capacity of sugar mills in the Southern Punjab Districts
which they state is not sustainable as the available installed capacity is already under
utilized. However, Mr. Salman Akram Raja controverted their objection. He also
referred to a document to show that the cultivation of sugarcane crop in the area has
considerably increased if the figures for the years 2005-2006 are compared to those of
2014-2015. It appears that there is a tussle between two different sugar mills’ owners
regarding the relocation of an existing sugar mill, whereas the matter considered by us
is the determination of the legality of the impugned Notification which has imposed a
ban on the setting up of new sugar mills and also expanding the installed capacity of
existing ones. Therefore, it would not be appropriate for us to express any opinion on
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
12
this aspect of the matter which has as yet not been decided by the Lahore High Court
where the said two writ petitions are pending adjudication.
8.
The questions for determination before us are: (1) whether the impugned
Notification could have been issued under the Act, (2) whether despite the issuance of
the impugned Notification the Government was required to give reasons for declining
an application received under section 3 of the Act, (3) whether the issuance of the
impugned Notification was within the domain of the executive authority of the
Government and therefore immune from challenge, (4) whether there were valid
reasons for issuing the impugned Notification and (5) whether such reasons were
sufficient to constitute public or national interest.
9.
Before proceeding to answer the abovementioned questions it would be
appropriate to reproduce the referred to provisions of the Act, the impugned
Notification, Notification dated 17th September 2002 and Notification dated 15th July
2005.
The Act:
“Preamble.
Whereas it is expedient to provide for the organized and
planned growth of industries in the Punjab, in the manner
hereinafter appearing;”
“3.
Restrictions
on
establishment
of
industrial
undertakings.
No person shall establish or cause to be established any
industrial undertaking or enlarge or cause to be enlarged any
existing industrial undertaking except with the previous
permission in writing of Government.
Provided that the application of any person for the grant
of such permission shall not be rejected:
(a)
without giving such person an opportunity of showing
cause against it; or
(b)
unless the Government is satisfied, on the basis of
information available to it and after making such
inquiry as it may deem fit, that the grant of permission
to such person will be prejudicial to the national
interest, or injurious to the health of or a source of
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
13
nuisance for, the residents of the local area in which the
industrial undertaking is proposed to be set up or, as the
case may be, the industrial undertaking which is
proposed to be enlarged is situated.”
“7. Revision and appeal.
(1) Any person feeling aggrieved by an order passed by
Government or by any officer or authority under section 3 or
section 4, may, within thirty days of the date of the order, apply
to Government for a revision of the order.
(2) Any person feeling aggrieved by an order passed by the
Director under section 4 may, within thirty days of the date of
the order, prefer an appeal to Government.
(3) If in any case it shall appear to Government that any order
passed by Government or the Director, as the case may be, be
set aside or modified, Government may pass such order thereon
as may be deemed fit:
Provided that no such order shall be passed unless, in
the case of an appeal, the appellant and in any other case the
party to be affected adversely, has been given reasonable notice
to appear and be heard.
(4) Subject to any order passed by Government under the last
preceding sub-section the order passed by Government or the
Director under section 3 or section 4, as the case may be, shall
be final.”
“11.
Exemption.
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette,
exempt any industrial undertaking or class of industrial
undertakings from all or any of the provisions of this Act or the
rules.”
Impugned Notification dated 6th December 2006:
“Government of Punjab Industries Department
Dated Lahore, the 6th December, 2006
NOTIFICATION
No. AEA-III-3-5/2003 (Vol-III):- In exercise of the powers
conferred upon him under Section 11 read with Section 3 of the
Punjab Industries (Control on Establishment & Enlargement)
Act, 1963, the Governor of the Punjab is pleased to order that
in supersession of Notification No. AEA-III-3-5/2003, dated
15th July, 2005, notified in the Extraordinary issue of the
Punjab Gazette published on July 20, 2005; the following
amendment shall be made in the Government of the Punjab,
Industries Department Notification No. AEA-III 3-9/91 dated
17.09.2002, with immediate effect:
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
14
AMENDMENT
For Clause 3, the following shall be substituted:
“No new sugar mill shall be set up and no
enlargement in capacity of the existing Sugar
Mills is allowed in the Province.”
Secretary Industries Department”
Notification dated 17th September 2002 (published in The Punjab Gazette
on 30th September 2002):
“Lahore Monday September 30, 2002
Government of Punjab
Industries, Mines & Minerals Department
NOTIFICATION
No.AEA-III.3-9/91:- In exercise of the powers conferred upon
him under Section 11 of the Punjab Industries (Control on
Establishment & Enlargement) Act, 1963 and in supersession
of the Punjab Government Notification No.AEA-III-4-1/85,
dated 26 October, 1986, amended up to 12th February, 2000,
the Governor of the Punjab is pleased to exempt all industries
and areas from the provisions of Section 3 of the said Act
except as notified hereunder:-
1. No Industrial unit mentioned in Schedule ‘A’ of this
notification or industrial unit exceeding a total cost of Rs.
100.00 million (Rupees Hundred million) shall be set up
within 10 miles (16 KMs) of the International Border.
2. No Industrial unit shall be set up in areas affected by flood
flowing transversely in the strip of one mile of either side
across the Grand Trunk Road from Shahdara Town to
Muridke Town, without prior permission of the Provincial
Government.
3. No new Sugar Mill shall be set up and no existing Sugar
Mill be enlarged in the districts of Multan, Sahiwal, Vehari,
Khanewal, Pakpattan, Lodhran, Bahawalpur, Rahimyar
Khan, Bahawalnagar, D. G. Khan, Rajanpur, Layyah,
Muzzaffargarh and Okara.
4. Each District Government may declare “negative area” for
industry. Such “negative area” be determined by a District
Committee after consultation with all stakeholders in light
of general policy guidelines to be issued by the Industries
Department and exemptions allowed under Schedule ‘B’ of
this Notification.
5. No Industrial Unit mentioned in Schedule ‘C’ of this
Notification shall be set up any where in the Punjab without
prior approval of the Government.
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
15
6. The Government reserves the right to refuse establishment /
enhancement of any Industrial undertaking which is in
contravention of the public interest, ecology or any other
law / rules for the time being in force.
7. The Government may relax any of the provisions of this
notification in case of a particular unit or industry or class
of units of industries.
Secretary to Government of Punjab
Industries, Mines & Minerals Department”
Notification dated 15th July 2005:
“Government of Punjab Industries Department
Dated Lahore, the 15th July 2005.
NOTIFICATION
No. AEA-III-3-5/2003. In exercise of the powers conferred
upon him under Section 11 read with Section 3 of the Punjab
Industries (Control on Establishment & Enlargement) Act,
1963, the Governor of the Punjab is pleased to order that in
supersession of Notification No. AEA-III-3-5/2003, dated
12-10-2004 notified in the Punjab Weekly Gazette October 20,
2004; the following amendment shall be made in the
Government of the Punjab, Industries Department Notification
No. AEA –III-3-9/91 dated 17-09-2002, with immediate effect:
AMENDMENT
For Clause 3, the following shall be substituted:
i) The establishment of new sugar mills upto the capacity
of 16,000 TCD is allowed in the province.
ii) The sugar mills are not allowed to enlarge existing
capacity over 16,000 TCD.
Secretary Industries Department”
10.
The purpose of enacting the Act is proclaimed in its preamble which is, “to
provide for the organized and planned growth of industries in the Punjab”. The most
significant provision of the Act is its section 3 which states that the prior permission in
writing of the Government is to be obtained before establishing or enlarging any
industrial undertaking. The proviso to the section 3 however states that an application
seeking permission shall not be rejected without giving an opportunity of showing
cause against it (clause (a) of the proviso) or the Government is satisfied, “on the basis
of information available to it … that the grant of permission … will be prejudicial to
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
16
the national interest, or injurious to health or a source of nuisance for, the residents of
the local area” in which it is to be set up or enlarged (clause (b) of the proviso).
However, the Government may, in exercise of powers under section 11, “exempt any
industrial undertaking or class of industrial undertakings from all or any provision of
this Act or the rules”. We were informed that no rules have been enacted so far.
11.
The impugned Notification has been issued under section 3 read with section
11 of the Act and has effectively placed a complete ban on the setting up of new sugar
mills or expanding the existing ones. There is some merit in the contention of the
appellants that section 11 is an enabling provision rather than a disabling one,
therefore, a ban on a class of industrial undertakings could not have been imposed
thereunder. However, such an interpretation would not in itself enable the appellants
to set up or expand any industrial undertaking because section 3 clearly requires the
previous permission in writing of the Government. There is also not a serious
challenge to the proposition that each and every application could be rejected by the
Government on the ground that it was “prejudicial to the national interest”. The
Government has instead issued the impugned Notification restricting the establishment
of new sugar mills as well as expanding existing ones. Let us consider the ambit of the
proviso first. The proviso enables the Government to reject applications if it is
satisfied on the basis of information and any inquiry that it may deem fit to conduct
that it is prejudicial to the national interest or is injurious to health or is a source of
nuisance. Accordingly we proceed to consider the information available with the
Government and the inquiries made by it before it had issued the impugned
Notification.
12.
The Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock of the Government of
Pakistan reviewed the position that had emerged after the issuance of the Notification
dated 15th July 2005, by the Government of Punjab, and recommended (on 8th
September 2005) that the said Notification be withdrawn and, “a country-wide
complete ban on installation and expansion of sugar mills may be imposed
immediately by all the provinces”. It also called upon the Provincial Governments to
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
17
constitute provincial committees for the preparation of comprehensive guidelines on
the subject. The recommendations were made on the basis of the following
documented reasons:
“4.
The new Policy has been examined by the Ministry of
Food, Agriculture, and Livestock and its views on the mater are
as follows:
i.
Sugarcane is a tropical crop as it requires high rainfall
and moderate temperature for optimum growth. Pakistan does
not have the tropical climate and irrigation resources needed to
attain comparative advantage in the cultivation of sugarcane.
Therefore, it is not in our economic interest to promote this
crop, particularly in the areas in which it displaces cotton and
wheat.
ii.
Sugarcane is typically sown during the months of
February-March and harvested during November-March. Its
life cycle has a span of around one year. It needs almost 18-20
irrigations for proper tillering and growth. Cotton and wheat
rotation over the same period requires around 10-12 irrigations.
Sugarcane is thus a highly water intensive crop not suited to
our cropping system and rainfall patterns. In a future scenario
where water resources will become scarcer. It is neither
advisable nor prudent to replace cotton/Wheat rotation with
Sugar Cane.
iii.
As a consequence of its water intensive nature,
sugarcane in the cotton zone is grown in the areas where
ground water is sweet as canal water alone cannot meet the
total requirement. Water shortage and low rainfall in previous
years have led to excessive ground water pumping. Experts are
already raising serious concerns regarding depletion of our
ground water resources. Any increase in sugarcane area in the
cotton zone will only worsen the situation. Availability of
sweet groundwater is a major source of irrigation in southern
Punjab, an area which produces the bulk of our cotton and
wheat crops. These areas are serviced by non-perennial
irrigation canals that run only for six months, leaving the
farmer totally dependent on the aquifer for the remaining
months of the year. Any adverse change in the aquifer in the
core cotton growing area will, therefore, jeopardize our
economic future.
iv.
Sugarcane further loses its economic potential when it
is grown under the dry and hot conditions of “cotton zone”. In
such an environment, it substitutes out our most important
crops i.e. cotton and wheat and its irrigation requirements are
further increased due to the low rainfall and hot weather
conditions. Frequent irrigations under hot and dry conditions
significantly raise humidity levels and create ideal conditions
for rapid multiplication of pests – conditions not favorable for
the cotton crop. These were the factors that had led to the
imposition of the ban on installation of sugar mills in the
“cotton zone”. These factors have now become even more
important in view of our “Textile Vision”, changing world
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
18
scenario for textile competitiveness, and rapid expansion in our
textile sector in the recent past.
v.
In order to achieve the targets of textile vision 2010, we
need all the available land under cotton cultivation. Billions of
dollars of investment has taken place in the textile sector
during the last five years on the firm commitment of the
Government
that
industry-friendly
policies
assuring
uninterrupted and adequate supply of all raw materials will be
formulated. Consequently, demand for raw cotton has
substantially increased in the recent past. The Federal and
Provincial Governments should implement policies and
programs which encourage growers to bring more area under
cotton instead of curtailing the area and switching to other
crops.
vi.
The Punjab Government had itself initiated a program
of “Revival of Cotton in old Cotton area” in 2002 to increase
cotton acreage in Punjab and as a part of the policy had
actually revised its definition of “cotton zone” by including
new districts in the negative list and banning the setting up of
sugar mills in these districts. An abrupt reversal of policy will
shake the confidence of the textile industrialists which we can
ill afford at this crucial stage. APTMA has already expressed
serious concern based on rumours about the change in the
Policy (annex C). It will take up this issue with the
Government at all levels more vigorously once they receive
official Notification. We will not be able to defend this shift in
Policy given our previous policy statements.”
13.
The Cane Commissioner of Punjab had also opposed lifting the ban on the
establishment of new sugar mills and expanding the capacity of existing ones. In
coming to this decision he gave the following reasons which are contained in his letter
dated 4th April 2009:
“1. The Punjab Sugar Industry include 46 sugar mills out of
which 45 are functional. The crushing capacity of the 45
functional sugar mills is 3,21,900 metric ton per day. Due
to non availability of sufficient sugarcane these mills have
never utilized their crushing capacity 100% even in the
year 2007-08 when there was a bumper crop of sugarcane.
In that year the sugarcane crushed was 3,30,63,564 metric
ton during 150 crushing days as against requirement of
4,82,85,000 metric ton of sugarcane for 100% utilization of
crushing capacity of sugar mills. In the sugarcane glut
season the mills could run only @ 65 to 70% of their
crushing capacity.
2. The maximum sugarcane growing area falls in Bahawalpur
and Faisalabad Divisions. The number of sugar mills in
these Divisions are 7 & 16 having a crushing capacity of
87,000 & 1,04,000 metric ton per day, respectively. These
sugar mills despite their having been located in the
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
19
favourable sugarcane growing area, have never managed
utilize their mills crushing capacity fully.
3. Sugarcane is a high water delta crop. It can not possibly be
horizontally propagated and extended.”
14.
The Government had sought the comments and views of the Agriculture
Department on the “Establishment of New Sugar Mills” which were conveyed by the
Secretary Agriculture under cover of letter dated 20th February 2008, from which the
following extracts have been reproduced:
“Sugarcane and cotton are two important cash crops of the
Punjab besides rice. However, in the main cotton belt
sugarcane has emerged as a competing crop with its inroad in
traditional cotton belt i.e. Rahim Yar Khan due to
establishment of new crushing unit in the areas. This trend has
enormous economic and ecological consequences. Sugarcane is
a one year crop and it requires high delta of water compared to
cotton as Punjab falls under arid climate whereas sugarcane is a
tropical crop. Moreover, in case of cotton, wheat can be grown
after cotton picking which substantially contribute to the food
security of the country and generate surplus for the deficit
areas. The wheat grain in cotton belt is of high gluten and free
from seed born disease.
Cotton ensures economic security as its value added
product contributes 60% to the foreign exchange. There is a
widening gap in demand and supply due to which country has
to import cotton to meet the domestic requirements evident
from data below.
In future, import of cotton will not be cost effective due
to expansion in textile sector of India and China.
The country requires about 18 millions bales of cotton
by the year 2015 and 80% of it has to be produced in the
Punjab Province. This target can be achieved through increase
in production per unit area and expansion in area. Therefore,
we need to maintain the current level of areas under cotton and
also ensure 1 % expansion in areas every year. The expansion
of sugarcane in the Province is evident from the table below.
The mills capacity is already much higher compared to the
cane supply.”
15.
A Committee was constituted by the Chief Minister of Punjab which included
the Chief Secretary, Secretary Industries, Secretary Agriculture, and Secretary Food as
well as the representatives of the Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industries and
representatives of the Punjab Sugar Mills Association. The said Committee, in its
meeting held on 8th April 2011, recommended the “ban on establishment of new sugar
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
20
mills and enlargement in capacity of existing sugar mills of any category throughout
the Province.” In supporting the ban the Secretary industries stated:
“…the imposition of ban on sugar mills by the Government of
the Punjab was in line with the position of Federal government
namely that promotion of sugarcane production was not in the
national interest in view of its substitution effect on cotton and
wheat crops and its harmful role, being a water intensive crop,
in the depletion of ground water resources. He pointed out that
crushing capacity of sugar mills in the province was
underutilized to the extent of a 36% deficit between crushing
capacity of sugar mills and availability of sugarcane in
Punjab.”
The view of the Chief Secretary of the Province was recorded in the minutes of
the meeting as under:
“…applications to setup new / mini sugar mills were mostly for
setting up units in cotton growing belt of Punjab. The
attraction of this area for the investors was mainly on account
of high sugarcane recovery and if this trend is encouraged, the
demand for additional sugarcane would come at the expense of
the cotton crop. However, as sugar requirements of the
province could easily be met from existing capacity of sugar
mills, addition of new / mini sugar mills is not needed. He was
of the view that the ban on the establishment of new sugar
mills may be continued.”
The Secretary Agriculture endorsed the above view adding, “that lifting of ban
on establishment of sugar mills would affect production of cotton which was presently
13 million bales and the country’s demand was 15-16 million bales.”
16.
It is therefore quite clear that the decision of the Government, disallowing the
setting up of new sugar mills and expanding the capacity of existing ones, was taken
after considerable deliberations and was in conformity with the advice of experts of
the relevant departments, including Agriculture, Food and Industries. The decision of
the Government is also in accordance with the views of the Government of Pakistan.
The factors taken into consideration in coming to such a decision, as gleaned from the
referred to documents, included the following ecological / environmental, agricultural,
industrial and financial ones:
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
21
●
Punjab has an arid climate whereas sugarcane is best grown in tropical
zones;
●
Sugarcane consumes far more water than other crops;
●
The water required for growing sugarcane in non-perennial
irrigation canal areas is made up by tapping into groundwater /
aquifers inducing water scarcity by depleting aquifers;
●
Sugarcane stubble remains rooted in the soil after it has been
cut therefore the second (wheat) crop cannot be grown on such
land whereas it can be grown on the land from which cotton is
harvested;
●
Sugarcane adversely affects food security;
●
Sugarcane substitutes cotton and wheat;
●
Existing sugar mills have underutilized capacity;
●
Textile industry is being starved of locally available cotton;
●
Cotton bales are imported by using scarce foreign exchange;
●
Textiles are a major foreign exchange earner; and
●
International price of sugar is cheaper than the local price
therefore sugar does not have export potential.
17.
In order to ascertain whether some or all of the aforesaid factors, which had led
to the ban being imposed, still prevailed, we examined the current data on the subject.
The Cane Commissioner of the Punjab as recently as 24th July 2015 pointed out that
even though sugar mills were operating well below installed capacity the production
of sugar was considerably more than its consumption, stating that:
“4. Pakistan is producing above 5 MMT of sugar per annum
and has excess installed crushing capacity (3,47,900 MT / Day
- Punjab) than domestic consumption, whereas the annual
domestic consumption is 4.4 MMT on the basis of 200 million
population and average per capita consumption of 22 kgs per
annum.”
The sugar glut could also not be reduced by exporting it because:
“5. International price of sugar are $360-375 M. Ton and
domestic price are $500 per M. Ton during 2015.”
The “Pakistan Economic Survey 2015-2016”, published by the Finance
Division of the Government of Pakistan, also does not depict an encouraging situation.
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
22
The financial year (FY) 2015-2016 discloses excessive sugarcane production and a
deficit cotton crop which is adversely affecting the cotton ginning and textile industry
with negative financial consequences, as can be seen from the following extracts taken
from the said report:
“During FY 2016, the performance of agriculture sector as a
whole remained dismal as it witnessed a negative growth of
0.19 percent against 2.53 percent growth during the same
period last year. The growth of crops declined by 6.25 percent,
while the other sub component of Agriculture sector like
Livestock, Forestry and Fishing posted positive growth of 3.63
percent, 8.84 percent and 3.25 percent, respectively. The
growth of sub Sector of crops included important crops, other
crops and cotton ginning remained negative as it posted a
growth of -7.18 percent, -0.31 percent and -21.26 percent
which impacted negatively on crops as a result became the
reason of negative growth of Agriculture sector. The last
negative growth in Agriculture was witnessed in 2000-01,
when agriculture growth declined to 2.18 percent. Important
crops having a share of 23.55 percent in agricultural value
added has witnessed negative growth of 7.18 percent on
account of large decline in cotton production (27.83 percent),
rice production (2.74 percent) and maize production (0.35
percent) during 2015-16 against negative growth of 0.52
percent during the same period of last year. While only wheat
and sugarcane production witnessed a positive growth of 1.58
percent and 4.22 percent respectively, as compared to last year.
Other crops contributed 11.36 percent in value addition of
agriculture witnessed a decline of 0.31 percent during 2015-16
against positive growth of 3.09 percent during the same period
last year due to decline in the production of pulses, fruits and
oilseeds posting negative growth of 12.49 percent, 2.48 percent
and 9.56 percent, respectively. With drop in cotton production
by around 27.83 percent this year the Cotton ginning having a
share of 2.32 percent in value addition of agriculture has
suffered badly and posted a negative growth of 21.26 percent
compared to 7.24 percent growth during the same period last
year.” (at pages 24 and 25)
“Cotton being a cash crop and a essential source of raw
material to the textile, enables the textile industry to survive
and expand its base. The cotton has share of 1.0 percent in
GDP and contributes 5.1 percent in agriculture value addition.
This year the production of cotton massively declined
therefore, to maintain the supply chain of cotton to the textile
industry, the import of raw cotton during July-March 2015-
2016 has increased to 345.363 thousand tonnes compared to
97.354 thousand tonnes during same period last year showing a
growth of 254.75 percent while in value terms it reached to
US$ 588.236 million against US$ 224.647 million witnessing
growth of 161.85 percent. During 2015-16, the cotton crop
was sown on an area of 2917 thousand hectares, showing a
decrease of 1.5 percent over last year’s area of 2961 thousand
hectares. Cotton production for the year 2015-16 stood at
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
23
10.074 million bales against 13,960 million bales last year
showing a decline of 27.8 percent.” (at page 26)
The excessive availability of sugar is further confirmed by the statement of the
Economic Advisor of the Government of the Punjab, which is based upon the statistics
provided by the Sugar Advisory Board of the Ministry of Industries and Production,
Government of Pakistan, filed by the learned AAG:
“As per latest (2015-16) statistics of Sugar Advisory Board,
Ministry
of
Industries
&
Production,
Islamabad
the
requirement of sugar per person per annum is 20 kg. Thus for
the Punjab population of around 100 million, the sugar
requirement is approximately 2MM tons per annum and the
population
based
sugar
requirement
of
Pakistan
is
approximately 4 MM tons per annum. The detail of Sugar
Production and Demand is as under:
Pakistan
Punjab
Production of Sugar
5.681 Million Metric Ton
2.900 Million Metric Ton
Demand of Sugar
4.0 Million Metric Ton 2.144 Million Metric Ton
Surplus Sugar
1.681 Million Metric Ton
0.756 Million Metric Ton”
Thus, the situation that had prevailed prior to the ban being imposed appears to
have been further aggravated. Therefore, not only has the ban been justified but also its
continuance is imperative.
18.
Before proceeding to answer the questions formulated in paragraph 8 (above) it
would be appropriate to attend to the preliminary legal objection taken by the learned
AAG that the appellants had not availed of the alternate remedy of revision / appeal.
In our opinion availing of the said remedies would be an exercise in futility in the
presence of the impugned Notification as it is not expected that a Government
functionary could, or even should, take a decision contrary to the Government’s policy
decision incorporated in the impugned Notification of not permitting the setting up of
new sugar mills or expanding the existing ones. Moreover, it was rightly noted by
Jawwad S. Khawaja J, when he was a judge of the Lahore High Court, in the case of
Madina Sugar Mills (above), the havoc caused when discretion was given and how it
was abused. The judgment sets out the history of the law and how appallingly matters
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
24
of national importance were attended to as amply demonstrated by the following
extracts therefrom:
“3.
From time to time the Provincial Government has
issued notification in exercise of its powers under section 11 of
the Ordinance. The first such notification, which bears
relevance to the present case was issued on 2-10-1986 and is
hereinafter referred to as the “Original Notification”. By means
of the Original Notification, all industries and areas in the
province were exempted from the application of section 3 of
the Ordinance except those specified in the said Notification
itself. As a consequence, border areas, areas prone to flooding
and urban areas among other specified locations, were retained
within the regulatory ambit of section 3 of the Ordinance while
in the remaining areas of the Province, industries could be set
up (subject to certain industry-wise restrictions) without
obtaining the prior permission of the Government under section
3 of the Ordinance. The area-wise restrictions, which find
mention in paragraphs Nos.1 to 4 of the Original Notification,
reflect what is officially termed as the "Location Policy" of the
Punjab Government.” (at pages 508-509)
“5. After the Original Notification the Location Policy
underwent numerous changes, primarily it would appear,
effecting the sugar industry. On 3-11-1988 as Notification (the
“First Amending Notification”) was issued whereby the sugar
industry was brought into the Location Policy of the
Government through the incorporation of paragraph 2(a) in the
Original Notification. Paragraph 2(a) stipulated that no sugar
mill would be allowed to be set up in a defined negative area
comprising of the divisions of Multan, Bahawalpur and D. G.
Khan and the district of Okara.” (at page 509)
“7. What happened subsequent to the First Amending
Notification is a story of distasteful cronyism which was
indulged in by the incumbent Chief Ministers of the time which
undermined the well-considered Location Policy of the
Government and sacrificed the State and public interest to the
business, commercial and political interests of persons who
were influential politically or otherwise. It appears that as and
when the Government in power wished to favour such
influential persons, the Location Policy was modified without
much ado and wholly in disregard of the considerations, which
had prevailed in the formulation of the Location Policy in the
first place. New sugar mills as a result, were allowed to be set
up in the negative area comprising of the divisions of
Bahawalpur, Multan and D.G. Khan and the District Okara.”
(at page 510)
“9. … It has become apparent from an examination of the
official record that each of the notifications mentioned in the
preceding paragraph, was issued to accommodate influential
persons desirous of setting up sugar mills in the negative area.
These notifications are not based on any valid justification for
modifying the Location Policy. No committees were
constituted nor was any data, information or opinion gathered
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
25
to justify deviation from the Location Policy, which had been
formulated after the in-depth and extensive deliberations
preceding the First Amending Notification as set out in
paragraph 6 above. The learned Advocate-General at the very
outset conceded that he could not defend what had happened
during the past. He did, however, argue that any failing of mis-
governance in the past could not be made the basis for allowing
it to continue in the future also.” (at page 511)
“16. However, having so held I am not oblivious of the
abusive manner in which the well-considered Location Policy
of the Government was tampered with for considerations which
clearly were based on favouritism and were not motivated by
the interest of the State. I have little doubt that if any of the
notifications mentioned in paragraph 8 had been challenged in
Court, at the relevant time, on the ground of arbitrariness and
unreasonableness, such challenge would have merited serious
consideration. In this context I find that the Final Notification
represents a salutary correction of the waywardness with which
the Location Policy of the Government was undermined in the
past. It is not for this Court to sit in judgment over the policy
decision of the Government once the Court concludes that the
process through which such policy decision was arrived at was
not open to exception.” (at page 513)
We could not agree more with the aforesaid observations with regard to the sad
state of affairs that prevailed. The cherished objective of transparency in governance
was obfuscated. Unfortunately, the incumbent Chief Minister/s have continued on the
path of favoritism as it transpires that despite the said judgment a number of sugar
mills were given permission to be set up. In this regard, in response to our query, the
learned AAG placed on record letter dated 24th June 2016 of the Economic Advisor of
the Government of Punjab which shows that during the period that the Notification
dated 15th July 2005 held the field a sugar mill of a capacity of 12,000 TCD was set up
in District Muzaffargarh and another of a capacity of 16,000 TCD was set up in
District Rahim Yar Khan. Alarmingly two sugar mills were also allowed to be set up
after the issuance of the impugned Notification which had forbidden the setting up of
new sugar mills; one of a capacity of 12,000 TCD in District Rahim Yar Khan and
another of a capacity of 15,000 TCD in District Mianwali. These facts came to the
fore incidentally and are not the subject matter of these appeals therefore it would not
be appropriate to state any thing further in this regard as the same may be subject
matter for investigation and litigation.
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
26
19.
The appellants have also questioned the constitutionality of the impugned
Notification, even though no challenge was made on this score in the prayer clause of
the petition before the High Court. It has been contended that the impugned
Notification violates the appellants’ fundamental right contained in Article 18 of the
Constitution to conduct the business of setting up sugar mills and manufacturing sugar
therefore the said ban must yield to the Constitution. To appreciate the contention it
would be appropriate to reproduce the said provision of the Constitution, as under:
“18. Freedom of trade, business or profession.
Subject to such qualifications, if any, as may be prescribed by
law, every citizen shall have the right to enter upon any lawful
profession or occupation, and to conduct any lawful trade or
business:
Provided that nothing in this Article shall prevent-
(a)
the regulation of any trade or profession by a
licensing system; or
(b)
the regulation of trade, commerce or industry
in the interest of free competition therein; or
(c)
the carrying on, by the Federal Government
or a Provincial Government, or by a
corporation
controlled
by
any
such
Government, of any trade, business, industry
or service, to the exclusion, complete or
partial, of other persons.”
The case of Government of Pakistan v Zamir Ahmad Khan (PLD 1975
Supreme Court 667) considered the licensing regime enabling import of
cinematograph films and the amendment made therein pursuant to which the
respondents were disqualified from importing films. A three member bench of this
Court considered the scope of Article 18 of the Constitution. It also considered
whether the issuance of a license can be claimed as a right even if it was contrary to
the policy objective of the Government and whether a writ can be issued which would
defeat the policy that was competently made by the Federal Government. Muhammad
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
27
Gul J, delivered the courts opinion, and it would be appropriate to reproduce the
following extracts therefrom:
“It will be appropriate to examine in the first instance, whether
the respondent can invoke any provision of the Constitution in
the Chapter relating to the Fundamental Rights for the grant of
licence for the import of films. Article 18 of the Constitution,
which relates to the freedom of trade, business or profession,
which corresponds to Article 15 of the, Interim Constitution,
and which incidentally held the field at the relevant time,
assures the citizens the right to enter upon any "lawful
profession or occupation" and "to conduct any lawful trade or
business". It is important to point out that the word "lawful"
qualifies the right of the citizen in the relevant field. This
clearly envisages that the State can by law ban a profession,
occupation, trade or business by declaring it to be unlawful
which in common parlance means anything forbidden by law.
Prostitution, trafficking in women, gambling, trade in narcotics
or dangerous drugs are common place instances of unlawful
profession or trade. These are inherently dangerous to public
health or welfare. Therefore, on the wording of Article 18 of
the Constitution, the right to enter upon a profession or
occupation or to conduct trade or business can hardly be
described to be a constitutional or fundamental right when such
right may be denied by law. In this respect our Constitution
stands in sharp contrast with the corresponding provision of the
Indian Constitution which omits the use of word "lawful" in the
relevant provision.” (at page 672)
“…law is well settled that in the generality of cases, licence
(simpliciter) is a privilege and not a legal right; much less there
is a legal duty for its grant. Therefore, exceptional cases apart,
mandamus would not issue in such cases. Speaking generally
in such cases the emphasis is on policy, and any discretion
vesting in the authorities is directed towards attaining the
policy objective.” (at page 677)
“Indeed, the Government has all along since the inception of
the Ordinance, frequently and materially altered import
policies. These policies are determined generally with
reference to the domestic needs their priorities, availability of
foreign exchange and multitudes of other factors of which the
Federal Government is the sole arbiter in exercise of its
executive authority. The decision taken, falls within the realm
of policy making. These policy decisions are binding on the
subordinate administrative authorities as a matter of duty. In all
such cases, orders made must conform to the policy decisions
of the Government. The amendment made on 10-8-1972 in
item No. 49 signified a change in policy and the respondent
was informed that he was being refused licence because of "the
change in policy" and not because of any other reason. On
these facts, it is not possible to subscribe to the proposition that
a writ of mandamus would lie against the Licensing Authority
which would have the effect of defeating the policy,
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
28
competently made by the Federal Government.” (at pages 677-
678)
The above judgment was referred to and approved (at page 223) in the seven
member bench judgment of this Court in case of Arshad Mehmood v Government of
Punjab (PLD 2005 Supreme Court 193). However, the point for determination in
Arshad Mehmood’s case was quite different, which was to consider the
constitutionality of section 69-A introduced in the West Pakistan Motor Vehicles
Ordinance, 1963 in pursuance whereof the appellants had been prevented from plying
their transport vehicles despite holding valid route permits. This Court held that since
the exclusion of the appellants by franchise holders pursuant to section 69-A was a
‘classification’ not permissible under Article 25 (the equality provision of the
Constitution) section 69-A of the said Ordinance was “violative of Article 25 of the
Constitution”.
20.
In the cases heard by us the appellants were not already operating sugar mills
but were proposing to set up new ones. The owners of existing sugar mills were also
prevented from expanding their sugar mills. The decision to impose the ban was not to
benefit or punish anyone but to ensure the organized and planned growth of the
industry, which may include the factors noted in paragraph 16 above, even though by
imposing a ban the existing sugar mills may have obtained an advantage of reduced
competition. The decision to impose the ban was taken after long deliberations and on
the advice of experts and we have not been shown any mala fide or ulterior motive of
the Government in taking this decision. On the contrary, it may well be stated that if
the Government had not finally acted it would have further devastated the
environment and food security as well as undermining the economy. When the
Government stopped the expansion of the sugar business it did not offend Article 18
of the Constitution since the rights guaranteed thereunder are “subject to such
qualifications” that have been “prescribed by law”. The Act starts with the position of
not permitting the setting up of any industry except by the prior written permission of
the Government and then proceeds to state that the applications seeking such
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
29
permission shall not be rejected except for the reasons mentioned in the proviso to
section 3. Regretfully the rules which were envisaged in the Act and were to be made
by the Government have not materialized despite the Act being in the field for over 53
years. Consequently, anyone can submit an application wanting to set up any industry
and each such application is to be dealt with on a case to case basis. This, to say the
least, is a most unsatisfactory state of affairs. In this terrain unregulated by rules the
Government may reject the applications received by it either under clause (a) or clause
(b) of the Act. Under clause (a) the Government has to provide an opportunity to show
cause against it. However, under clause (b) the Government may reject an application
if it is satisfied, on the basis of information available to it and after making such
inquiry as it may deem fit. As noted above the Government had inquired into the
matter and there was considerable information available with for it to conclude that
permitting the establishment of new sugar mills or permitting the expansion of
existing ones was prejudicial to the national interest. The Government therefore took
the decision to prohibit both new sugar mills and the expansion of existing ones and
issued the impugned Notification. The decision of the Government was/is in the
public and national interest. Such decision was also not motivated by malice, mala
fide nor taken for any ulterior reason. Therefore, it is unexceptionable. In respect of
such a decision a writ under Article 199 of the Constitution does not lie. Whilst a
notification prohibiting a particular class of industry as noted above may not be issued
under section 11 of the Act, there is no reason why it could not be issued under section
3 of the Act, even though section 3 does not specifically mandate the issuance of such
a notification.
21.
Having answered the first question (formulated in paragraph 8 above) in the
affirmative leads us to the second question. Since the Government has issued the
impugned Notification, which is based on valid reasons we do not think there would
be any point to give reasons for declining an application seeking the establishment of a
new sugar mill or expanding an existing one. The impugned Notification is
C.As. 1242 to 1245/2013
30
undoubtedly within the executive authority of the Government, which answers the first
part of the third question, however, it would not be immune from a challenge if it
could be demonstrated that it was issued for mala fide or for ulterior purposes or was
against the public or national interest, which answers the second part of the third
question. Whilst it may have been difficult to determine the line which separates the
legitimate from the illegitimate assumption of such power there was no difficulty in
determining this in the present case. As has already been determined that there were
valid reasons for issuing the impugned Notification the fourth question stands
answered. The fact that there were a number of reasons justifying the issuance of the
impugned Notification and each reason in itself sufficient to be categorized as
constituting the public or national interest the fifth question too is answered. In
conclusion we may state that the legal principles enunciated in the case of Madina
Sugar Mills (above) were correct.
22.
That for the aforesaid reasons these appeals are dismissed, however, because
such a matter had not been earlier decided by this Court and there was some
uncertainty about it there shall be no order as to costs.
Judge
Judge
Announced in open Court
At Islamabad
On 25th July, 2016
By Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan, J.
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
(Zulfiqar)
| {
"id": "C.A.1242_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
“The right to dissent is the only thing that makes life tolerable
for a judge of an appellate court.”
- Justice William O. Douglas
MAQBOOL BAQAR, J,- Brought under challenge
through various constitution petitions before the Sindh High
Court, was the transfer/devolution of three different entities,
namely,
Jinnah
Postgraduate
Medical
Centre
(JPMC),
National Institute of Child Health (NICH), and National
Institute of Cardio Vascular Diseases (NICVD), by and from
the Federal Government to the Province of Sindh. It was
submitted that the transfer/devolution, was ultra vires the
Constitution
of
Islamic
Republic
of
Pakistan,
1973
(‘Constitution’) as the three entities were federal institutes of
the nature as described by Entry No. 16 of Part-I of the
Federal Legislative List (FLL) of the Constitution. Entry No. 16
reads as follows:
“16. Federal agencies and institutes for the following
purposes, that is to say, for research, for professional
or technical training, or for the promotion of special
studies.”
2.
The genesis of JPMC lies in Medical Corps
Hospital, established in the year 1930 to provide medical aid
to the military personnel during World War-II. In the year
1947, it was a 100 bed hospital with all basic facilities. After
independence the hospital was renamed, Pakistan Central
Hospital and subsequently as Jinnah Central Hospital
(“JCH”). In April 1953 an institute, namely Basic Medical
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
2
Science Institute (“BMSI”), was established in a building
situated at the site of JCH. In the year 1959 JCH and BMSI
were amalgamated to create JPMC. Upto this point in time
Karachi was the Capital of Pakistan. On 01.07.1959 the West
Pakistan Administration, (merger of the federal territory of the
Karachi) Order 1961, (Presidential Order No. 9 of 1961), came
into effect; Karachi was thus merged into the province of West
Pakistan, and ceased to be the capital of Pakistan. From this
date onwards, Karachi fell under the legislative and
administrative domain of the province.
3.
Mr. Raza Rabbani, learned ASC for the appellants
in Civil Appeal No.2307/2016, submitted that being a
hospital was the primary function of JPMC, NICVD and NICH.
The learned ASC submitted that JPMC and its derivatives,
being NICVD and NICH, could not be treated as entities
falling within Entry No. 16 of the FLL, merely due to some of
their functions, which were incidental and ancillary to the
main functions of being a hospital, supposedly falling within
the scope of the said entry. Mr. Rabbani submitted that
“health” and “hospitals” have always been in the exclusive
domain of the province, and any exception in that regard, if
ever intended, was specifically so provided for through a
separate and distinct entry. By way of illustration, he referred
to Entry No. 19 of Part-I of the FLL, which specifically
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
3
provides for “Seamen’s and Marine hospital and hospitals
connected with port quarantine”, and to Entry No. 23, of the
former concurrent list, which pertains to “places for the
reception or treatment of the mentally ill and mentally
retarded”. However, the learned counsel emphasized that
hospitals in general neither found place in the federal list, nor
had they been on the concurrent list, and were thus
exclusively in the provincial domain. In his endeavour to
demonstrate that the subject entities were nothing but
general hospitals, the learned counsel referred to various
documents/material, highlighting the various aspects of the
said hospitals. He emphasized that if at all there were any
activities which may at all be perceived as pertaining to
“research”, the same were entirely incidental and ancillary to
the institutes’ primary function of being a hospital, and
nothing more.
4.
The learned counsel referred to the prospectus of
the JPMC and submitted that the overwhelming majority of
its various departments are those of a hospital and only a few
relate to research based activities. He referred to the “quality
and research based ranking of Pakistan High Educational
Institutes (HEI) issued/ published by the Higher Education
Commission of Pakistan (HEC) (page 371-374, Part-II CMA
15/19), to show that none of the said hospitals/ institutes
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
4
find any place therein. The learned counsel submitted that
the hospitals/institutes are also not mentioned in the list of
“Research Institutes in Pakistan” posted at the website of
ILM.com.pk,
which
according
to
him
is
the
biggest
educational portal in Pakistan (page-366, Part-II, CMA
15/19). According to the learned counsel, the research
activities attributed to JPMC in its own publication/booklet,
titled “JPMC- A National Pride” (pages 290-297, Part-II CMA
15/19), are the compilation of medical research, management
of medical library and publication of a medical journal titled
“Annals of JPMC”. The booklet admits that “the response of
local researchers to submit papers in Annals of JPMC is
lukewarm, may be due to non-recognition of Annals with the
PMDC”.
5.
Mr. Rabbani while concluding his arguments
reiterated that JPMC and its derivative units had previously
been under federal control; not because they were research
institutes
or
because
the
federation
has
legislative
competence over “health” and “hospitals” in general, but
simply because Karachi had been the federal capital after
independence; where the constituent elements of JPMC were
set up. Elaborating his arguments Mr. Rabbani submitted
that in relation to the federal capital territory, the federation
has always had plenary power i.e. it could legislate in respect
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
5
of matters exclusive to the federation, and concurrent, as well
as those otherwise exclusive to the provinces within their
respective territories. The province obviously could not
legislate in respect of the federal capital territory and it was
solely for this reason that the federation had been able to set
up the constituent units of JPMC, and to exercise control over
them. However, with the passage of time Karachi ceased to be
the federal capital and became part of the erstwhile province
of West Pakistan, and subsequently the Province of Sindh.
The federation, therefore, ceased to have any competence or
power over JPMC, and it ought to have been transferred to
the province. The transfer however did not take place, and
JPMC continued to remain under the federal control, which
certainly was against the mandate of the constitution. The
correction came about only at the time the various ministries,
departments
and
organizations
were
being
devolved/
transferred
in
pursuance
of
the
18th
Constitutional
Amendment. The subject transfer, according to Mr. Rabbani,
was no more than a long deserved factual recognition and
regularization of a situation that had in law, come about
decades ago.
6.
Mr. Farooq H. Naek, Senior ASC appearing for the
Government of Sindh in Civil Appeals No. 125-K to 131-
K/2016, at the very outset submitted that the present dispute
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
6
is a dispute between the Federal Government and the
Province of Sindh. As such, he submitted that only the
Supreme Court was competent to adjudicate the dispute and
the judgment rendered by the High Court is liable to be set
aside for want of jurisdiction. He argued that the Honourable
Sindh High Court in its impugned judgment had conclusively
determined three issues; (1) that the three institutions do not
fall under Entry No. 11 and 12 of Part II of the FLL, (2) that
the institutions fall under Entry No. 16 of Part I of the FLL,
and (3) that the transfer of the hospitals to the Province of
Sindh was unauthorized and untenable because they had no
relationship with the concurrent list which was abolished and
entries whereof were devolved to the provinces under Article
270AA (8) of the Constitution. The learned Senior ASC
submitted that the subject of public health was never a part
of the Federal or concurrent list but the same has throughout
our history vested exclusively in the provinces. Resultantly,
the devolution/transfer of the hospitals to the Province was in
view of the fact that the Federal Government could not
legitimately exercise any executive authority over a hospital in
any of the provinces in the face of inter alia, Articles 142(c)
and 137 of the Constitution.
7.
Mr. Salman Talibuddin learned Advocate General
Sindh recapitulated the submissions advanced by M/s. Raza
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
7
Rabbani, ASC and Farooq H. Naek, Sr ASC. Additionally, he
argued that the JPMC ought to have been transferred to the
Province of Sindh when the capital was moved from the city of
Karachi and when the city resultantly became part of the
Province of West Pakistan. To substantiate his view, he relied
on Article 231(1) of the Constitution of 1956 which stipulated
as follows:
“All property and assets which immediately
before the Constitution day were vested in Her
Majesty’s for the purposes of the Federal
Government shall, as from that day, vest in the
Federal Government, unless they were used for
the purposes which on the Constitution Day
became purposes of the Government of a
Province, in which case, they shall, as from that
day, vest in the Provincial Government.”
8.
The learned Advocate General also submitted that
similar provisions were inserted in subsequent constitutional
documents. Article 232(1) of the Constitution of 1962, Article
284 of the Interim Constitution of 1972 as well as Article 274
of the Constitution of 1973 are in para materia to Article 231
in the Constitution of 1956. Transferring or devolving the
hospitals to the Province of Sindh he argued, was therefore
righting a wrong that should have long been rectified. The
Learned Advocate General also argued that decentralization
was the sina qua non for heterogeneous countries like
Pakistan where large segments of the citizenry remain
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
8
marginalized
by
the
centralist
and
patronage-based
governance mechanism.
9.
Mr. Salahuddin Ahmed, ASC for the Jinnah Sindh
Medical University (‘JSMU’) in Civil Appeals 2306/2016,
echoed the arguments advanced by Mr. Raza Rabbani.
Recounting the Constitutional history of Pakistan, he
submitted that the subject of public health and hospitals has,
throughout our history, vested in the provinces, sometimes by
way of an entry in the provincial list and sometimes by
consigning it to the realm of residuary subject. He further
submitted that neither the Province of Sindh nor the Federal
Government assailed the transfer/devolution of the said
hospitals before the Sindh High Court. He contended that in
the absence of any objections by the Federal Government or
the Province of Sindh, the employees working in these
hospitals did not have the locus standi to challenge the
transfer/devolution. While maintaining that the hospitals did
not fall under the rubric of Entry No. 16 of the FLL, he
contended that the Federal Government was vested with the
power to transfer the hospitals under Article 173 of the
Constitution, even if the said hospitals were considered to fall
within the said entry. The mere fact that the notification of
transfer does not refer to Article 173 could not preclude the
Federal Government from exercising its powers under the said
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
9
Article. He submitted that what has to be considered is
whether the Federal Government had the power to transfer
the hospitals or not.
10.
Mr. Haider Waheed ASC appeared on behalf of the
students and teachers of JSMU. He stated that the JPMC is
an attached hospital of JSMU. He argued that in case the
ownership and control of the JPMC is reverted to the
Federation, JSMU would fall foul of the Medical and Dental
Institutions (Recognition, Eligibility Criteria for Enhancement
in
Annual
Admissions
and
Accreditation
Standards)
Regulations, 2018, especially Regulation 9 and 5 thereof. Said
regulations stipulate that degrees from a medical university
would be recognized only when the said university has an
attached hospital of 1,750 beds. He contended that this
requirement can only be filled by the JPMC in Karachi. He
further diverted our attention to the fact that the JSMU has
four constituent colleges, i.e. colleges which are managed and
administered by JSMU in addition to nine affiliated colleges,
i.e. private medical and dental colleges whose degrees are
issued by JSMU. He submitted that setting aside the
transfer/devolution of the JPMC would strip the JSMU of its
status as a university and thus preclude it from awarding
degrees. The fate of thousands of students pursuing their
education from JSMU and the constituent and affiliated
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
10
colleges thereof hinges on the outcome of the lis before us.
Mr. Waheed argued that since the subject of public health is
within the sphere of the provinces’ delegated powers, any
executive authority exercised by the Federation over hospitals
is constitutionally and legally barred.
11.
Appearing for the respondents in C.A 125-K and
129/2016, Ms. Umaima Anwar Khan (with permission of this
Court) argued that JPMC has never been a part of the
Provincial List and always fell in the category as described by
Entry No. 16 of the FLL. Relying on Sindh Revenue Board vs
Civil Aviation Authority of Pakistan (2017 SCMR 1344,
paragraphs 18 and 22) and Sui Southern Gas vs Federation of
Pakistan (2018 SCMR 802, paragraphs 14(1) to 14(4)), she
argued that entries in the FLL must not be interpreted in a
“narrow or pedantic” manner but the same should be given
the broadest possible import. She contended that the three
hospitals were carrying out a number of research activities
and would, thus, squarely fall within Entry No. 16 of the FLL.
Moreover, it was submitted that the fact that public health
and hospitals is admittedly a provincial subject would not
obviate the Federal Government from owning and operating
its own hospitals in the provinces. As regards the nature and
character of JPMC for the purpose of its legislative
classification she submitted that JPMC is a premier teaching
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
11
institute, imparting higher medical education, and providing
training to House Officers, Medical Graduates, medical
students from SMC, nurses, technicians and paramedics in
the various fields of medicine, surgery and its allied sub
specialities. The institute she claimed, is affiliated with the
University of Karachi for advance training leading to M.Phil.
and Ph.D. degrees. According to the learned counsel more
than 768 M.Phil., and 28 Ph.D. degrees have been awarded to
the students of JPMC till date, and that its various
departments are recognized/accredited by the College of
Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan (CPSP) for FCPS, MCPS
and MRCS diplomas in various specialities. Its department of
thoracic medicine, for instance, was recognized as a centre for
Post Graduate training and diploma courses, such as MCPS,
FCPS and DTCD, and further that its department of
ophthalmology
has
produced
many
FCPS
and
FRCS
surgeons, which has also been recognized for second
fellowship training in Vitreo-retinal surgery by CPSP. The
learned counsel claimed that many pulmonologists practicing
in the country have received their training at BMSI. The list
annexed to the synopsis of arguments submitted by the
learned counsel for the respondent, described as “Education
and Training Section JPMC Annual Report 2019”, shows that
varying number of doctors, students and trainees have been
selected by the hospital for different professional degrees,
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
12
diploma courses and training programmes. These include
Post Graduate (PG), FCPS-II training, PG MCPS training, PG
MS Training and PG MD, M.Phil. degree, etc., in different
subjects. She submitted that the pursuit of a Ph.D. degree at
JPMC essentially requires an extensive research work and the
thesis based thereon has to be defended before a panel of
experts, which is then required to be published in a HEC and
PMDC approved journal.
12.
The learned counsel also submitted that JPMC,
NICD and NICVD, are considered active centres of research
and have been acknowledged and recognized by Pakistan
Council for Science and Technology as a scientific and
technological research centres in Pakistan and that “Pakistan
Medical
Research
Centre
for
Gastroenterology
and
Hepatology”, at JPMC is recognized by CPSP as a specialized
research centre for training, research, publications and
workshops.
13.
Mr. Khurram Saeed learned Additional Attorney
General for Pakistan appeared on behalf of the Federation
and supported the impugned judgment. He argued that the
transfer/devolution of the hospitals was ultra vires the
Constitution and the same may be set aside. It may be
interesting to note here that in the proceedings before the
Sindh High Court, the Federal Government had supported the
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
13
transfer/devolution of the three hospitals. One can only
wonder as to what prompted the Federal Government’s
change of heart in the present proceedings.
14.
We have heard the learned counsel and have, with
their able assistance, perused the relevant record. However,
without going into the veracity of the rival claims detailed in
paragraphs 4, 11 and 12 above, it may be observed here that
the above claimed activities, pursuit and, engagements,
cannot and do not overwhelm or eclipse the basic and
primary character and nature of the JPMC being a tertiary
care public hospital. The research, education and training
activities are made possible at JPMC because of it being a
hospital, and that too, with at least twenty eight different
department for treatment of as many diseases and ailments
and their different strands. It may also be relevant to note
here that not all the departments and facilities at JPMC are
being used for imparting education and training. There is no
denying the fact that JPMC is one of the leading tertiary care
public hospital in the country. It provides services not only to
the mega cosmopolitan city of Karachi but to the people from
all over Sindh and also from different parts of the entire
country. Way back in the year 2006, the hospital had 1185
beds to provide in patient facility, covering all aspects of
medical and surgical sub specialities (and in all probability
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
14
the facilities may now have expanded further). Research,
training and education, thus, contrary to being a derogation
to its function as a hospital are in fact amongst the means,
tools and resources through which its main purpose/function
of providing the most adequate and the best possible health
care and treatment actualizes.
15.
While NICVD has evolved from the central heart
clinic of ward 10 of JCH, the present day JPMC. NICVD, as
such, was set up in 1963, and was so registered under the
Societies Registration Ordinance 1860. The Society was later
converted into a trust; through a trust deed dated
08.05.1976. The aims and objects of the Trust as set out in
the deed (Clause-4), were “providing modern facilities for
treatment of Cardiovascular diseases, setting up a teaching
and training centre for postgraduate and undergraduate
medical students and nurses and a centre for research into
Cardiovascular Diseases and carrying on the Institute’s
hospital, its attached units and subsidiaries for the treatment
of persons suffering from Cardiovascular Diseases and
development, research and training in the relevant fields.”
16.
From the above, one can clearly appreciate that
the primary and the predominant, object, purpose and
function, of NICVD was “treatment of cardio vascular
diseases”, and “running and managing institutes, hospitals,
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
15
its attached units, and subsidiaries for the treatment of
persons suffering from cardio vascular disease”. The proposed
research and training was to be a part of the said purpose
and effort. Later, in the year 1979, NICVD Ordinance was
promulgated, section 6 whereof enumerates the function of
the institute as follows:
“6. Function of the Institute. The functions of the
Institute shall be-
(1) to
undertake
modern
treatment
of
cardiovascular diseases;
(2) to acquire latest physical facilities required for
carrying out necessary investigation and treatment
of cardiovascular diseases;
(3) to seek and enter into cooperation with
international and other foreign agencies with the
prior approval of the Federal Government in
furtherance of the objectives of the Institute;
(4) to carry out research in Cardiovascular
Diseases
for
prevention
and
control
of
cardiovascular
diseases
as
well
as
for
its
treatment;
(5) to undertake training of medical students and
nurses, both under graduate and post-graduate,
in cardiovascular diseases; and
(6) to develop itself into a Centre of super
excellence for the treatment of cardiovascular
diseases.”
The above does not leave any nature of doubt, or ambiguity
regarding the fact that the predominant, rather the core
function/purpose of the institute is that of a cardio vascular
hospital, while training and research were to be employed
merely as tools and means to achieve and realize such
purpose. These activities were thus subservient to the
principal object of providing the most appropriate and the
best possible medical treatment and health care to its
patients. The explicit language of the above provision, and the
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
16
order of placement of the different functions set out therein,
do not require any elaboration with regard to the primary and
core function/purpose of the institute, being that of a
hospital. It may also be observed here that the purported
NICVD Ordinance 1979, was no impediment in the transfer of
the institute; firstly for the reason that the Ordinance did not
exist in the eyes of law, having been promulgated by the
federal government beyond its constitutional mandate and in
violation of the restriction placed on it by means of Article 142
(c) of the Constitution, as hospitals and public health (the
entry to which the purported Ordinance pertains) never fell
within the legislative sphere of the federation and have
always, exclusively remained provincial subjects. More
significantly and above all, the impugned transfer, though
made belatedly, was in compliance with the constitutional
mandate, as prescribed by Article 274 of the Constitution.
17.
The origins of the NICH on the other hand lie in
the paediatric ward of JPMC. It has now developed into a five
hundred bed children hospital, where teaching and training is
carried out merely as an ancillary activity.
18.
As noted earlier, throughout the constitutional
history of Pakistan, and even before independence, “public
health, hospitals & dispensaries” have remained provincial
subjects. Thus, in the Government of India Act, 1935, (which
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
17
was the only instrument available for governing the country
at the time of independence), the above subjects were
enumerated in the provincial legislative list as entry No. 14.
The very first constitution of this country, which received
assent on the 2nd March, 1956, also entrusted the subjects of
“public health sanitation, hospitals and dispensaries” to the
provinces (Entry No. 26 of the Provincial Legislative List). The
Constitution of 1962, which did not contain any provincial
list and enumerated certain subjects only in the Central
legislative list, left “public health” etc., for the provinces as
residuary subjects. The interim Constitution of 1972 restored
the provincial list with “public health” etc. as Entry 13
thereof. The Constitution of 1973 originally contained two
legislative lists, a federal legislative list, and a concurrent
legislative list. The above subjects did not find place in any of
the two lists, and thus being residuary subjects fell within the
legislative competence of the province, & remained under the
executive domain thereof. The concurrent list was abolished
through the 18th Constitutional Amendment. Some of the
entries of the concurrent list were shifted by the Amendment
to the federal list. Most however were omitted.
19.
Hence in the above backdrop, and from the very
inception, public health, hospitals, and matters relating
thereto have remained under the provincial domain, and as
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
18
such public hospitals in general have throughout been
owned, controlled and managed by the provinces within their
respective territories. However, in terms of “The Pakistan
(Establishment of the Federal Capital) Order 1948, GCO No.
15 (Order of 1948), Karachi (where JPMC, previously known
as JCH, was/is located,) was declared the Capital of Pakistan,
whereas section 5 of the said Order provided that the
executive authority for Karachi shall be exercised by the
Governor General. Such authority also extended to matters
enumerated in List-II of the Seventh Schedule to the Act of
1935, being the provincial legislative list, wherein “Public
Health, “Hospital & Dispensaries” found place by way of Entry
14, hence JPMC (JCM of that time) was then being managed
and controlled by the Federal/Central government. Thus, it
can be seen that it was only by virtue of Section 5 of the
Order of 1948 that the hospital, which otherwise fell within
the provincial sphere of authority, was being managed and
controlled by the Federal/Central Government. The situation
however changed when after establishment of the Province of
West Pakistan, under the “Establishment of West Pakistan
Act, 1955, the federal capital territory of Karachi was,
through the West Pakistan Administration (Merger of the
federal territory of Karachi) Order, 1961, merged into the
province of West Pakistan. Article 3 of the said merger Order
1961, provided that “the specified territory shall, with effect
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
19
from the appointed day, cease to be administered as federal
territory and be known as the Karachi division of West
Pakistan and administered accordingly.” Under the West
Pakistan Administration (Merger of federal territory of
Karachi) Order, 1961 (enforcement), 1st July 1961 was
appointed as the day when the said ordinance would come
into force and thus the executive authority acquired by the
federal/central government over the provincial subject
through section 5 of the Establishment of the Federal Capital
Territory Order 1948 would cease to exist. Thus, from the 1st
day of July 1961, on which date the 1956 Constitution was in
force, hospitals, along with public health, fell exclusively
within the provincial domain. The subject hospitals thus
ought to have been transferred to the province. Unfortunately,
however, it took a few decades to so happen.
20.
The fact that “public health” encompasses and
embraces a large spectrum of responsibilities, activities,
obligations, undertakings and functions hardly needs any
emphasis. It involves and requires the deployment of various
tools, means and resources; medical education, training and
research, being the most crucial of them all, without which
components
no
government
can
effectively
provide
appropriate and adequate health care to its people. This
obligation
undoubtedly
includes
prevention,
diagnosis,
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
20
diseases treatment, surveillance, prescription, invasive and
non-invasive procedures, human resources development, and
a lot more, which in turn essentially require a continuous
research and training process/effort in different fields and
spheres relating to health and medicine. Research, education
and training are also essentially required to discover,
diagnose, prevent, control and treat the various strains of
different diseases and ailments which always keep mutating.
Health System as described by the World Health Organization
(WHO) is the sum total of all the organizations, institutions
and resources whose primary purpose is to improve health.
WHO defines ‘public health’ as “the art and science of
preventing disease, prolong life and promoting health through
organised efforts of society”. The University of Pittsburgh
defines the terms as “the science of protecting life and
providing health through education, policy making and
research for diseases and injury prevention”. According to the
Pan American Health Organization, “the principal or exclusive
objectives of the health sector are to safeguard the health of
individuals or population and the activities of the health
sector institutions are designed to prevent and control
diseases, care for the ill, conduct health research and
training.” Research and training are therefore the most
essential components of the public health, without which, the
obligation to provide quality and affordable healthcare cannot
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
21
be discharged, dispensed and fulfilled. It would therefore not
be fair to say that health related research education and
training cannot lawfully form part of a “hospital” and/or
“public health”, in the context of the distribution of legislative,
hence executive powers in a federal dispensation. Had it been
the intent of the Constitution givers to assign general hospital
with research, teaching and training facilities to the federal
government, they could have conveniently created as a
separate category for such hospitals and placed them on the
FLL, like “Seamen’s and Marine hospital and hospitals
connected with port quarantine”, which was so placed
through entry No. 19, and the “places for the reception or
treatment of the mentally ill and mentally retarded”, which
category was enumerated in the erstwhile concurrent list as
entry No.23. It should be kept in mind that classifying a
general hospital as of the category falling under entry No.16
of the FLL, for its conducting research and/or imparting
professional or technical training in the fields of health
sciences would dissuade hospitals owned and operated by the
provincial governments from pursuing such activities, for a
fear of being so branded, and thus being taken over by the
Federal Government. It is a matter of common understanding
that in this day and age of scientific and technologic
advancement and professionalism, and for keeping abreast
with the social and scientific development around, it is
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
22
imperative for us to conduct research, and undertake
teaching and training in all the fields and disciplines.
However, declaring such activity as a qualifiers for falling into
entry No.16 of the FLL would prevent the various provincial
departments, organizations and undertaking from indulging
in the same, descending them into stalemate, redundancy
nay retardation with disastrous results.
21.
It is in recognition of the fact that research,
education and training in health related disciplines are
essential components of public health that public hospitals
throughout Pakistan, other than those situated in the federal
capital (irrespective of the extent and volume of their
involvement in the aforesaid three activities) have been
treated as Provincial entities only. They have thus been
owned, managed, and controlled exclusively by the Provinces.
By way of a few examples one may mention, The Children’s
Hospital and The Institute of Child Health, Lahore, The
Children Hospital and the Institute of Child Health, Multan,
The Mayo Hospital, Lahore City, Lahore, The Service Institute
of Medical Sciences/Services Hospital, Lahore, Postgraduate
Medical Institute, Peshawar (PGMI, Pesh), and Postgraduate
Medical Institute/Lahore General Hospital, Lahore (PGMI,
Lhr/LGH, Lhr).
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
23
22.
The Children Hospital and The Institute of Child
Health, Lahore is recognized by the College of Physicians &
Surgeons Pakistan (CPSP) for postgraduate training. It is also
recognized for house job by Pakistan Medical & Dental
Council (PMDC). As per the institute’s website, 234
postgraduate trainees are currently getting training in 55
different disciplines and allied specialties of paediatric
medicine, including various programme of fellowship, 2nd
fellowship, & membership of CPSP and for MD, MS & M.Phil
degrees. The institute is recognized for M. Phil Histopathology
& MD Development & Behavioural Paediatrics with University
of Health Sciences, Lahore. It is also conducting scientific
research and encompasses a school of nursing, and a School
of Allied Health Sciences.
23.
The Children’s Hospital & The Institute of Child
Health, Multan is a tertiary care teaching hospital, and is
recognized by CPSP for its membership and fellowship
programs in Medicine, Surgery, Neonatology, Anaesthesiology,
Radiology etc. The University of Health Sciences, Lahore is
running its MD, MS and DCH training programs at the
Institute. The Institute has also been recognized by PMDC for
imparting training for the aforementioned degree and Diploma
programmes. The Institute also claims to be regularly
involved in continuous medical educational activities and
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
24
research
projects
in
collaboration
with
National
and
International Institutes.
24.
The School of Nursing, Mayo Hospital, Lahore, is
imparting a three years general training of nursing, and
presently 250 Nursing Students are getting training of
nursing at the school, whereas CPSP has approved the East
Medical Ward of Mayo Hospital for FCPS training in
rheumatology, making it the third major centre in public
sector hospital in Punjab, offering level IV qualification in
super specialization.
25.
The Services Institute of Medical Sciences/
Services Hospital, Lahore is recognized for, and offers FCPS
training in 26 specialities. It is also recognized for MCPS
training in various disciplines.
26.
The Post Graduate Medical Institute, Peshawar
(PGMI, Pesh) was established by the Government of KPK as a
separate and independent Postgraduate Medical Institute at
Lady Reading Hospital, Peshawar, to be a Provincial centre of
excellence which could offer the highest quality tertiary health
care services and to promote research in all field of health in
the Province. The Institute now stands recognized as a
teaching and training institute by PMDC, CPSP and Royal
College of UK & Ireland. It is said to be serving the health
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
25
needs of the Province as a major human resource
development centre. The Institute is also engaged in
conducting research and its research work is now regularly
published in various national and international medical
journals. PGMI Peshawar offers FCPS-II training and
numerous
diploma
courses
to
health
professionals
throughout KPK. The institute consists of 41 teaching units
at Lady Reading Hospital and Hayatabad Medical Complex
and is accredited by the CPSP, it is also affiliated with Khyber
Medical University.
27.
The
Postgraduate
Medical
Institute,
Lahore/
Lahore General Hospital, Lahore (PGMI, Lhr/LGH, Lhr) is also
engaged in imparting education and training in the various
fields of medicine & surgery and is conducting training for
various FCPS & MCPS programmes.
28.
Adverting now to the nature of our constitutional
dispensation, suffice to say that Pakistan is a Federal
Republic (Article I of the Constitution). The preamble to our
Constitution envisaged the State of Pakistan to be a
federation, comprising of autonomous units (Provinces),
enjoying power and authority as may accordingly be
prescribed. Being true to its aspiration, the Constitution laid
out a comprehensive scheme in consonance with a federal
dispensation, some aspects whereof have been highlighted
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
26
hereinafter. The principle and spirit of federalism and
provincial autonomy has been reinforced and made watertight
and sacrosanct, through the 18th Amendment, adopted by the
Parliament with unanimity.
29.
Dilating upon the concept of federalism in the
context of the United States’ Constitution, KC Whease, former
professor at the University of Oxford and Chairman of Rhodes
Trust stated: “If we examine the American Constitution, we
must conclude that, as a matter of law there laid down, the
field of government is divided between the general authority
and the regional authority which are not subordinate to each
other, but coordinate with each other. In the words of a
modern American historian, the general government “is a
government supreme within its spheres, but that sphere is
defined and limited”. As the tenth amendment made clear in
1971, “the power not delegated to the United States by the
constitution nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved as
to the states respectively or to the people”.
30.
In the Oxford Handbook of Indian Constitution,
edited by Sujit Choudhry and Pratap Mehta, following
commonly accepted features of
federalism have been
highlighted:
(i)
existence of two levels of government; a
general government for the whole
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
27
country and two or more regional
governments
for
different
regions
within that country;
(ii)
distribution of competence or power-
legislature,
executive,
judicial
and
financial between the general and the
regional governments; and
(iii)
supremacy of the constitution- that is,
the foregoing arrangements are not
only incorporated in the constitution
but they are also beyond the reach of
either governments to the extent that
neither of them can unilaterally change
nor breach them.
31.
Mr. AK Brohi in his book “Fundamental Law of
Pakistan – 1958” has described “federalism” as a “device by
which a system of double government is made to operate in
one and the same State. It envisages a scheme of securing
division of power between the National Government, on the
one hand, and the Regional Governments, on the other hand,
in such a way that, both of them discharge their law making
and executive functions strictly within the sphere of their
allotted jurisdiction…. The two governments accommodated
within the framework of a federal polity are of coordinate
authority and work independently of each other in the sphere
marked out to them… in a Federal Constitution there are
really two governments working side by side, and the
operation of each one of them, within the limits defined by the
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
28
Constitution, is independent of the control by the other. They
are coordinate, independent organs sovereign power, each
being a master in the sphere of its own allotted jurisdiction”.
32.
And
thus,
in
terms
of
Article
97
of
the
Constitution “subject to the Constitution, the executive
authority of the Federation extends to the matter with respect
to which Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) has powers to make
laws”. Similarly, Article 137 of the Constitution grants such
authority to the Provinces to the extent “of the matters with
respect to which the Provincial Assembly has powers to make
laws”. Article 142 of the Constitution, on one hand, through
its clause (a), grants exclusivity to the Parliament in
legislating with respect to matters enumerated in the FLL,
and on the other, vide clause (c) thereof, secures the
legislative power in respect of all the residual matters, i.e. the
matters not listed in the FLL, exclusively in favour of the
Provincial Assembly. The Article emphatically forbids the
Parliament from legislating in such matters, save and except
in respect of areas in the Federation that are not included in
any Province, in relation whereto, as provided by clause (d),
the Parliament exercises exclusive powers. However, in terms
of clause (b) of Articles 142, law making in respect of criminal
law, criminal procedure and evidence has been left open for
the Parliament as well as the Provincial Assemblies to venture
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
29
into. It can, therefore, be seen that the Constitution has laid
down a well-defined scheme, prescribing the extent and
limitation
of
the
respective
legislative
and
executive
competence and sphere of the Federation and the Provinces,
leaving no ambiguity regarding such demarcation, and no
room either for the Federation, or the Provinces, to
manoeuvre any encroachment over the exclusive domain of
the other. The above delineation of power is so well secured
that it is only in case where the President, being satisfied that
a grave emergency, threatening the security of the country by
(i) war or external aggression, or (ii) by internal disturbances
beyond the power of a Provincial Government to control
exists, proclaims emergency, as envisaged by Article 232(1) of
the Constitution, that the Parliament may be able “to make
laws for a Province or any part thereof, with respect to the
matters not enumerated in FLL” [Article 232(2)(a)]. It may, in
such an eventuality, by order assumes to itself, all or any of
the functions of the Government of the Province, and make
such incidental and consequential provisions as appear to it
to be necessary and desirable for giving effect to the objects of
the proclamation [Article 232(2)(c). However it is not just the
satisfaction of the President that a grave emergency
threatening the security of the country exists, that a
proclamation can be made, but in case the emergency occurs
because of internal disturbance beyond the power of a
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
30
Provincial government to control, a resolution from the
Provincial Assembly for making such imposition is, (as
provided under clause-I of the said Article), an essential
prerequisite. In case the President proceeds on his own,
however, the proclamation is required to be placed before the
two Houses of the Parliament for approval of each House
within ten days. Yet, a law made by the Parliament which, but
for a proclamation of emergency, would not have been
competent to make, shall to the extent of incompetency, cease
to have effect on the expiration of six months after the
proclamation of emergency has ceased to be in force [Article
232(5)]. Furthermore in terms of clause 7(a) of the above
Article a proclamation, within thirty days of its being made,
shall be laid before a joint sitting of the Parliament, and shall
cease to be in force at the expiration of two months, unless it
has been approved by a resolution of the joint sitting by such
time. Conversely, a proclamation shall subject to clause 7(a)
above, cease to be in force upon a resolution disapproving the
proclamation being passed by the majority of the total
membership of the two Houses in a joint sitting. The federal
character of our Constitution and provincial autonomy,
hence, remain unimpeachable even during a war or external
aggression, or internal disturbance beyond the power of a
Provincial Government to control, resulting in a proclamation
of emergency, issuance of which, requires a resolution of the
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
31
relevant Provincial Assembly and in the second case, has to
be approved by both Houses of the Parliament. It may also be
recalled that the assumption of power to make laws with
respect to matter beyond the FLL, and so also the assumption
of the functions of the Provincial Government by the
Federation are limited to the relevant Province, and that too
only for a limited period. The Federal Government’s
consequential ability to make any incidental provision also is
limited to those that are inevitable to give effect to the object
of the proclamation. Furthermore, the proclamation ceases to
be in force, at the expiry of two months, unless it is approved
by a resolution of the joint sitting of the Parliament before
such expiry.
33.
The basic feature, rather the spirit and soul of
federalism, is the distribution of legislative powers between
the federation and the province, with its core being provincial
autonomy. Interpretation of constitutional provisions should
thus be in consonance with the said principle, rather than in
a manner that encroaches upon the space reserved for the
provinces. The scope of an entry in the FLL should not be
expanded or enlarged in a manner that infringes provincial
autonomy. It is also to be kept in mind that the nature and
character of the Constitution carries great significance and is
of utmost relevance in construing the legislative entries and
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
32
determining the scope and extent of the subjects assigned by
it to the Federation and the Provinces. The Court should
therefore avoid an expansive construction of a federal
legislative power which renders redundant or nugatory the
legislative field, power and authority assigned to the
provinces, either expressly or as residuary, thus undermining
provincial autonomy.
34. As regards fundamental rights, it may be observed here
that indeed the State has guaranteed the protection of
fundamental
rights
enshrined
in
the
Constitution.
Nonetheless, one must resist conflating the State with the
federal government as the provincial and also the local
governments too constitute the State. The State’s obligation
with regard to fundamental rights is, therefore, to be fulfilled
and discharged by all tiers of the government and all organs
of the State as per their power, authority, obligation, and
competence, strictly as prescribed under the Constitution.
Under no notion can any of the said governments be stripped
of their rights, authority, or power, nor can they be exempted
from discharging or fulfilling their prescribed obligations. If
allowed, this would result in complete anarchy and the
Constitution would not only be undermined but would
become redundant. It may also be relevant to observe here
that the scope and extent of the “right to life”, as protected
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
33
under Article 9 of the Constitution is so wide spread that it
embraces almost every aspect and facet of human existence.
Allowing the federation to assume power and authority under
such a rubric would, thus, hardly leave anything for the
provincial government to undertake, discharge, or fulfil,
jeopardizing this nation’s collective odyssey towards greater
provincial autonomy, as witnessed in the unanimous
approval of the 18th Amendment.
35. It was in order to ensure the faithful and instant
compliance of the delineation of power between the federation
and the provinces and ultimately between the provincial and
the local governments that the Parliament enacted Article
140A in the Constitution. Article 140A in its present form
prescribes that “each province shall, by law, establish a local
government system and devolve political, administrative and
financial responsibilities and authority to the elected
representatives of the local government.” Adhering to the
above would certainly foster in the people, a greater sense of
participation and reinforce and strengthen their faith in the
State machinery of governance, bringing cohesion and giving
strength to the country.
36.
Disregarding
the
mandatory
provisions
of
the
Constitution
and
the
categorical
mandate
prescribed
thereunder would embolden and encourage those who are
CA 125-K/2016 etc.
34
averse to the rule of law and have scant regard for the
supremacy of the Constitution, thereby strengthening those
who want to create dissention and discord in our national
polity.
37.
Now before parting with this note, it may be
relevant to state that while a dissenting note has no legal
force, the purpose of this endeavour is to appeal to the
brooding spirit of the law in the hope that what may be
dissent today becomes the law tomorrow.
38.
Above are the reasons for my short order dated
17.01.2019.
Judge
‘APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
(Aamir Sh.)
| {
"id": "C.A.125-K_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.1255 AND 1256 OF 2012
(Against judgment dated 11.9.2012 of the
Lahore High Court, Multan Bench passed in
ICA Nos.104 and 105 of 2011)
Zarai Traqiati Bank Ltd.
…
Appellant
(In both cases)
Versus
Muhammad Asim Rafique and others
(In CA 1255/12)
Muhammad Farooq & others
(In CA 1256/12)
…
Respondents
For the Appellant:
MianMuhammad Hanif, ASC.
Mr. Mehr Khan Malik, AOR.
For the respondents:
Mr. Muhammad Suleman Bhatti, ASC.
Date of hearing
16.2.2016
ORDER
MAQBOOL BAQAR, J.-In response to an advertisement
placed by the appellant-bank in the daily “Dawn” for the post of
“Management Trainee Officer”. The respondents applied, they passed
the written test and were selected in their interview, however, instead
of issuing appointment letters, the appellant bank offered them a
contract for on the job training as “Management Trainee” for a period
of two years on payment of Rs.16,000/- per month and instead of the
word ‘salary’ the word ‘stipend’ was used for such payment. Clause
vii of the contract provided that the said contract will not constitute
employee/employer relationship between the trainee and the
appellant-bank, whereas clause ix provided for extension of the
training beyond the original period of two years and clause xi
stipulated that the training does not offer any guarantee of regular
employment in the appellant-bank. The contract, however, through
clause iv provided 30 working days annual leave. The respondents, in
pursuance of the above were inducted in the appellant-bank. They
were posted in different branches of the bank as Grade-II Officers
and as Managers also. They were assigned the functions such as
authorized to sanction loan, negotiate financial facility with the
customers, evaluate the securities and to recovery the finance
granted to the customers and thus were functioning as/and
discharging their duties with power and authority as could be of any
other officer/employee of the equivalent position in the bank. Upon
expiry of the above contract, after the prescribed period of two years,
the contract on 26.5.2010 was extended for a period of about seven
months up to 31.12.2016. However, neither was the employment of
the respondents regularized nor were their contracts extended
thereafter and the bank instead advertised vacancies for appointment
in place of the respondents.
2.
We have noted that not only the applications that were
invited by the appellant-bank and made by the respondents were, “to
fill the positions of MTOs for operations of the Bank in Finance and
Accounts”. To catch the attention of the prospective candidates to the
advertisement, in fact “Career for Management Trainee Officers” was
printed on the top of the advertisement in bold letters and
offer/advertisement
also
promised
“payment
of
competitive
remuneration”. From the official summaries placed by the appellant-
bank through CMA No.989 of 2015, also clearly show that the
applications were in fact invited for the “posts of Management
Trainee” and that in response to the advertisement, the appellant-
bank received 8392 applications which were short listed to 1942. The
candidates were further short listed for written test and thus 231
candidates were put to such test. Though the candidate securing
45% and above marks in the test were to be considered eligible for
interview, however, keeping in view the vacancy position only 30
candidates were called for interview conducted by the Designated
Committee and on the recommendations at of the Committee, the
competent authority decided that the respondents may be considered
for selection in the Head Office and the fields and after that they may
be preferred for posting in concerned zone with high merit. The
summary/office note further reveals that the above trainees were to
be accepted for on job training initially for a period of two years and
were to be considered for regular appointment on expiry of contract
period upon satisfactory performance and availability of vacancies
and further that in case any management trainee fails to join, the
next candidate with high merit may be offered the position for
posting. The respondents were also required to furnish medical
fitness certificate issued by the authorized medical practitioners.
(The Federal Government imposed ban)
Judge
Judge
Islamabad the,
14th June 2013
(Aamir Sh.)
‘NOT APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
| {
"id": "C.A.1255_2012.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed
Mr. Justice Qazi Faez Isa
Mr. Justice Sardar Tariq Masood
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1257 OF 2012
[On appeal against the judgment dated 27.09.2012 passed by
the Islamabad High Court, Islamabad, in W.P.No.322 of 2012]
SME Bank Ltd through its President Islamabad
& another
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Izhar ul Haq
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
: Mr. Tariq Mehmood, Sr. ASC
Syed Riffaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For the Respondent(s)
: Mr. Abdul Rahim Bhatti, ASC
Mr. M.S.Khattak, AOR
Date of Hearing
: 15.04.2019
JUDGMENT
GULZAR AHMED, J.— The Respondent was employed as an
Executive Vice President (EVP) with the appellant-Bank. The
appellant had issued Voluntary Separation Scheme (VSS) and it
seems that the respondent had applied under it. At the same time,
the respondent was facing disciplinary proceeding. In the
disciplinary proceedings, he was found guilty of committing
irregularities and gross negligence of the highest degree on all
charges relating to TAAS Securities an
8-CA No.1257 of 2012.doc
- 2 -
institution. The appellant vide Office Order dated 02.06.2003
imposed such penalty. This Office Order of penalty was challenged
by the respondent by filing Writ Petition No.2702 of 2006 in the
Lahore High Court, Rawalpindi Bench, with the following prayer:
a)
Declare the impugned Order dated 02.06.2003 may kindly be
set-aside by extending the benefits of the Judgments
mentioned above;
b)
Direct the respondents to release the benefits of Voluntary
Separation Scheme with 20% mark up and the petitioner may
also be paid the salaries and allowances for the period from
17.01.2002 to 02.06.2003; and
c)
Direct the respondents to calculate the benefits of VSS on the
basis of last pay drawn by the petitioner”.
Although the appellant seems to have contested the said writ
petition but vide judgment dated 28.10.2011 the said writ petition
was allowed by granting the following relief to the respondent:
“11. The ultimate inference which floats from the above discussion
is that the petitioner is entitled for recovery of V.S.S. benefits.
Resultantly, the instant writ petition is accepted and the
respondents are directed to pay Voluntary Separation
Scheme benefits to the petitioner.”
This judgment of the High Court was not challenged either by the
appellant or the respondent. The respondent was paid benefit of
VSS vide letter dated 05.01.2012, which payment was received by
the respondent ‘under protest’ as stated by his counsel. The
respondent then filed another Writ Petition No.322 of 2012 in the
Islamabad High Court, Islamabad, containing the following prayer:
“i)
Salaries and allowances for the period from 17.01.2002 to
02.06.2003;
ii)
VSS benefits on the basis of last pay drawn i.e. 02.06.2003
with 20% mark up”.
This writ petition was also contested by the appellant. After
hearing learned counsel for the parties, learned Judge-in-
Chambers of the Islamabad High Court passed the impugned
judgment dated 27.09.2012, accepting the said writ petition and
specifically directing the appellant to comply with the judgment
dated 28.10.2011, in letter and spirit. Petition for leave to appeal
8-CA No.1257 of 2012.doc
- 3 -
was filed by the appellant, in which leave was granted by this
Court vide order dated 31.12.2012.
2.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties and
have also gone through record of the case.
3.
Mr. Abdul Rahim Bhatti, learned ASC for the
respondent, at the outset, has contended that the appeal before
this Court is not maintainable as against the impugned judgment
the appellant had a remedy of filing an Intra-Court Appeal (ICA) in
the High Court. He contended that without availing such remedy,
the present appeal is liable to be dismissed.
4.
Mr. Tariq Mehmood, learned Senior ASC for the
appellants, on the other hand, has opposed the submissions and
contended that remedy of ICA was not available to the appellants
for that under the RDFC Employees Service Regulations, 1989, by
which penalty was imposed upon the respondent, there was
remedy of appeal and review under Regulation No.10.7, which
provides that an employee shall have the right of appeal from or of
making application for review of any order imposing on him any of
the penalties and the respondent claiming these Regulations to be
statutory. Thus, the remedy of ICA will stand excluded altogether
to the appellant per section 3 of the Law Reforms Ordinance, 1972
(Ordinance of 1972), and in this respect reliance was placed upon
a judgment of five-member Bench of this Court in the case of Mst.
Karim Bibi & others v. Hussain Bakhsh & another [PLD 1984 SC
344].
5.
We would directly like to examine the said judgment of
this Court cited at the Bar by the learned Senior ASC for the
appellant and in this regard, reference is made to para 8 thereof.
Relevant portion is as follows:
“8.
After giving our anxious consideration to the arguments
urged in support of this appeal we are, however, not impressed by
any of the contentions raised. The test laid down by the Legislature
in the proviso is that if the law applicable to the proceedings from
which the Constitutional Petition arises provides for at least one
appeal, against the original order, then no appeal would be
8-CA No.1257 of 2012.doc
- 4 -
competent from the order of a Single Judge in the constitutional
jurisdiction to a Bench of two or more Judges of the High Court. The
crucial words are the "original order". It is clear from the wording of
the proviso that the requirement of the availability of an appeal in
the law applicable is not in relation to the impugned order in the
Constitutional Petition, which may be the order passed by the
lowest officer or authority in the hierarchy or an order passed by
higher authorities in appeal, revision or review, if any, provided in
the relevant statute. Therefore, the relevant order may not
necessarily be the one which is under challenge but the test is
whether the original order passed in the proceedings subject to an
appeal under the relevant law, irrespective of the fact whether the
remedy of appeal so provided was availed of or not. Apparently the
meaning of the expression "original order" is the order with which
the proceedings under the relevant statute commenced.”
6.
It is admitted fact that disciplinary proceedings were
conducted against the respondent under the Regulations stated
above, which ultimately resulted into imposition of penalty vide
Office Order dated 02.06.2003, against which under the said
Regulations, which are stated by the respondent to be statutory,
the remedy of appeal and review is provided. We are of the view
that where the proceedings from which the writ petition has arisen
provided for either review, revision or appeal, in terms of proviso to
section 3 of the Ordinance of 1972, remedy of ICA will not be
available against the judgment passed by the learned Single Judge
in the writ petition. Thus, the appeal before this Court is
competent.
7.
During the course of arguments, it was plainly
conceded by the learned ASC for the respondent that Writ Petition
No.322 of 2012 is a continuation of the proceeding under which
penalty was imposed upon the respondent and that the respondent
was claiming benefit by way of implementation of the judgment
passed by the High Court in the earlier Writ Petition No.2702 of
2006. Learned ASC for the respondent was then confronted with
the question as to whether the writ petition is maintainable for
obtaining implementation of the judgment passed by the High
Court in the earlier writ petition, he, in the first place, referred to
the provision of Article 187(2) of the Constitution and contended
that the High Court is competent to execute its own judgment
under this provision. On reading of Article 187 of the Constitution,
it is apparent that it gives powers to the Supreme Court to issue
such directions, orders or decrees as may be necessary for doing
8-CA No.1257 of 2012.doc
- 5 -
complete justice in any case or matter pending before it, including
an order for the purpose of securing the attendance of any person
or the discovery or production of any document, while as per
clause (2) thereof such directions, order or decree shall be
enforceable throughout Pakistan and shall, where it is to be
executed in a Province, or a territory or an area not forming part of
a Province but within the jurisdiction of the High Court of the
Province, be executed as if it had been issued by the High Court of
that Province. Thus, this provision of the Constitution does not
offer any help to the respondent for it deals with the execution of
directions, orders and decree of the Supreme Court by High Court.
The learned ASC for the respondent then referred to the provision
of sub-para (i) of paragraph (c) of clause (1) of Article 199 to argue
that the judgment passed in Writ Petition No.2702 of 2006 could
be enforced through this Article of the Constitution. We have
asked the learned ASC to cite any precedent but no such precedent
was cited by him before us. Thus, his second Writ Petition No.322
of 2012 was not maintainable before the Islamabad High Court.
8.
What we understand is that pursuant to the penalty
imposed upon the respondent, he filed Writ Petition No.2702 of
2006 in which the only relief granted to him, out of the prayers
made by him, was that of VSS benefit be paid to him and no other
prayer, contained in the said writ petition, was allowed by the High
Court. The respondent neither sought review of the said judgment
nor challenged the same before this Court rather the judgment
itself was accepted by him and the payment made to him under
such judgment was received by him ‘under protest’. Receiving of
benefit ‘under protest’ was of no consequence for that the
respondent admits that such payment settled his dues of VSS but
the remaining dues, as was prayed by him in Writ Petition No.2202
of 2006, were not granted to him. If that be the case, the
respondent ought to have taken measures for granting him other
prayers containing in the earlier writ petition either by seeking
review or by filing proceeding before this Court, which he did not
do. The VSS benefits having been paid to him, which were only
relief allowed by the High Court vide its judgment dated
8-CA No.1257 of 2012.doc
- 6 -
28.10.2011 and same having been accepted by the respondent, he
cannot claim that full relief has not been granted to him by the
appellant. Further, the principle of res judicata with all its force
will apply to the case of the respondent for that his second writ
petition against the appellant will not be maintainable for granting
him the relief, which was not allowed to him by the High Court
earlier for that the law assumes that such relief stood specifically
denied to him by the High Court while passing judgment dated
28.10.2011. This being the position apparent on the record, after
having heard learned counsel for the parties and going through the
record, by short order we had allowed the appeal and set aside the
impugned judgment dated 27.09.2012. These are the reasons of
our short order of even date.
JUDGE
Bench-II
ISLAMABAD
15.04.2019
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
JUDGE
*Hashmi*
JUDGE
8-CA No.1257 of 2012.doc
- 7 -
2012 SCMR 366 SUPREME-COURT
Side Appellant : GHULAM AKBAR LANG
Side Opponent : DEWAN ASHIQ HUSSAIN BUKHARI
2005 SCMR 699 SUPREME-COURT
Side Appellant : Messrs M.K.B. INDUSTRIES (PVT.) LTD. and others
Side Opponent : CHAIRMAN, AREA ELECTRICITY BOARD, WAPDA
| {
"id": "C.A.1257_2012.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE MANZOOR AHMAD MALIK
MR. JUSTICE KHILJI ARIF HUSSAIN
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1264 TO 1270/2006, 975/2007, 229/2010,
716, 717, 722, 723/2011, 697/2015 AND C.M.A.NO.793/2008 IN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1574/2007
(Against the judgments dated 27.1.2006/30.3.2006, 30.4.2009/15.4.2011/5.5.2011/
12.11.2014 of the High Court of Sindh, Karachi passed in ITA No.178/1999, ITR
No.102/1991, Ref. Case No.130/1997, ITR No.131/1997. ITA No.177/1999, ITA
No.217/1999,
ITA
No.208/1999,
ITR
No.185/1997,
ITRA
No.531/2000,
ITA
No.295/1997, ITA No.296/1997, ITA No.929/2000, ITA No.930/2000 & ITC
No.482/2004)
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1264/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1265/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1266/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1267/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1268/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1269/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.1270/2006
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.975/2007
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.A.229/2010
Commissioner Inland Revenue
…in C.A.716/2011
Commissioner Inland Revenue
…in C.A.717/2011
Commissioner Inland Revenue
…in C.A.722/2011
Commissioner Inland Revenue
…in C.A.723/2011
Commissioner Inland Revenue
…in C.A.697/2015
Commissioner of Income Tax
…in C.M.A.793/2008
in C.A.154/2007
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Balochistan Concrete and Block Works Ltd.
…in C.A.1264/2006
M/s Balochistan Wheels Ltd.
…in C.A.1265/2006
M/s Automotive Battery Co., Ltd.
…in C.A.1266/2006
M/s Balochistan Wheels Ltd.
…in C.A.1267/2006
M/s Bolan Casting Ltd.
…in C.A.1268/2006
M/s Automotive Battery Co., Ltd.
…in C.A.1269/2006
M/s Automotive Battery Co., Ltd.
…in C.A.1270/2006
M/s Allied Garments Industries (Pvt.) Ltd.
…in C.A.975/2007
M/s Bolan Casting Ltd. Karachi
…in C.A.229/2010
M/s Asia Board Industries Ltd.
…in C.A.716/2011
M/s Asia Board Industries Ltd.
…in C.A.717/2011
M/s Diamond Food Industries (Pvt.) Ltd.
…in C.A.722/2011
M/s Diamond Food Industries (Pvt.) Ltd.
…in C.A.723/2011
M/s NP Spinning Mills Ltd.
…in C.A.697/2015
Shah Nawaz Textile Mills Ltd.
…in C.M.A.793/2008
in C.A.154/2007
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
(in all cases)
Dr. Farhat Zafar, ASC
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 2 :-
Mr. Muhammad Siddiq Mirza, ASC
Mr. Shakeel Ahmed, ASC
Mr. Muhammad Habib Qureshi, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
For the applicant(s):
Nemo
(in C.M.A.793/2008)
For the respondent(s):
Mian Allah Nawaz, Sr. ASC
(in C.A.1268/2006)
Mr. Salman Pasha, ASC
(in C.As.716 & 717/2011 & 697/2015)
Ex-parte
(in C.As.1264, 1270/2006 & 975/2007)
Not represented
(in C.As.229/2010, 722 & 723/2011)
Date of hearing:
16.11.2016
…
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- These appeals, by leave of the
Court, involve the following questions:-
(i)
whether the losses incurred by an industrial undertaking
during the period of tax holiday under the Income Tax
Ordinance, 1979 (the Ordinance) which could not be fully set-
off against the income earned during such period, can be
carried forward and set-off against the income earned in the
assessment years beyond the tax holiday period; and
(ii)
whether unabsorbed depreciation allowance can be carried
forward to the assessment years beyond the tax holiday
period.
2.
The brief facts are that the respondents, industrial
undertakings involved in the manufacturing of different goods, claimed
exemption from charge to tax under various clauses (particularly Clauses
118D, 119, 122 and 125) of the Second Schedule of the Ordinance for various
assessment years. However they suffered losses which could not be fully
set-off against the income earned by them during the period of tax
holiday and therefore claimed that such losses be carried forward and
set-off against the income earned in the assessment years beyond the
tax holiday period (note:- in Civil Appeals No.716 and 717/2011 the respondents sought
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 3 :-
carrying forward of unabsorbed depreciation allowance). This claim was declined by
the Assessing Authority. The matters came before the Commissioner of
Income Tax, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (the Tribunal) and finally
the learned Division Bench of the High Court of Sindh which, while
deciding the tax references, held that the losses (and the unabsorbed
depreciation allowance) sustained during the tax holiday could be carried
forward
against
income
earned
thereafter.
Aggrieved,
the
appellant/department approached this Court. Leave was granted
through numerous orders to consider the questions highlighted in the
opening paragraph of this opinion.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant/department submitted
that losses incurred during the tax holiday period which remained
unabsorbed could not be carried forward and set-off against the profits
and gains earned by the respondents in the assessment years beyond
such period; the learned High Court of Sindh in the impugned
judgment(s) has erred by relying upon precedents regarding set-off of
unabsorbed depreciation of plants, buildings, machinery etc. which was
not relevant to losses sustained during the tax holiday period; the use
of the word ‘loss’ in the definition of ‘income’ means that it cannot be
carried forward and is confined to that particular year; and that there is
no law that allows losses incurred in tax holiday period to be adjusted
in the tax period. Reliance was placed upon Commissioner of Income
Tax Vs. Messrs Anwar Textile Mills Ltd (1989 PTD 1016), In the
matter of the Income-Tax Assessments of Messrs Sheikco Ltd.,
Ismailabad, Multan (PLD 1962 Lah 870), Commissioner of Income
Tax, Companies Zone-I, Lahore Vs. Messrs Grays Leasing Company
Limited (2005 PTD 2093), Messrs Pioneer Bank Ltd. in liquidation
Official Liquidator, State Bank of Pakistan, Dacca Vs. The
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 4 :-
Commissioner of Income-Tax, East Pakistan, Dacca (1968 PTD 520)
and The Commissioner of Income-Tax, East Zone, Karachi Vs.
Messrs Iqbal Engineering Works and another (PLD 1986 SC 556).
4.
Contrarily, learned counsel for the respondents contended
that the purpose of tax exemptions was to promote and encourage
certain industries; Sections 34 and 35 of the Ordinance specifically
excludes carrying forward of speculation losses under Section 36 but
nowhere have losses incurred during the tax holiday been excluded
from being carried over; once the tax holiday period is over, the normal
law comes into play on which basis assessments are to be made, and
such law provides that if an assessee suffers losses he would be entitled
to adjustment, irrespective of whether there were tax holidays or not;
the definition of ‘income’ in Section 2(24) of the Ordinance includes
‘loss’ and hence the Assessing Officer erred in finalizing the assessment
at ‘nil’ income without giving any findings regarding the quantum of
income or loss. Reference was made to Commissioner of Income Tax,
Lahore and Chairman FBR, Islamabad and others Vs. Messrs
Prosperity Weaving Mills (Pvt.) Ltd. and others (2011 SCMR 177).
5.
Heard. According to Section 14 of the Ordinance, incomes
or classes of income, or persons or classes of persons specified in the
Second Schedule shall be exempt from tax, under the Ordinance,
subject to the conditions and to the extent specified therein, provided
that, where any income which is exempt from tax under any provision
of the Second Schedule, such income, as may be specified in the said
Schedule and subject to such conditions as may be specified therein,
shall be included in the total income, so however that the tax shall not
be payable in respect of such income. Clauses 118D, 119, 122 and 125
of the Second Schedule all provide that industrial undertakings (which
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 5 :-
fulfil the conditions enumerated therein) set up during various time periods were
exempt from paying tax upon their profit and gains. It is undisputed
that the respondent/industrial undertakings were entitled to such
exemption, rather the only issue is whether they were entitled to carry
forward the losses they incurred during the tax holiday period and have
it set-off against the income earned in the assessment years beyond the
tax holiday period. Section 34 of the Ordinance provides that:-
“34.
Set-off of losses.- Where an assessee sustains a
loss (not being a loss to which section 36 or section 37
applies) in any assessment year under any head of
income specified in section 15, he shall, subject to
clause (v) of sub-section (1) of section 23 be entitled to
have the amount of the loss set-off against his income
(other than income to which sub-section (7) or (9) of
section 12 applies), if any, under any other head
assessable for that assessment year.”
Although Section 34 ibid restricts the set-off of loss to the income of
that particular assessment year, Section 35 of the Ordinance allows for
business losses to be carried forward, the latter of which reads as
under:-
“35. Carry forward of business losses.- Where an
assessee sustains a loss in any assessment year under
the head `Income from business or profession’ (not
being a loss to which section 36 applies) and the loss
cannot be wholly set-off under section 34, so much of
the loss as has not been set-off, or the whole of the loss
where the assessee has no income under any other
head, shall be carried forward, subject to clause (v) of
sub-section (1) of section 23, to the following
assessment year and set-off against the profits and
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 6 :-
gains, if any, of such business or profession assessable
for that year if such business or profession continues to
be carried on by the assessee for that assessment year;
and if the loss cannot be wholly set-off in this manner,
the amount of the loss not so set-off shall be carried
forward to the following assessment year, and so on,
but no loss shall be carried forward to more than six
assessment
years
immediately
succeeding
the
assessment year for which the loss was first computed:
Provided that…”
Thus the conditions of the right to carry forward business losses for the
purposes of set-off are as follows:-
(i)
The loss should fall under the head ‘income from business
or profession’ defined in Section 22 of the Ordinance;
(ii)
It should not be a loss to which Section 36 of the Ordinance
applies, i.e. speculation losses;
(iii)
The loss shall be carried forward to the following
assessment year and set-off against the profits and gains of
such business or profession assessable for that year. In
other words, the loss being carried forward cannot be set-
off against a source other than the profits and gains of such
business or profession;
(iv)
The business or profession in which the loss was originally
sustained should continue to be carried on by the assessee
for the assessment year in which carried forward loss is
sought to be set-off;
(v)
A loss cannot be carried forward for more than six years
from the assessment year for which the loss was first
computed;
(vi)
A loss cannot be carried forward unless it has been
determined in pursuance of a return filed under Section 55
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 7 :-
of the Ordinance. In order to be entitled to carry forward a
loss, the assessee must submit a return under Section 55
ibid and have an assessment made for the year in which he
has incurred the loss. The Assessing Officer has to notify to
the assessee by an order in writing the amount of the loss
as computed by him which the assessee is entitled to have
carried forward.
Therefore under the Ordinance, losses of assessees can be carried
forward and subsequently set-off according to the provisions of Section
35 of the Ordinance. No exception has been created vis-à-vis tax
holidays, whereby such periods have been excluded for the purposes of
carrying forward and setting off of losses. While it is clear, upon a
perusal of the Ordinance, that it does not preclude losses incurred
during tax holidays from being carried forward and set-off subsequently
as per Section 35 thereof, nevertheless if the interpretation adopted by
the learned counsel for the appellant/department was also possible, or
there existed an ambiguity, in such a situation an interpretation
favourable to the tax payer should be preferred as settled by this Court
in Pakistan through Secretary Finance and others Vs. Messrs Lucky
Cement and another (2007 SCMR 1367). Regarding the case of Iqbal
Engineering Works (supra) relied upon by the learned counsel for the
appellants, it involved an interpretation of Section 24 of the Income Tax
Act, 1922 and the issue was regarding set-off of losses in the context of
a registered firm and therefore is not relevant to the instant matter.
Therefore, in our candid view, the respondents/industrial
undertakings were entitled to carrying forward and setting off of the
losses they incurred during the tax holiday period in accordance with
the provisions of Section 35 of the Ordinance. In light whereof, Civil
Appeals No.1264 to 1270/2006, 975/2007, 229/2010, 722 and
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 8 :-
723/2011 and 697/2015 are dismissed. Regarding Civil Appeal
No.1574/2007 dismissed for non-prosecution vide order dated
27.2.2008, for the reasons stated in C.M.A.No.793/2008, the same is
allowed and the main appeal (C.A.No.1574/2007) is restored to its original
number and is dismissed for the reasons enumerated above.
7.
As regards Civil Appeals No.716 and 717/2011, the issue
involved
therein
is
regarding
carrying
forward
of
unabsorbed
depreciation allowance. Section 38(6) of the Ordinance provides that:-
“Where, in making an assessment for any year, full
effect cannot be given to the allowances referred to in
clause (v) of sub-section (1) of section 23 owing to
there being no profits or gains chargeable for that year
or such profits or gains being less than the allowance,
then, subject to clause (v) of sub-section (1) of section
23 and the provisions of sub-section (7), the allowance
or part of the allowance to which effect has not been
given, as the case may be, shall be added to the
amount of the allowance for depreciation for the
following year and be deemed to be part of that
allowance, or if there is no such allowance for that
year, be deemed to be the allowance for that year and
so on for succeeding years.”
(Emphasis supplied)
While Section 38(6) of the Ordinance allows for carrying forward of
unabsorbed depreciation allowance, an exception has been provided
under Rule 3A of the Third Schedule of the Ordinance which (rule) reads
as under:-
“(3A) Where any building, furniture, machinery or
plant is used for the purposes of business or profession
during any income year for which the income from
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 9 :-
such business or profession is exempt from tax,
depreciation admissible under sub-rule (1) shall be
deemed to have been allowed in respect of the said
income year and after expiration of the exemption
period written down value of such assets shall be
determined in accordance with sub-clause (ii) of
clause (b) of sub-rule (7) of rule 8.”
(Emphasis supplied)
Rule 3A ibid provides for depreciation allowance to be deemed to have
been allowed, which in turn means that it has been given due effect for
the purposes of Section 38(6) of the Ordinance and therefore cannot be
carried forward to subsequent assessment years. Unlike the case with
carrying forward of losses under Section 35 of the Ordinance, there
exists a clear exception in the form of Rule 3A of the Third Schedule to
carrying forward of unabsorbed depreciation allowances under Section
38(6) of the Ordinance. In the case of Anwar Textile Mills (supra) relied
upon by the learned counsel for the appellants, the question that arose
before the learned High Court of Sindh was whether the assessee was
entitled to carry forward the unabsorbed amount of depreciation after
the expiry of the tax holiday period and the Court held that the right to
carry forward unabsorbed depreciation to the following year was
conferred by proviso (b) of Section 10(2)(vi) of the Income Tax Act, 1922
and the applicability of such provision was not excluded, therefore the
assessee was allowed to carry forward the unabsorbed depreciation
amount. However, in the instant matter, as mentioned above,
undoubtedly an exception has been provided to carry forward
unabsorbed depreciation allowance by virtue of Rule 3A of the Third
Schedule to the Ordinance.
Civil Appeals No.1264/2006 etc.
-: 10 :-
Therefore, we opine that the respondent/industrial undertaking
(in Civil Appeals No.716 and 717/2011) is not entitled to carry forward to the
post-tax holiday period, the unabsorbed depreciation allowances that
arose during the tax holiday period. In light whereof, Civil Appeals
No.716 and 717/2011 are allowed and the impugned judgments are set
aside.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 25.11.2016 at Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Ghulam Raza/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1264_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE SH. AZMAT SAEED
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1291 OF 2005
(On
appeal
against
the
judgment
dated
1.1.2003 passed by the High Court of Sindh,
Karachi
in
Special
Customs
Appeal
No.
142/2002)
Collector of Customs
… Appellant
VERSUS
M/s D.G. Khan Cement Co Ltd
…Respondents
For the Appellant:
Raja Muhammad Iqbal, ASC
For the Respondent:
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, ASC
Dates of Hearing:
13.04.2016 & 27.04.2016
JUDGMENT
FAISAL
ARAB,
J.-
In
order
to
encourage
industrialization in certain areas of the country, the Federal
Government from time to time has been granting exemptions from
customs duty and sales tax. One such incentive was contained in
SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992. Under this notification, plant
and machinery, not manufactured locally, imported for setting up
a new unit or for expansion or balancing, modernization and
replacement of an already existing unit in certain areas was
granted exemption from the whole of the customs duty and sales
tax subject to fulfilling certain conditions.
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
2
2.
The respondent company, a cement manufacturing
enterprise, imported three Caterpillar Off-Highway dump trucks,
which were shipped to Karachi port through S.S. ‘Chitral’. Letter of
Credit for the import of such trucks was opened on 27.2.1995 and
the Bill of Entry was filed on 29.6.1995 i.e. well before the arrival
of the ship. Upon arrival of the ship on 16.7.1995, benefit of total
exemption from customs duty and sales tax was sought under
Notification No. SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992, but the same
was denied to the respondent company for two reasons. Firstly it
was maintained that the exemption was applicable only to such
imports that arrived at the port on or before 30.06.1995 whereas in
the present case the ship carrying the Off-Highway dump trucks
arrived on 16.7.1995. The other reason for denying benefit of
exemption was that the Off-Highway dump truck being mobile
vehicle, cannot be termed as a plant hence does not fall within the
ambit of SRO 484(I)/92. The customs authority thus assessed the
consignment on the basis of PCT Heading that is applicable to
dump trucks and imposed 30% Ad Volerum duty as well as the
applicable rate of sales tax and other charges.
3.
Having being denied the benefit of exemption under
SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992, the respondent company
challenged the assessment of the customs authority in the Lahore
High Court and on the basis of an interim order obtained release of
the consignment upon furnishing personal bonds of its directors.
The Lahore High Court then relegated the respondent company to
contest the matter before the forum provided under the Customs
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
3
Act. All the three forums upto the Customs and Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal held that the exemption cannot be availed on
Off-Highway dump trucks on the ground that the same being
vehicles cannot be termed as ‘plant’. The respondent company
challenged the decision of the Tribunal before the High Court of
Sindh in Special Customs Appeal No. 142/2002. The High Court
after framing the question of law “Whether Dump Trucks imported by
the appellant fall within the purview of plant and machinery as
contemplated in SRO-484(I)/92 dated 14.5.1992”, vide impugned
judgment dated 1.1.2003 answered it in the affirmative. Being
aggrieved by such decision, the appellant filed CPLA No. 256-
K/2003 before this Court giving rise to the present appeal.
4.
Mr. Raja Muhammad Iqbal, learned counsel for the
appellant, argued that Off-Highway dump trucks imported by the
respondent company being mobile vehicles, fall under PCT Heading
8704.1090 and do not fall under any entry listed in PCT Heading
84 and 85, which lists the items of machinery, appliances and
equipments, therefore not being part of the plant of respondents’
factory it was not entitled to claim exemption under SRO 484(I)/92
dated 14.05.1992. He next submitted that the power to classify
any item for customs tariff lies exclusively with the government
and as the Off-Highway dump truck is separately classified in PCT
headings and not included in the items of machinery listed in SRO
484(I)/92, the same does not fall within the ambit of plant. In
support of this contention he relied upon the case of Big Mak
Foods Ltd Vs. Deputy Collector of Customs (1994 SCMR 537). He
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
4
next argued that in the present case the Bill of Entry was filed on
29.6.1995 at the time when the ship carrying the consignment in
question had not even arrived. The ship arrived on 16.7.1995 and
at that time the benefit of exemption granted under SRO 484(I)/92
was no longer available as by that time the period of exemption
had already expired. He submitted that in terms of the first proviso
to Section 30 of the Customs Act where Bill of Entry is filed in
advance of the arrival of the conveyance, the applicable rate of
duty would be such that was chargeable on the date the manifest
of the conveyance is delivered, which in the present case was
16.07.1995. Therefore, he maintained that the filing of Bill of Entry
before the cut-off date i.e. 30.06.1995 would not bring any benefit
for the respondent company under SRO No. 484(I)/92. In support
of this argument, the learned counsel for the appellant relied upon
the case of Fauji Cement Company Limited Vs. Federation of
Pakistan (2014 SCMR 994). He also relied upon the cases of
Pakistan
Telecommunication
Corporation
Vs.
Federation
of
Pakistan (2011 PTD 2175) and Collector of Customs Vs. Ismail &
Co (2015 SCMR 1383).
5.
In rebuttal, Mr. Salman Akram Raja, learned counsel
for the respondent company, argued that by definition an
industrial plant comprises of equipments, machines and apparatus
that are applied in an industrial process to produce a desired
result and respondent company’s industrial process of cement
manufacturing starts from the quarrying of the limestone. He
explained that the Off-Highway dump trucks are meant for
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
5
transporting the quarried limestone to the place where it is further
processed, thus being an integral part of industrial process entitled
the respondent company to avail the benefit of exemption granted
under SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992. In support of his
argument that even a moving vehicle can be described as part of a
‘plant’, Mr. Salman Akram Raja placed reliance upon the case of
Collector of Customs Vs. Fauji Fertilizer Co. Ltd (PLD 2005
Supreme Court 577) and also on a judgment from English
jurisdiction rendered way back in the year 1887 and reported as
Yarmouth Vs. France (1887 LIR. 19 Q.B.D. 647). In this case, the
plaintiff was an employee of a wharfinger. He brought an action
against his employer under the Employers’ Liability Act, 1880 after
being injured by the employer’s horse that pulled the trolley on
which the plaintiff used to deliver consignments on the
instructions of his employer. The plaintiff for his injury claimed
compensation in the suit. The defendant resisted the action on the
ground that neither the plaintiff was a ‘workman’ nor the horse a
‘plant’ within the meaning of the Employers’ Liability Act, 1880’
therefore, the claim was not maintainable. The Divisional Court,
while affirming the decision of the Trial Court, held that the horse
which drove the trolley was the most material part of the
assignment of the plaintiff and hence can be described as ‘plant’.
Mr. Salman Akram Raja maintained that if a horse can be
described as a ‘plant’ then by analogy the moving vehicle Off-
Highway dump trucks engaged in an industrial process can also be
described as a ‘plant’ and the exemption under SRO 484(I)/92 can
be sought on their import for use in a cement factory.
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
6
6.
We have read the above referred judgment in Yarmouth
supra case and also the dissenting view of one of the three judges
and find ourselves to be in agreement with the reasoning given in
the dissenting note in the above referred English judgment which
stated that the term ‘plant’ is to be confined to fixtures and others
unanimated chattels used in trade or business but nothing which
is animate can be termed as a ‘plant’ as the living creatures can in
no sense be considered as ‘plant’. The plant as is ordinarily defined
means machines, apparatus and equipment that are utilized at
various stages of an industrial process in order to produce some
industrial product. Nothing that is animate, whether man or
animal, can be defined as a ‘plant’ even though any machine,
apparatus or equipment may not become operational without the
physical labour of a man or an animal. Merely for the reason that
in the 19th century a carriage could only be driven by a
domesticated animal like a horse or a donkey does not make that
animal part of a plant. If the description of a plant is also
attributed to an animal then a man who pulls a cart would also be
described as a material part of a plant as he does so by applying
manual labour. The distinction between the plant and the worker
or animal that operates it has to be maintained otherwise the
workers of a factory would also be defined as ‘plant’. Even the land
on which the ‘plant’ is placed and the building where it is housed
are not regarded as ‘plant’ then how could anything which is
animate could be regarded as ‘plant.
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
7
7.
Having discussed these two cases, it is pertinent to
mention here that the basis of respondent company’s claim for
exemption under SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992 was that as the
Off-Highway dump trucks were imported for their use in the
industrial process of a cement factory, therefore, the same be
regarded as part of the plant and machinery of the cement factory.
In order to make a determination to this effect, we shall firstly
proceed to examine the function of an Off-Highway dump truck
and then seek to resolve whether its use in the cement industry
makes it part of the plant that is engaged in the industrial process
of producing cement inspite of the fact that such trucks in their
utilization remain mobile as against other machinery and
equipment of the plant which, directly or indirectly remains
fastened to the earth.
8.
The layout plan of a cement factory determines what
equipment, engineering and construction is required to complete
the industrial process that is to be undertaken. Ordinarily, a
cement factory is located where the main raw-material to produce
cement such as limestone is found in abundance. So the industrial
process of a cement factory starts from quarrying of the limestone.
Where the layout of the cement factory is so designed that it starts
its industrial process from extracting its raw materials from quarry
then the same has to be hauled to the facility where the raw-
materials are to be first crushed. The entire set of machines used
in conjunction with other apparatus and electrical and mechanical
equipments, required for undertaking and completing the
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
8
industrial process, starting right from quarrying till the finished
product that is produced is to be regarded as part of the plant of
the respondent company. Off-Highway dump trucks, also called
Off-Road dump trucks, are specifically designed for use in difficult
terrain where the activity of mining, quarrying and construction of
big buildings is carried out. These Off-Highway dump trucks, on
account of their specific utility, have low payload capacity as well
as low speed in comparison with the ordinary dump trucks that we
see every day on roads and highways. Other than such use, the
Off-Highway dump truck cannot be economically used as an
ordinary means of transportation of goods.
9.
In cement industry Off-Highway trucks are used at the
quarries where the predominant raw-material in the cement
production ‘limestone’ is won from the quarry by either extraction
or blasting following which it is hauled on Off-Highway dump
trucks to the place where the second stage in the cement
manufacturing i.e. crushing of the raw-material takes place. Thus
there is direct nexus between the use of Off-Highway dump truck
at the quarry of a cement manufacturing factory with its industrial
process. This nexus brings the Off-High way dump truck within
the definition of ‘plant’. When the industrial process of a cement
factory starts with the quarrying activity of a cement factory, we
see no reason why Off-Highway dump trucks’ utilization cannot be
treated as part of the industrial process of a cement factory. Thus
Off-Highway dump trucks cannot be excluded from being treated
as part of the plant of a cement factory, where their utility forms
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
9
an integral function in the manufacturing of the cement. So
irrespective of the fact that Off-Highway dump trucks required to
be operated at the very first stage in the cement manufacturing
activity i.e. quarrying of the raw materials, are mobile vehicles,
nevertheless these trucks are utilized to further the industrial
process without which the industrial process of a cement factory
would get interrupted and hindered at the very initial stage.
10.
It may not be out of place to mention here that
extracting limestone and clay from the quarry can itself be a
complete industrial process undertaken only to sell limestone in
the market as its finished product. The customer of such
enterprise could be a cement factory which is either not designed
to start its industrial process from extracting limestone or for some
reason the quarrying facility of a cement factory may have become
dysfunctional and has to purchase limestone from elsewhere and
transport it to its crushing facility. In such a situation the activity
of transportation of raw-materials from the place of procurement to
the place of crushing facility of a cement factory, would not make
such activity part of cement factory’s industrial process as mere
transportation of a product from one facility to another, where it is
utilized as raw material, does not make the act of transportation
part of the industrial process of either of the two enterprises.
However this does not seem to be the case with the respondent
company as since in the present case the quarrying of materials is
undertaken by one and the same enterprise which after completion
of the remaining stages involved in the manufacturing of cement
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
10
(crushing, blending, heating, cooling, clinkering and milling) ends
with the portable cement being produced in bulk or bags for
consumption. The respondent company in the present case seems
to be so designed that its’ Off-Highway dump trucks involved in the
industrial process are to be regarded as part of the ‘plant’ of the
cement factory. We are therefore left with no other option other
than to hold that the very use of Off-Highway dump trucks at the
quarries make them part and parcel of the industrial process of a
cement factory and thus such trucks fall within the definition of
the respondent company’s cement plant.
11.
The matter with regard to grant of exemption under
SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992 however does not end here. It is
an admitted position that the respondent company opened the
letter of credit on 27.2.1995 well within cut-off date mentioned in
SRO 484(I)/92 whereas the consignment was delivered at Karachi
port after the cut-off date. Learned counsel for the appellant had
argued that in terms of the first proviso to Section 30 of the
Customs Act where the Bill of Entry (now called Goods Declaration)
is filed in advance of the arrival of the conveyance, the relevant
date for the purposes of rate of duty would be when the manifest of
the conveyance is delivered at the port of first entry and mere filing
of Bill of Entry when the SRO 484(I)/92 was applicable was not
sufficient as the goods had not arrived by the cut-off date of
30.06.1995. In support of this argument learned counsel for the
appellant relied upon the case of Fauji Cement Company Limited
Vs. Federation of Pakistan (2014 SCMR 994) wherein this Court
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
11
while dealing with the imports under the same SRO which is
subject matter of these proceedings i.e. SRO No. 484(I)/92 held
that date on which ‘Letter of Credit’ was established or steps were
taken in respect of import of machinery are not relevant and it is
the date of import which determines applicability of the customs
duty. In response to this, learned counsel for the respondent
company relied upon another Notification No. SRO No. 978(I)/95
dated 4.12.1995 which gives continuity to the benefit of exemption
granted under SRO 484(I)/92 dated 14.05.1992 to a certain extent.
This notification provides that where Letter of Credit for the import
of plant and machinery, intended to be cleared under the
notification No. SRO 484(I)/92, had already been opened prior to
the cut-off date i.e. 30.6.1995 but the consignment was delivered
at the port after the expiry of such cut-off date, then the benefit of
exemption granted under Notification No. SRO 484(I)/92 can be
availed. We are of the view that in terms of the decision of this
Court in the case of Fauji Cement supra, the respondent company
was not entitled to seek exemption granted under SRO 484(I)/92 in
its entirety. However, the respondent company was entitled to
exemption to a limited extent on the import of Off-Highway dump
trucks by virtue of SRO No. 978(I)/95 which exempts duties and
charges over and above 25% of the leviable customs duty and sales
tax and no more. To such extent the impugned judgment stands
modified. The customs authority shall be justified in recovering
customs dues and Sales Tax on the imported Off-Highway dump
trucks accordingly.
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1291-K/2005, 847/2009, 427-K/2009, 428-K/2009
12
12.
This appeal is disposed off in light of the discussion
undertaken above.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
Announced on ______________ by Hon’ble Mr. Justice Faisal Arab
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1291_2005.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, CJ
MR. JUSTICE MAZHAR ALAM KHAN MIANKHEL
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 130 OF 2021
(On appeal against the judgment dated
12.09.2019 passed by the Lahore High Court,
Rawalpindi
Bench
in
Writ
Petition
No.
2436/2019)
Tasawar Hussain
…Appellant
VERSUS
Deputy Commissioner District, Jhelum and others
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant:
Khawaja Muhammad Arif, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For the Respondent:
Barrister Qasim Ali Chohan, Addl. P.G.
Mirza Muzafar Baig, Chief Officer, M.C.
Pind dadan Khan
Date of Hearing:
08.06.2021
…
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI, J.- Through this appeal by
leave of the Court under Article 185(3) of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973, the appellant has called in question the
judgment dated 12.09.2019 passed by the Lahore High Court,
Rawalpindi Bench, whereby the writ petition filed by him was
dismissed and the penalty of dismissal from service imposed upon
him was maintained.
2.
Briefly stated the facts of the case are that appellant
was appointed as Chowkidar (BPS-1) in Municipal Committee, Pind
Dadan Khan on 22.06.2002. He took leave from the department from
01.02.2013 to 31.01.2014. During his leave period, pursuant to
registration of a criminal case bearing FIR No. 58 dated 10.02.2013
under Sections 302, 109, 34 PPC at Police Station Saddar Chakwal,
the appellant absconded from the country and the leave period ended
during his absconsion. However, he was arrested from abroad and
ultimately, he was acquitted of the charge vide judgment dated
Civil Appeal No. 130/2021
-: 2 :-
28.03.2017. The appellant had to join duty on 01.02.2014 but neither
he applied for further leave nor informed his office. During his
absence, inquiry proceedings were conducted against him. An Inquiry
Officer was appointed on 10.03.2015 by the Tehsil Municipal Officer,
Pind Dadan Khan and the appellant was given charge sheet vide
letter dated 05.05.2015. The Inquiry Officer also issued publication of
proclamation in this regard of the appellant in newspaper on
30.05.2015 and after inquiry proceedings vide order dated
17.06.2015 recommended to impose penalty of removal from service
under Section 4(b)(v) of Punjab Employees Efficiency, Discipline and
Accountability Act, 2006. On 20.08.2015, he was further issued a
notice to appear before the Tehsil Municipal Officer for personal
hearing but he neither appeared nor submitted his reply. He was
given another opportunity for personal hearing for 26.11.2015 but
again he did not appear nor replied. Ultimately, the competent
authority vide order dated 22.10.2015 imposed major penalty of
dismissal from service upon the appellant from the date of his
absence i.e. 01.02.2014. After his acquittal, he filed departmental
appeal on 13.04.2017 against his dismissal order but the same stood
dismissed vide order dated 10.08.2017. He, thereafter, filed
representation
before
the
Deputy
Commissioner
Jhelum
on
09.09.2017 but it also met the same fate vide order dated
21.05.2019. The appellant challenged these orders before the Lahore
High Court, Rawalpindi Bench by filing Writ Petition No. 2436/2019,
which has been dismissed vide impugned judgment. Hence, this
appeal with leave of the court.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant inter alia contended
that no inquiry officer has been appointed nor any inquiry has been
conducted by the department; that the department did not follow the
proper procedure as warranted under law; that after acquittal of the
appellant from the criminal case, it was mandatory for the
department to reinstate him in service; that the inquiry officer had
recommended ‘penalty of removal from service’ but the competent
authority without assigning any reason, awarded penalty of
dismissal from service to the appellant, which is against the intent of
law. In support of his arguments, learned counsel relied on the cases
of Secretary Government of Punjab Vs. Ikramullah (2013 SCMR 572)
and Shibli Farooqui Vs. Federation of Pakistan (2009 SCMR 281).
Civil Appeal No. 130/2021
-: 3 :-
4.
On the other hand, learned Additional Advocate General
has supported the impugned order. He mainly contended that the
appellant was awarded major penalty of dismissal from service due
to willful absence of 23 months without any leave and being a public
servant he was bound to take prior leave or inform the department
but he did not respond in the manner as required, therefore, the major
penalty of dismissal from service is rightly imposed upon him.
5.
We have heard learned counsel for the appellant and the
learned Law Officer at some length and have perused the available
record.
6.
It is an admitted fact that the appellant remained absent
from duty for a long period of 23 months without taking leave. The
only defence put by him is that as a false case was registered
against him, therefore, due to fear of illegal persecution he absconded
from the country. However, nothing had estopped him to at-least
inform the department but he neither applied for leave nor informed
his office. During his absence, the inquiry proceedings started and
ultimately resulted in his dismissal from service on 22.10.2015. It is
on record that the appellant was arrested through inter-pole on
25.08.2016 whereas he was granted bail on 01.10.2016 by the court
of competent jurisdiction. Till that time, the inquiry proceedings had
already completed. The Inquiry Officer also issued publication qua
absence of the appellant in newspaper and after fulfilling all
requirements of inquiry proceedings recommended that the penalty of
removal from service under Section 4(b)(v) of Punjab Employees
Efficiency, Discipline and Accountability Act, 2006 be imposed upon
the appellant. The competent authority vide order dated 22.10.2015
imposed major penalty of dismissal from service upon the appellant
from the date of his absence i.e. 01.02.2014 under Section 4(b)(vi) of
the PEEDA Act, 2006. The anxiety of the learned counsel that the
department has not followed the legal requirements before awarding
the penalty is without any legal justification. All codal formalities
were duly fulfilled. Otherwise, it is now well settled that where the
absence from duty is admitted, there is no need to hold regular
inquiry. This aspect has been taken care of by this Court in a recent
judgment reported as National Bank of Pakistan Vs. Zahoor Ahmed
(2021 SCMR 144) wherein while relying on an earlier judgment of
this Court, it has been held as under:-
Civil Appeal No. 130/2021
-: 4 :-
“In the face of such absence from duty of the respondent,
which being admitted, there was no need to hold a regular
enquiry because this Court in the case of Federation of
Pakistan through Secretary Ministry of Law and Justice
Division, Islamabad v. Mamoon Ahmed Malik (2020 SCMR
1154), has already held that where the fact of absence
from duty being admitted on the record, there was no need
for holding of a regular enquiry for that there was no
disputed fact involved to be enquired into.”
(Underlined to lay emphasis)
7.
The crux of the arguments advanced by the learned
counsel for the appellant mainly relates to the fact that the Inquiry
Officer had made recommendations contrary to the penalty inflicted
by the competent authority. To carefully consider the aforesaid legal
contention, a deeper analysis is required to adjudicate it according to
the dictates of justice. In ordinary circumstances, it is now settled that
the competent authority is not under obligation to act according to the
recommendations made by the Inquiry Officer, rather it can inflict
penalty as it deems appropriate according to the facts and
circumstances surfaced on the record. There is no denial to this fact
that the Inquiry Officer had made recommendation of removal from
service in terms of Section 4(b)(v) of Punjab Employees Efficiency,
Discipline and Accountability Act, 2006 but the competent authority
has acted contrary to the recommendation while inflicting penalty of
dismissal from service under Section 4(b)(vi) of the above-said PEEDA
Act. There is no second cavil to this proposition that in both the
eventualities, the employee has to relinquish the job but to ascertain
the gravity of the punishment, it seems appropriate to know the
consequence of both the penalties. The penalty of removal from
service does not debar the employee to seek re-employment and it is
not considered as a continuous stigma but the penalty of dismissal
from service stigmatizes the employee on permanent basis, therefore,
in all fairness the penalty of dismissal from service is placed at a
higher pedestal as far as gravity of the punishment is concerned. It is
established principle of law that in pursuance of the dictates of
natural justice and fairness, while enhancing the penalty to a severe
degree, assigning of the reasons seems to be more judicious,
equitable and it further glorifies the judicial system. Hence, we are in
agreement with the argument of learned counsel for the appellant
that while enhancing the penalty, the competent authority is under
legal obligation to assign judiciable reasoning. As far as the
Civil Appeal No. 130/2021
-: 5 :-
judgments of this Court relied upon by the learned counsel for the
appellant are concerned, they further fortify the view expressed by
us, therefore, the present appeal to this extent is justified. As a
consequence, the enhancement of the penalty of removal from service
into dismissal from service is declared not sustainable in the eyes of
law and coupled with appellant’s length of service and the fact that
he has already suffered hardship, we deem it appropriate to modify
the penalty of dismissal from service into removal from service.
8.
For what has been discussed above, this appeal is partly
allowed and the impugned judgment is maintained with the
modification of punishment as referred in the preceding paragraph.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
8th of June, 2021
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.130_2021.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1313 OF 2014
(Against the judgment dated 15.5.2014 of
the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar
passed in W.P.No.1882-P/2013)
Muhammad Zaman etc.
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Government of Pakistan through Secretary, Finance Division
(Regulation Wing), Islamabad etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. Abdul Rahim Bhatti, ASC
Mr. Abdul Rehman Khan, ASC
For respondent No.1:
Syed Nayab Hassan Gardezi, Standing
Counsel
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
Abid Hussain Channa, S.O. Finance
For respondents 2 to 4:
Kh. Muhammad Farooq, Sr. ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Date of hearing:
14.12.2016
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J:- This appeal with the leave of
this Court is to decide whether the State Bank of Pakistan Officers
(Pension-cum-Gratuity) Regulations, 1980
(the
Regulations) are
statutory or non-statutory after the amendment whereby the
phrase “subject to the approval of the Federal Government” was omitted.
2.
The brief facts of the case are that the appellants are
retired employees of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP). Following the
direction of the Federal Government issued on 30.11.1977, SBP
introduced a pension scheme for its employees vide letter dated
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 2 :-
10.1.1978. Thereafter, the Central Board of Directors of SBP
(Board), in exercise of its powers under Section 54 of the State Bank
of Pakistan Act, 1956 (the Act), framed the Regulations with the
approval of the Federal Government. The appellants, being
aggrieved of SBP’s failure to grant them periodical increases in
pension in line with those granted by the Federal Government
since 1997, filed representations before SBP but to no avail. The
petitioners then filed a constitutional petition before the learned
High Court which (petition) was dismissed vide impugned judgment.
Leave was granted on 3.10.2014 for the reasons recorded in the
order dated 2.9.2014, the which latter order reads as under:-
“The petitioners before us are retired employees of
the State Bank of Pakistan. They claim to be entitled
to the same retirement benefits, which are applicable
to Federal Government employees of similar nature.
The petitioners, however, have been non-suited by the
High
Court
vide
impugned
judgment
dated
15.05.2014. It has been observed by the High Court
as under:-
“Initially, the Central Board had been
vested
with
powers
to
make
regulations consistent with the Act to
provide for all matters which are
necessary and for the purpose of
giving effect to the provision of the Act
but subject to the approval of the
Federal Government by virtue of
section 54 of the Act. In compliance
therewith, the SBP Officers (Pension-
cum-Gratuity) Regulations 1980 were
framed in exercise of power conferred
by section 54 of the ibid Act, by the
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 3 :-
Central Board of Directors of SBP,
with the approval of the Federal
Government. In view of this statutory
backing and support, the said Rules
were statutory which were in vogue
since its coming into force till
amendment effected in section 54 of
the Act. The phrase “subject to the
approval of the Federal Government”
was omitted from Section 54 of the
Act, vide Act-ii of 1994. After the
omission of the said phrase, the
absolute power has been vested win
the Central Board of the Bank to make
Regulations for giving effect to the
provisions of the Act without any
approval of the Government.”
2.
Learned counsel for the petitioners has
argued that in view of the law laid down by this
Court in the cases of Oil and Gase (sic) Development
Company v. Nazar Hussain (2010 SCMR 1060) and
Masood Ahmed Bhatti v. Federation of Pakistan
(2002 SCMR 152) the reasoning of the High Court is
erroneous.
3.
Let notice issue to the respondents for a date
after 30 days.”
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant argued that in the
light of the judgments reported as Muhammad Tariq Badrah29
and another Vs. National Bank of Pakistan and others (2013
SCMR 314), Shafique Ahmed Khan and others Vs. NESCOM
through Chairman, Islamabad and others (PLD 2016 SC 377),
Pakistan Defence Officers’ Housing Authority and others Vs.
Lt. Col. Syed Jawaid Ahmed (2013 SCMR 1707), Zarai Taraqiati
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 4 :-
Bank Limited and others Vs. Said Rehman and others (2013
SCMR 642) and Pakistan Telecommunication Employees Trust
(PTET) through M. D., Islamabad and others Vs. Muhammad
Arif and others (2015 SCMR 1472) the Regulations were
statutory and thus the learned High Court had wrongly dismissed
the appellants’ writ petition. In this context he also relied upon
Section 6 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 (the General Clauses Act) and
Article 264(c) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan, 1973 (the Constitution) to argue that omission of the phrase
“subject to the approval of the Federal Government” did not render the
earlier statutory Regulations non-statutory. He further submitted
that the learned High Court could not non-suit the appellants on
the ground of laches as the denial of pension is a recurring cause
of action. In this regard he relied upon the judgments reported as
S. A. Jameel Vs. Secretary to the Government of the Punjab,
Cooperative Department and others (2005 SCMR 126), Umar
Baz Khan through L.Hrs. Vs. Syed Jehanzeb and others (PLD
2013 SC 268), Masooda Begum through Legal Heirs Vs.
Government of Punjab through Secretary Forest, Lahore and 9
others (PLD 2003 SC 90), State Bank of Pakistan and others
Vs. Mst. Mumtaz Sultana and others (2010 SCMR 421), Ali
Muhammad Vs. Commissioner Afghan Refugees, N.W.F.P. and
another (1995 SCMR 1675) and Chief Executive Progressive
Paper Limited/The Chairman National Press Trust, Islamabad
Vs. Sh. Abdul Majeed and another (2005 PLC(CS) 1439).
4.
Learned counsel for the respondent stated at the very
outset that to follow the pension rates of the Federal Government
is not a part of the Act or the service/pension rules/regulations
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 5 :-
framed pursuant thereto and there is no obligation on SBP to
follow and abide by the rules of increase given by the Federal
Government to its employees. While referring to the circular dated
30.11.1977, he stated that initially there was a Banking Council
constituted under Section 9 of the Banks (Nationalization) Act,
1974 which controlled the banks on behalf of the Federal
Government. The Banks (Nationalization) (Amendment) Ordinance,
1996 brought about a sea change which eventually matured into
the Banks (Nationalization) (Amendment) Act, 1997 (the Amendment
Act) pursuant to which the banks were made almost completely
autonomous: the Banking Council was abolished and the boards
of directors of the banks were made independent. From 1977 to
1997 though SBP abided by the directions of the Federal
Government but every circular received from the Federal
Government was either republished or adopted through a separate
circular issued by the Board. The Federal Government’s directives
did not ipso facto become effective unless given effect through a
board resolution. Further, that after the Amendment Act, SBP
devised its own wage structure which it announced on 1.6.1999.
Learned counsel put forward the following propositions:-
i.
After the amendment in Section 54 of the Act, the new
Regulations could be framed without the sanction or
permission of the Federal Government;
ii.
The
instructive
direction
given
by
the
Federal
Government in 1977 that in future all increases in
wages or pension in the case of civil servants or
Federal Government employees would apply to SBP
employees
does
not
enjoy
the
status
of
a
rule/regulation having a binding effect because the
regulation-making power under Section 54 of the Act
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 6 :-
vests exclusively with the Board. Therefore the
provisions of Section 54 would be relevant for
determining whether any change brought about by the
Regulations could be examined in light of the directive
issue by the Federal Government in 1977;
iii.
With regard to determination of quantum, learned
counsel relied upon Akram Ul Haq Alvi Vs. Joint
Secretary (R-II) Government of Pakistan, Finance
Division, Islamabad and others (2012 SCMR 106) to
argue that SBP was vested with the power to fix the
amount of, or increase in pension;
iv.
Regarding the appellants’ claim that SBP ceased to
increase their pension in line with the Federal
Government since 2003, whereas the writ petition was
filed in 2014 – he stated that it is not a recurring
cause of action – when they stood retired, pension or
commuted portion of their pension was paid to them
immediately in 2004, 2005 and 2006 and that was the
time the cause of action accrued because they knew
precisely the rate they were being paid;
v.
Notwithstanding the change in law, the Regulations
are statutory, as according to the Pakistan Defence
Officers’ Housing Authority’s case, the approval of
the Federal Government has ceased to be a relevant
factor in order to determine whether rules/regulations
are statutory or non-statutory.
5.
Heard. In order to answer the proposition identified in
the opening paragraph of this opinion, we find it expedient to first
discuss the object and purpose of SBP. After the creation of
Pakistan in 1947, SBP was created as the central bank of Pakistan
to take over the management of the currency from the Reserve
Bank of Indian (Section 3(1) of the Act). The Preamble of the Act
postulates the reasons for the constitution of SBP as the regulator
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 7 :-
of the monetary and credit system of Pakistan and to foster its
growth in the best national interest with a view to securing
monetary stability and fuller utilisation of the country’s productive
resources. The business and functions of SBP have been provided
for in detail in Chapter IV of the Act (Sections 17 to 40). Broadly
speaking, SBP’s functions include, amongst other things, issuance
of notes, regulation and supervision of the financial system, to act
as the Government’s bank, to conduct the monetary policy of
Pakistan, management of public debt and foreign exchange,
advising the Government on policy matters, liaising with
international financial institutions, development of a financial
framework for Pakistan and institutionalization of savings and
investment.
SBP is a body corporate having perpetual succession and a
common seal and the ability to sue and be sued [Section 3(2) of the
Act].
The
Board
has
been
entrusted
with
the
general
superintendence and direction of the affairs and business of SBP
and its (Board’s) functions and responsibilities have been provided
in detail in Section 9A of the Act. The Board comprises of a
Governor (Chairman of the Board), the Secretary, Finance Division,
Government of Pakistan and eight directors (at least one from each
Province) who are eminent professionals from the field of economics,
finance, banking and accountancy (Section 9 of the Act). There is also a
Board for the co-ordination of fiscal, monetary and exchange-rate
policies (See Section 9B of the Act) and the Monetary Policy Committee
(See Sections 9D and 9E of the Act).
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 8 :-
6.
Like many other statutory bodies, SBP has also been
given the power to frame regulations. In this regard Section 54 of
the Act is relevant which reads as follows:-
“54. Powers of the Central Board to make
regulations.
(1) The Central Board may make regulations
consistent with this Act to provide for all matters for
which provision is necessary or convenient for the
purpose of giving effect to the provisions of this Act:
Provided that the terms and conditions of
service of Governor and Deputy Governor shall be
determined by the Federal Government.
(2) In particular and without prejudice to the
generality
of
the
foregoing
provision,
such
regulations may provide for all or any of the
following matters, namely:-
:
(j) recruitment of officers and servants of the Bank
including the terms and conditions of their service,
constitution of superannuation, beneficial and other
funds, with or without bank’s contribution, for the
officers and servants of the Bank; their welfare;
providing amenities, medical facilities, grant of loans
and advances, their betterment and uplift;
:
(3)
……………………………………………………………”
According to Section 54(1) of the Act, the Board is empowered to
make regulations consistent with the Act to provide for all matters
for which provision is necessary or convenient for the purpose of
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 9 :-
giving effect to the provisions of the Act. It is pertinent to mention
that previously SBP could only make regulations with the approval
of the Federal Government, however by virtue of Act II of 1994, the
words “subject to the approval of the Federal Government” were omitted.
We are of the view that this omission is significant, conferring
greater autonomy on the Board as the Federal Government was
removed from the regulation-making process, and full authority
came to vest in the Board to make such regulations. Indeed this
was the view of a two-member bench of this Court in the judgment
reported as Chief Manager, State Bank of Pakistan, Lahore and
another Vs. Muhammad Shafi (2010 SCMR 1994) wherein,
while considering whether the State Bank of Pakistan Staff
Regulations, 1999 were statutory or non-statutory, it was held as
follows:-
“7. The words "subject to the approval of the Federal
Government" were omitted vide Act II of 1994. The
regulations were framed under section 56 in the year,
1999 as is evident from the source on the basis of
which the said regulations were framed which is to
the following effect:-
"In exercise of the powers conferred by section 54 of
the State Bank of Pakistan Act, 1956 (XXXIII of
1956) the Central Board of Directors, hereby makes
the following Regulations, to define the conditions of
service of the employees of the Bank."
8. The omission of the aforesaid words subject to the
approval from section 54 is meaningful. Rules framed
by the Central Board of Directors which does not
require approval of the Government, therefore
aforesaid regulations may be termed as internal
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 10 :-
instructions or domestic rules/regulations having no
status of statutory rules/regulations as law laid down
by this Court in various pronouncements…”
We are of the opinion that the above view applies to and is correct
vis-à-vis the Regulations in the instant matter as well.
Furthermore, as matters stand (since the omission by Act II of 1994), and
as mentioned above, the regulation-making power lies solely in the
hands of the Board with no intervention or approval of the Federal
Government, and this reflects the intention of the Legislature. In
this context, as highlighted above, even the structure of the Board
as provided for in the Act renders it autonomous, with the
Members, save for the Secretary, Finance Division, Government of
Pakistan, being private individuals, independent from the Federal
Government. In fact, where the legislature wanted the intervention
of the Federal Government, it has specifically provided for the
same, and in this regard the proviso to Section 54(1) of the Act is
relevant which states that “the terms and conditions of service of Governor
and Deputy Governor shall be determined by the Federal Government”, clearly
suggesting that the Legislature’s intention was to exclusively
clothe SBP with the power to frame regulations to carry out the
objects and purpose of the Act. Furthermore, Section 46B(2) of the
Act [inserted by the State Bank of Pakistan (Amendment) Act, 1997 (Act No.XIII of
1997)], provides that “the Bank, the members of the Board or the staff of the
Bank, shall not take instructions from any other person or entity, including the
government or quasi-government entities. The autonomy of the Bank shall be
respected at all times and no person or entity shall seek to influence the members
of the Board and Monetary Policy Committee or the staff of the Bank in the
performances of their functions or interfere in the activities of the Bank.” It may
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 11 :-
be added that to give maximum autonomy to SBP, Section 52(1) of
the Act which empowered the Federal Government to supersede
the Board and entrust the general superintendence and direction
of the affairs of SBP to such agency as it (Federal Government) may
determine
was
omitted
by
the
State
Bank
of
Pakistan
(Amendment) Act, 2012 (Act No.IX of 2012 dated 13.3.2012). All
the above aspects point towards the growing autonomy of SBP.
7.
According to the judgment delivered in Civil Appeal
No.654/2010 etc. titled Shafique Ahmed Khan, etc. Vs. NESCOM
through its Chairman, Islamabad, etc. the test of whether
rules/regulations are statutory or otherwise is not solely whether
their framing requires the approval of the Federal Government or
not, rather it is the nature and efficacy of such rules/regulations.
It has to be seen whether the rules/regulations in question deal
with instructions for internal control or management, or they are
broader than and are complementary to the parent statute in
matters of crucial importance. The former are non-statutory
whereas the latter are statutory. In the case before us, the
Regulations were made pursuant to Section 54(1) of the Act and
Section 54(2) thereof goes on to provide the particular matters for
which the Board can frame regulations [while saving the generality of the
power under Section 54(1) of the Act]. Out of all the matters listed in
Section 54(2) of the Act, clause (j) is the most relevant which
pertains to the “recruitment of officers and servants of the Bank including the
terms and conditions of their service, constitution of superannuation, beneficial
and other funds, with or without bank’s contribution, for the officers and servants
of the Bank; their welfare; providing amenities, medical facilities, grant of loans
and advances, their betterment and uplift”. A perusal of the Regulations
Civil Appeal No.1313 of 2014
-: 12 :-
suggests that they relate to pension and gratuity matters of the
employees of SBP and therefore it can be said that the ambit of
such Regulations is not broader but narrower than the parent
statute, i.e. the Act. Thus the conclusion of the above discussion is
that the Regulations are basically instructions for the internal
control or management of SBP and are therefore non-statutory.
Hence the appellants could not invoke the constitutional
jurisdiction of the learned High Court which was correct in
dismissing their writ petition.
8.
Since it has been held above that the Regulations are
non-statutory, therefore we do not find it necessary to dilate upon
the point of laches.
9.
In light of the above, this appeal is dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 21.2.2017 at Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Ghulam Raza/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1313_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1338 OF 2007
(On
appeal
against
the
judgment
dated
14.03.2006 passed by the High Court of Sindh,
Karachi in ITR No. 03/1994)
Commissioner of Income Tax, Companies Zone, Islamabad
… Appellant
VERSUS
M/s Pak Saudi Fertilizer Ltd
…Respondent
For the Appellant:
Dr. Farhat Zafar, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
For the Respondent:
Mr. Iqbal Salman Pasha, ASC
Date of Hearing:
20.02.2017
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- In the assessment years 1987-88,
1988-89 and 1989-90, the respondent invested a sum of
Rs.14,99,99,762/- in the purchase of National Funds Bonds. The
interest income on such Bonds was exempt from tax under the
provisions of Clause 170 to the Second Schedule to Part I of the
erstwhile Income Tax Ordinance, 1979. In these assessment years,
the respondent on such investment derived interest income to the
tune of rupees 19.6 million. Considering the fact that the
respondent on the one hand was claiming exemption on interest
income and on the other hand interest expense was being incurred
on loans borrowed from Asian Development Bank and Government
of Saudi Arabia, the Income Tax Officer drew an inference that
borrowed monies were diverted to purchase the National Funds
Bonds to derive tax free income. The Income Tax Officer thus
disallowed the interest accrued on the loans in proportion to the
interest income derived from the Bonds to the extent of rupees
12.13 million.
Civil Appeal No. 1338/2007
2
2.
The decision of the Income Tax Officer was challenged
by the respondent upto the stage of Income Tax Tribunal but
without success. The respondent then filed Reference in the High
Court of Sindh, which framed the question “whether on the facts
and in the circumstances of the case the learned Income Tax
Appellate Tribunal was justified in confirming the disallowance of
proportionate interest”. This question was answered in the negative
against the department and in favour of the respondent. After
taking into consideration the plea of the respondent that the loans
that were obtained by the respondent from Saudi Arabian
Government as well as from the Asian Development Bank were
utilized in the purchase of fixed assets and the investment in the
National
Funds
Bonds
was
made
from
the
capital
and
unappropriated profits available with the respondent, the learned
High Court held that the Tribunal’s findings were based merely on
assumptions and conjectures as it failed to examine whether the
Bonds were in-fact purchased from the borrowed monies or not.
Aggrieved by such decision, the appellant filed the present appeal
with the leave of this Court.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant argued that as a
huge loan amount was outstanding against the respondent, the
investment made in the National Funds Bonds for deriving tax free
income was not justified for the reason that on the one hand the
interest expense was being claimed on the borrowed monies and
on the other hand tax free income was being derived by investing
the very same amount in the Bonds, thereby taking undue
advantage.
4.
In rebuttal, learned counsel for the respondent
submitted that from the statement of accounts of the respondent
relating to the tax years in question it was evident that long term
loans were obtained, which were utilized in the purchase of capital
assets for setting up fertilizer plant and the investment that was
made in National Funds Bonds was out of respondents' own
capital and unappropriated profits, which had no nexus with the
loan amount and this aspect was not considered at any stage upto
Civil Appeal No. 1338/2007
3
the Income Tax Tribunal and was only taken into account by the
High Court.
5.
It is an admitted position that the interest income on
the investment made in the National Funds Bonds was exempt
from tax under Clause 170 to the Second Schedule to the Part I of
the Income Tax Ordinance. The appellant’s counsel failed to point
out that there was any restriction under the law that would have
disentitled the respondent from claiming exemption on the interest
income in case there were loans standing against it. A perusal of
the copies of the statement of accounts filed by the respondent, it
is quite evident that long term loans were obtained by the
respondent prior to the purchase of the Bonds which were to be
discharged with interest over a long period of time. Hence,
independent of the financial obligation against the long term loans,
the respondent made investment in the National Funds Bonds with
its own funds generated from its business. The interest income
derived thereon was admittedly exempt under the law and had no
co-relation whatsoever with the loans. Irrespective of any co-
relation between the two, no provision of law was shown to us to
establish that mere existence of financial obligation in the form of
loans would have disentitled the respondent from claiming
exemption granted under Clause 170 to Second Schedule to Part I
of the defunct Income Tax Ordinance, 1979.
6.
We, therefore, find no justification to reverse the
findings arrived at by learned High Court of Sindh. This appeal is,
therefore, dismissed.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
20thof February, 2017
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1338_2007.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
( Appellate Jurisdiction )
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE ANWAR ZAHEER JAMALI, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE AMIR HANI MUSLIM
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
MR. JUSTICE KHILJI ARIF HUSSAIN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.134-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 24-03-2011 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in Review Petition No.103/2009 in WP. No.59/2009)
Govt. of KPK thr. Secy. Agriculture
and others
Vs. Adnanullah
CIVIL APPEAL NO.135-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 22-09-2011 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.2170/2011)
Chief Secy. Govt. of KPK & others Vs. Amir Hussain and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.136-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 07-03-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.1897/2011)
Govt. of KPK and others
Vs. Muhammad Younas and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.137-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 13-03-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Abbottabad Bench, in Writ Petition No.200-A/2012)
Govt. of KPK and others
Vs. Attaullah Khan and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.138-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 20-06-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Mingora Bench (Dar-ul-Qaza), Swat in W.P. No.189-M/2012)
Govt. of KPK thr. Secy. Agriculture
Livestock Peshawar and others
Vs. Muhammad Ayub Khan
CIVIL APPEAL NO.52-P OF 2015
(On appeal against the judgment dated 5-12-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar in Writ Petition No.3087/2011)
Govt. of KPK thr. Chief Secretary
and others
Vs. Qalbe Abbas and another
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1-P/2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 10-05-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Mingora Bench (Dar-ul-Qaza), Swat in Writ Petition No.2474/2011)
District Officer Community
Development Department (Social
Welfare) and others
Vs. Ghani Rehman and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.133-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 17-05-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Mingora Bench (Dar-ul-Qaza), Swat, in Writ Petition No.2001/2009)
Govt. of KPK thr. Secretary
Vs. Iftikhar Hussain and others
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
2
Livestock and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.113-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 17-05-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Mingora Bench (Dar-ul-Qaza) Swat, in Writ Petition No.2380/2009)
Govt. of KPK thr. Secretary I.T,
Peshawar and others
Vs. Muhammad Azhar and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.231 OF 2015
(On appeal against the judgment dated 24-04-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, D.I.Khan Bench, in Writ Petition No.37-D/2013)
Govt. of KPK thr. Secy. Agriculture,
Livestock, Peshawar and another
Vs. Safdar Zaman and others
CIVIL APPEAL NO.232 OF 2015
(On appeal against the judgment dated 24-04-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, D.I.Khan Bench, in Writ Petition No.97-D/2013)
Govt. of KPK thr. Secy. Agriculture,
Livestock, Peshawar and another
Vs. Innayatullah and others
CIVIL PETITION NO.600-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 06-06-2012 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.1818/2011)
Govt. of KPK thr. Chief Secy. and
others
Vs. Noman Adil and others
CIVIL PETITION NO.496-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 26-06-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.1730-P/2014)
Govt. of KPK thr. Chief Secretary
Peshawar and others
Vs. Muhammad Nadeem Jan and
others
CIVIL PETITION NO.34-P OF 2015
(On appeal against the judgment dated 23-09-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.141-P/2014)
Dean, Pakistan Institute of
Community Ophthalmology (PICO),
HMC and another
Vs. Muhammad Imran and others
CIVIL PETITION NO.526-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 12.3.2013 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.376-P/12)
Govt. of KPK through Chief
Secretary Peshawar and others
Vs. Mst. Safia
CIVIL PETITION NO.527-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 12.3.2013 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.377-P/2012)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Mst. Rehab Khattak
CIVIL PETITION NO.528-P OF 2013
(On appeal against the judgment dated 12-03-2013 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.378-P/2012)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Faisal Khan
CIVIL PETITION NO.28-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 19-09-2013 passed by the Peshawar
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
3
High Court, Mingora Bench (Dar-ul-Qaza) Swat, in Writ Petition No.4335-P/2010)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Rahimullah and others
CIVIL PETITION NO.214-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 30-01-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.2131-P/2013)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Mst. Fauzia Aziz
CIVIL PETITION NO.621-P OF 2015
(On appeal against the judgment dated 08-10-2015 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Abbottabad Bench, in Writ Petition No.55-A/2015)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Mst. Malika Hijab Chishti
CIVIL PETITION NO.368-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 01-04-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.351-P/2013)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Imtiaz Khan
CIVIL PETITION NO.369-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 01-04-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.352-P/2013)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Waqar Ahmed
CIVIL PETITION NO.370-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 01-04-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.353-P/2013)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Mst. Nafeesa Bibi
CIVIL PETITION NO.371-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 01-04-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.2454-P/2013)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Mst. Naima
CIVIL PETITION NO.619-P OF 2014
(On appeal against the judgment dated 18-09-2014 passed by the Peshawar
High Court Peshawar, in Writ Petition No.2428-P/2013)
Govt. of KPK through Chief Secy.
Peshawar and others
Vs. Muhammad Azam and others
CA.134-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
Syed Masood Shah, SO Litigation.
Hafiz Attaul Memeen, SO. Litigation (Fin)
Muhammad Khalid, AD (Litigation)
Abdul Hadi, SO (Litigation)
For the Respondent(s)
:
Mr. Imtiaz Ali, ASC
(Res. No.186, 188, 191)
:
Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
(CMA.496-P/13)
:
Mr. Ayub Khan, ASC
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
4
CA.135-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Hafiz S. A. Rehman, Sr. ASC
Mr. Imtiaz Ali, ASC
CA.136-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Hafiz S. A. Rehman, Sr. ASC
Mr. Imtiaz Ali, ASC
CA.137-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For Respondents (2 to 6)
:
Mr. Ijaz Anwar, ASC
CA.138-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Not represented.
CA.52-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For Respondent No.1
:
In person (Absent)
For Respondent No.2
:
Not represented.
CA.1-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For Respondents
(1-4, 7, 8, & 10-13)
:
Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
Mr. Khushdil Khan, ASC
CA.133-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For Respondents
(1-3, 5 & 7)
:
Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
For respondents
(4,8,9 & 10)
:
Not represented.
CA.113-P/2013
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
CA.231-P/2015
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For Respondents (1-3)
:
Mr. Shoaib Shaheen, ASC
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
5
CA.232-P/2015
For the appellant(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For Respondent No.1
:
Mr. Shoaib Shaheen, ASC
CP.600-P/2014
For the Petitioner(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Mst. Sadia Rehim (in person)
CP.496-P/2014
For the Petitioner(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
Noor Afzal, Director, Population Welfare
Department.
For the Respondent(s)
:
Mr. Khushdil Khan, ASC
CP.34-P/2014
For the Petitioner(s)
:
Mr. Shakeel Ahmed, ASC
For the Respondent(s)
:
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
CPs.526 to 528-P/2013
For the Petitioner(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Mr. Ijaz Anwar, ASC
CP.28-P/2014
For the Petitioner(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
Mr. Khushdil Khan, ASC
CPs.214-P/2014, 368-
371-P/2014 and 619-
P/2014 & 621-P/2015,
For the Petitioner(s)
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG KPK
For the Respondent(s)
:
Not represented.
Date of hearing
:
24-02-2016
JUDGMENT
AMIR HANI MUSLIM, J.- Through this common
judgment, we intend to decide the titled Appeals/Petitions, as common
questions of law and facts are involved therein.
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
6
CA.134-P/2013
On Farm Water Management Project, KPK.
2.
On 27.10.2004, various posts in the “On Farm Water
Management Project” were advertised. In response to the advertisement, the
Respondent, Adnanullah, applied for the post of Accountant (BPS-11) for
which he was selected and appointed for with effect from 31.12.2004. This
appointment was initially for a period of one year and later was consistently
extended from time to time on recommendation of the Petitioner. In the
year 2006, a proposal was moved for creation of 302 regular vacancies to
accommodate the contract employees working in different Projects. The
Chief Minister KPK approved the proposal of 275 regular posts for this
purpose with effect from 1.7.2007. During the interregnum, the
Government of NWFP (now KPK) promulgated Amendment Act IX of
2009, thereby amending Section 19(2) of the NWFP Civil Servants Act,
1973 and NWFP Employees (Regularization of Services) Act, 2009.
However, the newly created regular posts did not include the Respondent’s
post. Feeling aggrieved, he filed a Writ Petition which was allowed (on the
conceding statement of Addl. Advocate General) with the direction that if
the Respondent was eligible, his services should be regularized, subject to
verification of his domicile. The Review Petition filed by the Govt. of KPK
was dismissed being time barred. Thereafter, leave was granted in the
Petition filed by the Government of KPK before this Court.
CA.No.135-P/2013 & Civil Petition No.600-P of 2013
On Farm Water Management Project, KPK
3.
On 23.06.2004, the Secretary, Agriculture, got published an
advertisement in the press, inviting Applications for filling up the posts of
Water Management Officers (Engineering) and Water Management
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
7
Officers (Agriculture) in BS-17, in the NWFP for the “On Farm Water
Management Project” on contract basis. The Respondents applied for the
said posts and in November, 2004 and February 2005 respectively, they
were appointed for the aforementioned posts on contract basis, initially for
a period of one year and later extendable to the remaining Project period,
subject to their satisfactory performance and on the recommendations of the
Departmental Promotion Committee after completion of requisite one
month pre-service training. In the year 2006, a proposal for restructuring
and establishment of Regular Offices for the “On Farm Water Management
Department at District level was made. A summary was prepared for the
Chief Minister, KPK, for creation of 302 regular vacancies with the
recommendation that eligible temporary/contract employees working on
different Projects may be accommodated against regular posts on the basis
of their seniority. The Chief Minister approved the summary and
accordingly, 275 regular posts were created in the “On Farm Water
Management Department” at District level w.e.f 01.07.2007. During the
interregnum, the Government of NWFP (now KPK) promulgated
Amendment Act IX of 2009, thereby amending Section 19(2) of the NWFP
Civil Servants Act, 1973 and NWFP Employees (Regularization of
Services) Act, 2009. However, the services of the Respondents were not
regularized. Feeling aggrieved, they filed Writ Petitions before the
Peshawar High Court, praying that employees placed in similar posts had
been granted relief, vide judgment dated 22.12.2008, therefore, they were
also entitled to the same treatment. The Writ Petitions were disposed of,
vide impugned orders dated 22.09.2011 and 06.06.2012, with the direction
to consider the case of the Respondents in the light of the judgment dated
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
8
22.12.2008 and 03.12.2009. The Appellants filed Petition for leave to
Appeal before this Court in which leave was granted; hence this Appeal and
Petition.
C.A.No.136-P of 2013 to 138-P of 2013
On Farm Water Management Project, KPK
4.
In the years 2004-2005, the Respondents were appointed on
various posts on contract basis, for an initial period of one year and
extendable for the remaining Project period subject to their satisfactory
performance. In the year 2006, a proposal for restructuring and
establishment of Regular Offices of “On Farm Water Management
Department” was made at District level. A summary was prepared for the
Chief Minister, KPK, for creation of 302 regular vacancies, recommending
that eligible temporary/contract employees who, at that time, were working
on different Projects may be accommodated against regular posts on the
basis of seniority. The Chief Minister approved the proposed summary and
accordingly 275 regular posts were created in the “On Farm Water
Management Department” at District level w.e.f 01.07.2007. During the
interregnum, the Government of NWFP (now KPK) promulgated
Amendment Act IX of 2009, thereby amending Section 19(2) of the NWFP
Civil Servants Act, 1973 and NWFP Employees (Regularization of
Services) Act, 2009. However, the services of the Respondents were not
regularized. Feeling aggrieved, they filed Writ Petitions before the
Peshawar High Court, praying therein that employees placed in similar
posts had been granted relief, vide judgment dated 22.12.2008, therefore,
they were also entitled to the same treatment. The Writ Petitions were
disposed of, vide impugned orders dated 07.03.2012, 13.03.2012 and
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
9
20.06.2012, with the direction to consider the case of the Respondents in
the light of the judgment dated 22.12.2008 and 03.12.2009. The Appellants
filed Petition for leave to Appeal before this Court in which leave was
granted; hence these Appeals.
Civil Petition No.619-P/2014
Establishment of Database Development Based on Electronic Tools (Project)
5.
In the year 2010 and 2011, in pursuance of an advertisement,
upon the recommendations of the Project Selection Committee, the
Respondents were appointed as Data Base Developer, Web Designer and
Naib Qasid, in the Project namely “Establishment of Data Base
Development Based on Electronic Tools” including “MIS, Social Welfare
and Women Development Department”, on contract basis, initially for one
year, which period was extended from time to time. However, the services
of the Respondents were terminated, vide order dated 04.07.2013,
irrespective of the fact that the Project life was extended and the posts were
brought under the regular Provincial Budget. The Respondents impugned
their termination order by filing Writ Petition No.2428 of 2013, before the
Peshawar High Court, which was disposed of by the impugned judgment
dated 18.09.2014, holding that the Respondents would be treated at par, if
they were found similarly placed, as held in judgments dated 30.01.2014
and 01.04.2014 passed in Writ Petitions No.2131 of 2013 and 353-P of
2013. The Appellants challenged the judgment of the learned High Court
before this Court by filing Petition for leave to Appeal.
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
10
Civil Petitions No.368-P of 2014 to 371-P of 2014
Industrial Training Centre Garhi Shehsdad and Industrial Training Centre Garha Tajak,
Peshawar
6.
In the year 2008, upon the recommendations of the
Departmental Selection Committee, after fulfilling all the codal formalities,
the Respondents were appointed on contract basis on various posts in
Industrial Training Centre Garhi Shehsdad and Industrial Training Centre
Garha Tajak, Peshawar. Their period of contract was extended from time to
time. On 04.09.2012, the Scheme in which the Respondents were working
was brought under the regular Provincial Budget, but the services of the
Respondents despite regularization of the Scheme were terminated vide
order dated 19.06.2012. The Respondents filed Writ Petitions No.351-P,
352, 353 and 2454-P of 2013, against the order or termination and for
regularization of their services on the ground that the posts against which
they were appointed stood regularized and had been converted to the
regular Provincial Budget, with the approval of the Competent Authority.
The learned Peshawar High Court, vide common judgment dated
01.04.2014, allowed the Writ Petitions, reinstating the Respondents in
Service from the date of their termination with all consequential benefits.
Hence these Petitions by the Petitioners.
Civil Petition No.214-P of 2014
Welfare Home for Destitute Children, Charsadda.
7.
On 17.03.2009, a post of Superintendent BS-17 was
advertised for “Welfare Home for Destitute Children”, Charsadda. The
Respondent applied for the same and upon recommendations of the
Departmental Selection Committee, she was appointed at the said post on
30.04.2010, on contractual basis till 30.06.2011, beyond which period her
contract was extended from time to time. The post against which the
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
11
Respondent was serving was brought under the regular Provincial Budget
w.e.f 01.07.2012. However, the services of the Respondent were
terminated, vide order dated 14.06.2012. Feeling aggrieved, the Respondent
filed Writ Petition No.2131 of 2013, which was allowed, vide impugned
judgment dated 30.01.2014, whereby it was held that the Respondent would
be appointed on conditional basis subject to final decision of this apex
Court in Civil Petition No.344-P of 2012. Hence this Petition by the Govt.
of KPK.
Civil Petition No.621-P of 2015
Daar-ul-Aman Haripur
8.
On 17.03.2009, a post of Superintendent BS-17 was
advertisement for “Darul Aman”, Haripur. The Respondent applied for the
said post and upon recommendations of the Departmental Selection
Committee she was appointed w.e.f. 30.04.2010, initially on contract basis
till 30.06.2011, beyond which her period of contract was extended from
time to time. The post against which the Respondent was serving was
brought under the regular Provincial Budget w.e.f 01.07.2012. However,
the services of the Respondent were terminated, vide order dated
14.06.2012. Feeling aggrieved, the Respondent filed Writ Petition No.55-A
of 2015, which was allowed, vide impugned judgment dated 08.10.2015,
holding that “we accept this writ Petition and pass same order as has
already been passed by this Court in W.P.No2131-P of 2013 decided on
30.01.2014 and direct the respondents to appoint the Petitioner on
conditional basis subject to final decision of the Apex Court in Civil
Petition No.344-P of 2012.” Hence this Petition by the Govt. of KPK.
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
12
Civil Petition No.28-P of 2014
Darul Kafala, Swat.
9.
In the year 2005, the Government of KPK decided to
establish Darul Kafalas in different districts of the Province between
01.07.2005 to 30.06.2010. An advertisement was published to fill in
various posts in Darul Kafala, Swat. Upon recommendations of the
Departmental Selection Committee, the Respondents were appointed on
various posts on contract basis for a period of one year w.e.f 01.07.2007 to
30.06.2008, which period was extended from time to time. After expiry of
the period of the Project in the year 2010, the Government of KPK has
regularized the Project with the approval of the Chief Minister. However,
the services of the Respondents were terminated, vide order dated
23.11.2010, with effect from 31.12.2010. The Respondents challenged the
aforesaid order before the Peshawar High Court, inter alia, on the ground
that the employees working in other Darul Kafalas have been regularized
except the employees working in Darul Kafala, Swat. The Respondents
contended before the Peshawar High Court that the posts of the Project
were brought under the regular Provincial Budget, therefore, they were also
entitled to be treated at par with the other employees who were regularized
by the Government. The Writ Petition of the Respondents was allowed,
vide impugned judgment dated 19.09.2013, with the direction to the
Petitioners to regularize the services of the Respondents with effect from
the date of their termination.
Civil Petitions No.526 to 528-P of 2013
Centre for Mentally Retarded & Physically Handicapped (MR&PH), Nowshera, and Welfare
Home for Orphan Female Children Nowshera
10.
The Respondents in these Petitions were appointed on
contract basis on various posts upon the recommendations of the
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
13
Departmental Selection Committee in the Schemes titled “Centre for
Mentally Retarded & Physically Handicapped (MR&HP)” and “Welfare
Home for Orphan Female Children”, Nowshera, vide order dated
23.08.2006 and 29.08.2006, respectively. Their initial period of contractual
appointment was for one year till 30.06.2007, which was extended from
time to time till 30.06.2011. By notification dated 08.01.2011, the above-
titled Schemes were brought under the regular Provincial Budget of the
N.W.F.P. (now KPK) with the approval of the Competent Authority.
However, the services of the Respondents were terminated w.e.f
01.07.2011. Feeling aggrieved, the Respondents filed Writ Petitions
No.376, 377 and 378-P of 2012, contending that their services were
illegally dispensed with and that they were entitled to be regularized in
view of the KPK Employees (Regularization of Services Act), 2009,
whereby the services of the Project employees working on contract basis
had been regularized. The learned High Court, while relying upon the
judgment dated 22.03.2012, passed by this Court in Civil Petitions
No.562-P to 578-P, 588-P to 589-P, 605-P to 608-P of 2011 and 55-P, 56-P
and 60-P of 2012, allowed the Writ Petitions of the Respondents, directing
the Petitioners to reinstate the Respondents in service from the date of their
termination and regularize them from the date of their appointments. Hence
these Petitions.
Civil Appeal No.52-P of 2015
11.
On 23.06.2004, the Secretary, Agriculture, published an
advertisement in the press, inviting Applications for filling up the posts of
Water Management Officers (Engineering) and Water Management
Officers (Agriculture), BS-17, in the NWFP in the “On Farm Water
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
14
Management Project” on contract basis. The Respondent applied for the
said post and was appointed as such on contract basis, on the
recommendations of the Departmental Promotion Committee after
completion of a requisite one month pre-service training, for an initial
period of one year, extendable till completion of the Project, subject to his
satisfactory performance. In the year 2006, a proposal for restructuring and
establishment of Regular Offices of the “On Farm Water Management
Department” at District level was made. A summary was prepared for the
Chief Minister, KPK, for creation of 302 regular vacancies, recommending
that eligible temporary/contract employees working on different Projects
may be accommodated against regular posts on the basis of their seniority.
The Chief Minister approved the summary and accordingly, 275 regular
posts were created in the “On Farm Water Management Department” at
District level w.e.f 01.07.2007. During the interregnum, the Government of
NWFP (now KPK) promulgated Amendment Act IX of 2009, thereby
amending Section 19(2) of the NWFP Civil Servants Act, 1973 and enacted
the NWFP Employees (Regularization of Services) Act, 2009. However,
the services of the Respondent were not regularized. Feeling aggrieved, he
filed Writ Petition No.3087 of 2011 before the Peshawar High Court,
praying that employees on similar posts had been granted relief, vide
judgment dated 22.12.2008, therefore, he was also entitled to the same
treatment. The Writ Petition was allowed, vide impugned order dated
05.12.2012, with the direction to the Appellants to regularize the services of
the Respondent. The Appellants filed Petition for leave to Appeal before
this Court in which leave was granted; hence this Appeal.
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
15
Civil Appeal No.01-P of 2013
Welfare Home for Female Children, Malakand at Batkhela and Industrial Training Centre at
Garhi Usman Khel, Dargai.
12.
In response to an advertisement, the Respondents applied for
different positions in the “Welfare Home for Female Children”, Malakand
at Batkhela and “Female Industrial Training Centre” at Garhi Usman Khel.
Upon the recommendations of the Departmental Selection Committee, the
Respondents were appointed on different posts on different dates in the
year 2006, initially on contract basis for a period of one year, which period
was extended from time to time. However, the services of the Respondents
were terminated, vide order dated 09.07.2011, against which the
Respondents filed Writ Petition No.2474 of 2011, inter alia, on the ground
that the posts against which they were appointed had been converted to the
budgeted posts, therefore, they were entitled to be regularized alongwith the
similarly placed and positioned employees. The learned High Court, vide
impugned order dated 10.05.2012, allowed the Writ Petition of the
Respondents, directing the Appellants to consider the case of regularization
of the Respondents. Hence this Appeal by the Appellants.
Civil Appeals No.133-P
Establishment and Upgradation of Veterinary Outlets (Phase-III)-ADP
13.
Consequent upon recommendations of the Departmental
Selection Committee, the Respondents were appointed on different posts in
the Scheme “Establishment and Up-gradation of Veterinary Outlets (Phase-
III)ADP”, on contract basis for the entire duration of the Project, vide
orders dated 4.4.2007, 13.4.2007. 17.4.2007 and 19.6.2007, respectively.
The contract period was extended from time to time when on 05.06.2009, a
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
16
notice was served upon them, intimating them that their services were no
longer required after 30.06.2009. The Respondents invoked the
constitutional jurisdiction of the Peshawar High Court, by filing Writ
Petition No.2001 of 2009, against the order dated 05.06.2009. The Writ
Petition of the Respondents was disposed of, by judgment dated
17.05.2012, directing the Appellants to treat the Respondents as regular
employees from the date of their termination. Hence this Appeal by the
Appellants.
Civil Appeal No.113-P of 2013
Establishment of One Science and One Computer Lab in Schools/Colleges of NWFP
14.
On
26.09.2006
upon
the
recommendations
of
the
Departmental Selection Committee, the Respondents were appointed on
different posts in the Scheme “Establishment of One Science and One
Computer Lab in School/Colleges of NWFP”, on contract basis. Their
terms of contractual appointments were extended from time to time when
on 06.06.2009, they were served with a notice that their services were not
required any more. The Respondents filed Writ Petition No.2380 of 2009,
which was allowed on the analogy of judgment rendered in Writ Petition
No.2001 of 2009 passed on 17.05.2012. Hence this Appeal by the
Appellants.
Civil Appeals No.231 and 232-P of 2015
National Program for improvement of Water Courses in Pakistan
15.
Upon the recommendations of the Departmental Selection
Committee, the Respondents in both the Appeals were appointed on
different posts in “National Program for Improvement of Water Courses in
Pakistan”, on 17th January 2005 and 19th November 2005, respectively,
initially on contract basis for a period of one year, which was extended
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
17
from time to time. The Appellants terminated the service of the
Respondents w.e.f 01.07.2011, therefore, the Respondents approached the
Peshawar High Court, mainly on the ground that the employees placed in
similar posts had approached the High Court through W.Ps.No.43/2009,
84/2009 and 21/2009, which Petitions were allowed by judgment dated
21.01.2009 and 04.03.2009. The Appellants filed Review Petitions before
the Peshawar High Court, which were disposed of but still disqualified the
Appellants filed Civil Petitions No.85, 86, 87 and 91 of 2010 before this
Court and Appeals No.834 to 837/2010 arising out of said Petitions were
eventually dismissed on 01.03.2011. The learned High Court allowed the
Writ Petitions of the Respondents with the direction to treat the
Respondents as regular employees. Hence these Appeals by the Appellants.
Civil Petition No.496-P of 2014.
Provision of Population Welfare Programme
16.
In the year 2012, consequent upon the recommendations of
the Departmental Selection Committee, the Respondents were appointed on
various posts in the project namely “Provision of Population Welfare
Programme” on contract basis for the entire duration of the Project. On
08.01.2012, the Project was brought under the regular Provincial Budget.
The Respondents applied for their regularization on the touchstone of the
judgments already passed by the learned High Court and this Court on the
subject. The Appellants contended that the posts of the Respondents did not
fall under the scope of the intended regularization, therefore, they preferred
Writ Petition No.1730 of 2014, which was disposed of, in view of the
judgment of the learned High Court dated 30.01.2014 passed in Writ
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
18
Petition No.2131 of 2013 and judgment of this Court in Civil Petition
No.344-P of 2012. Hence these Appeals by the Appellants.
Civil Petition No.34-P of 2015
Pakistan Institute of Community Ophthalmology Hayatabad Medical Complex, Peshawar
17.
The Respondents were appointed on various posts in the
“Pakistan Institute of Community Ophthalmology Hayatabad Medical
Complex”, Peshawar, in the years 2001, 2002 and from 2007 to 2012, on
contract basis. Through advertisement dated 10.01.2014, the said Medical
Complex sought fresh Applications through advertisement against the posts
held by them. Therefore, the Respondents filed Writ Petition No.141 of
2004, which was disposed of more or less in the terms as state above.
Hence this Petition.
18.
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. Advocate General, KPK,
appeared on behalf of Govt. of KPK and submitted that the employees in
these Appeals/ Petitions were appointed on different dates since 1980. In
order to regularize their services, 302 new posts were created. According to
him, under the scheme the Project employees were to be appointed stage
wise on these posts. Subsequently, a number of Project employees filed
Writ Petitions and the learned High Court directed for issuance of orders
for the regularization of the Project employees. He further submitted that
the concessional statement made by the then Addl. Advocate General,
KPK, before the learned High Court to “adjust/regularize the petitioners on
the vacant post or posts whenever falling vacant in future but in order of
seniority/eligibility.” was not in accordance with law. The employees were
appointed on Projects and their appointments on these Projects were to be
terminated on the expiry of the Project as it was stipulated that they will not
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
19
claim any right of absorption in the Department against regular posts as per
existing Project policy. He also referred to the office order dated
31.12.2004 regarding appointment of Mr. Adnanullah (Respondent in CA.
No.134-P/2013) and submitted that he was appointed on contract basis for a
period of one year and the above mentioned office order clearly indicates
that he was neither entitled to pension nor GP Fund and furthermore, had
no right of seniority and or regular appointment. His main contention was
that the nature of appointment of these Project employees was evident from
the advertisement, office order and their appointment letters. All these
reflected that they were not entitled to regularization as per the terms of
their appointments.
19.
In the month of November 2006, a proposal was floated for
restructuring and establishment of Regular Offices of “On Farm Water
Management Department” at District level in NWFP (now KPK) which
was approved by the then Chief Minister KPK; who agreed to create 302
posts of different categories and the expenditure involved was to be met out
of the budgetary allocation. The employees already working in the Projects
were to be appointed on seniority basis on these newly created posts. Some
of the employees working since 1980 had preferential rights for their
regularization. In this regard, he also referred to various Notifications since
1980, whereby the Governor KPK was pleased to appoint the candidates
upon the recommendations of the KPK Public Service Commission on
different Projects on temporary basis and they were to be governed by the
KPK Civil Servants Act 1973 and the Rules framed thereunder. 302 posts
were created in pursuance of the summary of 2006, out of which 254 posts
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
20
were filled on seniority basis, 10 through promotion and 38 by way of
Court orders passed by this Court and or the learned Peshawar High Court.
He referred to the case of Govt. of NWFP vs. Abdullah Khan (2011 SCMR
898) whereby, the contention of the Appellants (Govt. of NWFP) that the
Respondents were Project employees appointed on contractual basis were
not entitled to be regularized, was not accepted and it was observed by this
Court that definition of “Contract appointment” contained in Section
2(1)(aa) of the NWFP Employees (Regularization of Services) Act, 2009,
was not attracted in the cases of the Respondent employees. Thereafter, in
the case of Government of NWFP vs. Kaleem Shah (2011 SCMR 1004),
this Court followed the judgment of Govt. of NWFP vs. Abdullah Khan
(ibid). The judgment, however, was wrongly decided. He further contended
that KPK Civil Servants (Amendment) Act 2005, (whereby Section 19 of
the KPK Civil Servants Act 1973, was substituted), was not applicable to
Project employees. Section 5 of the KPK Civil Servants Act 1973, states
that the appointment to a civil service of the Province or to a civil post in
connection with the affairs of the Province shall be made in the prescribed
manner by the Governor or by a person authorized by the Governor in that
behalf. But in the cases in hand, the Project employees were appointed by
the Project Director, therefore, they could not claim any right to
regularization under the aforesaid provision of law. Furthermore, he
contended that the judgment passed by the learned Peshawar High Court is
liable to be set aside as it is solely based on the facts that the Respondents
who were originally appointed in 1980 had been regularized. He submitted
that the High Court erred in regularizing the employees on the touchstone
of Article 25 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan as the
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
21
employees appointed in 2005 and those in 1980 were not similarly placed
and, therefore, there was no question of discrimination. According to him,
they will have to come through fresh inductions to relevant posts if they
wish to fall under the scheme of regularization. He further contended that
any wrongful action that may have taken place previously, could not justify
the commission of another wrong on the basis of such plea. The cases
where the orders were passed by DCO without lawful authority could not
be said to have been made in accordance with law. Therefore, even if some
of the employees had been regularized due to previous wrongful action,
others could not take plea of being treated in the same manner. In this
regard, he has relied upon the case of Government of Punjab vs. Zafar Iqbal
Dogar (2011 SCMR 1239) and Abdul Wahid vs. Chairman CBR (1998
SCMR 882).
20.
Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, learned ASC, appeared on behalf of
Respondent(s) in C.As.134-P/2013, 1-P/2013 and C.P.28-P/2014 and
submitted that all of his clients were clerks and appointed on non-
commissioned posts. He further submitted that the issue before this Court
had already been decided by four different benches of this Court from time
to time and one review petition in this regard had also been dismissed. He
contended that fifteen Hon’ble Judges of this Court had already given their
view in favour of the Respondents and the matter should not have been
referred to this Bench for review. He further contended that no employee
was regularized until and unless the Project on which he was working was
not put under the regular Provincial Budget as such no regular posts were
created. The process of regularization was started by the Government itself
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
22
without intervention of this Court and without any Act or Statute of the
Government. Many of the decisions of the Peshawar High Court were
available, wherein the directions for regularization were issued on the basis
of discrimination. All the present cases before this Court are related to the
category in which the Project became part of the regular Provincial Budget
and the posts were created. Thousands of employees were appointed
against these posts. He referred to the case of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Vs. The
State (PLD 1979 SC 741) and submitted that a review was not justifiable,
notwithstanding error being apparent on face of record, if judgment or
finding, although suffering from an erroneous assumption of facts, was
sustainable on other grounds available on record.
21.
Hafiz S. A. Rehman, Sr. ASC, appeared on behalf of
Respondent(s) in Civil Appeal Nos. 135-136-P/2013 and on behalf of all
174 persons who were issued notice vide leave granting order dated
13.06.2013. He submitted that various Regularization Acts i.e. KPK Adhoc
Civil Servants (Regularization of Services) Act, 1987, KPK Adhoc Civil
Servants (Regularization of Services) Act, 1988, KPK Employees on
Contract Basis (Regularization of Services) Act, 1989, KPK Employees on
Contract Basis (Regularization of Services) (Amendment) Act, 1990, KPK
Civil Servants (Amendment) Act, 2005, KPK Employees (Regularization
of Services) Act, 2009, were promulgated to regularize the services of
contractual employees. The Respondents, including 174 to whom he was
representing, were appointed during the year 2003/2004 and the services of
all the contractual employees were regularized through an Act of legislature
i.e. KPK Civil Servants (Amendment) Act, 2005 and the KPK Employees
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
23
(Regularization of Services) Act, 2009, was not applicable to present
Respondents. He referred to Section 19(2) of the KPK Civil Servants Act
1973, which was substituted vide KPK Civil Servants (Amendment) Act,
2005, provides that “A person though selected for appointment in the
prescribed manner to a service or post on or after the 1st day of July, 2001,
till the commencement of the said Act, but appointment on contact basis,
shall, with effect from the commencement of the said Act, be deemed to
have been appointed on regular basis.” Furthermore, vide Notification
dated 11.10.1989 issued by the Government of NWFP, the Governor of
KPK was pleased to declare the “On Farm Water Management Directorate”
as an attached Department of Food, Agriculture, Livestock and Cooperation
Department, Govt. of NWFP. Moreover, it was also evident from the
Notification dated 03.07.2013 that 115 employees were regularized under
section 19 (2) of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Civil Servants (Amendment)
Act, 2005 and Regularization Act, 2009 from the date of their initial
appointment. Therefore, it was a past and closed transaction. Regarding
summaries submitted to the Chief Minister for creation of posts, he clarified
that it was not one summary (as stated by the learned Addl. Advocate
General KPK) but three summaries submitted on 11.06.2006, 04.01.2012
and 20.06.2012, respectively, whereby total 734 different posts of various
categories were created for these employees from the regular budgetary
allocation. Even through the third summary, the posts were created to
regularize the employees in order to implement the judgments of Hon’ble
Peshawar High Court dated 15.09.2011, 8.12.2011 and Supreme Court of
Pakistan dated 22.3.2012. Approximately, 20-30% employees were
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
24
recruited through KPK Public Service Commission and the Public Service
Commission is only meant to recommend the candidates on regular posts.
22.
Mr. Imtiaz Ali, learned ASC, appearing on behalf of the
Respondent in CA No.134-P/2013, submitted that there was one post of
Accountant which had been created and that the Respondent, Adnanullah,
was the only Accountant who was working there. He contented that, even
otherwise, judgment dated 21.9.2009 in Writ Petition No.59/2009, was not
questioned before this Court and the same had attained finality. He further
submitted that his Writ Petition was allowed on the strength of Writ
Petition No. 356/2008 and that no Appeal has been filed against it.
23.
Mr. Ayub Khan, learned ASC, appeared in C.M.A 496-
P/2013 on behalf of employees whose services might be affected (to whom
notices were issued by this Court vide leave granting order dated
13.06.2013) and adopted the arguments advanced by the senior learned
counsels including Hafiz S. A. Rehman.
24.
Mr. Ijaz Anwar, learned ASC, appeared in C.A 137-P/2013
for Respondents No. 2 to 6, CPs.526-P to 528-P/2013 for Respondents and
for Appellant in Civil Appeal No.605-P/2015 (JR) and submitted that the
Regularization Act of 2005, is applicable to his case and if benefit is given
to some employees then in light of the judgment of this Court titled
Government of Punjab Vs. Samina Perveen (2009 SCMR 1), wherein it was
observed that if some point of law is decided by Court relating to the terms
and conditions of a Civil Servant who litigated and there were other who
had not taken any legal proceedings, in such a case the dictates of justice
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
25
and rules of good governance demand that the benefit of the said decision
be extended to others also who may not be parties to that litigation.
Furthermore, the judgment of Peshawar High Court which included Project
employees as defined under Section 19(2) of the KPK Civil Servants Act
1973 which was substituted vide KPK Civil Servants (Amendment) Act,
2005, was not challenged. In the NWFP Employees (Regularization of
Services) Act, 2009, the Project employees have been excluded but in
presence of the judgment delivered by this Court, in the cases of Govt. of
NWFP vs. Abdullah Khan (ibid) and Govt. of NWFP vs. Kaleem Shah
(ibid), the Peshawar High Court had observed that the similarly placed
persons should be considered for regularization.
25.
While arguing Civil Appeal No. 605-P/2015, he submitted
that in this case the Appellants/ Petitioners were appointed on contract basis
for a period of one year vide order dated 18.11.2007, which was
subsequently extended from time to time. Thereafter, the services of the
Appellants were terminated vide notice dated 30.05.2011. The learned
Bench of the Peshawar High Court refused relief to the employees and
observed that they were expressly excluded from the purview of Section
2(1)(b) of KPK (Regularization of Services) Act, 2009. He further
contended that the Project against which they were appointed had become
part of regular Provincial Budget. Thereafter, some of the employees were
regularized while others were denied, which made out a clear case of
discrimination. Two groups of persons similarly placed could not be treated
differently, in this regard he relied on the judgments of Abdul Samad vs.
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
26
Federation of Pakistan (2002 SCMR 71) and Engineer Nariandas vs.
Federation of Pakistan (2002 SCMR 82).
26.
We have heard the learned Law Officer as well as the learned
ASCs, representing the parties and have gone through the relevant record
with their able assistance. The controversy in these cases pivots around the
issue as to whether the Respondents are governed by the provisions of the
North West Frontier Province (now KPK) Employees (Regularization of
Services) Act, 2009, (hereinafter referred to as the Act). It would be
relevant to reproduce Section 3 of the Act:
“3.
Regularization
of
Services
of
certain
employees.—All employees including recommendees of
the High Court appointed on contract or adhoc basis
and holding that post on 31st December, 2008, or till the
commencement of this Act shall be deemed to have been
validly appointed on regular basis having the same
qualification and experience.”
27.
The aforesaid Section of the Act reproduced hereinabove
clearly provides for the regularization of the employees appointed either on
contract basis or adhoc basis and were holding contract appointments on
31st December, 2008 or till the commencement of this Act. Admittedly, the
Respondents were appointed on one year contract basis, which period of
their appointments was extended from time to time and were holding their
respective posts on the cut-of date provided in Section 3 (ibid).
28.
Moreover, the Act contains a non-obstante clause in Section
4A which reads as under:
“4A.
Overriding
effect.—Notwithstanding
any
thing to the contrary contained in any other law or
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
27
rule for the time being in force, the provisions of
this Act shall have an overriding effect and the
provisions of any such law or rule to the extent of
inconsistency to this Act shall cease to have effect.”
29.
The above Section expressly excludes the application of any
other law and declares that the provisions of the Act will have overriding
effect, being a special enactment. In this background, the cases of the
Respondents squarely fall within the ambit of the Act and their services
were mandated to be regulated by the provisions of the Act.
30.
It is also an admitted fact that the Respondents were
appointed on contract basis on Project posts but the Projects, as conceded
by the learned Additional Advocate General, were funded by the Provincial
Government by allocating regular Provincial Budget prior to the
promulgation of the Act. Almost all the Projects were brought under the
regular Provincial Budget Schemes by the Government of KPK and
summaries were approved by the Chief Minster of the KPK for operating
the Projects on permanent basis. The “On Farm Water Management
Project” was brought on the regular side in the year 2006 and the Project
was declared as an attached Department of the Food, Agriculture, Livestock
and Co-operative Department. Likewise, other Projects were also brought
under the regular Provincial Budget Scheme. Therefore, services of the
Respondents would not be affected by the language of Section 2(aa) and (b)
of the Act, which could only be attracted if the Projects were abolished on
the completion of their prescribed tenure. In the cases in hand, the Projects
initially were introduced for a specified time whereafter they were
transferred on permanent basis by attaching them with Provincial
CAs.134-P/2013 etc
28
Government departments. The employees of the same Project were adjusted
against the posts created by the Provincial Government in this behalf.
31.
The record further reveals that the Respondents were
appointed on contract basis and were in employment/service for several
years and Projects on which they were appointed have also been taken on
the regular Budget of the Government, therefore, their status as Project
employees has ended once their services were transferred to the different
attached Government Departments, in terms of Section 3 of the Act. The
Government of KPK was also obliged to treat the Respondents at par, as it
cannot adopt a policy of cherry picking to regularize the employees of
certain Projects while terminating the services of other similarly placed
employees.
32.
The above are the reasons of our short order dated 24.2.2016,
which reads as under:-
“Arguments heard. For the reasons to be recorded
separately, these Appeals, except Civil Appeal No.605 of
2015, are dismissed. Judgment in Civil Appeal No.605
of 2015 is reserved”
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad the,
24-02-2016
Approved for reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.134-P_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Mian Saqib Nisar, HCJ
Mr. Justice Asif Saeed Khan Khosa
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Mazhar Alam Khan Miankhel
Civil Appeals No. 1340, 1341 and 1342 of 2018 and Civil
Miscellaneous Application No. 9985 of 2018 in Civil Appeal No.
1340 of 2018
(Against the judgments dated 19.09.2018 passed by the Islamabad
High Court, Islamabad in Writ Petitions No. 2839, 2841 and 2842
of 2018)
Chairman,
National
Accountability
Bureau,
Islamabad
through Prosecutor-General Accountability, Islamabad
(in all cases)
…Appellant
versus
Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif
(in C.A. 1340 of 2018)
Maryam Nawaz Sharif
(in C.A. 1341 of 2018)
Capt. (Retd) Muhammad Safdar
(in C.A. 1342 of 2018)
…Respondents
For the appellant:
Mr. Muhammad Akram Qureshi,
Special
Prosecutor,
National
Accountability Bureau
with Mr. Jahanzeb Khan Bharwana,
Additional
Prosecutor-General,
National Accountability Bureau
(in all cases)
For the respondents:
Khawaja Haris Ahmad, Sr. ASC
Mr. Mehr Khan Malik, AOR
(in C.A. 1340 of 2018)
Mr. Muhammad Amjad Pervaiz, ASC
Syed Rafaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in C.A. 1341 of 2018)
N.R. (in C.A. 1342 of 2018)
For the Applicant:
Nomo. (in C.M.A. No. 9985 of 2018 in
C.A. 1340 of 2018)
Date of hearing:
14.01.2019
Civil Appeals No. 1340, 1341 and 1342 of 2018
2
JUDGMENT
Asif Saeed Khan Khosa, J.:
Civil Miscellaneous Application No. 9985 of 2018 in Civil
Appeal No. 1340 of 2018
The
reason
mentioned
in
the
application
seeking
adjournment has not been found by us to be valid or sufficient for
the purpose nor is the same supported by any material.
2.
Through this miscellaneous application the applicant has
prayed for his impleading as a party to the main appeal but we
have not felt satisfied with his locus standi or interest in the
matter. This miscellaneous application is, therefore, dismissed.
Civil Appeals No. 1340, 1341 and 1342 of 2018
3.
Through these appeals by leave of this Court granted on
12.11.2018 the appellant/Chairman, National Accountability
Bureau has sought setting aside of the impugned judgments
passed by a learned Division Bench of the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad in Writ Petitions No. 2839, 2841 and 2842 of 2018
whereby respondents No. 1 in the present appeals were admitted to
bail upon suspension of their sentences in their respective criminal
appeals filed against their convictions and sentences recorded by
the Accountability Court-I, Islamabad on 19.09.2018 in Reference
No. 20 of 2017.
4.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and have
gone through the record of the case with their assistance.
5.
After hearing the learned counsel for the parties and going
through the relevant record with their assistance we have noticed
the following shortcomings in the impugned judgments passed by
the High Court:
Civil Appeals No. 1340, 1341 and 1342 of 2018
3
i)
Instead of adhering to the guidelines issued and
recommendations made by this Court in the
case of Muhammad Shakeel v. The State and
others (PLD 2014 SC 458) regarding shorter
format of orders to be passed in matters of bail
the High Court had written a judgment spanning
over 41 pages while deciding the matter of bail of
respondents No. 1 upon suspension of their
sentences.
ii)
It is settled law that while deciding an
application for bail or suspension of sentence
during the pendency of an appeal merits of the
case are not adverted to or commented upon in
any detail whereas in the impugned judgments
passed by it the High Court had not only
undertaken a detailed assessment of the merits
of the case but had also recorded some
categorical conclusions regarding the same.
iii)
The raison d’être for suspension of sentence
during the pendency of an appeal is that due to
the peculiarities of his case the convict may not
be kept in custody till his appeal is fixed for
hearing but in these cases the writ petitions filed
by respondents No. 1 had been taken up for
hearing and decision at a time when the main
appeals were also fixed for hearing.
iv)
With reference to many a precedent case a
Larger Bench of this Court has clarified in the
case of Tallat Ishaq v. National Accountability
Bureau, etc. (Civil Petition No. 632 of 2019
decided on 01.10.2018) that in cases under the
National Accountability Ordinance, 1999 bail
may
be
granted
through
exercise
of
Constitutional jurisdiction of a High Court only
in extraordinary circumstances and in cases of
extreme hardship but in the present cases no
such extraordinary circumstance or hardship
had been referred to by the High Court in the
impugned judgments passed by it.
v)
In cases pertaining to the offence under section
9(a)(v) of the National Accountability Ordinance,
1999
this
Court
has
identified
different
ingredients of the said offence in the cases of
Syed Qasim Shah v. The State (2009 SCMR 790),
Muhammad Hashim Babar v. The State and
another (2010 SCMR 1697), Khalid Aziz v. The
State (2011 SCMR 136) and Ghani-ur-Rehman v.
National Accountability Bureau and others (PLD
2011 SC 1144) explaining which ingredients are
Civil Appeals No. 1340, 1341 and 1342 of 2018
4
to be proved by which party and some of the
above mentioned precedent cases had been
referred to by the High Court in the impugned
judgments passed by it. It had not been
appreciated by the High Court that in all those
precedent cases the accused persons had
accepted
ownership
or
possession
of
the
properties in issue whereas in the present cases
respondents No. 1 had maintained that the
relevant properties did not belong to them nor
were they in possession of the same. The High
Court had failed to consider whether the above
mentioned precedent cases were relevant to the
cases in hand or not and whether in the present
cases the principle of forfeiture of the defence
would apply if the accused persons denied
ownership
or
possession
of
the
relevant
properties but in the circumstances of the case
such ownership or possession was established.
vi)
While adverting to some deficiencies in the
evidence vis-à-vis the ingredients of the offence
under
section
9(a)(v)
of
the
National
Accountability Ordinance, 1999 the High Court
had failed to consider that conclusions in that
regard were premature at the stage of bail or
suspension of sentence because by virtue of the
provisions of section 428, Cr.P.C. additional
evidence could be adduced or procured during
the pendency of the appeals.
6.
Despite the above mentioned deficiencies found by us in the
impugned judgments passed by the High Court we are cognizant of
the legal position that considerations for grant of bail and those for
its cancellation are entirely different. No allegation has been leveled
before us regarding any misuse or abuse of the concession of bail
by respondents No. 1 to these appeals. One of the said respondents
is already in jail after having been convicted and sentenced in
connection with another criminal case, another of the said
respondents is a woman and the law envisages concession for her
in the matter of bail and the sentence of imprisonment passed by
the trial court against yet another of the said respondents was
quite short. In these peculiar circumstances we have not felt
persuaded to interfere with the jurisdiction and discretion
exercised by the High Court in the matter of the said respondents’
Civil Appeals No. 1340, 1341 and 1342 of 2018
5
bail upon suspension of their sentences during the pendency of
their appeals. These appeals are, therefore, dismissed.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad
14.01.2019
Approved for reporting.
Arif
| {
"id": "C.A.1340_2018.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
(on appeal from the judgment of the Islamabad
High Court, Islamabad dated 2.10.2012 passed
in I.C.A. No.222/2010)
Pakistan Telecommunication Employees Trust
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Federation of Pakistan, etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Hamid Khan, Sr.ASC
M.S.Khattak, AOR
For the Respondent(s):
Abdul Rasheed Awan, DAG
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Date(s) of Hearing:
16.05.2017 & 22.05.2017
…
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.— The facts of this appeal are that
the appellant, Pakistan Telecommunication Employees Trust (the Trust),
manages the Pakistan Telecommunication Corporation Employees
Pension Fund (the Pension Fund), certain amounts of which were invested in
various banks and schemes etc. The Zakat and Ushr Department
deducted zakat in terms of Section 3 the Zakat and Ushr Ordinance,
1980 (the Ordinance). The appellant challenged such deductions through a
constitution petition before the learned High Court on the ground that
the appellant was not a sahib-e-nisab and thus, could not be made
subject to compulsory deduction of zakat. The writ petition was
dismissed. The appellant’s Intra-Court Appeal was also dismissed by the
learned Division Bench of the High Court vide impugned judgment,
hence this appeal with the leave of the Court dated 5.11.2013, to
consider, inter alia, the following questions:-
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 2 :-
(a)
Whether the appellant, being a trust, does not fall
within the definition of sahib-e-nisab provided in
Section 2(xxiii) of the Ordinance being a successor to
the Pension Fund under Sections 45 and 46 of the Act?
(b)
Whether the deduction of zakat in the instant case does
not fall within the ambit of Section 3 of the Ordinance,
which is the charging section read with Schedule-I
appended therewith?
(c)
Whether the Pension Fund, on which zakat is to be
deducted, does not fall within the meaning of annuities
as defined in the Ordinance?
(d)
Whether zakat is not payable under Section 3 of the
Ordinance by the appellant as it does not own or
possess any assets rather held the same as amanat, on
which no zakat is leviable?
(e)
Whether zakat is not payable by the appellant as the
funds being administered by it are not its assets but its
liability towards the beneficiaries of the Trust in terms
of Sections 44 to 46 of the Act?
(f)
The Pension Fund being a joint account for the
beneficiaries/pensioners, who themselves might be
liable to deduction of zakat, whether the deduction of
zakat prior to the onward payment of money to them
would amount to double taxation?
2.
Heard. For the sake of brevity, the arguments of the learned
counsel for the parties are not recorded separately and shall be reflected
in the course of the opinion. The learned counsel for the respondents
raised a preliminary objection regarding the maintainability of the writ
petition before the learned High Court, that the appellant was
established in 1996 and zakat was continuously deducted since 1997,
whereas the writ petition was filed in 2004, therefore, the same is hit by
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 3 :-
laches. We find that the principle of laches does not apply in this case
because zakat was deducted from the appellant each year which gave
rise to a fresh cause of action to challenge the validity of such deduction.
Thus, we hold that the writ petition was maintainable.
3.
The fundamental question in this appeal is: what is the legal
status of the appellant and whether it falls within the scope of Section 3
of the Ordinance for the purposes of deduction of zakat? In order to
answer this question, we find it expedient to discuss the law pertaining
to zakat. Section 1(2) of the Ordinance provides for the extent of the
application of the Ordinance: (i) territorial jurisdiction, in that it extends
to the whole of Pakistan; (ii) subject matter jurisdiction, in that it
pertains to payment and recovery of zakat; and (iii) parties’ jurisdiction,
in that the Ordinance applies only to Muslim citizens of Pakistan and a
company, or other association of persons, or body of individuals,
whether incorporated or not, majority of the shares of which is owned,
or the beneficial ownership of which is held, by such citizens. Section
3(1) of the Ordinance is important which reads as follows:-
3. Charge and collection of Zakat.– (1) Subject to the
other provisions of this Ordinance, Zakat in respect of
assets mentioned in the First Schedule shall be charged
and collected, on compulsory basis, for each Zakat year, at
the rates and in the manner specified therein, and as may
be prescribed, from every person who is on the Valuation
Date, and for the whole of the preceding Zakat year been,
sahib-e-nisab, and who owns or possesses such assets on
the Valuation Date:
The aforementioned section is the charging provision according to which
zakat is to be compulsorily charged and collected for each zakat year in
respect of the assets mentioned in the First Schedule from every person
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 4 :-
who: (i) is, on the Valuation Date, and for the whole of the preceding
zakat year been, sahib-e-nisab, and (ii) owns or possesses such assets
on the Valuation Date. Sahib-e-nisab has been defined in Section 2(xxiii)
as under:-
2(xxiii) ‘sahib-e-nisab’ means a person who owns or
possesses assets not less than nisab, but does not include:
(a)
……………………………………………………...............
(b)
a statutory corporation, a company or other
enterprise, owned wholly, directly or indirectly, by
the Federal Government, a Provincial Government,
a local authority or a corporation owned by the
Federal Government or a Provincial Government,
either singly or jointly with one or more of the other
three;
�
(i)
an institution, fund, trust, endowment or society:-
(a)
registered as a charitable organization under
the Societies Registration Act, 1860 (XXI of
1860), or as a company under section 26 of the
Companies Act, 1913 (VII of 1913), or
registered or approved as a charitable or social
welfare organisation under any other law for
the time being in force, and
(b)
approved by the Central Board of Revenue for
the purposes of section 47 of the Income Tax
Ordinance, 1979 (XXXI of 1979);
[Emphasis supplied]
According to the above definition, sahib-e-nisab is a person who owns or
possesses assets not less than nisab which has been defined in Section
2(xva) of the Ordinance as follows:-
2(xva) ‘nisab’ in relation to assets liable to Zakat, except
agricultural produce and animals fed free in pastures, means
612.32 grams of silver, or cash or gold, or goods for trade,
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 5 :-
or any assets liable to Zakat under Shariah, the aggregate
value of which is equal to the value of 612.32 grams of
silver, as notified by the Administrator-General for each
Zakat year or, in the case of a person whose assets liable to
Zakat consist only of gold, 87.48 grams of gold;
4.
It is not disputed that the Pension Fund was less than the
nisab prescribed in Section 2(xva) ibid. The main contention of the
learned counsel for the appellant is that the Ordinance does not apply to
the appellant as it is not a sahib-e-nisab in terms of Section 2(xxiii)(b) of
the Ordinance, as it is a statutory corporation wholly owned by the
Federal Government. In this regard, he relied upon the judgment
reported
as
Administration
General
Zakat,
Central
Zakat
administration, Islamabad and others Vs. Pakistan Insurance
Corporation through Secretary and others (PLD 2016 SC 468). He
also argued that the Ordinance did not apply to the appellant as
according to Section 1(2) thereof, it applied only to Muslim citizens which
he contended the appellant is not. On the other hand, learned counsel
for the respondents submitted that the appellant is not owned by the
Federal Government, thus is a sahib-e-nisab and is not exempt from the
deduction of zakat. Thus, we must examine the nature and status of the
appellant,
for
which
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
Pakistan
Telecommunication (Re-organisation) Act, 1996 (the Act). Section 2(w) of
the Act defines ‘Trust’ which “means the Pakistan Telecommunication Employees
Trust established under section 44;” Section 44(1) of the Act provides that “As
soon as may be, after the commencement of this Act, the Federal Government shall, by
notification in the official Gazette, establish a trust to be called the Pakistan
Telecommunication Employees Trust.” According to sub-section (2) thereof, the
Trust shall be a body corporate, having perpetual succession and a
common seal with power (subject to the provisions of the Act) to acquire and hold
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 6 :-
property, both moveable and immovable, and shall sue and be sued by
its name. Sub-section (3) stipulates that the Trust is to be managed by a
Board of Trustees (the Board) consisting of six trustees, three to be
appointed by the Federal Government and three by Pakistan
Telecommunication Company Limited (the Company), for a period of three
years, unless earlier removed by the appointing authority. Section 45(1)
of the Act provides:-
45. Pension Fund.- (1) The Federal Government shall, by
notification in the official Gazette, order that from the
effective date, all assets of the Pakistan Telecommunication
Corporation Employees Pension Fund as created by a Trust
Deed dated the 2nd April 1994, hereinafter referred to as the
"Pension Fund", and such liabilities as are specified in the
notification, shall vest in and shall become the assets and
liabilities of the Trust:
Provided that………………………………………………
Sub-section (3) thereof lists the amounts and contributions that the
Fund is to consist of:-
(3) The Pension Fund shall consist of-
(a)
amounts
received
from
the
Pakistan
Telecommunication Corporation Employees Pension
Fund referred to in sub-section (1);
(b)
contribution to be paid by the Company under sub-
section (2);
(c)
annual contribution to be paid by the Company at the
commencement of each financial year;
(d)
investments and the profits, gains and other returns
accrued on such investments; and
(e)
donations and other contributions by individuals or
any aid-giving agencies.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 7 :-
Section 46 of the Act goes onto stipulate the functions and powers of the
Trust which read as under:-
46. Functions and powers of the Trust.- (1) For carrying
out the purposes of the Trust, the Board of Trustees shall-
(a)
take over and assume the liability of the Pension
Fund, including contributions of the Company to the
Pension Fund;
(b)
obtain payment from the Company of the amount
determined by Actuary as representing the unfunded
proportion of the accrued pension liabilities to be
discharged by the Company;
(c)
determine, at the commencement of each financial
year, the amount to be contributed to the Pension
Fund by the Company; and
(d)
make provision for the payment of pension to
telecommunication employees to the extent of their
entitlement.
(2) In performance of its functions, the Board of Trustees
shall-
(a)
have the exclusive right to determine the amounts, if
any, payable in respect of pension benefits to the
telecommunication employees;
(b)
administer and operate the Pension Fund;
(c)
specify and certify the requirements to be fulfilled for
payments of the pensions to be made from the
Pension Fund;
(d)
appoint, promote, remove and exercise discipline and
control over its employees; (e) enter into contracts;
(f)
acquire, lease, encumber, dispose of, exchange,
invest or otherwise deal with any moveable or
immovable property or any interest therein; and
(g)
exercise all such powers as may be necessary or
incidental to the performance of any of its functions
or the exercise of any of its powers.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 8 :-
(3) The Manager of the Board of Trustees shall be
responsible for administrative control of the employees of
the Trust and day to day working of the Trust as may be
assigned to him by the Board of Trustees.
A cumulative reading of above provisions makes clear that the appellant
is an independent and autonomous body which is not wholly owned,
directly or indirectly, by the Federal Government. Mere creation by a
notification issued by the Federal Government under Section 44 of the
Act does not, to our mind, mean that the Trust is wholly owned by the
Federal Government. It can acquire and hold property, both moveable
and immoveable, and can sue and be sued in its own name. The Trust is
managed by the Board which is free to take decisions by simple majority,
and just because half of the members of the Board are appointed by the
Federal Government, one cannot conclude that the Trust is owned by the
Federal Government. For all its actions, it is neither required to obtain
prior permission nor is bound to get the same validated from the Federal
Government, apart from the framing of rules for the management and
conduct of business of the Trust in accordance with Section 44(9) of the
Act. We find that this single factor is not sufficient to establish whole
ownership of the Federal Government. Furthermore, as is clear from
Section 45(1) of the Act, a Pension Fund was created, albeit by the
Federal Government through a notification in the official Gazette, and all
the assets of Pakistan Telecommunication Corporation (PTC) Employees
Pension Fund created by a trust deed dated 2.4.1994, and such
liabilities as were specified in the notification, vested in and became the
assets and liabilities of the appellant. As is manifest from Section 45(2)
of the Act, the Federal Government makes no contributions whatsoever
to the Pension Fund. A bare reading of Section 46 of the Act makes clear
that the Board is free and independent to exercise its powers and carry
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 9 :-
out its functions in accordance with law with no interference whatsoever
from the Federal Government. Moreover, Section 53(2) of the Act lends
support to the proposition that the Pension Fund is owned by the Trust
and not the Federal Government, as “The balance of the Pension Fund shall, on
the winding up of the Trust, be paid to the Federal Government…” suggesting that
till winding up of the Trust, the Pension Fund is not owned by the
Federal Government but the Trust itself. Hence it is safe to say that the
appellant is not owned, directly or indirectly, by the Federal Government
and is therefore not excluded from the definition of sahib-e-nisab under
Section 2(xxiii)(b) of the Ordinance. Additionally, the appellant is no
doubt a body of individuals, albeit not incorporated, the beneficial
ownership of which is held, by Muslim citizens, as it is not the case of
the appellant that the majority of the employees/pensioners are non-
Muslims; thus, the Ordinance is applicable to the appellant in terms of
territorial, subject matter and parties’ jurisdiction contained in Section
1(2) thereof.
As regards the National Insurance Corporation’s case (supra)
relied upon by the learned counsel for the appellant, suffice it to say that
in the said judgment this Court declared the Corporation to be exempt
from the deduction of zakat as it was wholly owned by the Federal
Government. The said case is distinguishable from the instant case and
cannot be relied upon, as we have held above, the appellant is not wholly
owned, directly or indirectly, by the Federal Government.
5.
Learned counsel for the appellant also argued that the
Ordinance does not apply to the appellant as it is not a sahib-e-nisab in
terms of Section 2(xxiii)(i) of the Ordinance being a charitable trust
meant for the social welfare of the employees of the Company. In this
regard, it is to be noted that as reproduced above, an institution, fund,
trust, endowment or society is exempt from deduction of zakat in terms
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 10 :-
of Section 2(xxiii)(i) ibid only if it meets two criteria: (a) it is registered as
a charitable organization under the Societies Registration Act, 1860, or
as a company under Section 26 of the Companies Act, 1913, or
registered or approved as a charitable or social welfare organization
under any other law for the time being in force; and (b) it is approved by
the Central Board of Revenue for the purposes of Section 47 of the
Income Tax Ordinance, 1979. When the learned counsel for the appellant
was confronted with this provision, he candidly conceded that the
appellant is not registered as a charitable or social welfare organization
under any relevant law. Yet, he argued that the trust has been created
for a public purpose, namely to pay pension to the government
employees of the Pakistan Telephone and Telegraph Department (the
Department) which later became the employees of the Company, therefore,
it should be exempted from the deduction of zakat. We do not find that
the appellant is involved in any social welfare or charitable activity,
rather it only provides pension to the retiring employees of the erstwhile
Department. In this regard, this Court has held in various judgments
that pension is not bounty, but is a right acquired in consideration of
past service. The right to pension is a well-earned right subject to
fulfillment of the conditions provided in the law. Learned counsel also
submitted that the provision ibid should be construed in a wide manner
to encompass all types of trusts, including the appellant, and not be
restricted to those who fulfill part (a) and (b) of Section 2(xxiii)(i) supra.
We are of the view that the law is clear, in that the appellant, albeit a
trust (note:- certain provisions of the Trusts Act, 1882 are applicable to the appellant
according to Section 52 of the Ordinance), must fulfill the conditions contained in
part (a) and (b) of Section 2(xxiii)(i) ibid which admittedly the appellant
does not. We are not willing to read in ‘any type of trust’ into Section
2(xxiii)(i) ibid as that would render part (a) and (b) thereof to be entirely
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 11 :-
redundant, and redundancy cannot be attributed to the legislature.
Therefore, the appellant is not a trust that falls within the provisions of
Section 2(xxiii)(i) of the Ordinance and is thus not excluded from the
definition of sahib-e-nisab.
6.
Learned counsel for the appellant also argued that the
Pension Fund is not an asset of the appellant, rather it (the appellant) is
only a conduit and merely holds the Pension Fund on trust for the
employees/pensioners of the Company as amanat, thus the appellant is
exempt from payment of zakat. According to the learned counsel, vesting
in management cannot be equated with vesting in ownership. In this
behalf, he relied on the case of Board of Foreign Missions of the
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America through Lahore
Church Counsel Vs. the Government of the Punjab through
Secretary Education, Civil Secretariat, Lahore and another (1987
SCMR 1197). As mentioned above, under Section 45 of the Act, all
assets of the PTC Employees Pension Fund and such liabilities as were
specified in the notification, stood vested in the appellant and became
its assets and liabilities. Under Section 46 of the Act, the Board is to
take over and assume the liability of the Pension Fund, including
contributions of the Company to the Pension Fund [clause (a)].
Furthermore, the Board is authorized to, inter alia, administer and
operate the Pension Fund [Section 46(2)(b)] and acquire, lease, encumber,
dispose of, exchange, invest or otherwise deal with any moveable or
immoveable property or any interest therein [Section 46(2)(f)]. Thus, the
appellant clearly holds and possesses the assets, i.e. the Pension Fund.
It is pertinent to mention here that in the definition of sahib-e-nisab
under Section 2(xxiii) of the Ordinance, the phrase used is “a person who
owns or possesses assets”. Likewise, the requirement of Section 3 ibid is also
that “who owns or possesses such assets on the Valuation Date”. The word ‘or’
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 12 :-
signifies that to ‘own’ and ‘possess’ are separate and disjunctive. To
qualify as a sahib-e-nisab and to fall within the ambit of the charging
section (Section 3 of the Ordinance), a person may not necessarily be the owner
of an asset rather need only possess the same. Therefore though in the
above discussion we have found that for all intents and purposes it is the
Trust that owns or has the legal title to the assets, even if it is accepted
that the real ownership is the beneficial ownership which vests in the
employees/pensioners who are the beneficiaries of the Pension Fund, the
Trust being in possession of such Fund would still qualify as a sahib-e-
nisab under Section 2(xxiii) of the Ordinance and would fall within the
ambit of Section 3 thereof and be liable to payment of zakat.
As regards the case of Board of Foreign Missions of the
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America relied upon by
the learned counsel for the appellant, though it was observed by this
Court that the word ‘vest’ is a word of variable import, not having a fixed
connotation and does not necessarily mean to ‘vest in title’, yet the facts
of the said case are entirely distinguishable from the instant case. The
issue involved therein was that whether after taking over of the
management of the privately managed schools by the Federal
Government, the property owned by them vested in the Government or
not. The Court finally held that the intention of Martial Law Regulation
No.118 manifestly was only to take over the management of the
institutions and not to confiscate the property in which the privately
managed schools were being run. Thus, the ratio of the said case is not
attracted to the instant case.
7.
We now advert to the argument of the learned counsel for
the appellant that zakat is payable on assets and not liabilities, and that
the Pension Fund is entirely a liability. Accepting this contention would
mean that all banks and financial institutions, etc. which hold non-
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 13 :-
charitable funds and endowments, etc. would also be exempt from zakat
for the mere reason that such funds and endowments, etc. are liabilities
held for the depositor, account holder or beneficiary. This would be
ludicrous. Therefore, we do not find any force in this argument which is
hereby repelled. In fact, the balance sheet of the appellant reflects that
upon investment of the amounts in the Pension Fund, the appellant has
earned a certain amount of income. This negates the argument that the
Pension Fund is a liability.
8.
Finally, the learned counsel for the appellant submitted that
deducting zakat from the appellant would amount to double taxation as
zakat would subsequently be deducted from the person who eventually
receives the pension (if he is a sahib-e-nisab). To our mind, this prospect is
misconceived. Zakat under the Ordinance is collected only once a year. If
in one year, zakat was deducted from the appellant, and subsequently an
employee/pensioner was determined to be entitled to pension and was
made such payment from the Pension Fund, for the next year when such
pensioner holds and possesses his pension amount, if he fulfills the
conditions of Section 3 of the Ordinance and is a sahib-e-nisab, it is only
he who would be liable to pay zakat upon the amount held by him, and
not the appellant which has ceased to hold and possess such amount.
Therefore, there is no possibility of double taxation and this argument
too, is rejected.
9.
As we have found above that the appellant is a sahib-e-nisab
and the Pension Fund is an asset owned and possessed by the appellant,
therefore, it (the appellant) is liable to compulsory payment of zakat under
Section 3 of the Ordinance, thus the question as to whether the Pension
Fund does not fall within the meaning of annuities as defined in the
Ordinance does not need any deliberation. During the course of
arguments, the learned counsel for the appellant gave up the argument
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1352 OF 2013
-: 14 :-
regarding
the
Pension
Fund
being
a
joint
account
for
the
beneficiaries/pensioners.
10.
In the light of the above, we do not find any reason to
interfere in the impugned judgment. Resultantly, this appeal is
dismissed.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 4.8.2017 at Islamabad
Approved for reporting
Mudassar/
| {
"id": "C.A.1352_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Mr. Justice MazharAlam Khan Miankhel
Mr. Justice MunibAkhtar
Civil Appeal No.1355/2006 and Civil Appeal No.1495/2006
(On appeal from the judgment dated 1.8.2006 passed by the High Court of Sindh at
Karachi in HCA No.91/2006 & HCA.No.108/2006).
1. Mrs. ZakiaHussain and another
..(In CA.1355/2006)
2. Mrs. ZakiaHussain
..(In CA.1495/2006)
…Appellants
VERSUS
1. Syed FarooqHussain
..(In CA.1355/2006)
2. Syed FarooqHussain
..(In CA.1495/2006)
…Respondent(s)
For the appellants:
Malik MuhammadQayyum, Sr. ASC
(In both cases)
alongwith Syed Akbar Hussain
For the respondent(s):
Mr. ShahabSarki, ASC
(In both cases)
alongwith Syed FarooqHussain
Date of hearing:
12.2.2020&13.2.2020
JUDGMENT
MazharAlam Khan Miankhel, J-.
A
sale
agreement
dated
31.01.2001
regarding
Apartment No.4, third floor, Kashmir Court, Plot No.162/F/3,
P.E.C.H.S., Karachi (Suit Property) is the matter of concern
CA.1355/2006 etc
2
between the parties to the present lis, i.e. the appellants as
vendor/Defendants (Appellants) and the Respondent being the
vendee/Plaintiff (Respondent). As per allegations in the plaint,
when the appellants failed to perform their part of contract,
respondent filed a suit for declaration alongwithsix other prayers
fully described in the plaint. The appellants by contesting the
same filed their written statement. After a regular trial, learned
trial Court (High Court of Sindh) granted a decree in favour of
respondent vide its judgment and decree dated 13.3.2006 but
only withregard to prayers A, B and C and the said judgment &
decree was silent with regard to other prayers. Both the parties
feeling themselves aggrieved of the same, filed their respective
appeals (HCA No. 91/2006 and HCA No.108/2006). After hearing
the parties, the learned division Bench of the High Court allowed
the appeal of respondent (H.C.A.108/2006) by defining the terms
and conditions of the judgment & decree by way of a short order
dated 18.05.2006 whereas the appeal of the present appellants,
(HCA.91/2006) was dismissed by way of a common judgment
and decree dated 01.08.2006.
2.
The appellants still feeling aggrieved have questioned
the above noted common judgment & decree dated 01.08.2006
through two separate appeals before this court.
3.
These appeals are pending adjudication since 2006.
Once on 13.10.2016, this Court during the course of hearing had
CA.1355/2006 etc
3
noted that the respondent, during the course of trial, had not
appeared as his witness and his attorney, who was not fully
conversant with the facts and circumstances of the case
personally, had deposed in the Court which is nothingless than a
hearsay and the attorney does not fall within the purview of
Order III Rule 1 & 2 of Civil Procedure Code 1908 (CPC). Besides
the above, the oral evidence in the case was not recorded by the
court itself as provided in Order XVIIIof CPC rather the same was
recorded through a local commissionwhich does not qualify the
test of exceptions for the purposes of recording of evidence by the
commission. To resolve the above questions of law, Syed Najmal-
ul-Hassan Kazmi and Mr. Makhdoom Ali Khan learned Senior
Advocates Supreme Court were appointed as amicus curiae.
4.
Both the learned Senior Advocates Supreme Court
submitted
their
valuable
written
submissions
through
C.M.As.No.9968 and 9969 of 2017 respectively. We must
appreciate that these submissions are really very helpful and
beneficial to decide the above issues.
5.
We, before considering the merits of the case, would
like to dilate upon the above said legal questions. To consider the
said issues, we may observe that there is no hard and fast rule
available in law to answer the above questions. Facts and
circumstances of each case are the determiningfactors in
considering such like questions.
CA.1355/2006 etc
4
6.
There is no cavilto the proposition that a question of
law can be raised at any stage of the case but again that has to
be considered in the light of facts and circumstances of each
case. It is for the court to decide whether such party can be
allowed to raise such objection for the first time before this court
or facts and circumstances of a case do not permit to allow a
party to raise such question for the first time.
7.
The courts of civil judicature for their procedure are
regulated by the Code of Civil Procedure (Act V 1908) (Code) but
at the same time it does not affect any special or local law or any
special jurisdiction or power conferred or any special forum of
procedure prescribed by any other law. It provides the general
procedure for trial and proceedings of the civil cases besides the
inherent jurisdiction of the civil courts. Appearance of parties
during the trial/proceedings in person or through recognized
agent/attorney is provided in Order III of the Code. So,
appearance of attorney on behalf of a party is not alien to the
civil judicature. An attorney is competent to act on behalf of the
party in the light of specific authority given to him. The question
beforeus requiring determination is whether a witness not fully
conversant with the facts and circumstances of the case would
be a competent witness within the meaning of Rule 1 & 2 of
Order III CPC. The case law of the country so far developed
regarding this question is based on the facts and circumstances
CA.1355/2006 etc
5
of each case. Initially, it is the party itself to depose about the
first hand and direct evidence of material facts of the transaction
or the dispute and its attorney having no such information
cannot be termed as a competent witness within the meaning of
Order III Rule 1 & 2 of CPC. Yes! The attorney can step-in as a
witness if he possesses the first hand and direct information of
the material facts of the case or the party had acted through the
attorney from the very inception till the accrual of cause of
action. Deposition of such an attorney under the law would be as
good as that of the principal itself. Non-appearance of the party
as a witness in such a situation would not be fatal. If facts and
circumstances of the case reflect that a party intentionally did
not appear before the court to depose in person just to avoid the
test of cross examination or with an intention to suppress some
material facts from the court, then it will be open for the court to
presume adversely against said party as provided in Article 129
(g) of Qanun-e-Shahadat, Order 1984 (QSO, 1984).
8.
Similarly while coming to the second question we may
observe that recording of evidence is the job of the court. A
witness while deposing before a court, his veracity, conduct and
demeanor is adjudged by the court. A witness can be a party to
the suit itself or attorney or witness of other facts and record.
Rule 4 of Order XVIII (CPC) requires that evidence of a witness be
recorded in open court. During such exercise court has to decide
CA.1355/2006 etc
6
about the admissibility of documents/evidence. Also the question
of re-examination of a witness and allowing a party to cross-
examine its own witness is also to be determined by the court
but subject to the facts and circumstances of the case.
Sometimes a woman as a witness is exempted from personal
appearance as provided in Section 132 of CPC. A kind of sickness
or infirmity of a witness may compel the court to issue
commission for recording of evidence of such witness. Sometimes
a witness is within the jurisdiction of the Court but cannot
appear for any compelling reasons or a person outside the
jurisdiction of the courtor is going to leave the jurisdiction or a
person in the service of state can be examined through a
commission. Even a commission can be issued to a court to
record the evidence of a person residing within its jurisdiction.
This entire procedure is provided in Section 75 to 78 read with
Order XXVI of CPC.Even a local commission can be issued with
consent of the parties. The provision of Rule 8 of the Order ibid
would make it clear that an evidence taken under a commission
cannot be read as evidence in the suit but with the consent of the
party against whom the same is offered. It is for the court to
satisfy itself regarding the conditions necessary for issuance of
commission and on return of commission with deposition of
witnesses,court can order it to be made part of the record of the
suit. Even a High Court may issue a commission for recording of
evidence of a witness under Rule 19 of Order ibid. So, in view of
CA.1355/2006 etc
7
the above discussion, we can say that it is the court seized of the
matter to take a decision for issuance of commission by keeping
in mind the facts and circumstances of the case.
9.
After considering the above legal position, we would
like to dilate upon the merits of the case by keeping in mind the
above discussion on the questions of law.
10.
The main stress of the learned counsel for the
appellantsthrough his oral as well as written submissions
remained the same as pointed out in question No.1 above.
Besides this technical though legal argument, other submissions
of the learned counsel for the appellants were that respondent
did not make final payment of Rs.6,50,000/- inspite of reminders
which as per sale agreement dated 31.01.2001 was to be paid on
or before 31.07.2001 and thereby failed to perform his part of
contract which prompted the appellants to cancel the sale
agreement on 02.08.2001 as the date fixed for payment was the
essence of contract. He further argued that appellants in order to
perform their part of agreement were always ready to deliver the
possession of the suit property “as is where is basis” but due to
financial restraints respondent did not make the balance
payment and failed to get possession of the suit property and
prayed for dismissal of suit by accepting instant appeals.
11.
As
against
that
the
learned
counsel
for
the
respondent submitted that the appellants had approved plan and
CA.1355/2006 etc
8
permission to raise construction of ground plus two floors and
they had no such legal permission to raise construction of 3rd
floor. The appellants by practicing fraud and concealment of this
material fact, did not disclose the legal defect in their capacity to
enter into an agreement for sale of an apartment on the third
floor for which they had no valid and legal approval/sanction by
the authority concerned. The cancellation of sale agreement
unilaterally,he argued, is unlawful andhaveno adverse effect on
his rights.He argued that the respondent was ready throughout
to fulfill his part of agreement by making final payment but
appellants were not in a position to deliver the possession of the
apartment as the same was incomplete and not ready besides
there
was
no
legal
approval/sanction
for
raising
such
construction. With these submissions the learned counsel for
respondent supported the impugned judgment and decree and
prayed for dismissal of both the appeals.
12.
Learned counsel for the parties were heard and record
of the case was perused. The perusal of the record would reveal
that only non-payment of balance amount of Rs.6,50,000/- and
the factum of legal and valid authority of appellants to enter into
an agreement of sale in absence of approval/sanction from KBCA
to raise construction of 3rd floor and the two law points discussed
above would require consideration. Besides the above, we would
also like to consider as to whether the facts and circumstances of
CA.1355/2006 etc
9
the case attract the commission of fraud, concealment of true
facts and malice on the part of appellants. The execution of sale
agreement
dated
31.01.2001,
payment
of
part
of
sale
consideration amounting to Rs.1.5 million and the outstanding
amount of sale consideration i.e. Rs.6,50.000/- on or before
31.07.2001 never remained disputed between the parties.
Besides the above admissions, it has also been established on
the record that initially the appellants, had lawful approval of
Karachi Building Control Authority (KBCA) to raise construction
of ground plus two floors and they had no such approval for
raising construction of 3rd floor. Though their case in this regard,
as per record and even admissions made by the appellants,
remained pending since 1995 with KBCA and they also filed two
civil suitsbefore the High court and then before the lower court
but both the suits were dismissed. Again an established fact is
that the appellants got lawful approval of occupying of entire
building including 3rd floor on 25.02.2003 by the KBCA much
after the filing of instant suit on 10.10.2001.
13.
We, in the circumstance, first would like to discuss
the effect of two legal questions mentioned above. The legal
position in general of the issues has already been discussed
above. Mainstress of arguments of the learned counsel for the
appellants was also with regard to first question. No doubt,
respondent, being a vendee to the sale agreement in question,
CA.1355/2006 etc
10
did not appear as his witness to depose about the material facts
but when we go through the record of the case, it appears that
this never remained a question of defence of the appellants
throughout the trial and even during the course of hearing of
their appeal by the High Court. They even did not bother to raise
a specific ground in this regard.No doubt certain questions
regarding some facts were put to attorney and he was not aware
of the same. But in our view all the material facts requiring
determination are either admitted or to be considered in
accordance with law by the court. So, unawareness of the
attorney regarding some immaterial facts would not make any
dent
muchless
serious
and
material
in
the
case
of
respondent.Since respondent, as an admitted fact, was abroad
for his job, had appointed an attorney to pursue his case and his
mere presence alongwith the original record on the day statement
of attorney was recorded would again not be fatal to the merits of
the case. Points in issue and disputed facts requiring
consideration by the court are well before the court. Appointment
of attorney in any special circumstance is within the sphere of
law. That special circumstance of respondents living abroad is
also not a disputed fact. His statement in the circumstances
cannot be held to be against the provisions of Rule 1 & 2 of Order
III (CPC). A look at the entire statement of GhulamHyderAbbasi,
the attorney, would alsomake it clear that the same is a good
CA.1355/2006 etc
11
piece of evidence and he was fully aware of the material facts of
the case.
14.
Learned counsel for the appellants has relied upon
the case law which in the circumstances cannot be made
applicable to the facts and circumstance of the present case
Dilshad Begum v. NisarAkhtar (2012 SCMR 1106) and Abdul
Qayyum v. Muhammad Sadiq (2007 SCMR 957). Both the above
noted cases were given under pre-emption laws and a question of
performance of talabs by the agent was involved and there was
no reason available on the record as to why the principal did not
appear before the court to establish the factum of talabbut in the
case in hand reasons of absence of respondent were admitted as
discussed above and there was not a single material fact which
required its establishment by the plaintiffhimself. Again case of
Abdullah Khan v. Nisar Muhammad Khan (PLD 1959 (W.P.)
Peshawar 81) would also not be applicable. We fully agree with
the finding that party knowing the facts should appear to face
the test of cross-examination and this is the settled law. But here
in this case reasons for appointment of attorney were not denied.
Yes! on the day of recording of evidence his attorney had called
him from abroad to bring the original record which he did. So, we
in the circumstances, hold that non-appearance of respondent as
his witness will have no adverse effect on his case.
CA.1355/2006 etc
12
As far as 2ndquestion is concerned, issuance
of commission for recording of evidence is also within
the jurisdiction of court and domain of law. The
conditions and situations for issuance of commission
have been discussed above. Record of the case reveals
that the commission for recording of evidence was
issued with consent ofboth the parties vide order dated
22.4.2002. Since trial of civil cases is conducted by the
High Court and it is the general practice of the High
Courtof
Sindh
that
because
of
rush
of
work
commissions are normally issued with the consent of
the parties. If any party has got any objection regarding
issuance of commission then, as per practice of the
court, that objection is noted and properly considered
by the court. We can lay hands on some of the cases
wherein
similar
conditions
have
been
dealt
with.KhawajaFeroz v. Muhammad Dawood) (PLD 2008
Karachi
239),
Badar
Rahim
v.
HammadAsifDosslani(2009 CLC 459), IqbalM. Hamza v.
Gillette Pakistan Ltd (2011 YLR 277), Hafeez Begum v.
Zainab
Muhammad
Ali(2014
MLD
1000).Even
Islamabad High Court in a case reported as BBC
Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd v. MasudAlam(2018 YLR 363)adopted
the same view. Besides the above, we may refer to a new
provision of Rule 1A of Order X CPC where-under court
CA.1355/2006 etc
13
can adopt any lawful procedure, not inconsistent with
the provisions of CPC, including issuance of commission
with the consent of parties amongst others. The same is
reproduced for ready reference:-
“ORDER X
EXAMINATION OF PARTIES BY THE COURT
1. Ascertainment
whether
allegations
in
pleadings are admitted or denied._____
………………………………………………………
[1A.The Court may adopt any lawful
procedure not inconsistent with the provisions
of this Code to:-
(i)
Conduct preliminary proceedings and
issue orders for expediting processing
of the case;
(ii)
Issue, with the consent of the parties,
commission
to
examine
witnesses,
admit documents and take other steps
for purposes of trial;
(iii)
Adopt, with the consent of the parties,
any alternative method of the dispute
resolution
including
mediation,
conciliation or any such other means.].
However,
provincial
assembly
of
Sindh
introduced
certain
amendments to the Code of Civil Procedure Act (Act V of 1908) vide its
Sindh Act IV of 2019 dated 25.02.2019 whereby Order X Rule 1A was
substituted through Section 5 of the Act ibid which reads as under:-
CA.1355/2006 etc
14
“1A.- The Court may adopt any lawful procedure
not inconsistent with the provisions of this Code and adopt
any method of Alternative Dispute Resolution (hereinafter
referred to as “ADR”) under Section 89A of this Code”.
15.
This court in the case Muhammad Sharif v.
NabiBakhsh (2012 SCMR 900) has also appreciated this rule.
While coming backto the facts of the case, we see that even no
one raised any objection in this regard. During recording of
evidence not a single objection of law was raised before the
commission which could have hampered the proceedings before
the commission. So, we without any hesitation can hold that
there was no illegality in issuance of commission who only
recorded the version of the parties and accepted the documents
in evidence. The veracity of the evidence and authenticity and
admissibility of documents was considered by the court itself
which makes it lawful. Besides, no objection was raised by any of
the parties during hearing either before the trial court or before
the High Court in appeal. So, this does not lie in their mouth to
raise such objection before this Court for the first time.
16.
As far as next argument of the learned counsel for the
appellants regarding non fulfillment of part of contract by the
respondent by failing to make final payment on due date is
concerned, that,in the peculiar circumstances of the case in
hand, appears to be absurd and illogical. There is no denial of
the fact that the date on which final payment was to be made i.e.
CA.1355/2006 etc
15
31.7.2001 the apartment in question was incomplete. The
appellants being fully aware of its non-completion and having full
knowledge of lack of approval/sanction of construction of third
floor (where the suit property is situated) by KBCA, the
concerned authority, unilaterally cancelled the sale agreement
dated 31.01.2001 through a notice dated 02.08.2001 (sent
through fax). The only reason for cancellation of sale agreement
was non-payment of the balance amount of Rs.6,50,000/- by
invoking and taking advantage of Clause 6 of the sale agreement
but on the same side they just ignoredother Clauses of the sale
agreement which speak of delivery of vacant and peaceful
possession of the premises after informing vendee in writing and
execution and registration of sale/sub-lease deed. There is
nothing in black and white from the side of appellants asking the
respondent to take possession. The agreement is silent regarding
a specification of date and time of delivery of vacant possession
and also the date of execution and registration of sale/sub-lease
deed and it only mentions the date of final payment agreed
between the parties. It is worth to mention that the sale price of
the suit property included water, electricity and gas charges. The
unilateral act of cancellation of sale agreement by the appellants
was based on their misconception and mistaken belief of a term
used in the sale agreement, “as is where is basis”. During the
trial of the case appellants tried to develop a case that the
respondent had agreed to accept delivery of possession of
CA.1355/2006 etc
16
incomplete apartment as he was short of finances and for that
matter this clause was added in the agreement. Had this been
the situation, it must have been written in the agreement in clear
and unambiguous words. The respondent while observing the
same incomplete condition of the apartment, finally served the
appellants with a notice dated 7.9.2001 that he is ready to make
payment subject to delivery of possession of apartment, complete
in all respects and execution/registration of sale/sub-lease deed.
On their failure to comply with their part of agreement,
respondent filed instant suit wherein he also questioned the
cancellation of sale agreement besides other reliefs and
expressed his willingness to make payment subject to delivery of
possession of the apartment and execution of sale deed. Record
of the case would further reflect that the appellants don’t have
any defence much less plausible except non-payment of balance
amount by the respondent within the due date and reiterated the
stance of delivery of possession of the apartment on “as is where
is basis”. This defence on the very face of it appears to be
baseless and unjustifiable. Unless specifically agreed upon
between the parties due to some compelling reasons, a person of
sound mind can in no way on the basis of the sub clauseaccept
an incomplete structure without utilities, although same are
undertaken in the agreement. In the given circumstances, we
cannot agree with stance of the appellants regarding the date
fixed for performance of contract to be a date essence of contract.
CA.1355/2006 etc
17
Mere mention of date in an agreement per se cannot be
considered to be a date essence of contact. It is a settled principle
of law that facts and circumstance of each and every case would
be determinative factor to hold as to whether time is essence of
contract or not. We in the given circumstances cannot agree with
appellants. Here in this case conduct of the appellants is the
most important factor to determine the fate of the case. It is an
admitted fact on the record that the appellants initially had
approval/permission from KBCA to raise construction of ground
plus two floors which as per record was completed somewhere in
1995. Thereafter appellants started efforts to get permission to
raise construction of 3rd floor. Again an admitted fact that prior
to said approval/permission they had started construction of 3rd
floor. They in this regard even filed a civil suit against KBCA in
High Court and thereafter in the lower courts but both were
dismissed. The respondent, in thecircumstances, having no other
option, filed instant suit wherein he, after issuance of his legal
notice dated 07.09.2001, once again expressed his willingness to
pay/deposit the balance amount and asked for delivery of
possession incomplete form alongwith execution of sale/sub-
lease deed. It is worth to mention here that the suit apartment is
still in that incomplete condition and the respondent on the
directions of the court had deposited the balance amount in the
court in 2006 which is still lying there.
CA.1355/2006 etc
18
17.
It is time and again held by this court that specific
performance of a contract is essentially an equitable and
discretionary relief and the court seized of the matter is in a
better position to decide and resolve not simply according to the
spirit of the law but also in accordance with the principles of
substantial justice by keeping in mind peculiar facts and
circumstance of each case. It cannot be claimed as a matter of
right. The discretion to be exercised by the court requires that it
should not be arbitrary but should be sound and reasonable
guided by judicial principles and capable of correction by a court
of appeal. Such an exercise of grant or refusal of relief would
depend on the facts and circumstances of each case and also the
conduct of the parties. This is the mandate of Section 22 of The
Specific Relief Act, 1877. The same is reproduced for ready
reference:-
“22. Discretion
as
to
decreeing
specific
performance:The
jurisdiction
to
decree
specific
performance is discretionary, and the Court is not
bound to grant such relief merely because it is lawful to
do so; but the discretion of the Court is not arbitrary
but sound and reasonable, guided by judicial principles
and capable of correction by a Court of appeal.”
18.
The perusal of the above quoted provision of law
clearly speaks the mandate of law. Learned counsel for the
appellants placed reliance on the cases of Gulshan Hamid v.
Abdul Rehman (2010 SCRM 334), Muhammad Ibqal v.
CA.1355/2006 etc
19
MehboobAlam
(2015
SCMR
21),
Muhammad
AbdurRehmanQureshi v. Sagheer Ahmad (2017 SCMR 1696). A
perusal of these judgments would reveal that the same cannot be
made applicable to the peculiar facts and circumstances of the
case in hand. Similarly the case ofArshadHussain v. ZenatunNisa
(2017 SCMR 608) is also not applicable being altogether a case of
different facts and law.
19.
A look at the entire record of the case would make it
abundantly clear that here in this case the vendee/respondent
was cheated and defrauded by concealing the factum of non-
approval/sanction from KBCA for illegal construction of 3rd floor
where the suit apartment is situated. Though the appellants have
tried to make out a case that the said non-approval/sanction
from KBCA was brought into the knowledge/notice of the
respondent and thereafter the respondent entered into an
agreement of sale. This stance of the appellants does not get
support from record of the case. Even the sale agreement is silent
in this regard. Respondent might have seen, as alleged, the
construction being carried out on 3rd floor but that does not
mean that he had knowledge of the above deficiency. Even at the
time of sale agreement, both the suits of appellants against
KBCA for seeking approval were dismissed. This was a fact so
important that this should have been brought into the notice of
respondent in clear and unequivocal terms. Because grey
CA.1355/2006 etc
20
structure was there but permission/sanction of the concerned
authority was not there. So, in such a risky state of affairs,
knowledge and notice of respondent in something black and
white was must. Thereafter it would have been his open choice to
go for agreement to sell or not. At least there should have been a
clause in the sale agreement that sale deed or possession would
be delivered after getting proper approval of the entire 3rd floor or
anything like that. But there is nothing of the sort. To the good
luck of the respondent that the said approval of 3rd floor by the
KBCA was accorded on 25.02.2003, much after the institution of
present suit otherwise his already deposited amount of Rs.1.5
million would have been at risk. Had the appellants have bona
fide intention, aftergetting approval, they could have asked the
respondent that remaining work of the apartment would be
completed by them and by the time he should make payment of
balance amount but they continued with the contest and have
dragged him for almost two decades when Rs.1.5 million were
already paid in 2001 and remaining balance Rs.6,50,000/- was
deposited on the orders of the court in the year 2006. The
respondent in his plaint has asked for damages and costs of suit
etc but the record would reveal that there was no such evidence
brought by the respondent. In such like situations actual loss
and damages cannot be calculated rather principle of rule of
thumb is applied. We think this aspect should have been
considered by the High Court (in trial and then in appeal).We, in
CA.1355/2006 etc
21
the circumstances,would not like to grant such relief to
respondent at this stage but would dismiss both the appeals with
costs of Rs.3,00,000/- (three lac) for false and vexatious defense
and wasting the time of courts. This amount of costs be
recovered/paid to the respondent from the balance amount of
Rs.6,50,000/-lying with the court and the remaining i.e.
Rs.3,50,000/- can be withdrawn by the appellants.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Announced at Islamabad on _______________
Judge
“APPROVED FOR REPORTING”
‘Sarfraz/’-
| {
"id": "C.A.1355_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.1359 TO 1363 OF 2014
(On appeal from the judgment dated 24.4.2014 of the
Peshawar High Court, Abbottabad Bench passed in Writ
Petitions No.276-A to 280-A/2014)
Pir Imran Sajid
…in C.A.1359/2014
Muhammad Saeed
…in C.A.1360/2014
Muhammad Sajid Fariq
…in C.A.1361/2014
Khaliq-ur-Rehman
…in C.A.1362/2014
Atif Ali
…in C.A.1363/2014
…Appellants
VERSUS
Managing Director/General Manager (Manager Finance),
Telephone Industries of Pakistan and others
…Respondents
(in all cases)
…
For the appellants:
Hafiz S. A. Rehman, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For the respondents:
Mr. Abdul Rehman Qadar, ASC
Mr. Ahmed Nawaz Ch., AOR
Date of hearing:
18.5.2015
…
ORDER
MAQBOOL BAQAR, J.- Leave to appeal in the above cases
was granted by this Court, inter alia, to “examine whether despite the
petitioners having remained in continuous service of the respondents
for a period of one decade as contract employees, no vested rights were
created in their favour for grant of relief of their regularization as laid
down in the case of Province of Punjab v. Ahmad Hussain (2013
SCMR 1547).”
2.
Relevant facts of the case, in brief, are that appellants in
all the above appeals, except in CA No.1360 of 2014, were appointed in
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 2 :-
the Telephone Industries of Pakistan (“TIP”) in various junior positions,
in the year 2003, through due process and pursuant to the
advertisements for such vacancies in a national newspaper, whereas
the appellant in CA 1360 of 2014 was so appointed in the year 1992.
Initially, all the appellants were appointed on a contract for one year,
however, such appointment/employment was extended on year to year
basis. Admittedly, ‘TIP’ a private limited company, is wholly owned,
controlled, managed, and financed by the federal government.
3.
According to the appellants, their repeated requests for
regularization did not find favour with the management of the
company. Looking to the plight of the appellants and other
contract/daily wages employees of TIP and various other ministries/
divisions/ attached departments/ autonomous bodies/ organizations
etc., a cabinet sub-committee on regularization of such employees,
under the directives of the Prime Minister of Pakistan, held a meeting
on 21.2.2013, and after considering the recommendations of the
Ministry of Information and Technology, under which ministry TIP
functions, and after due deliberations, approved the regularization of
773 contract and 109 daily wages employees of TIP, subject to
availability of posts and fulfillment of recruitment criteria. Names of
the appellants appear at the 9th page of the minutes of the meeting,
(page 59 of the paper book). A copy of such minutes was forwarded by
the Ministry of Information and Technology to the Managing Director
TIP, for implementation, through letter dated 6.3.2013. Through Office
Memorandum dated 05.6.2013, the said ministry requested the
Managing Director TIP for regularization of the aforesaid 882
employees in terms of the decision of the cabinet sub-committee, and
also to submit a comprehensive plan for revitalization of TIP as
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 3 :-
directed by the Priority Committee. However, MD TIP did not heed to
the above and to the repeated requests made by the appellants for
their regularization, from time to time. The appellants were thus
constrained to file writ petitions before the learned Peshawar High
Court. The petitions were, however, dismissed through the impugned
order.
4.
At the very outset the learned counsel for the respondents
submitted that the learned Peshawar High Court has rightly dismissed
the petitions for the reasons; firstly that TIP is a private limited
company, with no statutory service rules, and secondly that the
appellants were contract employees. He, however, conceded that TIP is
wholly owned, controlled, managed and financed by the federal
government and is performing functions in furtherance of the affairs of
the federation.
5.
Keeping in view such status of the company, and the
“Function Test” as prescribed and applied by a five member Bench of
this Court in the case of Abdul Wahab and others v. HBL and others
(2013 SCMR 1383), authored by one of us (Mian Saqib Nisar, J.),
which test/criterion is fully meet in the present case, the status of TIP
could not prevent the appellants from seeking constitutional remedy
as the company clearly falls within the definition of a “person” as
envisaged by Article 199 of the Constitution. The learned counsel for
the respondents, in support of his second objection i.e. lack of
statutory service rules, relied upon the judgment in the case of Fakhr-
ur-Islam Qureshi (Civil Appeal No.424 of 2009), authored by one of us
(Mian Saqib Nisar, J.), whereby the said appeal was dismissed on the
ground that relationship between the appellant, retired employee and
TIP is not governed by statutory rules. Such reliance, in our view, is
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 4 :-
wholly mis-placed for the reason, that unlike in the present case the
appellants therein were seeking pensionary benefits on the basis of
pensionary rules, which rules were non-statutory. Whereas in the
present case, the appellants are seeking implementation of the
directive of the Prime Minister of Pakistan and the decision of the
cabinet sub-committee for their regularization sought to be enforced
by the relevant ministry.
6.
Admittedly, all the appellants have been serving TIP in
their respective position since about last more than twelve (12) years,
though on contract basis, however, renewal of their contracts on year
to year basis since the inception clearly shows that the nature of their
jobs/duties is permanent and not casual or temporary, and that the
appellants have been performing their functions/duties to the
satisfaction of their employer and further that throughout the whole
period their services were required, and have remained useful for and
beneficial to the organization. There is no allegation of any misconduct
or incompetence against the appellants, rather they have been granted
increments from time to time. It has also not been, and indeed, in the
facts and the circumstances of the case, could not have been, claimed
that the posts held by the appellants and the work carried out by them
was of a temporary nature. On record, are letters which show that
services of some of those employed on temporary/contract basis have
been regularized by the TIP from time to time.
7.
In the case of Province of Punjab v. Ahmad Hussain (2013
SCMR 1547), cited in the leave granting order in the present case, the
respondent/employee (Ahmed Hussain) was working as storekeeper
with the PWD Department on work charge basis for more than 14
years, the authority was, however, reluctant to regularize his services,
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 5 :-
though some of his colleagues were regularized, this Court, whilst
referring to the judgments in the cases of Province of Punjab v. Gul
Hassan (1992 PLC 924), Punjab Seed Corporation v. Punjab Labour
Appellate Tribunal (1996 SCMR 1947), Executive Engineer v. Abdul
Aziz (PLD 1996 SC 610) and Secretary, Irrigation and Power
Department Government of Punjab v. Mohammad Akhtar (2009
SCMR 320), was pleased to uphold the judgment of the learned Lahore
High Court, whereby an order of a single bench for regularization of
the services of the employee (Ahmed Hussain) was upheld. The
relevant portion of which judgment may be beneficial and is
reproduced hereunder:-
“(6) The job of respondent was that of storekeeper. The respondent
keeps on keeping the store which has not ceased to exist. The job
of a Storekeeper, Plumber, Electrician, Carpenter and Sweeper etc.
are permanent jobs by their nature. These services as long the
Punjab House at Islamabad exists, are needed by the department
and the occupiers of the promises. These services are not to be
performed for a day or a couple of days and then to be dispensed
with. These services are needed as long the building department
exists. It can safely be said that the nature of the jobs is
permanent. The respondent employed in the year 1998 and fellow
employees having been employed from almost the same time, have
been performing their respective duties incessantly. These posts
and the duties can by no stretch of imagination be taken to be of
temporary nature. The length of the respondent’s service indicates
and hints at the permanence of the posts. Even the work charge,
casual and daily-wages workers, on account of the long
continuation in service earn a presumption of regular need of their
service obliging the authority to consider with a positive mind the
necessity of the regularization of their service. It was so held by the
august Supreme Court of Pakistan in (1996 SCMR 1947). The
Federal Service Tribunal in Appeal No. 529(L)(C.S/2004) held that
those continuously in service for more than 90 days in a Calendar
year had attained the status of permanent workman by operation
of the West Pakistan Standing Orders Ordinance, 1968, this
decision was upheld by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of Pakistan in
C.P. No. 1862-L of 2005. The impugned judgment passed by the
learned Single Judge of this Court is in consonance with law. This
appeal has no merit. It is hereby dismissed.”
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 6 :-
8.
In addition to the benefit of the above dictum, we may
observe here that TIP’s non-compliance, rather defiance of the decision
of the cabinet sub-committee to regularize the services of the
appellants, and not heeding to the directive of their Ministry to comply
with said decision, compliance whereof is being sought by the
appellants, is wholly illegal and malafide. Even otherwise, since as
noted earlier, the retention of the appellants by TIP for a period of
more than 12 years and repeated renewal of their contracts of
employment, clearly show that the posts/positions held by the
appellants were/are of permanent nature which were essentially
required by TIP for its functioning and that repeated renewal of the
appellants’ contracts and the increments granted to them show also,
that the appellants have been discharging their duties to the
satisfaction of their employer and therefore, employing/retaining the
appellants on contract, instead on permanent basis was/is wholly
malafide, whimsical and unfair. Such practice/conduct has also been
deprecated through judicial pronouncements. The appellants have
rendered prime time of their life in serving TIP and in the process may
now have become overage for any other suitable employment.
9.
It is now well established that right to life as envisaged by
Article 9 of the Constitution, includes the right to livelihood and as
laid down in the case of Abdul Wahab (supra), the “right to livelihood,
therefore, cannot hang on to the fancies of individuals in authority.”
Certainly, as has further been held in the said judgment; “it shall
unmistakably be permissible that the employment of an employee can
be brought to an end, but obviously in accordance with law”, whereas
in the present case, and as observed earlier, there was/is no
justification for not making their employment permanent, and for
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 7 :-
keeping their entire career, rather livelihood exposed and susceptible
to the whims of the authorities, which also hurts the dignity of the
appellants.
10.
Indeed the service/employment rules of TIP are non
statutory, but such does not prevent the appellants from seeking
implementation of the decision/order of the Federal Government/
ministry for their regularization.
11.
It hardly needs to be emphasized that the whole edifice of
governance of the society has it genesis in the Constitution and laws
aimed at to establish an order, inter alia, ensuring the provisions of
socio-economic justice, so that the people may have guarantee and
sense of being treated in accordance with law that they are not being
deprived of their due rights. Provision of Article 4 embodies the
concept of equality before law and equal protection of law and save
citizens from arbitrary/discriminatory law and actions by the
Governmental authorities. Article 5(2) commands that every body is
bound to obey the command of the constitution1. Every public
functionary is supposed to function in good faith, honestly and within
the precincts of its power so that persons concerned should be treated
in accordance with law as guaranteed by Article 4 of the Constitution.
It would include principles of natural justice, procedural fairness and
procedural propriety2. The action which is malafide or colourable is
not regarded as action in accordance with law. While discharging
official functions, efforts should be made to ensure that no one is
prevented from earning his livelihood because of unfair and
discriminatory act on their part.
1 PLJ 2007 SC 32
2 PLD 1999 SC 1026
CA 1359-1363/14
-: 8 :-
12.
It is now well laid down that the object of good governance
cannot be achieved by exercising discretionary powers unreasonably
or arbitrarily and without application of mind but objective can be
achieved by following the rules of justness, fairness, and openness in
consonance with the command of the Constitution enshrined in
different articles including Articles 4 and 25. The obligation to act
fairly on the part of the administrative authority has been evolved to
ensure the rule of law and to prevent failure of the justice.
13.
Looking through the above constitutional prism and
keeping in view the facts that the federal government which owns,
controls, manages and finances TIP has directed TIP to regularize the
appellants, and that admittedly the appellants have initially been
appointed in an open and transparent manner and after the vacancies
were advertised in the newspapers, one cannot escape the conclusion
that the appellants ought to have been regularized.
14.
The appeals are, therefore, allowed. The services of the
appellants be regularized from the date of decision of the Cabinet Sub-
Committee for Regularization.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
18th May 2015
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
Aamir Sh./
| {
"id": "C.A.1359_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE QAZI MUHAMMAD AMIN AHMED
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1399 OF 2019
(On appeal against the judgment dated
12.08.2016 of the Lahore High Court, Multan
Bench, Multan passed in W.P.No.136 of
2015)
Shamona Badshah Qaisarani
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Election Tribunal, Multan etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Muhammad Shahzad Shaukat, ASC
For Respondent No.3:
Barrister Umer Aslam, ASC
Mr. Ahmed Nawaz Ch., AOR
For the ECP:
Mr. M. Arshad, D.G. (Law)
Date of Hearing:
16.03.2021
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI, J.- Through this appeal
by leave of the Court under Article 185(3) of the Constitution of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973, the appellant has called in
question the judgment dated 12.08.2016 passed by the Lahore High
Court, Multan Bench, whereby while dismissing the constitution
petition filed by her, the order of the Election Tribunal, Multan dated
01.01.2015 was upheld and the nomination papers to contest bye-
elections in PP-240 Dera Ghazi Khan-I filed by the appellant were
rejected. The said Tribunal also declared the appellant disqualified
to contest elections under Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution, which
was also maintained by the learned High Court by upholding the
same.
2.
Briefly stated the facts of the matter are that appellant’s
husband was the returned candidate in the general elections held in
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
2
2013 in the constituency PP-240, Dera Ghazi Khan-I but
subsequently, he was disqualified on account of fake degree. In the
bye-elections held on 07.10.2013, the appellant contested and won
the elections by securing the highest votes. The respondent No. 3
Khawaja Muhammad Dawood Sulemani who had also contested the
said elections, challenged the elections by filing Election Petition No.
13 of 2013 before the Election Tribunal, Bahawalpur & D.G. Khan
Divisions on the ground of corrupt practices but it was dismissed
vide order dated 19.11.2014. During the pendency of the said
Election Petition, the respondent No. 3 also filed an application
under Section 76-A of the Representation of the People Act, 1976
before the aforesaid Election Tribunal praying that the election of the
appellant may be declared void as the declaration of assets made
by her in the nomination papers were false, incorrect and against
the record because she did not disclose a piece of agricultural land
which was in her ownership. The Election Tribunal Bahawalpur
accepted the application filed by the respondent No. 3, declared the
bye-elections void, de-notified the appellant and ordered fresh
elections in the constituency. The appellant challenged the said
order before this Court but her appeal stood dismissed vide
judgment dated 09.05.2016. Thereafter, again bye-elections were
scheduled to be held on 17.01.2015. The appellant again submitted
her nomination papers whereupon the respondent No. 3 raised
objection that according to the findings of the Election Tribunal
Bahawalpur dated 19.11.2014 passed in an application under
Section 76-A of the Representation of the People Act, 1976, the
appellant is not “Sadiq” and “Ameen” and is not entitled to contest
the elections. However, the Returning Officer accepted the
nomination papers of the appellant vide order dated 27.12.2014.
The respondent No. 3 challenged the acceptance of nomination
papers of the appellant before the Election Tribunal Multan by filing
Election Petition No. 04 of 2014, which was allowed vide order
dated 01.01.2015, the appellant’s nomination papers were rejected
and on the basis of the order of the Election Tribunal Bahawalpur
she was disqualified under Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution. The
appellant being aggrieved by the order of the Election Tribunal
Multan, challenged it before the Lahore High Court, Multan Bench by
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
3
filing Writ Petition No. 136 of 2015 but it has been dismissed vide
impugned judgment dated 12.08.2016. Hence, this appeal by leave
of the Court.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant inter alia contended
that the appellant could not have been disqualified under Article
62(1)(f) of the Constitution because the declaration that she was
non-sagacious, non-profligate, non-righteous etc was not granted
after affording her proper opportunity to defend her case; that even
the Tribunal is not a forum to issue a declaration without recording
of evidence in this regard after provision of the right of due process
and the same is based on surmises and conjectures; that even
otherwise the act of the appellant of not mentioning the agricultural
property inherited from her parents in the nomination papers was
neither a dishonest act nor was a deliberate concealment to gain
certain benefits/advantage; that this Court in the recent judgments
has held that unless there is a dishonest intent behind concealment
of an asset, one cannot be punished for life if he had made an
innocent error; that non-mentioning of the assets in the nomination
papers could have become fatal, if the omission would have been
with the purpose to avoid payment of tax or other state dues etc,
therefore, in view of the law laid down by this Court, the appellant
could not have been permanently disqualified under Article 62(1)(f)
of the Constitution.
4.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent
No. 3 controverted the arguments advanced by the learned counsel
for the appellant by submitting inter alia that the agricultural
property was deliberately not mentioned by the appellant in her
nomination papers; that this fact was believed by the Election
Tribunal Bahawalpur in its judgment dated 19.11.2014 passed in
an application in Election Petition No. 13/2013 under Section 76-A of
Representation of People Act, 1976 after affording her ample
opportunity to put up her case; that the judgment of the Tribunal
was upheld by this Court, therefore, it cannot be said that the
declaration to disqualify the appellant was based on surmises and
conjectures.
5.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties and have
perused the relevant record as also the relevant law.
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
4
6.
After hearing the arguments advanced by the learned
counsel for the parties, the issues which crop up for our
consideration are whether the omission of the appellant of non-
mentioning the agricultural property inherited from her parents was
sufficient enough to disqualify her permanently, and whether the
declaration of disqualifying the appellant in terms of Article 62(1)(f)
of the Constitution was based on proper scrutiny of the evidence
evaluated by a court of competent jurisdiction and in accordance
with the law laid down by this Court.
7.
It is now a well settled principle that every non-
disclosure or mis-declaration would not be sufficient enough to
permanently disqualify a member of the Parliament or a candidate.
The purpose and intention needs to be seen behind the non-
disclosure or mis-declaration. The returned candidate would be
disqualified only when if he/she has dishonestly acquired assets
and is hiding them to derive certain benefits. If the non-disclosure or
mis-declaration is such that it gives an illegal advantage to a
candidate then it would lead to termination of his candidature. This
Court in the case of Khawaja Muhammad Asif Vs. Muhammad
Usman Dar (2018 SCMR 2128) has candidly held that merely the
fact that a candidate has not declared an asset in the nomination
papers would not end in his disqualification but it has to be seen
whether the act of non-disclosure of the asset is with dishonest
intent or not and only if there is dishonest intent behind the non-
disclosure, the candidate would be disqualified. It is the credibility
of the explanation that would be the determining factor as to
whether non-disclosure of an asset carries with it the element of
dishonesty or not. It would be advantageous to reproduce the
relevant portion of the judgment, which reads as under:-
“9.
While considering a case of dishonesty in judicial
proceedings what should not be lost sight of is that on
account of inadvertence or honest omission on the part of a
contesting candidate a legitimately acquired asset is not
declared. This may happen as an honest person may
perceive something to be right about which he may be wrong
and such perception cannot necessarily render him dishonest
though the omission would invariably result in rejection of
his nomination paper had such a fact is pointed out to the
Returning Officer at the time of scrutiny of nomination papers
or in proceedings available under the election laws. There
are many conceivable instances where an omission to
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
5
declare an asset on the face of it cannot be regarded as
dishonest concealment. For example, where an inherited
property is not declared on account of mistake of fact or an
asset acquired from a legitimate source of income is not listed
in the nomination paper. Suchlike omissions at best could be
categorized as bad judgment or negligence but certainly not
dishonesty. As mentioned earlier even the proviso to section
14(3)(d) of RoPA envisaged that rejection of a nomination
paper on account of failure to meet the requirements of
section 12 of RoPA would not prevent a candidate to contest
election on the basis of another validly filed nomination
paper. Hence mere omission to list an asset cannot be
labeled as dishonesty unless some wrongdoing is associated
with its acquisition or retention which is duly established in
judicial proceedings. In our view attributing dishonesty to
every omission to disclose an asset and disqualify a member
for life could never have been the intention of the parliament
while incorporating Article 62(1)(f) in the Constitution. All
non-disclosures of assets cannot be looked at with the same
eye. In our view no set formula can be fixed with regard to
every omission to list an asset in the nomination paper and
make a declaration of dishonesty and impose the penalty of
lifetime disqualification. In a judgment from the foreign
jurisdiction in the case of Aguilar v. Office of Ombudsman
decided on 26.02.2014 by the Supreme Court of Philippines
(G.R. 197307) it was held that dishonesty is not simply bad
judgment or negligence but is a question of intention. There
has to exist an element of bad intention with regard to an
undeclared asset before it is described as dishonest. Unless
dishonesty is established in appropriate judicial proceedings,
Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution cannot be invoked to
disqualify an elected member for life.
10.
Where a matter with regard to an undisclosed asset is
taken to court, it would not form the opinion that it is a case
of dishonest concealment without first calling upon the
elected member to explain the source from which such an
asset was acquired. Where no satisfactory explanation is
forthcoming and the undeclared asset also does not
commensurate with the elected member's known sources of
income, it would give rise to the presumption that unlawful
means may have been applied with regard to such an asset.
It is the credibility of the explanation that would be the
determining factor as to whether non-disclosure of an asset
carries with it the element of dishonesty or not. The test of
honesty with regard to non-disclosure of assets and
liabilities is to be applied in that context only and certainly
not in a case where a clean asset has not been declared on
account of bad judgment or inadvertent omission. In the
impugned judgment, the learned High Court itself was
conscious of the fact that where there is a case of non-
disclosure of an asset the same ipso facto does not render a
person to be dishonest. In this regard, a judgment of this
Court cited by respondent No. 1's counsel in the case of Rai
Hassan Nawaz v. Haji Muhammad Ayub (PLD 2017 SC 70)
was referred where it was held as follows:-
"8.
We,
therefore,
observe
that
any
plausible
explanation
that
exonerates,
inter
alia,
mis-
declaration of assets and liabilities by a contesting
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
6
candidate should be confined to unintended and
minor errors that do not confer any tangible benefit or
advantage upon an elected or contesting candidate.
Where assets, liabilities, earnings and income of an
elected or contesting candidate are camouflaged or
concealed by resort to different legal devices including
benami, trustee, nominee, etc. arrangements for
constituting holders of title, it would be appropriate for
a learned Election Tribunal to probe whether the
beneficial interest in such assets or income resides in
the elected or contesting candidate in order to
ascertain if his false or incorrect statement of
declaration under section 12(2) of the ROPA is
intentional or otherwise. This view finds support from
the statutory aim and purpose of requiring all
contesting candidates to file their statements and
declarations as envisaged in section 12(2) of the
ROPA. Clearly there is a public interest object behind
the statutory prescription for obtaining the said
statements and declaration. It is to ensure integrity
and probity of contesting candidates and therefore all
legislators."
(Underlined to lay emphasis)
8.
In the case of Shakeel Awan Vs. Sheikh Rasheed
Ahmed (PLD 2018 SC 643) the appellant had sought disqualification
of
the
respondent
on
the
ground
that
the
returned
candidate/respondent
has
deliberately
concealed
certain
agricultural land in his nomination papers; has declared his land
holding to be 983 Kanals 17 Marlas while it has been established on
record that the respondent owned 1049 Kanals and 13 Marlas and
also not correctly disclosed the market value of certain immovable
property. This Court while dismissing the appeal held that in cases
where the non-disclosure or misdeclaration gives an illegal
advantage
to
a
candidate
then
such
non-disclosure
or
misdeclaration would terminate his candidature, and if he has been
elected to his disqualification and consequent removal but the
misdeclaration made by the respondent apparently did not offend
any law, in that if he had disclosed his entire land holding and had
shown the value of the said house to be forty eight million rupees he
would still be able to contest the elections. In
Muhammad
Hanif
Abbasi Vs. Imran Khan Niazi (PLD 2018 SC 189), Faisal Arab, J, as
he then was, while agreeing with the majority view observed that
there can be many examples where it can be safely said that an
omission on the face of it is not dishonest. Omission to list an
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
7
inherited property or the pensionary benefits received by one's
spouse or the plot allotted by the government in acknowledgment of
services rendered are some of the instances which cannot be said
that a member intentionally concealed its disclosure in order to cover
some financial wrongdoing. Suchlike omissions at best could be
categorized as bad judgment or negligence but not dishonesty. In
Murad Bux Vs. Kareem Bux (2016 SCMR 2042), the petitioner in the
nomination papers filed for contesting local council election had
failed to disclose that a criminal case is pending against him, which
on objection raised by the respondent, led to rejection of his
nomination papers. However, this Court allowed the petition by
holding that where the explanation of a party contesting the election
is plausible in regard to non-disclosure of any fact in the affidavit, it
cannot be denied the right to contest for elections and that the non-
disclosure of a fact which otherwise, if disclosed, could not debar
the Petitioner from contesting the election, cannot be made a ground
to preclude the Petitioner from contesting the election.
9.
In view of what has been discussed above, before
disqualifying the appellant, the learned fora below ought to have
established whether the act of the appellant of non-mentioning of
landed property was a dishonest act with a view to gain some
benefits i.e. to evade tax payment etc or the property was acquired
later on after elections by using corrupt practices etc. However, we
have noted that the learned fora below have made no effort to
ascertain these aspects of the matter. The learned Election Tribunal
Multan while disqualifying the appellant vide judgment dated
01.01.2015 only made basis to the earlier order passed by the
Election Tribunal Bahawalpur dated 19.11.2014 in an application
filed by the respondent No. 3 under Section 76-A of the
Representation of the People Act, 1976. Under Section 76-A, the
Election Tribunal can declare the election of the returned candidate
void or declare any other contesting candidate to have been duly
elected and nothing else. In those proceedings, the stance of the
appellant was that the property was inherited from her parents,
which has been transferred to her brothers and in this regard the
“Tamleek Nama” has been executed on 04.07.2013. The learned
Election Tribunal Bahawalpur vide order dated 19.11.2014 de-
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
8
seated the appellant mainly on the ground that as the bye-elections
were to be held on 07.10.2013, therefore, she was to declare her
assets on the preceding 30th of June i.e. 30.06.2013 and as the
“Tamleek Nama” was executed after the cutoff date i.e. 30.06.2013,
therefore, it was held that she ought to have mentioned the
agricultural property. However, in this order, the learned Election
Tribunal had admitted the fact that the property was legitimate as it
was inherited from her parents vide duly attested mutations. This
judgment was upheld by this Court and thereafter, again bye-
elections were scheduled to be held on 17.01.2015. For the second
bye-elections to be held on 17.01.2015 the appellant filed
nomination papers, which were objected to by the respondent No. 3
on the basis of the order of the Election Tribunal Bahawalpur dated
19.11.2014 but these were accepted. It was in the appeal before the
Election Tribunal Multan against acceptance of nomination papers of
the appellant for the second bye-election that the Election Tribunal
Multan for the first time while relying on the order of the Election
Tribunal Bahawalpur dated 19.11.2014 disqualified the appellant
but failed to take into consideration that in the order of the Election
Tribunal
Bahawalpur,
there
was
nothing
mentioned
about
disqualification of the appellant and the earlier bye-election was
only declared void by holding that the appellant ought to have
mentioned about the property which was in her possession before
the cutoff date i.e. 30.06.2013 and as the “Tamleek Nama” was
executed on 04.07.2013 after the cutoff date, therefore, it was not
taken into consideration. No wrongdoing was associated with the
acquisition of the property or its retention, therefore, in view of the
law laid down by this Court referred above, the act of non-
mentioning of the property could not have been termed as dishonest
act, rather it could only be termed as bad judgment or negligence but
certainly not dishonesty. This Court in Muhammad Siddique Baloch
Vs. Jehangir Khan Tareen (PLD 2016 SC 97) has held that in cases
involving a finding of fact about the disqualification of a returned
candidate in election matters, such finding must be based on
affirmative evidence and not on presumptions, inferences and
surmises. It would be in order to reproduce the relevant portion of
the said judgment, which reads as under:-
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
9
“29.
At this juncture, it is important to emphasize that in
cases involving a finding of fact about the disqualification of
a returned candidate in election matters, such finding must
be based on affirmative evidence and not on presumptions,
inferences and surmises. That does not mean that
proceedings in an election petition before an Election Tribunal
are strictly criminal proceedings. It is settled law that even in
civil proceedings, a finding of fact must be based on positive
and affirmative evidence. This requirement rests in the basic
principles of the Qanun-e-Shahadat Order, 1984 and is
articulated in Allah Din v. Habib (PLD 1982 SC 465). For that
reason and the serious consequences that follow a finding of
disqualification under Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution, an
additional evidentiary safeguard is adopted by the Court,
namely, that any reasonable hypothesis available in the
recorded evidence to avoid the disqualification of the
returned candidate ought to be adopted by the Court of law.
The foregoing safeguards have already been laid down in
relation to the proof of corrupt practice by a candidate in an
election. Section 78(3)(d) of the ROPA treats a false statement
by a candidate about his educational qualification to be a
corrupt practice.
30.
The earliest pronouncement on this subject is
rendered by this Court in Muhammad Saeed's case (PLD
1957 SC 91), wherein it is held that:
"... the burden of proof of corrupt practices is on the
petitioner; that the evidence of proof of such practices
must be restricted to the charges or instances
mentioned in the petition and the particular; that each
ingredient of a corrupt practice so charged must be
affirmatively
proved
by
evidence,
direct
or
circumstantial; and that where the evidence is wholly
circumstantial, the commissioners before finding a
corrupt practice proved must exclude all reasonable
hypotheses which are consistent with that corrupt
practice having not been committed... ."
31.
A case directly pertaining to disqualification of a
returned candidate was heard by this Court in Mohammad
Yusuf's case (PLD 1973 SC 160) wherein whilst adopting the
view taken in Muhammad Saeed's case (PLD 1957 SC 91)
this Court has observed that finding of disqualification must
be based on positive evidence and should not be rendered
inferentially on mere surmises; that since a disqualification
was penal in nature, therefore, the terms thereof were
subject to strict interpretation; and the benefit of doubt was
to be extended in favour of a returned candidate. The later
judgments of this Court rendered in Saeed Hassan's case
(PLD 1976 SC 6) and Muhammad Afzal's case (1986 SCMR
1736) approve the principles enunciated in the afore-noted
two judgments.”
(Underlined to lay emphasis)
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
10
10.
In the case of Allah Dino Khan Bhayo Vs. Election
Commission of Pakistan (PLD 2020 SC 591), this Court has held as
follows:-
“5.
The upshot of the said judgment is that a
disqualification under Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution
can only be imposed by or under a declaration made by a
court of law. By such prescription Article 62(1)(f) creates a
lawful, transparent and fair mechanism for an election
candidate to contest an allegation that he is disqualified
under one or more of the grounds listed in the said
Constitutional provision. Accordingly, in the case reported
as Sardar Yar Muhammad Rind v. Election Tribunal
Balochistan, Quetta and others (PLD 2020 SC 137) this
Court held that a judicial declaration disqualifying a
candidate under Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution must
necessarily be based on oral or documentary evidence. In
the case reported as Imran Ahmad Khan Niazi v. Mian
Muhammad Nawaz Sharif (PLD 2017 SC 265), the learned
Judge speaking for the majority elaborated that even an
Election Tribunal can only disqualify a candidate when its
declaration is issued on the basis of evidence before it.
Such a requirement is implicit in Article 10A of the
Constitution which makes both due process and fair trial a
fundamental right in lawful judicial proceedings. Thus the
determination of a dispute relating to a right or liability,
the recording of evidence including the right of cross-
examination, a hearing of the arguments of the parties and
a reasoned judgment are essential attributes of a court of
law (ref: Tariq Transport Co., Lahore v. Sargodha Bhera
Bus Service (PLD 1958 SC (Pak) 437) and Mollah Ejahar
Ali v. Government of East Pakistan (PLD 1970 SC 173).
11.
It is well-settled that no man should suffer because of
the fault of the court. There is an old maxim ‘actus curiae neminem
gravabit’, which means that an act of court shall prejudice no man
and the same becomes applicable in the present case as the learned
fora below were under obligation to do justice with the appellant.
This maxim is founded upon justice and good sense which serves a
safe and certain guide for the administration of law. In a case,
where any undeserved or unfair advantage has been given to a
party invoking the jurisdiction of the court (the respondent No. 3 in
the present case) and the same requires to be neutralized, the said
maxim is to be made applicable.
12.
For what has been discussed above, we are of the view
that the learned Election Tribunal Multan disqualified the appellant
in a slipshod manner. The act of the appellant at best could be
termed as bad judgment or negligence and as the property was
legitimately acquired through inheritance, the same could not be
Civil Appeal No.1399 of 2019
11
labeled as acquired through dishonest means. For this negligence,
she could not be disqualified for life. Consequently, this appeal is
allowed and the impugned judgment is set aside.
13.
The above are the detailed reasons of our short order of
even date.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
16th of March, 2021
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1399_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN.
MR. JUSTICE QAZI FAEZ ISA.
CIVIL APPEALS NOs. 139 to 144 of 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 1384 of 2011.
(On appeal against the judgment dated
21.01.2009
of
the
Islamabad
High
Court,
Islamabad passed in FAO Nos. 7, 11 & 13 of 2008
and WP Nos.705,706,741,763 and 1526 of 2008)
World Call Telecom Ltd thr. its Chief Executive Officer.
(in CAs. 139-140/13).
Wi-Tribe Ltd. Pakistan Ltd. thr. its Director.
(in CA. 141/13)
Telecard Ltd. World Trade Center thr. its Director.
(in CA.142/13)
DV com Limited.
(in CA.143/13)
Telecard Limited.
(in CA.144/13)
M/s Dancom Pakistan (Pvt) Limited.
(in CP.1384/11)
…Appellants/Petitioner.
Versus
Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) thr. its Chairman.
(in CAs. 139, 140, 143 and 144/13)
Federation of Pakistan thr. Secy. Information Technology, etc.
(in CAs. 141-142/13 and CP. 1384/11)
…Respondents
For the appellants/petitioners: Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC.
Mr. M. Ali Raza, ASC.
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
2
Mr. Shahzad Shoukat, ASC
Kh. Ahmed Tariq Rahim, ASC
Mr. Afnan Karim Kundi, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR.
Mr. Tariq Aziz, AOR.
Syed Safdar Hussain AOR.
For the respondents:
Ch. Aamir Rehman, Addl. A. G.
Mr. Waseem Sajjad, Sr. ASC.
Mr. M. Ikram Ch., Sr. ASC.
Mr. Azid Nafees, ASC. (For PTCL)
Mr. Asim Hafeez, ASC
Sardar M. Aslam, ASC.
Mr. Shamshadullah Cheema, ASC (For FAB)
Mr. M. S. Khattak AOR.
Mr. Waseem Anwar, A. D. Law (PTA)
Mr. M. Khurram Siddiqui, Dir. Law. (PTA)
Mr. Bilal Afzal Khokhar, Consultant, PTA.
Syed Sibt-e-Hassan Gardezi, AGM (Law), USF.
Mr. Nasir Ayyaz, Director, Legal, M/o IT.
Mr. Arif Sargana, Director (C.A.) Law, M/o IT
Ms. Ameena Sohail, Member (Legal), M/o IT
Dates of hearing:
16.4.2013,
17.04.2013,
06.05.2013,
23.05.2013,
18.9.2013,
23.9.2015,
12.10.2015,
13.10.2015,
15.10.2015,
26.10.2015, 04.11.2015 and 05.11.2015.
(Judgment Reserved).
J U D G M E N T
EJAZ AFZAL KHAN, J.- Vires of Access Promotion Rules,
2004 was challenged on the grounds that they are outside the orbit
of Section 57 of the Pakistan Telecommunication (Re-Organization)
Act, 1996; that Access Promotion Contribution being insertion of
Pakistan Telecommunication (Re-Organization) (Amendment) Act,
2006 (Act II of 2006) could not precede the amendment especially
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
3
when the provision regulating it was also inserted in Section 4(k)
through the above mentioned Amendment Act in 2006; that though
the term Access Promotion Contribution was also defined by the
Access Promotion Rules, 2004 but in the absence of any clear
provision in the Act, it could not be exacted from the licencees; that
Rules under Section 57 of the Act could be made for carrying out the
purposes of the Act provided therein as the words “and where
provided for herein before” clearly exclude what has not been
provided by the Act; and that as the rules requiring payment of APC
are ultra vires, no action could be taken against the appellants
under
Section
23
of
the
Pakistan
Telecommunication
(Re-
Organization) Act, 1996 on account of their failure to pay APC. Even
establishment of the USF, according to Mr. Ali Raza, ASC for
appellants in Appeal No. 141 of 2013 which is required to be made
by a notification in the Official Gazette under Section 33A of the
Pakistan Telecommunication (Re-Organization) Act, 1996, cannot
precede the insertion of the provision providing therefor, therefore,
the USF exacted under the rules 2004 is also ultra vires. Functions and
powers of the Authority have been listed in Section 4 and 5 of the
Act respectively, therefore, performance of any other function or
exercise of any other power according to the learned ASC shall be
outside the scope of this Act.
2.
Mr. Khalid Anwar, learned Sr. ASC appearing on behalf
of the appellants in Appeals Nos. 139 to 140 of 2013 contended that
the Authority did not have any power to levy fee, other charges and
fix rates in respect of the services, before the passing of Pakistan
Telecommunication (Re-organization) (Amendment Act), 2006,
therefore, no amount in any form could be exacted from the
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
4
appellants. Licence, the learned Sr. ASC contended, is subject to the
terms and conditions of the Act, rules and regulations and that in the
event of any conflict or inconsistency between the provisions of the
lincence and provisions of the Act, rules or regulations, the latter shall
prevail; that revenue could be shared from international calls, from
LDI and LL licences according to the formulas specified by the
Authority from time to time but it cannot remain static when the rates
vary from time to time. The amount exacted in the form of APC for
the USF cannot be spent anywhere but to promote the availability of
a
wide-range
of
high
quality,
efficient,
cost-effective
and
competitive telecommunication services throughout Pakistan. The
Federal Government, the learned Sr. ASC went on to argue is not
always supposed to be on the receiving end as it is also required to
credit sums mentioned in sub-Section 4 of Section 33A of the Act. The
mainstay of the learned Sr. ASC was that Access Promotion
Contribution could not be exacted just for the heck of it; that if it is a
tax, it cannot be imposed without express provision of the statute
and that in case it is a fee, some service should have been provided
in lieu thereof; and that where it lacks the essential attributes of tax as
well as fee it has no statutory foundation. The APC, the learned Sr.
ASC maintained, could have been treated as a fee, had it been
spent on the development of the infrastructure or on the welfare of
the Contributors, but where it is not known where does it go and who
spends it, not only proceedings against the petitioner under Section
23 of the Act be dropped but the amount received so far be
restored to coffers it has come from. Another strange anomaly, the
learned Sr. ASC argued, is that the Access Promotion Contribution
has been made part of Federal consolidated fund vide notification
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
5
dated 29.06.2013 which is not justified under any canons of law and
the Constitution. Arguing further, the learned Sr. ASC contended that
if the amount exacted from the appellants is shown to have been
spent on the purpose it is exacted for a greater part of his grievance
shall stand redressed but where it has neither been audited nor
accounted for in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Act
and the rules, its retention by the Federation would be absolutely
unjustified. He next contended that even Approved Account Rates
which are the main sources of APC for the USF are also prescribed
without considering the grave ground realities with the result that the
licensees instead of gaining anything out of the business are loosing
even what they have invested. The learned Sr. ASC further argued
that the learned Single Judge erred by construing the word “and” as
disjunctive without considering the justification therefor; that such
conversion is justified only when it leads to absurdity or gives rise to a
conflict. The learned Sr. ASC to support his contentions placed
reliance on the cases of C. E. Gibbon, Deputy Speaker, National
Assembly. Vs. Pakistan (through the Secretary Ministry of Law, etc
(PLD 1957 (W.P.) Karachi 956), Imtiaz Ahmed Lali. Vs. Ghulam
Muhammad Lali (PLD 2007 S.C. 369) and Salehon and others. Vs. The
State (PLD 1969 SC 267). He lastly argued that notification enforcing
the USF issued under the Pakistan Telecommunication
(Re-
Organization) Amendment Ordinance, 2005 would die with the
death of the Ordinance and cannot continue unless another
notification in terms of Section 33A of the Act is issued by the Federal
Government soon after the commencement of the Pakistan
Telecommunication
(Re-Organization)
Amendment
Act,
2006,
notwithstanding the provisions contained in Article 264(b) of the
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
6
Constitution. The learned ASC to support his contention placed
reliance on the case of Government of Punjab through Secretary,
Home Department. Vs. Zia Ullah Khan and 2 others (1992 SCMR 602).
3.
The learned Sr. ASC appearing on behalf of the USF
contended that licencee cannot provide any telecommunication
service
or
system,
establish,
maintain
or
operate
in
telecommunication system unless authorized by the Authority; that
grant of licence is subject to fulfillment of terms and conditions
stipulated in the licence and that no person has any locus standi to
enter the realm of telecommunication without a license. The learned
Sr. ASC next contended, that the appellants whose existence in the
field of telecommunication is on account of the licence would stand
nowhere if the licence which has its origin in the draft Rules of 2004 is
withdrawn. Though the Rules, the learned Sr. ASC maintained, were
given legal attire in 2004 nevertheless they being in draft form were
accepted as such at the time of grant of licence. The learned Sr.
ASC next contended that though the definition of Access Promotion
Contribution was inserted in the Act through the Amendment Act,
2006, but it was all along present in the rules framed under Section 57
of the Act. The learned Sr. ASC went on to argue that Access
Promotion Rules, 2004 are fully covered by Section 57 of the Act,
even if the word “and” used therein is read conjunctively. The
learned Sr. ASC, however, conceded that APC for the USF exacted
from the contributors cannot be made part of consolidated fund nor
can it be used for a purpose not mentioned in the statute. The
learned Sr. ASC next contended that appellants cannot approbate
the terms and conditions of licence as well as the rules where they
benefit them and reprobate the same where they bring them under
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
7
some obligation. The learned Sr. ASC contended that Section 33A of
the
Act
provides
for
issuance
of
a
notification
after
the
commencement of the amendment Act, 2006 but it does not mean
that the notification issued under the provision of the Ordinance
which is in para materia with the above mentioned provision would
cease to have effect. Such notification, the learned Sr. ASC added,
would continue under Article 264(b) of the Constitution. The learned
Sr. ASC by concluding his argument contended that the efficacy or
legitimacy of the terms and conditions of the licence or even the
rules cannot be challenged at such a belated stage when the very
establishment of the appellants in the field owes its origin and whole
existence to the said terms and conditions as well as rules.
4.
The learned Addl. A. G. appearing on behalf of the
Federation contended that a great deal of the amount exacted
through APC for the USF has been spent on the increase of
teledensity, development of infrastructure and betterment of
contributors, therefore, its restoration to the coffers it has come from
is unthinkable. He, however, conceded that the amount exacted
through APC for the USF could not be made a part of the Federal
Consolidated Fund. He next contended that the appellants cannot
take a U-turn to deny the whole dispensation when their presence in
the field of telecommunication originated therefrom and one of
them availed subsidies from the USF to the tune of 1.12 billion for
different projects.
5.
We have gone through the entire record carefully and
considered the submissions of the learned Sr. ASCs and ASCs for the
parties as well as learned Addl. A. G. for the Federation.
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
8
6.
The first and foremost question arising for consideration is
as to what is the true meaning of the word “and” used in sub-Section
(1) of Section 57 of the Act and whether Access Promotion Rules of
2004 can be held to have been enacted in accordance with the
said Section of the Act. Before we deal with the arguments
addressed at the Bar it is worthwhile to refer to Section 57 as it stood
before amendment. It thus reads as under:
"57. Power to make rules.__ (1) For carrying out the
purposes of this Act [“and where provided for
hereinbefore”], the Federal Government may, from
time to time, by notification in the official Gazette,
make rules not inconsistent with this Act.
(2)
Without prejudice to the foregoing powers, the
Federal Government may make rules_
a)
extending
the
categories
of
telecommunication
systems
or
telecommunication services or which a
licence is not required under Section 20;
b)
regulating the use of encryption
apparatus or software by requiring use of
approved apparatus or software or such
appropriate apparatus or software be
lodged with the Authority free of cost; and
c)
restricting or prohibiting the use of
any public switched network for signaling
purposes
in
circumstances
in
which
charges
otherwise
payable
may
be
avoided or reduced, or the advertising of
means or services for such use.”
7.
The above quoted provision in clear and unambiguous
terms provides for rules making power of the Authority. The purpose
behind making these rules is to carry out the purposes of this Act and
“where provided for hereinbefore”. The word “and” as contended
by the learned Sr. ASC for the appellants is conjunctive and has to
be read as such. We agree that it is conjunctive and has to be read
as such but still it does not support the deduction that the rules of
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
9
2004 have been framed outside the scope of Section 57. The
legislature by using the word “and” intended to include and
encompass the rules framed for carrying out the purposes of the Act
and the rules envisaged by Section 29(4) thereof. Given that the
expression APC has been defined as the payment made by LDI
licencees to LL Licencees or to the USF pursuant to the rules made
under this Act, by 2(a) of the Act of 1996 which was inserted by the
Amendment Act, 2006, but as is evident by the definition itself, it was
already in existence and in force ever since 2004. It was in this
context that the learned Sr. ASC for the appellant went to the extent
of calling it inconsistent with the Act of 1996, but they cannot be held
to be inconsistent on any account. It would have been inconsistent
with the Act, had its levy been prohibited by the Act express and
unequivocal terms. But when there is nothing in the Act prohibiting its
levy, we don’t agree with the learned Sr. ASC for the appellants that
the APC or the rules providing therefor are either ultra vires the Act or
inconsistent therewith. The judgments rendered in the cases of C. E.
Gibbon, Deputy Speaker, National Assembly. Vs. Pakistan (through
the Secretary Ministry of Law, etc, Imtiaz Ahmed Lali. Vs. Ghulam
Muhammad Lali and Salehon and others. Vs. The State (supra) are
not relevant to the case in hand when by reading the word “and” as
conjunctive the status of the rules remains much the same. Even if we
assume for a while that rules were not in force at the time of grant of
licence, it would not have much effect when even instructions
contained in memoranda issued by the Government could be
regarded as statutory in nature where they are expressed with
precision and have been acted upon. Reference can well be made
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
10
to the case of Faiz Ullah Khan. Vs. Government of Pakistan (PLD 1974
SC 291).
8.
The argument that APC for the USF cannot be imposed
even as a fee when no service is provided in lieu thereof, is absolutely
devoid of force when a great deal of money so exacted is spent on
the development of infrastructure, increase of teledensity and
betterment of contributors which widen the gamut of their business
and in turn bring them more and more profits. The argument that the
Approved Account Rates which are the main sources of APC for the
USF are not prescribed after taking stock of the dynamics in the
international market of telecommunication is mere conjectural than
real as nothing has been brought on the record to substantiate this
argument. The argument that the fund exacted through APC for the
USF has neither been audited nor accounted for in accordance with
the relevant provisions of the Act and the rules has a lot of force in it
but the instant litigation has not been initiated for the audit the
amount so exacted. The argument that when it is not known as to
where does the fund exacted through APC for the USF goes,
proceedings against the appellants under Section 23 of the Act be
dropped is also nothing but a subterfuge to cover up their failure to
do what they are required to do under the terms and conditions of
the licence, the rules and the Act. The argument that where
establishment of the USF is required to be made by notification in the
official gazette under Section 33-A of the Act, it cannot precede the
insertion of the provision is also devoid of force when it was already
established by a notification in the official gazette under Section 33-
A
of
the
Pakistan
Telecommunication
(Re-organization)
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
11
(Amendment) Ordinance which continues as is clearly provided by
Article 264(b) of the Constitution which reads as under:-
“264. Effect of repeal of laws.—Where a law is
repealed, or is deemed to have been repealed,
by, under, or by virtue of the Constitution, the
repeal shall not, except as otherwise provided in
the Constitution,--
a)
………………………………
b)
affect the previous operation of the
law
or
anything
duly
done
or
suffered under the law;
c)
………………………………
d)
………………………………
e)
………………………………
………., as if the law had not been
repealed.”
The judgment rendered in the case of Government of Punjab through
Secretary Home Department. Vs. Zia Ullah Khan and two others when
read carefully does not support the contention of the learned Sr. ASC
for the appellants. The argument that licence is subject to the terms
and conditions of the Act, rules and regulations and that in the event
of any conflict or inconsistency between the provisions of the licence
and the provisions of the Act, rules and regulations, the latter shall
prevail is, no doubt correct but we don’t think there is any conflict or
inconsistency between the terms and conditions of the licence and
the provisions of the Act or the rules and regulations made
threreunder. The argument that functions and powers of the
Authority have been listed in Sections 4 and 5 of the Act, therefore,
performance of any other function or exercise of any other power
shall be outside the scope of the Act is also devoid of force, when
acts done, orders passed, rights acquired or liabilities incurred
pursuant to the rules framed under Section 57 of the Act cannot be
held to be outside the scope of the Act. The more so when we have
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
12
observed above, that rules of 2004 are by no stretch of imagination
inconsistent with the provisions of the Act.
9.
We, however, don’t understand why do the appellants
question the terms and conditions of the licences which emanate
from the rules and why do they question the rules when they
emanate from the provisions contained in Sections 20, 21, 23 and 24
of the Act. No person, in view of the provision contained in Section
20
of
the
Act,
can
establish,
maintain
or
operate
any
telecommunication system or provide any telecommunication
service unless he has obtained a licence under this Act. All the
licences are granted by the Authority as it alone has the exclusive
power to grant them under Section 21 of the Act on the terms and
conditions enumerated therein. It is the Authority which, in view of
the provision contained in Section 22 of the Act, has the power to
modify a licence or its conditions with the consent of the licencee.
Orders and penalties are also enforced by the Authority in view of
the provision contained in Section 23 of the Act and again it is the
Authority which wields the powers of Administrator under Section 24
of the Act. We don’t understand why do the appellants approbate
the rules when they benefit them and reprobate them when they
bring them under obligation. The appellants don’t understand that
by questioning vires of the rules they not only embark on a self
defeating exercise but hack the branch they are resting on when
they minus the rules are just non-entity. Leaving apart the question of
acquiescence or estoppel where one of the appellants availed
subsidies from the USF to the tune of rupees 1.2 billion for different
projects, it does not behove it to bite the hand that feeds it.
C. A. Nos. 139 to144 of 2013 and C.P. No.1384 of 2011
13
10.
The argument that the amount exacted from the APC
cannot be made part of the Federal Consolidated Fund has not
been disputed by the learned Sr. ASC for the USF and the learned
Additional Attorney General and rightly so because neither the
parameters prescribed by Articles 78 and 79 of the Constitution for
the fund, nor the purpose of APC for the USF prescribed by the Act
can be enlarged or extended without amendment in the
Constitution and the Act. Even the Secretary, Ministry of Finance,
Govt. of Pakistan has assured the Court through a statement duly
signed by him that the USF shall be used for the purposes it has been
exacted for and that the USF amount transferred earlier to the
Federal Consolidated Fund is also available for transfer to the USF as
per the current mechanism in place. We would, however, observe
that it be transferred to the USF as early as possible.
11.
Having thus considered, we don’t feel inclined to
interfere with the impugned judgment, notwithstanding the reasons
recorded in support of the conclusions are different.
12.
For the reasons discussed above, these appeals as well
as petition being without merits are dismissed.
Judge
Judge
Announced in open Court at Islamabad on 22.12.2015.
Judge
‘Not Approved For Reporting’
M. Azhar Malik
| {
"id": "C.A.139_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ
MR. JUSTICE SH. AZMAT SAEED
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ-UL-AHSAN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.14-L OF 2013
(On appeal from the order dated
27.3.2012 of the Lahore High Court,
Lahore, passed in W.P. No.4144 of
2010)
Saif-ur-Rehman
… Appellant
Versus
Addl. District Judge, Toba Tek
Singh and two others
… Respondent (s)
For the Appellant
: Mr. Sarfraz Khan Gondal, ASC
For Respondent No.3 : Mian Shah Abbas, ASC
Date of Hearing
: 17.04.2018
JUDGMENT
SH. AZMAT SAEED, J.- This Civil Appeal
by leave of the Court is directed against the Order
dated 27.03.2012, whereby a Constitutional Petition
i.e. Writ Petition No.4144 of 2010, filed by the
present Appellant, was partly accepted.
2.
The brief facts necessary for adjudication of
the lis at hand are that the Appellant and
CA.14-L/2013
2
Respondent No.3 were married but unfortunately,
the matrimonial relationship between the parties
collapsed, whereafter, Respondent No.3 filed a Suit
for Dissolution of Marriage as well as the Suit for
Return of Dowry Articles. The former Suit was
decreed vide judgment and decree dated 01.02.2008
and the marriage dissolved. No challenge was thrown
to it and such decree attained finality.
3.
The Suit for Dowry Articles was also
decreed by the learned Family Court for an amount
of Rs.25,000/- vide judgment and decree dated
29.09.2009. Respondent No.3 filed an appeal before
the learned First Appellate Court, which was allowed
vide judgment and decree dated 27.01.2010 and the
decretal amount was enhanced to Rs.4,00,000/-. In
the above backdrop, the present Appellant invoked
the Constitutional jurisdiction of the learned Lahore
High Court, Lahore by filing Writ Petition No.4144 of
2010. After hearing the parties, vide impugned Order
dated 27.03.2012, the Writ Petition filed by the
present Appellant was partly accepted and the
CA.14-L/2013
3
amount in lieu of dowry articles was reduced to
Rs.3,00,000/-.
4.
The Appellant invoked the jurisdiction of
this Court by filing Civil Petition bearing No.781-L of
2012, in which Leave to Appeal was granted vide
Order
dated
01.01.2013.
The
said
Order
is
reproduced herein below for ease of reference:
“States, that the judgment and
decree of the Family Court pertaining
to the return of dowry articles was to
the tune of Rs.25,000/- (rupees
twenty five thousand), thus as per the
provisions of Section 14(2)(b) of the
West Pakistan Family Courts Act,
1964, no appeal was competent
before the learned Additional District
Judge,
therefore,
the
appellate
judgment which has been partly
affirmed by the learned High Court is
without jurisdiction. Besides, the list
of dowry articles had not been proved
by the respondent in terms of the law
and there are many contradictions in
those which are apparent on the face
of the record. Leave is granted to
consider the above.”
5.
We have heard the learned counsel for the
parties and examined the available record.
6.
The
learned
Appellate
Court,
after
examining the evidence available on the record,
returned a finding that Respondent No.3 was entitled
CA.14-L/2013
4
to return of dowry articles and in lieu thereof she
was entitled to a sum of Rs.4,00,000/-. The learned
High Court, after examining the evidence, more
particularly, the statement of Respondent No.3 as
PW-1 concurred with the findings of the learned First
Appellate Court that the said Respondent was
entitled to the value of the dowry articles but the
quantum thereof was reduced from Rs.4,00,000/- to
Rs.3,00,000/-. The findings of the learned High
Court appeared to be based on a fair and reasonable
appreciation of the evidence. No misreading or non-
reading of evidence has been pointed out at the bar.
The reasoning does not appear to be perverse. Thus,
no ground for interference, in this behalf, is made
out.
7.
The only other question, which floated to
the surface and was asserted by the learned counsel
for the Appellant is that the learned Family Court
had granted a decree for a sum of Rs.25,000/- upon
the claim of dowry, hence, in view of Section 14(2) of
the Family Courts Act, 1964 (Act of 1964), no appeal
was maintainable against the said judgment and
CA.14-L/2013
5
decree being less than the amount mentioned in the
aforesaid provisions of law; hence, the judgment and
decree of the learned First Appellate Court was
wholly
without
jurisdiction.
Consequently,
the
impugned Order of the learned High Court partly
affirming the same was also liable to be set aside.
Leave in the instant case has been granted to
consider the aforesaid aspect of the matter.
8.
The aforesaid contentions of the learned
counsel for the Appellant have been controverted by
the learned counsel for Respondent No.3. It has been
contended that the embargo placed on the right of
appeal being pressed into service by the learned
counsel for the Appellant applies to the husband
only and not to a wife, dissatisfied with the quantum
or denial of relief.
9.
It is Section 14 of the Act of 1964, more
particularly,
sub-section
(2)
thereof,
which
is
required to be interpreted in order to adjudicate
upon the divergent contentions, in this behalf,
canvassed by the learned counsel for the parties at
the bar.
CA.14-L/2013
6
10.
Before proceeding further, it may be
appropriate to contextualize the Family Courts Act,
1964 in general and Section 14(2), in particular. Out
of the general canvass of the forum and procedure
for adjudication of the claims and disputes, a
jurisdiction has been carved out through the
enactment of the Family Courts Act, 1964, creating a
special forum i.e. the Family Court for adjudication
of the family disputes in accordance with the special
procedure as set forth in the aforesaid Act of 1964
and the Rules framed thereunder i.e. The West
Pakistan Family Courts Rules, 1965. The purpose of
this exercise is evident from the preamble of the Act
of 1964 i.e. “expeditious settlement and disposal of
disputes relating to marriage and family affairs”. The
nature of disputes which can be brought before the
Family Court for adjudication have been set forth
and enumerated in Part I of the Schedule referred to
in Section 5 of the Act of 1964. It is now settled law
that a purposive rather than a literal approach to
interpretation is to be adopted while interpreting
Statutes. An interpretation which advances the
CA.14-L/2013
7
purpose of the Act is to be preferred rather than an
interpretation which defeats its objects. Reference, in
this behalf, may be made to the judgments reported
as Federation of Pakistan through Ministry of
Finance
and
others
v.
M/s.
Noori
Trading
Corporation (Private) Limited and 14 others (1992
SCMR 710) and Hudabiya Engineering (Pvt) Limited
v. Pakistan through Secretary, Ministry of Interior,
Government of Pakistan and 6 others (PLD 1998
Lahore 90).
11.
The second aspect of the Family Courts Act,
1964 and the Rules framed thereunder as amended
from time to time would reveal its gender sensitivity.
A glance at Section 3 of the Act of 1964 reveals that
women Judges are specifically catered for. The
residence of the wife can be a determining factor for
conferring territorial jurisdiction in certain Suits as
is evident from the provisions of Rule 6 of the West
Pakistan Family Courts Rules, 1965. There can be
no escape from the fact that the tone and tenor of
the Family Courts Act, 1964 and the Rules framed
thereunder are beneficial in nature. It is an equally
CA.14-L/2013
8
settled law that beneficial provisions in a Statute
must be interpreted liberally in a manner so that the
benefit conferred is advanced rather than frustrated
or subverted. Reference, in this behalf, may be made
to the judgments of this Court reported as Lahore
Development Authority through D.G., Lahore and
another v. Abdul Shafique and others (PLD 2000 SC
207) and Pakistan Engineering Co. Limited, Lahore
through Managing Director v. Fazal Beg and 2 others
(1992 SCMR 2166).
12.
Section 14(2) of the Family Courts Act,
1964,
must
necessarily
be
approached
and
interpreted in the above backdrop and in accordance
with the aforesaid principles i.e. the purposive object
thereof achieved and being beneficial in nature, the
benefits so conferred are actualized.
13.
Sub-section (1) of Section 14 of the Act of
1964, confers a right of appeal. However, by virtue of
sub-section (2) of Section 14 of the Act of 1964, this
right of appeal has been curtailed. The obvious
purpose of curtailing the right of appeal is to avoid
the benefits of any decree which may have been
CA.14-L/2013
9
passed being tied up in an appeal before a higher
forum. It has also been noticed that in only three
eventualities that even the right of first appeal has
been curtailed. In all three eventualities, the decree
would be for the benefit of the wife for dissolution of
marriage under Clause (a), for dower or dowry under
Clause (b) and for maintenance under Clause (c).
The last may also be for the benefit of a minor. Thus,
the only logical and reasonable interpretation, which
is in accordance with the purposive of the Act and in
line with the beneficial nature thereof would be that
a judgment-debtor of a decree envisages in Clauses
(a), (b) and (c) of sub-section (2) of Section 14 of the
Act of 1964, would not have a right of appeal so that
the
disputes
mentioned
therein
are
resolved
expeditiously and the benefits conferred through
such decree reach the decree-holder without being
frustrated. However, the said provision cannot be
interpreted so as to exclude a right of appeal to a
wife whose claim of dower or dowry has been
partially
or
entirely
declined.
For
such
an
CA.14-L/2013
10
interpretation, would defeat the purpose and object
of the Act of 1964 and frustrate its beneficial nature.
14.
This Court while interpreting Section 14(2)
of the Act of 1964, in its judgment reported as
Tayyaba Yunus v. Muhammad Ehsan and others
(2010 SCMR 1403) held that where a Suit for dower
has been dismissed, the wife has a right of appeal
under Section 14(2) of the above-said Act of 1964.
15.
In a case pertaining to dissolution of
marriage, this Court in the judgment reported as
Abid Hussain v. Additional District Judge, Alipur,
District Muzaffargarh and another (2006 SCMR 100)
held as follows:
“The object behind non-provision of
appeal in case of dissolution of
marriage is to protect women, an
under
privileged
and
generally
oppressed section of our society from
prolonged and costly litigation. It
aims to put a clog on the right of
husband.”
16.
Thus, the only possible purposive beneficial
and rational interpretation of Section 14(2) of the Act
of 1964, is that the right of appeal of a husband
against whom a decree has been passed is curtailed,
CA.14-L/2013
11
if the amount awarded is less than the amount,
which is mentioned in the said provision. However,
in no event the right of the wife to file an appeal is
extinguished if she is dissatisfied with any decree in
a Suit for dower or dowry.
17.
The aforesaid view incidentally has also
been consistently enunciated by the learned Lahore
High Court in the judgments reported as Ghulam
Rasool v. Senior Civil Judge and 4 others (PLJ 2008
Lahore 531), Saeeda Alia v. Syed Ghulam Mursalin
Naqvi and another (2004 MLD 306) and Mst. Neelam
Nosheen and others v. Raja Muhammad Khaqaan
and others (2002 MLD 784).
18.
In this view of the matter, there is no denial
of fact that the appeal of Respondent No.3 was
validly filed and the learned First Appellate Court
was vested with the jurisdiction to adjudicate
thereupon and such jurisdiction was not barred
under Section 14(2) of the Act of 1964. In view of the
above, this Civil Appeal is totally devoid of merit and
is liable to be dismissed.
CA.14-L/2013
12
19.
These are the reasons of our short Order of
even date, which is reproduced herein below:
“For reasons to be recorded later,
this appeal is dismissed.”
Chief Justice
Islamabad, the
Judge
17th April, 2018
Judge
‘Approved For Reporting’
Safdar & Mahtab
| {
"id": "C.A.14-L_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Mr. Justice Faisal Arab
Mr. Justice Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1400 OF 2019
(Against the judgment 31.5.2019 passed by High
Court of Sindh at Karachi in C.P. No.493-D of 2018)
Umaid Ali
…Appellant(s)
Versus
The Election Commission of Pakistan
through Secretary Election Commission
of Pakistan Islamabad & others
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Zulfiqar Khalid Maluka, ASC
For Respondent No.5:
Afnan Karim Kundi, ASC
For Government of Sindh:
Syed Shabbir Shah, Addl. A.G.
Sindh
Date of hearing:
11.03.2020
ORDER
Umar Ata Bandial, J. The learned High Court
through the impugned judgment dated 31.05.2019 has upheld the
findings of the learned Election Commission of Pakistan (“ECP”)
vide its order dated 16.01.2018, which held as follows:
“In the light of above discussion, we are
of the considered view that respondent
violated
the
provisions
of
Section
36(1)(i)(j) and section 80(2) of the Sindh
Local Government Act, 2013 and Article
63(1)(l) of the Constitution. It is proved
though the documentary evidence that
respondent was a Government contractor
(owner of Dhatti one Transport Company
Civil Appeal No.1400 of 2019
2
Umerkot) and received a huge amount of
Rs.40,27,450/- from Government. Being
a Government Contractor the respondent
was not eligible to file nomination papers
or take part in the Local Government
Election held in 2015 for the seat of
Member, Town Committee, Kheme Jo Par
and thereafter for the seat of Chairman of
the said Town Committee. The petition is
accepted.”
2.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that
the disqualification of the appellant is confined to Section 36(1)(i)
of the Sindh Local Government Act, 2013 (“the Act”), which reads
as follows:
S36(1) “A person shall be disqualified from
being elected or chosen as and from being a
member of the Council, if-
(i) he is under contract for work to be
done or goods to be supplied to a
council or has otherwise any direct
pecuniary interest in its affairs.”
Admittedly, the appellant is a Government Contractor but he is not
a Contractor with any Council nor does he have any direct
pecuniary interest in the affairs of such Council. Consequently, it
is submitted that the appellant has been wrongly disqualified for
holding the elected office of the Chairman, Town Committee,
Kheme Jo Par, District Tharparkar Sindh. The learned counsel for
the appellant has then urged that the ECP is the original forum for
directing removal of a member of a Council under Section 36(2) of
the Act. No appeal is provided against such decision of the ECP.
On the other hand, the ECP is the appellate forum under Section
30 of the Act against a similar direction for removal of a member of
Civil Appeal No.1400 of 2019
3
the Council by the Provincial Government under Section 25 of the
Act. There is a duality of roles of the ECP in respect of the same
relief which can lead to a conflict.
3.
Learned counsel for the respondents submit that the
impugned order of the ECP dated 16.01.2018 not only disqualifies
the appellant under clause (i) of Section 36(1) of the Act but also
on the basis of clause (j) of the said section. The language of that
clause is reproduced below:
(j) “he is for the time being disqualified or
chosen as a member of the Provincial
Assembly under any law for the time being
in force.”
His submission is that clause (j) ibid is a residuary or blanket
provision that incorporates additional disqualifications in Article
63(1) of the Constitution. Consequently, the admitted status of the
appellant as a Government Contractor attracts the sanction under
Article 63(1)(l) of the Constitution which disqualifies a candidate
who is a Government Contractor. It applies fully to the appellant
and therefore he is disqualified in the present election.
4.
After hearing the learned counsel for the parties, it
transpires that since the appellant is a Government Contractor the
disqualification under section 36(1)(i) ibid does not apply to the
appellant because the disability thereunder extends to a contractor
of a local Council. Accordingly, the only issue in controversy
between the parties is whether the appellant is disqualified under
clause (j) of Section 36(1) of the Act because that would attract
clause (l) of Article 63(1) of the Constitution. The language of
clause (j) ibid leaves much to be desired because it is not clear how
“disqualified or chosen as a member of the Provincial Assembly”
makes any sense. If as suggested by the learned counsel for the
Civil Appeal No.1400 of 2019
4
respondents, the words ‘or chosen’ are to be ignored to arrive at
the intended meaning then that amounts to ignoring the literal
words and to reading down in order to ascertain the meaning of
the statutory provision. On the other hand, if the words “from
being elected” are read into the said provision after the word
“disqualified” then such reading in is also avoided by the courts
unless the intention of the law maker is clear. To ascertain the
intention of the law maker if one looks at the other provisions of
section 36(1) ibid, it is noticeable that these reproduce almost
verbatim clauses (a), (b), (c) & (d) of Article 63(1) of the
Constitution. Clause (c) of the Act, that reproduced clause (c) of
Article 63(1) of the Constitution, was subsequently repealed on
27.08.2015. Clauses (f) & (g) of section 36(1) ibid correspond with
the terms of clauses (h) & (g) of Article 63(1) of the Constitution but
with the reduction of the period of disqualification. Clause (h) of
section 36(1) ibid mirrors the provisions of clauses (i) & (j) of Article
63(1) of the Constitution. In the same manner clause (i) of section
36(1) ibid adopts the disqualification listed in clause (l) of Article
63(1) of the Constitution. The scope of the disqualifications under
Article 63(1) have been modified in the Act to cater to the
requirements of elected representatives of local Councils. In the
above context, the modifications of the disqualifications contained
in Article 63(1) of the Constitution for incorporation into the Act
have made the Provincial Legislature’s intention clear about the
nature and extent of disability of candidates for election to a
Council under the Act.
The statedly general or blanket
disqualification incorporated through clause (j) of Section 36(1) of
the Act, therefore, cannot again import the disqualifications under
Civil Appeal No.1400 of 2019
5
Article 63(1) of the Constitution that have already been
incorporated with modification in clauses (a) to (d), (f), (g), (h) & (i)
of section 36(1) of the Act. Otherwise, clause (j) of section 36(1) ibid
would either be repeating the incorporated disqualifications from
Article 63(1) of the Constitution or undoing the modifications made
thereto in section 36(1) of the Act. Although clause (j) of Section
36(1) ibid is unclear and vague, we are not convinced that clause
(j) of the Act intends to repeat what is already stated in clauses (a)
to (i) of section 36(1) of the Act. Accordingly, the rule of reading in
or reading down is not attracted to the facts of this case. The
application of such an aid while interpreting or construing a
statutory provision has been dealt with in the case reported as
Abdul Haq Khan & others vs. Haji Ameerzada & others (PLD
2017 SC 105, at page 117):
“As a matter of statutory interpretation,
Courts generally abstain from providing
casus omissus or omissions in a statute,
through construction or interpretation.
An exception to this rule is, when there
is a self-evident omission in a provision
and the purpose of the law as intended
by the legislature cannot otherwise be
achieved, or if the literal construction of
a particular provision leads to manifestly
absurd or anomalous results, which
could not have been intended by the
legislature. However, this power is to be
exercised cautiously, rarely and only in
exceptional circumstances.”
Following the above dictum, we are of the view that the Court
cannot come to the assistance of the respondents to construe
Civil Appeal No.1400 of 2019
6
clause (j) of Section 36(1) of the Act to bear a meaning which is not
apparent or clear from the words thereof. Nor is the need for the
suggested attribution of a blanket disqualification in clause (j) of
section 36(1) ibid evident from the intention of the law maker. This
is because clauses (a) to (i) of Section 36(1) of the Act mirror the
disqualifications contained in Article 63 of the Constitution. At
best, clause (j) of Section 36(1) of the Act may encompass such
other disqualifications in Article 63(1) of the Constitution that have
not already been incorporated in Section 36(1) of the Act. In this
behalf, clauses (n) & (o) of Article 63(1) of the Constitution dealing
with willful default may be covered in clause (j) of Section 36(1) of
the Act. However, this aspect is not germane to the present
controversy and may be considered in some other appropriate
case. Consequently, we are not inclined to agree with the
impugned judgment that the appellant is disqualified under clause
(j) of section 36(1) of the Act for admittedly being a Government
Contractor. The relevant disqualification is section 36(1)(i) which
disbars only a contractor of the Council and not a contractor of the
Government. As a result, findings recorded in the impugned
judgment of the ECP dated 16.01.2018 and affirmed by the learned
High Court in its impugned judgment dated 31.05.2019 are in
error. This appeal is, therefore, allowed.
5.
The Provincial Government is also directed to re-
examine and amend the language of Section 36(1)(j) of the Act as
necessary to bring it in conformity with the intention of the
legislature.
Judge
Civil Appeal No.1400 of 2019
7
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
11th March, 2020
Meher + Ghulam Raza
APPROVED FOR REPORTING.
| {
"id": "C.A.1400_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1419 OF 2009
(Against the judgment dated 16.6.2009 of the
Islamabad High Court, Islamabad passed in
STR No.1/2009)
Chairman, Federal Board of Revenue, Islamabad
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
M/s Al-Technique Corporation of Pakistan Ltd. etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. Khalid Abbas, ASC
For respondent No.1:
Sh. Iftikhar Ahmad, ASC
Mr. Sohail Akram Malik,
Senior Law Officer, Al-Technique Corporation
Date of hearing:
22.11.2016
…
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- The leave granting order in this
appeal envisages three questions of law but the learned counsel for the
appellant whilst arguing the matter has confined himself to only one i.e.
whether sterilization of syringes or other medical/surgical products by
respondent No.1 (respondent) falls within the definition of ‘manufacture’
under Section 2(16) of the Sales Tax Act, 1990 (the Act) and consequently is
chargeable to sales tax. The other two questions are identical and
dependent on the above proposition, and require no independent
expression of opinion by us.
2.
The brief facts of the case are that the respondent is engaged
in the business of gamma sterilization of medical/surgical products which
are provided to it by other individuals/companies. The appellant
department issued a notice to the respondent claiming that it was liable to
Civil Appeal No.1419 of 2009
-: 2 :-
pay sales tax on the sterilization process along with additional tax and
thereafter passed an order in original to this effect. The respondent
appealed against the order before the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal but
lost. However the learned High Court in the tax reference filed by the
respondent held that the process of sterilization did not amount to
‘manufacturing’ and therefore sales tax was not payable.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant, by referring to the
definition of ‘manufacture’ and ‘taxable supply’ (as reproduced later in this
opinion), argued that value is added to the medical/surgical products on
account of the sterilization process and this squarely falls within the
definition of ‘manufacture’ and, therefore, the respondent is liable to pay
sales tax. In support of his contention, he has cited the judgments
reported as Collector of Customs, Central Excise and Sales Tax and
others Vs. Mahboob Industries (Pvt.) Ltd. and others (PLD 2006 SC
148), Adil Polypropyleneah22 Products Limited and others Vs. The
Federation
of
Pakistan
through
Secretary
Finance,
Federal
Secretariat, Islamabad and others (2000 SCMR 1708) and Sheikhoo
Sugar Mills Ltd. and others Vs. Government of Pakistan and others
(2001 SCMR 1376).
4.
Heard. It is settled principle of law that tax cannot be charged
and levied unless it falls squarely within the purview of the charging
provisions. Taxing laws are not to be extended by implication beyond the
clear import of the language used. To hold otherwise would violate another
principle of interpretation of taxing statutes: that tax laws should be
construed in favour of the taxpayer and any substantial doubt resolved in
favour of the citizen and against the government. This principle is based
on the fact that taxation is a process which interferes with the personal
and property rights of the people, although it is a necessary interference.
Civil Appeal No.1419 of 2009
-: 3 :-
But because it does take from the people a portion of their property, the
tax laws must be construed in favour of the taxpayer1. In this context,
Section 3 of the Act mandates as under:-
“3.
Scope of tax.—(1)
Subject to the provisions of
this Act, there shall be charged, levied and paid a tax
known as sales tax at the rate of seventeen per cent of the
value of—
(a)
taxable supplies made by a registered person in the
course or furtherance of any taxable activity
carried on by him; and
(b)
…………………………………………………………...”
‘Taxable supply’ has been defined in Section 2(41) as:-
“2(41) “taxably supply” means a supply of taxable goods
made by an importer, manufacturer, wholesaler (including
dealer), distributor or retailer other than a supply of goods
which is exempt under section 13 and includes a supply of
goods chargeable to tax at the rate of zero per cent under
section 4”
(Emphasis supplied)
‘Manufacturer’ has been defined in Section 2(17) of the Act which reads as
under:-
“2(17) “manufacturer” or “producer” means a person
who engages, whether exclusively or not, in the production
or manufacture of goods whether or not the raw material
of which the goods are produced or manufactured are
owned by him; and shall include—
(a)
………………………………………………………………
1 The Construction of Statutes, Crawford, 1998.
Civil Appeal No.1419 of 2009
-: 4 :-
(b)
………………………………………………………………
(c)
………………………………………………………………
Provided that………………………………………………………”
(Emphasis supplied)
‘Manufacture’ has in turn been defined in Section 2(16) of the Act which
reads as follows:-
“2(16) “manufacture” or “produce” includes—
(a)
any process in which an article singly or in
combination
with
other
articles,
materials,
components, is either converted into another
distinct article or product or is so changed,
transformed or reshaped that it becomes capable of
being put to use differently or distinctly and
includes any process incidental or ancillary to the
completion of a manufactured product;
(b)
……………………………………………………………
(c)
…………………………………………………………”
(Emphasis supplied)
We reiterate that there is no cavil with the principle that a charging
provision in a fiscal statute is to be given a strict interpretation and if a
case does not fall within the purview thereof, tax cannot be charged from a
person from whom it is being claimed. As is clear from Section 3 of the
Act, sales tax can only be charged/levied against a person who makes a
taxable supply which has been defined in Section 2(41) of the Act which
specifically and unequivocally provides that it is supply of taxable goods
by inter alia a manufacturer. According to Section 2(17) of the Act a
manufacturer is a person who engages in the manufacture of goods and
therefore, the definition of manufacture provided in Section 2(16) of the
Civil Appeal No.1419 of 2009
-: 5 :-
Act becomes germane in the instant case. It is settled that a definition
clause is foundational when construing provisions of law. The definition
given in the Act should be so construed as not to be repugnant to the
context and would not defeat or enable the defeating of the purpose of the
Act. It must be read in its context and the background of the scheme of
the statute and the remedy intended by it2. A bare reading of the definition
of ‘manufacture’ suggests that it is a process where:-
(i)
an article singly or in combination with other articles,
materials, components, is either converted into another
distinct article or product; or
(ii)
an article is so changed, transformed or reshaped that it
becomes capable of being put to use differently or distinctly;
and
(iii)
includes any process incidental or ancillary to the completion
of a manufactured product.
Does the process of sterilization of the syringes/surgical products convert
them into a distinct article or product or is the article (syringes) changed,
transformed or reshaped? The answer will depend on the meaning
attributed to said words. It may be pointed out at this juncture that the
part of Section 2(16) of the Act “any process incidental or ancillary to the
completion of a manufactured product” is ejusdem generis to the earlier part of
the definition [paragraphs (i) and (ii)]. The alleged manufacturing activity must
fall within the first two categories else the third category would have no
independent application or legal significance. Returning to the issue at
hand, the words ‘convert’, ‘change’, ‘transform’ and ‘reshape’ are
important. Chambers 21st Century Dictionary has defined them as
follows:-
2 Interpretation of Statutes, N. S. Bindra, tenth edition.
Civil Appeal No.1419 of 2009
-: 6 :-
“Convert – to change the form or function of one thing into
another;
Change – to make or become different;
Transform – to change in appearance, nature, function, etc.
often completely and dramatically;
Reshape – to form or fashion or to give a particular form to
something, again, or again and in a different way.”
The Concise Oxford Dictionary (1982 ed.) has assigned the following
meanings:-
“Convert – change; change in character or function;
Change – making or becoming different;
Transform – make change in the form, outward
appearance, character, disposition, etc.;
Reshape – create, form, construct, model, mould, fashion,
bring into desired or definite figure or form once more,
again, afresh.”
Further, ‘sterilization’ means “the treatment of food, surgical or laboratory
equipment, etc. with heat, chemicals or radiation in order to destroy all living micro-
organisms”.3
5.
Adverting to the case law referred to by the learned counsel,
the cases of Mahboob Industries (supra) and Adil Polypropylene Products
(supra) pertain to excise and are therefore not relevant to the instant
matter. In Sheikhoo Sugar Mills (supra) this Court held that the definition
of the word ‘manufacture’ in Section 2(16) of the Act clearly suggested that
the bagasse produced during the extrusion of sugarcane had an
independent identity, status and character and was capable of being put
3 Chambers 21st Century Dictionary.
Civil Appeal No.1419 of 2009
-: 7 :-
to use differently therefore it fell within the said definition, therefore
supplying bagasse fell within the definition of taxable supply.
6.
From the facts of the present case, it is quite clear that the
activity of gamma sterilization, which the respondent is engaged in – a
process that eliminates all forms of living organisms – does not involve the
conversion of any article singly or in combination with other articles into
another distinct article or product. The process does not change,
transform or reshape the syringes in any way, thereby rendering them
capable of being put to use differently or distinctly. The syringes remain
syringes after sterilization. Therefore, a bare reading of all the
aforementioned definitions in their legal and usual context makes it
manifest that the process of sterilization of medical/surgical products
does not fall within the meaning of ‘manufacture’ as provided in Section
2(16) thus the respondent is not a ‘manufacturer’ under Section 2(17) and
is not making a ‘taxable supply’ as per Section 2(41) and therefore cannot
be charged to sales tax under Section 3 of the Act. In light whereof, this
appeal is dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Bench-I
Islamabad, the
22nd November, 2016
Not Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1419_2009.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
( Appellate Jurisdiction )
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE AMIR HANI MUSLIM
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1428 OF 2015
(On appeal against the judgment dated 15.09.2015
Passed by the Peshawar High Court Peshawar, in
R.P.No.32-P/2014 in W.P.No.2547-P/2012)
Qayyum Khan.
…
…
Appellant.
VERSUS
Divisional Forest Officer, Mardan
Wildlife Division, Mardan and others.
…
…
Respondents
For the Appellant
:
Raja Muhammad Asghar Khan, ASC
For Respondent No.1-4
:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG.
For Respondent No.5
:
In-Person.
Date of hearing
:
25-02-2016
JUDGMENT
AMIR HANI MUSLIM, J.- This Appeal, by leave of the
Court is directed against order dated 19.05.2015 passed by the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar, whereby the Review Petition filed by the Appellant
against the order dated 13.02.2014 passed in Writ Petition No.2547-P of
2012, was dismissed.
2.
The facts necessary for the present proceedings are that on
01-02-2010, the Appellant was appointed as Wildlife Watcher (BS-05) in
Sakra Wildlife Range, Mardan, on contract basis till the expiry of the
Project. On 25.05.2012, during the contract period of the Appellant, the
Finance Department, Government of KPK, vide letter No.BO11/FC/1-
CA.1428/2015
2
5A/2012/13, converted the contract posts of Wildlife Watchers into
permanent posts in the said Range. However, the Appellant was not
considered for appointment on permanent basis and his services were
terminated, vide order dated 05.06.2012.
3.
The Appellant assailed the order of his termination before the
Peshawar High Court, by filing Writ Petition No.2547 of 2012, which was
dismissed. The Appellant filed Review Petition against the judgment passed
by the learned High Court in the Writ Petition, which too was dismissed.
The Appellant assailed the judgments of the learned Peshawar High Court
before this Court by filing Civil Petition for leave to Appeal in which leave
to Appeal was granted on 16.12.2015. Hence this Appeal.
4.
The learned Counsel for the Appellant has contended that the
post against which the Appellant was appointed had been converted to a
regular post, therefore, the Appellant ought to have been appointed against
the regular post. He submits that many other employees working on
contract basis in the projects were regularized after the project posts had
been converted to regular posts.
5.
On the other hand, the learned Additional Advocate General,
KPK, has supported the impugned judgments.
6.
We have heard the learned Counsel for the Appellant and the
learned Additional Advocate General, KPK. The only distinction between
the case of the present Appellant and the case of the Respondents in Civil
Appeals No.134-P of 2013 etc. is that the project in which the present
Appellant was appointed was taken over by the KPK Government in the
CA.1428/2015
3
year 2012 whereas most of the projects in which the aforesaid Respondents
were appointed, were regularized before the cut-off date provided in North
West Frontier Province (now KPK) Employees (Regularization of Services)
Act, 2009. The present Appellant was appointed in the year 2010 on
contract basis in the project after completion of all the requisite codal
formalities, when on 25.05.2012, the project was taken over by the KPK
Government. It appears that the Appellant was not allowed to continue after
the change of hands of the project. Instead, the Government by cherry
picking, had appointed some other person in place of the Appellant. The
case of the present Appellant is covered by the principles laid down by this
Court in the case of Civil Appeals No.134-P of 2013 etc. (Government of
KPK through Secretary, Agriculture vs. Adnanullah and others), as the
Appellants was discriminated against and was entitled to continue the job
with the employees who were similarly placed and were allowed induction
on regular basis.
7.
We, for the aforesaid reasons, allow this Appeal and set aside
the impugned judgments. The Appellant shall be reinstated in service from
the date of his termination and is entitled to the back benefits for the period
he has worked with the project or the KPK Government. The service of the
Appellant for the intervening period i.e. from the date of his termination till
the date of his reinstatement shall be counted towards his pensionary
benefits.
Judge
Judge
Islamabad the, 25th Feb, 2016.
Approved for reporting.
Judge
Sohail/**
| {
"id": "C.A.1428_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1428 TO 1436 OF 2016
(Against the order dated 9.3.2016 of the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad passed in ICAs No.204, 205, 210/2014 and 793/2013,
W.Ps.No.3025 to 3027/2014 and ICAs No.201 & 202/2014)
M/s Mustafa Impex, Karachi
…in C.As.1428 & 1429/2016
M/s SSS Enterprises, Karachi
…in C.A.1430/2016
M/s Fact International, Karachi
…in C.A.1431/2016
M/s Broadways, Karachi
…in C.A.1432/2016
M/s M. A. Enterprises, Karachi
…in C.A.1433/2016
M/s Bulash Enterprises, Karachi
…in C.A.1434/2016
Muhammad Rehman & another
…in C.A.1435/2016
Naveed Gaba Proprietor of “G Mobile”,
Karachi and another
…in C.A.1436/2016
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
The Government of Pakistan through Secretary Finance, Islamabad etc.
…Respondent(s)
(in all cases)
For the petitioner(s):
Mian Muhammad Athar, ASC
Mr. Shafqat Mahmood Chohan, ASC
(in C.As.1428 to 1434 & 1436/2016)
Mr. Farhat Nawaz Lodhi, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in C.P.1435/2016)
For the respondent(s):
Sh. Izhar-ul-Haq, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
(for Respondent No.3 in C.As.1428 & 1430/2016 &
Respondent No.2 in C.As.1429, 1431, 1432 & 1433/2016)
Raja Muhammad Iqbal, ASC
(for Respondent No.5 & 6 in C.As.1428 & 1430/2016
& Respondent No.4 & 5 in C.As.1429 & 1431/2016)
Ms. Misbah Gulnar Sharif, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
(for Respondent No.4 in C.As.1428, 1430 & 1433/2016
& Respondent No.3 in C.As.1429, 1431, 1435 & 1436/2016)
Mr. Khalil Dogar, ASC
(for Respondent No.7 in C.As.1432 & 1434/2016
& Respondent No.6 in C.A.1433/2016)
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 2 :-
Ch. Muhammad Zafar Iqbal, ASC
(for Respondent No.7 in C.As.1429 & 1431/2016, Respondent
No.8 in C.As.1428, 1430 & 1433/2016,
Respondent No.4 in C.As.1432 & 1434/2016)
On Court’s call:
Mr. Muhammad Waqar Rana,
Additional Attorney General
Mr. Abid Hussain Channa, S.O. M/o Finance
Mr. Sajid Javed, Legal Assistant M/o Finance
Amicus Curiae:
Syed Ali Zafar, ASC
Dates of hearing:
23.5.2016 & 24.5.2016
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J:- These appeals with the leave of the
Court entail the following facts:- the appellants are importers of cellular
phones and textile goods. Earlier they enjoyed certain exemptions from
sales tax granted by the Federal Government. Subsequently the
exemptions were either withdrawn or the tax rates were modified vide
notifications No.280(I)/2013, 460(I)/2013 (both relating to cellular phones)
issued pursuant to Sections 3(2)(b), 3(6), 8(1)(b), 13(2)(a) and 71 of the
Sales Tax Act, 1990 (the Act), and 682(I)/2013 (relating to textile goods) issued
under Sections 4(c), 3(2)(b), 3(6), 8(1)(b) and 71 of the Act dated
4.4.2013, 30.5.2013 and 26.7.2013 respectively. Aggrieved of this
withdrawal and/or modification (in the rate) of sales tax, the appellants
challenged the same through constitution petitions before the learned
Islamabad High Court on the primary ground that such notifications had
not been issued by the Federal Government in accordance with Section 3
of the Act. The petitions were dismissed by the learned High Court
through a consolidated judgment. The Intra-Court Appeals (ICA) initiated
by the appellants also failed (note:- some constitution petitions were decided through
the impugned judgment in ICA). Leave in these matters was granted to consider
inter alia the following points:-
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 3 :-
“Learned counsel for the petitioners while attacking the
impugned judgment of the learned Division Bench of the
High Court affirming the judgment of the learned single
Judge-in-Chambers submits that the petitioners have no
cavil to the proposition that the Federal Government does
have the power, jurisdiction and authority to issue the
notification, however his argument is that the notifications
in question dated 4.4.2013 and 30.5.2013 challenged in the
constitution petitions were not issued by the Federal
Government rather by the Additional Secretary who was
not competent to do so. It is also submitted that to grant the
exemption is only the privileged authority of the Cabinet as
per the provisions of Article 90 of the Constitution of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 and even the Secretary
or Advisor to the Prime Minister has no competence to
issue such notifications and grant exemption. It is also
submitted that the notification dated 4.4.2013 was issued
before the approval was granted by the Advisor to the
Prime Minister which was done ex-post facto. This again
renders the said notification as nullity in the eyes of law.”
Notice was also issued to the learned Attorney General for Pakistan in
terms of Order 27A of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC); and in
view of the importance of the matter Mr. Ali Zafar, learned ASC was
appointed as an amicus curiae.
2.
Learned counsel for the appellants has argued that only the
Federal Government has the authority to issue notifications under
Section 3(b) of the Act. Federal Government is not defined in the Act, but
according to the provisions of Article 90 of the Constitution of the Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973 (the Constitution) the Prime Minister and the
Ministers, i.e. the Cabinet as a whole, constitute the Federal Government
for all intents and purposes. Neither the Prime Minister nor any Minister
singularly has the authority to exercise the power(s) provided in Section
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 4 :-
3 ibid. He submitted that as per Article 90 as it existed prior to the 18th
Amendment, the President was to exercise the executive authority either
directly or through the officers subordinate to him, but after the noted
amendment such exercise can only be done by the Cabinet which has
not been so done. He submitted that approval was sought from and
granted by the Advisor to the Prime Minister on Finance, as has been
conceded by the respondents in their comments (before the learned High Court),
as opposed to the Cabinet which he (Advisor) was not authorized in law to
give. Further, Rules 3 and 5 of the Rules of Business, 1973 (Rules of
Business) only provide for the transaction and allocation of business, and
there is nothing in the said Rules which empowers any individual to act
or take decisions on behalf of the Federal Government, particularly with
regard to levy of tax or grant of exemptions, etc. Learned counsel
contended that there has been non-compliance with Rule 16(d) of the
Rules of Business according to which proposals for levy/alteration of tax
must be brought before the Cabinet. Learned counsel has relied upon
Watan Party and another Vs. Federation of Pakistan and others (PLD
2011 SC 997) to support his concept of the executive.
3.
On the other hand, the crux of the collective arguments of
the learned counsel for the respondents is that the impugned
notifications have been lawfully issued. According to them, the purport of
Article 90 of the Constitution, as is made clear by sub-article (2), is that
the Prime Minister or a Minister is empowered to exercise the executive
authority, and not the Cabinet as a whole. According to Article 99 of the
Constitution executive actions shall be taken by the Federal Government
in the name of the President and pursuant to the article ibid the Rules of
Business have been framed which specify the manner in which orders
and instruments made and executed in the name of the President are to
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 5 :-
be authenticated, and also provides for the allocation of business. They
submitted that Division has been defined in Rule 2(vi) of the Rules of
Business as the administrative unit responsible for the conduct of
business of the Federal Government. Rule 3(3) provides that the business
of the government would be allocated to the Divisions in accordance with
Schedule II, which in turn provides that tax policy and tax
administration fall within the domain of the Revenue Division (Entries 1 and
2 of Clause 35 of Schedule II). Therefore the Chairman FBR, who is the ex-officio
Secretary of the Revenue Division is duly empowered under Rule 4(2)
read with Rule 3(3) to issue notifications pertaining to modification of tax
which falls within the purview of tax policy and tax administration.
Reference was also made to Rule 7(2) read with Schedule IV which allows
the Secretary to authenticate by signature all orders and other
instruments made and executed in the name of the President. It was
further argued that despite the fact that the Secretary was competent to
issue such notification under the Rules of Business, he sought approval
of the Advisor by issuing the note for the Advisor to the Prime Minister
on Finance dated 24.5.2013. They submitted that there is no
requirement for matters pertaining to tax administration to be routed to
and approved by the Cabinet.
4.
The summary of the submissions of the learned Additional
Attorney General is that:-
(i)
The Federal Government consists of the President and the
Cabinet. The Federal Government conducts its business in
accordance with the Rules of Business framed pursuant to
Article 99(3) of the Constitution.
(ii)
The levy and exemption of tax is the function of Parliament
under Article 77 of the Constitution and grant of exemption
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 6 :-
by the competent authority under the relevant law is in the
nature of subordinate legislation.
(iii)
The power of exemption if given to the executive per se,
would
amount
to
the
negation
of
the
doctrine
of
parliamentary supremacy and the doctrine of separation of
powers.
(iv)
If the proposition that exemption is not subordinate
legislation is rejected and it is held that on the contrary it is
an executive act, even then the Federal Government would
conduct its business in accordance with the Rules of
Business.
(v)
The impugned notification has been competently issued by
the Secretary in exercise of the powers conferred upon him.
Learned law officer stated at the very outset that Federal Government
has not been defined, therefore the meaning of Federation, Federal
Government, and executive authority of the Federation all need
elucidation. In this context he gave us a broad view of the Constitution.
Part III of the Constitution deals with the Federation which (part) consists
of 3 chapters. Chapter 1 relates to the President, his term of office and
his powers, etc. (Articles 41-49; particularly Article 48); Chapter 2 deals with the
Parliament (Articles 50-89); and Chapter 3 pertains to the Federal
Government (Articles 90-100). In the context of the matters at hand, he also
made reference to Articles 7 (definition of the State) and 77 (deals with taxation
power of the State which is to be “by or under the authority of law”).
5.
In elucidating the meaning of “executive authority” the
learned Additional Attorney General submitted that it was the residuary
power after accounting for legislative and judicial power. The rationale
behind this contention was that the earliest powers surrendered by the
British Crown were the legislative and judicial powers, thus the only
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 7 :-
power left with the British Crown, and keeping in mind the fact that our
Constitution is based upon the British Parliamentary form of government
with modifications according to our needs, was the executive power
which was two-fold – prerogative powers and powers vesting in the
Crown. With a written constitution such as ours the only powers are
those which are provided in the Constitution and there are no inherent
powers. Therefore according to him the source of the executive authority
of the Federation is the Constitution itself and the laws enacted by
Parliament. With this background, he referred to the judgment reported
as Rai Sahib Ram Jawaya Kapur and others Vs. The State of Punjab
(AIR 1955 SC 549 at page 554 paragraph 7) in which the interpretation
of Article 73 of the Indian Constitution was involved which (article) is pari
materia to Article 90 of our Constitution except that the phrase “subject
to the Constitution” was not present, and that the executive authority of
the Federation “vests in the President”. The ratio of the case of Rai
Sahib1 (supra), that the executive authority in Article 73 ibid is the residue
of the legislative and judicial authority has been recently upheld in Pu
Myllai Hlychho and others Vs. State of Mizoram and others (AIR
2005 SC 1537) and Satya Narain Shukla Vs. Union of India and
others [(2006) 9 SCC 69]. He stated that there is a similar provision in
the Australian Constitution and the Australian High Court has defined
“executive authority” in the case reported as The State of Victoria and
another and The Commonwealth of Australia and Hayden [(1975)
134 CLR 338]. Further, Article 2 of the US Constitution provides that
the “executive power” shall vest in the President, however according to
the
learned
law
officer,
power
and
authority
can
be
used
interchangeably. The judgment from the US jurisdiction cited in this
1 AIR 1955 SC 549 = (1955) 2 SCR 225
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 8 :-
regard is the seminal case of Lois P. Myers, Adninistratix of Frank S.
Myers, Appt. Vs. United States [272 U.S. 52 (1926) at 128 and 129].
6.
As regards the definition of “Federal Government”, he
submitted that the President is the Head of the State (Article 41 of the
Constitution), exercising the sovereign power of the State. According to
Article 48(2) of the Constitution the President is to act upon the advice of
the Cabinet, which could mean two things:- one is the Cabinet itself, the
other is in Article 90 which very specifically refers to the Prime Minister
and Federal Ministers. Article 91 defines the Cabinet as including the
Ministers of State (Article 92), who have been deliberately omitted from
Article 90. Therefore according to him, the Federal Government is the
President along with the Cabinet headed by the Prime Minister. The
Federal Government conducts its business in accordance with the Rules
of Business framed pursuant to Article 99(2) of the Constitution. The
word “business” has been defined in Rule 2(iii) of the Rules of Business
as all work done by the Federal Government, which he submits includes
both executive and legislative work. When the Federal Government
conducts its business which includes the business which has been
conferred on it pursuant to an Act of Parliament (reference was made to Article
77 whereby the Parliament is empowered to levy tax), that Act or law becomes
relevant. The Sales Tax Act, 1990 provides that the grant of exemption is
to be made by the Federal Government. Therefore this is not the
executive, but legislative business. Levy of tax (which includes exemption from
tax) is a legislative business, and accordingly the grant of exemption itself
is a part of subordinate legislation. To conduct the business of
subordinate legislation, the Federal Government has allocated this
business to the Divisions concerned, in this case the Revenue Division.
In this regard he relied upon the judgment reported as Tanveer A.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 9 :-
Qureshi Vs. President of Pakistan, President House, Islamabad and 3
others (PLD 1997 Lahore 263). In support of the above contention he
referred to the Pakistan Telecommunication (Re-Organisation) Act, 1996
which defines “Federal Government” as the Ministry of Information
Technology and Telecommunication Division. By making reference to
Article 97 of the Constitution, he submitted that once a law made by
Parliament occupies the field then the authority is to be exercised in the
manner provided by the law itself. While referring to Article 99(3) of the
Constitution, he stated that granting exemption from tax is in the nature
of subordinate legislation, therefore Article 90 which pertains to the
exercise of executive authority, would not be relevant.
7.
In Article 90, the phrase “officers subordinate” was replaced
by “Prime Minister and Federal Ministers”. He referred to Emperor Vs.
Sibnath Banerji and others (AIR 1945 PC 156) and The Crown Vs.
Muhammad Afzal Bangash (PLD 1956 FC 1). He submitted that though
the phrase “officers subordinate” as opposed to “Prime Minister and
Federal Ministers” was used in our previous constitutions, the former
phrase still included Ministers. He submitted that rationale behind the
insertion of the words “subject to the Constitution” in Article 90, as in
other articles of the Constitution beginning with the same phrase, was to
differentiate the extent of the executive authority of the Federation in
those situations from what was provided in Article 99. Article 90 of the
Constitution starts with “subject to the Constitution”, which is a
departure from the corresponding articles in the previous constitutions
and the Indian Constitution. This phrase was never used earlier.
Therefore the Federal Government constitutes the President along with
the Cabinet headed by the Prime Minister and the business of the
Federal Government is to be conducted in the manner provided and
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 10 :-
mandated by the Constitution in Article 99. As far as exemption is
concerned, that falls under the power to levy tax which is dealt with by
Article 77 and such power vests with Parliament, thus it is Parliament
which will determine the manner in which such power is to be exercised.
Since, according to him, the grant of exemption from sales tax is
subordinate legislation it falls within the business of the executive which
is to be exercised in the manner provided in the Rules of Business.
Ministers have been accorded protection in terms of Article 248 of the
Constitution. Finally while referring to Rules 4(2), 3(3), Schedule II, Rules
5(8) and 5(9) of the Rules of Business, learned law officer submitted that
the business pertaining to tax has been allocated to the Revenue Division
whose official head is the Secretary. In support of his contentions, he
referred to the judgments reported as M. Afzal & Son and others Vs.
Federal Government of Pakistan and another (PLD 1977 Lah 1327 at
1330 paragraph 7), Collector of Customs, Sales Tax and Central
Excise etc. Vs. M/s Sanghar Sugar Mills Ltd., Karachi etc. (PTCL
2007 CL 565 at page 591 paragraph 24), Principles of Statutory
Interpretation (14th Ed.) by Justice G. P. Singh, Indian Express
Newspapers (Bombay) P. Ltd. and others Vs. Union of India and
others (AIR 1986 SC 515), Union of India Vs. Paliwal Electricals (P)
Ltd. and another (AIR 1996 SC 3106), British India Corporation Ltd.
Vs. Collector of Central Excise, Allahabad and others (AIR 1963 SC
104), A. Sanjeevi Naidu etc., etc. Vs. State of Madras and another
(AIR 1970 SC 1102 at paragraphs 10 and 11), Islamic Republic of
Pakistan through the Secretary, Ministry of Defence, Government of
Pakistan, Rawalpindi and another Vs. Amjad Ali Mirza (PLD 1977 SC
182 at page 192), Aman Ullah Khan and others Vs. The Federal
Government of Pakistan through Secretary, Ministry of Finance,
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 11 :-
Islamabad and others (PLD 1990 SC 1092), Mohtarma Benazir
Bhutto Vs. The President of Pakistan through the Secretary to the
President (PLD 1992 SC 492 at page 516).
8.
The learned amicus stated at the very outset that the State is
like a ship and the Government its crew. The State has to be run by
natural persons. The impugned notifications were purportedly issued
under the provisions of the Act and have been challenged on the ground
that the decision to issue them was not taken by the Federal Government
i.e. the Prime Minister and the Cabinet. In this context the questions
which require resolution are, first, who is the Federal Government/who
are the natural persons who will run the State; secondly, what is the
business that these persons, i.e. the Federal Government, are to
run/what is their executive authority/what is the extent or limit of that
authority; and thirdly, how does the Federal Government conduct this
business/how does it exercise the power to decide and how does it then
implement the law and the decision.
9.
The learned amicus submitted that in a Parliamentary
system, the Federal Government consists of the Prime Minister and
Cabinet who are elected under the Constitution and they run the
business of the State. In doing so, they have to exercise executive
authority. Within the realm of such executive authority they may also be
called upon by law to exercise legislative functions also known as
delegated legislation and quasi-judicial functions as well. All such
functions fall within the business of the State which they have to
perform. The issuance of notifications and grant of exemptions pertaining
to tax are an executive function given to the government as delegated
legislation.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 12 :-
10.
After tracing a brief history of executive authority in
Pakistan, learned amicus submitted that the position presently is that
the executive authority no longer vests in the President although it is to
be exercised in his name, but it is now to be exercised directly by the
Federal Government which consists of the Prime Minister and Federal
Ministers. This Federal Government is to act through the Prime Minister
who is the Chief Executive. Therefore direct executive authority has been
given to the Federal Government. However he very candidly stated that
whether the executive authority vests in the President or in the Prime
Minister and Cabinet is not relevant for the decision of the third question
(identified hereinabove) which is how that executive authority is to be
exercised.
11.
The framers of the Constitution envisaged that if every
decision were to be taken by the President himself or the Cabinet as a
whole, the business of the government would fail. Thus the Constitution
provides for making of rules for allocation of business. These rules create
a cascading hierarchy of authority with the Prime Minister and the
Cabinet at the top, then Ministers, under whom there are Ministries,
then Divisions which have a Secretary in charge with officers subordinate
to the Secretary and each Division is given a business. Every Division is
divided into sections with an officer and such sections also have
businesses allocated thereto. Finally there are departments. The most
important binding force according to the learned amicus is the concept of
collective responsibility, enshrined in our Constitution. The scheme
whereby, for example, a Minister is responsible for the acts of his
Ministry; this is not delegation of power, but acting on behalf of.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 13 :-
12.
The learned amicus referred to the Watan Party2 case (supra)
(at paragraph 108) and Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif Vs. President
of Pakistan and others (PLD 1993 SC 473) to elucidate the meaning of
executive authority. According to him, executive authority is the
administration of the government in accordance with law. There is no
inherent executive authority and such authority has to be as provided for
in the Constitution or the law, as held by Kaikaus, J. in Mian Jamal
Shah Vs. (1) The Member Election Commission, Government of
Pakistan, Lahore (2) The Returning Officer, Constituency of the
National Assembly of Pakistan No. NW-II, Peshawar II, and (3) Khan
Nasrullah Khan (PLD 1966 SC 1). Further, delegated legislation of
exemption from tax or modification of rates under the umbrella of the
general law is permissible. In this regard he referred to Zaibtun Textile
Mills Ltd. Vs. Central Board of Revenue and others (PLD 1983 SC
358) and Messrs Sh. Abdur Rahim, Allah Ditta Vs. Federation of
Pakistan and others (PLD 1988 SC 670).
13.
The learned amicus made extensive reference to Articles 90,
91, 92, 97 98, 99, 41 and 48 of the Constitution and the relevant Rules
of Business (as amended up to 16.1.2016). According to him, Article 90 provides
that:- (i) executive authority is to be exercised in the name of the
President (as he is the head of the State as per Article 41); (ii) executive authority is
to be exercised by the Federal Government through the Prime Minister
and the Federal Ministers; and (iii) the Federal Government shall act
through the Prime Minister who shall be the Chief Executive of the
Federation. He stated that the corresponding Article 39(1) of the
Constitution of 1956 used to provide that:- (i) executive authority shall
vest in the President; (ii) executive authority shall be exercised by the
2 PLD 2011 SC 997
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 14 :-
President; and (iii) that he may do so directly or through officers
subordinate to him. Previously there was no concept of Federal
Government. Article 31 in the Constitution of 1962 corresponded to the
current Article 90; in which the position was the same as Article 39(1) of
the Constitution of 1956. The same position was reflected in the
Constitution of 1972. However, in the Constitution of 1973 (as originally
enacted) the scheme was the same as it is today. In the Constitution of
1985, the old 1956 provision(s) was brought back. Article 53 of the
Indian Constitution corresponds with and reflects the position at the
time of our Constitution of 1956. However learned amicus submits that
the issue as to how the President (when the power previously vested in him), or the
Prime Minister and/or the Cabinet is to exercise that power (when the power
is to be exercised by them) will remain the same. The jurisprudence may
change as to who is to exercise decision making powers but the concept
of allocation of powers will not change.
14.
He then referred to Article 91 of the Constitution which also
reflects the concept that executive authority would be exercised by the
Prime Minister and the Cabinet. Article 91(6) provides for the concept of
collective responsibility, which was there in Article 37(1) and (5) in the
Constitution of 1956, but interestingly was absent in the Constitution of
1973 as originally enacted, rather it was reintroduced in the
Constitutional amendment of 1985. Article 74 of the Indian Constitution
is more or less the same as Article 91 of our current Constitution. Going
further, our Constitution also defines the limits of executive authority in
Article 97; the same is restricted to the items contained in the Federal
Legislative List.
15.
He then moved on to the question of how the executive
authority is to be exercised for which he referred to Article 99 of which
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 15 :-
sub-article (3) is the most important and relevant according to which
framers of the Constitution deemed it fit to empower the Federal
Government to make rules for the allocation and transaction of business.
However in the Constitution of 1973 (as originally enacted) the language was
slightly different and rather clearer according to him which provided that
the Federal Government was empowered to delegate its functions to
officers or authorities. In 1985, the article was shortened, empowering
the President to make such rules, but such powers were then given to
the Federal Government through the 18th Amendment. Therefore the
concept of delegation contained in the original Constitution of 1973 does
not exist anymore and this departure is most relevant. Now the officers
exercise executive authority on behalf of the Federal Government as
opposed to acting in delegation of such powers (note:- Article 77 of the Indian
Constitution provides for allocation of business).
In view of the foregoing, he concluded as follows:- executive
authority is to be exercised in the name of the President; executive
authority is to be exercised by the Prime Minister and the Cabinet; the
Federal Government may act through the Prime Minister who is the Chief
Executive of the Federation; this executive authority extends to subjects
enumerated in the Federal Legislative Lists; and that the Federal
Government can make rules for the allocation of its business, i.e. the
Rules of Business. He referred to the judgments reported as Tariq Aziz-
ud-Din and others: in re (2010 SCMR 1301), Government of Punjab
through Secretary, Industries Mines and Minerals Development,
Department, Lahore and another Vs. Shakeel Ahmad (2006 SCMR
485), Ahmad Nawaz Shah, Senior Intelligence Officer, Director
General, Intelligence and Investigation (Customs and Excise),
Islamabad Vs. Chairman, Central Board of Revenue, Islamabad and
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 16 :-
10 others (2002 SCMR 560) and The State Vs. Anwar Saif Ullah Khan
(PLD 2016 SC 276) which held that the Rules of Business have been
framed under the Constitution and are therefore to be followed.
16.
Coming to the Rules of Business, learned amicus referred to
the definitions of the words “business”, “Cabinet”, “case”, “Division”, and
“Ministry” provided in Rule 2. He discussed Rules 3, 4, 5 [particularly 5(9)(d)
as per the same the Secretary is empowered to dispose of some business, Rule 5(10) and Rule
5(11)], and 6. He then read extensively from a book titled “The
Government and the Law” authored by Professor Griffith. He relied upon
the cases of Sibnath Banerji3 (supra) and Afzal Bangash4 (supra). He also
referred to a series of seven cases that have arisen from this very issue in
India, they are:- Rai Sahib’s5 case (supra), M/s Bijoya Lakshmi Cotton
Mills Ltd. Vs. State of West Bengal and others (AIR 1967 SC 1145),
A. Sanjeevi Naidu, etc. Vs. State of Madras and another [1970 (1)
SCC 443], U.N.R. Rao Vs. Smt. Indira Gandhi [1971 (2) SCC 63], Bk.
Sardari Lal Vs. Union of India and others [1971 (1) SCC 411],
Samsher Singh Vs. State of Punjab and another (AIR 1974 SC 2192)
and State of Sikkim Vs. Dorjee Tshering Bhutia and others [(1991) 4
SCC 243], Gulabrao Keshavrao Patil and others Vs. State of Gujarat
and others [(1996) 2 SCC 26], MRF Ltd Vs. Manohar Parrikar and
others [(2010) 11 SCC 374] and Delhi International Airport Ltd. Vs.
International Lease Finance Corpn & others (AIR 2015 SC 1903)
which pertain to allocation as opposed to delegation. He concluded that
because there is allocation under the Rules of Business, the decisions
have to be taken in accordance with it.
3 AIR 1945 PC 156
4 PLD 1956 FC 1
5 AIR 1955 SC 549 = (1955) 2 SCR 225
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 17 :-
Finally he referred to Rule 16 of the Rules of Business which
provides for Cabinet Rules and according to him sub-rule (d) which
pertains to levy, alteration etc. of tax seems to be applicable to the
instant matter, according to which the proposal may have been made by
the relevant Division but has to eventually be brought before the
Cabinet.
17.
Heard. This case raises important and interesting questions
of constitutional significance in relation to various key concepts found
embedded in the Constitution of Pakistan. The most important of these is
the connotation of the term “Federal Government”. Furthermore, we are
also required to examine the concept of “executive powers” exercised by
the Federal Government in addition to the various allied provisions, all of
significant constitutional import, which are referred to below. Analysis is
also required for, and in relation to, the Rules of Business.
18.
Prior to analyzing the constitutional provisions we need to
make a quick survey of their constitutional predecessors in the earlier
constitutional arrangements in the subcontinent. For this purpose a
convenient take off point is provided by the Government of India Act,
1935. However, prior to examining it closely, a brief reference to earlier
Government of India Acts would be advantageous.
19.
The first significant Government of India Act was passed in
1833, the Preamble whereof reads, “as an Act for effecting an
Arrangement with the East India Company and for the better government
of His Majesty’s Indian territories”. It was to remain in force till the 30th
day of April 18546. This Act was followed by the Government of India Act,
6 Prior to the enactment of the 1833 Act the East India Company had certain rights of governance in
relation to the territories in India. These rights were given statutory effect by means of the East Indian
Company Act, 1773, which, however, is not relevant for our purposes. These rights were then surrendered
by the Company to the British Government for various considerations
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 18 :-
1853. The necessity for this enactment was obvious since the previous
arrangement was due to expire in 1854.
20.
It was followed by the Indian Councils Act, 1861, the
preamble whereof stated that it was an Act to make better provision for
the constitution of the Council of the Governor General of India and for
various other contingencies. The 1861 Act was amended in 1892 to effect
certain changes in the constitution of the Councils.
21.
The next major development took place in 1915 through the
enactment of the Government of India Act, 1915. This was the forerunner
of the Government of India Act, 1935. Section 1 of the 1915 Act dealt
with the powers of the Crown and stipulated that the territories for the
time being vested in the Crown shall be governed in the name of the King
and the rights which were previously exercised by the East India
Company prior to the 1853 Act would be exercised by, and in the name
of, the King (this is a formulation, which, in a modified form, persists till today). Section 2
dealt with the Secretary of State and Section 3 related to the constitution
of the Council of India. Under Section 6 all powers required to be
exercised by the Secretary of State in Council were to be exercised by the
Council of India. Part-IV provided that the superintendence, direction
and control of the civil and military government of India was to vest in
the Governor General in Council who, in turn, was required to obey
orders passed by the Secretary of State. The Governor General was
authorized to set up an Executive Council under Section 35. Section 40
has bearing on the present case inasmuch as it is the legislative
predecessor, and forerunner, of subsequent corresponding articles in the
successive constitutions of Pakistan. Section 40 is reproduced below:
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 19 :-
“40. – (1) All orders and other proceedings of the Governor-
General in Council shall be expressed to be made by the
Governor-General in Council, and shall be signed by a
Secretary to the Government of India, or otherwise, as the
Governor-General in Council may direct.
(2) The governor-general may make rules and orders for the
more convenient transaction of business in his executive
council, and every order made, or act done, in accordance with
such rules and orders, shall be treated as being the order or
the act of the Governor-General in Council.”
It is not necessary for purposes of the present case to examine the other
provisions of the Act.
22.
We may note in passing that the 1915 Act was the first
comprehensive legislation for, and in relation to, the governance of India
and marked an attempt, perhaps a tentative first step, towards the rule
of law as opposed to actions taken in exercise of the royal prerogative or
based on the decisions of the Secretary of State. By means of the Fourth
Schedule thereto the previous enactments dealing with the governance of
India, beginning with the East India Company Act, 1770 onwards, were
repealed.
23.
The 1915 Act was succeeded by the Government of India Act,
1924, which was essentially intended as a consolidating Act and hence
does not require any further discussion. Then followed the Government
of India Act, 1935. Part-I of the Act was essentially introductory in
nature and provided, in terms of Section 2, for the Government of India
by the Crown. Part-II related to the Federation of India and conferred
authority on the Crown to declare, by Proclamation, that from the
appointed date the Federation of India would be created. However, in
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 20 :-
terms of Section 320 it was stipulated the Act would come into force in
separate stages. It read as under:-
“320(1)
Part II of this Act shall come into force on such
date as His Majesty may appoint by the Proclamation
establishing the Federation and the date so appointed is the
date referred to in this Act as the date of the establishment of
the Federation.
(2)
The remainder of this Act shall, subject to any express
provision to the contrary, come into force on such date as His
Majesty in Council may appoint and the said date is the date
referred to in this Act as the commencement of Part III of this
Act.”
24.
Due to various political vicissitudes which were an integral
part of the struggle for freedom it was Part-III of the Act, which related to
the Provinces, which came into full force. The part relating to the
Federation was not enforced in pre-partition India (after partition the
Government of India Act, 1935, as radically re-structured by Governor General’s Order No.22,
was applied in Pakistan as a precursor of the 1956 Constitution. However, for purposes of our
analysis it is the original version of the Act which is material).
25.
The Federal Executive is the title of Chapter-II of the Act.
Section 7 related to the functions of the Governor General on behalf of
the King and Section 9 related to the Council of Ministers and its
functions. Both sections are reproduced below in order to illustrate the
striking similarity with their constitutional successors in Pakistan:-
“7(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the executive
authority of the Federation shall be exercised on behalf of His
Majesty by the Governor-General, either directly or through
officers subordinate to him, but nothing in this section shall
prevent the Federal Legislature from conferring functions upon
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 21 :-
subordinate authorities, or be deemed to transfer to the
Governor-General any functions conferred by any existing
Indian law on any court, judge or officer, or on any local or
other authority.
(2)
References in this Act to the functions of the Governor-
General shall be construed as references to his powers and
duties in the exercise of the executive authority of the
Federation and to any other powers and duties conferred or
imposed on him as Governor-General by or under this Act,
other than powers exercisable by him by reason that they have
been assigned to him by His Majesty under Part I of this Act.
(3)
The provisions of the Third Schedule to this Act shall
have effect with respect to the salary and allowances of the
Governor-General and the provision to be made for enabling
him to discharge conveniently and with dignity the duties of his
office.”
---------------------------------------
“9(1) There shall be a council of ministers, not exceeding ten
in number, to aid and advise the Governor-General in the
exercise of his functions, except in so far as he is by or under
this Act required to exercise his functions or any of them in his
discretion:
Provided that nothing in this subsection shall be
construed as preventing the Governor-General from exercising
his individual judgment in any case where by or under this Act
he is required so to do.
(2)
The Governor-General in his discretion may preside at
meetings of the council of ministers.
(3)
If any question arises whether any matter is or is not a
matter as respects which the Governor-General is by or under
this Act required to act in his discretion or to exercise his
individual judgment, the decision of the Governor-General in
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 22 :-
his discretion shall be final, and the validity of anything done
by the Governor-General shall not be called in question on the
ground that he ought or ought not to have acted in his
discretion, or ought or ought not to have exercised his
individual judgment.”
26.
Section 17 is also relevant and stipulated that all executive
actions of the Federal Government shall be expressed to be taken in the
name of the Governor General. The said section is reproduced below:-
“17 - (1)
All executive actions of the Federal Government
shall be expressed to be taken in the name of the Governor-
General.
(2)
Orders and other instruments made and executed in the
name of the Governor-General shall be authenticated in such
manner as may be specified in rules to be made by the
Governor-General, and the validity of an order or instrument
which is so authenticated shall not be called in question on the
ground that it is not an order or instrument made or executed
by the Governor-General.
(3)
The Governor-General shall make rules for the more
convenient transaction of the business of the Federal
Government, and for the allocation among ministers of the said
business in so far as it is not business with respect to which the
Governor-General is by or under this Act required to act in his
discretion.
(4)
The rules shall include provisions requiring ministers
and secretaries to Government to transmit to the Governor-
General all such information with respect to the business of the
Federal Government as may be specified in the rules, or as the
Governor-General may otherwise require to be so transmitted,
and in particular requiring a minister to bring to the notice of
the Governor-General, and the appropriate secretary to bring
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 23 :-
to the notice of the minister concerned and of the Governor-
General, any matter under consideration by him which
involves, or appears to him likely to involve, any special
responsibility of the Governor-General.
(5)
In the discharge of his functions under subsections (2),
(3) and (4) of this section the Governor-General shall act in his
discretion after consultation with his ministers.”
27.
We propose to begin with the term “Federal Government”. It
has been submitted before us on behalf of the Government, that the
concept of Federal Government had not been defined and hence was
required to be determined. This, we must point out, is less than
accurate. The General Clauses Act, 1897, at Section 3(8-ab) contains a
compendious description of the meaning of the said term for, and in
relation to, five different time periods. In brief, it will be noted that the
concept of Federal Government has not remained static but has varied
with the passage of time. The definition in the General Clauses Act thus
provides a convenient overview of the concept. The said definition is
reproduced hereinbelow:-
“Federal Government”. Federal Government shall –
(a) in relation to anything done before the commencement of
Part III of the Government of India Act, 1935 mean the
Governor General in Council or the authority competent at
the relevant date to exercise the functions corresponding to
those subsequently exercised by the Governor General;
(b) in relation to anything done after the commencement of
Part III of the said Act, but before the establishment of the
Federation of Pakistan, mean, as respects matters with
respect to which the Governor General was by or under the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 24 :-
provisions of the said Act then in force required to act in
his discretion, the Governor General and as respects other
matters, the Governor General in Council;
(c) in relation to anything done after the establishment of the
Federation of Pakistan but before the twenty third day of
March, 1956, mean the Governor General; and shall
include-
(i)
in relation to functions entrusted under subsection
(1) of section 124 of the said Act to the Government
of a Province, the Provincial Government acting
within the scope of the authority given to it under
that subsection; and
(ii)
in relation to the administration before the
fourteenth day of October, 1955, of a Chief
Commissioner’s Province, the Chief Commissioner
acting within the scope of the authority given to him
under subsection (3) of section 94 of the said Act,
and
(d)
In relation to anything done or to be done, after the twenty
third day of March, 1956, mean the President; and shall
include in relation to functions entrusted to the Government
of a Province, the Provincial Government acting within the
scope of the authority given to it by the President.
(e)
In relation to anything done or to be done, after the
fourteenth day of August, 1973, mean the Prime Minister
and the Federal Ministers; and shall include in relation to
functions entrusted to the Government of a Province, the
Provincial Government acting within the scope of the
authority given to or power conferred on it by the Federal
Government;
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 25 :-
28.
It can be observed that the legislature elucidated the concept
of Federal Government over five phases. The first began prior to the
commencement of Part-III of the Government of India Act, 1935, and
refers to the Governor General in Council, or the authority competent, at
the relevant date, to exercise those functions which were subsequently
exercised by the Governor General. During this period executive
authority vested in the Crown was exercised in a manner untrammeled
by restrictions and at the absolute discretion of the Crown. The second
time period began after the commencement of Part-III of the said Act but
before the establishment of the Federation of Pakistan. This was, in
essence, the nascent functioning of constitutional rule in a country
which was still subservient to the Crown. It draws a distinction between
the Governor General (exercising his discretionary power) and the Governor
General in Council (a concept which is analogous to the functioning of a cabinet). The
third time period commenced after the creation of the Federation of
Pakistan but prior to the 23rd day of March, 1956 and refers to the
Governor General (it is clarified that functions, in relation to provincial administration do
not concern us in this analysis). The fourth time period began after the 23rd day
of March, 1956, i.e. with the introduction of the Constitution of 1956,
and refers to the President, in whom the executive authority of the state
was vested, in name, to be exercised in accordance with various
constitutional provisions (as well as certain functions in relation to the provinces). This
definition omits any specific reference to the Constitution of 1962.
Finally, we come to the period after the 14th day of August, 1973 which
refers to the Prime Minister and the Federal Ministers and, once again,
includes, in relation to the functions entrusted to the Government of a
Province, the Provincial Government acting within the scope of the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 26 :-
authority given to it, or power conferred on it, by the Federal
Government.
29.
This is essentially a descriptive definition. As observed
earlier, for our purposes it will not be necessary to embark on a
discussion for, and in relation to, the provincial sphere conceptualized by
it. However, before we embark upon a normative analysis of the concept
of Federal Government it will be advantageous to place it within a
historical perspective. Sections 7, 9 and 17 of the Government of India
Act, 1935 are of seminal importance for, and in relation to, the
development
of
constitutional
terminology
in
the
subsequent
constitutional dispensations relating to the exercise of political power.
Essentially the 1935 Act furnished the template on which the
Constitution of Pakistan, 1956, was based, which, in turn laid down the
architectural framework within which the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973
was framed.
30.
Chapter II of Part-II of the 1935 Act bore the heading “the
Federal Executive”. The term Federal Executive considered contextually
appears to be a synonym and means exactly the same thing as the
Federal Government. Section 7 is the first section contained in Chapter-II
and has been reproduced above.
Section 7 is followed by Section 8 which clarifies the matters in
relation to which the executive authority of the Federation extends. It is
coterminous with the Federal legislature’s powers to make laws. It is not
necessary for purposes of this case to deal with the other topics covered
by Section 8. Section 8, in turn, is followed by Section 9 which bears the
heading “Administration of Federal affairs”.
Thereafter we have Section 10 which relates to the appointment of
Ministers by the Governor General. Travelling further, we come to
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 27 :-
Section 17 which, as noted, provides that all executive action(s) of the
Federal Government are to be expressed to be in the name of the
Governor General.
31.
It can be seen, at a glance, that the above provisions are the
foundations on the basis of which Articles 90 and 99 of the Constitution
of 1973 were drafted. However, before we arrive at the 1973 Constitution
we can examine the comparable provisions of the 1956 Constitution.
32.
Part-IV of the 1956 Constitution bears the heading “The
Federation”. Chapter-I, which follows, bears the title “The Federal
Government”. Article 32 deals with the office of the President and the
relevant part thereof is reproduced below:-
“32.
The President. – (1) There shall be a President of
Pakistan, in the Constitution referred to as the President, who
shall be elected by an electoral college consisting of the
members of the National Assembly and the Provincial
Assemblies, in accordance with the provisions contained in the
First Schedule.
The Cabinet is dealt with under Article 37 which is reproduced
below:-
“37. The Cabinet. – (1) There shall be a Cabinet of Ministers
with the Prime Minister at its head, to aid and advise the
President in the exercise of his functions.
(2)
The question whether any, and if so, what, advice has
been tendered by the Cabinet, or a Minister or Minister of
State, shall not be inquired into in any court.
(3)
The President shall, in his discretion, appoint from
amongst the members of the National Assembly a Prime
Minister who, in his opinion, is most likely to command the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 28 :-
confidence of the majority of the members of the National
Assembly.
(4)
Other Ministers, Ministers of State and Deputy
Ministers shall be appointed and removed from office by the
President, but no person shall be appointed a Minister of State
or Deputy Minister unless he is a member of the National
Assembly.
(5)
The Cabinet, together with the Ministers of State, shall
be collectively responsible to the National Assembly.
(6)
The Prime Minister shall hold office during the
pleasure of the President, but the President shall not exercise
his powers under this clause unless he is satisfied that the
Prime Minister does not command the confidence of the
majority of the members of the National Assembly.
(7)
In the exercise of his functions, the President shall act
in accordance with the advice of the Cabinet or the
appropriate Minister or Minister of State, as the case may be,
except in cases where he is empowered by the Constitution to
act in his discretion, and except as respects the exercise of his
powers under clause (6).
Explanation. – For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby declared
that for the purpose of clause (4) the appropriate Minister shall
be the Prime Minister.”
The next relevant article for our purposes is Article 39 which deals
with the executive authority of the Federation and reads as under:
“39. Extent of executive authority of the Federation. – (1)
The executive authority of the Federation shall vest in the
President and shall be exercised by him, either directly or
through officers subordinate to him, in accordance with the
Constitution.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 29 :-
(2)
The executive authority of the Federation shall extend
to all matters with respect to which Parliament has power to
make laws:
Provided that, save as expressly provided in the
Constitution or in any Act of Parliament which Parliament is,
under the Constitution, competent to enact for a Province, the
said authority shall not extend in any Province to any matter
with respect to which the Provincial Legislature also has
power to make laws.”
Thereafter we come to Article 41 which deals with the conduct of
business of the Federal Government and reads as under:-
“41. Conduct of business of the Federal Government. – (1)
All executive actions of the Federal Government shall be
expressed to be taken in the name of the President.
(2)
The President shall by rules specify the manner in
which orders and other instruments made and executed in his
name shall be authenticated, and the validity of any order or
instrument so authenticated shall not be questioned in any
court on the ground that it was not made or executed by the
President.
(3)
The President shall also make rules for the allocation
and transaction of the business of the Federal Government.”
33.
The Constitution of 1962 is not really relevant to the present
discussion since the entire axis was altered from a parliamentary form of
government into a presidential one. Nevertheless, it is striking that
despite this, many of the key concepts were borrowed from the preceding
constitutional instruments.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 30 :-
Part-III of the 1962 Constitution bore the heading “The Centre” i.e.
the Federation. Chapter-III was titled The Central Government, which
was the original term for the Federal Government. Article 31 dealt with
the Executive Authority of the Federation and read as under:-
“31.
Executive Authority of Republic vests in President. –
The executive authority of the Republic is vested in the
President and shall be exercised by him, either directly or
through officers subordinate to him in accordance with this
Constitution and the law.”
Thereafter, comes Article 32 which relates to the Business of
Government and is reproduced below:-
“32.
Execution of instruments, etc. – The President may –
(a) Specify the manner in which orders and other
instruments made and executed in pursuance of any
authority or power vested in the President shall be
expressed and authenticated; and
(b) Regulate the allocation and transaction of the
business of the Central Government and establish
divisions of that Government.”
34.
The Constitution of 1972, being merely an interim
arrangement does not require analysis.
35.
The present Constitution came into force on 12th of April,
1973. Once again Part-III deals with the Federation of Pakistan.
Chapter-III bears the heading “The Federal Government”. Article 90, the
article with which we are primarily concerned, is the opening article of
Chapter-III and is reproduced below (as originally enacted):-
“90. The Federal Government. – (1) Subject to the
Constitution, the executive authority of the Federation shall be
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 31 :-
exercised in the name of the President by the Federal
Government, consisting of the Prime Minister and the Federal
Ministers, which shall act through the Prime Minister who
shall be the chief executive of the Federation.
(2)
In the performance of his functions under the
Constitution, the Prime Minister may act either directly or
through the Federal Ministers.
(3)
The Prime Minister and the Federal Ministers shall be
collectively responsible to the National Assembly.”
The important point to note about the original structure of Article
90 is that the first two clauses are identical to those contained in its
present version. The third clause, which deals with the subject of
collective responsibility to the National Assembly no longer remains a
part of Article 90 since it has been moved to Article 91(6) with a minor
terminological emendation. However, what is important to note is that in
the interregnum between the enactment of Article 90, as it originally
stood, and its present restoration, a radical change was introduced in
1985. By means of the Revival of the Constitution Order (Presidential Order
No.14 of 1985, which was the forerunner of the 8th Amendment to the Constitution) Articles 90
to 95 were substituted therefor. The substituted version of Article 90
under the 8th Amendment is reproduced below:-
“90.
Exercise of executive authority of the Federation. – (1)
The executive authority of the Federation shall vest in the
President and shall be exercised by him, either directly or
through officers subordinate to him, in accordance with the
Constitution.
(2)
Nothing contained in clause (1) shall –
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 32 :-
(a)
be deemed to transfer to the President any functions
conferred by any existing law on the Government of any
Province or other authority; or
(b)
prevent
the
Majlis-e-Shoora
(Parliament)
from
conferring by law functions on authorities other than
the President.”
36.
Article 91, which currently deals with the Cabinet, at that
time dealt with the election or appointment of the Prime Minister. It is
not necessary for our purposes to examine this intermediate version of
Article 91.
37.
Article 99 of the constitution was also substituted in 1985.
The original Article 99 read as under:-
“99. Conduct of business of Federal Government. – (1)
Orders and other instruments made and executed in the name
of the President shall be authenticated in such manner as may
be specified in rules to be made by the Federal Government,
and the validity of an order or instrument which is so
authenticated shall not be called in question on the ground that
it is not an order or instrument made or executed by the
President.
(2)
The Federal Government may regulate the allocation
and transaction of its business and may for the convenient
transaction of that business delegate any of its functions to
officers or authorities subordinate to it.”
However, in 1985 it was substituted to read as under:
“99.
Conduct of business of Federal Government: (1) All
executive actions of the Federal Government shall be
expressed to be taken in the name of the President.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 33 :-
(2)
The President shall by rules specify the manner in
which orders and other instruments made and executed in his
name shall be authenticated, and the validity of any order or
instrument so authenticated shall not be questioned in any
Court on the ground that it was not made or executed by the
President.
(3)
The President shall also make rules for the allocation
and transaction of the business of the Federal Government.”
At present, after the 18th Amendment it reads as under:-
“99.
Conduct of business of Federal Government: (1) All
executive actions of the Federal Government shall be
expressed to be taken in the name of the President.
(2)
The Federal Government shall by rules specify the
manner in which orders and other instruments made and
executed in the name of President shall be authenticated, and
the validity of any order or instrument so authenticated shall
not be questioned in any Court on the ground that it was not
made or executed by the President.
(3)
The Federal Government shall also make rules for the
allocation and transaction of its business.”
It will be observed that except for the substitution of the term
Federal Government for the President the latter two versions are
identical.
38.
The 18th Amendment, which was passed in 2010, made a
conscious attempt, (albeit not consistently) to eradicate from the text of the
Constitution amendments which had been made in 1985, as they were
considered as remnants of a military government. Thus we find that
Article 90 was returned to its original formulation except for clause (3).
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 34 :-
Similarly Article 91 was replaced, although not in identical terms. We are
not, however, concerned with this aspect of the matter.
39.
Reverting to Article 99, we note there are two very important
alterations, which are material in the facts of the present case (however
learned counsel for the parties did not address any submissions in regard to the same). Article
99, as originally framed, contemplated two sets of rules: the first were
intended for the authentication of orders and were thus formal in nature,
as also mandatory. The second set was very important and served a dual
purpose:
(i)
The first purpose was in relation to the allocation and
transaction of business, and
(ii)
The second was to enable the convenient transaction of that
business by the Federal Government by conferring on it the
power to delegate any of its functions to officers or
authorities.
It is important to note, however, that the word “may”, connoting a
discretionary element, was used in the original article.
40.
The two critically important changes which have been made
in the present formulation are:-
(a)
the power of delegation to officers and subordinate
authorities has been taken away, and
(b)
the making of rules has been made mandatory. Two very
significant inferences follow ineluctably from the changes.
(i)
The executive power of the Federal Government has
now been channelized and the exercise thereof is to be
through the mandatory modality of Rules of Business.
These Rules are therefore binding on the Government
and a violation of the terms thereof can be fatal to the
exercise of executive power. It needs emphasizing that
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 35 :-
the conscious substitution of the word “may” by “shall”
speaks to the intention of Parliament to leave no doubt
in the matter.
(ii)
Whereas originally the Federal Government had the
power to delegate any of its functions to officers or
authorities i.e. it would have been possible to delegate
functions pertaining to fiscal matters to the Finance
Ministry; this is no longer possible.
There is no discretion left in the Executive in relation to this.
Obviously, the framers of the 18th Amendment felt so strongly about this
that, notwithstanding, their reluctance to retain any vestiges of the 1985
Amendments, in this matter they preferred to retain the phraseology
adopted in it. There has, therefore, been a radical re-structuring of the
law. We will revert to this aspect of the matter below.
41.
We may clarify, in relation to the first set of Rules, that they
are merely intended to ensure that the genuineness of orders passed by
the Federal Government cannot be questioned in any court once they
have been authenticated in accordance with the Rules. However, and this
is an important point, this does not mean that any or every order passed
will be held to be valid merely because it has been authenticated. The
scope of this provision is limited only to questions of formal
authentication and, in each case, it would have to be independently
determined whether or not the power exercised was in fact available and
the exercise was validly made in accordance with law.
42.
We are now in a position to examine the contents of the
Rules of Business themselves. The present formulation of the Rules of
Business dates back to 1973. A quick synoptic overview of the relevant
Rules would not be out of place at this point of time. Rule 2, clause (iii)
defines “business” as meaning all work done by the Federal Government.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 36 :-
Then follows Rule 3 which relates to the allocation of business and
clause (3) thereof provides that the business of Government shall be
distributed among the various Divisions (i.e. the administrative units) in the
manner indicated in Schedule-II. Rule 4 deals with the organization of
Divisions and Rule 5 bears the heading “Transaction of Business”. It
prescribes that no important policy decision is to be taken except with
the approval of the Prime Minister. The responsibility of a Minister, as
head of a Division, is to assist the Prime Minister in relation to the
formulation of policy and also to keep him informed of any important
cases disposed of by him. Subject to the above, a Minister is responsible
for the policies of his Division. Clause (8) further clarifies that the
business of a Division shall ordinarily be disposed of by, and under the
authority of, the Minister in charge and Clause (9) lays down the
responsibilities of the Secretary. Clauses (8) and (9) of Rule 5 insofar as
relevant are reproduced below:-
“(8)
The business of the Division shall ordinarily be
disposed of by, or under the authority of the Minister-in-
Charge.
(9)
The Secretary shall –
(a)
assist the Minister-in-Charge in the formulation of
policy;
(b)
duly execute the sanctioned policy;
(c)
submit all proposals for legislation to the Cabinet with
the approval of the Minister;
(d)
Keep the Minister-in-Charge generally informed of the
working of the Division and of any important case
disposed of without reference to the Minister;
(e)
be the principal accounting officer of his Division, its
Attached Departments and Subordinate Offices, and
ensure that the funds controlled by him are spent in
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 37 :-
accordance with the rules laid down by the Finance
Division;
(f)
Subject to the provisions of these rules and with the
approval of the Minister-in-Charge issue standing
orders laying down the manner of disposal of cases in
the Division, including the distribution of work amongst
the officers of his Division and such orders may specify
the cases or class of cases which may be disposed of by
an officer subordinate to him; and
(g)
be responsible for the careful observance of these rules
and, where he considers that there has been any
material departure from them, either in his own or any
other division, he shall bring the matter to the notice of
the Minister-in-Charge and, if necessary, to the notice
of the Prime Minister or the Cabinet.”
43.
Rule 6 reflects the constitutional concept of individual and
collective responsibility and reads as under:-
“6.
Individual and collective responsibility. – The Cabinet
shall collectively be responsible for the advice tendered to, or
the executive orders issued in the name of the President
whether by an individual Minister or as a result of decision by
the Cabinet; but the Minister shall assume primary
responsibility for the disposal of business pertaining to his
portfolio.”
Rule 7 provides that, subject to Article 173, all executive actions of
the Government shall be expressed to be taken in the name of the
President. Rule 12 renders consultation with the Finance Division
mandatory in relation to matters which may involve the relinquishment,
remission or assignment of revenue or expenditure for which no
provision exists in the Budget. Rule 14 bears the heading “Consultation
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 38 :-
with the Law, Justice and Human Rights Division” and Clause (1) is
material and is reproduced below insofar as relevant:-
“14.
Consultation with the Law, Justice and Human Rights
Division. – (1) The Law, Justice and Human Rights Division
shall be consulted –
(a) on all legal questions arising out of any case;
(b) on the interpretation of any law;
(c) before the issue of or authorization of the issue of an order,
rule, regulation, by-law, notification, etc. in exercise of
statutory powers;”
Rule 15 makes it mandatory to obtain the approval of the Prime
Minister in relation to important policy matters.
44.
Rule 16 is an important rule and, insofar as material, is
reproduced below:-
“16. Cases to be brought before Cabinet. – (1) The following
cases shall be brought before the Cabinet :-
(a) proposals for legislation, official or non-official, including
money bills;
(b) promulgation and revocation of Ordinances;
(c) the budgetary position and proposals before the
presentation of the Annual Budget Statement and a
Supplementary Budget Statement or an Excess budget
Statement under articles 80 and 84.
(d) Proposals for levy, abolition, remission, alteration or
regulation of any tax and floatation of loans;
(e) to (m)
(2)
Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-rule (1), the
Prime Minister may in any case give directions as to the
manner of its disposal without prior reference to the Cabinet.”
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 39 :-
It will be noted, and this is relevant for purposes of the present
matter, that it is mandatory to bring any proposal for the levy, abolition,
remission, alteration or regulation of any tax to the Cabinet. Whilst it is
no doubt true that the Prime Minister has been given discretionary power
in the matter it is clear that the exercise thereof is circumscribed by the
following conditions:
(i)
There must be a conscious application of mind by the Prime
Minister to the existing circumstances justifying the need for
this departure through passing of a reasoned and formal
order prior to the action taken, and
(ii)
More critically, and definitively, a determination whether the
constitutional provisions justify such a departure? This is a
matter which we will examine infra.
We note that, ex facie, this Rule has been violated by the Finance
Division in issuing the impugned notification merely on the basis of the
approval of the Secretary and the Advisor. This is a matter we will further
discuss at a later stage in this judgment, when we will also consider the
question of the constitutionality of Rule 16(2).
45.
Rule 17 deals with the method of disposal of cabinet cases
and is reproduced below:
“17. Method of disposal of Cabinet cases. – (1) Cases referred
to the Cabinet shall be disposed of –
(a)
by discussion at a meeting of the Cabinet; or
(b)
by circulation amongst Ministers; or
(c)
by discussion at a meeting of a committee of the
Cabinet.
Provided that the decisions of the Committee shall be ratified
by the Cabinet unless the Cabinet has authorized otherwise.”
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 40 :-
The procedure for the submission of matters for decision making
by the Cabinet is set out in Rule 18 and again is important. The relevant
provisions thereof are reproduced below:-
“18. Manner of submissions of Cabinet cases. (1) In respect of
all cases to be submitted to the Cabinet, the Secretary of the
Division concerned shall transmit to the Cabinet Secretary a
concise, lucid and printed memorandum of the case
(hereinafter referred to as the “summary”), giving the
background and relevant facts, the points for decision and the
recommendations of the Minister-in-Charge. In the event of
the views of the Division being different from the views of the
Minister both the views shall be included in the summary.
Provided that the Executive Director, Higher Education
Commission, shall be the ex-officio Federal Secretary and may
submit summaries, or cases to cabinet directly with the
approval of Chairman, Higher Education Commission, having
the status of a Federal Minister. (note:- this proviso, however, has
been deleted vide SRO 226(I)/2010 dated 2.4.2010)
(2)
In the case of a proposed legislation to which approval
is sought in principle, the summary shall bring out clearly the
main issues to be legislated upon.
(3)
The summary shall be self-contained as far as possible,
not exceeding two printed pages and may include as
appendices only such relevant papers as are necessary for the
proper appreciation of the case. The number of copies of the
summary and the form in which it is to be drawn up shall be
prescribed by the Cabinet Secretary.
(4)
Where a case concerns more than one Division, the
summary shall not be submitted to the Cabinet unless it has
been considered by all the Divisions concerned. In the event of
a difference of opinion between them, the points of difference
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 41 :-
shall be clearly stated in the summary, a copy of which shall be
sent by the sponsoring Division to the other Division
concerned simultaneously with the transmission of the
summary to the Cabinet Division.
(5)
All draft Bills, Ordinances or Orders shall be submitted
to the Cabinet after they have been scrutinized by the Law,
Justice and Human Rights Division, and no changes shall be
made therein except in consultation with that Division.
(6)
No case for inclusion in the agenda of a meeting of the
Cabinet shall be accepted unless it reaches the Cabinet
Secretary at least several clear days in advance of the meeting:
Provided that, if a case is urgent and is required to be taken up
at short notice, the Secretary concerned will obtain approval of
the Prime Minister for its inclusion in the agenda before it is
transmitted to the Cabinet Secretary.
(7)
It shall be the duty of the Cabinet Secretary to satisfy
himself that the papers submitted by a Secretary are complete
and in appropriate form. He may return the case until the
requirements of the rules have been complied with. If the
Cabinet Secretary is satisfied that the case does not merit
consideration of the Cabinet he may advise the matter to be
placed before an appropriate forum or require it to be
submitted to the Prime Minister.”
46.
The procedure to be followed in Cabinet meetings is set out
in Rule 20 which prescribes that they are normally to be held once a
week (we note, in passing, that it appears that presently this Rule is being honoured more in the
breach than in the observance thereof. The political implications of this do not concern us here,
but we will revert to the question of the constitutional implications flowing from decision making
lacking the prior sanction of the Cabinet). It may be noted that it is not mandatory
for the Prime Minister to preside at all meetings of the Cabinet. In this
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 42 :-
connection, reference may be made to Clauses (3) and (4) which are
reproduced below:-
“20.
Procedure regarding Cabinet Meetings.
(3)
The Prime Minister may authorize the holding of
Cabinet meetings during his absence.
(4)
The Prime Minister shall preside at all Cabinet
meetings. In the absence of the Prime Minister a Minister
nominated by the Prime Minister shall preside. The decisions
taken in the Prime Minister’s absence shall be subject to the
approval of the Prime Minister, unless the Cabinet feels that a
particular case is so urgent that immediate action may be taken
in anticipation of the Prime Minister’s approval.”
Rule 20, clause (6) is an important provision and provides that no
case shall be discussed in Cabinet, nor any issue raised, without a
summary relating to it first being circulated. There is a proviso, in terms
whereof this requirement may be dispensed with but for that purpose a
formal order of the Prime Minister is required. What is significant about
the above provisions is that they indicate that a mere formal consent of
the Cabinet without following the detailed provisions in the Rules may
render the decision open to question. The Cabinet, being the supreme
body of the Executive, with a high constitutional status, cannot and ought
not to be treated as a mere rubber stamp for decision making by the Prime
Minister. Article 90 envisages a parliamentary form of Government which
is based on decision making by the Cabinet. To turn the Cabinet into
such a rubber stamp in pursuit of decision making by the Prime Minister
to the exclusion of his Cabinet would violate the letter and spirit of our
Constitution. That would be to reduce a cabinet form of government into
a prime ministerial one which is a concept which is alien to the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 43 :-
Constitution, as it stands at present. However, it should be noted in
passing, that the original formulation of the constitution, was certainly
more amenable to a greater construction of power in the hands of the
Prime Minister (originally Article 48 of the constitution contained a clause stating that the
orders passed by the President required for their validity the counter-signature of the Prime
Minister. It is, on the face of it, a little difficult to reconcile this clause with the dignity and status
of the head of state). We shall revert to this aspect of the matter later.
47.
It will be recollected that the word “business” was defined in
terms of Rule 2 to mean all work done by the Federal Government. This
necessarily means that the concept of business of Government includes
not merely executive matters but also those which pertain to legislation.
This is borne out by the provisions of Part-E of the Rules which bears the
heading “Legislation”. Rule 27 provides for official Bills relating to
proposed legislation. The procedure envisages the involvement of the Law
Division in relation to drafting and so forth. In all cases the draft Bill has
to be put up before the Cabinet by the concerned Division for its
approval. Even legislation of a formal nature forms the subject matter of
the Rules and sub-clauses (7) and (8) of Rule 27 are relevant in this
context.
“(7)
Legislation relating to the codification of substantive
law or for the consolidation of existing enactments or
legislation of a purely formal character, e.g., repealing and
amending Bills and short title Bills, may be initiated in the
Law, Justice and Human Rights Division. It shall, however,
consult the Division concerned, if any, which shall consider the
draft legislation from the administrative point of view and send
their views to the Law, Justice and Human Rights Division.
(8)
After taking action in terms of sub-rule (5), the Division
concerned shall forward to the Law, Justice and Human Rights
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 44 :-
Division the draft legislation in its final form with a statement
of objects and reasons duly signed by the Minister-in-Charge.
The Law, Justice and Human Rights Division, after satisfying
itself that all legal requirements have been complied with for
the introduction of the Bill in the Assembly or, as the case may
be, the Senate, transfer the Bill along with the statement of
objects and reasons to the Parliamentary Affairs Division for
arranging its introduction in the appropriate House.”
48.
Against the above backdrop we can now turn to the facts of
the present case. As observed earlier, the appellants are importers of
cellular phones and other goods. Certain exemptions from sales tax were
granted to them by the Federal Government. They were then either
withdrawn or the tax rates were modified in terms of different
notifications issued pursuant to Sections 3(2)(b), 3(6), 8(1)(b), 13(2)(a)
and 71 of the Act. These notifications relate to cellular phones. Similar
notifications had been issued earlier in relation to textile goods and, once
again, the exemptions granted were withdrawn and/or modifications
took place in relation to the rates of sales tax.
49.
The sole ground urged before us was that these notifications
had not been issued by the Federal Government, as that term ought to
be construed in the light of the constitutional provisions. We will,
therefore, assume for purposes of the present case, that the notifications
issued were otherwise in order and not open to any exception save and
except in relation to the above point.
50.
The importance of the Rules of Business cannot be
understated within a constitutional framework. Although, generally
speaking, it is correct to state that all rules are binding for, and in
relation to, the powers thereby conferred on the Executive, this is
especially so in the case of the Rules of Business. The concept of rules,
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 45 :-
as is obvious, is subsumed in subordinate or delegated legislation. It is
an integral part thereof. All legislation is binding and should be acted
upon. The Federal Government does not have the prerogative to follow, or
not to follow, legislation, both primary as well as secondary or delegated,
in its discretion. The authority to frame rules is normally conferred by an
Act of Parliament. In the case of the Rules of Business this authority
flows from the Constitution itself. As noted above, Clause (3) of Article 99
makes it mandatory for the Federal Government to make rules which
cover two related sub-fields; firstly, for and in relation to the allocation of
the business of the Government and secondly, for transacting the said
business. This clause is to be read as essentially ancillary to the
overarching concept of the rule of law. The Constitution confers vast
powers on the Government for the transaction of executive business.
There is no reason to suppose, or believe, that the framers of the
Constitution intended, in disregard of the explicit language employed,
that the Federal Government could, in its discretion, either follow, or not
follow, the provisions of the Rules of Business. The framer of rules is as
much bound by the content thereof as anyone else is subject thereto. These
are basic precepts of constitutional interpretation. To allow the Executive
to depart from the language of the Rules, in its discretion, would be to
permit, and legitimize, unconstitutional executive actions. Quite
independently of the above, there is ample case law stressing the
importance of a structured exercise of discretionary power. In this case
the discretionary executive powers have already been fettered by the
Constitution. The framing of rules for this purpose is inextricably linked
to the guided exercise of official power. The following of the Rules of
Business is a salutary exercise intended to enhance, and amplify,
concepts of good governance. We have no doubt that it is mandatory and
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 46 :-
binding on the Government, and so hold. A similar view was taken by
this Court in the case of Ahmad Nawaz Shah7 (supra).
51.
The argument is sometimes advanced, in order to defeat the
language of subordinate legislation, that it is merely directory and not
mandatory. It is necessary to emphasize the point that, in the normal
course, there is no reason whatsoever why the language of rules should
not be considered to be mandatory unless it is ex facie discretionary.
The rules are framed to achieve a certain objective and to achieve this
within the channels relating to the devolution and flow of statutory
authority. In the absence of compelling reasons to the contrary all rules
are, and should be considered to be mandatory and binding. The burden
of proof lies on anyone asserting that the rules in question are directory
and not mandatory. He must establish that there is a sound and
powerful reason why they should not be considered mandatory and
binding. This principle applies with redoubled force, for and in relation to
two sets of rules; firstly, constitutionally mandated rules i.e. the Rules of
Business, and secondly, rules framed under fiscal enactments.
Constitutionally mandated rules are closely intertwined with the concept
of good governance for and in the public interest. Allowing a departure
therefrom would be detrimental to open and transparent forms of
governance. If a government department admits that although it has
violated explicit provisions of the rules, its violation should be condoned
by treating the breach as non-actionable merely on the ground of its
supposedly being directory, then surely serious questions arise in
relation to the good faith of the department. In each and every case the
presumption of law would be that the rules are mandatory and should be
observed and followed. If, and only if, a compelling public interest is
7 2002 SCMR 560
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 47 :-
established as a reason for non-compliance with the rules i.e. other than
inadvertence, or negligence, or incompetence then, and only then, can
the court consider whether or not to condone the breach in the
observance of the rules. These considerations are fortified and amplified
for, and in relation to, fiscal enactments. The reason is twofold; firstly
Article 77 of the Constitution only enables the levy of tax under law and,
secondly, the levy of a tax inevitably implies a restriction of a citizen’s
right to property. Payments of tax amount to a corresponding deprivation
of property and, since the right to property is a fundamental right, this
can only be done by means of strict compliance with the law. It follows
that the breach of Rule 16 is fatal to the case of the Government.
Although this is sufficient to dispose of the case it is necessary that we
should also clarify the constitutional position, for which it is necessary to
revert to the concept of Federal Government.
52.
Article 90, as pointed out above, states that the executive
authority of the Federation shall be exercised in the name of the
President by the Federal Government. The Federal Government is then
described as “consisting of the Prime Minister and the Federal Ministers”.
The question is, what is the precise interpretation of this provision?
53.
The learned Additional Attorney General advanced, at some
length, his submissions for, and in relation to, the concept of Federal
Government as well as the allied concept of the executive authority of the
Federation. He developed his argument by referring to Article 41 of the
Constitution. The said article provides, in terms of Clause (1) thereof,
that the President shall be the Head of State and shall represent the
unity of the Republic. He then travelled to Article 48. Clause (1) of the
said Article provides that, in the exercise of his functions, the President
shall act on, and in accordance with, the advice of the Cabinet or the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 48 :-
Prime Minister. Incidentally, at this point we may note, in passing, that
the original formulation of Article 48(1) stipulated that the President was
obligated to act on, and in accordance, with the advice of the Prime
Minister and it was further added that such advice shall be binding on
him. In brief, the importance and significance of the Cabinet which lies
at the heart of the parliamentary form of Government, was downplayed
in the original formulation and an alternate template of virtual prime
ministerial rule was laid down. We have already referred to this aspect of
the matter above. By means of the 8th Amendment to the Constitution
Article 48 was reformulated into its present form so as to give primacy to
the advice of the Cabinet and thus restore the Cabinet to a pristine
position at the heart of the Executive. Reverting to the submissions of the
learned counsel, he then developed his argument by contending that the
definition of the Federal Government should now be considered to be the
President along with the Cabinet headed by the Prime Minister. This
argument certainly has the merit of novelty, if nothing else.
54.
We are unable to agree with him. Article 90 states
categorically what the Federal Government is; it consists of the Prime
Minister and the Federal Ministers (i.e. the Cabinet) and not the President
who is not mentioned therein (we note, in passing, the similarity with Articles 176 and
192 which respectively define the Supreme Court and the High Court as consisting of the Chief
Justice and judges). We are unaware of any principle of constitutional
interpretation which would allow us to construe Article 41 and Article 48,
on the basis of a presumed intention, so as to override the explicit
provisions of Article 90. Neither article purports to do so. The concept of
the President being the Head of State should not be confused with the
completely different concept of the Head of Government and nor should
the two offices be conflated. Article 48 merely stipulates that, in the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 49 :-
discharge of his functions, the President is mandated to act on, and in
accordance with, the advice of the Cabinet or the Prime Minister. This
article relates to the performance of the constitutional functions of the
President by making it binding on him to follow the advice of the Cabinet.
This is by no means the same as asserting that, by doing so, he becomes
a part of the Federal Government. He is not. He is the Head of State.
There are many functions of state which are discharged by different
organs without their becoming part of the Federal Government. To take
an obvious illustration; the judicial functions of the State, which lie at
the heart of the rule of law, are discharged by the Supreme Court and
the High Courts as well as such other courts as are established by law in
terms of Article 175. By doing so they do not become part of the Federal
Government (at least for purposes of the domestic law of the State). Article 175 does
not in any manner qualify the position stated in Article 90. The concept
of Head of State is distinct from that of head of government and remains
as such.
55.
In English constitutional law, which forms the bedrock on
which the parliamentary form of government is based, the status of the
sovereign has been developed over the years. In the classic tome “The
Law of the Constitution” by A.V. Dicey (first published in 1886) there is a
detailed exposition of the rule of English law which states that “the King
can do no wrong.” The following passage is reproduced from page 24 of
the 9th Edition:-
“To the law of the constitution belong the following rules:-
“The King can do no wrong.” This maxim, as now interpreted
by the courts, means, in the first place, that by no proceeding
known to the law can the King be made personally responsible
for any act done by him; if (to give an absurd example) the
King were himself to shoot the Premier through the head, no
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 50 :-
court in England could take cognizance of the act. The maxim
means, in the second place, that no one can plead the orders of
the Crown or indeed of any superior officer in defence of any
act not otherwise justifiable by law; this principle in both its
applications is (be it noted) a law and a law of the constitution,
but it is not a written law. “There is no power in the Crown to
dispense with the obligation to obey a law;” this negation or
abolition of the dispensing power now depends upon the Bill of
Rights; it is a law of the constitution and a written law. “Some
person is legally responsible for every act done by the Crown.”
This responsibility of Ministers appears in foreign countries as
a formal part of the constitution; in England it results from the
combined action of several legal principles, namely, first, the
maxim that the King can do no wrong; secondly, the refusal of
the courts to recognize any act as done by the Crown, which is
not done in a particular form, a form in general involving the
affixing of a particular seal by a Minister, or the counter-
signature or something equivalent to the counter-signature of a
Minister; thirdly, the principle that the Minister who affixes a
particular seal, or countersigns his signature, is responsible
for the act which he, so to speak, endorses; this again is part of
the constitution and a law, but it is not a written law. So again
the right to personal liberty, the right of public meeting, and
many other rights, are part of the law.
56.
In England the Government is often referred to as Her
Majesty’s Government. Everything is done in the name of the sovereign,
although the actual and effective power of the Crown is strictly limited.
Hence the distinction between the sovereign and the Government. The
Government is carried on in the name of the Crown. The courts of law
are described as the Royal Courts of Justice although the Crown has no
influence over them. In brief, the Crown is considered theoretically as the
fountainhead of all authority and power. This goes back to the time when
the monarch wielded absolute power and authority.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 51 :-
57.
The underlying concept that government is to be carried on
in the name of the President was borrowed from English constitutional
practices as embodied in the Government of India Act, 1935, which was
then followed in successive constitutional dispensations. However, formal
terminology is one thing, the constitutional reality is another. Thus,
under Articles 90 and 99 although all executive actions are to be
expressed to be taken in the name of the President, this does not change
the underlying reality.
58.
The learned Additional Attorney General also submitted, in
relation to the concept of “business”, as defined in Rule 2, that it
includes both executive and legislative work. So far the argument is
unexceptionable and we have no difficulty in accepting it. It is obvious
that an important part of the functions of the Government relates to the
formulation and initiation of legislative measures. Thus the Rules of
Business must encompass both executive as well as legislative business.
However, the inference drawn by him from this premise is not justifiable.
There is a vast gulf between considering, or taking, policy decisions
regarding legislative measures and the actual power to frame or enact
legislation, whether primary or secondary. Although the overwhelming
majority of legislation is proposed by the Government, which enjoys the
majority to pass the same in parliament, the Executive, as such, cannot
make laws. This is the legislative function. It is distinct from the
executive function. Indeed, the Rules of Business themselves make this
clear although the proposition is obvious even otherwise (we will separately
deal with the ordinance making power of the State at a later stage of this judgment).
59.
Part-E of the Rules of Business deals specifically with
legislation. Rule 27 stipulates that the Division concerned shall be
responsible for determining the contents of the proposed legislation and
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 52 :-
for consultation with other Divisions. Other rules further develop, and
lay down, in some detail, the procedure to be adopted. All this is part of
the legislative business which is governed by the Rules of Business.
However, once the proposed legislation is finalized and then placed
before the House, the powers of the Executive, as such, come to an end.
The legislature takes over. It is inconceivable that on account of the fact
that the Rules of Business cover legislative work they could also be
deemed to confer power on the Executive to enact legislative measures.
All statutory rules, including those of a fiscal nature, are subordinate
legislation. The power to enact subordinate legislation has to be
conferred by substantive law. The Rules of Business, which merely
regulate procedural modalities, cannot conceivably do so.
60.
His further argument that Rule 3(3) provides that the
business of government is to be allocated to Divisions in accordance with
Schedule-II,
which
in
turn
provides
that
tax
policy
and
tax
administration falls within the Revenue Division is, confined to that
extent, and that extent alone, correct. It cannot be stretched any further,
and it by no means follows that the Chairman, FBR, who is the ex officio
Secretary of the Revenue Division is empowered, ipso facto under Rule
4(2) read with Rule 3(3) to issue notifications pertaining to modifications
of tax merely because the subject falls within the scope of his
responsibilities. The conferment of power, the exercise of power and the
formal notification of the exercise of power are all independent (albeit
interlinked) concepts. The Chairman FBR, in his capacity as Secretary to
the Revenue Division can no doubt make proposals pertaining to
modification of tax policy. He can either directly, or through his
subordinate officials, process proposals. If the processing of tax
proposals were, for example to be done by another Division that would
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 53 :-
quite clearly be illegal. However, his power does not extend any further.
The power to make fiscal changes is a substantive power, and moreover,
one of great constitutional importance. It has to be clearly spelt out from
the scheme of the constitution and the language used in any enactment.
The Rules of Business neither confer such a power, and nor can they, on
any meaningful interpretation of the constitution, conceivably confer
such a power. If the Rules of Business were to be amended to
purportedly confer such a power, the amendment would be clearly ultra
vires.
61.
His reference to Rule 7(2), read with Schedule-IV which
allows the Secretary to authenticate by signature all orders and other
instruments made, or executed, in the name of President disregards the
fact that this is a purely formal power. The exercise of this power
establishes the genuineness of the document. It does not confer the
statutory power to issue such a document.
62.
The continuation of his argument to the effect that the
Secretary sought, and obtained, the approval of the Advisor is equally
flawed. Neither the Secretary, nor the Advisor, has any power to make
subordinate or delegated legislation. This power has been conferred
solely and exclusively on the Federal Government in terms of Section 3 of
the Sales Tax Act. Indeed it could not have been conferred on any other
subordinate authority, or body, without violating the Constitution. We
have already noted that the constitutional power to delegate functions to
officials or other authorities has been taken away.
63.
It needs to be stressed, with clarity and precision, that the
allocation of business, i.e. by whom, and how a matter is to be dealt
with, is not equivalent to the grant of power. Allocation of business is
merely a matter of inter-departmental procedure to indicate which
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 54 :-
Division of the Government is going to deal with a certain subject. The
mere fact that a certain Division is going to deal with a specified subject
does not confer any extra, or additional, constitutional or statutory
powers on the said Division. In each and every case it has to be
established as to what power has been conferred and in what manner it
is to be exercised. Certain powers have been conferred under the Sales
Tax Act. They have been conferred, and rightly so, on the Federal
Government. The conferment of such a power on any other authority
would have been clearly unconstitutional. Now it is up to the Federal
Government to allocate, through the modality of the Rules of Business,
which of the different Divisions is to deal with the matter. But this most
emphatically does not mean that the Revenue Division has been
transformed into the Federal Government. It has not. It remains what it
always was. The concept of Federal Government is a foundational
concept of the Constitution and must be interpreted and construed
exactly as specified in Article 90. The Secretary of the Revenue Division
has full power and authority to process a case relating to fiscal matters.
Once he has processed it, he then has to forward it, in accordance with
the normal constitutional channels, to the Federal Government, for
decision. In other words, the decision would then be taken by the
Cabinet comprising of the Prime Minister and the Ministers. The mere
fact that the Secretary of the Revenue Division has processed the case
does not elevate his status to that of the Federal Government.
64.
The above clarification is further fortified by the language of
Article 97 of the Constitution which is reproduced below:-
“97.
Extent of executive authority of Federation. --- Subject
to the Constitution, the executive authority of the Federation
shall extend to the matters with respect to which [Majlis-e-
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 55 :-
Shoora (Parliament)] has power to make laws, including
exercise of rights, authority and jurisdiction in and in relation
to areas outside Pakistan.
Provided that the said authority shall not, save as expressly
provided in the Constitution or in any law made by [Majlis-e-
Shoora (Parliament)], extend in any Province to a matter with
respect to which the Provincial Assembly has also power to
make laws.”
It will be noted that this Article lays down the extent of the
executive authority of the Federation i.e. the powers of the Federal
Government. It begins with the qualifying phrase “subject to the
Constitution”, which is significant, for reasons to be explained below,
and goes on to state that the executive authority of the Federation is
coterminous with Parliament’s power to make laws. The exercise of both
powers falls within a congruent sphere. If Parliament can make laws
about a certain matter, the Federal Government can take executive
action in relation thereto. The executive authority of the Federation vests
in the Federal Government and it can operate within the corresponding
legislative sphere. However, it should be noted that it is the Federal
Government – as constitutionally defined - which is the repository of this
executive power and no one else. Article 99 carries the argument logically
forward by stating that all executive actions of the Federal Government
(and no one else) are expressed to be taken in the name of the President.
The use of the phrase “subject to the constitution” in Article 97 indicates
that the executive authority of the Federation, as exercised by the
Federal Government, is subordinated to the constitutional schema in
relation to the conferment of constitutional powers and responsibility on
the three great organs of the State. It would be recollected that all
executive actions of the Federal Government are expressed to be taken in
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 56 :-
the name of the President. It is not the actions of the Secretary, or head
of a Division, as such, but the executive actions of the Federal
Government which are to be taken in the name of the President.
65.
We now turn to a consideration of the status of “subordinate
authorities” which is a matter dealt with in Article 98. This article
provides that, on the recommendation of the Federal Government,
Parliament may, by law, confer functions upon officers, or authorities,
subordinate to the Federal Government. It is reproduced below:-
“98.
Conferring of functions on subordinate authorities. –
On the recommendation of the Federal Government, [Majlis-e-
Shoora (Parliament)] may by law confer functions upon
officers
or
authorities
subordinate
to
the
Federal
Government.”
66.
This article, read contextually with the other relevant
articles, envisages a multi-stage procedure. Each stage has to be strictly
complied with.
The sequence of developments is as follows:-
(i)
The original concept in Article 90 (which now stands restored
to its initial configuration) was that the executive authority
of the Federation was to be exercised in the name of
the President by the Federal Government.
(ii)
The Federal Government was defined to be the Prime
Minister and the Federal Ministers (i.e. the Cabinet).
(iii)
The Cabinet was to act through the Prime Minister
who was to be the Chief Executive.
(iv)
The Prime Minister could act directly or through
Federal Ministers.
(v)
This hierarchical exercise of powers was stated to be
subject to the constitution i.e. the exercise of
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 57 :-
governmental
power
was
subjected
to
the
constitutional
provisions
in
their
totality.
This
obviously
postulates
a
referential
base
of
a
parliamentary democracy with the Cabinet at the heart
of the Executive.
(vi)
In 1985 a radical change was made in Article 90 by
vesting the totality of executive authority in the
President instead of the Federal Government i.e. the
Cabinet. The flow of authority was then the following:
(a)
The President now became the constitutional
repository of all executive authority.
(b)
He could exercise this authority, either directly
or through officers subordinate to him (this would
obviously include the exercise of power through ministers).
(c)
There was no delegation of power as such.
When powers were exercised by officials it was,
in the eye of law, the President acting through
them.
(d)
The effective restraint on the President was that
power was to be exercised in accordance with
the constitution. This, therefore, restored the
power of the Cabinet, albeit by a rather
circuitous route. However, the formulation as a
whole, was really a reversion to the structure of
the Government of India Act, 1935 which we
have already discussed above.
(vii)
By the 18th Amendment the original language of Article
90 was restored, but other changes were also made.
When it came to Article 99, which in its original
formulation, conferred the power on the Federal
Government to delegate its functions to subordinate
officials, this power was not restored. It is, however,
important to bear in mind that in the original
constitution the power to delegate was purely
discretionary. It could be exercised, or not exercised,
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 58 :-
at the will of the Government. In actual practice it was
perhaps rarely exercised. It follows from the above that
the mere taking away of a discretionary power to
delegate does not make any substantial difference to
the exercise of constitutional power as matters stand
at present.
It is important to note that designated functions can only be
conferred on officers or authorities who are subordinate to the Federal
Government. They cannot, for example, be conferred on private entities
or companies. Official power can only be exercised through official
channels. However, as is obvious, even the passing of a law to such
effect would not elevate the status of officers of the Federal Government
and enable them to be treated as the Federal Government itself.
Furthermore, this provision very clearly does not contemplate the
transfer of legislative powers of any nature whatsoever to subordinate
officials. All it permits is the discharge of certain functions by designated
officials. The transfer of legislative powers would be a clear cut violation
of the structure of the constitution and the concept of separation of
powers. We are, therefore, unable to agree with the contention of the
learned Additional Attorney General in this behalf. Neither the
constitutional provisions, nor the Rules of Business, confer power on a
Secretary or head of a Division, to be treated as the Federal Government.
Contrary to what he has submitted, the phrase “subject to the
constitution” used in Article 90 was not intended to differentiate the
extent of the executive authority of the Federation from that as set out in
Article 99. Both articles are to be read in conjunction with each other
and not in opposition thereto. There is no conflict between the two
articles which requires resolution by reference to the phrase “subject to
the constitution”. Article 99 supplements the contents of Article 90.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 59 :-
67.
He has, however, correctly contended that the levy of tax is
the function of Parliament under Article 77 of the Constitution and the
regulation and issuance of fiscal notifications is in the nature of
subordinate legislation. He has further, again correctly, contended that
such powers, if given to the Executive per se, would amount to a
negation of the doctrine of parliamentary supremacy and the doctrine of
separation of powers. Both these propositions are valid and make the
distinction between executive and legislative power clear.
68.
We may now refer to the provisions of the Pakistan
Telecommunication (Re-Organization Act), 1996 to which reference was
made by the learned Additional Attorney General to buttress his
submissions. While it is perfectly true, as stated by him, that the said Act
does contain a definition of the Federal Government as being the
Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication we have no
doubt about the fact that a statutory definition must yield before the
provisions of the Constitution of Pakistan. These provisions, as discussed
above, leave no doubt in the matter as what the term Federal
Government means. It means the Prime Minister and the Ministers.
Hence, this statutory definition is clearly violative of Article 90 of the
Constitution and, therefore, is ultra vires.
69.
There was a sharp difference of opinion between the learned
Additional Attorney General and the learned amicus appearing in the
matter as to the meaning of the phrase “executive authority”. The learned
Additional Attorney General submitted that the executive power of the
state was the residue of legislative and judicial power. In support of his
contention he relied on English parliamentary practice in terms of which,
although initially all powers were concentrated in the monarch, they
were gradually subjected to the rule of law which implied that legislative
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 60 :-
and judicial powers were essentially surrendered to parliament and the
judiciary. Thus the executive power left with the Crown was essentially a
residuary power. The executive power of the Crown was further modified
with the passage of time. He has, in support of his submissions relied on
Rai Sahib’s8 case (supra) as reaffirmed in two subsequent decisions of the
Indian Supreme Court. Paragraph 12 of the former judgment is
reproduced below:-
“It may not be possible to frame an exhaustive definition of
what executive function means and implies. Ordinarily the
executive power connotes the residue of governmental
functions that remain after legislative and judicial functions
are taken away.
The Indian Constitution has not indeed recognized the doctrine
of separation of powers in its absolute rigidity but the functions
of the different parts or branches of the Government have been
sufficiently differentiated and consequently it can very well be
said that our Constitution does not contemplate assumption, by
one organ or part of the State, of functions that essentially
belong to another. The executive indeed can exercise the
powers of departmental or subordinate legislation when such
powers are delegated to it by the legislature.
It can also, when so empowered, exercise judicial functions in
a limited way. The executive Government, however, can never
go against the provisions of the Constitution or of any law.
This is clear from the provisions of Article 154 of the
Constitution but, as we have already stated, it does not follow
from this that in order to enable the executive to function there
must be a law already in existence and that the powers of the
executive are limited merely to the carrying out of these laws.”
70.
As against the above contention, the learned amicus
contended that the argument that the executive power is the residual
8 AIR 1955 SC 549 = (1955) 2 SCR 225
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 61 :-
power is fallacious. He relied on various decisions in support of his
contention. According to him, the executive authority is set out in the
constitution and is the administration of the Government in accordance
with law.
71.
In our opinion the difference between the two learned
counsel is largely semantic in nature. One has traced the origin of
executive power in the light of the history of the parliamentary form of
government which indicates that although the sovereign enjoyed powers
which were originally an amalgam of executive, legislative and judicial
power, but gradually with the passage of time it is the executive power
alone which has remained with the government of the day. The
Constitution of Pakistan, which essentially accepts the separation of all
power into three broad divisions (albeit without a formal statement to this effect) by
treating legislative, executive and judicial powers separately arrives at
the same conclusion, not as a historical process but on an analytical
plane. Both paths converge. The conclusion in both cases is the same.
There is no conflict between the two approaches; one is predicated on the
evolutionary process while the other is descriptive of the culmination of
that process in the form of three separate categories of power in terms of
the present constitution.
72.
It should, however, be clarified that the above noted division
of power which is sometimes referred to as the trichotomy of powers, is
not rigidly adhered to in our Constitution. The term is in that sense
somewhat misleading. The parliamentary form of government essentially
envisages a broad categorization of power but not the erection of rigid
walls
of
separation.
The
distinction
is
of
great
significance
jurisprudentially. There are no impassable barriers between the different
types of power. There is often an overlapping or blurring of boundaries.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 62 :-
The executive also exercises some legislative powers while the judiciary is
not entirely devoid of other forms of power including the power to make
rules. A rigid division, or separation, is sometimes to be found in
presidential forms of government although there too, in practice, there is
often some blurring of boundaries. In this connection, reference may be
made to the opening sections of Articles 1, 2 and 3 of the Constitution of
the United States which are reproduced below:-
Article I
“Section 1
All legislative Powers herein granted shall be
vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist
of a Senate and House of Representatives.
Article II
Section 1
The executive power shall be vested in a
President of the United States of America. He shall hold his
office during the term of four years, and, together with the
Vice-President, chosen for the same term, be elected, as
follows….
Article III
Section 1
The judicial power of the United States, shall be
vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior courts as the
Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The
Judges, both of the Supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold
their offices during good behaviour, and shall, at stated times,
receive for their services a compensation, which shall not be
diminished during their continuance in office.”
73.
At this point we can conveniently revert to the question of
the constitutional classification of the ordinance making power. We
should note, at the very inception, that this question raises formidable
issues of interpretation. It is located in Article 89, and is only exercisable
under clause (1) thereof when the National Assembly or Senate are not in
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 63 :-
session. This provision by itself gives a hint as to the nature of the power.
Clause (2) then follows and is reproduced below:-
“(2) An Ordinance promulgated under this Article shall
have the same force and effect as an Act of Majlis-e-Shoora
(Parliament) and shall be subject like restrictions as the power
of Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) to make law, but every such
Ordinance-
(a)
shall be laid-
(i) before the National Assembly if it contains provisions
dealing with all or any of the matters specified in clause (2) of
Article 73, and shall stand repealed at the expiration of one
hundred and twenty days from its promulgation or, if before
the expiration of that period a resolution disapproving it is
passed by the Assembly, upon the passing of that resolution:
Provided that the National Assembly may by a resolution
extend the Ordinance for a further period of one hundred and
twenty days and it shall stand repealed at the expiration of the
extended period, or if before the expiration of that period a
resolution disapproving it is passed by the Assembly, upon the
passing of that resolution:
Provided further that extension for further period may be made
only once; and
(ii) before both Houses if it does not contain provisions dealing
with any of the matters referred to in sub-paragraph (i), and
shall stand repealed at the expiration of one hundred and
twenty days from its promulgation or, if before the expiration
of that period a resolution disapproving it is passed by either
House, upon the passing of that resolution: and
Provided that either House may by a resolution extend it for a
further period of one hundred and twenty days and it shall
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 64 :-
stand repealed at the expiration of the extended period, or if
before the expiration of that period a resolution disapproving it
is passed by a House, upon the passing of that resolution:
Provided further that extension for a further period may be
made only once;
(b)
may be withdrawn at any time by the President.
(3) without prejudice to the provisions of clause (2),-
(a) an Ordinance laid before the National Assembly under
subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of clause (2) shall be
deemed to be a Bill introduced in the National Assembly; and
(b) an Ordinance laid before both Houses under sub-
paragraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of clause (2) shall be deemed
to be a Bill introduced in the House where it was first laid.”
The following characteristics of an ordinance may be noted:-
(i)
It has “the same force and effect as an Act of Parliament.” It
is important to note a subtle distinction at this point. The
language does not state that an ordinance is an Act of
Parliament. It also, more importantly, does not state that it
is to be deemed an Act of Parliament – it only has the same
force and effect as an Act of Parliament. This distinction is
important from the jurisprudential point of view. It raises a
taxonomic issue of importance.
(ii)
It is mandatory that it be laid before Parliament. The reason
is obvious – we are now in the constitutionally mandated
legislative field.
(iii)
It shall stand repealed on the expiry of 120 days (unless
extended) i.e. it is not that it shall be repealed (since only Parliament
can repeal a law), nor that it shall be deemed to be repealed (since
the word repeal is limited in its application to an Act of Parliament and an
ordinance is not deemed to be an Act of Parliament). It follows necessarily
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 65 :-
that an ordinance falls into an anomalous category, all by
itself.
(iv)
The question is, how is an ordinance to be classified? Is it
legislative in nature? Or, is it executive in nature? Or, is it
quasi-legislative? In order to resolve this issue it is
imperative to bear a crucial jurisprudential distinction in
mind. This is the distinction between the nature of a
constitutional power and the person who is exercising it.
These are conceptually distinct matters. This distinction
points the way forward to resolving the issue.
74.
The nature of the power is clearly legislative, since it
contemplates a change, or alteration, in the corpus of laws in the
country. Thus there is no ambiguity on this point. It is not quasi-
legislative. The other, essentially independent, although inter-linked,
question is as to who is exercising this power. The answer is the
Executive. However, this mere fact will not transform the nature, or
classification, of the power. The power to make laws is ex hypothesi a
legislative power irrespective of who is exercising it. Clause (2) of Article
260 further corroborates this inference by explicitly providing that Act of
Parliament includes an ordinance. However, it has to be added that the
legislative drafting of the above provisions is by no means free from
ambiguity since it should not be forgotten that Article 89 has already
declared that an ordinance is to be deemed to be a bill pending in
Parliament. The question is, how can an ordinance (i.e. an Act of Parliament)
be at the same time a bill pending in Parliament? The only way to resolve
this dilemma is to hold that for purposes of Article 89, it is deemed to be
a Bill pending in Parliament, which, however, is to be treated as having
the same force and effect as an Act of Parliament and Article 260 is
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 66 :-
merely a brief re-statement of the position, although set out in a different
terminology.
75.
We may now deal with the submission of the learned amicus
to the effect that previously there was no concept of the Federal
Government. He has developed this argument by referring to Article 39(1)
of the Constitution of 1956 which stipulates that the executive authority
shall vest in the President, and that he may exercise the same either
directly or through officers subordinate to him. He has stressed the fact
that this article does not mention the Federal Government at all. He has
contrasted this with the language of Article 90 to contend that it follows
that there was previously no concept of Federal Government. This is
clearly erroneous, both factually as well legally. The implied conclusion
that a parliamentary form of government can exist without a government
is inconceivable. The word government, in its normal connotation, is
equivalent to the term Executive. It is one of the three principal organs of
the State. Contrary to his contention, the term Federal Government has
been explicitly used in the constitution of 1956 and indeed it is hardly
possible that it could not have been used. Part-IV of the said
Constitution bearing the heading “The Federation” sets out the title of
Chapter-I as being “The Federal Government”. Article 41 of the
constitution explicitly deals with the Federal Government. The said
Article is reproduced below:-
“41.
Conduct of business of the Federal Government. --
(1) All executive actions of the Federal Government shall be
expressed to be taken in the name of the President.
(2)
The President shall by rules specify the manner in
which orders and other instruments made and executed in his
name shall be authenticated, and the validity of any order or
instrument so authenticated shall not be questioned in any
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 67 :-
court on the ground that it was not made or executed by the
President.
(3)
The President shall also make rules for the allocation
and transaction of the business of the Federal Government.”
76.
His further contention that the concept of collective
responsibility which is found in Article 91(6) of the present Constitution
(as well as in Article 37(1) and (5) of the Constitution of 1956) was absent in the
Constitution of 1973, as originally enacted, and was only introduced for
the first time by means of the amendments made in 1985, is equally
erroneous. If reference is made to Article 90 clause (3)9 of the 1973
Constitution, as originally enacted, it will be found that this concept is
clearly set out therein.
77.
At this stage we may also clarify another confusion. This is
in relation to the concept of delegation of power. It was contended before
us that in the Constitution of 1973, as originally enacted, the Federal
Government was empowered to delegate its functions to officers and
authorities. It was further contended that in 1985 the provisions of
Article 99 were amended and the power of delegation was taken away.
The contention was that the concept of delegation contained in the
original constitution does not exist anymore and hence that officers
exercise executive authority on behalf of the Federal Government as
opposed to acting in delegation of such powers. The implied inference
that the taking away of the power of delegation by itself amounts to the
conferment of power to act directly through someone is certainly not
justified. There has to be an independent conferment of power. It needs
to be clarified that there is a significant conceptual distinction between
the exercise of power through a designated person and the delegation of
9 90(3), “The Prime Minister and the Federal Ministers shall be collectively responsible to the National
Assembly”.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 68 :-
powers to him. If reference is made to the provisions of the 1973
Constitution, as enacted originally, it will be seen that Article 90(1)
explicitly stated two things. Firstly, it was stated that the executive
authority of the Federation was to be exercised in the name of the
President. This is merely a question of nomenclature and nothing
substantial turns on it. The mere fact that the executive authority was to
be exercised in the name of the President does not amount to an explicit
conferment of powers either on the President or anyone else. It is the
further statement in Article 90 to the effect that the executive authority
shall be exercised by the Federal Government consisting of the Prime
Minister and the Federal Ministers which creates conferment of
constitutional power. This power is conferred on the Prime Minister and
the Federal Ministers who are authorized to act through the Prime
Minister who is to be the chief executive of the Federation. This is a
direct conferment of power on the constitutional plane. The question of
delegation arises, however, when powers are transferred from one person
to another person and is constitutionally and analytically quite distinct
from the exercise of power by one person through another person (in a
delegation of power, there is a transfer of power from the donor to the donee). By way of
illustration (but only of illustration, since the constitutional position in England is
distinguished from that prevailing in Pakistan) we may refer to the position in
England, as set out in Halsbury’s Laws of England (4th edition) on page
748, which is reproduced below:
“748. Ministers of the Crown and local authorities. Where
functions entrusted to a minister are performed by an official
employed in the minister’s department there is in law no
delegation because constitutionally the act or decision of the
official is that of the minister. Similarly where a local
authority appoints a committee for the discharge of certain of
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 69 :-
its functions, the committee is merely machinery for the
discharge by the authority of the business entrusted to the
committee all of whose acts are subject to the authority’s
approval.”
78.
At this stage it would be convenient to also deal with the
position of the Prime Minister. He was, and still is, described as the Chief
Executive. This formulation is unknown to all the prior constitutions. It
was introduced in 1973 but no definition was given of the term. His
powers and responsibilities accordingly have to be determined on the
basis of the overall structuring of power in the constitution. The concept
of a Chief Executive is a familiar one in corporate law. The Companies
Ordinance, 1984 contains a definition of the term, but, as is obvious,
this was not in force in 1973 and so one cannot infer that the legislature
had the statutory definition in mind when using the term Chief Executive
(prior to the enactment of the Companies Ordinance, 1984, the Companies Act, 1913, was in
force and it was customary at that time to appoint a managing director under the articles of
association). Even otherwise, it would be manifestly inappropriate, both
analytically as well as historically, to equate the position of a Head of
Government with that of an executive head of a limited liability company
engaged in protecting the financial interests of his shareholders.
Furthermore, the powers of a corporate chief executive, at present, are
statutorily conferred and defined, while no such definition exists in the
constitution. Accordingly, we set aside this analogical mode of reasoning
and proceed to discuss the matter solely on the basis of the language
used which, as stated above, lacks clarity and precision.
79.
We begin with the postulate that the constitutional definition
of Federal Government under Article 90 is absolutely clear in its scope
and ambit – it means the Prime Minister and the Federal Ministers,
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 70 :-
which, in turn, means the Cabinet. The Cabinet is a composite concept
and its components are the Prime Minister and the Federal Ministers.
Together they constitute the Cabinet. Article 91, as it stands at present,
bears the heading “The Cabinet”, and restates the same proposition from
a slightly different perspective. Under Article 90 it was posited that the
executive authority was to be exercised by the Federal Government i.e.
the Cabinet. But, it was added that the Cabinet was to exercise the
executive authority in the name of the President. In brief, the executive
authority of the state was to be exercised by the Cabinet, as a collective
entity, in the name of the President. Another way of articulating this
proposition, is to state that whatever the Cabinet did was to be described
not as its action but the action of the President. Article 91 then re-states
this, and amplifies it, by placing it within a different framework by
positing that the function of the Cabinet is to aid and advise the
President. In either case, the actions would be of the Cabinet but in the
name of the President. The central role in both theoretical formulations is
played by the Cabinet which is, in fact, a re-description of the Federal
Government. The Prime Minister is the head of the Cabinet but he can
neither supplant it nor replace it. In Article 90 he is described as the
Chief Executive while in Article 91 his description is that of the Head of
the Cabinet. He is the single most important person in the Cabinet, but he
does not stand in the position of the Cabinet. He is neither a substitute nor
a surrogate for the Cabinet. He cannot exercise its powers by himself. The
reason that he cannot stand in the position of the Cabinet is because the
Cabinet is, in fact, the Federal Government and is so described in article
90. If we treat the office of the Prime Minister as being equivalent to that of
the cabinet, it would follow that the Prime Minister, by himself, as a single
individual, becomes the Federal Government. This is simply inconceivable.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 71 :-
It is the antithesis of a constitutional democracy and would amount to a
reversion to a monarchical form of Government reminiscent of King Louis
XIV’s famous claim that “I am the State” (literally “L’etat, c’est moi”). It is
most emphatically not the function of this court to surrender the hard
won liberties of the people of Pakistan to such a fanciful interpretation of
the constitution which would be destructive of all democratic principles.
We have no doubt in rejecting it, in its entirety. It follows from the above
that Rule 16(2) which enables the Prime Minister to dispose of matters by
by-passing the Cabinet is ultra vires and it is so declared.
80.
It only remains, in this context, to examine what precisely is
the meaning to be assigned to the term Chief Executive and it is to this
that we now turn. Article 90, as stated above, describes the Prime
Minister as Chief Executive and contemplates the Cabinet acting through
him. Clause (2) of Article 90 adds that he may act either directly or
through Federal Ministers. This is his discretionary choice. From the
above the logical inference follows that the function of the Chief
Executive is to execute and implement the policy decisions taken by
Cabinet i.e. the Federal Government. He executes policy decisions, he
does not take them by himself. The executive function, even on a literal
basis, is to execute or implement decisions. On this interpretation the
whole structure now falls into place. The Prime Minister cannot take
decisions by himself, or by supplanting or ignoring the Cabinet because
the power to take decisions is vested with the Federal Government i.e. the
Cabinet, and unilateral decisions taken by him would be a usurpation of
power. As our parliamentary system of government is based on the
British system it would be more useful to relate the term ‘Chief
Executive’ to the British concept of the Prime Minister as “primus inter
pares” or a first among equals. The Rules of Business, if they carry, or
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 72 :-
imply, a different impression, must yield to the superior mandate of the
Constitution. The decisions of the Federal Government are the decisions
of the Cabinet and not of the Prime Minister. Any decisions taken by the
Prime Minister on his own initiative lack the authority of the law or the
Constitution.
81.
The above views are buttressed by the provisions of Article
91(6) which provide that the Cabinet shall be “collectively responsible to
the Senate and the National Assembly”. It should be noted that it is not
the Prime Minister by himself who is responsible to Parliament. It is the
body known as the Cabinet, which is collectively responsible. It follows
that to allow him to act on his own would enable him to escape from
responsibility to Parliament for the consequences of his actions, which
cannot conceivably be the intention of the constitution. The underlying
substratum of any representative form of government is to link
acceptance of responsibility with the exercise of power. This principle
applies across the board. It applies with special force in relation to fiscal
or budgetary matters. He cannot make fiscal changes on his own and nor
can he engage in discretionary spending by himself. Furthermore, the
Prime Minister is not constitutionally mandated to authorize expenditure
on his own. In all cases the prior decision of the Cabinet is required since
it is unambiguously that body alone which is the Federal Government.
All discretionary spending without the prior approval of the Cabinet is
contrary to law. We clarify that an ex post facto approval by the Cabinet
will not suffice since money once spent cannot be unspent. An attempt to
confront the court with a fait accompli by contending that since the
money has already been spent it should be regularized is unacceptable.
Any provisions of the Rules of Business to the contrary are ultra vires
since there is no constitutional provision to justify them. It appears that,
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 73 :-
at the bare minimum, an Act of Parliament would have to be passed to
grant retrospective approval for the illegal expenditure (we leave aside for
consideration on another occasion the question of constitutionality of such a law). Such a
law would have to set out the full particulars of the illegal spending, from
time to time, to enable Parliament to consider the advisability of
validating the expenditure and to try and bring it in line with normal
constitutional principles. It would of course have to be passed by the
National Assembly as well as the Senate since it would not be a normal
money bill.
82.
What is the procedure to be followed, in case the need arises
for unforeseen spending. The answer is to be found in Article 84 of the
Constitution which is reproduced below:-
“84.
Supplementary and excess grants: If in respect of any
financial year it is found –
(a)
that the amount authorized to be expended for a
particular service for the current financial year is
insufficient, or that a need has arisen for expenditure
upon some new service not included in the Annual
Budget Statement for that year; or
(b)
that any money has been spent on any service during a
financial year in excess of the amount granted for that
service for that year;
The Federal Government shall have power to authorize
expenditure from the Federal Consolidated Fund, whether the
expenditure is charged by the Constitution upon that Fund or
not, and shall cause to be laid before the National Assembly a
Supplementary Budget Statement or, as the case may be, an
Excess Budget Statement, setting out the amount of that
expenditure, and the provisions of Articles 80 to 83 shall apply
to those statements as they apply to the Annual Budget
Statement.”
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 74 :-
Once again, it would be noted that the power has been conferred
not on the Prime Minister but the Federal Government i.e. the Cabinet.
Similarly, Article 85 confers power, not even on the Federal Government,
but on the National Assembly to make a grant in advance for a period not
exceeding 4 months pending completion of the budgetary procedure laid
down in Article 82, and Article 86 confers a similar power on the Federal
Government but only during the period when the National Assembly
stands dissolved. Clause (3) of Article 82 explicitly states that no demand
for a grant shall be made except on the recommendation, not of the
Prime Minister, but of the Federal Government i.e. the Cabinet. What are
the powers of the Prime Minister in relation to such matters? They are
set out in Article 83 and are confined to a mere authentication of the
grants made by signing a schedule setting them out. These provisions
are clearly articulated and must not be violated in any circumstances.
This court has already dealt with the question of the constitutionality of
discretionary spending by the Prime Minister in the case reported as
Action against distribution of development funds by Ex-Prime
Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf (PLD 2014 SC 131) paragraph 52 of
which reads as follows:
“52.
For the foregoing reasons it is held as under:-
(1)
The National Assembly, while giving assent to a
grant which is to be utilized by the Executive at
its discretion, has to follow the procedure
provided in Articles 80 to 84 of the Constitution
as well as the Rules of Procedure, 2007.
However, such discretionary grant cannot be
spent at the absolute discretion of the Executive
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 75 :-
and the discretion has to be exercised in a
structured manner;
(2)
The
Constitution
does
not
permit
the
use/allocation of funds to MNAs/MPAs/Notables
at the sole discretion of the Prime Minister or the
Chief Minister. If there is any practice of
allocation of funds to the MNAs/MPAs/Notables
at the sole discretion of the Prime Minister/Chief
Minister,
the
same
is
illegal
and
unconstitutional. The government is bound to
establish
procedure/criteria
for
governing
allocation of such funds for this purpose;
(3)
Though funds can be provided for development
schemes by way of supplementary grant but for
that purpose procedure provided in Articles 80
to
84
of
the
Constitution
and
the
rules/instructions noted hereinabove has to be
followed strictly;
(4)
Funds can be allocated by way of re-
appropriation but the procedure provided in the
Constitution and the rules has to be followed in
its true perspective;
(5)
No bulk grant can be made in the budget without
giving detailed estimates under each grant
divided into items and that every item has to be
specified;
(6)
The amounts as approved in the budget passed
by the National Assembly have to be utilized for
the purpose specified in the budget statement.
Any re-appropriation of funds or their utilization
for some other purpose, though within the
permissible limits of the budget, are not justified.
In such circumstances, the supplementary budget
statement has to be place before the Parliament
following the procedure provided in Articles 80
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 76 :-
to
84
of
the
Constitution
and
the
rules/instructions noted hereinabove.”
It follows from the above that any discretionary spending at the
initiative of the Prime Minister alone is manifestly unconstitutional and
contrary to law. This illegality will continue until such time when, at the
very least, the procedure set out in paragraph 66 above is adopted and
followed. Failure to do so would mean that the Prime Minister would
remain personally responsible.
83.
Having decided the questions of law on the plane of principle
we now turn to a brief consideration of the case law. A large number of
cases were cited before us. Many of them were only peripherally relevant
or merely contained generalized propositions of law or stray observations.
A number of Indian authorities were also cited before us, some of which
dealt with some similar issues. We were referred to a series of seven
cases decided by the Indian Supreme Court. These included the cases of
B.K. Sardari Lal (supra) and Samsher Singh (supra). However, we noted
that the latter judgment explicitly overruled the view expressed in the
former case. In fact, the latter case was explicitly taken up by a larger
bench for the express purpose of re-considering the earlier view. We have
not found it necessary to discuss those cases either since it would merely
prolong this judgment. There is, however, one case to which we would
like to make specific reference since it is a decision of the Federal Court.
In the case of Afzal Bangash10 (supra) the Court had occasion to consider
the provisions of the NWFP Public Safety Act, 1948. The facts of the case
were that the Court of the Judicial Commissioner struck down the order
of detention which had been passed by the Chief Minister which,
according to him, was without jurisdiction and ultra vires. The Judicial
10 PLD 1956 FC 1
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 77 :-
Commissioner was of the opinion that in respect of matters as important
as the liberty of the subject, the responsibility of curtailing that liberty by
means of an executive order was intended by the Constitution to rest
upon the Governor and his Ministers and not the Chief Minister alone.
Under the Act in question the duty of satisfaction regarding the existence
of the conditions necessary for the making of an order of detention rested
upon the Provincial Government. His view was that the use of the term
provincial government implied the Governor conducting the affairs of the
government of a Province as aided and advised by his Council of
Ministers. In doing so he followed the views expressed by the Federal
Court in the case of Emperor Vs. Sibnath Banerji and others (AIR
1943 FC 75). He, apparently inadvertently, omitted to note that the
decision of the Federal Court in that case had been set aside by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (reported in 72 IA 241). In
arriving at his conclusion the Judicial Commissioner placed a strangely
limited interpretation on the phrase “business of the provincial
government”. He arbitrarily restricted the definition of the word
“business” to confine it only to day to day and routine work of the
Government. He considered matters relating to the liberty of a subject as
being of such great importance as not to fall within the said term. This
was rather surprising since, on the face of it, there is no reason to
exclude important matters from the “the business of the provincial
government.” The Federal Court had no difficulty in setting aside his
views, basing itself on the earlier decision of the Privy Council. The
admitted facts were that under the Rules of Business the Chief Minister
had been allocated the subject of preventive detention (quite apart from an
office memorandum to the said effect as well). The order passed by the Chief
Minister clearly fell within the ambit of the relevant provisions of the
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 78 :-
Government of India Act, 1935 and the Rules of Business made under
Section 59. The discussion deals with this aspect of the matter alone
and not the wider constitutional issues and hence is distinguishable.
84.
We may now summarize our conclusions:-
(i)
The Rules of Business, 1973 are binding on the Government
and a failure to follow them would lead to an order lacking
any legal validity.
(ii)
The Federal Government is the collective entity described as
the Cabinet constituting the Prime Minister and Federal
Ministers.
(iii)
Neither a Secretary, nor a Minister and nor the Prime
Minister are the Federal Government and the exercise, or
purported exercise, of a statutory power exercisable by the
Federal Government by any of them, especially, in relation to
fiscal matters, is constitutionally invalid and a nullity in the
eyes of the law. Similarly budgetary expenditure, or
discretionary
governmental
expenditure
can
only
be
authorized by the Federal Government i.e. the Cabinet, and
not the Prime Minister on his own.
(iv)
Any Act, or statutory instrument (e.g. the Telecommunication (Re-
Organisation) Act, 1996) purporting to describe any entity or
organization other than the Cabinet as the Federal
Government is ultra vires and a nullity.
(v)
The ordinance making power can only be exercised after a
prior consideration by the Cabinet. An ordinance issued
without the prior approval of the Cabinet is not valid.
Similarly, no bill can be moved in Parliament on behalf of the
Federal Government without having been approved in
advance by the Cabinet. The Cabinet has to be given a
reasonable opportunity to consider, deliberate on and take
decisions in relation to all proposed legislation, including the
Finance Bill or Ordinance or Act. Actions by the Prime
Minister on his own, in this regard, are not valid and are
declared ultra vires.
C.As.1428 to 1436 of 2016
-: 79 :-
(vi)
Rule 16(2) which apparently enables the Prime Minister to
bypass the Cabinet is ultra vires and is so declared.
(vii)
Fiscal notifications enhancing the levy of tax issued by the
Secretary, Revenue Division, or the Minister, are ultra vires.
(it is clarified, in passing, that this court has in the past consistently held that a
greater latitude is allowed in relation to beneficial notifications and that
principle still applies).
(viii) In consequence of the above findings the impugned
notifications are declared ultra vires and are struck down.
Prior to concluding this judgment we would like to express our
appreciation for the valuable assistance provided by the learned counsel
who have appeared in this matter. We are grateful to each one of them.
85.
In view of the above by accepting these appeals and while
setting aside the impugned judgment(s), all the writ petitions filed by the
appellants are allowed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 18.8.2016 at Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Ghulam Raza/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1428_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1440 OF 2007
(On appeal from the judgment/order dated 16.05.2001 passed by
Lahore High Court, Lahore, in Civil Revision No.713-D/1989)
Dausa & others
…
…
Appellants.
Versus
Province of the Punjab, etc.
…
…
Respondents.
For the appellants
:
Mr. S.M. Tayyab, ASC.
For respondents (1-2)
:
Mr. Muddassar Khalid Abbasi, DAG Pb.
Mr. Zafar Iqbal, Patwari Halqa.
For the respondents
:
Mr. Muhammad Munir Peracha, ASC.
(4-10 & 13-16)
L.Rs. of Respondents (3, 11, 12) :
Ex-parte.
Date of hearing
:
16.06.2015.
JUDGMENT:
UMAR ATA BANDIAL, J. – The leave granting order dated
31.07.2007 notes the appellants’ (“plaintiffs”) contention that their predecessors
mortgaged their land in favour of evacuee mortgagees vide registered mortgage
deed dated 22.12.1882 (Exb.P-16). This transaction was duly entered in the revenue
record vide mutation No.4 dated 05.05.1887. However, by a clerical mistake, the
plaint in the suit has pleaded such mortgage to have been created in the year 1914.
Therefore, the claimed redemption of mortgage vide mutation No.2 dated
17.06.1913 was rejected by the learned Appellate and the learned Revisional Courts
as being contradictory and destructive of the plaintiffs’ claim. Accordingly, leave
was granted to consider, inter alia, the effect of the registered mortgage deed dated
22.12.1882 (Exb.P-16) upon the outcome of the appellants’ plea for declaration of
title of the mortgaged land.
2.
The plaintiffs filed a suit on 04.11.1986 in the Court of Senior Civil
Judge, Sargodha seeking declaration of title in respect of land measuring 71 Kanals
CA.1440/2007.
2
3 Marlas situate in village Jhumat Ranjhayan Wala, Tehsil Bhalwal, District
Sargodha (‘suit land’). The plaintiffs are the progeny of Taja son of Karam and of
Babal son of Sahba (grandson of Karam). Taja, Sahba and Samand sons of Karam
mortgaged the suit land to evacuee mortgagees under a registered deed of
mortgage dated 22.12.1882. Rather implausibly, the plaint claims that the said
mortgage was created in the year 1914-15 but on the contrary, it rightly claims that
this mortgage was redeemed vide mutation No.2 dated 17.06.1913. However,
redemption of the mortgage was not reflected in the periodical revenue record. The
mutation No.1999 dated 12.04.1971 (“impugned mutation”) was entered to record
the resumption of the mortgaged suit land by the Central Government under the
Displaced Persons (Land Settlement) Act, 1958. The prayer in the suit is for the
impugned mutation to be declared illegal and void. The judgment of the learned
Trial Court dated 25.06.1988 upheld the redemption of mortgage by the plaintiffs
but dismissed their suit as being time barred for the relief prayed. The learned
Appellate Court, however, noticed the contradiction in the plaint about the date of
redemption of the mortgage being prior to the date of its creation. Vide judgment
dated 12.12.1988 the learned Appellate Court dismissed the plaintiffs’ appeal by
holding that a mortgage cannot be redeemed before it is created; therefore the case
set up in the plaint was self destructive. This was affirmed on 16.05.2001 by the
learned Revisional Court which also held that the mutation No.1999 dated
12.04.1971 was valid.
3.
The learned counsel for the appellants has referred to Exb.P-16 which
is a copy of the mortgage deed dated 22.12.1882 registered in the record of the Sub-
Registrar, Bhera, executed by Taja, Sahba and Samand, the three sons of Karam, in
favour of evacuee mortgagees. The corresponding mutation No.4 dated 05.05.1887
incorporating the mortgage in the revenue record is also part of Exb.P-16. Although
the said document was exhibited on record by the plaintiffs yet they made no effort
before any of the learned three Courts below to amend the plaint in order to correct
the pleaded date of mortgage of land by their predecessors. However, finally by an
application bearing C.M.A. No.3811-L of 2006 filed before this Court under Order V
CA.1440/2007.
3
Rule 2(8) of the Supreme Court Rules, 1980, the plaintiffs have sought to amend the
plaint for incorporating therein the correct date of creation of mortgage on the basis
of the said Exb.P-16.
4.
The written statement filed in the Trial Court by the respondents
(“defendants”), who are respectively the Provincial Government and the successors
of the Settlement and Rehabilitation Commissioner, namely, the Notified Officer
(Senior Member, Board of Revenue, Government of Punjab), acknowledges/admits
that mortgage of half the suit land was indeed redeemed vide mutation No.2 dated
17.06.1913, which is duly reflected in the Jamabandi for the year 1915-18. The written
statement further states that the remaining half of the suit land has remained subject
to mortgage. It is averred that after the lapse of 60 years, the right of redemption of
the mortgage has become time barred; consequently, the suit land has vested in the
government. Therefore, the impugned mutation No.1999 dated 12.04.1971 is rightly
recorded.
5.
The learned counsel for the parties have been heard. The learned
counsel for the appellants/plaintiffs has also filed written arguments to elaborate
his submissions. The learned Assistant Advocate General has filed a concise
statement on behalf of the Provincial Government which aptly explains the position
on record. These materials and the record have been perused.
6.
A reading of the record and the three judgments of the learned
Courts below reveals the cursory manner in which the parties, namely, the plaintiffs
on the one hand and the government defendants on the other hand, dealt with the
controversy in issue before the learned Trial Court. Quite apart from the factual
error in the pleadings which is sought to be rectified by an amendment application
filed by the plaintiffs before this Court, the pleadings of the parties are silent about,
inter alia, the terms of the mortgage, tracing the plaintiffs’ succession from the three
mortgagors, the particulars and the area of the mortgaged land that is in their
possession. Although the written statement by the Provincial Government
specifically mentions that only half of the mortgaged suit land stands redeemed but
possession of the entire suit land by the plaintiffs is not denied. However, no
CA.1440/2007.
4
evidence on the particulars of the redeemed land is available on record. The
defendants were proceeded ex-parte by the learned Trial Court before recording of
evidence.
7.
The submissions made by learned counsel before us, the evidence on
record and the written submissions filed by the learned counsel in Court establish
consensus between the parties that in 1882 three sons of Karam, namely, Taja, Sahba
and Samand jointly mortgaged their land in favour of evacuee mortgagees (Ex.P-
16). The successors of Babal son of Sahba and the successors of Malli son of Taja are
plaintiffs in the suit. Sahba had three other sons, namely, Ditta, Jallo and Shabul,
who died issueless; so also did Samand son of Karam, the third mortgagor. This
detail is available from the pedigree table of the plaintiffs attached to the statements
filed in Court by the learned counsel for both the parties before us. The redemption
mutation No.2 dated 17.06.1913 records redemption by Ditta, Jallo and Shabul, the
issueless sons of Sahba. According to the said mutation, the predecessors of the
plaintiffs, namely, Babal and Malli did not redeem their share of the suit land under
mortgage and nor did Samand, the third mortgagor. Accordingly, there is another
error in the suit, namely, whilst the plaintiffs claim rights pursuant to redemption
mutation No.2 dated 17.06.1913, in fact it is the shares of Ditta, Jallo and Shabul,
who are not plaintiffs, that have been redeemed under the said mutation. This is
significant because the plaint does not claim the plaintiffs to be the only heirs of the
redeeming mortgagors. In the resulting scenario, the plaintiffs lack locus standi for
the relief of declaration of title of the redeemed land prayed in the suit. Also, the
plaintiffs as successors of the non-redeeming mortgagors have not sought
redemption of their share in the mortgaged land. This appeal, therefore, prima facie,
lacks potential for any relief.
8.
There are, however, two legal developments that have taken place
during the pendency of the lis. These impact the outcome of the controversy. It is
noted that the impugned mutation No.1999 dated 12.04.1971 has by operation of
law resumed the proprietary rights of the mortgaged land in favour of the
government. With regard to such resumption of land, the judgment of this Court
CA.1440/2007.
5
given in the case of Samar Gul v. Central Government (PLD 1986 SC 35) has laid
down that under the Displaced Persons (Land Settlement) Act, 1958 the proprietary
interest that is liable to transfer in favour of the Central Government is the right of
evacuee mortgagees in mortgaged land and not the ownership rights of such land.
It is also held that a memorandum dated 08.12.1959 issued by the Chief Settlement
and Rehabilitation Commissioner constitutes an acknowledgment of the existence of
a mortgage of land to evacuee persons within the terms of Section 19 of the
Limitation Act, 1908. This communication has been held to renew the period of
limitation for redemption of mortgage under Article 148 of the Limitation Act, 1908
by another 60 years. The said memorandum directs the field officers to issue notices
to Muslim landowners/mortgagors to redeem their mortgages or else the evacuee
mortgagee rights in their mortgaged land would be put to auction. The consequence
of the ruling in Samar Gul’s case (supra) is that straightaway the impugned
mutation resuming title of the mortgaged suit land in favour of the government is
rendered illegal. At best only the evacuee mortgagee rights in the suit land could
have been resumed. Consequently, the impugned mutation divesting the
appellants/plaintiffs of their title in the suit land is illegal and void. However, the
said title remains subject to the mortgagee interest in favour of the government.
9.
In the light of the above facts, the Court has endeavored to construe
the case of the parties in the light of the pleadings, available evidence on the record
and the law applicable to the controversy which involves the interest of evacuee
mortgagees. Due to a wrong date of creation of mortgage on the suit land given in
the plaint, a reasonable factual plea in the suit based on the redemption mutation
No.2 was rendered futile. It is noted that the document Exb.P-16 (comprising the
registered mortgage deed dated 22.12.1882 and mutation No.4 dated 05.05.1887)
clarifies the confusion about the creation of the mortgage and cures the
contradiction in the suit. Moreover, Exb.P-16 is an admitted document by the
respondents and belongs to the official record. It is therefore, both genuine and
reliable. The actual date of creation of the mortgage which is evidenced by the
document Exb.P-16 is consistent with the plea of mortgage of the suit land taken in
CA.1440/2007.
6
the plaint. The amendment application (C.M.A. No.3811-L of 2006) by the
appellants/plaintiffs for incorporating the correct date of the mortgage in the plaint
does not alter the nature of the case pleaded by the plaintiffs. The prayer for the
incorporation of an undisputed fact is of a formal nature and brings factual clarity
which promotes the fair adjudication of the controversy and the interest of justice.
Compliance with the said criteria satisfies the principles for allowing amendment in
pleadings even by the highest Court. [Ref: Ghulam Nabi vs. Nazir Ahmad (1985
SCMR 824); Secretary to Government (West Pakistan) vs. Abdul Kafil (PLD 1978
SC 264)]. The C.M.A. No. 3811-L of 2006 for the amendment prayed is accordingly
allowed.
10.
As a result of the amendment, the finding duly recorded by the
learned Appellate Court and the learned Revisional Court that a self destructive
case has been setup by the plaintiffs is rendered redundant. What remains in the
field is the learned Trial Court’s finding that the suit is time barred. It is contended
on behalf of the appellants/plaintiffs that the registered mortgage deed (Exb.P-16)
provides for repayment of the mortgage amount of Rs.500/- by 4 Poh 1937 (Jan,
1937). Ordinarily, the limitation period of 60 years under Article 148 of the
Limitation Act, 1908 for redemption of mortgage reckoned from that date ends
roughly in the year 1997. However, the legal rule laid down in Samar Gul’s case
(supra), the memorandum extends the limitation period for the redemption of a
mortgage created in favour of evacuee mortgagees or their successors, the
Settlement Commissioner/Notified Officer until 07.12.2019. Accordingly, a suit for
redemption of the unredeemed land may competently be filed by the plaintiffs until
that date.
11.
With respect to half the mortgaged land that was redeemed by Ditta,
Jallo and Shahbul, the three issueless sons of Sahba under the mutation No.2 dated
17.06.1913 (Exb.P-16), the plaintiffs have brought no evidence on the record to
establish their locus standi as the only successors of the three issueless redeeming
mortgagors. From the agreed pedigree table of the redeeming mortgagors that is
available on record, it appears that the plaintiffs may have entitlement as collaterals
CA.1440/2007.
7
of the redeeming mortgagors. However, the impleadment of all entitled successors
of the redeeming mortgagors in the suit, the ascertainment of the veracity of the
entries in the cultivation column of Intikhab Misl Bandobast of the Mouza from
1911-1912 to 1962-1963 (Exb.P-1 to Exb.P-12) showing the possession of the
mortgaged land with the successors of the redeeming mortgagors and deciding any
third party interest that may have crept over the suit land would be necessary for
adjudicating the title of the redeemed mortgaged land prayed in the suit. Since
neither of the said aspects of the case have been dealt with by the learned Courts
below, it is appropriate that the matter be remanded to the learned trial Court for
deciding after allowing the parties to amend their pleadings, if desired and leading
fresh evidence. This is without prejudice to our finding that according to the law
declared in Samar Gul’s case (PLD 1986 SC 35) the impugned mutation No.1999
dated 12.04.1971 is illegal and void. The respondents are entitled to hold the interest
of evacuee mortgagees in the suit land for which requisite correction shall be made
in the relevant revenue record of Mouza in which the suit land is situate.
For the foregoing discussion, this appeal is partly allowed. No order
as to costs.
J.
J.
Announced in Court at Islamabad,
On 19.04.2016.
J.
APPROVED FOR REPORTING.
| {
"id": "C.A.1440_2007.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1447 OF 2016 CRL. ORIGINAL PETITION
NO.220 OF 2016 IN CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1447 OF 2016
(Against the order dated 16.2.2016 of the High Court of Sindh at Karachi
passed in Spl.H.C.A.No.2/2016)
Gulistan Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1447/2016
Soneri Bank Ltd.
In Cr.O.P.220/2016
…Appellant(s)/Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
Soneri Bank Ltd.
In C.A.1447/2016
Naseer Ahmed
In Cr.O.P.220/2016
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Salman Aslam Butt, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(In C.A.1447/2016)
Ms. Sofia Saeed, ASC
Mr. Tariq Aziz, AOR
(In Cr.O.P.220/2016)
For the Respondent(s):
Ms. Sofia Saeed, ASC
Mr. Tariq Aziz, AOR
(In C.A.1447/2016)
Mr. Salman Aslam Butt, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(In Cr.O.P.220/2016)
Date of Hearing:
2.1.2018
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.- The facts pertaining to this
appeal, with the leave of the court, are that the respondent (bank)
filed a suit for recovery and sale of pledged stocks under Section 9
of the Financial Institutions (Recovery of Finances) Ordinance,
2001 (Ordinance) before the learned Banking Court pursuant to
which the appellant (customer/borrower) filed its application for leave to
defend, which is currently pending adjudication. During the course
of proceedings in the suit, the respondent filed an application
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 2 :-
(C.M.A. No.11483/2012) inter alia seeking the sale of the goods allegedly
pledged in favour of the respondent, which was dismissed by the
learned Banking Court vide order dated 16.4.2013: on the ground
that such application was premature as the application for leave to
defend was yet to be decided and the respondent’s apprehension
regarding misappropriation of goods was unfounded since the keys
of the godown were with the muccadam and additionally a status
quo order passed in a civil suit filed by the appellant, against inter
alia the respondent, before the learned Lahore High Court, was in
the field and stood in the way of grant of said application. This
order remained unchallenged and has since attained finality.
Thereafter, the respondent filed another application (C.M.A.
No.16530/2015), again inter alia, seeking the same relief as in its
previous application. This second application was allowed by the
learned Banking Court vide order dated 4.12.2015 (the appellant was
proceeded against ex-parte and this order was an ex-parte order) primarily on the
ground that the goods in question were likely to be devalued and
this happenstance necessitated sale. The appellant unsuccessfully
challenged this impugned order before a Division Bench of the
learned High Court and thereafter approached this Court. Leave
was granted on 13.5.2016 in the following terms:-
“Learned counsel for the petitioner states that
per the provisions of Section 16 of the
Financial Institutions (Recovery of Finances)
Ordinance, 2001, the learned Banking Court
has no jurisdiction to direct the sale of the
goods belonging to the petitioner allegedly
pledged with the respondent-bank. It is
further argued that on account of the specific
provisions ibid the general law envisaged by
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 3 :-
Order 39 Rule 6 of the CPC empowering the
sale of security by the court as an interim
measure shall not be available or invoked. It
is further submitted that the goods for which
the sale has been directed by the learned
Banking Court are not the ones which are
pledged with the respondent-bank, rather
those are hypothecated. There is an earlier
application filed by the respondent-plaintiff
for the sale of the property which has been
rejected, thus the principle of res judicata
shall be applicable. Reliance in this behalf is
placed upon Messrs Lanvin Traders, Karachi
Vs. Presiding Officer, Banking Court No.2,
Karachi and others (2013 SCMR 1419).
Leave is granted to consider the above.”
2.
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
respondent admitted in its replication (paragraph No.16) to the
application for leave to defend that the security was not pledged
but rather hypothecated, and having so admitted it cannot take
advantage of Section 176 of the Contract Act, 1872 which allows a
pawnee to sell pledged and not hypothecated goods. Further, he
stated that interim sale of goods is not permitted by the
Ordinance. In this respect he referred to and read out the
provisions of Sections 7, 16, 19 and 23 of the Ordinance.
According to the learned counsel, the purpose of Section 16 of the
Ordinance is to preserve property and the legislature’s intent is
revealed by the use of the word ‘preventing’ therein. Section 16(4)
specifically saves sub-sections (1) and (3) and additionally the
powers under Order XXXVIII Rule 5 and 6 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (CPC) have also been bestowed upon the Banking
Court with regard to property which may not form a part of the
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 4 :-
security mentioned in Section 16(1) of the Ordinance. According to
him, whatever powers the legislature wanted to bestow upon the
Banking Court have been specifically mentioned in Section 16.
Learned counsel submitted that Section 23(2) of the Ordinance
does not give the power to sell, whereas Section 19(3) specifically
provides for sale, therefore wherever the legislature wanted to give
the Banking Court the power to sell, it did so expressly. He went
on to argue that although the Banking Courts have been given the
powers of a Civil Court under the CPC by virtue of Section 7 of the
Ordinance, the use of the words “subject to the provisions of this
Ordinance…” in sub-section (1) thereof means that where specific
provisions in the special law, i.e. the Ordinance, cater to a
particular situation the general law would cede. Learned counsel
for the appellant further contended that the second application for
sale of allegedly pledged goods filed by the respondent was barred
by the principle of res judicata which also applied to applications.
In this respect he relied upon the judgment reported as Hashir
Ahmad Vs. Kamaluddin etc. (1981 SCMR 1180). He further
stated that the appellant did not receive notice of the second
application filed by the respondent and was therefore not heard
when the impugned order dated 4.12.2015 was passed. He argued
that the learned Division Bench of the Banking Court failed to
advert to/decide this question relating to the said application as
the same was decided without giving an opportunity of hearing to
the appellant.
3.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent
referred to various documents including the plaint filed by the
respondent, letters, reports and orders of the Official Assignee in
order to establish that the goods were in fact pledged and not
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 5 :-
hypothecated.
With
respect
to
the
respondent’s
apparent
admission in their replication to the application for leave to defend
that the goods were hypothecated and not pledged, she averred
that it was simply a typographical error. Learned counsel further
submitted that the circumstances surrounding the filing of both
the applications were different, in that with respect to the second
application, the keys were no longer with the muccadam leading to
the apprehension that the goods were likely to be misappropriated
which in turn justified sale of the goods vide order dated
4.12.2015.
4.
Heard. It is pertinent to mention at the very outset
that throughout this opinion, we have deliberately refrained from
commenting or adjudicating upon the factual aspect as to whether
the goods in question were pledged or hypothecated as this would
involve a detailed factual exercise and determination in a matter
arising out of an interlocutory order, which in turn would have a
direct impact on the suit filed by the respondent and the
application for leave to defend filed by the appellant, pending
before the Banking Court. In order to determine whether the
Banking Court has the power to direct interim sale of goods under
the provisions of Section 16 of the Ordinance we find it expedient
to briefly discuss the history and purpose of banking laws in
Pakistan. Initially the resolution of banking disputes was by
means of filing a civil suit, with the CPC governing the
proceedings. In 1978, a special law was enacted; the Banking
Companies (Recovery of Loans) Ordinance, 1978 (Ordinance of 1978)
which created Special Courts and moreover provided a special
procedure for the disposal of matters pertaining to banking
companies and recovery of loans which fell within the ambit of the
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 6 :-
said Ordinance. It was followed by the Banking Companies
(Recovery of Loans) Ordinance, 1979 which repealed and re-
enacted with certain modifications the Ordinance of 1978.
Thereafter, the Banking Tribunals Ordinance, 1984 (Ordinance of
1984) was promulgated which created the Banking Tribunals and
provided a machinery for recovery of finances provided by banking
companies. Then the Banking Companies (Recovery of Loans,
Advances,
Credits
and
Finances)
Ordinance,
1997
which
eventually culminated into the Banking Companies (Recovery of
Loans, Advances, Credits and Finances) Act, 1997 (Act of 1997)
created the Banking Courts to resolve disputes pertaining to
defaults in terms of fulfilling of their obligations by the customer,
borrower or banking company as defined by the said Act. Finally,
the Financial Institutions (Recovery of Finances) Ordinance, 2001
was promulgated which repealed and re-enacted with certain
modifications the Act of 1997. The aforementioned banking
statutes in general and the Ordinance in particular were
essentially enacted to be complete and comprehensive codes. This
special law postulates the procedure for the resolution of disputes
between financial institutions and customers pertaining to
recovery of finances falling within the domain of the Ordinance. A
special triumvirate of jurisdiction has been conferred upon the
Banking Courts created by the Ordinance : territorial, party based
and subject matter based. Territorial jurisdiction refers to the
geographical reach to which the jurisdiction of the Banking Court
is extended (Sections 1(2) and 5 of the Ordinance). With respect to parties,
the Banking Courts only have jurisdiction over a matter which
involves a financial institution and a customer (Section 9(1) of the
Ordinance), and both terms have been defined in Sections 2(a) and
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 7 :-
(c) of the Ordinance respectively. The subject matter over which
the Banking Courts have jurisdiction is the default (by a customer or
financial institution) in fulfillment of any obligation with regard to any
finance (Section 9(1) of the Ordinance), where the terms finance and
obligation have been defined in Sections 2(d) and (e) of the
Ordinance respectively. Undoubtedly the jurisdiction of the
Banking Courts is special and exclusive and this is bolstered by
Section 7(4) of the Ordinance which provides as follows:-
“Subject to sub-section (5), no Court other
than a Banking Court shall have or exercise
any jurisdiction with respect to any matter
to which the jurisdiction of a Banking Court
extends under this Ordinance, including a
decision as to the existence or otherwise of a
finance and the execution of a decree passed
by a Banking Court.”
5.
It is in this backdrop that we proceed to examine the
various provisions of the Ordinance, the relevant parts whereof are
reproduced below for ease of reference:-
Financial Institutions (Recovery of
Finances) Ordinance, 2001
“7. Powers of Banking Courts.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Ordinance, a
Banking Court shall:
(a)
in the exercise of its civil jurisdiction
have all the powers vested in a civil Court
under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act
V of 1908);
(b)
……………………………………………
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 8 :-
(2)
A Banking Court shall in all matters
with respect to which the procedure has not
been provided for in this Ordinance, follow
the procedure laid down in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), and the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of
1898).
(3)
……………………………………………
(4)
……………………………………………
(5)
……………………………………………
(6)
……………………………………………
(7)
……………………………………………
16. Attachment before judgment, injunction
and appointment of Receivers.-(1) Where the
suit filed by a financial institution is for the
recovery of any amount through the sale of
any property which is mortgaged, pledged,
hypothecated, assigned, or otherwise charged
or which is the subject of any obligation in
favour of the financial institution as security
for finance or for or in relation to a finance
lease, the Banking Court may, on application
by the financial institution, with a view to
preventing
such
property
from
being
transferred, alienated, encumbered, wasted or
otherwise dealt with in a manner which is
likely to impair or prejudice the security in
favour of the financial institution, or
otherwise in the interest of justice
(a)
restrain the customer and any other
concerned
person
from
transferring,
alienating,
parting
with
possession
or
otherwise encumbering, charging, disposing
or dealing with the property in any manner;
(b)
attach such property;
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 9 :-
(c)
transfer possession of such property
to the financial institution; or
(d)
appoint one or more Receivers of
such property on such terms and conditions
as it may deem fit.
(2)
An order under sub-section (1) may
also be passed by the Banking Court in
respect of any property held benami in the
name of an ostensible owner whether
acquired before or after the grant of finance
by the financial institution.
(3)
In cases where a customer has
obtained property or financing through a
finance lease, or has executed an agreement
in connection with a mortgage, charge or
pledge in terms whereof the financial
institution is authorized to recover or take
over possession of the property without filing
a suit, the financial institution may, at its
option:
(a)
directly recover the same if the
property is movable; or
(b)
file a suit hereunder and the Banking
Court may pass an order at any time, either
authorising the financial institution to recover
the property directly or with the assistance of
the Court:
Provided that in the event the
financial institution wrongly or unjustifiably
exercises the direct power of recovery
hereunder it shall be liable to pay such
compensation to the customer as may be
adjudged by the Banking Court in summary
proceedings to be initiated on the application
of the customer and concluded in thirty days.
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 10 :-
(4)
Nothing in sub-sections (1) to (3) shall
affect the powers of the Banking Court under
Order XXXVIII Rules 5 and 6 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908) to
attach before judgment any property other
than property mentioned in sub-section (1).
19. Execution of decree and sale with or
without intervention of Banking Court.-(1)
Upon pronouncement of judgment and decree
by
a
Banking
Court,
the
suit
shall
automatically stand converted into execution
proceedings without the need to file a
separate application and no fresh notice need
be issued to the judgment-debtor in this
regard. Particulars of the mortgaged, pledged
or hypothecated property and other assets of
the judgment-debtor shall be filed by the
decree-holder
for
consideration
of
the
Banking Court and the case will be heard by
the Banking Court for execution of its decree
on the expiry of 30 days from the date of
pronouncement of judgment and decree:
Provided that if the record of the suit
is summoned at any stage by the High Court
for purposes of hearing an appeal under
section 22 or otherwise, copies of the decree
and other property documents shall be
retained by the Banking Court for purposes of
continuing the execution proceedings.
(2)
……………………………………………
(3)
In cases of mortgaged, pledged or
hypothecated
property,
the
financial
institution may sell or cause the same to be
sold with or without the intervention of the
Banking Court either by public auction or by
inviting sealed tenders and appropriate the
proceeds towards total or partial satisfaction
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 11 :-
of the decree. The decree passed by a Banking
Court shall constitute and confer sufficient
power and authority for the financial
institution to sell or cause the sale of the
mortgaged, pledged or hypothecated property
together with transfer of marketable title and
no further order of the Banking Court shall be
required for this purpose.
(4)
Where a financial institution wishes to
sell mortgaged, pledged or hypothecated
property by inviting sealed tenders, it shall
invite offers through advertisement in one
English and one Urdu newspaper which are
circulated widely in the city in which the sale
is to take place giving not less than thirty days
time for submitting offers. The sealed tenders
shall be opened in the presence of the
tenderers or their representatives or such of
them as attend:
Provided that the financial institution
shall be entitled in its discretion, to purchase
the property at the highest bid received.
(5)
……………………………………………
(6)
……………………………………………
(7)
Notwithstanding anything contained in
the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 (Act V of
1908), or any other law for the time being in
force:
(a)
the Banking Court shall follow the
summary
procedure
for
purposes
of
investigation of claims and objections in
respect of attachment or sale of any property,
whether or not mortgaged, pledged or
hypothecated, and shall complete such
investigation within 30 days of filing of the
claims or objections;
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 12 :-
(b)
if the claims or objections are found
by the Banking Court to be malafide or filed
merely to delay the sale of the property, it
shall impose a penalty upto twenty percent of
the sale price of the property.
(c)
the Banking Court may, in its
discretion, proceed with the sale of the
mortgaged, or pledged or hypothecated
property if, in its opinion the interest of
justice so require:
Provided that…………………………”
(Emphasis added)
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
“Order XXXIX Rule 6. Power to order
interim sale.—The Court may, on the
application of any party to a suit, order the
sale, by any person named in such order, and
in such manner and on such terms as it thinks
fit, of any movable property being the subject-
matter of such suit or attached before
judgment in such suit, which is subject to
speedy and natural decay, or which for any
other just and sufficient cause it may be
desirable to have sold at once.”
In case of a suit for the recovery of any amount through sale of
property which has been pledged, hypothecated, etc. in favour of a
financial institution as security for finance (or for or in relation to a
finance lease), Section 16 of the Ordinance empowers a Banking
Court to pass an order before judgment, upon an application by
the financial institution, to prevent such property from being
transferred, alienated, encumbered, wasted or otherwise dealt with
in a manner which is likely to impair or prejudice the security in
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 13 :-
favour of the financial institution or otherwise in the interests of
justice. The types of orders that the Banking Court could pass are
provided for in Section 16(1) of the Ordinance:- it may (a) restrain
the customer (and any other concerned person) from transferring,
alienating, parting with possession or otherwise encumbering,
charging, disposing or dealing with the property in any manner; (b)
attach the property; (c) transfer possession of such property to
the financial institution; and (d) appoint one or more Receivers
of such property on such terms and conditions as it may deem fit.
Section 16(2) of the Ordinance empowers the Banking Court to
pass similar orders to those mentioned in Section 16(1) ibid with
respect to any property held benami in the name of an ostensible
owner. Where movable property is concerned, Section 16(3) allows
for direct recovery by a financial institution in cases where a
customer has obtained property/financing through a finance lease
or in those situations where the financial institution has been
authorized to recover or take over possession of the property
without filing a suit. The relevant provision for the purposes of the
instant case is Section 16(1) of the Ordinance, a plain reading of
which makes clear that the Banking Court does not have any
power to sell goods which are pledged, hypothecated etc. prior to
passing of the judgment in a suit for recovery through sale filed by
the financial institution. The qualified powers given to the Banking
Courts in this respect have been specifically mentioned in parts (a)
to (d) of Section 16(1) of the Ordinance which are essentially orders
of restraint, attachment, transfer of possession and appointment of
Receiver(s).
Section 16 ibid can be compared with Section 19 of the
Ordinance, which provides for execution of decree and sale. In
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 14 :-
juxtaposition with Section 16, Section 19(3) has specifically used
the words sell/sold with respect to mortgaged, pledged or
hypothecated property in terms of what the financial institution
(with or without the intervention of the Banking Court) may do for the purposes
of total or partial satisfaction of the decree. The use of the word
sell in this Section [and the failure to use it in section 16 ibid] is
indicative of the fact that the legislature used such word only
where it intended that sale be permitted. Thus the legislature has
permitted a financial institution to sell goods only after it has
attained a decree in its favour, for total or partial satisfaction
thereof. Therefore, we are sanguine in our view that the absence of
the words sale or sell (or any variant thereof) coupled with the
specificity of the types of orders that a Banking Court can pass
under Section 16, speaks to the legislative intent; that sale not be
permitted during the pendency of a suit for recovery by sale before
the Banking Court.
6.
This brings us to a discussion of Section 7 of the
Ordinance. Sub-section (1) part (a) of Section 7 ibid provides that
in exercise of its civil jurisdiction a Banking Court shall have all
the powers vested in a Civil Court under the CPC. One may argue
that since, in exercise of its powers under the CPC, a Civil Court is
empowered to pass an order for interim sale of property, furnished
as security to a financial institution, before the final determination
of the case under Order XXXIX Rule 6 of the CPC or whilst
exercising its inherent jurisdiction under Section 151 of the CPC,
therefore by virtue of Section 7(1)(a), which is legislation by
reference, the Banking Court too would possess such power. This
view is incorrect because according to the principle of harmonious
interpretation the special law would take precedence over the
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 15 :-
general law (generalia specialibus non derogant). The Ordinance is a special
law, and therefore its specific provisions will displace the general
law which shall be deemed to be inapplicable. Reference in this
regard may be made to the judgment reported as Neimat Ali
Goraya and 7 others Vs. Jaffar Abbas, Inspector/Sargeant
Traffic through S.P., Traffic, Lahore and others (1996 SCMR
826). This position is also supported in Section 4 of the Ordinance
which provides that “the provisions of this Ordinance shall have effect
notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law for
the time being in force”. The reason behind this is logical in that the
legislature, having devoted attention to a special subject and
provided for all the peculiar circumstances that may arise in
respect thereof (the legislature is presumed to know the law when enacting
legislation), it cannot intend to derogate from such special enactment
by allowing the general law to override the special law, unless it
does so through express and specific mention of its intention to
that effect. Thus when Section 16 of the Ordinance has provided a
comprehensive list of the specific types of orders (which do not include
sale of property) that a Banking Court is empowered to pass with
respect to property that is pledged, hypothecated etc. prior to the
final judgment of a suit for recovery by sale, there is no doubt that
such provision was intended to be all-inclusive, leaving no room to
read in the power to sell by means of applying the general
provisions of the CPC, i.e. Order XXXIX Rule 6 or the inherent
powers under Section 151 of the CPC. However, the legislature did
intend that nothing in sub-sections (1) to (3) of Section 16 should
affect the powers of the Banking Court under Order XXXVIII Rules
5 and 6 of the CPC to attach before judgment any property other
than property mentioned in sub-section (1) and therefore
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 16 :-
specifically provided for the above in Section 16(4) of the
Ordinance. The saving of certain provisions of the CPC within
Section 16, as done through Section 16(4), augments the view that
the said section was meant to be comprehensive and it does not
permit sale before judgment.
This opinion is further bolstered by the fact that Section 7(1)
of the Ordinance itself begins with the words “Subject to the provisions
of this Ordinance, a Banking Court shall…”. Section 7(2) further clarifies
and provides that:-
“A Banking Court shall in all matters with
respect to which the procedure has not been
provided for in this Ordinance, follow the
procedure laid down in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), and the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of
1898).”
(Emphasis supplied)
Therefore a Banking Court is to follow the procedure laid down in
the CPC in all matters with respect to which the procedure has
not been provided for in the Ordinance, whereas the procedure
to prevent property which has been pledged or hypothecated etc.
from being transferred, alienated etc. has been duly and
exhaustively provided for in Section 16 of the Ordinance(save for
Section 16 (4) thereof). Therefore, to this extent the application of the
CPC has been excluded.
7.
We now consider whether the second application filed
by the respondent was liable to be dismissed on the ground of res
judicata. There are several aspects to this issue. First, whether the
principle of res judicata applies to applications or not; and second,
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 17 :-
if the answer to the first question is in the affirmative, what is the
scope of the application of such a principle? Res judicata is the
Latin term for “a matter (already) judged” and entails the concept of
claim preclusion; once a matter has been decided and adjudicated
on merits by an adjudicatory body, the same cannot be raised
again. The purpose of this principle is to create repose and to
prevent multiple and possibly contradictory findings on the same
issues and to curb unnecessary delays in proceedings. As regards
civil proceedings, this concept is codified in Section 11 of the CPC.
However, the said section specifically refers to ‘suits’ and therefore
restricts the application of the principle thereto. Interlocutory
applications can not be regarded as ‘suits’; hence, strictly speaking
Section 11 of the CPC would not be attracted to such applications.
Nevertheless, the general legal principles of res judicata would
most certainly apply. Therefore an order passed pursuant to any
interlocutory application at one stage of the proceedings would
operate as a bar upon similar interlocutory applications made at a
subsequent stage of the proceedings based on the general
principles of res judicata.1 However this general rule will not apply
where the order on such interlocutory application does not involve
any adjudication. Examples of such instances are:- where there is
no decision on merits, but a mere expression of opinion not
necessary for the disposal of the application;2 where a matter,
though in issue has, as a fact, not been heard and decided, either
actually or constructively;3 where a matter in issue has been
1 The Code of Civil Procedure (1908) as amended by Act 104 of 1976 by W. W. Chitaley and V. B.
Bakhale.
2 Aruguma Thamviran and others Vs. Namasivaya Pandara Sannadhi and others (AIR 1926 Mad
162).
3 Jairam Kissan Vs. Chandrakaladevi and others (AIR 1974 Bom 49).
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 18 :-
expressly left open and undecided;4 where the suit is not pressed;
or where the suit is withdrawn.5 A further exception is highlighted
in the case of Amanullah Khan and others Vs. Khurshid Ahmad
[PLD 1963 (W.P.) Lah 566], which holds that where an application
has been decided once, but subsequently a fresh application is
made on facts and circumstances different from those which
existed earlier, res judicata would not apply. In this context the
case reported as Mst. Sarkar Khano A. Molo Vs. Abdul Malik
Rehmanah20tullah Kasim Lakha through L.Rs. and others
(2016 YLR 1506) is germane which holds that the change of the
status of a suit property, even during the pendency of a suit, could
be pressed as a fresh ground to re-present an application, even in
the event of the existence of an earlier order on an application of
the same nature or title. We find it pertinent to make reference to
the case of Arjun Singh Vs. Mohindra Kumar and others (AIR
1964 SC 993) wherein it was held that interlocutory orders such
as orders of stay, injunction or receiver which are designed to
preserve the status quo during the pendency of the litigation and
to ensure that the parties may not be prejudiced by the normal
delay occasioned in the proceedings before the Court, do not decide
in any manner the merits of the controversy in issue in the suit
and are capable of being altered or varied by subsequent
applications for the same relief, but only on proof of new facts or
new situations which subsequently emerge. The Indian Supreme
Court drew a fine but elegant distinction between the rule of res
judicata and a rejection on the ground that no new facts have been
adduced to justify a different order. It held that if the decision on a
4 Parsotam Gir Vs. Narbada Gir [(1899) ILR 21 All 505].
5 Ghulam Nabi and others Vs. Seth Muhammad Yaqub and others (PLD 1983 SC 344);
Muhammad Akram and others Vs. Member, Board of Revenue and another (2007 SCMR 289).
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 19 :-
particular issue of fact is based on the principle of res judicata
even if fresh facts were placed before the Court, the bar would
continue to operate and preclude a fresh investigation of the issue,
whereas in the other case, on proof of fresh facts, the court would
be competent, indeed would be bound to take those into account
and make an order in conformity with the new facts. Thus in our
view, the proof of new facts or circumstances is necessary in order
to exclude the application from the bar of res judicata in respect of
interlocutory applications during the pendency of a suit. A further
exception is where an application is dismissed as being premature;
this is not a decision on merits and would not operate as res
judicata. A case in point is Banwari Lal Radhe Moham Vs. Punjab
State Co-operative Supply and Marketing Federation Ltd. (AIR
1983 Delhi 86) wherein it was held that the application for
injunction against encashment of bank guarantee did not bar the
second application seeking the same relief as the first application
was premature and held to be not maintainable for the reason that
no demand for encashment of guarantee had been made at the
time of the first application.
In the instant matter, the order dated 16.4.2013 dismissing
the first application filed by the respondent seeking sale of the
goods did not adjudicate on merits, rather the Banking Court
specifically termed the said application premature. This clearly
leaves the matter to be decided at a later stage. Further, the
subsequent application filed by the respondent seeking sale of the
goods indicates a development in that the keys of the godown
where the goods were located were no longer with the muccadam of
the bank, hence their apprehension that the appellant might
misappropriate the goods, which circumstances did not prevail at
Civil Appeal No.1447 of 2016
-: 20 :-
the time of the first application. We are of the view that the
argument by the learned counsel for the appellant that the second
application was barred by the principle of res judicata is
misconceived. The case of Hashir Ahmad (supra) relied upon by the
learned counsel for the appellant is a leave refusing order and is
thus not the law laid down by this Court.
8.
In light of the above, the order for sale of the goods in
question passed by the learned Single Judge-in-Chambers and the
order upholding such order of sale in appeal passed by the learned
Division Bench of the Banking Court are illegal, being in violation
of the provisions of Section 16 of the Ordinance. Therefore, this
appeal is allowed and the impugned order is set aside.
9.
Before parting it may be observed that the matter is
pending before the Court for the last five years, yet leave
application has not been decided. We direct the Banking Court
(where the case is statedly pending now) to decide the matter within one
month from the date fixed for hearing before the Court without fail.
Till the final decision upon the leave application, Mr. Salman
Aslam butt, learned counsel for the appellant has undertaken that
the stocks lying in godown Nos.9 and 11 shall not be removed or
disposed of. The criminal original petition is accordingly disposed
of.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
2nd of January, 2018
Approved for reporting
Waqas Naseer
| {
"id": "C.A.1447_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED.
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB.
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN.
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1459 OF 2018.
Against judgment dated 13.09.2018 of Peshawar High Court, Peshawar,
passed in Writ Petition No.4125-P of 2017.
Riffat Shaheen.
…Appellant(s)
Versus
The Government of KPK through
Chief Secretary, Peshawar and others.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s): Mr. Nasir Mehmood, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
For the respondent(s): Barrister Qasim Wadood, Addl.AG, KP
Date of Hearing:
07.03.2019.
O R D E R
Ijaz ul Ahsan, J-. The petitioner seeks leave to
appeal against a judgment of the Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar,
dated
13.09.2018.
Through
the
impugned
judgment, a constitutional petition filed by the petitioner was
dismissed.
2.
The brief facts necessary for decision of this lis are
that the petitioner was appointed as a PTC Teacher on
04.10.1985 and has been residing with her husband in a
government accommodation (Quarter No.26-B, Officers Block,
GRC, Kohat Road, Peshawar). He was working as an Assistant
Director, KPK TEVTA. He retired on 01.04.2017. After expiry of
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1459 OF 2018.
six months’ grace period, the Respondents issued a vacation
notice dated 29.09.2017. The petitioner applied for transfer of
the quarter in her name on 01.08.2017 under Rule 4 of the
KPK Residential Accommodation at Peshawar (Procedure for
Allotment) Rules, 1980 (‘the Rules, 1980’). Her request was
not acceded to. In the meantime, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Buildings (Management, Control and Allotment) Act, 2018
(“the Act”) was promulgated which repealed and substituted
the previous Rules. Consequently, the petitioner’s application
was not accepted which prompted her to approach the High
Court
in
its
constitutional
jurisdiction.
However
her
constitutional petition also did not succeed. Hence, this
petition.
3.
The learned counsel for the petitioner submits that
under the Rules, 1980 a vested right had accrued in her favour
which could not be taken away through a subsequent change
in law/rules. He further maintains that the Act, 2018 and the
Rules framed thereunder were promulgated on 22.01.2018 and
the same could not be given retrospective effect. He maintains
that the High Court has erred in law in applying and
interpreting the relevant laws and has exercised jurisdiction in
a perverse and erroneous manner.
4.
The learned Additional Advocate General, Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa has defended the impugned judgment. He
submits that the case of the petitioner was governed under the
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1459 OF 2018.
Rules, 2015 which were struck down by the learned High
Court. It had been observed by the High Court that out of turn
allotments were required to be prohibited by the law and the
Rules. He maintains that the Act, 2018 was promulgated in
light of the judgment of the High Court and gave effect to the
same. He further submits that a special quota for children and
spouses of the deceased/retired employees has been provided
in the new law. At present, the petitioner appears at Sr.No.13
of the waiting list under the said quota. As soon as
accommodation becomes available she would be entitled to the
same in accordance with her seniority under the said quota.
5.
Having heard the learned counsel for the petitioner
and the learned Law Officer, we find that the Rules, 1980 as
well as the Rules, 2015 were repealed by the Act and Rules of
2018, which specifically provided that the Rules of 1980 and
2015 stood repealed except to the extent as were not in
consistent or in conflict with the Act and Rules of 2018. It is
also an admitted fact that the Rules of 2015 did not provide for
out of turn allotment to the spouse of a retired civil servant.
Further, the Act and Rules of 2018 do not provide an
automatic benefit to the spouse or children of a deceased or
retired civil servant to retain the government accommodation
on retirement/demise of the original allottee. However, their
rights have been safeguarded by providing a special quota in
the available government housing which is based on seniority
of applications. A list of eligible children and spouses of
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1459 OF 2018.
retired/deceased employees is accordingly maintained by the
concerned department. That being the case, the petitioner
would be entitled to allotment of an official accommodation at
her own turn and she cannot rely upon the Rules of 1980 and
or of 2015 in order to advance her claim. Further, she has
already retained the government accommodation for a grace
period of six months whereafter she and her husband are
obliged to vacate the government accommodation and utilise
house rent allowance which is paid by the government.
6.
The learned Law Officer has also pointed out that
the petitioner’s name appears at Sr.No.13 of the waiting list
maintained by the Respondents for allotment of government
accommodation. We are therefore not persuaded by the
argument of the learned counsel for the petitioner that she has
a legitimate right to retain the government accommodation
originally allotted to her husband on the basis of 1980 Rules
because the same have been repealed. Her case is governed by
the Act, 2018 and the Rules framed thereunder and no legally
enforceable vested right exists in her favour. The judgment of
the High Court is well reasoned and does not suffer from any
legal, procedural or jurisdictional defect, error or flaw that may
require interference by this Court.
7.
Above are the reasons for our short order dated
07.03.2019. The same for ease of reference is reproduced
below:-
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1459 OF 2018.
“Having heard the learned ASC for the appellant as well as
the
learned
Additional
Advocate
General,
Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa and for reasons to be recorded later, this
appeal is dismissed.”
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
ISLAMABAD.
07.03.2019.
ZR/*
‘Not Approved For Reporting’
| {
"id": "C.A.1459_2018.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE QAZI MUHAMMAD AMIN AHMED
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
(On appeal against the judgments dated 13.03.2013 &
01.12.2011 passed by the High Court of Sindh,
Karachi in C.P. No. D-3336/2011 & Islamabad High
Court, Islamabad in W.P. No. 2895/2011)
FBR through Chairman, Islamabad etc
(In both cases)
… Appellants/Petitioners
VERSUS
M/s Wazir Ali and Company etc
(In CA 1460/2013)
Shahid Aziz Zahidi and others
(In CP 133/2012)
For the App/Petitioners:
Mr. Abdul Hameed, ASC
(In CA 1460/2013)
Mr. Babar Bilal, ASC
(In CP 133/2012)
Mr. Masood Akhtar, Chief Legal
Officer, FBR
For the Respondents:
Nemo
(For Respondent No. 1 in CA 1460/2013)
Ex-parte
(For respondent No. 2 to 4 in CA 1460/2013)
Mr. M. Raheel Kamran Sh, ASC
(For respondent Nos. 1 to 13 in CP 133/2012)
Date of Hearing:
09.03.2020
JUDGMENT
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460/2013
FAISAL ARAB, J.- The respondent is a partnership
firm engaged in the business of importing goods and selling them
in the local markets. During the course of tax year 2011, the
respondent paid advance income tax at the import stage on the
value of goods which tax in terms of Section 148 of the Income Tax
Ordinance, 2001 (“2001 Ordinance”) had become its final tax
liability for that tax year. During the same tax year, Section 4A was
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
2
inserted in the 2001 Ordinance through the Income Tax
(Amendment)
Ordinance,
2011
dated
16.03.2011
whereby
surcharge was imposed at the rate of 15% of the income tax
payable under the 2001 Ordinance for the period commencing
from the promulgation of the 2001 Ordinance till 30.06.2011.
Section 4A of the 2001 Ordinance reads:
‘4A. Surcharge: - (1) Subject to this Ordinance, a surcharge
shall be payable by every taxpayer at the rate of fifteen per
cent of the income tax payable under this Ordinance including
the tax payable under Part V of Chapter X of Chapter XIII, as
the case may be, for the period commencing from the
promulgation of this Ordinance, till the 30th June, 2011.
(2) Surcharge shall be paid, collected, deducted and deposited
at the same time and in the same manner as the tax is paid,
collected, deducted and deposited under this Ordinance
including Chapter X or XII as the case may be:
Provided that this surcharge shall not be payable for the tax
year 2010 and prior tax years and shall be applicable, subject
to the provisions of sub-section (1), for the tax year 2011 only.’
2.
On 12.09.2011, FBR issued Circular No.11 of 2011,
relevant portion of which reads ‘However, it has been decided that
the tax liability for the entire T/Y (Tax Year) 2011 may not be
subjected to imposition of surcharge and the same be levied on the
proportionate liability for a period of three and a half months.’ Thus,
in terms of the Circular, the liability of surcharge was confined to a
period of 3½ months (16.03.2011 to 30.06.2011) and the tax
liability of the tax year 2011 was to be proportionately allocated to
the 3½ month period. This Circular was then followed by the
Federal Government’s Notification SRO 977 (1) 2011 dated
19.10.2011 whereby in exercise of the power conferred by Sub-
Section (2) of Section 53 of the 2001 Ordinance, Clause (11) was
added in Part III of the Second Schedule which reads ‘The amount
of surcharge payable on the income tax liability for the tax year
2011 under Section 4A shall be computed on the proportionate
amount of income tax liability for three and a half months.’
3.
Before the period for the filing of tax returns under
Section 114 and the statement of income under Section 115 of the
2001 Ordinance for the tax year 2011 expired, the respondent
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
3
challenged FBR’s Circular dated 12.09.2011 in the High Court of
Sindh in its Constitutional jurisdiction. The main ground for the
challenge was that the surcharge can only be computed on that tax
liability that exclusively pertained to the income derived in the 3½
months period. It was thus maintained by the respondent that for
the purpose of computing surcharge, all payments of advance
income tax made at the import stage in the entire tax year 2011
should not be taken into consideration proportionately for the
purposes of determining surcharge for the 3½ month period and
the advance income tax paid in the said 3½ month period only
could have been considered. On such basis, prayer was made to
declare FBR’s Circular unlawful and void ab initio.
4.
The learned judges of the High Court in the impugned
judgment gave the findings to the effect that Section 4A of the
2001 Ordinance does not envisage proportionate determination of
the tax liability of the entire tax year 2011 for the purposes of
calculating surcharge for the 3½ month period and only that
income was to be taken into consideration which pertained to such
period only. In other words, taxable income for 3½ month period
falling between 16.03.2011 to 30.06.2011 alone was to be
ascertained on which tax liability was to be worked out afresh and
then on such tax liability surcharge was to be computed. The effect
of the impugned judgement was that it split the entire tax year
2011 into two and then the income of the last 3½ month period
only was taken into consideration for computing tax liability and
on that limited tax liability of 3 ½ month period the surcharge was
to be computed. In deciding so, the High Court invoked the
principle that when two interpretations of a charging provision are
reasonably possible, the one favouring the taxpayer is to be
preferred and adopted. This principle was applied after taking into
consideration the fact that most of the respondent’s taxable income
related to the first 8½ month period of tax year 2011 and not the
remaining period of 3½ month and the interpretation which it put
on Section 4A of the 2001 Ordinance was more beneficial to the
respondent’s case. Upon giving such findings, FBR’s Circular dated
12.09.2011 was declared to be inconsistent with the provisions of
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
4
Section 4A of the 2001 Ordinance. Aggrieved by such decision, the
department has preferred this appeal with the leave of this Court.
5.
The whole of the 2001 Ordinance envisages that the
income tax liability is to be determined on the basis of taxable
income that is derived or legally presumed to have been derived in
a whole tax year and not any part of it. Therefore, even for the
purpose of computing surcharge under Section 4A of the
Ordinance, the entire income tax liability of the tax year 2011 was
to
be
taken
into
consideration
which
was
then
to
be
proportionately allocated to the 3½ month period and on that
figure of proportionate tax liability surcharge was to be calculated.
This is so as no provision of the 2001 Ordinance allows splitting of
a tax year into two periods for the purposes of determining two
separate taxable incomes of the same tax year and then on the
income of one such period tax liability is to be computed. If that is
done, it would be in derogation of the provisions of the 2001
Ordinance itself, most relevant being the provisions of Sections
4(1), 74, 114 and 115 of the 2001 Ordinance. When we read
Section 4 (1) of the 2001 Ordinance, it clearly provides that income
tax liability is to be determined for the entire period of a tax year
not any part of it and tax year is specifically defined in Section 74
of the 2001 Ordinance which means a period of twelve months.
This period normally ends on 30th June and may also end on any
other date in case the same is allowed by the competent authority
to be adopted. Nevertheless, a tax year under Section 74 of the
2001 Ordinance has to be of twelve months. It is for this reason
that Section 114 of the 2001 Ordinance under which return of
income is required to be filed covers entire tax year. Even in cases
where payment of advance tax becomes a person’s final tax liability
and he is required to file only a statement of income under Section
115 of the 2001 Ordinance, that statement too has to be with
regard to the tax year and not any part of it. Whatever method of
computing taxable income is applicable to a person, either at the
rates specified in the Schedule to the 2001 Ordinance or the
advance tax deductions become his final tax liability, one thing is
certain that income tax liability is determined on the actual or
presumptive income of the whole tax year. Therefore, in cases
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
5
where advance tax deduction made on the basis of value of goods
imported by a person is considered to be his final tax liability, the
legally presumed taxable income of such a person would be the
total value of goods imported in a given tax year. Hence in
whichever mode the tax liability of a person is determined under
the 2001 Ordinance, it is determined on a taxable income that
pertains to a whole tax year. Splitting of taxable income of the
same tax year would negate the very intention of the Legislature
reflected from the provisions of Sections 4(1), 74, 114 and 115 of
the 2001 Ordinance. Not only this, the provision of Section 4A (1)
of the 2001 Ordinance also leads us to reach to the same
conclusion. It reads as follows:-
“4A. Surcharge: - (1) Subject to this Ordinance, a surcharge
shall be payable by every taxpayer at the rate of fifteen per
cent of the income tax payable under this Ordinance including
the tax payable under Part V of Chapter X of Chapter XIII, as
the case may be, for the period commencing from the
promulgation of this Ordinance, till the 30th June, 2011.
6.
As is evident from the contents of Section 4A(1) of the
2001 Ordinance, it starts with the phrase ‘Subject to this
Ordinance’, underlined to lay emphasis, which clearly points out
that it does not have any overriding effect, hence, it cannot be in
derogation of any provision of the 2001 Ordinance and, as already
discussed, no provision of the 2001 Ordinance envisages splitting
of a taxable income of a tax year. Secondly, Section 4A also
contains the phrase ‘…. at the rate of fifteen percent of the income
tax payable under this Ordinance…’ underlined to lay emphasis,
which further leads us towards the direction that surcharge is to
be computed on the income tax that is determined in the manner
provided under the 2001 Ordinance itself and not in any other
manner. This leaves no room for computing tax liability of the tax
year 2011 on a basis other than what is provided in the 2001
Ordinance. This then means that the whole basis for computing
surcharge even for 3½ month period should be the income tax
liability that is determined for the entire tax year, 2011 and then
such tax liability is to be proportionately allocated for the 3½
month period for the purposes of computing surcharge without
determining two separate taxable incomes of the same tax year and
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
6
then working out tax liability of 3½ months separately for the
purposes of computing surcharge. In other words, there cannot be
separate determination of taxable income for 8½ month period
(from 1st July to 15th March) for which accounting is to be
separately done and then a separate accounting is done for the
remaining 3½ month period (from 16th March to 30th June) and on
the basis of taxable income emerging for the 3½ month period,
income tax liability is computed and on that surcharge payable
Section 4A of the 2001 Ordinance is calculated.
7.
As discussed above, when no provision of the 2001
Ordinance permit splitting of tax year for the purposes of
determining two separate taxable incomes of the same tax year and
the only way to compute surcharge was to allocate tax liability of
the entire tax year 2011 proportionately to the 3½ month period
then the question of more than one interpretation of Section 4A
does not arise. Even for argument sake we assume that more than
two interpretation of Section 4A were possible then how to deal
with the situation where there are two sets of taxpayers, one to
whom the proportionate basis would be more suitable as they may
have derived all or substantial income in the last 3½ month period
of the tax year 2011 in comparison to first 8½ month period of the
tax year 2011. For them the interpretation of the learned judges of
High Court which splits the tax year into two would not be of any
benefit as proportionate determination of taxable liability would be
more suitable to them. Whereas the other set of taxpayers like the
respondent to whom the splitting of the tax year for the purposes
of determination of taxable income and on that tax liability is
computed separately would be more beneficial instead of
proportionate allocation of tax liability. Both the situations can
arise. This would mean to vary the interpretation in order to give
beneficial interpretation. The Courts cannot put two separate
interpretations of the same provision of law on the principle of
beneficial interpretation, one of which is beneficial to one set of
taxpayers and the other to another, though the taxing provision
applies equally to both the sets of taxpayers without any
distinction whatsoever. This would create an anomalous situation.
We are clear in our minds that Section 4A does not admit more
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
7
than one interpretation as it was inserted in the 2001 Ordinance
with the rider that it is subject to the other provisions of the said
Ordinance and none of its provisions permit splitting of the period
a tax year for the purposes of determining one tax liability for one
period and the other for the other period of the same tax year.
Therefore, the only way Section 4A would have become workable
for the purposes of computing surcharge keeping within the four
corners of the Ordinance was that the tax liability of the entire tax
year 2011 was proportionately divided in order to notionally work
out the tax liability for the 3½ month period that falls between
16.03.2011 and 30.06.2011 and then liability of surcharge is
computed on such determination.
8.
The respondent follows normal tax year of twelve
months that ends every year on 30th June. Whatever advance tax
was recovered from the respondent at the import stage during the
entire tax year 2011 that had become his final tax liability for the
entire tax year 2011. As income tax liability for the whole tax year
had already stood determined then this tax liability was to be
proportionately divided in order to determine the notional tax
liability of 3 ½ month period and on that surcharge under Section
4A of the 2001 Ordinance was to be computed. For example,
income tax liability of the respondent for the entire tax year 2011
is assumed to be Rs.120,000, the same was to be divided by 12
and then multiplied by 3½ which would have given proportionate
income tax liability for the 3½ month period, which comes to
Rs.35,000/-. (Rs.120,000 ÷ 12 x 3½ = Rs.35,000). On this
proportionate tax liability 15% surcharge payable under Section 4A
of the 2001 Ordinance was to be calculated. The Circular in
question had only explained the only possible way the surcharge
under Section 4A could be computed by remaining within the
ambit of the provisions of the 2001 Ordinance.
9.
We may also point out an important aspect of the case
which had escaped the attention of the advocates of the parties as
well as the learned judges of the High Court. When we read Section
4A (1) of the 2001 Ordinance, it states that surcharge was to be
calculated ‘…..for the period commencing from the promulgation of
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
8
this Ordinance, till the 30th June, 2011.’ This clearly means that
Section 4A in its application came into effect right from the date of
the promulgation of the 2001 Ordinance i.e. the year 2001 till
30.06.2011 which application was then restricted to only tax year
2011 by its proviso which reads ‘Provided that this surcharge shall
not be payable for the tax year 2010 and prior tax years and shall
be applicable, subject to the provisions of sub-section (1), for the tax
year 2011 only.’ The proviso makes Section 4A effective for the tax
year 2011 only. By no means Section 4A is to be read to mean that
it covers only a part of the tax year, 2011. Probably realizing the
fact that Section 4A, in its application covers the entire tax year
2011 though inserted in the 2001 Ordinance on 16.03.2011 i.e.
during the course of tax year 2011, FBR through its Circular No.11
of 2011 announced that the surcharge was to be paid with effect
from 16.03.2011 i.e. the day Section 4A was inserted in the 2001
Ordinance till 30.06.2011 which was to be computed on the basis
of proportionate tax liability of the tax year 2011. This Circular in
effect granted concession to the taxpayers otherwise Section 4A
had covered the entire tax year 2011 and not any part of it.
Probably realizing the fact that FBR through its circulars cannot
grant any concession, the same was followed by the Federal
Government’s Notification SRO 977 (1) 2011 dated 19.10.2011
which was issued in exercise of the power conferred on it under
Sub-Section (2) of Section 53 of the 2001 Ordinance whereby
Clause (11) was added in Part III of the Second Schedule. Clause
(11) provided ‘The amount of surcharge payable on the income tax
liability for the tax year 2011 under Section 4A shall be computed on
the proportionate amount of income tax liability for three and a half
months.’ The said SRO which was issued by the Federal
Government in exercise of powers contained in Section 53 of the
2001 Ordinance and granted exemption in the sense that it limited
the application of Section 4A to only 3½ month period, which in
terms of Section 4A covered the entire tax year 2011 and while
extending such exemption, provided the mode in which the
surcharge was to be computed i.e. on the basis of proportionate
tax liability of the tax year 2011. Hence the said SRO 977 (1) 2011
dated 19.10.2011 on its own strength had the force of law and
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1460 OF 2013 AND
CIVIL PETITION NO. 133 OF 2012
9
never came under challenge. So has to be given effect to
regardless of the FBR’s Circular dated 12.09.2011, which only was
challenge was challenged in the High Court.
10.
The above are the detailed reasons of our short order
dated 09.03.2020 whereby the delay was condoned, this appeal
was allowed and the connected Civil Petition No. 133 of 2020 was
converted into appeal and allowed. The short order reads as
follows:-
“We have heard the C.P. No. 133 of 2013 and have
arrived at the conclusion that the surcharge levied under
Section 4A of the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 added thereto
by Income Tax (Amendment) Ordinance IV of 2011 levies a
surcharge on the income tax payable for the entire tax year.
Accordingly, for reasons to be recorded later, this petition is
converted into appeal and allowed.
2.
In Civil Appeal No. 1460 of 2013 leave was granted
by order dated 02.12.2013 but subject to the question of
limitation as the petition is admittedly barred by 09 days.
According to the principle laid down in Mehreen Zaibun Nisa
etc. versus Land Commissioner, Multan etc (PLD 1975 SC
397) and Province of Punjab versus Muhammad Tayyab
(1989 SCMR 1621) when a common question of law is
decided in one case, another case involving the same point
that is time barred is liable to be heard on merits.
Consequently, following the said principle, we condone the
delay and insofar as the merits are concerned, for reasons to
be recorded later, we allow this appeal.”
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
9th of March, 2020
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1460_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HACJ
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
MR. JUSTICE TARIQ PARVEZ
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1471 OF 2015
(Against the judgment dated 29.6.2015 of the
Peshawar
High
Court,
Abbottabad
Bench,
Abbottabad passed in RFA No.30-A/2012)
Zahid Zaman Khan etc.
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Khan Afsar etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Haji Ghulam Basit, ASC
For the respondent(s):
Mr. Abdul Rashid Awan, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
Amicus curiae:
Mr. Najam-ul-Hassan Kazmi, Sr. ASC
Date of hearing:
02.02.2016
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- In this appeal with the leave of
the court we are required to resolve the primary question as to what
should be the forum of appeal where the value of the suit as fixed
in the plaint has been changed by the court? Ancillary to the above,
there are some other connected questions which are duly reflected in
the leave granting order (LGO) and shall be accordingly addressed.
2.
In this context, the brief facts of the case are that the
appellants filed a suit (bearing No.167/1 of 2007) for declaration to the effect
that they are the owners in possession of the suit land with further
relief seeking protection of their possession. Respondent No.1 (the
respondent) also filed a suit (bearing No.166/1 of 2007) qua the same land for
declaration, possession and permanent injunction etc. against the
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 2 :-
appellants on the basis of his entitlement to the property. It is
pertinent to mention that the appellants had valued their suit for the
purposes of court fee and jurisdiction at Rs.200/- whilst the
respondent valued his suit at Rs.900/-. The learned Trial Judge
consolidated the suits on 26.4.2008. An additional issue was framed
in the suit of the respondent qua the valuation of that suit for the
purposes of court fee and jurisdiction. Vide single judgment dated
31.1.2012 the Trial court dismissed the suit of the appellants and
decreed that of the respondent. With respect to the additional issue
about the valuation, the court held:-
“To prove the facts mentioned in the additional issue,
plaintiffs produced eight witnesses and according to their
statements the market value of the suit property is
approximately 30 Lac rupees and as the defendant No.1 in
his connected suit also sought the relief of possession in
alternate, therefore, he is directed to affix the proper courfee
within thirty days. Hence, the issue is decided accordingly”.
Consequently, the respondent paid an amount of Rs.15,000/- (fifteen
thousand) as court fee and the said valuation of the suit for the purposes
of jurisdiction, as determined by the court, was also reflected in the
decree passed in favour of the respondent.
3.
The appellants filed one regular first appeal (RFA No.30-
A/2012) before the learned Peshawar High Court challenging the
judgment and both the decrees. The respondent raised a preliminary
objection to the effect that for the purposes of determining the forum
of appeal the valuation given in the plaint would be relevant and not
the one determined by the learned Trial Court, and since the value of
the suits fixed by both the plaintiffs
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 3 :-
below the pecuniary jurisdiction of the High Court, therefore, the
appeal was not competent before the High Court. The respondent
relied on a judgment of the learned Peshawar High Court dated
24.4.2015 passed in RFA No.41/2002. The learned High Court
allowed this objection vide impugned judgment, holding:-
“I am of the view that the preliminary objection raised by the
learned counsel for the respondents holds the field.
Therefore, the instant appeal is held not competent before
this Court. Consequently, office is directed to return the
appeal to the appellants for its presentation before the
proper forum by retaining photocopies thereof”.
Hence the present appeal (with leave of the court).
4.
Leave in this case was granted on 4.11.2015 to consider
the following propositions:-
i.
Where the value of the suit for the purposes of jurisdiction
fixed in the plaint has been altered (increased) by the civil
court (trial court), what shall be the forum of appeal in view
of the provisions of Section 18(1)(a)(b) of the Civil Courts
Ordinance, 1962;
ii.
Whether in the suits which are consolidated the trial court
is obliged to pass separate decrees in each of the suits or a
single decree shall be sufficient pursuant to a common
judgment disposing of such suits; and
iii.
If
two
(or
more)
consolidated
suits
have
different
jurisdictional valuation and are decided through a
common judgment but separate decrees have been drawn,
what shall be the forum of appeal in relation to such
suits/decrees; whether in such a situation the aggrieved
party is obliged to file separate (RFA) appeals before
District Court and the High Court as per the valuation of
the suits, but the High Court where the appeal is
competently filed against the common judgment and a
decree which is pending can, in order to avoid conflict of
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 4 :-
judgments, withdraw the appeal filed/pending in the
District Court and decide the same.
5.
In answering the first question, we need to see whether
the trial court has the authority in law to change the valuation of the
suit for the purposes of court fee and jurisdiction and to direct the
plaintiff to pay the court fee according to the valuation so determined
by the court. In this context two situations may arise; firstly where a
suit’s valuation by the plaintiff is challenged by the defendant on the
basis of the relevant law, i.e. the Court Fees Act, 1870 (the Court Fees Act)
and Suit Valuation Act 1887 (the Suit Valuation Act), an issue is framed and
evidence recorded. The court is obliged to determine and fix the correct
valuation for the purposes of court fees and jurisdiction (see 1980 CLC 589)
and direct the plaintiff to make good the deficiency of the court fee.
The plaintiff is bound to do so and failure to so do would entail the
consequences under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (CPC). In the event that the value of the suit so determined
exceeds the pecuniary jurisdiction of the court, it (the court) shall send
the matter to the District Judge for its transfer and entrustment to the
court of competent jurisdiction. Secondly, in the cases where the
defendant(s) is proceeded against ex-parte and there is no challenge to
the valuation fixed in the plaint but where the court forms an
impression that the suit is seemingly collusive and might have been
filed to affect third party rights and/or is ostensibly undervalued, the
Court is duty bound to determine and fix the value after holding such
inquiry and collecting such material as may be deemed expedient by
the court. It would then direct the plaintiff to make good the
deficiency of the court fee. It may emphatically be stated that the law
enjoins a duty upon the Court to settle questions about its
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 5 :-
jurisdiction, because subject to certain exceptions, any decision
rendered by the court having no jurisdiction stands vitiated on that
account alone. We are fortified in our view by a judgment reported as
Ch. Nazir Ahmed Vs. Abdul Karim and another (PLD 1990 SC 42),
the relevant portion reads as under:-
“It is well settled that the Court is bound to ascertain the
deficiency in the court-fee affixed on the plaint and then give
time to the plaintiffs to make up the deficiency and if he
complies with the order within time, the defect in the plaint is
deemed to have been removed from the date it had originally
filed in Court.”
Adverting now to the proposition itself, for the purposes of determining
the forum of appeal the provisions of Section 18(1) of the Civil Courts
Ordinance, 1962 (the Ordinance) are relevant which are reproduced
hereunder:-
“18.
Appeals from Civil Judges.— (1) Save as aforesaid,
an appeal from a decree or order of a Civil Judge, shall lie -
-
(a) to the High Court if the value of the original suit in
which the decree or order was made exceeds twenty
five hundred thousand rupees.
(b) to the District Judge in any other case.”
Section 18 ibid applies to regular first appeal(s) from the decree or
order of the Civil Judge. For the purposes of this proposition the most
important words of the section are “the value of the original suit”.
Obviously the value of the original suit initially is the one which has
been fixed by the plaintiff in his plaint, but where the court in either of
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 6 :-
the two situations outlined above has increased the valuation, the
determination made by the court shall be “the value of the original suit”
and the value initially fixed by the plaintiff shall cease to exist, and
shall for all intents and purposes on account of the judicial
determination stand substituted (by the valuation of the court). It would be
absurd if, even after the court having made a judicial determination to
increase the value, the initial value which was found to be wrong by
the court were to be given precedence over the courts’ determination
and the forum of appeal were to be settled on that basis (i.e. the plaintiff’s
valuation). We hold that the value determined by the court shall finally
and exclusively be taken into account in terms of Section 18(1)(a) and
(b) of the Ordinance as “the value of the original suit”. Reliance may be
placed upon Zafeer Gul Vs. Dr. Riaz Ali (2015 SCMR 1691) wherein
it has been held:-
“Till final determination by the court, the valuation
shown in the plaint was to be deemed as proper value of
the suit property for the purpose of availing the remedy
of appeal qua determining the forum of appeal.”
(Emphasis supplied)
Similarly in Babu Jan Muhammad and others Vs. Dr. Abdul
Ghafoor and others (PLD 1966 SC 461), the facts were that the ADJ
hearing an appeal rejected an objection as to the valuation of the
plaint and came to the conclusion that the value of the suit for the
purposes of jurisdiction should be the value placed on the suit
property by the plaintiffs and he thus arrived at the conclusion that
the correct value for jurisdiction was in excess of Rs. 5,000 (as an amount
of land revenue was liable to be added) on the plaintiffs own valuation and
consequently the appeal lay before the High Court, holding that "if the
plaintiff chooses to value his suit absolutely wrongly in utter disregard of the rules
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 7 :-
obtaining on the subject, even then such a valuation is to be treated as the correct
valuation for the purposes of determining the forum of appeal". The next day, the
appellants presented their appeal in the High Court, which dismissed
it in limine.This Court, examining the facts held as below:-
The learned Judges in the High Court appear to have
thought that the plaintiffs were so plainly in error in
their valuation of the suit for jurisdiction that they
could not be allowed the benefit of the time spent in
the Additional District Judge's Court, which led to the
decision that the jurisdictional value was understated.
They appear to have ignored the fact that it was not
for the plaintiffs to vary the valuation in the plaint
when it came to taking the matter in appeal against
refusal of the Senior Civil Judge to restore the suit. The
plaintiffs were bound by the valuation they had thus stated,
in a suit of which the Senior Civil Judge had become seized,
with the consequence that that valuation could not be altered
by themselves, unless with the permission of the Senior Civil
Judge. Equally, when they came to appeal against the
adverse order of the Senior Civil Judge, they could not
choose a forum on the basis of an altered valuation to be
conceived, or made by themselves. In other words, it was
essential that they should take their appeal to the District
Judge, since the valuation of the suit for jurisdiction was
below Rs. 5,000, and it was only after that Court had
decided the matter definitely that they became entitled
to go to the High Court as the proper Court of appeal.”
(Emphasis supplied)
In the case reported as Sana Ullah Vs. Muhammad Akhtar and 11
others (1979 CLC 578) the learned Lahore High Court after
considering quite a few precedents from the sub-continent came to the
following conclusion:-
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 8 :-
“I am also of the view that the forum of appeal will be
determined in a case where the valuation is not changed
by the Court, by the value as fixed by the plaintiff but in a
case where such a valuation has been changed by the
Court after determining the real market value of the
property, it will be that valuation which will be deemed to
be the value of the original suit within the meaning of
section 18 because the word 'value' means the value of the
subject-matter of the suit. I am also of the view that in
such a case whether the plaintiff contests the valuation
arrived at by the Court or acquiesced in it, in either case
the form for appeal will be determined by the valuation so
found.”
The findings of Nazir Ahmad and another vs. Muhammad Tahir
(PLD 1992 Lahore 89), Muhammad Sharif Vs. Nawab Din and
another (PLD 1957 (W.P.) Lahore 283), Suleman and others vs. Pir
Baksh and others (2012 CLC 1457), Ilahi Baksh Vs. Bilqees Begum
(PLD 1985 SC 393), Muhammad Nawaz Vs. Sher Muhammad (PLD
1987 SC 284) and Abdul Majid and others Vs. Muhammad Walayat
Khan through his Legal Heirs (1987 SCMR 1139) are to the same
effect and reliance has been placed on some of these cases in Babu
Jan Muhammad and others Vs. Dr. Abdul Ghafoor and others (PLD
1966 SC 461). Learned counsel for the respondents however has
placed reliance upon Muhammad Nawaz Vs. Sher Muhammad (PLJ
1987 SC 262) and Muhammad Ayub vs. Obaidullah (1999 SCMR
394) but on a close reading of these two dicta, we are of the opinion
that they do not depart from the ratio of the judgments that the fora of
appeal are to be determined on the basis of the valuation fixed by the
court. Even otherwise the case of Muhammad Ayub is a leave refusing
order and cannot be held to be the enunciation of law by this Court.
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 9 :-
6.
In conclusion, we hold that the judicial determination of
the value of a suit for the purposes of court fee and jurisdiction by a
judicial forum shall have precedence over the valuation made by the
plaintiff and it shall be such valuation which shall be taken into
account while determining the forum of appeal from a decree passed
in such a suit. In other words, the judicial determination shall be the
“value of the original suit” in terms of Section 18(1)(a) of the Ordinance.
7.
With respect to question No.2; it is settled law that it is
the inherent power of the court to consolidate suits and the purpose
behind it is to avoid multiplicity of litigation and to prevent abuse of
the process of law and court and to avoid conflicting judgments1. No
hard and fast rule forming the basis of consolidation can be definitive
and it depends upon the facts and the points of law involved in each
and every case, obviously where the court is persuaded that the
interests of justice so demand, consolidation can be ordered, provided
no prejudice is caused to any litigant and there is no bar in the way of
the courts to consolidate the suits. Reverting to the proposition, there
is no provision in the CPC where the court is obliged to prepare a
separate decree in the consolidated suits. However, let us consider the
importance of a decree that follows a judgment. Section 33 of CPC
stipulates that:-
“33. Judgment and decree.--The Court, after the case
has been heard, shall pronounce judgment, and on such
judgment a decree shall follow.”
As is evident, a judgment is followed by a decree in a case. But where
a common judgment is delivered disposing off two or more suits, how
1 PLD 2006 SC 1262 and 1981 CLC 443
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 10 :-
many decrees are to be drawn up in such a case? In this respect it is
important to keep in mind the principle that is embodied in the case of
H. M. Saya & Co., Karachi Vs. Wazir Ali Industries Ltd., Karachi
and another (PLD 1969 SC 65) that the Court ought not to act on the
principle that every procedure is to be taken as prohibited unless it is
expressly provided for. The Court should proceed on the principle that
every procedure which furthers administration of justice is permissible
even if there is no express provision permitting the same. Order XX
Rule 6 of the CPC provides for the contents of a decree including
necessary particulars inter alia, the number of the suit, the names and
descriptions of the parties, the particulars of the claim, the relief
granted or any other determination of the suit. In the circumstances it
would be more appropriate that separate decrees are drawn up for
each of the consolidated suits.
An appeal lies against the decree and it is the decree which is
executed. Additionally, for the purposes of appeal, the contents of the
memorandum must state the grounds of objection to a decree. The
requirement of a decree cannot be dispensed with and has to be filed
along with the memo of appeal and it is for this reason that where an
appeal is admitted without a copy of the decree, time may be granted
by the court in appropriate cases to file the decree sheet2. In the
judgment reported as Siraj Din and 11 others Vs. Rajada (1992
SCMR 979) the circumstances were that two consolidated suits were
disposed off through a common judgment which was challenged
through an appeal before the District Judge. The decree sheet in one
of the suits was appended with the memorandum of appeal. When the
appeal was allowed the aggrieved party sought to file a second appeal
2 See inter alia, 2004 SCMR 707; 1988 SCMR 892.
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 11 :-
on the basis that the earlier appeal challenged only one decree (the
second appeal was accompanied by an application for condonation of delay); the said
second appeal was dismissed. This Court granted leave to consider
whether filing of one appeal against the consolidated judgment in two
consolidated suits relating to same or similar subject, had not satisfied
the requirement of law and if not, whether mere technical controversy
should not have been resolved in favour of the petitioners. This Court
found that “On a question of fact we also find that two separate decrees in the two
suits were in fact prepared”. This Court further held that there was no
question of treating the earlier appeal as confined to one suit as the
substance of the appeal showed that it was a composite attack on both
suits. The point to note here is that this Court considered the
preparation of two decrees in the consolidated judgment to be
unremarkable and indeed the tenor of the judgment is to the effect
that it was a failing of the appellate court not to require the party to
attach the second decree at an earlier stage. We direct all the trial
courts of the country that where two or more suits have been
consolidated and disposed of through a common judgment, that
separate decree sheets with all the material particulars as per the
requirements of Order XX of the CPC must be drawn up. This
direction shall be for the future and consequence of non-compliance
thereof shall be considered in appropriate cases.
8.
Adverting to the third question; it is settled law that a
consolidated appeal is permissible against a consolidated judgment
before the appellate forum provided that it has the pecuniary
jurisdiction to hear the appeal against the decrees according to their
valuation i.e. the valuation of the original suit. The appellants are
required in law to specifically challenge both the decrees and also to
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 12 :-
affix the requisite court fee in the same manner as they would be so
obliged to affix if separate appeals were filed. This brings us to the
matter of those appeals in which the decrees passed have different
valuations i.e. the one falling within the jurisdiction of the High Court
and the other in the jurisdiction of the District Court; obviously no
consolidated appeal can be filed. In such a situation the appellants are
required in law to file two appeals according to the value of the original
suit i.e. one before the District Judge and the other before the High
Court. The learned High Court, however, while exercising its power
under Section 24 of the CPC if a case is made out within the purview
of the section ibid may, in order to avoid delay in the disposal of the
matter and conflicting decisions, transfer the appeal filed before the
District Judge to the High Court and decide the same along with the
appeal which had been competently filed before the High Court.
9.
In light of the above, this appeal is partly allowed. The
impugned judgment of the High Court, to the extent of the appeal in
which the decree passed in favour of the respondent has been
challenged and the memo of appeal has been returned is set aside. It
is held that such appeal was competent before the High Court.
However, to the extent of the other decree i.e. the one through which
the suit of the appellants was held not competent, obviously the
appellants are required to file fresh appeal before the District Judge.
However as they had challenged that decree in the memo of appeal
and appended the decree sheet therewith, as per the impugned order
of the High Court, such certified copy of the decree sheet be returned
to the appellants by the court within three days upon the production
of the certified copy of this judgment. After having obtained the
certified copy of the consolidated judgment and affixing therewith the
Civil Appeal No.1471 of 2015
-: 13 :-
decree sheet so returned to the appellants, a fresh appeal may be filed
before the District Judge with the appropriate application seeking
condonation of delay which (application) shall be decided by the District
Court on its own merits.
Before parting we must acknowledge the valuable assistance
provided to us by the learned amicus.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 24.2.2016 at Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
JUDGE
| {
"id": "C.A.1471_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OV PAR:ASTI
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
- MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
MR. JUSTICE SYED MANSOOR ALl SHAH
CIVIL PPEAL NO.1474. OF 2015
(Against the judgment dated _16.12.2014
passed by the Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar in Writ Petition No.162 of 2014).
• Muhammad Naeem Khan. �
...Appellant(s)
Versus
. President, National Bank of Pakistan, etc. �
...Respondent(s) -
For the Appellant(s): �Mr. Abdul Rehman Khan, ASC.
For the Respondent(s): �
Mr. Ghulam Sh.oaib Jaily, ASC.
Syed Rafaqat H. Shah, AOR.
Date of Hearing: �
10.12.2020.
JUDGMENT
WAZ
J-. This appeal by leave of
the Court is directed against a judgment of the Peshawar
1-ligh Court, Peshawar dated 16.12.2014. Through the
impugned judgment, a constitutional petition
(W.P,No.162 of 2014) filed by the Appellant was
dismissed.
2. �Briefly stated the facts necessary for disposal
of this Lis are that the Appellant (Muhammad Naeem
Khan) was holding the post of Assistant Vice President
and was posted . as Branch. Manager, National Bank of
2
Pakistan, Main Branch, .Swa.bi. A charge sheet was
issued to him on various allegations including failure to
keep comprehensive and intelligent check over the
Branch affairs and control systems, failure to follow
Circulars regarding steps to be taken to enhance
confidence in the system resulting in increased business,
better discipline, reduction in fraud and forgeries and
improve controls to strengthen operational activities. It
was alleged that he had failed to perform his assigned
responsibilities rather he became instrumental and
supported various individuals in defrauding the
Government exchequer. It was further alleged that the
Appellant was informed by a whistleblower namely,
Gulfraz, Officer Grade--I about the fraud being committed
in tb.e Branch. However, instead of taking any action
against the delinquents, he tried to pressurize the
whistleblower and exerted pressure on him to keep silent
about the issue. He also removed the whistleblower from
the pension payment section of the Branch in order to
facilitate continuation of fraudulent activities in the
Branch. Despite being informed by the whistleblower that
fraud was being committed in the pension payment
section of the Branch, instead of bringing the fraud into
the notice of the Regional Management he intentionally
and deliberately concealed the facts from the Controlling
. �
• �
.
clihAPiML?Cl474O?2('Jj
3
Office and withheld the relevant information. The charge
sheet further alleged that the Appellant was in the
knowledge of irregularities pointed out by the Regional
Inspectors/Annual Audit/ Surprise Auditors/Internal
Control Inspectors pertaining to pension payments.
However, he deliberately kept silent and made no effort to
improve internal working of the Branch and
strengthening the operational controls. It was stated that
he intentionally avoided to relieve an under transfer
delinquent officer namely Hikrnat Shah, 00-1 for Moneri
Branch and retained him in his Branch for more than 11
and a half months with the result that the said
delinquent officer continued his fraudulent activities and
embezzled pension payments in substantial amounts
causing loss to the exchequer.
3. �Finally during his tenure as Branch Manager
important bank books were not maintained including
pension payment book (B-59)/Pension Register (B-143)
and updation of pension records. Through his acts of
omission and commission, he had been guilty of
negligence and dereliction of duty which resulted in huge
financial loss to the exchequer. His reply to the charge
sheet was not found satisfactory and after due process a
penalty of demotion to one lower grade was imposed by
way of demoting him from the post of Assistant Vice
:21
2.X.5
President to Officer Grade-1. Although the Appellant
alleges that the punishment was appealed in the
departmental hierarchy which was not decided, the
Respondent-Bank totally denies receipt of any such
appeal. Nothing has been placed. on record by way of
proof of filing such appeal. He approached the Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar in its constitutional jurisdiction
challenging his punishment and seeking redressal of his
grievance. Such petition wa.s dismissed by the learned
High Court, vide impugned judgment dated 16.12.2014.
4. �Leave to appeal was granted by this Court on
08.12.2015 in the following terms:
"it is argued by the learned counsel for the
petitioner that service in the respondent Bank is
governed by National Bank of Pakistan (Staff) Service
Rules, 1973, which are statutory rules and in terms of
Rule 39 inquiry has to be conducted as per the
instructions Circular No.4/2003 dated 24.04.2003,
issued by the President of the Bank, SET/13 and
Chairman of Disciplinary Cases Committee was the
competent authority to issue charge sheet to the
Executives.
2.
He contends that charge sheet to the petitioner
has been issued by Mr. Naeem Khan, AI/P/ Manager,
who was not competent. He further states that whole of
the disciplinary proceedings against the petitioner were
tainted with the illegalities.
3.
The submissions made, require consideration.
Leave to appeal is granted to consider the above
points."
•
1„..4CEE2.521Elluili2 �102110-0011,226.01-attf,i3Meia
77,........P.P.MPW7.r. �
•-=
f2IYILAP.V.ZAW11-3.11%:1..ciff ,VIT2
5. �The learned counsel for the Appellant submits
that service in the Respondent-Bank is governed by the
National Bank of Pakistan (Staff) Service Rules, 1973
("Rules, 1973"). Such Rules are statutory in nature and
in terms of Rule 39 of the Rules, 1973 an inquiry has to
be conducted as per instructions contained in -Circular
No.4 of 2003 issued by the President of the Bank. He
maintains that in issuing the charge sheet, the
requirements of Rule 3 of the Rules, 1973 were not
followed insofar as the charge sheet was issued by
Muhammad Hassan Khaskheli, ENP/Divisional Head
who was not competent to do so. He f rther maintains
that disciplinary proceedings were not conducted by the
competent officer and are therefore a nullity in the eye of
law. He submits that some co-accused of the Appellant
namely Syed Qurban Ali Shah, 0G-I and Abdul A.kbar,
0G-II were exonerated while the Appellant who was
overall supervisor of the Branch and was not directly
involved in operational matters was wrongly punished.
He further submits that the Appellant was not provided a
copy of the proceedings or that of the inquiry report and
the impugned penalty has been imposed upon him in
violation of FR-29. He finally maintains that the
Appellant was not granted personal hearing before
imposing the major penalty which has violated his legal
•
17.1-ck, 1.4 �
6
and constitutional rights and amounts to being
condemned unheard. Further, the major penalty of
demotion to a. lower rank did not specify the timeframe or
duration of the penalty which is against the settled
principles of law on the subject.
6. �Learned counsel for the Respondent-Bank has
however defended the impugned judgment. He submits
that the Appellant being the Branch Manager was
responsible to keep an eye on all activities in the Branch
and maintain vigilance against any fraud or illegality in
the Branch. He points out that despite fraud being
pointed out to him by the whistleblower, instead of taking
action the Appellant tried to pressurize the whistleblower
and ultimately removed him from the pension payment
section of the Branch. It is further pointed out that in
contravention of his fiduciary duties the Appellant
intentionally tried to conceal fraud and ignored illegalities
committed in the pension payment section of the Branch
despite such illegalities being pointed out during his
surprise audit. He further submits that the Appellant
was overall incharge of the Branch and it was his duty to
ensure that all books and records including but not
limited to pension records were immaculately maintained
and his failure to do so resulted in heavy loss to the
public exchequer. He further submits that all legal and
7
procedural formalities were properly followed, the
Appellant was given adequate and multiple opportunities
to defend himself yet he was failed to defend himself and
was found guilty of most of the charges mentioned in the
charge sheet by independent inquiry officers/ competent
authorities who had no personal bias or grudge against
him.
7. �As far as failure to specify the period of major
penalty is concerned, the learned counsel for the
Respondent-Bank has pointed out that a categoric
statement was made before the leaned High Court that
the Appellant would be considered for promotion on the
• basis of available record to the next higher post after
expiry of his three years penalty. Failure on the part of
the competent authority to specify the period of
punishment would not have the effect of nullifying the
entire proceedings specially so where the defect stands
cured and has been so mentioned in the impugned
judgment of the learned High Court.
8. �We have heard the learned counsel for the
parties and gone through the record with their
assistance. The main focus of the argument of learned
counsel for the Appellant is that the show cause notice
was issued by an incompetent authority. It is claimed by
•
'" �
•••..• �
•
S.22W,...61.016.12.N1W221.1k: 2.411.4 �
8
the Respondent-Bank that the charge sheet was issued
by an authorized officer and all proceedings were carried
out as per the provisions of the Rules, 1973, We have
examined the said Rules and find that the power to issue
show cause notice has been mentioned in Rules 38 & 39
read with Rule 3(d) and Sr.No.12 of Appenclit to the
Rules, 1973. Rules 38 86 39 of the Rules, 1973 provide
that a competent authority is authorized to issue show
cause notice. Rule 3(d) of the Rules, 1973 defines the
competent authority as an authority specified .in Column
No.4 of Appendix-1 to the Rules, 1973. For ease ol
reference, Appendix-I to Rules 1973 is reproduced below:
Sr.
No
Reference
to Rules
•
Nature �
of
powers
delegated
Competent authority to whom powers
delegated
Categories �
of
employees �
in
respect �
of
which powers
delegated
upto
10.
32
Grant �
of
(a) �
Managing Director
1(a)
33 and 34
permission
(b) �
Deputy Managing Directors
1(b)
to �
incur •
unsecured
debt �
and
giving
guarantee,
etc �
to open
accounts
with �
other
banks
(c) �
Pleads �
of �
Administration
Department, �
I lead
Office! Principal Offices
11
11.
37 and 39
Dismissal
(a) �
Managing Director
I (11
and �
other
(b) �
Deputy Managing Directors
II
punishment
a
(c) �
I leads �
of �
Ad in ini s traticm
Department, �
(lead
111
Office/Principal �
Offices �
and
Senior Regional Managers.
(d) �
Regional �
Managers �
and
IV
Managers �
(Officers �
Grade �
II
and above). �
12.
38 and 39
Suspension
(a)
Managing Director
I(a)
(pending
(b)
Deputy Managing Directors.
All Categories
enquiry)
(c)
Heads �
of �
Administration
except 1(a), (b)
grant �
of
permission
to �
leave
station
during
suspension
and issue of
show cause
Department, �
Head
Office/ Principal �
Offices �
and
Senior Regional Manager.
(d) 'Heads of Departments at Head
Office/Principal �
Offices.
Regional �
Managers �
and
Managers (Officers Grade I and
above)
and (c)
notice
(c) �
Managers of lira riches (Officers
II
Grade If and a once)
(I) �
Managers of Branches (Officers
Ill
L
----------------------- •_
Grade III and Junior Officers)
9. �A perusal of the Appendix-I above reveals that
delegation of powers in respect of issuance of show caus
1.10. Am, �
Nc?,_Lcerilf3
9
notices have been mentioned at Sr.NO.12 thereof. in
terms of the said item, the power to issue show cause
notice to all categories except (i)(a), (b) and (c) are
delegated to Deputy Managing Director, Head of
Administration Department, Head Office, Principal
Offices and Senior Regional Managers. In the case in
hand, the show cause notice was issued by Executive
Vice President/ Divisional Head, Head Office, Karachi. It
would therefore appear that the show cause notice to the
Appellant has prima facie been issued by a competent
authority. We, therefore, find that the power conferred
through Rules, 1973 was rightly exercised by the
Executive Vice President and the objection of the
Appellant in this regard is misconceived and is
accordingly over ruled and repelled.
10. �
It also appears to us that the nomenclature of
different designations has changed overtime. However,
the powers of officers of various categories, in the matter
of disciplinary proceedings remain the same. According
to the learned counsel for the Respondent-Bank, after
change of nomenclature, various categories may be read
as follows:
"CATEGORY
a)
Senior Exec-utlue Vice President/Executive Vice President
f'xecutive grade)
b)
Senior Vice President: (Senior grade-I)
c)
Vice President: (Senior grade-I1)
d)
Assistant Vice President: (Senior grade-III)
e)
Officer Grade-I.
.1) �
Officer Grade-II/Chief Cashier.
.0-
fir, ;armee
�
..1774.4•7:
.6BOL.40),Q.1.174.12.1LVt4 �
10
FY) �
Officer Grade-Ill/Senior Head Cashier.
CATEGORY II
a)
Senior Assistant/ Head Cashier/ Stenographer/ Godown.
Inspector/ Head Draftsman.
b)
Draftsman/ Estimator/ Overseer.
c)
Senior Cashier/ Stenotypist/ Teleprinter/ Telex. Operator/ Key
Punch Operator.
d)
Assistant/ Typist/Cashier/ Godown Keeper/ Machine & Telephone
Operator/ 0)ristructicm �
Supervisor/ Works
Supervisor/ Tracer/ Mechanic and other technicians.
CATEGORY III
a)
Electrician (Possessing Wireman's Competency Licence)/ Ferro
Printer.
b)
Driver/ Chief Jemadar/ Daftari
c)
Bank Guard/ Chowkidar/ Messenger/ Electrician/ Mali and other
inferior staff
d)
Sweeper."
11.
As far as the argument of the learned counsel
for the Appellant in respect of President's Office Circular
No.4 of 2003 dated 22.04.2003 is concerned., the same
mentions the authority to issue charge sheet as
Chairman/Disciplinary Cases Committee (DCC). We have
found the said reading of the Circular by the Appellant is
erroneous and misleading. Rule 5 of the Rules, 1973
defines delegation of powers as follows:
`Rule 5(2) provides that "The Managing Director may, where considered
necessary, delegate any of the powers vested in him to the Deputy
Managing Directors and those exercised by the Deputy Managing Directors
to other officers."
12.
It appears that by virtue of the powers
available under Rule 5(2), the President of the Bank
delegated his powers to the DCC through Circular No.4 of
2003. In the same circular at point No.2(a) it is clearly
mentioned.. that "all the disciplinary cases failing within
the competence of the President and the Board of
Directors, shall be considered, deliberated upon. and
decided/recommended by the Committee". it further
COLIALTMLni 1Y-1 Sk.2q1.1i �
11
appears that under Circular No.4 of 2003, the President
of the Bank delegated his Own powers which by virtue of
the Appendix are in respect of issuing show cause notices
to DepUty Managing Director, Senior Principal Officers
and Principal Officers. in the case in hand, the matter is
not in respect of issuing show cause notice to any of the
said officers because the Appellant was neither Deputy
Managing Director, Senior Principal Officer nor the
Principal Officer and in fact he was an Assistant Vice
President. Therefore, his stance that only the
Chairman/ICC were the competent authorities to issue
him show cause notice is clearly misconceived. We have
also gone through NBP Instruction Circulars, Office
Circulars, information Circulars and NBP Employee
Discipline Policy (EDP). On perusal of the said documents
leads us to the conclusion that the charge sheet was
validly and lawfully issued by an authorized officer,
competent to do so.
13. �
Having dealt with the question of validity of the
charge sheet, we have gone through the inquiry report
and the material collected during the inquiry. It is clear
and obvious to us that the Appellant being Branch
Manager was, responsible to keep an eye on the activities
in his Branch relating to its business: There is no denial
of the fact. that fraud was actually committed and in the
ZIRFE-JH ROMET,A0MOW
„Ay
' �
virti.Pent; NO.14 74 OE Atifi �
12
opinion of the inquiry officer, lack of vigilance for long
periods of time and failure of the Appellant to put
systems in place and maintaining the relevant registers,
perpetrated and perpetuated continuous fraud for almost
four years. It also appears that the Appellant consciously
and deliberately covered up the fraud and thereby
facilitated commission of such fraud which resulted in
misappropriation of substantial sums of money at the
cost of the exchequer. There is no explanation available
on the record why despite being intimated by a
whistleblower and others including surprise audits the
Appellant remained complacent, failed to take any action
and taking steps to ensure that the delinquents were
brought to book by way of appropriate action in
accordance with law and that continuation of the fraud
and misappropriation of public money was stopped.
Instead, he pressurized the whistieblower to remain
silent and ultimately removed him from the pension
payment section and failed to take any action despite
identification of fraud and misappropriation of funds
from the pension account during surprise audits. This
emboldened those who were misappropriating funds tc
continue their activities for years on end.
14. �
A perusal of the record also reveals that the
' '
Appellant was provided all relevant documents required
. �
• �
'
?r;
•
• �
• • ,'.;:•• �
.-• ; • •;;;',;" �
• �
• �
'
13 •
by him in order to build his defence and he was also
given an opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses who
appeared against him. The Appellant signed the inquiry
proceedings confirming the fact that he was provided all
due process rights for his defence and cannot be heard at
this stage to take a different stance specially so where
this stance Was not even taken before the High Court.
. 15. �
As far as the argument of the learned counsel
for the Appellant that some of the co-accused were
exonerated and the Appellant deserved equal treatment is
concerned, we find that the same is contrary to the
record. Our examination of the record reveals that all
relevant officials were charge sheeted and their cases
were decided as per gravity of their involvement. It has
been pointed out to us that penalties were imposed on
nine (09) different delinquents and only two namely,
•Shahab ucl. Din, 004 and Muhammad Said, 00-II,
Incharge Government Section were exonerated because
the charges against them were not proved. However, a cc-
accused with the Appellant namely Shah. Nawaz,
AVP/Manager was down graded by one step in his pay
Seale. Syed Qurban Ali Shah, Operation Manager was
demoted to next lower grade like the Appellant.
Muhammad Urnar, 00-I and Abdul .Akbar, 00-II were
demoted to the next lower grade. Badar Munk, 00-II and
fL1/27,211TBMin
.Q.E.2 �
L.
Bakht Sher, 0G-III were dismissed from service with
immediate effect. It appears and has also been stated at
the bar that except the Appellant none of the said
officials has challenged the penalties imposed upon
them.
16. �
We have also gone through the record and find
that there is no denial of the fact that there was
continuous embezzlement in pensionary funds in the
Main Branch, Swabi where the Appellant was posted as
Branch Manager. In view of his senior and supervisory
position, it was his responsibility arid duty to supervise,
exercise, control and keeping a vigilant eye on each and
every a.spect of business and services provided by
different sections of the Branch including but not limited
to pension payment section. He was not only required to
be vigilant but to have direct and first hand knowledge
and maintain supervision of all activities and the manner
in which such activities were being conducted. It is clear
and obvious to us that controls of the Appellant were
lacking, he was unwilling to take responsibility for the job
that had been assigned to him and was reluctant to take
action despite being informed by various sources that
misappropriation was being committed by officials
working under his supervision and control. Further, he
failed 'to informhe Regional Management, his immediate
2:ElEfIn2M4 RiZEIEfirat. EqE*:igi.E;i:2RfifEiNIIME'giiigt8O211fff.E255E11:'Y.Z.E•EadaafigtdNEtl.I'il°aiiggRFeaMPAgiaiiif;sgik"Mgta'Ctfa§:iftLa#;Lii.WC::,'i;iLI,•,
1V11,./IPPIIALM.14 74 OP Z215
superior authority about the delinquency of his
subordinate staff. On the contrary, he made active efforts
to cover up and hide their activities and let embezzlement
continue unabated for about four years.
17. �
The argument of learned counsel for the
Appellant that some of the officials have been visited with
lesser penalties while the Appellant was demoted to a
loWer grade indefinitely is concerned, the same has not
impressed us. Admittedly, other officials were at a lower
level of seniority, were not responsible and answerable for
all activities of the Branch, while the main focal person
and Incharge of the Branch was the Appellant. Failure on
his part to perform his functions efficiently, diligently and
vigilantly has correctly attracted a higher penalty in view
of the fact that he not only ignored the Standard
Operating Procedures and failed to maintain records and
conduct or cause to be conducted regular scrutiny of the
records to ensure that there were no violation of the
procedures • and �
no �
financial �
mishandling,
misappropriation or embezzlement of public money but
also actively and deliberately ignored information and
reports that embezzlement was taken place. This is
clearly highlighted by his treatment of the whistleblower
who had provided direct and credible information to him.
In- these circumstances, we are neither persuaded no3-
1,11:kfl
gymApPii:AL �
16
convinced by the argument of the learned ASC that the
Appellant has been discriminated against on the issue of
imposition of penalty or that his penalty was unduly hard
and disproportionate to the offences committed by him.
18.
As far as the duration of the penalty is
concerned, the Respondent-Bank had made a categoric
statement before the learned High Court to the effect that
the penalty imposed on the Appellant was for a limited
period of three years and that he shall be considered for
promotion in accordance with the rules by the competent
authorities on expiry of the said period. This has been
repeated before us during the course of arguments.
Further, it is settled law that after the period of penalty of
an official has expired, the same does not operate as an
impediment in his future prospects of promotion if
Otherwise due.
19.
We find that the judgment of the learned High
Court elaborately and extensively discusses all pleas
raised by the Appellant, has correctly applied the relevant
law, rules and regulations to the facts and circumstances
of the case. No illegality, failure or refusal to exercise
jurisdiction or erroneous conclusions unsupported by the
record have been pointed out to us. On hearing the entire
Matter extensively and scrutinizing the record, we have
•
• 2 ,1
" �
" �
.2 �
• • �
• �
• �
' �
'
13.11.11,,VEJL,11-.11:N_QE.201.44 �
17
reached the same conclusions as the. High Court and
have no reason,. basis or justification to take a different
view.
20. �
For reasons recorded above, we find no merit
in this appeal. It is accordingly dismissed.
ISLANI A.B AD.
1.0.12.2020.
ZR/*
.
fAfat Approved For Reporting'
| {
"id": "C.A.1474_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate/Original Jurisdiction)
Present:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE QAZI FAEZ ISA
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1476 TO 1485 OF 2018
(on appeal from the judgments/orders 25.09.2018 of the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad, passed in I.C.A.365/2017 In W.P.308/2016, I.C.A.366/2017 In
W.P.309/2016,
I.C.A.367/2017
In
W.P.310/2016,
I.C.A.368/2017
In
W.P.2128/2015, C.M.A.3053/2018 In I.C.A.365/2017, C.M.A.3055/2018 In
I.C.A.365/2017, I.C.A.22/2018 In W.P.308/2016, I.C.A.23/2018 In W.P.308/2016,
I.C.A.24/2018 In W.P.308/2016)
AND
C.M.A.10393/2018 and 7403/2019 in C.A.1476/2018,
C.M.A.10950/2018 in C.A.1477/2018, C.M.A.10398/2018 in
C.A.1480/2018,
C.M.A.10951/2018
in
C.A.1483/2018,
C.M.A.10952/2018
in
C.A.1484/2018
AND
C.M.A.
10953/2018 in C.A.1485/2018 AND Crl.O.P.166/2018 in
Crl.O.P.7/2016
AND
Crl.M.A.2083/2018
in
Crl.O.P.166/2018
AND
WRIT PETITIONS NO.4270, 4723 OF 2016 AND WRIT
PETITION NO.3594 OF 2018
Federal Government Employees Housing
Foundation (FGEHF), Islamabad
(In C.A.1476-1480/2018)
Sohail Ahmed Mian
(In C.A.1481/2018)
Najma Siddiqi
(In C.A.1482/2018)
Manzar Hafeez Mian & others
(In C.A.1483/2018)
Khizer Hayat Khan & others
(In C.A.1484/2018)
Ms. Sameera Yasin & other
(In C.A.1485/2018)
Supreme Court Bar Association
(In Cr.O.P. 166 /2018)
Noor Elahi Chuhan & others
(In WP 4270/2016)
Multi Professional Cooperative
(In WP 4723/2016)
Nazeer Hussain Chuhan etc
(In WP 3594/2018)
…Appellant(s)/Petitioner(s)
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
2
VERSUS
Malik Ghulam Mustafa & others
(In C.A.1476/2018)
Malik Bashir Ahmed (since deceased)
through. LRs & others
(In C.A.1477/2018)
Zulfiqar Hussain & others
(In C.A.1478/2018)
Malik Dad & others
(In C.A.1479/2018)
Muhammad Sabir & others
(In C.A.1480/2018)
Malik Bashir Ahmed & others
(In C.A.1481-1482/2018)
Federal Government of Pakistan,
Through its Secretary, Cabinet
Division, Islamabad & others
(In C.A.1483-1485/2018)
Amer Ali Ahmed and others
(In Crl.Org. P. 166/18)
Chief Commissioner, Islamabad, etc.
(In WP 4270/2016)
Federation of Pakistan & others
(In WP 4723/2016)
Land Acquisition Collector, ICT
(In WP 3594/2018)
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Mansoor Ahmed, ASC
(in CAs 1476 to 1479/18)
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(in CAs 1477 & 1480/18):
Sardar Muhammad Aslam, ASC
In CA 1481/18:
In person
In CA 1482/18:
In person
In CA 1483-1485/18:
Mr. Shah Khawar, ASC
IN CMA 10950/18:
Mr. Khushdil Khan Malik, in-
person
In CMA 10951-10953/18: Nemo
In CMA 10393, 10398/18: Syed Rafaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
In CMA 7403/2019:
Syed Iqbal Hashmi, ASC
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
In CMA 9756/19:
Syed Zulfiqar Abbas Naqvi, ASC
In CMA 9210-9213
& CMA 9835/19:
Mr. Sajeel Sheryar Swati, ASC
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
3
In Crl.O.P 166/18:
Mr. Rasheed A. Rizvi, Sr.ASC
Mr. Hamid Khan, Sr. ASC
Mr. Amanullah Khan Kanrani, ASC
Mr. Syed Qalb-i-Hassan, ASC
Mr. Mehmood A. Sheikh, AOR
Syed Rafaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
Ms. Shireen Imran, ASC
Mr. Liaqat Ali Tareen, ASC
Mr. Aurangzeb Asad Khan, ASC
Mr. Shamim-ur-Rehman, ASC
Mr. Ehsan Qadir Sial, ASC
In Cr.O.P 166/18:
Mr. Naeem Bokhari, ASC
(for Private Respondents)
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR
& for Petitioners
(in W.Ps 4270/16, 4723/16
& 3594/18)
On Court Notice:
Mr. Niaz Ullah Niazi, AG Islamabad
For CDA:
Ch. Riasat Ali Gondal, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
For Federation:
Mr. Sajid Ilyas Bhatti, Addl. AGP
For Private Respondents:
Syed Feisal Hussain Naqvi, ASC
in CAs 1476-1480/18:
Ch. Hassan Murtaza Mann, Adv.
Dates of Hearing:
15th,16th,20th,21st,22nd,23rd May, 2nd,
7 th,10 th,23rd October, 12th,25th
November of 2019 and 7th,9th,13th, and
14th of January, 2020.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
4
JUDGMENT
MUSHIR ALAM, J.— Since the issue involved in all these cases is
almost identical, therefore, we find it expedient to decide the titled
cases together through this common judgment.
Facts
1.
Facts forming matrix of the proceedings in hand are that
on 20.01.2014, the Senate Committee on Housing and Works
recommended that Sector F-14 be allocated by Capital Development
Authority (herein referred to as CDA) to Federal Government
Employees Housing Foundation (herein referred to as FGEHF)
[(converted into authority under Federal Government Employees
Housing Authority Act, 2020 during the pendency of proceedings], the
appellant herein, for preparing a housing scheme. After meetings and
deliberations, the CDA and FGEHF agreed to initiate a housing scheme
in Sector F-14 with mutual collaboration. Accordingly, Secretary
Ministry of Housing and Works initiated a summary on 06.01.2015
regarding acquisition of land for the FGEHF in Sector F-14 and some
parts of Sector F-15 in Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT). The Prime
Minister approved the summary on 01.05.2015 and notifications
under Section 4 and later under Section 17 of the Land Acquisition
Act of 1894 (herein referred to as LAA, 1894) were issued by the
Commissioner ICT on 20.05.2015 and 04.12.2015 respectively. On
29.09.2016, a development contract was awarded to the Frontier
Works Organization (FWO). Then an award was announced by the
Collector on 15.11.2016 regarding land in F-14. The Commissioner
ICT issued a notification regarding land in F-15/3 & F-15/4 on
15.06.2017. The Collector then announced the award for land situated
in revenue estates of Tarnol and Jhangi Syedan in ICT in favor of
FGEHF on 06.07.2017. The land owners/natives of the area
challenged the above said notifications and the awards in writ
jurisdiction before the learned Islamabad High Court, Islamabad,
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
5
which were allowed vide judgment(s)1 dated 23.10.2017. The
judgment(s) were challenged through Intra-Court Appeals No.
364/2017 to 368/2017, 412/17-415/17, 417/17, 22/18-24/18,
306/08 and 307/18, which was maintained through the common
impugned judgment(s) dated 25.09.2018.2
2.
The Appellant/FGEHF, Islamabad (since succeeded by
Federal Government Employees Housing Authority), have, with the leave
of the Court, filed Civil Appeals No.1476 to 1480/2018, assailing the
judgment rendered by learned Division Bench of the Islamabad High
Court, Islamabad, passed in the Intra-Court Appeals noted above
whereby not only the acquisition proceedings carried out under the
LAA,1894 but, also all the actions and orders relating to acquiring of
land for the appellant in Sectors F-14 and F-15, Islamabad (subject
sectors) were declared illegal, void and without jurisdiction and as such
notifications impugned in writ petitions were also set aside. The
impugned judgment held that the land within Islamabad Capital
Territory can only be acquired by the Capital Development Authority
under the provisions of the Capital Development Authority Ordinance,
1960 (herein referred to as the CDAO, 1960), which being special and
later law, has precedence over the LAA 1894, which was held to be
general in nature. The Learned bench further directed that ‘the land
owners and owners of built up properties who have received the
payment through Land Acquisition Collector to return the amount within
(3) three months from the date of judgment through pay orders”. The
Appellant was left with discretion to recover the amount paid for their
own purposes, to the private parties/contractors, through their own
mechanism and or legal process. Lastly, CDA was held to be entitled
“to implement the master phased program as provided in section 11 and
12 of the CDAO, 1960 and develop Sectors F-14 and F-15 as per their
own decision in consultation with the Federal Government, if so
required”.
1 Since reported as Malik Bashir Ahmed v. Federal Government of Pakistan (PLD 2018
Islamabad 68)
2 Reported as FGEHF and others v. Malik Ghulam Mustafa and others (PLD 2019 Islamabad
1)
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
6
3.
The Appellants, in Civil Appeals No.1481 to 1485/2018,
being serving and retired Government servants, are the allottees of
plots/land in Subject Sectors. The Appellants have also assailed the
judgment of the learned Division Bench of the Islamabad High Court
and claimed their respective plots/land as they have already deposited
the requisite amount since long with the Appellant in lieu of their
allotted plots.
4.
Persons considering that they may be prejudiced by order
that may be passed in instant proceedings have made applications to
be added as party. Such persons fall in two categories, the first being
serving and retired federal government employees, who have been
offered plots (CMA 10950, 10951, 10952 & 10953/2018 filed by the
allottee/federal government employees) and second category of
persons are the land owners, whose land is subject matter of
acquisition, who have also filed (CMA No. 7403/2019, 9210-9213,
9835/19 & 9756/19) applications to be added as party as it is claimed
that unless they are made party and heard, they will be seriously
prejudiced. All such persons were aware of the acquisition
proceedings, and some also made applications before the Islamabad
High Court, some have directly approached this Court. All such
persons claim to have interest in the outcome of the instant
proceedings, either as allottee or as land owner, and all such persons
have interest common to persons already represented by eminent
counsels. Without entering into much debate as to such persons, being
necessary or proper party, at this stage of proceedings, in order to do
complete justice3, we consider it expedient to hear all such persons
without formally adding them as party to the respective appeals or
petitions, to avoid delay in the matter. Such course is acceptable to all
such parties and it would also meet the ends of justice4. However
C.M.A.10393 (in CA 1476/18) and CMA 10398/18 (in CA 1480), moved
by the FGEHF, Appellant, to add CDA as party is allowed. CMA 35/19
(in CA 1477/18) to bring legal heirs of Respondent No.1 on record is
granted, subject to all just exceptions; amended title may be filed and
3 Multiline Associate v. Ardeshir Cowasjee PLD 1995 SC 423 (para 11)
4 Federation of Pakistan v Muhammad Aslam 1997 SCMR 607
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
7
taken on record. All other CMAs seeking permission to bring additional
documents on record, file reports and or compliance etc. are granted,
subject to all just exception and, disposed of accordingly.
5.
The land owners and residents of the locality, whose land
has been acquired, have also filed Writ Petitions No.4270 & 4723 of
2016 and 3594 of 2018 before the learned Islamabad High Court,
challenging the very acquisition of the land for the purposes of, inter
alia, developing a housing society for lawyers etc. However, on
27.12.2018, while hearing of Criminal Original Petition No.166/2018,
at the request of their counsel and land owners present in Court,
subject Writ Petitions were requisitioned from the concerned High
Court so that the same may be considered along with Civil Appeals
No.1476/2018 etc.
6.
The Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan (herein
referred to as the SCBA), through its President, filed Criminal Original
Petition No.166/2018, which is an off shoot of Cr.O.P 41/17 seeking
implementation of the order of this Court dated 10.08.2018 (arising out
of C.P 38/2013 SCBA v Amer Ali Ahmed Chief Commissioner
Islamabad) with regard to a settlement arrived at between the office
bearers of the SCBA and the FGEHF & other government functionaries
relating to issuance of Notification under section 4 and 17(4), decision
of objections under section 9 and issuance of Award under Section 11
of the LAA, 1894. According to learned ASC for the SCBA, Mr. Rasheed
Rizvi, settlement arrived at by and between the Respondents in Cr.O.P
166/18 has not been complied with. He also opposed Cr.MA No.
2083/18
7.
Mr. Nazir Hussain Chohan represented by Mr. Naeem
Bukhari, Senior ASC, has filed Cr.MA No. 2083/18 in Cr.O.P No.
166/2018 seeking setting aside of Order dated 10.8.2018 passed on
Cr.O.P 41/2017 (which is an off shoot of CP 38/2013 filed by SCBA)
as noted above, Cr.O.P No.166/2018 and Cr.MA No. 2083/18 will be
attended separately.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
8
I.
Judgment of the Honorable Islamabad High Court:
General Overview:
8.
The learned bench of the Islamabad High Court
considered all the facts in detail from paragraph 1 to 9, including the
issuance of Notification by the Additional Deputy Commissioner
Revenue under Section 4, 6 and 17 of the LAA, 1894 dated 20.5.2015
which was later converted into the amended notification dated
02.12.15. The relevant portion of the same has been reproduced below:
"WHEREAS, it appears to the Land Acquisition Collector,
Islamabad District Islamabad that the land is likely to be
taken
for
Federal
Government
Employees
Housing
Foundation, under the administrative Control of Ministry of
Housing and Works; Government of Pakistan for its expense
for public purpose namely for launching housing scheme in
Sector F-14 as well as contiguous area of F-15 prior to G. T.
Road falling in Zone-1 for the Federal Government Employees
in villages Tarnol, Mara Sumbal Akku, Mara Sumbal Jaffar,
Thalla Syedan and Jhangi Syedan, Tehsil and District
Islamabad. It is hereby notified that the land in the locality
described below is likely to be acquired for the above purpose.
(Emphasis supplied)."
9.
The learned bench then elaborately explains the Scheme
of Sector F-14 & 15 in paragraph 14 to paragraph 16 when the
notification by the Commissioner later culminated into an Award dated
15.06.2017 in respect of land situated in Sector F-14 (measuring 7003
Kanals & 10 Marlas) namely Moza Tarnol, Jhangi Syedan, Thallah
Syedan, Mehra Sumbal Akku, and Mehra Submal Jaffar. The second
award was issued by the Land Acquisition Collector vide notification
dated 28.9.2017 for land situated in F-15/3 & 4 (measuring 300
Kanals) falling in Moza Tarnol and Jhangi Syeda.
10.
In paragraph 17 to 22, the Learned Bench considered the
principles of interpretations enunciated by apex court as to general
and special law and then compared LAA, 1894 to CDAO, 1960. In
paragraph 23 to, arrive at the conclusion that: “ we are also of the view
that CDA Ordinance, 1960 is purpose specific law to cater the
requirement of new capital of Pakistan and such kind of enactment
provides a complete mechanism in itself, which has no nexus with the
Land Acquisition Act, 1894.” It was further held that FGEHF, should
have invoked the CDAO, 1960 and not LAA 1894 for the acquisition of
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
9
land, and the things were not done in the manner required by law, to
buttress the conclusion, learned bench relied on Muhammad Anwar
etc. v Mst Ilyas Begum etc5.
II.
Reasoning of the IHC
i.
Intent and Purpose of the Legislation:
11.
The learned bench, to discover the intent and purpose of
the impugned legislation, examined the contemporary provisions of
both the statutes. In paragraph 24 of the impugned judgment, learned
bench placed reliance on the case of Syed Mehmood Akhtar Naqvi vs.
Federation of Pakistan6 to hold that:
“no provision should be rendered meaningless and there was
no scope of placing unnatural interpretation on the meaning
of language used by the legislators, especially when the
language of legislative provision was clear, it was not the duty
of the Court to either to enlarge the scope of legislation or the
intention of the legislators.”
It was further concluded that:
“It is also settled that in case of conflict, preference is to be
given to the new law and the implied repeal of earlier law
could be inferred only when there was enactment of a later
law which had the power to override the earlier law, and was
totally inconsistent with the earlier law and when there are
two laws, the earlier and the later law, could not stand
together, therefore, later laws abrogate the earlier contrary
laws.”
For the conclusion so arrived at reliance was placed on the judgments
rendered in the cases of Lahore (Inland Revenue) RTO v M/s Almakdi
International7, and Tanveer Husain v. Division Superintendent Pakistan
Railways8.
5 PLD 2013 SC 255
6 PLD 2012 SC 1089
7 2013 PTD 2125
8 PLD 2006 SC 249
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
10
ii.
Public Purpose under the CDAO, 1960:
12.
In paragraph 25 to paragraph 27 of the impugned
judgment, it was held that Section 11 and Section 12 of the CDAO,
1960 provided for the larger purpose of the development of ICT and
the acquisition of land for development of specified area, which shall
be done under Section 22 of the CDAO, 1960. It was further held that
that the requirements enunciated within Section 4 of LAA, 1894 had
been applied by implication within Section 22 of CDAO, 1960.
Although, the term “public purpose”, originally provided under Section
4 of LAA, 1894, was not defined under the CDAO, 1960, the latter
provides for a different scheme for the acquisition of land as mentioned
above. Given the existence of the larger purpose within the CDAO,
1960, it was held that the acquisition of land under the LAA, 1894
for public purpose is not acceptable. It was further mentioned that the
‘public purpose’ needs to be seen in the light of the ‘general interests of
the community’ as opposed to the ‘particular interest of the individual’.
Therefore, it was held that“it is not permissible to take land of one and
give it to another in private interest”. Reliance was placed on Ghulshan
Hussain etc. v Commissioner (Revenue), Islamabad, etc.9, Smt.
Somavant and Others v. The State of Punjab and Others10, Suo Moto
Case No. 13 of 200711.
13.
In paragraph 28, the learned bench then relied on the
English saying “you cannot rob Paul to pay Peter” to further elaborate
how the interests of the general community must be furthered instead
of the interests of the individual for ‘public purpose’ as only the
community of Federal Government servants are the beneficiaries
under the objectives of the Federal Government Employees Housing
Foundation and not the general community at large. Reliance was
placed on Muhammad Akbar v. Commissioner Rawalpindi12, Dr Nasim
Javaid v. Lahore Cantt. Cooperative Society Ltd13.
9 2000 YLR 1711
10 AIR 1963 SC 151
11 PLD 2009 SC 217
12 PLD 1976 Lah 747
13 PLD 1983 Lah. 552
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
11
iii.
Federal Government Employees Housing Foundation as a
Private Enterprise:
14.
In paragraph 29, the learned bench then builds on the
proposition regarding public purpose with respect to the FGEHF, as a
company established with a specific objective, which does not cover
private individuals as the FGEHF can only provide housing to its
members by remaining within the scope of its objectives. This is to be
categorized as a private interest only to be exercised in favor of the
members of the FGEHF. Reliance was placed on Muhammad Ishaq etc.
v. Govt. of Punjab etc14. Therefore, it was held that:
”when they use the state machinery with their limited
objective under the Companies law, their entire working has
to be seen in the light of their objective only and the purpose
for which the land was acquired was too limited to hold that
the same would be used for public purpose”
15.
In Para 26, 29, 30 and 35 of the impugned judgment, the
learned bench concurred with the single judge that the land was
acquired under the LAA, 1894 and not under the CDAO, 1960. The
learned bench, relying on the arguments of the private respondents,
further agreed with the single judge that the FGEHF, being a private
enterprise, and a juristic person, any land acquisition, if at all was
permissible, should have been under the CDAO, 1960. The FGEHF
was treated as a company, no different than a land developer, society,
and therefore, not permitted to initiate any land acquisition
proceedings in any part of ICT.
iv.
Enactment of Law to Qualify as an Exception within Art.
24(3) of the Constitution, 1973.
16.
In Para 29 of the impugned judgment, it was also ruled
that certain exceptions are provided under sub-article (3) of Article 24
(wrongly quoted as Clause 3 of Article 4) of the Constitution, “……that
for acquisition of any property under any one of the exceptions, a law
has to be enacted. It follows, therefore, that in any case, without specific
14 2002 SCMR 1652
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
12
law, no person can be deprived of from his property or the possession
taken by the government.” Reliance was placed on Nazim F Haji, Chief
Citizen Police Liaison Committee Karachi v. Commissioner Karachi15.
v.
Property Rights within the Constitution, 1973
17.
The learned bench also relied on Article 24 of the
Constitution, in extenso within paragraph 30 to, draw a conclusion
that “in accordance with law” as referred in the Article is CDAO, 1960
and acquisition of land for the Appellant was considered to be for self-
serving benefit of its member, do not figure out under the scheme of
the CDAO, 1960 for which reliance was placed on Suo Moto Case No.
13 of 200916.
vi.
Determination of Public Purpose:
18.
The learned bench, in Paragraph 30 of the impugned
judgment, recognized that determination of public purpose objectively
is domain of the Government and is subject to judicial review. Reliance
was placed on Messer Eden Developers Pvt. Limited Pakistan v.
Government of Punjab etc.17.
vii.
Regulatory Capture:
19.
Learned bench of IHC, from paragraph 31 to 34, viewed
the acquisition of land for the Appellant in concert with CDA authority
as a ‘regulatory capture’, and not in public interest. For this conclusion,
reliance was placed on Barrister Sardar Muhammad v. Federation of
Pakistan18, Lahore Development Authority v. Mrs. Imran Tiwana19,
Muhammad Ashraf Tiwana v. Pakistan20, and Mrs. Imran Tiwana v.
15 PLD 1993 Kar. 79
16 PLD 2011 SC 619
17 PLD 2017 Lah. 442
18 PLD 2013 Lah 343
19 2015 SCMR 1739
20 2013 SCMR 1159
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
13
Province of Punjab21. The learned Bench also heavily relied on The
Murree Brewery Co Ltd. V. Pakistan through Secretary to Govt. of
Pakistan, Works Division22.
20.
In Paragraph 33 of the impugned judgment, the learned
Division bench extensively dilated upon purported illegalities and
irregularities committed by CDA and considered various provisions of
the CDAO, 1960, Islamabad Land Disposal Regulations 2005 (ILDR,
2005), and ICT Zoning Regulations 1992, inter-alia, and read them to
exclusion of the LAA 1894. The learned bench further viewed that
acquisition of land in Sector F-14 under the LAA, 1894, at the behest
of FGEHF, is in violation of ILDR, 2005. No agency other than the CDA
can acquire land in the Specified Area which comprised of five (5) Zones
viii.
State Largesse:
21.
In paragraph 34, of the impugned judgment it was
opinioned that acquisition of land should have been routed under the
CDAO, 1960, and concept of State largesse has been flouted. It was
further held that the land could only be acquired under Article 173 of
the Constitution. The Appellant, a company registered with SECP, is no
different than any other land developers (since given status of
authority under FGEHF Authority Act, 2020). Any permission or
NOC extended by the CDA Board or Authority were held to be illegal
and void. It was concluded that acquisition of land within Islamabad
Capital Territory is within the domain of CDA Ordinance, in terms of
Article 24 Constitution of Pakistan, read with Article 173, and
application of any other law and procedure stands excluded. Land in
specified areas could only to be utilized in accordance with Section 11
and Section 12 of the CDAO, 1960. Therefore, the learned bench held
that the Notification under Section 4 of the Land Acquisition Act was
“illegal and void.”
21 PLD 2015 Lah. 522
22 PLD 1972 SC 279
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
14
III.
Leave Granting Order
22.
In the back drop of above factual and legal matrix, leave
was granted in C.A. No.’s 1476 to 1485/2018 vide order dated
06.12.2018 inter-alia to consider whether:
1. Capital Development Authority (CDA) under the Capital
Development
Authority
Ordinance,
1960
(the
Ordinance) has exclusive jurisdiction to acquire land
and it excludes acquisition under the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894 (the Act);
2. The provisions of the Ordinance exclude those of the Act
with respect to acquisition of land for a public purpose;
3. Acquisition
for
a
housing
scheme
for
Federal
Government Employees and allied group constitutes a
valid public purpose;
4. Acquisition under the Act becomes State largesse under
Article 173 of Constitution of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan, 1973 read with Section 16 of the Act, and
5. In view of the alternate and efficacious remedy
available under Section 18 of Act, the constitutional
petitions before the learned High Court were not
maintainable.
6. In the meantime, the operation of the impugned
judgment is suspended. Any acquisition would be
subject to the final decision of the instant cases and
any construction raised from today onwards shall be at
the risk and cost of the person(s) doing so.
We have extensively heard the arguments of all the learned Counsels
for the parties and heard some of the parties present in persons as
well, perused the record with the assistance of all the learned Counsels
and parties in person.
IV.
Judgment of the Supreme Court:
23.
In order to consider the points of determination, as noted
in leave granting order, regarding which of the two competing or
comparable statutes in the field (i.e. LAA, 1894 or CDAO 1960), and
if some of the provisions in CDAO, 1960, essentially relating to land
acquisition, have precedence over the provisions of LAA, 1894 or
otherwise. The principles to adjudge which of the statutes and
provisions of which of the competing statutes are to be given
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
15
preference, are to have dominance in repealing, or overriding effect,
over the other becomes quite challenging.
I.
The Applicability of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 within
ICT
a.
LEGISLATIVE ORIGIN OF THE LAA, 1894:
24.
The State of Pakistan inherited The Land Acquisition
Act, 1894 as a colonial legacy. It was enacted with an object to acquire
any land needed by the Government for public purpose and for the
Companies. “It provides complete indemnity to the owner and no
property is to be acquired without proper and adequate compensation”23.
The present controversy is confined only to the acquisition for public
purpose.
25.
The LAA, 1894 provides an elaborate procedure and
mechanism for the acquisition and vesting of land, determination,
payment of compensation, inquiring into measurement, value claims,
award(s) by the collector, and hearing of objections as to adequacy and
apportionment between the claimants. In addition, it also provides the
complete hierarchy for adjudication of objections relating to the
adequacy, or otherwise, of compensation24 leading up to the Supreme
Court25.
26.
The LAA, 1894, remaining a colonial legacy, is still
retained in statute books by India and Pakistan alike. It was given
protection under the Government of India Act, 193526, which was
succeeded by the Indian Independence Act, 194727. It was then
adapted vide Governor General’s Order No.20 of 1947, also known
as Pakistan Adaptation of Existing Pakistan Laws Order 194728,
23 PLD 2010 SC 719 (Paragraph 5). WAPDA v Hira Begum (1972 SCMR 138).
24 Section 18 of LAA, 1894
25 Section 54 of LAA, 1894
26 See Article 292 and 293
27 See Section 18
28 See Section 54(2)
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
16
eventually finding its way into the Constitution of Pakistan 195629.
The Constitution of Pakistan 196230 also shielded the LAA, 1894
and it was finally adopted by the Constitution of Pakistan, 197331.
27.
Pursuant to Section 1(2) of the Central Laws (Statute
Reforms) Ordinance 1960, 32the LAA, 1894 was amended to make it
applicable to whole of Pakistan. On 30th March 1970, by virtue of
Section 4 of the Province of West Pakistan (Dissolution) Order
197033, the province of West Pakistan was dissolved and four
Provinces,
Islamabad
Capital
Territory
(ICT)
and
Centrally
Administered Tribal Areas were created. As per Article 19 of the
aforementioned Order of 1970 which stated that
“all existing laws shall continue in force, so far as applicable
and with necessary adaptation, until altered or repealed or
amended by the appropriate Legislature or other competent
authority”.
28.
The Legal Implication of the Presidential Order 1 of
1970 was considered in the case of Islamabad Club v. Punjab Labour
Court etc.34 wherein it was held that
“Under the Interim Constitution of 1972 and the 1973
Constitution the Federal Capital of Islamabad has continued
to be a distinct territory under federal administration, but no
specific provisions seem to have been made for its
governance, with the result that the previous arrangements
have to continue. The result of these successive legal
instruments in that the laws, which were applicable to the
territory of Islamabad before the dissolution of the Province
of West Pakistan, and the designation of Islamabad as
federally administered area would continue to operate as
existing laws, until repealed or altered by the competent
Legislature.”
29 See Article 224
30 See Article 225
31 See Article 268
32 PLD 1960 Central Statutes 238 “(a) The Province of East Pakistan and Province of West
Pakistan and; (b) Such other States and territories as/or may become included in Pakistan
whether by accession or otherwise …”
33 PLD 1970 Central Statute 218
34 PLD 1981 SC 81
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
17
29.
In order to remove any doubts, as to applicability of LAA,
1894 in Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT), and in exercise of legislative
competence
conferred
under
the
enabling
provisions
and
Constitutional mandate35, as noted herein, the Federal Laws
(Revision and Declaration) Ordinance No. XXVII of 198136 was
enacted on 8th July 1981 which enlisted37 laws in the IVth Schedule vide
item 938 thereof; Sections 3, 9, 14, 43, 45, 47, and 54 were
substituted and amended to make LAA, 1894 compatible in its
application to ICT. Only certain provisions of the LAA, 1894, and not
the entire Act, were amended in order to clarify its application to the
ICT. This action manifest that the LAA, 1894 was applicable to ICT at
all times and, any doubts as to its applicability were legislatively
removed
by
virtue
of
the
Ordinance
enacted.
30.
The reinforcement of the LAA, 1894, with necessary
substitution and amendment, was made during currency of CDAO
1960 is a clear manifestation of the intention of the Federal Legislature
that LAA, 1894 applies with full force in ICT and is not eclipsed by the
provisions of CDAO 1960 as held in para 24 of the impugned
judgment. Thus, merely because the CDAO, 1960 was enacted later
would not be the sole determining factor to give it dominance or
overriding effect over the LAA, 1894. In the case reported as Abdul
Ghani & another v Province of Baluchistan and another39, the learned
division bench of the Balochistan High Court, while examining the
applicability of LAA, 1894 with competing provisions of ‘land
acquisition’ contained in the ‘Baluchistan Acquisition of Land (Housing
and Development Schemes in Rural Areas) Act XVIII of 1974’, in held as
follows40:-
“12. The next question which crops up is as to whether the
promulgation of the Baluchistan Acquisition of Land Act of
1974 would repeal the Central Act of 1894 (or) not by its own
force. According to the provision of sub-Article (1) of Article
35 Oer Article 142 (d)
36 PLD 1982 CS 10
37 Under Section 5
38 PLD 1982 CS 113
39 PLD 1982 Q 63
40PLD 1982 Q 63. Para 12 at Page 67.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
18
268, the repeal should be express and unless that is done
expressively the Central Act would continue to remain in
force as an existing law under Article 268(1) of the
Constitution. This argument of Advocate General further
finds support from the fact that the Provincial Act, was an Act
of limited application when it was introduced. It only applied
at that time to Housing and Development Schemes in rural
area and later to urban areas as well. With this limited
application it could not mean to repeal the Pakistan Land
Acquisition Act of 1894 even by implication….”
b.
THE TESTS WITHIN THE CONSTITUTION TO ADJUDGE THE
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF LAW:
31.
To determine the repeal, overriding effect, repugnancy,
vires, intra-vires or otherwise of any competing or comparable statutes,
or analogous provisions contained therein, several litmus tests, tools
of interpretations, and legal doctrines are applied. These accessories of
interpretation are harvests of long drawn jurisprudential expositions
and judicial interpretational wisdom culled by the superior courts. The
tests to determine the validity of legislation are applied, inter-alia, on
the touchstone of Constitution, legislative competency, limitation and
distribution of legislative authority between Federal and Provincial
legislature, doctrine of occupied field, pith and substance, special and
general law, earlier and later law, delegated and subordinate
legislation, directory or mandatory enactment or provisions, effect of
obstante or non-obstante provisions in any enactment or otherwise.
These are some of the illustrative and non-exhaustive tools of
interpretation and doctrines applied by the superior courts to adjudge
the legitimacy, vires, ultra-vires, repeal, overriding, or supremacy of
one statute over the other. When the conflict between two or more
competing or comparable statues by the same, or contemporaneous,
legislature is to be resolved, it becomes all the more challenging to
decipher the real intentions of the legislature and dominance of one
statute or its provisions over the other. As noted above, the foremost
tool of interpretation of any statute is the Constitution which sets the
‘gold standard’ to adjudge constitutionality, repugnancy, and validity
and, vires of any legislative instruments or, provisions contained
therein.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
19
32.
In the succeeding paragraphs, we will apply litmus test as
to the legitimacy, or otherwise, of the LAA, 1894 as provided for in the
Articles 8, 24, 227 and other enabling provisions of the Constitution,
1973. In addition to the Constitutional filter, other tools such as
legislative history, statement of object, and the preamble of a statute
are important tools in deciphering intention, legitimacy, repugnancy,
validity, and overriding or dominance of competing statutes, or
provisions contained therein, which is relevant in the instant case. In
order to appreciate the rival contentions of the parties we have
examined the legislative origin, history, object, purpose and preamble
of LAA, 1894 and CDAO, 1960.
c.
THE TEST WITHIN ARTICLE 8
33.
Article 8 sets down a twofold gold test to adjudge the
constitutionality of any pre and post 1973 Constitutional regime of
laws. Sub-Article (1) of Article 8 of the Constitution, 1973 provides
that any law enacted prior to the 1973 Constitution is to be filtered
through the lens of fundamental rights to earn legitimacy. For
convenience, it has been reproduced below:
“any law or any custom or usage having force of law, in so far
it is inconsistent with the fundamental rights shall, to the
extent of such inconsistency be void.”
Whereas, Sub-Article (2) of Article 8 attends to, post 1973
Constitution, legislative regime. It restrains the Federal and Provincial
Government “not to make any laws which takes away or abridges the
(fundamental) rights so conferred”. Any breach of such constitutional
restraint is visited by invalidation to the extent that such invalidation
infringes fundamental rights.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
20
d.
THE TEST WITHIN ARTICLE 227(1)
34.
First part of Article 227(1), read with Article 268(3),
further requires all “existing laws” [i.e. per Article 268(7) that existed
immediately before the date the Constitution of 1973 “came into
force”41], shall be whittled down per the injunction of Islam as laid down
in Quran and Sunnah. A similar restraint is placed on legislative
authority of either of the Legislatures under the second part of Article
227(1) within the 1973 Constitutional regime, which forbids that no
laws could be framed in breach of Islamic Injunction, however, the only
caveat is that ‘personal laws’ applicable on non-Muslim citizens are not
liable to be filtered through the regime of Islamic injunctions42.
35.
In the plethora of cases adjudicated by the Courts, the
LAA, 1894 has been held to be in conformity with Article 24 (2) of the
Constitution, 1973. One may refer to Muhammad Ishaq v. Government
of Punjab43, under which the LAA, 1894 was found to be per the
injunction of Quran and Sunnah as ordained under Article 227 of the
Constitution 1973. One may also see the five-member Bench decision
in the case of Hafiz Muhammad Amin v. Islamic Republic of Pakistan
and others44 where the laws relating to compulsory Land Acquisition
were held to be validly made, having constitutional protection, and
cannot be held ultra-vires by the court. The Federal Shariat Court, in
the case cited as Islamization of Laws45, not only held the CDAO, 1960,
barring provisions freezing of compensation, to be in accordance with
Article 24 of the Constitution, 1973 but other laws relating to Land
Acquisition were also held to be validly made.
36.
It may be observed that not only the LAA, 1894 but the
CDAO, 1960 falls within the category of “existing law” that enjoys
constitutional protection under Article 268(1) and, irrespective
41 See Article 265(2)
42 See Article 227 (3) ibid
43 2002 SCMR 1652
44 PLD 1981 FSC 23, at page 41
45 PLD 1985 FSC 221 at pages 242-243, 263
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
21
whether such (existing) laws have been adapted as required under sub-
Article (3) and (4) thereof or not, the courts, under the constitutional
dispensation, are required to enforce such (existing) laws in accordance
with the provisions of Constitution. The assumption of the learned
Division Bench that the LAA, 1894 has no constitutional backing, in
view
of
discussion
herein,
cannot
be
sustained.
e.
THE APPLICATION OF THE LAA, 1894 IN ICT:
37.
In the present situation the LAA, 1894 continued in full
force and effect as a Federal legislation by virtue of Article 268(1) &
(7) of the Constitution, 1973 as an “existing law”, meaning thereby that
all laws in force in Pakistan, or any part thereof, or having
extraterritorial validity immediately before commencing day i.e. 14
August, 197346, will continue to enjoy the protection under the
Constitution. Consequently, the LAA, 1894, which is protected as
Federal Law, was amended from time to time by all the Provinces by
virtue of the power devolved under the successive Constitutions of
Pakistan, as noted above and, by the Parliament to the extent of
Islamabad Capital Territory47. As discussed earlier in paragraph 29, the
applicability of LAA, 1894 in Islamabad Capital Territory was due to
the relevant amendments made to the LAA, 1894 by the enactment of
The Federal Laws (Revision and Declaration) Ordinance No. XVII
of 198148. Therefore, the affirmation of the LAA, 1894 being
applicable to ICT, after the enactment of CDAO, 1960, serves as
conclusive evidence that the legislature was cognizant of the earlier
enactment, yet chose to contemporaneously apply the LAA, 1894 to
the ICT. Needless to say that ignorance cannot be attributed to the
legislature. Hence, the conclusion arrived by the learned bench in
paragraph 24 of the impugned judgment cannot be sustained.
46 see Article 260
47 See Article 142(b) of the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973
48 PLD 1982 CS 10
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
22
f.
IGNORANCE OF EARLIER LAW CANNOT BE ATTRIBUTED TO
THE LEGISLATURE
38.
Needless to say, that Legislature is presumed to know the
‘existing laws’, judicial pronouncements, and general principle of law49.
The Legislature must be presumed to know the facts and conditions
rendering a statute expedient and beneficial50. In a case from the
American Jurisdiction where the Congress subjected specific
categories of ticket sales to taxation but failed to cover another
category, either by specific or by general language, the Court refused
to extend the coverage. To do so, given the “particularization and detail”
with which the Congress had set out the categories, would amount to
“enlargement” of the statute, rather than “construction” of it51.
Relatedly, “[w]here Congress explicitly enumerates certain exceptions to
a general prohibition, additional exceptions are not to be implied, in the
absence of a contrary legislative intent.”52
39.
In a judgment reported as State of M.P v. Kedia Leather &
Liquor and others53, the Indian Supreme Court, while attending to
doctrine of implied repeal, held that there is a presumption against
repeal by implication and the reason of this rule is based on the theory
that the legislature, while enacting a law, has the complete knowledge
of existing laws on the same subject matter. Therefore, when the
legislature does not provide a repealing provision, the intention is clear
not to repeal the existing legislation. However, the presumption of
49 NS Bindra’s Interpretation of Statutes Tenth Edition by Lexis Nexis, Page 235.
50 Raval & Co. v. Ramachandran AIR 1967 Mad 57, at page 69.
51 Iselin v. United States, 270 U.S. 245, 250 (1926). See also Lamie v. United States Trustee, 540
U.S. 526, 537 (2004) (courts should not add an “absent word” to a statute; “there is a basic
difference between filling a gap left by Congress’ silence and rewriting rules that Congress
has affirmatively and specifically enacted”). Obviously, the line between the permissible
filling in of statutory gaps and the impermissible adding of statutory content may be
indistinct in some instances, and statutory context, congressional purpose, and overriding
presumptions may tip the scales. For example, the Court made no mention of the “absent
word” rule in holding that a reference to “any entity” actually meant “any private entity”
in the context of preemption. Nixon v. Missouri Municipal League, 541 U.S. 125 (2004)
(preemption of state laws that prohibit “any entity” from providing telecommunications
service. Does not preempt a state law prohibiting local governments from providing such
service).
52 Andrus v. Glover Const. Co., 446 U.S. 608, 616-17 (1980) (citing Continental Casualty Co.
v. United States, 314 U.S. 527, 533 (1942)
53 (2003) 7 SCC 389
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
23
implied repeal can be rebutted. Repeal is inferred by necessary
implication when the provisions of the later law are so inconsistent
with, or repugnant, to the provisions of the earlier law that the two
cannot stand together54. Although, if the two can be read together and
some application can be made of the words in the earlier Act, repeal
will not be inferred. The necessary questions to be asked are; (i)
Whether there is direct conflict between the two provisions; (ii) whether
the legislature intended to lay down an exhaustive Code in respect of
the subject matter replacing the earlier law and (iii) whether the
two laws occupy the same field. The doctrine of implied repeal, based
upon the theory that the legislature, which is presumed to know the
existing law, did not intend to create any confusion by retaining
conflicting provisions and, therefore, when the court applies the
doctrine, it does no more than give effect to the intention of
the legislature by examining the scope and the object of the two
enactments
and
by
a
comparison
of
their
provisions.
40.
From what has been discussed above, the ignorance of
existing laws, judicial pronouncement, and judicial interpretation of
law by the highest judicature of the State cannot be attributed to the
legislature. Thus, it could be said that the legislature was fully
cognizant that LAA, 1894, being existing law, deals exhaustively and
elaborately with acquisition of land for ‘Public Purpose’ and Companies,
against consideration and under law, yet the legislature still chose to
enact CDAO, 1960, and in its wisdom provided Chapter VI of the
CDAO, 1960 for acquisition of land, but only for object and purpose of
planning and development of Islamabad Capital Territory55. The
legislature felt it necessary for the CDAO, 1960 to be bestowed with
the power to acquire land for the effective implementation of planning
and development of Islamabad Capital Territory so the authority may
not necessarily have to fall back to the LAA, 1894 for the acquisition
land for the purpose of the Ordinance.
54 Ibid. Paragraph 14.
55Preamble, CDAO, 1960.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
24
41.
It may be observed that in Pakistan both the Federal and
Provincial legislatures, in its wisdom, have promulgated numerous
legislative instruments for the purpose of ‘planning and development’
of various cities falling in their respective legislative territory. We have
noted that these statutes have either wholly or partially adopted the
land acquisition mechanism provided for in the LAA, 1894 either by
reference, adaptation or explicitly excluded the applicability of LAA,
1894 in the legislature’s sole wisdom and prerogative. The intention of
the legislature, as to adoption by reference or otherwise, exclusion or
giving the special enactment overriding effect over other comparable
statute can be ascertained by a cursory reading of such special statute
(Various special statutes providing for ‘planning and development’ of
cities and region for illustrative purposes are discussed in succeeding
paragraph 65). Therefore, the CDAO, 1960 does not override the
provisions of the LAA, 1894 for Islamabad Capital Territory but each
legislation dwells within the extent of its own unique purpose.
42.
In the light of discussion made herein, the CDAO, 1960
was examined, which revealed that the legislature did not completely
exclude the application of LAA, 1894 in Islamabad Capital Territory,
for Public Purpose and for Acquisition by Companies. The conspicuous
absence of a ‘non-obstante’ or overriding clause in CDAO, 1960
manifests the intention of the legislature that each of these
contemporaneous statutes to exist side by side and operate in their
respective domain. It is not the case of any of the party that there is a
competing claim of acquisition of land, under respective statute either
for public purpose, under LAA, 1894, or for the Development and
Planning of ICT, under the CDAO, 1960. Therefore, it was not
considered appropriate in present proceedings to dilate as to which set
of proceedings for competing acquisition of land may have preference
over the other.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
25
43.
In order to determine the amount of compensation to be
awarded for the land acquired, the criteria to consider matters with
respect to the same is provided for under S.23 of the LAA, 1894.
Whereas, the matters to be neglected in determining the amount of
compensation are provided for under S.24 of the LAA, 1894.
44.
After
the
18th
Constitutional
amendment56,
land
acquisition has become a provincial subject which has led to the
creation of diverging legislative regimes57. Each legislation provides for
different parameters for compensation which creates disparity. In
order to alleviate such disparity, other jurisdictions, such as India,
have enacted the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in
Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013,
whereby, a uniform compensation mechanism exists for the entire
State and the compensation afforded to the land owners, whose land
is acquired under the exercise of Eminent Domain for public purpose,
is significantly greater. It is desirable that one uniform compensation
mechanism should also be adopted by the parliament of Pakistan by
conducting a similar exercise to bring forth an identical, or more
beneficial, legal regime to recompense land owners for the compulsory
acquisition of their land. We also observe that the scheme of
compensation provided under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894
remains a remnant of colonial times that should have been timely
amended to cater to our evolving socio-economic circumstances.
Therefore, such overhaul becomes necessary in light of the
shortcomings of the current scheme of land acquisition with respect to
compensation and matters incidental thereto.
56 See Paragraph 44 of this Judgment for more detail
57 Some of which are detailed in paragraph 65 of this judgment
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
26
g.
APPLICATION OF DOCTRINE OF OCCUPIED FIELD, PITH AND
SUBSTANCE, AND INCIDENTAL ECNROACHMENT ON THE
FACTS
45.
When two or more competing laws or provisions contained
therein, are seemingly similar or overlapping, then legislative intent of
the parliament may be discernible from examining the Preamble,
legislative history, doctrine of pith and substance, incidental
encroachment, and occupied field to adjudge their co-existence in their
respective domain or for one to nudge out and claim dominance over
the other. The superior courts have expounded such doctrines,
amongst others, as interpretive techniques, which are used to adjudge
the predominance and constitutionality of a statute or of any provision
contained therein. This court has examined the circumstances
warranting applicability of such doctrines to outcast LAA, 1894 and
CDAO, 1960 or provisions in competition. In the case of Shama Textile
v. Province of Punjab58 this court has set down the rule to apply the
doctrine of occupied field, pith and substance, and incidental
encroachment. The relevant portion is reproduced below:
“The doctrine of occupied field is a concomitant of the larger
doctrine of pith and substance, incidental encroachment.
Under the doctrine of pith and substance, with all its
concomitants, postulates for its applicability on a competition
between Federal legislation and Provincial legislation and it
would be erroneous to invoke the doctrine where there is no
such competition, merely because a Provincial law conflicts
with another law which has not been passed by the Federal
Legislature but deals with a matter in the Federal List. Similar
is the case where a Federal Statute provides that the
provincial Government may extend the operation of a law to
any part of the Province and the legislation is brought into
operation by the Provincial Government, the law does not lose
its Federal Character and does not become invalid when it
comes into conflict with another Federal law.” (Underlined to
add emphasis)
46.
Thus, it could be seen that doctrine of occupied field, which
is auxiliary to the larger doctrine of pith and substance, and incidental
encroachment, may be invoked by the courts to determine the extent of
58 1999 SCMR 1477 at page 1495
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
27
legitimacy only in cases where the competing statutes or any of the
provisions contained therein are by different tiers of legislature. In the
case at hand, both the LAA, 1894 and the CDAO, 1960 are the Federal
Statutes and it is not a case of competition between the federal or
provincial tier of the legislature. Therefore, it would be an exercise in
futility to invoke the doctrine of pith and substance, incidental
encroachment, or occupied field where there is no legislative
competition between the federal and provincial tier of statutes.
II.
The Legislative Intent of the Parliament in CDAO, 1960
a.
LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE
47.
Where legislative instruments in competition, one
promulgated by the Federal and the other by the Provincial legislature,
or any provisions contained therein, are pitched against each other,
the test to determine the legislative supremacy or dominance is
comparatively simple and provided by Article 141 and Article 142 of
the Constitution, 1973 which clearly demarcates the legislative edges,
competency and supremacy test. In case of conflict between Federal
and Provincial enactments, privilege of overriding supremacy is
conceded to the Parliament/Federal legislature under Article 143.
Where one or more Provincial Assemblies, through resolution,
authorizes the Parliament to pass law in respect of a residuary subject,
in such event, power to repeal and amend such law is exclusively
retained by such Provincial legislature(s)59.
b.
THE EXCLUSIVE DOMAIN OF THE FEDERATION FOR THE
SUBJECT OF ‘LAND ACQUISITION’ OVER ISLAMABAD CAPITAL
TERRITORY
48.
The Federal Legislature exercises such jurisdiction in
respect of matters enumerated in the Federal Legislative List (FLL). All
other left over matters/subjects are secured by the Provincial
Legislature in constitutional parlance referred to as residuary subjects.
59 Government of Sindh v Dr. Nadeem Rizvi 2020 SCMR 1 (para 16 ( v), para 20)
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
28
The Parliament (by 2/3rd majority of both the houses)60, through the
Constitution (Eighteenth Amendment) Act X of 2010, negotiated
and redefined the legislative territory of the Federal and Provincial
Legislature. Pakistan has migrated from two lists to one in the Federal
Legislative List (FLL), which reserves subjects/entries exclusively for
the Parliament to legislate. Although the Concurrent List, which gave
the Parliament and the Provincial legislature contemporaneous or
overlapping jurisdiction, has been done away with, the current scheme
envisages a minuscule overlapping concurrent legislative domain
confined to three subjects/entries i.e. criminal law, criminal procedure
and evidence61.
49.
It could be seen that by virtue of successive constitutional
instruments, as succeeded by Constitution 1973, the ‘legislative
subject or entry’ of “land acquisition” was neither covered by the Federal
Legislative List nor the Concurrent Legislative List. Even when the
concurrent list was done away with under the Constitution
(Eighteenth Amendment) Act X of 2010, it did not alter the status of
the subject of ‘Land Acquisition’, which remained as a ‘residuary’ or
‘leftover subject,’ as it remained uncovered under the ‘Federal
Legislative List’. Therefore, by the operation of Article 142(c), read
with Article 268 of the Constitution of 1973, the Provincial Assembly
alone is endowed with the legislative competence to pass new
legislation, or alter, repeal, and amend the ‘existing laws’ that had
fallen within its legislative domain or competence of the respective
provincial legislature by virtue of such laws being a ‘residuary subject’.
60 See Article 238 & 239
61 Article 142(b)
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
29
50.
The status of Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT), under
Article 1(2) of the 1973 Constitution, is classified as a territory that is
clearly distinguishable from the territory of the Provinces. The relevant
extract of Article 1 (2) is been reproduced below for perusal.
“1. The Republic and its territories.-
(1) Pakistan shall be Federal Republic to be known as the
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, hereinafter referred to as
Pakistan.
(2) The territories of Pakistan shall comprise:-
a) the Provinces of Baluchistan, the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab and Sindh;
b) the Islamabad Capital Territory, hereinafter
referred to as the Federal Capital;
c) (c) the Federally Administered Tribal Areas; and
d) such States and territories as are or may be
included in Pakistan, whether by accession or
otherwise.”
51.
The Constitution of Pakistan, 1973 not only makes
specific provision for the exclusive legislative domain in respect of
“residuary subjects” (i.e. subjects/entries left out of Federal Legislative
List) over the respective provincial territories of the provincial assembly
by virtue of Article 142(c), but it also recognizes the exclusive domain
of the Federal legislature over “residuary subjects” in respect of
territories or areas ‘not included in any province’ by the operation of
Article 142(d) which includes Islamabad Capital Territory. Given the
nature of Islamabad Capital Territory under Article 1(2), only the
Federal Legislature is empowered with the exclusive domain to legislate
in areas not forming part of a territory of any province as enumerated
in Article 142(d). It becomes evident that only the Federation itself
has the exclusive domain to legislate on all matters that are, in their
nature, ‘residuary subjects’, including ‘land acquisition’, with respect
to ICT.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
30
III.
The Conflict between Special Law and General Law
52.
The learned bench of the Islamabad High Court, in
paragraph 21 to 24, of the impugned judgment, stressed on the
principle of general and special law, earlier law and later law, doctrine
of implied repeal, and the nature of LAA 1894, a general law and
CDAO, 1960, a special law, held
‘that there is conflict between the two enactments
and could not stand together; therefore special law
which was enacted later would not only have
precedence but abrogate the earlier contrary law62.
As will be discussed in the succeeding paragraphs, the conclusion
drawn that provisions of ‘land acquisition’ contained in the CDAO,
1960 abrogates provisions of land acquisition in the LAA, 1894 cannot
be sustained.
a.
PROPERTY
RIGHTS
WITHIN
THE
CONSTITUTION
OF
PAKISTAN, 1973
53.
Articles 4, 23, 24, 152, 172, 173 and 253 of the
Constitution of Pakistan, 1973 deals with various aspects of property
rights, interests and concomitant limitations.
Article 4 guarantees that:
‘no action detrimental to life, liberty, body, reputation or
‘property’ of any person shall be taken except in accordance
with law.’
Article 23 provided that:
'Every citizen shall have the right to acquire, hold and dispose
of property in any part of Pakistan, subject to the Constitution
and any reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the public
interest.‘
Sub Article (1) of Article 24 ibid further hold the out assurance:
‘that no person shall be deprived of his property save in
accordance with law’
62 Paragraph 24 of Impugned judgment
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
31
Sub Article (2) further reassures that:
No property shall be compulsorily acquired or taken
possession of with a caveat
(a) save for a public purpose, and
(b) save by the authority of law, which provides
(c) for compensation therefore and either fixes the amount of
compensation or specifies the principles on and the manner in
which compensation is to be determined and given.
The expression “save by authority of law” in this Article provides for
acquisition in accordance with law, which in the present case is the
Land Acquisition Act, 1894 as it is in conformity with all the
attendant limitations.
54.
Article 253(1) endows the Majlis-e-Shora (Parliament) to
prescribe a maximum limit as to property, or any class thereof, which
may be owned, held, or possessed by any person. Any law, which
allows a person to own or possess beneficially an area of land greater
than which, immediately before the commencing day63, he could have
lawfully owned or possessed beneficially, was held to be void64. Clause
(b) of sub-Article (1) of Article 253, gives legislative competence to the
Parliament to legislate, empowering the Federal or Provincial
Government, directly or through corporations controlled by any of such
Government, to carry on any trade, business, industry, or service as
may be specified in such laws either wholly, partially or to the exclusion
complete or partial of other person or by corporation controlled by any
such Government.
6314 August, 1973 per Article 265 (2) of the Constitution
64 Land Reform, Act 1972, and Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil Industries (Control and
Development) Ordinance 1973 owes its legitimacy under Article 253 (1) of the Constitution
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
32
b.
THE ABSENCE OF A ‘NON-OBSTANTE’ OR OVERRIDING
CLAUSE IN CDAO, 1960
55.
The observation of the learned bench in para 24 of the
impugned judgment is that:
“It is settled that in case of conflict, preference is to be given
to the new law, and the implied repeal of earlier law could be
inferred only when there was enactment of later law, which
had the power to override the earlier law, and was totally in
consonance with the earlier law and when there are two laws,
the earlier and later law, could not stand together, therefore,
later laws abrogate the earlier laws.”
i.
Distinguishing the Cases relied upon by the learned bench
56.
The propositions of law appears to have been drawn from
precedent law cited as The Lahore (Inland Revenue)65, Tanveer Husain,66
which though is correct, however, applying the same on the facts and
circumstances of the present case to infer that the LAA, 1894 stands
superseded by CDAO, 1960 is not a correct deduction.
57.
In the case of Lahore (Inland Revenue) supra, rival
provisions contained in the Income Tax Ordinance 1979 and the
Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 were under consideration. In the case
of Tanveer Husain (supra), the period of limitations to file the appeal
contained in the rival statutes i.e Civil Servant Act, 1973 and similar
provisions in Removal from Service (Special Powers) Ordinance
2000 were under question. The cases are quite distinguishable.
58.
Learned Counsel for the Respondents has relied upon
Syed Murshad Shah etc v. FIA67, Muhammad Mohsin Ghuman v.
Government of Punjab68, and LG HQ Frontier Corp etc. v. Ghulam
65 2013 PTD 2125
66 PLD 2006 SC 249
67 2017 SCMR 1218
68 2013 SCMR 85
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
33
Hussain69, to urge that when two competing laws are in field, then the
later law prevails. Said cases were relied upon in paragraph 21 of the
impugned judgment with approval. We have examined and note that
the under lying principles in cited cases were missed by the learned
bench.
59.
In the first mentioned case of Syed Murshad Shah etc, the
matter concerned a customer of a bank involved in financial
impropriety. This Court resolved the conflict as to the primacy of law,
stuck between Banking Companies Ordinance, 1962 read with
Federal Investigation Agency Act, 1972, Banking Companies
(Recovery of Finance) Ordinance 2001, Financial Institution
(Recovery of Finance) Ordinance 2001 (FIO, 2001), and Offences
in Respect of Banks (Special Courts) Ordinance, 1984. It was held
that where there is conflict between competing laws, ultimately
question of relativity between two or more of the statute on common
subject matters and where the two conflicting law contain overriding
clause, generally the legislation later in time will prevail. Such
presumption was, however, held not to be automatic. A host of other
factors including object, purpose and policy of both statutes and the
legislature’s intention as expressed by the language employed therein
to determine which of the two was to prevail.
60.
In the second case of Mohsin Ghuman Surpra, the Police
Order 2002 was pitched against the Punjab Civil Servant
Recruitment (Relaxation of Upper Age Limit) Rules 1976. The
general law as well as the special law contained a ‘non-obstante' clause.
The Court opined that the special statute overtakes the general law
even if the general law contained a non-obstante clause. The case is
quite distinguishable as the CDAO, 1960, while special law, does not
contain a non-obstante clause to override the provisions of LAA, 1894
for land acquisition.
69 2004 SCMR 1397
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
34
61.
It was noted in the case of LG HQ Frontier Corp etc. v.
Ghulam Hussain, both the competing laws i.e. Frontier Corp
Ordinance 1959 and Removal from Services (Special Power)
Ordinance, 2000 were couched in negative terms or in such
affirmative terms, which unequivocally involve negative ramifications,
that proved fatal to the earlier enactment. In all the three cases noted
above, ‘overriding’ and ‘non-obstante' clauses gave supremacy over
both general as well as special law, which were earlier in time. None of
the cases supports the case of the private Respondents.
62.
Hence, the conclusion of the learned bench in para 23 of
the impugned judgment cannot be sustained, as the CDAO, 1960
neither contains an ‘overriding’ nor a ‘non-obstante' clause that may
nudge out LAA, 1894 from its applicability in ICT. Having examined
both the enactments, we are also of the view that CDAO, 1960 is
purpose specific law that caters to the requirement of ‘planning and
development’ of the new capital of Pakistan and such kind of
enactment provides a complete mechanism in itself, which is a self-
contained enactment, having no dependency for the acquisition of land
on the LAA, 1894, unlike similar statutes catering for planning and
development of major and developing cities as discussed in succeeding
paragraph 66.
63.
No arguments strong enough have been put forth to show
that the CDAO, 1960 could override the provisions of the LAA, 1894.
In absence of overriding or superseding or ‘non-obstante' provision
within the CDAO, 1960, we see no reason strong enough as to why
the CDAO, 1960 should override the provisions of the LAA, 1894 as
held by the learned Bench in the impugned judgment. In conclusion,
as stated above, the legislations are merely overlapping and there
appears to be no conflict between both the statutes. There is no
apparent reason as to why these statutes cannot exist coextensively as
each of them caters to a different object and purpose.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
35
ii.
Construing the words of the CDAO, 1960 in their natural,
ordinary, or popular meaning
64.
The provisions of CDAO, 1960, are to be considered in
their natural, ordinary or popular meaning, not containing a non-
obstante clause. The CDAO, 1960 also does not explicitly exclude the
application of LAA, 1894 over ICT, as compared to other legislations
of similar nature (as noted in succeeding paragraph 66). The literal
rule further lends support that the CDAO, 1960 is not the only
legislation to be used in ICT for acquisition of land, which can be
invoked in furtherance of the main purpose of the legislation i.e for
planning and development’ as held in the case of Murree Brewery Co
Ltd. v. Pakistan through Secretary to Govt. of Pakistan, Works Division70.
iii.
The Legislature adds a ‘non-obstante’ clause where the
intention is for the legislation to have an overriding effect:
65.
One may instructively refer to the Punjab Development
of Cities Act, 1976, which, by virtue of its Section 24, makes the Act,
applicable notwithstanding provisions of LAA, 1894. In addition, the
Punjab Acquisition of Land (Housing) Act, 1973, per Section 3,
enables it’s provisions to apply notwithstanding anything contained to
the contrary in LAA,1894 or any other law for the time being in force.
Furthermore, Section 25 of the Lahore Development Authority Act,
1975 also contained a notwithstanding clause. Baluchistan
Acquisition of Land (Housing and Development Scheme) Rural
Areas Act, 1974, Hyderabad Development Authority Act, 1976
contained no provision overriding LAA, 1894 in either enactment. As
per Section 49 of the NWFP Urban Planning Ordinance, 1978,
provisions of the same would apply notwithstanding anything
contained to the contrary in the LAA,1894 or any other law for the
time being in force. Section 15 of the Baluchistan Costal
Development Authority Act, 1998 states that where the Authority is
of the opinion that any land needed for any scheme or other public
purpose cannot be acquired under Section 14, such land may be
70 PLD 1972 SC 279
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
36
acquired in accordance with LAA, 1894. Gwadar Development
Authority Act, 2003, through Section 39, makes provisions of LAA,
1894
by
explicit
reference
applicable.
Lastly,
New
Murree
Development Authority Act, 2004, through Section 7(c), has the
power to acquire property, both moveable and immoveable, and
Section 25 of the same confers an overriding effect over provisions of
any other law, but surprisingly, unlike other statutes on the subject,
the Act of 2004 does not give manner and procedure of acquisition of
land. Cited statutes are amongst many on the subject, relatable to ‘city
or region specific development’, some of the statute import, some adopt
by reference, and some override applicability of not only the LAA,
1894, but any other laws too. During the pendency of the case, the
Foundation has been transformed into the Authority the under
Federal Government Employees Housing Act, 2020 which contains
a non-obstante clause essentially overriding the CDAO, 1960,
implication of such change and up gradation of legal status of
foundation to that of the Authority will be dealt with separately.
66.
As noted earlier, CDAO, 1960 is a purpose specific
legislation “providing for making all arrangements for the planning and
development of Islamabad within the frame work of a regional plan”.
The CDAO, 1960, as already noted above, does not contain any
exclusionary or overriding clause barring the applicability of LAA,
1894, meaning thereby that, while enacting any statue, some of the
matters covered by the purpose specific statute of CDAO, 1960 may
touch upon some of the aspects, which, in fact, are elaborately covered
by other statutes and both the statute can coextensively exist and
operate in their respective domain. The Respondents were not able to
convincingly demonstrate that CDAO, 1960, under given set of
circumstances, overrides the LAA, 1894 for ICT. However, the
planning and development is still the domain of the CDA and it still
maintains the authority to conduct such planning and development of
any land that is acquired under the LAA, 1894 for public purpose.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
37
IV.
Enactment of Law to Qualify as an Exception within Article
24 of Constitution:
67.
Indeed, it was rightly concluded by the learned Division
Bench, (in para 29 of the Impugned Judgment) that for the purpose of
acquisition of any property or depriving any person of a property, such
exercise of authority need to be backed by law. The learned bench, in
a truncated manner, relied upon exceptions carved out in terms of sub-
article (3) of Article 24, where a Constitutional shield is provided to
laws framed for the acquisition of different category of property i.e
a) for preventing danger to life, property or public health
b) property which has been acquired by, or come into the
possession of, any person by any unfair means, or in
any manner, contrary to law
c) enemy property or evacuee property
d) for limited period, either in the public interest or in order
to secure the proper management of property or for the
benefit of its owner
e) (i) providing education and medical aid to all or any
specified class of citizen
(ii) housing and public facilities
(iii) providing maintenance to those who, on account of
unemployment, sickness, infirmity or old age, are
unable to maintain
themselves,
f) any existing law or any law made in pursuance of
Article 253.
68.
The learned Division Bench of the Islamabad High Court,
relying on sub-article (3) of Article 24, (wrongly quoted as Clause 3 of
Article 4), concluded that no persons could be deprived of his property
without any authority or backing of law, is indeed correct. To draw
support, the learned bench relied upon a judgment in the case of Nazim
F Haji, Chief Citizen Police Liaison Committee Karachi v. Commissioner
Karachi etc.71 In the cited case, the action of the Government of Sindh,
whereby private vehicles were being requisitioned without any
compensation in favor of law enforcement agencies, such as the police,
was eventually challenged in the court of law. When it was challenged,
the Government of Sindh defended the action relying on Section 42 of
71 PLD 1993 Kar. 79
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
38
the Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 which inter-alia obligates the
public to assist the Magistrate and the Police for prevention or
suppression of breach of law. The learned bench of the Sindh High
Court rightly deprecated such practice of the Police and held that
Section 42 Cr.P.C does not authorize the requisition of private vehicles
and there is no law on the subject that complies with Article 24 of the
Constitution, 1973 for the requisition of private Vehicle in public
interest against compensation. Although, such law is enacted in the
Indian part of Punjab72. We fail to understand how the learned bench
has relied on the aforementioned case in the current circumstances,
let alone how it advances the case of the Respondents.
69.
The legislative history, Constitutional, as well as legislative
protection, of the LAA, 1894, including its applicability on ICT have
been thrashed out in detail in the above mentioned paragraphs. The
legitimacy of the LAA, 1894 in the current legislative scheme has
already been discussed and established. Hence, the LAA, 1894 is
covered under the exception contained in Article 24 (2), which need
no further elaboration. To assume that the land acquisition in the case
at hand is without any legal backing is too naive an opinion, which
cannot be sustained.
70.
The learned bench concluded that the LAA, 1894 has no
constitutional blessing within Art. 24 and assumed that is, in fact, the
CDAO, 1960 that fits within the scheme of Article 24. As discussed
in the preceding paragraphs, the CDAO, 1960 and the LAA, 1894 had
each qualified under the tests provided in Article 8 and Article 227
of the Constitution. We have noted that all statutes, some of which are
referred herein above in paragraph 65, that provide for the acquisition
of any class of property, have provisions to discharge municipal
function. Such discharge of municipal functions, along with executing
a scheme for ‘planning and development’ in area of respective
72 Punjab Requisitioning and Acquisition of Movable Property, Act, 1978
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
39
jurisdiction, can enable these statutes to qualify under the exceptions
contained in sub-clause (ii) of clause (e) to Sub-Article (3) of Article
24 of the Constitution for the purposes of land acquisition. The same
has been reproduced below:
“(3)Nothing in this Article shall affect the validity of
(e) any law providing for the acquisition of any class of
property for the purpose of-
(ii) providing housing and public facilities and
services such as roads, water supply, sewerage,
gas and electric power to all or any specified
class of citizens”
71.
While previously the CDAO, 1960, under S.15A, catered
for municipal functions, they have since been sliced away pursuant to
the mandate of Article 140A of the 1973 Constitution and such
municipal functions are now conferred on the Authority established
under Islamabad Local Government Act, 2015. Therefore, the
possibility has now arisen where the CDAO, 1960 may no longer even
qualify under the exception contained in sub-clause of (ii) of Clause
(e) to Sub-Article (3) of Article 24 of the Constitution for the purposes
of land acquisition. Since this was not an issue before us, we have
refrained from attending to it.
a.
THE EXCEPTION UNDER ARTICLE 24(2)
72.
Perhaps it would have been appropriate if the learned
bench, prior to venturing into the exceptions contained in sub-article
(3) of Article 24, had examined the exception contained in sub-article
(2) of Article 24. The same has been reproduced below for convenience
sake.
“(2) --- Protection of Property Rights
No property shall be compulsorily acquired or taken
possession of save for a public purpose, and save by the
authority of law which provides for compensation therefore
and either fixes the amount of compensation or specifies the
principles on and the manner in which compensation is to be
determined and given.”
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
40
73.
The exception contained in sub-article (2) of Article 24 is
relevant to determine the validity of actions taken the LAA, 1894. Once
a declaration is issued under S.6 (3) of the LAA, 1894, it is conclusive
evidence that the land is needed for either public purpose or for a
company, unless it is shown to be in colorable exercise of jurisdiction
as was in the case of Murree Brewery73. In fact, the validity of law under
clause (e) (ii) of sub-Article (3) of Article 24 is now conferred on the
FGEH Authority Act 2020 due to the municipal functions entrusted
to it under S.3(4) of the Act.
74.
Article 172 deals with the vesting of ownerless and other
properties like mineral, oil and natural gas in the Provincial and
Federal Government respectively, or jointly, as the case may be.
Article 173(1), defines the limit of executive authority of the
Federation and a Province, subject to any Act of appropriate legislation
with regard to the grant, sale, disposition, or mortgage of any property;
This Article also governs the purchase or acquisition of property either
on behalf of the Federal Government or the Provincial Government, as
the case may be, and the making of a contract. In terms of Sub-Article
(2) of Article 173, ‘all property acquired for the purposes of the
Federation or of a Province, as the case may be’ shall vest in the Federal
Government or in the Provincial Government as the case may be. The
learned bench erred in holding (see paragraph 34 and 35 of the
impugned judgment) that the acquisition for public purpose, could
only be undertaken in exercise of authority under Art. 173, read with
CDAO, 1960, and not LAA, 1894 mandated under Art. 24. As
noted, herein, objectives and purpose of the two articles are entirely
different.
75.
The objectives and purpose of the two articles are entirely
different. Article 24(2) provides for the acquisition of privately owned
property, for a public purpose, against compensation. Whereas,
Article 173(2), as noted above, concerns where the acquisition of the
property is “for the purposes of the Federation or of a Province”. The
73 PLD 1972 SC 249
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
41
learned bench did not consider the correlation of sub-article (2) of
Article 24 with S.6 of the LAA, 1894 that led to an erroneous
conclusion. Resultantly, it becomes imperative to delve into the
legislative origin of Article 24 and the principle it embodies to form a
better understanding regarding the power of the State to acquire land
under the umbrella of ‘public purpose’.
V.
Eminent Domain:
76.
The power of ‘Eminent Domain‘ is a proprietary aspect of
sovereignty and is inseparable from it.74 It is an inherent attribute of a
sovereign State and the manifestation of the sovereign authority of
‘Eminent Domain’ can be traced to Article 24 of the Constitution of
Pakistan, 1973. It vests within the State, or its delegated
instrumentality, to expropriate private property for public use, and or
for company against adequate, or reasonable, compensation payable
to the owner of property75.
77.
The doctrine of ‘Eminent domain’ is founded on two
maxims which can be traced back to the work of Roman orator, writer,
and statesman, Marcus Tullius Cicero's76 and ‘De Legibus’77. The first of
these maxims is “salus populi est supreme Lex (i.e regard for the public
welfare is the highest law) and the second is “necessitas publica major
est quam private” (i.e public necessity is greater than private
necessity)”.’ The term "eminent domain" was then coined from the legal
treatise “De jure belli ac pacis” (On the Law of War and Peace),
authored by the Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius in 1625, which used the
term ‘Dominium Eminens’ (Latin for supreme ownership)78.
74 Fauji Foundation v. Shamimur Rehman PLD 1983 SC 457
75 For an elaborate discussion, see American Jurisprudence, 2d Vol 26, pp 638-39 para1, and
Sooraram Pratap Reddy & Ors. v. Deputy Collector, Ranga Reddy & Ors. (2008 (9) SCC
552), Para 47
76 Period of work ranging from 106 BCE- 43 BCE
77 Period of work is estimated between February 45 and November 44 - Encyclopedia Britannica
78 Nowak, John E.; Rotunda, Ronald D. (2004). Constitutional Law (Seventh ed.). St. Paul,
MN: Thomson West. p. 263. ISBN 0-314-14452-8
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
42
a.
EMINENT DOMAIN ORIGIN IN THE US CONSTITUTION.
78.
Tracing the constitutional history, the concept of Eminent
Domain received first recognition and manifestation in the 5th
Constitutional Amendment (1791) in the Constitution of United
States, 1789, whereby it incorporated that ‘No person can be deprived
of life liberty or property without due process of law’ and limits of the
authority of the State from taking private property for public use
without "just compensation". The Fifth US Constitutional amendment
provided the basis of Eminent Domain in the United States. While
originally Eminent Domain vested only within the Federal Government,
the US Supreme Court, in the case of United States v. Jones79,
approved that such powers could be legislatively delegated by the State
to municipalities, government subdivisions, or even to private persons
or corporations, when they are authorized to exercise the functions of
public character80. The Power of Eminent Domain of a State and its
delegated authority is now considered as one of the pivotal attribute of
all modern Constitutions of the nation States.
b.
THE PRINCIPLE OF EMINENT DOMAIN IN SUBCONTINENT
79.
The said principles have also been accepted and applied
in India in the cases reported as Charanjit Lal Chowhury v Union of
India and others (1950)81, and State of Bihar v. Kameshwar Singh82. The
Indian Supreme Court examined the constitutionality of the provisions
of LAA, 1894 pitched against the rights to property and applied the
doctrine of Eminent Domain to rule in favor of the LAA, 1894.
79 109 U.S. 513 (1883)
80 See Chicago, B & Q Railroad Co v. Chicago 166 U.S 226 (1897)
81 1 SCR 869
82 AIR 1952 SC 252 = (1952)1 SCR 899
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
43
80.
The Constitution of Pakistan, 1973 is no exception to
applying the principles of Eminent Domain. The concept of Eminent
Domain can be attributed to Article 983 read with Article 24(1)84 of the
Constitution of Pakistan, which are in pari matretia to Vth American
Constitutional Amendment. As noted above, sub-Article (2) of
Article 24 regulates exercise of sovereign authority or Eminent Domain
of State over private property is subjected to three concomitant
limitations. Firstly, that no person can be deprived of his property
except in accordance with law, meaning thereby that, no property
could be acquired through executive orders and actions. Secondly, a
person could only be deprived of his property for public purpose.
Thirdly, that acquisition of property of a person must be against
compensation. Sub-Article (3) of Article 24 gives constitutional
protection to various laws dealing with acquisition of different types of
property for variety of purposes and objectives.
81.
Several Land Acquisition legislations were considered in a
large number of cases from the perspective of legislative domain and
the right to property, as guaranteed under the constitution and
Eminent Domain enjoyed by a State authority as discussed herein.
Such legislation was also viewed through lens of Islamic Injunction85.
In case reported as Hafiz Muhammad Ameen v. Islamic Republic of
Pakistan and others86, a five member bench held:
“Since Article 24 in its clause (2) provides that any law of
compulsory acquisition will have to provide for compensation,
clause (4) was added to provide protection to laws covered by
clause (3)”
They further held that the:
“power of Court was taken away to declare invalid law for
acquisition of any class of property for certain purposes….”
83 No person shall be deprived of his life or liberty save in accordance with law
84 No person shall be deprived of his property save in accordance with law
85 Article 227 of The Constitution of Pakistan, 1973
86 PLD 1981 FSC 23 at page 41
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
44
82.
Another manifestation of Eminent Domain, in addition to
Art. 24, over a Province find its place in Article 152, which sanctions
acquisition of land situated in a Province, at the direction, on behalf
of, and at the expense of the Federal Government, for any purpose with
respect to which the Parliament (Majlis-e-Shoora) has power to make
law. Article 152 also provides for the transfer of land owned by a
Provincial Government to the Federal Government by agreement. In
case of disagreement between the two Governments, the dispute is to
be resolved by the Arbitrator to be appointed by the Chief Justice of
Pakistan87.
83.
In essence, the principle of Eminent Domain provides for
the acquisition of land by the State for a Public Purpose or for company
in exchange for compensation. The State, exercising their authority
under Eminent Domain, has rightfully acquired such property by
issuing notification S.6 of the LAA, 1894, which is treated as
“conclusive evidence that the land is needed for public purpose or for the
company as the case may be “ 88
84.
In order to ascertain the inherent powers of a State to
exercise
Eminent
Domain,
either
itself
or
through
its
instrumentality/agent, the deduction of the nature of the Federal
Government Employees Housing Foundation becomes necessary. The
learned bench did not look into the nature of FGEHF, and assumed it
to be entity under Section 2(e) of the LAA, 1894. The true nature of
the FGEHF as either a corporate entity in common parlance or an
instrumentality/agency of government would further clarify if the
Foundation
could
exercise
Eminent
Domain
as
an
instrumentality/agency of the government.
87 for further discussion one may see Iftikhar Hussain Shah v. Pakistan through Secretary,
Ministry of Defence, Rawalpindi 1991 SCMR 2193
88 Section 6 (3) LAA, 1894
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
45
VI.
NATURE OF FGHEF:
85.
On 2.10.2019, Mr. Faisal Hussain Naqvi, learned counsel
for the private Respondents, in C.A 1476 to 1480 of 2018, brought to
the notice of the Court that Federal Government Employees Housing
Foundation has been established through an Act of Parliament, which
has superseded the FGEHF. Such fact was taken note of to examine
its implication. Later FGEHA Act, 2020 was brought to our notice.
While the Foundation is now an ‘authority’ due to the Act, 2020, we
will nonetheless examine the legal implications of the ‘Foundation’ in
the given set of circumstances.
a.
DISTINGUISHING THE CASES RELIED UPON BY THE
ISLAMABAD HIGH COURT
86.
In the case Ghulshan Hussain etc. v Commissioner
(Revenue), Islamabad, etc.89, the learned division bench treated Federal
Government Employees Housing Foundation as an agency of the
Government and relied on the cited case of Fauji Foundation v.
Shamimur Rehman90 and cited a passage, which is relevant for the
purpose of present controversy and, in fact, supports the Petitioner
Foundation’s case
“Once the public purpose is evident, the means for executing the
project is for the law giver alone to determine as to how purpose
may better be served as through an agency of private enterprise
or through department of government, it is not open to court to give
its own opinion on matter of which lawgiver is the judge.”
87.
We fail to understand how case of Muhammad Ishaq etc.
v. Govt. of Punjab etc.91, (para 29 of Impugned judgment) is helpful to
the Respondents. In the referred cases, this court held that the Co-
operative Society fall within the definition of Company as defined under
Section 2 (e) of the LAA, 1894, and acquisition of land for the need of
89 2000 YLR 1711
90 PLD 1983 SC 456
91 2002 SCMR 1652
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
46
company need not be for public purpose. The referred case is of no
help to the Respondents, as the learned bench presumed that the
Petitioner having been registered as Foundation under Section 42 of
the Companies Ordinance, 1984 in the attire of a “company” is a
company within the meaning of Section 3(e) of the LAA, 1894. While,
in fact, the Foundation was indeed registered under S.42 of the
Companies Ordinance, 1984, but not as a commercial or trading
entity. Instead, it was registered as a service provider, a non-trading
not for profit entity, and as an instrumentality of the State and,
therefore, it’s comparison with a trading company for profit, is not
justified.
b.
THE TEST FOR INSTRUMENTALITY/AGENCY LAID DOWN BY
THE APEX
88.
In order to determine the exact nature of the FGEHF, we
will be relying on the jurisprudence of this Court where it has
previously examined instrumentalities/agencies performing functions
in connection with the affairs of the Federation or a province. It may
be observed much before the status of FGEHF was examined by this
court, the test to determine whether functions entrusted to an
organization are the functions of a state, or otherwise, was laid down
in the case of Salahuddin and 2 others v. Frontier Sugar Mills and
Distillery Ltd,92 The same has been reproduced below:
‘What is meant by the phrase "performing functions in
connection with the affairs of the Federation or a Province" It
is clear that the reference is to governmental or state
functions, involving, in one form or another, an element of
exercise of public power. The functions may be the traditional
police functions of the State, involving the maintenance of law
and order and other regulatory activities; or they may
comprise functions pertaining to economic development, social
welfare, education, public utility services and other State
enterprises of an industrial or commercial nature. Ordinarily,
these functions would be performed by persons or agencies
directly appointed, controlled and financed by the State, i.e.,
by the Federal Government or a Provincial Government.
However, in recent years, there has been manifest a growing
92 PLD 1975
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
47
tendency on the part of Government to create statutory
corporations
for
undertaking
many
such
functions,
particularly in the industrial and commercial spheres, in the
belief that free from the inhibiting effect of red tapism, these
semi-autonomous bodies may prove snore effective, flexible
and also profitable. Inevitably, Government retains effective
control over their functioning by appointing the heads and
other senior officers of these corporations, by regulating their
composition and procedures by appropriate statutes, and by
finding funds for financing their activities.’
‘The primary test must always be whether the functions
entrusted to the organization or person concerned are indeed
functions of the State involving some exercise of sovereign or
public power; whether the control of the organization vests in
a substantial manner in the hands of the government; and
whether the bulk of the funds is provided by the State. If these
conditions are fulfilled, then the person, including a body
politic or body corporate, may indeed be regarded as a person
performing functions in connection with the affairs of the
Federation or a Province; otherwise not.’
i.
Exercise of Sovereign or Public Power by the Organization:
89.
Given the aforementioned test, the Rules of Business
1973, elaborately lay down the rules and manner how a Federal and
Provincial Government functions and regulates their business through
the Federal or Provincial Secretariat. The occupational work of each
secretariat is distributed amongst several Divisions. As Per Rule 4
under the Rules of Business, 1973 each of the Divisions of the Federal
Government are further branched into several sub-divisions, flanked
by ‘Attached Departments’, which is then further devolved into
‘working units’, or sections, and any such agencies or offices as the
Prime Minister or chief Minister may determine. Each Secretariat
carries on assigned business and activities, through various
instrumentalities, agency of juridical, and administrative embodiment.
90.
The List of Ministries and Divisions that the Federal
Secretariat shall comprise of is provided in Schedule I93 of the Rules
of Business, 1973. Entry #11 in Schedule I pertains to the ‘Ministry
of Housing and Works’ with the attached division of ‘Housing and
93 Rule 3(1) of the Rules of Business, 1973
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
48
Works’. The business of ‘Ministry of Housing and Works’ is as
distributed is mentioned in Schedule II94 in the Rules of Business,
1973. Upon perusal, Serial #14, Entry No. 2 elaborates one of the
businesses it transact is reproduced below
‘2. Provision of Government owned office accommodation and
residential accommodation, policy for acquisition,
requisitioning
and
hiring
of
office
and
residential
accommodation for officers and staff of Federal
Government.’
91.
The learned bench also relied on the Memorandum of
Association of the FGEHF, in paragraph 13 of the impugned judgment,
to illustrate the complete objective concept, wherein the primary object
was provided in Clause III(a) reproduced hereunder:
“III(a).To eradicate shelterlessness in the Federal Government
employees and to make and assess as far as possible each
of them have a house at the time of his retirement or earlier
and his dependents in case of death before retirement, on
such terms and the Board of Governors may determine.
(b).To initiate, launch, sponsor and implement housing
schemes for Federal Government employees on ownership
basis in Islamabad, the provincial capital and other major
cities of Pakistan.”
92.
The purpose that was being carried out by the Federal
Government Employees Housing Foundation was one that fell
within the powers of the Division of the Ministry of Housing and Works
as noted above. The fact that the Chairman of the Board of Governors
for the Foundation was the Minister of Housing and Works also further
lends to the fact that the Foundation exercised functions allocated to
the Ministry of Housing and Works under the Rules of Business,
1973.
94 Rule 3(3) of the Rules of Business, 1973
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
49
ii.
The control of the organization vests in a substantial
manner in the hands of the government:
93.
The
learned
bench
themselves
acknowledged,
in
paragraph 12 of the impugned judgment, that the members of the
Former Foundation were members of the executive belonging to
various ministries, including the Ministry for Housing and Works. The
relevant paragraph has been reproduced below:
‘The Federal Government Employees Housing Foundation
while incorporating its Articles of Association referred the
concept of membership which is only opened to the Federal
Government employees, approved by the executive committee
The management system referred in the said Articles is based
upon the Executive Committee, comprising of Secretary
(Housing and Works) as Chairman and Joint Secretary
(Housing and Works) as a Vice Chairman, along with five
members who are Financial Advisor (Ministry of Finance),
Joint Secretary (Cabinet Division), D.G. Public Works
Department, Deputy Secretary Admin (Works Division), and
CSD (P&EC). The FGEHF has its Board of Governors
comprising of Chairman, who is Minister for Housing and
Works with four members including Secretary Interior,
Secretary Establishment Division, Secretary Finance and
Secretary Housing and Works. The Board and its Executive
Committee are the decision maker in the FGEHF.’
94.
The aforementioned reproduction conclusively establishes
that the control of the former foundation vested solely in the hands of
the government as the Board and its Executive Committee were the
decision makers in the FGEHF. Therefore, the control of the
organization, in its entirety, vested within the hands of the
government.
iii.
The bulk of the funds is provided by the State
95.
Given that the foundation is conducting the affairs of the
government, it is the State itself that allocates funds for financing the
operation, salary of all its Board members, who are Civil Servants and
for the staff and activities of the Foundation.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
50
c.
AFFIRMATION BY THE SUPREME COURT OF THE TEST LAID
DOWN IN SALAHUDDIN V. FRONTIER SUGAR MILLS AND
DISTILLERY LTD.
96.
The exact nature of the FGEHF was examined by this
Court in detail in the case reported as FGEHF v. Muhammad Akram95,
wherein leave was granted inter alia to consider whether the allotment
of plot claimed by a Civil Servant in the housing scheme of the FGHF
fell within the terms and condition of service so as to attract the
jurisdiction of Federal Service Tribunal. This court, in order to resolve
the right of a civil servant to invoke appropriate jurisdiction, examined
true character and status of the FGHF This Court examined the
manner, intent and purpose of establishing FGEF in detail at page
1088 observed
“This is correct that Housing Foundation was neither a
statutory body nor is performing sovereign function rather by
its character, it is functioning as an agency of ministry of
Housing and Works, Government of Pakistan and is enjoying
the status of an official body of the said ministry. Housing
Foundation as per its declared objects and purpose, has
undertaken the function of establishing the project for
providing residential houses to the Federal Government
Employees as a welfare institution without any financial gain.
The Housing Foundation is not as such being financed from
public exchequer but its affairs are being fully managed and
controlled by machinery of the State and its functionaries are
being paid from public exchequer. The Housing Foundation is
operating the capital area and after acquiring land in the
capital territory of Islamabad through land Acquisition
Collector under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, has prepared
the housing Scheme for allotment of residential plots to
Federal Government Employees.”
In succeeding paragraph at page 1090 it was further reiterated
The Housing Foundation thus by virtue of object and purpose
has acquired the status of an official organization in the form
of a company incorporated under the Companies Ordinance
1984 which is functioning under the direct control of Ministry
of Housing and Works, Government of Pakistan, as its official
wing and is recognized as an agency of the Federal
Government”.
952002 PLC (CS) 1655= 2002 PLD SC 1079
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
51
In the following paragraph at page 1091 it was further
reaffirmed,
“FGHF having acquired the role of agency of Federal
Government was working for the benefit of employees of
Federal Government including the employees of Institutions,
Corporations, and Organizations controlled by the Federal
Government and would stand on different footing to that of a
private companies incorporated under the Companies
Ordinance, 1984”
97.
Even otherwise during pendency of instant appeals and
Petitions FGEHF, has been transformed into a Statutory Authority
through Federal Government Employees Housing Act, 2020, which Act
has received the assent of the President on 14 January 2020 and the
Act was published in the official Gazette on 15 January 2020. The
2020 Act has unequivocally cleared the ambiguities elaborated upon
in this judgment. The relevant provisions have been analyzed in
paragraphs 115 to 122.
X.
Public Purpose Justified for a particular segment of society
98.
The Indian Supreme Court in the case of Ratilal
Shankarabhai and others v. State of Gujrat and others96 held that
ordinarily, the Government is the best authority to determine whether
the purpose in question is a public purpose or not. Furthermore, the
declaration made by it under Section 6 is conclusive evidence of the
fact that the land in question is needed for a public purpose as in
Smt. Somavanti v. State of Punjab97. The decision lays down that
conclusiveness in S.6(3) of the LAA, 1894 must necessarily attach not
merely to a 'need' but also to the question whether the purpose was a
public purpose.
96 AIR 1970 SC 984 in Paragraph 7.
97 see Smt. Somavanti v. State of Punjab 1963 AIR SC 151 = 1963 SCR (3) 774
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
52
99.
Invariably, in all the cases so relied on by the learned
bench, ‘public purpose’ for a segment of society was held to be a public
purpose. The foundational case on the subject is Ministry of Works
Government of Pakistan v Muhammad Ali98 wherein Cornelius, J.,
speaking for the majority of the bench, held that the acquisition of land
for residence of Government servant is a public purpose. None of the
case cited by the learned bench supports the case of the Respondents.
The appropriate portion has been reproduced below:
‘The provision of residences is not by itself a matter falling
outside the concept of a "public purpose" provided that it is
part of a scheme for making general provision of that
character. Secondly, the provision of residences for a
particular class of persons, even though it may operate so as
to provide a particular residence for a particular member of
that class is also not excluded from the meaning of the
expression "public purpose", nor does it make any difference
whether the residences are for completely unprivileged
persons like coolies, or for those enjoying the patronage of
Government in the capacity of officers And the further
conclusion which emerges from these decisions is that the
provision of such residences may be included within the
meaning of the expression, "public purpose" in the case of
coolies because of the benefit to a whole class, and in the case
of public servants for the reasons stated by their Lordships of
the Judicial Committee, because of the public benefit which
accrues from the fact of Government being assisted in
maintaining the efficiency of its servants.’
100.
The dicta laid down by Cornelius, J. was recently upheld
by a three-member bench of this court in the case of Younus Habib v.
Imranur Rashid and others99 wherein it was held that the acquisition
of land for a housing society is recognized as a public purpose.
101.
The scope of ‘public purpose’ was further extended in the
case titled Pakistan through the Secretary, Ministry of Defence v.
Province of Punjab and Others100, wherein it was held that even the
construction of shops in a market would be considered to be a public
purpose even if profit is earned. The judgment serves as substantive
evidence that ‘public purpose’ is justified even when specific classes of
98 PLD 1960 SC 60
992018 SCMR 705
100 PLD 1975 SC 37
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
53
people, such as the shopkeepers in the cited case, are benefitted
notwithstanding the fact that the Cantonment Board was earning a
profit on such allocation. The relevant extract has been reproduced for
convenience sake
“Thus if in a market so constructed shops are let out on rent,
or some fee is levied as a toll in the market place would not
render the purpose merely the earning of profit; but it would
still be a public purpose being discharged by the Cantonment
Board in performance of the duties imposed upon it by Section
116 of the Cantonments Act. The levy of the fee or rent would
merely be incidental and would neither deprive the property
of its true character nor alter the user of the property from a
public purpose to merely profit-making.
I have no cavil with this enunciation and if a property is really
used for a public purpose then the fact that a fee is levied for
the user of such property would not render the user a non-
public purpose, Thus, for instance, the provision of slaughter
houses at which a fee is charged for slaughtering cattle will
not render the slaughter-house a merely profit-making
concern. It would still remain a premises used for a public
purpose”
102.
The concept of ‘public purpose’ was further enlarged to
include welfare funds to serving personnel, ex-servicemen, and their
families who also represented a specified class of people in the five-
member judgment of this court titled Fauji Foundation and another v.
Shamimur Rehman101
“The next question whether the retrieving of G.H.Q welfare
funds and the charitable purposes such as those in which the
appellant is engaged fall within the concept of "public
purpose" or "public welfare". Just as the recovery of
government dues cannot but be for public purpose as those
not only belong to government but also to the entire people of
the country, similarly retrieving of G. H. Q Welfare Funds
which are also public funds and committed to the welfare of
the serving personnel and ex-servicemen and their families,
would also be for a public purpose on account of their purport
and beneficial use by a large segment of population as
against the private interest of an individual.
All the enumerated items are without doubt purposes
involving benefit to a large community of the population and
in that view of the matter relatable to public purpose or public
welfare. This view seems to gain support further from the use
101 PLD 1983 SC 457
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
54
of expression "any advancement of any other object of general
public utility" which necessarily connotes some beneficial
advantage and service to the public”
103.
The judgments used by the learned bench are authorities
that essentially contradict their own argument. We will venture to show
how a select few of these authorities are essentially contradictory of
their own stance on how public purpose is not justified in this case.
The case of Ghulshan Hussain and another v. Commissioner (Revenue)
Islamabad102 provided a set of circumstances, which if fulfilled, would
satisfy the threshold for ‘public purpose’ with respect to the functions
discharged
by
the
Federal
Government
Employees
Housing
Foundation (FGHEF). The learned bench has considered the cited case
in isolation and has been unsuccessful in applying the principle
enumerated. The relevant portions of the cited case are reproduced
below:
“18. The Foundation, in the light of the definition of "public
interest", unless includes all the employees of the Federal
Government inside or outside Islamabad and all those persons
who are discharging functions in connection with the affairs of
the Federation such as employees of the National Assembly,
Election Commission of Pakistan, Supreme Court of Pakistan,
the employees of High Court discharging function at
Rawalpindi Bench of Lahore High Court, Federal Sharait Court
and the autonomous Bodies, Corporations, Institutions,
Government or semi-Government Organizations which are
directly or indirectly discharging the functions under the
control of the Federal Government, Doctors, Engineers,
Lawyers and Educationist, who in any manner are connected
with the Federal Government and Federation in public or
private sectors are bonafidely running their affairs in
Islamabad, such-like Journalists, the acquisition of land for a
Housing Scheme exclusively for the benefit of a limited class of
civil servants will not be the "public interest”. Similarly, the
senior members of the Armed Forces who having completed
their service are at the verge of their retirement or being in the
retirement tenure or retired are discharging their function at
their Headquarters in Islamabad and Rawalpindi are also
entitled to be given representation in the Housing Scheme of
Housing Foundation like the members of the superior judiciary.
Thus, the Housing Foundation without extending the benefit of
the scheme to the public and private sectors on the basis of a
reasonable classification and ratio by including people from
every walk of life in official or semi-official position cannot
102 2000 YLR 1711
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
55
justifiably acquire land for the benefit of only the employees of
Federal Government as such employees are not definable as a
Community for "public purpose".
104.
The learned bench then concluded that the ‘public
purpose’ would be justified as long as the entire classes of employees
in connection with the federation are benefitted by the housing
scheme. It is further evident upon perusal of paragraph 24 of the cited
case
“24. The acquisition of land for a Housing Scheme introduced
by the Housing Foundation for public utility in the form of an
Agency like Capital Development Authority under the control
of Federal Government and if such scheme is executed in the
benefit of public-at-large and is not confined to a limited class,
it will definitely advance the spirit of Constitution. Therefore,
the acquisition of the land by the Housing Foundation for the
benefit of all the above referred categories of persons can be
for the "public purpose" and the same will not be in violation
of Article 24 of the Constitution, which does not prevent
establishment of Housing Colonies in the public interest.”
105.
The learned bench then relies on the case of Muhammad
Ishaq and Others v. Government of Punjab and others103 in Paragraph
29 of the impugned judgment to hold that
‘… any scheme prepared by the FGEHF for providing housing
facility to its members has to be seen as a private interest for
those members only and their status is of a society for the
purposes of housing scheme… However, when they use the
state machinery with their limited objective under the
Companies law, their entire working has to be seen in the light
of their objective only and the purpose for which the land was
acquired was too limited to hold that the same would be used
for public purpose”
106.
The principle that land used for housing societies qualifies
as a ‘public purpose’ was also affirmed by this Court in Younus Habib
and others v. Imranur Rashid and others104. The dicta laid down by the
cited judgment, read with Ghulshan Hussain and another v.
Commissioner (Revenue) Islamabad (supra), denotes that the
acquisition of land by the FGEHF was no longer for a specified class of
103 2002 SCMR 1652
104 2018 SCMR 705
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
56
Federal Government employees but now included every employee in
connection with the affairs of the Federation. Therefore, the opinion of
the learned bench of the High Court cannot be maintained regarding
‘public purpose’ not being justified.
107.
In Sooram Pratap Reddy and others v. District Collector,
Ranga Reddy Dist and others105, the Indian Supreme Court stated that
“public purpose” includes any purpose wherein even a fraction of the
community may be interested or by which it may be benefited. As such
Special Economic Zones (SEZs), mines, shopping malls, factories,
dams, and other large-scale projects have been facilitated by
expropriation of land under the Land Acquisition Act.
XI.
You cannot rob Paul to pay Peter:
108.
The learned division bench of the Islamabad High Court
equated the land acquisition exercise with taking property of one and
giving it to other and drew strength from English saying ‘to rob Paul to
pay Peter and relied upon some cases to mentioned in para 25 of the
impugned judgment. We have gone through all the cases so cited. In
fact all the cases so cited support the case of the Petitioner foundation,
the case of Muhammad Akbar (supra), cited with approval in Dr. Nasim
Javaid case (supra), does not approve of the concept relied on by the
Islamabad High Court. The appropriate portion has been reproduced
below
‘… taking land of one to be given to other. One cannot rob Peter
to pay Paul, it may be Robin Hood Philosophy not part of law and
is barred by Fundamental Law i.e Constitution of Pakistan,
which only permits acquisition of land for Public Purpose’106
105 (2008)9 SCC 552
106 PLD 1976 Lah. 747 at Para 13
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
57
XII.
Regulatory Capture:
109.
The learned Bench of the Islamabad High Court invoked
the “Economic Theory of Regulation” propounded by Nobel Laureate of
1982, George J. Stigler107. The doctrine is recognized as “regulatory
capture”, which proclaims that interest groups and other political
participants use the regulatory and coercive powers of government to
shape laws and regulations in a way that is beneficial to them.
110.
In a case where the Punjab Local Government was
rendered non-functional, by delaying elections of local bodies, and one
of the mega projects was undertaken by Lahore Development
Authority, the matter, when taken to Lahore High Court, the non-
holding of election of local bodies was viewed critically and considered
by three member Bench of the Lahore High Court to be regulatory
capture of municipal functions in Imrana Tiwana v Province of
Punjab108.
111.
When the matter came for consideration up before this
court in Lahore Development Authority v. Imrana Tiwana, it was held
that
“The doctrine applies where a statutory body setup to
regulate a group is then manned by the persons from that
group to defeat the regulations. It would not apply where the
Regulated includes the government because inevitably
appointments to such regulatory bodies have to be made by
the Government. Government can defeat the legislative intent
by not appointing persons to such bodies or by making
appointment of such persons who will act only under its
dictation, the power to appoint has to be exercised in a fair
manner and the exercise of authority by appointee has to be
transparent in public interest and non-arbitrary”109
The result is that an agency, charged with acting in the public interest,
instead acts in ways that benefit the industry it is supposed to be
regulating.
107 The Theory of Economic Regulation. The Bell Journal of Economics and Management
Sciences, Vol. 2 No. 1 (Spring 1971), pp. 3 – 21. George J. Stigler.
108 PLD 2015 Lah. 522.
109 2015 SCMR 1735. Paragraph 85.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
58
112.
On the current facts of the case, the learned bench, in
paragraph 31 of the impugned judgment, has definitively concluded
that the CDA made a regulatory capture. The relevant extract has been
reproduced below
“In
our
humble
view
the
entire
working
of
the
appellant/FGEHF and the CDA authorities in combination of
other public officials made a regulatory capture which
occurred when a regulatory agency, created to act in the
public interest instead advance the commercial or special
concern of interest group that dominated the industry or sector
it was charged with regulating. Regulatory capture was a
form of Government failure and it occurred when special
interest, typically an industrial group, persuaded Government
actors to exercise the coercive powers of the state in ways that
were not in the public interest i.e. the interest of the industry
group diverged from the public interest, the Government
choose the former over the later.”
113.
The CDA was established as a public service provider and
not as a regulatory Authority. CDA is essentially responsible for
making all arrangement for the planning and development of
Islamabad, within the framework of regional development plan110. In
addition, the municipal services earlier entrusted to the CDA in 1966
under Act 22 of 1966111 were withdrawn and entrusted to Islamabad
Local Government112. The FGEHF is registered under Section 42 of the
Companies Ordinance 1984; It is merely a non-trading, not for profit
entity that is created for the betterment or service to the society
generally or any segment of society particularly. It is under the Ministry
of Housing and Works and performs one of its functions assigned to
Housing and Works Division. It may be observed neither, the CDA nor,
the FGEHF are the regulatory authority, none regulate any sector of
business or, commercial activities of commercial bodies rather both
are service providers.
110 Preamble, Section 11 to 21 of the CDAO, 1960.
111 S.15-A of the CDAO, 1960.
112 Islamabad Local Government Act, 2015.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
59
114.
The learned bench has also concluded, in paragraph 34 of
the impugned judgment that the State functionaries have failed to
perform their lawful duties on a required standard after due care and
caution which amounts to regulatory capture. We cannot endorse the
conclusion drawn by the learned bench. The present set of
circumstances do not warrant the application of the doctrine of
‘regulatory capture’ as a state functionary, the CDA, is executing its
statutory function, which does not include regulating any group of
trade or business, let alone, being manned by a person from any of
such commercial group or entity it is regulating. CDA and or FGEHF
fail the test of regulatory capture laid down in the case of Imrana
Tiwana.
XIII The Federal Government Employees Housing Authority Act,
2020
a.
EEFFECT OF ENACTMENT OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES HOUSING AUTHORITY ACT, 2020, DURING
PENDENCY OF INSTANT APPEALS AND PETITIONS
115.
During hearing and pendency of instant appeals, the
FGEHF, has been translated into an Authority through Federal
Government Employees Housing Authority Ordinance on 12th July,
2019 which later graduated into FGEHA Act, 2020 as published in
the official Gazette on 15 January 2020. In the case of Karan Singh
and others v Bhagwan Singh113, Indian Supreme Court held that the
subsequent act came into force during pendency of appeal, rights and
remedies by operation of law to be governed under new law. In another
case reported as Ramjilal & Ors. Etc. Vs. Ghisa Ram114, Indian Supreme
Court, under Section 57 of the Indian Evidence Act115, took judicial
notice of all the laws in force in the territory of India.
113 [1996] 7 SCC 559
114 1996 SCALE (2) 401
115 Corresponding Provision in Pakistan is Article 112 of Qanoon-e- Shahadat Order, 1984
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
60
116.
Thus in case in hand, this Court has taken judicial notice
of the Federal Government Employees Housing Society Act, 2020
passed by the Parliament on 15th January, 2020 as brought to the
notice of the court. None of the parties took any exception to the new
legislative regime leading to land acquisition by the Authority for the
purpose and object set out in the preamble of the Act, 2020.
Accordingly, we took notice of the change in law as regard acquisition
of land subject matter of present controversy. Examining the Act,
2020, it is noted that, it contains an elaborate procedure for enquiry,
acquisition of land, payment and determination of compensation,
vesting of property on issuance of notification and, right of appeal and
all other incidental and ancillary matter relating to acquisition of land.
117.
Under Section 3 thereof, the former Federal Government
Employees Housing Foundation is now a body corporate having
perpetual succession and is also a local authority in the “specified
area”116.
118.
In terms of Section 5(2)(e), the Board of the Authority is
empowered
“to impose and vary development charges, transfer fee,
services charges, toll, tax or other charges in respect of any
land or building within any scheme in the specified area”.
119.
By virtue of Section 24(a):
“all assets, rights, powers, authorities, and privileges, and all
property, moveable and immoveable, bank balances, bank
accounts, reserve funds, investments and all other interest
and rights in or arising out of such property and all liabilities
and obligations of whatever kind of the Foundation
established before commencement of this Act, shall stand
transferred to and vested in the Authority”
116 Defined under Section 2(n) to “means all lands owned, purchased, acquired or procured
by or vested in or leased to the Foundation under any law before the commencement of
this Act and such other land as may be purchased or procured or acquired or vested in or
leased to the Authority in Islamabad Capital Territory or other parts of Pakistan;”
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
61
120.
All acts and action of the FGEHF award of the contracts
etc. are now also protected by virtue of deeming clause contained in
Section 24(a) and further by virtue of Section 29 which reads as
follows;-
“All acts done or taken by the Foundation, before the
Commencement of this Act, shall be deemed to have been
validly done or have been taken under this Act to the extent
they are consistent with the provisions of this Act”
121.
The Act, 2020 contains ‘non-obstante’ clause117 which has
an overriding effect. The same is reproduced below:
“32. Relation of this Act with other laws–
(1) The provisions of this Act shall have effect not in
derogation of the Pakistan Penal Code 1860, Code of Criminal
Procedure 1898 (Act V of 1898), Code of Civil Procedure 1908
(Act V of 1908), Qanun-e-Shahadat 1984 (P.O. 10 of 1984)
and Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (1 of 1894)
(2) Subject to subsection (1), the provisions of this Act shall
have effect notwithstanding anything contained in any other
law
for
the
time
being
in
force.
122.
The recent enactment of the Act, 2020 substantiates the
fact that where the Parliament intend for the law to have overriding
effect, the words of the statute, in their natural, ordinary, or popular
sense, will clearly declare so. It is not the duty of the Court to either
enlarge or curtail the scope of the legislation or the intention of the
legislators, the latter of which was done so by the learned bench by
concluding that the CDAO, 1960 had an overriding effect over the LAA,
1894 when no such intention of the legislature could be deciphered,
either on the basis of legislative history of both the enactments as made
applicable in ICT, and in absence of ‘non obstante’ clause in either of
the statutes discussed elaborately. The Act, 2020 leaves no ambiguity
regarding the status of the Authority under the current constitutional
regime and simultaneously grants immunity to any prior actions
undertaken by the now Authority, previous Foundation, due to the
inclusion of the deeming clause as mentioned herein above.
117 S.32(2) of Federal Government Employees Housing Act, 2020
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
62
XIII.
Conclusion:
123.
For the foregoing reasons, the first and second question
regarding the jurisdiction of the CDA to acquire land to the exclusion
of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 has been answered in the negative
in paragraph 62-63. The third question regarding the acquisition for a
housing scheme constituting a valid public purpose has been
answered in the affirmative in paragraph 98-107. The fourth question
regarding the Acquisition under the LAA, 1894 becoming a State
Largesse under Art. 173 of the Constitution have been answered in
the negative as in paragraph 75. The fifth question regarding the
constitutional petitions not being maintainable, was not argued by any
of the parties, very fact that contentious matters has been argued and
dilated by the High court as well attended to by this Court, we do not
deem appropriate to delve into such controversy and leave it to be
addressed in some appropriate proceedings.
124.
In view of the forgoing discussion and determination of
points noted in the leave granting order dated 6.12.2018, Civil Appeals
No. 1476 to 1485 of 2018 stand allowed. Impugned consolidated
judgments
dated
04.7.2018
in
Intra
Court
Appeals
No.
I.C.A.365/2017, I.C.A.366/2017, I.C.A.367/2017, I.C.A.368/2017
I.C.A.365/2017, I.C.A.365/2017, I.C.A.22/2018, I.C.A.23/2018 and
I.C.A.24/2018 are set aside, consequently, consolidated judgments
dated 23.10.2017 rendered in W.P. No. 2128/2015, W.P No.
3496/2015, and W.P No’s 308 to 310/2016 are also set aside,
resultantly all the Writ Petitions noted herein stand dismissed.
XIV.
Crl.O.P 166 of 2018
125.
Crl.O.P. P 166 of 2018 has been filed by the SCBAP. It
arises out of Order dated 23.09.2014 passed in C.P. No. 38 of 2013,
(SCBAP vs. Amer Ali Ahmed Commissioner Islamabad and other)
whereby the SCBA sought implementation of the Directive No. 3059
and No. 3060 issued by the Prime Minister Secretariat, dated
13.11.2012, making a commitment for the allotment of land to the
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
63
members of the legal fraternity. The Petition proceeded and, ultimately,
pursuant to issuance of Notification under Section 4 of the LAA, 1894
on 23.09.2014, it was disposed of as not pressed. From the record, it
appears that the notification was later withdrawn, which led to the
filing of Crl.O.P No. 12 of 2015. It appears that a fresh notification for
the land acquisition was again issued on 29.04.2015. Consequently,
the Crl.O.P No. 12 of 2015 was withdrawn on 30.04.2015. For inaction
on the part of Petitioner Foundation and concerned authorities, several
Criminal Miscellaneous Petitions were filed from time to time and it
seems that Crl.O.P. No. 41 of 2017 came up before the Bench for non-
compliance of orders made from time to time in various proceedings
arising out of C.P. No. 38 of 2013. It is matter of record that during
pendency of Cr.O.P 41 of 2017 a settlement was arrived at between the
SCBAP, Collector Land Acquisition, and Director-General of the
Foundation, wherein it was stipulated that the requisite notification
under the LAA, 1894, having been issued, and objection, if any, were
to be decided within the stipulated period followed by the award. The
amount lying with the Appellant Foundation, submitted by the SCBAP,
was to be credited to the Land Acquisition Collector, ICT. In view of
such agreement reached between the parties, the Crl.O.P. 41 of 2017
stood dismissed on 10.08.2018.
126.
Presently, we are confronted with Crl.O.P. 166 of 2018,
which is a sequel of successive proceedings arising out of C.P. No. 38
of 2013, made by the SCBAP from time to time seeking implementation
of various directives, assurances by the authorities concerned and
lastly commitment made through agreement reached between the
parties and recorded in the order dated 10.8.2018, and to draw
contempt proceedings against all those responsible to make
compliance of assurance held out in agreement as reproduced in order
dated 10.8.2018.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
64
127.
Since a statement has been made by Mr Rizvi, learned
ASC, for the SCBA, that the amount, as claimed by the FGEHF and
the Collector Land Acquisition, has been deposited by the SCBAP, the
learned Counsel for the Appellant and learned DAG assures that the
agreement by and between the parties shall be honored. Mr. Rizvi,
learned ASC, is satisfied with the assurance made on behalf of the
authorities concerned. In this view of the matter Crl.O.P No. 166 of
2018 does not call for any further action, and is accordingly disposed
of.
XV.
CMA No. 2083 of 2018
128.
Nazar Hussain Chohan and Seven (7) others have filed
CMA No. 2083 of 2018 whereby they seek to be added as a party to the
proceedings and be allowed to assist this Court, further direction to
the Islamabad to decide W.P No. 4270/16 and W.P 3594/18 in
accordance with law and lastly, alternatively prayed that order dated
10.8.2018 passed in Cr.O.P 41/2017 be withdrawn and settlement
dated 10.8.2018 be set-aside. Mr. Naeem Bukhari learned Sr. Counsel
for the Petitioners in the noted application has assailed the
proceedings and orders noted herein on the ground, inter-alia, that the
land owners were not heard while disposing off C.P. No. 38 of 2013 and
series of Cr.O.P’s arising there from and while taking on record
settlement dated 10.8.2018 and treating the same as an order of the
Court. He contends that the land owners are prejudiced by such
directions of this Court under which their land has been acquired.
129.
Mr. Rasheed Rizvi, learned ASC for the Petitioner/SCBAP,
and so also Mr. Mansoor Ahmed, learned Sr. ASC, for the Foundation,
contends that originally C.P. No. 38 of 2013 was disposed off on
assurance of the authority concerned that the directives of the Prime
Minister noted above would be complied with and later on a settlement
was arrived at between the parties, which, do not speak of any
particular land. According both the learned counsels, remedy against
any acquisition of land, if any of the Petitioners lies elsewhere and not
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
65
in collateral proceedings. It was further argued that in the garb of listed
application Petitioners cannot be allowed to seek review of the order
dated 10.8.2018 as no fee for seeking review has been filed as required
under the Supreme Court Rules, 1980, even otherwise, review is
barred by time. On such grounds the application is liable to be
dismissed.
130.
Having heard the argument of all the contesting parties
and perused the record. Contention of Mr. Rashid Rizvi, and Mr.
Mansoor Ahmed learned Sr.ASC, is correct that there is no order of
this Court whereby any direction to acquire any particular land was
issued. The SCBAP has sought compliance and implementation of the
directive of the then Prime Minister of Pakistan, which was complied
with, and it was up to the authority concerned to make compliance
with the directive of the Prime Minister in the manner it may deem
expedient. It may further be observed that whenever any property is
acquired, in exercise of authority conferred, and Notifications under
S.4, S.6, and S.17 of the LAA, 1894 are issued, the parties interested
and aggrieved have a right to object to such acquisition and/or
challenge the award and determination and apportionment of
compensation. We are informed that numerous land owners have
already invoked the remedy against such acquisition. In this view of
matter we are not persuaded by the contention of Mr. Naeem Bokhari,
learned ASC that any directions were issued for acquisition of any
particular land. It is the sole prerogative of the authorities to acquire
land and the person so interested and aggrieved by such acquisition
may avail of the remedy as provided under the relevant acquisition
proceedings/laws. As regard his challenge to the applicability of CDAO,
1960 and inapplicability of LAA, 1894 in Islamabad, have been
attended elaborately in preceding paragraphs need no further
elaboration. Therefore, CMA No. 2083 of 2018 does not merit any
consideration and is accordingly dismissed.
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
66
131.
Since a statement has been made by Mr. Rizvi learned ASC
for the SCBA, that amount as claimed by the FGEHF and the Collector
Land Acquisition, has already been deposited by the SCBAP, and the
learned Counsel for the appellant and the DAG, assures that the
agreement by and between the parties shall be honored Mr. Rizvi,
learned ASC, is satisfied. In this view of the matter Crl.O.P No. 166 of
2018 does not call for any further action, stands disposed of.
XVI.
Writs Called:
132.
While hearing the subject Civil Appeals, as requested by
Mr. Naeem Bukhari, learned Sr.ASC vide Order dated 27.12.2018, W.P
No. 4270/2015, 4723/2016 and 3594/2018 pending in Islamabad
High Court were called for consideration and disposal. We have noted
that under Article 186A of the Constitution, 1973, this Court “may, if
it considers it expedient to do, in the interest of justice, to transfer any
case, appeal or other proceedings pending before any High Court to any
other High Court”.
133.
We have noted that unlike Indian Constitution118, Article
186A of the Constitution, 1973 does not confer any jurisdiction in this
Court to, call any case, appeal or other proceedings pending before any
High Court for the purposes of hearing and deciding the same itself,
though such record and proceedings may be call for perusal and
examination. Though, Mr. Naeem Bukhari, learned senior ASC, prayed
for and consented to such course. It is a settled position in law that
jurisdiction on court cannot be conferred even by consent; unless it is
118 Article 139A Constitution of India Transfer of certain cases
“Where cases involving the same or substantially the same questions of law are pending
before the Supreme Court and one or more High Courts or before two or more High Courts
and the Supreme Court is satisfied on its own motion or an application made by the
Attorney General of India or by a party to any such case that such questions are substantial
questions of general importance, the Supreme Court may withdraw the case or cases
pending before the High Court or the High Courts and dispose of all the cases itself.
Provided that the Supreme Court may, after determining the said questions of law return
any case so withdrawn together with a copy of its judgment on such questions to the High
Court from which the case has been withdrawn, and the High Court shall on receipt
thereof, proceed to dispose of the case in conformity with such judgment”
C.As N.1476 – 1485/18 etc.
67
so conferred by or under Constitution and or law119. We, therefore,
deem it proper to return all the three Writ Petitions to the Islamabad
High Court, which shall be deemed to be pending.
134.
Lastly, we also appreciate the research carried out by
Mr. Ahmad Hassan, Law Clerk and acknowledge his assistance
rendered in the completion of this case.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad
Announced in Open Court on 8th October, 2020
Judge
Approved for Reporting
119 Article 175 (2) of the Constitution 1973
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
Qazi Faez Isa, J. This case is about the compulsory acquisition of
thousands of kanals1 of land (‘the Land’) in the area of the Islamabad
Capital Territory (‘Islamabad’). The Land was acquired by the Federal
Government Employees Housing Foundation (‘the Foundation’)2 in terms
of the Land Acquisition Act, 18943 (‘the Land Acquisition Act’). After the
acquisition of the Land, the Foundation submitted its layout plans to the
Capital Development Authority4 (‘CDA’) which were approved by the CDA
Board5. The Land (less the area consumed in roads, utilities, etcetera) was
delineated and earmarked into residential plots for allotment to government
servants and advocates of the Supreme Court (‘the allottees’). The
acquisition cost of the Land and its development cost is borne by the
allottees; no amount is spent from the public exchequer by the Foundation
or CDA.
2.
Land Acquisition Act: The Land Collector within whose jurisdiction the
Land is situated directed the Foundation to deposit the tentative cost of the
Land and it was so deposited. Thereafter, the Collector issued the requisite
notices which were published in the official gazette; the ‘Preliminary
Notification’ dated 20 May 2015 followed by the ‘Declaration that land is
required for a public purpose’ notification dated 4 December 2015,
respectively under sections 4 and 6 of the Land Acquisition Act. The
Collector made and issued awards under section 12 of the Land Acquisition
Act, respectively Award dated 15 November 2016 and Award dated 15 June
2017. The said Awards determined the amount payable to the owners of the
Land, that is, the market price of the Land, the additional compensation of
fifteen per cent6 on account of the compulsory acquisition and six per cent
1 One kanal of land is equal to 605 yards or 505 meters.
2 Incorporated as an ‘association not for profit’ under section 42 of the Companies Ordinance,
1984 and in the Companies Ordinance, 2016, which used to be section 26 of the earlier
Companies Act, 1913 and now is section of 42 the Companies Act, 2017. The Foundation was
converted into a statutory organization by the Federal Government Employees Housing Authority
Act, 2020, Act No. IV of 2020, enacted on 15 January 2020, published in Gazette of Pakistan,
Extraordinary, Part I, on 15 January 2020.
3 Land Acquisition Act, 1894, Act No. I of 1894.
4 Set up under section 4 of the Capital Development Authority Ordinance, 1960, Ordinance No.
XXIII of 1960, published in Gazette of Pakistan, Extraordinary, 27 June 1960 (PLD 1960
Central Statutes 375).
5 On 6 July 2017.
6 Section 23(2) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
2
annual interest7. An award made by the Collector is subject to challenge
before a referee judge8 and then on appeal before the High Court9.
3.
Impugned Judgments: Some of the land owners challenged the acquisition
proceedings by invoking the Islamabad High Court’s constitutional
jurisdiction under Article 199 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan (‘the Constitution’). The challenge was made on a number of
grounds10. It was alleged that the acquisition of the Land was not for a
‘public purpose’ and since the Land was situated in Islamabad its
acquisition could only take place under the Capital Development Authority
Ordinance, 196011 (‘the CDA Ordinance’). The learned Chief Justice of the
Islamabad High Court vide judgment dated 23 October 2017 allowed the
petitions because, in his opinion, the said acquisition was not for a public
purpose and because CDA, under the CDA Ordinance, had exclusive
jurisdiction to acquire the Land as it was situated in Islamabad. The
Foundation and some of the allottees challenged the judgement of the
learned Single Judge by filing Intra Court Appeals12 (‘ICAs’) before a
Division Bench of the Islamabad High Court but their appeals were
dismissed by judgment dated 25 September 2018. In the ICAs, the findings
of the learned Single Judge regarding public purpose and CDA’s exclusive
jurisdiction were upheld and it was further held that the Land Acquisition
Act was not applicable.
4.
The Foundation and some of the allottees filed petitions for leave to appeal13
before this Court and leave was granted on 6 December 201814. The learned
Mushir Alam, J, has mentioned the facts, laws and precedents in
considerable detail. I am in respectful agreement with his lordship’s
conclusions. However, I have dilated upon certain relevant and necessary
matters in this additional note.
5.
Mr. Mansoor Ahmed, the learned counsel representing the Foundation,
submitted that Article 24(2) permits compulsory acquisition of private
7 Section 34 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894.
8 Section 18 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894.
9 Section 54 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894.
10 Writ Petition Nos. 308, 309 and 310 of 2016 and 2128 and 3496 of 2015.
11 Ordinance No. XXIII of 1960, published in Gazette of Pakistan, Extraordinary, 27 June 1960
(PLD 1960 Central Statutes 375).
12 ICA Nos. 364 to 368 of 2017 and 22 to 24 of 2018.
13 Civil Petition for Leave to Appeal Nos. 4449 to 4453, 4468, 4469 and 4482 to 4484 of 2018.
14 The leave granting order is reproduced in paragraph 22 of Mushir Alam, J’s judgment.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
3
property provided it is for a public purpose, done under the authority of law
and a mechanism for determining compensation is provided, and that these
three conditions were met; the acquisition was for a public purpose; was
made under the Land Acquisition Act and, therefore, was made pursuant
to the authority of law; and, the compensation payable to the landowners
was determined by the Collector by applying the stipulated mechanism in
terms of the Land Acquisition Act. The learned counsel submitted that the
CDA Ordinance was applicable only in respect of land situated in Islamabad
and was required for the use or purpose of the CDA. And, in this case the
Land was not acquired by CDA, nor could it have been, since it was not
required by CDA and/or for the use or purpose of CDA. The learned Deputy
Attorney General representing the Federation and Senior Counsel Sardar
Muhammad Aslam representing CDA, who sadly passed away after the
judgement was reserved, had supported the appellants and adopted the
submissions of the learned Mr. Mansoor Ahmed. On the other hand, Messrs
Naeem Bukhari and Feisal Hussain Naqvi relied on the impugned
judgments and reiterated the submissions made before the High Court and
the reasons which prevailed with the learned Judges of the High Court.
6.
Acquisition of Private Property for ‘Public Purpose’: Article 24(2) of the
Constitution permits the compulsory acquisition of land provided it is for
‘public purpose’15 and that the acquisition is pursuant to, ‘the authority of
law which provides for compensation therefor and either fixes the amount of
compensation or specifies the principles on and the manner in which
compensation is to be determined and given’16. I am in respectful agreement
with the learned Mushir Alam, J17 that the Constitution permits
compulsory acquisition if three conditions are met; firstly, the acquisition
must be for public purpose; secondly, the land must be acquired pursuant
to some law; and, thirdly, such law must provide for the determination of
compensation and its disbursement. The Land in these cases was acquired
pursuant to the Land Acquisition Act, a law which provides a detailed
mechanism for the determination and payment of compensation, hence, the
stipulated second and third conditions are met. The first condition -
whether the Land was acquired for public purpose – remains to be
considered. Public purpose is not specifically defined in the Constitution
15 Article 24 (2) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
16 Article 24 (2) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
17 Paragraph 80 of his lordship’s judgment.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
4
but it may be gathered from Article 24(3)(e). Article 24(3) commences by
stating that, ‘Nothing in this Article shall affect the validity of’ compulsory
acquisition and then lists six categories from (a) to (f). Clause (ii) of the fifth
category (e), reproduced hereinbelow, is relevant and applicable:
(3)
Nothing in this Article shall affect the validity of-
(e)
any law providing for the acquisition of any class of
property for the purpose of-
(ii) providing housing and public facilities and services
such as roads, water supply, sewerage, gas and electric
power to all or any specified class of citizens;
(emphasis added)
Providing housing is specifically mentioned in Article 24(3)(e)(ii). Therefore,
land which is compulsorily acquired for providing housing is for a public
purpose and government/civil servants and lawyers, are a specified class
of citizens.
7.
Housing is a Public Purpose: The learned Judges of the High Court did not
consider the scope of Article 24(2) of the Constitution. They also overlooked
Article 24(3)(e)(ii) of the Constitution which stipulates that providing
housing is a public purpose. The following precedents have categorically
determined that housing is a public purpose. The term public purpose in the
context of land acquisition has been interpreted in a number of decisions.
The impugned judgments mention that these precedents were cited, but
they were not considered. In the case of Pakistan v Muhammad Ali18, this
Court held that:
It will be sufficient for me to refer firstly to the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894, which employs the expression “public purpose” in a
very wide sense, and restrains the powers of the Government to
acquire private property compulsorily. The Act does not define
the expression “public purpose” exhaustively… It is obvious
that the omission to define “public purpose” exhaustively is
intentional, for it is impossible to place any limit upon the
purposes which, in the light of the exercise of governmental
power over large territories and populations, in respect of the
multifarious activities which go into the establishment and
operation of a thorough system of administration, would fall
within the meaning.19
18 PLD 1960 Supreme Court 60.
19 Ibid, Cornelius, J, page 67H.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
5
This Court went on to hold that providing housing was a public
purpose:
[P]rovision of residences is not by itself a matter falling outside
the concept of a “public purpose” provided that it is part of a
scheme for making general provision of that character.
Secondly, the provision of residences for a particular class of
persons, even though it may operate so as to provide a
particular residence for a particular member of that class is also
not excluded from the meaning of the expression “public
purpose”, nor does it make any difference whether the
residences are for completely unprivileged persons like coolies,
or for those enjoying patronage of Government in capacity of
officers.20
Recently in the case of Yunus Habib v Imranur Rashid21 it was held that,
‘[T]he acquisition of land for a housing society is recognized as a public
purpose’22. In Zafeer Gul v NWFP Province23 a Division Bench24 of the
Peshawar High Court determined that, ‘land acquired by WAPDA
Coopreative Housing Society for construction of residential colony would fall
under the definition of “public purpose”’25 by relying on the decisions in
Pakistan v Muhammad Ali (mentioned above) and on a number of Indian
authorities26. In the case of Ch. Nazir Ahmad v Province of Punjab27, it was
held, that, Article 24(3)(e)(ii) ‘of the Constitution makes it clear and obvious
that the individual can be deprived of his property for the purposes of
providing housing to a specified class of citizens and any law or act in this
behalf will not offend against the fundamental right granted under Article
24’28. In Suo Motu Case No. 13 of 2019,29 this Court held that the
Fundamental Right to life30 includes shelter31. Therefore, the Land, which
was acquired to provide housing was acquisition for a public purpose.
Reference may also be made to the Principles of Policy and the Objectives
Resolution.
20 Ibid, Cornelius, J, page 69.
21 2018 SCMR 705.
22 Ibid, Saqib Nisar, J, page 724F.
23 2001 CLC 1853.
24 Comprising of Mian Shakirullah Jan (as he then was) and Talat Qayyum Qureshi, JJ.
25 Ibid, 1858C.
26 Including, R. L. Arora v State of Uttar Pradesh (AIR 1962 SC 764), Anand Kumar v State of
Madhya Pradesh (AIR 1963 Madhya Pradesh 256), Veeraraghavachariar v Secretary of State for
India (AIR 1925 Madras 837).
27 2007 CLC 107.
28 Ibid, Shaikh Azmat Saeed, J, page 120.
29 PLD 2011 Supreme Court 619
30 Article 9 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
31 PLD 2011 Supreme Court 619, 646.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
6
8.
Principles of Policy: The Principles of Policy32 enumerate the aspirations
of the nation33. Securing the well-being of the people, raising their standard
of living and providing housing are amongst the nation’s declared
objectives. Article 38(a) and (d) of the Principles of Policy respectively
stipulate:
38. The State shall-
(a)
secure the well-being of the people, irrespective of sex,
caste, creed or race, by raising their standard of living,
by preventing the concentration of wealth and means of
production and distribution in the hands of a few to the
detriment of general interest and by ensuring equitable
adjustment of rights between employers and employees,
and landlords and tenants; (emphasis added)
(d)
provide basic necessities of life, such as food, clothing,
housing, education and medical relief, for all such
citizens, irrespective of sex, caste, creed or race, as are
permanently or temporarily unable to earn their livelihood
on account of infirmity, sickness or unemployment;
(emphasis added)
To provide housing is a basic necessity of life, it also ‘secure[s] the well-
being of the people’ and raises ‘their standard of living’; these principles
reiterate that providing housing is a public purpose. ‘It is the responsibility
of each organ and authority of the State, and of each person performing
functions on behalf of an organ or an authority of the State, to act in
accordance with those Principles’.34 The President and Governors are
required to prepare and lay respectively before Parliament and the
Provincial Assemblies reports on ‘the observance and implementation of the
Principle of Policy’35. And, discussion on these reports has to take place in
Parliament and the Provincial Assemblies. The requirement of preparing
such reports and submitting them for discussion amongst the elected
representatives of the people suggests that these reports constitute a
performance audit of the Federal and Provincial Governments.
9.
Objectives Resolution: Reference may also be made to the preamble of
the Constitution which reproduces the Objectives Resolution36 and which
32 Chapter 2, Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
33 Ibid, Article 31 to 40.
34 Ibid, Article 29(3).
35 Ibid.
36 With slight changes.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
7
is a ‘substantive part of the Constitution and shall have effect accordingly’37.
The Objectives Resolution calls for the provision of ‘social justice, as
enunciated by Islam’ and guarantees ‘social, economic and political justice’.
To acquire land in order to provide it to those in need of housing, after
compensating the owners, does not detract from the objective of social
justice as enunciated in Islam, and it constitutes social justice as
understood in common parlance.
10.
Significance of Principles of Policy and the Objectives Resolution: The
Principles of Policy and the Objectives Resolution reflect the aspirations of
the people and are guiding lights for the nation. In Benazir Bhutto v
Federation of Pakistan38, which was decided by an eleven-member Bench,
the Principles of Policy were said to, ‘occupy a place of pride in the scheme
of the Constitution’ and categorized as ‘the conscience of the Constitution, as
they constitute the main thrust of the commitments to socio-economic
justice.’39 A similar sentiment was expressed in Employees of the Pakistan
Law Commission v Ministry of Works40, describing them and the Objectives
Resolution as inspirational provisions which ‘invigorate the entire
Constitution’41 and achieve ‘democracy, tolerance, equality and social
justice’42. More recently in Lahore Development Authority v Imrana Tiwana43
it was said that the Objectives Resolution and the Principles of Policy, ‘can
be used to understand and interpret the chapter on Fundamental Rights in
its proper context’44.
11.
Incorrect Premise: The learned Single Judge had premised his findings
on a number of misconceptions which were: ‘the land is being acquired for
the distribution of State largess’45 [sic], the Land ‘vests in the Government’46,
‘loss’ would be ‘suffered by the people of Pakistan’47 and it constitutes
‘plunder’48. The Land, which was acquired and which was to be distributed
37 Article 2A of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, which instead of mentioning
the ‘Preamble’ of the Constitution referred to ‘the Objectives Resolution reproduced in the Annex’.
38 PLD 1988 Supreme Court 416.
39 Ibid, p. 489 per Muhammad Haleem, CJ.
40 1994 SCMR 1548.
41 Ibid, p. 1552.
42 Ibid.
43 2015 SCMR 1739.
44 Ibid, paragraph 32D.
45 Judgment dated 23 October 2017, paragraph 29.
46 Ibid, paragraph 49.
47 Ibid, paragraph 47.
48 Ibid, paragraph 49.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
8
amongst the allottees was not State or public land, therefore, the people of
Pakistan did not suffer a loss as a consequence of the acquisition. The Land
was privately owned and was acquired from its owners who were to be
compensated in accordance with the law; to categorize such acquisition as
plunder was unjustified. The two learned Judges of the High Court hearing
the ICAs did not correct these misconceptions.
12.
CDA Ordinance or the Land Acquisition Act: The impugned judgement
of the learned Single Judge alludes to, and the learned Judges of the
Division Bench held that, the applicable law in respect of the acquisition of
the Land was the CDA Ordinance because the Land was situated in
Islamabad. They also reasoned that since the CDA Ordinance is a special
law applicable to Islamabad, therefore, the CDA Ordinance, and not the
Land Acquisition Act, applies. The learned Mr. Mansoor Ahmed referred to
a number of earlier land acquisitions49 undertaken by the Foundation in
Islamabad all of which were under the Land Acquisition Act. He also
referred to section 5 read with the Fourth Schedule of the Federal Laws
(Revision and Declaration) Ordinance, 198150 which had amended the
Land Acquisition Act in its ‘application to the Islamabad Capital Territory’
and contended that, despite the promulgation of the CDA Ordinance in
1960, the Legislature had specifically accepted, in 1981, that the Land
Acquisition Act was still applicable to the Islamabad Capital Territory. The
learned Judges of the High Court also did not consider this. Significantly,
the CDA Ordinance does not contain an overriding or non-obstante clause
nor vests exclusive jurisdiction in CDA with regard to land acquisition in
Islamabad.
13.
Compulsory Acquisition by CDA: Section 25 of the CDA Ordinance
enables CDA to compulsorily acquire land, but this power is, ‘Subject to the
other provisions of this Ordinance, the rules made thereunder’ and land by
CDA can only be acquired ‘for the purposes of this Ordinance’. Sections 11
to 15 of the CDA Ordinance mention the activities that CDA may undertake
in the Specified Areas51. Land can be compulsorily acquired by CDA when
49 (1) 6,330 kanals in 1999 in Sector G-13; (2) 831 kanals in 2005 in Sector G-14/1, 2, 3 and (3)
831 kanals in 2009 in Sector G-15/3.
50 Ordinance XXVII of 1981, Gazette of Pakistan, Extraordinary, Part I, 8 July 1981 (PLD 1982
Central Statutes 10, 11 and 113).
51 Defined in section 2(p) of the Capital Development Authority Ordinance, 1960, which is such
areas as may from time to time be, ‘included therein by the Federal government notification in the
official gazette’.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
9
it is required by CDA for its own use and/or purposes. In the case of Murree
Brewery Co. Ltd. v Pakistan52 (‘the Murree Brewery case’) ‘buildings
standing on about 16 acres of land’ were sought to be compulsorily acquired
by CDA under the CDA Ordinance for the, ‘Provision of Office
Accommodation for the President’s Secretariat’. This Court, after examining
in detail the provisions of the CDA Ordinance and the power of CDA to
compulsorily acquire land thereunder, held, that CDA did not have,
‘unlimited and undefined power to acquire all land within the Specified
Areas. Any acquisition within these areas must have a reasonable reference
to the purpose of the Ordinance, and must be carried out strictly in
accordance with its provisions’53. The Murree Brewery case which involved
compulsory acquisition under the CDA Ordinance rather than under the
Land Acquisition Act, held that the land situated in Islamabad which CDA
sought to acquire it could not do so. The learned Single Judge noted that
the learned counsel representing the Foundation relied on the Murree
Brewery case54 but his lordship neither applied nor distinguished it. The
learned Judges hearing the ICAs also referred to the Murree Brewery case
and quoted therefrom55 without realizing that it had held that when land
was required for the use and/or purpose of CDA it could be compulsorily
acquired under the CDA Ordinance. Since the Land in question was not
required for the use and/or purpose of the CDA it could not have been
acquired under the CDA Ordinance, but only under the Land Acquisition
Act.
14.
Compensation Amount: The landowners (the contesting respondents)
were not satisfied with the amount of compensation determined by the
Collector and/or wanted a percentage of plots from the Land56. Therefore,
these cases were adjourned a number of times on the parties’ request to
enable them to explore the possibility of a compromise, but a compromise
did not materialize. The Land Acquisition Act stipulates that compensation
is determined by the concerned Collector. If either party is not satisfied
with the Collector’s determination, the referee court and thereafter the High
Court in its appellate jurisdiction may be approached. Since the High Court
52 PLD 1972 Supreme Court 279.
53 Ibid, 290-291.
54 Ibid, paragraph 6, page 17 of the Judgment.
55 Ibid, paragraph 32, pages 35-6 of the Judgement.
56 Capital Development Authority Land Acquisition and Rehabilitation Regulation, 2007, S.R.O.
304(1)/2008 published in the Gazette of Pakistan, Extraordinary, Part II, on 20 March 2008.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
10
did not determine the matter of compensation it would be inappropriate to
comment thereon, as it may affect the rights of either side.
15.
Allotment of Plots to Different Categories of Persons: The learned
Messrs Naeem Bukhari and Feisal Naqvi, representing the landowners, had
raised concerns about the grant of plots at below market price to judges.
Reference was also made to the judgement of Muhammad Nawaz Abbasi,
J in the cases of Ghulshan Hussain v Commissioner (Revenue), Islamabad57
(‘Ghulshan Hussain case’) and Federal Government Employees’ Housing
Foundation
v
Muhammad
Akram
Alizai58
(‘Federal
Government
Employees’ Housing Foundation case’). In the Ghulshan Hussain case
land was acquired by the Foundation in Sector G-13 of Islamabad and the
section 4 notification issued under the Land Acquisition Act was
challenged. The Rawalpindi Bench of the Lahore High Court59 held that the
acquisition was valid and if the compensation determined by the Collector
was unacceptable then the remedies provided under the Land Acquisition
Act are to be availed; no exception can be taken to this. However, the
learned Muhammad Nawaz Abbasi, J went on to unnecessarily observe
that Judges of the Supreme Court, of the Lahore High Court working at
Rawalpindi, of the Federal Shariat Court and ‘senior members of the Armed
Forces’ were entitled to receive plots from the Foundation. The Federal
Government Employees’ Housing Foundation case was an appeal against
the decision of a Service Tribunal60 and it was decided that, ‘the allotment
of residential plot in the housing scheme of Housing foundation cannot be
claimed as terms and conditions of service by a civil servant’; which to such
extent cannot be faulted. And, once again the learned Muhammad Nawaz
Abbasi, J repeated his earlier obiter observations made in the Ghulshan
Hussain case with regard to judges’ and senior members of the Armed
Forces’ entitlement to plots. These observations were without any basis,
without considering the ‘terms and conditions of service’ of judges (Article
205 of the Constitution) and the oath of judges. One threads a thorny path
when it comes to self-interest. Decisions must accord with the Constitution
and the law. Neither the Constitution nor any law entitles judges and senior
members of the Armed Forces to receive land. It is trite, but needs restating
57 2000 YLR 1711.
58 PLD 2002 Supreme Court 1079.
59 Before the establishment of the Islamabad High Court.
60 Under Article 212(2) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
11
that judges are not empowered to make law; they simply interpret it and if
a law offends the Constitution they must strike it down or the offending
part thereof.
16.
Judge’s Remuneration and Terms and Conditions of Service: Judges’
entitlement to plots of land has been questioned, therefore, it needs to be
addressed. Article 205 of the Constitution stipulates that, ‘The
Remuneration and other terms and conditions of service of a Judge of the
Supreme Court or of a High Court shall be as provided in the Fifth Schedule’
of the Constitution. The Fifth Schedule comprises of two parts; the first
attends to ‘The Supreme Court’ and the second to ‘The High Court’. Both
parts comprise of 6 clauses. Clause 1 mentions the monthly salary ‘or such
higher salary as the President may, from time to time, determine’; clause 2
sets out the ‘privileges and allowances … as may be determined by the
President’; clause 3 deals with the ‘pension payable’ to retired judges;
clause 4, 5 and 6 respectively deal with the pension payable to the ‘widow
of a Judge’, when its payment to her stops and if the judge’s children are
entitled to the pension. None of these clauses state that judges are entitled
to land. The last order issued by the President of Pakistan with regard to
Judges was President’s Order No. 03 of 201861, which did not entitle judges
to plots.
17.
Are Judges Entitled to Receive Plots?: The Constitution and the law
(presidential orders) do not entitle chief justices and judges of the superior
courts to plots of land. The ‘Supreme Court of Pakistan: Judicial
Estacode’62 (‘the Judicial Estacode’) also does not contain anything
therein entitling chief justices and judges to plots of land. Likewise, the
Manual of ‘Pay, Pension and other Privileges’63 (‘the Manual’), compiles the
presidential orders, rules, and notifications regarding the pay, pension and
privileges of judges, but the manual also does not contain anything entitling
chief justices and judges of the superior courts to plots of land.
61 Salary of Judges of the Supreme Court Order, 2018, No.F.2(2)/2018-Pub., which raised the
monthly salary of the Chief Justice of Pakistan to Rs. 931,204 and of every other Judge of the
Supreme Court to Rs. 879,669.
62 Published by Supreme Court of Pakistan, 2019.
63 Compiled by the Librarian and Assistant Librarian of the Supreme Court, published by the
Supreme Court of Pakistan, 2018, amended up to 22 April 2019.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
12
18.
The Oath of Judges: ‘In all circumstances, I will do right to all manner of
people, according to law, without fear or favour, affection or ill-will’ says the
oath taken by chief justices and judges. Judges adjudicate disputes and
ensure that the people are not deprived of their Fundamental Rights, which
more often than not are enforced against the executive. The Federal and
provincial governments, and organizations controlled or under them, are
often arrayed as parties in cases. The aphorism that, justice must not only
be done but be seen to be done, is undermined if people perceive that cases
are not decided without fear or favour. The executive giving plots to judges
constitutes a favour. The independence of the judiciary is a necessary
concomitant to ensure its respect and credibility in the eyes of the people.
19.
Financial Independence of Judges: The Constitution determines the terms
and conditions of service of superior court judges and nothing can be
subtracted therefrom or added thereto. The Constitution permits
compulsory acquisition, however, it also sets out the terms and conditions
of service of judges, and since the stipulated terms and conditions do not
entitle judges to receive plots they are not entitled to receive plots from the
Foundation or out of any compulsorily acquired land. The learned Messrs
Naeem Bukhari and Feisal Naqvi are correct to state that judges are not
entitled to receive plots. However, this argument cannot be extended to
government servants or lawyers as mentioned above.
20.
Only a Single Plot may be Received: In this case the Foundation had
launched a scheme to allot plots to government servants and lawyers. The
Land was acquired under the Land Acquisition Act. Those wanting a plot
applied for it, paid its price and stood in the queue for his/her turn to receive
it. A person’s housing needs stand redressed on receiving a plot on which
to build a house. Therefore, no one can be given, nor can they receive, more
than a single plot. The Foundation, government or any organization
controlled by the government cannot provide a second or additional plot.
Moreover, without specific legal sanction, no one, including the Prime
Minister, has the discretion to grant land, a house or an apartment to
anyone.
21.
Plots for Junior Officers and Lower Income Staff: When the Foundation,
government or an organization controlled by a government launches a
scheme to provide housing it would be appropriate to ensure that smaller
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
13
and cheaper plots are also made available to cater to the need of junior
officers and lower income staff reflecting their percentage in government
service because the Constitution does not distinguish between senior and
junior officers and officials with regard to service of Pakistan. With regard
to plots/lands the Constitution also does not distinguish between civilian
and armed forces personnel, between junior and senior officers nor creates
a special category of senior members of the Armed Forces (as per
Muhammad Nawaz Abbasi, J).
22.
Plots and Land Grants to Members of the Armed Forces: Different laws
govern those employed in the Army64, Air Force65, Navy66, Rangers67,
Frontier Constabulary68, Frontier Corps69, National Guards70, Coast
Guards71 and Airports Security Force72; the laws governing them do not
provide that they be given residential plots, commercial plots or agricultural
land nor permits them to receive the same. Nevertheless, senior members
of the Armed Forces get plots and agricultural lands and continue to be
given additional plots and agricultural lands as they rise up the ranks. In
his 655-page book the brother of General Asif Nawaz73 brings privileged,
personal and scholarly insight into the Armed Forces of Pakistan74. General
Mohammad Ayub Khan was preceded by two British officers75 as Pakistan’s
Army Chiefs. When General Gracey was commanding Pakistan’s Army
General Mohammad Ayub Khan approached him with a request for a plot
but he was rebuffed by the Army Chief; ironically a British officer preserved
Pakistan’s land from a son of the soil. The author mentions the grant of
subsidized plots and other benefits76 and states, ‘Gradually, the mores of
the military changed to make all such “sweetheart” deals acceptable”77.
Shuja Nawaz in his book under the chapter - ‘United Pakistan: How to Break
64 The Pakistan Army Act, 1952.
65 The Pakistan Air Force Act, 1953.
66 The Pakistan Navy Ordinance, 1961.
67 The Pakistan Rangers Ordinance, 1959.
68 The North-West Frontier Constabulary Act, 1915.
69 The Frontier Corps Ordinance, 1959.
70 The National Guards Act, 1973.
71 The Pakistan Coast Guards Act, 1973.
72 The Airports Security Force Act, 1975.
73 The Chief of Army Staff of Pakistan, 1991-1993.
74 Shuja Nawaz, Crossed Swords - Pakistan, its Army, and the Wars Within, Oxford University
Press, Pakistan (2008).
75 General Sir Frank Walter Messervy and General Sir Douglas Gracey.
76 ‘The Report of the Hamoodur Rehman Commission of Inquiry into the 1971 War, (Lahore, Karachi,
Islamabad: Vanguard) p. 291.’
77 Shuja Nawaz, Crossed Swords - Pakistan, its Army, and the Wars Within, Oxford University
Press, Pakistan (2008), p. 253.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
14
up a Country’ writes, ‘the practice of multiple plots was to become common,
giving rise to a new “Culture of Entitlement” that permeated both the military
and civil bureaucracies and that would become embedded in Pakistan
society’78. This Court in a different context79 had castigated a Brigadier who
was not satisfied with what he already had received, saying, ‘It is high time
that we should learn from history’80 and quoted from an American classic81
to express the Court’s displeasure – ‘The land fell into fewer hands, the
number of the dispossessed increased and every effort of the great owners
was directed at repression. The money was spent for arms, for gas to protect
the great holdings, and spies were sent to catch the murmuring of revolt so
that it may be stamped out.’
23.
Service of Pakistan: The Constitution82 defines the service of Pakistan as
under:
"Service of Pakistan" means any service, post or office in
connection with the affairs of the Federation or of a
Province, and includes an All-Pakistan Service, service in the
Armed Forces and any other service declared to be a service of
Pakistan by or under Act of Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) or of
a Provincial Assembly… [emphasis added]
Both civil service and armed forces personnel are in the service of Pakistan;
the Constitution creates no distinction between them. Civil servants are
employed in different departments of government doing what their
respective mandates stipulate while armed forces personnel defend the
country against external aggression and act in aid of civil power when called
upon to do so83. The people of Pakistan pay for the services provided by
each category. Those in the service of Pakistan can receive only that which
the law sanctions. The terms and conditions of all those in the service of
Pakistan are set out in the laws respectively applicable to them. Article 240
of the Constitution stipulates, that, ‘Subject to the Constitution, the
appointments to and the conditions of service of persons in the service of
Pakistan shall be determined’ by the Federation through an Act of
Parliament and for those in the service of a province through an Act of the
Provincial Assembly of the province.
78 Ibid, p. 253.
79 Brigadier Muhammad Bashir v Abdul Karim (PLD 2004 Supreme Court 271) which pertained to
the Colonization of Government Lands (Punjab) Act, 1921.
80 Ibid, per Javed Iqbal, J, p. 284.
81 John Steinbeck, Grapes of Wrath, (1939). Steinbeck received the Nobel Prize for Literature.
82 Article 260(1) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
83 Article 245 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
15
24.
Equal Treatment: The laws governing civil and armed forces personnel do
not entitle them to receive residential plots, commercial plots or agricultural
land. If residential plots, commercial plots and agricultural land are given
to only one category in the service of Pakistan, that is to members of the
armed forces, and the civilians in the service of Pakistan are disregarded, it
constitutes discrimination and offends the Fundamental Right of equality84.
However, the Foundation, a government or an organization controlled by a
government may launch a housing scheme for the members of the Armed
Forces, and when this happens they may apply for the allotment of a single
plot for housing. But, they like every other applicant of such schemes will
have to pay the requisite amount (not subsidized by the State), stand in
queue and await their turn for allotment in terms of the applicable
methodology. And, the plot which is allotted/granted must not be large
because available land is finite and the list of beneficiaries is long, and
keeps growing longer. The prevailing practice of granting State/public plots
and land to members of the Armed Forces is contrary to the Constitution
and the law. Laws can also not be enacted to enable such allotments/grants
because if enacted these would violate the Constitution (Articles 24, 25, 205
and 227) and be void85. The Constitution does not permit self-enrichment
and personal aggrandizement. ‘During the period of Hazrat Umar at one
occasion such a situation had arisen with regard to some land and the
Mujahideen demanded distribution of the said land to them but the Caliph
refused to give the said land to the Mujahideen with the consideration that
Islam strictly prohibits the establishment of an individual interest in the State
property in preference to the public interest.’86
25.
Pensions: Those in the service of Pakistan retire at the age of 60, Chief
Justice and Judges of the High Courts at the age of 62 and Chief Justice
and Judges of the Supreme Court at the age of 65; by which age most, if
not all, already have a place to call home; if they don’t, they will receive a
sizeable monthly pension which they can use to rent a place. The amount
to be spent in the current financial year 2020-2021 on pensions is
84 Article 25 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
85 Article 8 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
86 Ghulshan Hussain v Commissioner (Revenue), Islamabad, 2000 YLR 1711, 1727 and Federal
Government Employees Housing Foundation v Muhammad Akram Alizai, PLD 2002 Supreme
Court 1079, 1095.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
16
470,000,000,00087 rupees (four hundred and seventy billion rupees); of
which 111,000,000,000 rupees (one hundred and eleven billion rupees) is
to be spent on retired civilians and 359,000,000,000 rupees (three hundred
and fifty-nine billion rupees) is to be spent on retired personnel of the
Armed Forces. The annual cost of pension payments is almost equal to the
cost of ‘Running of Civil Government’, which is 476,589,000,00088 rupees
(four hundred and seventy-six billion, five hundred and eighty-nine million
rupees). The people of Pakistan pay these pensions despite having very little
themselves. To serve the nation is a singular honour. When, in addition to
receiving pensions, public lands are taken it is eminently unfair.
26.
Prebendalism: A system which grants benefits to those holding official
positions is referred to as a ‘prebendal order’89. In a prebendal order ‘the
strong exploit and abuse the weak’90 in a ‘tenacious and self-enforcing
mechanism’91. The philosopher Thomas Hobbes described such yearnings
as ‘a perpetual and restless desire of power after power, that ceaseth only in
death’92. A prebendal order enriches the powerful elite. ‘Prebendalism was
sustained by a relatively narrow civil-military elite’.93 Dr. Richard Joseph in
his seminal work94 noted that those who use their offices to benefit and
enrich themselves emulate a discredited feudal practice; his research
revealed that prebendalism made it difficult to determine the true extent of
public corruption.
27.
Indebtedness: Pakistan is heavily indebted. The people pay astronomical
amounts to service the accumulated debt. This financial year95
2,946,135,000,000 rupees (two trillion, nine hundred and forty-six billion,
one hundred and thirty-five million rupees) will be paid to service debt96;
87 Government of Pakistan, Federal Budget 2020-21, (Finance Division, 12 June 2020)
<http://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/Budget_in_Brief_2020-21_English.pdf>.
88 Ibid.
89 A term coined by Dr. Richard Joseph (Professor Emeritus Northwestern University) in his book
Democracy and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria (1st edition, Cambridge University Press, 1987).
90 Professor (University of Oxford) Wale Adebanwi and Professor (University of Kansas) Ebenezer
Obadarte, Democracy and Prebendalism in Nigeria - Critical Interpretations (1st edition, Palgrave
Macmillan, 2013) p. x.
91 Ibid, p. viii.
92 Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (first published in 1651, Penguin 1985).
93 P. Lewis, From Prebendalism to Predation: the Political Economy of Decline in Nigeria (1996) 34
The Journal of Modern African Studies, p. 79-103, 100.
94 Dr. Richard Joseph, Democracy and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria (1st edition, Cambridge
University Press, 1987).
95 2020-2021.
96 Government of Pakistan, Federal Budget 2020-21, (Finance Division, 12 June 2020)
<http://www.finance.gov.pk/budget/Budget_in_Brief_2020-21_English.pdf>.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
17
this astronomical amount does not include the repayment of a single dollar,
sterling, yen, euro or rupee. And, the government continues to take more
loans; piling debt upon debt, and adding billions to debt servicing. Debt-
servicing is the single largest component of the Federal expenditure.
Children, their unborn children and the unborn children of the unborn are
born into poverty, and will remain impoverished till death. In this dire
situation giving away the one asset that the people do have, their land, is
inexplicable.
28.
Precedents on Land Conferrals: The judiciary and the armed forces of
Pakistan are patterned on the British model. Land is not given away to
judges and to the members of the armed forces in Britain, in the United
States of America nor in any commonwealth country, with the singular
exception of Pakistan. At the time when the subcontinent was captured and
ruled by the East India Company, and later when it came under the direct
rule of the British Crown, British officers, soldiers and judges, whether
deployed in the subcontinent or serving at home, were not conferred land.
They also did not have rights to captured territory and property. Sometimes
a portion of captured property was distributed amongst officers and soldiers
as prizes, but it was made clear that this was not by way of entitlement. In
the Deccan prize-money case of Alexander v Duke of Wellington97 it was held
that98:
All prize is clearly and distinctly the property of the Crown. This
is a principle not to be disputed… It is equally incontrovertible
that that the Crown possesses this property absolutely, and
wholly without control; that it may deal with it entirely at its
pleasure; may keep it for its own use; may abandon or restore
it to the enemy; or, finally, may distribute it in whole or in part
among the persons instrumental in its capture; making that
distribution according to whatever scheme, and under whatever
regulations and conditions it sees fit. It is equally clear that the
title of a party claiming prize must in all cases be the act of the
Crown, by which the royal pleasure to grant prize shall have
been signified to the subject.
‘The capturing force having therefore no legal right to the spoils of war’.99
When a portion of captured property was distributed amongst officers and
soldiers it was done pursuant to a legal enactment. The land distributed
97 2 Russell and Mylne’s Reports, 54; reproduced in H. Prendergast, Law Relating to Officers in
the Army (2nd edition, Parker, Furnivall, and Parker, Military Library, London, 1855) p. 106.
98 Lord Chancellor Brougham.
99 n97, p. 107.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
18
amongst the officers of the armed forces of Pakistan is not captured land
nor has Parliament authorized its distribution. Those who serve in the
judiciary and in the armed forces of Pakistan receive a salary for their
services and receive a pension on their retirement; they do not serve in the
expectation of receiving land from the State.
29.
Elite Capture and Impoverishing the Poor: Elite capture creates, ‘a
“predatory state” in which the division between private and public interests
is totally dismantled’100. ‘Elite patronage is not always associated with
autocratic rule; it can sometimes continue even after the formal transition to
democracy’.101 But, ‘Following the demise of domestic rule, however, the
distribution of benefits becomes increasingly characterized by exclusionary,
centralized distribution modes favouring powerful groups like top military
officers’102. Studies by preeminent researchers103 have found that
democracy is an institutionally established mechanism for regulating
resources and hence effective in controlling elite capture. The horizontal
expansion of Pakistani cities104 took place when land was distributed
amongst members of the armed forces105; these areas have come to dwarf
the original cities. If this land was sold at market-price Pakistan may have
escaped the indebtedness that it suffers and its people not made to suffer
calamitous, backbreaking and perpetuating poverty. The manner in which
land is distributed impoverishes and marginalizes the poor further. ‘When
communities have well-established organizations where the poor are
sufficiently empowered, the participatory approach is on safe grounds. The
problem arises when local organizations do not exist or when they are
dominated by strong elites driven by their peculiar interests.’106 It needs
100 Arild Schou (Professor at the University of South-Eastern Norway), Demand-driven Poverty
Programmes and Elite Capture in Malawi: Between Prebendalism and Benevolence, European
Journal of Development Research, Vol. 19, p. 594-613, 597.
101 Ibid.
102 Ibid.
103 Jean-Phillipe Platteau, Professor of Economics and Director of the Centre for Research on the
Economics of Development at the University of Namur, Belgium and Frederic Gaspart, Associate
Professor of Economics at the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences at the University of Louvain-La-
Neuve, Belgium.
104 https://earth.google.com, Historical Imagery.
105 Commenced under the unconstitutional rule of General Mohammad Ayub Khan, established
under the dictatorship of General Zia ul Haq and perpetuated ever since.
106 F. Gaspart and J. Platteau, Is Cheap Aid Money Good for the Poor?, Centre for Research on
the Economics of Development, 2012
<www.editorialexpress.com/cgibin/conference/download.cgi?db_name=CSAE2013&paper_id=4
94>.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
19
restating that the people have not sanctioned the distribution of land to
judges and to the members of the Armed Forces.
30.
Enriching the Elite and Tax Free: Most Pakistanis struggle their entire
lives to put a roof over their heads. Judges and officers of the armed forces
who receive land in prized urban locations invariably do not build on it a
house for themselves to live in, and those officers who get agricultural lands
do not cultivate it. They sell their plots and agricultural land or become
absentee landlords. ‘This negative perception and reference to the most
visible and talked about aspects of military rule and operations: foremost of
which is the creation of residential Defence Housing Societies throughout the
country for military officers, which yield huge windfall profits when individual
officers sell their plots – reflects one of the many challenges to the army today.
The sale of each urban plot fetches hundreds of millions of rupees. The army
is perceived to be in charge…everywhere.’107 These profits are also not taxed
and the original recipients do not pay fees and duties108 which even the poor
pay. ‘This benefits ladder has been defined by the army itself, over time, with
officers now allowed access to subsidized housing plots at almost all their
senior posting stations, where such valuable land is available for allocation
at the discretion of the local army commanders and not the civilian
government.’ Many senior officers liquidate these assets, convert the sale
proceeds into foreign currency, send the money abroad and live luxurious
lives in prime locations overseas, creating disillusionment in the ranks. The
ranks may also question why, say a general’s need for housing and
agriculture is more pressing than theirs, as it is their lives which are more
susceptible to danger as they stand more exposed.
31.
Land Unavailable for Public Utilities and Services: A just social order,
and an Islamic one, enjoins the well-being of the people; the provision of
basic necessities and public welfare. Islam is a religion of community
(ummah); the spirit of community is ordained from Above; Almighty Allah is
107 Shuja Nawaz, Crossed Swords - Pakistan, its Army, and the Wars Within, Oxford University
Press, Pakistan (2008), p. 567.
108 This is done by surrendering the original allotment order in exchange for money (sale
consideration) and a valuable piece of property is surrendered (transferred) and a fresh allotment
order is issued in favour of the purchaser. Since the ‘powerful’ in the country are the beneficiaries
of this most suspect mechanism, questions are not raised either by the Federal Board of Revenue
(‘FBR’) or by the provincial authorities which are required to collect stamp duty under the Stamp
Act, 1899 and registration fee on transfers under the Registration Act, 1908.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
20
present in every human community109 and is ‘closer to you than your jugular
vein’110. State or community (ummah’s) land can only be used for everyone’s
benefit; for public hospitals, clinics, graveyards, police stations, schools,
universities, parks, playgrounds, sport facilities, retirement homes, bus and
train stations, water reservoirs, drains, abattoirs and other public purposes
which serve society. It is also meritorious to establish hospitals for birds
and animals because the earth is for all ‘the creatures’111 (lil’anami) and to
provide a place for the community112 of injured or lame animals to live
protected and in peace. But land is not available for utilities and public
services and the destitute and the poor are cast aside. However, free or
heavily subsidized State/public land is distributed amongst the elite. People
lose faith in the system of governance, despondency sets in and society then
comes to be held together by sheer force.
32.
Injunctions of Islam: The Constitution mandates that ‘all existing laws
shall be brought in conformity with the Injunctions of Islam as laid down in
the Holy Quran and Sunnah … and no law shall be enacted which is
repugnant to such Injunctions’113. The practice of giving away the ummah’s
land to judges and to members of the armed forces is contrary to the
Injunctions of Islam. Islam jealously guards the properties and assets of the
ummah (community/State). The majority of citizens are poor, they barely
manage to eke out a subsistence. Most live out their lives without the ability
to buy a couple of marla114 of land to build a shack on. Many encroach on
State land and often in precarious places like alongside riverbeds and storm
drains to put a roof over their and their children’s heads; forever exposed to
the elements and the threat of eviction and demolition of their shanty
homes, a threat which is oftentimes carried out. An Islamic polity is founded
on the principle of unity and brotherhood115 which is fractured when those
in dire poverty and abject need are ignored. Islam is a religion of balance,
‘He imposed the balance (al-mizan)’116 and we are directed not to ‘transgress
the balance’117; the balance is ruptured when lands are bestowed on the
109 Al-Qur’an, surah Al-Mujadilah (58) verse 7.
110 Al-Qur’an, surah Qaf (50) verse 16.
111 Al-Qur’an, surah Ar-Rahman (55) verse 10.
112 Al-Qur’an, surah Al-Anam (6) verse 38, surah An-Nur (24) verse 41 and surah Ar-Rahman (55)
verse 10.
113 Article 227 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
114 25 square yards.
115 ‘Indeed believers are (one another’s) brothers’ - Al-Quran, surah Al-Mujadilah (58), verse 10.
116 Al-Qur’an, surah Ar-Rahman (55) verse 7.
117 Ibid, verse 8.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
21
elite. The Holy Qur’an mandates that the destitute, the poor and the needy
are entitled to charity and may be supported by the State (ummah). Almighty
Allah says that, ‘charity (sadaqatu) is only for the poor (fuqara'), the needy
(masakin)’118, etcetera. If a person is not poor (fuqara) or needy (masakin) it
is not permissible to give him/her the ummah’s land. When the ummah’s
land is bestowed upon the privileged elite, those blessed with good salaries,
secure jobs and pensions may attract the Qur’anic rebuke, ‘Competing to
piling up (worldly things) distracts you, until you visit your graves’119. The
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) graphically
expanded on this insatiable desire for wealth, ‘If a man had a valley full of
gold, he would want another valley full of gold, but in the end only dust will
fill his mouth’120.
33.
Unconstitutional Nondisclosure and Secrecy: The affront to the people is
confounded when information with regard to distribution of State /
ummah’s land is kept under wraps. The people have every right to know
what is given to those in the service of Pakistan and holding constitutional
positions. There is no quicker way to lose public trust then to shroud
information in secrecy. To withhold such information from the people is
unconstitutional. The ‘right to Information’ is a Fundamental Right121.
Almighty Allah says that ‘there is no good’122 in secrecy except when giving
charity, extending kindness and effecting reconciliation. Keeping public
matters secret is castigated123. The Holy Qur’an calls on believers to, ‘firmly
establish truth’124 (liyuhiqqa l-haqqa) and not to ‘hide the truth’125. ‘The truth
will set you free’126. ‘The Report of the Hamoodur Rehman Commission of
Inquiry into the 1971 War’, a Commission headed by the Chief Justice of
Pakistan, reported that, ‘responsible service officers’ had asserted before the
Commission that ‘corruption resulting from … lands and houses’ had
resulted in loss of will to fight and loss of professional competence. These
118 Al-Qur’an, surah At-Tawbah (9) verse 60.
119 Al-Qur’an, surah At-Takathur verses 1 and 2.
120 Narrated on the authority of Anas bin Malik, Sahih Al-Bukhari, 6439, also in Al-Muslim.
121 Article 19A of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
122 Holy Qur’an, surah An-Nisa (4) verse 114.
123 Holy Qur’an, surah At-Tawbah (9) verse 78, surah Al-Isra (17) verse 47, surah Ta Ha (20) verse
62, surah Al-Anbiya (21) verse 3, surah Az-Zukhruf (43) verse 80 and surah Al-Mujadilah (58) verse
10.
124 Holy Qur’an, surah Al-Anfal (8) verse 8.
125 Holy Qur’an, surah Al-Baqarah (2) verse 42.
126 Attributed to the Prophet Isa (peace be upon him), John 8:32.
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
22
disastrous consequences127 and the aphorism, those who do not learn from
history are condemned to repeat it must be avoided.
34.
Declaration by Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah: The Constitution
dictates that, we must remain, ‘Faithful to the declaration made by the
Founder of Pakistan, Quaid-i-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah, that Pakistan
would be a democratic State based on Islamic principles of social justice’128.
The Quaid addressed ‘Civil, Naval, Military & Air Officers of the Pakistan
Government’129, and said:
The establishment of Pakistan for which we have been striving
for the last ten years is, by the grace of God, an established fact
today, but the criterion of a State of our own was means to an
end and not end in itself. The idea was that we should have a
State in which we could live and breathe as free men and which
could develop according to our own lights and culture and
where principles of Islamic social justice could find freeplay130.
The Quaid131 wanted Pakistan to be a prosperous and happy place to live
in; a place which ensured the well-being of the people and above all of the
poor:
Now, if we want to make this great State of Pakistan happy and
prosperous we should wholly and solely concentrate on the
well-being of the people, and especially of the masses and the
poor.132
The primary reason for the creation of an independent nation state by
Mohammad Ali Jinnah and his companions was to enable believers to freely
pursue their faith, to end discrimination and the economic exploitation of
the people. We must never forget that Pakistan was, ‘achieved by the
127 ‘His [General Mohammad Ayub Khan] economic policies mostly resulted in the unequal
distribution of wealth between certain privileged classes and the common person. With the growth
of the economy, a vacuum of income between the inter-regional, inter-personal, rich and poor classes
grew. A gap between the majority people of East Pakistan and West Pakistan was clearly visible.’
This inequality is stated to have contributed towards the country fragmenting into two separate
States. Pakistan’s First Military Coup: Why Did the First Pakistani Coup Occur and Why Does it
Matter? Naghman Chaudhry, Captain Pakistan Navy, 2004-5, thesis submitted for the degree of
Master of Arts in Security Studies; referenced S. J. Burki, Ayub’s Fall, A Socio-Economic
Explanation, Asian Survey, Vol. 12, No. 3, March 1972.
128 The Preamble to the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, quite unlike the
preambles to the constitutions of other countries, is not a mere introduction or adornment but a
‘substantive part of the Constitution and shall have effect accordingly’ (Article 2A of the
Constitution).
129 At Khaliqdina Hall, Karachi on 11 October 1947.
130 Z. H. Zaidi, Editor-in-Chief, Jinnah Papers - Pakistan at Last, Volume IV, published by Quaid-
i-Azam Papers Project, Cabinet Division, Government of Pakistan (1999) p. 75.
131 Presidential Address to the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan, 11 August 1947 at Karachi.
132 Z. H. Zaidi, Editor-in-Chief, Jinnah Papers - Pakistan at Last, Volume IV, published by Quaid-
i-Azam Papers Project, Cabinet Division, Government of Pakistan (1999).
C.A. Nos. 1476 to 1485 of 2018, etc.
23
unremitting struggle of the people against oppression and tyranny’133.
Bestowing wealth, which is unearned, obliterates the cherished goals of
Pakistan.
35.
Serving Humanity Without Reward: The leaders of the Freedom
Movement, of the All-India Muslim League, who got us Pakistan, amongst
whom were many who had lost their own homes, did not take a single square
inch of land. These proud Freedom Fighters of Pakistan were also not
remunerated nor pensioned. They spent from their own pockets to create
Pakistan. Their only motivation was a burning desire to serve the people.
The constitutional goal of ‘creating an egalitarian society’134 is undermined
when public land furtively finds its way into private hands.
36.
For the reasons mentioned above, I concur with the conclusions arrived at
by the learned Mushir Alam, J: that the applicable law for the compulsory
acquisition of the Land was the Land Acquisition Act, that the Land was
legally acquired by the Foundation and that its distribution amongst the
allottees did not violate the Land Acquisition Act nor the Constitution.
37.
It would be appropriate to translate this judgment into Urdu135 for its wider
dissemination as it contains matters of public importance. Since the
Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority Ordinance, 2002136 was
enacted to also, ‘ensure accountability, transparency and good governance
by optimizing the free flow of information’137, therefore, a copy of this
judgment be sent to the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority138
(‘PEMRA’) which is directed to send copies onwards to its licencees, who
may want to broadcast it. And, PEMRA should ensure that such broadcasts
are unimpeded.
Islamabad,
JUDGE
Dated: 8 October 2020.
133 Preamble - Objectives Resolution – of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
134 Ibid.
135 Article 251 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
136 Gazette of Pakistan, Extraordinary, Part I, published on 1 March 2002 (PLD 2002 Federal
Statutes 63).
137 Preamble (iv) of the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Ordinance, 2002.
138 Constituted under section 3 of the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Ordinance, 2002.
| {
"id": "C.A.1476_2018.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, CJ
MR. JUSTICE MAZHAR ALAM KHAN MIANKHEL
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1477 OF 2019
(On appeal against the judgment dated 01.02.2017
passed by the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar in
Writ Petition No. 1588-P/2013)
Muhammad Siddique
…Appellant
VERSUS
Senior Executive Vice President, PTCL and others
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant:
In person
For the Respondents:
Mr. Shahid Anwar Bajwa, ASC
Date of Hearing:
09.06.2021
…
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI, J.- Through this appeal by
leave of the Court under Article 185(3) of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973, the appellant has called in question the
judgment dated 01.02.2017 passed by the Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar, whereby writ petition filed by him was dismissed.
2.
Succinctly stated the facts of the matter are that the
appellant was working as Senior Accounts Clerk (BPS-11) in the
respondent
department.
Pursuant
to
introduction
of
Voluntary
Separation Scheme (VSS), the appellant applied for the same.
Considering his basic salary as Rs.7605/- per month, he was paid
emoluments of Rs.198,8999/- vide letter dated 05.03.2008. At the time
of final settlement, an amount of Rs.81,520/- was also recovered on
account of outstanding house building advance. However, the appellant
claimed that his last basic pay was Rs.8070/- and the emoluments
should be calculated on the basis of this last pay. According to him, the
outstanding amount of house building advance was Rs.77750/- instead
of Rs.81520/-. Keeping in view the wrong calculation, he served
grievance notice on 03.11.2008 upon the respondents but the same was
Civil Appeal No. 1477/2019
2
never responded. The appellant then filed petition before Labour Court,
Peshawar, which stood dismissed vide order dated 27.05.2010. This
decision was maintained by the Labour Appellate Tribunal vide
judgment dated 06.06.2012 as also by the learned Peshawar High
Court vide impugned judgment. Hence, this appeal by leave of the Court.
3.
The appellant, who appeared in person, submitted that the
learned courts below have misread the evidence and decided the matter
in a hasty manner without deeply appraising the record; that according
to Last Pay Certificate (LPC), his basic salary was Rs.8070/- but the
courts below never taken into consideration this document; that he is
put to loss of Rs.465/- per month in pension, thus a valuable right has
been accrued in his favour; that he had availed house building loan of
Rs.77,520/- but the department has wrongly deducted Rs.81,520/-
thereby putting him to financial loss of Rs.4000/-.
4.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondents
mainly contended that there are concurrent findings of three courts
below against the appellant and that the claim of the appellant is false
and he does not deserve any relief by this Court.
5.
We have heard the appellant in person and learned counsel
for the respondents at some length and have perused the record.
6.
It appears from the record that the department had
introduced Voluntary Separation Scheme somewhere in November,
2007. The appellant applied for the same and vide letter dated
21.01.2008, the appellant was asked to complete the requisite
documents by 25.01.2008. After completing all codal formalities, he was
paid the emoluments vide letter dated 05.03.2008 considering his basic
pay as Rs.7605/- per month. We have perused two documents
available on record. One is Last Pay Certificate (LPC) dated 29.03.2018
(Exh.PW2/5) and Initial Pay Slip dated 28.02.2008 (Exh.PW-2/4). Both
these documents clearly show that at the relevant time, the basic pay of
the appellant was Rs.8070/-. The appellant has also produced on
record an email dated 09.03.2008 (Ex.PW-2/5), written by Manager HR,
Peshawar to General Manager, PTCL, which was to the effect that
according to service book, the basic pay of the appellant was Rs.8070/-.
The learned courts below while refusing the claim of the appellant put
much stress on the point that while appearing as PW-3, he had admitted
during cross-examination that his basic salary was Rs.7605/- per
month. However, in view of the aforesaid documents available on
Civil Appeal No. 1477/2019
3
record, which clearly show that at the relevant time the basic salary of
the appellant was Rs.8070/-, the oral statement of appellant has no
force and the same cannot be used against him to deprive him of his
valuable rights. The appellant has admitted before us that at the time of
cross-examination, he inadvertently mentioned his basic salary as
Rs.7605/- and later on he tried to rectify his mistake by placing reliance
on the aforesaid documents but these documents were never taken into
consideration by the courts below. There is a well known dicta that ‘a
man can tell a lie but a document cannot’. If a person has or has been
bestowed some legal right and he omitted to claim such legal right
through oral assertion but the best documentary evidence of which the
case in its nature is susceptible is found in his favour then the
documentary evidence in favour of a person should be given credence.
When we confronted learned counsel for the respondents with this
aspect of the matter, he candidly conceded that as only a difference of
approximately Rs.450/- per month in the pension and an amount of
Rs.47000/- in the commutation would occur, he would not oppose the
claim of the appellant. So far as the difference of Rs.4000/- in the house
building loan amount is concerned, learned counsel for the respondents
also frankly conceded that since it is a meager amount, he will not
oppose the claim of the appellant.
7.
For what has been discussed above, this appeal is allowed
and the impugned judgment is set aside. The respondent department is
directed to recalculate the monthly pension and the amount of
outstanding house building advance of the appellant in the light of this
judgment and pay the difference to the appellant within a period of one
month.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
9th of June, 2021
Not Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1477_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk, CJ
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1481 OF 2007
[On appeal against the Judgment dated 16.06.2007,
passed by the High Court of Sindh, Karachi, in
C.P.No.D-1549 of 2005]
Province of Sindh through its Chief Secretary
& 8 others
Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Syed Kabir Bokhari
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
[Appellants No.1, 4, 6-9]
: Mr. Qasim Mirjat Addl.A.G. Sindh
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
[Appellants No.2, 3 & 5]
: Syed Jamil Ahmed, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
For the Respondent(s)
: Dr. A. Basit, Sr. ASC
Date of Hearing
: 10.02.2015
JUDGMENT
GULZAR AHMED, J.— The brief facts of the matter are that
through two identical allotment orders dated 23.2.1976, Karachi
Development Authority (KDA), on acceptance of highest bid of the
respondent, had allotted two kiosks Plot No.1 and Plot No.2 in Block
IV, each measuring 100 Sq.Yards, in Scheme No.5, Kehkashan,
Clifton, Karachi at the rate of Rs.505/- per Sq.Yard (the disputed
plots). Through possession orders both dated 24.2.1976 the KDA
handed over the possession of disputed plots to the respondent. The
possession order provided that 99 years lease will be granted on
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
2
payment of full occupancy value. It is further alleged that respondent
has paid the full occupancy value of the disputed plots. Subsequently
it transpired that in the master plan of KDA Scheme 5, Kehkashan
Clifton, Karachi made by the KDA and notified on 06.10.1964 there
was no land earmarked for the purpose of two kiosks and the
allotment of the disputed plots to the respondent was illegal. Two
show cause notices, both dated 14.7.2005, were issued by the CDGK,
Land Management Department (Successor of KDA) for canceling the
allotment of the disputed plots of kiosks Nos.1 & 2 on the ground that
respondent has failed to raise construction on the disputed plots
within stipulated period of two years from the date of possession and
further the disputed plots were carved out from amenity plot without
completing the codal formalities and thus the allotment order was
ab initio void and illegal. Through two letters both dated 05.8.2005
the allotment of the disputed plots of kiosks Nos. 1 & 2 were
cancelled. The respondent filed C.P.No.D-1549/2005 in the High
Court of Sindh at Karachi challenging the cancellation orders. The
learned Division Bench of High Court of Sindh at Karachi, through
short order dated 30.5.2007, allowed the said petition and directed
the respondents (the appellants in the present appeal) to execute
lease deed in favour of the petitioner (respondent herein) of the
disputed plots of kiosks No. 1 & 2 and also transfer the site in terms
of the allotment orders. The detailed judgment was given on
16.6.2007. The appellant challenged the said judgment in this Court
and vide order dated 09.8.2007 leave to appeal was granted to
consider the following questions:
i)
Whether, in the facts and circumstances of
the case, the plots viz: kiosk Nos. 1 and 2
allotted to the respondent in the year
1976 through open auction could be
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
3
cancelled in the year 2005 on the ground
that
in
revised
plan
prepared
by
Government the same were carved out
from the land originally meant for amenity
purposes particularly when after such
cancellation the very kiosks have been
advertised by City District Government for
public auction as commercial plots?
ii)
Whether the cancellation f allotment of
plots in dispute after full payment received
from respondent and possession handed
over to him was validly and legally made
after twenty nine years of the allotment?
2.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties at length and
have also gone through the record of the case.
3.
There is no dispute between the parties on the factual
controversy that is the allotment of disputed plots to the respondent,
the payment of its price/occupancy value, delivery of possession,
issuing of show cause notice and cancellation of disputed plots. The
main argument revolved before us was on the question that disputed
plots were part of an amenity plot. The fact that the disputed plots
become part and parcel of parking lot for providing parking facility to
the public is also not in dispute for that there is a inspection report of
Deputy Nazir of High Court dated 15.12.2005 so also the report dated
18.10.2012 of the Office Incharge of the Supreme Court of Pakistan,
Branch Registry Karachi, wherein the position reflected on the ground
is that the disputed plots are shown to be part and parcel of parking
lot made by the CDGK. It was proposed by the counsel for respondent
that the respondent is prepared to accept the cancellation of the
disputed plots for use as a parking space for public provided the
respondent is paid appropriate compensation in that respondent has
acquired proprietary right in the disputed plots and such right cannot
be denied or taken away.
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
4
4.
Both learned Additional Advocate General Sindh appearing for
the appellant Nos. 1, 4, 6 and 9 and Syed Jameel Ahmed learned ASC
appearing for the appellant Nos. 2, 3 & 5 have sought time to seek
instructions from their respective parties on the point of payment of
compensation but despite availing of ample time, no response has
been made by the above named two counsel for the appellants. It
therefore, transpires that the appellants are not willing to pay
compensation to the respondent in respect of disputed plots.
5.
On perusal of the record, we find that in the revised layout plan
of Kehkashan, Scheme 5, Clifton, Karachi made in the year 1972, a
copy of which is attached with CMA No. 4472/2011 filed by the counsel
for respondent, does not anywhere reflect availability of any land or
plots for the purpose of kiosks. There is land showing cross lining in
front of which is an open land. In this open land perhaps the petitioner
in his own hardwiring has shown to be having the deputed plots of two
kiosks. Yet another copy of another revised layout plan of 1975 is
attached with the same CMA, which also reflects that the similar
position of land, which is shown in the revised plan of 1972 except that
there is an insertion of two squares, which are shown to be located
outside the cross lining area. The respondent in his letter dated
10.7.2003 addressed to the District Executive Officer, Master Plan
Group of Office, CDGK has himself stated that due to error the KDA at
the time of making the Master Plan of Kehkashan Clifton Scheme 5
Karachi two kiosks were not included in the master plan and requested
for their incorporation in the master plan. This very letter of
respondent lend support to the fact that in the master plan of
Kehkashan, Scheme 5, Clifton, Karachi there was no existence of any
plot for kiosks.
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
5
6.
It is not the case of respondent before us that the disputed
plots allotted to the respondent were the plots meant for commercial
use and such also does not appear to be the position emerging on
examining the two master plans as referred above. The master plan
shows that the land having cross lines apparently is meant for
amenity/land for public use and not a space/land meant for allotment
for use in commercial venture. Depiction of two squares in the
revised master plan of 1975 is outside the lined area does not appear
to be factually correct as has become known from the two reports;
one submitted by the Deputy Nazir of High Court of Sindh and the
other of Office Incharge of this Court in which the disputed plots are
shown to be part and parcel of parking lot of CDGK and not out side
it. The land immediately outside the parking lot is a beach, which
become submersible by sea water on high tide.
7.
All these factors show that the disputed plots allotted to the
respondent were carved out from amenity plot/land for public use
and such allotment being admittedly made for commercial use was
directly in conflict with the Article 52-A of the KDA Order, 1957 which
specifically provided for procedure for seeking of conversion of
amenity plot for other use. Admittedly, there is no order whereby use
of plot from that of amenity to that of commercial was sanctioned by
competent authority in respect of disputed plots.
8.
It may further be noted that the allotment of disputed plots was
made as back in the year 1976 but despite having possession, the
respondent took no steps for raising construction and rather left the
disputed plots as they were at the time of allotment and possession
that is a bare site. The respondent has given an explanation for not
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
6
raising the construction that is the officials did not develop the area
nor provided the utility. The fact however remains that for almost 29
years respondent remained inactive and did not use the disputed
plots for the purpose for which they were allotted. This fact of non-
use of disputed plots by the respondent reflects heavily against him
and shows that very purpose of allotment of disputed plots was
other-wise than use by the respondent as kiosks.
9.
Though, it is contended by the respondent that these disputed
plots and other plots were being offered for ten years lease by the
CDGK for their commercial exploitation seems to be correct but such
venture was scrapped for the reason that the disputed plots stood
already allotted to the respondent. We do not know nor do we want
to comment upon the venture of CDGK of giving plot on ten years
lease for commercial exploitation. Had such venture been executed,
the same on the basis that amenity plots cannot be used for
commercial exploitation would have definitely been set aside. It may
be observed that the residents of Karachi have over time been denied
of
amenity/land
for
public
use
by
their
illegal
occupation/
encroachments and also by public functionaries by making false
allotments/transfers, which has clogged the city and denuded it from
much needed open spaces for the residents as a breather and a
space where they can walkout freely. This facility for the residents of
the city of Karachi seems to have been totally vanished. In our view,
CDGK so also Government of Sindh should take immediate steps for
restoring of amenity/land for public use for which they were
exclusively provided in the original master plan of city of Karachi. It is
so strange to note that the whole of the beach of the city of Karachi
totally looks barren devoid of any plantation or greenery except much
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
7
acclaimed Bagh-e-Ibne Qassim, which apparently is not being
maintained in a way the park of such magnitude is required to be
maintained.
10.
Despite the above discussion, it is clear that it was the KDA
who has offered the disputed plots to the respondent who through a
bidding process has made the highest offer and on acceptance of
such offer has got allotment of disputed plots in his favour. He has
also paid whole of occupancy value/price of disputed plots and has
obtained their possession, which possession letter represented giving
of lease of 99 years of disputed plots on receipt of full occupancy
value/price. The respondent cannot be squarely blamed for illegal
conduct of officials of the KDA in making of allotment of amenity plot/
land for public use to the respondent. The respondent admittedly has
paid substantial amount in the shape of whole occupancy value/price
of disputed plots and thus cannot be deprived of his funds so paid by
him to the KDA now the CDGK. Although the respondent did not
acquire any title to the disputed plots but the fact remains that he did
pay for disputed plots and such was done by him on illegal and
unlawful conduct of officials of then KDA. The Government and its
department are bound to act justly and fairly with the citizens of the
country and in case of illegal and unlawful conduct of the government
and its officials of department any loss is caused to the citizen of this
country,
same
is
appropriately
be
compensated.
This
is
a
fundamental rule and also principle of equity. The learned ASC for the
respondent during the course of hearing of this appeal has contended
that in case the respondent is found not entitled to the disputed plots
of the two kiosks, the respondent be paid compensation at the
prevailing market rate of the disputed plots and in this respect has
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
8
referred to the advertisement published in daily newspaper Dawn
dated 16.11.2005 in which offer of public auction of plots by the
CDGK on the Clifton Beach for setting up stalls etc on short lease of
ten years with a bid price of Rs.15,00,000/- per year. Similar position
has been taken by the respondent in his CMA No.581/2015. We have
already noted above that the land, on which the disputed plots were
allotted to the respondent, was an amenity plot/land for public use
and thus not available for being allotted for commercial exploitation.
No lease of 99 years was made in favour of the respondent. The
respondent himself did not utilize the two plots for almost 29 years
though in possession. Although, on the basis of fundamental rules so
also principle of equity the respondent is entitled to be compensated
but the compensation as is claimed by the respondent is not what in
the facts and circumstances of the present case such principle will
admit. The offer of plot by public auction by the CDGK in 2005 at the
rate of Rs.15,00,000/- per year never materialized and thus it cannot
form basis for granting of compensation. Yet the illegality committed
by the officials of KDA in dolling out the disputed plots out of the
amenity plot/land for public use cannot give advantage to the
respondent so as to enrich himself from such illegality. In all fairness,
the respondent can well be compensated by directing refund of the
amount received from him as the occupancy value/price of land by
the appellant alongwith interest/markup at the rate of 18% per
annum from the date of the receipt of occupancy value/price of land
until it is actually refunded. Consequently, the appeal is partly
allowed by setting aside the impugned judgment with directions to
the appellants Government of Sindh/CDGK to refund to the
respondent all the amount of occupancy value of disputed plots
alongwith markup at the rate of 18% per annum from the date of
C.A.No.1481 of 2007.doc
9
occupancy amount received till the amount is actually paid to the
respondent.
CJ.
Bench-I
ISLAMABAD
J.
10.02.2015
NOT APPROVED FOR REPORTING
*Hashmi*
J.
Announced in open Court on
11.08.2015
J.
| {
"id": "C.A.1481_2007.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE ANWAR ZAHEER JAMALI, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE MANZOOR AHMAD MALIK
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1491 OF 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, CIVIL
PETITIONS NO. 1945-L/11, 933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 736/14,
1155-L/13, 1483-L/14, 1524-L/14, 1535-L/14, 928-L/14, 719-L/14,
1053-L/14,
1112-L/14,
1338-L/14,
1429-L/14,
CRIMINAL
PETITIONS NO. 74-P/12, 62-Q/13, 30-Q/14, 49-Q/14, CIVIL
PETITIONS NO. 1325/14, 1831-L/14, 1727-L/14, 1732-L/14, 1861-
L/14, 1883-L/14, 1921-L/14, 1958-L/14, 2116-L/14, 2161-L/14,
2213-L/14, 102-L/15, 249-L/15, 598-L/15, 908-L/15, 1139-L/15,
1197-L/15, 544-L/15, 1431-L/15, 1434-L/15, 937-L/15, 2202-L/15,
2270-L/15, 2276-L/15, 2380-L/15, 2489-L/15, 2585-L/15, 2580-
L/15, 2552-L/15, 2715-L/15, 2776-L/15, 2939-L/15, 24-L/16, 1716-
L/15, 2150-L/15, 1179-L/15, 1180-L/15, 1923-L/15, CMA. 13/16
IN CP. 2852-L/15, 1966-L2015.
(On appeal against the judgments/orders dated 01.10.2013, 3.10.2013,
23.10.2013,
17.6.2010,
16.06.2014,
25.06.2013,
25.01.2012,
03.04.2014,
30.04.2012, 9.10.2013, 27.06.2014, 16.12.2013, 11.02.2014, 27.5.2013, 19.9.2011,
17.03.2015, 10.06.2015, 11.11.2015, 12.5.2014, 30.10.2014, 24.6.2014, 28.10.2014,
29.4.2014, 7.7.2014, 3.7.2014, 19.6.2014, 6.6.2014, 18.8.2014, 10.4.2014,
28.5.2014,
28.10.2014,
19.11.2014,
24.11.2014,
17.10.2014,
07.11.2014,
21.10.2014, 10.12.2014, 11.12.2014, 25.3.2015, 6.4.2015, 29.4.2015, 21.4.2015,
4.2.2015, 6.4.2015, 10.08.2015, 13.7.2015, 15.9.2015, 5.10.2015, 7.9.2015,
14.10.2015,
13.10.2015,
06.10.2015,
14.10.2015,
18.11.2015,
9.11.2015,
29.7.2015, 8.6.2015, 21.04.2015, 21.4.2015, 30.07.2015 and 20.06.2014 of the
Lahore High Court, Rawalpindi Bench, Rawalpindi, Lahore High Court, Lahore,
Lahore High Court, Multan Bench, Multan, Lahore High Court, Bahawalpur
Bench, Bahawalpur, Peshawar High Court, Peshawar, Peshawar High Court,
Circuit Bench, Abbottabad, Islamabad High Court, Islamabad and High
Court of Balochistan, Quetta, passed in ICA. Nos. 248 of 2010, 764 of 2013,
ICA. No. 1081 of 2013 in W. P. No. 7519/13, CP. 1012-L of 2007, in ICA. 597 of
2014 in W. P. No. 25865 of 2013, ICA. 273 of 2013 in W. P. No. 1834 of 2013, in
ICA. 500/12, W. P. No. 2141 of 2014, W. P. No. 8962 of 2014, Cr. M. Q. No. 17 of
2011, Crl. Quashment No. 331 if 2013, Crl. Quashment P. No. S-10/2014, ICA.
No. 1069 of 2013, W. P. No. 27381 of 2013, W. P. No. 12961 of 2013, ICA. No.
548 of 2011, W. P. No. 7535 of 2015, W. P. No. 2586 of 2015, ICA. 1453 of 2015,
W. P. 2582 of 2014, ICA. 375 of 2014 in W. P. No. 12333/2014, ICA. 649 of 2014
in W. P. No. 7740 of 2014, ICA. 650 of 2014 in W. P. No. 6167 of 2014, W. P. No.
26388 of 2014, W. P. No. 689-A of 2013, W. P. No. 19650 of 2014, W. P. No.
19430 of 2014, W. P. No. 26486 of 2013, W. P. No. 15114 of 2014, W. P. No.
18823 of 2014, W. P. No. 9725 of 2014, W. P. No. 12456 of 2014, W. P. No. 12226
of 2014, W. P. No. 25281 of 2013, W. P. No. 25919 of 2014, W. P. No. 24246 of
2014, W. P. No. 8035 of 2014-BWP., W. P. No. 12096 of 2014, W. P. No. 18644 of
2014, W. P. No. 24487 of 2014, W. P. No. 8291 of 2015, ICA. 482 of 2015 in W. P.
No. 2587 of 2015, W. P. No. 6380 of 2014, W. P. No. 24714 of 2012, W. P. No.
25441 of 2014, W. P. No. 26288 of 2014, W. P. No. 16360 of 2014, ICA. No. 963 of
2015, ICA. No. 1133 of 2015, W. P. No. 19339 of 2015, W. P. No. 28009 of 2011,
W. P. No. 12563 of 2015, ICA. No. 552 of 2015, ICA. No. 541 of 2013, ICA. 1317
of 2015 in W. P. No. 27919 of 2015, W. P. No. 10832 of 2013, W. P. No. 29557 of
2014, ICA. 1481 of 2015, W. P. No. 22491 of 2015, ICA. No. 70 of 2015-BWP., W.
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
2
P. No. 10468 of 2014, W. P. No. 34323 of 2014, ICA. No. 639 of 2015 and Writ
Petition No. 1194 of 2014).
Younas Abbas.
Muhammad Aslam.
Asghar Rafiq and another.
Abdullah.
Mian Naveed Arshad.
Hakim Ali.
Mian Sajjad.
Tanveer Hussain.
Co. (R) Nazar Hussain Islam.
Ahad Nawaz.
Muhamad Javed Afridi.
Haji Murad Bakhsh.
Shakar Khan and others.
Mian Muhammad Usman.
Taj Din Malik.
Anwar Ali.
Hafiz Maqsood Ahmed.
Qalab Abbas, etc.
Bashir Ahmed Ch.,
Sabir Hussain.
Shehzad Khan.
Muhammad Yasin.
Naseebullah.
Rafiullah and others.
Zafar.
Kamran Butt.
Kamran Butt.
Fida Hussain.
Muhammad Ramzan.
Nazir Ahmad.
Muhammad Safdar Shaheen.
Syed Afzaal Hussain Kazmi.
Ch. Ali Ahmad.
Rana Naseem Haider.
Nasreen Bibi.
Muhammad Ahmad Ramay.
Ameen.
Shahbaz Sarfraz.
Lt. Col. (R) Aqeel Ahmed.
Muhammad Anwar.
Muhammad Ameer.
Saima Firdous.
Abdul Rauf.
Haji Maqbool Hussain.
Uzma Imran.
Sardar Shaukat Mahmood.
Ghulam Nabi.
Muhammad Aslam Hayat.
Muhammad Ishaq.
Zahid Hussain.
Umer Din.
Muhammad Iqbal.
Muhammad Sana Ullah Khan.
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
3
Ehtasham Ali, etc.
Muhammad Afzal.
Mst. Malka Bushra Haider.
Ch. Zafar Iqbal.
Mst. Shehzadi Rani.
Muhammad Ali.
Muhammad Ali.
Shah Nawaz Bhali.
Mrs. Maryam Zahid.
Mr. Maryam Zahid.
Abdul Hameed.
…Petitioner/Appellant(s)
V E R S U S
Additional Sessions Judge, Chakwal and others.
Additional Sessions Judge, Lahore and others.
Learned Justice of Peace/ASJ, Faisalabad and others.
Additional Sessions Judge, Faisalabad, etc.
Additional Sessions Judge, Lahore etc.
Additional Sessions Judge, Lahore, etc.
I. G. Punjab, Lahore, etc.
Deputy I. G. Police, Gujranwala, etc.
Additional Sessions Judge/Justice of Peace, (East), Ibd and others.
Additional Sessions Judge, Sargodha, etc.
Muhammad Anwar Khan and others.
The State and others.
The State and others.
Additional Sessions Judge, Lahore, etc.
Mian Tauseef, etc.
Additional Sessions Judge/Ex-Officio Justice of Peace, Chiniot, etc.
ASJ/Ex-Officio Justice of Peace, Sialkot and others.
Muhammad Ashraf, etc.
Director General, FIA and others.
Ex-officio Justice of Peace/ASJ, Faisalabad and others.
ASJ/Ex-Officio Justice of Peace, Sialkot and others.
ASJ, Lahore and others.
Ibrahim Jan and others.
District Police Officer, Mansehra and others.
Muhammad Nawaz, etc.
CCPO, Lahore, etc.
CCPO, Lahore, etc.
Justice of Peace/ASJ, Karor District Layyah, etc.
CCPO, Lahore, etc.
Waqas Anwar, etc.
Justice of Peace/ASJ, Lahore, etc.
ASJ/Justice of Peace, Daska, Sialkot, etc.
Justice of Peace Pakpattan, etc.
SHO P.S. Chichawatni, District Sahiwal, etc.
ASJ, Faisalabad, etc.
The Sessions Judge Okara, etc.
ASJ, Pakpattan Sharif, etc.
ASJ, Justice of Peace, Lahore, etc.
Ch. Safdar Bhatti, Justice of Peace, ASJ, Lahore etc.
ASJ, Bhakkar, etc.
Sub-Divisional Police Officer, Arifwala, Pakpattan Sharif, etc.
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
4
ASJ/Ex-Officio Justice of Peace Pakpattan Sharif, etc.
Muhammad Amin, etc.
ASJ, Gojra District Toba Tek Singh, etc.
SHO PS. Lahore, etc.
SDPO/DSP Circle Jaranwala, Faisalabad, etc.
ASJ/Ex-officio Justice of Peace Pasrur Sialkot, etc.
Justice of Peace/ASJ Shorkot District Jhang, etc.
Munir Badar, etc.
ASJ/Justice of Peace Jampur, District Rajanpur, etc.
Ex-officio Justice of Peace, ASJ, Lahore, etc.
Justice of Peace ASJ Samundari, Faisalabad, etc.
ASJ/Ex-officio Justice of Peace, Mianwali, etc.
Justice of Peace/ASJ, Sialkot etc.
SHO, PS City Depalpur, Okara etc.
Ex-Officio, Justice of Peace, ASJ, Lahore, etc.
Ex-officio, Justice of Peace, ASJ, Gujranwala, etc.
ASJ/Justice of Peace Chishtian District Bahawalnagar, etc.
The State through P. G. Lahore, etc.
ASJ/Justice of Peace, Pindi Bhattian, District Hafiz Abad, etc.
ASJ/Ex-officio Justice of Peace, Lahore, etc.
ASJ/Ex-officio Justice of Peace, Lahore, etc.
ASJ/Ex-officio Justice of Peace, Lahore, etc.
Noal Sher, etc.
…Respondent(s)
ATTENDANCE :
C.A. No. 1491/13
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Muhammad Shahid Kamal, ASC
For Respondents 4, 7:
Sh. Zamir Hussain, Sr. ASC
For Respondents 5, 6:
Mian Shafaqat JAN, asc
C.A. No. 63-L of 2014
For the Appellant(s):
Nemo
For Respondents 1, 2, 3:
N/R
C.A. No. 64-L of 2014
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Aziz A. Malik, ASC
For Respondents 2-3, 6-9:
N/R
For Respondents 4-5:
Mr. Aftab Ahmad Bajwa, ASC
C.P. No. 1945-L of 2011
For the Petitioner(s):
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 933-L of 2013
For the Petitioner(s):
Nemo
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
5
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1840-L of 2013
For the Petitioner(s):
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 372-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 589-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 736 of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. 1155-L of 2013
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
Crl. P. No. 74-P of 2012
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
Crl. P. No. 62-Q of 2013
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
Crl. P. No. 30-Q of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Zahoorul Haq Chishti, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
Crl. P. 1483-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo.
For the Respondents:
N/R
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
6
C.P. Nos. 1524 & 1535-L of 2014
For the Petitioners:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 928-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Salim Khan Cheechi, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 719-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1053-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Rana Aftab Ahmad Bajwa, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1112-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1338-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1325 of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Malik Jawad Khalid, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. 1831-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. Nos. 1727 & 1732-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1861-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
7
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1883-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1921-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1958-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2116-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2161-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2213-L of 2014
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Zafar Mehmood Chaudhry, ASC
For Respondent 2:
Mr. Javed A. Khan, ASC
C.P. No. 102-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Syed Nisar Ali Shah, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 598-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 908-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Sahir Mahmood Bhatti, ASC
For Respondent 3:
Mr. M. Zahid Rana, ASC
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
8
C.P. No. 1139-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Irshad Ahmed Cheema, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1197-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 544-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1431-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1434-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Munir Ahmad Bhatti, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 937-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Miam Muhammad Aslam, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2202-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mr. M. Sohail Dar, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2270-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mrs. Kausar Iqbal Bhatti, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2276-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2380-L of 2015
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
9
For the Petitioner:
In person
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2489-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Saiful Malook, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2585-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2580-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2552-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
In person
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2715-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
In person
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2776-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Salim Khan Chechi, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2939-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
In person
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 24-L of 2016
For the Petitioner:
In person
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1716-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
10
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 2150-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1179-L of 2015 &
C.P. No. 1180-L of 2015
For the Petitioners:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1923-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Nemo
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.M.A. No. 13/16 in
C.P. No. 2852-L of 2015
For the Applicant/P:
Mr. Ahmad Nawaz Chaudhry, AOR
For the Respondents:
N/R
C.P. No. 1966-L of 2015
For the Petitioner:
Mr. Muhammad Sohail Dar, ASC
For the Respondents:
N/R
On Court’s Call:
For Province of Punjab:
Mr. Razzaq A. Mirza, Addl. AG
For Province of Sindh:
Mr. Abdul Jabbar Qureshi, Asstt. AG
For Province of KPK:
Mr. Waqar Ahmed Khan, Addl. AG
For Province of Balochistan:
Mr. Ayaz Swati, Addl. AG
Amicus Curiae:
Kh. Haris Ahmed, Sr. ASC
Date of Hearing:
12.02.2016 (Judgment Reserved)
**************************
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
11
J U D G M E N T
EJAZ AFZAL KHAN, J.- Though the appellants and the
petitioners in many cases voiced their individual grievances against
the orders directing or refusing the registration of cases but
appellants in Civil Appeal No. 491 of 2013 also questioned the vires
of Section 22-A in general and 22-A(6) of the Cr.P.C. in particular.
This Court after hearing the learned ASCs for the parties crystallized
the formulations as under :-
“3.
We have gone through the leave granting order
dated 13.12.2013, wherein the afore-referred questions have
been adverted to for consideration, however, while hearing
the appellant’s learned counsel, we find that certain issues
relatable to the vires of Section 22-A Cr.P.C. and the manner
it is being used, require consideration. In this view of the
matter, we are persuaded to direct the learned counsel for
the parties to address the Court, inter alia, on the following
issues :-
a)
Whether Section 22-A Cr.P.C. is ultra vires of the
Constitution inasmuch as it confers Executive
powers to a Judicial Officer? and
b)
Whether
its
alleged
misuse
is
not
in
consonance with the canons of expeditious
justice? and
c)
Whether the exercise of power under Section
22-A Cr.P.C. amounts to interference in the
investigative domain of police, which is
violative
of
this
Court’s
judgment
in
Muhammad Bashir Vs. Station House Officer,
Okara (PLD 2007 SC 539) and Imtiaz Ahmad.
Vs. Government of Pakistan (1994 SCMR 2142)?
2.
Notices were issued to the Advocates General of the
Provinces whereas Kh. Haris Ahmed and Mr. Farogh Naseem were
appointed as amicus curiae. This case was heard on 20.11.2014 by
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
12
a Bench of this Court, which ordered it to be heard by a Larger
Bench by observing as under :-
“2.
We have heard the learned amicus curiae. Both the
learned counsel have submitted that the powers exercisable
under Section 22-A (6) read with Section 25 of the Cr.P.C.
are quasi judicial in nature and therefore do not violate the
provision of Article 175(3) of the Constitution; and that if
these powers are declared to be executive or administrative
in nature, the same would not be in consonance with the
provision of Article 175(3) of the Constitution. During the
course of arguments two judgments were brought to our
notice; one by the Lahore High Court authored by Hon’ble
Justice Asif Saeed Khan Khosa, as Judge of that Court,
which was reaffirmed by a three member bench of this
Court in the case of Muhammad Ali. Vs. Additional I. G.
Faisalabad and others (PLD 2014 SC 753) declaring that the
said powers are administrative and executive in nature.
Since the said judgment has been handed down by a three
member bench, it would be appropriate that this case be
heard by a larger bench, in order to determine whether the
powers under Section 22-A(6) of Cr.P.C. are quasi judicial in
nature, and if not, would it violate the provision of Article
175(3) of the Constitution.”
3.
The learned Advocates Supreme Court appearing in
the appeals as well as civil petitions and criminal petitions
addressed arguments in support of and against the formulations.
The main theme and thrust of the arguments addressed in support
of the formulations was that the Ex-officio Justice of Peace while
exercising powers under Section 22-A (6) Cr.P.C. interferes with
investigation, delays dispensation of justice, and thereby abuses the
process of the Court which is violative of the dicta rendered in the
cases of Muhammad Bashir. Vs. Station House Officer, Okara Cantt.
and others (PLD 2007 SC 539) and Brig. (Retd) Imtiaz Ahmad. Vs.
Government of Pakistan through Secretary, Interior Division,
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
13
Islamabad and 2 others (1994 SCMR 2142). Some of the ASCs also
went to the extent of calling this provision as ultra vires in the sense
that these powers being executive and administrative in nature
militate against the concept of independence of judiciary and its
separation from the executive as enshrined in Article 175 of the
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.
4.
Sheikh Zamir Hussain, learned ASC appearing on behalf
of respondents Nos. 4 and 7 in C. A. No. 1491 of 2013 contended
that the people could live and lump up with the powers of the Ex-
officio Justice of Peace under Section 22-A(6) Cr.P.C. but not with
their abuse and misuse especially when he assumes the role of
investigator, prosecutor and the Court before the case is sent
thereto or any other Court for trial and thereby defeats the purpose
this provision was enacted for.
5.
Mr. Saiful Malook, learned ASC appearing on behalf of
the petitioner in C. P. No. 2489-L of 2015 by highlighting the excesses
committed by the Ex-officio Justice of Peace in exercise of his
powers, vehemently pleaded for prescribing parameters in this
behalf lest it does more harm than good.
6.
Mr. Muhammad Shahid Kamal, learned ASC appearing
on behalf of the appellant in C. A. No. 1491 of 2013 contended that
enactment of Section 22-A, 22-B and 25 of the Criminal Procedure
Code is well intentioned, if their efficacy in facilitating the cause of
justice is looked at and that there may be deviations here and
there, but they can well be corrected through judicial review.
7.
The learned Advocates General of the respective
Provinces contended that these provisions cannot be treated as
heal-all inasmuch as their side effects have added to the backlog
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
14
which is already mountain-high as was also observed by this Court
in the case of Muhammad Bashir. Vs. Station House Officer, Okara
Cantt. and others (supra) .
8.
Kh. Haris Ahmed, learned ASC appearing as amicus
curiae having cited a good number of judgments sought to
canvass at the bar that interference with investigation at any level
has not been approved of by this Court unless of course it is
malafide and without jurisdiction. He next contended that even the
powers conferred on the High Court under Section 561-A of Cr.P.C.
cannot be used to impede or hamper the investigation, but to
prevent the abuse of the process of the Court. The learned ASC to
support his point of view referred to the cases of Muhammad Bashir.
Vs. Station House Officer, Okara Cantt. and others, Brig. (Retd)
Imtiaz Ahmad. Vs. Government of Pakistan through Secretary,
Interior Division, Islamabad and 2 others (supra), Emperor. Vs.
Khawaja Nazir Ahmad (AIR 1945 PC 18), Shahnaz Begum. Vs. The
Hon’ble Judges of the High Court of Sindh and Baluchistan and
another (PLD 1971 SC 677) and Ghulam Mohammad. Vs. Muzzamil
Khan (PLD 1967 SC 317). The learned ASC went on to argue that
what cannot be permitted in exercise of jurisdiction under Article
199 of the Constitution or 561-A of Cr.P.C. cannot be permitted at
the level of the Ex-officio Justice of Peace. According to the
learned ASC, the view taken in the judgments cited above was
reaffirmed in the cases of Saeed Hussain Shah. Vs. The State (1996
SCMR 504), Raja Rustam Ali Khan. Vs. Muhammad Hanif and 6
others (1997 SCMR 2008), Muhammad Saeed Azhar. Vs. Martial Law
Administrator, Punjab and others (1979 SCMR 484), Muhammad
Latif, ASI, Police Station Sadar, Sheikhupura. Vs. Sharifan Bibi and
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
15
another (1998 SCMR 666), Mazhar Naeem Qureshi. Vs. The State
(1999 SCMR 828), Nasrullah Khan. Vs. Manzoor Hussain and others
(2004 SCMR 885), Ajmeel Khan. Vs. Abdur Rahim and others (PLD
2009 SC 102), Hayatullah Khan and another. Vs. Muhammad Khan
and others (2011 SCMR 1354) and S. N. Sharma. Vs. Bipen Kumar
Tiwari and others (AIR 1970 SC 786).
9.
We have gone through the record carefully and
considered the submissions of the learned ASCs for the parties, the
learned Advocates General as well as the learned amicus curiae.
10.
Law is undoubtedly a set of commands of the
sovereign. It can endure and stay efficacious if it is not abstract and
socially unrelated. It becomes all the more enduring and
efficacious if it pulsates from the soil and reflects indigenous
conditions around. A law thus evolved not only caters for what
people need for their peaceful co-existence but also endures till the
time the conditions around change. On the contrary, a law which is
a patchwork of imported patches can neither cater for the
legitimate needs of the people nor stay efficacious because of its
feeble basis and frequent violation. Before we examine these
provisions in this background and in the light of the arguments
addressed at the bar, it is worthwhile to refer to the provisions which
read as under :-
“22-A. Powers of Justice of the Peace.--(1) A Justice
of the Peace for any local area shall, for the purposes
of making an arrest, have within such area all the
powers of a Police Officer referred to in section 54
and an officer in-charge of a police-station referred
to in section 55.
(2) A Justice of the Peace making an arrest in
exercise of any powers under subsection (1) shall,
forthwith, take or cause to be taken the person
arrested before the officer in-charge of the nearest
police-station and furnish such officer with a report as
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
16
to the circumstances of the arrest and such officer
shall thereupon re-arrest the person.
(3) A Justice of the Peace for any local area shall
have powers, within such area, to call upon any
member of the police force on duty to aid him:
(a) in taking or preventing the escape of any
person who has participated in the commission
of any cognizable offence or against whom a
reasonable complaint has been made or
credible information has been received or a
reasonable suspicion exists of his having so
participated; and
(b) in the prevention of crime in general and,
in particular, in the prevention of a breach of
the peace or a disturbance of the public
tranquility.
(4) Where a member of the police force on duty has
been called upon to render aid under subsection (3),
such call shall be deemed to have been made by a
competent authority.
(5) A Justice of the Peace for any local area may, in
accordance with such rules as may be made by the
Provincial Government:
(a) issue a certificate as to the identity of any
person residing within such area, or
(b) verify any document brought before him
by any such person, or
(c) attest any such document required by or
under any law for the time being in force to be
attested by a Magistrate, and until the
contrary is proved, any certificate so issued
shall be presumed to be correct and any
document so verified shall be deemed to be
duly verified, and any document so attested
shall be deemed to have been as fully
attested as if he had been a Magistrate.
[(6)
An ex-officio Justice of the Peace may
issue appropriate directions to the police
authorities
concerned
on
a
complaint
regarding-
(i)
non-registration of a criminal case;
(ii)
transfer of investigation from one police
officer to another; and
(iii)
neglect, failure or excess committed by
a police authority in relation to its
functions and duties.]
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
17
22-B. Duties of Justices of the Peace.-- Subject to such
rules as may be made by the Provincial Government,
every Justice of the Peace for any local area shall—
(a) on receipt of information of the occurrence
of any incident involving a breach of the
peace, or of the commission of any offence
within such local area, forthwith make inquiries
into the matter and report in writing the result
of his inquiries to the nearest Magistrate and to
officer in charge of the nearest police-station.
(b) if the offence referred to in clause (a) is a
cognizable offence, also prevent the removal
of any thing from, or the interference in any
way with, the place of occurrence of the
offence;
(c) when so required in writing by a police-
officer making an investigation under Chapter
XIV in respect of any offence committed within
such local area.
(i) render all assistance to the police-
officer in making such an investigation.
(ii) record any statement made under
expectation of death by a person in
respect of whom a crime is believed to
have been committed'.]
25. Ex-officio Justice of the Peace.—By virtue of their
respective offices, the Sessions Judges and on
nomination by them, the Additional Sessions Judges,
are Justices of the Peace within and for whole of the
District of the Province in which they are serving”.
11.
The duties, the Justice of Peace performs, are
executive, administrative, preventive and ministerial as is evident
from sub-sections 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of 22-A and 22-B of the Cr.P.C.
Such duties have not been a subject matter of controversy nor
have they ever been caviled at by anybody. Controversy emerged
with the insertion of sub-section 6 in Section 22-A and Section 25 of
the Cr.P.C. when Sessions Judges and on nomination by them the
Additional Sessions Judges became the Ex-officio Justices of Peace.
The functions, the Ex-officio Justice of Peace performs, are not
executive, administrative or ministerial inasmuch as he does not
carry out, manage or deal with things mechanically. His functions as
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
18
described in Clause (i), (ii) and (iii) of sub-section 6 of Section 22-A
Cr.P.C., are quasi-judicial as he entertains applications, examines
the record, hears the parties, passes orders and issues directions
with due application of mind. Every lis before him demands
discretion and judgment. Functions so performed cannot be
termed as executive, administrative or ministerial on any account.
We thus don’t agree with the ratio of the judgments rendered in the
cases of Khizar Hayat and others. Vs. Inspector General of Police
(Punjab), Lahore and others (PLD 2005 Lhr. 470) and Muhammad Ali.
Vs. Additional I. G. (PLD 2015 SC 753) inasmuch as it holds that the
functions performed by the Ex-officio Justice of Peace are
executive, administrative or ministerial.
12.
Now we are to see whether the insertion of this
provision has advanced and hastened or obstructed and delayed
dispensation of justice. A brief look into the past and its comparison
with the present would answer the question. In the past if a person
aggrieved went to report the commission of a cognizable case his
report was not registered. If he had means he could file a petition
for issuance of an appropriate writ in the respective High Court. By
the time his petition matured for being heard and decided in his
favour, a great deal of evidence was either lost or destroyed. The
relief so granted was almost equal to the relief declined barring
exceptions, which were not more than a few. With the insertion of
sub-section 6, an aggrieved person could get in time at his
doorstep, what he could not get despite approaching the High
Court. As against that, grievance of a person having no means and
resources went unattended and un-redressed altogether. Wealthy,
well off and well connected people exploited this situation. They
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
19
committed the crime and yet went scot-free. But ever since the day
the Sessions Judges and on nomination by them the Additional
Sessions Judges became the Ex-officio Justices of Peace, no rich
and well off person could break the law with impunity or obstruct
the person oppressed and assaulted from seeking remedy at his
doorstep. If the SHO of a Police Station, owing to the influence and
affluence of any, refused to register a case, resort could be had to
the Ex-officio Justice of Peace for the issuance of an appropriate
order or direction by moving a simple application. Aggrieved
persons, who could not afford the luxury of engaging a lawyer in
the past for filing a writ petition in a High Court to get the desired
relief, could seek an order or direction from the Ex-officio Justice of
Peace without spending much. He could complain against the
neglect, failure or excess committed by the Police Authorities in
relation to its functions and duties which in the past was no less than
living in Rome and fighting with the Pope.
13.
Transfer of investigation from one police officer to
another was, no doubt, in vogue but it was done only at the
bidding of wealthy and well off people. A poor man, whose entry in
the well guarded offices of the high-ranking police officers was well
nigh impossible, could never dream of getting such relief even in
the wildest of his dreams. Article 18(6) of the Police Order also
provides a remedy for change of investigation but it, in a set up
where the police do not have operational independence, is illusory
and inadequate. It is more so where even the high-ranking police
officers are posted and transferred with the intervention of the class
wielding influence inside and outside the lounges of power. In this
state of despair, a legislation establishing equality before the law
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
20
and breaking the idols of influence and affluence was desperately
needed. The legislature rose to the occasion, enacted sub-section 6
of Sections 22-A and 25 of the Cr.P.C. and enabled the poor and
the downtrodden to see eye to eye with those who infringed their
rights with impunity in the past. We need not discuss how the Justice
of the Peace acts or acted in the United Kingdom, the United States
of America or the Union of India. We are to see whether this
insertion, giving powers to the Ex-officio Justice of Peace, has
harmed the people by and large or empowered them, who on
account of economic constraints and compulsions resigned to their
unhappy lot. Yes, it is not heal-all as was contended by one of the
learned Advocates General because its side effects have added to
the backlog which is already mountain-high in the District Courts as
well as the High Courts. But these side effects like those of antibiotics
have to be borne by the patients for their rapid recovery. Needless
to say that someone has to travel a mile extra to restore balance to
the society.
14.
The argument that the people could live and lump up
with the powers of the Ex-officio Justice of Peace under Section 22-
A(6) Cr.P.C. but not with their abuse and misuse especially when he
assumes the role of investigator, prosecutor and the Court before
the case is sent thereto or any other Court for trial and thereby
defeats the purpose this provision was enacted for, is misconceived
when the orders passed, directions issued and actions taken by the
Justice of Peace in excess of his powers being justiciable can well
be quashed through judicial review.
15.
Granted that jurisdiction to issue a writ is traditionally a
high prerogative jurisdiction of a High Court dating back to
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
21
antiquity is now recognized by the Constitution, as has been held in
the case of Khizar Hayat and others. Vs. Inspector General of Police
(Punjab), Lahore and others (supra), but such jurisdiction has now
been conferred on the Ex-officio Justices of Peace, as the power to
issue direction in the nature of habeas corpus has been conferred
on the Sessions Judges and Additional Sessions Judges under
Section 491(1-A) of the Cr.P.C. The rationale behind conferment of
such powers on the Ex-officio Justices of Peace under sub-section 6
of Section 22-A and on the Sessions Judges as well as Additional
Sessions Judges under Section 491(1-A) of the Cr.P.C. was to
provide the remedy to an aggrieved person at his doorstep.
Exercise of such powers, by no stretch of imagination, interferes with
investigation or delays dispensation of justice.
16.
The argument pleading for prescribing parameters for
exercising such powers by the Ex-officio Justices of Peace may
have some substance, but where the parameters laid down for the
High Courts are equally applicable to the Ex-officio Justice of Peace
exercising almost similar powers, another effort in this behalf would
be absolutely unnecessary. What are the parameters in this behalf
and how far the exercise of such powers is complementary to the
functions of the police are the questions which have been
elaborately dealt with in a number of cases. In the case of Emperor.
Vs. Khawaja Nazir Ahmad (AIR 1945 PC 18), the Privy Council by
prescribing the parameters and highlighting the complimentary
nature of the functions of the judiciary and the police held as
under:-
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
22
“In their Lordship’s opinion however, the more serious aspect
the case is to be found in the resultant interference by the
Court with the duties of the police. Just as it is essential that
every one accused of a crime should have free access to a
Court of justice so that he may be duly acquitted if found
not guilty of the offence with which he is charged, so it is of
the utmost importance that the judiciary should not interfere
with the police in matters which are within their province
and into which the law imposes upon them the duty of
enquiry. In India as has been shown there is a statutory right
on the part of the police to investigate the circumstances of
an alleged cognizable crime without requiring any authority
from the judicial authorities, and it would, as their Lordships
think, be an unfortunate result if it should be held possible to
interfere with those statutory rights by an exercise of the
inherent jurisdiction of the Court. The functions of the
judiciary
and
the
police
are
complementary
not
overlapping and the combination of individual liberty with a
due observance of law and order is only to be obtained by
leaving each to exercise its own function, always, of course,
subject to the right of the Court to intervene in an
appropriate case when moved under S. 491, Criminal P. C.,
to give directions in the nature of habeas corpus. In such a
case as the present, however, the Court’s functions begin
when a charge is preferred before it and not until then. It has
sometimes been thought that S. 561-A has given increased
powers to the Court which it did not possess before that
section was enacted. But this is not so. The section gives no
new powers, it only provides that those which the Court
already inherently possess shall be preserved and is inserted,
as their Lordships think, lest it should be considered that the
only powers possessed by the Court are those expressly
conferred by the Criminal Procedure Code, and that no
inherent power had survived the passing of that Act. No
doubt, if no cognizable offence is disclosed, and still more if
no offence of any kind is disclosed, the police would have
no authority to undertake an investigation and for this
reason Newsam, J. may well have decided rightly in AIR
1938 Mad. 129. But that is not this case”.
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
23
17.
In the case of Ghulam Mohammad. Vs. Muzzamil Khan
(PLD 1967 SC 317), this Court after examining the ratio of various
judgments on a similar issue held as under :-
“The inherent jurisdiction given by section 561-A is not an
alternative jurisdiction or an additional jurisdiction but it is a
jurisdiction preserved in the interest of justice to redress
grievances for which no other procedure is available or has
been provided by the Code itself. The power given by this
section can certainly not be utilized as to interrupt or divert
the procedural statute. The High Court, as has repeatedly
been pointed out in a number of decisions, should be
extremely reluctant to interfere in a case where a
competent Court has after examining the evidence
adduced before it, come to the view that a prime facie
case is disclosed and has framed charges or summoned the
accused to appear, unless it can be said that the charge on
its face or the evidence, even if believed, does not disclose
any offence. This the High Court has not found in the present
case but has merely proceeded on an erroneous
conception that in a case where a complaint has been filed
the police has no jurisdiction to investigate into any other
offence which comes to its notice in the course of the
investigation of the complaint, particularly, if the offence
disclosed is of a non-cognizable nature. The High Court itself
has referred to a Full Bench authority of the Madras High
Court where a contrary view was taken but has not quoted
any other authority in support of its own view. We are in
agreement with the views expressed by the Madras High
Court for, we can see no legal bar to the police submitting a
challan in respect of offences other than those mentioned in
the First Information Report, if the same should come to its
notice during the course of investigation on the basis of
complaint except in the cases mentioned in Sections 196 to
199, Cr.P.C. Section 190(1)(b) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure clearly gives jurisdiction to the Magistrate
mentioned therein to take cognizance of an offence on the
basis of a police report whether the offence be cognizable
or non-cognizable. In the present case, the Magistrate was
an Additional District Magistrate and one of the offences in
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
24
respect of which the challan was submitted was under
section 408, P.P.C., which was cognizable. Thus even the
obstacle posed by section 155(2), Cr.P.C., did not stand in
the way. The challan submitted by the police was, therefore,
lawfully submitted an legally enquired into”.
18.
In the case of Shahnaz Begum. Vs. The Hon’ble Judges
of the High Court of Sindh and Baluchistan and another (PLD 1971 SC
677) this Court held as under :-
“If an investigation is launched mala fide or is clearly beyond
the jurisdiction of the investigating agencies concerned then
it may be possible for the action of the investigating
agencies to be corrected by a proper proceeding either
under Article 98 of the Constitution of 1962 or under the
provisions of section 491 of the Criminal Procedure Code, if
the applicant is in the latter case in detention, but not by
invoking the inherent power under section 561-A of the
Criminal Procedure Code.
If this be the position with regard to the quashing of
an investigation we have no manner of doubt that section
561-A of the Cr. P.C. does not give any power to transfer an
investigation as claimed by the learned Advocate General
of Sindh. Section 561-A of the Criminal Procedure Code runs
as follows:-
“561-A. Nothing in this Code shall be deemed to limit
or affect the inherent power of the High Court to make such
orders as may be necessary to give effect to any order
under this Code, or to prevent abuse of the process of any
Court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice”
It will be observed that the power given thereby can
be invoked to give effect to any order under the Code to
prevent an abuse of the process of any Court or otherwise
to secure the ends of justice. The ends of justice necessarily
means justice as administered by the Courts and not justice
in the abstract sense or justice administered by agencies
other than Courts. The words “otherwise to secure the ends
of justice”, have to be read along with the earlier objects
mentioned in this section and must have some co-relation
with them and it is in this sense that this Court in the case of
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
25
M. S. Khawaja V. The State (PLD 1965 SC 287) opined that the
ends to secure which the inherent power may be invoked
“have reference to the purposes which the judicial process is
intended to secure, and it is difficult to include actions of
investigating agencies within the scope of judicial process.”
19.
In the case of Brig. (Retd) Imtiaz Ahmad. Vs.
Government of Pakistan through Secretary, Interior Division,
Islamabad and 2 others (1994 SCMR 2142) this Court while
reiterating the earlier view held as under :-
“The power under Article 199 of the Constitution is the power
of judicial review, that power “is a great weapon in the
hands of Judges, but the Judges must observe the
Constitutional limits set by our parliamentary system on their
exercise of this beneficial power, namely, the separation of
powers between the Parliament, the Executive and the
Courts”. (Lord Scarman in Nottinghamshire C.C. v. Secretary
of State (1986) (All ER 199, 204). Judicial review must,
therefore, remain strictly judicial and in its exercise, Judges
must take care not to intrude upon the domain of the other
branches of Government. As was succinctly put by
Hamoodur Rahman, J. (as he then was) in Mir Abdul Baqi
Baluch v. The Government of Pakistan (PLD 1968 SC 313,
324), under a Constitutional system which provides for
judicial review of executive actions :-
“It is, in my opinion, a fallacy to think that such
a judicial review must be in the nature of an
appeal against the decision of the executive
authority. It is not the purpose of judicial
authority reviewing executive actions to sit on
appear over the executive or to substitute the
discretion of the Court for that of the
administrative agency”.
While dealing with transfer of investigation from one police
officer to another, this Court applied the same principles by holding
that the Investigating Authorities do not have an unfettered
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
26
authority of running investigation according to their whim and
caprice. They can be pushed back to their allotted turf if and when
they overstep it. In the case of Anwar Ahmed Khan. Vs. The State
(1996 SCMR 24), this Court held that the High Court in exercise of its
jurisdiction was competent to pass necessary orders where
investigation was malafide or without jurisdiction to ensure justice
and fair play. It was also held in the case of Muhammad Latif, ASI,
Police Station Sadar, Sheikhupura. Vs. Sharifan Bibi and another
(supra) that the High Court in exercise of its constitutional jurisdiction
could pass appropriate orders where investigation is malafide. In
the case of Nasrullah Khan. Vs. Manzoor Hussain and others (supra)
this Court declined to interfere with the order of the High Court
directing entrustment of the investigation of the case to some
responsible officer of repute. In the case of Col. Shah Sadiq. Vs.
Muhammad Ashiq and others (2006 SCMR 276) this Court after
referring to a string of judgments of this Court, Privy Council and
Indian Supreme Court reiterated the same principle. The same view
was also reaffirmed in the cases of Saeed Hussain Shah. Vs. The
State (1996 SCMR 504), Raja Rustam Ali Khan. Vs. Muhammad Hanif
and 6 others (1997 SCMR 2008), Muhammad Saeed Azhar. Vs.
Martial Law Administrator, Punjab and others (1979 SCMR 484),
Mazhar Naeem Qureshi. Vs. The State (1999 SCMR 828), Ajmeel
Khan. Vs. Abdur Rahim and others (PLD 2009 SC 102), Hayatullah
Khan and another. Vs. Muhammad Khan and others (2011 SCMR
1354), Muhammad Ali. Vs. Additional I. G. (supra) and S. N. Sharma.
Vs. Bipen Kumar Tiwari and others (AIR 1970 SC 786).
20.
Next comes the vires of the provisions contained in sub-
section 6 of Section 22-A and Section 25 of the Cr.P.C. A provision of
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
27
law can be declared ultra vires if it is violative of the provisions of
the
Constitution
which
guarantee
fundamental
rights,
independence of judiciary or its separation from the executive. An
examination and empirical verification of these provisions will show
that they do not infringe any of the fundamental rights guaranteed
by the Constitution. They on the contrary, not only facilitate their
enforcement but also guard against their infringement by providing
expeditious and inexpensive justice to the people at their doorstep.
It does not even remotely impinge upon the independence of
judiciary nor does it militate against the concept of its separation
from the executive. When the Ex-officio Justice of Peace passes
orders, issues directions, or takes actions under the aegis of judiciary
rather than the executive, he instead of going under the thumb of
the executive, in fact, brings the executive under the thumb of law.
We, therefore, without a moment’s hesitation hold that these
provisions cannot be declared ultra vires on either of the criteria
mentioned above. Their vires even on the yardstick of the legislative
competence cannot be questioned when we don’t find any
defect in the legislative competence nor has it been imputed
thereto by any of the parties before us.
21.
Having thus considered, we hold that the functions
performed by the Ex-officio Justice of Peace being quasi judicial in
nature cannot be termed as executive, administrative or ministerial;
that such functions being complementary to those of the police do
not amount to interference in the investigative domain of the latter
and thus cannot be held to be violative of the judgments of this
Court rendered in the cases of Muhammad Bashir. Vs. Station House
Officer, Okara Cantt. and others and Brig. (Retd) Imtiaz Ahmad. Vs.
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
28
Government of Pakistan through Secretary, Interior Division,
Islamabad and 2 others (supra) and that insertion of sub-section 6
of Section 22-A and 25 of the Cr.P.C. through the Code of Criminal
Procedure (3rd Amendment Ordinance) CXXXI of 2002 is not ultra
vires by any attribute. In this view of the matter, we direct that the
cases be listed before the benches for decision in accordance with
law. We, while parting with the judgment appreciate the
enlightened assistance rendered by Khawaja Haris Ahmad, learned
Sr. ASC who despite his heavy pre-occupations honoured the words
of this Court.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Announced in open Court at Islamabad on ________________
Judge
‘Not approved for reporting’
M. Azhar Malik
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
29
Manzoor Ahmad Malik, J.- I have had the privilege of
going through the erudite judgment rendered by my learned brother
Hon’ble Mr. Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan. While agreeing with the conclusion
drawn by his lordship, I am adding following note to attend to certain
aspects which are germane to the lis.
2.
The past experience of around 14 years (since the insertion of
these provisions into the Code of Criminal Procedure) would
unmistakeably reveal that these provisions especially Section 22-A of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, though beneficial and advantageous to the
public at large, yet in myriad cases, it has been misused and abused.
3.
Once a false criminal case is registered against an individual,
it becomes exceedingly difficult for him/her to get rid of it. The time and
money which is spent on acquiring a clean chit by way of cancellation of
the case or acquittal is not hard to fathom. There is no denying the fact that
at times false and frivolous cases are got registered just to humble and
harass the opposite party. In such a milieu, powers given to an ex-officio
Justice of the Peace under sub-section (6) of Section 22-A, Code of
Criminal Procedure, to issue appropriate directions on a complaint filed by
an aggrieved person for registration of a criminal case (Clause-i) and for
transfer of investigation from one police officer to another (Clause-ii)
though efficacious and expeditious besides being at the doorstep, but at the
same time, these provisions should not be unbridled or open-ended. These
provisions must be defined, structured and its contour delineated to obviate
misuse by influential and unscrupulous elements. Therefore:-
(i)
The ex-officio Justice of the Peace, before issuance of a
direction on a complaint for the non-registration of a criminal
case under sub-section (6)(i) of section 22-A, Code of
Criminal Procedure must satisfy himself that sufficient
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
30
material is available on the record, such as application to the
concerned SHO for registration of the criminal case and on
his refusal or reluctance, complaint to the higher police
officers i.e. DPO, RPO etc., to show that the aggrieved
person, before invoking the powers of ex-officio Justice of
the Peace, had recourse to the high ups in the police
hierarchy.
(ii)
So far as transfer of investigation of a criminal case from one
police officer to another police officer is concerned, a
complete mechanism has been provided in the Police Order,
2002. However, Clause (ii) of Sub-section (6) of Section 22-
A, Code of Criminal Procedure has given power to the ex-
officio Justice of the Peace to issue appropriate direction to
the concerned police authorities for the transfer of
investigation of a case from one police officer to another, but
it does not prescribe a criterion or mechanism in so many
words as to what might be the standard or what reasons
should prevail with the ex-officio Justice of the Peace while
issuing such a direction. To issue a direction regarding
transfer of investigation by ex-officio Justice of the Peace
without taking into consideration the attending circumstances
of the case may be counter-productive and may defeat the
purpose of the mechanism as provided in the Police Order,
2002, thus may result into unnecessary interference with the
working of an agency. Therefore, it would be appropriate for
the ex-officio Justice of the Peace, before issuance of any
direction regarding the change of investigation, to satisfy
himself from the available record that the grievance of the
Civil Appeals No. 1491 of 2013, 63-L & 64-L/14, Civil Petitions No. 1945-L/11,
933-L, 1840-L/13, 372-L, 589-L, 737/14, 1155-L/13, etc.
31
aggrieved person (who has filed the application for this
purpose)
has
not
been
redressed
by
the
Police
Officers/authorities as provided in the Police Order, 2002.
(MANZOOR AHMAD MALIK)
JUDGE
Islamabad,
Approved for Reporting
K.Anees
| {
"id": "C.A.1491_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, CJ
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALT AKBAR NAQVI
S
Civil Appeal NO-1496 of 2019
Against judgment dated 05.10.2018 of Federal
Service Tribunal, Islamabad, passed in Appeal
No.256(R)CS of 2016.
M/o Finance through Secretary, etc
Versus
Appellant(s)
Syed Afroz Akhtar Rizvi & others
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Sohail Mehmood, AddI.AGP
Khan Hafeez, JS, Fin. Div
Abdul Ghaffar, SO, Fin. Div
Sajid Javed, Legal Assistant, Fin. Div
For the Respondent(s)
Mr. M. Ramzan Khan, ASC
Syed B. H. Shah, AOR a/w
Respondent No.1 in person.
Date of Hearing: 12.07.2021
ORDER
IJAZ UL AHSAN, J.-
The appellant is
aggrieved of a judgment of the Federal Service Tribunal,
Islamabad ("the Tribunal") dated 05.10.2018. Through
the impugned judgment, while accepting a Service Appeal
bearing No.256(R) CS of 2016 filed by Respondent No.1
(Syed Afroz Akhtar Rizvi) the Tribunal directed that his
last drawn pay as contract employee would stand
protected on his regularization/ appointment on regular
basis
and
the
Appellant
should
provide
Civil Appeal No. 1496 o[2019
2
consequential/ retirement benefits to him within a period
of three months.
2. Briefly stated the facts necessary for decision
of this Appeal are that Respondent No.1 was appointed
as Data Entry Operator (BS-12) in National Educational
Information Management System ("NEIMS") on
11.04.1992 on contractual basis. Subsequently, the
employees of NEIMS were transferred to the Academy of
Educational Planning & Management ("AEPM") and were
regularized with effect from 01,07.2008. After
regularization, the Respondent rendered services in
AEPM and retired 8 years later. He submitted an
application requesting that he may be regularized with
effect from his initial appointment and his services from
11.04.1992 to 30.06.2008 be counted towards
determination/ fixation of his pensionary benefits. Such
application was rejected by the Appellant. This prompted
the Respondent to file an appeal which was allowed vide
judgment dated 01,02.2017. The said judgment was
challenged before this Court through CPLA No.1255 of
2017 which was converted into an appeal and allowed
vide order dated 22.03.2018. The matter was remanded
to the Tribunal for decision afresh. In post remand
proceedings, the appeal of the Respondent was again
allowed, vide impugned judgment dated 05.10.2018.
CiuliAppeal No. 1 496 of 2019
3
3. Leave to appeal was granted by this Court on
29.08.20 18 inter alia in the following terms:-
"Submits that the impugned judgment of the
learned tribunal dated 05.10.2018 fails to apply the
principle laid down in Chairman, Pakistan Railway,
Government of Pakistan v. Shah Jahan Shah (PLD 2016
SC 534) and reproduced in the impugned judgment. The
period of temporary service exceeding 5 years can be
added towards the government service pension if he is
otherwise entitled to pension. This principle contained in
article 371-A of the Civil Service Regulations (CSR) has
been affirmed in the aforenoted judgment. On the other
hand, the respondent fails to satisfy the condition of
article 371-A of CSR and is therefore not entitled to
receive pension. Y et the Tribunal has awarded him that
relief:
4. The learned Additional Attorney General for
Pakistan appearing for the Appellant submits that the
Respondent was appointed purely on temporary basis in
NEIMS, his services were regularized on 18.08.2008 in
AEPM which in essence was a fresh appointment. His
application for grant of pensionary benefits was
disallowed on the ground that he did not meet the
criteria of qualifying service of 10 years. He maintains
that the period from 1992 to 2008 cannot be counted for
the purpose of determining qualifying service in view of
the fact that qualifying service has to be performed in a
Government Department and at least for a period of ten
years. He further maintains that the Tribunal has
misinterpreted and misapplied the provisions of CSR
Ch,iI Appeal No. 1496 o[2019
4
352, 361 and 365 and has come to the conclusions
which are patently erroneous. He relies on a judgment of
this Court reported as Chairman, Pakistan Railway,
Government of Pakistan v. Shah Jahan Shah (PLD 2016
Sc 534) and submits that the Tribunal has totally
misinterpreted the same. He further maintains that the
Finance Division has issued policy guidelines vide Office
Memorandum No.4(2)R-2/ 2014-237 dated 07.04.2015
for protection of pay of gazetted contract employees on
their regularization/ employment on regular basis. As per
para 1(v) of the said OM, the services rendered on
contract basis do not qualify for pension/ gratuity. He
further submits that benefit of pay protection is
admissible to the Respondent but pensionary benefits are
not admissible for the contract period. However,
pensionary benefits for regular service from the date of
regularization are admissible to regular employees under
the Rules.
S. The learned ASC for Respondent No.1 has
defended the impugned judgment of the Tribunal. He
maintains that admittedly the Respondent has rendered
uninterrupted and continuous contractual service in
NEIMS from 1992 to 2008. That being so, the said period
which comes to around 15 years is liable to be counted
towards his pensionary benefits and denial by the
Civil Appeod No. 1496 of 2019
5
Department to grant him the benefit of pension was
patently illegal as had correctly been held so by the
Tribunal. He further submits that the correct
interpretation of CSR 352, 361 and 365 is that if a
contractual employee who is subsequently regularized
has rendered, in aggregate, service in excess of the
qualifying service as defined in the Civil Service Rules,
such employee is entitled to pensionary benefits. He also
relies on the judgment of this Court in the case of Shah
Jahan Shah (supra).
6. We have heard the learned Additional Attorney
General Pakistan as well as learned ASC for Respondent
No.1 and have examined the relevant provisions of Civil
Service Regulations as interpreted by this Court from
time to time. An analysis of the said provisions and
judgments of this Court more specifically a relatively
recent judgment of this Court in Shah Jahan Shah's case
shows that the following general principles apply to
employees who have worked against contractual posts
which were subsequently converted into regular posts for
the purpose of grant and calculation of pension:
I. an employee who was employed on
contractual basis and is subsequently
regularized may be entitled to pensionary
benefits provided;
Civil A ppeal No. 1496 of 2019
i) he is eligible for pension having served for
the qualifying period (10 years) as a
II
regular employee.
ii) for the purpose of calculating pensionary
benefits his service as a contractual
employee can be factored in to provide
him any financial benefit that may be due
to him.
iii) the period spent in employment as a
contractual employee and as a regular
employee cannot be aggregated in order
to determine his eligibility for entitlement
to pension.
iv) eligibility to receive pension is directly
related to rendering qualifying service as
a regular employee. Unless an employee
has performed services in a regular
appointment for the duration of the
qualifying period (10 years), he is not
entitled to receive pension.
7. In case, an employee has served a Government
Department for the duration of the period qualifying him
to receive pension, the period spent as a contractual
employee may be added to his regular qualifying service
only and only for the purpose of calculating his pension
and for no other purpose. The provisions of Article 371-A
Ciull Appeal No, 1496 o[2019
7
of CSR start with a non obstante clause which means
that the said Article does not relate to the question
entitlement or eligibility to receive pension. It is clearly
and obviously restricted to counting the period of a
minimum of five years which has been rendered by a
temporary contractual employee to be taken into account
with the object of calculating the quantum of his pension
and not more. The non obstante clause in Article 371-A
of CSR does not allow those who do not fulfil the
requisite conditions for qualifying for pension to bypass
such conditions and add up regular and contractual
periods of employment for the purpose of meeting the
eligibility criterion of ten years of service. Such an
interpretation would create absurd situations and would
render other provisions and Articles of CSR redundant,
unnecessary and surplus. We are therefore in no manner
of doubt that Article 371 of CSR does not allow
Government Servants rendering temporary service in a
temporary establishment for more than 5 years to be
entitled for grant of pension rather such period can be
counted towards calculation of pension only if otherwise
entitled to pension by meeting the criteria of qualifying
service.
8. It is not disputed that the Respondent
rendered continuous service from 1992 to 2008 as Data
Chill A ppeal No. 1496 of 2019
8
+
I
Entry Operator in NIEMS. It is also not disputed that he
was regularized in 2008 and retired in 2016 before
meeting the criteria of qualifying service. That being so,
the benefit of Article 371-A of CSR was not available to
him as he did not qualify for the pensionary benefits
which qualification is a necessary pre-requisite for grant
of pension.
9. It may also be pointed out that the earlier view
taken by a three member Bench of this Court in the case
of Mir Ahmad Khan v. Secretary to Government & others
(1997 SCMR 1477) was declared per incuriam in a five
member judgment of this Court rendered in Shah Jahan
Shah's case ibid. As such, the view consistently taken by
this Court in a situation where the services of a
contractual employee are converted into regular
employment is that although the period spent in
contractual employment subject to a minimum of five
years can be included in calculating pensionary benefits
but only and only in a situation where the employee is
otherwise entitled/ eligible to receive pension subject to
having rendered qualifying service (10 years) in
permanent employment. Unless he meets the criteria of
having served for the duration of the qualifying period,
the period spent in contractual employment cannot be
added to make up for any deficiency in qualifying service
S
Civil Appeal No. 1496 of 2019
S
for the purpose of eligibility to receive pension. The
Tribunal has clearly and obviously taken an incorrect
and erroneous view of the law and has been unable to
appreciate the essence and tenor of Shah Jahan Shah's
case ibid which is an authoritative declaration of law on
the subject by this Court. Reference of the Tribunal to
selective portions of the alorenoted judgments are found
to be out of context leading to incorrect and erroneous
interpretation of the relevant principles of law. We
therefore find that the impugned judgment of the
Tribunal dated 05.10.2018 is unsustainable. It is
accordingly set aside. Consequently, the listed appeal is
allowed and the Service Appeal bearing No.265(R) of CS
2016 filed by Respondent No.1 (Syed Afroz Akhtar Rizvi)
before the Tribunal is dismissed.
ISLAMABAD, THE
12 of July, 2021
ZR/*
Afet Approved For Reporting
-.
I
| {
"id": "C.A.1496_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, CJ
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1499 & 1500 OF 2019
(On appeal against the judgment dated 10.09.2018 passed by
the Federal Service Tribunal, Lahore in Appeal Nos. 243(L) &
244(L)/2016)
Divisional Superintendent Postal Services Jhang and another
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Siddique Ahmed
(In CA 1499/2019)
Jhandy Khan
(In CA 1500/2019)
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Sohail Mehmood, Addl. Att. General
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
(In both cases)
For the Respondent (1):
In person in both cases
Date of Hearing:
08.07.2021
…
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI, J.- Through these appeals by
leave of the Court under Article 212(3) of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973, the appellants have called in question the
vires of the impugned judgment dated 10.09.2018 passed by the
learned Federal Service Tribunal, Lahore, whereby the Service Appeals
filed by the respondents were allowed and the penalty of dismissal
from service was converted into withholding of one increment for two
years.
2.
Briefly stated the facts of the matter are that the
respondents in both the appeals namely Siddique Ahmed and Jhandy
Khan were working as Postmen. The allegation against the
respondents is that they have misappropriated money orders
amounting to Rs.50,000/- and Rs.15000/- respectively by forging
signatures of the payees and showed the same to have been paid to
the rightful owners. During the course of investigation, the respondents
confessed their guilt, which led to issuance of Show Cause Notices to
them by the competent authority on account of inefficiency, misconduct
and corruption. The respondents submitted their explanations before
the Authorized Officer in which they admitted their guilt. Ultimately,
Civil Appeal Nos. 1499 & 1500/2019
-: 2 :-
after affording an opportunity of personal hearing, the competent
authority vide separate orders dated 06.11.2015 imposed major
penalty of dismissal from service upon the respondents. The
respondents preferred departmental appeals but the same stood
dismissed vide orders dated 18.01.2016 & 22.01.2016. Being
aggrieved, the respondents filed Service Appeals before the learned
Federal Service Tribunal, which have been allowed vide impugned
judgment and the major penalty of dismissal from service has been
converted into withholding of one increment for two years. Hence,
these appeals by leave of the Court.
3.
The crux of the arguments advanced by learned Additional
Attorney General is that the respondents have themselves admitted
that they have put forged signatures of the payees and kept the money
with them; that merely the fact that subsequently, they returned back
the misappropriated amount does not absolve them of their liability;
that they were duty bound to either deliver the money orders to the
payees or in case they were not available, to handover the same to the
Post office; that the learned Service Tribunal also taken note of the fact
that the money orders were used by the respondents for their own
purpose
and
they
were
habitual
in
committing
temporarily
misappropriation of the money orders but despite that it allowed the
appeals, which is not sustainable in the eyes of law.
4.
The respondents, who appeared in person, admitted that
although they had kept the amount of money orders with them but it
was on the asking of the payees, who were out of town due to their
official commitments.
5.
We have heard learned Law Officer as also the
respondents in person and have perused the available record.
6.
In the present case, the fact of misappropriation of the
money orders amount is not disputed. The respondents, who appeared
in person, have admitted before us that instead of delivering the said
amount to the payees, they kept the same with them for 10/15 days.
However, they have stated that it was on the asking of the payees,
who according to them were out of town. On our specific query, as to
whether they were not supposed to handover the money orders back to
the Post Office if the payees were not available at the address to which
they admitted that they ought to have done so. According to learned
Law Officer, the respondents did not take this stance in their written
Civil Appeal Nos. 1499 & 1500/2019
-: 3 :-
statements, which they had submitted before the Authorized Officer.
Although, the said written statements are not annexed with these
appeals but the respondents did not join this issue before us, which
shows their implied admission. This Court in the case of Divisional
Superintendent, Postal Services Vs. Muhammad Arif Butt (2021 SCMR
1033) while dealing with the similar case where the respondent
postman instead of delivering the amount to the rightful owner had
utilized the amount of Rs.36,400/- for his personal use, has candidly
held that “a Government servant who is found to have misappropriated
public money, notwithstanding its amount, breaches the trust and
confidence reposed in a Government servant who is charged with the
responsibility of handling public money. Misappropriation of the same,
whether temporary or permanent and irrespective of the amount
constitutes dishonesty and misconduct. Such an employee/individual
has no place in Government Service because he breaks the trust and
proves himself to be unworthy of the confidence that the State reposes
in him. It is a fundamentally important requirement of his job that
Rules and regulations are followed and violations be dealt with
strictly.” In paragraph 7 of the impugned judgment, the learned
Federal Service itself taken note of the fact that the respondents had
used the money orders’ amount for their own purpose and they are in
the habit of committing temporarily misappropriation of the same
amount but despite that it took a lenient view, which was not
warranted in law because misappropriation of the amount either
meager or huge results in breach of trust which is reposed in a
government servant and the delinquent has no right to be retained in
service.
7.
For what has been discussed above, these appeals are
allowed and the impugned judgment is set aside.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
8th of July, 2021
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1499_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, CJ
Mr. Justice Jawwad S. Khawaja
Mr. Justice Sh. Azmat Saeed
CIVIL APPEALS NO.149 AND 150 OF 2010.
(On appeal from the judgments of the High Court of
Sindh, Karachi, dated 07.05.2008 & 28.02.2008,
passed in CPs No.D-442 & D-441 of 2007,
respectively)
Habibullah Energy Limited
In CA.149/2010.
Zonal Labour Union Lakhra
and others.
In CA.150/2010.
… Appellants
VERSUS
WAPDA through its
Chairman and others.
In CA.149/2010.
Federation of Pakistan
through Secretary M/o W&P
and others.
In CA.150/2010.
… Respondents
----
For the Appellants (s)
: Miangul Hassan Aurangzeb, ASC
Mr. Arshad Ali Ch., AOR
(in CA.149/2010)
Mr. Tariq Mehmood, Sr. ASC
(in CA.150/2010)
On Court’s Notice
: Mr. Shah Khawar, Addl. AGP
CAs.149/2010, etc.
2
For Chairman, WAPDA &
Lakhra Power Generation
: Mr. Shahid Hamid, Sr. ASC
For M/o W&P
: Raja Abdul Ghafoor, ASC/AOR
Mr. Saifullah Chatha, Secy., W&P
Mr. Zargham Ishaq, MD, PEPCO
Barrister Asghar Ali, Sr. Legal Consultant
For the Privatization
Commission
: Mr. Abdul Haseeb Khan,
Sr. Legal Consultant
For NEPRA
: Kh. Muhammad Naeem, Chairman
For the Associated Lakhra
Energy
: Mr. Wasim Sajjad, Sr. ASC
Mr. Mehr Khan Malik, AOR
Date of Hearing
: 19-21.08.2013.
JUDGMENT
SH. AZMAT SAEED, J.- The Water & Power
Development Authority (WAPDA) granted 20-years lease to
M/s. Associated Group (M/s. AG) in respect of GENCO-IV
Lakhra Power Generation Company Limited on 11.09.2006. The
said transaction was challenged by M/s. Habibullah Energy
Limited (M/s. HEL) before the learned High Court of Sindh by
filing Constitutional Petition No.D-442 of 2007, which was
dismissed vide judgment dated 07.05.2008. Being aggrieved,
M/s. HEL challenged the aforesaid judgment through Civil
Petition for Leave to Appeal No.545 of 2008 before this Court.
2.
The grant of lease on 11.09.2006 by WAPDA to
M/s. AG was also challenged by the Zonal Labour Union, Lakhra
CAs.149/2010, etc.
3
(ZLU) and others before the learned High Court of Sindh through
Constitutional Petition No.D-441 of 2007, which was also
dismissed vide judgment dated 28.02.2008. Being aggrieved, the
said ZLU invoked jurisdiction of this Court through Civil Petition
for Leave to Appeal No.351 of 2008.
3.
In both the afore-mentioned Civil Petitions for Leave
to Appeal, this Court vide Order dated 08.03.2010 granted leave
to appeal and the said Petitions were converted into Appeals i.e.
Civil Appeals No.149 and 150 of 2010. The relevant portion of
the Leave Granting Order is reproduced herein below:
“After having heard the learned counsel on behalf
of the parties at length, we feel that there are
certain legal, Constitutional and factual ticklish
questions which need some discussion and
accordingly leave to appeal is granted, inter alia,
on the question as to whether the process has been
completed in a fair and transparent manner. …”.
4.
Both the aforesaid Civil Appeals involving common
questions of law and fact were heard together and were allowed
by this Court vide short Order dated 21.08.2013 in the following
terms:
“We have heard the learned counsel for the
parties
at
length
and
have
examined
the
pleadings/documents
placed
before
us
for
ascertaining as to whether transaction between the
parties i.e. the Lease for 20-years in respect of
Lakhra
Power
Station
GENCO-IV,
dated
11.09.2006,
followed
by
Power
Purchase
Agreement dated 15.12.2007 had been entered into
in a transparent manner following the PEPRA
CAs.149/2010, etc.
4
Rules and allowing open opportunity to interested
parties to participate in the competition for
acquiring the said Leasehold Rights.
2.
The conclusion is that the transaction noted
herein above between M/s. Associated Group
(AG) and the Water and Power Development
Authority (WAPDA) is not sustainable being non-
transparent and also suffers from irregularities,
illegalities, omissions and commissions as well as
violates the relevant Rules as well as precedents
set-forth by the superior Courts.
3.
Therefore, while setting aside the transaction
noted herein above, we direct the Federal
Government
of
Pakistan
to
conduct
an
inquiry/probe to fix the civil and criminal liability
upon the persons/beneficiaries, etc in accordance
with the law as a result of above conclusion.
4.
For the reasons to be recorded later, both the
appeals are allowed with costs throughout.”
The detailed reasons of the above-said Order are as follows:
5.
The brief facts necessary for adjudication of the lis at
hand as gleaned from the voluminous record made available by
the parties are that apparently the Coal Fired Lakhra Power Plant
consisting of three (03) Generating Units of 50 MW each (total
150 MW) were set up by WAPDA in Kashmore, District
Jamshoro, Province of Sindh. The said Plant i.e. Coal Fired
Lakhra Power Plant apparently became operational in 1995. In
February, 2002, the Lakhra Power Generation Company Limited
(LPGC) was incorporated as a subsidiary of WAPDA in which
the said Plant vested.
CAs.149/2010, etc.
5
6.
In the meeting held on 12.06.2001, the Task Force on
Thar Coal decided that the Government of Sindh should take
necessary action/steps to privatize the Lakhra Power Plant in
consultation with WAPDA. Perhaps it was pursuant to the
aforesaid decision that the LPGC was incorporated. On
26.07.2003 an advertisement was issued on behalf of LPGC, inter
alia, in the Daily Dawn, News and the Nation inviting
applications for Pre-qualification/Expression of Interest for
privatization of 150 MW Fluidized Bed Combustion Coal Fired
Power Plant Lakhra near Khanote in District Jamshoro, Sindh.
The salient features of the said advertisement were that a decision
had been taken by the Federal Government to privatize the Lakhra
Power Plant through the Sindh Privatization Commission
(Commission). However, the said Power Plant required major
rehabilitation for which an Internationally experienced Operator
for Rehabilitation, Operation, Maintenance and Management
(ROMM) was to be appointed. The offers were invited only for
the Pre-qualification for appointment as a ROMM Operator.
Pursuant to the aforesaid advertisement, 17 parties purchased the
Information Package, 8 parties responded/submitted their
Expression of Interest disclosing their experiences and financial
standings. However, only two parties i.e. M/s. Muhammad Ismail
CAs.149/2010, etc.
6
& Company (Pvt) Limited, Hyderabad and M/s. Habibullah
Energy Limited, Karachi (the Appellant in Civil Appeal No.149
of 2010) submitted the Pre-qualification documents before the
due date.
It may be pertinent to mention that M/s. AG neither
submitted any Expression of Interest nor any Pre-qualification
documents pursuant to the afore-said advertisement.
7.
The offers made pursuant to the advertisement dated
26.07.2003 were not found satisfactory and in this behalf
objections were also raised by the Commission. Consequently, on
17.03.2004 the Water & Power Development Authority decided
to terminate the process and to undertake an inhouse maintenance
programme, so as to increase the capacity and feasibility of the
said Power Plant. In pursuance of the aforesaid decision, the
Purchase Orders, both local and international, were placed for the
procurement of material for rehabilitation of the Lakhra Power
Plant.
8.
M/s. Rupali Polyester Limited vide letter dated
22.06.2004 expressed its interest in lease of the said Power Plant.
The said request was turned down by WAPDA, thereafter, on
20.08.2005 M/s. AG apparently wrote a letter to WAPDA
expressing its interest to get a lease of the said Power Plant.
CAs.149/2010, etc.
7
Pursuant to the said letter, as per the case of the Federation before
us, a meeting was held in October, 2005 in the Presidency
between M/s. AG and the Chief of Staff to the President, followed
by a meeting with the then President on 29.11.2005.
9.
In the above backdrop M/s. AG wrote a letter on
06.01.2006 to the Chairman, WAPDA which is reproduced
hereunder for reference:
“To
Chairman WAPDA
WAPDA House,
Lahore
Sub: Lease of Lakhra Coal Fired Power Project -
Presentation/Documents
Dear Tariq Bhai,
We appreciate your cooperation in giving us
opportunity to present 3 x 50 MW Lakhra
Fluidized Bed Coal Power Project assessment
study executive summary by PIC Marubeni Energy
Group tomorrow at 3 PM. However, due to the
presentation
scheduled
tomorrow
for
Prime
Minister in Islamabad on the same subject will
request you to kindly reschedule the presentation
for next week?
Per the proper protocol we wanted to brief you
about our work before meeting the Prime Minister
tomorrow but you have been tied up in other
meetings. Our presentation covers the detailed
work that has been carried out and give you a good
overview of the project.
For your information and review please find the
Plant Condition Assessment Report and a draft
MOU. We look forward to meeting you.
Thank you very much,
Sincerely yours,
CAs.149/2010, etc.
8
Sd/-
Iqbal Z. Ahmed
Chairman”
10.
A perusal of the Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) appended with the letter dated 06.01.2006 indicated that
the lease would be for a period of 20-years and in case of
privatization, M/s. AG would have the first right of refusal. In
response, WAPDA vide letter dated 19.01.2006 asked M/s. AG to
submit its technical and financial proposals. On 09.03.2006 the
Representatives of M/s. AG met with the then Federal Minister
for Water & Power and gave a presentation.
11.
A meeting was convened on 22.03.2006, the Minutes
whereof are available on the record wherein the then President
and the Prime Minister, inter alia, took the following decision:
“WAPDA to finalize terms and conditions for
leasing Lakhra Power Plant to Associated Group
within one week.”
12.
WAPDA addressed a letter dated 25.03.2006 to six of
the Companies which had shown interest pursuant to the
advertisement dated 26.07.2003 for Pre-qualification for
appointment as a ROMM Operator, to submit their proposals for
lease of the Lakhra Power Plant within four weeks, which time
was subsequently extended up to 22.05.2006. M/s. AG did not
submit any fresh proposal purportedly in view of the decision
CAs.149/2010, etc.
9
dated 22.03.2006 referred to above. In a subsequent meeting
dated 12.05.2006 chaired by the then President of Pakistan, it was
decided that M/s. AG should be given the first right of refusal in
respect of lease of the Coal Fired Lakhra Power Plant. The said
decision was communicated vide Prime Minister’s Secretariat
letter dated 25.05.2006. M/s. HEL, Appellant in Civil Appeal
No.149 of 2010, was the only Firm which submitted its proposal
by due date i.e. 22.05.2006. Another meeting was held in the
President House at Islamabad on 13.07.2006, in pursuance
whereof vide letter dated 17.07.2006, both M/s. Habibullah
Energy Limited and M/s. Associated Group were advised to
submit their revised bids by 21.07.2006 to be opened on the same
date. Such revised bids were submitted and opened. M/s. AG
made two separate offers based on two separate proposals. One of
the offers of M/s. AG after some adjustments through
negotiations with WAPDA was approved by the Board of
Directors of LPGC on 19.08.2006. The Government of Sindh
vide letter dated 24.08.2006 conveyed its No Objection. The offer
was approved by the WAPDA Board on 06.09.2006 whereupon a
Lease Deed was executed in favour of M/s. AG on 11.09.2006.
Pursuant thereto, we are informed that a Power Purchase
Agreement dated 15.12.2007 has since been executed.
CAs.149/2010, etc.
10
13.
The grant of lease to M/s. AG was challenged
variously, both by the M/s. HEL and the ZLU through two
separate Constitutional Petitions filed before the learned High
Court of Sindh. Both the Constitutional Petitions were dismissed
by two separate judgments dated 07.05.2008 and 28.02.2008.
Feeling aggrieved, M/s. HEL and the ZLU invoked jurisdiction of
this Court through two separate Civil Petitions for Leave to
Appeal No.545 and 351 of 2008, which were converted into
instant appeals i.e. Civil Appeals No.149 and 150 of 2010,
respectively.
14.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties as
well as the learned Additional Attorney General for Pakistan.
15.
It is contended by the learned counsel for the
Appellant-M/s. HEL that the advertisement dated 26.07.2003 was
for inviting applications for Pre-qualification/Expression of
Interest for appointment as a ROMM Operator only. The said
Appellant was one of the two Companies which had submitted its
Pre-qualification documents as is evident from the record. In the
circumstances, the Respondents-WAPDA/LPGC were bound to
pre-qualify the Appellant. M/s. AG did not even participate in the
pre-qualification process and in the absence of such pre-
CAs.149/2010, etc.
11
qualification it was a rank outsider whose bid could not even be
considered by WAPDA/LPGC.
16.
The learned counsel further contended that no specific
advertisement was issued inviting bids for lease of the said Power
Plant and in absence of such an advertisement for information of
public-at-large the entire process was liable to be set aside. Even
otherwise, the offer submitted by M/s. AG was unsolicited,
therefore, invalid. Furthermore, the bid submitted by M/s. AG
contained two alternative proposals, which is not permitted in law
and such bid should have been treated as non-responsive and
rejected. It is added that the documents on record illustrate that
M/s. AG had easy and exclusive access to the persons involved in
the decision making process for grant of lease, as a consequence
whereof the entire process was far from transparent. The learned
counsel further added that a decision to award the Contract to
M/s. AG was taken on 22.03.2006 at the highest level, whereafter
with mala fide intention and by way of deception, notices were
issued on 25.03.2006 to some of the Companies which had
participated in the pre-qualification process for appointment of a
ROMM Operator. Even then, the notices were not issued to all the
parties who had shown their interest in response to the
advertisement dated 26.07.2003 mentioned above. It is further
CAs.149/2010, etc.
12
added that M/s. AG was exclusively granted the first right of
refusal which was not available to any other bidder.
The learned counsel further contended that the transaction
for the lease of the Lakhra Power Plant fell squarely within the
purview of the Privatization Commission Ordinance, 2000
(Ordinance, 2000) and could only be effected by the said
Privatization Commission in accordance with the mode of
privatization prescribed in the Ordinance, 2000 and the Rules
framed thereunder as in view of Section 42 of the said Ordinance,
2000, the provisions thereof would override any other law for the
time being enforce. In short, it is contended that the transaction
was carried out by an Institution which had no jurisdiction in a
manner not provided by law. The learned counsel added that the
provisions of the Public Procurement Rules, 2004 (Rules, 2004)
were not adhered to especially with reference to Pre-qualification.
In view of the above, it is contended that the award of the
Contract to M/s. AG was not sustainable in law.
17.
In support of his contentions, the learned counsel
placed reliance on the judgments, reported as Wattan Party
through President v. Federation of Pakistan through Cabinet
Committee of Privatization, Islamabad and others (PLD 2006 SC
697), Petrosin Corporation (Pvt) Limited and others v. MOL
CAs.149/2010, etc.
13
Pakistan Oil and Gas Co. and others (PLD 2008 SC 472) and
Messrs Subhan Deepwell Corporation, Bahawalpur v. Project
Director, Punjab Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Project HUD
and PHE Department, Lahore and another (2001 CLC 1762). He
also referred to the various provisions of the Rules, 2004 as well
as the PCO 2000 and the Privatisation (Modes and Procedure)
Rules, 2001.
18.
The learned counsel for the Appellant-Zonal Labour
Union, Larkana and others echoed the contentions raised on
behalf of M/s. HEL and further added that the process for
appointment of a ROMM Operator had been formally terminated
and a specific decision in this behalf had been taken which is on
the record. Therefore, grant of lease to M/s. AG was the outcome
of a separate and independent procedure which had been initiated
without the issuance of a public advertisement inviting offers and
in the absence of such public advertisement, the entire process is
illegal and invalid in view of the law laid down by this Court. He
further contended that the offer of M/s. AG was unsolicited and
non-responsive and the Contract had been obtained by it through
unfair means and by exercise of influence on account of its
connections with the decision making Authorities at the highest
level which is self-evident from the record. The learned counsel
CAs.149/2010, etc.
14
further submitted that the award of the Contract was illegal and
void, and should be declared as such.
19.
The learned counsel for M/s. AG controverted the
contentions raised on behalf of the Appellants. He further
contended that the mode, process and the procedure to be adopted
was the prerogative of WAPDA/LPGC and M/s. AG participated
in the same, hence, cannot be penalized for the irregularity, if any,
in the process. He laid great stress that the offer made by M/s. AG
was financially more beneficial to WAPDA/LPGC than any other
offer received by them at any point of time. The offer made by
M/s. AG is also in the public interest, as it would help in
generating electricity at a very economical cost.
20.
The learned counsel for WAPDA at the very outset
stated that perhaps it would have been more appropriate to issue
an advertisement, inviting bids for grant of lease of the
Generating
Plant,
however,
in
the
peculiar
facts
and
circumstances which existed the most efficient and fair procedure
was adopted. He further contended that three (3) Generating Units
at Lakhra desperately needed rehabilitation involving a large
input of fresh capital. A decision to privatize the same was taken
and as a precursor to such privatization, it was decided to appoint
a ROMM Operator. The response to the advertisement in this
CAs.149/2010, etc.
15
behalf was very poor and impractical. Consequently, a decision to
explore alternative possibilities was made and an offer was
received from M/s. AG for lease of the said Plant which also
included a large investment by the lessee. All the Firms and
Companies which showed any interest in the Lakhra Power Plant
were invited and the offers therefrom solicited. M/s. HEL
participated in the said process but the offer made by M/s. AG
admittedly was more economical, hence, it was accepted after
some adjustments for the benefit of WAPDA and LPGC. It is
further contended that the Contract as awarded is bona fide and in
the public interest, therefore, minor inconsequential irregularities
cannot be made basis for invalidating the Contract awarded. It
was also the case of the learned counsel, that in view of the failure
to find a ROMM Operator for the Coal Fired Lakhra Power Plant
for the purpose of rehabilitating the same as a preclude to its
eventual privatization an alternative way forward had to be found.
The peculiar facts and circumstances necessitated the leasing of
the Plant and in this behalf the offer of M/s. AG was accepted
through a proper process. Such offer was not only economical for
the WAPDA but also in the public interest, therefore, minor
deviation, if any, neither adversely effect the integrity of the
process nor furnished a legal basis for judicial review. It is
CAs.149/2010, etc.
16
emphasized that the offer made by M/s. AG was more attractive
than any other offer received from any other party, including M/s.
HEL (Appellant).
21.
The learned counsel was of the view that the
transaction in question had been carried out in exercise of the
powers conferred under Section 8(2)(vii) read with the
explanation to Section 8(2)(v) of the WAPDA Act, 1958 and did
not come within the purview of the Ordinance, 2000.
22.
In support of his contentions, the learned counsel
relied upon the judgment, reported as Dr. Akhtar Hassan Khan
and others v. Federation of Pakistan and others (2012 SCMR
455). The learned counsel also disputed the locus standi and bona
fide of the Appellants.
23.
The learned Additional Attorney General for Pakistan
appearing on behalf of the Federation disowned the award of the
Contract to M/s. AG. On instructions, he stated that the Federal
Government is of the view that the entire leasing transaction is
without lawful authority and in excess of jurisdiction. A number
of irregularities and serious lapses were committed, impairing the
transparency, with the sole purpose of benefiting a particular
party/beneficiary at the cost of the State and the people.
24.
Heard. Available record perused.
CAs.149/2010, etc.
17
25.
Adverting first to the legal objection raised by the
learned counsel for WAPDA regarding the locus standi of the
present Appellants to invoke the constitutional jurisdiction of the
learned High Court, it may be noted that such objection is with
reference to M/s. ZUL (Appellant in Civil Appeal No.150 of
2010) and not with regards to M/s. HEL (Appellant in Civil
Appeal No.149 of 2010). Since both the Constitution Petitions
from which the instant two Appeals arose had been filed to
challenge the same transaction of the contract/lease granted in
favour of M/s. AG for which M/s. HEL had also submitted a bid,
the said legal objection pales into insignificance and looses all
relevance. Even otherwise, as has been repeatedly held the
jurisdiction of the Superior Courts of Judicial Review for the
enforcement of Fundamental Rights is not a “closed shop”
particularly, in the context of Public Interest Litigation (PIL),
therefore, the contentions of the learned counsel even on a stand
alone basis with reference to Civil Appeal No.150 of 2010 are
rather suspect, more so as the jurisdiction had been invoked by
the workers employed in a public Asset to question the
proprietary and integrity of the process of the transfer of rights in
such Asset.
CAs.149/2010, etc.
18
26.
The nature, scope and extent of the power of judicial
review by the superior Courts of administrative actions and the
grounds on the basis whereof such actions can be set aside has
evolved with the passage of time and its contours stand clearly
defined especially in the context of the award of the contracts by
the State or its instrumentalities. In the case, reported as Messrs
Airport Support Services v. The Airport Manager, Quaid-e-Azam
International Airport, Karachi and others (1998 SCMR 2268), the
following was held:
"Further a contract, carrying elements of public
interest, concluded by functionaries of the State,
has to be just, fair transparent, reasonable and
free of any taint of mala fides, all such aspects
remaining open for judicial review. The rule is
founded
on
the
premises
that
public
functionaries, deriving authority from or under
law, are obligated to act justly, fairly equitably,
reasonably,
without
any
element
of
discrimination
and
squarely
within
the
parameters of law, as applicable in a given
situation. Deviations, if of substance, can be
corrected through appropriate orders under
Article 199 of the Constitution. In such behalf
even where a contract, pure and simple, is
involved, provided always that public element
presents itself and the dispute does not entail
evidentiary facts of a disputed nature, redress
may be provided. A number of precedents have
contextually come to occupy the field and, inter
alia, may be noted (1) Anjuman-e-Ahmadiya,
Sargodha v. Deputy Commissioner, Sargodha,
PLD 1966 SC 639, (2) The D. F.O. South Khari
v. Ram Sanehi Singh, 1971 (3) Supreme Court
Cases 864-AIR 1973 SC 205; (4) Rashid A.
Khan v. West Pakistan Railway Board PLD 1973
Lahore 733; (5) The Majilisi-lntizamia, Jamia
Masiid, Ghulam Muhammad Abad Colony v.
Secretary to Government of West Pakistan,
CAs.149/2010, etc.
19
Communication and Works Department, PLD
1975 SC 355, (6) Muhammad Ashraf Ali v.
Muhammad Naseer and 2 others 1986 SCMR
1096 (7) M/s. Dwarkadas Marfatia & Sons v.
Board of Trustees, Bombay Port, AIR 1989
Supreme-Court 1642; (8) M.H. Abidi v. State
Life Insurance Corporation, 1990 MLD 563; (9)
Mahabir Auto Stores v. Indian Oil Corporation,
AIR 1990 Supreme Court 1031; (10) Shrilekha
Vidyarthi v. State of U.P. AIR 1991 Supreme
Court 537; (11) M/s Pacific Multinational (Pvt.)
Ltd v. Inspector-General of Police Sindh PLD
1992
Karachi
283;
(12)
Messrs
Presson
Manufacturing Ltd. v. Secretary Ministry of
Petroleum & Natural Resources and 2 others
1995 MLD 15 (Lahore) and (16) Shoaib Bilal
Corporation v. Government of Pakistan KLR
1997 Rev. Cas. 27 Lahore."
The aforesaid judgment was noted and followed by this Court in
the case, reported as Messrs Ramna Pipe and General Mills (Pvt)
Limited v. Messrs Sui Northern Gas Pipe Lines (Pvt) and others
(2004 SCMR 1274).
27.
This Court, in the case, reported as Raja Mujahid
Muzaffar and others v. Federation of Pakistan and others (2012
SCMR 1651), has held as under:
“31. Public funds, public property, licenses,
jobs or any other government largesse is to be
dealt with by public functionaries on behalf of
and for the benefit of the people. Public authority
must necessarily be examined in accordance with
law keeping in view the Constitutional Rights of
the citizens. Thus, this Court has not hesitated
in the exercise of its jurisdiction of judicial
review …”.
In Suo Motu Case No.13 of 2009 (PLD 2011 SC 619), this Court
held as follows:
CAs.149/2010, etc.
20
“24. It is well-settled that in matters in which the
Government bodies exercise their contractual
powers, the principle of judicial review cannot be
denied. However, in such matters, judicial review
is intended to prevent arbitrariness or favouritism
and it must be exercised in larger public interest. It
has also been held by the Courts that in matters of
judicial review the basic test is to see whether
there is any infirmity in the decision making
process. It is also a well-settled principle of law
that since the power of judicial review is not an
appeal from the decision, the Court cannot
substitute its decision for that of the decision
maker. The interference with the decision making
process is warranted where it is vitiated on account
of
arbitrariness,
illegality,
irrationality
and
procedural impropriety or where it is actuated by
mala fides. …”
It was further held as follows:
“32… The Governmental bodies are invested with
powers to dispense and regulate special services by
means of leases, licences, contracts, quotas, etc.,
where they are expected to act fairly, justly and in
a transparent manner and such powers cannot be
exercised in an arbitrary or irrational manner.
Transparency lies at the heart of every transaction
entered into by, or on behalf of, a public body. To
ensure transparency and fairness in contracts,
inviting of open bids is a prerequisite. The
reservations or restrictions, if any, in that behalf
should not be arbitrary and must be justifiable on
the basis of some policy or valid principles, which
by
themselves
are
reasonable
and
not
discriminatory.”
In the case, reported as Maulana Abdul Haque Baloch and others
v. Government of Balochistan through Secretary, Industries and
Mineral Development and others (PLD 2013 SC 641), the
following was held:
117. As regards the power and jurisdiction of the
municipal courts to nullify any action of the
CAs.149/2010, etc.
21
Government where it is established that the
decision-making authority has exceeded its powers;
committed an error of law or breach of the rules of
natural justice; reached a decision which no
reasonable forum would have reached; or abused its
powers, …”.
In the case of Corruption in Hajj Arrangements (PLD 2011 SC
963), this Court has held as under:
“29. The jurisdiction of this Court is always
exercised judiciously and with judicial restraint.
All those cases which are quoted hereinabove
clearly indicate that in the matter of exercise of
power of judicial review in Pakistan we have not
travelled so far as is the position in the
neighboring country. By now, the parameters of
the Court's power of judicial review of
administrative or executive action or decision
and the grounds on which the Court can interfere
with the same are well settled. Indisputably, if
the action or decision is perverse or is such that
no
reasonable body of persons, properly
informed; could come to or has been arrived at
by the authority misdirecting itself by adopting a
wrong approach or has been influenced by
irrelevant or extraneous matters the Court would
be justified in interfering with the same.
[Commissioner of Income Tax v. Mahindra
(AIR 1984 SC 1182)]. The exercise of
constitutional powers by the High Court and the
Supreme Court is categorised as power of
judicial
review.
Every
executive
or
administrative action of the State or other
statutory or public bodies is open to judicial
scrutiny and the High Court or the Supreme
Court can, in exercise of the power of judicial
review under the Constitution, quash the
executive action or decision which is contrary to
law or is violative of Fundamental Rights
guaranteed by the Constitution. With the
expanding horizon of Articles dealing with
Fundamental Rights, every executive action of
the Government or other public bodies, if
arbitrary, unreasonable or contrary to law, is now
amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the Superior
Courts and can be validly scrutinised on the
touchstone of the Constitutional mandates.
CAs.149/2010, etc.
22
[Common Cause, A Regd. Society v. Union of
India (AIR 1999 SC 2979)]. In the case of Union
Carbide Corporation v. Union of India [AIR
1992 SC 248 = 1991 SCR (1) Supl. 251].
In the case of Stretching Computers Ltd v. Messers M. and N.
Publications Ltd (AIR 1996 SC 51), it was also held as under:
“… It has also been pointed out that for securing
the public interest one of the methods recognized
is to invite tenders affording opportunity to
submit offers for consideration in an objective
manner. However, there may be cases where in
the special facts and circumstances and due to
compelling reasons which must stand the test of
Article 14 of the Constitution, departure of the
aforesaid rule can be made. …”
28.
An overview of the judgments reproduced or referred
to herein above leaves little room for doubt that it is now a well-
settled principle of law that all public functionaries must exercise
public authority, especially while dealing with the public
property, public funds or Assets in a fair, just, transparent and
reasonable manner, untainted by mala fide without discrimination
and in accordance with law, keeping in view the Constitutional
Rights of the Citizens. This would hold true even in the absence
of any specific statutory provisions setting forth the process in
this behalf. Therefore, it is not really relevant whether the
transaction in question was governed by the Ordinance, 2000 or
the Rules, 2004 or neither. It is an equally well settled principle of
law that such actions of public functionaries are always subject to
CAs.149/2010, etc.
23
Judicial Review. No doubt, while exercising its jurisdiction, the
Superior Courts neither sit in appeal over the administrative
actions nor interfere on account of inconsequential deviations, as
has been observed in Dr. Akhtar Hassan Khan’s case (supra).
However, where the administrative authority acts in a
discriminatory manner and action fails the test of reasonableness,
transparency and/or is otherwise unjust and unfair or suffer from
mala fide, the Courts not only are vested with the jurisdiction to
set aside such action but any failure in such an eventuality to
exercise the power of Judicial Review, when invoked, would
make the Court a party to such unreasonable, unfair, mala fide
and illegal action.
29.
Examining the transaction, the subject matter of the
instant case in the light of the principles of Judicial Review
enumerated hereinabove, it appears that the original process
initiated through the advertisement dated 26.07.2003 was for the
appointment of a ROMM Operator and was commenced through
the Government of Sindh in consultation with WAPDA. The said
process was formally terminated on 17.03.2004. The disputed
contract of lease was a result of independent process undertaken
by WAPDA unrelated to the procedure initiated pursuant to the
advertisement dated 26.07.2003. No fresh public advertisement
CAs.149/2010, etc.
24
was issued. Such an advertisement is universally accepted as a
condition precedent for ensuring a free, fair, open, competitive
and transparent process for transfer of public assets or rights
therein. In fact no compelling reasons have been pleaded at the
bar by WAPDA for not issuing such an advertisement. The
absence of such an advertisement, alone in fact and under the
circumstances of the case, is fatal to the transaction in question.
30.
M/s. Rupali Polyester Limited vide letter dated
22.06.2004 expressed its interest to lease the said Power Plant,
which was turned down and rightly so by WAPDA. However,
when M/s. AG approached WAPDA in this behalf, it was
welcomed with open arms.
31.
The admitted record also reveals that M/s. AG was
unilaterally given prior access to the Power Plant evidencing the
availability of an unfair advantage and access to the decision
making authorities at the highest level not only in WAPDA but
also in the Presidency.
32.
The documents and facts, as made available by
WAPDA, revealed that no formal decision was taken by WAPDA
on its own to lease out the Power Plant that too for a period of 20
years. In fact, such decision was taken for WAPDA by M/s. AG,
CAs.149/2010, etc.
25
as it is apparent from the MOU appended with the letter dated
06.01.2006.
33.
The decision in principle to award the contract to M/s.
AG was taken on 22.03.2006 at the highest level by the President
of Pakistan, Prime Minister of Pakistan and the Chairman,
WAPDA. Thereafter, without issuing any advertisement for the
information of the public at large, some of such firms, which had
originally shown their Expression of Interest for being
appointment as a ROMM Operator, pursuant to the advertisement
dated 26.07.2003 were contacted. Such procedure was not only
illegal but in fact a farcical and mala fide attempt to clothe the
transaction with some semblance of legality. The said process and
the subsequent approval by the Board of WAPDA to M/s. AG
appears to be an infertile attempt to paper over the illegalities.
34.
The aforesaid deviations are not trifle but go to the
very heart of the matter. The omissions and commissions make it
clear and obvious that by no stretch of the imagination, the
transaction in question is legal, transparent, fair, open or the result
of a competitive and fair process. The Power Plant is a public
asset and those entrusted therewith were sadly found wanting.
The transaction has not only been disowned by the Federal
Government of which the WAPDA is an instrumentality but it has
CAs.149/2010, etc.
26
also categorically taken the stand that the transaction was beset
with irregularities, and serious lapses were committed impairing
its transparency with the sole purpose of benefiting the
beneficiary i.e. M/s. AG. The learned counsel appearing for M/s.
AG found himself, unable to defend the process culminating in
the transaction in question, leaving WAPDA floundering alone in
the sea of its own irregularities and illegalities.
35.
Thus, for the foregoing reasons, these appeals are
allowed with costs through out, the impugned judgments are set
aside and the transaction of lease with M/s. AG and the Power
Purchase Agreement executed in pursuance thereof held to be not
sustainable and the direction was issued to the Federal
Government to fix the civil and criminal liability.
Chief Justice
I agree and have also added a separate concurring note.
Islamabad
Judge
21.08.2013.
‘APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
Mahtab/*
Judge
CAs 149-150/2010
1
Jawwad S. Khawaja, J. I have had the benefit of going through the reasoning of
my learned brother Azmat Saeed, J., in support of the short order dated 21.8.2013. While
in agreement with his conclusions, I am writing this concurring opinion to provide
additional reasons in support of the said order.
2.
At the outset, it is important to clarify a fundamental principle regarding the
nature of public sector enterprises which seems to have eluded learned counsel for the
respondents. Public sector enterprises, such as the power plant at Lakhra, are public
assets which belong beneficially to the people of Pakistan. While the state is entrusted
with the management of such enterprises, the state agencies responsible for management
do not thereby become owners of the enterprise and its assets. While public sector
enterprises do not have shareholders like private corporations, this does not mean that the
agency responsible for the management of the enterprise can exercise unbridled discretion
in managing the enterprise.
3.
In order to ascertain the proper role of state agencies in the management of public
sector enterprises, it is of critical importance to understand the nature of government as
defined by our constitutional system. Constitutional democracy is premised on a
contractual theory of government, whereby power is delegated by the people to the
government in accordance with the terms of the Constitution. The preamble to the
Constitution stipulates, inter alia, “that it is the will of the people of Pakistan to establish an
order.” State agencies responsible for the management of publicly owned companies are
part of the order established by the will of the people, and thereby possess merely
delegated authority.
4.
Rather than being owners of public sector enterprises, state agencies stand in a
fiduciary relationship to the people who are the beneficial owners of the publicly owned
assets. The idea that rulers owe a fiduciary obligation to the ruled is at least two millennia
old. The Roman philosopher and politician Cicero defined the nature of government as
follows in De Officiis, “The guardianship of the state is a kind of trusteeship which should always
be managed to the advantage of the person [or body which has] entrusted rather than of those to
whom it is entrusted.” We have on numerous occasions emphasized the fiduciary nature of
the interaction between the state and the citizen. In Muhammad Yasin v. Federation of
Pakistan (PLD 2012 SC 132), we held that “holders of public office…are first and foremost
CAs 149-150/2010
2
fiduciaries and trustees for the people of Pakistan. And when performing the functions of their
Office, they can have no interest other than the interests of the honourable People of Pakistan.” The
basis of fiduciary relations is the exclusive benefit principle, according to which the
fiduciary has a duty to act solely in the interests of the beneficiary. Fiduciary obligations
depend on the complete commitment of the fiduciary to act in the best interest of the
principal.
5.
It is important to note that a fiduciary obligation is not merely an ethical precept.
As a legal imperative, fiduciaries must act in the best interests of the principal, performing
their functions with care and complete fidelity. In the private law context, where fiduciary
duties are routinely enforced by the courts, elections alone are not considered sufficient to
hold company directors responsible to shareholders and align their interests. Instead, in
the area of corporate law, there is a recognition that the interests of elected directors and
shareholders may diverge. Given that shareholders are numerous and diffuse, it may be
difficult for them to effectively monitor the decisions taken by the board. Further, because
of collective action problems, the shareholders may find it difficult to coordinate and
respond to abuse of discretionary authority by the directors. Hence, corporate law
employs a judicial mechanism, the enforcement of fiduciary duties, to align the interests
of the shareholders and their agent, the board of directors. The structure of the principal-
agent problem is the same in the case of state agencies, such that public officials may have
an incentive to advance their own interests at the expense of the citizens’ interests. In fact,
the need for a judicial mechanism is even more acute in the case of state agencies, since
the principal, the people, is even more numerous and diffuse than the shareholders of a
company.
6.
At this point, it is important to note that not all decisions by state functionaries are
to be subjected to an exacting judicial oversight. This is because the principal, (the people),
has in fact vested state agencies with discretionary power of an administrative nature.
Such delegation of authority by the principal is essential to the efficient functioning of the
government. However, given the possibility of the agent’s deliberate or negligent
deviation from the best interests of the beneficiary, the court will enforce fiduciary
obligations under certain circumstances. A breach of the duty of loyalty, such as in the
case of a self-dealing transaction or one involving conflict of interest, will trigger
CAs 149-150/2010
3
heightened scrutiny by the court. Further, if public officials fail to exercise the duty of care
that is expected of a prudent manager, the court will assess the underlying action or
transaction to ascertain whether the state functionaries have breached their fiduciary
obligations to the people of Pakistan.
7.
The respondent state agency that conducted the leasing process of the Lakhra
Power Generation Company failed to meet the high standard of loyalty and care that is
expected of a fiduciary. Rather than privileging the interests of a particular company
interested in utilizing publicly owned assets for its own benefit, the respondent state
functionaries ought to have acted solely in the interests of their principal, the people of
Pakistan. As elaborated in the lead judgment by my learned brother, the interests of the
principal would have been best served if the requirement of pre-qualification for the
bidding process would have been uniformly applied to all interested companies, and if a
proper advertisement that specially mentioned the intent to ‘lease’ the publicly owned
assets had been published by the respondent authorities. These requirements could have
been met without any administrative burden to such authorities and would have greatly
enhanced the fairness of the bidding process. The failure to uniformly apply rules to all
participants in the bidding process or to publish proper advertisement to give notice to
potential bidders, suggests that the responsible state authority exercised improper
oversight during the leasing process. State agencies have not been entrusted with publicly
owned assets so that its functionaries can at their will rubber-stamp a decision without
proper review and consideration of its merits. Moreover, favouring one participant in the
process over the others suggests that the process has not been conducted in good faith by
the public officials responsible for the leasing of the power plant at Lakhra.
8.
While the defects in the bidding process are evident, as has been discussed in the
lead judgment in this case, we have been urged by counsel for the respondents to condone
the tainted transaction in the name of ‘public interest’. Of particular concern is the
following submission by Mr. Shahid Hamid, Sr. ASC on behalf of respondents Nos. 1 and
5 (C.M. No. 646 of 2011 in C.A. No. 149 of 2010, emphasis added):
“It is highly unlikely that any re-bidding will lead to a rate better than the
rate… approved on 12.8.2006… Consequently even if there has been any
procedural lapse, the same merits to be condoned in the public interest, as, despite
CAs 149-150/2010
4
all hurdles and difficulties, there was no unfairness/inequity/impropriety in
the final stage of the bidding and its evaluation.”
9.
In the above cited excerpt, the learned counsel has urged this Court to accomplish
the impossible: to condone a breach of the rule of law in public interest. If this Court takes
upon itself to selectively condone infractions of obligations owed by the state to the
people, any semblance of the rule of law in this country will evaporate. Further, learned
counsel has erred in submitting that certain circumstances make it impossible to get a rate
comparable to the one approved in August 2006. If state authorities such as WAPDA were
perfectly adept at knowing ex ante what the highest bidding rate will be, there would be
no need for conducting the bidding process. Finally, learned counsel has argued that since
the final stage of the bidding process was free of procedural defects, we should condone
the lapses in the earlier phases of the process. This is at best a questionable assertion, and
at worst deeply inimical to the idea of the rule of law. To begin with, who shall decide
what the ‘final’ stage of the bidding process will be? A protracted series of defective
decisions followed by a final procedurally adequate decision will not lead to a lawful
outcome. If the courts focus only on the final stage of the process, it will give carte blanche
to the state agencies to abuse the discretion that has been delegated to them by the
principals i.e. the honourable people of Pakistan.
10.
In asking this Court to ‘condone’ a violation of the fiduciary duties owed by the
state agency to the people, the counsel for respondents is implicitly resorting to the now
defunct ‘doctrine of necessity.’ In Mobashir Hassan v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2010 SC
265) we stated emphatically that “the path of expediency and subjective notions of ‘State
necessity’ are dead and buried.” The idea that this Court ought to base its decisions on the
consequences of government action alone without consideration of the decision-making
process is a frontal assault on the very concept of the rule of law. The idea of a
“beneficial” deviation from core fiduciary duties of undivided loyalty, prudence, and
reasonableness, which the state functionaries owe to the people of Pakistan must be
rejected in the strongest terms.
11.
This brings me to another misconception in the arguments of Mr. Wasim Sajjad Sr.
ASC for the Associated Group. In the name of expediency, the Court has been urged to
exercise judicial restraint by condoning the defective aspects of the leasing process and
CAs 149-150/2010
5
the lease agreement in this case. Judicial restraint and activism are value-laden concepts
often employed in the media and in public discourse, to understand the impact of Court
decisions. The Court itself, however, does not operate in the framework of these concepts.
For the Court, as guardian and interpreter of the Constitution, the only concept that
matters is that of the rule of law. The Court will not condone an illegal action by the state
just because it will be perceived as an activist institution. The Constitution defines the role
of the judiciary as upholding the rule of law, and that is the only consideration the Court
will have while adjudicating the matters before it. Further, in the present case, the concept
of judicial restraint is wholly inapplicable, as the case has reached this Court in its
appellate jurisdiction. As an aggrieved party, the petitioner has challenged the judgment
of the High Court of Sindh and we have granted leave to appeal. Exercising restraint in
such a case would be tantamount to denying the opportunity to an aggrieved party to
have an unfavorable judgment reversed by a higher court and would also amount to
denial of due process to such aggrieved party.
12.
In conclusion, I would reiterate that the basis of discretionary power of state
functionaries is the delegation of authority by the principal, the people of this country.
The state’s legal authority is derived from this fiduciary relationship. If the state or its
instrumentalities deviate from their fiduciary obligations, the underlying authority of the
state to administer and enforce the law is thereby eroded. If this happens, the citizens, as
legal subjects of the state, can no longer be expected to obey the law since the state itself
has reneged on its public fiduciary duties. We, therefore, cannot condone violations of
public fiduciary duties, because doing so will lead to an erosion of the basis of the state’s
legal authority and the rule of law.
(Jawwad S. Khawaja)
Judge
21.08.2013
2
3
4
(beneficial owner)
1
De Officiis(Cicero)
( PLD 2012 SC 132)
(beneficiary)
5
2
6
(beneficiary)
7
3
(lease)
8
1
5 C.M. No. 646/10)
2006
12
4
9
2006
10
(PLD 2010 SC 265)
5
11
(restraint)
(activism)
(restraint)
(activism)
12
(fiduciry relationship)
6
7
| {
"id": "C.A.149_2010.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1509 OF 2016
(Against
the
judgment
dated
29.3.2016 of the Islamabad High
Court Islamabad passed in S.T.R.
No.27 of 2012)
M/s Pakistan Television Corporation Ltd.
… Appellant(s)
Versus
Commissioner Inland Revenue (Legal) LTU, Islamabad etc.
… Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. M. Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For the respondent(s):
Dr. Farhat Zafar, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Date of hearing:
23.10.2018
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.- The brief facts of this appeal are that
a show cause notice (SCN) dated 23.05.2011 was issued to the appellant for
the tax years 2006-2007, 2008-2009 and 2009-2010 raising four issues: (i)
non-payment of Federal Exercise Duty (FED) on receipt of PTV license fee; (ii)
non-payment of sales tax on program sales; (iii) non-payment of sales tax on
sales of fixed assets; and (iv) non-payment of sales tax on sale of scrap. After
receiving two replies dated 08.06.2011 and 15.06.2011, the Deputy
Commissioner Inland Revenue (DCIR) passed an Order-in-Original (O-in-O)
dated 04.10.2011 for recovery of the amounts mentioned in the SCN along
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 2 :-
with default surcharge and penalty (all under the relevant provisions of law). The
appellant preferred an appeal against the O-in-O before the Commissioner
Inland Revenue, Appeals-II (CIRA) which, vide Order-in-Appeal (O-in-A) dated
27.02.2012, was accepted to the extent that the matter of sales tax on sale of
programs was remanded and the matters of non-payment of sales tax on
sale of fixed assets and of scrap were vacated, whereas the appeal was
dismissed on the point of non-payment of FED on receipt of PTV license fee.
Thereafter the appellant filed an appeal before the Appellate Tribunal Inland
Revenue (ATIR) which was also dismissed vide order dated 04.12.2012. This
order was assailed before the learned High Court through a Sales Tax
Reference (STA) which was dismissed through the impugned judgment.
Hence, the instant appeal with the leave of the Court dated 23.05.2016
which reads as under:-
“Federal Excise Duty was levied on TV license fee which is
being collected through electricity bills via various distribution
companies. This levy was made under the Wireless Telegraphy
Act, 1993 read with the Television Receiving Apparatus
(Possession
and
Licensing)
Rules,
1970
and
in
the
circumstances no excisable services are being provided by the
petitioners as defined under Section (1)(d) of the Federal Excise
Act, 2005. It is stated by the learned counsel for the petition that
the view set out by the learned High Court to the contrary is not
based on a proper construction/interpretation of the requisite
law…”
2.
We have heard the arguments of the learned counsel for the
parties which are not reproduced for the sake of brevity, but shall reflect in
the course of this opinion. However for ease of reference, the relevant
provisions of law are reproduced as under:-
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 3 :-
Federal Excise Act, 2005
“3. Duties specified in the First Schedule to be levied.- (1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act and rules made there
under, there shall be levied and collected in such manner as
may be prescribed duties of excise on,-
(a) ……………………………………………………………………….
(b) ……………………………………………………………………….
(c) ……………………………………………………………………….
(d) services provided in Pakistan including the services
originated outside but rendered in Pakistan;
at the rate of fifteen per cent ad valorem except the goods and
services specified in the First Schedule, which shall be
charged to Federal excise duty as, and at the rates, as set-forth
therein.
(2)
…………………………………………………………………..
(3)
The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, in
lieu of levying and collecting under sub-section (1) duties of
excise on goods and services, as the case may be, levy and
collect duties,-
(a) ……………………………………………………………………….
(b) on fixed basis, as it may deem fit, on any goods or class of
goods or on any services or class of services, payable by any
establishment or undertaking producing or manufacturing
such goods or providing or rendering such services.
(3A)
…………………………………………………………………..
(4)
…………………………………………………………………..
(5)
the liability to pay duty shall be-
(a) ……………………………………………………………………….
(b) ……………………………………………………………………….
(c) in case of services provided or rendered in Pakistan, of the
person providing or rendering such service, provided where
services are rendered by the person out of Pakistan, the
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 4 :-
recipient of such service in Pakistan shall be liable to pay
duty; and
(d) ……………………………………………………………………….
Explanation.- Subject to sub-section (1), for the purpose of this
section, (goods) means the goods specified in CHAPTERS 1 TO
97 and “services” means the services specified in CHAPTER
98 of the First Schedule to the Customs Act, 1969 (IV of 1969).
7.
Application of the provisions of the Sales Tax Act,
1990.- (1) In case of goods specified in the Second Schedule or
such services as may be specified by the Board through a
notification in the official Gazette the duty shall be payable in
sales tax mode, whereby-
(a)
a registered person manufacturing or producing such
goods or providing or rendering such services shall be entitled
to deduct input tax paid during the tax period from the amount
of duty of excise due from him on such goods or services in
respect of that tax period;
(b)
a registered person shall be entitled to deduct the
amount of duty of excise paid or payable by him on such goods
or services as are acquired by him during a tax period from the
output tax due from him in respect of that tax period;
(c)
a registered person supplying such goods or providing
or rendering such services shall be entitled to deduct duty of
excise paid or payable on such goods or services as are
acquired by him during the tax period from the amount of duty
of excise due from him on such goods manufactured or
produced or services as are provided or rendered by him during
that period; and
(d)
a person shall be entitled to deduct duty of excise paid or
payable, on such goods or services as are acquired by him
during a month, from the amount of duty of excise due from him
on such goods manufactured or produced or services as are
provided or rendered by him, during that month. Such services
as are provided or rendered by him, during that month.
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 5 :-
(2)
…………………………………………………………………..
Explanation.— …………………………………………………….......
First Schedule
Table II
(Excisable Services)
S.No. Description of Goods
Heading/sub-
heading Number
Rate of
Duty
6.
Telecommunication
services, excluding
such services in the
area of a Province
where such Province
has imposed Provincial
sales tax and has
started collecting the
same through its own
Board or Authority, as
the case may be.
98.12
(All sub-
headings)
Seventeen
per cent of
charges
[Emphasis supplied]
Customs Act, 1969
The First Schedule
Section
Chapter 98
(SERVICES)
98.12
Telecommunication services
9812.1000
Telephone services
9812.1100
Fixed line voice telephone service
9812.1200
Wireless telephone
9812.1210
Cellular telephone
9812.1220
Wireless Local Loop telephone
9812.1300
Video telephone
9812.1400
Payphone cards
9812.1500
Pre-paid calling cards
9812.1600
Voice mail service
9812.1700
Massaging service
9812.1710
Short Message service (SMS)
9812.1720
Multimedia message service (MMS)
9812.1910
Shifting of telephone connection
9812.1920
Installation of telephone extension
9812.1930
Provision of telephone extension
9812.1940
Changing of telephone connection
9812.1950
Conversion of NWD connection to non
NWD or vice versa
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 6 :-
9812.1960
Cost of telephone set
9812.1970
Restoration of telephone connection
9812.1990
Others
9812.2000
Bandwith services1970
9812.2100
Copper line based
9812.2200
Fibre-optic based
9812.2300
Co-axial cable based
9812.2400
Microwave based
9812.2500
Satellite based
9812.2900
Others
9812.3000
Telegraph
9812.4000
Telex
9812.5000
Telefax
9812.5010
Store and forward fax services
9812.5090
Others
9812.6000
Internet services
9812.6100
Internet services including e-mail services
9812.6110
Dial-up internet services
9812.6120
Broadband services for DSL connection
9812.6121
Copper line based
9812.6122
Fibre-optic based
9812.6123
Co-axial cable based
9812.6124
Wireless based
9812.6125
Satellite based
9812.6129
Others
9812.6130
Internet/e-mail/Data/SMS/MMS services
on WLL networks
9812.6140
Internet/e-mail/Data/SMS/MMS services
on cellular mobile networks
9812.6190
Others
9812.6200
Data Communication Network services
(DCNS)
9812.6210
Copper Line based
9812.6220
Co-axial cable based
9812.6230
Fibre-optic based
9812.6240
Wireless/Radio based
9812.6250
Satellite based
9812.6290
Others
9812.6300
Value added data services
9812.6310
Virtual private Network service (VPN)
9812.6320
Digital Signature service
9812.6390
Others
9812.9000
Audiotext services
9812.9100
Teletext services
9812.9200
Trunk radio services
9812.9300
Paging services
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 7 :-
9812.9400
Voice paging services
9812.9410
Radio paging services
9812.9490
Vehicle tracking services
9812.9500
Burglar alarm services
9812.9090
Others
At first glance, this case is about the challenge by the appellant to the
jurisdiction of the tax authorities to levy FED on TV license fee. At the heart
of the case, however, is an important question, i.e. what is the correct
method of interpreting the headings and sub-headings of the First Schedule
to the Customs Act, 1969 (Customs Act) – commonly known as the Pakistan
Customs Tariff (PCT)? However before proceeding further, we think it
expedient to discuss the various orders passed by the lower fora.
3.
The SCN issued by the DCIR to the appellant alleged that:-
“The Federal Government has appointed you as an agent in the
matter of issuing licences to possess television receiving
apparatus,
video
recording
apparatus
or
reproducing
apparatus and television broadcasting receiving antenna under
section 5 of the Wireless and Telegraphy Act, 1933 (XVII of
1993)…
This fee is collected through domestic electricity bills…This
revenue being receipts on account of PTV license fee is taxable
under section 3 of the Federal Excise Act, 2005 being
telecommunication services (PCT heading 98.12) read with
SRO 550(I)/2006 dated 12.06.2006…Therefore, an amount of
Rs. 1,522,614,090/- is recoverable from you under section 14
along with default surcharge under section 8 and penalty under
section 19 of the Federal Excise Act, 2005.”
[Emphasis supplied]
The O-in-O passed by the DCIR basically regurgitated the allegations in the
SCN without any discussion on the law or the facts. However it is worthy to
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 8 :-
note that three things in the SCN and the O-in-O: (i) the licenses were for the
possession of television receiving apparatus; (ii) the fee was levied by the
Government of Pakistan; and (iii) the appellant received the TV license fee.
4.
In the O-in-A the CIRA was of the view that:-
“…it is a fact that TV sets are used by the public to avail the
telecast services as the federal excise is levied on the
telecommunication services PCT Headings 98.12 in the First
Schedule to the Customs Act, 1969…
Further the term “telecommunication services” is elaborated
from the SRO issued in this regard in SRO No. 648(I)/2005
dated 1.7.2005 PCT heading 98.12 which was showing the
description “services provided or rendered by persons engaged
in telecommunication work in respect of telephone, telegraph,
telex, telefax and alive” [sic]. This SRO was superseded by SRO
No. 550(I)/2006 dated 5th June, 2006 wherein PCT heading
98.12 was described as “telecommunication service” which
means that the scope of these services was broadened and
services like TV telecast were brought within the scope of this
term.
In view of above noted discussion the TV Telecast fall within the
definition of telecommunication services accordingly the TV
license fee is liable to federal excise, hence the action of the
DCIR is confirmed.”
The CIRA decided the case against PTV because, in his view, FED was levied
on Telecommunication Services: PCT Heading 98.12. This Heading, in his
opinion, was broad enough to cover any and all kinds of ‘telecommunication
services’. PTV made telecasts; these were received on television sets; this was
telecommunication. The CIRA further concluded that the TV license fee too
was covered by PCT Heading 98.12. In reaching these conclusions the CIRA
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 9 :-
did not examine whether any of the sub-headings of PCT Heading 98.12
covered telecasts or television sets or TV license fee. The CIRA referred to
SRO No.648(I)/2005 dated 01.07.2005 (SRO 648) and SRO No.550(I)/2006
dated 05.06.2006 (SRO 550). In SRO 648 the services under PCT Heading
98.12 were described as “Services provided or rendered by persons engaged in
telecommunication work in respect of telephone, telegraph, telex, telefax and alike”. In SRO
550 which superseded SRO 648, the services under PCT Heading 98.12 were
described as “Telecommunication services”. From the variation in the language
regarding the description of services in the two SROs the CIRA concluded
that “the scope of these services was broadened” under SRO 550 “and services like TV
telecast were brought within the scope of this term”.
The finding by the CIRA that because PCT Heading 98.12 was titled
‘Telecommunication
services’
and
because
a
telecast
was
a
telecommunication service, therefore, TV license fee was covered by this
Heading and subject to FED will be examined later. It will be addressed
when discussing the order of the Appellate Tribunal Inland Revenue (ATIR)
and the judgment of the Islamabad High Court which are to similar effect.
The conclusion based on SRO 550 being peculiar to the CIRA and the ATIR
will be addressed immediately after the discussion on the order of the ATIR.
5.
The appellant filed an appeal with the ATIR against the order of
the CIRA. By order dated 04.12.2012 the ATIR dismissed the appeal in
which it held as follows:-
“The signals based television telecast services are no different
to the telecommunication services falling under PCT heading
98.12 chargeable to federal excise duty under SRO No.
550(I)/2006 dated 05.06.2006. In our view anything which is
signal based and is provided as a service is liable to excise
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 10 :-
duty. The only purpose of license fee is a provision of telecast
service and this service is not outside the ambit of PCT 98.”
[Emphasis supplied]
The conclusion of the CIRA and the ATIR insofar as it is based on SRO 550
or the superseded SRO 648 is contrary to the Constitution of the Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973 (Constitution) and the scheme of levy of a tax as
provided in fiscal statutes. A tax, under Article 77 of the Constitution, can
only be levied by or under the authority of an Act of Parliament. It is levied
under the charging section of such an Act. Section 3 and the First Schedule
to the Federal Excise Act, 2005 (Federal Excise Act) as well as the First Schedule
to the Customs Act including PCT Heading 98.12 are statutory provisions.
These can only be amended by an Act of Parliament. Delegated legislation
such as a SRO cannot amend these. Even more so when neither of the two
SROs was issued under Section 3 of the FEA, the charging section. Therefore
the findings of the CIRA and ATIR to this extent are incorrect and invalid.
The SROs and their effect have also been misread. The SROs do not
seek to enlarge the scope of PCT Heading 98.12. Both SRO 648 and 550
were issued by the Government of Pakistan, in exercise of its powers under
Section 7 of the Federal Excise Act. This section authorises collection of FED
in Sales Tax mode for such services as may be specified by the Federal Board
of Revenue. SRO 648 as well as SRO 550, thus, merely authorised the
collection of FED on ‘Telecommunication Services’ in Sales Tax mode. The
notifications explicitly state so. A provision providing for a mode of collection
is not a charging provision. It can neither abridge nor expand the scope of a
charging provision in an Act. These SROs were, therefore, not intended to
and in fact had no effect on the scope of levy of FED on ‘Telecommunication
Services’. FED can only be levied under Section 3 of the Federal Excise Act,
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 11 :-
on services specified thereunder or in the First Schedule thereto read with
Chapter 98 of the PCT, and not under any SRO. In particular, it could not be
levied under an SRO issued under Section 7 of the Federal Excise Act.
6.
The decision of the ATIR was examined by the Islamabad High
Court in a reference application which was decided against the appellant
vide impugned judgment. The learned High Court discussed what in its
opinion were the main elements of the TV process and the three major ways
to receive TV signals. Based on this discussion the learned High Court
concluded as under:-
“…that the Television set has been used for the transmission,
broadcast and rebroadcast of different programmes through
Television signals and the PCT Heading 98.12 refers
Telecommunication services including Telephone services etc.
and others vide reference No. 9812.9090.”
The learned High Court observed that “the International Convention on the
harmonized commodity description and coding system provides Rules for interpretation”. It
observed that if “through the said interpretation rules if one can review the First Schedule
to the Customs Act, 1969, Chapter 98 (Services) heading “Telecommunication Services 98.12
covers Wireless based 9812.6124, Satellite bases 9812.6125, Data Communication Network
Services (DCNS) 9812.6200, Wireless/radio based 9812.6240, Satellite based 9812.6250 and
others 9812.9090…” Based on these observations the learned High Court
concluded that:-
“…in view of these Pakistan Customs Tariff headings and
subheadings, the TV technology main elements of its process
covers the video source, audio source, transmitter, receiver etc.
and through three major ways to receive TV signals it includes
Broadcast TV, Satellite TV and Cable TV, hence all features
are fully attracted in the First Schedule to the Customs Act,
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 12 :-
1969, Chapter 98 (Services) heading Telecommunication
Services, therefore, there is no issue suggesting that the
Television provides the services which falls within the definition
of word “services” defined in section 2(23) of Federal Excise
Act, 2005…”
[Emphasis supplied]
The learned High Court observed that its “net conclusion” was further
strengthened:-
“…from the bare reading of section 16 (Exemptions) of Federal
Excise
Act,
2005
wherein
if
Pakistan
Television
Corporation…consider itself exempted, it can apply for
exemption but in the present case there is no such exemption
issued by the Federal Government.”
7.
It is worthy to note that none of the forums below, apart from
the learned High Court, referred to Section 16 of the Federal Excise Act to
support their conclusions. Before examining the provisions of the Federal
Excise Act and the rules for interpretation of the PCT it may be pertinent to
first address the finding regarding Section 16 ibid. The Customs Act, the
Sales Tax Act, 1990 (Sales Tax Act) and the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 (Income
Tax Ordinance) have their respective charging sections. Tax is levied on a
subject covered by the charging section. All these statutes also have
provisions which exempt an assessee from the payment of the whole or a
part of the leviable tax. An exemption does not take the assessee out of the
scope of the charging section. The assessee remains within the tax net and
the tax remains leviable. The assessee is, however, exempt from paying the
whole or a part of the tax. If the exemption is withdrawn the leviable tax
becomes payable. The scheme of the Federal Excise Act is different. Section
3 of the Federal Excise Act provides that services provided in Pakistan are
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 13 :-
liable to FED at the rate of 15% ad valorem “except the…services specified in the
First Schedule, which shall be charged to Federal excise duty as, and at the rates, set forth
therein.” Section 16(1) of the Federal Excise Act provides that “All goods
imported, produced or manufactured in Pakistan and services provided or rendered except
such goods and services as are specified in the First Schedule shall be exempt from whole of
excise duties levied under section 3”. In other words all services provided in
Pakistan are exempt from FED unless specified in the First Schedule to the
Federal Excise Act. Even an activity within the definition of “services” under
Section 2(23) of the Federal Excise Act is exempt from FED unless specified
in the First Schedule. An assessee, therefore, does not have to apply under
Section 16 of the Federal Excise Act for exemption. The services provided by
the assessee are exempt if not specified in the First Schedule to the Federal
Excise Act.
8.
Both the Explanation to Section 3 of the Federal Excise Act and
the definition of “services” in Section 2(23) thereof make it clear that for an
activity to be a service leviable to FED it must be specified in the Federal
Excise Act or Table II to the First Schedule thereto read with Chapter 98 of
the PCT. The First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act is not to be read in
isolation, rather has to be read with Chapter 98 of the PCT. Table II of the
First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act broadly identifies the services and
mentions the PCT Headings. Item 6 of this Table lists PCT Heading 98.12:
Telecommunication Services (including all sub-headings) and states the rate of
duty as 17% ad valorem. Item 6 of Table II has to be read with Chapter 98 of
the PCT as required by Section 2(23) of the Federal Excise Act and the
Explanation to Section 3 thereof. PCT Heading 98.12: Telecommunication
Services of Chapter 98 of the First Schedule to the Customs Act is a broad
general category. Under it are 65 sub-headings. Like in the orders of the
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 14 :-
DCIR, CIRA and ATIR there is no discussion in the judgment of the learned
High Court on how a Heading of the PCT and its sub-headings are to be
read. There is also no discussion about which sub-heading, if any, will cover
TV license fee. Only at one place (paragraph No.16) in the judgment, the learned
High Court seems to suggest that PCT Heading 9812.9090: “Others” may
provide legal cover for the charge of FED on TV license fee.
9.
The learned counsel for the respondent did not dispute that
Section 2(23) of the Federal Excise Act and the Explanation to Section 3
thereof require that Table II to the First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act
must be read with Chapter 98 of the PCT. She, however, vehemently argued
that Section 2(23) ibid defines services and this definition read with PCT
Heading 98.12: ‘Telecommunication Services’ would cover TV license fee. The
main plank of her argument was that only PCT Heading 98.12 was relevant
which covered all ‘Telecommunication Services’. PTV made telecasts and
telecasts were received on TV sets, and telecasts and their reception on TV
sets was a ‘Telecommunication Service’, therefore, it was covered by PCT
Heading 98.12. Since TV License Fee was received by PTV, it must, therefore,
have been received by PTV for the service of telecast. It was therefore,
chargeable to FED under PCT Heading 98.12. All telecommunication services
irrespective of their nature and kind, according to her, were covered by PCT
Heading 98.12. Even if TV license fee or telecast did not fall within any of the
sub-headings of PCT 98.12, the demand survived as it was covered by the
main Heading: PCT 98.12. The sub-headings, according to her, were of no
consequence. If this argument was accepted to be correct, then the definition
of “services” in Section 2(23) of the Federal Excise Act which requires that its
First Schedule be read with Chapter 98 of the PCT has to be disregarded.
The First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act, in Item 6 of Table II mentions
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 15 :-
PCT Heading 98.12 and “all sub-headings” in parenthesis. Therefore all the
sub-headings of PCT Heading 98.12 are imported into the definition through
The First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act and Chapter 98 of the PCT. If
the sub-headings were of no consequence, then there was no need for
Parliament to provide that the First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act be
read with Chapter 98 of PCT. Equally unnecessary was, the Explanation to
Section 3 of the Federal Excise Act, the charging section, which provided
that for the purposes of that section “services” meant the services specified
in Chapter 98 of the First Schedule to the Customs Act.
10.
One may explore the argument of the learned counsel for the
respondent further. A number of service providers, activities and services are
defined in Section 2 of the Federal Excise Act. ‘Telecommunication Services’
are not so specified. One must, therefore, proceed to examine the First
Schedule to the Federal Excise Act and Chapter 98 of the PCT. Section 3 of
the Federal Excise Act is the charging section which levies FED on services
provided in Pakistan. The Explanation to the said section makes it clear,
however, that services for the purposes of the charging section “mean the
services specified in Chapter 98 of the First Schedule to the Customs Act, 1969.” FED
cannot, therefore, be levied on a service which is not specified in Chapter 98
of the PCT. PCT Heading 98.12 has 65 sub-headings. A close examination of
the various sub-headings of PCT Heading 98.12 makes it clear that all these
deal with ‘Telecommunication Services’. Try as one may, one cannot find that
any of these 65 sub-headings cover telecasts, TV sets or TV license fee. At
this point it would be relevant to mention Rule 6 of the General Rules for the
Interpretation of the First Schedule of the Customs Act, i.e. the PCT, which
provides that “For legal purposes, the classification of goods in the sub-headings of a
heading except Chapter 99 shall be determined according to the terms of those sub-headings
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 16 :-
and any related sub-heading Notes and, mutatis mutandis, to the above Rules, on the
understanding that only sub-headings at the same level are comparable.” Accordingly, not
being covered by any of the sub-headings to PCT Heading 98.12 read with
Item 6 of Table II of the First Schedule to the Federal Excise Act, telecasts,
TV sets and TV license fee are outside the charging provisions of the Federal
Excise Act. If one were to accept the argument of the learned counsel for the
respondent that only the Heading of PCT 98.12 is to be applied and all its
sub-heading are irrelevant, it would render the specific services listed under
the 65 sub-headings of PCT Heading 98.12 redundant. If the legislative
intent
was
for
PCT
Heading
98.12
to
cover
every
conceivable
‘Telecommunication Service’ there was no need to provide 65 sub-headings,
listing specific telecommunication services, under it. It would make the
reference to Chapter 98 of PCT in several places by the Federal Excise Act of
no consequence or relevance. If the legislature intended PCT Heading 98.12
to have as wide a meaning as ascribed to it by the counsel for the
respondent, then there was no need to provide 65 specific sub-headings
under this PCT Heading.
11.
Even otherwise, it is not possible to accept the argument of the
respondent without an unnecessarily strained construction of the Federal
Excise Act. The Federal Excise Act is a fiscal statute. The principles of
interpreting such statutes are well settled. Some of these principles have
been recently repeated in Messrs Pakistan Television Corporation Vs.
Commissioner Inland Revenue (Legal), Islamabad and others (2017
SCMR 1136) which are summarised as follows:-
i.
There is no intendment or equity about tax and the provisions of
a taxing statute must be applied as they stand;
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 17 :-
ii.
The provision creating a tax liability must be interpreted strictly
in favour of the taxpayer and against the revenue authorities;
iii.
Any doubts arising from the interpretation of a fiscal provision
must be resolved in favour of the taxpayer;
iv.
If two reasonable interpretations are possible, the one favoring
the taxpayer must be adopted;
v.
When a tax is clearly imposed by a statutory provision any
exemption from it must be clearly expressed in the statute or
clearly implied from it;
vi.
Where the taxpayer claims the benefit of such express or implied
exemption, the burden is on him to establish that his case is
covered by the exemption;
vii.
The terms of the exemption ought to be reasonably construed;
and
viii.
If a taxpayer is entitled to an exemption on a reasonable
construction of the law it ought not to be denied to him by a
strained, strict or convoluted interpretation of the law.
Applying the above principles, it is clear that telecasts, TV sets and TV
license fee are not covered by the definition of services in Section 2(23) of the
Federal Excise Act and Item 6 of Table II of the First Schedule to the Federal
Excise Act read with Chapter 98 of the PCT. At the risk of repetition, TV
license fee, telecasts and TV sets not being covered by any of the sub-
headings of PCT Heading 98.12 are not subject to FED on a reasonable
interpretation of the law. Being plainly outside the ambit of the charging
provision they cannot be brought in by a strained construction of the law.
The issue may be examined in another manner. As stated above that
telecasts, TV sets and TV license fee are not within Table II of the First
Schedule to the Federal Excise Act, read with Chapter 98 of the First
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 18 :-
Schedule to the Customs Act. These are not covered by any of the sub-
headings of PCT 98.12. These, are, therefore, exempt from FED under
Section 16 of the Federal Excise Act. The appellant is, therefore, exempt from
payment of FED on TV license fee. A reasonable interpretation of the law
plainly entitles it to such an exemption. It cannot be denied to it by a
strained, forced or convoluted interpretation of the law. The conclusion,
therefore, remains unchanged. In any case, the demand of FED on TV
license fee received by the appellant is, therefore, not legal. The above
principles also make clear that the Federal Excise Act being a fiscal statute
has to be construed, where possible, in favour of the assessee.
12.
This submission of the counsel for the respondent also runs
counter to the structure of the PCT. As observed in Messrs Citibank NA Vs.
Commissioner Inland Revenue (2014 PTD 284):-
“This is based on and is almost identical to the Harmonized
Commodity Description and Coding System ("HS System"),
which has been agreed upon under an international convention
and which is regulated by the World Customs Organization. The
HS System is of course concerned with goods, and it comprises
of 97 chapters (with one chapter, 77, being left "blank" for
possible future use) wherein all manner of goods are listed and
categorized. The Pakistan Customs Tariff faithfully reproduces
and gives effect to this system. In addition, the HS System allows
two final chapters (i.e., 98 and 99) to be used for national
purposes and Pakistan has utilized Chapter 98 for "services".
Even a quick glance shows that Chapter 98 replicates the
system of classification adopted for goods under the HS System.
Now, the chapters of the HS System are preceded by certain
"General Rules for the interpretation of the Harmonized
System" ("General Rules"). These rules are incorporated in the
Pakistan Customs Tariff and therefore have the force of law.
Although the rules are concerned with goods, in our view they
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 19 :-
may, subject to suitable adaptation, also be used for the
purposes of Chapter 98. This is so because of the close
correspondence between the classification system under the HS
System and that used in Chapter 98. Rule 6 of the General
Rules has been understood to mean, inter alia, that in those
headings under which sub-headings are to be found, the
classification is to be on the basis and in terms of the sub-
headings.
[Emphasis Supplied]
When this Rule is applied to PCT Heading 98.12 it is absolutely clear that it
is the sub-headings under PCT Heading 98.12 that are to be applied. Such
an approach is in conformity with the HS System, and is, therefore, the
correct approach to applying Chapter 98.
13.
Another argument advanced by the learned counsel for the
respondent and which found favour with the learned High Court was that
even if TV license fee was not covered by any of the specific sub-headings of
PCT Heading 98.12 it would be covered by PCT 9812.9090: “Others”. This
argument ignores the scheme of division of specific services under the
various sub-headings of PCT Heading 98.12. The various types of
telecommunication services are bunched together in separate groups. At the
end of each bunch one finds the entry “Others”. The services under the sub-
headings of PCT Heading 98.12 are in 8 groups. And the sub-heading
“Others”, therefore, appears eight times under PCT Heading 98.12. For
instance, the first group consists of various kinds of telephone services.
These are listed from PCT 9812.1000 to 9812.1970. At the end is PCT
9812.1990: “Others”. The last group is of sub-headings PCT 9812.9000:
‘Audio text services’, PCT 9812.9100: ‘Teletext services’, 9812.9200: ‘Trunk
radio services’, PCT 9812.9300: ‘Paging services’, PCT 9812.9400: ‘Voice
paging services’, PCT 9812.9410 ‘Radio paging services’, PCT 9812.9490:
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 20 :-
‘Vehicle tracking services’ and 9812.9500: ‘Burglar alarm services’, followed
by PCT 9812.9090: “Others”. The sub-heading “Others” is, therefore, to be
read ejusdem generis with the preceding entries in the group. It will apply to
and cover only such services which are similar to the ones specifically
described before it. It cannot include every conceivable telecommunication
service. Reading the sub-heading “Others” to include all kinds of
telecommunication services would render all the specific sub-headings
otiose. Such an interpretation being clearly flawed cannot be sustained.
14.
There is yet another aspect of the matter. TV license fee is levied
under the Wireless Telegraphy Act, 1933 (Wireless Telegraphy Act). Section 2(2) of
the Wireless Telegraphy Act defines “wireless telegraphy apparatus” as under:-
“any apparatus, appliance, instrument or material used or
capable of use in wireless communication, and includes any
article determined by rule made under Section 10 to be wireless
telegraphy apparatus, but does not include any such apparatus,
appliance, instrument or material commonly used for other
electrical purposes, unless it has been specially designed or
adapted for wireless communication or forms part of some
apparatus, appliance, instrument or material specially so
designed or adapted, nor any article determined by rule made
under Section 10 not to be wireless telegraphy apparatus.”
Section 3 of the Wireless Telegraphy Act provides that “no person shall possess
wireless telegraphy apparatus except under and in accordance with a license issued under
this Act” [Emphasis supplied]. Section 5 thereof designates the authority “competent
to issue licenses to possess wireless telegraphy apparatus…” [Emphasis supplied] Section 6
makes possession of wireless telegraphy apparatus in contravention of
Section 3 ibid an offence.
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 21 :-
15.
The Television Receiving Apparatus (Possession & Licensing)
Rules, 1970 (Rules) were framed under Section 10 of the Wireless Telegraphy
Act. Rule 3(3) of the Rules, requires the “holder” to obtain a license
“immediately after he comes into possession of a television set” [Emphasis supplied]. Rule
2(e) of the Rules defines a “holder” as “any person for the time being in possession of
a television receiving apparatus” [Emphasis supplied]. Rule 2(i) of the Rules defines
“Television Receiving Apparatus” as “any apparatus…capable of being used for
receiving the telecasts…and includes any apparatus which is temporarily incapable of being
so used by reason of a defect…” [Emphasis supplied]. Although now the collection of TV
license fee is made through electricity bills, the Wireless Telegraphy Act and
the Rules make the Parliamentary intention clear. The license fee is paid not
for any service provided by the appellant but by the holder of the TV set for
its possession. The taxable event is not the provision of any service by the
appellant. It is the possession of a television set by the holder. The
Government of Pakistan allows the fee so collected to be used by the
appellant for its maintenance and operations. The State has an interest in
owning and operating a television corporation. This requires money. It,
therefore, decided to levy license fee, collect it and allow the appellant to
receive and use it for its maintenance and operations. It is for this reason
that the amount of license fee received by the appellant is disclosed in its
financials. The contention of the learned counsel for the respondent that the
receipt of fee by the appellant establishes that it is subject to FED is not
correct. All that it establishes is that the Government of Pakistan which has
levied the fee has decided to allow the appellant to receive it and to use this
revenue for its maintenance and operations. For FED to be levied on this
amount it must further be established that it is a “service” as defined in
Section 2(23) of the Federal Excise Act and is subject to the charge levied
C.A. NO.1509/2016
-: 22 :-
under Section 3 thereof which, as discussed above, is clearly not the case.
TV license fee not being the product of any service provided by PTV, FED
cannot be levied on it.
16.
The foregoing are the detailed reasons for our short order of even
date which reads as under:-
“For the reasons to be recorded later, this appeal is allowed
and the impugned order is set aside.”
CHIEF JUSTICE
Islamabad, the
23rd of October, 2018
Not approved for reporting
JUDGE
JUDGE
M. Azhar Malik/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1509_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE SH. AZMAT SAEED
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 150, 151 AND 152 OF 2006
(Against the judgment dated 22.11.2005 of the Peshawar High
Court, Peshawar passed in Income Tax References No.117, 118 &
119 of 2003)
Lucky Cement Ltd., having its offices at Lakki Marwat, Dera Ismail
Khan
…Appellant(s)
(in all appeals)
VERSUS
Commissioner Income Tax, Zone Companies, Circle-5, Peshawar
…Respondent(s)
(in all appeals)
…
For the appellant(s):
(in all appeals)
Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
For the respondent(s):
(in all appeals)
Ghulam Shoaib Jally, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Date of hearing:
31.03.2015
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- The main question involved in
these matters is:- whether the income received by the appellant
from the investment(s) made by it of its surplus money into various
profitable ventures/schemes and the amounts thus realized as
profits thereupon amount to income from business or income
from other sources. The facts relevant for the purposes of
resolution of the noted question are:- the appellant is a public
limited company (listed at the stock exchange). The main and primary object
of the appellant was/is to setup/establish and run a cement
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 2 :-
factory, however, in its business prudence, the appellant decided to
not seek and avail any financial support from outside (i.e. financial
institutions etc.), rather it relied upon its own resources (i.e. the
deposits/contributions made by the shareholder etc). It may be pertinent to mention
here that for the accomplishment of the above venture (cement factory),
the appellant had collected and possessed in its reserves an
amount of rupees 3.44 billion, which was not required to be used
immediately (in one go) in lump sum and thus as the amount was
lying unutilized with the appellant-company in banks or otherwise,
it (appellant) decided to invest the said amount in certain profitable
schemes through fund management process/arrangements. In this
manner, the investments were made and certain profits were
earned by the appellant during the financial years 1994-95, 1995-
96 and 1996-97. The assessing officer (Deputy Commissioner Income Tax)
vide order dated 24.3.1997 assessed the income so received by the
appellant as from other sources under Section 30(2)(b) of the
repealed Income Tax Ordinance, 1979 (note: the rate of tax on such income was
different than the rate of tax on income generated from the business of the assessee).
However, the Commissioner on appeal through its order dated
30.10.1997 reversed the aforesaid decision and considered the said
amount as the business income of the appellant. The department
challenged this decision before the Tribunal which appeal was
accepted on 29.9.2001, and by setting aside the order of the
Commissioner Appeals, the order of the Assessing Officer was
restored. The appellant unsuccessfully assailed the above (two)
decisions vide tax references before the Peshawar High Court which
were dismissed through the impugned judgment dated 22.11.2005.
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 3 :-
Leave in these cases was granted on 24.1.2006 to consider
the following points:-
“i)
Whether earning from investment of surplus money in the
portfolio and fund management ventures and such other
activities of the petitioner would be income from the business
as profit or interest?
ii)
Whether learned Division Bench of the High Court has erred
in law in failing to consider that the Tribunal has erred in
law treating the net amount received by the petitioner from
portfolio and fund management ventures and other activities
as an interest?
iii)
What would be the nature of relationship between the
investor and the Bank when the latter is not responsible in
case of any loss in case of investment?
iv)
Whether learned Division Bench of the High Court failed to
appreciate that the business undertaken by the petitioner of
portfolio and fund management ventures/activities was
inextricably linked to the construction of cement plant and
such surplus funds earned from the said ventures were
specifically earmarked for construction of cement plant.”
2.
Mr. Khalid Anwar, learned Sr. ASC, by relying upon
Article III of the appellant-company’s Memorandum of Association
has argued that though the primary object and purpose of the
company was to establish a cement factory and this would be the
ultimate business of the appellant, however since the constitution
i.e. the Memorandum of Association of the company permits
investments to be made for the purposes of its (appellant) business to
generate income, therefore any profits earned or income generated
and received through such investments should be taxed as income
from business, as opposed to income from other sources. For the
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 4 :-
ease of reference, he has referred to relevant clauses of Article III of
the Memorandum of Association of the appellant-company, which
are reproduced below.
Clause 1 of Article III ibid reads as follows:-
“To carry out the design, engineering, procurement, manufacturing,
delivery, erection, installation, testing and commissioning at site of a
new, state of the art, plant including all auxiliary and ancillary
equipment, complete in all respects for the purpose of manufacturing
PORTLAND
CEMENT
as
per
Pakistan/British
standard
specifications, including all mechanical and electrical equipment
and controls to ensure a smooth and continuous production clinkers
and corresponding quantity of ordinary PORTLAND CEMENT.”
Clause 6 of Article III ibid reads as follow:-
“To invest or otherwise deal with the money of the Company in such
manner as may from time to time be determined.”
Clause 36 of Article III ibid reads as under:-
“It is expressly declared that the several sub-clauses of this clause
and all the powers expressed therein are to be cumulative but in no
case unless the context expressly so requires is the generality of any
one sub-clause to be narrowed or restricted by the name of the
Company or by the particularity of expression in the same sub-
clause or by the application or any rule of construction such as the
ejusdem generis rule, and accordingly none of such sub-clauses or
the objects therein specified or the power thereby conferred shall be
deemed subsidiary or auxiliary, merely to the objects mentioned in
any other sub-clause of this clause and the Company shall have full
power to exercise all or any of the powers conferred by any
provisions of this clause in any part of the world.”
It is thus submitted that Clause 6 ibid specifically and
independently provides and enables the company to make such
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 5 :-
investment in addition, the said clause when read in light of
residuary Clause 36 ibid, makes the investments a permissible
business activity of the appellant, notwithstanding its primary
business of establishing the cement factory, therefore all such
income received by the appellant shall be taxable as the income
from business and not from any other source. It is also argued that
the learned High Court has unnecessarily relied upon the judgment
of this Court reported as The Commissioner of Income-Tax, East
Pakistan, Dacca Vs. The Liquidator, Khulna-Bagerhat Railway
Company Ltd., Ahmadabad (PLD 1962 SC 128). Such decision is
distinguishable on its own facts, and has no relevance and
application to the proposition in hand. It is further urged that it is
always the intention of the assessee which is germane and
expedient for the purposes of deciding and determining whether the
income generated by it (the assessee) is from the business of the
assessee or from any other source. It is contended that even the
earning of interest on investment(s) and the deposits as such, could
also be a business of a company. And the apt example of this is,
where investments are made by the banks etc. in certain treasury
bonds etc. and the income is generated on that account, which for
all intents and purposes shall be the income from business. In
support of his plea(s), the learned counsel has made reference to
the judgment of this Court reported as The Commissioner of
Income-Tax, West Zone, Karachi and another Vs. Messrs
Khairpur Textile Mills Ltd. and others (1989 SCMR 61). It is
also argued that since Clause 36 ibid is a residuary clause and on
account of the interpretation assigned to such a clause (residuary
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 6 :-
stipulation/provision),
the
investment(s)
made
by
the
appellant
undoubtedly were a business investment and therefore, the same
cannot be termed to be investment(s) beyond the scope of
appellant’s business and thus the income from any other source. In
this regard, the judgments cited are Commissioner of Income-
Tax, U.P. Vs. Basant Rai Takhat Singh ((1933) ITR 197),
Commissioner of Income-Tax Vs. Govinda Choudhury and Sons
((1993) 200 ITR 881) and Asiatic Agencies Limited, Karachi Vs.
Commissioner of Income-Tax (1967 PTD 286). Learned counsel
has further argued that even a single transaction can be taken as a
business of the assessee and it is not necessary that there should
be a series of transactions. Support is drawn from Kanwarlal
Manoharwal Vs. Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madras ((1975)
101 ITR 439) and K. Nallathambi Pillai Vs. Commissioner of
Income-Tax ((1975) 98 ITR 13) for the above submission.
3.
Contrary to the above, learned counsel for the
respondent has made reference to Clause 37 of Article III of the
Memorandum of Association which reads as under:-
“Notwithstanding anything contained in the foregoing object clauses
of this Memorandum of Association, nothing herein shall be
construed as empowering the Company to undertake or indulge in
the business of banking, finance, investment, leasing or insurance,
directly or indirectly or any unlawful operations.”
On the basis of above, it is argued that this being a
prohibitory clause, no investments can be made by the appellant
and the appellant cannot be said to have made the investment(s)
under question in pursuit of its business venture and resultantly
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 7 :-
the amount of the profit accruing to the appellant is assessable as
income from other sources. It is also argued that according to
Clause 1 of Article III of the Memorandum of Association, the
primary/main and key object of the appellant is to establish a
cement factory and even if it is considered that the investment
business is permissible, since the same is not ancillary to the main
business object of the appellant-company, any income generated
through such investment business is to be taxed as income from
other sources.
4.
Heard. Before resolving the proposition in hand, we find
it expedient to briefly state the nature and legal status/position of
Memorandum of Association (MOA) and Articles of Association (AOA)
of a company, the purpose and object of the same, the rules of its
application
and
the
construction/interpretation
of
such
a
document. In this regard, several judgments of superior courts
have shed light and from the gist thereof, it can be held that the
MOA and Articles of Association when read as a whole are the
constitution of the company. MOA provides and prescribes the
object(s) and the purpose(s) for which the company has been
established and constituted, with specific reference to the business
and the avocations which it can conduct, carryon and undertake.
While the AOA are the organizational and governance rules of the
company which primarily deal with the management affairs. There
are judgments of the superior Courts to the effect that anything
done by a company (as the company is a juristic person and has to act through natural
person i.e. its management) which is beyond the scope of its MOA is ultra
vires and thus cannot be given any legal sanctity. In order words, a
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 8 :-
company cannot engage in a business which is not fairly covered by
any of its independent objects, or such objects which are ancillary
and incidental to those for which a company has been created and
such MOA is duly recognized and accepted, by the regulatory
body(ies) meant for the incorporation of a company and oversight
thereof.
It has been noticed and experienced by us for various MOAs
of different companies that in order to avoid any of its venture
being declared as ultra vires of the object, besides the main object
of the company and its ancillary purposes, the latest trend is that
the company shall incorporate in the MOA certain other objects as
well which are aloof and independent of its main object/business;
this is also so because the company might at some point of time
like to undertake some another or more business, but would be
precluded from doing so, because of the lack of object and it is
difficult to have the MOAs changed and altered frequently.
A company thus may have a primary object and purpose, but
still there may also be several other objects mentioned in the
objects clause, and after proper construction of such objects, by
resorting to the relevant rules of interpretation, it should be
considered whether those are ancillary to the main object of the
company or can be held to be independent of each other. It may be
pertinent to mention here that MOA of a company in law should be
read and construed liberally and be given a wide meaning through
literal interpretation of the clause. Since objects are considered to
be the permissive activities which a company can undertake in
order to do its business, the same should not be given a restrictive
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 9 :-
meaning. In any case, rigid construction of the said document,
unless and until inevitable and insurmountable, must be avoided.
5.
In the context of the above, the question whether in the
instant case, the investments made by the appellant-company are
pursuant to its business or such investments and the profits
derived therefrom are from other sources, now needs to be
determined. But before doing that, we would like to reproduce the
provisions of Section 30(2)(b) of the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979,
which are as follows:-
30. Income from other sources:-
…….
(2) In particular, and without prejudice to the generality
of the provisions of sub-section (1), the following
incomes shall, save as otherwise provided in this
Ordinance, be chargeable under the head “Income from
other sources”, namely:
……
(b) “interest, royalties and fees for technical services”
6.
From Clause 1 of Article III of the appellant-company’s
MOA, as reproduced above, it is clear that the primary and main
object of the appellant-company is to install, establish and run a
cement manufacturing plant. This, however, is not the only object
of the appellant-company, rather there are numerous other
ventures which are permissible under the objects clause of the
company.
Some
are
ancillary,
but
some
are
vividly
and
undoubtedly independent; and Clause 6 ibid amongst others falls
within the latter category. According to Clause 6, it is
unequivocally clear that the company is empowered to, and one of
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 10 :-
its purposes and objects is “To invest or otherwise deal with the money of the
Company in such manner as may from time to time be determined”. From a plain
reading of this clause, it is manifest that investment of the money
of the company, surplus or otherwise, for the purpose of earning
income, would be within the pail of permissible business activities
detailed in the MOA; the decision as to where, how and to what
extent this money is to be invested, in which scheme and for what
profit etc. is left for the management to decide in its commercial
prudence and in the best interest of the company.
Notwithstanding the above clause, in clause 36 (supra), which
is a residuary clause, it has been specifically stated that all the
aforesaid clauses shall be held to be independent objects of the
company and no objects stated in any sub-clause shall be deemed
or construed to be subsidiary or auxiliary to any objects mentioned
in any other sub-clause and that the Company shall have full
power to exercise all or any of the powers conferred by any
provisions of this clause in any part of the world. The only
exception to this general rule of interpretation of the MOA of the
appellant-company as envisaged by Clause 36 is where the scope of
sub-clause or object is expressly narrowed down or made
dependent on any other object/sub-clause. Therefore, while reading
Clause 6 in light of Clause 36, it may deduced that Clause 6 has
been considered and held to be an independent object of the
company as well.
7.
In light of the above, suffice it to say that Section
30(2)(b) is only applicable where the investment of money by a
person has not been made as part of his business activities. Where
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 11 :-
money has been invested by a person in his business and profit is
generated on such an investment, that profit shall, for all intents
and purposes, be considered to be the profit earned from business
and not from other sources.
To elucidate the above, it may be mentioned that if a person
is engaged in a business of sale and purchase of paintings and
pursuant to his business activity, he buys a painting worth
Rs.100/-, sells that out for Rs.150/-, and thus earns Rs.50/- as
profit, such profit of Rs.50/- shall be considered to be part of the
income generated from his business. On the contrary, if a person,
merely interested in collecting paintings for his personal collection,
purchases one but later sells it at a profit margin, the
profit/income earned by such person shall be deemed to be income
from other source as opposed to income from business. The reason
for this being that his purchase of the property i.e. paintings is only
for the purposes of his private collection and not as part of any
commercial/business activity he is engaged in. Therefore, it is the
object/purpose for which investments are made which is relevant
and the object, in the case of a company, has to be ascertained
from its Memorandum of Association and in the case of any other
individual, from the nature of his business activity.
8.
As
regards
the
judgment
reported
as
The
Commissioner of Income-Tax, East Pakistan, Dacca Vs. The
Liquidator,
Khulna-Bagerhat
Railway
Company
Ltd.,
Ahmadabad (PLD 1962 SC 128), the learned High Court has
heavily relied upon this verdict, but to our consideration, the
judgment is not germane to the facts and circumstances of the case
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 12 :-
in hand. The facts in which the aforesaid judgment was rendered
were that the respondent was a railway company which had
entered into an agreement with Secretary of State for India in-
council in 1916 for construction and management of railway in
what was previously East Pakistan. Later on in the year 1948, the
railway was acquired by the Government of Pakistan. When the
income tax return for the relevant period was filed by the
respondent, exemption was claimed under subsections 3 and 4 of
section 25 of the Income Tax Act. The question before the income
tax officer was whether income from interest from monies kept in
banks earned by the company during the relevant assessment year
would be classified as income from business or from other sources.
The income tax officer deemed such interest to be part of the
legitimate business activities of the company. This decision
however was reversed on appeal and the decision of the appellate
authority was upheld throughout. The Supreme Court while
hearing the matter held that per Article 2 and 3 of Memorandum of
Association of the respondent-company, main business was
construction and upkeep of the Railway system and though Article
26 did authorize the company to lend or invest monies belonging to
it, because such an activity was not company’s (railways) normal
business. The Supreme Court in that case concluded that each
case must be decided on its own facts, and in that case the
circumstances brought out in the evidence did not indicate that the
receiving of interest on Invested moneys was really included in the
business-income of the company. The supra case is distinguishable
from the one in hand because in the instant case, when the various
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 13 :-
clauses of the MOA of the appellant-company are construed and
applied specifically in the presence of Clause 36, it is clear that
Clause 6 is an independent object of the company and not a mere
authorization available with the appellant-company to make
investments which may be narrowed down or confined or deemed
auxiliary to Clause 1 ibid, which factor it seems was absent in the
afore cited case (emphasis supplied).
9.
Now attending to the question raised by the counsel for
the respondent that the provisions of Clause 37 ibid of the MOA
specifically prohibits the appellant-company from making any
investment of its money and carrying on any activity having no
nexus to its main object for generating income. It may be held that
unambiguously and undoubtedly the aforesaid is a prohibitory
clause, it is couched in the negative language and therefore under
the law of interpretation of statutes, such a provision of law and/or
a clause appearing in a document (such clause in the MOA) should be
construed and applied strictly. It should be assessed and
ascertained as to what is the real intent and object behind such a
clause, what mischief it has to suppress, circumvent and curb.
Besides, such prohibitory clause unless no other interpretation is
possible cannot be used as a tool for obliterating any other specific
and express provision of the statute or document, (in this case MOA)
which provision/clause unequivocally, categorically and clearly
provides a particular act and object of the company as its
permissible business, which otherwise is also lawful. It should not
be construed and interpreted that a prohibitory clause in a
statute/document is prescribed and is designed to render any other
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 14 :-
specific provision/clause as nugatory, rather for all intents and
purposes the rules of harmonious interpretation should be adhered
and resorted to and all possible efforts should be made to save each
and every provision of the statute/clauses of MOA (as the case may
be). In this context we find that Clause 6 supra in very clear and in
unambiguous terms prescribes that the appellant-company can
make an investment of its money. The precise words are “To invest
or otherwise deal with the money of the Company in such manner as
may from time to time be determined”. The word “deal” appearing in
the clause is disjunctive and notwithstanding the word invest (note:
which shall be construed in the preceding part of this opinion not hit by Clause
37) by itself permits the company to administer and apportion its
money by ways of putting it in any profit bearing scheme and
venture and earn income thereupon. Anyhow while interpreting the
two clauses, we ask a question to ourselves that if Clause 37 was
not there in the MOA, whether the company could invest its monies
as its business venture as per the force of Clause 6 ibid. The
answer we find is in the affirmative i.e. YES. Thus the question for
consideration and resolution now is if Clause 37 has made the
otherwise permissible business of the company as impermissible,
the reply is in the negative, NO. For the above reply, the intent and
the object of Clause 37 needs some elaboration, and the relevant
comments in this context are:- that regardless of the empowerment
of the company to carry out its objects clearly mentioned in the
preceding part of the MOA; Clause 37 when read independently
and in isolation of other clause it does debar the company from
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 15 :-
undertaking and indulging in the business of banking, finance,
investment, leasing or insurance or any other unlawful business.
Now for a moment excluding two words appearing in this
clause from consideration i.e. finance and investment, if the clause
is read, it is very much clear that a company has been precluded
and denuded of the authority to undertake (i.e. “to take on an
obligation or task; to give a formal promise; to make oneself responsible for
(a person, fact, or the like); a promise, pledge, or engagement” and indulge
i.e. “to become involved in any activity”), and indulge with the business
(this is an important word in the clause) of banking, leasing or insurance.
The word business unmistakably is also directly relevant to the two
other components of this clause i.e. finance and investment, which
connotes that the company shall not enter into any business of
financing, meaning thereby to undertake and indulge into the
business of financing i.e. providing money to others which concept
in the commercial parlance and sense is understood to act and
function as a financing company, or a company indulged in the
business of lending money. Likewise, there is a prohibition and a
bar per this clause that the appellant shall not act as an
investment entrepreneur, or an investment company, by attracting
and calling upon the public or class of people to invest money with
it and pay investors, the interest, profit etc. on such investment, so
as to act as an investment institution.
Clause 37 seemingly has been purposely added in the MOA
with the clear intent, and as an extra precaution to eliminate any
doubt that a company while misinterpreting any of its object clause
might not undertake and indulge into such business which is
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 16 :-
expressly covered and falls within the prohibitory domain thereof.
But where a business of the company is covered expressly by
anyone or more than one of its lawful objects, and do not clearly
and unambiguously fall within the prohibitory clause, it is held to
be beyond the pale of the said clause i.e. 37. Therefore, we are clear
in our mind that this clause in no way affect, control or annul the
specific object Clause 6 of the MOA, otherwise it is not conceivable
that on the one hand the company has assigned to itself a lawful
purpose and business in the shape of Clause 6, but on the other
hand itself has nullified the said empowerment by Clause 37. Thus
for the purposes of interpreting the two clauses the rule of
harmonious interpretation as mentioned above should apply and
both be saved for the purposes of serving their own object and
purpose. Before parting with this point it may be relevant to
mention here that for the purposes of banking; leasing and for
insurance the licences are required and the above clause had such
intent behind and for financing and investment as those are an
unlawful business which imperially experienced and it is a publicly
known fact has resulted in bid and critical scams, therefore the
prohibition was placed in the MOA for such business with a
purpose of preventing that. In fact the purpose of Clause 37 is to
discourage, unregulated collection of funds from the public and
safeguard against financial scams.
10.
In light of what has been discussed above, we are clear
in our mind that the amount of profit earned by the appellant-
company from the investment made in the various schemes/banks
is pursuant to its business activities and, therefore, this profit
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 17 :-
cannot be termed to have been accrued from any other source so as
to attract the application of Section 30(2)(b) i.e. income from other
source. These appeals, thus, are allowed, the impugned judgment
of the learned High Court and that of the Income Tax Tribunal is
set aside. The question of law thus involved in the matter
accordingly stands answered.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on ___________ at ____________
Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 18 :-
SH. AZMAT SAEED, J.- The brief facts necessary
for adjudication of the lis at hand are that the Appellant is a
limited
Company,
incorporated
under
the
Companies
Ordinance, 1984. The primary object of the Company was to
setup a Cement Manufacturing Plant. It was incorporated on or
about 18.09.1993 and commenced its business on 22.11.1993. It
appears that from its surplus funds, investments were made in
various Banks and Financial Institutions. Such investment was
yielded income in the Assessment Years 1994-95, 1995-96 and
1996-97. In the audited Statement of Accounts, the Appellant set-
off the income so realized against its unallocated capital
expenditure. The Deputy Commissioner Income Tax (DCIT)
issued a notice to the Appellant under Sections 61/62 of the
Income Tax Ordinance, 1979 to show cause as to why the income
realized from the aforesaid investments of surplus money
should not be treated as “income from other sources” in terms of
Section 30 of the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979. Explanations were
offered by the Appellant, which was not accepted. However, the
CIT Appeals accepted the contentions of the Appellant
whereafter the Department invoked the jurisdiction of the
Tribunal, which vide its decision dated 29.9.2001 held that the
income realized by the Appellant from the surplus fund placed
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 19 :-
in the Financial Institutions was to be treated as “income from
other sources”. The Appellant filed three separate Tax
References i.e. T.R. Nos.117 to 119 of 2003 before the learned
Peshawar High Court, against the consolidated order of the
Tribunal. The said Petitions were dismissed vide judgment
impugned dated 16.11.2005. Whereafter, the Appellant invoked
the jurisdiction of this Court by filing Civil Petitions Nos.38 to 40
of 2006 wherein leave to appeal was granted vide Order dated
24.01.2006.
2.
Upon hearing the learned counsels and after perusal
of the available record, it is evident that it is common ground
between the parties that the amounts realized by the Appellant
Company from the funds placed with the various Banks and
Financial Institutions is income. The only matter in controversy
is whether such amounts are to be treated as “Business Income”
or “income from other sources”. It is the case of the Appellant
that by virtue of its Memorandum of Association (MOA), more
particularly, sub-clause 6 thereof the Appellant Company is
authorized and entitled to invest its money and such venture is
one of the declared objects of the Company. Furthermore, each
and every object of Company as set out in the various sub-
clauses of the MOA, by virtue of sub-clause 36 must be
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 20 :-
construed independently unrestricted by any other sub-clause,
including sub-clause I, identifying the main Business of the
Company, sub-clauses 6 and 36 are reproduced herein below for
ease of reference:
“6.
To invest or otherwise deal with the
money of the Company in such manner as
may from time to time be determined.”
“36. It is expressly declared that the several
sub-clauses of this clause and all the powers
expressed therein are to be cumulative but in
no case unless the context expressly so
requires is the generality of any one sub-
clause to be narrowed or restricted by the
name of the Company or by the particularity
of expression in the same sub-clause or by the
application or any rule of construction such as
the ejusdem generis rule, and accordingly
none of such sub-clauses or the objects therein
specified or the power thereby conferred shall
be deemed subsidiary or auxiliary, merely to
the objects mentioned in any other sub-clause
of this clause and the Company shall have full
power to exercise all or any of the powers
conferred by any provisions of this clause in
any part of the world.”
3.
While, on the other hand, it is the case of the
Department that all the sub-clauses of the MOA are qualified by
sub-clause 37, which in no uncertain terms states the object
clauses of the MOA cannot constrained to empower the
Company to indulge in inter alia the Business of Investment.
Thus, the income derived by the Company from the investment
in Banks and Financial Institutions cannot be deemed to be
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 21 :-
income derived from the “Business” of the Company but in fact
is “income from other sources”. For ease of reference, sub-clause
37 is reproduced hereunder:
“37. Notwithstanding any thing contained in
the
foregoing
object
clauses
of
this
Memorandum of Association, nothing herein
shall be construed as empowers the Company
to undertake or indulge in the business of
banking, finance, investment, leasing or
insurance, directly or indirectly or any
unlawful operations.”
4.
The MOA of a Company is undoubtedly its Charter,
which identifies the objects of the Company the business to be
undertaken and the powers conferred upon the Company.
Subject to the tenor of the MOU, one mode of interpretation the
same would be to identify the primary or normal business of the
Company and treat all other powers enumerated therein as
pertaining or subservient to the such normal business and any
income derived through exercise of such incidental powers was
not treated as Business Income for tax purposes. Reference in
this behalf may be made to the judgment of this Court, reported
as Commissioner of Income Tax, East Pakistan Dacca Vs. The
Liquidator, Khulna Bagerhat Railway Company Limited,
Ahmadabad (PLD 1962 SC 128), wherein it has been held as
follows:
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 22 :-
“We have considered the various Articles by
which this Company was governed. We have
no hesitation in agreeing with the view of the
High Court that the normal business of the
Company was the construction and the
running of the Railway and not investment of
its moneys on interest. Other powers were
also given to the Company by the Articles of
Association, but it is not contended that all
those powers pertained to the earning of
normal business income. If the Company,
instead of retaining its surplus moneys in idle
condition, invested them under the powers
given to them by their Articles of Association,
it would not follow that the income so derived
would be part of the Company’s normal
business income. Each case must be decided
on its own facts and, in the instant case, the
circumstances brought out in the evidence do
not indicate that receiving of interest on
invested moneys was really included in the
business income of the Company.”
5.
A Company can be incorporated to carry on multiple
business. Furthermore, the object clauses of the MOA can be
scribed so as to be read independently, unfettered by the other
clauses, including the clause identifying the primary or normal
business as has been attempted to be done in the instant case
through sub-clause 36 reproduced hereinabove. But, be that as it
may, we cannot ignore or avoid giving effect to sub-clause 37
(reproduced herein above). The said sub-clause is prefixed with
the word “Notwithstanding” which defines in Black’s Law
Dictionary Ninth Edition to mean “Despite” or “in spite of”.
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 23 :-
6.
On a plan reading, sub-clause 37 states in unequivocal
terms states that in spite of anything contained any of the object
clauses (including clause 6 and clause 36) nothing therein shall
continued to empower the Company to undertake or indulge in
the Business of inter alia Investment. Such is the clear and
unambiguous import and meaning of sub-clause 37. To attribute
to the said sub-clause any other meaning would require
inflicting extreme violence on the plain language. In the
circumstances, the accumulative effect of the MOA, more
particularly, sub-clause 6, 36 and 37, which read together would
be that the Appellant Company is empowered to invest its
money but such a transaction cannot be deemed to be Business
of Company; consequently, the income derived from such
investment cannot qualify as Business Income and therefore
must fall in the category of “income from other sources” as has
been correctly held by the Tribunal and the High Court by way
of the impugned judgment. Hence, these Appeals are liable to be
dismissed.
Judge
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 24 :-
Mushir Alam, J-. I had the privilege and benefit of reading
the opinion of two very learned brothers (Mian Saqib Nisar, J and Sh.
Azmat Saeed, J). I concur with the conclusion drawn by my learned
brother Justice Sh. Azmat Saeed. However, I would like to supplement my
own reasons for the same.
2.
Facts of the case are straightforward and simple. Appellant-
Lucky Cement Ltd, which is a public limited company, with authorized
capital of Rupees Three Billion was incorporated on or about 18.9.1993 for
the purpose of inter-alia to setup a cement plant to manufacture “Portland
Cement”. To set up cement plant, Appellant had raised capital/funds,
during the period of construction of cement plant, surplus funds not
immediately required by it, were invested in various financial institutions.
Period of investment comprised of three assessment years i.e. 1994-95,
1995-96 and 1996-97. Investments of funds were specifically permitted by
Clause 6 of its Article and Memorandum of Association. For the subject
three assessment years, no business was carried out as the cement plant
was under construction. Appellant, however, declared income, in all three
assessment years, earned from interest (earned through Pak Rupee
Currency investment and Foreign Currency Investments). In the audited
statement of account, the Appellant set off the aggregate of the sum so
realized from the financial institutions against unutilized capital
expenditure, which also included the financial charges and capitalized the
balance claiming to have reduced the project cost.
3.
The Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax, Circle-18, Zone-A,
Peshawar (DCIT) rejected the claim of Appellant that the interest income
was not liable to be taxed vide order dated 24.07.1997 and assessed the
interest income under Section 30 (2)(b) of the Ordinance, 1979 so received
by it under the head “from other sources.” It was held that “the Company
does not enjoy exemption under any clause of the 2nd Schedule to the
Income Tax Ordinance, 1979”. It was further held “that income earned on
account of income on interest and other investments are liable to tax and
is treated as “income from other sources”. It may be observed that interest
income earned from Foreign Currency investment was not taxed being
exempted vide Section 5 of the “Protection of Economic Reforms Act, 1992.
However, the Commissioner of Income/Wealth Tax, Appeals [CIT (A)], on
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 25 :-
Appeal by the Appellant company, reversed the finding of the DCIT, vide
order dated 30.10.1997 and, held that “Income earned was directly related
to the main business of setting up of cement project”, hence “the appellant
had correctly offset the said income against the cost of the project”.
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) accepted the Appeal filed by the
CIT(A), placing reliance on the case of Commissioner of Income Tax, East
Pakistan, Dacca v. The Liquidator, Khulna Bagerhat Railway Company
Ltd. Ahmadabad (PLD 1962 SC 128) and, held that the main business of
the Assessee is to earn income from manufacture and sale of cement and
though clause 6 of the Article of Association, allows the Company to invest
surplus money but in view of the observation in the cited case, it cannot be
included in the normal business of the respondent (Lucky Cement), which
were unsuccessfully subjected to Tax References No.117, 118 and 119 of
2003 by the Appellant company under Section 133 of the Income Tax
Ordinance, 2001. All the three References were dismissed by the Peshawar
High Court vide impugned judgment dated 22.11.2005 (reported as Lucky
Cement v. CIT Zone Companies Circle Peshawar 2006 PTD 578). Leave in
all the three cases was granted vide order dated 24.1.2006, which has been
reproduced in the opinion of my learned brother (Mian Saqib Nisar, J)
and thus need not be reiterated herein.
4.
Pivotal question that clichés the controversy in hand is
whether the income (interest) earned by investing surplus fund not
immediately required by the Appellant, during the period of construction
of cement plant, in various financial institutions, either falls under the
head “Income from business and profession per Section 15(d) and
chargeable to tax under Section 22 or “Income from other sources” and
chargeable to tax under Section 30 of the Ordinance, 1979.
5.
Total income of the Appellant-company under the Ordinance,
1979 is chargeable to tax under Section 9 thereof. Head of income for the
purpose of charging tax and computation of total income are classified in
six sub-heads under Section 15 of the Ordinance, 1979, manner of
computing income on each head is further detailed in separate provision as
mentioned in the tabulation below.
Head of income
Charging Provision
U/s 15 of Ordinance, 1979
a). Salary
…………………………………………….Section 16.
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 26 :-
b). Interest on Securities
……………………Section 17.
c).Income from house property……………………..Section 19.
d).Income from business and profession…..……Section 22.
e).Capital Gain …………..………………………………Section 27.
f). Income from other sources….……………………Section 30.
6.
As noted above, computation of income falling under any of
the heads as enumerated above is chargeable to tax under provision
specified against each head. Admissible and inadmissible allowances and
deductions are catered for each of the six sub-heads of income separately
under the Ordinance, 1979. Any exemption, concession, deduction and or
adjustment or set off on account of expenditure is permissible as per
provisions of the Ordinance, 1979 and not otherwise. Generating income
that may fall under any of the six sub-heads as noted above, does not affect
its taxability in any manner whatsoever irrespective of application of such
income for the payment of interest, adjustment and or setting off on
account of expenditure etc.
7.
It may be observed that a corporate entity like Appellant, have
vast portfolio to operate upon under its Article and Memorandum of
Association. A corporate entity or for that matter any person/assessee may
have more than one source of income, each falling in any of the six sub-
heads enumerated under section 15 ibid. Income falling under any of the
six sub-heads is charged separately under different provisions of the
Ordinance, 1979 as mentioned against each sub-head of income as noted
above.
8.
It may so happen, as in the instant case, that a company
incorporated to undertake any commercial or business venture has not yet
commenced its main business or commercial activity that may yield any
income, may generate income from other sources, like renting out part of
its premises, which is not yet put to use during period of completion of its
factory/cement plant and or by purchasing and selling any real estate using
its surplus fund and or by renting it out, and or by utilizing its surplus fund
in any other commercial proposition including and not limited to placing
such funds in fixed deposit or profit bearing scheme in any financial
institution and or by investing in stock or securities etc. as may be
permissible under its Article and Memorandum of Association. As has
happened in the case in hand, to generate more revenue or earn interest or
profit, Appellant Company, in its commercial prudence and rightly so,
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 27 :-
instead of keeping its surplus money idle, “chose to employ such fund in
proactive manner in order to generate additional fund”, invested its
surplus funds “by way of portfolio, fund and cash management venture”.
It is Appellant’s case that “by an active trading (buying and selling) of
these financial assets, the Appellant was able to earn substantial amount
by way of return”.
9.
As noted in the narrative above, DCIT disallowed the claim of
the Appellant Company to set off the aggregate of the sum so realized from
the financial institutions against unutilized capital expenditure, which also
included the financial charges and capitalized the balance claiming to have
reduced the project cost, which triggered controversy in hand. The decision
of the DCIT was reversed by the CIT(A), however ITAT, restored the
finding of the DCIT.
10.
The controversy that has drawn attention of this Court in
instant case is ‘whether the “interest income” generated “by way of
portfolio, fund and cash management venture” falls under clause (d) and
or (f) of Section 15 of the Ordinance, 1979’. As noted above, income within
taxable slab may fall under any of the six sub-heads enumerated under
Section 15 ibid; are liable to be taxed in accordance with respective
charging provisions, unless specifically exempted by law under Section 14
read with schedule 1 of the Ordinance.
11.
For the purpose of controversy in hand, phrases “Income from
business” (clause-d) and “Income from other sources” (clause-f) are
relevant. “Business” is defined under Section 2(11) of the Ordinance, 1979
“to include any trade, commerce or manufacture, or any adventure or
concern in the nature of trade, commerce or manufacture. As noted above
each head of income enumerated in Section 15 ibid is charged separately
under respective charging section. Charging provision for the purposes of
income from business falling under clause (d) of Section 15 ibid; is Section
22 of the Ordinance, 1979, which provides “income” that shall be
chargeable under the head of income from “business or profession” as
follows:-
(a)
Profits and gain of any business or profession carried
on, or deemed to be carried on, by the assessee at any
time during income year
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 28 :-
(b)
Income derived by any trade, profession and similar
association from specific service performed for its
members; and
(c)
Value of any benefit or perquisite, whether convertible
into money or not, arising from business or exercise of
profession.
Explanation : Where speculative transaction carried on by an
assessee are of such a nature as to constitute a business, the
business, the business (hereinafter referred to as “speculation
business”) shall be deemed to be distinct and separate from
any other business carried on by the assessee.”
12.
Income from “other sources” chargeable to tax per clause (f) of
Section 15 is further elaborated in Section 30 of the Ordinance, 1979, which
reads as follows:-
“30.
Income from other sources: (1) Income of every
kind which may be included in the total income of an
assessee under this Ordinance shall be chargeable under
the head “Income from other sources”, if it is not included
in his total income under any other head.
(2)
In particular, and without prejudice to the
generality of the provisions of sub-section (1), the
following income shall, save as otherwise provided in this
Ordinance, be chargeable under the head “Income from
other sources” namely,
(a)
dividend;
(b)
interest, royalties and fees for technical
services;
(c)
ground rent;
(d)
income from the hire of machinery, plant or
furniture, belonging to the assessee and also
of buildings belonging to him if the letting of
the building is inseparable from the letting of
the said machinery, plant or furniture; and
(e)
any income to which sub-section (12) of the
Section 12 or Section 13 applies.”
13.
Contentions of Mr. Khalid Anwar, learned senior ASC for the
Appellant, that though primary object of the Appellant Company per object
No.1 set out in the Memorandum of Association of Appellant Company was
to install “state of the art plant” for the purpose of manufacturing
“PORTLAND CEMENT”. It was urged that surplus money lying idle, during
the three assessment year, when the cement plant was under construction,
as business prudence would have demanded, were invested to earn interest
to mitigate cost of installation of plant, cannot be termed anything but
income from business. It was urged that investment of the surplus fund of
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 29 :-
the Appellant company from part of the business activity is permissible
under clause 6 of its Article and Memorandum of Association.
14.
The controversy raised is not new, in our jurisdiction. Similar
controversy prevailed in Indian jurisdiction, was resolved by the Supreme
Court of India in the case titled as Tuticorin Alkali Chemicals and
Fertilizers Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, 1997 Supp. (1) SCR 528
(also reported in 1998 PTD 900). In the cited case also the company raised
funds for setting up plant for manufacturing heavy chemicals, utilized its
funds, which were not immediately required by the company in short term
deposit with the bank, such investment was specifically permitted under its
Article and Memorandum of Association. In said case, also the company
initially set off the interest income against the business loss, claimed
benefit of carry forward of net loss, however, later filed revised return and
claimed that interest and other finance charges along with other pre-
production expenses will have to be capitalized, and that the interest
income should go to reduce the pre-production expenses, which would
ultimately be capitalized. The Supreme Court of India, considered large
number of conflicting decisions of various High Courts and approved the
judgment rendered by the Madras High Court in the case reported as
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Seshasayee Paper & Board Ltd. (156 ITR
543), wherein it was held that “the interest earned by the assessee from the
bank deposit had to be assessed under the head “Other sources”.
15.
Position in Pakistan is no different. Similar controversy has
arisen in the case of Commissioner of Income Tax v. Liquidator Khulna-
Bagerhat Railway Company Ltd (PLD 1962 SC 128) wherein this Court
confronted with proposition similar to one in hand and resolved the same
at page 132 as follows:-
“We have considered the various Articles by which
this Company was governed. We have no hesitation in
agreeing with the view of the High Court that the normal
business of the Company was the construction and the
running of the Railway and not investment of its moneys
on interest. Other powers were also given to the Company
by the Articles of Association, but it is not contended that
all those powers pertained to the earning of normal
business-income. If the Company, instead of retaining its
surplus moneys in idle condition, invested them under the
powers given to them by their Articles of Association, it
would not follow that the income so derived would be part
of the Company’s normal business-income. Each case
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 30 :-
must be decided on its own facts and, in the instant case,
the circumstances brought out in the evidence do not
indicate that the receiving of interest on invested moneys
was really included in the business-income of the
Company. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the view
taken by the High Court is not open to any legal exception.
The appeal fails and is hereby dismissed with costs.”
16.
In another judgment reported as Genertech Pakistan Ltd v.
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal of Pakistan (2004 SCMR 1319), wherein
facts are somewhat similar to the facts in instant case, the assessee
company, received share capital from various sharers for the purpose of
setting up “Electric Generation Project”, and instead of keeping the money
idle, deposited said amount in the Bank. The amount so deposited earned
interest. The company showed “nil” profit from power generation,
however, at the same time claimed exemption from payment of tax on the
interest earned from the Bank under item 176 of the 2nd Schedule of the
Ordinance, (which inter-alia exempted from tax any “Profit and gain
derived by an assessee from an electric power generation project set up in
Pakistan on or after 1st day of July 1988). Stance of the company was not
accepted by the DCIT and the interest earned was treated as "income from
other sources”, and was taxed accordingly, which assessment order was
concurrently maintained up to the High Court. Controversy landed in this
Court, which examined all the relevant provisions and came to a conclusion
as recorded in paragraphs 9 and 11 thereof at page 1323 as follows:-
“9.
Now question for consideration is as to whether
interest earned by the appellants from the share capital
deposited in the Banks does fall within the scope of
“income from other sources” under section 30 of the
Ordinance. To answer the proposition it is to be borne in
mind that Item 176 of Second Schedule of the Ordinance
provides in clear terms that “profits and gains derived by
an assessee from Electric Power Generation Project, set up
in Pakistan on or after 1st of July, 1998 shall be exempted
from total income tax.” Essentially, profits and gains from
the Electric Power Generation Project is distinct and
different from the interest being obtained by the Company
on the deposit of share capital in the Banks, during the
financial years for which the return of income under the
relevant provision of Ordinance is filed and the exemption
is claimed from the payment of income tax under Item 176
of Second Schedule of the Ordinance. It is informed that
Electric Generating Plants of appellants-companies had
started functioning in 1994-95 but they instead of
claiming exemption on the profits/gains from Power
Generation, claimed it from the deposit of the share
capital lying in the Banks. It is to be seen that no sooner as
a Company goes in production it cannot claim exemption
of income tax on the interest of share capital deposited in
Banks because on commencement of the production,
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 31 :-
profits and gains are to be earned out of the income of
Electric Generation independently.
11.
But in instant case, position is altogether different
because the share capital deposits in the Banks by the
appellants are providing a separate income to them after
post production stage of the Power Generating activity,
therefore, on the income of interest no exemption can be
claimed by the appellants under Item 176 Second Schedule
of the Ordinance as it is a different income from the
profits/gains being earned from post production activity
of power generation.”
17.
In another case reported as CIT, Karachi v. Gelcaps (Pvt) Ltd
(2009 PTD 331), a learned Division Bench confronted with similar
proposition, examined large number of cases from Pakistani and Foreign
jurisdiction in detail and came to following conclusion in Paragraph 38 at
page 350; as follows:-
“38.
We fully agree with the reasoning contained in the
above two judgments of the Patna High Court and hold
that the interest income earned by the assessee in the two
cases before us on short-term deposit out of the capital
borrowed for the establishment of industry is not income
from business but is income from other sources and
cannot be allowed to be adjusted against the interest paid
on the borrowed capital for the simple reason that the
interest paid on the borrowed capital is to be capitalized
and there is no provision in law whereby income earned
under the head “other sources” can be permitted to be
adjusted against the expenses which are to be capitalized.”
18.
In a more recent judgment reported as UCH Power (Pvt) Ltd
v. Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (2010 SCMR 1236), this Court once
again reaffirmed the principle enunciated in the case of Tuticorin Alkali
Chemicals (1998 PTD 900); Gelcaps (Pvt.) Ltd (2009 PTD 331) and
Genertech Pakistan Ltd (2004 SCMR 1319), already noted in the preceding
paragraphs above.
19.
On examining the scheme of the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979,
case law on the subject, consensus that emerges is that during the period or
course of setting up of a factory or plant by the company, activity of
investing surplus funds of the company and generating any sum, return or
interest on such investment, could not be considered as “Income from
business” under clause (d) of Section 15 of the Ordinance, 1979. Fact
remains in the words of the Appellant, surplus funds in the hands of
appellant company were employed “in proactive manner in order to
generate additional fund”, invested its surplus funds “by way of portfolio,
fund and cash management venture”. It is Appellant’s case that “by an
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 32 :-
active trading (buying and selling) of these financial assets, the Appellant
was able to earn substantial amount by way of return”. Such activity was
carried out during the period cement plant/factory was under construction,
therefore, the Appellant, under facts and circumstances cannot be said to
be carrying on any business within the contemplation of Section 22 of the
Ordinance, 1979. When income does not fit in any of the five sub-heads
enumerated in clauses (a) to (e) of Section 15 of the Ordinance, 1979 and
falls under the residuary sub-head of “Income from other sources” i.e.
clause (f) of Section 15 ibid, the DICT, under the given facts and
circumstances, was justified to treat the “interest” income yielding from the
investment of the surplus funds of the company as “Income from other
sources” and rightly assessed the same under Section 30 (2)(b) of the
Ordinance, 1979, which was rightly sustained by the ITAT and so also by
the learned Division Bench of the High Court.
20.
Consequently, the appeals do not merit consideration and are
dismissed.
Judge
Civil Appeals No.150, 151 & 152 of 2006
-: 33 :-
ORDER OF THE BENCH
By majority of two to one, these appeals are, accordingly,
dismissed.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Announced in open Court
on 10th July 2015 at Islamabad
(Judge)
| {
"id": "C.A.150_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
Mr. Justice Mian Saqib Nisar, CJP
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Mr. Justice Faisal Arab
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1515 & 1516 OF 2016
(On appeal from the judgment/order dated 02.06.2015 passed by
Peshawar High Court, Peshawar in W.Ps. Nos.4122/2010 & 214/2011)
Govt. of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,
Thr. Secretary Energy & Power Department,
Peshawar, etc.
…
…
Appellants.
(in both cases)
Versus
Ihsan Ullah
…
…
Respondent
(in C.A.1515/2016)
Masood Khan & others
…
…
Respondent
(in C.A.1516/2016)
For Appellant No.1
:
Mr. Umar Farooq Adam, Addl.AG KPK
(in both cases)
For Appellants (2-3)
:
Mr. Shumail Butt, ASC.
(in C.A.1515/2016 & for
Appellants 2-6 in C.A.1516/2016)
For respondents
:
Mr. Zulfiqar Khalid Maluqa, ASC.
(in both cases)
Date of hearing
:
08.02.2017.
JUDGMENT:
UMAR ATA BANDIAL, J. – The Appellants challenge
the common judgment of the learned Peshawar High Court dated
02.06.2015, holding that the contract services of the Respondents
stand regularised by operation of law, under Section 19(2) of the
C.As.1515-1516/2016
2
KPK Civil Servants Act 1973 (“Act, 1973”), as amended by the KPK
Civil Servants (Amendment) Act, 2005 (“Amendment Act, 2005”).
2.
The
Respondents
were
appointed
in
2004
as
Accountants BPS-16 for one year on contract basis to project posts in
various projects of the Sarhad Hydel Development Organisation
(“SHYDO”) now known as the Pakhtunkhwa Energy Development
Organisation (“PEDO”), which organisation is represented by
Appellants No. 2 to 5. The Respondents’ contracts were repeatedly
extended until December 2010, when they were informed that their
employment was being terminated due to the completion of their
respective projects. The Respondents challenged their termination
vide Writ Petitions before the learned Peshawar High Court. By the
impugned judgment dated 02.06.2015, the learned High Court
allowed the Petitions and held that the Respondents stood
regularized by operation of law, as already noted above.
3.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
have gone through the impugned judgment carefully and perused
the record.
4.
In 2005, Section 19(2) was inserted into the Act, 1973 by
the Amendment Act, 2005 which reads as under:
“19. Pension and Gratuity
(1) …
(2) A person though selected for appointment in the
prescribed manner to a service or post on or after the 1st
day of July, 2001, till the commencement of the said Act,
but appointed on contract basis, shall, with effect from the
commencement of the said Act, be deemed to have been
C.As.1515-1516/2016
3
appointed on regular basis. All such persons and the
persons appointed on regular basis to a service or post in
the prescribed manner after commencement the said Act
shall, for all intents and purposes, be civil servant, except
for the purposes of pension or gratuity. Such a civil servant
shall, in lieu of pension and gratuity, be entitled to receive
such amount contributed by him towards the Contributory
Provident Fund, along with the contributions made by
Government to his account in the said Fund in the
prescribed manner.” (emphasis supplied)
5.
The fiction of regularisation of service created by
Section 19(2) supra was applied by the learned High Court because
the date of contract employment of the Respondents falls within the
qualifying period prescribed in the said provision. However, we are
unable to subscribe to the view taken by the learned High Court for
a number of reasons.
6.
Firstly, it is pertinent to note that according to Section
2(1)(b) of the Act, 1973:
“2.(1) …
(a)
…
(b) “civil servant” means a person who is member of a
civil service of the Province, or who holds a civil post in
connection with the affairs of the Province, but does not
include-
(i)
a person who is on deputation to the Province from
the Federation or any other Province or other
authority;
(ii)
a person who is employed on contract, or on work-
charged basis or who is paid from contingences; or
(iii)
a person who is “worker” or “workman” as
defined in the Factories Act, 1934 (Act XXV of
1934), or the Workman’s Compensation Act, 1923
(Act VIII of 1923).” (emphasis supplied)
In other words, according to the Act, 1973 civil servants are
employees who are in the service of the provincial government or
C.As.1515-1516/2016
4
who hold a civil post in such government. According to the Sarhad
Hydel Development Organisation Act, 1993 (now in its amended
form
known
as
the
Pakhtunkhwa
Energy
Development
Organisation Act, 1993) SHYDO/PEDO is not a government
department; it is rather a semi-autonomous body. The expressions
“service or post” used in Section 19(2) ibid manifest the attributes
given in the aforesaid definition of a civil servant in Section 2(1)(b)
of the Act, 1973. It becomes clear that Section 19(2) applies to
employees of the government and not to employees of semi-
autonomous bodies. Therefore, in the absence of material showing
that the Respondents are members of a Provincial service or are
holding regular sanctioned posts in the Provincial Government, they
are not eligible for the benefit granted by Section 19(2) ibid.
7.
Secondly, it is an undisputed fact that the Respondents
were project employees. Their letters of appointment clearly state
that their posts were “temporary project posts” which would be
“likely to continue till the completion of the project.” The rationale
for the 2005 amendment incorporating Section 19(2) in the Act, 1973
refutes the view that the new sub-Section applies to project
employees. Under its 2002 Contract Policy, the KPK government
made contract based appointments on sanctioned posts falling
under the provincial government budget. Such employment created
disparity between the rights and privileges of regular and contract
employees of the government. Section 19(2) ibid was introduced to
mitigate that imbalance. A factual narrative of the remedial object of
C.As.1515-1516/2016
5
the said provision is available in the judgment of the learned
Peshawar High Court in Tariq Habib vs. Govt of NWFP [2011 PLC
(CS) 1479].
8.
The impugned judgment by the learned High Court
places reliance on Government of KPK and others vs. Kaleem
Shah and others (2011 SCMR 1004) as authority for regularisation of
project employees. The view expressed in the said judgment follows
the judgment of this Court dated 01.03.2011 passed in Civil Appeals
Nos. 834 to 837 of 2010 titled Govt. of NWFP and others vs.
Abdullah Khan and others. In that case, the employer government
department had failed to prove that the contesting respondents were
project
employees.
Consequently
the
latter
were
granted
regularisation in service. The facts of the present case are different.
The Respondents are admittedly project employees in a semi-
autonomous statutory body of the provincial government and the
only
question
is
whether
such
employment
qualifies
for
regularization under Section 19(2) of the Act, 1973. We have already
observed that the eligibility criterion for relief under Section 19(2) of
the Act, 1973, namely, being member of a provincial service or
holder of a civil post in the provincial government, is not met by the
Respondents. The KPK (Regularisation of Services) Act, 2009 also
excludes project employees from its ambit, therefore, the
Respondents are ineligible even on that score. Consequently, we are
not persuaded by the relevance of the Kaleem Shah’s case supra
relied by the learned High Court to the matter in issue.
C.As.1515-1516/2016
6
9.
The Respondents have also alleged that they have been
discriminated against by their employer SHYDO/PEDO. We do not,
however, find reliable material to accept this contention. The
Respondents have cited the cases of numerous SHYDO employees
who have been regularised but these employees were not shown to
be project employees. The difference of status between the said
regularised employees and the Respondents is clear from their
respective letters of appointment. Unlike the Respondents, the
letters of appointment of the regularised employees do not offer
employment on temporary project posts. The Respondents are
therefore, prima facie, not similarly placed as the regularised
employees. The learned counsel for the Respondents cited the
regularisation of one Mr. Anwar Zeb, a project employee. The
Appellant employer has, however, stated that Mr. Anwar Zeb was
‘inadvertently’ regularised but his status has been reversed. In view
of the foregoing, the Respondents’ plea of discrimination is, prima
facie, misconceived.
10.
Be that as it may and in the interest of justice, the
Respondents may within one month hereof place documentary
evidence of the regularisation of service of any project employee of
SHYDO/PEDO before the Appellant authority in order to show that
notwithstanding the employment of such employee on a temporary
project post his services were nevertheless regularised by the
Appellant. In such event, the Appellant authority shall after
C.As.1515-1516/2016
7
Verification forthwith regularise the services of the Respondents in
SHYDO/ PEDO with effect from the date of termination of their
services.
For the foregoing discussion, the impugned judgment
dated 02.06.2015 is set aside and these appeals are partly allowed in
the above terms.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Announced
in Court on 05.05.2017.
Sd/-
Judge
NOT APPROVED FOR REPORTING.
| {
"id": "C.A.1515_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE MANZOOR AHMAD MALIK
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
Against order dated 20.6.2013 of Lahore
High Court, Lahore, passed in Writ Petition
No.11584 of 2013.
Haroon-ur-Rashid
Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Lahore Development Authority, etc.
Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s)
:
Mr. Mehboob Azhar Sheikh, ASC
For the Respondent(s) :
Mr. Khurram Raza Ch, ASC
Rana Umar Saeed Dy. Dir (SFP)
Date of Hearing
:
26.02.2016
JUDGMENT
Mushir Alam, J-. This appeal by leave of the Court is
directed against order dated 20.6.2013 of Lahore High Court,
Lahore, whereby Writ Petition No.11584 of 2013 filed by the
appellant challenging the order of his compulsory retirement
was dismissed.
2.
Facts, in brief, are that the appellant holding the
charge of Deputy Director (Revenue), a Grade-18 post in
Lahore Development Authority (LDA) was suspended from
service and issued a show cause notice dated 02.7.2012 under
Section 7(b) read with Section 5(1) (a) of the Punjab
Employees Efficiency, Discipline and Accountability Act, 2006
(PEEDA, 2006) for having committed irregularities detailed
therein. Show cause notice was contested and after hearing,
major penalty of compulsory retirement from service was
inflected
on
the
appellant
by
the
Director
General/Competent Authority of the LDA vide order dated
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
2
3.8.2012.
Departmental
appeal
was
dismissed
by
the
Chairman, LDA on 23.4.2013, which was challenged through
Writ Petition No.11584 of 2013. The learned High Court
dismissed the petition inter alia holding that:-
“Learned counsel for the petitioner has admitted
before this Court that there are no statutory rules
of service and on the basis of malafide on the part
of respondents he has filed this constitutional
petition. I am afraid when there are no statutory
rules of service and rule of master and servant is
applicable, therefore, in the light of case law
referred by learned counsel for the respondents
i.e. Lahore Development Authority and others
Versus Abdul Shafiq and others” (1992 PLC 1214)
as well as an unreported judgment of this Court
passed in Writ Petition No.11926 of 2011 titled
“Masood Ahmad Qazi Vs. L.D.A etc” decided on
18.1.2012, this writ petition is not maintainable.
Even if it is presumed that there was some malice
or malafide on the part of respondents, simply
saying so is nothing until and unless it is proved
through cogent evidence. The petitioner, if so
advised, can file a suit for damages, if he has
wrongly been dismissed from the service. In this
view of the matter, this petition being not
maintainable stands dismissed.”
3.
Mr.
Mehboob
Azhar
Sheikh,
learned
ASC
appearing for the appellant contends that the appellant was
not proceeded under the Lahore Development Authority
Service Regulations, 1978 (LDA Regulations, 1978) which
admittedly are non statutory. He was proceeded under the
PEEDA, which is a statutory enactment and any violation
thereof or action taken there under is amenable to writ
jurisdiction and in support of his contention he has placed
reliance on the case of Muhammad Amin vs. Government of
Punjab (2015 SCMR 706) wherein it has been held that
employees of statutory authority who fall within the ambit of
employee covered under section 2(h) (i) of the PEEDA, 2006
and are not civil servants, for redressal of their grievances
arising out of disciplinary proceedings under PEEDA, 2006 may
invoke jurisdiction of the High Court under Article 199 of the
Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973.
4.
Mr. Khurram Raza Chaudhry, learned ASC for the
respondents-LDA has defended the impugned order. He
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
3
contends that though the LDA is created under the Lahore
Development Authority Act, 1975 (LDA Act, 1975) but services
of employees of the LDA are governed under the LDA
Regulations, 1978 framed under Section 45 of LDA Act, 1975
which are non-statutory as held in the cases reported as
Muhammad Saeed Ahmed Khan and 2 others vs. Secretary to
Government of the Punjab, Housing and Physical Planning
Department and 3 others (PLD 1983 Lahore 206) and Javaid
Iqbal vs. Azad Government of the State of Jammu and
Kashmir and 2 others (1992 PLC 1214). According to learned
counsel, this Court, in a number of cases, including the ones
reported as Zeba Mumtaz v. First Women Bank Ltd (PLD 1999
Supreme Court 1106); PIA Corporation v. Suleman Alam Rizvi
(2015 SCMR 1545); Abdul Wahab v. HBL (2013 SCMR 1383);
Pakistan Defence Officers’ Housing Authority v. Jawaid Ahmed
(2013 SCMR 1707); Nazir Gillani v. Pakistan Red Crescent
Society (2014 SCMR 982); and Pakistan International Airline
Corporation and others v. Tanweer-ur-Rehman and others (PLD
2010
Supreme
Court
676), has
consistently held that
relationship between a statutory corporation or authority and
its employees is that of a ‘master and servant’ and no writ
would be maintainable against the disciplinary proceedings
taken under non-statutory rules of service. He also contends
that since after the case reported as Muhammad Mubeen-us-
Salam v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2006 Supreme Court 172),
employees of the LDA, not being Civil servant, cannot invoke
jurisdiction of Service Tribunal either, only remedy if any lies by
way of suit before the civil court. According to learned
counsel, no interference in the rightful exercise of jurisdiction
by the High Court in declining to interfere in the departmental
matter is called for.
5.
Heard the arguments and perused the record.
There is no cavil to the factual matrix of the case that the LDA
created under the LDA Act, 1975 is a statutory authority and
disciplinary matters and proceedings against its employees,
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
4
admittedly were governed under the LDA Regulations, 1978
framed under Section 45 of the LDA Act, 1975. However,
pursuant to the promulgation of Punjab Removal from Service
(Special Powers) Ordinance, 2000 (RSO, 2000), enacted on
18.09.2000, the employees both in the service of Government
of
Punjab
and
or
in
service
of
statutory
corporation/authority/body for the purpose of disciplinary
matters and proceedings were brought within the regime of
RSO, 2000 which was succeeded by Punjab Employees
Efficiency, Discipline Act, 2006 (PEEDA, 2006), promulgated on
17th October, 2006. Section 2(h) of PEEDA, 2006 recognizes two
sets of employees; one in the government service or those
who are members of a civil service of the Province or who hold
civil post in connection with affairs of the Province and
another set of persons in the employment of corporation,
corporate body, autonomous body, authority, statutory body
or any other organization or institution set up, established,
owned, managed or controlled by the Government by or
under any law for the time being in force or a body or
organization in which the Government of Punjab has a
controlling share or interest and also includes the Chairman
and the Chief Executive and the holder of any other office
therein. Thus it could be seen that irrespective whether a
person is in the Government service or a member of a civil
service (per section 2(h)(ii) of PEEDA) or is in employment of
corporation or corporate or statutory body (per section 2(h)(i)
of PEEDA) could be proceeded departmentally in disciplinary
matter under the uniform statutory disciplinary dispensation.
Any proceedings taken, penalty imposed in terms of PEEDA,
2006 could be agitated before the departmental hierarchy by
way of appeal, review and or revision before the competent
authority detailed therein.
6.
We have come across case of Muhammad
Masood v. Market Committee (2014 PLC (CS) 1080), where an
employee of Market Committee, invoked the writ jurisdiction
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
5
of the High Court against the action taken under the PEEDA,
2006. Constitution Petition and so also the review Petition were
dismissed holding that the Petitioner was a Civil Servant; his
remedy lies under Section 19 of the PEEDA, 2006 before the
Punjab Service Tribunal.
7.
It may be observed that pursuant to dicta laid
down in the case of Muhammad Mubeen-us-Salam (PLD 2006
SC 602) an employee of an authority or statutory corporation
cannot be conferred a status of a civil servant or in service of
the Province or a post in connection with the affairs of the
Province under Article 240, thus not amenable to the
jurisdiction of Services Tribunal constituted under Article
212(1)(a) of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan,
1973. In this view of the matter, in the case of Muhammad
Dawood v. Federation of Pakistan (2007 PLS (CS) 1046), a
larger (three members) Bench of Sindh High Court, declared
Section 10 of the of the RSO, 2000 conferring appellate
jurisdiction on the Service Tribunal, in respect of matter arising
out of disciplinary proceedings under RSO, 2000 as ultra vires of
Article 212 of the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan,
1973. Remedy of appeal against the final order passes under
Section 16 or Section 17 of PEEDA, 2006 has been extended to
“any employee” aggrieved” or “affected employee” before
the Punjab Service Tribunal; extending the analogy of
Muhammad Dawood case (2007 PLC (CS) 1046), provisions of
Section 19 of PEEDA, 2006 (which is contemporaneous to
Section 10 of RSO, 2000) would be ultra vires. It is settled
position in law that while interpreting the law or any provision
of any statute all efforts are made by the Court to save the
statute by applying various tools of interpretation one of the
rule of harmonious construction being rule of reading down
and rule of severance. Rule of reading down, a statutory
provision means that a statutory provision is generally read
and or toned or narrowed down, applying restrictive meaning
in its application. Rule of severance means to trim down or
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
6
slice away invalid portion which is otherwise generally
considered to be part of statute or provision, purpose is to
save as much as to bring the statute or provision within the
ambit of constitution and law as declared by the superior
Courts and to protect it from being declared ultra-vires or
unconstitutional as a whole. If such trimming or slicing away is
possible then the Court declare such part to be beyond the
legislative competence and leave the reminder valid and
operative. In the case of Delhi Transport Corporation v. D.T.C
Mazdoor Congress (AIR 1991 SC 101=1990 SCR Supl. (1) 142),
Indian Supreme Court cited with approval the meaning and
scope of the word 'reading down' and 'Severance' dealt with
on page 7, para B in Australian Federal Constitutional Law by
Colin Haward, which reads as follows:
“The High court presumes the validity of legislation
to the extent that it will not of its own motion raise
questions of constitutionality. Legislation is treated
as valid unless the parties to litigation challenge it
on constitutional grounds. The techniques of
construction
known
as
reading
down
and
severance are corollaries of this presumption.
Reading down puts into operation the principle
that so far as it is reasonably possible to do so,
legislation should be construed as being within
power. It has the practical effect that where an Act
is expressed in language of a generality which
makes it capable, if read literally, of applying to
matters beyond the relevant legislative power, the
court will construe it in a more limited sense as keep
it within power”
And Further:
“It does not necessarily follow that because a
statute cannot be read down, it is wholly invalid.
The presumption of validity leads naturally to the
view that where a statute cannot be held wholly
valid it should be held valid at least to the extent
that it is reasonably possible or practicable to do
so. Where reading down is not available the court
next decides where there is a case for severing the
invalid parts of the statute from the parts which,
standing alone, are valid. If this can be done the
court declares only the invalid parts of the statute
from the parts which, standing alone, are valid to
be beyond power and leaves the remainder
operative”
8.
In the case of Province of Sindh through Chief
Secretary
v.
M.Q.M.
through
Deputy
Convener
(PLD
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
7
2014 SC 531), it was held by this Court that at the time of
“reading down” of a statute two principles had to be kept in
view; first that the object of “reading down” was primarily to
save the statute and in doing so the paramount question
would be whether in the event of reading down; could the
statute remain functional; second would the legislature have
enacted the law if that issue had been brought to its notice
which was being agitated before the Court. In this view of the
matter, Courts have a duty to construe and apply laws to
specific fact situations. Sometimes they have to construe a
particular law as meaning nothing and sometimes they have
to construe the law as meaning something different from the
letter of the law passed by the Parliament. The offending
provision or part of it is read down to the extent it is necessary
to give it legal effect, or will be severed if it cannot be read
down, and the remaining part and provisions of the statute will
remain in tact. Section 19 of the PEEDA, 2006 as it reads,
encompasses remedy before the Punjab Service Tribunal to
both the employees of statutory corporation/ body/authority
covered under Section 2(h)(i) and so also to the civil servants
falling under section 2(h)(ii) ibid. As discussed above, it is only
the civil servants by virtue of Article 240 read with Section 260
of the Constitution, who are amenable to the jurisdiction of
Services Tribunal constituted under Article 212(1)(a) of the
Constitution of Pakistan, 1973. This is what was held by this
Court in Mubeen us Salam Case (PLD 2006 SC 602) supra while
interpreting deeming provision of section “2-A” of the Service
Tribunal Act, 1973, whereby employees of governmental
controlled corporation etc. were treated as civil servants and
given access to the Service Tribunal for the redressal of their
grievance arising out of disciplinary proceedings. Section 2-A
ibid was declared ultra-vires and it was further held that the
Service Tribunal is established in pursuance of Article 212 of the
Constitution and has been conferred exclusive jurisdiction only
in respect of disputes relating to terms and conditions of civil
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
8
servant under the Civil Servants Act, 1973 and such jurisdiction
could not be extended to any other category. In this view of
the matter, harmonious construction dictated by rule of
reading down and rule of severance provisions of Section 19
of PEEDA, 2006 was examined which reads as follows;
“19. Appeal before Punjab Service Tribunal.- (1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other
law for the time being in force, any employee
aggrieved by any final order passed under Section
16 or 17 may, within thirty days from the date of
communication of the order, prefer an appeal to
the Punjab Service Tribunal established under the
Punjab Service Tribunals Act, 1974 (Punjab Act, IX of
1974).
(2) If a decision on a departmental appeal or
review petition, as the case may be, filed under
section 16 is not received within a period of sixty
days of filing thereof, the affected employee may
file an appeal in the Punjab Service Tribunal within
a period of thirty days of the expiry of the aforesaid
period, whereafter, the authority with whom the
departmental appeal or review is pending, shall not
take any further action. (underlined to add
emphasis)”
9.
In view of the discussion made above, instead of
interpreting and or giving literal meaning to the term
“employee aggrieved” as used in subsection (1) and the
“affected employee” as used in sub section (2) of Section 19
of PEEDA, such terms are to be harmoniously interpreted to
save the provision from casualty of striking it down. Such terms
are to be read down and given restrictive and toned down
meaning and employing ‘rule of severance’ to be understood
as those employees falling under the category of employee
within the contemplation of section 2 (h)(ii) of PEEDA only; thus
while
construing
phrases
“employee
aggrieved”
and
“affected employee” respectively used in Section 19 of
PEEDA, 2006 as reproduced above, category of employees of
statutory corporation etc. per section 2(h)(i) ibid, are to be
severed and sliced away for the purposes of extending
remedy before the Service Tribunal, it is only than provisions of
Section 19 ibid could be saved from being struck down as ultra
vires of the Constitution and law as declared by this Court and
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
9
noted above. Thus the remedy of appeal before the Punjab
Service Tribunal against any order passed under Sections 16 &
17 of the PEEDA, 2006 could only be invoked and availed by
the employees falling within the ambit of Section 2(h)(ii) of
section 19 ibid; before the Punjab Service Tribunal and not by
employees of statutory corporation etc. falling under section
2(h)(i) of PEEDA, 2006.
10.
It may be observed that employees of a statutory
corporation etc. were deprived of their right of appeal before
the Service Tribunal (extended under Section 2-A of Service
Tribunals Act, 1973 since declared ultra vires) pursuant to
judgment rendered in the case of Muhammad Mubeen-us-
Salam vs. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2006 Supreme Court 602)
and
in
case
of
Muhammad Idrees
vs.
Agricultural
Development Bank of Pakistan and others (PLD 2007 Supreme
Court 681) this Court found a way out for the employees of
statutory Corporation/ Authorities/ bodies etc. who were
proceeded under the Removal from Service (Special Powers)
Ordinance, 2000 to invoke jurisdiction under Article 199 of the
Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973.
11.
Plethora of the cases relied upon by learned
counsel for the respondent all emanates in respect of the
employees
of
statutory
corporations
and
or
authority
governed under the non statutory rules who invoked the
jurisdiction either of the Service Tribunal under section 10 of the
repealed RSO, 2000 or under Article 199 of the Constitution of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 invariably in all the cases this
Court also considered whether the relationship between the
employer and employee is governed under any statutory rules
or not, for the purposes of determining forum for the redressal
of grievance. There appeared some anomaly in some of the
cases noted above as the implication of statutory intervention
in disciplinary matter under RSO, 2000 was neither raised nor
examined by this court, which anomaly was attended to in the
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
10
subsequent case reported as of Pakistan International Airline
Corporation and others vs. Tanweer-ur-Rehman and others
(PLD 2010 Supreme Court 676) in para 19 at page 689 thereof
it was held by this Court as under:-
“However, this question needs no further discussion
in view of the fact that we are not of the opinion
that if a corporation is discharging its functions in
connection with the affairs of the Federation, the
aggrieved persons can approach the High Court
by
invoking
its
constitutional
jurisdiction,
as
observed hereinabove. But as far as the cases of
the
employees,
regarding
their
individual
grievances, are concerned, they are to be
decided on their own merits namely that if any
adverse action has been taken by the employer in
violation of the statutory rules, only then such action
should be amenable to the writ jurisdiction.
However, if such action has no backing of the
statutory rules, then the principle of Master and
Servant would be applicable and such employees
have to seek remedy permissible before the Court
of competent jurisdiction.”
12.
In a recent pronouncement of this Court in the
case of Pakistan Defence Housing Authority vs. Javed Ahmed
(2013 SCMR 1707) anomaly prevailing as to availability of
remedy
to
the
employees
of
statutory
corporation/authority/body was authoritatively resolved and
clarified by a larger bench of five Members of this Court,
wherein employees of Defence Officers Housing Authorities,
PIA, Pakistan Steel Mills, N.E.D, University of Engineering and
Technology, Pakistan State Oil and SME Bank were heard
together and in all the cases cited by the learned counsel for
the respondents-LDA, were also considered in paragraph 57
thereof at page 1746 and para 60 at page 1748, which read
as under:-
“57. The right of appeal is a substantive right. The
respondents were deprived of the said right not by
an legislative amendment but by a judicial opinion
and that too on the analogy of the law laid down in
Mubeen us Islam’s case (PLD 2006 SC 602) and
Muhammad Idrees’s case (PLD 2007 SC 681). In both
these cases, the effect of the Ordinance 2000 and
that it was a statutory intervention was not a moot
point. It is well established that an appeal is
continuation of trial. Would it be a fair trial if an
accused is shorn off his right of appeal? Would the
deprivation of right of appeal not amount to judicial
sanctification of all the orders passed by the
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
11
departmental authorities awarding various penalties
to the employees and would it not be violative of
the fundamental right to a “fair trial and due
process”
as
ordained
in
Article 10A of
the
Constitution? Could the respondent-employees not
invoke Article 199 of the Constitution to seek due
compliance of the Ordinance 2000 for ensuring fair
trial and due process? If the constitutional scheme
and the purpose of law are kept in view, the answer
to all these queries has to be in the affirmative and
the constitutional petitions filed by the respondents
seeking enforcement of their said right would be
maintainable.
60. It was not disputed before this Court by
appellants learned counsel that the respondent-
employees were “persons in corporation service”
within the meaning of section 2(c) of the Ordinance
2000 and except in the case of N.E.D. University,
they were proceeded against under the said law.
This was a ‘statutory intervention and the employees
had to be dealt with under the said law. Their
disciplinary matters
were
being
regulated
by
something higher than statutory rules i.e. the law i.e.
Ordinance, 2000. Their right of appeal (under section
10) had been held to be ultra vires of the
Constitution by this Court as they did not fall within
the ambit of the Civil Servants Act, 1973, [(in Mubeen
us Salam’s case (PLD 2006 SC 602) and Muhammad
Idrees’s case (PLD 2007 SC 681)]. They could in these
circumstances
invoke
constitutional
jurisdiction
under Article 199 of the Constitution to seek
enforcement of their right guaranteed under Article
4 of the Constitution which inter alia mandates that
every citizen shall be dealt with in accordance with
law. The judgment of this Court in Civil Aviation
Authority (2009 SCMR 956) supra is more in
consonance with the law laid down by this Court
and the principles deduced there from as given in
para 50 above.”
13.
Thus, it could be seen that anomaly as to
availability of forum for the aggrieved or affected employees
of
statutory
corporation/authority/body
against
whom
disciplinary proceedings are initiated and or any penalty is
inflicted under statutory dispensation has been removed. In
the
case
where
the
employees
of
statutory
corporation/authority/body
are
proceeded
under
the
statutory rules or any statutory dispensation like RSO, 2000 or
PEEDA, 2006 etc action of the competent authority could be
challenged under Article 199 of the Constitution of Pakistan of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973.
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
12
14.
Above rule was retreated with reference to action
taken against an employee of a statutory authority falling
within the category of employee falling under Section 2 (h)(i)
of PEEDA, 2006 in the case of Muhammad Amin and another
vs. Government of Punjab and others (2015 SCMR 706= PLC
(CS) 1082)), wherein employee of Market Committee Sialkot,
having no statutory rules, challenged action taken under
PEEDA, 2006 in writ jurisdiction, was denied relief on the
premise that he being Civil Servant, his remedy does not lie
under Article 199 of the Constitution, this Court set aside the
judgment and in paragraph 7 at page 709 it was observed as
follow:-
“Section 19 of the Act of 2006 which has been
made applicable by virtue of Section 2(h)(i) of the
Act of 2006 read with Section 35 of the Ordinance,
regulates the services of the petitioners. Section 19
of the Act of 2006 which appear to have been
amended subsequently clearly draws a line
between the Civil Servants and the employees
defined under section 2(h)(i) of the Act of 2006. The
Civil Servants who are proceeded against under
the provisions of the Act of 2006 have to approach
the Punjab Services Tribunal against a final order
passed by the Departmental Authorities. The other
employees who are covered under Section 2(h)(i)
of the Act of 2006, if aggri4eved by a final order
passed by the Departmental Authorities under
Section 16 or 17 of the Act of 2006 can seek
redressal of their grievances before the High
Court.”
15.
In view of the foregoing discussion, the judgment
rendered in the case of Muhammad Masood v. Market
Committee (2014 PLC (CS) 1080), does not lay down the
correct law and so also impugned judgment is not sustainable.
It is abundantly clear that the respondent is an employee of
Lahore Development Authority, a statutory authority created
under Section 4 of Lahore Development Authority Act, 1975,
proceeded
under
PEEDA,
2006,
which
is
a
statutory
intervention in disciplinary matter, therefore, irrespective of the
fact that the rules framed under Section 45 of the Lahore
Development Authority Act, 1975 are non statutory yet the
respondents were not proceeded under the Rules,1978 but
under the PEEDA, 2006 which is a statutory enactment and
Civil Appeal No.1519 of 2013
13
even a level up of the statutory rules. Therefore, High Court has
jurisdiction to examine the proprietary of the impugned action
taken against the respondents under the PEEDA, 2006.
16.
Accordingly, the impugned order is set aside and
the appeal is allowed. Writ Petition No.11584 of 2013 is
remanded to the learned Lahore High Court for decision on
merits as expeditiously as possible.
Judge
Judge
Announced by me in open Court
on ________ at Islamabad.
Judge
Approved for Reporting
arshed/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1519_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
MR. JUSTICE AMIN-UD-DIN KHAN
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 152-L OF 2010
(Against the judgment of Lahore High
Court, Lahore dated 24.06.2002 passed in
RFA No. 180/1994)
Lahore
Development
Authority
and
another
… Appellant
Versus
Muhammad Tariq Niaz
… Respondent
For the appellant.
:
Ch. Waseem Arif Bhaddar, ASC
Mr. M. Sabir Deputy Director
For Respondents
:
Mr. Ahmad Waheed Khan, ASC
Date of Hearing
:
27.08.2020
JUDGMENT
SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI;- Civil appeal, by
leave of the Court under Article 185(3) of Constitution of Islamic Republic
of Pakistan, 1973, is directed against the impugned judgment of Lahore
High Court, Lahore dated 24.06.2002 passed in RFA No.180/1994.
2.
The facts leading to file the instant civil appeal are that the
respondent/plaintiff filed a suit for declaration/specific performance with
consequential relief qua an agreement on the basis of which an offer was
made by the appellant to respondent/plaintiff. The said offer was in
response to an open public action proceedings published in a newspaper
dated 06.10.1980 regarding a plot bearing No.193/B, Upper Mall Lahore.
The respondent/plaintiff was one of the participants in the open auction
proceedings while depositing Rs.5000/- in lieu of terms and conditions.
Civil Appeal No.152-L of 2010.
-: 2 :-
The respondent/plaintiff was declared as highest bidder of the auction
proceedings which was declared Rs.3,56,000/- per Kanal. As the
respondent was highest bidder by all standards, therefore, the appellant
formally invited the respondent to make 1/3 of the total auction price as
per legal requirement at the spot. Consequently, Rs.1,50,000/- was
deposited and he was further directed to deposited an amount of
Rs.1,18,500/- in view of the acceptance of the bid. All such requirements
were fulfilled accordingly and as such receipt of the same was duly issued.
The respondent visited the office of the appellant time and again while
seeking demand notice to make the rest of the amount payable against
total auction amount. It is a matter of surprise that letter bearing No.707
dated 18.10.1980 was sent by the appellant/defendant wherein the
respondent/plaintiff was intimated to contact the appellant/defendant.
Subsequently, the respondent/plaintiff was informed on 11.12.1980 that a
third party (not participated in auction proceedings) had offered them
higher price of Rs.3,85,000/- per Kanal and as such showed their
unwillingness to hand over the plot, the subject matter of auction
proceedings to the respondent/plaintiff. Although the subsequent
development was squarely unjustified, however, the respondent/plaintiff
showed his inclination to pay the enhanced priced to meet the offer and as
such intimated the appellant through a letter which was incorporated in
diary of the appellant on 11.12.1980. The appellant in lieu of the offer
made to the respondent/plaintiff directed him verbally to deposit the
remaining amount within seven days, but in the meantime another public
notice for open auction was published in "Daily Pakistan Times" dated
16.11.1980 wherein the same plot bearing No. 193/B Upper Mall Lahore
was made the subject matter which was already auctioned in favour of the
respondent/plaintiff.
Civil Appeal No.152-L of 2010.
-: 3 :-
3.
Being aggrieved by the conduct of the appellant, the
respondent/plaintiff filed a declaratory suit and specific performance with
consequential relief while calling in question the re-auction of the plot
already auctioned in favour of respondent/plaintiff. The learned trial court
after recording of evidence of both the parties decreed the suit of the
respondent/plaintiff vide judgment and decree dated 27.03.1994. The
appellant challenged the judgment and decree of learned trial court
through filing Regular First Appeal before Lahore High Court, Lahore
which was ultimately dismissed vide judgment dated 24.06.2002.
4.
At the very outset, learned counsel for the appellant
contends that the learned courts below have grossly misinterpreted,
misconstrued the evidence available on the record which was not
evaluated in its true prospective. It is further contended that the oral as
well as documentary evidence adduced by the appellant was altogether
ignored and the same was not given due appreciation. Contends that the
main aspect of the auction proceedings was not sustainable as no
approval of the Director General was ever sanctioned in favour of the
auction proceedings in the capacity as "competent authority" and as such
whole super structure raised has no legal sanctity. Contends that the
declaration as prayed was not sustainable as such no right or interest was
ever accrued to the respondent/plaintiff in the given scenario. Contends
that the communication through Ex.D-8 qua confirmation of the auction
proceedings has no legal weightage as the negotiations were carried out
with LDA staff having no authorization to enter into negotiations and as
such hardly contribute towards completion of contract. Lastly, it is argued
that mere assumption that the contract was complete cannot be
substituted in absence of due sanction by the competent authority which is
squarely missing in the given circumstances. Learned counsel prayed that
Civil Appeal No.152-L of 2010.
-: 4 :-
as no right or interest has accrued in favour of the respondent/plaintiff,
hence, no liability can be ascribed to the appellant, therefore, the
reasoning assigned by the learned courts below are artificial, hence, nullity
in the eye of law.
5.
On the other hand, learned counsel appearing on behalf of
respondent argued that the respondent was bona-fide participant/bidder of
the auction proceedings qua the plot in question. Contends that all pre-
requisite to enter into open auction were fulfilled as per terms and
conditions and as such the depositing of different installment being highest
bidder further supplement the bona-fide of the respondent/plaintiff.
Contends that the conduct of the appellant while enhancing the auction
price at belated stage was uncalled for although the respondent/plaintiff
accepted the same with open heart. Contends that the public functionary
cannot demonstrate beyond the limits prescribed by the law and as such
an equitable right of the respondent was made complicated in un-
precedented manner, hence, such conduct cannot be assented by the
court of law.
6.
We have heard the arguments of the learned counsel for the
parties and perused the record with their able assistance.
7.
There is no denial to this fact that the respondent/plaintiff
participated in the open auction qua the plot bearing No. 193/B Upper Mall
Lahore. During the bidding proceedings respondent/plaintiff was declared
the highest bidder. The said claim of the respondent/plaintiff was even
accepted by the appellant while submitting written statement before the
learned trial court. It was further admitted that the respondent deposited
Rs.1,50,000/- at the time of bid and later on he deposited Rs.1,18,500/- as
1/3rd of the bid. Admittedly the appellant/defendant never denied the
Civil Appeal No.152-L of 2010.
-: 5 :-
various visits of respondent/plaintiff in the office of LDA in order to
complete the bidding process while depositing the rest of the amount to
discharge its liability qua payment of amount of auction. The introduction
of third party by the appellant (not participated in the open auction
proceedings) with offer of higher price was also intimated to the
respondent/plaintiff
which
was
ultimately
accepted
by
the
respondent/plaintiff and as such the letter was written which was
incorporated in the daily register, therefore, despite of the acceptance of
higher price another public notice was published in daily newspaper.
Faquir Muhammad, Assistant Director LDA while appearing as DW.1
admitted in cross examination that the respondent was the highest bidder
and LDA issued letter Ex.P.2 to respondent for negotiation. DW.1 also
admitted that the respondent paid an amount of Rs.2,73,500/- at the spot
as 1/3rd amount of the bid. The cross examination of DW.1 further reveals
that one Saeed Ahmad filed an application to the LDA that the disputed
plot be given to him at the rate of Rs.3,85,000/- per Kanal and the
respondent was called through letter Ex.P3 to accept that amount in order
to hand over the disputed plot. DW.1 further admitted that in the record of
LDA, the application of respondent is available that he is ready to admit
the condition under protest. The appellant did not deny that the offer was
made subsequently to the respondent/plaintiff; therefore, the appellant
could not back out from his admission. The written statement filed by the
appellant as well as statement of DW.1 Faquir Muhammad and Ex.P.4
and Ex.P5 shows that the acceptance of the offer of the appellant to pay
the price at the rate of Rs.3,85,000/- was made first orally on 03.11.1980
and thereafter through Ex.P4 dated 28.11.1980 and then through Ex.P.5
dated 15.12.1980 despite the fact that as per Ex.D.2 the bid of the
respondent/plaintiff was cancelled on 28.11.1980. The learned counsel for
Civil Appeal No.152-L of 2010.
-: 6 :-
the appellant was specifically confronted that the Director General ever
proceeded to cancel the bid being unlawful as it was carried out without
the sanction of competent authority. Further that the competent authority
ever proceeded against those employees who negotiated with the
respondent/plaintiff on behalf of the competent authority without seeking
prior sanction. The learned counsel failed to satisfy this Court. Otherwise
the fact that the price of bid was enhanced at belated stage on the pretext
that one person who was not participant of the open auction had made an
offer of higher price which cannot be made basis for re-auction of the plot
and this practice seems to be un-precedented being without any lawful
authority. On the contrary it is noticed by us that the respondent/plaintiff
has performed his part towards fulfillment of contract by first depositing an
amount of Rs.5000/- as per terms and conditions, as he was declared
highest bidder. Therefore he deposited an amount of Rs.2,73,500/- at the
spot as 1/3rd amount of the bid, all these facts are admitted by Assistant
Director of LDA while deposing before the court, hence, in the given
circumstances narrated above, it is made abundantly clear that the
appellant/defendant was grossly unjustified to issue another proclamation
for public auction relating to plot No. 193/B, Upper Mall Lahore, once its
valid acceptance was made by the respondent/plaintiff. It is worth
mentioning that the conduct of the appellant/defendant was not above-
board, rather they acted in a manner which was squarely against the
dictates of justice. This practice if allowed to continue it might frustrate
public confidence qua public functionaries which might be detrimental to
uphold the public order which is paramount to keep the society in peaceful
atmosphere; therefore, the public functionaries are expected to perform
their duties well within the prescribed limits of the law of the land.
Civil Appeal No.152-L of 2010.
-: 7 :-
8.
For reasons recorded above, we do not find any merit in this
appeal. It is accordingly dismissed.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Lahore
27.08.2020
Approved for reporting.
*Athar*
| {
"id": "C.A.152-L_2010.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed
Civil Appeal Nos1520, 1521 & 1522 of 2016
(Against judgment dated 20.10.2015 passed by Lahore
High Court Lahore passed in C. R. No.2704 of 2004
and connected C.Rs.)
Shabla & others
(in C.A. No.1520 of 2016)
Roshan Khan & others
(in C.A. No.1521 of 2016)
Muhammad Sher & others
(in C.A. No.1522 of 2016)
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Mst. Jahan Afroz Khilat & others
(in C.A. No.1520 to 1522 of 2016)
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Malik Ejaz Hussain Gorchha, ASC
(in C.A. No.1520 & 1521 of 2016)
Malik Ghulam Mustafa Kandwal, ASC
(in C.A. No.1522 of 2016)
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For Respondent No.1:
Maulvi Anwar-ul-Haq, ASC
Ch. Ali Muhammad, ASC
Mr. M. Ozair Chughtai, AOR
Date of hearing:
13.11.2019
JUDGMENT
Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed, J. Ms. Jahan Afroz Khilat,
respondent, inherited from her father’s estate, as a minor, land
measuring 2722-Kanal 12 Marla; after her marriage, she settled in
the United States, where she continued to receive her share of
produce; she returned in the year 1989 to learn that her entire
share stood mutated in favour of his nephew Meesam Mehdi Raza
Khan, way back on 10.8.1968, through the good offices of his father
Ameer Ali Raza Hayat Khan, her real brother. It is in evidence that
the transferee was aged about 1 ½ year at the time of mutation.
Through various transactions, the land passed on different hands,
each arrayed as defendant in the suit, dismissed by the learned trial
Judge vide judgment and decree dated 24.11.2011. The Appellate
Court reversed the findings vide judgment and decree dated
Civil Appeal Nos1520, 1521 & 1522 of 2016
2
14.09.2004, upheld by a learned Judge-in-Chamber of Lahore High
Court vide consolidated judgment dated 20.10.2015, vires whereof
are being assailed through the captioned appeals by leave of the
Court; bound by a common thread, these are being decided through
this single judgment.
2.
Learned counsel for the appellants, in a unison,
contend that the appellants are bonafide purchasers with
consideration and, thus, the learned trial Court had rightly
dismissed the suit and there was no occasion for the learned
Appellate Court as well the learned Judge-in-Chamber to take a
contra view; that the suit was not maintainable, as according to
them, admittedly the plaintiff/respondent was not in possession of
the suit land, otherwise doomed for being hopelessly barred by time.
The bottom line is that the land was consciously alienated by the
family, respondent’s being on board in each transaction. Reference
to the entire estate by the High Court is lastly pressed into service to
argue that the findings returned by the High Court, transcend far
beyond the original decree and, thus, intervention by this Court
would be most called for. Learned counsel for the respondents has
defended the impugned judgment on the ground that the impugned
transaction was nothing but a farce inasmuch as the respondent
was minor at the time when impugned mutation was purportedly
transacted; he has relied upon the doctrine of caveat emptor to
argue that the appellants could not defend their title in the face of a
transaction, void ab initio. Period of limitation could not stand in
impediment to respondents’ claim, concluded the learned counsel.
3.
Heard. Record perused.
4.
Competing claims, notwithstanding, respondent’s title
in her father’s estate to the extent of 2722-Kanal 12-Marla, as a
minor daughter is a common ground; being a female, in a Muslim
household, it was her due, conferred by Divine Law, recognized by
the law of the land; it is so ordained in Sura Al-Nisa(4/10),
reproduced below
ۖ ْمُﻛِدَﻻْوَأ ﻲِﻓ ُﱠ� ُمُﻛﯾِﺻوُﯾ
ۚ ِنْﯾَﯾَﺛْﻧُْﻷا ِّظَﺣ ُلْﺛِﻣ ِرَﻛﱠذﻠِﻟ
ِنْﯾَﺗَﻧْﺛا َقْوَﻓ ًءﺎَﺳِﻧ ﱠنُﻛ ْنِﺈَﻓ
ْنِإَو ۖ َكَرَﺗ ﺎَﻣ ﺎَﺛُﻠُﺛ ﱠنُﮭَﻠَﻓ
ۚ ُفْﺻِّﻧﻟا ﺎَﮭَﻠَﻓ ًةَدِﺣاَو ْتَﻧﺎَﻛ
� � ےر� � (�ارو �) د�وا ىر� � �ا
� �ا� � ں�� ود � � �� � � �د
ود (� ود) ں� � ں�� ف� �ا � ،� �از �
ہو �ا روا ،� � �� ود � �� سا � � نا �
� �دآ � � سا � � �ا
Civil Appeal Nos1520, 1521 & 1522 of 2016
3
Given the preponderance of conferment, such a right, rooted into
Personal Law, has to be jealously guarded, therefore, a heavy onus
is cast upon the claimant to demonstrate that a female legatee had
parted with her entitlement by choice and for considerations,
consciously, without duress or uncalled for persuasions, by those
placed qua her in advantageous positions. It is not merely an
invasion into proprietary rights of a woman but a criminal offence
punishable under section 498-A of the Pakistan Penal Code, 1860
(Act XLV of 1860) as well. In the present case, any one with ordinary
prudence, would fail to find any rational, prompting a minor girl
hardly of 13 years of age to alienate a considerable chunk of land in
favour of her minor nephew aged less than two years; she was
otherwise incompetent under the law to mutate the land; it sans
solemnity as well. A momentary glance of the entry, exposes the
deceit inherent in the mutation, reproduced for convenience of
reference
‘ر � �ا � ن� � ن� ت� �ہ� ى� � � � �ا �ارا �� �ا
۔� ىد � � � م� � � ��ِ���ر جرد �او ا � ر� � � �’
It is recorded in flagrant violation of procedure, provided under
section 42 of the West Pakistan Land Revenue Act, 1967 (XVII of
1967). There is none except Ameer Ali Raza Hayat Khan to
command transfer of land in favour of his own son to his benefit
and to the detriment of the respondent, no other than his real minor
sister; flux of time can neither validate the transaction nor wash
away the repugnance thereof. Argument that much water has flown
under the bridge is entirely beside the mark. Limitation never run
against fraud, more so in the matters involving inheritance rights of
a female; a view consistently taken by this Court in cases reported
as Fazal Ellahi deceased through legal heirs Vs. Mst. Zainab Bi (2019
SCMR 1930), Khan Muhammad through LRs & others Vs. Mst.
Khatoon Bibi & others (2017 SCMR 1476), Mahmood Khan Vs. Syed
Khalid Hussain Shah (2015 SCMR 869), Mst. Gohar Khanum Vs.
Mst. Jamila Jan (2014 SCMR 801), Rehmat Ullah & others Vs. Saleh
Khan & others (2007 SCMR 729), Arshad Khan Vs. Resham Jan and
others (2005 SCMR 1859) and Ghulam Ali & 2 other Vs. Mst. Ghulam
Sarwar Naqvi (PLD 1990 SC 1).
Reference to period of limitation is otherwise misplaced; it is
respondent’s case, in line with the pleadings and re-affirmed in the
Civil Appeal Nos1520, 1521 & 1522 of 2016
4
witness-box, that she kept on receiving her share of produce while
being in the United States wherefrom she returned in the year 1989
and learnt about the impugned mutation as late as in the year 1991
soon whereafter she instituted the suit.
Similarly argument that the appellants being innocent buyers
with considerations should not suffer from the consequences of a
wrong done upon the respondent by her own kith and kin, though
evokes sympathy, nonetheless, does not hold water in law. Doctrine
of ‘caveat emptor’ is a well entrenched principle in our
jurisprudence; it requires the buyer to be vigilant and careful as he
cannot acquire a better title; as observed above, a glance over the
mutation would have inescapably exposed the flaw patent therein,
putting the potential buyers at caution.
Non-maintainability of the suit on the plea of respondent’s
being out of possession is an argument that too carries no weight;
respondent being a co-sharer in the estate is deemed to be in
possession in each inch thereof till the land is partitioned according
the respective shares.
Typographical error in description of land in terms of its
volume in the High Court’s judgment does not carry vitiative impact
inasmuch as the suit land is clearly described in the head note of
the plaint as measuring 2722 Kanal 12-Marla and the suit was
decreed in accordance therewith; effects of the error do not impinge
beyond the suit land. View taken by the High Court being well
within the remit of law calls for no interference. Appeals fail.
Dismissed.
Judge
Judge
Islamabad
13.11.2019
Approved for reporting.
Azmat/-
| {
"id": "C.A.1520_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE ANWAR ZAHEER JAMALI, CJ
MR. JUSTICE AMIR HANI MUSLIM
MR. JUSTICE SH. AZMAT SAEED
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1525 TO 1528 OF 2016
(On appeal from judgment dated 11.11.2015, passed by
the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar, in W.Ps. No.2926-P,
3000-P, 2926-P and 3000-P/2012, respectively)
CA.1525/2016
Dr. Farhat Abbas Vs. Dr. Mehmood-
ul-Hassan and others
CA.1526/2016
Dr. Farhat Abbas Vs. Dr. Hikmat
Ullah Jan and others
CA.1527/2016
Chief
Executive,
Lady
Reading
Hospital, Peshawar and another Vs.
Dr. Mehmood-ul-Hassan and others
CA.1528/2016
Chief
Executive,
Lady
Reading
Hospital, Peshawar and another Vs.
Dr. Hikmat Ullah Jan and others
For the Appellants
: Mr. Abdul Latif Afridi, ASC
Mr. Khalid Anwar Afridi, ASC
(in CAs.1525 and 1526/2016)
Mr. Shakeel Ahmed, ASC
Mr. M. Amjad Khan, AOR (absent)
(in CAs.1527 and 1528/2016)
For Respondent No.1 : Mr. Ghulam Nabi Khan, ASC
(in CAs.1525 and 1526/2016)
Nemo
(in CAs.1527 and 1528/2016)
Date of Hearing
: 24.10.2016
JUDGMENT
SH. AZMAT SAEED, J.- Through this
judgment, it is proposed to adjudicate upon Civil
CA No.1525-2016 etc
2
Appeals Nos.1525 to 1528 of 2016, which are
directed against a consolidated judgment dated
11.11.2015 of the learned Peshawar High Court,
Peshawar.
2.
The brief facts necessary for adjudication of
the lis at hand are that vide Office Order dated
26.9.2012, Dr. Farhat Abbas (Appellant in Civil
Appeals Nos.1525 and 1526 of 2016) was promoted
as Associate Professor of Cardiology (BPS-19). The
private Respondent namely, Dr. Mehmood-ul-Hassan
challenged the same before the learned Peshawar
High Court, Peshawar through Writ Petition No.2926-
P of 2012, while the private Respondent namely Dr.
Hikmat Ullah Jan also challenged the said Office
Order through Writ Petition No.3000-P of 2012. In
the aforesaid Constitutional Petitions besides calling
into question the aforesaid Office Order dated
26.9.2012, the vires of the Regulations for the
Appointment
of
Faculty
Professorial
Staff/
Examiners/Principals/Deans/Administrative Staff in
Undergraduate & Postgraduate Medical & Dental
Institutions of Pakistan, 2011, hereinafter referred to
as “the Regulations of 2011”, were also challenged.
Both the Constitutional Petitions were heard together
CA No.1525-2016 etc
3
and
allowed
vide
impugned
Judgment
dated
11.11.2015,
whereby
the
office
Order
dated
26.9.2012 promoting the Appellant Dr. Farhat Abbas
as Associate Professor of Cardiology (BPS-19) was set
aside and a direction was issued for reconsideration
of the appointment of an Associate Professor of
Cardiology from among the candidates having the
basic qualification and experience in the relevant
speciality i.e. Cardiology.
3.
Appellant Dr. Farhat Abbas challenged the
impugned Judgment through Civil Petitions Nos.3548
& 3649/2015, while the Chief Executive, Lady
Reading
Hospital,
Peshawar
and
Dean
PGMI,
Peshawar, who had been impleaded as Respondents
before the learned High Court challenged the
impugned Judgment before this Court through Civil
Petitions Nos.52-P & 53-P of 2016. All the aforesaid
Civil Petitions were heard together and leave was
granted by this Court vide Order dated 26.5.2016.
Hence, these Civil Appeals.
4.
We have heard the learned counsel for the
parties and have perused the available record.
5.
Appellant
Dr.
Farhat Abbas
had the
qualification of FCPS in Medicine, while the private
CA No.1525-2016 etc
4
Respondents/Writ Petitioners namely, Dr. Mehmood-
ul-Hassan and Dr Hikmat Ullah Jan qualified FCPS
in Cardiology. All the aforesaid Doctors were serving
as Assistant Professors. However, Dr. Farhat Abbas
had been appointed earlier as an Assistant Professor.
In pith and substance, it was the case of the Writ
Petitioners/private Respondents that under the law
only, the Assistant Professor, inter alia, having FCPS
in
Cardiology
could
be
considered
for
the
appointment as an Associate Professor of Cardiology,
which qualification was not possessed by Appellant
Dr. Farhat Abbas. It was also the case of the private
Respondents that Regulation 19 of the Regulations
2011 scribing to the contrary was illegal and invalid.
6.
It is a common ground between the parties
that the qualification for appointment of teaching
staff in Medical Institutions is governed by the
Regulations framed by the PMDC. The current
Regulations, invoked and applicable to the facts of
this matter, are the Regulations of 2011, referred to
above. With regard to the additional qualification and
experience relevant for appointment as an Associate
Professor of Cardiology is prescribed as follows:-
CA No.1525-2016 etc
5
“Required
postgraduate
(additional)
qualification.
PM&DC level III qualification in respective
subject or general FCPS / M.S/M.D OR
other equivalent level III qualification in
the speciality approved by SRC and
recognized / registered by PM&DC.
Required experience.
Five years teaching experience as an
Assistant
Professor
in
the
relevant
subject”
7.
Furthermore, the said Regulations of 2011
are also contained Regulation 19, which reads as
follows:-
Regulation-19
“Eligibility for appointment in the sub-
specialities like cardiology, Psychiatry,
Cardiac Surgery, Orthopedic Surgery etc
shall be as per a level III qualification in
the sub-specialities. However, a candidate
who possess postgraduate qualifications
like FCPS, MD, MS in General Medicine or
General Surgery etc is also eligible for
appointment as Assistant Professor in the
sub-specialities if he has at least three
years teaching experience in a recognized
institute in the relevant sub-speciality and
then shall be promoted in the same sub-
specialities as Associate Professor and
Professor with the requisite teaching
experience
as
prescribed
in
these
Regulations
under
the
respective
speciality. However for appointment as
senior registrar in the sub-speciality, there
shall be no prerequisite of experience in
that sub-speciality only if the candidate
already holds and qualifies for a position
of senior registrar in General Medicine or
General surgery as the case may be. Once
a holder of qualifications like FCPS MD,
MS in General Medicine or General
Surgery etc; attains the post of Assistant
Professor in a sub-speciality than there
shall be no preference given to specific
sub-speciality
degree
holder
for
subsequent posts.”
CA No.1525-2016 etc
6
8.
An
accumulative
reading
of
the
two
provisions in juxtaposition leaves no manner of doubt
that the academic qualification, include the Level III
qualification in the sub-specialities or General FCPS.
Furthermore, Regulation 19 clearly provides that if a
candidate is qualified for the position of Senior
Registrar in General Medicine or General Surgery etc
and is a holder of FCPS, MD, MS in General
Medicine or General Surgery etc and attains the post
of Assistant Professor in a sub-speciality then no
preference will be given to a person, who is holding
the FCPS in the requisite field, for the purpose of the
appointment to further post including that of
Associate Professor. It is a common ground between
the parties that Appellant Dr. Farhat Abbas in terms
of Regulation 19, reproduced hereinabove, holds the
requisite qualification, as an Assistant Professor of
Cardiology with the requisite experience, hence was
entitled to be considered for the appointment and
was
appointed
as
an
Associate
Professor
of
Cardiology. It is also a matter on record that
Appellant Dr. Farhat Abbas is senior to the private
Respondents namely, Dr. Mehmood-ul-Hassan and
Dr. Hikmat Ullah Jan.
CA No.1525-2016 etc
7
9.
It is perhaps in view of the clear and
obvious interpretation of Regulations, 2011 that the
private
Respondents
challenged
the
vires
of
Regulation 19 of Regulations, 2011, which have been
framed in exercise of the powers conferred under
Section 33(2) of the Pakistan Medical & Dental
Council Ordinance, 1962. The learned counsel for the
private Respondents at the bar could not identify how
the said Regulations, 2011 particularly, Rule 19 is
ultra vires to the PM&DC Ordinance, 1962. In fact, it
has not been so held by way of the impugned
Judgment nor the Regulation 19 has been struck
down. Furthermore, none of the grounds available in
law for striking down the said subordinate legislation
were pleaded or established on record either before
the learned High Court or before this Court. In this
view of the matter, we are not persuaded to hold that
the Regulation 19 of the Regulations of 2011 is ultra
vires or invalid.
10.
As a consequence whereof, in view of the
clear and obvious import of the Regulations of 2011
more particularly Regulation 19, Dr. Farhat Abbas
was duly qualified to be promoted as an Associate
Professor of Cardiology and the Office Order of his
CA No.1525-2016 etc
8
appointment as an Associate Professor of Cardiology
was valid in law and could not be set aside by the
learned High Court.
11.
Consequently, in the above circumstances,
these Civil Appeals are liable to be allowed and the
impugned judgment dated 11.11.2015 is also liable
to be set aside and the Writ Petitions Nos.2926-P of
2012 and 3000-P of 2012 filed by the private
Respondents merit dismissal.
12.
The aforesaid are the reasons of our short
order of even date, which are reproduced herein
below:-
“We have heard arguments of learned
ASCs for the parties and perused the case
record. For the reasons to be recorded
separately, these appeals are allowed. The
impugned judgment is set aside and Writ
Petitions, filed by Respondent No.1 in
these cases, before the Peshawar High
Court are dismissed.”
Chief Justice
Judge
Islamabad, the
Judge
24th October, 2016
‘APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
Safdar/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1525_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006.
(On
appeal
from
the
order
dated
27.06.2006 by the Lahore High Court,
Lahore passed in C. R. Nos. 1325 of 2005
and 782 of 1998).
Khurshid Ahmad and others.
Deputy Admin Evacuee Trust Property Board Faisalabad.
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Rana Mumtaz Ahmad and others.
Ghani and another.
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Syed Zafar Ali, Sr. ASC.
(in CA.1540/2006)
Hafiz S. A. Rehman, Sr. ASC
(in CA.2106/2006)
For the respondents:
Malik Muhammad Qayyum, Sr. ASC.
Hafiz S. A. Rehman, Sr. ASC.
Mr. M. Munir Peracha, ASC.
Hafiz M. Yousaf, ASC.
(in CA.1540/2006)
Mr. M. Akram Sh., Sr. ASC.
Hafiz M. Yousaf, ASC.
Malik M. Qayyum, Sr. ASC.
Mr. Naveed Akhtar, ASC.
(in CA.2106/2006)
Date of Hearing:
11.12.2015. (Judgment Reserved).
J U D G M E N T
EJAZ AFZAL KHAN, J.- Civil Appeal No.1540/06: This
appeal with the leave of the Court has arisen out of the judgment
dated 09.05.2006 of Lahore High Court whereby the learned
Single Judge in its Chambers dismissed the revision petition filed by
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
2
the appellant. Facts of the case as narrated in para 2 of the leave
granting order read as under:-
“2.
The brief facts for disposal of this
petition of that petitioners and respondents
No. 4 and 5 filed a suit against respondent
Nos. 2 and 3 for specific performance of
agreement dated 28.03.1995 in respect of
land comprised in Killa Nos. 1, 2, 9, 10, 11, 20
and 21 of square No. 35, and killa No. 228, 13
to 18, 24 and 25 of square No. 36 measuring
187 kanals, 1 marla situated in Chak No.
124/JB Tehsil and District Faisalabad. The suit
was decreed on conceding statements
dated 18th December, 1995 and 21st January,
1996 whereby the suit was decreed to the
extent of 15 kanal in favour of respondent
No. 5 and the suit for the remaining area was
decreed in favour of the petitioners and
respondent No. 4 in equal-shares vide
judgment and decree dated 25.1.1996. After
a lapse of more than seven years on 28th July,
2003 respondent No. 1 Rana Mumtaz Ahmed
filed an application under section 12(2) CPC
in
the
Court
of
learned
Civil
Judge
Faisalabad
against
the
plaintiffs
and
defendants in the suit for setting aside of
judgment and decree dated 25.1.1996 on
the
ground
that
it
was
obtained
by
misrepresentation and fraud. Learned Civil
Judge, First Class, Faisalabad vide order
dated 15.3.2005 set aside the judgment and
decree of the Trial Court. At the same time
learned Civil Judge ordered impleadment of
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
3
respondent No. 1 Rana Mumtaz Ahmed as a
party in the said suit”.
2.
The
points
requiring
consideration
have
been
formulated in para 4 of the leave granting order which reads as
under:-
“4.
We have heard the arguments of Syed
Ali Zafar, ASC for the petitioners and have
perused the record as well as the provisions
of law applicable to the case and have
come to the conclusion that the following
questions
require
consideration
and
examination :
(i)
whether the judgment and decree of
the trial Court was obtained by way of
fraud, mis-representation or want of
jurisdiction making out a ground for
entertainment of the application under
Section 12(2) CPC;
(ii)
whether in view of the provisions of
section 27 of the Specific Relief Act the
application under section 12(2) CPC
was barred and ought not to have
been entertained;
(iii)
Whether the order passed by learned
Civil Judge, Faisalabad allowing the
application under section 12(2) CPC
and setting aside the judgment and
decree is not contrary to and in
violation of section 27 of the Specific
Relief Act;
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
4
(iv)
Whether in deciding an application
under section 12(2) CPC the learned
Civil Judge, First Class, Faisalabad
acted
within
jurisdiction
to
allow
impleadment of respondent No. 1 as a
party in the suit;
(v)
whether by ordering impleadment of
respondent No. 1 as a party in the suit,
the learned Civil Judge, First Class
revived the claim of respondent, Rana
Mumtaz Ahmed to agitate his claim
over
the
land
in
question
which
otherwise had become seemingly time
barred; and
(vi)
whether the judgment of the High
Court suffers from non-consideration of
above material questions.”
3.
Civil Appeal No.2106/06: This appeal has arisen out of
the judgment dated 9.5.2006 of the Lahore High Court whereby
the learned Single Judge in its Chambers dismissed the revision
petition filed by the appellant. Points raised and noted at the time
of leave read as under:-
“After hearing the learned counsel for the
petitioner at length, leave to appeal is
granted to consider; inter alia, whether the
jurisdiction of the Civil Courts was ousted in
terms of Section 14 of the Evacuee Trust
Property (Management and Disposal) Act
No.Xiii of 1975, unless order of the Chairman
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
5
was shown to be patently void and without
jurisdiction.”
4.
The learned ASC appearing on behalf of the
appellant in CA-1540/06 contended that where the application
filed by respondent No.1 neither mentioned the source of
knowledge nor explained the reasons of delay of each day in
filing the petition, his application under Section 12(2) CPC was
liable to be dismissed; that the respondent who also claimed to
have entered into an agreement to sell with Ghani could not get
anything out of the suit on reversal of the decree under Section
12(2) CPC when he never instituted a suit for specific performance
of contract, the more so when it was not asserted that the
appellants ever knew about the agreement dated 28.01.1990
and that in the absence of any allegation of fraud or
misrepresentation or want of jurisdiction, application under
Section 12(2) merited outright dismissal.
5.
Learned ASC appearing on behalf of the respondents
contended that where respondents were never served in
accordance with the requirements of law any judgment and
decree passed at their back could not stand, therefore, their
application under Section 12(2) of the CPC was rightly allowed
and that the judgment and decree of the High Court maintaining
the same being free from any infirmity is not open to any
exception.
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
6
6.
Learned ASC appearing on behalf of the appellant in
CA-2106/06 contended that where the property forming subject
matter of the dispute was evacuee trust property, it could not
have been allotted to anyone; that Ghani claimed this property
on the basis of RL-II which appears to be bogus on the face of it.
He next contended that if and when a question arises whether an
evacuee property is attached to charitable, religious or
educational trust or institution it shall be decided by the Chairman
Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) whose decision shall be final
and shall not be called in question in any Court. He further
contended that where the legislature has created a forum for
deciding such question recourse must be had to that as
jurisdiction of any other Court is expressly barred by Section 14 of
Evacuee Trust Property (Management & Disposal) Act. The
learned ASC argued further that where the Chairman Evacuee
Trust Property Board after taking cognizance of the matter and
recording evidence of the parties came to the conclusion that
the property forming subject matter of dispute is an evacuee trust
property, its judgment being final could not be called in question
in a Civil Court. The respondent, the learned ASC maintained, in
the first instance filed a revision before the Federal Government
but for the reasons best known to him withdrew it; notwithstanding
he could have pursued it and then filed a writ petition in the High
Court if the decision of the Federal Government happened to be
against him, but his failure to do so has blessed the judgment of
the Chairman ETPB with finality. The decision of the Civil Court, the
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
7
learned ASC by concluding his arguments contended, being
coram non judice has no effect altogether. The learned ASC in
support of his contention placed reliance on the case of Evacuee
Trust Property Board. Vs. Mst. Zakia Begum and others (1992 SCMR 1313).
7.
The learned ASC appearing on behalf of the
respondents in Civil Appeal No. 2106 of 2006 contended that
where the property being evacuee has been allotted to
respondent No. 1 as back as 24.04.1960 vide RL-II No. 561 and at
no stage has it been treated as evacuee trust property, claim of
the Evacuee Trust Board was absolutely unjustified and so was its
decision declaring it to be evacuee trust property vide judgment
dated 03.01.1995. He next contended that inquiry was allegedly
conducted as to the genuineness of the allotment of the property
to the respondent but it being one sided has no effect that too
when it has not been proved in accordance with law before any
Court. The learned ASC by referring to the case of Muhammad
Jamil Asghar. Vs. The Improvement Trust, Rawalpindi (PLD 1965 SC
698) contended that Evacuee Trust Board can only have assumed
jurisdiction to decide if a question arises whether an evacuee
property is attached to a charitable, religious or educational trust
or institution or otherwise, but where there is no such question, the
very jurisdiction of the Evacuee Trust Board to inquire into the
matter becomes questionable. The learned ASC next contended
that where the property in dispute has been in possession of the
allottee ever since its allotment, claim of the Evacuee Trust Board
would collapse like a house of cards. He next contended that
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
8
revision petition before the Federal Government or a writ petition
could have been filed before the High Court but where in view of
the judgment rendered in the case of Federation of Pakistan
through Secretary, Ministry of Religious Affairs/Minority Affairs,
Government of Pakistan, Islamabad. Vs. Mufti Iftikhar-Ud-Din and
another (2000 SCMR 1) remedy of revision before the Federal
Government has been held to be inadequate and the
determination of disputed questions of fact without recording the
evidence was not possible, recourse was rightly had to the Civil
Court which being just and proper in the circumstances of the
case cannot be looked askance at. He next contended that an
isolated entry in the revenue papers showing the property to be
Gaoshala Society Bar cannot make it charitable in the absence
of any document showing its dedication to charitable, religious or
educational purposes. The learned ASC by concluding his
arguments contended that where there is no evidence much less
conclusive on the record to show that the suit property being an
evacuee property has ever been attached to charitable
purposes etc., the judgment rendered by the Chairman Evacuee
Trust Board cannot take precedence over the judgment of the
Civil Court.
8.
We have gone through the entire record carefully and
considered the submissions of the learned ASCs for the parties.
9.
Before we deal with the tug of war going on between
the appellants and respondent of Civil Appeal No. 1540 of 2006
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
9
we would like to see as to what is the nature of the property;
whether it is evacuee property simplicitor or Evacuee Trust
Property; whether it has ever been allotted to Ghani, respondent
No. 1 in Civil Appeal No. 2106 of 2006; and whether it could be
treated as a property attached to charitable, religious or
educational trust or institution.
10.
A look at the extracts from the record of rights for the
years 1938-1939 and onward would reveal that this property has
been entered as Gaoshala Society Bar. These entries have been
repeated till 1960-1961. After 1960-1961 the Auqaf Department
took the control and management of this property and had been
managing this property through lease to different persons as is
evident from the entries made in the periodical records of 1964-
1965, 1968-1969, 1980-1981, 1984-1985 and 1988-1989. Respondent
No. 1 claims to be the allottee of this property through RL-II
mentioned above but at no stage of time any entry of its
allotment to the respondent figured in any of the periodical
records ever since 1946-1947. The respondent alleged that this
property was confirmed in his name but the entries in RL-II do not
conform to his claim. He moved a petition under Sections 8 and
10 of the Evacuee Trust Property (Management & Disposal) Act
No.XIII of 1975 in the Court of Chairman Evacuee Trust Board,
Govt. of Pakistan but he could not substantiate his claim that the
property in dispute was evacuee and that he was its lawful
allottee. Even entries in naqsha taqseem do not support the
contention that the property in dispute has ever been allotted to
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
10
the respondent. The evidence led in this behalf overwhelmingly
proves that the property is Evacuee Trust Property ever since late
30s. The surprising part of the litigation is that the respondent
himself invoked the jurisdiction of the Evacuee Trust Board for its
verdict about the nature of the property but when the verdict
given by the Board turned against him, he turned the table on the
Board and proceeded to question its verdict through a revision
petition. Somehow he withdrew it and instituted a civil suit
questioning the verdict of the Chairman Evacuee Trust Board
notwithstanding such verdict being amenable to the revisional
jurisdiction of the Federal Government in the hierarchy established
under the Act and then Constitutional jurisdiction of the High
Court, could not have been challenged in the Civil Court
especially when its jurisdiction was barred by Section 14 of the
Evacuee Trust Properties (Management and Disposal) Act, 1975.
11.
Now the question arises where jurisdiction of the Civil
Court is expressly barred and the Court exercising jurisdiction
under Section 8 of the Evacuee Trust Properties (Management
and Disposal) Act is a Court of Plenary Jurisdiction in view of the
provision contained in Section 21 of the Act, for the purposes of
deciding the question, whether an evacuee property is attached
to charitable, religious or educational trust or institution, how
could a Civil Court sit in judgment over the judgment of the
Chairman Trust Board when the law has blessed it with finality and
made it immune from being questioned in any Court. In the case
of Evacuee Trust Property Board. Vs. Mst. Zakia Begum and others
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
11
(supra) this Court after analyzing the relevant provision of the
Evacuee Trust Properties (Management and Disposal) Act, held
that the Chairman Evacuee Trust Property under Section 8 of the
Act alone is competent to decide whenever any question arises
as to whether an evacuee property is attached to charitable,
religious or educational trust or institution or otherwise and that
proceeding before the Civil Court shall be coram non judice. The
same view was reiterated and reaffirmed in the case of Evacuee
Trust Property Board through Deputy/Assistant Admiistrator,
Evacuee Trust Property, Peshawar. Vs. Ali Bahadur (PLD 2011 SC
126) by holding as under :-
“Analyzing section 14 ibid, it is unambiguous that
the jurisdiction of the civil Courts has been
barred with respect to any matter which an
officer appointed under the Act is empowered
to determine; such jurisdiction is also ousted to
grant and issue an injunction, process or order in
respect of any action taken or to be taken by
such officer in exercise of any power conferred
by or under the Act. Undoubtedly, the Chairman
of the Evacuee Trust Property Board is an officer
within
the
contemplation
of
the
section.
Therefore, in order to settle the question about
the ouster of jurisdiction it seems expedient to
examine, what was the proposition involved in
the suit and whether such a question was
determinable by the Chairman or not: In this
respect, it is foundational to evaluate the claim
of the respondent in his suit/plaint; on the perusal
thereof it is vivid that the respondent is seeking a
declaration that the suit property is his exclusive
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
12
ownership and is not an evacuee trust property,
consequently
the
appellant
should
be
precluded from interfering into his ownership
rights and apprentices thereto; the appellant in
defence joined issue with the respondent on
these factual aspects and claimed the suit
property being an evacuee trust property and it
is on this account that the jurisdiction of the
Court was challenged. Therefore, the key issue
before the Court would be whether the property
is an evacuee trust property otherwise? Now
when the provisions of section 8 of the Act are
adverted to, it specially mention “if a question
arises whether an evacuee property is attached
to a charitable, religious or educational trust, or
not it shall be decided by the Chairman”
meaning thereby that notwithstanding whether
a declaration in terms of section 8 has been
made or not by the Chairman, yet even if a
question has arisen at any point of time about
the status of the property it shall be the
Chairman alone who under the Act shall be
competent and empowered to determine and
decide the question and the Court in view of the
bar contained in Section 14 shall have no
jurisdiction in the matter”.
12.
The argument that an isolated entry in the revenue
papers showing it to be Gaoshala Society Bar cannot make it
charitable in the absence of any document showing its dedication
to charitable, religious or educational purposes is not correct as an
argument of similar tenor was turned down by this Court in the
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
13
case of Evacuee Trust Property Board. Vs. Rahim Khan and 3 others
(1989 SCMR 1605), by holding as under:-
“The question of law noticed in the leave
granting order ‘whether it is necessary to
produce the deed of trust in order to show
the real purpose of the trust’ has not been
pressed as there is no representation from the
side of the respondents. We may, however,
observe that according to section 407 of the
Principles of Hindu Law by D.F. Mulla (10th
Edn.) no writing is necessary to create an
endowment except where the endowment is
created by a will, if the case is governed by
the Indian Succession Act, 1925. The learned
author in the commentary, has also referred
to case law holding that the dedication of
land for public temple is not a gift within the
meaning of section 122 of the Transfer of
Property Act, and, consequently, does not
require to be effected by a registered
instrument. We, are therefore, of the firm view
that the evidence of extract from the
Property Register showing the property to be
in the name of the temple is sufficient for the
purpose of holding that it is attached to a
religious trust. It may be clarified, however,
that while giving effect to this finding the
relevant
authorities
will
take
into
consideration the provisions of section 10 of
the Evacuee Trust Property (Management
and Disposal) Act, 1975 (Act XIII of 1975)
under which property utilized bona fide
against the satisfaction of verified claims in
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
14
respect of which P.T.D. were issued prior to
June, 1968 have been validated and saved”.
13.
When we analyze this case in the light of the
paragraph quoted above, it appears to be better than the case
cited above, on the following grounds :-
a)
that this property has been entered as
Gaoshala Society Bar ever since 1938-1939 to
1960-1961;
b)
that nothing has been brought on the record
to show that it has ever been individual
property;
c)
that it has never been in possession of the
respondents ever since its allotment; and
d)
that it has been under the control and
management of the Auqaf Department ever
since 1964-1965, which conclusively prove
that the property being evacuee has been
attached
to
charitable,
religious
and
educational trust or institution.
Above all else the declaration given by the Chairman
Evacuee Trust Board which went unchallenged and thus attained
finality prove that the property in dispute is evacuee trust property
from whatever angle it is looked at. Reference to the case of
Muhammad Jamil Asghar. Vs. The Improvement Trust, Rawalpindi
(supra) has no application to the case in hand when the facts
averred in the application moved by the respondent Ghani raised
the question whether the property in dispute is attached to a
charitable, religious or educational trust or institution etc., or not. A
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
15
reference to the case of Federation of Pakistan through Secretary,
Ministry of Religious Affairs/Minority Affairs, Government of
Pakistan, Islamabad. Vs. Mufti Iftikhar-Ud-Din and another (supra)
too has no relevance to the case in hand as the provisions of
Sections
8,
10
and
21
of
the
Evacuee
Trust
Properties
(Management and Disposal) Act, 1975 have not been held to
have contained anything contrary to the injunctions of the Holy
Quran and the Sunnah of the Holy Prophet (PBUH), and that the
Courts already in place can continue, as final order so passed by
the Federal Government is assailable before the High Court in
exercise of its Constitutional Jurisdiction. The relevant paragraph is
thus reproduced for the facility of the reference which reads as
under :-
“The providing of right of appeal against
order of the Chairman passed under Section
8 of the Act XIII of 1975 should have been
provided to comply with the requirements of
principles of administration of justice in Islam
as immunity sought to be granted to such an
order by providing an inadequate remedy of
revision
would
be
repugnant
to
the
injunctions
of
Islam.
The
appellant
is
accordingly directed to suitably amend the
Evacuee Trust Properties (Management and
Disposal Act, 1975 (Act XIII of 1975) by
inserting a provision providing right of appeal
against the order passed by the Chairman
under Section 8 of the Act XIII of 1975. Such
an appeal can be provided to lie before the
High Court in line with the recourse adopted
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
16
in the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act, 1958 and the Displaced
Persons (Land Settlement) Act, 1958. If the
declaration as to the nature of the property
made by the Chief Settlement Commissioner
and later by the Chairman could be made
scrutable through an appeal to the High
Court, no possible can be raised to the
providing of the same remedy now under
Act XIII of 1975. It is also to be noted that
against the orders passed on other matter by
the officers appointed by the Board, appeal
has been provided to the higher officers of
the hierarchy including the Chairman and
against orders so passed the revision lies to
the Federal Government. The said course of
action can continue as before, as final order
so passed is further assailable before the High
Court
by
invoking
the
Constitutional
jurisdiction vesting in it under Article 199 of
the Constitution and a further petition for
leave to appeal before the Supreme Court
under Article 185 of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973. The remedies, so
provided, considering the nature of the
legislature are in such matters sufficient and
adequate. The amendment directed in the
above terms shall be made in Act XIII of 1975
by the appellant by the 30th July, 1999”.
The paragraph reproduced above is clear and unambiguous.
Neither the judgment rendered in the case of Federation of
Pakistan through Secretary, Ministry of Religious Affairs/Minority
CIVIL APPEALS NO. 1540 and 2106 OF 2006
17
Affairs, Government of Pakistan, Islamabad. Vs. Mufti Iftikhar-Ud-
Din and another (supra) nor the paragraph reproduced above in
any way leaves any scope for Civil Court to assume jurisdiction in
the matters falling within the purview of Sections 8, 10 and 14 of the
Act. The fora below as well as the High Court laboured under
misconception to circumvent the application of the Act to justify
assumption of jurisdiction which is clearly barred.
14.
When preponderance of documentary as well as oral
evidence on the record and verdict of the Chairman Evacuee
Trust Board prove that the property in dispute is an evacuee trust
property, the appellants and respondents in Civil Appeal No. 1540
of 2006 are left with no locus-standi much less a cause of action to
lay their hand on its ownership in any form and in any forum.
15.
As a sequel to what has been discussed above, appeal
filed by the Evacuee Trust Board is allowed, the impugned
judgments are set-aside while the suit pending in Civil Court in
respect of property in question together with the application under
Section 12(2) CPC is dismissed. Needless to say that where the
basic order in favour of respondent No. 1 has been declared void
ab-initio, entire superstructure raised thereon would automatically
collapse.
Judge
Judge
Announced in Open Court at Islamabad on 13.01.2016.
Judge
‘Not Approved For Reporting’
M. Azhar Malik\
| {
"id": "C.A.1540_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALT AKBAR NAQVI
Civil Appeal No. 1546 of 2019
AND
Civil Petitions Nos.2503 to 2519 & 2660 of 2019
Against judgments dated 25.02.2018 & 23.04.2019 of Federal Service
Tribunal, Islamabad, passed in Appeals No.3622(R)CS of 2017 and
3192 (R)CS of 20212) etc.
Secretary, M/o Finance, Islamabad, etc
Appellants (in CA#1546/19)
DG, FDE, Government of Pakistan,
Petitioners(,. CPs250-25I9 & 2660119)
etc
I
Versus
Tayyaba Halim Subhani
Irfan Mehmood & Another
Tahir Ullah & another
Javed Iqbal & Another
Syed Sajjad All Shah & Another
Hafiz Atta Ur Rehman & Another
Mrs. Khalida Nasim & Another
Rubina Kausar & Another
Adeela Tabasum & Another
Mrs. Sobia Imam & Another
Mrs. Najma & Another
Mrs. Attia Kaleem Anwar & Another
Mrs. Farah Saeed & Another
Mrs. Lubna Chaudhry & Another
Mrs. Tahira Akbar & Another
Mrs. Salama Khatoon & Another
Saeed ur Rehman & Another
Syed Tajammal Hussain Bokhari Shah & Others
Tayyaba Halim Subhani & another
CA 154612019
C.P 2503/2019
C.P 2504/2019
C.P 250512019
C.P 250612019
C.P2507/2019
C.P 2508/2019
C.P2509/2019
C.P 251012019
C.P 251112019
C.P 251212019
C.P 2513/2019
CP 2514/2019
CF 251512019
C.P2516/2019
C.P 251712019
CF 251812019
C.P2519/2019
C.P 2660/2019
For the Appellant
/Petitioners:
.Respondents
Mr. Sajid Ilyas Bhatti, Addl.AGP
M. Rehan, AD Legal
M. Ahmed, AD Legal
—
CIVIL PETITION NOS.2503 to 2519& 2660 OF 2019
2
in CA
For the Respondent(s):
Respondent-in-Person
1546/2019
Date of Hearing:
Jt AS C
Hafiz
S.A.
Rehman,
for
Respondent No. 1 and
Mr. M. Sharif Janjua, AOR in all
cps
27.01.2021
IJAZ UL ABSAN, J.- Through this single
judgment, we intend to decide Civil Appeal No. 1546 of 2019
(hereinafter referred to as "CA") and Civil Petitions No. 2503
to 2519 and 2660 of 2019 (hereinafter referred to as "CP") as
they involve common questions of law.
2.
Through the instant Appeals/ Petitions, the
Appellants/ Petitioners have challenged the Judgment of the
Federal Service Tribunal, Islamabad (hereinafter referred to as
"Tribunal") dated 15.02.2018 passed in Service Appeal No.
3622(R)CS/2017 and judgment dated 23.04.2019 passed in
Service Appeals No 3192(R)CS to 3196(R)CS of 2012,
3230(R)CS to 3238(R)CS of 2012, 90(1?)CS/2013,
9 1(R)CS/2013, 679(R)CS/20 16, and 3622(R)CS/20 17
(hereinafter referred to as "Impugned Judgments"). The
Tribunal through the Impugned Judgments accepted the
Service Appeals filed by the Respondents and ordered the
Appellants/ Petitioners to provide pay protection to the
Respondents by counting the service they had rendered on
daily wage basis for pensionary benefits and pay.
3.
The necessary facts giving rise to this us are that
the Respondents were appointed as teachers/ lecturers
CIVIL PETITION NOS2503 to 25198.2660 OF 9019
3
against their respective posts. The Respondent in the CA
retired upon reaching the age of superannuation w.e.f.
02.06.2017. Before her retirement, she had made a
departmental representation through which she had
requested her department to count the period for which she
had worked on daily wage basis towards the calculation of her
pensionary benefits. The Respondents in the CPs were
recommended to be regularized by the Federal Public Service
Commission w.e.f. 17.08.2010. They made representations to
the effect that their previous service rendered on daily wage
basis be counted towards their pay and pension benefits but
to no avail. Aggrieved of the treatment meted out to the
Respondents by the Appellants/ Petitioners, they approached
the Service Tribunal, which allowed their Service Appeals
through the impugned judgments. The Appellants/ Petitioners
challenged the impugned judgments before this Court.
4. Leave to Appeal was granted by this Court in the
CA vide order dated 17.09.2019 which is reproduced below
for ease of reference:
"Learned Additional Attorney General relies upon a
judgment passed by a 5 member bench of this Court in
the case of Chairman, Pakistan Railway, Government of
Pakistan, Islamabad and others v. Shah Jehan Shah
(PLD 2016 SC 534) to contend that the very issue dealt
with by the Tribunal in the impugned judgment has
been dealt with by this Court in the reported judgment
where the payment of pensionary benefits are
admissible to contract employees only after their
qualifying regularized service and thus unless such
qualifying regular service is rendered, the pensionary
benefits could not be granted to the employees.
2. Leave to appeal is granted to consider inter alia the
above submissions made by the learned Additional
Attorney General,,."
CNThPETfflOtNOS25O3 to 2$29&2660 0F2019 4
5.
The learned Additional Attorney General contends
that the service rendered on daily wage basis cannot be
counted as qualifying service for pension under the relevant
rules. As per Article 352 of the CSR, the Respondents cannot
claim pay protection or that their daily-wage-service be
counted towards pension because the said rule specifically
bars the Respondents from making such claim insofar as the
Respondents do not fulfil the three conditions mentioned
therein i.e. that the service must be under the government,
must be substantive and permanent, and, that the service
must be paid for by the government. Further, allowing the
Respondent's daily wage period to be counted towards pay
protection and pensionary benefits would open floodgates of
never-ending litigation. Lastly, the Respondents were not
working continuously, and, even otherwise, this being a policy
matter cannot be interfered with by Courts.
6.
The Learned Senior ASC appearing on behalf of
the Respondents contends that the act of the
Appellants/ Petitioners of not giving pay protection to the
Respondents and not allowing their service rendered on daily
wage to be counted towards their pensionary benefits is
discriminatory and exploitative. He adds that an identical
order was passed by the Ministry of Education dated
25.01.2006 whereby benefits were allowed to lecturers,
therefore, not granting the same to the Respondents who are
teachers, represents a policy of discrimination and pick and
choose. Further, the Respondents have been performing their
duties to the satisfaction of the Government and, by not
CIVIL PF,TITION N0S.2503 to 2519 & 2660 OF 2019
5
allowing them pay protection and by not counting their
service rendered on daily wage basis for pensionary benefits is
unjust and unfair.
7. We have heard the learned AAG and the learned
Senior ASC appearing on behalf of the parties. The issues
which fall for consideration of this Court are:-
i.
Could the service rendered by the Respondents on daily
wages basis be counted towards their pension?
ii.
Were the Respondents employed as a stop-gap
arrangement?
iii.
Could the Respondents be employed on daily wage basis
considering the nature of their work?
COULD THE SERVICE RENDERED BY THE RESPONDENTS
ON DAILY WAGES BASIS BE COUNTED TOWARDS THEIR
PENSION?
8. The learned counsel for the Respondents has
relied upon CSR 361 and has argued that, in view of the said
Rule, the Respondents were entitled to pension and pay
protection. For ease of reference, CSR 361 is reproduced as
under:-
"361:- Except as otherwise provided in these Regulations,
the service of an officer] does not qualify for pension
unless it conforms to the following three conditions:
First—the service must be under Government. Second.—
the employment must be substantive and permanent.
Third.—the service must be paid for by Government".
9. We have examined the Education Code 2006
issued by the Federal Directorate of Education. The learned
Tribunal has held that the Respondents were being paid out
of funds that were approved by the Government. In this
I
CIVIL PRTflIONNOS.2503 to 2519& 2660 OF 2019
6
respect, Paragraph 30 of the said Code is relevant which
provides that the following: -
"Heads of educational institutions shall be empowered to
incur expenditure out of Students' Fund as per the upper limit
of expenditure prescribed through a notification by the
Department Head on the following items:
(v) Payment to daily wage employees (teaching & non-
teaching)"
Paragraph 17 of the said Code provides that the Federal
Directorate of Education would manage the Federal
Government Educational Institution (Schools & Colleges),
Islamabad Model Institutions, and Hostels. The learned AAG
has not disputed the fact that the Respondents were working
in institutions that were admittedly being managed by the
Federal Directorate of Education. The Federal Directorate of
Education has itself issued a Code which such schools are
required to follow to regulate their affairs. The services of the
Respondents were utilized by the Appellants/ Government to
their satisfaction until the time the Respondents asked for
pay protection and pension. As such, the learned Tribunal
has correctly held that the Government cannot disassociate
itself from the entire process and hold that the Respondents
were not working under its supervision. It is the Federal
Directorate of Education that has issued the said Code, and
Paragraph 30 supra provides that the Federal Directorate of
Education has empowered heads of institutions to manage
pays and salaries of daily wage staff. It has not been argued
before us that the said heads of institutions could not be
delegated this task. The Government is fully empowered to
CIVIL PETITION NO&2503 to 2519&2660 OF 2029
7
delegate some of its tasks for administrative convenience and
efficient working as has been done in this case.
10.
We have gone through the letter dated 26.08.04
issued by the FDE (Model Colleges Wing). The said letter
provides an elaborate mechanism viz selection of teachers on
daily wage basis. They are to appear in a test of 50 marks
followed by an interview. Following this, their result is
approved by a Committee and sent to the Director Colleges,
Federal Directorate of Education who in turn seeks
confirmation from the Director-General, Federal Directorate of
Education. The said letter establishes that the Respondents
were not arbitrarily appointed as a stop-gap arrangement.
Their services were utilized by the Appellants/ Petitioners for
years on end till they reached the age of superannuation,
their services were substantive and permanent which were
paid for on behalf of and with the consent or approval of the
Government.
11.
We find that although the employment of the
Respondents was not permanent within the meaning of CSR
361, the establishment under which they were working was
permanent and the fact that they rendered services for years
shows that they were not employed on temporary basis as a
stop-gap arrangement for short periods of time. Further, that
the Federal Public Service Commission by recommending the
Respondents for retention into service has confirmed their
ability and qualification to hold these posts. It is an admitted
fact that the Respondents have been working continuously for
more than 5 years. We have gone through the memorandum
CIVIL PETITION NO&2503 to 2519 & 2660 OF 2029 8
dated 25.01.2006 whereby it was stated by the Federal
Directorate of Education that service rendered on an Ad Hoc
basis could be counted towards pay and pensionary benefits.
If the Appellants/ Petitioners have allowed the services of Ad
Hoc teachers/ lecturers to be counted for pay protection and
pension, it is hard to understand why the same was cannot
be done in the case of the Respondents. The principle of
similarly placed persons dictates that the Respondents also
deserve to be treated in the same manner as others who were
granted the benefits of pay protection and pension from the
date of their initial appointment on daily wages basis. The
Respondents have been discriminated against which is in
violation of their fundamental rights guaranteed to them by
the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973.
12. The learned Senior ASC for the Respondents has
placed reliance on the case titled Ikram Bari and 524
others vs National Bank of Pakistan (2005 SCMR 100) in
support of the submission that the service rendered on daily
wages basis can be counted for pension and pay. The relevant
portion of the judgment ibid is reproduced as under for ease
of reference: -
"An Islamic Welfare State is under an obligation to
establish a society which is free from exploitation
wherein social and economic Justice is guaranteed to its
citizens. The temporary Godown staff and the daily
wages employees were continued in service of the Bank
on payment of meagre emoluments fixed by the Bank. In
most of the cases of these employees, there were artificial
breaks in their service so as to circumvent the provisions
of the Labour Laws and the Rules of the Bank and to
deny them the salaries and other service benefits of
regular employees. In some cases, the Bank did not issue
formal letters of appointment or termination to the
employees so as to preclude them to have access to
CIVIL PETITION 1105.2503 to 2529 & 2660 OF 2019
-
9
justice. There was no equilibrium of bargaining strength
between the employer and the employees. The manner in
which they had been dealt with by the Bank was a fraud
on the Statute. A policy of pick and choose was adopted
by the Bank in the matter of absorption/ regularization of
the employees. By Article 2-A of the Constitution, which
has been made its substantive part, it is unequivocally
enjoined 'that in the State of Pakistan principle of
equality, social and economic justice as enunciated by
Islam shall be fully observed which shall be guaranteed
as fundamental right. The principle of policy contained in
Article 38 of the Constitution also provide, inter alia, that
the State shall secure the well being of the people by
raising their standards of living and by ensuring
equitable adjustment of rights between employers and
employees and provide for all citizens, within the
available resources of the country, facilities for work and
adequate livelihood and reduce 'disparity in income and
earnings of individuals. Similarly, Article 3 of the
Constitution makes it obligatory upon the State to ensure
the elimination of all forms of exploitation and the
gradual fulfilment of the, fundamental principle, from
each according to his ability, to each accordin g to his
work. It is dtfficult to countenance the approach of the
Bank that the temporary Godown staff and the daily
wages employees should be continued to be governed on
disgraceful terms and conditions of service for an
indefinite period. In view of section 24-A of the General
Clauses Act 1897, the National Bank was required to act
reasonably, fairly and justly. An employee being jobless
and in fear of being shown the door had no option but to
accept and continue with the appointment on whatever
conditions it was offered by the Bank".
In addition to the aforenoted excerpt, a direction
was passed in the judgment of Ikram Bari ibid to the effect
that the previous service rendered by the Petitioners in the
said case shall be counted towards retirement/ pensionary
benefits. It was held as follows:-
"The Civil Petitions.. .filed by employees seeking financial
back-benefits and waiver of conditions of
,regularization/ reinstatement are disposed of with the
direction to the National Bank to regularize/ absorb them in
service with effect from 15-9-2003, subject to the conditions as
laid down in para. 10 of the impugned judgment. The National
Bank is directed to issue them appointment letters within one
month. Moreover, the previous service rendered bi, them with
the Bank shall be counted towards retirement! pensionarq
benefits .(Underlining is ours)
----4—,
CIVIL PETITION N0S2503 to 2529 & 2660 OF 2019
10
In view of the above position, the argument of the
learned AAG that the service period of the Respondents
rendered on daily wages could not be counted towards their
pension is misconceived. The said period could and should be
counted towards pension especially when the Respondents
had been working continuously for different periods for the
last many years.
WERE THE RESPONDENTS EMPLOYED ON A STOP-GAP
ARRANGEMENT?
13. The learned DAG has argued that the contracts of
the Respondents were not renewed/ extended, but they were
offered new contracts from time to time after their previous
contracts had expired. The record reveals that such breaks
were artificial. The said breaks cannot render the employment
of the Respondents to be purely temporary. The Respondents
have been performing their duties in their respective schools
since long and such artificial breaks in their employment do
not negate the fact that the Respondents had been
continuously serving the Appellants! Petitioners for a long
time. Reliance in this regard is placed on the case titled
Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education, Multan
vs Muhammad SaUd 12019 SCMR 233 Supreme Court)
wherein it was held as follows:-
"It is an admitted position that the respondents before us
have been working with the petitioner-Board since long,
however, in their clumsy attempt to break the continuity
of their service, the petitioner has been employing them
for 89 days only, and has been re-hiring them for the
next 89 days, and thus continued to avail their service for
a long period by creating artificial breaks in their service
period. The fact that they have, in fact, continuously
served the petitioner for a long period of time, albeit the
breaks created by the petitioner, as noted above, clearly
show that they have been performing the job of a
CIVIL PETITION NOS2503 to 2519&2560 OF 2019
permanent nature and have not been serving on casual
posts."
It is not the case of the Appellants before us that the
Respondents were temporarily working against temporary
posts and that such posts no longer exist. The fact that FPSC
was approached to test the qualifications and antecedents of
Respondents and make its recommendations by itself shows
that these posts were permanent in nature.
13.
As noted above, the said Principals of the
respective Schools where the Respondents were performing
services were acting in the aide of the Appellants/ Petitioners
under an elaborate mechanism/ modus operandi provided
by the Appellants/ Petitioners. The powers of the said
principals were being exercised on the instructions and under
supervision of the Appellants/ Petitioners and with their
express consent and approval.
14.
The learned DAG has stated that there were
breaks in the services rendered by the Respondents, however,
he has been unable to show from the record where and when
there were such breaks in the daily wage services rendered by
the Respondents. The only argument advanced by him in this
regard is that the Respondents were working on a stop-gap
arrangement. We are unable to agree with the learned DAG in
this regard. By no stretch of imagination can it be conceived
that when the Respondents were working against their
respective posts for long periods (in some cases for more than
10 years), the same can by any definition of the word be
C
CIVIL PETITION P1052503 W 2519 & 2660 OF 2019
termed as a stop-gap arrangement. A stop-gap arrangement is
one where a temporary arrangement is made for a limited
time for a few months at the most until something better or
more suitable can be found. Such an arrangement is typically
made until someone can be hired permanently through the
process provided in the law, rules or regulations. The
Respondents were admittedly employed for long periods of
time running into years and cannot be termed as stop-gap.
The definition of "stopgap" provided in Collins Dictionary and
as understood by Courts in our country clearly means:-
"A stopgap is something that serves a purpose for a short
time, but is replaced as soon as possible"
15. The meaning of a stopgap arrangement was
interpreted by this Court in the case titled as Chairman
Evacuee Trust PropertM Board and others vs Khawaja
Shahid Nazir (2006 PLC(CS) 1261 Supreme Court) in the
following terms:-
"The Tribunal had failed to interpret the notification
dated 29-6-2000 in its true perspective by ignoring the
clear stipulation contained therein that respondent was
appointed as Secretary BPS-19 and such appointment
was till further orders. From such stipulation it can be
inferred without anti doubt that it was not a regular
appointment in accordance with section 11(l) of the Act
and was by wait of stopgap arrangement. This Court in
the case of Abdul Majid Sheikh v. Mushafee Ahmed and
another PLD 1965 SC 208 while examining the effect of
the phrase "a person holds an appointment till further
orders" pronounced that it only means that he holds it till
orders are passed terminating his services. "(Underlining
is ours)
The learned DAG has been unable to show us any
document on the record which suggests that the Respondents
were employed for a specific period of time subject to the
arrival of permanent employees. The only term in this regard
0
CIVIL PETITION N0S2503 to 2519&2660 OF 2019
13
as found from the appointment orders of the Respondents is
that there would be no commitment in this regard from either
the Respondents or the Appellants/ Petitioners. The mere
insertion of this vague term in the contracts of the
Respondents does not mean that they were employed as a
stop-gap arrangement. The Appellants/ Petitioners never
terminated services of the Respondents. The Respondents
retired from their services after they were regularized, that too
in most, after more than 10 years of service. Adding artificial
breaks to the employment of the Respondents does not
convert the employment of the Respondents into a stop-gap
arrangement. They were not employed for a short period till
the arrival of someone permanent, but, were employed
against their respective posts for almost the whole of their
professional lives. As such, the argument of the learned DAG
in this regard does not hold much water and the employment
of the Respondents was to be treated as permanent in nature
as correctly held by the Tribunal.
COULD THE RESPONDENTS BE EMPLOYED ON DAILY
WAGES BASIS CONSIDERING THE NATURE OF THEIR
WORK?
16. Teachers strengthen the foundation of any state as
well as play a pivotal role in nation building by imparting
education which is necessary to uplift a society consisting of
educated and aware citizens who believe in values and
strengthen democracy and democratic values. Employing
teachers on daily wages basis is not only detrimental to the
education sector of Pakistan but is also a discouraging factor
__________________________
1—•
CIVIL PETITION 1105.2503 to 2519 & 2660 OF 2019
14
for future teachers who in turn are demotivated and
discouraged a profession which is pivotal in the lives of our
future generations. It is pertinent to mention that primary
education is a fundamental right guaranteed under Article
25-A of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan,
1973. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights also
recognizes education as one of the most important rights of
children. Article 3 of the Constitution provides that all forms
of exploitation shall be eliminated. One of the reasons for
which this becomes relevant to the present controversy is that
notwithstanding the importance of the services they render to
society, which have consequences for generations, the
Respondents were made to work under uncertain conditions
on the pattern of unskilled and uneducated or semi-educated
labour hired on a daily wage basis for seasonal projects
expected to last for a limited period. We are appalled at this
irresponsible, casual and utterly unprofessional approach of
the policy makers towards a matter as important and as
serious as education of our future generations. We have no
hesitation whatsoever in strongly deprecating the same. These
actions of the Appellants/ Petitioners are not only contrary to
Constitutional dictates but also contrary to the Principles of
Policy enshrined in the Constitution which state that there
has to be an equal adjustment of rights between employers
and employees.
17. The Impugned Judgment of the learned Tribunal
is well reasoned, proceeds on the correct factual and legal
premises and has correctly applied the relevant law, rules and
-
CIVIL PETrTION NO&2503 to 25i9&2660 OF 2019
15
regulations to the facts and circumstances of the cases before
us. No legal, jurisdictional defect, error or flaw in the
Impugned Judgment has been pointed out to us that may
furnish a valid basis or lawful justification to interfere in the
same. The Learned AAG has not been able to persuade us to
take a view different from the Tribunal in the facts and
circumstances of the instant Appeal/ Petitions. We
accordingly affirm and uphold the Impugned Judgment of the
Learned High Court
18. For the reasons noted above, we find no merit in
the Appeal and the same is accordingly dismissed. As for the
Petitions, no question of law of public importance in terms of
Article 212(3) of the Constitution has been raised.
Accordingly, we find no merit in these Petitions and the same
are dismissed. Leave to appeal is refused.
Judge
ISLAMABAD, THE
272h of January 2021
Hans LC/
AT&T APPROVED FOR REPORTING
| {
"id": "C.A.1546_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE QAZI FAEZ ISA
MR. JUSTICE SAJJAD ALI SHAH
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1547 OF 2019
(On
Appeal
from
the
judgment
dated
01.08.2019 of the Lahore High Court, Lahore
passed in ICA.210640/2018)
Orient Power Company (Private) Limited through its
authorized officer
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited through its
Managing Director
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. Salman Akram Raja, ASC
For the Respondent(s):
Kh. Ahmad Hosain, ASC.
Date of Hearing:
12.12.2019
JUDGMENT
MUSHIR ALAM, J.— The Appellant, through Civil Appeal No.
1547 of 2019 arising out of CPLA No.3027/2019, has challenged the
legality of the order passed by the Learned Division Bench of the
Lahore High Court1 in ICA No. 210640/208 in COS No.16/2017.
Leave to Appeal was granted on 12.09.19 to consider the points
raised by both the Parties in this case.
I.
FACTS:
1. The Appellant, Orient Power Company (Private) Limited2 is a
private limited company incorporated under the laws of
Pakistan, whereas the Respondent, Sui Northern Gas Pipelines
Limited3 is a public limited company incorporated under the
1 Herein referred to as the “impugned judgment”
2 Hereinafter referred to as the “Petitioner”
3 Herein referred to as SNGPL
CA 1547/19
2
Companies Ordinance, 1984. SNGPL is the sole authorized and
licensed distributor of Natural Gas in the provinces of Punjab
and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
2. The Appellant constructed and operated a power generation
facility4 of approximately 212.7 Megawatts (MW). In this regard,
the Appellant entered into a Power Purchase Agreement5 on
08.11.2008 with National Transmission and Dispatcher Company
Limited6 for a term of thirty (30) years. The PPA governs the
terms of the sale and purchase of Energy and Capacity to the
Power Purchaser.
3. The Appellant also entered into an Implementation Agreement
with the President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan through
Private Power and Infrastructure Board which establishes the
framework under which the Complex is to be set up.
4. For the purposes of running the Complex, the Appellant required
Natural Gas as a primary fuel, and for this purpose, Appellant
entered into a Gas Supply Agreement7 with the Respondent. The
Parties signed the GSA on 18.10.06 which contained a “Take or
Pay Clause8”. Furthermore, the GSA’s purchase and supply
arrangement were such that it was divided into two time periods:
the first being the “Firm Delivery Period”, where the Respondent
was required to deliver and sell to the Appellant all of the
Complex’s requirements for Gas, up to the daily contract
quantity, and the second being the “As-Available Period” which
comprised of the three months excluded during the Firm Delivery
4 Herein referred to as the “Complex”
5 Herein referred to as the “PPA”
6 Herein referred to as the “Power Purchaser”
7 Herein referred to as the “GSA”
8Take-or-pay clause are common in the energy sector Contracts and, in particular, for gas sales
agreements whereby the buyer agrees to either: (1) take, and pay the contract price for, a minimum
contract quantity of gas each contracted period (the TOP Quantity); or (2) pay the applicable contract
price for such TOP Quantity if it is not taken during the applicable period see Amoco v Teesside
Gas 2001 UKHL 18) =[2001]1 All ER (Comm) 865
CA 1547/19
3
Period where the Respondent would provide Gas on ‘As Available’
basis.
5. During the Firm Delivery Period, the terms of the GSA stated that
the Appellant had a gas entitlement of 38 MMCFD (million
metric standard cubic feet per day).
6. Differences arose between the parties with respect to the
Commissioning Period Start Date,9 during which the Complex
would be tested, and the subsequent Commercial Operating Date,10
being the date when the Complex was to start its commercial
operations, and the Appellant’s obligation to take or pay gas
under clause 3.6 of the GSA during the CPSD and COD.
7. It was seen vide letter dated 01.07.09 that the parties agreed to
appoint Mr. Khalid S. Ibrahim as the Expert11 under clause 18.2(g)
of the GSA to resolve the dispute. The Expert heard the matter
and issued his Determination12 on 19.12.09, holding that some
amounts are due from the Appellant to the Respondents in terms
of the Take-or-Pay Clause calculated on the basis of the declared
CPSD13 and COD.14 The Appellant was directed to make payment
in fifteen days.
8. On the basis of the Expert Determination, the Parties, on 11.01.10,
executed the “Payment Agreement” which required the Appellant
to make payment in three installments. Under the Payment
Agreement, it was agreed that the Respondent would be entitled
to a late payment surcharge at “Delayed Payment Rate, ”which
would be paid until full payment is made.
9. For the period of 28.02.2011 till 10.05.2011, the Respondent did
not supply, and also curtailed supply of gas to the Petitioner,
9 Herein referred to as “CPSD”
10 Herein referred to as “COD”
11 Herein referred to as the “Expert”
12 Herein referred to as the “Expert Determination”
13 Dated 30 September 2008
14 Dated 1 April 2009
CA 1547/19
4
contrary to the terms of the GSA. This was done through various
letters written by the Respondent, whereby it purported to
declare Force Majeure on account of certain alleged terrorist and
sabotage activities. The Appellant was unable to operate the
Complex on gas during this period and as a result, payment
under the head of “Capacity Price” to be made by the Power
Purchaser to Appellant under the Power Purchase Agreement
with National Transmission and Dispatch Company Limited (the
“Power Purchaser”) were withheld and disallowed up to an
amount of Rs. 201,998,444/-.
10. The Appellant filed a Request for Arbitration (the “Earlier
Arbitration”) due to the accrual of such losses. The Parties
received the final award of this arbitration on 09.03.16, wherein it
was held that Respondent’s claim of Force Majeure events could
not be classified as such and, that Respondent was in breach of
the GSA during those periods and that Appellant was entitled to
compensation for the loss suffered.
11. Furthermore, under the Payment Agreement dated 11.01.10, the
Appellant made all of the requisite payments to the Respondent
except that of Rs. 104,133,296/-; which the Respondent claimed
as late payment surcharge.
12. Simultaneously, another dispute arose between the Parties, with
respect to six invoices issued by the Respondent from May to
October 2011 under the GSA, which the Appellant contended was
not due, as the Appellant had paid the full amount for the
months in which it was not able to take up the Gas.15
13. The Parties decided to refer these disputes to Justice Khalil-Ur-
Rehman Ramday (“Justice Ramday”) as per Section 18.2 of the
GSA. However, it must be noted that the dispute pertaining to
15 April to November 2009, March to April 2010 and March 2011
CA 1547/19
5
the late payment surcharge under the Payment Agreement was not
referred to Justice Ramday for determination,16 who declared in
his Determination dated 11.06.14 that the Respondent was not
entitled to retain the entire amount of money paid under Clause
3.6(a) of the GSA for which the gas was not taken, but may still be
entitled to reasonable compensation under Section 74 of the
Contract Act, 1872.
14. The Respondent referred the disputes relating to the unpaid
invoices along with the dispute relating to late payment
surcharge under the Payment Agreement to arbitration pursuant
to Section 18.3 of the GSA, which provided for arbitration to be
conducted in London under the rules of the London Court of
International Arbitration (the “LCIA”) on 12.06.14. During the
proceedings, the Parties submitted Expert Opinions by Mr.
Makhdoom Ali Khan and Chief Justice (R) Tassaduq Jillani.
15. The Respondent, in the arbitration, claimed, inter alia:
(i)
A declaration that the Appellant illegally, and in breach of
the GSA withheld a total amount of Rs. 603,202,083 from
the bills raised by the Respondent pertaining to the
months of May to October 2011;
(ii)
Late payment surcharge on unpaid amounts under the
GSA calculated until 31 May 2014 in the amount of Rs.
485,678,790;
(iii)
Continuing late payment surcharge on outstanding
amounts to be calculated from 31 May 2014 in accordance
with the terms of the GSA; and
(iv)
Interest on any award from the date of award to the date of
payment;
16. The Appellant advanced an objection to the jurisdiction of the
Arbitral Tribunal and, defended the claim on the grounds inter
alia-:
(i)
Declaration that the Respondent cannot raise any issues
regarding the Payment Agreement in these proceedings.
16 As enumerated in Paragraph 8
CA 1547/19
6
Any issue with the Payment Agreement can only be
settled as per laws of Pakistan and in a court of competent
jurisdiction. Payment Agreement is a standalone
agreement and the Appellant has not violated Payment
Agreement;
(ii)
Declaration that the Appellant is entitled to retain the
disputed amounts from the bills of the Respondent and
therefore can retain the Make Up Gas amount;
(iii)
Declaration that Respondent cannot forfeit the Make Up
Gas Amount under GSA or Pakistan law;
(iv)
Order Respondent that it either provides the Make Up
Gas against the Make Up Gas Amount (i.e. Rs
603,202,083/-) or refunds the same;
(v)
Declaration that the Make Up Gas is available even after
the expiry of the one Contract Year on “as available”
basis;
(vi)
Declaration that any valid Force Majeure claims by the
Respondent extends the period for Make Up Gas on a day
to day basis including the obligation to supply gas for
extended period;
(vii) Declaration that the claims made by the Respondent
through various letters/notices claiming existence of Force
Majeure during the period from 28 February 2011 to 10
May 2011 were illegal, invalid, inapplicable and contrary
to the facts and the law and Respondent is entitled to
withheld capacity.
17. The Sole Arbitrator issued the Partial Award dated 27.02.17 and
Final Award on 13.06.17 in the Arbitration wherein:
(i)
Arbitrator dismissed the claim of the Appellant that it did
not have jurisdiction over the Payment Agreement;
(ii)
Respondent’s claim for Rs. 104,133,296/- was allowed;
(iii)
Respondent’s
claim
under
the
six
invoices
for
Rs.603,202,083/- was stated to be the amount due under
the invoices;
(iv)
Sole Arbitrator directed Appellant to pay Respondent
simple interest at the rate of 6% per annum on Rs.
603,202,083/- from 31 October 2011 to the date of the
Award and simple interest at the rate of 6% per annum on
all sums payable pursuant to the Award from the date of
the Award to the date of payment; and
CA 1547/19
7
(v)
Respondent was liable to pay Rs. 98,452,322 in respect of
the Earlier Arbitration.
18. Subsequent to the issuance of the Award, the Respondent filed
COS No. 16/2017 before the Learned High Court at Lahore, and
on 04.04.18, the suit was allowed and it was held that the Award
shall be recognized and enforced as a judgment and decree of the
court under Section 6 of the Foreign Awards (Recognition and
Enforcement) of Foreign Arbitral Awards 2011 (the “Foreign
Arbitration Act”).
19. Consequently, the Appellant filed ICA No. 210640/2018,
impugning the judgment of the Learned Single Judge. The same
was dismissed by the Learned Division Bench of the Learned
High Court, at Lahore, inter alia, for the reasons:
(i)
High Court has exclusive jurisdiction to recognize and enforce
foreign arbitral awards which means it has exclusive jurisdiction
to recognize and enforce the Award;
(ii) The dispute resolution mechanism under the GSA was applicable
to the Payment Agreement and that the Sole Arbitrator was well
within his jurisdiction to make determination in terms thereof;
(iii) Public policy exception should not be used as a back door to review
the merits of a foreign arbitral award or to create grounds which
are not available under Article V of the Convention as this would
negate the obligation to recognize and enforce foreign arbitral
awards; and
(iv) The Take or pay clauses in the GSA, being a common provision in
commercial contracts, especially gas purchase agreements is valid
and enforceable and cannot be considered as a penalty provision.
The terms of the GSA were negotiated and agreed to between the
parties.
CA 1547/19
8
The Appellant has subsequently appealed to this Court, wherein,
leave to appeal was granted on 12.09.19 to consider the points raised
by both the Parties in this case.
II.
Arguments of the Parties
20. Counsel for the Appellant argues that pursuant to the laws of
Pakistan, there must be a specific arbitration clause in the
Payment Agreement in order for the matter to be referred to
arbitration. The first claim in the arbitration, with respect to non-
payment of Rs. 104,133,296/- was under the Payment Agreement,
which did not contain an arbitration clause and by virtue of
accepting the claim, the sole arbitrator exceeded its jurisdiction.
Learned counsel for the Appellant further argued that since the
Payment Agreement did not contain a valid arbitration agreement,
this was against Article V(1)(a) of the Convention on the Recognition
and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 1958 (the “New York
Convention”) which has been incorporated into the law of
Pakistan via its implementing statute, the ‘Recognition and
Enforcement (Arbitration Agreements and Foreign Arbitral Awards)
Act 2011 (the “Foreign Arbitration Act”).Appellant also argued that
the Payment Agreement does not make any express or specific
reference to the arbitration clause in the GSA.
21. Learned counsel for the Respondent counters the argument of
Appellant by relying on Clause 18.3 of the GSA that provided for
all matters ‘arising out of or in connection with the GSA to be referred
to arbitration’. He contends that it cannot plausibly be argued that
amounts due under the Payment Agreement are not “arising out
of or in connection with” the GSA. The Respondent further submits
that this is a question of contractual interpretation (i.e.
interpretation of the scope of the arbitration agreement in the GSA),
absent a completely perverse finding by the sole arbitrator and
the division bench, this Hon’ble Court ought not interfere in
CA 1547/19
9
these findings and that the findings of the two fora gave effect
sensibly to the commercial terms agreed in the GSA and are
therefore, subject to arbitration.
22. The Appellant maintains that the Impugned Judgment has
wrongfully held that Section 74 of the Contract Act is not attracted
in the “so called” take or pay clauses, set out in Section 3.6(a) of the
GSA. Appellant argues that its conduct of not taking the Gas
during the relevant period amounted to a breach under section
3.6(a). The Appellant further holds that non- performance of the
take or pay provisions would amount to breach under the laws of
Pakistan, consequently this would be a situation governed by
section 74 of the Contract Act, and that the Take or Pay provisions
cannot be allowed to operate outside the sphere of the laws of
Pakistan.
23. Counsel for Appellant also holds that the Award rendered by the
sole arbitrator was patently illegal since it was contrary to Section
74 of the Contract Act, 1872 (the “Contract Act”), which essentially
states that a party should not be allowed to recover more than it
has actually suffered. Appellant alleges that the Respondent had
not suffered an actual loss of more than Rs. 356,104,346.25/- and
that by awarding more than the actual loss suffered amounts to
unjust enrichment/double recovery since the amount of Gas not
taken by the Appellant was sold to third parties, unjustly
enriching the Respondent. The protection against unjust
enrichment, according to the Petitioner, is a fundamental aspect
of the public policy of Pakistan and Section 6 of the Foreign
Arbitration Act read with Article V(2)(b) of the New York
Convention.
24. Respondent counters that the judgment of Learned High Court
has made sound formulation on public policy, and that under the
New York Convention, public policy should be construed narrowly
CA 1547/19
10
and should only be used as a ground to refuse enforcement
where the award is on the face of it in clear violation of
fundamental notions of morality or justice of the enforcing State.
Respondent further contends that the Appellant’s disagreement
is not with public policy but rather with the quantum of the
award.
25. The above arguments of the learned counsel for the Parties have
been considered with due care and attention, and the available
record has been perused at length. Owing to the various issues
that arise in this case, each will be dealt separately.
III.
Issue No 1: Incorporation of arbitration clause from the
Main Contract
26. In today’s commercial reality, it is not unusual for parties to have
a network of inter-connected, inter-dependent, or multi-contracts,
which form an “indivisible whole contract”. Therefore, when
disputes arise, a party who intends to initiate arbitration will
potentially wish to do so under several of these inter-connected,
inter-dependent or multi-contracts connected inter-se.
27. Bernard Hanotiau, one of the revered authorities on arbitration, in
his book titled ‘Complex Arbitrations: Multi-party, Multi-contract,
Multi-issue – A comparative Study’ aptly explains that
“in a situation involving a series of agreements
between the same parties, the main problem is
determining whether these contracts constitute an
indivisible whole (ensemble contractuel unique). The
solution will rest on an interpretation of the will of the
parties.’.”17
17 'Chapter 3: The Possibility of Bringing Together in One Single Proceeding all the Parties Who Have
Participated in the Performance of One Economic Transaction Through Interrelated Contracts', in
Bernard Hanotiau, Complex Arbitrations: Multi-party, Multi-contract, Multi-issue – A comparative
Study (Second Edition), International Arbitration Law Library, Volume 14 Kluwer Law International
2020) pp. 197 - 310
CA 1547/19
11
28. The main consideration for the instant case, therefore, is whether
the GSA and the Payment Agreement are comprised of inter-
connected or inter-dependent contracts to be treated as “indivisible
whole contract” or whether they are separate and independent
from each other.
29. The Learned bench of the High Court has rightfully concluded
that the terms of the Payment Agreement establish that the parties
intended to remain within the confines of the GSA as the purpose
of the Payment Agreement was to give effect to the Expert's
Determination.18 The Expert Determination itself was a result of a
dispute arising out of the obligations of the GSA.
30. Furthermore, the intention of the Parties to give effect to the
obligations under GSA is evident by the Recitals to the Payment
Agreement, which make explicit mention of the GSA and the
dispute arising under it. Moreover, Clause 1 of the Payment
Agreement states explicitly that the definitions set forth in the GSA
will carry the same meanings under the Payment Agreement, and
Clause 4 states that after resolution of the issues under the
Payment Agreement, the provisions of the GSA shall apply and
prevail. Therefore, this is illustrative of the intention of the
parties to, not only be bound by the GSA, but also to remain
within its confines. This continuous reference to the GSA means
that the Payment Agreement was ultimately guided by, and
dependant on the GSA for its existence. It was, undoubtedly in
our minds, a “part of an indivisible whole” and the transaction thus
must be looked at in its entirety.
31. Philippe Leboulanger, another revered authority on international
commercial arbitration, urges us to take into account the
commercial realities of the operation:
18 Paragraph 17 of the impugned judgement
CA 1547/19
12
“It is important to take into account the commercial
reality of the operation, because sometimes the parties’
reciprocal synallagmatic19 obligations arise not from a
single contract, but from different contracts. It should
be checked whether the obligations undertaken under
the different agreements are reciprocal, having a
common origin, identical sources and an operational
unit.
When the agreements make up one single business
transaction, the interplay between the undertaking
cannot be ignored, as there exists within the
contractual context a kind of freedom of circulation of
obligations
and
interrelated
debts.
Whenever
obligations were undertaken for the accomplishment of
a single goal and are economically interdependent, the
different disputes should be appreciated on an overall
basis.
Agreements may be considered to be interrelated when
they were concluded on the same date, for the same
duration, for the same purpose. Another indication of
the interrelation between contracts is the presence of a
general—or a master, a cover, a basic or a head—
agreement outlining the obligations undertaken by the
parties, obligations which are usually discussed in
more detail in the ancillary agreements. General
agreements often contain a preamble describing the
transaction and the interrelation between the different
agreements. In this case, the interdependence between
a general agreement and its ancillary agreements is
evident, especially when the general agreement
expressly refers to each one of the ancillary agreements
and each one of the ancillary agreements expressly
refers to the general agreement and to the other
ancillary agreements. Interrelation also exists in the
context of framework and application agreements.”20
32. It is therefore, certain that the obligations undertaken under the
Payment Agreement were for the accomplishment of a single
goal i.e. the fulfillment of the terms of the GSA, both the contracts
were economically interdependent and had a common origin.
19Synallagmatic Contractin civil law. A bilateral or reciprocal contract, in which the parties expressly
enter into mutual engagements, each binding himself to the other. Poth.Obl. no. 9. Such are the
contracts of sale, hiring, etc. See State ex rel. Waterman v. J. S. Waterman and Co., 178 La. 340, 151
So. 422, 426. Black law Dictionary 4th Edition)
20 Philippe Leboulanger 'Multi-Contract Arbitration' (1996) 13 (4) J In't Arb 43, 47
CA 1547/19
13
33. The Appellant further argues that the arbitration clause in the
GSA did not cover the Payment Agreement, and thus the Sole
Arbitrator exceeded his jurisdiction by deciding the issues arising
out of the Payment Agreement. The arbitration clause in Clause 18.3
in the GSA covers disputes, disagreements or default of the seller
and buyer “in connection with or arising out of” this Agreement.
The dispute under the Payment Agreement was inarguably a
dispute connected to the GSA, and also arose out of the
obligations under the GSA.
34. Furthermore, we are guided by the following case law and
authorities on this matter.In the case of Fiona Trust& Holding
Corporation v. Privalov,21 the U.K House of Lords, held that the
proper approach is for courts to give effect to the commercial
purpose of the arbitration clause and that parties, as rational
businessmen, were likely to have their disputes arising out of
their relationship by the same forum i.e. the arbitral tribunal in
this case wherein it is stated that:
“7…parties, as rational businessmen, were likely to
have intended that only some of the questions arising
out of their relationship were to be submitted to
arbitration and others were to be decided by national
courts. Could they have intended that the question of
whether the contract was repudiated should be decided
by arbitration but the question of whether it was
induced by misrepresentation should be decided by a
court? If, as appears to be generally accepted, there is
no rational basis upon which businessmen would be
likely to wish to have questions of the validity or
enforceability of the contract decided by one tribunal
and questions about its performance decided by
another, one would need to find very clear language
before deciding that they must have had such an
intention.
8. A proper approach to construction therefore requires
the court to give effect, so far as the language used by
the parties will permit, to the commercial purpose of
the arbitration clause...”
21 [2007] UKHL 40
CA 1547/19
14
35. Since the decision rendered in Fiona Trust (supra) several cases
have since been decided, fine tuning the rationale laid down
therein, and courts have considered whether the presumption
also applies in a multi-contract scenario, where contracts contain
different, potentially inconsistent arbitration agreements. In some
of the cases, the presumption has been applied to discover the
real intention of the parties, insomuch as that the arbitration
clause in one agreement also envisages a dispute under another
agreement. Recently, an English Court in multi-contract conflicts
expanded the “centre of gravity” approach, and held that a
carefully and commercially minded construction
of the
agreement at hand is required, and the Court of Appeal in the
case of AmTrust Europe Ltd v Trust Risk Group SpA 22, further
examined which of the inter-related or inter-dependent contracts
was the “centre of gravity” of the dispute, based on which the
dispute resolution provisions of the “centre of gravity” contract
will govern the resolution of the inter-related or inter-dependent
contracts.
36. In a case decided by the French Supreme Court on 14 May 1996,23
an exclusive distribution agreement had been concluded by two
companies and contained an arbitration clause providing that
any dispute resulting from the agreement or its termination, or
relating thereto, would be decided through arbitration. A dispute
had arisen, and the parties had concluded an additional
agreement providing for the payment of commissions to the
distributor for sales performed outside the scope of the
distribution agreement. This second agreement did not contain
any arbitration or jurisdiction clause. A dispute arose under the
second agreement and the distributor started an action before the
Commerce Court of Bobigny. The lower court upheld its
22 [2015] EWCA Civ 437
23 1st Civ. Chamber, 14 May 1996, 1997 Rev. Arb. 535.
CA 1547/19
15
jurisdiction considering that the second agreement was not an
accessory of the first one since the two agreements concerned
different types of transactions and the absence of any explicit
reference to the arbitration clause in the second agreement
excluded any acceptance of the said clause in the context of this
second agreement. The French Supreme Court reversed the
finding, deciding that the second agreement was based on a
breach of the first agreement and was thus its complement, with
the consequence that it fell within the scope of the arbitration
clause contained in the first contract.
37. In another case by the French Supreme Court decided on 5 March
1991,24 the dispute arose from a share transfer agreement
concluded between A and B and containing a guarantee in favour
of the purchaser. It contained an arbitration clause. Two months
later, another agreement was concluded by the same parties to
the effect that after the establishment of a final accounting, the
debt of the Seller amounted to a certain sum. This second
agreement did not contain any arbitration clause. A dispute arose
and the purchaser started an action before the French courts. The
French Supreme Court considered that the second contract was
only the implementation of the first, which both formed a whole
and that therefore the force obligatoire (the binding force of the
contract) of the arbitration clause included in one agreement
extended to the other.
38. The same approach prevails in Singapore, in the case of Tjong
Very Sumito and Ors v. Antig Investments Pte. Ltd; the
Singapore Supreme Court,25 considered a Share Sale and
Purchase Agreement (SPA), which contained a clause providing
for disputes to be resolved by arbitration. The arbitration clause
24 Commercial Ch., 1992 Rev. Arb. 66 and note by L. Aynès
25 [2009] 4 S.L.R.(R) 732, [2009] S.G.C.A. 41
CA 1547/19
16
stated: “…any and all disputes, controversies and conflicts arising out
of or in connection with this Agreement or its performance (including
the validity of this Agreement) shall be settled by arbitration…” The
same
parties
subsequently
entered
into
four
further
Supplemental Agreements. Each Supplemental Agreement was
considered supplemental to the SPA.A dispute arose as to
whether a payment arrangement under the fourth Supplemental
Agreement, (which did not contain an arbitration clause) was
subject to the arbitration clause in the SPA. The Court of Appeal
held that since the fourth Supplemental Agreement ‘owes its
existence to the SPA, such Supplemental Agreement cannot stand
independently on its own. Like the first three supplemental
agreements, its purpose was to supplement and/or modify
certain terms of the SPA’. The dispute therefore, arose in
connection with the SPA. The Court concluded that the intention
of the parties was manifest to be bound by the Arbitration Clause
contained in the principal SPA and such clause extended to the
fourth Supplemental Agreement, as well.
39. From the above discussion, and keeping in sight judicial
consensus across globe, we decide as follows. In the instant case,
both the Agreement i.e GSA and the Payment Agreement are by
and between the same parties, therefore we are inclined to apply
the liberal interpretation as expounded in the case of Fiona Trust
case (supra). We have no hesitation in holding that the
controversy arising out of Payment Agreement is a progeny of the
GSA and cannot be divorced from the parent GSA. The
arbitration clause contained in the GSA would therefore be the
“centre of gravity” and would be deemed to be anchored in the
Payment Agreement which itself was merely an implementation of
the GSA. The disputes “arising out of” the GSA were thus wide
enough to cover the Payment Agreement. We hold that it would
neither be commercially sensible nor realistic to decide that both
CA 1547/19
17
the Agreements were to be decided by separate forums. Had this
been the case, the parties, as rational businessmen, would have
been prudent in expressly excluding the arbitration clause from
the Payment Agreement. We therefore, are inclined to uphold the
reasoning and conclusion drawn by the Learned Bench of the
High Court, and the Arbitral Tribunal.
40. Learned Counsel for the Appellant has relied upon the UK
Supreme Court case of Dallah Real Estate and Tourism Holding
v. Government of Pakistan26 in support of his contention that the
award, cannot be sustained on the ground inter-alia; of Article
V(1)(a) of the New York Convention. We have examined the cited
case, which essentially revolved around the issue of non-
signatories to the contract which is a common and recurring issue
in international commercial arbitration. Certain others aspects
were also explored in this case, more significantly the doctrine of
Kompetenz-Kompetenz
or
competence
competence.
Kompetenz-
Kompetenz, or competence-competence, is a jurisprudential
doctrine whereby a legal body, such as a court or arbitral
tribunal, may have competence, or jurisdiction, to rule as to the
extent of its own competence on an issue before it. The concept
arose in the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany. This
principle, which is accepted by the general international law in
the matter of arbitration, assumes particular force when the
international tribunal is no longer an arbitral tribunal […] but is
an institution which has been pre-established by an international
instrument defining its jurisdiction and regulating its operation27.
The principle was also considered by this Court in the case of
Karachi Dock Labour Board v. M/s Quality Builders Ltd28, wherein it
was observed that the arbitral tribunal is indeed a judge of both
fact and law, the latter of which includes the question of its own
26 [2010] UKSC 57
27 (Nottebohm Case (Liech. v. Guat.), 1953 I.C.J. Reports 7, 119 (21 March)
28 PLD 2016 SC 121
CA 1547/19
18
jurisdiction29. In numerous cases in Pakistan, it has been held that
there is no legal impediment in the way of the court or tribunal to
decide its own jurisdiction30. The principle Kompetenz-Kompetenz
was also recognized by Indian Supreme Court see SBP& Co. v.
Patel Engineering Ltd31. (Seven-member bench), overturning its
earlier judgment in Konkan Railway Corp. Ltd. v. Rani Construction
(P) Ltd;32. This doctrine, therefore, essentially allows the arbitral
tribunal to determine its own jurisdiction.
41. Under the facts and circumstances of this case and in accordance
with the doctrine of competence competence, the Sole Arbitrator
was well within his rights to determine his own jurisdiction, and
the learned counsel for Appellant has not been able to
demonstrate that the tribunal lacked jurisdiction, or that
assuming jurisdiction as regard the Payment Agreement, exceeded
his mandate under Article V(1)(c) of the New York Convention.
42. Furthermore, reliance of learned counsel on Article V(1)(a) of the
New York Convention, is misplaced, relied Article allows refusal of
recognition and enforcement of an award if:
“(a) The parties to the agreement referred to in article
II were, under the law applicable to them, under some
incapacity, or the said agreement is not valid under the
law to which parties have subjected it or, failing any
indication thereon, under the law of the country where
the award was made…”
Thus, enforcement of an award under this Article may be
refused if the arbitration agreement is invalid or if the parties
lacked the capacity to arbitrate, which is not the position in the
instant case.
29 Para. 14 Ibid.
30 See Government of Punjab v. Sanosh Sultan PLD 1995 SC 541 and Raunaq Ali v.Chief Settlement
Commissioner PLD 1973 SC 236
318 SCC 618 = AIR 2006 SC 450Judgment is on the Section 11 (6) of the Arbitration and conciliation
Act, 1996, which empowers the Chief Justice to appoint arbitrator in case of disagreement between
the parties, such powers as against earlier judgment, is held to be judicial power.
32[2000] (8) SCC 15
CA 1547/19
19
43. Under the Commentary of the New York Convention by Herbert
Kronke et al titled ‘Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral
Awards: A Global Commentary on the New York Convention’, it has
been stated that Article V(1)(a), permits a court to deny
recognition and enforcement of an award if no arbitration
agreement exists. We must however, be careful in noting that the
issue here is not the existence of the arbitration agreement, but
rather, whether the existing arbitration clause could have been
read into another agreement i.e. the Payment clause. We are
therefore unable to subscribe to the view of the learned counsel
for the Appellant that the case is covered by Article V(1)(a).
44. More broadly on the issue of incorporation of an arbitration
clause from one contract into another in international commercial
arbitration, as a guideline for future cases in Pakistan, we find it
necessary to dilate upon the trend followed across various
jurisdictions:
(i) UNITED KINGDOM:
45. One of the earliest adjudications regarding the incorporation by
reference was the landmark case of TW Thomas & Co. Ltd v.
Portsea Steamship Co Ltd.33While this was the initial view, the
jurisprudence has significantly evolved and departed from the
principles dilated in this case. The question arose as to whether
an arbitration clause in the charter party, which was referred to,
in the margin of the bill of lading had been incorporated into the
bill of lading or not. The margin of the bill of lading was inked
with the words “…all other terms and conditions and exceptions of
charter to be as per charter party, including negligence clause.”The
charter party itself provided “any dispute or claim arising out of any
of the conditions of this charter shall… be settled by arbitration.” The
House of Lords held that that the arbitration clause could not be
33 [1912] A.C 1 HL
CA 1547/19
20
incorporated because firstly, if the parties are to be deprived of
the ordinary legal remedies of approaching the court, the same
should be done explicitly; secondly, requisite modifications may
be required according to the parties; and thirdly, there is need for
certainty in law.
46. The Court of Appeal case of Aughton Limited v MF Kent Services
Ltd.34gave rise to differing view by the judges. Sir John Megaw,
relied on the case of Thomas v. Portsea (supra) and reinforced the
strict rule that maintained that specific words were necessary to
incorporate an arbitration clause into a contract and that the
reference in a sub-contract to another contract’s terms and
conditions would not suffice to incorporate the arbitration clause
into the sub-contract.
47. The reasoning, of the learned Judge, for imposing the
requirements of specific words of incorporation, is based on three
important factors; with respect to arbitration agreements. Firstly,
that an arbitration agreement may preclude the parties from
bringing a dispute before a court of law, which is not only a
permissible, but also desirable way of settling disputes. Secondly,
it was held that Section 7(1)(e) of the Arbitration Act 197935provide
that an arbitration agreement, has to be a “written agreement”. The
object and effect of which is to ensure that one is not deprived of
their right to have a dispute decided by a court of law, unless he
has “conspicuously and deliberately” agreed that it should be so.
Thirdly, he emphasized on the peculiarity of arbitration clauses,
as an arbitration clause, according to him, is a “self-contained
contract”, for example, it is capable of having a different proper
law from the main contract.
34 [1991] 57 B.L.R 1
35 As it was before the advent of the Arbitration Act, 1996
CA 1547/19
21
48. In the same case, Ralph Gibson L.J reached the conclusion that
express words of incorporation were not always necessary. In
some circumstances, general words would be sufficient to effect
incorporation depending on the terms of the arbitration
agreement. His preferred approach was to look at the precise
words of the contract alleged to permit incorporation and to the
precise terms of the arbitration agreement. If the terms of the
arbitration clause are such that they only apply to the contract in
which they appear, Ralph Gibson LJ’s view was that general
words of incorporation would be insufficient, but if they apply to
both, then general words of incorporation are sufficient.
49. The case of Habaş Sinai ve Tibbi Gazlar Isthisal Endustri A.Ş. v
Sometal S.A.L.,36 expounded upon the approach taken by Justice
Langleyin Sea Trade Maritime Corp. v. Hellenic Mutual War
Risks Association (Bermuda),37 wherein, cases were divided into
‘single contract’ cases. Where parties sought to incorporate a set
of standard terms or agreements, which contained an arbitration
clause. And ‘two-contract’ cases, where parties incorporate a set of
terms belonging to another contract. Habas, decided ‘one contract
cases’ to be those cases, where both the contracts, were entered
into by the same parties. The rest of the cases were classified as
‘two contract’ cases. In Habas case, there had been fourteen (14)
previous contracts between the same parties. The issue in this
case was whether general wording mentioned below were
capable of incorporating an arbitration clause:
“All disputes, or controversies, or differences, which
may arise between the buyer and seller under this
contract, shall be settled in London, according to
London Arbitration Rules, by the United Kingdom
Law.”
36 [2010] EWHC 29 (Comm)
37 [2006] 2 C.L.C 710
CA 1547/19
22
50. The final contract was prepared by an agent of one of the parties,
and did not contain the London arbitration clause but provided
that "All the rest will be same as our previous contracts". It was held
that in principle, English law accepted incorporation of standard
terms by the use of general words. The principle did not
distinguish between a term which was an arbitration clause and
one which addressed other issues.
51. A stricter rule was applied in charter party/bills of lading cases.
In relation to two contract cases, where contracts where not
entered into by the same parties, a more restrictive approach to
incorporation was required. In such a case, it might not be
evident that the parties intended to incorporate not only the
substantive provisions of the other contract but also provisions,
such as an arbitration clause, particularly if a degree of verbal
manipulation was needed for the incorporated arbitration clause
to work. Those considerations however, did not apply to a single-
contract case, and the stricter rule was not to be extended to
single-contract cases since that would involve the exception
swallowing up the rule. In a single-contract case, the independent
nature of the arbitration clause should not determine whether it
was to be incorporated. General words of incorporation were
capable of incorporating terms which included an arbitration
clause without specifically referring to it and the question was
whether in the instant case they did so.
52. Therefore, it was held that the words of incorporation in the last
contract were apt to incorporate the London arbitration clause.
Application of the arbitration clause did not require any
linguistic manipulation. When the parties referred to "all the rest"
being the same, there was no good reason to treat them as
meaning all of the rest except the arbitration clause.
CA 1547/19
23
53. It may, thus be seen, that the English approach to incorporation
by reference has evolved from a strict approach into one with
exceptions and carve-outs such as the “single contract” rule.
(ii)
Singapore:
54. Singapore advocates the “contextual approach” at present in order
to promote arbitration and adopt a pro-arbitration regime,
wherein the question of incorporation of an arbitration clause
depends on the contractual interpretation of the agreement
between the parties.
55. The Court of Appeal of Singapore passed the landmark judgment
of International Research Corp v Lufthansa Systems Asia Pacific
Pte Ltd;38 and discontinued the strict rule of interpretation that
had been earlier borrowed from English Common Law. The court
provided two primary reasons for distinguishing itself from the
UK jurisprudence and its previous decisions. First, it held that
ousting the jurisdiction of the court is no longer considered
"odious", and therefore, there is no point in requiring such a high
threshold of proof for establishing the intention to arbitrate; and,
secondly, businessmen, cannot be expected to differentiate
between arbitration clause and any other clause of the contract.
56. The said view of the Singapore Court of Appeal was further
endorsed in R1 International Pte Ltd v Lonstroff,39 where the
court affirmed the position that an arbitration clause can be
incorporated into a contract even after its formation provided
there was a prior understanding between the parties.
(iii) Hong Kong:
38 [2012] SGHC 226
39 [2015] 1 S.L.R 521
CA 1547/19
24
57. Hong Kong also follows the contextual approach of incorporation
i.e. there is no requirement of a specific reference to the
arbitration clause for its incorporation if intention of the parties
was to have arbitration as a dispute resolution mechanism.
58. In Astel Peiniger Joint Venture v. Argos Engineering,40 the Hong
Kong High Court did away with the strict approach laid down in
Thomas v. Portsea (supra), and explicitly stated that this rule is not
applicable in Hong Kong. It further held that ultimately, courts
must endeavor to give contractual and commercial effect to the
actual words used by the parties. This was also endorsed in the
case of Gay Constructions Pty v. Caledonian Techmore
(Building) Ltd.41
(iv)
India:
59. The general rule for incorporation by reference was laid down by
the Indian Supreme Court in the case of Alimenta SA v. National
Agriculture Co-op Marketing Federation of India.42 The Indian
Supreme Court held that it is now well established that the
arbitration clause of an earlier contract can be incorporated into a
later contract by reference; provided it is not repugnant to or
inconsistent with the terms of the contract in which it is
incorporated.43 In this case, the contract was for the sale and
supply of HPS groundnut kernel Jaras. After the usual terms as to
quality, quantity, price, etc., the contract provided in clause 11
that ‘other terms and conditions are per FOSFA-20 contract terms.’
The question therefore, was whether the arbitration clause in
FOSFA-20 contract, was incorporated by reference, in the contract
for sale and supply of HPS groundnut kernels. The Supreme
Court held that the arbitration clause in FOFSA-20 contract was
incorporated by reference into the contract for sale and supply of
40 [1994] 3 HKC 328
41 [1995] 2 HKLR 35
42 (1987) 1 SCC 615
43 Ibid at Paragraph 7
CA 1547/19
25
HPS groundnut kernel jaras. This judgment established an
important principle of the doctrine of incorporation, i.e.
incorporation can be considered valid only when it is “consistent,
sensible and intelligible” with the terms of the contract in which
it is incorporated. In doing so, the Indian Supreme Court
endorsed the approach laid down by a full bench of the Calcutta
High Court in Dwarkadas & Co. v Daluram Gaganmull44. A very
fine distinction between the phraseology of the provision
incorporating the arbitral clause was drawn and accepted.45
60. The next significant case that asses the proposition if an
arbitration clause can be incorporated by reference into
subsequent contracts; is that of Atlas Export Industries v. Kotak
Company46 which followed the approach laid down in the case
Alimenta S.A (supra).
61. The Indian Supreme Court in the case of M.R. Engineers &
Contractors (P) Ltd v Som Datt Builders Ltd.47 provided a list of
guidelines with respect to section 7(5)48 of the Indian Arbitration
and Conciliation Act, 1996 that are to be followed when dealing
with incorporation by reference:
1) the contract should contain a clear reference to the
documents containing arbitration clause;
2) the reference to the other document should clearly
indicate an intention to incorporate the arbitration
clause into the contract; and
3) the arbitration clause should be appropriate, that is,
capable of application in respect of disputes under
the contract and should not be repugnant to any
term of the contract.49
44 AIR 1951 Cal 10
45 Ibid at Paragraph 9 and 10
46 (1999) 7 SCC 61
47 (2009) 7 SCC 696
48 “The reference in a contract to a document containing an arbitration clause constitutes an
arbitration agreement if the contract is in writing and the reference is such as to make that arbitration
clause part of the contract.” Pakistan does not have an analogous provision.
49 Ibid at Paragraph 13
CA 1547/19
26
62. The apex court also clarified that only a specific reference from
the referred document in the contract between the parties should
have the effect of incorporating the arbitration clause. There is a
requirement of a "conscious" acceptance of the parties before
incorporation can take place. However, where the contract
provides that the standard form of terms and conditions of an
independent trade or professional institution should be
incorporated, a general reference to the referred document would
suffice.
63. Therefore, it would appear that when it comes to standard form
of contracts, the Indian Court is eager to take a more relaxed
view of interpretation, however, where standard form of
contracts are not concerned, a requirement of intention of the
parties to incorporate the arbitration clause into the contract is
needed.
(v)
Pakistan:
64. Under the current regime in Pakistan, the case of Messrs
MacDonald Layton v. Associated Electrical Enterprises50 held
that parties can incorporate an arbitration clause from another
agreement in their own agreement provided it is so mentioned
expressly. Further, it was decided that
“a mere reference that the terms and conditions of a
certain agreement will apply to the agreement between
the parties will not import the arbitration clause into
the agreement. A reference to the arbitration clause
should be specific so that there may not be any
ambiguity and the intention of the parties be made
clear.”
(vi) Conclusion:
65. An analysis, and surveillance from various jurisdictions, as
discussed above, seems to indicate that the adoption of the United
50 PLD 1982 Karachi 786
CA 1547/19
27
Nations Commission on International Trade Law on International
Commercial Arbitration (the “UNCITRAL Model Law”) has a
bearing on application of the approach taken by the courts on
incorporation of an arbitration clause by reference. The
UNCITRAL Model Law is designed to assist the States in
reforming and modernizing their laws on International
Commercial Arbitration and to develop a pro-arbitration regime
in their national regime. It covers all stages of the arbitral process
from the arbitration agreement, the composition and jurisdiction
of the arbitral tribunal and the extent of court intervention
through to the recognition and enforcement of the arbitral award.
It reflects worldwide consensus on key aspects of international
arbitration practice having been accepted by States of all regions
and the different legal or economic systems of the world.
66. For the purposes of incorporation of the arbitration clause by
reference, a noteworthy aspect of the UNCITRAL Model Law is
Article 7, which relates to arbitration agreements. More
specifically, Article 7(2) of the Model Law, states that:
“the reference in a contract to a document containing
an arbitration clause constitutes an arbitration
agreement provided that the contract is in writing and
the reference is such as to make that clause part of the
contract.”
67. Thus, the UNCITRAL Model Law, in furtherance of its pro-
arbitration aims, has explicitly allowed for incorporation by
reference. Legislation based on the Model Law has been adopted in
85 States in a total of 118 jurisdictions51 including United Kingdom,
Singapore, Hong Kong, and India have all incorporated
provisions of the UNCITRAL Model Law into their national laws,
and have therefore, incorporated Article 7 into their Acts.
51 https://uncitral.un.org/en/texts/arbitration/modellaw/commercial_arbitration/status
CA 1547/19
28
68. Indeed, Section 6(2) of the English Arbitration Act, 1996, Section 7(5)
of the Indian Arbitration Act, 1996, Article 19(6) of the Arbitration
Ordinance No. 17 of 2010, the National Arbitration Act for Hong
Kong, and Section 4(7) of the Singapore Arbitration Act, 2001 all state
that the reference in a contract to a document containing an
arbitration clause constitutes an arbitration agreement, if the
contract is in writing and the "reference is such as to make that
arbitration clause part of the contract".
69. Pakistan is a contracting State to the New York Convention on the
Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the New
York Convention). Pakistan became a signatory to the Convention
on 30 December 1958 and ratified it on 14 July 2005. It was first
implemented through the Recognition and Enforcement (Arbitration
Agreements and Foreign Arbitral Awards) Ordinance 2005. The
Ordinance, being temporary in nature, was occasionally re-
promulgated
until
2011
when
the
Recognition
and
Enforcement(Arbitration Agreements and Foreign Arbitral Awards)
Act 2011 was passed by Parliament. Pakistan is also a party to the
Washington Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes
between States and Nationals of Other States of 1965 (ICSID
Convention), the Geneva Protocol on Arbitration Clauses of 1923 and
the Geneva Convention on the Execution of Foreign Arbitral Awards of
1927 (the Geneva Treaties). However, the Geneva Treaties do not
apply to arbitration agreements and awards to which the New
York Convention applies.
70. In a commercially fast paced world, where the world is
essentially a global village, it is regrettable that Pakistan,
although a signatory to UNCITRAL, has till date not incorporated
the provisions of the Model Law into its domestic law and the
Foreign Arbitration Act makes no mention of incorporation by
reference.
CA 1547/19
29
IV.
ISSUE NO. 2: WHETHER A BREACH OF SECTION 74 HAS
OCCURRED?
71. We note that barring the Impugned Judgment, Take or Pay
clauses and their significance have not been adjudicated upon by
this Court. We therefore, deem it pertinent to dispel any
misconceptions regarding such clauses.
72. Briefly, Take or Pay provisions are a very familiar feature in gas
and liquefied natural gas (LNG) sales contracts, power purchase
contracts and many other common energy industry contracts,
and provide an option for the buyer to take supply of gas, LNG
or power, or to pay for it even if it does not take the commodity.
The reasoning provided by Paula Hodges QC and James Rogers
in an article titled ‘Take or pay clause tested in English Courts’52
illustrate the need for such clauses:
“The significant financial commitment required for
exploration, production, shipping and distribution
facilities leads participating companies to seek a
measure of security as regards the level of supply and
demand throughout the duration of any supply
arrangements so as to guarantee future returns on
their investment. Take or pay clauses have therefore
developed to the benefit of both purchasers and
suppliers. The supplier is guaranteed a regular income
stream, while the purchaser commits to pay for a
minimum quantity to guarantee a regular but flexible
supply. In the event that the purchaser is not able or
willing to take the agreed minimum amount, it is
nonetheless required to pay for it.
Take or pay clauses usually operate to the benefit of
both purchaser and supplier. The purchaser is given
the flexibility to vary his order quantity throughout
the life of the contract, subject to the minimum
quantities and the supplier has some certainty of
income in relation to the sale of the product. There is
therefore a commercial justification for including such
a provision in a supply contract. Moreover, in the
energy sector at least, such provisions will typically be
52 I.E.L.R. 2008, 3, 60-62
CA 1547/19
30
negotiated by sophisticated, commercially experienced
parties with comparable bargaining power.”
73. Take or Pay clauses are also widely utilized in the petroleum
industry in Pakistan. Therefore, it can be seen that Take or Pay
clauses are a common occurrence in energy contracts, and their
significance in maintaining a regular income stream for the seller
and a regular supply stream for the buyer is paramount.
74. There are two separate obligations in most take or pay contracts.
First, there is the obligation on the seller to make the gas
available to the Buyer. Secondly, there is the obligation on the
Buyer to pay for the gas that has been made available (either as
well as, or instead of, taking up the gas).53 Furthermore, take or
pay payments have been widely understood to be an amount due
to the seller or transportation company as a debt for having made
the gas or transportation services available, and not as damages
for failure on the other party to take gas. The rule of penalties in
this case is not held to apply generally, because the seller or the
transportation company is providing the service of making gas or
transportation services available to the other party, in accordance
with the Gas Sale/Supply Agreement or the Gas Transportation
Agreement which creates a debt owing to the seller or the
transportation company for that service.54
75. In the House of Lords case of Amoco v. Teeside Gas,55 the issue
was not whether the send or pay agreements (similar to take or
pay agreements) were damages or a debt, Lord Hoffman refereed
to send or pay agreements as an “income stream”. This was held to
be a clear reference that this “income stream” would create a debt
in favour of the gas transporter, should the shipper avail the
53 B. Holland ‘Enforceability of take-or-pay provisions in English law contracts-resolved’ 2016 Journal
of Energy & Natural Law Resources
54 Ibid
55 [2001] 1 All ER (Comm) 865
CA 1547/19
31
service. In the same vein, an “income stream” would be created
for the Seller of the gas, as a debt in its favour for supplying the
gas to the Buyer.
76. Similarly, in the case of Associated British Ports v. Ferryways
and Another,56 it was held, in relation to a send or pay clause at
paragraph 50 that the obligation to pay was held not to be “…a
secondary obligation that is triggered by a breach…but is itself a
primary obligation given in exchange for ABP’s promise to
provide a new linkspan, and as such cannot be a penalty.”
77. Therefore, it followed that payment under take or pay clause will
be a debt, and the law on penalties ought not apply. This settled
position was challenged in the case of M & J Polymers Ltd v.
Imerys Minerals Ltd;57 wherein the Commercial Court considered
the application of the rule of penalties in the context of take or
pay provisions in a commercial contract. This case famously held
the claim under the take and pay provisions was a debt.
However, Burton J also held that as a matter of principle, take or
pay clauses may operate as a penalty, but this would not be their
ordinary classification, and would apply where “a sum is
specified which is found not to be a "genuine pre-estimate of
damage" or a sum is stipulated as "in terrorem" of the offending
party”. In this case, however, Burton J upheld the take or pay
clause on the basis:
“On the facts of this case, I am entirely satisfied that
the take or pay clause was commercially justifiable, did
not amount to oppression, was negotiated and freely
entered into between parties of comparable bargaining
power, and did not have the predominant purpose of
deterring a breach of contract nor amount to a
provision "in terrorem". The evidence was wholly
clear. The negotiations took place between extremely
well qualified, able and savvy commercial men against
56 [2008] EWHC 1265 (Comm)
57 [2008] EWHC 344 (Comm)
CA 1547/19
32
a very significant commercial background, including a
background of previous dealings.“
78. A middle course was navigated in the UK Supreme Court case of
Cavendish Square Holdings BV v. Talal El Makdessi58 which
held that:
“13… There is a fundamental difference between a
jurisdiction to review the fairness of a contractual
obligation and a jurisdiction to regulate the remedy for
its breach. Leaving aside challenges going to the reality
of consent, such as those based on fraud, duress or
undue influence, the courts do not review the fairness
of men’s bargains either at law or in equity. The
penalty rule regulates only the remedies available for
breach of a party’s primary obligations, not the
primary obligations themselves.
14…where a contract contains an obligation on one
party to perform an act, and also provides that, if he
does not perform it, he will pay the other party a
specified sum of money, the obligation to pay the
specified sum is a secondary obligation which is
capable of being a penalty; but if the contract does not
impose (expressly or impliedly) an obligation to
perform the act, but simply provides that, if one party
does not perform, he will pay the other party a
specified sum, the obligation to pay the specified sum is
a conditional primary obligation and cannot be a
penalty.”
This approach illustrates that a take or pay payment should be
viewed as being due on the performance of the seller’s “specified
obligation” in making gas available. There will not be any
parallel breach by the buyer’s failure to take gas as the buyer will
have an option to take gas.
79. In the present case, Learned Counsel for Appellant has argued
that the fact that the Appellant did not take up the Gas during
the specified time, amounted to a breach of the Take or Pay
provisions, thereby rendering Section 74 of the Contract Act
applicable to the case. It was further argued that its conduct of
not taking the Gas during the relevant period amounted to a
58 [2015] UKSC 67
CA 1547/19
33
breach under Clause 3.6(a) of the GSA, which imposed an
obligation on the Appellant to take the Daily Contract Quantity of
Gas from the Respondent from and after the Commercial
Operations Date during the Firm Delivery Period.
80. Section 74 of the Contract Act reads:
“74. Compensation for breach of contract where penalty
stipulated for.-
When a contract has been broken, if a sum is named
in the contract as the amount to be paid in
stipulation
by
way
of
penalty,
the
party
complaining of the breach is entitled, whether or not
actual damage or loss is proved to have been caused
thereby, to receive from the party who has broken
the contract reasonable compensation not exceeding
the amount so named or as the case may be, the
penalty stipulated for.”
81. Retired Chief Justice Tassaduq Hussain Jillani, one of the Experts
in the arbitration proceedings, at page 30 of his Opinion, lays
down when the above provision of law would be attracted:
(i)
Firstly, when a contract has been broken;
(ii)
Secondly, if a sum is named in the contract in
the case of breach, or
(iii)
Thirdly, if the contract contains any other
stipulation by way of penalty;
(iv)
Fourthly, the party complaining of the breach
would be entitled, whether or not actual damage
has been proved to have been caused thereby, to
receive from the party who has broken the
contract,
reasonable
compensation
not
exceeding the amount so named or as the case
may be, the penalty stipulated for.
82. The first condition for an invocation of Section 74, therefore, is
breach of Contract. Learned Counsel for the Appellant argues
that, by not taking up the Make-Up Gas, there had been a breach
of Clause 3.6(a) of the GSA (the “Take or Pay” payment) on part of
the Petitioner. Counsel for Appellant states that this is attributed
to the wording of the Section, which, by use of the word “shall”,
CA 1547/19
34
imposes an obligation on the Appellant to take up the minimum
quantity of gas; and the latter part of the section which states
“…if not taken pay for a minimum quantity of Gas…” was a
provision providing for damages as a consequence of the breach
of the Appellant’s obligation. This Section is reproduced below
for ease of reference:
“Section 3.6: Take or Pay/Make-Up Gas
3.6(a): From and after the Commercial Operations Date
and during a Month in the Firm Delivery Period, the
Buyer shall take and if not taken pay for a
minimum quantity of gas (the “Take or Pay
Quantity”) equal to fifty percent (50%) of the Daily
Contract Quantity multiplied by the difference between
the number of days in that Month (or portion thereof)
and (i) the number of days (or fractions thereof) of Force
Majeure Events declared by the Seller or the Buyer in
that month, (ii) the number of days (or fractions thereof)
of non-delivery of Gas by the Seller in that Month for any
reason, including a breach or default by the Seller or
maintenance undertaken by the Seller pursuant to
Section 12.1, and (iii) the number of days of Scheduled
Outages in that Month notified to the Seller pursuant to
Section 12.2.”
(Emphasis supplied)
83. The case of Muhammad Saleh v. Tim Chief Settlement
Commissioner59 is clear authority on whether or not the word
“shall” is always to be construed so as to create a compulsive
obligation; this case laid down that the words “may” and “shall”
in legal phraseology are interchangeable, depending on the
context in which they are used, and are not to be interpreted with
the rigidity which is attributed to them in ordinary parlance.
84. Furthermore, this case stressed upon the need for a contextual
analysis of provisions. Upon our analysis, we find the
Appellant’s approach of dividing Section 3.6(a) of the GSA into
two different parts redundant. The provision, if looked at in its
59 1972 PLD SC 326
CA 1547/19
35
entirety, creates an obligation not to take up Gas, but rather, to
pay for it even if it is not taken up. The Take or Pay payment is
not due as a result of a contract breach or default, but rather, it
flows from the Appellant’s valid choice/decision not to take the
take or pay quantity. The take or pay payment under Section 3.6
is therefore essentially an agreement whereby the Appellant
agrees to either take and pay the contract price for, a minimum
contract quantity of Gas; or pay the applicable contract price for
such Take or Pay Quantity if it is not taken. Thus, the Appellant’s
obligation may be described as being in the “alternative” as it can
be satisfied in either of the two ways. Therefore, even if the
Appellant did not take up the Gas, but did pay for it, there would
be no breach of contract. No penalty was attracted as a result of
the Appellant not taking up the Gas, rather, conversely, under
Section 3.6(c) of the GSA, the Appellant was allowed to ‘make up’
for the amount he had paid for. Thus, we are unable to agree
with the contention of the Appellant that failure to take up the
Gas had resulted in breach of contract. Section 3.6(c) of the GSA is
reproduced as follows:
“Section 3.6(c): Except for the Gas taken or paid by
the Buyer pursuant to Section 3.6(b) above, any Gas
paid for by the Buyer pursuant to this Section 3.6(a)
above during a Contract Year but not taken prior to
the time of payment (“Make-Up Gas”) may be taken
with payment by the Buyer of the difference between
the Gas Price prevailing at the time the Make-Up Gas
is taken by the Buyer and the Gas Price used to
determine the payment for the Take or Pay Quantity,
using the “first in, first out” method and any increase
in taxes on the sale and purchase of Gas applicable to
Gas sales hereunder, during the Firm Delivery Period
of the immediately following one (1) Contract Year of
the Term, provided that the Buyer shall have first
taken and paid for a quantity equal to but not less than
the Take or Pay Quantity in the applicable Contract
Year and provided further that in no event shall the
Seller’s obligation to deliver the Gas hereunder on any
Day exceed the Daily Contract Quantity. At the end of
the Gas Allocation, the Buyer shall be entitled to the
CA 1547/19
36
Make-Up Gas during the immediately following
twelve (12) Months on as-available basis.”
(Emphasis supplied)
85. Furthermore, even though it is clear that Section 74 of the
Contract Act would not be attracted because there is no breach of
contract that triggers the application of this Section, even if it
were to have applied to the circumstances of the case, the
Appellant would not have been able to make out an arguable
case. This is because as per Section 74, the Respondent would be
entitled to “reasonable compensation”. In the case of Syed Sibte
Raza v. Habib Bank Limited,60 it was held that in working out
the amount for reasonable compensation, it would be relevant to
consider whether any loss has or has not accrued to the party,
which has suffered on account of the breach, and the extent of
that loss. As per the facts of this case, the fact that the Respondent
Bank had spent more than the amount of security it withheld
from its now departed employees on their training, therefore the
amount of security deposit forfeited by the Bank was not held to
be unconscionable or excessive.
86. Relating back to the case at hand, we note that the Take or Pay
clause in the GSA was a reasonable pre-estimate for the loss
suffered by the Respondent. This is because if the Take or Pay
Quantity was not taken up by the Petitioner, the Respondent
suffered losses insomuch as the fact that the Gas not taken by the
Appellant is provided to the domestic consumers through its
Distribution System. As a result, the Respondent suffered
significant loss because domestic consumers enjoy a lower tariff
as per the Regulations of the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority
(OGRA). It is a matter of record that when the GSA was executed
the IPP tariff was Rs. 264.87 per MMBTU, while the tariff for
60 PLD 1971 SC 743
CA 1547/19
37
domestic consumers consuming up to 500M3 per month was Rs.
85.03, and for domestic consumers consuming between 50M3 per
month, the tariff was Rs. 162.07. Moreover, Appellant’s obligation
under Section 3.6 may be regarded as a reasonable pre-estimate of
damages and not a penalty inserted in the contract for the reason
that the Appellant is not burdened with the task of paying for the
whole quantity of Gas which was to be taken, but rather 50% of
the daily contract quantity after the Commercial Operations Date
and 15% of the daily contract quantity during the Commissioning
Period. Secondly, if the Appellant did not take/buy gas during
the stipulated period, it was given a chance to make up the said
quantity of gas not taken, during a specific period mentioned in
the GSA i.e. during the Firm Delivery Period of immediately
following one (1) Contract Year of the term. This appears to be a
reasonable term stipulated in the contract, which has been
evidently agreed upon by both parties prior to the signing of the
GSA. The Appellant cannot now turn around and claim
otherwise.
V.
ISSUE NO. 3: WHETHER AWARD RENDERED BY THE
ARBITRATOR AMOUNTED TO UNJUST ENRICHMENT?
87. The Appellant vehemently asserts that a party should not be
allowed to recover more than it has actually lost; as enshrined in
Section 74 of the Contract Act, 1872 and that allowing more than
the actual loss amounts to unjust enrichment/double recovery.
Counsel for the Appellant further contends that Respondent
admitted that it had not suffered an actual loss of more than Rs.
356,104,346.25/-, and the Sole Arbitrator, by awarding more than
the actual loss suffered unjustly enriched the Respondent. The
Appellant has stressed upon the fact that for a loss of Rs. 365
million rupees, the Respondent has been awarded Rs. 603
million, which plainly exceeds reasonable compensation for the
losses suffered by the Respondent.
CA 1547/19
38
88. The Appellant, in furtherance of his claim, relies on the Witness
Statement of the Chief Billing Officer of the Respondent, who,
according to the Petitioner, has admitted that the Respondent
only suffered an actual loss of Rs. 356,104,346.25/- as a result of
the Appellant’s inability to take the Gas. Upon perusal of the said
document, we are unable to find such an admission on part of the
Chief Billing Officer regarding the amount. Rather, conversely, the
Chief Billing Officer explicitly states, at paragraph 4, that the total
principal amount payable is Rs. 603,202,083.61
89. The Appellant, by its failure to pay for the six invoices issued by
the Respondent from May to October 2011, was undeniably in
breach of its obligation under the GSA. This invariably attracted
Section 74 of the Contract Act, which was been discussed at
length above.
90. We are guided by the case of Province of West Pakistan v
Messers Mistri Patel & Co;62 wherein it was held that the award
of compensation by the court under Section 74 of the Contract Act
will depend upon a case by case factual and circumstantial
analysis as to what would be reasonable compensation in each
case subject to the limit of the amount mentioned in the contract.
It is noteworthy that as per the facts of this case, the Government
was entitled to forfeit five percent of the contract price in case of
breach of contract by the other party. However, it so transpired
that because the Government of Pakistan had earned a profit on
sale of the remaining goods, the Court declined to award
compensation of 5% of the total value of goods that had not been
lifted by the supplier by the stipulate date.
61 Page 392 of the File
62 PLD 1969 SC 80
CA 1547/19
39
91. In the present case, we note that the alleged harshness awarded
by the Sole Arbitrator has already been reduced to Rs. 400 million
Rupees, with the agreement of both parties by the Court and to
be deposited in court, while interpreting Section 74 of the Contract
Act.
92. However, we find it necessary to dilate upon whether the
Appellant’s claim for unjust enrichment holds the ground. For a
claim of unjust enrichment to succeed, there are certain factors
that ought to be taken into account. In the case of Fecto Belarus
Tractor Ltd v. Government of Pakistan,63 the Supreme Court
explained this doctrine as one in which a person gains a
“windfall…in respect of an amount which is not owned by him nor it
has sustained any loss in respect thereof”.
93. In more recent decisions, the Sindh High Court in the case of
Arabian Sea Enterprises v. Abid Amin Bhatti,64 has held that the
necessary ingredients for a claim of unjust enrichment to succeed
are as follows:
i.
The plaintiff must prove that defendant has become
enriched by the receipt of a benefit;
ii.
This enrichment is at the expense of plaintiff;
iii.
The enrichment and/or its retention is unjust; and
iv.
The defendant can legally be compelled to compensate
the plaintiff.
94. The Lahore High Court in the case of Sui Northern Gas Pipelines
v. DCIR65 explained unjust enrichment in the following terms:
“Unjust enrichment occurs when a person retains
money or benefits which in justice, equity and good
conscience, belong to someone else…
The doctrine of unjust enrichment, therefore, is that no
person can be allowed to enrich inequitably at the
63 PLD 2005 SC 605 at 636
64 PLD 2013 Sindh 290 at paragraph 22
65 2014 PTD 1939
CA 1547/19
40
expense of another. A right of recovery under the
doctrine of “unjust enrichment” arises where retention
of a benefit is considered contrary to justice or against
equity.”
95. The Canadian Supreme Court in the case of Garland v.
Consumers’ Gas Co.66 that:
“As a general matter, the test for unjust enrichment is
well established in Canada. The cause of action has
three elements: (1) an enrichment of the defendant; (2)
a corresponding deprivation of the plaintiff; and (3) an
absence of juristic reason for the enrichment.”
96. Upon analysis of the above cases, it must be seen that for a claim
of unjust enrichment to succeed, there must be enrichment at the
expense of the plaintiff and this enrichment must be unjust in
such a way that there should be no lawful justification for the
same. Relating back to the case at hand, learned counsel for the
Appellant argues that the fact that the Respondent was entitled to
recover the amounts for the same Gas twice, amounts to unjust
enrichment of the Respondent, which is therefore contrary to the
Contract Act, and also the principles of public policy. We cannot
agree with this argument. While it may be so that the Respondent
is receiving payment for the same amount of Gas twice, it needs
to be clarified that this is upon failure of the Appellant to take up
the Gas, and further, the Respondent, in any case, is not
recovering the same amount, due to the fact that it is redirecting
transmission to its domestic consumers, which pay a lower tariff
than Independent Power Producers (IPP). Furthermore, to allow the
Appellant’s claim would mean overlooking the fact that the
Respondent is still under an obligation to supply the Make-Up
Gas to the Appellant at any time within the duration stipulated
under Section 3.6(c) of the GSA. There is, therefore, presence of
‘juristic reason’ for the enrichment. Further, the Appellant has
failed to prove its deprivation as it is entitled to Make-Up Gas at a
66 [2004] 1 S.C.R. 629 at Paragraph 30
CA 1547/19
41
later date, which it failed to avail within the stipulated time
frame. It is by now settled law that that if a party failed to avail a
remedy within the period of limitation then after the expiry of the
said period, the other party acquires a valuable right.67 Therefore,
we hold that the Appellant has failed to make out a claim for
unjust enrichment of the Respondent.
97. We are also fortified in our view by the reasoning of the Sole
Arbitrator who very succinctly explained the factors to be taken
into account when dismissing the claim for unjust enrichment:
o Claimant
expanded
monies
to
construct
the
infrastructure to deliver Gas to the Respondent;
o Claimant having to be ready and able to provide under
the GSA, be it Daily Contract Quantity or the Take or
Pay Quantity to the Respondent during Firm Delivery
Period;
o Claimant remaining liable to its upstream suppliers
even if the Respondent chose not to take the Take or
Pay Quantity but opted to pay instead and to Make
Up Gas later;
o Claimant having to bear the responsibility of cutting
its losses and finding an alternative Buyer (even at a
lower price) for the Gas not taken by the Respondent
and the likely additional costs of transmission,
distribution and unaccounted for gas.
98. Conclusively, we hold that the Appellant has failed to make out a
claim for unjust enrichment, and we find that the award rendered
by the Sole Arbitrator was not disproportionate to the losses
suffered by the Respondent.
VI.
ISSUE NO 4: PUBLIC POLICY
99. Article V of the New York Convention lays down instances where
courts may refuse recognition and enforcement of an arbitral
award
brought
before
them,
more
specifically,
Article
67 (See Messrs Lanvin Traders Karachi v. Presiding Officer, Banking Court 2013 SCMR 1419)
CA 1547/19
42
V(2)(b)states that recognition and enforcement may be refused if
the award would be contrary to “public policy” of “that country”.
Thus, since recognition and enforcement of the award is being
sought in Pakistan, it is the public policy of Pakistan that one
must adhere to while perusing the award, which, in turn requires
a discussion on what amounts to a violation of public policy
under the laws of Pakistan.
100. It is noteworthy that neither the New York Convention nor the
corresponding Foreign Arbitral Awards Act has defined public
policy. This was purposefully done by the drafters of the
Convention so as to allow each country to derive its own notions
of public policy, as it would be unrealistic and utopian to expect all
States to adhere to one harmonized ideal of public policy.
101. The dilemma of defining public policy has adequately been by
Albert Van Den Berg in his book titled ‘The New York Arbitration
Convention of 1958. Towards a Uniform Judicial Interpretation’
wherein he states that the reason why the concept of public
policy is so difficult to grasp is that the degree of fundamentality
of moral conviction or policy is conceived differently for every
case in the various States. Indeed, this is true, and to that effect
both Parties have relied on a great many cases from different
jurisdictions to illustrate the views taken by courts and
commentators on the interpretation of public policy.
102. Owing to paucity of judicial commentary and literature alike in
Pakistan, we find it necessary to expound upon the meaning of
public policy, more specifically within the realm of international
commercial arbitration.
103. Perusals of the Travaux préparatoires (preparatory works) of the
New York Convention clearly indicate that the public policy
exception was never meant to be given a wide scope of
CA 1547/19
43
application. Article 1(2)(e) of the Geneva Convention, the
predecessor to the New York Convention contained the provision
of public policy in such a way that not only a violation of public
policy of the country of enforcement hindered recognition and
enforcement; an award could also be contrary to public policy if
it was contrary to the “principles” of the law of the country in
which it was seeking enforcement. The reference to principles of
law was omitted by the International Court of Commerce (ICC)
Draft of 1953, and Article IV(1)(a) of this draft was limited to only
a violation of public policy. In the final discussions leading up to
the adoption of the New York Convention, Working Party III was
instated to present its report on 3 June, 1958. The wording
“incompatible with the public policy of the country in which is award is
sought to be relied upon” was recommended, the reasoning behind
the same was that the public policy criterion should not be given a
broad scope of application. The Convention adopted the draft of
Working Party III, which now reads as Article V(2)(b) under the
New York Convention.
104. Article V(2)(b)’s defense of public policy is one ground that is
frequently invoked by a party resisting enforcement of the
award, but rarely is it granted. We find that it would be remiss if
we did not echo the Learned High Court in quoting the words of
an English Court upon this issue, which are by now almost
inextricably linked to this topic and oft cited: “public policy is a
very unruly horse, and once you get astride it you never know where it
will carry you. It may lead you from sound law. It is never argued at all,
but when other points fail.”
105. Another frequently cited judicial comment on public policy is
from Judge Joseph Smith in Parsons & Whittemore Overseas Inc. v.
RAKTA,68 who observed that the public policy defense ought only
68 508 F.2d 969 (1974)
CA 1547/19
44
to succeed where enforcement of the award would violate the
forum State's most basic notions of morality and justice.
106. The recent Privy Council decision of Betamax Ltd (Appellant) v
State Trading Corporation (Respondent) (Mauritius)69is of some
guidance, in which, on appeal, the Privy Council overturned the
decision of the Supreme Court of Mauritius which had set aside
an award for being contrary to the public policy of Mauritius,
because the underlying contract between the parties was in
breach of the public procurement law of Mauritius. The Board
held that the court was not entitled to use the guise of public
policy to reopen issues relating to the meaning and effect of a
contract or whether it complies with a regulatory or legislative
scheme. For that reasons the decision of the Supreme Court of
Mauritius setting aside the Award fell to be reversed.
107. In Pakistani jurisdiction, public policy has been interpreted in the
context of the Act preceding the Foreign Arbitral Awards Act,
2011 i.e. the Arbitration (Protocol and Convention) Act 1937 in Nan
Fung Textiles Limited v. Sadiq Traders Limited70 as being objects
which are illegal by common law or legislation, which are
injurious to good government which are adverse to justice,
family life or public interest and objects economically against the
public interest.
108. This court has also touched upon public policy in the case of Haji
Abdul Karim and others v. Sh. Ali Muhammad as:71
“Similarly, the appellants not having proved that a
license for the working of the factory was necessary
because the Chief Executive Officer had formed the
opinion that the running of the factory was dangerous
to life, health or property or likely to create nuisance, it
69 [2021] UKPC 14
70 PLD 1982 Karachi 619
71 PLD 1959 SC 167
CA 1547/19
45
cannot be held that running of the factory was opposed
to public policy.”
109. The Supreme Court of Azad & Jammu Kashmir in the case of
Sardar Muhammad Yasin v. Raja Feroze Khan72 has defined
public policy as:
“…any act the allowing of which would be against the
general interests of the community. This policy has
involved itself with the growth of organised society.
Certain standards in the domain of morality, used in
its widest sense, have assumed sanctity on account of
the acceptance by the general community. Therefore,
any agreement which would destroy these standards or
adversely effect [sic] the development of society or its
organization have to be viewed from this angle and it
is here that the principle of public policy is born.”
110. Therefore, it is easy to adduce the hesitance of courts and drafters
alike in invoking public policy frivolously and without the most
exceptional of circumstances. Most courts world over have
favoured a restrictive approach to public policy in international
commercial arbitration. It is imperative that, Pakistan is one of
the countries that have yet to develop jurisprudence on
international commercial arbitration, and we must be cautious,
and ought to adopt standards of practice in line with the
international community. There is also a need to develop best
standing practices for our own courts, which are seeing a rise in
cases
pertaining
to
international
commercial
arbitration;
therefore, there is an utmost need to deliver precedent that is
consistent and does not open floodgates to frivolous litigation.
Indeed, the very purpose of parties going to arbitration is the
(relatively) speedy settlement of disputes, which ought not to be
impeded by a party resorting to litigation once an award is
rendered.
72 PLD 1972 AJ&K 46
CA 1547/19
46
111. The jurisdiction of courts under international commercial
arbitration is merely supervisory; we deem it necessary to step in
under circumstances, where, if not remedied, the arbitration
award or agreement could lead to an unfair outcome for one of
the parties. This is in no way means that domestic awards would
be treated less favourably than foreign awards, but rather, the
aim is to create a level playing field between the two and treat
them at par.
112. A restrictive interpretation on challenge to enforcement of an
award would therefore, ensure finality of award at its last stage,
giving greater certainty to parties after having gone through
rigorous arbitrations. The New York Convention itself advocates
for a “pro-enforcement bias” and we are mindful of the same.
113. This does not in any way mean that the pro-enforcement bias
impedes State interests however, and where a claim for violation
of public policy is made, due care and attention ought to be
awarded to that claim. However, one must be mindful that the
public policy defense is an exceptional one at that, which demands
heightened standards of proof that courts would normally
require in order to refuse recognition and enforcement of a
foreign arbitral award. Thus the Canadian courts have requested
that the party opposing recognition and enforcement should
present
compelling
evidence,
and
that
recognition
and
enforcement should only be refused in instances of a “patently
unreasonable award”.73
114. This heightened standard of proof is compatible with the
exceptional nature of the public policy defense as well as with the
fact that Article V (2)(b) ibid; provides a mere facility to the courts
and not an obligation.
73 See Karaha Bodas Company, L.L.C. v. Perusahaan Pertambangan Minyak Dan Gas Bumi Negara
and P.T. PLN (Persero) 2007 ABQB 616
CA 1547/19
47
115. Under the present scenario, we are convinced that this was not a
case of unjust enrichment; rather, this was a case where the
Appellant was aggrieved by the quantum of compensation
awarded by the Sole Arbitrator. There had therefore, been no
violation of public policy.
116. The German case of the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt
(Oberlandesgericht
Frankfurt)
in
Oberlandesgericht
[OLG]
Frankfurt, Germany,74dismissed the argument of the Defendant
that enforcement of the award would violate German public
policy. It was held that even if the Defendant could prove that
damages had been awarded arbitrarily by the Arbitral Tribunal,
this would not amount to a violation of public policy.
117. Furthermore, in Oberlandesgericht [OLG] Celle, Germany,75 the
Higher Regional Court of Celle also dismissed a claim of public
policy presented by the Defendant. The Court held that the
penalty, though representing 40% of the main obligation under
the contract and being therefore "disproportionally high", did not
per se violate the international public policy of Germany. The
same principle applied to the decision on costs. In order to violate
public policy, the Court held that additional circumstances such
as abuse of economic power would have been necessary.
118. Finally, the Supreme Court of India in the case of Renusagar
Power Co. Ltd v. General Electric Co76 held that enforcement of a
foreign award would be refused on the ground that it is contrary
to public policy if such enforcement would be contrary to (i)
fundamental policy of Indian law; or (ii) the interests of India; or (iii)
justice or morality. More specifically, on the objections of one of
the parties based on unjust enrichment, the Court held, in
74 26 Sch 13/08, 16 October 2008
75 8 Sch 06/05, 6 October 2005
76 1994 SCC Supl. (1) 644
CA 1547/19
48
paragraph 100, that the case in question was not one of unjust
enrichment, and that the objections raised were with regard to
the quantum of the award by the Arbitral Tribunal. To hold that
this amounted to unjust enrichment would hold to mean that in
every case where an arbitrator awarded an amount higher than
what should have been awarded would open the award to be
challenged on the ground of unjust enrichment. Such a course
was not permissible under the New York Convention.
119. In light of the above cited case law, and in the same vein as
Renusagar (supra), we hold that awarding a greater quantum of
compensation than that was due by an Arbitral Tribunal does not
amount to violation of public policy, as the same would open
floodgates and would require the courts to undertake an
examination of each and every award, which is against the very
spirit of the New York Convention. Resultantly, we hold that the
award rendered by the Sole Arbitrator was not in violation of the
public policy of Pakistan.
120. We agree with the finding of the Learned High Court at
paragraph 57 of the Impugned Judgment, wherein it is stated:
“…[the] non-interference or the pro-enforcement
policy is in itself a policy of Contracting States, which
is not easily persuaded by the public policy exception
argument… The public policy exception acts as a
safeguard of fundamental notions of morality and
justice, such that the enforcement of a foreign award
may offend these fundamentals… [T]he public policy
exception should not become a back door to review the
merits of a foreign arbitral award or to create grounds
which are not available under Article V of the
Convention as this would negate the obligation to
recognize and enforce foreign arbitral awards. Such
kind of interference would essentially nullify the need
for arbitration clauses as parties will be encouraged to
challenge foreign awards on the public policy ground
knowing that there is room to have the Court set aside
the award.”
CA 1547/19
49
121. Conclusively, for the foregoing reasons, we hold:
i. the Appellant’s contention that the award of the Sole
Arbitrator to the extent of the Payment Agreement
ought to be set aside is dismissed;
ii. there has been no breach of Section 74 of the
Contract Act on part of the Appellant by failure to
take up the Make Up Gas,
iii. the award rendered by the Sole Arbitrator does not
violate the public policy of Pakistan.
122. The Appellant’s contentions are therefore misconceived, and this
Appeal is dismissed accordingly. No order as to costs.
123. Lastly, I would like to extend and acknowledge my deepest
gratitude for the diligent and extensive research carried out by
Law Clerks Mahnoor Waqar and Ahmad Hassan on global
jurisdictions
and
new
points
in
issue
on
Arbitration
Jurisprudence under Pakistan Law.
Judge
Judge
Judge
ANNOUNCED ON _________________
JUDGE
“Approved for Reporting”
| {
"id": "C.A.1547_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1560 OF 2008
(Against the judgment dated 12.8.2002 of
the Lahore High Court, Lahore passed in
C.R.No.353/1991)
Muhammad Ramzan (decd) through L.Rs. etc.
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Nasreen Firdous etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mian Abdul Aziz, ASC
For respondents 1 to 8:
Malik M. Tariq Rajwana, ASC
Amicus curiae:
Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC
Mr. Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC
Date of hearing:
21.10.2015
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- The primary question in this Appeal,
with leave of the Court dated 30.9.2008, is whether the Civil Courts in
Pakistan have jurisdiction to entertain and adjudicate upon a suit for
administration with regards to the property situate abroad.
2.
In the context of the above, the facts in brief are:- that Mst.
Hafi (now deceased), represented by the appellants as her legal heirs (hereinafter
called the appellants) being the mother of Muhammad Anwar Irshad (deceased)
who died in Islamabad on 26.3.1987 filed a suit for administration of his
property(ies) in the Civil Court at Lahore, claiming that the deceased had
left behind him Mst. Hafi as mother, Mst. Nasreen Firdous and Abida
Begum (defendants No.1 and 2) as his widows and the remaining defendants as
his sons and daughters. It was averred that the deceased had been settled
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 2 :-
in England and certain movable and immovable property(ies) situate in
Pakistan as well as in England forms part of his estate (detailed in Schedule A and
Schedule B of the plaint). It may be pertinent to mention here that the
respondents/defendants, the legal heirs of the deceased, primarily resisted
the suit in respect of the property(ies) abroad on the ground that the courts
in Pakistan have no jurisdiction to entertain and adjudicate the matter,
obviously meaning that they never submitted to the jurisdiction of the
courts in Pakistan to the extent of the property situated abroad.
3.
The learned Civil Judge seized of the matter, on the conclusion
of the trial granted partial decree, in that, the suit to the extent of the
property(ies) situated in Pakistan was allowed but to the extent of those
abroad it was dismissed, holding that it does not have jurisdiction. The
appeal filed by the appellants could not succeed and their civil revision
before the learned High Court was also dismissed. Thus the judgment and
decree of the Trial Court was maintained throughout.
4.
Leave in this case was granted to consider the following
questions:-
“(i)
Whether the courts below have fell in error in not giving
effect to the mandate of Section 20 of C.P.C 1908 which, inter
alia, provides that the suit could be instituted within the local
limits of a place where the defendant resides at the time of the
commencement of the suit?
(ii)
Whether the question of domicile of the deceased
Muhammad Anwar Irshad could be a determinative factor on
the question of jurisdiction of the court in the facts and
circumstances of the instant case?
(iii)
Whether in the face of the evidence led to the effect that
the parties admittedly reside permanently in Pakistan, would it
not be in accord with the principle of forum non convenience for
the courts in Pakistan to entertain the suit qua the
administration of properties situated in England?
(iv)
Whether the respondents-defendants having agreed to
the administration of properties and their respective shares in
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 3 :-
terms of the Islamic law and having not challenged the
impugned judgments and decrees of the three courts below,
invoking the said law, could they be allowed to raise the plea at
this stage that in the administration of properties in England,
the law in England would be applicable and not the Islamic
law?”
In the context of the above, two basic questions requiring resolution
are as follows:-
a)
What is the substantive law to be applied?
b)
Which court has jurisdiction?
These are completely independent questions which require to be
considered separately. At present, there appears to be a lot of confusion
and these two independent questions appear to have been jumbled together
and thus there is lack of conceptual clarity.
As regarding the question of the applicable substantive law, in order
to determine the question of jurisdiction of the courts in line with the
substantive municipal law of Pakistan, we will have to make recourse to
sections 16 to 20 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC). In so far as
sections 16 & 20 of the CPC are concerned, they raise complex questions
leading to the need to conduct a deeper examination of related, but much
broader issues of reconciliation of private international law in relation to
the municipal law of Pakistan. The extent of jurisdiction of Pakistani Courts
will also be determined in view of the established principles of private
international law.
5.
In respect of the municipal law of Pakistan, in order to address
the first question as to the applicable substantive law, the provisions of
Sections 16 to 20 of the CPC are relevant. It will be determined whether the
appellants’ suit before the Civil Judge in Lahore was competently filed
under the laws of Pakistan in relation to the property situated in England.
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 4 :-
In terms of section 16 C.P.C., such suits, in so far as they relate to
immovable property, are to be instituted before the Court within whose
territorial jurisdiction the property is situated. Section 16 ordains:-
“16. Suits to be instituted where the subject matter situate. ---
subject to the pecuniary or other limitations prescribed by any
law, suits ---
(a)
for the recovery of immovable property with or without
rent or profits,
(b)
for the partition of immovable property,
(c)
for foreclosure, sale or redemption in the case of a
mortgage of or charge upon immovable property,
(d)
for the determination of any other right to or interest in
immovable property,
(e)
for compensation for wrong to immovable property,
(f)
for the recovery of movable property actually under
distraint or attachment, shall be instituted in the Court within
the local limits of whose jurisdiction the property is situate, or
in the case of suits referred to in clause (c) at the place where
the cause of action his wholly or partly arisen:
Provided that a suit to obtain relief respecting or
compensation for wrong to, immovable property held by or on
behalf of the defendant may, where the relief sought can be
entirely obtained through his personal obedience, be instituted
either in the Court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction
the property is situate, or, in the case of suits referred to in
clause (c) at the place where the cause of action has wholly or
partly arisen or in the Court within the local limits of whose
jurisdiction the defendant actually and voluntarily resides, or
carries on business, or personally works for gain.
Explanation - In this section "property" means property
situate in Pakistan.” (emphasis added)
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 5 :-
It may be noted that the proviso contained in Section 16 prescribes
that a suit may also be filed before a Court within the local limits of which
the defendant resides, carries on business or works if the relief sought can
be obtained entirely through his personal obedience. We may take this
opportunity to dispel a commonly held perception that this proviso applies
to all the categories of suits provided in subsections (a) to (f) of section 16.
It is stressed that the language of the proviso is very clear and it does not
apply to suits for determination of a right to, or recovery of immovable
property.
Be that as it may, from the clear and unambiguous language of the
explanation of Section 16, there remains absolutely no doubt that the
property(ies) which falls within the purview of the section are those which
are situated in Pakistan and thus the Pakistani Courts shall have the sole
and exclusive territorial jurisdiction in respect thereto. In other words, as
per the mandate of law, the territorial jurisdiction of Pakistani Courts has
been limited, restricted and circumscribed only to such property(ies) which
are situated within the territorial boundaries of Pakistan. It may be
pertinent to mention here that where a word/expression has been defined
in the statute, it is settled law of interpretation that such word/expression
has to be given the same meaning until and unless the assignment of such
meaning would be patently in conflict with the express text of the said
provision or would destroy the spirit and object of the provisions of law in
which such expression/word appears or shall lead to an absolute
absurdity. This principle is no less true for the explanation added to a
particular section which (explanation) in law is a guideline for the purposes of
explaining the true intent, object, purpose, letter and spirit of such a
provision by the legislature itself, with the obvious consequence that the
legislature means and intends to leave little room and opportunity for any
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 6 :-
misinterpretation and misapplication of the said section and would desire
that the scope of the section should be construed in the manner as has
been explained by the statute.1 Thus, it is clear that the Pakistani Courts
as per the explanation shall only have the jurisdiction with respect to the
property(ies) which are subject matter of the suit and falls within the
territorial domain of Pakistan.
Such interpretation of the relevant provisions of the C.P.C are
duplicated in the Indian Jurisprudence as will be illustrated by briefly
making reference to a few cases on the question of jurisdiction of courts to
try suits pertaining to property situate outside the respective state.
In the case of Premchand v. Hiralal (AIR 1928 Nagpur 295) while
interpreting section 16 C.P.C, the learned judge agreed with the lower court
which held that it had no jurisdiction over the movable or immovable
property situated at Shahdole (outside British India). The learned Judge stated
that:-
“It seems to me very clear that the lower Court is right. The
question is concluded by S.16, Civil P.C, as regards immovable
property. The explanation to that section states that the word
‘property’ used therein means property situated in British
India… Our Courts are governed by the Civil Procedure Code,
and they cannot deal with immovable property situated where
that Code does not run.”2
6.
Having considered the provisions of Section 16, we feel it is
expedient to make reference to Sections 17 to 19 of the CPC which also deal
with the territorial jurisdiction of Pakistani Courts. It may be stated that
Section 16, as per the interpretation given to it above, is the main and
pivotal section which prescribes for the territorial jurisdiction of the courts
1 See PLD 1985 SC 92.
2 See also Gopi Chand v. Khazan Chand and others (A.I.R. 1938 Lahore 226) and
Debendra Nath Bhattacharjee v. Amarendra Nath Bhattacharjee (A.I.R 1955 Calcutta 159).
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 7 :-
in Pakistan (i.e. the courts of plenary civil jurisdiction) and this section, as
mentioned, has limited its jurisdiction only to the property(ies) which are
situated in Pakistan with the obvious legal consequence that the
property(ies) outside Pakistan are expressly excluded from the purview of
jurisdiction of Pakistani Courts as a whole. Sections 17 to 19 when read
and construed in the context of the subject matter jurisdiction are basically
supplemental provisions to Section 16 and in fact and law, cater for a
situation once the threshold of Section 16 vis-à-vis the jurisdiction of
Pakistani Courts is crossed; it is then that if the Pakistani Courts have
jurisdiction over the subject matter, that it should be settled and
determined as to which court within Pakistan shall have the jurisdiction in
the given circumstances of the case to try a suit of a particular nature. But
for the application of these sections (17 to 19 CPC) it is essential that firstly
the jurisdiction should vest in the Pakistani Courts in terms of Section 16.
In other words, Section 16 is not only a threshold section for the
conferment of jurisdiction to the Pakistani Courts but it is the portal
through which the plaintiff has to enter for the purposes of entering into
the city of jurisdiction of different courts in Pakistan. If, as per the mandate
of law, such door is closed upon a plaintiff because the property, subject
matter of a suit, is not within the limits of Pakistan, then such litigant is
barred and precluded from invoking the jurisdiction of any other court of
the country in terms of Sections 17 to 19. In the context of the above, if a
judgment is required, reference can be made to a case reported as Yusuf
Abbas and others Vs. Mst. Ismat Mustafa and others (PLD 1968 Karachi
480) (see paragraph 19 thereof).
With respect to section 18 C.P.C, it maybe added that even if the
property was situate in Pakistan (which is not the case in the present matter), section
18 C.P.C will ipso facto be inapplicable for the very reason that there is no
uncertainty as to the respective jurisdiction of the courts in England in the
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 8 :-
instant case since the property in question lies within the territorial
jurisdiction of England.
In a similar vein, section 19 C.P.C is applicable only to suits for
compensation for wrong to the person or movable property. It further
applies to torts committed within Pakistan. The instant case has no nexus
with the law of tort.
7.
We will now consider whether the present matter falls within
the purview of section 20 CPC. Learned counsel for the appellants while
relying upon Section 20 of the CPC contends that the courts below fell in
error in refusing to exercise the jurisdiction with respect to the property(ies)
situated in Pakistan because of the reason that the cause of action had
arisen to the appellants in Pakistan as the deceased had passed away in
Pakistan and in support of the contention has relied upon Yusuf Abbas’s
case (supra). Therefore, it seems expedient to consider the legal effect of the
said section which reads as under:-
“20. Other suits to be instituted where defendants reside or
cause of action arises. --- Subject to the limitations aforesaid,
every suit shall be instituted in a Court within the local limits of
whose jurisdiction--
(a)
the defendant, or each of the defendants where
there are more than one, at the time of the commencement of the
suit, actually and voluntarily resides, or carries on business, or
personally works for gain; or
(b)
any of the defendants, where there are more than
one, at the time of the commencement of the suit, actually and
voluntarily resides, or carries on business, or personally works
for gain, provided that in such case either the leave of the Court
is given, or the defendants who do not reside, or carry on
business, or personally work for gain as aforesaid, acquiesce in
such institution; or
(c)
the cause of action, wholly or in part, arises.
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 9 :-
Explanation I.--- Where a person has a permanent dwelling at
one place and also a temporary residence at another place, he
shall be deemed to reside at both places in respect of any cause
of action arising at the place where he has such temporary
residence.
Explanation II.--- A corporation shall be deemed to carry on
business at its sole or principal office in Pakistan or, in respect
of any cause of action arising at any place where it has also a
subordinate office, at such place.”
Ordinarily, section 20 C.P.C is to be read with and subject to the
limitations prescribed in section 16 C.P.C, however, since section 16 C.P.C
does not apply in relation to property situated abroad, section 20 C.P.C will
have to be read independently in the present case.
In terms of section 20 C.P.C, a suit may be filed in a Court within the
local limits of which (a) all the defendants were actually and voluntarily
residing, carrying on business or personally working for gain at the time of
commencement of the suit, or (b) any of the defendants, where there are
more than one, actually or voluntarily resides, or carries on business or
personally works for gain provided that in such cases leave of the Court is
obtained or the defendants who are not within the Court's jurisdiction
acquiesce or (c) where the cause of action wholly or partly arises.
The record of the present case clearly illustrates at the very least that
at all times, all the main contending defendants nos. 1 to 8 were residing,
carrying business or working outside Pakistan. This assertion is further
supported by the fact that the address provided for the defendants nos. 1 to
8 is that of England and it is nowhere suggested that the defendants have
at any time been residents of Pakistan or carried on business in Pakistan,
or worked in Pakistan. Therefore, section 20(a) C.P.C evidently does not
apply to the facts of the given case.
Moving on to consider whether the present case falls within section
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 10 :-
20(b) C.P.C, let it be said that if it is the case that at least one of the
defendants permanently resides, carries on business or works in Pakistan,
then, as necessitated by sub-section (b), leave of the court had to be
obtained which was not done in the present matter. Furthermore, the
defendants clearly did not acquiesce in relation to jurisdiction over the
property situated in England as the jurisdiction of Pakistan in relation to
the property in England is firmly disputed in the written statement of the
defendants Nos. 1 to 9.
Finally, sub-section (c) does not help the case of the appellants since
the question of jurisdiction of the Pakistani Courts in relation to the
property in Pakistan forms part of a separate cause of action than that in
relation to the property situated in England. The factum of the distinct
location of the properties alone gives rise to two separate causes of action.
The aforementioned opinion is supported by a body of cases
consistently decided by the learned courts of Pakistan.
To mention but a few, in the case of Mst. Zainab Vs. Mst. Raji & others
(PLD 1960 SC 229) the Supreme Court of Pakistan stated that even if the
suit was not barred by section 16, and the Pakistani Courts could not
assume jurisdiction in relation to property in India, since no effective decree
could be passed by the Civil Court, their jurisdiction must be held to be
barred by necessary intendment.
In the case of Nadeem Ghani v. United Bank Limited (2001 CLC
1904), the Karachi High Court after examining section 20 C.P.C found to
have jurisdiction to try to suit only because the Principal Office of United
Bank Limited (defendant No.1) was situated in Karachi and the defendants
Nos.2 and 3 in that case resided and worked for gain with defendant No.1
in Karachi, thus falling within the purview of section 20 C.P.C. However, as
noted above, a perusal of the record reveals that is in an accepted position
that the deceased and the defendants were at all material times domiciled
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 11 :-
in England and the defendants have been permanently residing there
throughout.
In the case of Heman & others v. Fazal (PLD 1955 Lahore 280) the
learned Judge was only able to find that the Court in Pakistan had
jurisdiction under section 20 C.P.C since the defendants were all residing
within the territorial jurisdiction of the Court.
In the case of Dr. Abdul Ghani & others v. Ismail & others (PLD
1958 Lahore 690 DB) there was a dispute in relation to the ownership of
property abandoned in India at the time of partition. The trial court framed
issues in relation to the jurisdiction and found that the civil court had
jurisdiction. Thereafter, arguments were addressed on the issue of
jurisdiction before the High Court and the case of Heman & others v Fazal
(PLD 1955 Lah.280) was also cited. The High Court acknowledged that the
facts of the case were almost identical to the facts in Heman. The High
Court refused to follow the dictum in Heman and held that the courts in
Pakistan are not competent to determine rights and interests in immovable
property situated outside Pakistan The High Court further held that section
20 of CPC only applied to actions of a personal or transitory nature and not
to actions of real or mixed kinds, which are exclusively governed by
sections 16 & 17 of C.P.C.
Going further, in the case of Haroon Ayoob Abdul Karim v
Sulleman Ahmad & others (CLC 1983 162 SB-Karachi) shareholders of
a company registered in Bombay filed a suit for accounts in Pakistan.
Question arose as to whether the Pakistani courts had jurisdiction in
respect of the subject-matter situated abroad. The learned single judge held
that:-
“it is not every action where mere presence of the defendants
within the jurisdiction of the Court vests the Court with
jurisdiction to pass a decree in respect of properties situate
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 12 :-
outside the jurisdiction”.
The learned Judge went on to hold that since the records pertaining
to the company were not available with the defendants either, even by
obedience of the defendants, no effective order could be passed. The suit
was accordingly dismissed.
In this respect, it is notable that the presence of the defendant within
the court’s jurisdiction would not ipso facto grant jurisdiction to the court
under section 20 C.P.C for the simple reason that the property in question
is within the territorial jurisdiction of another country which has the sole
jurisdiction as will be discussed below in detail.
Finally, in the case of Muhammad Sohail Sidddiqui v. Mst.
Parveen (MLD 2010 1433 SB-Karachi), while discussing the principles in
relation to letters of administration and succession certificates the learned
court stated that:-
“succession of the immovable property is regulated by the Law
of the Country in which person had his domicile at the time of
his death and Succession of Immovable property in Pakistan of
a person deceased is regulated by the Law of Pakistan wherever
such person may have had his domicile at the time of his death.”
It thus follows that the appellants cannot further rely on Section 20 C.P.C in
addition to section 16 C.P.C to argue that the suit was or can competently
be filed in relation to all property, movable and immovable, situated in
England.
8.
After having considered the relevant municipal law, we will now
consider the case relied upon by the appellants in the context of its
application to the facts of the present case.
The appellants have sought to rely on the Yusuf Abbas case to argue
that the courts of Pakistan have jurisdiction over property in England and
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 13 :-
that the facts of the Yusuf case are identical to the facts of their case and it
is fully applicable to the present situation.
It must be pointed out that the appellants’ reliance on this case is
flawed for the reason that it originates from an erroneous understanding of
the ratio of the case. In addition to this, the facts of that case and the facts
of the present case are completely distinct as will be made clear below.
Two determinative features in the facts of the Yusuf Abbas case are
not present in the present case: (i) the deceased in that case was domiciled
in Pakistan hence invoking the jurisdiction of Pakistani courts; (ii) the
defendants in that case were residing in Pakistan bringing the suit within
the purview of section 20 C.P.C.
Since the deceased was domiciled in Pakistan, the Pakistani Court
already possessed jurisdiction under private international law to generally
administer the entire estate of the deceased and the only issue was in
relation to immovable property abroad which was subject to the rule of lex
situs (discussed below). On the contrary, in the present matter, the deceased
was not domiciled in Pakistan, rather it is undisputed that he was
domiciled in England.
As far as the obiter dictum in the Yusuf case is concerned, we must
proceed cautiously before following the obiter. In that case the learned
Judge was faced with the question of whether the Court could assume
jurisdiction over immovable property abroad, and move away from the rule
of lex situs, while administering the estate of the deceased who was
domiciled in Pakistan. The learned High Court Judge discussed the English
jurisprudence on this point in England at length in order to ascertain
whether jurisdiction could be exercised in relation to property situated
abroad. In this respect, it is pertinent to state that English law on this point
is imprecise and at times inconsistent, hence the obiter in that case cannot
be of assistance to the appellants in the present case.
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 14 :-
9.
The consideration of the substantive position under the
municipal law of Pakistan leads us to the conclusion that the courts in
Pakistan lack the jurisdiction to adjudicate upon foreign property in terms
of the provisions of sections 16-20 C.P.C.
10.
For the sake of being comprehensive, it may be mentioned here
that the underlying basis or rationale for restricting the jurisdiction of a
state within its own territory under municipal law stems from the respect
for the territorial jurisdiction of another state. It is in this light that the
principles of private international law must be appreciated. Let us now
consider the question of jurisdiction under a parallel body of law, that is,
private international law.
Recourse is made to international law as the property in dispute
being within the territorial jurisdiction of England invites the application of
the recognized principles of private international law.. Whilst articulating
this notion, it is of benefit to quote Ian Brownlie’sPrinciples of Public
International Law (4th edn, Oxford University Press 2004) 299 wherein it is
stated:-
“...a state in normal circumstances maintains a system of courts
empowered to decide civil cases and, in doing so, prepared to
apply private international law where appropriate in cases
containing a foreign element.”
11.
Bringing our attention to bear on the principles of private
international law, the law governing matters of cross-border succession to
property are dealt with in line with the concepts of lex situs and lex
domicilii. In order to understand these two concepts, we can turn to
Cheshire, a renowned international law jurist, (Private International Law, Sixth End.,
p. 550).
As noted by Cheshire, one of the cardinal rules of private
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 15 :-
international law in matters of cross-border succession is that the movable
property of the deceased person is regulated by the laws of the country in
which the deceased is domiciled; in the present case, the law of England
constitutes the law of the country in which the deceased was domiciled. As
to immovable property, the recognized rule governing real or immovable
property is that such property is subject to the laws of the place within
which it is situated; again, in the present case the laws of England will be
applicable since the property in dispute is situated in England. This is the
principle of lex loci rei sitae (or more commonly referred to as lex situs) which governs
the question of jurisdiction as far as the immovable property is concerned.
The rationale for these two principles, lex domicilii and lex situs is
clearly to address and solve the problem posed by the notion of Conflict of
Laws by resorting to the two stated concepts.
It is of benefit to quote Cheshire who stated:-
“...only the Courts of Situs can make an effective decree with
regard to land”.
The courts of situs in the instant case are the courts of England by
reason of the fact that the disputed property is situated in England.
Pakistan recognizes these well-settled rules of private international
law as can be ascertained from a perusal of section 5 of the Succession Act,
1925 which is reproduced below:-
“5.
Law regulating succession to deceased person’s
immoveable and movable property respectively: (1) Succession
to the immoveable property in Pakistan of a person deceased
shall be regulated by the law of Pakistan, wherever such person
may have had his domicile at the time of his death.
(2)
Succession to the moveable property of a person
deceased is regulated by the law of the country in which person
had his domicile at the time of his death.”
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 16 :-
This Section clearly acknowledges the application of international
law, particularly in matters of succession.
12.
In the preceding paragraphs, after considering and applying
the relevant municipal law under C.P.C (sections 16 to 20 respectively), we
concluded that the jurisdiction of the courts of Pakistan is not extended to
property situated outside its territory. We have further attempted to very
briefly consider the applicable principles of private international law to
answer the same question of jurisdiction and there too, as has been
illustrated, we found that the courts of Pakistan must not adjudicate upon
property which is situated in another country as the governing principles
will be those of private international law as opposed to the municipal law of
Pakistan.
Viewed in this light, it is incumbent upon the courts of Pakistan to
keep the principles of Conflict of Laws or Private International Law in mind
whilst dealing with matters involving questions of cross-border succession.
These principles are based on mutual respect for and recognition of, the
judicial systems and the laws of other countries.
13.
The property in dispute is undoubtedly and indisputably
located inside the territorial jurisdiction of England thus barring the
jurisdiction of Pakistan over the subject-matter property situated in
England.
A state may extend its jurisdiction to its nationals abroad, however, in the
instant case, the deceased held dual nationality being both a Pakistani and
a UK national simultaneously.
In the case of Nadeem Ghani (supra) at paragraph 22 the Karachi
High Court stated as follows:-
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 17 :-
“It is universally accepted that according to the comity of
nations all legislation of a country is territorial, all exercise of
jurisdiction is territorial in nature and the laws of a country
apply to all its subjects, things and acts within its territory.”
This case aptly noted the international principle of absolute nature of
a state’s territorial jurisdiction is not to be extended beyond its territory
and within the territory of another state, since in that case, it will be
interfering with the territorial jurisdiction of England.
Additionally, it may be mentioned that the courts in Pakistan should
respect and give effect to (subject to certain exceptions), the judicial decisions of
other countries on the same subject under the principle of 'judicial comity.'
While acknowledging the doctrine of judicial comity, Mark Janis, (‘An
Introduction to International Law 327 2003) noted that:-
Roughly speaking, courts, according to the doctrine of
international judicial comity, should apply foreign law or limit
domestic jurisdiction out of respect for foreign sovereignty.
The doctrine of judicial comity, being recognized and applied in the
courts around the globe, was correctly acknowledged by the Lahore High
Court in the case of Louise Anne Fairley v. Sajjad Ahmed Rana (PLD
2007 Lahore 300).
The view that Pakistan should respect and give effect to the judicial
decisions of other countries finds further support from section 13 C.P.C
which reads, in so far as it is material, as under:-
“13.
When foreign judgment not conclusive.-- A foreign
judgment shall be conclusive as to any matter thereby directly
adjudicated upon between the same parties or between parties
under whom they or any of them claim litigating under the same
title except--
(a)
Where it has not been pronounced by a Court of
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 18 :-
competent jurisdiction;
(b)
Where it has not been given on the merits of the
case;
(c)
Where it appears on face of the proceedings to be
founded on an incorrect view of International Law or a refusal
to recognize the law of Pakistan in cases in which such law is
applicable;
(d)
Where the proceedings in which the judgment
was obtained are opposed to natural justice;
(e)
Where it has been obtained by fraud;
(f)
Where it sustains a claim founded on a breach of
any law in force in Pakistan.”
It is clear that foreign judgments are conclusive as to any matter
thereby adjudicated upon and Pakistani courts must recognize and enforce
the same. However, before enforcing any foreign judgment, a Pakistani
court will have to ensure that it does not fall within any of the exceptions
contained in section 13 C.P.C. For example, a Pakistani Court may not
consider a foreign judgment to be conclusive if it has been pronounced by a
Court of incompetent jurisdiction. In order to ascertain whether a judgment
has been pronounced by a Court of competent jurisdiction, Pakistani courts
will necessarily have to examine the principles of private and public
international law to determine whether the subject matter of the foreign
judgment fell within the jurisdiction of the foreign Court. If the judgment is
found to have been pronounced in excess of the foreign Court's jurisdiction
in view of the parallel body of law, that is, private international law, it will
be deemed to have not been pronounced by a court of competent
jurisdiction rendering the judgment inconclusive. When viewed in this light,
it is correct to state that since the deceased and the defendants were
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 19 :-
domiciled in England, the English courts will have jurisdiction and their
verdict on the matter, in respect of property situate there should be
considered final by the Pakistani Courts.
Similarly, under section 13(c) C.P.C it is expressly acknowledged that
a foreign judgment will not be conclusive where it appears to have been
founded on an incorrect application or understanding of private
international law or a refusal to recognize the law of Pakistan where such
law is applicable. These provisions, along with section 5 of the Succession
Act 1925 establishes, beyond any doubt, that the courts of Pakistan
recognize the principles of private international law and are bound to apply
the same wherever necessary.
A corollary to the above is that if a Pakistani court passes a judgment
without regard to the principles of private international law, its
pronouncement may not be considered to be conclusive by foreign courts
for having usurped the jurisdiction of a foreign court, even if in substance
the case is rightly decided.
In light of the above we are persuaded to hold that Pakistan must
refrain from exercising its jurisdiction because the property in dispute is
situated within the territorial jurisdiction of England.
14.
This logically leads us to the second question, as stated in the
Leave Granting Order, which can be answered in the affirmative. The very
nature of the present case invites the operation of private international law;
as such the domicile of the deceased will be a determinative factor to the
extent of the movable property of the deceased abroad. The movable
property abroad will be subject to rule of lex domicilii. Such a rule finds
further support in the present case because not only was the deceased
domiciled in England; he was also a British national in addition to holding
a Pakistani nationality.
The appellants have further tried to argue that the deceased’s
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 20 :-
domicile continued to be of Pakistan in terms of section 7 of the Succession
Act 1925. However, this argument is not sustainable in view of section 9
and 10 of the Succession Act 1925. Section 9 of the Succession Act 1925
states that the domicile of origin only prevails until a new domicile is
acquired. Section 10 of the same act states that a man acquires a new
domicile by taking up his fixed habitation in a country other than the
country of his origin. The determination of the question of domicile can be
slightly difficult at times since it involves an element of subjectivity.
However, in the present case it is an admitted position that the deceased
had taken up permanent residence in England and acquired a new domicile
which will prevail over his domicile of origin. Reference can be made to the
mentioned sections below:
“7.
Domicile of origin of person of legitimate birth. The
domicile of origin of every person of legitimate birth is in the
country in which at the time of his birth, his father was
domiciled, or, if he is a posthumous child, in the country in
which his father was domiciled; or, if he is a posthumous child,
in the country in which his father was domiciled at the time of
the father's death.
…….
9. Continuance of domicile of origin. The domicile of origin
prevails until a new domicile has been acquired.
10. Acquisition of new domicile. A man acquires a new
domicile by taking up his fixed habitation in a country which is
not that of this domicile of origin.”
In this regard reference may be made to 1975 SCMR 265, Ms Amtul
Naseer Sami vs. Secretary Health, Govt of Baluchistan wherein at p.267
this court held that the “residence must answer on qualitative and
quantitative test, and that the courts have regarded naturalization,
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 21 :-
purchase of house or burial ground, exercise of political rights, financial
expectations, establishment of children in business, place where a man’s
wife and family reside as indicia of his intention in regard to residence.” In
light of the above, it is clear that the newly acquired domicile of the
deceased (domicile of England) will prevail in the present situation.
15.
As regarding question (iii), this issue has been framed due to
the incorrect appreciation of facts by the learned counsel for the petitioner.
This, as it appears from question (i) and (iii) in the Leave Granting Order,
has erroneously led the Supreme Court to believe that all the parties in the
case are admittedly residing in Pakistan. This proposition is incorrect in
light of the record available from which it is immediately discernible that
the deceased and the material defendants have been permanently residing
in England. As noted earlier, this is evidenced by the fact that in all the
pleadings filed by the appellants themselves, the address of the
respondents provided is that of England alone. Therefore, on the correct
appreciation of facts, it is maintained that the courts in Pakistan lack
jurisdiction in so far as it is rightly discovered that the defendants did not
reside permanently in Pakistan.
16.
As regarding the final question (iv), suffice it to say that this
point has not been pressed by the learned counsels for the parties.
17.
It light of the entire discussion undertaken, it may be stated
that even if the rules of private international law are disregarded, the suit of
the appellants in relation to the property situated abroad could only be
entertained if it was brought within the purview of section 20 C.P.C., as is
clearly laid down in paragraph 21 of the judgment in the Yusuf Abbas case.
But for the reasons stated above and from the given facts of the case, the
present matter does not fall within the purview of section 20 C.P.C. Hence,
Jurisdiction in relation to the property situated in England will necessarily
have to be determined with regard to the relevant principles of private
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 22 :-
international law. The courts of Pakistan could only take cognizance in
relation to the immovable property situated in Pakistan subject to the
limitations prescribed in section 16 of the C.P.C. It may be contended that
they should not even have determined the rights to the movable property in
Pakistan inter se the parties in derogation of the rule of lex domicilii in
private international law. However, this element may have become
irrelevant since the defendants submitted to the jurisdiction of Pakistani
courts in relation to the movable property in Pakistan and therefore the
Pakistani courts were competent to determine the rights of the parties in
relation to the same. But there is no legal justification for the courts in
Pakistan to assume jurisdiction over any property, movable or immovable,
situated in England.
Conclusion: As can be discerned from the preceding discussion,
cross-border succession gives rise to the most important question of
jurisdiction of the courts. It must be understood that the question of
jurisdiction is separate from the issue of the applicable law. It is correct to
state that the English courts may apply Muslim law in such a case, hence
the question to be addressed never revolved around the law applicable,
rather the question was ultimately whether the courts in Pakistan had the
jurisdiction as under sections 16 to 20 C.P.C to entertain the suit in
question and adjudicate upon the disputed property in England. Based on
the reasons detailed above, this Court has answered the question in the
negative, affirming the concurrent findings and conclusion of the courts
below. The plain application of the relevant sections of C.P.C provides that
the courts in Pakistan will have jurisdiction in respect to property situated
in Pakistan. The said sections do not envisage an extra-territorial exercise
of jurisdiction, neither is such an extra-territorial exercise of jurisdiction
desirable in clear violation of sections 16-20 C.P.C and also in line with the
established and recognized principles of private international law.
Civil Appeal No.1560 of 2008
-: 23 :-
In view of private international law this Court finds that the
international responsibility of Pakistan to respect the territorial jurisdiction
of England cannot be ignored. It has never been disputed that the property
in dispute is situated outside Pakistan. As far as the Pakistani courts
possessed jurisdiction over to the property situated in Pakistan, the
decision was given in favor of the plaintiff Mst. Hafi (now deceased).
18.
In light of the foregoing, the discussion of the applicable law
and the reasons given thereafter led to the conclusion that this appeal fails
and is accordingly dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 16.12.2015 at Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1560_2008.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MAZHAR ALAM KHAN MIANKHEL
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZAHAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, C.M.A.259-Q/2020 in C.A.1562/2020
and
C.A.1563/2020,
C.M.A.260-Q/2020
in
C.A.1563/2020,
C.A.1564/2020, C.M.A.262-Q/2020, C.A.1565/2020 and C.M.A.264-
Q/2020 in C.A.1565/2020
(On appeal from the judgment dated 16.9.2020 passed by the High Court of
Balochistan, Quetta in C.P.No.970/2015, CP.1011/2015,CP.1258/2015,1257/2018
--------------------
Quetta Development Authority through Director General v. Abdul Basit
and others
…Civil Appeal No.1562/2020
Quetta Development Authority through Director General v. Abdul Basit
and others
..C.M.A.259-Q/2020
Quetta Development Authority thr: Director General v. Asif Ali and
others
..C.A.1563/2020
Quetta Development Authority thr: Director General v. Asif Ali and
others
.
.C.M.A.260-Q/2020
Quetta Development Authority thr: Director General v. Aziz Ahmed
..C.A.1564/2020
Quetta Development Authority thr: Director General v. Aziz Ahmed
..C.M.A.262-Q/2020
Quetta Development Authority thr: Director General v. Abdul Jalil
..C.A.1565/2020
Quetta Development Authority thr: Director General v. Abdul Jalil
..C.M.A.264-Q/2020
…Appellant/Applicant/Respondents
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, etc
2
For the appellants
(In all cases):
Syed Ayaz Zahoor, ASC (Via Video Link, Quetta)
For the respondents
In CAs.1562-1563/20: Mr. Gul Hassan Tareen, ASC (Via Video Link, Quetta)
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
Respondent
(In CAs.1564-1565/20):
Nemo
Date of hearing:
31.5.2021
Judgment
MAZHAR
ALAM
KHAN
MIANKHEL,
J-.
The
Quetta
Development Authority (‘QDA’) duly advertised different posts in various
pay scales. After completing all the codal formalities under ‘Quetta
Development
Authority
Employees
(Service)
Regulations
2010’,
(‘Regulations’), Departmental Selection Committee recommended the
names of successful Applicants/candidates for appointment to different
posts. The Director General (‘DG’), QDA in exercise of powers conferred
upon him under ‘Quetta Development Authority Ordinance, 1978’, (‘The
Ordinance’), vide its order dated 8th January, 2013 issued their
appointment orders and resultantly almost all such appointees
submitted their joining reports for their respective posts. But just after
few days of such exercise, their appointments were withdrawn/cancelled
by the DG, QDA, (‘the appointing authority’), vide its two different orders
dated 24th January, 2013 and 12th February, 2013. For ready reference
both the orders are reproduced hereinbelow respectively:-
“QUETTA DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
Dated Quetta the 24 January 2013
ORDER
No.1-16/78(135) Admn: 1860-66/. In view of weak financial
position of QDA, decreasing of interest rates on Term
Deposits of QDA by commercial banks and non-receipt of
grant-in-aid, the recruitment orders of staff issued vide this
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, etc
3
office order No.1-16/78(135) Admn1574 to 1732 dated 8th
January 2013 and No.1-16/78(135) Admn: 1733 to 1855
dated 9th January 2013 are hereby withdrawn/cancelled.
Sd/-
DIRECTOR GENERAL
Quetta Development Authority”
-----------------------------------------
ORDER - dated-12.2.2013:
“No.1-16/78(135) Admn:525-30). In view of weak financial
position of QDA, decreasing interest rates on Term Deposits of
QDA by commercial banks and non-receipt of grant-in-aid, the
recruitment orders of staff issued vide this office order No.1-
16/78(135)Admn: 1553-60 dated 8th January 2013, office order
No.1-16/78(135) Admn: 1561-67 dated 8th January 2013 and
No.1-16/78(135) Admn: 1567-74 dated 8th January 2013 are
hereby withdrawn/cancelled”.
2.
The said orders were questioned before The High Court of
Balochistan, Quetta (‘The High Court’). The High Court vide its detailed
and elaborate consolidated judgment dated 12th January, 2015 rendered
in different Writ Petitions, filed by some of the affectees, set aside the
above noted withdrawal/cancellation orders by allowing their Writ
Petitions, and declared the said orders to be null and void having no
legal effect and their appointment orders were restored. This Court vide
its judgment dated 18th September, 2015 passed in Civil Petition
No.167/2015, etc dismissed the Civil Petitions and refused to grant the
leave to appeal by upholding the judgment of The High Court dated 12th
January, 2015. The said order was complied with and acted upon to the
extent of the Petitioners of the Writ Petitions.
The present Respondents, being the remaining affectees of
the withdrawal/cancellation orders (noted above) regarding their
appointments, submitted their applications for reinstatement in the light
of judgments rendered by The High Court and The Supreme Court noted
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, etc
4
above, but the present Appellant-DG, QDA, turned down their request.
They being aggrieved and having no other remedy, approached The High
Court with their respective Constitutional Petitions which were allowed
vide the impugned judgment dated 16th September, 2020 and the
Respondents, herein, were ordered to be reinstated to their respective
posts in the light of recommendations of the Departmental Selection
Committee and their respective appointment orders. The DG, QDA,
feeling aggrieved, approached this Court with leave of this Court dated
23rd December, 2020.
3.
Learned counsel for the parties were heard and record of the case
perused. The main contention of the learned counsel for the Appellant
was that the Constitution Petitions before The High Court filed by the
Respondents were hit by the principle of laches as many of the same
were filed by the Respondents after about two years and ten months.
Besides the above, his next stance was that the Respondents were
project employees and as per terms and conditions of their appointment
orders, their services were liable to termination without assigning any
reasons. Whereas the learned counsel for the Respondents, simply
sought for the alike treatment to the Respondents as was meted out to
the similarly placed employees of QDA who were appointed with the
Respondents vide the same appointment orders dated 8th January, 2013
on similar terms and conditions of service, as per mandate of Article 25
of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 (‘The
Constitution’). He further argued that principle of laches in such
circumstances, looses its force. He went on to maintain that orders of
withdrawal/cancellation of appointment orders had earlier been struck
down qua the litigating affectees in earlier round of litigation and the
same has attained finality; validity of which now cannot be
considered/challenged in the present set of Writ Petitions.
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, etc
5
4.
Perusal of the record would reveal that process and procedure of
appointment of the present Respondents and the Petitioners of earlier
Writ Petitions, as noted above, had never been a question under dispute.
It was the subsequent two orders of withdrawal/cancellation of the
appointments made by the DG, QDA, as reproduced above. The
legality/validity of the said two orders was elaborately discussed and
considered by The High Court in its earlier consolidated judgment dated
12th January, 2015 and the same was upheld by this court vide its
judgment dated 18th September, 2015. The present Appellant had
contested the earlier round of litigation, and was fully aware of the entire
episode in the Courts. The Appellant, (the same authority/person) in the
present round of litigation, has once again raised the same points of
facts and the law regarding nature of appointments and then dismissal
from service of the Respondents and the learned counsel for the
Appellant, even argued the same points today in the Court. The earlier
part of the litigation has come to an end and has attained finality
between the parties. That, questions once decided by the competent
Court of law, cannot be re-agitated again by the Appellant. This
aspect/issue will act as res judicata against him precluding him to
question the order of appointments and then dismissals. The pros and
cons of the appointments and the dismissal orders of the Petitioners in
earlier round of litigation, were thoroughly considered by The High Court
and then upheld by this Court. These have attained finality, not open to
any further dilation and consideration.
The present round of litigation has been narrowed down
only to the question of entitlement of the Respondents as per the
mandate of Article 25 of the Constitution. Whether they can be extended
the same relief/benefit as was extended to their similarly placed
colleagues through the intervention of the Court in an earlier round of
litigation. We in the peculiar circumstances of the case, legally can only
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, etc
6
look into this aspect of the case. It’s a matter of record that present
Respondents were appointed on the same terms and conditions of
service as that of the Petitioners of earlier Writ Petitions who have been
given relief by the Court by restoring their orders of appointment and
declaring the orders of withdrawal/cancellation as null and void, having
no legal effect. The present Respondents were hired and fired together in
the same manner as Petitioners of earlier Writ Petitions and are standing
on the same pedestal as the earlier one. Both the sets of appointees
cannot be separated from each other with regard to their appointments
and dismissal. The only difference between the two sets is that the
earlier group is the one who litigated for their rights and second group,
the present Respondents, did not go to litigation earlier and through
instant litigation has sought the relief already given to the first group
who litigated. To claim such a relief is their fundamental right and the
Constitution extends protection to their such right and as such they
cannot be treated differently. The scale of justice has to be balanced on
the same pattern. This is the mandate of Article of 25 of the
Constitution. The law of the land in this regard has become well
established. References in this regard can be made to the cases of
Hameed Akhtar Niazi v. Secreatry, Establishment Division (1996 SCMR
1185), Tara Chand v. Karachi Water and Sewerage Board (2005 SCMR
499), Government of Punjab v. Sameena Parveen (2009 SCMR 1) and
Secretary, Government of Punjab, Finance Department and 269 others v.
M. Ismail Tayer and 269 others (2014 SCMR 1336). When we hold that
the Respondents being equally and similarly placed as the Petitioners of
earlier Writ Petitions, then they become entitled to the same relief which
was extended to them.
5.
In view of the law laid down by this Court (noted above), we cannot
non-suit the Respondents and allow the laches to be a stumbling block
in the way of dispensation of justice. This will amount to a refusal of a
Civil Appeal No.1562/2020, etc
7
fundamental right accrued in their favour after earlier decisions of The
High Court and this Court. The rule of laches is applied in accordance
with facts and circumstances of each case. It cannot be made a rule of
universal application. The question of laches, in the circumstances
looses its force. The earlier judgment of The High Court was upheld by
this Court and has attained finality. So, The High Court has very aptly
dealt with the matter in favour of present Respondents in the present
round of litigation.
6.
We in the circumstances find no merit; hence these appeals are
dismissed with no order as to costs. All the CMAs are also disposed of
accordingly.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Islamabad,
31st May, 2021
Sarfraz /-
‘’Not approved for reporting’’
| {
"id": "C.A.1562_2020.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE SAJJAD ALI SHAH
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1563 OF 2014 AND CIVIL
PETITIONS NO.2215-L OF 2017 AND 471-L OF 2018
(Against the impugned judgments dated 15.09.2014, 19.06.2017
and 22.02.2018 passed by the Lahore High Court, Lahore in C.O.
No.51/2013, C.M. No.37/2016 in C.O. No.51/2013 and C.M.
No.16/2018 in C.O. No.51/2013, respectively)
Shoaib Ullah Cheema (in C.A. No.1563/2014)
S. Zafar Ali Shah (in C.P. No.2215-L/2017)
Shoaib Ullah Cheema (in C.P. No.471-L/2018)
… Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
Additional Registrar of Companies, S.E.C.P. etc. (in all cases)
… Respondent(s)
For the appellant/
petitioner(s):
Mr. Shoaib Ullah Cheema, in person
(in C.A. No.1563/2014 and C.P. No.471-L/2018)
Nemo
(in C.P. No.2215-L/2017)
For the respondent(s)
SECP:
Mr. Muqtadir Akhtar Shabbir, ASC
Mr. Nasrullah Khan Babar, ASC
Date of hearing:
08.01.2019
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ:- On 18.08.2003, the Additional
Registrar of Companies, Securities and Exchange Commission of
Pakistan (SECP; the respondent) moved a petition (C.O. No.51/2003) before the
Lahore High Court, Lahore for the winding up of Forex Services
International (Private) Limited (the Company) alleging that it was involved in
the illegal business of receiving deposits from the public. On 27.04.2005, the
learned High Court appointed Mr. Fakhar Hayat and Syed Zafar Ali Shah as
the official liquidators. Subsequently on 21.05.2007, Syed Zafar Ali Shah
joined government service leaving behind Mr. Fakhar Hayat as the only
liquidator (the Liquidator). On 31.05.2013, Mr. Shoaib Ullah Cheema (the
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 2 :-
instant appellant) filed an application before the learned High Court for
removal of the Liquidator (the Application) on the ground that the Liquidator
had failed to complete the winding up process within the period stipulated
in Section 326 of the Companies Ordinance, 1984 (the Ordinance). This
Application was dismissed by the learned High Court vide order dated
15.09.2014 (Dismissal Order) against which the instant appellant filed an appeal
(C.A. No.1563/2014) before this Court under Section 10(1) of the Ordinance.
Leave was granted vide order dated 21.11.2014 in the following terms:-
“In order to consider whether the official liquidator having
not completed liquidation process within time contemplated
by Section 326 of the Companies Ordinance, 1984 was
liable to be removed and the audit of the company under
liquidation was expedient and imperative; the true import
and spirit of Section 326(3) of the Ordinance ibid, leave is
granted…”
Be that as it may, on 23.02.2015, the respondent raised an objection
regarding the maintainability of the appeal stating that a direct appeal
to the Supreme Court under Section 10(1) of the Ordinance lies only
against a winding up order of the Company Judge, and that any order
passed in the winding proceedings other than the winding up order, such
as the Dismissal Order, is to be assailed through an intra-court appeal
before a Division Bench of the High Court in terms of Section 10(2) of the
Ordinance. On 23.02.2015, this Court appointed Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC
and Dr. Parvez Hassan, Sr. ASC as amici curiae in to assist this Court on
the key preliminary question that arises from the instant proceedings, i.e.
what is the scope of a direct appeal to this Court under Section 10(1) of the
Ordinance. In the meantime, the learned High Court passed an order dated
19.06.2017 which directed (in C.M. No.37/2016) Syed Zafar Ali Shah (ex-Official
Liquidator) to refund to the respondents certain amounts in the liquidation
account. This order has been challenged by Syed Zafar Ali Shah before this
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 3 :-
Court through an appeal under Section 6(1) of the Companies Act, 2017 (the
Act). The learned High Court passed another order dated 22.02.2018
dismissed the objection petition (C.M. No.16/2018) filed against the auction
conducted that was approved vide order dated 04.12.2017. This order has
been challenged by the appellant again through an appeal under Section
6(1) of the Act.
2.
The appellant in person simply relied upon the arguments of
the learned amicus Dr. Pervaiz Hassan, Sr. ASC and supported the stance
that a winding up order as well as any other order passed by the Company
Judge in the winding up proceedings after a company has been ordered to
be wound up can be appealed against before the Supreme Court pursuant
to Section 10(1) of the Ordinance. On the other hand, the learned counsel
for the respondent submitted refuted this position and stated that this was
not the correct position law – the appeal before this Court is not
maintainable as the impugned order had to be challenged before a Division
Bench of the learned High Court as per the law.
3.
Before proceeding further, it is worthy to note Section 10 of the
Ordinance which reads as under:-
“10. Appeals against Court orders.- (1) Notwithstanding
anything contained in any other law, an appeal against any
order, decision or judgment of the Court under this Ordinance
shall lie to the Supreme Court where the company ordered to
be wound up has a paid-up share capital of not less than one
million rupees; and, where the company ordered to be wound
up has paid-up capital of less than one million rupees, or has
no share capital, such appeal shall lie only if the Supreme
Court grants leave to appeal.
(2)
Save as provided in sub-section (1), an appeal from any
order made or decision given by the Court shall lie in the same,
manner in which and subject to the same conditions under
which appeals lie from any order or decision of the Court.
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 4 :-
(3)
An appeal preferred under sub-section (2) shall be
finally disposed of by the Court hearing the appeal within
ninety days of the submission of the appeal.”
4.
We also find it expedient to mention the cases considered by
this Court for resolution of the question involved in the instant matter. The
relevant cases of this Court are: (1) Kamaluddin Qureshi Vs. Ali
International Company (PLD 2009 SC 367); (2) Ibrahim Shamsi Vs.
Bashir Ahmed Memon (2005 SCMR 1450); (3) Diamond Industries Vs. M.
Zafar-ul-Haq Hijazi (PLD 2003 SC 124); (4) Fiala Spinning Mills Limited
Vs. International Finance Corporation (2002 SCMR 450); (5) United
Rank
Limited
Vs.
Pakistan
Industrial
Credit
and
Investment
Corporation Limited (PLD 2002 SC 1100); (6) Glorex Textile Limited,
Karachi Vs. Investment Corporation of Pakistan (1999 SCMR 1850); (7)
Sindh Tech. Industries Limited Vs. Investment Corporation of Pakistan
(1998 SCMR 1533); (8) Brother Steel Mills Limited Vs. Mian Ilyas Miraj
(PLD 1996 SC 543); and (9) Muhammad Din and Sons Private Limited
Vs. Allied Bank of Pakistan (1993 SCMR 80). The germane cases of the
High Court of Sindh are: (10) Zulfiquar Hussain Vs. Bambino (Private)
Limited (2011 CLD 1737); (11) Syed Wajahat Hussain Zaidi Vs. T. J.
Ibrahim & Company (2009 CLD 1225); (12) Additional Registrar of
Companies Vs. Noorie Textile Mills Limited (2008 CLD 277); (13) Agha
Fakhruddin Khan Vs. Ruby Rice and General Mills Limited and others
(2001 YLR 1797); (14) Muhammad Faroog Vs. T. J. Ebrahim & Company
and Alliance Motors (Private) Limited (PLD 1999 Karachi 246) and (15)
Mehboob Industries Limited Vs. Pakistan Industrial Credit and
Investment Corporation Limited (1988 CLC 866). The relevant cases
from the Lahore High Court are reported as: (16) Asghar Ali Vs. Official
Liquidator (2007 CLD 888); (17) M. Suleman & Company Vs. Joint
Official Liquidators (1997 CLC 260); (18) M. Sunrise Textiles Limited
Vs. Mashreq Bank PSC and others (PLD 1996 Lahore 1); (19) Chaudhry
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 5 :-
Jamil Ahmad Vs. Nippon Bobbin Company (Pakistan) Limited (PLD 1991
Lahore 467); and (20) Lahore Development Authority, Lahore Vs.
Investment Corporation of Pakistan, Karachi (2003 CLD 1764). Finally,
the related case of the High Court of Balochistan is (21) Industrial
Development Bank of Pakistan Vs. Kamal Enterprises Limited (PLD
1995 Quetta 41).
5.
The superior courts of Pakistan while interpreting the scope of
Section 10(1) of the Ordinance in the aforementioned case law have laid
down the following principles:-
i.
An appeal against an order of winding up only lies before the
Supreme Court under Section 10(1) of the Ordinance while all
other orders in a winding up proceedings are appealable before
the Division Bench of a High Court under Section 10(2) of the
Ordinance [Cases (1); (11), (13) and (15)];
ii.
An appeal against an order of winding up and any order or
decision passed subsequent to the winding up order of a
company shall lie before the Supreme Court in terms of Section
10(1) of the Ordinance [Cases (2), (9), (10), (14), (16), (17), (18), (19), (20)
and (21)];
iii.
Orders passed under Section 10(2) of the Ordinance in exercise
of the original civil jurisdiction of a High Court are appealable
before a Division Bench of the High Court [Case (3)]; and
iv.
Section 10(1) of the Ordinance does not debar a company from
making an application before the Company Judge for setting
aside an ex-parte winding up order passed against it [Case (12)].
It is pertinent to note that in some cases, appeals were filed before the
Supreme Court under Section 10(1) of the Ordinance against post-winding
up orders. Similarly, appeals were also filed before the Division Bench of the
High Court under Section 10(2) of the Ordinance against orders passed
subsequent to the winding up order. But in these cases, the Supreme Court
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 6 :-
or the Division Bench of the High Court did not address the issue of
maintainability of the appeals [Cases (4), (5), (6), (7), (8) and (11)].
6.
Be that as it may, we find it expedient to discuss in detail the
judgment passed by this Court regarding the issue at hand. The case of
Kamaluddin Qureshi (supra), dealt with the scope of Sections 10(1) and
10(2) of the Ordinance. A three-Member Bench of this Court declared that
an appeal under Section 10(1) can only be made to the Supreme Court
against a winding up order and appeals against all other orders can be made
under Section 10(2). The relevant paragraphs read as under:-
“8. At this juncture before proceeding further, it may be
appropriate to consider the scope, consequences and effect of
an order of winding up of a Company. An order of winding
up of a Company encompasses activities in different spheres
of economic activity and effects interests of divergent nature.
The investment of shareholders and investors are at stake. The
various contracts with those supplying or providing services
to the company and their economic activities are affected. In
case, the Company is engaged in providing goods or services,
of essential or of daily requirements of the community, such
order may cause abrupt withdrawal of all such products or
services being provided by the Company under liquidation.
The various works undertaken by the Company or under
different contracts are brought to a standstill. The recovery
of taxes, duties and levies resulting from the activities is
discontinued, last but not the least. The entire range of
creditors, suppliers, Bankers, financers and employees
entitled to their respective dues are also exposed to
difficulties and uncertainties. No order passed under the
Company law has consequences of such diversity and
magnitude. Thus, the order of winding-up being entirely
distinguishable stands out on a different pedestal than any
other order relating to any specific subject matter or dispute.
No order passed either before the order of winding up or
afterwards can, therefore, be equated with an order of winding
up with respect to its consequence. It has been repeatedly held
the right to appeal is a substantial right. The remedy of an
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 7 :-
appeal is available only where expressly provided and in the
manner it is provided. Subsection (1) of section 10 of the
said Ordinance starts with the non-obstante clause and this
has an overriding effect over any other law it confers a
right to appeal against an order of winding up. The intent of
the legislature to provide the remedy of an appeal against an
order of winding up of a Company, directly to the Supreme
Court is reflected in unambiguous terms irrespective of the
fact and nature of the proceedings that may lead to an order
of winding up of a Company. The scope of an appeal has
therefore, been widened to provide remedy irrespective of the
source or basis of such order by use of the words "an order
decision or judgment of the Court" which if not challenged
in appeal would otherwise attain finality as an order of
winding up as is apparent by the use of the words "where the
Company ordered to be wound up."
The remedy provided is subject to further conditions; that in
case the Company ordered to be wound up has a paid up
capital of not less than one million rupees an appeal would
lie to this Court but where the Company ordered to be wound
up has a paid, up capital of less than one million rupees the
remedy is subject to an additional condition' of grant of leave to
appeal. The subsection thus creates a distinction between cases
involving the order of winding up of the Company and the remedy
of a direct "appeal" or "after grant of leave to appeal" before the
Supreme Court on the basis of the paid up share capital of
the Company. It may not be out of place here to examine the
consequences of interpretation of section 10(1) of the Ordinance
differently so as to apply to appeals against any order, decision
or judgment of the Court other than that the order of winding up
of a Company. The right of appeal conferred under the said
Ordinance which is a special enactment; adopting any other
interpretation, would lead to an anomalous situation. An example
of which may be case [sic] where an appeal involving a
claim of a creditor for over a million rupees brought before
the Court against order of a Company Judge in a case
where the paid up capital of the limited Company is less than
one million; a petition for leave to appeal would lie in spite of
the fact that the amount over one million against a Company
under liquidation merely because of the paid up capital
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 8 :-
being less than one million rupees, A different remedy of a
direct appeal to Supreme Court is provided to a creditor
having a claim for a few thousand rupees against a
Company with a paid up capital of over one million would
have a right to file a direct appeal against a finding of a
Company Judge pertaining to his claim involving a Company
under liquidation although their claims may otherwise be
similar except for the difference in amount of respective
claims. This prima facie is obvious discrimination amongst the
creditors.
Secondly
for
the
aforesaid
reasons
such
interpretation would also be in direct conflict with the
provisions of Article 185(d) (e) of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan pertaining to appeals before the
Supreme Court. There is no distinction regarding appeals
prior to passing of an order of winding up of a Company. Such
restriction can only be inferred by addition of words to this
effect but in view of the plain meanings of the word no
addition is required because the language of the statute is
clear and unambiguous they are to he given their ordinary
meaning as held in Pakistan through Secretary Finance and
others v. Messrs Lucky Cement and another 2007 SCMR
1367. It appears that the learned Bench of this Court; for the
legal acumen and learning of the Honourable members of
which we have the highest regard and hold in high esteem;
was not properly assisted in this case, while considering the
case of Ibrahim Shamsi (supra), as a result of which this
aspect escaped notice and the anomaly resulting in
practical terms case a different interpretation is adopted
escaped consideration. Both subsections (1) and (2) of
section 10 of the said Ordinance deal with the remedy of
appeal provided by the law.
Subsection (2) provides that an appeal from any order made
or decision shall lie in the same manner and subject to the
same conditions under which appeals lie from any order or
decision of the Court. This subsection appearing after
subsection (1) makes no distinction between orders prior to
or subsequent to an order of winding up. It appears after
subsection (1) and pertains to the same subject matter,
therefore, subsection (2) is attracted to and further regulates
all the cases of appeals including appeals against orders
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 9 :-
passed after an order of winding up of a Company. The scope
of the subsection has been widened b use of the words "an
appeal or decision" given to include and to a. to all
appeals except those covered by subsection (1) of section 10.
The clear wording and sequence of the two subsections of
section 10 of the Ordinance cannot be stretched as the same
would amount to doing violence to the provisions of that
section.
…
It shows that subsection (1) of section 10 deals only with
appeals against order of winding up of a Company.
The above view finds further support from the provisions of
the subsequent subsection (2) of section 10 of the Ordinance,
which specifically [sic] worded "save as provided in subsection
(1)". The second subsection is unconditionally attracted to
an appeal against "any order made or decision given by a
Court" and is not restricted to an appeal preferred before or
after passing of an order of winding up of a Corn an nor
to the value of the subject matter. The legislature has not
intended to place any restriction or impediment to the appeals
filed under this subsection. Yet another important and
significant aspect is that winding up orders passed are to be
examined as to the various aspects for revival of the Company
to be determined on consideration of its further viability. Effort
is made to continue the business particularly in cases of a
running Company and any delay may lead to irreparable losses
and drastic consequences as held by this Court in the case of
Hala Spinning Mills Ltd. v. International Finance Corporation
and another 2002 SCMR 450.
12. In view of the above discussion, we have no option but to
hold that the provisions of subsection (2) of section 10 are
attracted to appeals referred in cases except the appeals
against an order of winding up, which is distinct and has
multi dimensional effects with far reaching consequences as
already discussed above.”
[Emphasis supplied]
7.
The brief background of the case of Ibrahim Shamsi (supra) is
after the winding up order of Sindh Alkalis Limited Karachi was passed by
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 10 :-
the Company Judge, an order was passed which declared that the Official
Assignee had received improved bids and the two highest bidders should
close the bid among themselves. This order was challenged by the
petitioners. The counsel for the respondent contented that the appeal
before the Supreme Court was not maintainable under Section 10(1) of the
Ordinance and if the petitioners were aggrieved then they should have filed
an Intra-Court appeal under Section 10(2) thereof. After referring to the case
law, a two-Member Bench of this Court declared that an appeal against
any order or decision in proceedings where the company has already been
ordered to be wound up, including the winding up order, lies before the
Supreme Court under Section 10(1) supra. The relevant extracts of the noted
judgment are reproduced hereinbelow for ease of reference:-
“9. A casual reading of section 10(1) of Ordinance, 1984
gives an impression that it pertains to the order of winding up
alone which is appealable before the Supreme Court. Had it
been the intention of Legislature, it could have conveniently
used singular term of winding up, to the effect that, any
judgment whereby the Company is ordered to be wound up
shall be appealable before the Supreme Court in the
manner and under the conditions already described.
Contrary to the use of single term, the use of multiples like
“order”, “decisions” or “judgement” certainly covers a
wider ambit and point to a scenario where different types of
orders, not necessarily of winding up, might be challenged
in appeal.
10. Another important characteristic of this subsection is the
use of words “where the Company ordered to be wound up”.
These terms visualize the passage of any “order” or
“decision” passed or made at a time when the Company has
already been wound up. Had the Legislature an intention to
make a mere reference to an order or decision passed or
made during the pendency of a winding up proceedings, it
could have used the words “where the Company is sought
to be wound up” instead of the words “where the Company
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 11 :-
is ordered to be wound up”. So it includes any order passed
after the winding up order. The wisdom is apparent because
after the winding of [sic] order, the Legislature did not seem
to have intended to prolong the matters by allowing an
intermediary remedy of Intra-Court Appeal.
11.
We would, therefore, conclude and hold that section
10(1) includes the winding up order as well as any order or
decision in proceedings where the Company has already
been ordered to be wound up. Any order passed or decision
made by Company Judge after the winding up of Company,
shall be appealable before the Supreme Court in the manner
and under the conditions described in the subsection itself.
AS the impugned order is passed after winding up
proceedings, the petition before this Court, [sic] is
maintainable.
12. This Court in case of S. Muhammad Din and Sons case
1992 SCMR 1795 had held that appeal under section 10 is
competent only where an order or decision has been made in
proceedings when the Company has already been ordered to
be wound up. The terms to he appreciated are any
"proceedings" when the Company has already been ordered
to he wound up. It gives a clear indication that once a
company has already been ordered to he wound up, any
order passed or decision made in proceedings thereafter
can be challenged before the Supreme Court under section
10(1) of Ordinance, 1984. Though not referred to yet the
principle aforesaid was followed by Sindh High Court in
Muhammad Farooq's case PLD 1999 Kar. 246 holding a
view that once a winding up order has been passed, all orders
passed in proceedings thereafter shall fall under section 10(1)
of the Ordinance and be appealable before the Supreme
Court.”
[Emphasis supplied]
8.
In the case of Diamond Industries (supra) the petitioner
company was issued a show cause notice by the Securities and Exchange
Commission of Pakistan (SECP) as to why an Inspector should not be
appointed to investigate the affairs of the Company as it showed losses.
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 12 :-
After hearing the Company, an order for appointing the Inspector was
passed by the SECP. This order was challenged before the Appellate Bench
of the SECP and was set aside. Later on, another show cause notice for the
appointment of Inspector on grounds of deviation from memorandum of
association, non-payment of return to shareholders, etc. was made which
was rejected by the Appellate Bench of the SECP but maintained by the
Company Judge of Peshawar High Court. A three-Member Bench of this
Court dismissed the petition and declared as follows:-
“4.
In the case of Brother Steel Mills Ltd. and others v.
Mian Ilyas Miraj and 14 others (PLD 1996 SC 543) and an
unreported judgment in the case of Ch. Muhammad Hussain v.
Pakistan Industries and Credit Investment Corporation Ltd.
and others C.M.A. No. 943 of 2002 in C.A. No. 648 of 2002,
decided on 25-7-2002), this Court has held that all orders
passed under subsection (2) of section 10 of the Ordinance in
exercise of original civil jurisdiction of the High Court as per
provisions of section 15 of the Code of Civil Procedure
(Amendment) Ordinance (X of 1980) are appealable before a
Division Bench of the High Court.
5.
In the case in hand identical questions of law and fact
are involved. The impugned order being an interlocutory in
nature is governed by the aforesaid provisions of law
against which an Intra-Court Appeal before a Division
Bench is the only remedy.”
[Emphasis supplied]
9.
In the case of Hata Spinning Mills (supra), an appeal was filed
before this Court under Section 10(1) of the Ordinance against the
winding up order passed by the Company Judge. The respondent had
brought a winding up petition before the Company Judge contending that
the appellant Company has failed to pay its debt and the petition was
granted. The appellant Company appealed against this order which was
dismissed by a two-Member Bench of this Court while holding that “the
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 13 :-
opinion formed by learned Company Judge vide impugned judgment that it is just and
equitable to wound up appellant company admits no interference in appeal by this Court.”
In United Bank Limited’s case (supra), the appellant had extended a credit
facility to a company which was later ordered to be wound up by the
Company Judge. An order for the encashment of the bank guarantee was
also made against which the appellant filed an appeal under Section 10(2) of
the Ordinance in Karachi High Court which was dismissed and the order of
the Company Judge was maintained. The appellant filed an appeal before
this Court which was also dismissed by a three-Member Bench. However,
there was no discussion regarding the scope of either Section 10(1) supra or
10(2) supra in the judgment. In the case of Glorex Textile Limited (supra),
the respondents had filed a winding up petition against the appellant on
ground that the appellant had failed to pay the due amounts. The
Company Judge allowed the petition and an appeal against the winding up
order filed before this Court was dismissed by a three-Member Bench. The
case of Sindh Tech. Industries Limited (supra) involved an appeal against
the order of the Company Judge who had ordered the winding up of the
appellant company on the ground that it had failed to repay the amount of
the loan to the respondent. The appellant company contended that the
winding up petition was not maintainable as the service of statutory notice
under Section 306 of the Ordinance was not met. The High Court had
repelled the contentions and the appellant company approached this Court.
However, a two-Member Bench of this Court dismissed the appeal stating
that the appellant company had failed to repay the loan and the winding up
was just and equitable.
10.
In the case of Brother Steel Mills Limited (supra), a dispute
arose amongst various families in the Ittefaq Group set-up and a
memo of understanding was concluded between some of the families
concerned for dividing the corporate assets of the Ittefaq Group. In respect
of this settlement, respondents filed a. petition under Section 265(a)(ii) of
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 14 :-
the Ordinance before the Lahore High Court praying for direction to the
Corporate Law Authority to appoint Inspector to investigate the affairs of the
petitioner-company and to submit a report. The appellants opposed but the
Company Judge accepted the petition and ordered investigation in the affairs
of the petitioner-company by Inspectors to be appointed by the Corporate
Law Authority. This judgment was challenged in the Intra Court Appeal.
The respondents had also filed a petition under Section 290 of the
Ordinance before the Company Judge of the Lahore High Court. During the
pendency of the main petition under Section 290 of the Ordinance,
respondents filed an application under Section 292 of the Ordinance
praying that the management of the Company may be replaced by an
impartial board/administrator. This application was granted and the
management of the petitioner company was suspended/removed and
Inspector already appointed was appointed as Administrator to act as Chief
Executive of the Company and perform functions of the management. A
five-Member Bench of this Court, while discussing issues of jurisdiction,
declared with regards to Section 10 of the Ordinance as follows:-
“In the facts of the present case, section 10(1) of the
Ordinance cannot be pressed in service because one of
the preconditions for its applicability is that the company
should have been ordered to be wound up. If no order for
winding up of the company has been passed, section
10(1) of the Ordinance will not be attracted…The
provisions of appeal under section 483 of the Companies Act,
1956 are completely different, which provide for appeals
from any order made or decision given "in the matter of the
winding up of a company". In the Ordinance, section 10(1)
clearly provides that appeal can be filed against judgment or
order where the company has been ordered to be wound up
which is not as wide as under the Companies Act, 1956.
5.
The main question about maintainability of the
appeals can be resolved by interpreting the provisions of law
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 15 :-
quoted above. The present case will be governed by section
10(2) of the Ordinance according to which except the cases
mentioned in subsection (1), the appeal will lie in the "same
manner" and "subject to the same conditions" under which
appeals lie from any order or decision of the Court. This
provision does not specify the forum in which the appeal is to
be filed nor does it clearly state the conditions which will be
attracted while challenging the order in appeal. It however,
in clear terms states that the appeal will lie in the same way
as appeal lies against an order of the Court. This
provision confers a right of appeal against order
and decision passed by the Company Judge in a case
to which section 10(1) of the Ordinance does not apply.
The words "manner" and "conditions" are comprehensive
in meaning and wide in connotation to include the
procedure to be followed in filing and hearing appeals,
the period of limitation to be applied and the forum to which
appeal would lie. It is by reference that provisions providing
for filing appeal against an order of a Judge of the High
Court passed in exercise of original civil jurisdiction are
attracted…The first part of section 10(2) of the Ordinance
confers a right to file appeal against any order or decision of
the Company Judge. The forum, procedure, hearing and
period of limitation for filing appeal have not been stated and
will be regulated by such laws which apply to appeals filed
against the order passed or decision made by a Single Judge of
the Court.”
[Emphasis supplied]
11.
Finally
the
case
of
Muhammad
Din
(supra)
involved
reconstruction/reorganization of a company. The Company Judge had
disallowed the company from rechecking the accounts with the bank and
an appeal against that order was filed before this Court, a two-Member
Bench of which found as follows:-
“7.
Contention of the learned counsel for the respondent is
valid as an appeal against an order of a learned company
Judge is only competent where an order or decision has been
made in proceedings when the company has already been
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 16 :-
ordered to be wound up. In the case in hand there is no order
of winding up of the company. The application out of which
these proceedings arise was filed for reconstruction/re-
organization. For such purpose provision is provided in Part
IX whereas the provision for winding up is in the Part XI of
the aforementioned Ordinance, 1984. The two sets of
provisions are separate and distinct. Therefore, appeal against
the impugned order is not competent. Hence, it is dismissed.”
12.
There are various conflicting judgments on the interpretation of
Sections 10(1) and (2) of the Ordinance, including judgments of this Court.
At the risk of repetition, in Ibrahim Shamsi’s case (supra), a two-Member
Bench of this Court held that Section 10(1) of the Ordinance applies to a
winding up order as well as any order or decision made in the winding up
proceedings after the Company has been ordered to be wound up. Thus, a
winding up order as well as any order passed or decision made by the
company judge after the winding up of a company shall be appealable before
the Supreme Court instead of the Division Bench of the High Court. In
Kamaluddin Qureshi’s case (supra), a three-Member Bench of this Court held
that Section 10(1) of the Ordinance applies only to a winding up order.
Thus, only an order passed by the company judge for the winding up of a
company shall be appealable before the Supreme Court. All other orders
passed in the winding up proceedings whether before or after the winding
up order shall be appealable before the Division Bench of the High Court
under Section 10(2) of the Ordinance read with Section 3 of the Law
Reforms Ordinance, 1972 and Section 15 of the Code of Civil
Procedure (Amendment) Ordinance, 1980. As Kamaluddin Qureshi’s case
(supra) was decided by a bench larger than Ibrahim Shamsi’s case (supra) and
is also later in time, the ratio of the former would have prevailed over the
latter and accordingly, the instant appeal would not be maintainable before
this Court and the proper forum for the adjudication of the appeal would be
the Division Bench of the High Court. However, a larger Bench was created
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 17 :-
in order to re-consider the law on the subject and conclusively resolve the
question posed.
13.
A plain and simple reading of Section 10(1) of the Ordinance
reinforces the decision of this Court in Ibrahim Shamsi’s case (supra). It is a
settled principle of interpretation of statutes that the words of a statute are
to be given their plain and ordinary meaning. The use of the words “where
the company ordered to be wound up” in Section 10(1) visualizes the
passage of any “order” or “decision” passed or made at a time when the
company has already been wound up. Contrary to the use of single term, the
use of multiples like “order”, “decision” or “judgment” certainly covers a
wider ambit and point to a scenario where different types of orders, not
necessarily of winding up, might be challenged in appeal. The wisdom is
apparent because after the winding up order, the Legislature did not seem
to have intended to prolong the matters by allowing an intermediary
remedy of intra-court appeal. Thus, a plain and ordinary meaning of
Section 10(1) of the Ordinance provides that it applies to a winding up order
as well as any order or decision made in the winding up proceedings after
a company has been ordered to be wound up. Resultantly, a winding up
order as well as any order passed or decision made by the Company Judge
after the winding up of a company should be appealable before the
Supreme Court instead of the Division Bench of the High Court. Section
10(1) ibid refers to an appeal against “any” order, decision or judgment of
the Court “where the company ordered to be wound up...” Two essential elements of
Section 10(1) ibid are the use of the broad word “any” as qualifying “order,
decision or judgment” and that such order, decision or judgment must have
a nexus with “the company ordered to be wound up”.
14.
Petitions for winding up were (prior to the Act) ordinarily filed
under Section 305 of the Ordinance. Its opening line reads “A company
may be wound up by the Court” and provides the several circumstances in
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 18 :-
which a company may be wound up. Section 314(1) of the Ordinance
provides:-
“314. Powers of Court on hearing petition.- (1) On
hearing a winding up petition the Court may dismiss it with
or without costs, or adjourn the hearing conditionally or
unconditionally subject to the limitation imposed in section 9
or make any interim order, or an order for winding up the
Company or any other order that it deems just; but the
Court shall not refuse to make a winding up order on the
ground only that the assets of the Company have been
mortgaged to an amount equal to or in excess of those assets,
or that the Company has no assets.”
[Emphasis supplied]
The emphasized portion indicates the making of “an order for winding up of
the Company or any other order that it deems just”. Section 314(5) of the
Ordinance is also relevant which read as follows:-
“(5) Where the Court makes an order for the winding up of a
Company, it shall forthwith cause intimation thereof to be
sent to the official liquidator appointed by it and to the
registrar.”
[Emphasis supplied]
The result of the above provisions and discussion is that Section 10(1)
supra enables appeals to the Supreme Court against a winding up order
as well as any order or decision made in the winding up proceedings after
a company has been ordered to be wound up. Resultantly, a winding up
order as well as any order passed or decision made by a Company Judge
after the winding up of a company shall be appealable before the Supreme
Court instead of the Division Bench of the High Court. The fact that the
word “any” is used as opposed to “an order” would point to a broader
legislative intent. Also, the specific Sections of the Ordinance dealing
with the winding up of a company, some quoted above, use the
C.A. No.1563/2014 etc.
-: 19 :-
language, without exception, “order” for the “winding up”. For Section
10(1) ibid to include not only an “order” for the winding up of a company
but “any order” and not only “any order” but also “any decision or
judgment” of the High Court suggests that the intention may have been to
reach not only a winding up order but also post-winding up orders.
15.
In light of the foregoing, we find that the ratio of the Ibrahim
Shamsi’s case (supra) is good law, whereas that of Kamaluddin Qureshi’s
case (supra) is not, the latter of which is hereby overturned. Having decided
the question of maintainability in favour of the appellant, all these matters
are hereby referred to a regular Bench which shall decide the same on merit
in accordance with law.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 15.1.2019 at Islamabad
Approved for reporting
Waqas Naseer
| {
"id": "C.A.1563_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
(On appeal against the judgment dated 04.10.2016
passed by the High Court of Sindh, Karachi in First
Appeal No. 50/2000)
Abdul Ghaffar Adamjee and others
… Petitioners
VERSUS
National Investment Trust Limited and another
… Respondents
For the Petitioners:
Mr. Arshad Mohsin Tayebaly, ASC
Mr. K.A. Wahab, AOR
For the Respondents:
Mr. Muhammad Masood Khan, ASC
Date of Hearing:
31.12.2018
JUDGMENT
CMA NO. 1865-K/2018
For the reasons stated, this application is allowed and
the order dated 24.12.2018 dismissing the main appeal for non-
prosecution is recalled, which stands restored to its original
number. We now proceed to hear the main appeal.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 157-K/2016
Faisal Arab, J.- National Investment Trust, the
respondent No.1 herein, was one of the two major financial
institutions which provided finance to Adamjee Polycrafts Limited,
hereinafter referred to as ‘the company’, for setting up of its
Polypropylene Film Manufacturing Plant in Hub Industrial Trading
Estate, Lesbela, Balouchistan. The other financial institution was
PICIC, which provided a long-term finance of Rs.95,000,000/-.
Respondent No.1 provided a markup based short-term financial
facility of Rs.22,500,000/- under an agreement of finance executed
on 23.02.1988 repayable by 30.06.1990. The company made
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
2
certain repayments to respondent No.1 between 1990 and 1993
but failed to settle its account and a sum of Rs.18,500,000/-
remained outstanding. After giving ample opportunities to the
company to pay off its dues the respondent No.1 filed recovery suit
in the banking court in the year 1996. Alongwith the company its
sponsor directors were also sued as defendants No.2 to 4, who are
appellants in this case. The manner in which recovery was sought
from them was described in prayer clause ‘D’ of the plaint which
reads “Judgment and Decree, jointly and severally, against
Defendants No.2, 3 and 4, for the amount which is left unsatisfied
after the sale of all the hypothecated machinery as well as the
mortgaged land and buildings, described in para 8 above.”
2.
The respondent No.1’s suit was decreed in the sum of
Rs.18,500,000/- alongwith markup at the rate of 15% per annum
on the basis of banking law then prevailing. Apart from the
company, the decree was executable also against the appellants,
who were treated as guarantors under Sponsors’ Undertaking
executed contemporaneously with the agreement of finance. The
appellants appealed before the Division Bench of the Sindh High
Court which failed vide impugned judgment dated 04.10.2016. As
the defence put forward by the appellants was not accepted by the
appellate court as well, the appellants preferred this appeal with
the leave of the court.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellants argued that the
impugned judgment is bad in law and facts as the courts below
erred in treating appellants as guarantors on the basis of
undertaking as their liability was that of indemnifiers and that too
confined to what has been set out in clauses 1 to 4 and nothing
more. He submitted that as the appellants neither committed any
breach of clauses 1 to 4 of the undertaking nor it can be read as a
guarantee towards financial obligation of the company under the
agreement of finance dated 23.02.1988, therefore, both the courts
below erred in ordering recovery of decretal amount from them.
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
3
4.
Learned counsel for the respondent on the other hand
argued that when the second recital and clauses 6 and 7 of the
Sponsors’ Undertaking furnished by the appellants in their
capacity as company’s sponsor directors is read in the context of
Section 126 and Section 128 of the Contract Act, 1872 it comes
out as a contract of guarantee, making the liability of the
appellants co-extensive with that of the company.
5.
It may be mentioned here that while recovery
proceedings were pending, the company went into liquidation and
as PICIC also had its substantial claim against the company, there
is no likelihood that respondent No.1 could recover the decretal
amount from the company. The respondent No.1 has, therefore,
turned to the appellants for recovery in their capacity as
guarantors under Sponsors’ Undertaking which they had executed.
The appellants are resisting the recovery against them on the
ground that their undertaking does not make them personally
liable to pay any defaulted sum owed by the company. The crux of
the matter revolves around the controversy as to whether the
Sponsors’ Undertaking furnished by the appellants is a contract of
guarantee and make them personally liable to settle the decretal
amount on account of inability of the liquidated company to
discharge its financial obligation under the Agreement of Finance
dated 23.02.1988. The Sponsors’ Undertaking (portions of which
considered relevant have been highlighted) reads as follows:-
“SPONSORS’ UNDERTAKING
We (1) Abdul Ghaffar Adamjee son of Late Zakaria
Adamjee, residing at 9, Fatima Jinnah Road, Karachi. (2) Ms.
Salma Adamjee wife of Abdul Gaffar Adamjee, residing at 9,
Fatima Jinnah Road, Karachi and (3) Akbar Adamjee son of
Abdul Gaffar Adamjee residing at 9, Fatima Jinnah Road,
Karachi are sponsoring Directors of ADAMJEE POLYCRAFTS
LIMITED, having its registered office at Adamjee House,
I.I.Chundrigar Road, Karachi (hereinafter referred to as the
“Company”);
AND
WHEREAS
you
have,
on
terms
and
conditions contained in the Investment Agreement
dated 23-02-1988 made between yourselves and the
Company, agreed to invest a sum of Rs.22.5 million
(Rupees Twenty two point Five million) with the
Company;
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
4
AND WHEREAS you have agreed to make the
above investment on the condition, inter alia, that we
furnish you this guarantee;
NOW, THEREFORE, WE DO hereby agree, undertake
and guarantee as follows:
1.
The funds so made available to the company by us
and such other funds as may be made available by
the NIT shall be fully and honestly invested in the
project as required by you.
2.
The Company shall, to your satisfaction, implement
the project within the prescribed time-table or within
such time as may be fixed by you and keep you fully
posted/informed of the progress of the project as may
be required by you. We also agree not to change the
nature/score/capacity of the project without your
prior written permission.
3.
We shall engage a cause the Company to engage
suitable technical personnel and consultants/advisers
for the erection of its plant and machinery and employ
professionals,
technicians,
financial
and
sales
executives of the Company for carrying out its
business.
4.
We
shall
not
sell/transfer/dispose
of
our
shareholdings in the Company and/or transfer the
management of the Company/Project without your
prior written consent.
5.
Any breach of this undertaking shall be deemed
to be an event of default under the aforesaid
Agreement and we shall be personally liable to
all the monetary obligations, detriments, losses
that may be sustained by you due to any breach
of the covenants herein.
6.
We shall indemnify and keep you always safe,
harmless and indemnified.
7.
Our obligations hereunder are joint and several
and the same shall be binding on us until the
investment made by you in the Company is fully
satisfied and you notify the same to us.
6.
The first recital of Sponsors’ Undertaking refers to the
investment made by respondent No.1 in the company under the
agreement of finance dated 23.02.1998 and the second recital
states that respondent No.1 has agreed to make the investment on
the condition that the appellants furnish this guarantee. Clause 6
of the undertaking stipulates that the appellants shall indemnify
and keep respondent No.1 always safe, harmless and indemnified
and clause 7 stipulates that appellants’ obligations hereunder are
joint and several and binding on them until the investment made
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
5
by respondent No.1 in the company is fully satisfied. Reading
clauses 6 and 7 of the Sponsors’ Undertaking together with its
recitals what comes out is this: ‘respondent No.1 has agreed to
make investment in the company under Investment Agreement
dated 23.02.1988 on the condition that the sponsor directors of the
company have jointly and severally committed themselves to keep
respondent No.1 always safe, harmless and indemnified until the
investment made by respondent No.1 in the company is fully
satisfied’. From the text of the undertaking, it is clearly apparent
that it was intended to further secure the finance by seeking
personal undertaking from the appellants in case it no more
remains possible for respondent No.1 to recover it from the
company. It was for this reason that the appellants in terms of
clauses 6 and 7 undertook that they would keep respondent No.1
indemnified until investment made in the company is fully satisfied.
This very object which emerges from clauses 6 and 7 of the
Sponsors’ Undertaking cannot be ignored by confining its scope
only to the appellants’ commitments made in clauses 1 to 4. Hence
it cannot be said that the appellants did not give personally
assurance to respondent No.1 that in the event it becomes
impossible for it to recover from the company, it can have recourse
against them for the loss so incurred. We don’t see any other way
respondent No.1 could remain safe, harmless and indemnified as
committed under clauses 6 and 7 of the Sponsors’ Undertaking.
7.
Sponsors’ Undertaking was executed by the appellants
contemporaneously
with
the
agreement
of
finance
dated
23.02.1988 so it can be conveniently said that both the documents
were part of the same scheme under which respondent No.1
provided finance to the company. Should the object emerging from
clauses 6 and 7 of the Sponsors’ Undertaking be allowed to be
frustrated merely because it contains certain other commitments
in the form of clauses 1 to 4 which relate only to proper
management and running of the company by the appellants?
Parties draft agreements in many ways. While interpreting
covenants of a document it is to be seen what was the main
purpose and object which brought them to the table to sign it.
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
6
When the real purpose of executing a document becomes evident,
then in what order various covenants are arranged cannot be made
basis to frustrate it by excluding such covenants from its scope
that matter the most. So only that interpretation is to be adopted
that serves and not vitiates the main purpose with which the
document was executed. The respondent No.1 had no interest of
its own in the company other than recovery of its financial
investment along-with markup and this was the main object
behind incorporating clauses 6 and 7 in the Sponsor’s Undertaking
so as to make the appellants personally liable in case the company
is unable to settle the account under the Investment Agreement
dated 23.02.1998. When the Sponsors’ Undertaking is read in it’s
entirely, the principal object to seek its execution from the
appellants, in their capacity as sponsor directors of the company
could only be this and nothing else.
8.
As to the question whether the Sponsors’ Undertaking
is a contract of guarantee or indemnity, a guarantor under a
contract of guarantee takes upon himself the responsibility to fulfill
a promise or discharge a liability of a third person and by virtue of
Section 128 of the Contract Act his liability becomes co-extensive
with that of third person unless the parties provide otherwise.
Section 124 of the Contract Act defines contract of indemnity as “A
contract by which one party promises to save the other from loss
caused to him by the conduct of the promisor himself or by the
conduct of any other person…” Hence in a contract of indemnity the
indemnifier undertakes to save a party from the loss caused to it
either by his own conduct or by the conduct of a third party who
has made certain commitments to the other party, hence he
becomes liable only when the loss caused to the other party is
finally determined and all possible recoveries have been effected
from the party that caused the loss. The obligation of an
indemnifier is therefore not co-extensive with that of the principal
debtor and comes into existence only when it no more remains
legally possible to recover from the principal debtor. From the
contents of clauses 6 and 7 of Sponsors’ Undertaking also it is
evident that the liability of the appellants was not made co-
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
7
extensive with the company, hence it is a contract of indemnity.
This is exactly what the respondent No.1 considered the appellants
to be when in the prayer clause ‘D’ of the plaint it was stated
“Judgment and Decree, jointly and severally, against Defendants
No.2, 3 and 4, for the amount which is left unsatisfied after the sale
of all the hypothecated machinery as well as the mortgaged land
and buildings….” Clearly the appellants were sued in their capacity
as indemnifiers and in such capacity recovery against them had to
wait until all assets of the liquidated company were sold, which
has already happened in the liquidation proceedings. In liquidation
proceedings, the company has been wound-up and the sale
proceeds of all its assets have apparently gone to settle PICIC’s
claim and respondent No.1’s decree remains unsatisfied. The
proper stage to initiate recovery against the appellants in their
personal
capacity
as
indemnifiers
under
the
Sponsors’
Undertaking has thus matured. The learned counsel for the
appellants too has considered Sponsors’ Undertaking to be a
contract of indemnity but wants to confine its scope to clauses 1 to
4 only whereas the document does not stop there as it has three
more clauses i.e. 5 to 7. The only avenue left for respondent No. 1
is to recover the loss from the appellants in their capacity as
indemnifiers under Sponsors’ Undertaking. This the respondent
No.1 can now do by seeking execution of its decree. This appeal,
therefore, fails and is hereby dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
(For the reasons given in my judgment, I respectfully dissent)
Karachi, the
Announced on ______________ at _______________.
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
8
Munib Akhtar, J.- I have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgment
proposed to be delivered by my learned brother, Faisal Arab, J., with whom my
learned brother Mushir Alam, J. is in agreement. It is with regret that I find myself
unable to take the view as finds favor with the majority. For the reasons given
below, I would have allowed this appeal.
2.
The appellants are aggrieved by the dismissal of their appeal by a learned
Division Bench of the High Court. The impugned judgment is reported as
Adamjee Polycraft Ltd. and others v. National Investment Trust Ltd. 2017 CLD
380. That appeal arose out of judgment and decree of the learned Banking Court
made in favor of the present respondent, in a banking suit filed by the latter under
the finances/loans recovery law. The defendants in the suit were the company to
which the finance was provided (in terms of an investment agreement dated
23.02.1988; herein after “the Agreement”) and the present appellants, who were
its directors. The company defaulted in repaying the finance (there being only part
payment), which led to the filing of the banking suit. (The capacity in which the
appellants were sued will be stated shortly.) Two issues were framed and found
against the defendants; the suit was accordingly decreed. Both the company and
the present appellants appealed against the judgment and decree, which was
dismissed by means of the impugned judgment. The company has gone into
liquidation, and is not an appellant before us. It is on the record only as a pro
forma respondent, and the matter has attained finality against it. The appellants
contend that the suit against them ought to have been dismissed, as their liability
was only on the basis of a “Sponsors’ Undertaking” (“Undertaking”) executed by
them. It is their case that no occasion arose for the respondent to make a claim in
terms thereof, which according to them was only in the nature of an indemnity.
The respondent’s case is that the Undertaking, on its true interpretation and
application, was a guarantee by which, inter alia, the appellants guaranteed
repayment of all unpaid amounts due from the company. Since there was a default
in payment the appellants were liable in terms of the Undertaking. The suit was
rightly decreed against them (along with the company). Leave to appeal was
granted in this Court vide order dated 13.12.2016 to, inter alia, consider whether
the Undertaking was in the nature of a guarantee or otherwise.
3.
The Undertaking has already been set out in full in the majority judgment
and therefore need not be reproduced here. It was in form addressed to the
respondent (the “you” therein). It may be noted that the Undertaking was
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
9
executed by the appellants in their individual capacities as sponsor directors. It
then went on to state as follows:
“We, ADAMJEE POLYCRAFTS LIMITED shall, to your satisfaction
perform our part of the obligation as envisaged herein above.”
This statement was followed by an execution for and on behalf of the
company.
4.
The learned Banking Court framed an issue specifically with regard to the
appellants’ liability, and held them liable for the outstanding and unpaid amount
of the finance by reason of clause 6 of the Undertaking.
5.
The learned High Court took a different approach. In the judgment, the
learned Division Bench reproduced various clauses from the Agreement and also
from the Undertaking (pp. 386-389). However (and pertinently), clauses 1 to 4 of
the Undertaking were not reproduced. Reference was made to ss. 126 and 128 of
the Contract Act, 1872. It was observed that the appellants had become sureties,
while the company was the principal debtor and the respondent a creditor (pg. 389,
para 11). The learned Division Bench held that “it is an undeniable fact that the
Sponsors’ Agreement is a part and parcel of the Investment Agreement dated
23.2.1988 since it was a mandatory condition as per the agreement entered into
between the [company] and the respondent that the company has to furnish an
undertaking from all the directors of the company with regard to providing of the
funds in the project and for other necessary formalities” (pg. 390, para 13;
emphasis supplied). It is clear that for the learned Division Bench its conclusion
that the Undertaking was an integral part of the Agreement was vital for holding
the appellants liable to the respondent. Thus, it was observed as follows (pg. 391;
emphasis supplied):
“14. A perusal of the Sponsor Undertaking clearly stipulates that the
investment by the respondent would only become effective when the
sponsors furnish[] guarantee to the company in the shape of Sponsors
Undertaking. In the said agreement it has also been provided that the said
sponsors/guarantors in view of the specific condition imposed by the
respondent with regard to the investment made by them have agreed,
undertaken and thereafter given the guarantee with regard to the various
clauses of the Sponsors Undertaking. Now if the company has defaulted a
question would arise who will bear the liability of the respondent to clear
out the same? In our view, in case of default made by the company which
was the principal debtor definitely the sponsors/guarantors becoming
sureties due to the implication of the agreement have to payout those
liabilities of the principal debtor in accordance with the terms of the
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
10
contract entered between them and the respondent. We are fully conscious
of the fact that in determining the liability, so far as sponsors/guarantors
are concerned, the terms of the contract entered between the parties is of
prime importance and each case is to be adjudged by looking to the
peculiar facts and circumstances of the agreement entered between the
parties. In the present case, as noted above, in our view since the Sponsor
Undertaking being an integral part of the main agreement could not be
read in isolation or it could be said that the terms of the Sponsor
Undertaking entered between the parties is limited to the extent of the
clauses of the said undertaking only. In view of the facts and
circumstances of the case and after reading the agreement and the sponsor
agreement this argument is not found to be plausible.
15. In our view the Sponsor Undertaking, being an integral part of the
agreement, has to be read in conjunction with the agreement entered
between the Appellant No.1 and the respondent and the Appellants Nos.2
to 4 cannot absolve themselves from the liability accruing and arising on
the Appellant No.1 to be the liability of Appellant No.1 only as the
Appellants Nos.2 to 4 in our view are co-extensively liable to payout the
liability of the Appellant No.1….”
6.
Learned counsel for the appellants submitted that both the learned
Banking Court and the learned High Court erred materially in concluding that the
appellants were liable to the respondent. It was submitted that the appellants’
liability was only as set out in the Undertaking, and not otherwise. That liability
was limited to the obligations set out in clauses 1 to 4. Learned counsel submitted
that no evidence was led before the learned Banking Court that the appellants had
been in breach of those obligations. Thus, no occasion had ever arisen for the
respondent to invoke the Undertaking. The appellants had been wrongly sued, and
the suit erroneously decreed against them. As to the nature of the Undertaking,
learned counsel submitted that it was, on the face of it, an indemnity and not a
guarantee. Reference was made to clause 6. Insofar as the recitals of the
Undertaking were concerned, where the term “guarantee” was used, learned
counsel submitted that in terms of well settled principles of interpretation of deeds
and contracts, the recitals could not override the substantive clauses nor used to
interpret or supplement the latter when there was no ambiguity or uncertainty
regarding them. That, it was submitted, was the position with the Undertaking.
The appellants’ liability was spelt out in clear and categorical terms. Reliance was
placed on State Bank of India v. Mula Sahakari Sakhar Karkhana Ltd. AIR 2007
SC 2361, both to show the distinction between an indemnity and a guarantee and
the relevant rules regarding interpretation of contracts. It was prayed that the
appeal be allowed.
7.
Learned counsel for the respondent strongly opposed the appeal and
prayed for its dismissal. It was submitted that the appellants’ liability to make
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
11
payment on the company’s default was clear. A proper reading of the Undertaking
established unequivocally that it was a contract of guarantee and not, as claimed,
an indemnity. In this regard, it was submitted that reliance could be placed on the
recitals, where the obligation was clearly stated to be a “guarantee”. Without
prejudice to this submission, learned counsel submitted that clause 6 was in any
case sufficient to establish the appellants’ liability. Reliance was also placed on
clause 7 and it was emphasized that it expressly provided for the continuing joint
and several liability of the appellants till such time as the respondent was repaid in
full. In support of his submissions learned counsel also relied on certain case law,
being the following decisions of this Court: State Engineering Corporation Ltd. v.
National Development Finance Corporation 2006 SCMR 619 (leave refusing
order), Rafique Hazquel Masih v. Bank Alfalah Ltd. and others 2005 SCMR 72
(leave refusing order), Shipyard K. Damen International v. Karachi Shipyard
Engineering Works Ltd. PLD 2003 SC 191 (leave refusing order) and United
Bank Ltd. v. Pakistan Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation Ltd. and
another 2002 CLD 1781. A judgment of the Lahore High Court, Ch. Muhammad
Sadiq v. Small Business Finance Corporation and others 2005 CLD 1680, was
also relied upon.
8.
We heard learned counsel as above and considered the record and case law
relied upon. The rules of interpretation in relation to contracts, as presently
relevant, are well established. For a conspectus reference may be conveniently be
made to House Building Finance Corporation v. Shahinshah Hamayun
Cooperative House Building Society and others 1992 SCMR 19, where it was
held as follows (pp. 27-29):
“9. While interpreting the terms of contract the Court has to first ascertain
the intention of the parties….
10. The contract has to be construed strictly and literally without deviating
or implying anything which is not supported by the intention of the parties
and the language of the document. It is a sultry principle of consideration
of document that nothing can be implied in a contract which is
inconsistent with its expressed terms. In West Pakistan Industrial
Development Corporation, Karachi, v. Aziz Qureshi PLD 1973 SC 222, it
was held that a stipulation not expressed in a written contract should not
be implied merely because the Court thinks that it would be a reasonable
thing to imply it. Such an implication can be made only on consideration
of the terms of the contract in a reasonable manner and if the Court is
satisfied that it should necessarily have been intended by the parties when
the contract was made….
11. The main purpose of construction of terms of a written agreement is to
find out the intention of the parties to the agreement. By looking to the
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
12
words used one has to construe the intention which has persuaded the
parties to enter into the agreement….
In construing the deeds the words are to be taken in their literal plain and
ordinary meaning. Where the plain and ordinary meaning may lead to
inconsistency with other expressions used in the document or absurdity
then such plain and ordinary meaning can be modified to avoid absurdity
and inconsistency because the law favours to save a deed, if possible. In
order to avoid inconsistency and absurdity resulting from plain and
ordinary construction the Courts are always anxious to adopt a reasonable
construction by which the intention of the parties can be spelt out….
… [I]t is clear that the intention of the parties has to be collected from the
document as a whole and every part of the deed should be examined and
read together….”
In addition to the above, there is another rule that must be kept in mind,
which is that a contract is to be read contra proferentem, i.e., when there is any
doubt or ambiguity as regards the meaning of it or any words used therein, it will
be construed against the person who puts it forward.
9.
In my view, when the Undertaking is read in light of the foregoing
principles, it is clear that the principal obligation was as set out in clause 5 thereof.
That clause can be regarded as having two parts. The first part made any breach of
the Undertaking an event of default under the Agreement. Now, the appellants
were not party to the Agreement. However, as noted, the company also executed
the Undertaking, thereby agreeing to perform its obligation “as envisaged herein
above”. Thus, the first part of clause 5 became an additional event of default
under the Agreement and any breach thereof entitled the respondent (under clause
6.01 of the latter) to, inter alia, demand immediate payment of the finance
provided. This was of course without derogation of the events of default already
specified in the Agreement. This was the consequence insofar as the company
was concerned. As regards the appellants, their obligation was contained in the
second part of clause 5. That made them “personally liable to all the monetary
obligations, detriments, losses that may be sustained by you due to any breach of
the covenants herein” (emphasis supplied). The plain meaning of these words is
that the liability of the appellants as regards the monetary losses etc. suffered by
the respondent was conditional upon, and limited to, such being sustained on
account of any breach of the covenants contained in the Undertaking. Those
covenants were contained in clauses 1 to 4. None of these clauses contained any
obligation to make payment to the respondent if the company failed to repay the
finance or any part thereof. As correctly submitted by learned counsel for the
appellants, the evidence led at the trial did not show any breach at all of the said
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
13
clauses. It follows that insofar as both the appellants and the company were
concerned, their obligation and liability under clause 5 was never actualized.
There was no (deemed) event of default under the Undertaking as would, under
the Agreement, have allowed the respondent to demand immediate repayment of
the finance from the company, nor were there any monetary obligations,
detriments etc incurred or suffered by the respondent (on account of the breach of
clauses 1 to 4) as would make the appellants liable to it.
10.
It is important to keep in mind that clause 5 had two distinct consequences,
one for the company and the other for the appellants. While both were linked to
clauses 1 to 4, they were separate from each other. For the company a breach of
any of the said obligations resulted in there being an event of default entitling the
respondent to demand immediate repayment of the finance. For the appellants
such breach would make them liable to the respondent for detriments, losses etc
sustained by it on account thereof. However, there was no intermingling of the
consequences. More precisely, a nonpayment of any amount due from the
company to the respondent did not make the appellants liable for the same in
terms of clause 5. Thus, on the facts as established at the trial, clause 5 could not
have been invoked against the appellants, either directly or even indirectly by way
of an event of default (deemed or otherwise) by the company under the
Agreement.
11.
Clause 5 being found inapplicable, it is necessary to consider clause 6. The
obligation contained therein was, in my view, an indemnity. This was what the
clause said, on the face of it. But, and this is the crucial question, an indemnity
against what? Clause 6 was itself silent on this: it simply said that the appellants
would keep the company indemnified. Section 124 of the Contract Act speaks of
the promise to indemnify saving the indemnity-holder (here the respondent) “from
loss caused to him by the conduct of the promisor himself, or by the conduct of
any other person”. Thus, clause 6 could have applied in relation to either the
appellants’ conduct or that of the company (or both). However, neither this aspect,
nor the conduct against which the respondent was indemnified, were specified
therein. In other words, the clause was ambiguous and uncertain. Learned counsel
for the appellants submitted that the clause indemnified the respondent against
any loss suffered by it on account of any breach by the appellants of their
obligations under clauses 1 to 4, and no more. With respect, I am unable to agree.
That would reduce the clause to redundancy and mere surplusage since clause 5
already expressly secured the respondent as regards the first four clauses. The
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
14
indemnity granted in terms of clause 6 had to cover contingencies, situations, acts
and/or omissions (i.e., conduct) beyond those identified in clauses 1 to 4. The
question is: what were those contingencies and situations?
12.
The answer that learned counsel for the respondent would undoubtedly
give to the question just posed is that, regardless of whatever the full scope of the
indemnity was, it certainly covered the defaulted amount due from the company.
That was the conclusion that, in effect, found favor with the learned Banking
Court. In support of such a conclusion could be marshaled the recitals contained
in the Undertaking to which, arguably, resort could be had to resolve the
uncertainty and ambiguity regarding clause 6. In this regard the third recital
would be relevant, which provided that the finance was being granted the
company on condition that the appellants gave “this guarantee”. Now clearly the
recital could not affect the legal nature of the substantive provision and, as it were,
“convert” the indemnity contained in clause 6 into a guarantee. However, it could
resolve the uncertainty and ambiguity, and assist in establishing that the scope of
the indemnity did indeed cover any defaulted amount due from the company.
Would this be a proper reading and application of clause 6? It must be kept in
mind that since the clause was uncertain and ambiguous the contra proferentem
rule would also be applicable here. As was confirmed by learned counsel for the
respondent on a specific query from the Court, the Undertaking was in form and
language as determined by the respondent itself. The clause would therefore have
to be read against the respondent. During the course of his submissions learned
counsel for the appellants drew attention to the invariable practice adopted by
financial institutions when giving finance, of taking what are known as “personal
guarantees” from the directors or partners of the concern. Such guarantees clearly
and expressly provide for the directors’ liability for any unpaid or defaulted
amount. Learned counsel submitted that had that been the intent of the parties, the
respondent could easily have obtained such guarantees from the appellants.
Alternatively, such a liability could have been expressly spelt out in the manner of
clauses 1 to 4. However, the respondent chose not to adopt any such course. It
was content to provide for, and obtain, an indemnity as given in clause 6. The
respondent could not thereafter be allowed to improve its position and bring
within the scope of the said clause what would, in effect, be a guarantee.
13.
The competing positions just noted are not easy to resolve. The principles
of interpretation relevant for present purposes have been set out above. After a
careful consideration of the record, in my view the balance must tilt in favor of
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
15
the appellants and against the respondent. In the end, the contra proferentem rule
ought to be regarded as prevailing. As was said in the Supreme Court of Canada
in Co-operators Life Insurance Co. v. Gibbons 2009 SCC 59: “Whoever holds the
pen creates the ambiguity and must live with the consequences” (para 25). And in
Tam Wing Chuen v. Bank of Credit and Commerce Hong Kong Ltd [1996] UKPC
69, the Privy Council said as follows:
“…the basis of the contra proferentem principle is that the person who
puts forward the wording of a proposed agreement may be assumed to
have looked after his own interests, so that if words leave room for doubt
about whether he is intended to have a particular benefit there is reason to
suppose that he is not.”
Clause 6 was ambiguous and uncertain. That was a consequence of the
respondent’s own drafting. It must now live with that. If it had wanted to impose a
liability on the appellants regarding payment of any amount defaulted by the
company it could easily have done so, either by inserting appropriate language in
the Undertaking or by obtaining personal guarantees from them. Neither course
was adopted. The parties must be held to the bargain as struck. It would be
inappropriate for the Court to intervene and alter that bargain, and read into clause
6 an obligation simply because it would be convenient, reasonable or
commercially sensible to do so. This is all the more so when the terms of the
Undertaking were determined and settled by the respondent. As noted by this
Court in the aforementioned judgment (see para 8 above), something ought not to
be read or implied into a contract simply because it appears to be reasonable to do
so. In the Privy Council decision cited above, the Board also had this to say:
“Consistency with a liability which could have been expressed is no ground for
imposing a liability which was not expressed”. Clause 6 was ambiguous, and that
uncertainty left its scope indeterminate. It is not for the Court to find ways to
breathe life into the provision so as to enable the respondent to look to the
appellants in addition to the company for payment of any amounts defaulted by
the latter. All that can safely be said of the clause is that it indemnified the
respondent against any loss suffered by it that could be directly attributable to
conduct on the part of the appellants, over and above the contingencies and
situations particularized in clauses 1 to 4. But that is not the situation with regard
to the defaulted amount. Certainly, as a bare perusal of the plaint shows, the
respondent did not plead its case against the appellants in such terms. Clause 6
could not therefore be invoked and applied in the manner as sought. With respect,
the learned Banking Court erred materially in finding liability in terms thereof,
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
16
and the submissions made with regard thereto by learned counsel for the
respondent cannot also, with respect, be accepted.
14.
I turn to consider clause 7, on which also reliance was placed by learned
counsel for the respondent. With respect, the reliance was misconceived. Clause 7
created no independent or substantive obligation. Its effect was procedural: it
made clear that the liability of the appellants was joint and several. As is well
known, when there is joint liability, each of the parties is liable for the full amount
of the claim. Where the liability is several each bears only his own share of the
burden of the claim, and is liable accordingly. As here relevant, the effect of joint
and several liability is the same as liability that is joint. Thus, clause 7 enabled the
respondent to (at its option) sue any one, some or all of the appellants, as it chose,
for the full amount of its claim. However, that claim had to arise in terms of the
other clauses of the Undertaking. Clause 7 did not create or add to that liability.
Indeed, this is made clear by the opening words of the clause, which tied the joint
and several liability to the appellants’ obligations “hereunder”. Furthermore, the
reference at the end of the clause, to the appellants remaining liable till such time
as the respondent received full satisfaction of its claims against the company, was
only as regards the inter-se nature of their liability, i.e., that it would remain joint
and several.
15.
This brings me to the impugned judgment. As noted above, the learned
Division Bench reached two conclusions. Firstly, it held that the Undertaking was
a contract of guarantee and the appellants were liable as sureties. Secondly, the
Undertaking was regarded as “part and parcel” or an “integral part” of the
Agreement. With respect, I am unable to agree with either conclusion. The
Undertaking and the Agreement were obviously part of the same transaction, but
only in the sense of relating to the finance that the respondent proposed to give to
the company. The Undertaking was not in any legal sense (and certainly none as
presently relevant) “part” of the Agreement. Equally, the Undertaking had to be
construed and applied on its own terms. It was not a guarantee within the meaning
of s. 126 and, with respect, the learned Division Bench erred materially in so
concluding. In this context, the learned High Court appears to have been swayed
by the fact that the Agreement contained an express requirement that the sponsors
give an undertaking. However, there is a clear distinction between the obligation
to give an undertaking, and the terms thereof. The respondent’s obligation to
disburse the finance under the Agreement was, inter alia, conditional upon the
appellants giving the undertaking. But that did not make the Undertaking a part of
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
17
the Agreement, nor could it affect the legal nature and the proper construction and
application of the former. That depended on the actual terms of, and language
used in, the Undertaking itself. The approach taken by the learned High Court
cannot therefore be sustained.
16.
The cases relied upon by learned counsel for the respondent do not require
detailed consideration since they all involved instruments that were admittedly
guarantees. No question of the nature as raised here was in issue in the cited
judgments. They are clearly distinguishable.
17.
For the foregoing reasons, I would have allowed this appeal and, insofar as
it relates to the appellants, have set aside the impugned judgment. I would have,
likewise, varied the judgment and decree of the learned Banking Court and
dismissed the respondent’s suit against the appellants.
Judge
CIVIL PETITION NO. 157-K OF 2016 &
C.M.A. NO. 1865-K OF 2018
18
ORDER OF THE COURT
By majority of 2 to 1 (Munib Akhtar, J dissenting), this
appeal is dismissed and it is held that the Sponsors’ Undertaking
is clearly a contract of indemnity and the sponsor directors are
liable for any amount that is not recoverable from the company
under agreement of finance dated 23.02.1988.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced on 03rd of April, 2019 at Islamabad.
| {
"id": "C.A.157-K_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE SAJJAD ALI SHAH
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1583 TO 1598 OF 2014, 970 AND 971 OF
2013, 4, 5, 606 AND 1152 OF 2015 AND CIVIL PETITION
NO.2154-L OF 2014 AND CIVIL MISC. APPLICATION NO.484-K
OF 2014 IN CIVIL APPEAL NO.1598 OF 2014
(Against the judgments dated 4.8.2014, 29.10.2010, 3.12.2014, 18.3.2015,
9.6.2015 and 17.4.2014 of the High Court of Sindh, Karachi/Islamabad High
Court, Islamabad/Peshawar High Court, Peshawar/Lahore High Court, Lahore
passed in C.Ps.No.D-304/2012, D-3195/2010, D-1762/2012, D-658/2012, D-
3530/2011, D-3196/2010, D-2948/2011, D-2947/2011, D-2701/2011, D-
2269/2013, D-2188/2011, D-1642/2012, D-1410/2010, D-4184/2012, D-
153/2012,
D-1796/2010,
D-2428/2010,
W.P.No.4626/2014,
4628/2014,
C.P.No.4514/2013, W.P.No.634/2015 and R.A.No.93/2012)
M/s Sui Southern Gas Company Ltd.
In C.A.1583/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1584/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1585/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1586/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1587/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1588/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1589/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1590/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1591/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1592/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1593/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1594/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Ltd.
In C.A.1595/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1596/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1597/2014
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Company
In C.A.1598/2014
Shaheen Airport Services
In C.A.970/2013
Shaheen Airport Services
In C.A.971/2013
S.M.E. Bank Ltd. Islamabad
In C.A.4/2015
S.M.E. Bank Ltd. Islamabad
In C.A.5/2015
Muslim Commercial Bank Ltd.
In C.A.606/2015
President Meezan Bank Ltd., Karachi etc.
In C.A.1152/2015
Zohaib Arif, Traffic Loader, etc.
In C.P.2154-L/2014
…Appellant(s)/Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1583/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.1584/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.1585/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1586/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1587/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.1588/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1589/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.1590/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.1591/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.1592/2014
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 2 :-
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1593/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1594/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1595/2014
Province of Sindh etc.
In C.A.1596/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1597/2014
Federation of Pakistan etc.
In C.A.1598/2014
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.970/2013
National Industrial Relations Commission etc.
In C.A.971/2013
Full Bench, NIRC Islamabad etc.
In C.A.4/2015
Full Bench, NIRC Islamabad etc.
In C.A.5/2015
Tariq Zameer Siddiqui etc.
In C.A.606/2015
Full Bench, NIRC Islamabad etc.
In C.A.1152/2015
Manager, Shaheen Airport Services etc.
In C.P.2154-L/2014
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. Khalid Anwar, Sr. ASC
Mr. Nisar A. Mujahid, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
(In C.As.970 & 971/2013)
Mr. Asim Iqbal, ASC
(In C.A.1583/2014)
Dr. Muhammad Farough Naseem, ASC
(In C.As.1584, 1585, 1589, 1590, 1591, 1593, 1596,
1597 & 1598/2014)
Nemo
(In C.As.1586, 1587, 1588, 1592, 1594 & 1595/2014)
Mr. Tariq Masood, Sr. ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
(In C.As.4 & 5/2015)
Mr. Shahid Anwar Bajwa, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
(In C.A.606/2015)
Mr. Mehmood Abdul Ghani, ASC
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
(In C.A.1152/2015)
Mr. Khalid Ismail, ASC, Sr. ASC.
(In C.P.2154-L/2014)
For the respondent(s):
Mr. M. Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC
(In C.As.1583, 1585, 1586, 1590 to 1595/2014)
Mr. Rasheed A. Rizvi, Sr. ASC
(In C.As.1584 & 1587/2014)
Mr. Khalid Ismail, ASC
(In C.As.4 & 5/2015, 970, 971/2013)
Nemo
(In C.A.970/2013)
Mr. Amir Javed, ASC
(In C.A.1152/2015)
Mr. Salman Riaz Ch., ASC
(In C.P.2154-L/2014)
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 3 :-
On Court’s notice:
Mr. Muhammad Waqar Rana, Addl.A.G.P.
Mr. Shehryar Qazi, Addl. AG Sindh
Ms. Asma Hamid, Addl.A.G. Punjab
Barrister Qasim Wadood, Addl.A.G. KPK
Mr. Ayaz Swati, Addl.A.G. Balochistan
Mr. M. Bilal Nadeem, Dy. Registrar, NIRC
Syed Farrukh Hamayun, Joint Director
Labour Deptt. Sindh
Mr. Raja Maqsood, LO Labour Deptt.
Punjab
Mr. Mazhar Hussain, SO (Coordination) Ibd
For intervener
Mr. Saleem Khan, ASC
Qazi Ahmed Naeem Qureshi, ASC
Mr. Mehmood A. Sheikh, AOR
Date of Hearing:
10.1.2018
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.- These appeals with the leave
of the Court vide orders dated 5.9.2013 (C.As. No.970 & 971 of 2013),
27.11.2014 (C.As. No.1583 to 1598 of 2014), 8.1.2015 (C.As. No.4 & 5 of 2015),
30.6.2015 (C.A. No.606 of 2015) and 4.11.2015 (C.A. No.1152 of 2015) and
petition (C.P. No.2154-L of 2014) entail the common question of law thus
are being disposed of through this common judgment.
2.
The Islamic Republic of Pakistan is a democratic State
(Federation) with its Federating Units (Provinces) and the Constitution of
the Islamic Republic Pakistan, 1973 (Constitution) recognizes and
creates a balance between the authority of the Federation and the
autonomy of the Provinces, which recognition has been given an iron
cladding by virtue of the Eighteenth Amendment, passed vide the
Constitution (Eighteenth Amendment) Act, 2010. This Amendment to
the Constitution has inter alia introduced a drastic enhancement in
the legislative authority of the Provinces by deleting the Concurrent
Legislative List (CLL), whereby previously both the Parliament and the
Provincial legislatures could legislate on the subjects enumerated
therein. The omission of the CLL, left only a single
The
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 4 :-
the Constitution which exclusively list subjects that can be legislated
upon by the Parliament alone, and by virtue of Article 142(c) of the
Constitution any subject not enumerated in these two lists would
subject to the Constitution, be within the legislative competence of the
Provinces. Entry No. 26 of the erstwhile CLL contained the subjects of
“welfare of labor; conditions of labor, provident funds; employer's
liability and workmen's compensation, health insurance including
invalidity pensions, old age pensions”, whereas, Entry 27 of the same
dealt with the subjects of “trade unions; industrial and labor
disputes”. Thus, prior to Eighteenth Amendment, the subject of
labour and trade unions were in the domain of both the Parliament
as well as the Provincial Assemblies. The labour laws enacted by the
Parliament which were applicable in the Federation as well as the
Federating Units. However, after the Eighteenth Amendment, the
Parliament enacted the Industrial Relations Act 2012 (IRA 2012) which
was challenged before the concerned High Courts (all the provincial High
Courts as also the Islamabad High Court) mainly on the ground that the
same is incompetently enacted by the Parliament as the subject of
labour and the trade unions was no more in the legislative domain of
the Parliament rather within the domain of the Provincial Assemblies.
All the High Courts held (through judgments impugned herein as also other
judgments) in favour of the constitutionality/validity of the IRA 2012.
The factual background as also the questions of law raised in the
impugned judgments are as follows:
CA. 970/2013, against order of High Court of Sindh dated
29.10.2010 passed in C.P. No. 1796-D/2010 (2011 PLC
105)
The learned High Court of Sindh was faced with the question
whether Shaheen Air Port Services, is a charitable organization
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 5 :-
on the basis of being part of Shaheen Foundation which is a
charitable trust set up by the Government of Pakistan, and
thus whether a charitable organization fell within the ambit of
the Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969 and whether the
same was operative in the interregnum of the lapse of the
Industrial Relations Act 2008 on 30.4.2010 (as per Section
81(3) of the said Act) which question, the learned High Court
answered in the affirmative, holding that the Industrial
Relations Act 2008/Industrial Relations Ordinance 1969 being
Federal law was applicable to Shaheen Airport Services as the
same was operative in more than one Province and that
Shaheen Airport Services did not qualify as a charitable
organization in view of the activities that were entailed in the
operation of its business.
Another question involved therein was that after the Eighteenth
Amendment, whereby Entries No.26 and 27 occurring in the
CLL have been deleted, whether the Industrial Relations
Ordinance, 1969 has become ultra vires of the Constitution for
the reason that power to legislate on the subject no more
existed with the Federal Legislature, the Court held that if a
Trade Union has membership in more than one Provinces,
merely because Entries No. 26 and 27 have been deleted, the
jurisdiction of the Parliament to legislate in respect of
situations services and items which fall within the inter
Provincial trade, did not cease to exist.
CA. 1583/2014, against order of High Court of Sindh dated
4.8.2014 passed in C.P. No.304-D/2012 (PLD 2014 K 553)
The learned High Court while considering the question as to
whether the IRA 2012 is ultra vires of the Constitution, held
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 6 :-
that while there is no doubt that the Eighteenth Amendment
resulted in the deletion of the CLL, some room for concurrent
legislation by both the Parliament and Provincial Assemblies
was retained in Article 137 of the Constitution. Moreover, the
IRA 2012 aimed at protecting the Fundamental Right of the
citizens to form association provided under Article 17 and since
Article 141 of the Constitution is clear that Provinces cannot
legislate on matters beyond their territorial boundaries, it is
imperative that the Federation steps into and protects such
right of workers/employees who wish to form inter-provincial
trade unions/associations, which resolve is further solidified
with Articles 2A and 8 of the Constitution which emphasize the
protection of the fundamental rights and relied upon the
judgment reported as Pakistan Muslim League (N) v. The
Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2007 SC 642) and the Indian
judgment of Elel Hotels and Investment Ltd etc. v. Union of
India (AIR 1990 SC 1664) that advocates a liberal
construction of the constitutional legislative lists. Thus, holding
the IRA intra vires of the Constitution, the learned High Court
held that there is no overlap in the Provincial and Federal law
since the IRA 2012 applies to inter-provincial establishments
and its workers/employees, whereas the Sindh Industrial
Relations Act, 2013 applies to establishments functioning only
within the Province of Sindh.
C.A. No.4/2015, against order of Islamabad High Court
dated 3.12.2014 passed in W.P. No. 4626/2014
The dispute before the learned Islamabad High Court involved
the employees of the SME Bank Limited, having its Branches
throughout the Country i.e. in the Provinces of Punjab, Sindh,
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 7 :-
KPK and Balochistan, and also the Islamabad Capital Territory,
who hired employees on contract basis who had thereafter been
working for the said Bank for periods of 2 to 13 years and
terminated them. The Bank contested the grievance notice of
these employees contending that a fresh grievance notice
should have been sent to the Bank under the Industrial
Relations Act 2002 (the prevailing law at the time) which contention
was not accepted by the learned High Court which finding is
contested inter alia in the present application before this Court.
C.A. No.606/2015, against order of High Court Sindh dated
18.3.2015 passed in CP No. 4154-D/2013
The Sindh Labour Appellate Tribunal directed that the
grievance petition filed by the worker/employee ought to be
heard by the NIRC constituted under the IRA 2012. Being
aggrieved, the Bank challenged the said order through a
petition under Article 199 of the Constitution on the ground
that the grievance petition had to be filed with concerned
Labour Court constituted under the relevant provincial statute
i.e. the Sindh Industrial Relations Act, 2013 as the matter did
not lie under the IRA 2012. The High Court held that since the
IRA 2012 applied to the present case, the proper forum was
NIRC under the said Act and not the Labour Court set up
under provincial legislation.
C.A. No.1152/2015, against order of Peshawar High Court
dated 9.6.2015 passed in W.P. No.634-P/2015 (2016 PLC
279)
The petitioner therein filed grievance petition before the Labour
Court, Haripur which was remitted to NIRC, Peshawar Bench.
During the proceedings the right of cross-examination was
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 8 :-
struck off, against which, the Bank filed a writ petition,
however, in the meantime, NIRC accepted the grievance
petition, consequently the writ petition was withdrawn. The
appeal filed before the Full Bench of the NIRC Islamabad was
dismissed and the said order was assailed through another writ
petition. The learned Peshawar High Court held that the
allegation that the grievance petition of the petitioner (in the High
Court) was not maintainable before the NIRC was ill-founded,
thereby declaring that the NIRC was competent and the IRA
2012 was applicable to the Meezan Bank Limited (which is a trans-
provincial establishment).
C.P. No.2154/2014, against order of Lahore High Court
dated
17.11.2014
passed
in
Review
Application
No.93/2012
The grievance petition filed by the worker was dismissed by the
Labour Court on the ground that the IRO is not applicable to
Shaheen Airport Service. The appeal was allowed and the
matter was remanded, but the learned Lahore High Court in a
writ petition directed that as the identical issue was pending
before this Court the Labour Court would not proceed further
till the decision of that matter (CP No.11/2011). The review petition
against that order was dismissed in light of the identical matter
pending before this Court concerning the question as to
whether, post the Eighteenth Amendment, the petitioner’s case
would fall under the provincial law i.e. the Punjab Industrial
and Commercial Employment (Standing Orders) Ordinance,
1968 or the Federal law i.e. the Industrial Relations Ordinance
1969 or Industrial Relations Act, 2008.
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 9 :-
There are some other cases wherein the vires of the Industrial
Relations Ordinance, 2011 (IRO 2011) and IRA 2012 have been
considered by the High Courts but the same are not subject matter of
these appeals/petition. The factual background as also the questions
of law raised therein are as follows:
Order of Lahore High Court dated 13.3.2012 passed in Writ
Petitions No.24691 to 24695 of 2011 (2012 PLC 219)
The NIRC through order dated 19.8.2011 directed to suspend
the proceedings before the learned Labour Court. The vires of
IRO 2011 was challenged through writ petitions on the ground
that after abolition of CLL by means of Eighteenth Amendment,
the subject of labour became the provincial subject and as
such the President of Pakistan had no powers to promulgate
the IRO 2011. On the basis of Entries No.3, 32 and 59 of Part-I
of the FLL, the IRO 2011 was declared to be intra vires of the
Constitution.
Order of Islamabad High Court dated 27.6.2012 passed in
Writ Petition No.3472/2011
The learned High Court declared the IRO 2011 to be intra vires
of the Constitution on the basis of Entries No.3 and 32 of Part-I
in the FLL.
Order of High Court of Balochistan dated 26.6.2014 passed
in C.P. No.226/2012 (2014 PLC 351)
While considering the vires of the IRA 2012, the Court held that
the IRA 2012 was properly enacted by the Parliament and is
not ultra vires the Constitution, therefore, the IRO 2012, which
was succeeded by the IRA 2012, cannot be categorized as being
unconstitutional.
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 10 :-
3.
Heard the learned Counsel for the parties and perused
the impugned judgments with their able assistance. For brevity, the
respective arguments of the learned counsel for the parties are not
cited separately, which shall be considered and dealt with hereinafter
in our detailed discussion on the questions so formulated. From the
pleadings/arguments of parties, the following common questions of
law emerge for determination of this Court:
(a)
Whether the promulgation of the Industrial Relations Act,
2012 was ultra vires of the Constitution by reason of
encroaching upon the legislative authority of the
Provinces under Article 141-144 of the Constitution?
(b)
What is the extent of legislative competence of the federal
and provincial legislatures and whether a provincial
legislature has extra-territorial jurisdiction?
(c)
Whether there is an overlap in the legal remedies/forums
available to the employees/workers who are employed in
companies/corporations/institutions/establishments in
more than one Province and what is the precise scope of
jurisdiction
of
the
National
Industrial
Relations
Commission (NIRC) formed under Section 35 of the IRA
2012 for inter-provincial/trans-provincial labour and
trade disputes?
(d)
What is the precise scope of jurisdiction of the National
Industrial Relations Commission (NIRC) formed under
Section 25 of the Industrial Relations Act 2008 in the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 11 :-
interregnum till the IRA 2012 was not enacted for intra-
provincial labour and trade disputes?
4.
The
case
of
the
appellants/petitioners
can
be
summarized as under:
(1)
That by means of the Eighteenth Amendment to the
Constitution the CLL under which both the Parliament and Provincial
Legislatures
had
jurisdiction
to
legislative
on
the
subjects
enumerated therein was abolished, as such, the matters previously
covered under Entries No.26 and 27 thereof were no longer under the
legislative domain of the Parliament, because under Article 142(c) of
the Constitution, the legislative competence of the Federal Legislature
is restricted only to the subjects that are enumerated in the Federal
Legislative List (FLL) and the legislative competence of the Provincial
Legislatures have exclusive jurisdiction to make laws on all residuary
subjects. Further, under Article 144 (1) of the Constitution, the
Parliament can also legislate on any matter not enumerated in the
FLL only in the eventuality if one or more Provincial Assemblies pass
a resolution to that effect. Therefore, prior to promulgation of the IRA
2012 it was necessary that all the four Provincial Assemblies should
have passed the resolutions authorizing the Parliament to regulate by
law the subjects that are covered by it, but the said provision of the
Constitution was not resorted to. In the case of Air League of PIAC
Employees through President v. Federation of Pakistan M/O
Labour and Manpower Division Islamabad and others (2011
SCMR 1254) this Court has held that the Federal Government has
no power to legislate on the subject of labour welfare and trade
unions, which subjects, after the Eighteenth Amendment have
devolved upon the Provinces, which judgment under Article 189 of
the Constitution is binding on all Courts in Pakistan. Thus, the IRA
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 12 :-
2012 is not valid law. It was also the case of the appellants/petitioner
that the IRA 2012 cannot be validated on the basis of Entry No.3 of
the FLL on the ground that it is intended to discharge obligation
under the International Treaties and Conventions such as the ILO
Conventions
No.87
and
98,
especially
when
the
Provincial
Legislatures have already made the laws on the subjects covered by it
(IRA 2012). Further, by means of the IRA 2012 a parallel legal forum in
the shape of NIRC established under it (IRA 2012) alongside the Labour
Courts established under the Provincial laws has been created which
has resulted in a confusion with regard to the relevant forum to be
approached.
(2)
That since the promulgation of the Government of India Act,
1935 till the Constitution of 1973, the subject of trade unions and
workers welfare has consistently never ever been in the Federal
sphere of legislation. The Parliament, through the Eighteenth
Amendment, with a deliberate and conscious decision, enhanced the
quantum of provincial autonomy by abolishing the CLL, which can be
said to be one of the most important phases in the constitutional
history of Pakistan; however, the learned High Courts have validated
the Federal laws as if it had never taken place and the fact of the
devolution
of
powers
has
been
sidelined
and
treated
as
inconsequential. In fact, the upholding the federal law means an
increase in the legislative power of the Federation and reduction in
the legislative power of the Provinces, which is against the intent of
the Eighteenth Amendment.
(3)
That the learned High Courts have unanimously saved the
Federal laws by interpreting different entries of the FLL on the tacit
assumption that there never was any entry relating to trade unions
and labour welfare. Various other entries have been stretched to
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 13 :-
include trade unions and workers welfare while disregarding the
basic fact that this subject was previously the subject matter of
Entries No.26 and 27 of the CLL which have now been omitted i.e.
transferred exclusively to the Provincial sphere. It is obvious that
entries should be construed while taking an overall view of the
contents thereof and not in isolation as if the other entries have never
existed in the first place. The fact that the upholding the Federal
legislation necessarily means invalidating and striking down either
full or certain provisions of all four provincial Acts (Provincial Industrial
Relation Acts). In fact, the findings of the learned High Courts appear to
be on the basis that there is a vacuum in the law, which in fact was
not there, as all the four Provincial legislatures had enacted laws
providing an alternate route.
(4)
There is no bar on a Provincial legislature to make trans-
provincial legislation. The rights of the labourers/workers are better
protected through having Province-wide trade unions rather than
trade unions which are operating at the Federal level or in other
provinces and can only be given relief by a single body, namely the
NIRC. Further, Article 17 of the Constitution does not contemplate
the necessity for nationwide trade unions. If the Provincial
legislatures, considered that a nationwide trade union was beneficial
they could have provided for the same through the constitutional
mechanism provided by Article 144 of the Constitution, by
authorizing the Federal legislature to legislate on this subject. They
have, however, in their legislative wisdom, consciously decided not to
do so. It is a legislative policy matter on which the concerned
legislatures shall be allowed to decide and the learned High Courts
ought not to interfere therein.
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 14 :-
(5)
As per the definitions of terms ‘employer’, ‘establishment’,
‘industrial dispute’ and ‘industry’ contained in the Provincial law of
Sindh, every commercial entity, whether it is operating on a trans-
provincial basis or on a provincial basis, irrespective of the fact as to
whether it has certain employees in other Provinces apart from Sindh
would be covered by the Sindh Industrial Relations Act, 2013 (SIRA
2013). However, the Federal Act (IRA 2012), as interpreted by the High
Courts, excludes in totality the jurisdiction of the Provincial Labour
Courts with regard to the trade unions operating for and in relation
to any company operating in Sindh which has branches in other
Provinces. Therefore, this was not a case of vacuum which the
Federal law, by referring to the so called trans-provincial trade
unions had filled in. In fact, it was a blatant usurpation of Provincial
autonomy by the Federal Government and deprivation of the
jurisdiction of Provincial Labour Courts by limiting their jurisdiction
only to those companies which do not have branches in other
Provinces.
(6)
In terms of Section 3 of the SIRA 2013, which deals with trade
unions and freedom of association, it is specifically provided that
workers, without any distinction whatsoever, shall have the right to
establish and join trade unions of their own choice. With the Federal
law, this Section has been reduced in its scope and ambit and will
now apply to only those companies which do not have branches in
other Provinces. There is no justification whatsoever for this arbitrary
deprivation of the rights of workmen in Sindh merely because the
company for which they work has branches in different Provinces.
Likewise, the scope of Sections 17, 34 and 45 of the Act has also
been reduced; inasmuch as, the right of workmen to take a local
dispute before a local Court has been infringed.
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 15 :-
(7)
There is a critical distinction between legislative competence
and fundamental rights. Insofar as the question of legislative
competence is concerned the same is governed by the Article 142 of
the Constitution and the Articles relating to fundamental rights are
irrelevant in this regard. The fundamental rights are the rights
conferred on citizens of Pakistan and have nothing whatsoever to do
with legislative competence, which is a totally different concept. The
learned High Courts have not only mixed together these two
conceptually distinct and disparate aspects of constitutional
interpretation but also the concept of legislative competence has been
subordinated to the concept of fundamental rights. This has been
done on the assumption that a trans-provincial trade union is
desirable. Article 7, together with Article 8 of the Constitution,
controls all the fundamental rights. These Articles clearly lay down
restrictions upon the “State”; a restriction from passing a law in
violation of the fundamental rights. The definition of State includes
both the Federal as well as the Provincial organs of the State. The
framers of the Constitution, irrespective of the question of legislative
competence, which has to be determined under Article 142 ibid,
stipulated that a violation of fundamental rights, either by the
Federal or by the Provincial legislatures would be illegal.
(8)
The learned Baluchistan High Court, upheld the Federal
Legislation by relying upon the interpretation of US Supreme Court,
whereby the Entry relating to “commerce” in the US Constitution has
been stretched to include trade unions and workers welfare, so by
means of a similar process, the Entry relating to commerce contained
in Entry No. 27 of Part-I of the FLL in our Constitution, may also be
so structured. While holding so, the learned High Court has ignored
the fact that the entries in the US Constitution are very brief, as
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 16 :-
against it, the Constitution of Pakistan set out at great length and
detail various topics which form the subject matter of the jurisdiction
of the different legislatures, and previously certain entries (Entries No.26
and 27) of the CLL were dealing with these subjects but were abolished
and no corresponding entry was included/inserted in the FLL.
Further, the US Supreme Court is unique in the western world as
being the only openly politicized judicial institution; whereas, the
Pakistan Supreme Court is a far better judicial model, therefore, in
these circumstances, interpretation given by the US Supreme Court
should not be followed by this Court irrationally.
(9)
The learned High Courts have held that a Provincial legislature
does not have the power to pass laws in relation to companies which
operate in more than one province. There is nothing on the
constitutional plane preventing the Provincial Legislature from
passing a law in relation to trade unions and workmen, which would
make it compulsory and mandatory for each company to allow all its
employees, no matter where they are working, to become members of
a trade union. Thus, a company incorporated in one Province and
having its head office therein and a branch office in other Province
can allow all its workmen to be members of a single union. There is
nothing unconstitutional or illegal about it, as all the workers can be
subjected to the laws of the said Province. Since the large companies
usually have branches in different Provinces e.g. all major banks and
other corporate entities such as PIA, it is obvious that the jurisdiction
and legislative competence of the Provinces has been curtailed by the
learned High Courts. Even otherwise, having different trade unions
operating in different Provinces will cause no harm and detriment to
the workmen. It is not obvious that the interest of the small minority
of workmen in one Province are not co-terminus or identical with the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 17 :-
thousand employees in other Province. If there is only one trade
union to cover both sets of workmen, then it is obvious that the
majority view will be based on the interests of the vast majority of the
workmen while the minority workmen’s grievances may be
disregarded. The principle of justice being delivered to the door step
is radically breached by having only one forum at the Federal level,
namely, NIRC based in Islamabad. In contrast to this, there are more
than 30 Labour Courts in the different Provinces, therefore, it is
obviously to the advantage of workmen to be able to have resort to a
court at their door step. Although the NIRC travels to different
Provinces, obviously one Court travelling on circuit is not a substitute
for as many as 30 Courts operating all over the country.
5.
On the other hand, while supporting the judgments of
the learned High Court (impugned herein), it is the case of the
respondents that this Court has always leaned towards preserving
the competence of the legislature and thus saving a statute rather
than striking it down. Therefore, while determining the question
whether any of the Entries of the FLL is wide enough to encompass
within its ambit the IRA 2012, maximum possible amplitude must be
provided to the Entries. The subjects of labour and trade unions are
covered under many of the Entries of the FLL; therefore, the IRA
2012 was competently legislated by the Federal Legislature.
Inasmuch as, as relied upon by the learned High Courts, the subjects
dealt with in the IRA 2012 are covered under Entries No.3, 8, 27, 31,
32, 58 and 59 of Pert-I and Entries No.3, 13 and 18 of Pert-II of FLL,
therefore, being covered by the Entries in the FLL, the IRA 2012
cannot be struck down. Further, a provincial law cannot operate
beyond the territorial limits of the Province; therefore, the provincial
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 18 :-
IRAs cannot secure the rights of the employees working in
Establishments which are trans-provincial. The IRA 2012, which
guarantees the employees of inter-provincial establishments to
organize themselves form trade unions on inter-provincial level and
to seek appointment of Collective Bargaining Agent and also to have
an industrial dispute resolution mechanism at the Federal level, is
not void. With regard to the judgment of this Court in Air League of
PIAC Employees’ case (supra) it is the case of the respondents that
though under Article 189 of the Constitution a decision of this Court
is binding only to the extent it decides a question of law or is based
upon or enunciates a principle of law but in the said case the issue of
authority of the Federal or Provincial Legislature to legislate on the
subjects in issue has not been decided, therefore, the validity the IRA
2012 has to be determined decisively in the instant proceedings.
6.
Learned Additional Attorney General for Pakistan fully
supported the impugned judgments declaring the IRA 2012 to be a
valid piece of legislation. Learned Additional Advocate General Punjab
adopted the arguments of learned counsel for the appellants and her
stance is similar to the appellants that after the abolition of the CLL
through the Eighteenth Amendment, the subject of labour and trade
unions falls within the legislative competence of the Provinces and as
such IRA 2012 is ultra vires the Constitution. Same is the stance of
learned Additional Advocate General Sindh. Learned Additional
Advocate General KPK supported the impugned judgments to the
extent of validity of the IRA 2012 and its applicability only to the
Establishments existing at trans-provincial level and the Trade
Unions operating therein. However, according to him the Provincial
legislation can co-exist with the Federal legislation, as the former
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 19 :-
would apply to the Establishments existing at trans-provincial level
and the Trade Unions operating therein, whereas, the latter would
apply to the Establishments/Trade unions functioning within one
Province only. Same is the stance of the learned Additional Advocate
General Balochistan.
7.
Before dilating upon the questions involved in the instant
matter in the light of the submissions made by the learned counsel
as well as the Constitutional and legal provisions and also the
relevant case-law, it is appropriate to first mention the history of the
labour related laws which remained applicable from time to time in
Pakistan. At the time of the independence of Pakistan in 1947, two
laws on the subject i.e. the Trade Unions Act, 1926 and the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1941 were holding the field. The Trade
Unions Act had been enacted to provide for the registration of Trade
Unions, to specify their function, privileges and powers and other
incidental matters. Chapter III thereof provided for the rights and
liabilities of registered Trade Unions. The said Act neither specifically
conferred on the Trade Unions, whether registered or unregistered,
either the power to represent workers in any proceedings or the
persons to resort to authorize a strike. However, Section 15 of the
said Act specified the objects on which the general funds of a
registered Trade Union could be spent. In 1927, the Bombay Trade
unions Regulations were issued under the provisions of section 29 of
the Act and after the coming into force of the Government of India
Act, 1935 the Central Government, in 1938, issued the Central Trade
Unions Regulations in respect of the Trade Unions whose objects
extended
beyond
one
Province.
The
Bombay
Trade
Unions
Regulations were subsequently re-named, with regard to the Province
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 20 :-
of Sindh, as the Sindh Trade Unions Regulations, under the
provisions of Section 3 of Sindh Act 1 of 1951. As far as the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 is concerned, it came into force on
l.4.1947 and provided for the Investigation and settlement of
Industrial disputes by or through the Works Committees, Concilia-
tion Courts Boards of Conciliation, Courts of Inquiry and Industrial
Tribunals. Under Section 38 thereof, the Industrial Disputes Rules,
1947 were framed by the Central as well as Provincial Governments.
However, this Act was repealed and replaced by the Industrial
Disputes Ordinance, 1959, which was promulgated on 21.10.1959.
Section 34(1) of the Ordinance of 1959, like Section 36(1) of its
predecessor Act, entitled a workman, who was a party to a dispute, to
be represented in any proceedings under the said Ordinance by an
Officer of a Registered Trade Union. In 1960, the Federal Government
framed the Industrial Disputes (Central) Rules, 1960, superseding
the earlier Rules of 1938. The Trade Unions Act, 1926 was
substantially modified by Trade Unions (Amendment) Ordinance,
1960 (Ordinance No.KIV of 1960), whereby Chapter III-E was added thereto
providing for the recognition of registered Trade Unions by the
employers on the fulfillment of certain conditions by such Trade
Union. In March 1968 the West Pakistan Trade Unions Ordinance,
1968 and the West Pakistan Industrial Disputes Ordinance, 1968
were promulgated. The right of the Trade Unions to negotiate with the
employer through its executive, in respect of the matters connected
with the employment and conditions of work, was retained. In
November, 1969, the Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969 was
enacted to amend and consolidate the laws relating to reformation of
trade unions and to achieve uniformity, whereby the West Pakistan
Industrial Disputes Ordinance, 1968 was repealed. This new
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 21 :-
Ordinance was substantially modified by the Industrial Relation
(Amendment) Ordinance, 1970 (Ordinance No.XIX of 1970), the Labour
Laws (Amendment) Ordinance, 1972 (Ordinance No.IX of 1972), the Labour
Laws (Amendment) Act, 1972 (Act No.V of 1972) and the Industrial
Relations (Amendment) Act, 1973 (Act No.XXIX of 1973). By the
Labour Laws (Amendment) Ordinance, 1972, Section 22-A was
inserted in the Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969 which provided
for
the
establishment
of
the
National
Industrial
Relations
Commission (NIRC), for settlement of disputes between employers and
workers. The mechanism for the functioning of NIRC was provided
under the National Industrial Relations Commission (Procedure and
Functions) Regulations, 1973. Then comes the Industrial Relations
Ordinance, 2002, which repealed and replaced the Industrial
Relations Ordinance, 1969, however, all registered trade unions, were
saved and were deemed to have been registered under the new
Ordinance. The Industrial Relations Ordinance, 2002 was then
repealed and replaced by the Industrial Relations Act, 2008; however,
once again the registered trade unions were saved and were deemed
to have been registered under the Act, 2008. Importantly, the said
Act was a temporary enactment as under Section 87(3) thereof it was
provided that unless repealed earlier, the IRA 2008 shall seize to exist
on 30.4.2010. Till that date, no legislation was made either to
supersede or to extend the period of operation of the said law; as
such, by virtue of the said sunset clause the IRA 2008 stood repealed
on 30.4.2010. In the meantime, on 20.4.2010, through the
Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution, the CLL was abolished,
as such, Entries No.26 and 27 which provided the legislative
authority to the Federal Legislature alongside the Provincial
Legislature regarding the subjects, inter alia, of labor and trade
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 22 :-
unions, no more remained in field. It is to be noted that Clause (6) of
newly inserted Article 270AA of the Constitution provided that the
laws with respect to the matters enumerated in the erstwhile CLL,
including Ordinances, Orders, rules, bye-laws, regulations and
notifications and other legal instruments having the force of law, in
force in Pakistan, immediately before the commencement of the
said amendment would continue to remain in force until altered,
repealed or amended by the competent authority. After 30.4.2010
the Labour Courts, Labour Appellate Tribunal as well as NIRC
stopped functioning for the reason that the IRA 2008 had lapsed
and no further legislation had been made by the Federal
Legislature. When confronted with the issue, the NIRC, Islamabad,
held that by means of the Eighteenth Amendment, the IRA 2008
had been protected and was fully operative till altered or amended
or repealed by the competent authority. As the Labour Courts as
well as the Labour Appellate Tribunal stopped functioning, the
then Chief Justice of the Lahore High Court initiated suo motu
proceedings.
The
suo
motu
as
also
the
Writ
Petition
No.10746/2010 was disposed of on the basis of the report
submitted on behalf of the Government of Punjab stating therein
that IRA 2008 stood protected only upto 30.6.2011 in accordance
with the protection provided under Article 270AA of the
Constitution. On the same issue, the High Court of Sindh, in
Constitutional Petition No.D-1432/2010, held that IRA 2008 stood
repealed on 30.4.2010 by force of Section 87(3) thereof, whereas
the IRO 1969 stood revived from the said date. The Lahore High
Court, Rawalpindi Bench, in ICA No.200/2008 held that IRA 2008
had been protected till 30.4.2011 in view of Article 270AA of the
Constitution. The
Islamabad High Court, in Writ Petition
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 23 :-
No.4917/2010, also held that in view of Section 87(3) of IRA 2008,
it (IRA 2008) stood repealed on 30.4.2010.
Thereafter, pursuant to the Eighteenth Amendment, the
Provincial Legislatures of all the four Provinces made legislation on
the subjects of the trade unions and labour disputes, etc. In the
province of Punjab, on 13.6.2010, the Punjab Industrial Relations
Ordinance, 2010 (PIRO 2010) was enacted, which was to remain
operative till 10.9.2010, however, the life of the Ordinance was
extended for a further period of ninety days through a Resolution
passed by the Provincial Assembly on 23.7.2010. In the meantime,
on 9.12.2010 the Punjab Industrial Relations Act, 2010 (PIRA 2010)
was enacted which repealed the PIRO 2010. In the Province of
Sindh, on 5.7.2010, through the Industrial Relations (Revival and
Amendment) Act, 2010, the IRO 2008 was revived w.e.f. 1.5.2010
as if it had never been repealed. In the Province of Khyber
Pukhtunkhwa, on 14.7.2010, the Khyber Pukhtunkhwa Industrial
Relations Ordinance, 2010 (KIRO 2010) was promulgated. Likewise,
in the province of Balochistan, on 22.72010, the Balochistan
Industrial Relations Ordinance, 2010 (BIRO 2010) was issued, which
was then replaced on 15.10.2010 by the Balochistan Industrial
Relations Act, 2010 (BIRA 2010).
9.
The question whether the IRA 2008 stood repealed on
30.4.2010; or the same had been protected either till 30.6.2011 or
permanently; or if it lapsed/got repealed, whether the IRO 1969
stood revived or not, came up for consideration before this Court in
Air League of PIAC Employees’ case (supra) wherein, vide judgment
dated 2.6.2011, it was held that IRA 2008 ceased to continue in
force w.e.f. 30.4.2010. As no Federal Law remained in the field,
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 24 :-
thereafter, on 14.3.2012, the Federal Legislature promulgated the
IRA 2012. As per its preamble, the purpose of its promulgation was to
consolidate and rationalize the law relating to formation of trade
unions, and improvement of relations between employers and
workmen in the Islamabad Capital Territory and in trans-provincial
establishments and industry. It was also to recognize the right of
fundamental right of ‘freedom of association’ as envisaged in Article
17 of the Constitution, for implementation of the ILO Conventions
No.87 and 98 and is specifically applicable to only trans-provincial
establishments.
10.
Before going to the constitutional questions, it is
appropriate to first consider the ratio of the judgment of this Court in
AIR League of PIAC Employees’ case (supra). In the said case,
neither the constitutionality of any of the Federal legislations nor the
legislative competence of the Federal Legislature to legislate on the
subjects of labour and trade unions was considered, rather the only
issue therein was that whether after the Eighteenth Amendment, the
IRA 2008 stood protected or not, and if not protected whether the IRO
1969 revived or not. The Court, without going into validity of the
federal or provincial legislations, held that IRA 2008 on the basis of
Eighteenth Constitutional Amendment stood protected and continued
till 30.6.2011. Further, without considering in detail whether the
subjects of labour and trade unions fall within the legislative domain
of Federer or Provincial legislature only made reference of Article
144(1) of the Constitution. Relevant paras therefrom reads as under:-
“22.
At the cost of repetition, it is to be noted that the
IRA, 2008 stood repealed on 30-4-2010 by virtue of its
section 87(3), whereas, the provincial legislation was made
on 13th June, 2010; 5th July, 2010; 14th July, 2010; and
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 25 :-
22nd July, 2010 for the provinces of Punjab, Sindh,
Khyber Pukhtunkhwa and Balochistan, respectively.
Therefore, there was a period of about two months for
which there was no legislation, Federal or Provincial, in
force. The Labour Laws provide the procedure and
mechanism for the resolution of disputes, registration of
Trade Unions and establishment of Forum for the redressal
of grievance of the labourers as well as employers,
therefore, it is mainly a procedural law and in the light of
the well- settled principles of interpretation of Statutes as
mentioned above, the procedural law has retrospective
effect unless contrary is provided expressly or impliedly,
the same would thus be applicable retrospectively w.e.f.
1.5.2010. Further, in the Province of Sindh, the Industrial
Relations (Revival and Amendment) Act, 2010, the IRA,
2008 has been revived w.e.f. 1st May, 2010, therefore, the
interregnum period has already been catered for.
27.
Now turning towards the submission of the learned
amicus curiae on the vires of Provincial Labour Laws on the
ground that there are many Institutions/Corporations which
have their branches all over the country and there were
country wide Trade Unions but now Trade Union can only be
registered under the legislation of a specific province. It is to
be noted that instant proceedings have been initiated under
Article 184(3) of the Constitution with a limited purpose of
having a declaration that. IRA, 2008 on the basis of
Eighteenth Constitutional Amendment stood protected and
continued till 30th June, 2011, therefore, the vires of the
same cannot be considered in such proceedings. However, as
stated earlier Article 144(1) of the Constitution has provided
mechanism for making central legislation in respect of
matters not covered in the Federal Legislative List.
29.
Thus, for the foregoing reasons, it is held that IRA,
2008 ceased to continue in force w.e.f. 30th April, 2010, as a
consequence whereof petition is dismissed.”
It is evident from the above that this Court consciously left open the
question of the legislative domain of Federal or Provincial Legislature
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 26 :-
as also the constitutionality of labour laws. Therefore, the said
judgment passed by a learned Three-Member Bench of this Court, is
in no way an impediment in the way of the High Courts or even this
Court to consider and decide the validity of the IRA 2012.
11.
At this stage, it is also appropriate to consider the history
of legislative competence of the federal/provincial legislature
regarding the subject of trade unions and labour rights, etc. In this
regard it is to be noted that prior to the creation of Pakistan, the
subject of trade unions, labour disputes and labour matters were
mentioned in Entry No.35 of List-I of the FLL and also in Entries No.
26, 27 and 29 of Part-II of the CLL of the Government of India Act,
1935. The same was in the Seventh Schedule thereof and was
controlled by subsection Section 126(2) thereof, which is reproduced
hereunder:-
List-I of the Federal Legislative List
35.
Regulation of labour and safety in mines and oilfields.
Part-II of the Concurrent Legislative List
26.
Factories.
27.
Welfare of labour; conditions of labour; provident
funds;
employers'
liability
and
workmen's
compensation; health insurance, including invalidity
pensions; old age pensions.
29.
Trade unions; industrial and labour disputes.
Section
126.
Control of Federation over Province in certain
cases.-
(2)
The executive authority of the Federation shall also
extend to the giving of directions to a Province as to the
carrying into execution therein of any Act of the Federal
Legislature which relates to a matter specified in Part II of the
Concurrent Legislative List and authorises the giving of such
directions:
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 27 :-
Provided that a Bill or amendment which proposes to authorise
the giving of any such directions as aforesaid shall not be
introduced into or moved in either Chamber of the Federal
Legislature without the previous sanction of the Governor-
General in his discretion.”
The said subjects were mentioned in Entry No.5 of Part II of the
Concurrent List in Fifth Schedule of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1956. The same was controlled by Article
126(2)(d) thereof, which reads as under:-
Part-II of the Concurrent List
5.
Relations between employers and employees; trade
unions; industrial and labour disputes; welfare of labour
including conditions of work; provident funds;
employers’
liability;
workmen's
compensation;
invalidity and old age pensions and maternity benefits;
vocational and technical training of labour; social
security and social insurance.
Article 126.
(2)
The executive authority of the Federation shall extend
to the giving of directions to a Province as may appear to the
Federal Government to be necessary for the purpose of clause
(1), and the said authority shall also extend to giving of
directions to a Province-
(d)
as to the carrying into execution in the Province
of any Act Parliament which relates to a matter
enumerated in Part II of the Concurrent List and
authorizes the giving of such directions.”
In the Constitution of 1962, there was only one legislative list
pertaining to the subjects within the legislative competence of Central
Legislature, provided in Third Schedule, however, the subjects
pertaining to labour disputes and trade unions, etc., were not
mentioned in the said list. The said Schedule was controlled by
Article 131(2)(c) thereof, which reads as under: -
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 28 :-
131.
Central law-making power.-
(2)
Where the national interest of Pakistan in relation to –
(c)
the achievement of uniformity in respect of any matter
in different parts of Pakistan,
So requires, the Central Legislature shall have power to make
laws (including laws having extra-territorial operation) for the
whole or any part of Pakistan with respect to any matter not
enumerated in the Third Schedule.
In the Interim Constitution of 1972, Part-II of CLL in Fourth Schedule
deals with the subject of trade unions and labour disputes, which
was controlled by Article 138 thereof, which read as under: -
Concurrent List
29.
Welfare of labor; conditions of labor, provident funds;
employer's liability and workmen's compensation,
health insurance including invalidity pensions, old age
pensions.
31.
Trade unions; industrial and labor disputes.
Before the Eighteenth Amendment, two Legislative Lists were
available in the Constitution of 1973, namely, the FLL, which
contained the subjects in respect whereof the Federation could
legislate and the CLL, which contained the subjects in respect
whereof either the Federation or a Province could legislate; whereas,
the subjects which were not found in either of these two lists, were
within the exclusive domain of the Provinces. The Entries No.26, 27
and 30 of the CLL in the Fourth Schedule dealt with the issue of
trade unions and labour welfare, etc., which was controlled by Article
70 thereof. The same are reproduced here under:-
Concurrent Legislative List
26.
Welfare of labor; conditions of labor, provident funds;
employer's liability and workmen's compensation,
health insurance including invalidity pensions, old age
pensions.
27.
Trade unions; industrial and labor disputes.
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 29 :-
30.
Regulation of labor and safety in mines, factories and
oil- fields.
70.
Introduction and passing of Bills.- (1)
A
Bill
with respect to any matter in the Federal Legislative List may
originate in either House and shall, if it is passed by the House
in which it originated, be transmitted to the other House; and, if
the Bill is passed without amendment, by the other House also,
it shall he presented to the President for assent.
(4)
In this Article and the succeeding provisions of the
Constitution, "Federal Legislative List" means the Federal
Legislative List and the in the Fourth Schedule.
Reference in this regard may also be made to the provisions of the
Constitution of India which contains three legislative lists i.e. the
Union list, the State list and the Concurrent List. Entries No.22 to 24
of the Concurrent List in Seventh Schedule thereof deals with the
subjects of trade unions and labour disputes, etc. and is controlled
by Article 246 thereof, therefore, the Union as well as the States has
joint powers to legislate in respect thereof. The same is reproduced
below: -
Concurrent List, List-III
22.
Trade unions; industrial and labour disputes.
23.
Social security and social insurance; employment and
unemployment.
24.
Welfare of labour including conditions of work,
provident
funds,
employers
liability,
workmens
compensation, invalidity and old age pensions and
maternity benefits.
246.
Subject matter of laws made by Parliament and by the
Legislatures of States.- (1) Notwithstanding anything in clauses
(2) and (3), Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with
respect to any of the matters enumerated in List I in the
Seventh Schedule (in this Constitution referred to as the Union
List).
(2) Notwithstanding anything in clause (3), Parliament, and,
subject to clause (1), the Legislature of any State also, have
power to make laws with respect to any of the matters
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 30 :-
enumerated in List III in the Seventh Schedule (in this
Constitution referred to as the Concurrent List).
(4) Parliament has power to make laws with respect to any
matter for any part of the territory of India not included (in a
State) notwithstanding that such matter is a matter enumerated
in the State List.
12.
The relevant provisions of the Constitution of 1973 are
Articles 97, 137, 141 to 144 of the Constitution, which for reference
are reproduced below:-
97.
Extent of executive authority of Federation. -
Subject to the Constitution, the executive authority of the
Federation shall extend to the matters with respect to which
Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) has power to make laws,
including exercise of rights, authority and jurisdiction in and
in relation to areas outside Pakistan:
Provided that the said authority shall not, save as expressly
provided in the Constitution or in any law made by Majlis-e-
Shoora (Parliament), extend in any Province to a matter with
respect to which the Provincial Assembly has also power to
make laws.
137.
Extent of executive authority of Province.- Subject
to the Constitution, the executive authority of the Province
shall extend to the matters with respect to which the
Provincial Assembly has power to make laws:
Provided that, in any matter with respect to which both
Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) and the Provincial Assembly of
a Province have power to make laws, the executive authority
of the Province shall be subject to, and limited by, the
executive authority expressly conferred by the Constitution or
by law made by Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) upon the
Federal Government or authorities thereof.
141.
Extent of Federal and Provincial laws. Subject to the
Constitution, Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) may make laws
(including laws having extra-territorial operation) for the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 31 :-
whole or any part of Pakistan, and a Provincial Assembly may
make laws for the Province or any part thereof.
142.
Subject-matter of Federal and Provincial laws.-
Subject to the Constitution-
(a)
Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) shall have exclusive
power to make laws with respect to any matter in the
Federal Legislative List;
(b)
Majlis-e-Shoora
(Parliament)
and
a
Provincial
Assembly shall have power to make laws with respect
to criminal law, criminal procedure and evidence;
(c)
Subject to paragraph (b), a Provincial Assembly shall,
and Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) shall not, have
power to make laws with respect to any matter not
enumerated in the Federal Legislative List; and
(d)
Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) shall have exclusive
power to make laws with respect to all matters
pertaining to such areas in the Federation as are not
included in any Province.
143.
Inconsistency between Federal and Provincial
Law.- If any provision of an Act of a Provincial Assembly is
repugnant to any provision of an Act of Majlis-e-Shoora
(Parliament) which Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) is competent
to enact, then the Act of Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament),
whether passed before or after the Act of the Provincial
Assembly, shall prevail and the Act of the Provincial
Assembly shall, to the extent of the repugnancy, be void.
144.
Power of Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) to legislate
for one or more Provinces by consent.-(1) If one or more
Provincial Assemblies pass resolutions to the effect that
Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) may by law regulate any matter
not enumerated the Federal Legislative List in the Fourth
Schedule, it shall be lawful for Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament)
to pass an Act for regulating that matter accordingly, but any
act so passed may, as respects any Province to which it
applies, be amended or repealed by Act of the Assembly of
that Province.
The learned High Courts while holding the IRA 2012 to be intra vires
of the Constitution has relied upon following entries of the FLL: -
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 32 :-
Part-I
3. External affairs; the implementing of treaties and
agreements, including educational and cultural pacts and
agreements, with other countries; extradition, including the
surrender of criminals and accused persons to Governments
outside Pakistan.
27. Import and export across customs frontiers as deemed by
the Federal Government, inter-provincial trade and
commerce, trade and commerce with foreign countries;
standard of quality of goods to be exported out of Pakistan.
31. Corporations, that is to say, the incorporation, regulation
and winding-up of trading corporations, including banking,
insurance and financial corporations, but not including
corporations owned or controlled by a Province and carrying
on business only within that Province, or cooperative
societies, and of corporations, whether trading or not, with
objects not confined to a Province, but not including
universities.
32. International treaties, conventions and agreements and
International arbitration.
58. Matters which under the Constitution are within the
legislative competence of Majlis- e-Shoora (Parliament) or
relate to the Federation.
59. Matters incidental or ancillary to any matter enumerated
in this Part.
Part II:
3. Development of industries, where development under
Federal control is declared by Federal law to be expedient in
the public interest; institutions, establishments, bodies and
corporations administered or managed by the Federal
Government immediately before the commencing day,
including the [Pakistan Water and Power Development
Authority
and
the
Pakistan
Industrial
Development
Corporation]; all undertakings, projects and schemes of such
institutions,
establishments,
bodies
and
corporations,
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 33 :-
industries, projects and undertakings owned wholly or
partially by the Federation or by a corporation set up by the
Federation.
13. Inter-provincial matters and co-ordination.
18. Matters incidental or ancillary to any matter enumerated
in this Part.
13.
It is well established this Court, while considering the
vires of a legislative enactment under its powers of judicial review,
can consider not only the substance of the law but also the
competence of the legislature. Further, though it is an accepted
principle that no mala fide can be attributed to the legislature,
however, the bona fides of the legislature as also the purpose and
object of a statute may also be considered in the determination of the
vires of a statute. The vires of a statute can also be determined on the
ground that the legislation is colourable. In the instant case the only
issue involved is the legislative competence of the Parliament vis-à-vis
the legislative authority of the Provincial legislature. In this regard it
is to be noted that there is always a presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of a legislative enactment unless ex facie it appears
to be violative of any of the Constitutional provisions and in a case
where two opinions with regard to the constitutionality of an
enactment are possible, the one in favour of the validity of the
enactment is to be adopted. Meaning thereby that when a law is
enacted by the Parliament, the presumption lies that Parliament has
competently enacted it (law), and if the vires of the same (law) are
challenged, the burden always lies upon the person making such
challenge to show that the same (law) is violative of any of the
fundamental rights or the provisions of the Constitution. It is also a
cardinal principle of interpretation that law should be interpreted in
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 34 :-
such a manner that it should be saved rather than destroyed. The
Courts should lean in favour of upholding the constitutionality of a
legislation and it is thus incumbent upon the Courts to be extremely
reluctant to strike down laws as unconstitutional. This power should
be exercised only when absolutely necessary for injudicious exercise
of this power might well result in grave and serious consequences.
Reliance in this regard may be placed upon the cases of Province of
East Pakistan v. Sirajul Haq Patwari (PLD 1966 SC 854), Mehreen Zaibun
Nisa Vs. Land Commissioner, Multan and others (PLD 1975 SC
397), M/s Elahi Cotton Mills Ltd and others Vs. Federation of
Pakistan through Secretary M/o Finance, Islamabad and 6 others
(PLD 1997 SC 582), Dr. Tariq Nawaz v. Govt. of Pakistan (2000
SCMR 1956), Mian Asif Islam v. Mian Mohammad Asif (PLD 2001
SC 499), Pakistan Lawyers Forum and others Vs. Federation of
Pakistan and others (PLD 2005 SC 719), Master Foam v. Govt of
Pakistan (PLD 2005 SC 373), Federation of Pakistan through
Secretary, Ministry of Finance and others v. Haji Muhammad
Sadiq
(PLD
2007 SC 133),
Syed
Aizad
Hussain
v.
Motor
Registration Authority (PLD 2010 SC 983), Dr. Mobashir Hassan
v. Federation of Pakistan (PLD 2010 SC 265), In re: Regarding
Pensionary Benefits of the Judges of Superior Courts (PLD 2013
SC 829) , M.L. Kamra v. Chairman-cum-Managing Director, New
India Assurance Co. Ltd. & Anr [(1992) 2 SCC 36], M/s. Ispat
Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Customs, Mumbai [(2006) 9
SCALE 652], Manish Maheshwari vs Asstt. Commissioner Of
Income Tax (AIR 2007 SC 1696), Bharat Petroleum Corpn. Ltd vs
Maddula Ratnavalli & Ors [2007 (6) SCC 81] and also to the case
reported as Lahore Development Authority through D.G. and
others Vs. Ms. Imrana Tiwana and others (2015 SCMR 1739). In
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 35 :-
the last mentioned case, this Court has held that “The power to strike
down or declare a legislative enactment void, however, has to be
exercised with a great deal of care and caution. The Courts are one of
the three coordinate institutions of the State and can only perform
this solemn obligation in the exercise of their duty to uphold the
Constitution. This power is exercised not because the judiciary is an
institution superior to the legislature or the executive but because it
is bound by its oath to uphold, preserve and protect the Constitution.
It must enforce the Constitution as the Supreme Law but this duty
must be performed with due care and caution and only when there is
no other alternative.” The Court after relying upon Cooley: "Treatise
on Constitutional Limitations, Pages 159 to 186”, H.M. Seervai:
"Constitutional Law of India, Volume I, Pages 260 to 262”, Mr. A.K.
Brohi: "Fundamental Law of Pakistan, Pages 562 to 592”, Mr. Justice
Fazal Karim: "Judicial Review of Public Actions, Volume I, Pages 488 to
492”, summarized the rules which must be applied in discharging the
duty to declare laws unconstitutional, which read as under: -
(a)
There is a presumption in favour of constitutionality and a law
must not be declared unconstitutional unless the statute is
placed next to the Constitution and no way can be found in
reconciling the two;
(b)
Where more than one interpretation is possible, one of which
would make the law valid and the other void, the Court must
prefer the interpretation which favours validity;
(c)
A statute must never be declared unconstitutional unless its
invalidity is beyond reasonable doubt. A reasonable doubt must
be resolved in favour of the statute being valid;
(d)
If a case can be decided on other or narrower grounds, the
Court will abstain from deciding the constitutional question;
(e)
The Court will not decide a larger constitutional question than
is necessary for the determination of the case;
(f)
The Court will not declare a statute unconstitutional on the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 36 :-
ground that it violates the spirit of the Constitution unless it
also violates the letter of the Constitution;
(g)
The Court is not concerned with the wisdom or prudence of the
legislation but only with its constitutionality;
(h)
The Court will not strike down statutes on principles of
republican or democratic government unless those principles
are
placed
beyond
legislative
encroachment
by
the
Constitution;
(i)
Mala fides will not be attributed to the Legislature.
14.
There another rule of interpretation that entries in a
Legislative List are to be interpreted liberally. Reliance in this regard
may be made to the following cases:
(a)
In United Provinces Vs. Mt. Atiqa Begam (AIR 1941 FC 16) it was
held that “none of the items in the lists is to be read in a narrow or
restricted sense and each general word therein should be held to
extend to all ancillary and subsidiary matters which can fairly and
reasonably be said to be comprehended in it.
(b)
In Navinchandra Mafatlal Vs. The Commissioner of Income Tax,
Bombay City (AIR 1954 SC 58) it was held that “the cardinal rule of
interpretation, however, is that words should be read in their ordinary,
natural and grammatical meaning subject to this rider that in
construing words in a constitutional enactment conferring legislative
power the most liberal construction should be put upon the words so
that the same may have effect in their widest amplitude.”
(c)
In Sri Ram Ram Narain Medhi vs The State Of Bombay (AIR
1959 SC 459) it was held as under: -
“It is well settled that these heads of legislation should not be
construed in a narrow and pedantic sense but should be given
a large and liberal interpretation. As was observed by the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in British Coal
Corporation v. The King [(1935) A.C. 500]:-
"Indeed, in interpreting a constituent or organic statute such as
the Act, that construction most beneficial to the widest
possible amplitude of its powers must be adopted."
The Federal Court also in the United Provinces V. Atiqa
Begum [(1940) F.C.R. 110] pointed out that none of the items
in the Lists is to be read in a narrow or restricted sense and
that each general word should be held to extend to all ancillary
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 37 :-
or subsidiary matters which can fairly and reasonably be said
to be comprehended in it.”
(d)
In M/S New India Sugar Mills Ltd vs Commissioner Of Sales Tax,
Bihar (AIR 1963 SC 1207) it was held that “the entry should be
interpreted in a liberal spirit and not cut down by narrow technical
considerations. The entry in other words should not be shorn of all its
content to leave a mere husk of legislative power.”
(e)
In Navnit Lal C. Javeri v. K.K. Sen, Appellate Assistant
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay (AIR 1965 SC 1375) it was
held as under: -
“It is hardly necessary to emphasise that the entries in the Lists
cannot be read in a narrow or restricted sense, and as observed
by Gwyer, C.J., in the United Provinces v. Atiqa Begum, 1940
FCR 110: AIR 1941 FC 16, "each general word should be held
to extend to all ancillary or subsidiary matters which can fairly
and reasonably be said to be comprehended in it". What the
entries in the Lists purport to do is to confer legislative powers
on the respective Legislature in respect of areas or fields
covered by the said entries; and it is an elementary rule of
construction that the widest possible construction must be put
upon their words.”
(f)
In Assistant 'Commissioner of Land Tax, Madras, and others v.
Buckingham and Carnatic Co. Ltd. [(1970) 75 ITR 603] it was
held as under: -
“The legislative entries must be given a large and liberal
interpretation, the reason being that the allocation of the
subjects to the lists is not by way of scientific or logical
definition not by way of a mere simplex enumeration of broad
categories. We see no reason, therefore, for holding that
Entries 86 and 87 or List I preclude the State Legislature from
taxing capital value of lands and buildings under Entry 49 of
List II. In our opinion there is no conflict between Entry 86 of
List I and Entry 49 of List II. The basis of taxation under the
two entries is quite distinct. As regards Entry 86 of List I the
basis of the taxation is the capital value of the asset.”
(g)
In Elel Hotels and Investment Ltd. and another Vs. Union of India
(AIR 1990 SC 1664) = [(1989) 3 SCC 698)], wherein the Indian
Supreme Court held as under:-
"6.
… … The cardinal rule of interpretation is that the entries in
the legislative lists are not to be read in a narrow or restricted
sense and that each general word should be held to extend to
all ancillary or subsidiary matters which can fairly and
reasonably be said to be comprehended in it. The widest
possible construction, according to the ordinary meaning of
the words in the entry, must be put upon them. Reference to
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 38 :-
legislative practice may be admissible in reconciling two
conflicting provisions of rival legislative lists. In construing
the words in a Constitutional document conferring legislative
power the most liberal construction should be put upon the
words so that the same may have effect in their widest
amplitude.”
(h)
In Union Of India & Anr., Etc. Etc vs A.Sanyasi Rao & Ors., Etc.
Etc (AIR 1996 SC 1219) it was held that: -
As held by a Constitution Bench of this Court in Sri Ram Ram
Narain Medhi vs. State of Bombay (AIR 1959 SC 459), the
heads of legislation in the lists should not be construed in a
narrow and pedantic sense, but should be given a large and
liberal interpretation. To similar effect are the decisions of this
Court in Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietary) Ltd. vs. State of
West Bengal and others (AIR 1962 SC 1044 at p. 1049)
and Banarasi Das and others vs. The Wealth Tax Officer and
others (AIR 1965 SC 1387). In Union of India vs. Shri
Harbhajan Singh Dhillon (1971 (2) SCC 779 at p.792), the
Court quoted its earlier decision in Harakchand Ratanchand
Banthia and others vs. Union of India and others (1969 (2)
SCC 166), wherein it was held thus:-
".... The entries in the three Lists are only legislative heads or
fields of legislation, they demarcate the area over which the
appropriate Legislatures can operate."
(i)
In Godfrey Phillips India Ltd. & Anr Vs. State of U.P. [(2005) 2
SCC 515] it was held that “where there is the possibility of legislative
overlap, courts have resolved the issue according to settled principles
of construction of entries in the legislative lists. The first of such
settled principles is that legislative entries should be liberally
interpreted, that none of the items in the list is to be read in a narrow
or restricted sense and that each general word should be held to
extend to ancillary or subsidiary matters which can fairly and
reasonably be said to be comprehended in it.”
“The second principle is that competing entries must be read
harmoniously. The proper way to avoid a conflict would be to read
the entries together and to interpret the language of one by that of the
other.” [reliance in this regard was placed upon the cases of
Governor General in Council vs. Province of Madras [(1945) FCR
179 at pg. 191-192]; State of Bombay vs. Narottamdas
Jethabhai (AIR 1951 SC 69); Bar Council of U.P. vs. State of U.P.
& Anr. (AIR 1973 SC 231) = [(1973) 1 SCC 261]; D.G. Ghose &
Co. (Agents) (P) Ltd. vs. State of Kerala & Anr. [(1980) 2 SCC
410]; Federation of Hotel and Restaurant vs. Union of
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 39 :-
India [(1989) 3 SCC 634] and State of West Bengal vs. Kesoram
Industries (AIR 2005 SC 1646) = [(2004) 10 SCC 201], In the
matter of Central Provinces and Berar Sales of Motor Spirit and
Lubricants Taxation Act, 1938 (AIR 1939 FC 1)]
(j)
In Sh. Jilubhai Nanbhai Khachar etc. etc. Vs. State of Gujarat
and anr. etc. etc. [(1995) Suppl. (1) SCC 596] it was held as under: -
“It is settled law of interpretation that entries in the Seventh
Schedule are not powers but fields of legislation. The
legislature derives its power from Article 246 and other related
Articles of the Constitution. Therefore, the power to make
the Amendment Act is derived not from the respective entries
but under Article 246 of the Constitution. The language of the
respective entries should be given the widest scope of their
meaning, fairly capable to meet the machinery of the
Government settled by the Constitution. Each general word
should extend to all ancillary or subsidiary matters which can
fairly and reasonably be comprehended in it. When the vires
of an enactment is impugned, there is an initial presumption of
its constitutionality and if there is any difficulty in ascertaining
the limits of the legislative power, the difficulty must be
resolved, as far as possible in favour of the legislature putting
the most liberal construction upon the legislative entry so that
it may have the widest amplitude. Burden is on the appellants
to prove affirmatively of its invalidity. It must be remembered
that we are interpreting the Constitution and when the court is
called upon to interpret the Constitution, it must not be
construed in any narrow or pedantic sense and adopt such
construction which must be beneficial to the amplitude of
legislative powers. The broad and liberal spirit should inspire
those whose duty is to interpret the Constitution to find
whether the impugned Act is relatable to any entry in the
relevant List.”
(k)
In Bharat Hydro Power Corp. Ltd. & Ors. Vs. State of Assam &
Anr. [(2004) 2 SCC 553]
it was held as under: -
“It is likely to happen from time to time that enactment though
purporting to deal with a subject in one list touches also on a
subject in another list and prima facie looks as if one
legislature is impinging on the legislative field of the another
Legislature. This may result in large number of statutes being
declared unconstitutional because the legislature enacting law
may appear to have legislated in a field reserved for the other
legislature. To examine whether a legislation has impinged in
the field of other legislatures, in fact or in substance, or is
incidental, keeping in view the true nature of the enactment,
the Courts have evolved the doctrine of "pith and substance"
for the purpose of determining whether it is legislation with
respect to matters in one list or the other. Where the question
for determination is whether a particular law relates to a
particular subject mentioned in one list or the other, the courts
look into the substance of the enactment. Thus, if the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 40 :-
substance of enactment falls within Union List then the
incidental encroachment by the enactment on the State List
would not make it invalid. This principle came come to be
established by the Privy Council when it determined appeals
from Canada or Australia involving the question of legislative
competence of the federation or the States in those countries.”
(l)
In Messrs Haider Automobile Ltd. Vs. Pakistan (PLD 1969 SC
623) it was held as under: -
“The items in the legislative list, as was observed in the case
of the United Provinces v. Mst. Atique Begum and others
(AIR 1941 FC 16) are not to be read in any narrow or pedantic
sense. Each general word therein should be held to extend to
all ancillary or subsidiary matters which can fairly and
reasonably be said to' be comprehended within it. These items
describe only comprehensive categories of legislation by a
word of broad and general meaning. Thus, by being given the
authority to legislate in respect of the Constitution,
organisation, jurisdiction and powers of the Supreme Court,
the Central Legislature, in my view, acquired the jurisdiction
also to legislate with regard to the number of Judges to be
appointed, the salaries to be paid to them and the terms and
conditions upon which they were to serve in the Supreme
Court.”
(m)
In Pir Rashid-ud-Daula and 3 others v. The Chief Administrator
of Auqaf, West Pakistan (PLD 1971 SC 401), it was observed as
under: -
"In a Federal Constitution, in which an elaborate division of
Legislative powers is attempted, it is inevitable that
controversy should arise whether one or the other Legislature
is encroaching on the other's legislative field, for, no matter
how careful the draftsman or how exhaustive the legislative
lists it is not possible to provide for all conceivable
eventualities or to categories each subject of legislation under
a specific label. It is for the resolution of such controversies
that the Courts have evolved certain basic tests. A careful
examination of the relevant decisions indicates that the main
principles deducible from them are:--
(i)
That legislation, the validity of which has to be tested,
must be scrutinized in its entirety in order to determine its
true character in pith and substance. (Great Saddelory Co,.
Ltd v. The King (AIR 1921 PC 148).
(ii)
That after considering the legislation as a whole in pith
and substance it has to be seen as to with respect to which
topic or category of legislation in the various fields, it
deals substantially and directly and not whether it would in
actual operation affect an item in the forbidden field in an
indirect way. (Subrahmanyan Chettiar v. Muttuswami
Gourdan AIR 1941 PC 47).
(iii)
That none of the items in the lists is to be read in a narrow
or restricted sense and each general word therein should be
held .to extend to all ancillary and subsidiary matters
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 41 :-
which can fairly and reasonably be said to be
comprehended in it. (United Provinces v. Atiqa Begum
AIR 1941 FC 16). [emphasis supplied]
(iv)
That where there appears to be apparent overlapping in
respect of the subject-matter of the impugned legislation it
must first be considered whether a fair reconciliation
cannot be effected by giving to the language of the federal
and concurrent context bear is yet one that can properly be
given to it. (Governor-General-in-Council v. Province of
Madras AIR 1945 PC 98).
(v)
That a general power ought not to be so construed as to
make a particular power conferred by the same Act arid
operating in the same filed a nullity. (In re: C. P. Motor
Spirit Act AIR 1939 FC 1)."
(n)
In Fauji Foundation and another v. Shamimur Rehman (PLD
1983 SC 457), it has been held as under: -
"Item No. l as worded should be construed not in a narrow or
restricted sense but in a wider sense so as to include all
ancillary or subsidiary matters which can reasonably be
included within it".
(o)
In Pakistan Industrial Development Corporation Vs. Pakistan
through the Secretary, Ministry of Finance (1992 SCMR 891)
after relying upon the cases of Navinchandra’s case (supra) and Mst.
Atiqa Begum’s case (supra), it was held as under: -
“The Constitution provides governance to the country, confers
rights, privileges and liabilities on the citizens and also
controls the working in all fields of life. It is a living document
and is to be interpreted in a widest possible manner to ensure
continuity and balance in the several constituents and organs
of the State. The item in the list in respect of which the power
of taxation can be exercised should not be interpreted in a
restricted and pedantic manner.”
(p)
In Messrs Elahi Cotton Mills Ltd and others Vs. Federation of
Pakistan through Secretary M/o Finance, Islamabad and 6 others
(PLD 1997 SC 582) it was held as under: -
"The power to levy taxes is a sine qua non for a State. In
fact it is an attribute of sovereignty of a State. … The
entries in the Legislative List of the Constitution are not
powers of legislation but only fields of legislative heads.
The allocation of the subjects to the lists is not by way of
scientific or logical definition but by way of mere simple
enumeration of broad catalogue. … An entry in the
Legislative List must be given a very wide and liberal
interpretation.
It is needless to reiterate that it is a well-settled proposition of
law that an entry in the Legislative List must be given a very
wide and liberal interpretation.
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 42 :-
(q)
In Commissioner of Sales Tax and others Vs. Hunza Central
Asian Textile and Woollen Mills Ltd. and others (1999 SCMR
526) it was held as under: -
19. The Darned Attorney-General is correct in his submission
that Legislative entries in a Constitution are to be interpreted
liberally. This principle is well recognized and was recently
confirmed by this Court in its judgment (Full Bench of 5
Judges) in the case of Elahi Cotton Mills Ltd. (PLD 1997 SC
582). While considering the term "income-tax" in Entry No.49
in Part I of the Federal Legislative List (Fourth Schedule) of
the 1973 Constitution, it was observed that, from the case-law
and treatises considered in the judgment, one of the principles
deducible therefrom is that while construing the said word
"income" used in the entry in the Legislative List, restrictive
meaning cannot be applied … . While interpreting the word, it
was recognized that the rule of interpretation of any entry in
Legislative List is that the same should be given widest
possible meaning. …
24. As observed, legislative entries should be given liberal and
very wide interpretation and that the judicial approach in this
regard should be dynamic rather than rigid. Another principle
that has been noted in the earlier part of this judgment is that
the Legislature enjoys a wide latitude in the matter of selection
of persons subject-matter, events etc. for taxation. …
From the perusal of above case law, the following principles of
Constitutional interpretation with regard to the Entries in the
legislative lists emerge: -
(1)
The entries in the Legislative Lists of the Constitution are
not powers of legislation but only fields of legislative
heads;
(2)
In construing the words in an Entry conferring legislative
power on a legislative authority, the most liberal construction
should be put upon the words.
(3)
While interpreting an Entry in a Legislative List it should be
given widest possible meaning and should not be read in a
narrow or restricted sense;
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 43 :-
(4)
Each general word in an entry should be considered to extend
to all ancillary or subsidiary matters which can fairly and
reasonably be said to be comprehended in it;
(5)
If there appears to be apparent overlapping in respect of the
subject-matter of a legislation, an effort has to be made to
reconcile the Entries to give proper and pertinent meaning to
them.
(6)
A general power ought not to be so construed so as to make a
particular power conferred by the same legislation and
operating in the same filed a nullity.
(7)
Legislation under attack must be scrutinized in its entirety to
determine its true character in pith and substance;
(8)
After considering the legislation as a whole in pith and
substance, it has to be seen as to with respect to which topic or
category of legislation in the various fields, it deals
substantially and directly and not whether it would in actual
operation affect an item in the forbidden field in an indirect
way.
15.
In the light of the above principles, now we shall
consider the vires of the Federal legislation i.e. IRA 2012. In this
regard, the most important aspect of the matter is that there are
two types of establishments/organizations/ industries; firstly,
the industries, etc. functioning within the territorial limits of
one Province only, and secondly, certain other establishments,
etc. functioning within the territorial limits of more than one
Province or even in all the four Provinces as well as the Federal
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 44 :-
Capital Territory. Now the moot question arises whether,
notwithstanding the fact that the authority to legislate with
regard to the matters concerning the trade unions and unfair
labour practices vests with the Federal Legislature or not, a
Provincial legislature can legislate with regard to the trade
union/establishments functioning at trans-provincial level. In
this regard it is to be noted that Article 97 of the Constitution
provides that “subject to the Constitution, the executive authority of the
Federation shall extend to the matters with respect to which the both
Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament) has power to make laws, including
exercise of rights, authority and jurisdiction in and in relation to areas
outside Pakistan”. Under the said Article, the executive authority of
the Federation is not restricted to the areas within Pakistan but also
extended in relation to the areas outside Pakistan. However, as per
proviso thereto, “the said authority shall not, save as expressly
provided in the Constitution or in any law made by Majlis-e-Shoora
(Parliament), extend in any Province to a matter with respect to which
the Provincial Assembly has also power to make laws”. Under Article
137 of the Constitution, “subject to the Constitution, the executive
authority of the Province shall extend to the matters with respect to
which the Provincial Assembly has power to make laws”. As per
proviso thereto, “in any matter with respect to which both Majlis-e-
Shoora (Parliament) and the Provincial Assembly of a Province have
power to make laws, the executive authority of the Province shall be
subject to, and limited by, the executive authority expressly conferred
by the Constitution or by law made by Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament)
upon the Federal Government or authorities thereof”. Further, as per
Article 141 of the Constitution, “subject to the Constitution, Majlis-e-
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 45 :-
Shoora (Parliament) may make laws (including laws having extra-
territorial operation) for the whole or any part of Pakistan, and a
Provincial Assembly may make laws for the Province or any part
thereof”. Under Article 142 of the Constitution, the Parliament has
exclusive power to make laws with respect to (1) any matter in the
FLL, (2) criminal law, criminal procedure and evidence and (3) all
matters pertaining to such areas in the Federation as are not
included in any Province; whereas, a Provincial Assembly has power
to make laws with respect to (1) criminal law, criminal procedure and
evidence and (2) any matter not enumerated in the FLL. Under Article
232(2) of the Constitution, in case of emergency, the Legislative
authority of the Federation extends to enacting laws for a Province, or
any part thereof, with respect to any matter not enumerated in the
FLL. Thus, from the above provisions of the Constitution it is clear
that the Federal Legislature has extra-territorial authority to legislate,
but no such extra-territorial authority has been invested with the
Provincial Legislature. Thus, the Provincial Legislature has no
legislative competence to legislate law regulating the trade
unions functioning at trans-provincial level. Needless to observe
that to deal with such a matter, the Constitution itself has provided a
mechanism i.e. entries No.58 and 59 in Part-I of FLL, whereby the
Federal Legislature has been mandated to legislate in order to
preserve and regulate a right, which in its exercise transcends
provincial boundaries, especially one guaranteed under Article 17 of
the Constitution. The scope of Entries No.58 and 59 shall be
discussed in detail at the latter part of the judgment, considering the
scope of the Entries in the FLL.
16.
Having decided the question regarding the legislative
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 46 :-
competence of the Provincial legislature, now we shall consider
the question whether the IRA 2012 is a valid piece of legislation or
not, and whether by promulgating the said Act, the Federal
Legislature has gone beyond its legislative competence and
encroached upon the authority of the Provincial Legislature. In this
regard it is to be noted that although through the Eighteenth
Amendment the CLL (Entries No.26 and 27 whereof covered the subjects, inter alia,
of labour disputes and trade unions) was abolished from the Constitution,
however, a new Entry No.32 in Part-I of the FLL was introduced
which covered the subjects of “International treaties, conventions and
agreements and International arbitration”. Previously, somewhat
similar subjects were available in Entry No.3 of Part-I of the FLL, i.e.
“External affairs; the implementing of treaties and agreements,
including educational and cultural pacts and agreements, with other
countries; extradition, including the surrender of criminals and accused
persons to Governments outside Pakistan”. It has been argued by the
learned counsel for the appellants that if the interpretation of Entry
No.3 of Part-I of FLL as made by the learned High Courts is presumed
to be correct, then the Federal legislature could enlarge its legislative
powers and legislate on any subject it chooses simply because the
Executive has signed a treaty in relation to that topic; this would
negate the basic concept of division of powers on which our
constitutional structure has been erected. In this regard it is to be
noted that the Parliament through Eighteenth constitutional
amendment, though abolished the CLL which contained the subjects
of labour practices and trade unions (Entries No.26 and 27 of the CLL), but
with conscious application of mind, through insertion of the new
Entry No.32 ibid in the FLL, brought within the legislative
competence of the Federal Legislature the matters relating to the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 47 :-
international treaties, conventions, etc.; obviously, while doing so, it
(Parliament) was conscious of the fact that the matters relating to trade
unions and labour disputes, etc., have been dealt with and protected
under the International Labour Organization’s Conventions No.87
(Convention concerning Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise)
and 98 (Convention concerning the Application of the Principles of the Right to Organise
and to Bargain Collectively) which are covered under Entries No.3 and 32 of
Part-I of the FLL. Thus, the Federal Legislature has legislative
competence to legislate in this regard to discharge the obligations
created under the International Treaties and Conventions. Therefore,
the IRA 2012 has been validly enacted by the Parliament.
17.
Additionally, Entries No.58 and 59, which fall at the end
of the Part-I of the FLL, have their own significance. These two entries
are independent and unfettered. Entry No.58 ibid covers the “Matters
which under the Constitution are within the legislative competence of
Majlis- e-Shoora (Parliament) or relate to the Federation”. Further,
Entry No.59 deals with the “Matters incidental or ancillary to any
matter enumerated in this Part”. From the plain reading of these two
Entries, it is clear that besides the subjects enumerated in the
previous Entries, these Entries provide extended powers to the
Federal Legislature; inasmuch as, by means of these Entries, the
legislative competence of the Federal Legislature extends not only to
the matters which under the Constitution are within the legislative
competence of the Parliament but also to the matters which relate
to the Federation and also the matters incidental or ancillary
thereto. Thus, in addition to the matters specifically enumerated in
any of the Entries in Part-I of the FLL, the matters which in some way
relate to the Federation would also fall within the legislative
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 48 :-
competence of the Parliament. This interpretation also finds support
from the fact that in terms of Article 141 of the Constitution, a
Provincial Legislature does not possess extra-territorial legislative
competence and therefore, cannot legislate with regard to a subject
which in its application has to transcend the provincial boundaries. It
is to be noted that as clarified by the learned High Court the resort to
Entry No.58 ibid could only be made to deal with an extra-ordinary
situation i.e. when a matter may fall within the legislative competence
of the Province but when it comes to its application it has to travel
beyond the territorial boundaries of the Province, bringing it into the
domain of the Federal Legislation. Thus, it is held that the federal
legislature has the competence to legislate relating to the
Establishments/Trade Unions functioning at the Federal as well as
trans-provincial level.
18.
There is yet another Entry in Part-II of the FLL which
provides the legislative authority to the Federal Legislation, namely,
entry No. 13 which covers “Inter-provincial matters and co-ordination”.
This Entry also has two parts, firstly, the inter-provincial matters
and secondly, inter-provincial co-ordination. It is clear that under the
command of this Entry too, the Federation has competence to enact
laws relating to the inter-provincial matters/Trade Unions. Further,
Entry No.18 thereof covers the “Matters incidental or ancillary to
any matter enumerated in this Part”. This Entry further enlarges the
scope of the above Entry. Thus, it is held that even on the basis of
Entries No.13 and 18 ibid, the IRA 2012 is a valid piece of legislation.
19.
As we have already held that the subjects of labour and
trade unions fall within the scope of Entries no.3, 32, 58 and 59 of
Part-I and Entry No.13 and 18 of Part-II of FLL, we do not deem it
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 49 :-
appropriate to enter into the scope of Entries No.27 and 31 as also
other Entries which have been relied upon by the learned High Court
to uphold the validity of Federal legislations.
20.
At this juncture it is to be noted that when a provincial
legislature is not competent to legislate with regard to the workmen of
trans-provincial establishments, obviously the Federation has to
interfere in the matter with a Federal Legislation to preserve and
protect the fundamental rights of the said workmen ensured under
Article 17 of the Constitution. We are in agreement with the
observation made by the learned High Court that though in a Federal
system, provincial autonomy means capacity of a province to govern
itself without interference from the Federal Government or the
Federal legislature, but as the Provincial legislature does not possess
extra-territorial legislative authority i.e. it cannot legislate regarding
the establishments operating beyond the territorial boundaries of
that province. In absence of a Federal legislation, the right to form a
trade union that can operate beyond the provincial boundaries could
not be secured by any provincial law, and as such, any matter or
activity of a trans-provincial nature would remain unregulated. The
only solution to the above said problem is a Federal legislation. The
effect of non-promulgation of IRA 2012 would be that the employer
would not recognize the right of the workmen to form a countrywide
trade union and carry out unified activities in his establishment at
trans-provincial level; and also the number of workmen working in
each unit of an establishment working in a certain Province would be
counted separately which in turn would have adverse impact on the
rights of the workmen, in so far as applicability of benefits and
security of job granted under various labour laws are concerned as
certain rights granted under various labour laws become available to
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 50 :-
the workmen depending upon the total strength of the workmen in an
establishment. Needless to observe that as mentioned in its
preamble, the object of promulgation of IRA 2012 is “to consolidate
and rationalize the law relating to formation of trade unions, and
improvement of relations between employers and workmen in the
Islamabad
Capital
Territory
and
in
trans-provincial
establishments and industry”. Further, as per Section 3 thereof “it
shall apply to all persons employed in any establishment or
industry, in the Islamabad Capital Territory or carrying on
business in more than one province”. Hence, the parliament in its
wisdom has intentionally left it for a Province to make legislation
concerning the establishments/trade unions functioning only within
the limits of that Province, without transgressing the territorial limits
of the said Province. Thus, neither does the IRA 2012 in any manner,
defeat the object of the Eighteenth Amendment nor does it destroys
or usurps the provincial autonomy or the principle on which the
Federation was formed under the Constitution; rather it facilitates to
regulate the right to form unions at trans-provincial level, which
could not be attained through a provincial law.
21.
With regard to the question about the jurisdiction of the
NIRC formed under Section 25 of the Industrial Relations Act 2008
(which stood repealed w.e.f. 01.05.2010) in the interregnum till the
promulgation of IRA 2012, suffice it to say that as held by this Court
in Air League of Piac Employees’s case (supra) during the
interregnum period w.e.f. 01.05.2010, when no Industrial Relations
Law was holding the field, the workers had remedy under the
ordinary laws prevailing at that time, because in absence of a
special law, the ordinary/general laws come forward to fill in the
vacuum. Further, the IRO 2012 does not destroy any existing right,
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 51 :-
rather by means of Section 33 thereof, all the existing rights stood
preserved and protected, as such, it cannot be said that it affects any
right or obligation created by other laws, including any provincial
law. This Court has dealt with the issue of applicability of laws
during the interregnum period when any law was repealed or
declared ultra vires, and it has been repeatedly held that at the
best the newly enacted law would be deemed to have retrospective
effect by necessary implication because such change would only be
deemed to be procedural [see: Government of N.-W.F.P. v. Said
Kamal Shah (PLD 1986 SC 360) and Sarfraz v. Muhammad
Aslam Khan (2001 SCMR 1062)]. The Labour Laws provide the
procedure and mechanism for the resolution of disputes,
registration of Trade Unions and establishment of Forum for the
redressal of grievance of the labourers as well as employers,
therefore, it is mainly a procedural law and in the light of the well
settled principles of interpretation of Statutes, the procedural law
has retrospective effect unless contrary is provided expressly or
impliedly [see: Air League of Piac Employees’s case (supra)].
Thus, it is held that the IRA 2012 would be applicable
retrospectively w.e.f. 01.05.2010, when the IRO 2008 ceased to
exist.
22.
There is yet another question involved in the matter,
namely, the appellant-Shaheen Airport Services is a charitable
organizations or not. It is the case of the appellant that charitable
organizations are excluded from the operation of both the federal and
provincial law, therefore, regardless of the question whether the
appellant is a trans-provincial establishment for purposes of the
federal law or whether it comes within the ambit of the provincial law,
the appellant falls outside the purview of both the IRA, 2012 and the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 52 :-
SIRA, 2013, resultantly, no trade union can be registered within the
appellant. In this regard it is to be noted that the learned High Court
has considered this question in detail and has held that the Federal
law was applicable to Shaheen Airport Services as the same was
operative in more than one Province and that Shaheen Airport
Services did not qualify as a charitable organization in view of the
activities that were entailed in the operation of its business. We are in
agreement with the findings of the learned High Court.
23.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeals as also the
petition are dismissed and it is held as under: -
(1)
the Federal Legislature has extra-territorial authority but
no such extra-territorial authority has been conferred to
the Provincial Legislature by the Constitution;
(2)
the Federal legislature does, but the Provincial
Legislature does not, have legislative competence to
legislate to regulate the trade unions functioning at
trans-provincial level;
(3)
the matters relating to trade unions and labour disputes,
etc., having been dealt with and protected under the
International Conventions, are covered under Entries
No.3 and 32 of Part-I of the FLL. Thus, the Federal
Legislature has legislative competence to legislate in this
regard;
(4)
under the command of Entry No.13 in Part-II of the FLL,
the Federation has competence to enact laws relating to
the inter-provincial matters, Entry No.18 thereof further
enlarges the scope of the said Entry; therefore, the
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 53 :-
Federal Legislature has legislative competence to legislate
in this regard too;
(5)
the IRA 2012 neither defeats the object of the Eighteenth
Amendment to the Constitution nor does it destroy or
usurp the provincial autonomy;
(6)
the IRA 2012 has been validly enacted by the Parliament
and is intra vires the Constitution;
(7)
the workers of the establishments/industries functioning
in the Islamabad Capital Territory or carrying on
business in more than one provinces shall be governed
by the Federal legislation i.e. IRO 2012; whereas, the
workers of establishments/industries functioning or
carrying on business only within the territorial limits of a
province shall be governed by the concerned provincial
legislations;
(8)
as we have held that the IRA 2012 is valid piece of
legislation, it is held that the National Industrial
Relations Commission (NIRC) formed under Section 35 of
the IRA 2012 has jurisdiction to decide the labour
disputes, etc., relating to the employees/workers of
companies/corporations/institutions/establishments
functioning in more than one Province;
(9)
the IRA 2012, being a procedural law, would be
applicable retrospectively w.e.f. 01.05.2010, when the
IRO 2008 ceased to exist; and
(10)
M/s Shaheen Airport Services is not a charitable
Civil Appeals No.1583 to 1598 of 2014 etc.
-: 54 :-
organization and IRA 2012 is applicable to it as it is
operating in more than one Province.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 28.3.2018 at Islamabad.
Approved for reporting
Waqas/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1583_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE ANWAR ZAHEER JAMALI, CJ
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM
MR. JUSTICE MANZOOR AHMAD MALIK
CIVIL APPEAL NOs.158 & 159/2006
(Against the judgment dated 6.1.2003 of the Lahore High
Court, Rawalpindi Bench passed in W.Ps. No.542 of
1995&1220 of 1993)
Zila Council Jehlum through District Coordination Officer
…Appellant(s)
(in both cases)
VERSUS
M/s Pakistan Tobacco Company Ltd. and another . . . C.A.No.158/2006
ICI Pakistan, Soda Ash Works and another . . . C.A.No.159/2006
…Respondent(s)
* * * * *
For the appellant(s):
(in both cases)
Malik Qamar Afzal, ASC
For the respondent(s):
Mr. Farrukh Jawad Panni, ASC
(In C.A.No.158/2006)
Mr. Shahid Hamid, Sr. ASC
(In C.A.No.159/2006)
Date of hearing:
11.2.2016.
…
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- These appeals, by leave of the Court, entail
the facts, in that, the appellant is a Zila Council constituted under the
provisions of the Punjab Local Government Ordinance, 1979 (the Ordinance)
and is empowered to levy and collect various taxes including goods exit
tax (formerly known as export tax), whereas the respondents operate
manufacturing plants of cigarettes (in CA No.158/2006) and soda ash (in CA
No.159/2006) within the territorial limits of District Jhelum. The appellant
had earlier levied tax on the export of goods and animals from its
territorial limits on several items including the products of the
respondents in accordance with Rule 5(1) read with Rule 5(5) of the
Punjab Zila Council (Goods Exit Tax) Rules, 1990. Aggrieved of the said
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:2:-
levy, the respondents agitated the matter through the constitutional
jurisdiction of the High Court, which ultimately came to this Court and
was resolved [in the judgment reported as Zila Council, Jhelum Vs. I.C.I. Pakistan Ltd.
(Formerly ICI Pakistan Manufacturers Limited), Khewra, District Jhelum and another (1993
SCMR 454)] as under:
“As per the Notification dated 24-4-1990, referred to above,
even goods in transit have been declared liable to payment of
export tax if they remained in the limits of Zila Council beyond
certain time limit which might have been fixed by now. As
such, the burden of proof regarding each item of export of
soda ash while in transit is on the exporter to satisfy the
authorities of the Zila Council at the terminal that the goods
are in transit and are being exported within the prescribed
time limit. The impugned notification was not without lawful
authority and the learned High Court has legally erred in
declaring it as such.”
Subsequently, the respondents again approached the High Court in its
constitutional jurisdiction on the ground that despite the judgment of
this Court in Zila Council, Jhelum (supra) the appellant continued to
raise demands for goods exit tax even on those goods with respect to
which the respondents were able to furnish proof that they remained
within the territorial limits of the appellant for less than 24 hours. It was
during the pendency of the said constitutional petitions that the Punjab
Local Government (Fourth Amendment) Ordinance, 1996 (Ordinance II of
1996) (the Amendment Ordinance) and then the Punjab Local Government
(Fourth Amendment) Act, 1996 (Act I of 1996) (the Amendment Act) were
promulgated on 4.2.1996 and 21.5.1996 respectively amending the
definition of ‘zila’ in the Ordinance to include urban areas for the
purposes of goods exit tax. The original and the amended definition(s) of
‘zila’ are reproduced herein below:-
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:3:-
Original definition
“3(1)(Ix)
‘zila’ means a Revenue District as notified under
the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1967 (XVII of 1967) but
excluding its urban areas and Cantonment areas.”
Amended definition
“3(1)(Ix)
‘zila’ means the Revenue District as notified
under the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1967 (XVII of 1967)
excluding its urban areas but for purposes of tax on the
export of goods and animals the zila, including its urban
areas; and”
(Emphasis supplied)
The effect of the amendment has been to bring the respondents within
the territorial jurisdiction of the appellant for the purposes of goods exit
tax (it is undisputed that the respondents fall within the urban areas). It is pertinent to
mention that this amendment has been given retrospective effect by
virtue of Section 1(2) of both the Amendment Ordinance and Amendment
Act, which (sections) read as follows (as they are identical, they are being reproduced
once to avoid repetition):-
“1(2)
It shall come into force at once and shall be
deemed to have taken effect on the 1st day of July 1990.”
As a result of the aforesaid developments, the respondents amended
their petitions so as to challenge the amended law. It is pertinent to
mention that the goods exit tax was abolished on 29.6.1999 vide the
Punjab Local Government (Amendment for Abolition of Certain Taxes)
Ordinance, 1999 (Ordinance XXIX of 1999) (the Abolition Ordinance). The two
main questions involved in the matter before the High Court were, firstly
whether the appellant was competent to levy and recover goods exit tax
from the respondents on goods in transit and secondly whether the
amendment could be given retrospective effect. The learned High Court
has, through the impugned judgment, answered the first question
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:4:-
against the respondents by holding that the appellant was authorized to
levy and collect goods exit tax from the respondents’ goods in transit
from 21.5.1996 to 29.6.1999 (the period between the promulgation of the Amendment
Act and the Abolition Ordinance), whereas in the second question, it was held
that the amendment could not have been given retrospective effect.
Thereafter the appellant approached this Court and leave was granted
vide order dated 31.1.2006 to consider the following propositions:-
“(i) Whether a legislative enactment can be promulgated
with retrospective effect and if so, whether a fiscal liability can
be created retrospectively?
(ii)
What is the effect of repeal of the amending statute
within the contemplation of section 6 of the West Pakistan
General Clauses Act, 1956?
(iii) Whether petitioner Zila Council would be entitled to
enforce the recovery of tax for the intervening period during
which the law authorized it to levy and collect export tax on
goods?
(iv)Whether ICA was competent against the judgment rendered
in these writ petitions by learned Single Judge and as to what
is legal impact of not filing such appeal before a Division
Bench of the High Court?”
However, during the course of hearing, learned counsel for the appellant
candidly conceded that the only question to be resolved in these matters
is whether the amendment brought by the Amendment Ordinance would
have retrospective effect or not.
2.
Learned counsel for the appellant states that the goods exit
tax could be validly levied and collected retrospectively in light of the
judgment reported as Zila Council, Jhang, District Jhang through
Administrator and others Vs. Messrs Daewoo Corporation, Kot
Ranjeet, Sheikhupura through Director Contract and others (2001
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:5:-
SCMR 1012) wherein the definition of ‘zila’ (as amended) was examined. He
also relied on Zila Council, Sialkot through Administrator Vs. Abdul
Ghani Proprietor Iqbal Brothers, Sialkot and others (PLD 2004 SC
425) and Molasses Trading & Export (Pvt.) Limited Vs. Federation of
Pakistan and others (1993 SCMR 1905) to support his contention that
retrospective application of a fiscal statute is permissible. He argued that
where the wording of a statute is clear, the literal meaning is to be taken
and since retrospective application has been expressly provided for in
Sections 1(2) of the Amendment Ordinance and Amendment Act, hence
the goods exit tax will take effect from 1.7.1990. Further, the only
protection which could be available to the respondents is regarding past
and closed transaction(s) and this has not been proved by them. Learned
counsel also argued that having collected tax from the consumer, the
incidence of tax has been passed onto them, and consequently the
respondents cannot retain the benefit and be enriched on that account,
which (benefit) was the right of the appellant.
3.
Mr. Shahid Hamid, learned counsel for the respondent (in CA
No.159/2006) has categorically stated that no amount was included in the
bills to the consumers nor collected from them on the basis of the goods
exit tax for the period prior to 21.5.1996, the date of the Amendment Act,
rather the said respondent has paid all its goods exit tax from 21.5.1996
till 29.6.1999, the date of abolishment of the said tax. In support of his
contention that retrospective effect cannot be given to the amending law
he relied upon the judgments reported as Zila Council, Jhang (supra),
Zakaria H. A. Sattar Bilwani and another Vs. Inspecting Additional
Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Range-II, Karachi (2003 SCMR 271)
and Molasses Trading (supra). He further argued that considering the
subsequent amendments in the law which do not provide for such
retrospective effect, the intent of the legislature is clear in that it did not
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:6:-
want retrospective application of the said tax. Learned counsel for the
respondent (in CA No.158/2006) has argued that the said respondent’s
product was sold at its retail price which is the maximum price and
therefore, they could not and did not collect or pass on any goods exit tax
to the consumer (unlike sales and/or excise tax). He further submitted that any
enactment passed during the pendency of a case would not apply to such
a case unless clearly provided in the enactment itself. In this regard
reliance was placed upon Muhammad Hussain and others Vs.
Muhammad and others (2000 SCMR 367), Nabi Ahmed and another
Vs. Home Secretary, Government of West Pakistan, Lahore and 4
others (PLD 1969 SC 599) and Income-Tax Officer, Central Circle II,
Karachi and another Vs. Cement Agencies Ltd. (PLD 1969 SC 322).
4.
Heard. As conceded by the learned counsel for the appellant
the foundational question involved in these cases is whether the goods
exit tax could be levied and collected retrospectively by virtue of the
Amendment Ordinance and Amendment Act. In order to answer this
question, we find it necessary to elucidate the law regarding
interpretation of fiscal statutes and retrospective operation of laws.
Although the Legislature can legislate prospectively and retrospectively,
such power is subject to certain constitutional and judicially recognised
restrictions. According to the canons of construction, every statute
including amendatory statutes is prima facie prospective, based on the
principle of nova constitutio futuris formam imponere debet, non praeteritis
(which means ‘a new law ought to regulate what is to follow, not the past’ as per Osborn:
Concise Law Dictionary); unless it is given retrospective effect either expressly
or by necessary implication. In other words, a statute is not to be applied
retrospectively in the absence of express enactment or necessary
intendment, especially where the statute is to affect vested rights, past
and closed transactions or facts or events that have already occurred.
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:7:-
This principle(s) is attracted to fiscal statutes which have to be construed
strictly, for they tend to impose liability and are therefore burdensome (as
opposed to beneficial legislation). Furthermore, it is not only the wording/text of
the statute which is to be considered in isolation; we are not to examine
simpliciter whether such law has a retrospective effect or not, rather it
has to be examined holistically by considering several factors such as,
the dominant intention of the legislature which is to be gathered from the
language used, the object indicated or the mischief meant to be cured,
the nature of rights affected, and the circumstances under which the
statute is passed.
A bare reading of the Amendment Ordinance and the Amendment
Act including the preamble and particularly Section(s) 1(2) (reproduced
above), which is the section providing for retrospective effect, does not
reflect a clear intendment or a rationale for the levy and collection of
goods exit tax retrospectively through amendment of the definition of
‘zila’ so as to include urban areas. Rather, such amendment is a precise
indication of the fact that it was perhaps done to fill in a supposed
lacuna which developed as a result of this Court’s judgment in Zila
Council, Jhelum (supra) whereby entities including the respondents who
fell outside the territorial limits of the appellant could avoid payment of
goods exit tax by establishing that their goods-in-transit remained within
the territorial limits of the appellant for less than 24 hours. It may be
pertinent to mention here that according to the settled rules of
interpretation of a fiscal part of a statute, the charging section is the key
and pivotal provision which imposes a fiscal liability upon a
taxpayer/person, thus it should be strictly construed and applied. If a
person does not clearly fall within the four corners of the charging
section of such a statute he cannot be saddled with a tax liability. Thus,
mere amendment of the definition clause of 3(1)(Ix) of the Ordinance and
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:8:-
inclusion of the urban areas as a part of a zila for the purposes of goods
exit tax, with effect from 1.7.1990 does not express a clear intent. For
expression of clear intent it would be necessary to change the relevant
charging provision for the purposes of retrospective tax liability. The
change ibid, restricted as it is to a change in the definition clause, cannot
be considered to reflect the requisite intendment of the legislature to
impose the said tax with retrospective effect. Reliance may be placed
upon the case cited as Nagina Silk Mill, Lyallpur Vs. The Income Tax
Officer, a-Ward Lyallpur (PLD 1963 SC 322) wherein a five member
bench of this Court held as under:-
“The Court must lean against giving a statute retrospective
operation on the presumption that the Legislature does not
intend what is unjust. It is chiefly where the enactment would
prejudicially affect vested rights, or the legality of past
transactions, or impair existing contracts, that the rule in
question prevails. Reference may be made in this connection to
page 206 of Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statutes, Eleventh
Edition. Even if two interpretations are equally possible, the
one that saves vested rights would be adopted in the interest of
justice, specially where we are dealing with a taxing statute.”
Reliance placed upon the Molasses Trading case (supra) by the learned
counsel for the appellant is misplaced as that case involved the
interpretation and retrospectivity of the charging sections itself, which is
not the situation in the instant matters. Furthermore, the law recognises
that provisions of statute should not be read in a way that would lead to
obliteration of rights and liabilities that have accrued as a result of past
and closed transactions. In this respect this Court has held in Province
of East Pakistan Vs. Sharafatullah (PLD 1970 SC 514) as under:-
“In other words liabilities that are fixed or rights that have been
obtained by the operation of law upon facts or events for or
perhaps it should be said against which the existing law
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:9:-
provided are not to be disturbed by a general law governing
future rights and liabilities unless the law so intends.”
In the case of Molasses Trading (supra), a five member bench of this
Court by a three to two majority, was of the opinion that since the Bills
of Entries of the imported goods were presented prior to 1.7.1988 which
was the date on which Section 31-A of the Customs Act, 1969 (which section
essentially provided for a rate of duty applicable to certain goods) was enacted and
enforced, thus they were past and closed transactions which could not
be destroyed or reopened by applying Section 31-A ibid retrospectively. In
this regard the Court held:-
“Inevitably therefore a vested right has been created and the
transaction is closed by the quantification of the tax, if any, or
by the discharge of liability on that date…Viewed in this
perspective, if effect is given to the provisions of section 31-A so
as to undo the discharge of the liability which had already taken
effect, it will amount to re-opening a past and closed
transaction. The simple reason is that under the existing law
there was no further liability to pay the tax and by giving
retrospective operation to the new dispensation a liability is
being created for the payment of the tax. I cannot see anything
in the language of section 31-A, expressly or by necessary
intendment, to that effect. Such result is therefore not a
necessary corollary of the fiction created by the deeming
provisions of section 5 of the Finance Act, 1988. Otherwise also
it will be contrary of the principle, mentioned above, namely,
that liabilities once fixed or rights created by operation of law
upon facts or events, must not be disturbed by a general
provisions given retrospective effect unless such intention is
clearly manifested by the language employed.”
In any event, as the goods of the respondents have come and gone
through the terminals of the appellant in transit over several years and
such goods having passed through numerous hands and being sold to
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:10:-
various persons including wholesalers, retailers and consumers
culminating into several binding contracts prior to the amendment in the
definition of ‘zila’, thus this is clearly a fit case of past and closed
transaction(s) and it has been conceded by the learned counsel for the
appellant that a past and closed transaction cannot be reopened by a
retrospective interpretation of the impugned provision (subject to the clear,
unequivocal and explicit intention of the Legislature which as we have held above is not the case
in the instant matters). Viewed from this perspective, we are not persuaded to
give such effect to the provisions of the amended law so as to undo all of
the concluded transactions mentioned above as it would amount to re-
opening of past and closed transactions and that would disrupt of rights
and liabilities that have been created in the past. We observe that the
finding of the learned High Court in this regard is correct.
5.
With respect to the reliance placed upon Zila Council, Jhang
case (supra) by the learned counsel for the appellant, suffice it to say that
the following opinion of the judgment goes against the appellant, which
is reproduced as under:-
“…thus, the question of its realization with effect from
1.7.1990 does not arise because retrospective effect could
be given to the definition of ‘Zila’ but no liability can be
created retrospectively.”
(Emphasis supplied)
As far as the case of Zila Council, Sialkot (supra) is concerned, it may be
mentioned that the earlier view of this Court in Muhammad Hussain’s
case (supra) has not been taken into account, wherein while interpreting
the provisions of an identically phrased section (except for the date) of an
amendatory statute giving retrospective effect to an amendment, the
Court came to the conclusion that:-
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:11:-
“However, the question which arises for consideration is,
whether the words used in section 1(2) of Act X of 1992 are
wide enough to take away the vested rights or to undo past and
closed transactions. In our view, by merely providing in
subsection (2) of section 1 ibid that the “provisions of the Act
shall be deemed to have taken effect from 31-12-1991”, the suits
already filed in accordance with the existing provision of
section 31 of Act of 1987 could not be rendered not-
maintainable.”
Obviously, on this account the judgment of Zila Council, Sialkot (supra)
is per incuriam, as it has failed to take into consideration the principles
of interpretation laid down by this Court to the effect that while the
Legislature can enact statutes retrospectively, where the vested rights of
certain persons may be affected, such retrospective enactments must be
construed strictly. This principle has been succinctly enunciated by the
five member bench of this Court in Muhammad Hussain (supra) as
follows:-
“It is a well-settled principle of interpretation that there is a
strong presumption against the retrospectivity of a legislation
which touches or destroys the vested rights of the parties. No
doubt the Legislature is competent to give retrospective effect to
an Act and can also take away the vested rights of the parties,
but to provide for such consequences, the Legislature must use
the words which are clear, unambiguous and are not capable of
any other interpretation or such interpretation follows as a
necessary implication from the words used in the enactment.
Therefore, while construing a legislation which has been given
retrospective effect and interferes with the vested rights of the
parties, the words used therein must be construed strictly and no
case should be allowed to fall within the letter and spirit of Act
which is not covered by the plain language of the legislation.”
Additionally, the learned counsel for the appellant has not been able to
show us any evidence to the effect that any amount(s) of the disputed tax
Civil Appeals No.158 & 159 of 2006
-:12:-
was/were collected by the respondents from the consumers on the basis
of goods exit tax for the period prior to 1.7.1996. Even otherwise, we find
it contrary to logic and fail to understand as to how the respondents
could have conceivably collected from and thereby passed on the
incidence of such tax to the consumers, when it was not even levied and
payable as per the law at that time (prior to the amendment) by the
respondents who, being in the urban areas, stood excluded from the
territorial ambit of the appellant as per the earlier definition of ‘zila’.
6.
In view of the foregoing, we find that the goods exit tax cannot
be levied with retrospective effect in the circumstances, and the learned
High Court was correct in so holding.
7.
For the aforesaid detailed reasons the appellant’s civil appeals
were dismissed vide short order of even date, which reads as:-
“Arguments heard. For reasons to be recorded separately,
these appeals are dismissed.”
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
11th February, 2016
Approved For Reporting
Ghulam Raza/*
| {
"id": "C.A.158_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1590 TO 1598 OF 2006
(Against
the
judgment
dated
1.9.2005/22.3.2006/16.2.2006/
29.3.2006/8.3.2006/14.4.2006/2.5.2006/5.4.2006/26.4.2006 of the
High Court of Sindh, Karachi passed in ITR No.13/1999, 133/1997,
38/1998, 173/1997, 949/1999, 22/1993, 459/1990, 56/1995 & ITC
No.410/1997)
Commissioner of Income Tax Karachi
…Appellant(s)
(In all cases)
VERSUS
M/s Khalid Textile Mills
In C.A.1590/2006
M/s Karachi Electric Supply Corporation
In C.A.1591/2006
M/s Gulistan Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1592/2006
M/s Gul Ahmed Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1593/2006
M/s Faran Sugar Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1594/2006
M/s Mehran International Ltd.
In C.A.1595/2006
M/s National Printing & Packing Ltd.
In C.A.1596/2006
M/s Pfizer Laboratories Ltd.
In C.A.1597/2006
M/s Dewan Textile Mills Ltd.
In C.A.1598/2006
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Dr. Farhat Zafar, ASC
(In CA No.1590/2006)
Mr. Muhammad Habib Qureshi, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
(In CAs No.1591 to 1594/2006)
Mr. Muhammad Siddique Mirza, ASC
(In CA No.1595/2006)
For the respondent(s):
Mr. Iqbal Salman Pasha, ASC
(In CAs No.1590, 1591, 1593 to 1595, 1597 &
1598/2006AH32)
Ex-parte
(In CAs No.1592 & 1596/2006)
Dates of hearing:
7.2.2017 & 8.2.2017
…
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.- The question before this Court is
whether tax credit(s) available under Section 107 of the erstwhile
Income Tax Ordinance, 1979 (the Ordinance) were to be excluded while
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 2 :-
computing the actual cost of an asset in order to determine it’s written
down value for the purposes of calculating depreciation allowance in
terms of Rule 8(8)(b) of the Third Schedule to the Ordinance. .
2.
The brief facts (in Civil Appeals No.1590 to 1592 and 1595 to 1597/2006)
are that the respondents (assessees) are companies (both public and private
limited) deriving income from various industrial activities. In their returns
pertaining to various assessment years, they claimed tax credit(s) and
depreciation allowance under the Ordinance on their plants and
machinery.
The assessment orders calculated the depreciation
allowance after subtracting tax credit(s) from the written down value of
the assets, thereby curtailing the respondent’s claim of depreciation
allowance (note:- in Civil Appeal No.1597/2006, in the original assessment order,
depreciation allowance was calculated without subtracting tax credit. However when the
original assessment was re-opened under Section 66-A of the Ordinance, Inspecting Assistant
Commissioner of Income Tax ordered that depreciation allowance be calculated after
subtracting tax credit from the written down value of the assets, thereby curtailing the
respondent’s claim of depreciation allowance). The learned High Court passed the
impugned judgments in Income Tax references (references) in favour of
the respondents by relying upon Gulshan Spinning Mills Ltd. and
others Vs. Government of Pakistan and others (2005 PTD 259) (note:-
in Civil Appeal No.1595/2006, the learned High Court relied upon the impugned judgment
rendered in Civil Appeal No.1590/2006, i.e. ITR No.13/1999). This Court granted leave
vide order dated 5.10.2006 to consider the following:-
“(i)
Whether on the facts and circumstances of this
case Hon’ble High Court and Income Tax Appellate
Tribunal was justified in holding that assessee in (sic)
entitled to depreciation calculated on the W.D.V. of assets
without reducing there from (sic) the amount of tax credit
u/s 107 of the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979, despite of
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 3 :-
specific provision as laid down under rule 8(8)(b) of 3rd
Schedule of the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979.
(ii)
Whether on the facts and circumstances of this
case Hon’ble High Court after holding that tax credit u/s
107 not being in the nature of exemption, allowance and
deduction, has rightly allowed to exclude tax credit from
depreciation calculated on the W.D.V. of assets under
rule 8(8)(b) of 3rd Schedule of the Income Tax Ordinance,
1979.”
It bears mention that leave in these cases was granted on the basis of
the leave granting order dated 14.6.2005 passed in Civil Appeal Nos.612
to 636/2005 and although the noted cases were disposed of vide order
dated 3.4.2008 that was done on the basis of the parties’ consent.
Therefore, the aforementioned question of law remains to be determined
by this Court.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellant department (in Civil Appeal
Nos.1591 to 1594/2006) argued that tax credit applicable on plant and
machinery under Section 107 of the Ordinance fell within the
expression “value of assistance” received by an assessee from
Government or any other authority or person appearing in Rule 8(8)(b)
which (expression) had a wide connotation and the only type of assistance
it specifically excluded was that of any loan repayable with or without
interest. He submitted that Rule 8(8)(b) applied to tax credits under
Section 107 and therefore the impugned judgments were liable to be set
aside. According to him, when an assessee claimed tax credit at the rate
of 15% of the assets, the actual cost of the asset to the assesse was
accordingly reduced, as in terms of Rule 8(7)(b) the written down value
was to be calculated on the basis of the actual cost to the assessee and
not the total cost of the asset. His arguments were adopted by the
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 4 :-
learned counsel for the appellant in Civil Appeal Nos.1590/2006 and
1595/2006.
4.
Learned counsel for the respondents (in Civil Appeal Nos.1590,
1591, 1593 to 1595, 1597 and 1598/2006) argued that tax credit under Section
107 was claimed on the actual cost of plant and machinery which was
to be deducted from the tax payable for the year and not from the
taxpayer’s income, therefore, tax credit was not a grant, subsidy,
rebate, commission, deduction or allowance under the Ordinance.
According to him, the learned High Court rightly held that Rule 8(8)(b)
was not applicable to tax credits under Section 107. He relied on the
case of Gulshan Spinning Mills (supra).
5.
Heard. The relevant portions of Section 107 and Rule 8 (of
the Third Schedule) of the Ordinance are reproduced as under:-
“107. Tax credit for replacement, balancing and
modernisation of machinery or plant.- (1) Where an
assessee being a Pakistani company invests any amount
in the purchase of plant and machinery for installation at
any time between the first day of July, 1976 and the
thirtieth day of June, 1988 or between the first day of
July, 1990 and the thirtieth day of June, 1991, in an
industrial undertaking set up in Pakistan and owned by it,
for
the
purposes
of
replacement,
balancing
or
modernisation of the machinery and plant already
installed therein, credit at the rate of fifteen per cent of
the amount so invested shall be allowed against the tax
payable by it in the manner hereinafter provided.
Explanation.- As used in this sub-section,-
(a) "amount", in case of plant and machinery acquired on
lease, means the amount expended by the lessor in the
purchase of the said plant and machinery; and
(b) "purchase
of
plant
and
machinery"
includes
acquisition of plant and machinery on lease from a
scheduled bank, a financial institution or a leasing
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 5 :-
company on such terms and conditions as may be
approved by the Central Board of Revenue.
(2) The amount of credit admissible under this section
shall be deducted from the tax payable by the assessee in
respect of the income year in which the machinery or
plant in the purchase of which the amount referred to in
sub-section (1) is invested is installed.
(3) …………………………………………………………
(4) The provisions of sub-section (1) and (2) shall also
apply in the like manner to any plant and machinery
installed, for the purposes of extension of the industrial
undertaking:-
(i)
on or after the first day of July, 1978, and before
the thirtieth day of June, 1983 in the territories of
Pakistan; or
(ii)
on or after the first day of July, 1983, in the
territories of Pakistan (excluding Talukas of
Karachi
and
Hyderabad,
and
Tehsils
of
Faisalabad and Lahore, and such adjoining areas
of Lahore Tehsil as may be notified in this behalf
by the Federal Government).
⁞
(8) …………………………………………………………
THE THIRD SCHEDULE
(See Section 23)
RULES
FOR
THE
COMPUTATION
OF
DEPRECIATION ALLOWANCE
1. Allowances for depreciation. (1) Where, in any income
year, any building, machinery, plant or furniture owned
by an assessee is used for purposes of any business or
profession carried on by him…an allowance for
depreciation shall be made in computing the profits and
gains of the business or profession of the assessee in the
manner hereinafter provided.
8. Definitions.- For the purpose of this Schedule,-
(7) "written down value" means-
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 6 :-
(a)
in the case of a ship or any asset to which sub-rule
(3) of rule 2 applies,-
(i)
for purpose of rule 7, as in sub-clause (b),
and
(ii)
for any other purpose, the actual cost
thereof to the assessee; and
(b)
in the case of other assets,-
(i)
where the asset, was acquired in the
income year, the actual cost thereof to the
assessee; and
(ii)
where the asset, was acquired before the
income year, the actual cost thereof to the
assessee as reduced by the aggregate of
the allowance for depreciation allowed to
him under this Ordinance or the repealed
Act in respect of the assessments for
earlier years.
(8) For the purposes of clause (7),-
(a)
……………………………;
(b)
in computing the actual cost of an asset, the
amount of any grant, subsidy, rebate or
commission and the value of any assistance (not
being in the nature of any loan repayable with or
without interest) received by an assessee from
Government or any other authority or person and
any deduction or allowance admissible under this
Ordinance or the repealed Act shall be excluded;
⁞
(h)
……………………………………………………
Explanation……………………………………………”
6.
Chapter X of the Ordinance, particularly Sections 105 to
107AA, which pertained to tax credits for various types of investments,
is instructive in this regard. A tax credit is an incentive or relief given to
the taxpayer, usually for the purposes of promoting certain industries
or activities. Section 107 of the Ordinance allowed for tax credit at the
rate of 15% of the amount invested for the replacement, balancing and
modernization of machinery or a plant against the tax payable.
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 7 :-
According to Section 107(2) the amount of credit was to be deducted
from the tax payable by the assessee in respect of the income year in
which the said machinery or plant was installed. Tax credit was not
defined in the Ordinance. Black’s Law Dictionary (9th Ed.) defines it as
“an amount subtracted directly from one’s total tax liability, dollar for dollar, as
opposed to a deduction from gross income”. P. Ramanatha Aiyar’s Concise Law
Dictionary (4th Ed.) states, “Tax credit is a legal provision permitting taxpayers to
deduct specified sums from their tax liability”. The Oxford Advanced Learner’s
Dictionary of Current English (8th Ed.) provides that tax credit is “money
that is taken off your total tax bill”. Thus tax credit is an amount which is
directly offset against or adjusted/deducted from the tax liability and
not the gross income.
7.
The
relevant
provision
with
regard
to
depreciation
allowance was Section 23(1)(v) of the Ordinance according to which for
the purposes of computing income under the head “income from
business or profession”, certain allowances and deductions were
admissible in terms of the Third Schedule in respect of depreciation;
including First Year Allowance or Reinvestment Allowance or Industrial
Building Allowance, of any building, machinery, plant, furniture or
fittings, being the property of the assessee, except depreciation or First
Year Allowance on assets given on lease which was to be allowed against
income from lease rentals only, and such depreciation allowance was to
be computed in terms of the rules in the Third Schedule. In similar
terms, Rule 1 of the Third Schedule provided that where, in any income
year, any building, machinery, plant or furniture owned by an assessee
was used for purposes of any business or profession carried on by him,
or in any income year commencing on or after the first day of July,
1982, any machinery or plant was given on lease by the assessee, being
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 8 :-
a scheduled bank, a financial institution (or such modaraba or leasing company
as is) approved by the Central Board of Revenue for purposes of the
Third Schedule, an allowance for depreciation would be made in
computing the profits and gains of the business or profession of the
assessee. Rule 2 of the Third Schedule stipulated the various rates at
which depreciation allowance was admissible, which was a certain
percentage of the written down value of the asset. Rule 8 of the Third
Schedule contained the definitions of various words which were “For the
purpose of this [Third] Schedule” and Clause (7) thereof defined “written
down value” as reproduced above which was either the actual cost
thereof to the assessee or the actual cost thereof to the assessee
reduced by the depreciation allowance for assets acquired before the
income year in question. The actual cost of the asset to the assessee
was elucidated and clarified in Clause (8) which began with the phrase
“For the purposes of clause (7)”. Part (b) thereof stipulated that in
computing the actual cost of an asset, the following were to be
excluded:-
i.
the amount of any grant, subsidy, rebate or
commission and the value of any assistance (not being
in the nature of any loan repayable with or without interest) received
by an assessee from the Government or any other
authority or person; and
ii.
any deduction or allowance admissible under this
Ordinance or the repealed Act.
The word “excluded” needs to be elucidated. According to Chambers
21st Century Dictionary (2007), “exclude” means “to omit someone or
something or leave them out of consideration” while “excluding” means “not
counting; without including”. The Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of
Current English (8th Ed.) defines “exclude” as “to deliberately not include
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 9 :-
[something] in what you are doing or considering”. In the light of the
aforementioned definitions, exclude essentially means to remove from
consideration. The implication of this is significant. It means that the
amount of any grant, subsidy, rebate, or commission, and the value of
any assistance (not in the nature of any loan repayable with or without interest)
received by an assessee from the Government or any other authority or
person, and any deduction or allowance admissible under this
Ordinance (or the repealed Act) were not to be considered while computing
the actual cost of an asset. Therefore the interpretation adopted by the
learned counsel of both the parties to the effect that excluded meant
deducted or subtracted is absolutely incorrect and misconceived.
8.
The question is whether tax credit fell within the ambit of
Rule 8(8)(b) in the Third Schedule of the Ordinance in that it was not to
be considered while computing the actual cost of an asset. Rule 8(8)(b)
of the Third Schedule can be bifurcated into two parts as highlighted in
the preceding paragraph. The first part pertains to the amount of any
grant, subsidy, rebate or commission and the value of any assistance
(not being in the nature of any loan repayable with or without interest) received by an
assessee from Government or any other authority or person. In our view
tax credit does not fall within the domain of any of the these terms, i.e.
grant, subsidy, rebate, commission or the value of any assistance by
dint of the fact that they are not benefits received by an assessee under
the Ordinance but received otherwise from the Government or any other
authority or person. It is the second part of Rule 8(8)(b) which related to
any deduction or allowance admissible under the Ordinance (or the
repealed Act). We now need to determine whether tax credit fell within the
second part of Rule 8(8)(b), i.e. was it a deduction or allowance
admissible under the Ordinance?
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 10 :-
9.
Section 24 of the Ordinance categorically set out those
deductions which were not admissible under the Ordinance and
therefore did not fall within the ambit of Rule 8(8)(b). However various
types of deductions were allowed under the Ordinance. By way of
illustration, Sections 18, 20, 23 and 31 pertained to deductions to be
made whilst computing income under the heads interest on securities,
income from house property, income from business or profession and
income from other sources respectively. These were deductions made to
the total taxable income. According to Section 107(2) of the Ordinance,
the amount of credit admissible under Section 107 “shall be deducted from
the tax payable by the assessee…” [Emphasis supplied]. Therefore whilst tax credit
is undoubtedly a deduction, it is made against the tax payable as
mentioned in paragraph 6 of this opinion. It is pertinent to note that
Rule 8(8)(b) did not make any distinction between deductions from the
taxable income and deductions from the tax payable. The test was only
that of “any deduction…admissible under the Ordinance” (or the repealed Act) and
we are of the view that tax credit is a deduction albeit from the tax
payable [Section 107(2)] and being admissible under the Ordinance (Section
107) it clearly fell within the ambit of Rule 8(8)(b) of the Third Schedule.
Therefore, the key question identified in the opening paragraph of this
opinion is answered in the affirmative, in that, tax credit available
under Section 107 of the Ordinance did fall within the purview of Rule
8(8)(b) of the Third Schedule to the Ordinance and thus was to be
excluded or rather not to be considered while computing the actual cost
of an asset when determining the written down value thereof for the
purposes of calculating depreciation allowance.
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 11 :-
10.
In the case of Gulshan Spinning Mills (supra) relied upon by
the learned counsel for the respondents and the learned High Court in
the impugned judgments it was held that:-
“…tax credit is neither an allowance nor deduction
permissible under the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979, for
the purpose of determining the total income (assessed
income). It is not in the nature of exemption as well.
Anything in the nature of exemption, allowance or
deduction shall form part of the assessment order and
this, shall be integral part of the assessment process and
therefore, shall be allowed in accordance with law
prevailing in the assessment year. As held above, the tax
credit under section 107 of the Income Tax Ordinance, is
not in the nature of exemption, allowance or deduction for
the purpose of computing the income under the head
business or profession, therefore, it shall not be a part of
assessment process/assessment order.”
A perusal of the aforesaid extract makes it clear that the reference to
tax credit under Section 107 of the Ordinance in the said case was with
respect to the determination of total taxable income and not the written
down value of an asset for the purposes of depreciation allowance. The
issue at hand and the interpretation of Rule 8(8)(b) of the Third
Schedule was not under consideration in the case of Gulshan Spinning
Mills (supra).
11.
In the light of the above, Civil Appeals No.1590 to 1592 and
1595 to 1597/2006 are dismissed.
As regards Civil Appeals No.1593, 1594 and 1598/2006, the
issue involved (particularly before the learned High Court in the tax references) was not
whether tax credit should be considered while calculating the written
down value for the purposes of determining depreciation allowance.
Rather, the moot point was whether the dates of installation of the plant
and machinery were relevant for the purposes of claiming tax credit
Civil Appeal No.1590 of 2006 etc.
-: 12 :-
under Section 107 of the Ordinance, and not the date of purchase
thereof. This was the precise issue decided by the learned High Court in
Gulshan Spinning Mills (supra), however this was neither brought to the
attention of this Court during the leave granting stage and nor have we
received any assistance on this point, therefore the leave granting
order(s) in the noted cases are withdrawn and the petitions are
accordingly dismissed as no point requiring the grant of leave has been
made therein.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Announced in open Court
on 29.3.2017 at Islamabad
Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1590_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE TARIQ PERVEZ
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1600 OF 2006
(On appeal against the judgment dated 8.3.2006 passed
by the High Court of Sindh, Karachi in C.P Nos. 223,
224, 225 & 226 of 2003)
Indus Trading and Contracting Company
… Appellant
VERSUS
Collector of Customs (Preventive) Karachi and others
… Respondents
For the Appellant:
Mr. Issaq Ali Qazi, ASC
For the Respondent (1): Raja Muhammad Iqbal, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
For Respondents (2-3): Ex-parte
Date of Hearing:
04.01.2016
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.-Brief facts of this appeal are that at the end of
1995 and early 1996, the appellant imported two consignments of
medicines said to be living saving drugs. The import of such drugs
was free from Customs duty on the basis of the concession granted
under the Finance Act of 1995. Before these consignments arrived
at the port, the Federal Government issued SRO No. 1050(1)/95
dated 29th October, 1995 imposing 5% ad valorem regulatory duty
which the appellant paid and got the consignments released.
Subsequently, the appellant challenged the levy of regulatory duty
on the consignments in Constitution Petition No. D-1659/1996
that was filed in the High Court of Sindh. Thereafter, on
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
2
07.08.2002, the appellant withdrew it after seeking permission to
file it afresh. A couple of months later, the appellant filed another
constitution petition bearing No. D-226/2003 challenging the
imposition of the same regulatory duty. This petition was
dismissed vide impugned judgment dated 08.03.2006, after
holding regulatory duty was rightly charged on goods exempted
from customs duty. The appellant then turned to this Court for
relief in the present proceedings.
2.
Learned counsel for the appellant, Mr. Issaq Ali Qazi
argued that as long as import of such goods is free from duty on
the basis of the concession granted under the Finance Act, 1995,
no duty, much less regulatory duty, could have been lawfully
charged and the imposition of regulatory duty under the impugned
SRO No. 1050(1)/95 being based on subordinate legislation was
therefore illegal. He maintained that that imposition of regulatory
duty in effect nullified the concession of duty free import that was
granted under the provisions of Finance Act, 1995. He further
submitted that had the customs duty on such drugs and
medicines been zero-rated probably then the regulatory duty could
have been levied but as the import was free from customs duty, no
duty under any nomenclature could be lawfully imposed and the
learned Judges in the High Court failed to appreciate such
distinction. He concluded by submitting that this Court may order
refund of the regulatory duty that had been unlawfully charged
from the appellant at the import stage on the consignments in
question.
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
3
3.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent
No. 1 argued that the regulatory duty was charged and paid by the
appellant as far back as 1995 without any protest and thereafter
no departmental proceedings were initiated by it to challenge the
same. He submitted that even the first Constitution petition was
withdrawn after the decision of this Court in the case of Collector of
Customs Vs. Ravi Spinning Ltd (1999 SCMR 412) which validated
levy of regulatory duty, hence this appeal is liable to be dismissed.
4.
Before examining the merits of the case, we find it
necessary to state that at the stage when regulatory duty was
charged, the appellant ought to have challenged the same before
the forum provided under the Customs Act. Instead of doing that,
the appellant invoked the jurisdiction of the High Court under
Article 199(1) of the Constitution of Pakistan. Ordinarily, the
jurisdiction of the High Courts under Article 199 of the
Constitution should not be invoked where alternative forum under
a special law, duly empowered to decide the controversy is
available and functioning. Where a special law provides legal
remedy for the resolution of a dispute, the intention of the
legislature in creating such remedy is that the disputes falling
within the ambit of such forum be taken only before it for
resolution. The very purpose of creating a special forum is that
disputes should reach expeditious resolution headed by quasi
judicial or judicial officers who with their specific knowledge,
expertise and experience are well equipped to decide controversies
relating to a particular subject in a shortest possible time.
Therefore, in spite of such remedy being made available under the
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
4
law, resorting to the provisions of Article 199(1) of the
Constitution, as a matter of course, would not only demonstrate
mistrust on the functioning of the special forum but it is painful to
know that High Courts have been over-burdened with a very large
number of such cases. This in turn results in delays in the
resolution of the dispute as a large number of cases get decided
after several years. These cases ought to be been taken to forum
provided under the Special law instead of the High Courts. Such
bypass of the proper forum is contrary to the intention of the
provisions of Article 199(1) of the Constitution which confers
jurisdiction on the High Court only and only when there is no
adequate remedy is available under any law. Where adequate
forum is fully functional, the High Courts must deprecate such
tendency at the very initial stage and relegate the parties to seek
remedy before the special forum created under the special law to
which the controversy relates. We could have relegated the
appellant to seek remedy before the appropriate forum, however,
as the dispute in the present case is now more than twenty years
old, we for this reason only as matter of indulgence, proceed to
decide the controversy on its merits.
5.
Under Section 18 of the Customs Act, 1969, customs
duties are levied under different nomenclatures. Under Section
18(1) statutory customs duty is imposed whereas under Section
18(2) (after amendment regulatory duty is covered under Section
18(3) of the Customs Act) the legislature has empowered the
Federal
Government
to
impose
regulatory
duty
through
notifications. Therefore, statutory duty under Section 18(1) and
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
5
regulatory duty under Section 18(2) are two distinct categories of
duties. One should not be taken to be the same as the other. It is
by now well settled by the judicial pronouncements of this Court
that where import or export of any commodity enjoys exemption
from statutory customs duty, even then the Federal Government
can impose regulatory duty, within the confines described in
Section 18(2) of Customs Act through sub-ordinance legislation.
Where the legislature grants exemption from the payment of
customs duty that falls under Section 18(1), the same cannot be
made basis to avoid payment of regulatory duty imposed
subsequently unless there is also a promise that such concession
would also be applied to regulatory duty in case it is levied in
future. As the exemption in the present case does not contain such
a promise it is to be applied only to duty that was chargeable
under Section 18(2) and not to a duty which can be competently
levied under a different nomenclature. On this question, the
decision of this Court in the case of Collector of Customs Vs. Ravi
Spinning Ltd. (1999 SCMR 412) at page 443 can be referred with
considerable advance. In that case it was held as follows:
“………….It is not disputed that customs duties are not levied
only under section 18(1) of the Act but they are also levied
though under different nomenclature, under section 18(2) of
the Act and the Finance Act. The issuance of an exemption
notification under section 19 of the Act, therefore, presupposes
that the goods exempted are already subject to an existing
charge of the customs duty. The exemption notification,
therefore, ordinarily will not have within its purview a duty or
tax not in force or in existence, on the date of issuance of the
exemption notification. The exemption notification, while
exempting the goods from the existing charge of customs duty,
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
6
may, however, also provide that any future levy of customs
duty will also be exempted on to goods exempted from the
current and existing charge of customs duty. Therefore, the
conclusion that the exemption notification not only applied to
the existing charge of customs duty but also covered the
future levy of the customs duties will depend on the language
used in the notification.”
6.
Then in the same judgment at page 458, this Court
further held as follows:-
“The statutory duty prescribed under the First Schedule to the
Act has nexus only with the duty levied under section 18(1) of
the Act. Therefore, on the language of these S.R.Os., it is not
possible to hold that the exemption granted under these
notifications also applied to the customs duty levied in
addition to the statutory duty under section 18(2) of the Act or
under other laws for the time being enforced. We have already
pointed out earlier in this judgment that in contradiction to the
customs duty levied under section 18 (1), of the Act, which is
prescribed and predetermined, the regulatory duty is neither
prescribed nor pre-determined but is levied at a rate which
may
vary
according
to
the
circumstances.
Therefore,
regulatory duty imposed by the Government under section
18(2) of the Act though a species of customs duty, is a duty in
addition to the duty prescribed under the First Schedule to the
Act to meet a particular situation, not covered by the statutory
duty. The notification issued by the Government under section
19 of the Act granting exemption wholly or partially from
payment of customs duty prescribed under the First Schedule
to the Act, could not therefore, in our view, cover the customs
duty subsequently levied by the Government by way of
additional customs duty to meet or cover a situation arising
subsequent to the issue of the exemption notification. If the
Government intended to exempt any future levy of the customs
duty as well while granting exemption from the existing
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
7
prescribed customs duty, it could provide so in the exemption
notification as has been done on a number of occasions. As
the exemption notifications referred to above, did not exempt
the goods which were exempted from statutory customs duty,
also from the payment of regulatory duty, the exemption did
not apply to the regulatory duty imposed by the Government
subsequently although the regulatory duty may be a species
of the customs duty.”
7.
As to the distinction which the learned counsel for the
appellant tried to make between “duty free imports’ and “zero-rated
import” to justify that regulatory duty cannot be imposed where
goods are free from customs duty, suffice is to state that in the
impugned judgment it has been sufficiently explained that the
term “zero-rated” is not used in Customs Act as such a term is
used in the Sales Tax only and that too for the purpose of
adjustment of input-tax with the output-tax. Hence, nothing turns
on making such a distinction. We may also mention here that a
question may arise where the import is totally exempted from
customs duty how can then the regulatory duty, which is to be
charged ad valorem be computed. Such a question came up before
this Court in the case of Yousuf Re-Rolling Mills Vs. Collector of
Customs (PLD 1989 SC 232). It was held that such a levy is to be
computed on the basis of the value of the goods to be determined
under the provisions of Section 25 of the Customs Act. At page 241
of the Yousuf Re-Rolling Mills supra it was held as under:-
“If the rate of duty of the articles is specified in the 'First
Schedule then no, discretion is left to the Federal Government
to exceed the limit prescribed namely fifty per cent. But if no
rate is prescribed in the First Schedule such as in the case of
those articles which are imported free of customs duty, it is
Civil Appeal No. 1600/2006
8
only then that the maximum of the second part can be levied
on the value of the articles determined under section 25. The
restriction to levy regulatory duty is accordingly explicit in
case the articles imported fall under the first part in regard to
which the rate of duty is prescribed in the First Schedule and
while imposing the levy of regulatory duty the Federal
Government is under this restraint.”
8.
The judgment above cited not only established as to
how a regulatory duty is to be computed where the import of any
item is free from customs duty but it also supports our finding that
the Federal Government can impose regulatory duty even on goods
which are free from customs duty.
9.
From the above discussion, it is evident that
chargeability of regulatory duty has no nexus with the
chargeability or grant of exemption with regard to the statutory
customs duty falling under Section 18(1). We, therefore, find this
appeal as having no merit and the same is accordingly dismissed.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
4th of January, 2016
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1600_2006.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
MR. JUSTICE TARIQ PERVEZ
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1611 AND 1612 OF 2014
(Against the judgment dated 19.11.2014 of the Election
Tribunal, Karachi passed in E.P. No.9/2014)
Asghar Ali Sheikh …in C.A.1611/2014
Asadullah Junejo …in C.A.1612/2014
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Liaqat Ali Jatoi etc.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
(in C.A.1611/2014)
Mr. Wasim Sajjad, Sr. ASC
Mr. Raja M. Shafqat Khan Abbasi, ASC
For the appellant(s):
(in C.A.1612/2014)
Mr. Kamran Murtaza, ASC
For respondent No.1:
Mr. Afzaal Ahmed Siddiqui, ASC
Date of hearing:
06.01.2016
…
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- These appeals under Section 67(3)
of the Representation of People Act, 1976 (the Act) have been filed against
the judgment of the learned Election Tribunal, Karachi dated 19.11.2014
whereby the election of respondent No.2 (returned candidate) was set aside
and respondent No.1/election petitioner (runner up) was declared to be duly
elected.
2.
The brief facts of the case (for the sake of convenience, we will be using
C.A.1611/2014 as our reference point) are:- the appellant, respondent No.1
(respondent) and pro-forma respondents contested the general elections
held on 11.5.2013 for the Provincial Assembly Constituency PS-76 Dadu-
III. Respondent No.2, who obtained 56,938 votes was declared to be the
returned candidate by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) vide
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:2:-
notification dated 22.05.2013, while the respondent, who secured 22,803
votes, was the runner up, and the appellant, also one of the contesting
candidates, bagged 95 votes. The difference between the number of votes
obtained by respondent No.2 (returned candidate) and the respondent (runner
up) is 34,135 votes. The total number of valid votes cast at the election
was 81,738, whereas the number of rejected votes was 2,298.
The respondent filed an election petition challenging the elections
on the ground that there was widespread rigging and bogus voting at the
election, that the election of respondent No.2 had been procured by
corrupt and illegal practices and that there was rampant non-compliance
of the provisions of the Act and the rules made thereunder, on account of
which the election of respondent No.2 be declared as void and that the
respondent be declared to have been duly elected, or alternatively that
the election be declared void as a whole. After obtaining a reply from
respondent No.2 and in view of the divergent pleadings of the parties to
the election petition the learned Election Tribunal framed the following
issues:-
“1.
Whether petition is not maintainable? O.P.R.
2.
Whether this election petition is time barred? O.P.R.
3.
Whether
Police
personal
and
unqualified/incompetent polling staff was deployed
at the pilling stations at the command of respondent
no. 1 and they openly supported the respondent no.
1? O.P.P.
4.
Whether the notorious criminals before the election
and on the election day worked for the respondent
No. 1 rigged the election and polled bogus votes at
42 polling stations mentioned in para 7(i) of the
petition? O.P.P.
5.
Whether Qurban Ali Joyo and Mujeeb Laghari
closed polling station number 272 at about 2:30
P.M. took the entire Polling Staff to Zarai Taraqiati
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:3:-
Bank, Mehar, there stamped the ballot papers on
arrows and supplied the stamped ballot papers to
various polling stations and 300/400 ballot papers
were recovered from Zarai Taraqiati Bank, Mehar?
O.P.P.
6.
Whether respondent no. 1 and his associates
attacked the Polling Stations number 35,104 and
120, injured the agents, workers of petitioners, took
over the control and cast the bogus votes? O.P.P.
7.
Whether
Presiding
Officer
illegally
rejected/excluded 2294 votes ?O.P.P.
8.
Whether Presiding Officer of Polling Station number
3 was robbed and all the election material had been
taken away by the associate of respondent no. 1?
O.P.P.
9.
What should the order be?”
Upon giving its findings on various issues, the learned Election Tribunal
came to the conclusion that the election of respondent No.2 was
procured by corrupt practices and thus declared her election to be void
under Section 68 of the Act, and declared the respondent to be duly
elected under Section 69 of the Act. We find it expedient to reproduce the
conclusion reached by the learned Election Tribunal which reads as
follows:-
“…On account of the findings on the issues Nos. 3 and 4 in
the affirmative which relate to commission of corrupt
practices it can be held without any doubt that the election
of the returned candidate has been procured by the corrupt
practice as defined in Section 78(2) r/w Sec. 81(1)(a) and
(b) of the Act… Hence to election of the returned candidate
is declared as void as provided in Section 68(1)(c) of the
Act. The Petitioner being the runner up and has so claimed
to be declared as elected and this tribunal is satisfied that
he is entitled to be declared as such under Section 69 of the
Act and therefore declared accordingly.”
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:4:-
3.
It has been argued by the learned counsel for the appellant
that the appellant has no grievance with the setting aside of the elections
by the learned Election Tribunal, rather his sole attack against the
impugned judgment before us today is that the respondent could not
have been automatically declared to be duly elected under Section 69 of
the Act, as this has resulted in the disenfranchisement of 56,938 voters.
He further stated that the principle of throw away votes would only come
into operation if the disqualification of a returned candidate was
notorious at the time of polling, which is not the situation in the instant
case. In this respect he has relied upon the judgment reported as Sh.
Amjad Aziz vs. Haroon Ahtar Khan and 10 others (2004 SCMR 1484).
To buttress his arguments, learned counsel for the appellant also
submitted that even if the 56,938 votes cast in favour of respondent No.2
are held to be bogus on the basis that they have been obtained through
corrupt and illegal practices (which has been so held in the impugned judgment),
since such number of votes (56,938) constitutes approximately 70% of the
total votes cast, thus the elections stand to have been materially affected,
warranting declaration of the election to be void as a whole under Section
70 of the Act. Therefore in any case, the respondent cannot be
automatically declared to be duly elected, rather fresh elections must be
held.
4.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent, while
apprising us of the fact that respondent No.2 has withdrawn her
candidacy, has submitted that once the returned candidate has
withdrawn then the respondent being the runner up is the only one left
in the field to be declared as duly elected.
Learned counsel for the respondent, in order to controvert the
submissions of the learned counsel for the appellant regarding the
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:5:-
principles of throw away votes and notorious disqualification, stated that
the respondent had challenged the election of respondent No.2 on the
ground of corrupt and illegal practices and not that she was liable to be
disqualified, and having successfully proved that her 56,938 votes were
secured by corrupt practices, such number of votes were essentially not
in fact cast in her favour and thus the respondent can most definitely be
declared to be duly elected. He further argued that the attack put forth
by the appellant (who only secured 95 votes) is not sustainable, as it is more in
the nature of quo warranto, as he (appellant) is only seeking a declaration
of the election to be void, and not to have himself declared as duly
elected. Learned counsel for the respondent submitted that the fact that
the respondent’s election petition was given on oath and that the
evidence produced by the respondent was not cross-examined by any
party to the election petition was sufficient to prove to the satisfaction of
the learned Election Tribunal that the respondent was entitled to be
declared elected.
5.
Heard. Since the learned counsel for the appellant has stated
at the very outset that the appellant has no objection to the invalidation
of the election of respondent No.2, therefore we do not find it necessary
to discuss the same, and shall confine ourselves to the relevant key issue
of declaration of the respondent (runner up) as duly elected under Section
69 of the Act. In order to appreciate the above, the section ibid is
reproduced below:-
69.
Ground for declaring a person other than a
returned candidate elected.—The Tribunal shall declare
the election of the returned candidate to be and the
petitioner or any other contesting candidate to have been
duly elected, if it is so claimed by the petitioner or any of
the respondents and the Tribunal is satisfied that the
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:6:-
petitioner or such other contesting candidate was entitled to
be declared elected.
As has been held by this Court in the recent judgment passed in Syed
Hafeezuddin vs. Abdul Razzaq etc. (C.A. No.1086/2014) the
requirements of Section 69 of the Act are that a claim to be declared as
duly elected must be made either by the election petitioner or any of the
respondents to the election petition, and that the person seeking such
declaration has been able to substantiate and make out his case vis-à-vis
his entitlement to the satisfaction of the Election Tribunal. It may be
pertinent to mention that satisfaction should not be a subjective
assessment of the Tribunal rather must be objective in manner based
upon the evidence brought on the record by the respondent (who claims to be
declared as duly elected) and justifiable reasons must be duly recorded and
assigned in this behalf. Thus such declaration cannot be made ipso facto
or as a matter of right, rather, such person seeking a declaration will
have to prove on the strength of his own evidence his entitlement to be
declared as duly elected.
6.
In order to determine whether the respondent had indeed
proved his entitlement to be duly elected to the satisfaction of the learned
Election Tribunal, an appraisal of the evidence produced by him would
be necessary. Learned counsel for the respondent drew our attention to
the evidence led by the respondent (election petitioner) during the election
proceedings and stated that it (evidence) was sufficient to prove to the
satisfaction of the learned Election Tribunal that the respondent should
be declared as duly elected. The respondent himself appeared as a
witness (PW.1) and he produced and got exhibited his election petition
(Exb.C) which was to form his examination in chief. The three other
documents tendered in evidence were a certified copy of a complaint
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:7:-
regarding the conduct of elections filed by the respondent’s counsel to
the ECP, a certified copy of an FIR (bearing No.81/2013 dated 12.05.2013)
pertaining to allegations vis-à-vis the elections (Exb.C/2), and a certificate
issued by TCS courier service regarding verification of a receipt (Exb.C/3).
The second witness, Mr. Riazuddin (PW.2) only produced three documents
which were a letter (PW.2/1) from the Additional Session Judge/Returning
Officer stating that Mr. Riazuddin has been deputed to produce
documents pertaining to the election petition, and two complaints from
the respondent to District Returning Officer, Dadu (PW.2/2) and Returning
Officer, Mehar (PW.2/3) respectively regarding certain anomalies in the
conduct of election.
Suffice it to say that merely exhibiting an election petition (even if
verified on oath) is not a substitute for an examination on oath, in the form
of statement by a witness, therefore in this respect the respondent’s
evidence
is
completely
inadequate
and
cannot
be
taken
into
consideration for the purposes of proof of the respondent’s entitlement to
be
declared
as
duly
elected.
Further,
the
FIR
and
various
complaints/letters per se cannot be deemed to be adequate, satisfactory
and positive proof of the allegations leveled in the election petition,
which (allegations) must be proved through independent evidence. With
regard to the argument of the learned counsel for the respondent that the
respondent’s testimony was not subject to cross-examination (Note: it
appears that the respondent was subject to cross-examination by counsel for respondent No.8)
and that his evidence was not rebutted, suffice it to say that even if the
evidence of the respondent went un-rebutted, it does not mean that an
automatic conclusion should be drawn that such evidence was sufficient
to ‘satisfy’ the learned Election Tribunal that the respondent should be
declared to be duly elected in terms of Section 69 of the Act. As
mentioned earlier in this opinion, positive evidence to this effect must be
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:8:-
provided, therefore, in light of the above we are of the candid view that
the respondent has not been able to prove on the strength of his own
evidence that he was entitled to be declared a duly elected in place of
respondent No.2 (returned candidate). It may also be pertinent to mention at
this juncture that in the instant case while reading the part of the
impugned judgment under attack, we find the above criteria regarding
satisfaction of the learned Tribunal based on an objective assessment set
down (by us) to be conspicuously missing and the Tribunal in a cursory
and routine manner having declared the election of respondent No.2
(returned candidate) as void has issued a declaration of the respondent to be
duly elected in her place.
7.
Now coming to the argument propounded by the learned
counsel for the appellant pertaining to the non-applicability of the
principles of throw away votes and notoriety of disqualification to this
case, and thus the respondent should not have been declared as
automatically duly elected under Section 69 of the Act. In order to
controvert this argument, learned counsel for the respondent stated that
the respondent did not challenge the election of respondent No.2 on the
ground of her being disqualified, rather that illegal and corrupt practices
were committed, which fact has even been admitted by the appellant
himself as he has not challenged the impugned judgment to the extent of
invalidation of the election of respondent No.2.
As has been laid down in various dicta of this Court [which have been
considered in detail in Syed Hafeezuddin (supra)], a runner up to an election is not
to be automatically declared as duly elected simply by virtue of having
secured the next highest number of votes after discarding or ‘throwing
away’ the votes secured by a returned candidate whose election has been
declared to be void under Section 68 of the Act. The raison d’être against
automatic ‘throwing away’ of the votes of a person whose election has been
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:9:-
declared to be void, is that such would result in disenfranchisement of
the voters who voted for the returned candidate (in this case 56,938 voters)
unless it can be proved that the said voters casted their vote despite the
fact that they were aware of such person’s negative conduct in the
elections. A perusal of the record indicates that there is no proof
whatsoever brought by the respondent (election petitioner) that the 56,938
voters were aware of any such information that would hurl doubt upon
the validity of the votes cast, thereby potentially warranting throwing
away of their votes. It may also be pertinent to mention here that the fact
that the respondent only procured 22,803 votes (as opposed to 56,938 votes
secured by respondent No.2) out of a total of 81,738 votes cast in the
constituency (approximately 28% of the total votes) speaks for itself that he may
not necessarily be a true representation of the will of the people. The real
concept of elections is that the true representative of the people should
come forth, therefore in order to uphold the mandate of representative
democracy enshrined in the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan, 1973, we are of the view that the elections should be declared
to be void as a whole and fresh elections should take place to ensure that
the peoples’ desired representative is elected.
8.
Another aspect of the matter is that as per the impugned
judgment since the 56,938 votes cast in favour of respondent No.2 have
been held to be obtained through corrupt practices and thus there could
be said to have been a breach of the provisions of Section 70(a) and/or
(b) of the Act, if these 56,938 votes (which constitute approximately 70% of the total
votes cast) are excluded from the count, which are greater than the
differential between the votes secured by respondent No.2 (returned
candidate) and the respondent (runner up), i.e. 34,135 votes, thus it can be
said that the election has been materially affected and should be
C.As.1611 and 1612 of 2014
-:10:-
declared to be void as a whole. Resultantly, in this scenario as well fresh
elections would have to take place.
9.
In respect of the argument of the learned counsel for the
respondent that respondent No.2 has withdrawn from her candidacy, we
opine that subsequent withdrawal does not change the fact that during
the elections the respondent could not be said to be the true
representative of the people, having secured only approximately 28% of
the votes from his constituency as mentioned above.
10.
In view of the foregoing, we find that the respondent was
unable to prove through positive evidence his entitlement to the
satisfaction of the learned Election Tribunal to be duly elected under
Section 69 of the Act, therefore, the declaration to this effect by the
learned Tribunal was unwarranted and erroneous. Therefore, these
appeals are allowed to the extent that the respondent was declared to be
duly elected in place of respondent No.2, and the ECP is directed to hold
fresh elections in the constituency in accordance with law. Disposed of
accordingly.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
5th January, 2016
Not Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1611_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Gulzar Ahmed, HCJ
Mr. Justice Ijaz ul Ahsan
Mr. Justice Sajjad Ali Shah
Civil Appeal No.1618/2019.
(Against the order dated 18.7.2017 passed by the
Islamabad High Court in WP No.3793/2016)
NAB through its Chairman
… Appellant(s)
Versus
Muhammad Shafique
… Respondent (s)
For the Appellant (s)
:
Mr. Imran ul Haq Khan, DPG NAB
For the Respondent(s)
:
Raja Muhammad Anwar Khan Abbasi, ASC
Mr. Ahmed Nawaz Ch. AOR
Date of Hearing
:
06.01.2020
Judgment
Sajjad Ali Shah, J. The respondent in the year 1990 was
appointed as Upper Division Clerk in the Ministry of Food, Agriculture and
Life Stock, Islamabad and thereafter was placed in surplus pool. The
respondent ultimately on 18.12.2002 was absorbed in the appellant-NAB
as UDC. He absented himself from duty for a continuous period of 66 days
from 23.11.2009 giving rise to disciplinary proceedings which resulted in
his compulsory retirement. The respondent against such major penalty
invoked constitutional jurisdiction of the Islamabad High Court by pleading
inter alia that since the office order dated 12.3.2010 through which major
penalty of compulsory retirement from service was imposed also directs the
treatment of his un-authorized absence from duty of 66 days from
23.11.2009 to 27.1.2010 as extraordinary leave (EOL) without pay,
therefore, the major penalty of compulsory retirement could not be
sustained. The High Court, through the impugned judgment, while
accepting such plea allowed the petition by setting aside the major penalty
CA 1618 of 2019
2
of compulsory and directed the reinstatement of the respondent with all
back benefits.
2.
Leave was granted by this Court vide order dated 30.9.2019 to
examine as to whether in the circumstances, penalty of compulsory
retirement could not be imposed upon the respondent.
3.
The learned Deputy Prosecutor General NAB contends that
during 7 years of service with the appellant, the respondent remained
absent for a total period of 1627 days and in this respect various warning
letters were issued to him but he did not improve his behaviour rather once
again on 23.11.2009 absented himself which absence continued for 66
days. Show cause notice in the meanwhile was accordingly issued on
18.12.2009. It was responded by the respondent on 29.12.2009 requesting
the adjustment of his casual leave against his absence. However, the
response submitted by the respondent did not find favour with the
competent authority, consequently, vide order dated 12.3.2010 the
competent authority while imposing major penalty directed the compulsory
retirement of the respondent. So far as the conversion of the un-authorized
absence from duty as extraordinary leave, it was submitted that this was
only for the purpose of settlement of respondent’s dues. In the
circumstances, it was submitted that the impugned judgment lacks legal
sanctity and could not be sustained.
4.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent
contended that rule 9(3) of the Revised Leave Rules, 1980 empowers the
competent authority to grant extraordinary leave retrospectively in lieu of
absence from leave and since the competent authority has exercised such
discretion by treating the respondent’s un-authorized absence of 66 days as
extraordinary leave, therefore, there was no occasion to impose major
penalty of compulsory retirement. Counsel, in support of his contention,
placed reliance on the judgments of this Court in the case titled Lahore
Development Authority vs. Muhammad Nadeem Kachloo (2006 SCMR 434),
CA 1618 of 2019
3
Director General Intelligence Bureau vs. Muhammad Javed (2012 SCMR 165)
and Muhammad Sharif Abbasi vs. Member, Water, WAPDA Lahore (2013
SCMR 903).
5.
We have heard the contentions of learned counsel for both the
parties and have perused the record as well as the case law cited at bar.
6.
It appears from the record that the respondent not only
absented himself from duty but during his absence, he received a show
cause notice, responded it and still continued with his absence. The show
cause notice seeking explanation of the respondent for his un-authorized
absence was issued on 18.12.2009 containing the following charge:-
“You are absent from duty since 23rd November, 2009
without any intimation/prior approval of your office
incharge as reported by Ops Division. You were served an
explanation on 1st December, 2009 with the direction to
explain your position within three days followed by 2 x
reminders dated 10th and 14th December, 2009, but you did
not reply so far. You were also directed to report for duty
immediately, but you are still absent from duty”.
Therefore, you Mr. Muhammad Shafique, UDC, NAB (HQ),
Islamabad are called upon to show cause within period of
10 (Ten days) from the date of receipt of this notice as to
why one of the penalties as defined in para 11.03(1) of
NAB’s TCS should not be imposed upon you on account of
misconduct”.
7.
The respondent on 29.12.2009, almost within the prescribed
period, responded to the show cause notice, the relevant portion of the said
response, which is very relevant to resolve the controversy, is reproduced as
follows:-
“In the mean time I had been suffering from severe back-ach
and getting some formal treatment but in vain and the pain
was increasing day by day. It is worth of mention here that
I had been attending the office during those days. So I
decided to be treated from some specialist and I did so. In
the result of detailed check up by the doctor I was advised
complete bed-rest (Doctor’s advice will be submitted in
couple of days) and because of that I submitted casual
leave applications one after another, w.e.f. 1st December
2009 onward. It is humbly requested to treat my absent
days as leave. I shall be highly obliged”.
8.
The response submitted by the respondent did not find favour
with the competent authority which vide office order dated 12.3.2010
CA 1618 of 2019
4
directed the respondent’s compulsory retirement by imposing one of the
major penalties. Since this office order also directed the treatment of
respondent’s un-authorized absence as extraordinary leave without pay
and the entire controversy, as projected before us, revolves around the
treatment of respondent’s such un-authorized absence from duty as
extraordinary leave, therefore, it would be proper to reproduce the office
order dated 12.3.2010 imposing major penalty of compulsory retirement
which reads as under:-
“In pursuance of Show Cause Notice issued vide this
Bureau’s letter of even number dated 18th December, 2009
the competent authority i.e. Director General HR & Fin has
imposed a major penalty i.e. ‘compulsory retirement from
service’ upon Mr. Muhammad Shafique, UDC, NAB,
Islamabad under section 11.03(1)(b)(ii) of NAB’s TCS with
immediate effect.
The un–authorized absence from duty for a period of 66
days from 23rd November, 2009 to 27th January, 2010 is
hereby treated as EOL (without pay).”
9.
Perusal of this office order would reflect that the competent
authority in the first paragraph of office order has expressed its mind
explicitly on the unauthorized absence of the respondent by imposing the
major penalty of compulsory retirement from service with immediate effect.
So far as the second portion of the office order is concerned, since the
penalty imposed by the competent authority was of compulsory retirement
which follows the payment of salaries and other dues till the date of
imposing such penalty, therefore, in our opinion, it was necessary to give
finding as to how such absence is to be treated, therefore, to say that since
the un-authorized absence of the respondent was treated as extraordinary
leave in term of rule 9(3) of the Revised Leave Rules, 1980 does not appeal
to our mind. If this would have been the case then the first paragraph of the
office order would be redundant, on the contrary it categorically provides for
the consequences of the un-authorized absence.
10.
No doubt sub-Rule 3 of Rule 9 of “The Revised Leave Rules,
1980” empowers the authorized officer to treat the un-authorized absence
CA 1618 of 2019
5
of an employee as extraordinary leave without pay but such treatment is
not to be automatically allowed in every case. In our opinion, such powers
are to be exercised in very genuine cases where the authorized officer finds
that imposing of major penalty on account of unauthorized absence of an
employee would be too harsh or is not warranted under the circumstances.
However, where the authorized officer after due application of mind upon
examining/adjudging the misconduct has imposed one of the major
penalties and thereafter keeping in mind that the gap between the un-
authorized absence of the employee and the imposition of major penalty is
to be provided with some kind of treatment provides for accordingly, then
such treatment may it not be necessary would undo the major penalty.
11.
So far as the case law relied upon by the learned counsel for the
respondent is concerned, in the cases of Lahore Development Authority vs.
Muhammad Nadeem Kachloo and Director General Intelligence Bureau vs.
Muhammad Javed (supra), the competent authority after awarding major
penalty of dismissal from service had directed the petitioner’s un-authorized
absence as leave without pay. The cases can be differentiated as after
imposing the penalty of dismissal from service, an employee may not be
found entitled to any dues, therefore, there could hardly be any reason to
provide for the treatment of their un-authorized absence as leave without
pay. Beside in our view this was not a good interpretation of the office order
imposing major penalty for the simple reason that the subsequent portion of
the office order whereby the treatment of the un-authorized leave was
provided as extraordinary leave without pay, at the most could be
superfluous and redundant but could not be treated to nullify the major
penalty which of course is imposed after adjudging the conduct of an
employee. In case where the competent authority wanted to condone the
absence of an employee by directing its treatment as one kind of leave, then
the competent authority would have shown its intention by providing
reasons for condoning such absence or at least would not have in the same
CA 1618 of 2019
6
breath imposed major penalty of dismissal or compulsory retirement. The
benefit of such naïve drafting cannot be given to an employee who otherwise
by his conduct deserved one of the major penalties. Additionally, it is not
disputed that the conversion of unauthorized absence, as EOL without pay
is not a penalty/punishment so that one can say that such treat cannot co-
exist with the major penalty/minor penalties. It is very obvious that if a man
has absented himself from work without the permission of his employer, he
of course is not entitled as of a right for payment of salary for such period.
12.
So far as the case of Muhammad Sharif Abbasi vs. Member,
Water, WAPDA Lahore (supra) is concerned, in that case on account of un-
authorized absence, after awarding major penalty of compulsory retirement
the un-authorized absence was treated as EOL without pay. However, in the
said case the Court’s opinion was mainly swayed on account of the fact that
the petitioner in that case was an employee of the WAPDA and admittedly
was hospitalized in WAPDA’s own hospital, therefore, the major penalty of
compulsory retirement was not found sustainable.
13.
These are the reasons of our short order of even date which
was in the following terms:-
“We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
have also gone through the record of the case. For reasons
to be recorded, this appeal is allowed and the impugned
judgment passed by the High Court dated 18.7.2017 is set
aside
resulting
in
dismissing
of
Writ
Petition
No.
3793/2016, filed by the respondent against the petitioner”.
Chief Justice
Judge
Islamabad, the
6th January, 2020
A. Rehman
Judge
Not Approved for Reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.1618_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE ANWAR ZAHEER JAMALI, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE SH. AZMAT SAEED
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2014
(On
appeal
against
the
judgment
dated
19.11.2014
passed
by
Election
Tribunal,
Bahawalpur & D.G. Khan Divisions in Election
Petition No. 13/2013)
Ms. Shamuna Badshah Qaisarani
… Appellant
VERSUS
Khuwaja Muhammad Dawood and others
…Respondents
For the Appellant:
Mr. Khadim Nadeem Malik, ASC
Mr. Arshad Ali Ch, AOR
For the Respondent (1): Sardar Muhammad Aslam, ASC
Mr. M.S. Khattak, AOR
Date of Hearing:
09.05.2016
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- In the bye-election that was held
for the Punjab Assembly constituency PP-240 D.G. Khan-I, the
appellant was declared returned candidate. Her election was
challenged by losing candidate i.e. respondent No. 1 through an
election petition filed in the Election Tribunal, Bahwalpur and D.G.
Khan Divisions under Section 52 of the Representation of the
People Act, 1976. Corrupt and illegal practices were alleged.
During pendency of the election petition, the respondent No. 1
moved an application under Section 76A of the Representation of
the People Act, 1976. This provision of law entrusts the Election
Tribunal with additional power to declare an election of the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628/2014
2
returned candidate void if any material from any source or
information is laid before it that the returned candidate had inter
alia submitted a false or incorrect statement of assets and
liabilities of his own or his spouse or his dependents. Before the
Tribunal though the allegations of corrupt practices could not be
established however while hearing the application filed under
Section 76A of the Representation of the People Act, 1976 it
transpired that the respondent No. 1 in her nomination form failed
to disclose properties such as (i) land measuring 448 kanals 4
marlas situated in Moza Bairoot Mandhawani, Tribal District Khazi
Khan (owned by husband of the appellant) and (ii) land measuring
263 kanals 14 marlas situated in Moza Bait Wasava Khan Wala
Tehsil and District Layyah and (iii) land measuring 13 kanals 16
marlas situated in Bait Wasava Kalroo Tehsil and District Layyah,
and (iv) land measuring 77 acres situated in Mouza Khanwala,
Wasavewala, Layyah (owned by the appellant) were not disclosed in
the nomination papers. Consequently, the election of the appellant
was declared void and fresh elections were ordered to be held in
the constituency. Against such decision, the present appeal has
been filed.
2.
Learned counsel for the appellant contended that
Section 76A of Representation of the People Act, 1976 is contrary
to the provisions of Article 225 of the Constitution. He submitted
that according to Article 225 of the Constitution, no election to a
House or Provincial Assembly can be called in question except by
election petition and in the election petition the respondent No. 1
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628/2014
3
failed in establishing plea of corrupt and illegal election practices.
He submitted that in the circumstances the Election Tribunal
ought not to have entertained the application filed under Section
76A of Representation of the People Act, 1976. In support of his
contention, he relied upon the case of Muhammad Ahmad Chatta
Vs. Iftikhar Ahmed Cheema (2016 SCMR 763).
3.
In rebuttal, learned counsel for the respondent No. 1
contended that in the application filed by the respondent No. 1
under Section 76A of the Representation of the People Act, 1976,
he has clearly mentioned certain properties owned by the appellant
and her husband, which were admittedly concealed by the
appellant at the time of filing her nomination papers. He submitted
that even in the nomination papers that were filed in the General
Elections 2013, the appellant had disclosed one of her properties
measuring 77 acres in Mouza Khanwala, Wasavewala, Layyah but
at the time of contesting bye-election the same and some other
properties were not disclosed.
4.
The fact that certain properties were not disclosed in
the nomination papers was not denied. The only defence that was
taken was that as these properties have already been transferred
in the names of appellant’s brothers, therefore, the same were not
disclosed in nomination form. It is an admitted position that only
in an affidavit it has been disclosed that the properties have been
transferred to her brothers. At the time of filing of the nomination
papers these properties were admittedly in the name of the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628/2014
4
appellant and her spouse in the revenue record. With regard to the
legal objection that Section 76A of Representation of the People
Act, 1976 is contrary to the provisions of Article 225 of the
Constitution, the same is misconceived. Article 225 of the
Constitution clearly provides that no election to a House or
Provincial Assembly shall be called in question except by an
election petition presented to such tribunal and in such manner as
may be determined by Act of Parliament. The Representation of the
People Act, 1976 is an Act of the Parliament, which has provided
the manner in which election is to be challenged before the
Election Tribunal. The scope of challenge, which covers the acts of
corrupt and illegal practices committed by or on behalf of the
returned candidates in the conduct of the elections, is mentioned
in Section 68 of Representation of the People Act, 1976 whereas
Section 76A grants suo moto powers to the Election Tribunal to
declare election of a returned candidate void on certain grounds
which include non-disclosure or incorrect disclosure of assets of
the candidate or his spouse or his dependents. Under Section 76A
such disclosure can come from any source before the Election
Tribunal, which in the present case came from respondent No. 1.
The procedure adopted by the respondent No.1 and entertained by
the Election Tribunal in an election petition being very much
within the confines of Article 225 of the Constitution, it cannot be
said to be unconstitutional. Article 225 clearly provides that the
forum to challenge the election to a House or Provincial Assembly
is the Election Tribunal and the manner in which such challenge is
to be made is to be determined by the Parliament and for the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628/2014
5
purposes of the present proceedings, the manner is provided in
Section 76A of the Representation of the People Act, 1976.
5.
The above are the detailed reasons of our short order
of even date vide which we had dismissed this appeal.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
9th of May, 2016
Not Approved For Reporting
Khurram+
| {
"id": "C.A.1628_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
MR. JUSTICE FAISAL ARAB
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
(On appeal against the judgment dated 13.04.2017
passed by the Lahore High Court, Lahore in Election
Appeal no. 16/2016)
Zulfiqar Ali Ranjha and Mirza Habibullah
… Appellants
VERSUS
Zia Ullah Ranjha and others
… Respondents
For the Appellants:
Mr. Hamid Khan, Sr. ASC
For the Respondents:
Mr. Muhammad Munir Paracha, ASC
Mr. Dil Muhammad Khan Alizai, ASC
Date of Hearing:
08.03.2018
JUDGMENT
FAISAL ARAB, J.- Under the local government laws,
election to the seats of chairman and vice chairman of a Union
Council is contested in pairs. Four sets of candidates contested for
the seats of chairman and vice chairman of Union Council No. 23,
Minawal Ranjha, District Mandi Bahauddin, Punjab for which
polling was held on 19.11.2015. The appellants ranked first by
securing 2545 votes whereas respondent Nos. 1 & 2 stood runner-
ups, bagging 2523 votes. Leading with a thin margin of 22 votes, the
appellants were declared returned candidates. The respondent Nos.
1 & 2 disputed the vote-count of Polling Station No.200 and sought
recount where a total of 1178 votes had been cast. Out of 1178
votes 1131 were declared valid of which the appellants bagged 712
votes, respondent Nos. 1 & 2 bagged 286 votes, respondent Nos. 3 &
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
2
4 bagged 130 votes and respondent Nos. 5 & 6 bagged 3 votes. 47
votes were rejected. The Returning Officer allowed the application of
respondent Nos. 1 & 2 for recount of votes polled in polling station
No.200. In the process of recounting, 17 votes from the count of the
appellants and 4 votes from the count of respondent Nos. 1 & 2
were excluded whereas 8 votes were added to the count of
respondent Nos. 3 & 4. After such minor adjustments the tally of
valid votes in the second count came down to 1118 votes from 1131
votes and rejected votes increased to 60 votes from 47 votes.
However these minor adjustments are not in issue in the present
proceedings. The issue solely relates to 207 ballot papers that were
excluded from the tally of 1118 valid votes on account of absence of
signatures of the presiding officer. Of these 207 ballot papers 131
were polled in favour of the appellants, 53 in favour of respondent
Nos. 1 & 2 and 23 in favour of respondent Nos. 3 & 4.
2.
As in the initial counting of votes, the appellants were
declared successful with a thin margin of 22 votes, upon exclusion
of 207 ballot papers in the recount, the final tally of the entire
constituency tilted in favour of respondent Nos. 1 & 2 which
reflected that they bagged 2447 votes as against 2391 votes bagged
by the appellants. Hence, the result was reversed in favour of
respondent Nos. 1 & 2 which the Election Commission notified on
21.12.2015. The appellants being aggrieved with the reversal of the
result
filed
Election
Petition
before
the
Election
Tribunal,
Gujranwala, however, the same was dismissed on 03.10.2016 on
the basis of sub-rule 4 (c) (i) of Rule 35 of the Punjab Local
Governments (Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2013 which provides
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
3
that in case the official mark and the signature of the presiding
officer is missing on the back of the ballot papers, the same are to
be excluded from the vote-count. Unsatisfied with the result of the
Election Tribunal, the appellants filed Election Appeal in the Lahore
High Court. The High Court came to the conclusion that Rule 35 (4)
(c) (i) specifically provides that where ballot papers do not bear the
official mark and the signature of the presiding officer, the same are
to be excluded from the vote count. Thus, the order of the Tribunal
was maintained. Aggrieved by such decision of the High Court,
present appeal with leave of this Court has been filed.
3.
Learned counsel for the appellants argued that
exclusion of 207 ballot papers from the tally of valid votes on
account of absence of the signatures of the presiding officer was not
justified when the ballot papers were duly stamped with the official
mark and thus substantial compliance of the Rule 35 (4) (c) (i) of
Punjab Local Governments (Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2013 was
made. In support of his contention, learned counsel relied upon the
dicta laid down in the case of Muhammad Abdullah Vs. Abdul Wakil
(PLD 1986 SC 487).
4.
Learned counsel for the respondents in rebuttal argued
that Rule 35 (4) (c) (i) of Punjab Local Governments (Conduct of
Elections) Rules, 2013 envisages existence of both the requirements
i.e. official mark as well as the signature of the Presiding Officer
which are mandatory and omission in the fulfilment of any of the
two requirements would result in exclusion of ballot papers from the
vote-count. With regard to the judgment cited by the counsel for the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
4
appellants, learned counsel for the respondent Nos. 1 & 2
contended that the said judgment was rendered by this Court on
the basis of the legal position obtaining under the then election laws
which envisaged that such ballot papers are to excluded from the
vote-count that do not contain official mark or the signature of the
presiding officer whereas under Rule 35 (4) (c) (i) of Punjab Local
Governments (Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2013 every ballot paper
has to contain an official mark as well as the signature of the
presiding officer in order to be counted and for this reason the word
‘and’ has been used in sub-rule 4 (c) (i) between the two
requirements and not ‘or’ as was the law when Muhammad
Abdullah’s case supra was decided, therefore, it is distinguishable
on that score. He maintained that the word ‘and’ as provided under
the law applicable to the case in hand, may not be read as ‘or’. In
support of this contention learned counsel placed reliance on a
judgment of this Court rendered in the cases of Shah Muhammad
Vs. Election Tribunal, Urban Local Council, Chishtian (PLD 1985
SC 287) and Zahid Iqbal Vs. Muhammad Adnan (2016 SCMR 430).
To further strengthen his submission, learned counsel also placed
reliance on the handbook issued by Election Commission of
Pakistan to all Presiding and Assistant Presiding Officers deputed to
conduct 2015 Local Government elections in Punjab. One of the
directions contained in the handbook with graphic display provided
that where a ballot paper does not bear the stamp of the official
code mark and the signature of the Assistant Presiding Officer, the
same is to be excluded from the vote-count.
5.
The question which needs to be examined in this case is
whether the omission on the part of Presiding Officer to sign ballot
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
5
papers would outright warrant their exclusion from the vote-count
under sub-rule 4 (c) (i) of Rule 35 of Punjab Local Governments
(Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2013. For the sake of convenience
sub-rule 4 (c) (i) of Rule 35 is reproduced below:-
(4)
Subject to the directions of the Election Commission, the
Presiding Officer shall:
(a)
………………………………………………………………
(b)
………………………………………………………………
(c)
count the votes cast in favour of each contesting
candidate excluding from the count the ballot
papers, which bear:
(i)
no official mark and signature of the
presiding officer;
6.
Sub-rule 4 of Rule 35 facilitates in ascertaining whether
the tally of final vote-count reconciles with the tally of legitimately
issued ballot papers to the voters of a polling station at the time of
polling. In case fake ballot-papers smuggled from outside are
secretively stuffed in the ballot boxes, this would become apparent
when the final vote-count exceeds the count of legitimately issued
ballot papers. In such eventuality the official marks as well as the
signatures of the presiding officer on the back of each ballot paper
would facilitate in sorting out fake ballot papers from the genuine
ones which could then be excluded from the vote-court. This
appears to be the intent behind framing of sub-rule 4 of Rule 35.
From the election data of the present case it is evident that a total of
1178 ballot papers were issued to the voters of which 1131 were
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
6
declared valid and 47 were rejected in the first count. When
recounting was ordered it was conducted in two stages. In the first
stage the tally of valid votes in the disputed polling station was
reduced from 1131 to 1118 as 13 valid votes were rejected raising
the tally of rejected votes from 47 to 60. This was the first stage of
recounting of disputed votes which is not in dispute in these
proceedings. Dispute arose when in the second stage of recounting
207 ballot papers from the tally of valid votes were excluded from
the vote-count on account of absence of signatures of the Assistant
Presiding Officer who conducted the elections at Polling Station
No.200. After such exclusion, the final tally of valid votes came
further down to 911 votes from 1118 votes. It may be mentioned
here that the polling agents of the contesting candidates also keep
an account of the ballot-papers issued to the voters by the presiding
or assistant presiding officers. It has never been the case of
respondent Nos. 1 & 2 that the final tally of ballot papers on the
first or second count exceeded the number of ballot-papers
legitimately issued at the disputed polling station during the polling
process nor is their case that before commencing the count, the
ballot boxes were removed from the sight of the their polling agents
in order to give rise to the suspicion that the genuine ballot-papers
may have been replaced with fake ones. In these circumstances the
overall tally of ballot papers (inclusive of valid, rejected and excluded
votes) issued at the time of polling at Polling Station No. 200 was
1178 and at both the stages of counting was also the same i.e. 1178
votes, totally ruling out bogus voting from the equation. The
mischief which sub-rule 4 of Rule 35 intends to suppress is to
prevent stuffing of ballot boxes with bogus votes which is not the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
7
case in the present proceedings. This could be more conveniently
comprehended from the following table:-
Voting result of Polling Station No. 200
Position
after
first
vote count
Adjustments
made in the
second
vote
count
which
was
not
disputed
Tally of votes
after
undisputed
adjustments
in
second
count
Deduction
of
207
valid
votes
having
no
signature
of
Presiding
Officer
Finally
tally
of
votes after
recount
Appellants
712
-17
695
-131
564
Resp Nos. 1 & 2
286
-4
282
-53
229
Resp Nos. 3 & 4
130
+8
138
-23
115
Resp Nos. 5 & 6
3
-
3
3
Total valid votes
1131
1118
911
Rejected votes
47
13
60
207
267
Total votes polled
1178
1178
1178
7.
From the above data, it can be seen that in all 1178
ballot papers were issued at the disputed polling station to the
voters at the time of polling and the tally of vote-count in the two
stages of recounting also remained the same i.e. 1178 votes (911
valid and 267 rejected/excluded). This establishes that the disputed
207 ballot papers were not smuggled from outside and polled but
were part of 1178 ballot papers that were issued to the genuine
voters who came to cast their votes at Polling Station No.200 but
were excluded in the second count only for the reason that these
ballot-papers did not bear the signature of the Presiding Officer,
which is one of the two requirements of sub-rule 4 of Rule 35. In
our opinion a ballot paper warrants out-right exclusion from the
count if the signature as well as the official mark, both, are missing.
In case only one of the two requirements exists and yet the final
tally of votes cast at a polling station exceeds the number of ballot
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
8
papers issued to the voters then too such ballot-papers should be
excluded from the vote-count as excess of votes upon their count
establishes that bogus voting has taken place. None of these two
situations, as illustrated above, exists in the present case. Why then
these 207 voters, who legitimately exercised their right of vote, stand
disenfranchised merely because the presiding officer committed
mistake of not signing on them. In Muhammad Abdullah’s case
supra referred to by the learned counsel for the appellants, reliance
was placed on an earlier judgment of this Court in the case of Jamal
Shah v. The Member Election Commission (PLD 1966 SC 1) which is
a unanimous decision of five member bench. In this case late A. R.
Cornelius, C.J. had observed thus “Moreover, the Member’s
argument is not without weight, viz that an error in this respect is
totally outside the obligation of the elector, and the law could not
intend that he should be penalized for it. It is the duty of the Presiding
Officer, under section 32, before he hands a ballot-paper over to the
voter, to apply the official mark to it, and at the same time, to place
his initials on it. There is ground, therefore, for thinking that the
existence of the official mark is by itself sufficient to show that the
paper passed through this process at the hands of the Presiding
Officer, and it was mere act of inadvertence on his part that he failed
to initial it at the same time. These considerations are relevant for the
decision of the question of construction, viz whether the conjunction
‘or’ as used in the expression ‘no official mark or initials’ appearing in
section 36 (1) (b) (i) enjoining exclusion of the vote by the Presiding
Officer and section 38 (2) (a) enjoining rejection by the Returning
Officer was not to be understood in a conjunctive, rather than in a
disjunctive sense.”
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
9
8.
When only 1178 ballot papers were issued to the voters
at the time of polling at the disputed polling station and the final
count of all the votes in the second round was also 1178 votes (911
valid and 267 rejected/excluded) and the disputed 207 ballot papers
are inclusive of these 1178 ballot papers then on what material it
could be said that the election in the disputed Polling Station was so
badly conducted that the sanctity of vote was violated. Election laws
are meant to prevent illegal and corrupt practices in an election
process. Any omission on the part of the election officials in the
enforcement of a rule which has nothing to do with the contesting
candidate or the voters and such omission does not lead to form an
opinion that bogus voting may have taken place then one cannot
assume that object of sub-rule 4 of Rule 35 would be defeated if 207
validly cast votes are treated as valid and counted. On the contrary
the said object would stand fully achieved, notwithstanding the
omission of one of the two requirements of sub-rule 4 of Rule 35.
When one of the two requirements have been fulfilled establishing
that the disputed 207 ballot papers were issued to genuine voters of
the constituency then there appears to be no reason to exclude
them from the vote-count merely because one of the two
requirements of sub-rule 4 of Rule 35 was not fulfilled by seeking
strict compliance of both the requirements simultaneously. The
object of sub rule 4 of Rule 35 of Punjab Local Governments
(Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2013 is to exclude bogus and not
genuine vote from the vote count. In the light of specific facts and
figures of this case discussed above, exclusion of 207 votes would
amount to excluding genuinely cast 207 votes from the count, which
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1628 OF 2017
10
in the circumstances of the case would amount to disenfranchising
207 genuine voters. A five member bench of this Court in the case of
Jamal Shah supra has held that omission on the part of the
presiding officer to sign ballot papers is totally outside the obligation
of the voters and for that they cannot be penalized by excluding
their votes which were nevertheless duly stamped with the official
mark. This dictum of Jamal Shah’s case was not touched upon by
three member bench of this Court in the case of Shah Muhammad
supra though it was cited.
9.
In view of the above discussion, we allow this appeal on
the basis of dictum laid down in Shah Jamal’s case and declare that
207 disputed ballot papers are to be treated as valid and shall be
taken into vote-count.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
Announced on 04.05.2018 by Hon’ble Mr. Justice Faisal Arab
Approved For Reporting
Khurram
| {
"id": "C.A.1628_2017.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
Present:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1631 TO 2112 OF 2017,
CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 216 OF 2016 AND CIVIL APEPAL NOs.
806 TO 811 OF 2016.
(On appeal form the judgments dated 18.7.2017,11.1.2016,05.10.2015 of the Federal Service Tribunal,
Islamabad passed in Appeal Nos565 to 573,757 to 793,894-918,918-A,919-943,998-1005,1005-A,1006-
1045,1108-1179,1224-1243,1265-1325,2327-2350,2352-2368,2368-A,2369,2370,2372-2443,2446-
2449,2453,2451,2452,2450,2454-2484,2487-2501,2508-2520®CS/2016,867-872(R)CS/13,224(R)CS/15
etc.)
Federation of Pakistan through Secretary Capital Administration
and Development Division,
Islamabad etc.
…. Appellant(s)
(in all cases)
VERSUS
Nusrat Tahir etc.
(in C.A.1631/2017)
Miraj Gul etc.
(in C.A.1632/17)
Ejaz Ahmed and others
(in C.A.1633/2017)
Firdous Begum etc.
(in C.A.1634/2017)
Robina Qureshi etc.
(in C.A.1635/17)
Muhammad Arshad etc.
(in C.A.1636/2017)
Shahbaz Akhtar Khalid etc.
(in C.A.1637/2017)
Muhammad Touqeer Ikram etc.
(in C.A.1638/2017)
Aftagb Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1639/2017)
Taimoor Imran Ali Khan etc.
(in C.A.1640/2017)
Muhammad Jabbar Khan etc.
(in C.A.1641/17)
Shahid Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1642/2017)
Muhammad Anwar etc.
(in C.A.1643/2017)
Naheed Kausar etc.
(in C.A.1644/17)
Iqbal ur Rashid etc.
(in C.A.1645/2017)
Ghulam Mustafa etc.
(in C.A.1646/2017)
Mukhtar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1647/17)
Naeema Bushra Malik etc.
(in C.A.1648/2017)
Meena Asad etc.
(in C.A.1649/2017)
Muhammad Qayyum etc.
(in C.A.1650/17)
Rubina Mahmood Awan etc.
(in C.A.1651/2017)
Muhammad Khushal Khan etc.
(in C.A.1652/2017)
Mussarat Bibi etc.
(in C.A.1653/17)
Muhammad Ghulam Durrani etc.
(in C.A.1654/2017)
Muhammad Mushtaq etc.
(in C.A.1655/2017)
Qari Muhammad Almas etc.
(in C.A.1656/17)
Riaz Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1657/2017)
Syed Zameer Haider Rizvi etc.
(in C.A.1658/2017)
Liaqat Ali etc.
(in C.A.1659/17)
Muhammad Arif etc.
(in C.A.1660/2017)
Waseem Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1661/2017)
Khalid Pervez etc.
(in C.A.1662/17)
Muhammad Nazir Kiyani etc.
(in C.A.1663/2017)
Abdul Majeed etc.
(in C.A.1664/2017)
Muhammad Ashraf etc.
(in C.A.1665/17)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
2
Mumtaz Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1666/2017)
Manzoor Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1667/2017)
Mohsin Tanvir etc.
(in C.A.1668/17)
Jabbar Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1669/2017)
Syed Manzar Hussain Gardezi etc.
(in C.A.1670/2017)
Muhammad Saleem Kunber etc.
(in C.A.1671/17)
Abid Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1672/2017)
Nawabzada etc.
(in C.A.1673/2017)
Muhammad Azeem Khan etc.
(in C.A.1674/17)
Attaullah etc.
(in C.A.1675/2017)
Syed Nazir Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.1676/2017)
Muhammad Amir etc.
(in C.A.1677/17)
Mrs. Mehmood Farzana
(in C.A.1678/2017)
Muhammad Anwar ur Rahman etc. (in C.A.1679/2017)
Rafi etc.
(in C.A.1680/17)
Mumtaz Khan etc.
(in C.A.1681/2017)
Mrs. Rehana Ghaffar etc.
(in C.A.1682/2017)
Azad Khan etc.
(in C.A.1683/17)
Shazia Bibi etc.
(in C.A.1684/2017)
Imran etc.
(in C.A.1685/2017)
Zahid Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1686/17)
Zafeer Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1687/2017)
Arslan Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1688/2017)
Mrs. Syeda Khatoon etc.
(in C.A.1689/17)
Miss Zubaida Khatoon etc.
(in C.A.1690/2017)
Mrs. Farida Rafi etc.
(in C.A.1691/2017)
Badar Munir Badar etc.
(in C.A.1692/17)
Azhar Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1693/2017)
Muhammad Daud etc.
(in C.A.1694/2017)
Shafiq etc.
(in C.A.1695/17)
Javaid Rauf etc.
(in C.A.1696/2017)
Ch. Amjad Ali etc.
(in C.A.1697/2017)
Liaqat Ali etc.
(in C.A.1698/17)
Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1699/2017)
Shaukat Jan etc.
(in C.A.1700/2017)
Abdul Karim etc.
(in C.A.1701/17)
Mubarik Ali Satti etc.
(in C.A.1702/2017)
Mrs. Safia Kalboro etc.
(in C.A.1703/2017)
Mrs. Sahleha Nasreen etc.
(in C.A.1704/17)
Miss Shazia Nazir etc.
(in C.A.1705/2017)
Abdul Rashid Shah etc.
(in C.A.1706/2017)
Mumtaz Gill etc.
(in C.A.1707/17)
Muhammad Farhan etc.
(in C.A.1708/2017)
Alludin etc.
(in C.A.1709/2017)
M. Sohail Khan etc.
(in C.A.1710/17)
Syeda Sadaf Ali etc.
(in C.A.1711/2017)
M. Anwar etc.
(in C.A.1712/2017)
Miss Shahida Parveen
etc.
(in C.A.1713/17)
Mrs. Shamim Abid etc.
(in C.A.1714/2017)
Mrs. Rahat Sultana etc.
(in C.A.1715/2017)
M. Maqsood etc.
(in C.A.1716/17)
Mrs. Sumira Yasmeen
(in C.A.1717/2017)
Shahid M. Khan etc.
(in C.A.1718/2017)
Miss Shazia Bibi etc.
(in C.A.1719/17)
Mrs. Rukh-e-Afzal etc.
(in C.A.1720/2017)
M. Amir etc.
(in C.A.1721/2017)
Mrs. Sumera Aziz etc.
(in C.A.1722/17)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
3
Asif Ali and others
(in C.A.1723/2017)
Wajid Bashir etc.
(in C.A.1724/2017)
Mrs. Samina Zafar etc.
(in C.A.1725/17)
Muhammad Bukhsh others
(in C.A.1726/2017)
Mrs. Qamar Zahra etc.
(in C.A.1727/2017)
Shabbir Nawaz etc.
(in C.A.1728/17)
Zulfiqar Ahmed others
(in C.A.1729/2017)
Mrs. Rashda Jabeen etc.
(in C.A.1730/2017)
Mrs. Najma Khanum etc.
(in C.A.1731/17)
Mrs. Mah-e-Naz Israr & others
(in C.A.1732/2017)
Zubaida Khanum etc.
(in C.A.1733/2017)
Mrs. Shabana Latif etc.
(in C.A.1734/17)
Mrs. Zahida Naheed etc.
(in C.A.1735/2017)
Miss Lala Rukh Qurshi etc.
(in C.A.1736/2017)
Mrs. Raheela Ambreen etc.
(in C.A.1737/17)
Mrs. Shams un Nisa and others
(in C.A.1738/2017)
Ms. Farzana Masood etc.
(in C.A.1739/2017)
Mrs. Kaneez Rubab etc.
(in C.A.1740/17)
Ms. Raheela Haider and others
(in C.A.1741/2017)
Mrs. Asia Bashid etc.
(in C.A.1742/2017)
Mrs. Tayyaba Qaiser etc.
(in C.A.1743/17)
Mrs. Naureen Iqbal and others
(in C.A.1744/2017)
Mrs. Shahbana Kausar etc.
(in C.A.1745/2017)
Tahira Yasmeen Aya etc.
(in C.A.1746/17)
Tauqeer Ahmad and others
(in C.A.1747/2017)
Inayat Ullah etc.
(in C.A.1748/2017)
Muhammad Idrees Qamar etc.
(in C.A.1749/17)
Syed Arif Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.1750/2017)
Parveen Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1751/2017)
Muhammad Yousaf etc.
(in C.A.1752/17)
Nasreen Anjum Aya etc.
(in C.A.1753/2017)
Muhammad Ishaq etc.
(in C.A.1754/2017)
Azhar Mahmood etc.
(in C.A.1755/17)
Abdul Ghafoor etc.
(in C.A.1756/2017)
Muhammad Sayyad etc.
(in C.A.1757/2017)
Muhammad Saleem Khan etc.
(in C.A.1758/17)
Gul Shad etc.
(in C.A.1759/2017)
Josheph Rafiq etc.
(in C.A.1760/2017)
Syeda Sadaf Ali etc.
(in C.A.1761/17)
Mrs. Mehnaz Ajmal etc.
(in C.A.1762/2017)
Javed Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1763/2017)
Mrs. Rizwana Shahid etc.
(in C.A.1764/17)
Muhammad Ajmal etc.
(in C.A.1765/2017)
Iqtidar Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1766/2017)
Tahir Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1767/17)
Adnan Babar etc.
(in C.A.1768/2017)
Pervaiz Nadeem etc.
(in C.A.1769/2017)
Asif Younas etc.
(in C.A.1770/17)
Muhammad Younas etc.
(in C.A.1771/2017)
James Mashid etc.
(in C.A.1772/2017)
Muhammad Aslam etc.
(in C.A.1773/17)
Shoukat Mashid etc.
(in C.A.1774/2017)
Ms. Yasmin Tahira etc.
(in C.A.1775/2017)
Muhammad Aslam etc.
(in C.A.1776/17)
Mrs. Rubina Anjum etc.
(in C.A.1777/2017)
Habib Khan etc.
(in C.A.1778/2017)
Ahmed Sher Arshad etc.
(in C.A.1779/17)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
4
Ms. Nazmina etc.
(in C.A.1780/2017)
Ms. Tasneem Fatima etc.
(in C.A.1781/2017)
Muhammad Naveed Arif Khan
etc.
(in C.A.1782/17)
Miss Naz Tahir etc.
(in C.A.1783/2017)
Syed Sultan Shah etc.
(in C.A.1784/2017)
Mrs. Shagufta Bibi
(in C.A.1785/17)
Khawar Idrees etc.
(in C.A.1786/2017)
Mrs. Naila Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1787/2017)
Amjad Badshah etc.
(in C.A.1788/17)
Waris Malik etc.
(in C.A.1789/2017)
Imran Anwar etc.
(in C.A.1790/2017)
Amjad Sohail etc.
(in C.A.1791/17)
Asif Mashid etc.
(in C.A.1792/2017)
Mrs. Nusrat Dastagir etc.
(in C.A.1793/2017)
Mukhtar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1794/17)
Basharat Masih etc.
(in C.A.1795/2017)
Ali Rehman etc.
(in C.A.1796/2017)
Munir Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1797/17)
Muhammad Zardad etc.
(in C.A.1798/2017)
Syed Ashraf Ali etc.
(in C.A.1799/2017)
Mrs. Kausar Ayub etc.
(in C.A.1800/17)
Malik Waheed Shahzad etc.
(in C.A.1801/2017)
Ashraf Mashid etc.
(in C.A.1802/2017)
Muhammad Ajmal etc.
(in C.A.1803/17)
Mrs. Shaista Manazir etc.
(in C.A.1804/2017)
Mumtaz Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1805/2017)
Mrs. Saima Noreen etc.
(in C.A.1806/17)
Razzaq Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1807/2017)
Muhammad Ayub etc.
(in C.A.1808/2017)
Ejaz Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1809/17)
Shah Muhammad Afzal etc.
(in C.A.1810/2017)
Muhammad Javed etc.
(in C.A.1811/2017)
Muhammad Asif etc.
(in C.A.1812/17)
Muhammad Khaliq etc.
(in C.A.1813/2017)
Nafisa Hanif etc.
(in C.A.1814/2017)
Qari Zahid Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1815/17)
Asif Amin etc.
(in C.A.1816/2017)
Mrs. veronica etc.
(in C.A.1817/2017)
Qari Muhammad Siddique etc.
(in C.A.1818/17)
Syeda Saima Nasir etc.
(in C.A.1819/2017)
Mrs. Huma Waseem etc.
(in C.A.1820/2017)
Waheed ur Rehman etc.
(in C.A.1821/17)
Ms. Saima Parveen etc.
(in C.A.1822/2017)
Ghulam Rasool and others
(in C.A.1823/17)
Tariq Khan etc.
(in C.A.1824/2017)
Muzaffar Hussain Rathore etc.
(in C.A.1825/2017)
Ms. Shahana Shahid etc.
(in C.A.1826/17)
Muhammad Khan etc.
(in C.A.1827/2017)
Basharat Ali etc.
(in C.A.1828/2017)
M. Tanveer etc.
(in C.A.1829/17)
Shabbir Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1830/2017)
Mrs. Shamim Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1831/2017)
Tanveer Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1832/17)
S.M. Siraj etc.
(in C.A.1833/2017)
Zahid Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1834/2017)
Mrs. Nadia Noreen etc.
(in C.A.1835/17)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
5
Shahzad Nasir etc.
(in C.A.1836/2017)
Miss Rubina Aqeel etc.
(in C.A.1837/2017)
Irfan Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1838/17)
Kausar Afza etc.
(in C.A.1839/2017)
Atif Rashid etc.
(in C.A.1840/2017)
Mst. Shamim Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1841/17)
Babar Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1842/2017)
Ihsan Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1843/2017)
Mrs. Naghmana Jabeen etc.
(in C.A.1844/17)
Qari Muhammad Abbas etc.
(in C.A.1845/2017)
Noureen Kazmi etc.
(in C.A.1846/17)
Sajid Masih etc.
(in C.A.1847/2017)
Mrs. Uzma Khatoon etc.
(in C.A.1848/2017)
Abdul Manan etc.
(in C.A.1849/17)
Haroon Rasheed etc.
(in C.A.1850/2017)
Sajid Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1851/2017)
Zeeshan ur Rehman etc.
(in C.A.1852/17)
Muhammad Saleh etc.
(in C.A.1853/2017)
Said Rehman etc.
(in C.A.1854/2017)
Muhammad Ashraf etc.
(in C.A.1855/17)
Guftar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1856/2017)
Shahid Rauf etc.
(in C.A.1857/2017)
Farrukh Saleem etc.
(in C.A.1858/17)
Muhammad Irfan etc.
(in C.A.1859/2017)
Muhammad Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1860/2017)
Zia Ullah Asad etc.
(in C.A.1861/17)
Falahat Shahid etc.
(in C.A.1862/2017)
Mrs. Asghari Bano etc.
(in C.A.1863/2017)
Zia Afzal etc.
(in C.A.1864/17)
Muhammad Rafaqat etc.
(in C.A.1865/2017)
Rafiq Masih etc.
(in C.A.1866/2017)
Javed Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1867/17)
Muhammad Yameen etc.
(in C.A.1868/2017)
Mst. Ishrat Masood etc.
(in C.A.1869/17)
Zafar Iqbal Bajwa etc.
(in C.A.1870/2017)
Khalil Ahmad Bajwa etc.
(in C.A.1871/2017)
Alam Zeb etc.
(in C.A.1872/17)
Muhammad Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1873/2017)
Tanveer Bawar etc.
(in C.A.1874/2017)
Ghulam Imran Haider etc.
(in C.A.1875/17)
Muhammad Farid etc.
(in C.A.1876/2017)
Chan Mehmood Sajjad etc.
(in C.A.1877/2017)
Nisar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1878/17)
Aslam Shahzad etc.
(in C.A.1879/2017)
Shaukat Ali etc.
(in C.A.1880/2017)
Nisar Ali etc.
(in C.A.1881/17)
Muhammad Asif etc.
(in C.A.1882/2017)
Arif Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1883/2017)
Syed Rizwan Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1884/17)
Muhammad Aslam etc.
(in C.A.1885/2017)
Mazhar Iqbal Kiyani etc.
(in C.A.1886/2017)
Munir Masih etc.
(in C.A.1887/17)
Shaukat Hayat etc.
(in C.A.1888/2017)
Nazir Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1889/2017)
Syed Akbar Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1890/17)
Syed Tahir Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1891/2017)
Ms. Nadia etc.
(in C.A.1892/17)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
6
Khalid Usman etc.
(in C.A.1893/2017)
Muhammad Akbar Masood etc.
(in C.A.1894/2017)
Zafar Ejaz etc.
(in C.A.1895/17)
Azhar Ali etc.
(in C.A.1896/2017)
Arban Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1897/2017)
Arif Khan etc.
(in C.A.1898/17)
Atif Aman Butt etc.
(in C.A.1899/2017)
Muhammad Siddique etc.
(in C.A.1900/2017)
Ghulam akbar etc.
(in C.A.1901/17)
Zafar Khan Khattak etc.
(in C.A.1902/2017)
Babar Sultan etc.
(in C.A.1903/2017)
Younas Masih etc.
(in C.A.1904/17)
Muhammad Feroz etc.
(in C.A.1905/2017)
Taj Muhammad etc.
(in C.A.1906/2017)
Muhammad Yousaf etc.
(in C.A.1907/17)
Muhammad Riaz etc.
(in C.A.1908/2017)
Sibghat ur Rehman etc.
(in C.A.1909/2017)
Munir Akhtar Qureshi etc.
(in C.A.1910/17)
Nasir Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1911/2017)
Zaheer Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1912/2017)
Manzoor Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1913/17)
Muhammad Zahir Shah etc.
(in C.A.1914/2017)
Muhammad Tariq etc.
(in C.A.1915/2017)
Muhammad Khalid etc.
(in C.A.1916/2017)
Muhammad Ejaz etc.
(in C.A.1917/17)
Muhammad Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1918/2017)
Azad Khan etc.
(in C.A.1919/2017)
Syed Ulmer Shah etc.
(in C.A.1920/17)
Moeen ud Din Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1921/2017)
Zarif Hussain Siddique etc.
(in C.A.1922/2017)
Fazil Wadood etc.
(in C.A.1923/17)
Abdul Salam etc.
(in C.A.1924/2017)
Kamran Khan etc.
(in C.A.1925/2017)
Muhammad Bashir etc.
(in C.A.1926/17)
Zulfiqar Ali etc.
(in C.A.1927/2017)
Khalid Mehmood Khan etc.
(in C.A.1928/2017)
Muhammad Shafi etc.
(in C.A.1929/17)
Khadim Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.1930/2017)
Nasir Mehmood Satti etc.
(in C.A.1931/2017)
Tahir Masih etc.
(in C.A.1932/17)
Shahid Abbas Shah etc.
(in C.A.1933/2017)
Farah Rehman etc.
(in C.A.1934/2017)
Shamshad Ghuri etc.
(in C.A.1935/17)
Muhammad Riaz etc.
(in C.A.1936/2017)
Muhammad Salman Siddique etc.
(in C.A.1937/2017)
Fiaz Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1938/17)
Riaz Ali etc.
(in C.A.1939/2017)
Saeedullah etc.
(in C.A.1940/2017)
Yasir Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.1941/17)
Umar Baksh etc.
(in C.A.1942/2017)
Muhammad Fayaz etc.
(in C.A.1943/2017)
Saima Rana etc.
(in C.A.1944/17)
Muhammad Kaleem Khalid etc.
(in C.A.1945/2017)
Mehmood Arif etc.
(in C.A.1946/2017)
Zeeshan Khan etc.
(in C.A.1947/17)
Abdul Qayyum etc.
(in C.A.1948/2017)
Muhammad Naeem etc.
(in C.A.1949/2017)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
7
Azhar Qayyum etc.
(in C.A.1950/17)
Pervaiz Masih etc.
(in C.A.1951/2017)
Muhammad Munir etc.
(in C.A.1952/2017)
Shaheen Ara etc.
(in C.A.1953/17)
Mrs. Parveen Zaidi etc.
(in C.A.1954/2017)
Muhammad Kamran etc.
(in C.A.1955/17)
Miss Tasleem Alia etc.
(in C.A.1956/2017)
Azmat Ullah Khan etc.
(in C.A.1957/2017)
Faiza Pervaiz etc.
(in C.A.1958/17)
Mushtaq Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1959/2017)
Muhammad Rizwan etc.
(in C.A.1960/2017)
Muhammad Roshan etc.
(in C.A.1961/17)
Rukhsana Yasmeen etc.
(in C.A.1962/2017)
Noreen Altaf etc.
(in C.A.1963/2017)
Fehmida Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1964/17)
Junaid Haider etc.
(in C.A.1965/2017)
Waqar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1966/2017)
Waqar Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.1967/17)
Shahid Hussain etc.
(in C.A.1968/2017)
Abdul Razzaq etc.
(in C.A.1969/2017)
Bilal Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1970/17)
Muhammad Pervez etc.
(in C.A.1971/2017)
Nusrat Iqbal etc.
(in C.A.1972/2017)
Parveen Akram etc.
(in C.A.1973/17)
Samina Hameed etc.
(in C.A.1974/2017)
Amir Shahzad etc.
(in C.A.1975/2017)
Ghazala Ghafoor etc.
(in C.A.1976/17)
Tayyaba Sadaf etc.
(in C.A.1977/2017)
Shamim Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1978/17)
Qamar Jabeen etc.
(in C.A.1979/2017)
Tahira Naheed etc.
(in C.A.1980/2017)
Muhammad Waseem etc.
(in C.A.1981/17)
Naseem Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.1982/2017)
Shahnaz Javed etc.
(in C.A.1983/2017)
Tariq Mahmood etc.
(in C.A.1984/17)
Syed Sajjad Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.1985/2017)
Hajira Bibi etc.
(in C.A.1986/2017)
Memoona Aslam etc.
(in C.A.1987/17)
Chan Sanobar etc.
(in C.A.1988/2017)
Shaheen Niazi etc.
(in C.A.1989/2017)
Naseer Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.1990/17)
Lashma Parveen etc.
(in C.A.1991/2017)
Ahmed Bilal Karim etc.
(in C.A.1992/2017)
Tabssum Begum etc.
(in C.A.1993/17)
Farhan Abbas etc.
(in C.A.1994/2017)
Muhammad Khan etc.
(in C.A.1995/2017)
Surriya Ashfaq etc.
(in C.A.1996/17)
Muhammad Hanif etc.
(in C.A.1997/2017)
Ashraf Masih etc.
(in C.A.1998/2017)
Ansar Mahmood etc.
(in C.A.1999/17)
Nasreen Agai etc.
(in C.A.2000/2017)
Sajid Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.2001/17)
Muhammad Munir etc.
(in C.A.2002/2017)
Mehmood Ali etc.
(in C.A.2003/2017)
Naveeda Sher etc.
(in C.A.2004/17)
Imtiaz Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2005/2017)
Matloob Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2006/2017)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
8
Bilqees Bano etc.
(in C.A.2007/17)
Ibadat Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2008/2017)
Ms. Azra Batool etc.
(in C.A.2009/2017)
Mushtaq Masih etc.
(in C.A.2010/17)
Nazia Bano etc.
(in C.A.2011/2017)
Syed Shahrukh Farhat Bukhari
etc.
(in C.A.2012/2017)
Yasmin Fatima etc.
(in C.A.2013/17)
Muhammad Ismail etc.
(in C.A.2014/2017)
Naheed Akhtar etc.
(in C.A.2015/2017)
Zahida Rashid etc.
(in C.A.2016/17)
Moeen Shahzad etc.
(in C.A.2017/2017)
Hifsa Hameed etc.
(in C.A.2018/2017)
Rizwana Bashir etc.
(in C.A.2019/17)
Muhammajd Sabir etc.
(in C.A.2020/2017)
Uzma Nawaz etc.
(in C.A.2021/2017)
Ghazanfar Abbas etc.
(in C.A.2022/17)
Fouzia Shamshad etc.
(in C.A.2023/2017)
Saira Shaheen etc.
(in C.A.2024/17)
Naheed Rauf etc.
(in C.A.2025/2017)
Mehboob ur Rehman etc.
(in C.A.2026/2017)
Shahnaz Zafar etc.
(in C.A.2027/17)
Abdul Rahim etc.
(in C.A.2028/2017)
Muhammad Umair etc.
(in C.A.2029/2017)
Ume-e-Farwa etc.
(in C.A.2030/17)
Muhammad Ashfaq Rana etc.
(in C.A.2031/2017)
Haleema Sadia etc.
(in C.A.2032/2017)
Mehboob Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2033/17)
Muhammad Javed etc.
(in C.A.2034/2017)
Khalid Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.2035/2017)
Ashfaq Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2036/17)
Shabir Ahmad etc.
(in C.A.2037/2017)
Zulfiqar Khan etc.
(in C.A.2038/2017)
Muhammad Imran etc.
(in C.A.2039/17)
Aqib Mehmood Khan Niazi etc.
(in C.A.2040/2017)
Iftikhar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.2041/2017)
Rifat Sultana etc.
(in C.A.2042/17)
Bulbul Jehan etc.
(in C.A.2043/2017)
Muhammad Majid etc.
(in C.A.2044/2017)
Rukhsana Amin etc.
(in C.A.2045/17)
Rana Muhammad Riaz etc.
(in C.A.2046/2017)
Ms. Robina Sadiq etc.
(in C.A.2047/2017)
Shoukat Ali etc.
(in C.A.2048/17)
Ehsan Ullah Butt etc.
(in C.A.2049/2017)
Fayyaz Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2050/2017)
Mian Mubeen Sarwar etc.
(in C.A.2051/17)
Irfan Waseem etc.
(in C.A.2052/2017)
Tahir Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.2053/2017)
Rashid Ali etc.
(in C.A.2054/17)
Hassan Mirza etc.
(in C.A.2055/2017)
Syed Imdad Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.2056/2017)
Maskhoor Khan etc.
(in C.A.2057/17)
Muhammad Naseebullah etc.
(in C.A.2058/2017)
Farah Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.2059/2017)
Aisha Fareed etc.
(in C.A.2060/17)
Umair Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2061/2017)
Arif Javed etc.
(in C.A.2062/2017)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
9
Rukhsana Begum etc.
(in C.A.2063/17)
Akbar Ali etc.
(in C.A.2064/2017)
Nasira Naseem etc.
(in C.A.2065/2017)
Hafiz Muhammad Subhani etc.
(in C.A.2066/17)
Imran Nazir etc.
(in C.A.2067/2017)
Imran Bukhsh etc.
(in C.A.2068/2017)
Muhammad Aslam etc.
(in C.A.2069/17)
Syed Kashif Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2070/2017)
Fazal Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.2071/2017)
Nadeem Ashiq etc.
(in C.A.2072/17)
Ali Muhammad etc.
(in C.A.2073/2017)
Ali Haider Zaidi etc.
(in C.A.2074/2017)
Saima Bibi Awan etc.
(in C.A.2075/17)
Waseem Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.2076/2017)
Mrs. Shamim Bibi etc.
(in C.A.2077/2017)
M. Habib Khan etc.
(in C.A.2078/17)
Mrs. Yasmin Akhter etc.
(in C.A.2079/2017)
Shahzad Zaman etc.
(in C.A.2080/2017)
Shah Khalid etc.
(in C.A.2081/17)
Syed Amjad Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2082/2017)
Rizwan Qayyum etc.
(in C.A.2083/2017)
Shahbaz Ahmed Khan etc.
(in C.A.2084/17)
Mubashir Hussain Shah etc.
(in C.A.2085/2017)
Iftikhar Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.2086/2017)
Tariq Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2087/17)
Kamran Ali etc.
(in C.A.2088/2017)
Muhammad Shahid Rasheed etc.
(in C.A.2089/2017)
Hady Hussain etc.
(in C.A.2090/17)
Amar Shahzad etc.
(in C.A.2091/2017)
Miss Farhat Naseem etc.
(in C.A.2092/2017)
Abdul Rehman etc.
(in C.A.2093/17)
Hafeez Ahmed etc.
(in C.A.2094/2017)
Imran Khan etc.
(in C.A.2095/2017)
Muhammad Yasir etc.
(in C.A.2096/17)
Tariq Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.2097/2017)
Mrs. Rehana Kausar etc.
(in C.A.2098/2017)
Habib Ullah Niazi etc.
(in C.A.2099/17)
Habib Ullah etc.
(in C.A.2100/2017)
Muhammad Khan etc.
(in C.A.2101/2017)
Syed Naushad Ahmad etc.
(in C.A.2102/2017)
Taj Muhammad etc.
(in C.A.2103/17)
Yasir Mehmood etc.
(in C.A.2104/2017)
Zafar Hayat etc.
(in C.A.2105/2017)
Hafeez ur Rehman Soomro etc.
(in C.A.2106/17)
Muhammad Ramzan etc.
(in C.A.2107/2017)
Syed Muhammad Irshad etc.
(in C.A.2108/2017)
Rafaqat Ali etc.
(in C.A.2109/17)
Muhammad Jaffar etc.
(in C.A.2110/2017)
Farhan Saleem etc.
(in C.A.2111/2017)
Shahid Ilyas etc.
(in C.A.2112/17)
Dr. farrukh F. Lodhi etc.
(in C.A.216/2016)
Mubashir Iqbal Zafar etc.
(in C.A.806/2016)
Muhammad Luqman etc.
(in C.A.807/16)
Allah Bakhsh etc.
(in C.A.808/2016)
Muhammad Riaz etc.
(in C.A.809/2016)
Zulfiqar Ali etc.
(in C.A.810/16)
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
10
Muhammad Attique ur Rehman
etc.
(in C.A.811/2016)
…Respondents(s)
For the Appellant(s)
Mr. Sajid Ilyas Bhatti, DAG
(in all cases)
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
Ms. Saadia Kanwal, S.O Fin.
Mr. Abid Hussain Channa, S.O Fin.
Mr. Sajid Javed, Asstt. Legal Fin.
Mr. Abdul Razzaq, AAO MEG
Rawalpindi
For the Respondent(s)
In-person
For the Respondent(s)
Mr. Muhammad Ilyas Lodhi, ASC
(in C.A.216/16)
Malik Itaat Hussain Awan, ASC
Amicus Curiae:
Mr. Muhammad Makhdoom Ali
Khan, Sr. ASC
Mr. Sikandar Bashir Mohmand, ASC
Date of Hearing
17.01.2018.
JUDGMENT
UMAR ATA BANDIAL, J.— By leave of this Court
granted on 23.02.2016, 01.4.2016 and 12.12.2017 in the
several connected appeals before us, the appellant Federal
Government challenges the judgments delivered on common
questions of fact and law by the learned Federal Service Tribunal
on 05.10.2015, 11.01.2016 and 18.07.2017. The judgments
impugned in the connected appeals declare the respondent
employees of different institutions functioning under the
Directorate General of Special Education (“DGSE”) to be entitled
to payment of Health Allowance granted by the Federal
Government vide its Office Memoranda dated 04.02.2012 and
06.2.2012. These Memoranda are issued by the Finance Division
(Regulations Wing) Government of Pakistan pursuant to
approval granted by the Prime Minister under the Rules of
Business, 1973. It would be useful to reproduce the two
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
11
memoranda containing the terms and conditions for the grant of
Health Allowance to eligible persons:
“Government of Pakistan
Finance Division
(Regulations Wing)
F.No.2(13)R-2/2011
Islamabad, the 04th Feb,2012
OFFICE MEMORANDUM
Subject:
GRANT OF ADHOC ALLOWANCE EQUAL TO
ONE BASIC PAY AT THE INITIAL OF THE
SCALE TO THE HEALTH PERSONNEL IN BPS
SCHEME.
The undersigned is directed to say that the
Ordinance No.VI of 2011 that sanctioned the Career Structure for
Health Personnel Scheme (CSHP) has lapsed on 26.12.2011.
Accordingly, CSHP is no longer in the field and all health personnel
have consequently reverted to the BPS scheme. In order to
compensate health personnel for the loss of benefits sought under
CSHP while preserving their status as Civil Servants, it has been
decided by the Federal Government to grant adhoc allowance equal
to one basic pay at the initial of the scale to the health personnel
in the employment of Federal Government, in BPS scheme, with
effect from 1st January, 2012. This will be in addition to their
existing pay/allowances in BPS Scheme.
2.
This Division’s OM No.2(13)R-2/2011-698 dated 17th
November, 2011 may be treated as withdrawn w.e.f. 26.12.2011.
Sd/--
(M. Munir Sadiq)
Deputy Secretary (R-I)”
***
“Government of Pakistan
Finance Division
(Regulations Wing)
F.No.2(13)R-2/2011-777
Islamabad, the 06th February,2012
OFFICE MEMORANDUM
Subject:
GRANT OF ADHOC ALLOWANCE EQUAL TO ONE
BASIC PAY OF RUNNING SALARY TO THE HEALTH
PERSONNEL IN BPS SCHEME.
In
continuation
of
Finance,
Division’s
O.M.
No.F.2(13)R-2/2011, dated 4.2.2012, it has been decided by the
Federal Government to grant benefit of one basic pay of running
salary as Health Allowance to the health personnel in the
employment of Federal Government, in BPS scheme, with effect
from 1st January, 2012. This will be in addition to their existing
allowances in BPS Scheme. Also grant of stipend amounting to
Rs.50,000 per month to the postgraduate residents and Rs.24,000
per month for House Officers respectively w.e.f. 1.7.2011 will
continue.
Sd/--
(Manzoor Ali Khan)
Sr. Joint Secretary (Regulations)”
(emphasis supplied)
2.
Learned Deputy Attorney General has contended
that the Health Allowance granted by the Federal Government is
available to health personnel in the employment of the Federal
Government in the BPS scheme at three hospitals established in
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
12
Islamabad, namely, Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences
(“PIMS”), Federal Government Polyclinic (“FGP”) and National
Institution of Rehabilitation Medicines (“NIRM”). The employees
at these hospitals do not have a career structure in place after
the Career Structure for Health Personnel Scheme Ordinance,
2011 (“Ordinance”) lapsed on 26.1.2011. The Health Allowance
was accordingly granted by the Federal Government as a form of
compensation. It is clear from the two memoranda dated
04.2.2012 and 06.2.2012 reproduced above that the Health
Allowance is granted to “health personnel”. However, the
composition of the category of employees that are eligible for the
benefit has not been provided therein. The respondents who are
several hundred in number are unrepresented by counsel. In
view of the fact that a large number of employees are affected by
the instant controversy, the Court has sought assistance from
Mr. Muhammad Makhdoom Ali Khan, Sr. ASC and Mr. Sikandar
Bashir Mohmand, ASC as amicus curiae in the matter.
Mr. Sikandar Bashir Mohmand, ASC made able submissions
before
the
Court
that
highlighted
important
facts
and
documents
on
record
which
simplified
the
controversy
appreciably.
3.
It transpires that an Office Memorandum dated
27.03.2012 by the Finance Division (Regulations Wing) clarifies
that the term “health personnel” used in the above mentioned
memoranda bears the meaning given to that expression in
Section 2(b) of the Ordinance. This definition refers to the
contents of Schedule-I to the Ordinance which specifies the
service providers who qualify as health personnel. A perusal of
Schedule-I shows that five categories of service providers are
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
13
classified as health personnel, namely: Doctors, Allied, Nurses,
Paramedics and Support. The services specified under the
categories of Paramedics and Support include Teachers,
Audiovisual Operators, Technicians, Librarians, etc.
4.
The
administrative
Ministry
for
the
health
institutions of the Federal Government at Islamabad is the
Ministry of Capital Administration and Development Division
(“CADD”). It is an admitted fact that vide order dated
13.03.2013 the Ministry of CADD granted the Health Allowance
to the employees of the DGSE and its allied special education
centers/ institutions including National Trust for the Disabled
(“NTD”) and the National Council for Rehabilitation of Disabled
Persons
(“NCRDP”).
The
respondents
were
thereby
acknowledged as beneficiaries of the said grant and were paid
the
Health
Allowance
with
effect
from
01.1.2012
until
27.10.2014, when the Finance Division informed the Accountant
General Pakistan Revenue (“AGPR”) that only health personnel
working in Federal Government hospitals and clinics were
qualified
to
receive
the
Health
Allowance.
The
AGPR
correspondingly instructed the DGSE to stop payment of the
said allowance to its employees as no budget allocation for the
said emolument had been made in the financial year 2014-15.
5.
The discontinuation of their Health Allowance was
taken to the Islamabad High Court by some of the respondents.
Vide order dated 17.9.2015 the learned High Court referred the
dispute to the Secretary CADD for passing a speaking order
thereon; and till then restrained recovery of past payments of
the Health Allowance from the affected employees of DGSE and
allied centers. The Secretary CADD heard the parties and by
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
14
order
dated
21.3.2016
rejected
the
entitlement
of
the
respondents to receive the said allowance. The principal ground
of his decision is that employees of the DGSE were engaged in
the process of education, training and rehabilitation of disabled
children and therefore did not fall within the ambit of a health
organization. The respondents successfully challenged the said
order before the learned Federal Service Tribunal which has,
inter alia, by the impugned judgment dated 18.07.2017 declared
that the respondents are entitled to the grant of Health
Allowance.
6.
Learned Deputy Attorney General has contended
that after the lapse of the Ordinance that had provided a career
structure for the doctors, nurses and paramedics working in
PIMS, FGP and NIRM, the Health Allowance was granted by the
Federal Government as compensation to the said health
personnel.
He
was,
however,
unable
to
show
any
contemporaneous direction issued by the Ministry of CADD or
the Ministry of Finance that restricted the grant of the Health
Allowance to the claimed employees of the three hospitals
specified by him. As already noted above, the definition of health
personnel
provided
in
the
Ministry
of
Finance
Office
Memorandum dated 27.3.2012 is wide in scope and therefore
unhelpful to his plea.
7.
We
have
examined
the
definition
of
“health
personnel” adopted by said memorandum dated 27.3.2012 from
Section 2(b) of the Ordinance which is to the following effect:
“b) “health personnel” means a person who holds a post in any
institute or organization delivering services in the health
sector and included in Schedule-I, but does not include:
i) a person who is on deputation to the Federal
Government from any Province or other authority;
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
15
ii) a person who is employed on contract, or on work
charged basis or who is paid from contingencies.”
8.
It is noted that the foregoing definition of health
personnel covers persons holding posts in any institute or
organization who are delivering services in the health sector that
are included in Schedule-I to the Ordinance. Learned Deputy
Attorney General was unable to distinguish the respondents,
who are employees of the DGSE and allied institutions/centers,
NCRDP and NTD, from the paramedic and support staff
positions that qualify as health personnel according to
Schedule-I to the Ordinance. It is not denied by the appellant
that education, training and rehabilitation of disabled persons
are services provided in the health sector. These services fall
within the terms of Schedule-I to the Ordinance and therefore
the providers thereof qualify as health personnel.
9.
Accordingly, not only do the respondents fall within
the category of persons who are, in terms of Finance Division
Memoranda dated 06.2.2012 and 27.3.2012, eligible for grant of
the Health Allowance but their entitlement has in fact been
admitted by both the Ministry of CADD and Ministry of Finance.
In this respect the aforementioned letter dated 13.3.2013 issued
by the Ministry of CADD is referred. Also the affidavit of the
Secretary Finance, Government of Pakistan filed in the
Islamabad High Court pursuant to that Court’s order dated
20.3.2015 passed in Writ Petition No. 4007 of 2014, specifically
records that the proposal approved by the Prime Minister vide
Summary dated 25.1.2012 did not restrict admissibility of the
Health Allowance to the personnel of the three hospitals
(identified by the learned DAG). For that reason the Finance
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
16
Division Memoranda dated 04.2.2012 and 6.2.2012 made the
allowance available to all health personnel employed by the
Federal Government in the BPS Scheme.
10.
As a result, the said allowance was paid to the
health personnel of the DGSE and its allied institutions until
27.10.2014 when the Finance Division instructed the AGPR to
confine the grant of the allowance to employees of Federal
Government hospitals and clinics. This instruction represents
merely a change of opinion which is not occasioned by an
amendment in the terms of eligibility for the Health Allowance.
Therefore, as the Memoranda dated 04.2.2012, 06.2.2012 and
27.3.2012 issued by the Finance Division, Government of
Pakistan still hold the field in their original terms, there is no
merit in the objection by the learned DAG to the entitlement of
the respondents to claim and receive the Health Allowance.
11.
As a secondary and also tenuous argument, learned
Deputy Attorney General contended that the Health Allowance is
granted under executive fiat without any statutory backing
therefore the same can be withdrawn by the Federal Government
at any time. That is clearly a flawed contention. It is admitted
that grant of the Health Allowance and the terms of eligibility to
receive the same were determined by the competent authority,
Ministry of Finance in accordance with Rules of Business of the
Federal Government. The original terms of the said lawful grant
still hold the field. These were acted upon and payment of the
Health Allowance to the respondents has conferred a vested
right upon them. In such circumstances, the executive is barred
by the rule of locus poenitentiae from unilaterally rescinding and
retrieving the benefit availed by its recipients. Reference is made
C.A. NO. 1631 OF 2017 ETC.
17
to Pakistan, through the Secretary, Ministry of Finance vs.
Muhammad Himayatullah Farukhi (PLD 1969 SC 407) and
The Engineer-in-Chief Branch vs. Jalaluddin (PLD 1992 SC
207). Therefore without a change of the terms of eligibility for
the Health Allowance even the prospective exclusion of the
respondents from receipt of the benefit shall constitute arbitrary
and unlawful action.
12.
In the circumstances, we do not find any error or
defect in the impugned judgments of the learned Federal Service
Tribunal
dated
05.10.2015,
11.1.2016
and
18.7.2017.
Consequently, these appeals are dismissed and the entitlement
of employees of the DGSE, allied institutions/centers, NCRDP
and NTD to receive the Health Allowance is affirmed.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Islamabad
17.01.2018
Naseer
Not approved for reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.1631_2017.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1646 & 2000/2006 AND CIVIL PETITION NO.782-K/2009
(Against the judgment dated 18.2.2009, 10.8.2006 of the High Court of Sindh, Karachi passed in C.P.
No.D-2659/1994, C.P. No.34-D/1995)
M/s MFMY Industries Ltd.
…in C.A.1646/2006
M/s Sapphire Textile Mills Ltd.
…in C.A.2000/2006
M/s Gatron Industries Ltd.
…in C.P.782-K/2009
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
Federation of Pakistan through M/o Commerce etc. …in C.A.1646/2006
Pakistan through Secretary M/o Finance etc.
…in C.A.2000/2006
Pakistan through Secretary M/o Finance etc.
…in C.P.782-K/2009
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. Tariq Javed, ASC
(in C.A.1646/2006)
Mr. Abdul Ghaffar Khan, ASC
(in C.A.2000/2006)
For FBR:
Mr. M. Bilal, Sr. ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Departmental
Representative:
For Federation:
Imran Mehmood, MCB
Mr. Sohail Mahmood, D.A.G.
Date of hearing:
21.04.2015
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.-
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1646 & 2000/2006:
These appeals are being disposed of on a short point i.e.
whether the impugned judgment passed by the learned High Court is
proper judicial dispensation or otherwise. The relevant facts in this context
are:- the appellants filed constitution petitions before the learned High
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 2 :-
Court of Sindh, whereby they assailed the imposition of import fee enforced
through certain SROs on various grounds and also sought relief of refund
of the amount already paid by them to the Customs Department on
account of the above. The hearing in the matters took place on 22.3.2005
and 4.5.2005 respectively and the judgment was reserved, which was
ultimately announced on 10.8.2006 after a lapse and delay of almost one
year and three months. The appellants had challenged the said judgment
herein and leave was granted, inter alia, on the point(s) that since the
impugned judgment had been passed in the matters after an inordinate
delay, whether it was a case fit for remand of the matters to the learned
High Court for hearing and decision afresh.
2.
Learned counsel for the appellants while arguing these appeals
has confined today to the said point and submitted that because of such a
long delay, the judgment in question is invalid and improper judicial
dispensation and on this score alone the same (judgment) stands vitiated.
This is the proposition requiring resolution vide the present verdict.
3.
Heard. Before dilating upon the proposition in hand, I feel
constrained to briefly highlight the importance of judiciary/judicature as a
vital component of the State. A State, as understood today, constitutes
three foundational organs i.e. Legislature, Executive and Judicature. In
ordinary parlance, these (organs) are also known to be the three pillars of the
State. The political philosophers, jurists, constitutional experts and even
judicial opinions pronounced all over the world (specially in the countries having the
democratic system/set up for governance) are unanimous in their views that the
entire structure of the State is founded, built upon, and secured only on
account of the said pillars. And due to lack/absence or imbalance in
respect of any of these organs/pillars, the very concept of State is periled
and its existence is put at risk.
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 3 :-
The main object and function of the legislative branch of the State is
to make laws, which (laws) obviously define and prescribe the rights and
obligations of the citizens/persons and the duties of the State; these laws
ordain the functions which the State can and has to perform vide various
organs thereto. The legislative limb also enables a broader mechanism for
State governance by drawing policies and issuing and passing resolutions
on numerous important aspects expedient for the effective functioning of
the State. It may also provide for a machinery through which laws and
directives etc. are or should be implemented and enforced. It (legislature)
formulates and constitutes the positive law of the State.
Whereas the object of executive is to not only carry out and run the
affairs of the State in accordance with the laws made by the legislature and
any policy/direction given to it, but also comply with laws, follow the
established rules, norms and standards expedient and necessary for the
due administration of the State. Thus, it (executive) is responsible for the
governance of the State and for carrying out its affairs in consonance with
the Rule of law.
According to the Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973
(the Constitution), the executive authority of the Federation shall be exercised in
the name of the President by the Federal Government, consisting of the
Prime Minister and the Federal Minister. The executive authority shall act
through the Prime Minister who shall be the Chief Executive of the
Federation (see Article 90 of the Constitution). Furthermore President shall appoint
Federal Ministers and Ministers of State from amongst the members of
Majlis Shoora on the advice of the Prime Minister (see Article 92). Thus it is
clear that the top echelon of the State administration comes into being
through and from the Parliament, which comprises of the chosen
representatives of the people. These chosen representatives simultaneously
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 4 :-
act as the legislators and the administrators. The administrative/executive
branch, having thus been elected by the people of State, while performing
its functions keeps in view its political expediencies, the commitments
made to the electorate per its manifesto and the policies which seem
necessary in its own judgment for its future political interests; inter alia for
these factors and in the exuberant pursuit of its goals, the executive may
compromise the well established rules of governance which not only results
in misuse and abuse of authority, but may also lead to violation of the
rights of the citizens consciously or inadvertently or cause violation of the
social, economic and political rights of the people in general or in particular
of those who do not agree with the government in power.
Anyhow, as highlighted above, according to the constitutional setup
of our country, executive primarily emanates out of the legislative branch of
the State i.e. out of the chosen representative of the people, therefore, there
remains no strict separation of power between the legislature and the
executive. Rather practically there is considerable harmony and also
collaboration between these two branches of the State. These branches at
times support and bolster each other and while they do so, the possibility
that either of the two branches exceeds its jurisdiction and empowerment
or misuses the same cannot be ruled out. For example, on account of some
executive expediency, the legislature, on the behest of the executive, may
pass certain laws, which otherwise may not conform to the parameters (ultra
vires) of constitutionality, but are simply promulgated with the object of
meeting executive exigencies. Likewise, the elements of abuse, excessive
use of power, arbitrary exercise of power, whimsical, non-transparent,
unfair and unreasonable action(s) on part of the executive including the
violation of fundamental rights have been commonly noticed and also
interfered with by the judiciary to protect and safeguard the rights of the
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 5 :-
citizens/persons, who are affected on account of such abuses and misuses.
It is in the aforementioned circumstances that where the legislature or the
executive branch has erred in the exercise of its jurisdiction and is
responsible for any of the deviations indicated above, that an affected
person for the purposes of seeking redressal of his grievance against such
wrong and/or for enforcing his rights under the law, including his
fundamental rights as enshrined in the Constitution, comes forth to the
judicature by knocking at its door (note: in the context of above, I am purposely not
making reference to any private litigation between two individuals). This is the last resort
for a beleaguered and aggrieved person. It is thus that the judicature is
conceived, perceived and is meant to act as the final arbiter not only vis-à-
vis the interpretation of the Constitution, the statutory law(s), but is to also
ensure that RULE OF LAW is adhered to and the rights of the
citizens/persons approaching the courts are determined and enforced
against the Might of the State. It is commonly and jurisprudentially known
all over the republican and democratic world that the courts are the
guardians of the Constitution and are responsible for preserving and
securing the rights of the aggrieved citizens/persons as against the State.
The discussion above briefly provides for the importance of the
judicial branch of the State. Besides, the pivotal, cardinal and important
role of the judicature can be assessed from the quote of Hazrat Ali (R.A.)
who avowed “a society with kufr may be sustained but not the one where there is
injustice”. In Asma Jillani’s case (PLD 1972 SC 139 @ 182), Chief Justice
Hamood-ur-Rahman while impressing upon the role of judiciary remarked
“It is this that led Von Hammer, a renowned orientalist, to remark that under the Islamic
system the law rules through the utterance of justice, and the power of the Governor carries
out the utterance of it”. I am also reminded to mention here (as it is commonly
known, but I have no authentic version of it), that during the second world war, a
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 6 :-
question was posed to Winston Churchill, Britain Prime Minister, whether
Britain would win the war or not, he responded to the effect that if there
was a functional judiciary in Britain, there was no doubt that Britain would
win. Once Justice Thurgood Marshall, Judge of the Supreme Court of the
United States of America while commenting on the importance of the
judiciary remarked, “The greatest scourge an angry Heaven ever inflicted upon an
ungrateful and a sinning people was an ignorant, a corrupt, or a dependent judiciary”. In
furtherance to this, I would also like to add here that judiciary which lacks
courage to do justice without fear and favour, is biased, suffers from the
vice of self-interest, is tardy, indolent and incompetent and has no urge,
will, passion and ability to decide the cases/disputes before it
expeditiously, it falls in the romance of aggrandizement and populism is a
danger to the State and the society. Whereas, a great virtue of a judicial
functionary is that he applies the rules of balancing and proportionality
while performing his functions and discharging his duties.
Provided above, are some good illustrations of the importance and
significance of the judiciary in a society and within a State. I may like to
add here that one of the most important differences between developed
countries on one hand and developing or under developed countries on the
other is the respect for, adherence to and enforcement of THE RULE OF
LAW. I have no doubt in my mind that this ideal can only be achieved
through an independent and capable judiciary, which is beyond the reach,
control and influence of other branches of the State. The judicature has to
act as a natural umpire who keeps a check on the exercise of power by
other organs of the State so as to ensure that the rights of citizens/persons
are not affected and trampled contrarily to law.
4.
In view of the above discourse, when the judiciary enjoys such
a special position, privilege and status in the functioning of the State, it is
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 7 :-
also saddled with the onerous duty of discharging its functions efficiently,
effectively and with utmost diligence and care. One of the responsibilities in
this context, universally known, is the duty of the Judge to decide the cases
expeditiously, because it is a known jurisprudential concept that “justice
delayed is justice denied”. The courts must, thus, exercise all the authority
conferred upon them to prevent any delays which are being caused at any
level by any person whosoever. I am mindful of the fact that in any
litigation there are certain procedural implications without which there
shall be no discipline left for the regulation of a lis before a court. These
procedural and legal aspects of the matter are equally important, which
must be followed in letter and spirit. However, barring such time that is
consumed for adherence with these legal and procedural aspects, the
courts are bound to decide the matter as promptly as possible especially
once the trial and the hearing of the case(s) is complete (note: in the trial case)
and in appeals, revisions and constitutional matters, once the hearing of
the matter (when arguments are concluded) has taken place and has been
concluded.
5.
Termination of a lis undoubtedly is through a verdict of a court
which is a decision disposing of a matter in dispute before it (the Court) and
in legal parlance, it is called a “JUDGMENT”. It is invariably known that a
Judge finally speaks through his judgment. According to Black’s Law
Dictionary, a judgment has been defined to mean “A court’s final determination of
the rights and obligations of the parties in a case” and per Henry Campbell Black, A
Treatise on the Law of Judgment “An action is instituted for the enforcement of a right or
the redress of an injury. Hence a judgment, as the culmination of the action declares the existence of
the right, recognizes the commission of the injury, or negatives the allegation of one or the other. But
as no right can exist without a correlative duty, nor any invasion of it without a corresponding
obligation to make amends, the judgment necessarily affirms, or else denies, that such a duty or such
a liability rests upon the person against whom the aid of the law is invoked”. These definitions
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 8 :-
are adequately self-explanatory. In our procedural law (civil), judgment as
defined in Section 2(9) of Code of Civil Procedure means “the statement given by
the judge of the grounds of a decree or order”. It should be emphasized here that a
judgment should supply adequate reasons for the conclusion reached and
arrived at and should be reflective of application of proper judicial mind by
the Judge and it should not be a mechanical and not speaking judgment in
nature.
It may be reiterated that without a judgment, there is no concept of
justice and/or fruitful outcome of litigation which without any fear of
contradiction means that the State lacks an effective justice system. In
such a situation, I would, rather, go to the extent of saying that if the
Judge/the Court does not pronounce a judgment for resolving the legal and
factual issues involved in a dispute before it at all, the very purpose of the
judicial branch of the State will be frustrated and eroded. If there is no
judgment in terms of law, the entire judicial setup shall be rendered farce
and illusionary, which obviously shall in turn disturb the equilibrium
between the pillars of the State upon which it rests, resulting into serious
impairment of the functioning of the State.
6.
After having shed some light on the importance of judgments,
it is essential to note that in pure civil litigation which emanates from the
institution of a suit/lis, a Trial Judge, if there are triable issues for the
resolution of which the evidence is required, (note: subject to delinquency of the
parties and the consequences for not producing the evidence thereof) (the court) after recording
of the evidence, is supposed to pronounce the judgment per Order 20 Rule
1(2), which reads as:- “the Court shall, after the case has been heard, pronounce
judgment in open court, either at once or on some future day not exceeding thirty days,
which due notice shall be given to the parties or their advocates”. The judgment thus
has to be given by the Trial Court within the prescribed period of 30 days,
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 9 :-
after the hearing of the case has been concluded. It may be relevant to
mention here that with the commencement of the trial in a civil lis, the
hearing of the case also starts. And with the conclusion of the trial, the
hearing also concludes. The conclusion of the trial or the hearing means
that the parties have concluded and completed their evidence. There is no
specific provision in the CPC which confers the right upon the parties to
make oral arguments before the trial Court, but per convention, the oral
submissions of the parties are also heard, which exercise however, must be
concluded within 30 days time from the conclusion of the trial, as
prescribed by law. If the parties, despite the opportunity granted by the
court to make oral submissions, do not avail the same, the court is not
bound to wait indefinitely for them and keep on adjourning the matter. This
is highly deprecated and should be discouraged, rather the Court should
pronounce the judgment without their arguments and this (such judgment)
shall not be in violation of the rule of hearing.
In my view, the expression “not exceeding thirty days” makes it
mandatory for the Trial Court to render its judgment within the prescribed
time period. If the same is not done, without a sufficient cause i.e. a cause
beyond the control of the Judge, the judgment is impaired in value if not
invalid and disciplinary action can be taken against a Judge who is found
habitual in delaying his judgments beyond that period, obviously following
proper legal steps for such action and in any case at least this vice of the
judge must adversely reflect in his ACR’s.
However, in the case(s) of appeal against the judgment and decree of
the Trial Court, the provisions relevant in the context of judgment are Order
41 Rule 30, CPC, which read as follows:-
“The Appellate Court after hearing the parties or their pleaders
and referring to any part of the proceedings whether on appeal
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 10 :-
or in the Court from whose decree the appeal is preferred to
which reference maybe considered necessary, shall pronounce
judgment in open Court, either at once or on some future day of
which notice shall be given to the parties or their pleaders.”
From a reading of the above, it is conspicuous that the appellate Court after
hearing (note: obviously the hearing means oral arguments) the parties or their
pleaders, as the case may be, shall pronounce the judgment at once or on
some future day. This future day by no stretch of legal interpretation or on
the settled rules and norms of justice can be construed to mean an
indefinite period. Rather the rule of reasonableness of time required for
the performance of a judicial act in the normal and ordinary course
necessary for doing justice should be attracted and pressed into service and
read into it.
If the first appeal against the decree or order (subject to the pecuniary
jurisdiction) is being heard by the District Judge (Additional District Judges included),
and it is only the oral summations which are being addressed by the
parties/pleaders and heard by the court and no fresh evidence is being
recorded (subject to additional evidence as discussed in Order 41 Rule 27 CPC), as the long
exercise of a trial is now over; the record is complete; the matter is ripe in
all respects for a decision, and the Judge is only required to render the
judgment after hearing the summations, thus he has to do the same within
reasonable time. This reasonable time, to my candid consideration, should
not be more than 45 days. I am enlarging the margin of 15 days (i.e. 30 days +
15 days) because the same Judges also act as Sessions Judges and have to
conduct session trials and render decisions in criminal matters and other
judicial work also, thus given them the margin of other assignments the
noted time is most reasonable and quite sufficient for the appellate court
(District Judges) to compose the judgment. This rule and adherence to time,
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 11 :-
should equally apply to the judgments in relation to the revisional as also
review jurisdiction of these court(s) or where the court(s) is exercising any
other special jurisdiction in cases of civil nature before it. If the judgments
are not announced within such reasonable time as stated above, same
consequences should follow which are prescribed for the trial court Judges
in respect of action(s) proposed against them and the impairment of the
judgment(s). I find it expedient to mention here that this rule should also
extend to all the special courts (forums), tribunals either constituted under
the Federal or the Provincial laws and set up which are presided over by the
serving or retired judges of the subordinate judiciary and even to those
forums which are presided over by the ex-judges of the High Courts (note:
however if some time has been fixed by the law for the disposal of any matter before the special
forum, such law should take precedence over this rule of reasonableness of time set out in this
opinion). It also requires mention here that in quite a large number of cases it
has been experienced that the cases are adjourned for the arguments for
umpteen, indefinitely numerous occasions, therefore to curb this menace
the Judges of the District Judiciary and the special forum throughout the
country while pronouncing their judgments should record a note at the
end/bottom thereof, as to how many times the case was listed for hearing
of the arguments and was adjourned so that the High Courts which have
supervisory authority over the said Judiciary must stay abreast about the
performance of the Judges; the causes for the delay and should take
measures and the steps to rectify the causes and the reasons in this behalf.
Moreover this Court as the apex Court of the country and being the
paterfamilias must also know what is the state of affair in the Judiciary at
the lower ebb and the manner in which the cases are being dealt with and
conducted at the trial and appellate/revisional stage. The special courts
and the forums should also made such endorsements at their judgments
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 12 :-
too. No lethargy or casual attitude is tolerable and the times have come to
take appropriate stern and positive actions for speedy justice, rather simple
rhetorics.
7.
I shall now turn to the hearing of the first and/or second
appeals by the High Court(s), and the hearing of the cases before it in its
revisional and constitutional jurisdiction. As the first appeals against
decrees and mostly the constitutional cases and ICAs are heard by a
Division Bench(s) of the High Courts, so as to enable the two Judges to
deliberate, confabulate and compose the judgment(s), or record dissent
and/or
exchange
draft
judgments,
the
reasonable
time
for
the
pronouncement of judgments should be 90 days. This time period (90 days)
shall also be reasonable time for the High Courts, for the reason that Article
201 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 mandates
“Subject to Article 189, any decision of a High Court shall, to the extent that it decides a
question of law or is based upon or enunciates a principle of law, be binding on all courts
subordinate to it”. Thus for proper enunciation of law, considerable research,
brooding and pondering may be required. 90 days time in view of said
Article should, therefore, also be good and adequate for the composition of
the judgments by the High Court(s) in the above matters and also in first
appeal against order or second appeals, and in the cases before it in its
revisional or review jurisdiction, or any of the special jurisdictions of the
High Court(s) (note: subject to the principle if the law has fixed a time for the conclusion of the
proceedings and pronouncement of judgment under any special law, this has to take precedence over
the 90 days)
If the Judges cannot compose and deliver the judgments within the
above (reasonable) time, then they for sufficient reasons, to be recorded (by
them) should set out the case for re-hearing. However, because of the high
status of the judges of the High Courts, it is not expected that the learned
Judges shall fix the matters for rehearing in routine just to cover up the
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 13 :-
lapse in composing the judgment within 90 days, rather I am sure that it
shall definitely be for genuine reasons, reflected in the order of rehearing as
to why the judgment could not be written and pronounced. However,
pronouncement of judgment by the High Court after a lapse of time period
of 90 days if the matter for any reason is not put for any rehearing per se
shall not be invalid, though it may be frowned upon. But again it does not
mean that learned High Court has indefinite time to pronounce the
judgment after hearing of the matter. In my opinion, the maximum time
within which the judgment should come is 120 days. Otherwise the
judgment shall stand weakened in quality and efficiency, if not invalid
altogether and therefore when challenged before this Court, the Court shall
decide whether it should sustain or set aside on the simple and short
ground of inordinate delay.
8.
Now coming to the judgments to be rendered by the apex Court
of the country. The cases/matters by this Court are heard in benches.
Usual cases are heard by a three members’ bench, though two members’
benches also hear the matters. The rule of 90 days should also ordinarily
extend to those (cases) heard by two member benches of this Court and if the
matter is not decided within this time, the case should be fixed for
rehearing. This is what I would do for myself.
But as the cases are heard by the larger Bench particularly a Bench
of three and above, the rule of 90 days should not be attracted because this
Court, being the apex Court of the country has to enunciate law on very
important legal and constitutional propositions, which law is binding on all
the courts and other organs of the State (see Article 189). Therefore for laying
down the LAW, a lot of effort, research, deliberations and confabulations
are required. This is the final court of the country which is saddled with the
duty of laying down the correct law therefore more responsibility is cast on
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 14 :-
the Court and utmost care is required to pursue the law which is free from
any flaw(s). Thus the judgments sometimes after being drafted are shelved
for a while for further thinking, rethinking about its implication, the effect
and impact on the State, society, culture, pending cases and the system of
governance, the rights of the citizens etc. This Court settles the
jurisprudence of the country and the development and true interpretation
of law. Numbers of drafts are therefore prepared for discussion and in put;
different opinions are to be recorded in the same judgment on different
points of law by the Judges of the Bench; there are dissents recorded. It is,
thus, left to the Judge(s) of this Court to decide for themselves as to what
minimum time frame shall be needed for composing and pronouncing the
judgment as the judges of the superior courts cannot be said to be unaware
or unmindful about their responsibility of providing speedy justice and the
expediency of dispensation of the justice. And of course the mandate of
Article X of the Judges Code of Conduct, which they have sworn (vide their
oath) to follow and abide by in letter and spirit. And the said Article
stipulates:-
“In this judicial work a Judge shall take all steps to decide
cases within the shortest time, controlling effectively efforts
made to prevent early disposal of cases and make every
endeavor to minimize suffering of litigants by deciding cases
expeditiously through proper written judgments. A Judge who
is unmindful or indifferent towards this aspect of his duty is not
faithful to his work, which is a grave fault.”
9.
Furthermore, in the context of the judgments in general and in
particular to be delivered by the superior courts, it is my firm and well
thought-out view that if there is an inordinate delay in pronouncement of
judgment after hearing of the matter, especially on account of lapse of
considerable and reasonable time, such as six months and beyond, the
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 15 :-
Judges shall not be in a position to exactly recall and record with precision
and exactitude as to what propositions of law and facts were argued before
them. This shall have reflection upon the rule of audi alteram partem,
which is a fundamental and salutary rule of justice and postulates that if
someone has been denied appropriate opportunity of hearing in a case, any
verdict/decision given against such person/party shall not be laudable.
This rule is quite known and established in our jurisprudence (note: I do not
find it expedient to unnecessarily reiterate the importance of this rule here) and the legal
consequences qua the violation thereof by a Court are also well established.
Besides, it may be mentioned here, that hearing means a meaningful,
purposeful and effective hearing which enables a Judge to understand the
legal and factual proposition involved in the matter as opposed to an
illusionary and cursory hearing conducted barely as a formality and to
bring on record mere compliance of the rule of hearing. If effective hearing
is not provided, it shall tantamount to non-hearing of the party concerned
and the legal consequences of non-hearing of parties shall follow.
10.
Be that as it may, in quite a number of cases where judgments
have been withheld by the Courts (by any Court) for a considerable period of
time, it has been frowned and disapproved, for example in the case reported
as Muhammad Ovais and another Versus Federation of Pakistan
through Ministry of Works and Housing Pakistan, Islamabad and
others (2007 SCMR 1587) it has been ordained:-
“6.
With regard to the writing of judgment, the directions
can be found under Order XX, rule 1(2) of the C.P.C. It lays down
imperatively that, after the case has been heard, the Court shall
pronounce judgment in the open Court either at once or on some
future date not exceeding thirty days, for which due notice shall be
given to the parties or their Advocates. The Code applies to the
High Court as well but if its application is relaxed in the exercise
of constitutional jurisdiction, one can conclude that the judgment
be pronounced on some future date, to be reasonably calculated.
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 16 :-
Though, strictly speaking, departure from thirty days is not
justified otherwise. Abdul Aziz, C.J. in Pathana v. Mst. Khandal
PLD 1952 BJ 38 had observed that a judgment, with reference to
Order XX, rule 1, C.P.C., delivered after five months of hearing
arguments is tantamount to delivering judgment without hearing
the parties. A Full Bench of this Court in Syed Iftikhar-ud-Din
Haider Gardezi v. Central Bank of India Limited 1996 SCMR 669
has maintained that the term "future date" cannot be determined
by a Court unreasonably. This was with reference to Order XLI,
rule 30, C.P.C. In the case aforesaid, a judgment pronounced
eight months after hearing of arguments was held to be
unreasonably delayed and the case was remanded to the High
Court for rehearing and re-deciding the matter. We have given our
anxious consideration to the law involved and also the principle of
propriety and hold that when the delay in pronouncement of
judgment is not expected to be unreasonable either in the exercise
of original or in appellate jurisdiction, why it should be so allowed
and interpreted in case of constitutional jurisdiction, especially,
when Code of Civil Procedure is held applicable.
7.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.
Even if, we go to the condition of prejudice caused to a
party by delayed pronouncement of judgment, though not provided
in law, yet the decision would depend upon the facts and
circumstances of each case. It is only adhered to for the sake of
argument, whereas, the verdict in 1996 SCMR 669 is to prevail
any way. The unreasonable delay of ten months in the instant case
in pronouncement of judgment by the learned High Court has
caused prejudice as well. In the lengthy arguments addressed
before us on merits, we were referred to a bulk of documentary
evidence going to the very route of the case which was never found
mentioned in the impugned judgment of the High Court. This
omission seems to be caused only and only due to the delay of ten
months in question.”
Almost to the same is the ratio of the law laid down in the cases reported as
Syed Iftikhar-ud-Din Haidar Hardezi and 9 others Versus Central Bank
of India Ltd. Lahore and 2 others (1996 SCMR 669), Muhammad Latif
Versus Member, Board of Revenue/Chief Settlement Commissioner,
Punjab, Lahore and 9 others (2003 CLC 1064) and Walayat Hussain
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 17 :-
Versus Muhammd Hanif (1989 MLD 1012). Similar jurisprudence can
also be found in the Indian Jurisdiction on the subject, where in the case
reported as R.C. Sharma Versus Union of India and others (AIR 1976 SC
2037), it has been held as under:-
“The Civil Procedure Code does not provide a time limit for the period
between the hearing of arguments and the delivery of a judgment.
Nevertheless, we think that an unreasonable delay between hearing of
arguments and delivery of a judgment, unless explained by exceptional
or extraordinary circumstances is highly undesirable even when written
arguments are submitted. It is not unlikely that some points which the
litigant considers important may have escaped notice. But, what is more
important is that litigants must have complete confidence in the results of
litigation. This confidence tends to be shaken if there is excessive delay
between hearing of arguments and delivery of judgments. Justice, as we
have often observed, must not only be done but must manifestly appear to
be done.”
11.
In the light of all that has been discussed and mentioned
above, it is clear that unlike the cases before the Trial Court, the cases for
which no specific period has been fixed by the statutory law for
pronouncing the judgment, it is required of the learned Judges concerned
of the District Judiciary that they should pronounce the judgments within
the time enunciated by this opinion. And it is expected of the learned
Judges of the High Courts to give respect to what time has been laid down
herein. Otherwise, any judgment rendered may be questioned as not being
meaningful, purposive and rather illusionary. Such a verdict shall neither
fit in the concept, object and purpose of a judgment nor shall it meet the
rule of proper dispensation of justice. But if any matter comes before this
Court in which a judgment of the learned High Court is attacked as
traveling beyond the period of six months, despite my holding it to be
weakened in quality etc., but it shall not be invalid altogether, still it shall
C.As.1646 & 2000 of 2006 & C.P.782-K of 2009
-: 18 :-
be open to this Court to examine if for some reason an exception can be
taken to this opinion and if so such judgment may be upheld. However
having examined the judgment impugned in this case which has been
pronounced after a period of one year and three months, I find it to be
against the rule of natural justice and it fundamentally does not meet with
the concept of proper judicial dispensation, thus the same cannot be
sustained and in such a situation the rule of vitiation of a judicial decision
can be aptly resorted to; and is, therefore, set aside and the matter is
remanded to the learned High Court for decision afresh. These appeals
stand allowed in the terms noted above.
CIVIL PETITION NO.782-K/2009:
12.
In this case, the impugned judgment has not been passed
through independent application of mind, rather the Court has decided the
matter simply on the basis of the judgments pronounced in the noted
appeals, which have been set aside, thus the impugned judgment in this
case also cannot be sustained. Resultantly this petition is converted into
appeal and allowed, the impugned judgment is set aside and the matter is
remanded to the learned High Court for decision afresh in accordance with
law.
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
JUDGE
21st April, 2015
Approved For Reporting
Ghulam Raza/*
| {
"id": "C.A.1646_2000.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed
Civil Appeal No.1664 of 2014
(Against judgment dated 22.09.2014 passed by the
Peshawar High Court Abbottabad Bench in C.R.
No.225 of 2008)
Mst. Kalsoom Begum
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Rizwan Shah & others
….Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Barrister Umar Aslam, ASC
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR
For the Respondent(s):
Mr. Manzoor Hussain, ASC
Date of hearing:
10.09.2020.
ORDER
Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed, J.-Appellant/plaintiff, claiming
to be a co-sharer in contiguity with concomitant rights, successfully
pre-empted sale of land measuring 1-Kanal 3-Marla bearing Khasra
No.2459/6027 in Khata No.3568/6997, situating within the revenue
estate of Mansehra, effected through mutation No.53825 dated 27.1.2003,
vide judgment/decree dated 30-11-2006, upheld by the learned Appellate
Court vide judgment/decree dated 16.10.2008. The respondent/ vendee-
defendant filed Civil Revision No.225 of 2008, a learned Judge-in-Chamber
issued pre-admission notice on 1.12.2008 to examine improvements on
the suit land, claimed by the vendee-defendant while affirming appellant’s
superior right as well as performance of Talab-e-Muwathibat being in
accordance with law. Dissatisfied with the finding of the learned Judge on
the aforesaid issues, the vendee-defendants, during the pendency of their
civil revision assailed the order ibid through Civil Petition No.93 of 2009,
however, it was dismissed as withdrawn on 6.8.2008 with a direction to
the High Court to afford opportunity of hearing to the both sides. It was in
this backdrop that the learned High Court set aside the judgments and
decrees
of
the
Courts
below
vide
judgment
dated
2.4.2012
Civil Appeal No.1664 of 2014
2
and remanded the case to the trial Court for decision afresh, assailed this
time by the appellant through Civil Petition No.1247 of 2012 wherein leave
was granted on 13.11.2012 in consequence whereof vide order dated
23.01.2013 the High Court was directed to decide the revision petition on
merit by itself, pursuant whereto, the High Court allowed the revision
petition and dismissed the suit vide judgment dated 22.09.2014, vires
whereof, are being assailed through this direct appeal, inter alia, on the
grounds that the High Court ran into error to non-suit the appellant by
holding that she lacked superior right of being a co-sharer in the estate as
well as her failure to satisfactorily perform Talabs in accordance with law.
Contrarily, the learned counsel for the respondents has defended the
impugned judgment by arguing that after a long drawn legal battle the
learned High Court had drawn conclusions just and fair duly supported by
evidence brought on the record. The learned counsel, emphatically,
pointed out appellant’s failure to produce the postman who had statedly
delivered the notices to argue that the omission by itself was fatal to the
suit; he has also highlighted “discrepancies” in the statements of witnesses
to prove the Talabs with a particular reference to absence of their names in
the plaint. The appellant was not a co-sharer in the estate at the relevant
time, concluded the learned counsel.
2.
Heard. Record perused.
3.
Appellant’s superior right as a co-sharer in the estate is the
foundation stone of her claim; factum of contiguity and easement are
inseparably consequent thereupon; she has constructed her plea on the
strength of a court decree dated 4.5.1976, holding field till date, a common
ground, on the basis whereof, mutation was sanctioned as late as on
15.1.2004, almost one year after the impugned sale as confirmed by
Ghulam Raza, Patwari Halqa (PW-2) as well as mutation (Ex.PW-2/R-I);
belated mutation weighed with the High Court to exclude the appellant
from the estate. It is by now well settled that a mutation by itself does not
create or destroy an existing right; it is merely reflection of revenue record,
authenticity/validity whereof is to be essentially ascertained in the
underlying transaction, a view held by this Court throughout in cases
reported as Muhammad Lehrasab Khan Vs. Mst. Aqeel-un-Nisa and 5 others
(2001 SCMR 338), Saadat Pervaz Sayan Vs. Chief Secretary, Government of
Punjab, Lahore and 3 others (2003 PLC (C.S.) 1277), Muhammad Munir Vs.
Civil Appeal No.1664 of 2014
3
Muhammad Saleem and others (2004 SCMR 1530), Arshad Khan Vs. Mst.
Resham Jan and others (2005 SCMR 1859), Mst. Janntan and others Vs.
Mst. Taggi through LRs and others (PLD 2006 S.C. 322), Muhammad Ishaq
Vs. Muhammad Shafiq and 9 others (2007 SCMR 1773), Haji Muhammad
Anwar Vs. Muhammad Ahmed and others (2007 SCMR 1961), Abdul
Rasheed through LRs and others Vs. Manzoor Ahmad and others (PLD 2007
SC 287), Mst. Suban Vs. Allah Ditta and others (2007 SCMR 635) and
Muhammad Yaqoob Vs. Mst. Sardaran Bibi and others (PLD 2020 S.C. 338).
The Court decree though incorporated after inordinate delay, nonetheless,
had conferred the status of a co-sharer upon the appellant way back in the
year 1976, additionally establishing contiguity with the suit land as well as
easement rights appertaining thereto. Absence of the postman from
witness-box who had actually delivered notices (Ex.PW-3/3-5) along with
relevant receipts (Ex.PW-1/1-3) does not violate the law declared by this
Court requiring official attendance to establish dispatch of notice of Talab-i-
Ishhad as Muhammad Yousaf, Clerk GPO Mansehra appeared as PW-1 to
bring on record the relevant details and thereby successfully established
dispatch of the required notice to the respondents. It has been held in the
case of Liaqat Ali and others Vs. Safdar Khan (2020 SCMR 863) that “we are
also not impressed by the argument that the postman who had actually delivered the notice
ought to have appeared in person instead of Fazal Majeed , Registration Clerk GPO and
Zahid Ahmed, Postman, who respectively appeared as PW-2 and PW-3. Plaintiff by
producing these official witnesses along with relevant receipts and acknowledgement due
aptly discharged the onus to establish dispatch of notice. There is perpetual continuity in
State business, sustained by officials in succession”. The appellant discharged the
onus to prove dispatch of notice by producing official witnesses from the
concerned post office as the mode adopted by her is in accord with the
provisions of section 26 of the West Pakistan General Clauses Act, (Act VI),
1956, reproduced below:
“26. Meaning of service by post.—Where any Provincial
Act, authorizes or requires any document to be served by
post, whether the expression “serve” or either of the
expressions “give” or “send” or any other expression is
used, then, unless a different intention appears, the
service shall be deemed to be effected by properly
addressing, pre-paying and posting by registered post, a
letter containing the documents, and, unless the contrary
is proved, to have been effected at the time at which the
letter would be delivered in the ordinary course of post.”
Civil Appeal No.1664 of 2014
4
Adverting to the statements of the witnesses produced by the appellant to
establish Talab-i-Muwathibat and Talab-i-Ishhad, held by the learned High
Court as discrepant, upon our analysis, we have not been able to persuade
ourselves to subscribe to the view taken by the learned High Court as the
alleged contradiction in their depositions may not be viewed as major or
significant. The appellant acquired knowledge of the impugned sale soon
after her return to Pakistan after performance of Hajj. Some variations in
the statements of witnesses, blown out of proportion, are merely narrative
variations that inevitably occur in honest human discourse after flux of
time; these do not destroy the contextual integrity of the declarations so as
to defeat a valuable statutory right, vesting in the appellant. The appeal is
allowed; impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside and the
judgments and decrees of the trial Court and that of the Appellate Court
are restored. No order as to costs.
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
10th September, 2020
Not approved for reporting
Azmat/-
| {
"id": "C.A.1664_2014.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Umar Ata Bandial
Mr. Justice Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed
Mr. Justice Sayyed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi
CIVIL APPEAL NO.166 OF 2021
Ali Asjad Malhi
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Ms. Syeda Nosheen Iftikhar and others
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. M. Shahzad Shoukat, ASC
Mian Abbas Ahmed, ASC
Mr. M. Sharif Janjua, AOR
For Respondent No.1:
In person.
For Respondent No.7:
Mr. Ghulam Mustafa Kandwal,
ASC
For the E.C.P.:
Mian Abdul Rauf, ASC
Mr. M. Arshad D.G. E.C.P.
Date of hearing:
16.03.2021.
ORDER
The impugned judgment of the Election Commission
of Pakistan (“ECP”) dated 08.03.2021, which was preceded by a
short order dated 25.02.2021, has been read to the Court. The
relevant facts of the present lis are that on 20.02.2021, a day
after the polling in the bye-election of NA-75, Sialkot-IV had
concluded, respondent No. 1 (a contesting candidate) complained
Civil Appeal No.166 of 2021
2
to the Returning Officer and the ECP about irregularities
committed at twenty polling stations. Thereafter, on completion of
his preliminary inquiry, the Returning Officer vide report dated
21.02.2021 accepted the claim of respondent No. 1 only to the
extent of fourteen polling stations. However, after hearing the
parties, ECP in its impugned short order dated 25.02.2021
declared the whole election of NA-75, Sialkot-IV null and void.
2.
It is accepted by all sides appearing in the matter
that two persons were killed at one polling station, roughly forty
polling stations were affected by aerial firing and Presiding
Officers of twenty polling stations went missing because of which
they could not hand over the results to the Returning Officer in
time. More importantly, the underlying tenor of the impugned
judgment is that the police were silent spectators who did not
intervene to check the acts of intimidation, harassment and
violence that took place outside the polling stations on election
day. In fact, the impugned judgment has observed that neither
the Inspector General of Police, Punjab nor the Chief Secretary,
Punjab responded to the ECP’s request on polling day for
controlling the law and order situation in Daska. Instead, only
the Federal Government reacted by providing protection through
Rangers for the polling staff, polling stations and polling material.
3.
There is no cavil with the proposition that ECP is
empowered under Article 218(3) of the Constitution read with
Section 9 of the Elections Act, 2017 (“Act”) to ensure that
elections are conducted honestly, justly, fairly and lawfully in
such a manner that coercion, intimidation and pressure tactics
Civil Appeal No.166 of 2021
3
are stymied. However, the question before us is: what standard of
proof, quantum of evidence, scale and severity of violations of law
will warrant a re-poll in the entire constituency. As it presently
stands, Section 9 ibid operates in a very limited span of sixty
days following the publication of the result of an election. The
jurisdiction of ECP under the said provision partakes of executive
and quasi-judicial powers that may be exercised promptly to cure
any irregularity in the conduct of an election. Therefore, the
benchmarks laid down by the law for the Election Tribunal to
annul an election and order a re-poll may not strictly apply to the
ECP under the said Section without suitable modification. In
such circumstances we would like to examine whether the
impugned action of the ECP, namely, its allegedly excessive
response to the prevailing situation in Daska was within its
jurisdictional parameters. The learned counsel for the parties
have so far not analyzed the extensive material on record to relate
the same to the powers and jurisdiction of the ECP under the
Constitution and the Act. In particular, the following questions
have not been addressed:
a. What transgressions on the polling day could
constitute grave illegalities or violations calling for a
fresh rather than a partial re-poll?
b. In what situations would non-pervasiveness of the
illegalities or violations committed on polling day still
attract the same result?
4.
To assist the Court in answering these questions, we
would appreciate if ECP could present a map of the constituency
labelling the polling stations where specified wrongs were
Civil Appeal No.166 of 2021
4
committed along with a chart explaining the said labels. To come
up for arguments on the foregoing points on 19.03.2021.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad, the
16th March, 2021
Azmat/- Meher
| {
"id": "C.A.166_2021.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
MR. JUSTICE MAQBOOL BAQAR
CIVIL APPEAL NO.167-Q OF 2005
(On
appeal
against
the
judgment
dated
14.12.2004 of the High Court of Baluchistan,
Quetta in RFA No.58 of 1999)
M/s Summit Bank Limited through its
Manager, M.A.Jinnah Road Branch, Quetta …
Appellant
Versus
Muhammad Alam & another
…
Respondents
For the appellant:
Hadi Shakeel Ahmed, ASC.
For the respondents: Syed Ayaz Zahoor, ASC.
Date of hearing:
07.4.2015
JUDGMENT
MAQBOOL BAQAR, J.- Through the instant appeal,
the appellant-bank has impugned judgment dated 14.12.2004 of a
learned Single Judge of the High Court of Balochsitan, whereby
the respondents’ appeal was allowed and the judgment dated
25.9.1999, of the learned Additional District Judge-II, Quetta,
dismissing the respondents’ suit against the appellant-bank, was
set-aside.
2.
The relevant facts of the case, in brief, are that on
25.3.1992. Qasim Khan, the father of the respondents, opened an
account, bearing No.251, with the appellant-bank in his name.
However, in May 1992 he allowed respondent No.2 and thereafter
also allowed respondent No.1 to operate the said account. Qasim
CA 167-Q/05
2
Khan passed away on 28.6.1996 whereafter at the request of the
respondents the title of the account was changed to “M/s Qasim
and Company”.
3.
A
contracting
firm,
namely,
M/s
Tameer-e-Nau
Engineers and Contractors (hereinafter referred to as “Tameer-e-
Nau”), owned by one Mir Afzal was awarded a civil contract by
Lahore Development Authority (LDA). On 01.11.1994, the
appellant-bank furnished a performance guarantee in respect of
the said project on behalf of Tameer-e-Nau. The said performance
guarantee was, sometime after 04.9.1995, enforced and encashed
by LDA. For the purposes of said payment a Running Finance
facility was granted in favour of Tameer-e-Nau and the amount
was thus debited in the running finance account of Tameer-e-Nau.
As per the relevant sanction advice (page 105 of the paper book), the
facility was secured by way of hypothecation of stock of
construction material worth Rs.4.000 millions and also through
equitable mortgage of a property bearing No.7-A, Model Town,
Lahore, measuring 600 square yards, valuing Rs.5.215 millions.
However, according to the appellant-bank, the re-payment of the
facility was also guaranteed by Qasim Khan, the deceased father
of the respondents, who according to the appellant-bank, executed
a guarantee in that regard. According to the respondents, huge
amounts were transacted by them through their afore-noted
account bearing No.251. It was claimed that on 21.2.1998 an
amount of Rs.55.50 millions was remitted by them through
telegraphic transfer to the said account. However, subsequently
some cheques including cheques dated 24.2.1998 and 17.3.1998
drawn by them against the said account were dis-honoured, and
CA 167-Q/05
3
upon inquiry they were informed by the appellant-bank that
sufficient balance was not available in the respondents’ account
as an amount of Rs.38,88,721.65 has been deducted by the
appellant-bank towards liquidation of the liability of Qasim Khan
(late) therefrom under the aforesaid guarantee.
4.
The plaintiffs/respondents through their counsel
caused a legal notice to be served on the appellant-bank for
refund of the amount but to no avail. The respondents, thus, filed
the recovery suit.
5.
Mr.Shakeel Ahmed, learned counsel for the appellant-
bank submitted that in terms of section 7(4) of the Banking
Companies (Recovery of Loans, Advances, Credit and Finances)
Act XV of 1997 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’), read with
section 9 of the Act, it was only the Banking Court constituted
under the Act, which had the jurisdiction to entertain the
respondents’ suit and to proceed therewith, as the question
involved therein was of the validity, extent, and encashment of the
guarantee furnished by the late father of the respondents to
secure re-payment of a finance facility within the meaning of
section 9 of the Act and therefore, the learned High Court ought to
have dismissed the respondents’ appeal. He submitted that not
only the account bearing No.251 was established and maintained
by Qasim Khan (late) but even after his death, though the present
respondents changed the title of the account but such fresh title
being “M/s Qasim and Company” also contained the name of the
deceased and therefore, the appellant-bank was fully justified in
exercising its lawful right of lien over the said account as
envisaged by section 171 of the Contract Act, and has thus rightly
CA 167-Q/05
4
appropriated the amount of the outstanding liability of the
deceased from the said account.
6.
On the other hand, Mr.Ayaz Zahoor, the learned
counsel for the respondents submitted that after the death of
Qasim Khan and at the request of the respondents, the title of the
account was changed from “Qasim Khan” to “M/s Qasim and
Company”. He submitted that such account was being maintained
and operated exclusively by the respondents. He further
submitted that undisputedly heavy amounts were transacted in
and out of the said account since after the death of Qasim Khan
in June 1996 and upto 18.3.1998, when an amount of
Rs.38,88,721.65 was debited/ appropriated by the appellant-bank
purportedly towards the alleged liability of the deceased. Mr.
Zahoor further submitted that admittedly on 21.2.1998 a sum of
Rs.55.50 millions was remitted by the respondents from
Islamabad to the aforesaid account.
7.
The learned counsel further submitted that neither the
appellant-bank has had any lien over the amount lying in the
aforesaid account nor could they exercise any such lien under
section 171 of the Contract Act. He submitted that at the relevant
time neither the account belonged to or was in the name of Qasim
Khan (late), nor any amount lying in credit therein was deposited
by Qasim Khan. However, the appellant-bank without any notice
to the respondents, and without establishing their claim against
the Tameer-e-Nau, the principal debtor and or even against the
deceased, illegally and unlawfully mis-appropriated the amount
from the respondents’ account under the grab of setting-off.
CA 167-Q/05
5
8.
The learned counsel for the respondents further
submitted that neither the respondents who hold and operate the
said account are/were customers of the appellant-bank in relation
to the alleged transaction relating to Tameer-e-Nau, nor have they
executed any document in relation thereto and that no lien was
ever marked over the subject account and thus, there was no
question of the appellant-bank exercising its lien over the said
account.
9.
He further submitted that it is a settled principle of law
that if any pecuniary obligation arises out of a contract by the
deceased such would only bound the legal representatives to the
extent of the estate left by the deceased and not otherwise. Mr.
Zahoor further submitted that as can be seen from the sanction
advice in relation to the Running finance facility in favour of
Tameer-e-Nau,
the
said
facility
was
secured
by
way
of
hypothecation and through equitable mortgage of a valuable
property. However, neither the appellant-bank established its
claim against Tameer-e-Nau nor have they sought enforcement of
the such securities from the Court and instead found it
convenient to surreptitiously mis-appropriate the respondents’
money lying in trust with them under the garb of liquidation of the
purported undetermined liability of their deceased father and,
therefore, the respondents rightly invoked the jurisdiction of the
Court.
10.
The question that arose in this case was/is as to
whether the deduction/withdrawal in dispute was lawful or not.
The appellant-bank claims to have affected the deduction/
withdrawal by exercising its lien/right to set-off the liability of the
CA 167-Q/05
6
deceased towards the appellant-bank. The concept of banker’s
lien/right to set-off as embodied under section 171 of the Contract
Act has been aptly explained in the case of Punjab National Bank
Ltd. v. Arura Mal Durga Das (AIR 1960 Punjab 632) as under:-
“(14). The rule of English Law that the Bank has a lien
or more appropriately, a right to set-off against all
monies of his customers in his hands has been
accepted as the rule in India. According to this rule
when the monies are held by the Bank in one account
and the depositor owes the Bank on another account,
the Banker by virtue of his lien has a charge on all
monies of the depositor in his hands and is at liberty
to transfer the monies to whatever account, the banker
may like with a view to set-off or liquidate the debts….”
It hardly need any emphasis to understand that a banker
can exercise his right of lien or his right to set-off the liability of
his customer against the securities and monies in his hand of that
customer only and not of any body else.
11.
To elaborate the above mutuality, the judgment
proceeds as follows:-
“15. In order to create Banker’s lien on several
accounts it is necessary that they must belong to the
payer in one and in the same capacity. Where the
person has two accounts, one a trustee account and
another private account at a bank, deposits in the two
accounts cannot be set-off, the one against the
other….
16.
Bankers have a right to combine one or more
accounts of the same customer. But it cannot combine
the account belonging to another or to himself along
with another account which is the joint account with
another…...
17.
Similarly, the Banks have no lien on the deposit
of a partner, on his separate account, for a balance
due to the Bank from the firm. Therefore, the banker is
CA 167-Q/05
7
entitled to combine all accounts kept in the same right
by the customer. It does not matter whether the
accounts are current or deposit or whether they are in
the same or different branches. ---- It is essence to the
validity of a banker’s lien, that there should be a
mutuality of claim between the Bank and the
depositor. In order that it should be permissible to set-
off one demand against another both must mutually
exist between the same parties.”
12.
Furthermore, as rightly commented by Sheldon and
Fidler’s in their book on Practice and Law of Banking (Eleventh
Edition, page 31) “The banker may exercise the right of set-off only
when the money owned to him is a sum certain, which is due”.
13.
Here it may be relevant to note that even under the law
which provides for recovery through coercive process such as land
revenue, determination of the amount due is an essential pre-
requisite. The bank cannot be conferred with the judicial powers
for
determination
of
the
amount
due
against
its
customer/borrower. The right/power to set-off would be available
only where the amount claimed was due and is certain and
determined by a competent judicial forum.
14.
However, in the present case, although the subject
account was established by Qasim Khan in his name, however,
undisputedly, he authorized the respondents to operate the
account. After the death of Qasim Khan on 28.6.1996, the title of
the account was, at the request of the respondents, changed to
“M/s Qasim and Company”. Since after the death of Qasim Khan
and upto 18.3.1998, when the appropriation/adjustment in
question was made by the appellant-bank, heavy amounts were
transacted in and out of the said account. Admittedly, on
CA 167-Q/05
8
21.2.1998 an amount of Rs.55.50 millions was remitted by the
respondents from Islamabad to the said account. The learned
counsel for the appellant has not shown to us that any amount
lying in the subject account, in fact belonged to the deceased and
thus the very first pre-requisite for creation of a right to set-off did
not exist in the present case.
15.
Even otherwise, neither the purported liability of the
deceased has been proved nor has the same been quantified. The
appellant-bank has not even filed any recovery suit, either against
Tameer-e-Nau, or even against the deceased. Although the finance
was primarily secured by way of mortgage over a valuable property
and through hypothecation of stock valuing Rs.4 Millions, but no
suit for enforcement of the securities was filed by the appellant-
bank. In the circumstances no right to set-off was available to the
appellant-bank.
16.
It is a well settled principle of law that a pecuniary
obligation undertaken by a deceased promisor would be binding
on his legal representatives to the extent of the estate of the
deceased promisor in their hand. This principle has been
statutorily recognized in section 50 of the Civil Procedure Code
which lays down the extent to which a decree passed against a
judgment-debtor who dies before the decree has been fully
satisfied, against his legal representative. Whereas, in the present
case, as noted, neither has there been any adjudication of
appellant’s claim against Tameer-e-Nau and/or Mir Afzal, the
principle debtor, or against the deceased, nor has it been judicially
determined as to whether the respondents h ave inherited any
property from the deceased, there was/is thus no question of the
CA 167-Q/05
9
appellant seeking to right-off the alleged liability and/or seeking
any recovery from the respondents without adjudication of the
above referred aspects of the matter.
17.
As regards the appellant’s contention that only the
Banking Court, established under the Act had jurisdiction in the
matter, it may be noted that, as is now clear from the above
discussion, neither there was any question pertaining to “finance”
as defined by Section 9 of the Act, nor the question as to whether
the respondents were “customers” in the context of the Act
involved in the matter and no documents were executed by the
respondent securing re-payment of the alleged liability. The suit
for recovery was filed by the respondents for the amount that was
deducted out of their monies lying in their account illegally and
unauthorizedly and thus the Banking Court had no jurisdiction in
the matter as the same was constituted to adjudicate upon the
matter pertaining to “finance” between bank and its customer, we
therefore, did not find any jurisdictional error in the matter.
18.
It was in view of the foregoing that we dismissed the
above appeal.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad the
7th April 2015
(Aamir Sh.)
‘NOT APPROVED FOR REPORTING’
| {
"id": "C.A.167-Q_2005.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE JAVED IQBAL
MR. JUSTICE JAWWAD S. KHAWAJA
MR. JUSTICE ANWAR ZAHEER JAMALI
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
(On appeal from the judgment
dated 29.10.2009 of the Peshawar
High Court, Abbottabad Bench
passed in WP No.429/2009)
Waqar Ali & others
…
Appellants
VERSUS
The State through Prosecutor/
Advocate General, Peshawar & others …
Respondents
For the appellants
Mr. Tariq Mahmood, Sr. ASC
For respondent 1-3:
Nemo.
For respondent-2:
Mr. Gulzarin Kiyani, ASC
Date of hearing:
23.11.2010
JUDGMENT
Jawwad S. Khawaja, J.- The three appellants namely Waqar Ali,
Zulfiqar Ali and Sadaqat Ali who are brothers inter se, impugn the
judgment dated 29.10.2009 passed by a learned Division Bench of the
Peshawar High Court whereby Writ Petition No.429/09 filed by the
appellants was dismissed. For a proper understanding of the grievance of
the appellants it is necessary to set out briefly, the relevant facts which
have given rise to this appeal by leave of the Court.
2.
The appellants, through a registered sale deed dated 8.2.2005
purchased land measuring 150 kanals in khasra No.4729/2042 and
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
2
4730/2042 situated in mauza Khanpur, Tehsil & District Haripur. The
authenticity of the sale deed and the validity of the title acquired by the
appellants are not disputed. Respondent No.2 namely Ghulam Basit is
owner of land measuring 30 kanals 6 marlas in khasra Nos.
4260/2344,4257/2339,4258/2339,4723/4259/2344/4259/2344 in the same
mauza i.e. Khanpur. The title of the respondent Ghulam Basit in the said
land is not disputed by the appellants. It is also clear that the land owned
by the appellants is in khata No.1039/1421 while the respondent Ghulam
Basit owns land in a different khata. These are material circumstances
having a bearing on the outcome of this appeal, as will be apparent from
the discussion which follows.
3.
On 3.5.2008, the aforesaid respondent lodged a complaint under
Section 3 of the Illegal Dispossession Act, 2005 against the three
appellants and two others namely Zila Council Haripur and the Project
Manager, Khanpur Dam. It was alleged therein that the appellants had
committed an offence under Section 3 ibid and a prayer was made that
they be convicted and sentenced under the said provision of law. The
relevant allegations against the appellants can be gathered from
paragraphs Nos.3 and 4 of the complaint which, for ease of reference, are
reproduced as under:-
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
3
4.
The aforesaid averments in the complaint have special significance
and will be considered later. At this stage, however, it is relevant to note
that the appellants had purchased land in February 2005. It is also
important that even according to the contents of the complaint the area
owned by the respondent-complainant was open land without any
boundary wall or other markings to identify the extent or the exact metes
and bounds of the same. The respondent claims he became aware of the
offence but no date or time of the alleged commission of offence has been
mentioned in the complaint. The respondent’s knowledge is based on a
demarcation report made in May, 2008 on an application to the Tehsildar,
Haripur filed by the respondent-complainant on 1.2.2008. The complaint
under Section 3 ibid was filed in the trial Court on 3.5.2008. The
appellants, on their own, and even before cognizance had been taken,
appeared before the trial Court and challenged the maintainability of the
complaint. It is not necessary for the present to give an account of certain
proceedings which took place on the complaint, before the learned trial
Court or in the Peshawar High Court between 3.5.2008 which is the date
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
4
of filing of the complaint and 15.7.2009 when the learned trial Court took
cognizance by observing as under:-
“At this juncture, this Court is to see that whether prima
facie the matter is cognizable under the Act or not. The other
aspects of possession of the respondents and the correctness of
the report of the local commissioner are matters of evidence to
be thrashed out at proper stage. The complaint is prima facie
maintainable.”
(emphasis supplied)
This order was assailed by the appellants through the afore-noted Writ
Petition No.429/09 filed before the Peshawar High Court. It was the case
of the appellants that there was no basis for holding that the complaint
was maintainable. The writ petition was dismissed vide impugned
judgment dated 29.10.2009 on the short ground that the trial Court’s
order ‘is not final which could be challenged in constitutional jurisdiction and
in this sense the [writ] petition is premature.’ It is in these circumstances
that the appellants filed Civil Petition No.2038 of 2009 wherein leave to
appeal was granted to consider if the assumption of jurisdiction by the
learned trial Court was violative of the Illegal Dispossession Act, 2005
5.
We have heard learned counsel for both sides. We have also
examined the grounds which prevailed with the learned trial Court while
taking cognizance of the matter and the reasons which persuaded the
High Court to pass the impugned judgment dated 29.10.2009. Although
learned counsel for the appellants adverted at length, to factual
controversies between the parties relating to title, possession and similar
matters, it is not necessary to adjudicate on such factual aspects because
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
5
the matter before us is confined to the issue noted in the leave granting
order which is in the following terms:-
“…..
Having heard learned counsel for the appellants at
some length, leave is granted to consider whether the
assumption of jurisdiction by the learned Additional
Sessions Judge in the circumstances alluded to in the
petition is violative of the mandate of Illegal Dispossession
Act, 2005.”
6.
The above issue must be examined, starting with the contents of the
complaint itself which highlights a mixed question of law and fact. It is
clear from the complaint as already noted, that the area measuring 30
kanals 6 marlas owned by the respondent-complainant was open land
without any visible identification of its limits. It also appears evident from
the record that when the appellants purchased their property measuring
150 kanals, there was no construction or boundary-wall to identify the
same. Even the tatimma khasra number in respect of the said 150 kanals
was created subsequent to the purchase made by the appellants. Another
important factor markedly obvious from the complaint is that the
respondent was aware of certain demarcation and boundary disputes
raised by Malik Manzur, another local land-owner, in respect of the area
purchased by the appellants. This dispute arose and had been settled well
before the filing of the respondent’s complaint. Yet, no demarcation was
sought nor was any other action taken by the respondent at the time to get
his land demarcated. Between 2005 when the appellants purchased and
took possession of their property, and the filing of the application for
demarcation on 1.2.2008, the respondent himself appears not to have had
any grievance let alone a cause for complaint for trespass or illegal
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
6
dispossession. Admittedly, as per paragraph 4 of his complaint
(reproduced above) the respondent only became aware that the alleged
offence under Section 3 supra had been committed by the appellants, upon
receiving the demarcation report. These circumstances simplify the
controversy before us.
7.
The legal question as to whether the trial Court had jurisdiction in
the matter can thus be easily decided by referring to the above
circumstances and the relevant provisions of the Illegal Dispossession Act,
2005 (hereinafter referred to as the “Act”). Section 3 of the said statute
which defines the offence thereunder, is reproduced below for ease of
reference:-
“3.
Prevention of illegal possession of property, etc.---
(1) No one shall enter into or upon any property to dispossess,
grab, control or occupy it without having any lawful authority to
do so with the intention to dispossess, grab, control or occupy the
property from owners or occupier of such property.”
(2) Whoever contravenes the provisions of the subsection (1) shall,
without prejudice to any punishment to which he may be liable under
any other law for the time being in force, be punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to ten years and with fine and the
victim of the offence shall also be compensated in accordance with the
provision of section 544-A of the Code.”
(emphasis supplied)
We may also briefly refer to other provisions of the Act which have
relevance in this appeal. Section 4 stipulates that any “contravention of
section 3 shall be triable by the Court of Session on a complaint”. It also
provides that the offence under the Act shall be non-cognizable. Section 5
empowers the Court to direct the police to make investigation. The scope
of these provisions of the Act will be considered during the course of this
opinion.
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
7
8.
It is clear from section 3 ibid that in order to constitute an offense
thereunder the complaint must disclose the existence of both, an
unlawful act (actus reas) and criminal intent (mens rea). In view of the
allegations and circumstances considered above, it is apparent that even
if it is ultimately established that the appellants are in occupation of an
area owned by the respondent-complainant, there is no indication that
they also had the necessary criminal intent. On the contrary, the
averments in the complaint point in the opposite direction and show at
best, that there is a dispute of a purely civil nature between the parties as
to the exact location of their respective parcels of land. It is in these
circumstances, and with the aforesaid background in mind that learned
counsel for the respondent-complainant was asked to state if an
inadvertent encroachment would constitute an offence under Section 3 of
the Act. He replied in the affirmative. We are afraid his response is
against the express wording of the statute which requires the existence of
a guilty intention for the purpose of assuming jurisdiction. For reasons
considered above, guilty intent, does not exist in the present case.
Learned counsel for the respondent did advert to some precedents in
support of his submission to the contrary. However, the ratio of the cited
precedents is not attracted in the present case as will be shown shortly.
9.
We can now examine the grounds which found favour with the
learned trial Court to justify cognizance of the alleged offence under
Section 3 ibid. At the very outset reference may be made to the extract
from the order of the learned trial Court reproduced in paragraph 4
above. From the same it appears that the learned trial Court took
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
8
cognizance of the alleged offence without making the requisite
determination that the complaint disclosed the commission of such
offence. The trial Court decided the question of its jurisdiction and the
maintainability of the complaint unthinkingly and without, in fact,
giving serious consideration to the averments made in the complaint. It
has merely been observed that the “epitome of the complaint is that the
[appellants] allegedly took the possession of the property owned and possessed by
the complainant”. It is implicit in this observation that the ‘intention to
dispossess, grab, control or occupy’ cannot be deduced from the complaint.
The said observation of the trial Court represents the total consideration
given by it to the contents of the complaint. The learned trial Court has
also stated that “[o]n the lodging of the complaint the mater was sent to [the]
SHO for investigation twice”. The basis on which the learned trial Court
took cognizance, however, is neither the complaint nor the police
investigation. It is instead, the subsequent report of a Local Commission
appointed by the Court.
10.
The above noted observations point to the erroneous approach
taken by the trial Court as to the maintainability of the complaint. The
Court, it should be noted is not obliged on the filing of each complaint, to
direct the police to investigate the matter. Section 5 of the Act is clear that
“upon a complaint the Court may direct” the police to investigate the matter.
This enabling power of the Court can only be exercised on the basis of
and after considering the contents of the complaint. The power to direct
an investigation under section 5 ibid is to be exercised judicially and not
as an unconsidered or mechanical action undertaken on every complaint
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
9
filed under the Act, regardless of the merits of the same. The purpose of
the investigation under the aforesaid statute is to ascertain prima facie, the
authenticity of what has been stated in the complaint. The complaint
itself has to show that an offence cognizable by the Court has been
committed by the accused person(s) named therein. In the present case,
from the order of the learned trial Court dated 15.7.2009 it is obvious that
the matter was sent to the police “on the lodging of the complaint”. If the
learned trial Court had gone through the complaint, in particular,
paragraphs 3 and 4 thereof it would have become apparent to it that the
dispute between the parties was not of a criminal nature, and as such
cognizance was not required to be taken.
11.
The aim of directing an investigation by the police is not to add to
the allegations or grounds raised in a complaint. The purpose of such
investigation, if resorted to by the trial Court, is to inquire into the
correctness of allegations made in the complaint itself. The Court need
not order investigation under section 5 of the Act if it concludes from the
complaint and the material furnished by the complainant in support
thereof, that all essential elements of an offence under section 3 ibid are or
are not, sufficiently disclosed and established. In the present case when
we consider the order of the learned trial Court dated 15.7.2009 it
becomes evident that mens rea has been inferred by the learned trial
Court on the basis of the musavi prepared by a Local Commission
appointed by the Court. Under the statutory scheme, the Court is not to
become a party in gathering information or evidence in support of the
complaint to justify the existence of mens rea when none can be made out
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
10
from the complaint itself. In any event, the musavi has no relevance in
establishing mens rea in the circumstances noted above, even if the Local
Commission’s report is eventually proved correct. This is so because the
report prepared by the Local Commission or the musavi at best shows a
situation as it exists on ground in the opinion of the Local
Commission. It has no intrinsic or probative value, even prima
facie, for the purpose of showing on the facts of this case, that the
appellants harboured a guilty intent.
12.
There is another circumstance in the present case which has to be
noted as it implies an absence of mens rea. It has been acknowledged in
paragraph 4 of the complaint that the appellants, in particular Waqar Ali,
had encroached on the complainant’s land. The word ‘tajawuz’ has been
used by the complainant which can only be translated as ‘encroachment’
rather than criminal trespass or unlawful entry with the intention of
grabbing the disputed land or of dispossessing the respondent-
complainant. This is particularly the case, considering that the
complainant claims to have become aware of the encroachment only after
the demarcation made by the revenue functionaries. In these
circumstances, the various “investigations” undertaken by the Police or
by a Local Commission can, only be treated as prima facie evidence of a
civil dispute between the parties. This dispute, needless to say, will be
decided by the competent Civil or Revenue Courts having jurisdiction in
the matter. The learned trial Court also observed that ‘mere encroachment
is something different from illegal dispossession as the former does not involve
intentional grabbing of property’. However, not finding the element of mens
rea in the complaint, the learned Court travelled outside the complaint to
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
11
draw an unjustified inference from a masavi prepared by the Local
Commission. As noted above, this course of action is not envisaged by
the Act.
13.
As in any criminal case, the complainant is to state the facts which,
without extraneous considerations or evidence, satisfy the Court of the
existence of every ingredient of an alleged offence. Without this a
complainant is not entitled to invoke the aid of the Court and to foist the
travails of a criminal trial on the person(s) accused by him. In a very
important sense a Court empowered to take cognizance of an offence
under the Act, is required to act as a sieve and to filter out those
complaints which do not disclose the requisite criminal intent. Courts
which have been authorized to try cases under the Act thus have a
responsibility to see that the persons named in the complaint have a case
to answer, before they are summoned to face trial. This course,
unfortunately has not been followed in the present case. As a result the
appellants unnecessarily, have had to face trouble, expense and
disruption in their lives. In this process the time and scarce resources of
the Court have also been wasted and its docket burdened without cause.
It may be clarified that the Court may, in the first instance, issue a notice
(rather than summons) to the accused person if it requires clarification or
in order to ensure that cognizance is justified.
14.
The provisions of the Act, in our opinion, have to be interpreted in
line with established jurisprudence on criminal law. This will ensure that
the process of law is not abused through filing of vexatious complaints.
Courts are also duty bound to scrutinize complaints and, if necessary,
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
12
examine complainants, to protect hapless victims of false complaints or
complaints which do not show the existence of all necessary elements of
an alleged offence. We should also add that a bald assertion in the
complaint alleging mens rea may not (depending on the facts of a case)
justify the assumption of jurisdiction if the attendant circumstances set
out in the complaint or ascertainable from material filed in support
thereof, do not bear out such allegation.
15.
We may now turn to the judgment of the High Court, impugned before
us. Criminal proceedings initiated on the basis of a complaint entail a two-step
process. In the first instance the Court has to decide if the complaint merits
further action such as taking cognizance. This decision, properly speaking,
cannot be equated with a mere interlocutory order because in respect of the
complaint, taking or refusing cognizance brings to an end the first step of the
process. The criminal trial commences and can only be said to be pending after
cognizance is taken and the accused is summoned. Thus in the event the Court
does not find sufficient material in the complaint to justify cognizance, it may
dismiss the same without proceeding to order an inquiry or investigation and
without summoning the accused. While passing the impugned judgment, the
learned Division Bench of the High Court held that the order “of the learned trial
Court dated 15.7.2009 is not final which could be challenged in the constitutional
jurisdiction and in this sense the petition is premature”. We say with respect, that
this is an overly simplistic remark which does not take into account the
aforesaid legal aspect of the case. An interlocutory order passed by a Court
competent to exercise jurisdiction in a matter, is qualitatively very different
from an order passed by a Court to determine if, in the first place, the requisite
jurisdictional facts exist which would enable it to proceed in the matter.
Support for this legal proposition can be drawn from the case of titled Sind
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
13
Employees’ Social Security Institution versus Dr. Mumtaz Ali Taj & another (PLD
1975 SC 450).
16.
In view of the foregoing circumstances, the pending criminal trial
against the appellants commenced on 15.7.2009 because it is on this date
“the Court [took] cognizance of the offence” and the matter was adjourned
for framing of charge. An order passed after 15.7.2009 but before the
conclusion of the trial could appropriately be termed an interlocutory
order, but this would not include the said order itself. It is important at
this point to bear in mind the distinction between two facets of a Court’s
jurisdiction under the Act. The question of jurisdiction may, in one set of
circumstances, constitute a pure question of law. Thus a complaint under
section 3 of the Act filed before a Judicial Magistrate will be dismissed
straightaway or will be returned to the complainant for want of
jurisdiction because under section 4 of the Act, the said offence is triable
by a Court of Session. The second aspect of jurisdiction is highlighted by
the circumstances of the present case where jurisdiction constitutes a
mixed question of law and fact. Thus as a matter of law the Court of
Session before which the respondent filed his complaint is the Court
vested with jurisdiction under section 4 of the Act. However, in order for
the Court to exercise its jurisdiction by taking cognizance, certain facts
must first be held to exist. These facts which constitute an offence under
section 3 of the Act have to be evident from the complaint and
documents filed in support thereof. Thus, if the necessary ingredients of
an offence under section 3 of the Act are not disclosed through the
complaint and accompanying documents, the Court of Session will not
be justified in exercising jurisdiction and taking cognizance. It will
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
14
nevertheless have the jurisdiction to dismiss the complaint on the ground
that an offence under section 3 of the Act is not made out.
17.
Learned counsel for the respondent-complainant referred to the
cases titled Jehandad and 2 others versus The State and another (PLD 2006 SC
270) and Islamic Republic of Pakistan through Secretary, Establishment
Division, Islamabad and others versus Muhammad Zaman Khan and others
(1997 SCMR 1508) to urge that the order of the learned trial Court dated
15.7.2009 was only an interlocutory order and, therefore, the refusal of
the High Court to interfere in the same in writ jurisdiction was
unexceptionable. We have gone through the cited precedents but find
that the ratio of the same has no application in the case before us. In both
cited cases, the jurisdiction of the Court seized of the matter was not in
dispute. As such no issue arose as to the maintainability of pending cases
in which interlocutory orders were passed and were assailed in the
Supreme Court. It was, in the circumstances, held that this Court would
not be justified in exercising jurisdiction under Article 185 (3) of the
Constitution because the Court seized of the matter which had passed
the impugned interlocutory order, was vested with jurisdiction.
18.
It may be noted that the Supreme Court is possessed with
jurisdiction to interfere even in interlocutory orders passed by a lower
Court. If any authority for this legal proposition is required, reference
may be made to the case titled Islamic Republic of Pakistan through
Secretary, Establishment Division, Islamabad and others versus Muhammad
Zaman Khan and others (1997 SCMR 1508). However, in order to regulate
its jurisdiction, this Court ordinarily does not interfere with interlocutory
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
15
orders passed by a Court which has rightly assumed and exercised
jurisdiction in a pending matter. In the present case, however, leave was
specifically granted “to consider whether the assumption of jurisdiction by the
learned Additional Sessions Judge in the circumstances alluded to in the
petition” was violative of the mandate of the Act. The issue of whether the
trial Court had jurisdiction was not an interlocutory matter in the
circumstances of this case considered above. At this point, however, we
may add that if a proper and conscious application of mind has been
made by a trial Court under the Act before taking cognizance, the High
Court and this Court while regulating their jurisdiction under Articles
199 and 185 of the Constitution respectively, will not ordinarily, interfere
in such actions.
19.
In view of the foregoing discussion relating to the jurisdiction of
the trial Court and the reasons which prevailed with the High Court
while passing the impugned judgment of 29.10.2009, interference in these
orders was warranted under Article 185 of the Constitution. Being aware
of the problems faced by accused persons in criminal trials, Courts have
to be sensitive to their difficulties. Such difficulties can be avoided or
mitigated through the proper and conscious exercise of the power to take
cognizance of a complaint under the Act. It was felt necessary by us to
highlight the legal issues which arise in this case and to thereby also
enunciate the law in terms of Article 189 of the Constitution.
20.
In view of the forgoing circumstances, we are not left in any doubt
that jurisdiction was assumed by the learned trial Court on an erroneous
premise while the learned Division Bench in the High Court also fell in
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
16
error by declining to exercise writ jurisdiction on the premise that the
order of the learned trial Court dated 15.7.2009 was not final and that,
therefore, the writ petition filed by the appellants was premature.
However, in order to ensure completeness of this judgment it is
necessary to discuss further case law cited at the bar by learned counsel
for the parties.
21.
Learned counsel for the respondent-complainant firstly referred to
the case titled Muhammad Abbasi Vs. S. H. O. Bhara Kahu and 7 others
(PLD 2010 SC 969) to support the impugned judgment. In the cited case
cognizance had not, by then, been taken by the trial Court and it was also
observed that the provisions of section 249-A of Cr. P.C. constituted an
adequate remedy for redressal of the grievance of the petitioner in the
circumstances of the said case. It may be noted that in the present case,
the learned trial Court had assumed jurisdiction without the existence of
the requisite jurisdictional fact i.e. mens rea. The cited precedent is,
therefore, distinguishable on facts and is thus of little help to the
respondent.
22.
Learned counsel for the respondent-complainant also referred to
the case titled Shahabuddin Vs. State (PLD 2010 SC 725). The facts of the
cited precedent are also distinguishable. Firstly it is to be noted that the
petitioner therein had been convicted after due trial. A factual
determination had been made that he had illegally dispossessed the
complainant from the property in question. Another important point of
distinction is that there was no controversy at all as to the identity of the
property in contention which had well defined and undisputed
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
17
boundaries. In the present case, it is quite evident that the metes and
bounds of the respondent’s land were not identifiable on site and he had
to resort to the revenue authorities for the purpose of a prima facie,
determination in respect of the exact location of his property. Yet another
feature which distinguishes the cited precedent on facts is that the
petitioner was proved not to have any title in the contested property. In
the present case we have already noted that the sale deed in favour of the
appellants and the title acquired by them is not disputed by the
respondent-complainant. Only the location and boundaries of the said
property appear to be in contention between the parties. The case of
Shahabuddin supra, therefore, does not advance the respondent’s cause.
23.
Cases titled Mumtaz Hussain Vs. Dr. Nasir Khan & others (2010
SCMR 1254) and Muhammad Akram & 9 others Vs. Muhammad Yousaf &
another (2009 SCMR 1066) were then cited by learned counsel for the
respondent-complainant in support of his submissions. We have gone
through these precedents and find the same to be inapplicable to the
circumstances of the present case. In the cited cases, the question as to
assumption of jurisdiction and taking of cognizance on the basis of the
contents of the complaint had not arisen before the Court. The said
precedents, therefore, have no application in this case.
24.
Lastly, the case titled Rahim Tahir Vs. Ahmed Jan & 2 others (PLD
2007 SC 423) was referred to by learned counsel for the respondent. This
case primarily involved the question as to whether the Act was
applicable retrospectively. For reasons discussed above, we are not called
upon to answer this question in the present case. We are conscious that a
Civil Appeal No.16 of 2010
18
general observation has been made in paragraph 6 of the cited judgment
to the effect that the Act “would reveal that all cases of illegal occupants
without any distinction would be covered by the Act.” The issue of mens rea
appears not to have arisen and was not discussed in the said case as the
matter primarily focused on the retrospective effect of the Act. The cited
case, therefore, does not help the respondent even though there may be
aspects in the judgment which require elaboration. This, however, can be
attended to in an appropriate case as and when it comes before us.
25.
In view of the foregoing discussion, this appeal is allowed. As a
consequence the impugned judgment of the High Court dated 29.10.2009
and the order of the learned trial Court dated 15.7.2009 are set aside, with
the result that the complaint filed by the respondent is dismissed. There
shall be no order as to costs.
Judge
Judge
Judge
Islamabad
Announced on ____________
M. Azhar Malik/*
Approved for reporting.
| {
"id": "C.A.16_2010.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1703 OF 2013
(Against the judgment dated 31.5.2013
of the High Court of Sindh, Karachi
passed in Const.P.No.D-1365/2012)
Shahid Anwar Bajwa
…Appellant(s)
VERSUS
S.M. Asif and others
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Mr. Shahid Anwar Bajwa, ASC (in person)
Mr. M. S. Khattak, AOR
For the respondent(s):
Not represented
On Court’s notice:
Mr. Muhammad Waqar Rana, Addl.A.G.P.
Date of hearing:
25.1.2018
ORDER
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, CJ.- In this appeal with the leave of
the Court dated 16.12.2013, the key issue involved is whether the
appellant, who is a retired Judge of the High Court of Sindh, is entitled
to practice before the same High Court.
2.
The facts of the case are that the appellant was appointed
as an Additional Judge of the High Court of Sindh vide Notification
dated 24.9.2009. Thereafter, he was appointed as a Judge of the said
Court under Article 193 vide Notification dated 17.9.2011. He served
as a Judge of the said Court till his retirement w.e.f. 4.10.2012.
Thereafter, he represented a party in a petition filed before the said
High Court as a counsel, wherein an objection was raised to the effect
that being an ex-Judge of the same High Court he could not appear as
a counsel before that Court. This issue was decided against the
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 2 :-
appellant and while interpreting the provisions of Article 207 of the
Constitution it was categorically held by the Court through the
impugned judgment that he is debarred from appearing before the
High Court of Sindh.
3.
Leave in this case has been granted in the following
terms:-
“The petitioner remained a permanent judge of the
High Court of Sindh and retired on 04.10.2012 upon
attaining the age of superannuation. He filed power of
attorney to represent a party in a constitution petition before
the High Court of Sindh. A primary question arose as to
whether there existed a constitutional bar disallowing a
retired judge of a High Court to plead before the same Court.
The petitioner pleaded his own case and a Division Bench of
the High Court of Sindh held that the constitution does not
allow the petitioner to plead before the same Court where he
had served as a permanent judge.
2.
The relevant provision barring a retired judge of a
High Court to plead before the certain Courts are
incorporated in Article 207 of the Constitution which reads:-
“207. Judge not to hold office of profit, etc. (1) A
Judge of the Supreme Court or of a High Court shall
not-
(a)
…………………………………….
(b)
…………………………………….
(3)
A person who has held office as a permanent
Judge-
(a)
of the Supreme Court, shall not plead
or act in any court or before any
authority in Pakistan;
(b)
of a High Court, shall not plead or act
in any Court or before any authority
within its jurisdiction; and
(c)
…………………………………….”
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 3 :-
3.
The petitioner had pleaded before the High Court and
had argued before us that there was a clear bar against a
permanent judge of a High Court to plead before that Court
under Article 166(3) of the 1956 Constitution and by the
change brought about in the corresponding Article 207 of the
1973 Constitution the bar relates only to Courts subordinate
to the High Court where the Judge had served. Article 166(3)
of 1956 Constitution reads:-
“A person who has held office as a permanent
judge of a High Court shall not plead or act
before that court or any court or authority
within its jurisdiction.”
4.
Since the question raised in this petition is one of first
impression and requires interpretation of Article 207 of the
Constitution regarding constitutional bar on retired
permanent judge of a High Court to plead before the same
Court leave to appeal is granted.”
4.
The appellant in person, has referred to the provisions of
Article 207(3)(b) of the Constitution of 1973 as well as Article 166(3) of
the Constitution of 1956, which for the purposes of facility of reference
are reproduced below:-
Article 207(3)(b)
“A person who has held office as a permanent judge - of a
High Court, shall not plead or act in any court or before any
authority within its jurisdiction.”
Article 166(3)
“A person who has held office as a permanent judge of a
High Court shall not plead or act before that court or any
court or authority within its jurisdiction.”
On the basis of the omission of the words “that Court”, which were
present in Article 166(3) of the Constitution of 1956 but were omitted
in Article 207(3)(b) of the Constitution of 1973, he argued that the
significance of such omission could notbe ignored. Through such
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 4 :-
deliberate omission by the legislature, the bar of appearance has been
restricted to the Courts sub-ordinate to the High Court in which a
person has served as a Judge, but there is no longer a bar against
appearance before the same High Court. In support of his contentions,
reliance
has
been
placed
upon
the
judgments
reported
as
Government of Pakistan Vs. Syed Akhlaque Hussain and another
(PLD 1965 SC 527), M/s Haider Automobile Ltd. Vs. Pakistan (PLD
1969 SC 623), AL-Jehad Trust through Raeesul ah 45 Mujahideen
Habib-ul-Wahabb-ul-Khairi and others Vs. Federation of Pakistan
and others (PLD 1996 SC 324), Lahore Development Authority
through D.G. and others Vs. Ms. Imrana Tiwana and others (2015
SCMR 1739) and M/s Mustafa Impex, Karachi and others Vs. The
Government of Pakistan through Secretary Finance, Islamabad
and others (PLD 2016 SC 808). It is also argued that the case-law, on
which reliance has been placed by the learned High Court, while
passing the impugned judgment, did not relate to the Constitution of
1973 but to the Constitution of 1962, therefore, these judgments have
no relevance to the facts and circumstances of the present case.
5.
It is to be noted that the same arguments were raised
before the High Court, but after considering the relevant provisions of
both the 1973 and the 1962 Constitutions as well as the relevant
judgments and other material from our jurisdiction as also from
foreign jurisdictions, the learned Division Bench rejected the same. It
was held by the Court that the bar on a person who has been a
permanent Judge of a High Court as contained under Article 207(3)b)
of the Constitution is not limited only to the courts which are under
the administrative control of a High Court but it also includes the High
Court.
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 5 :-
6.
The judgment of the High Court is well reasoned and
cogent.
However,
it
is
appropriate
to
consider
the
relevant
constitutional/statutory history of the restriction on the ex-Judge(s) of
the superior Courts to practice before the same Court. The restriction
was first introduced in 1956 in the shape of Article 166(3) of the 1956
of Constitution, however, such restriction ceased to exist in the year
1958 when the Constitution of 1956 was abrogated. Thereafter, the
restriction was re-introduced by the Retired Judges (Legal Practice)
Order, 1962 (Order of 1962), but the same was limited to such Judges
who were removed from service; however, a retired Judge retained the
right to practice before the same High Court. In the Constitution of
1962, there was no provision imposing any such restriction on a
permanent Judge of the High Court after his retirement or removal,
however, by means of the Legal Practice (Disqualifications) Ordinance,
1964, the Order of 1962 was repealed and the bar was re-introduced.
Ultimately, the restriction was again introduced in the form of Article
207(3)(b) of the Constitution of 1973. Thereafter, the Ordinance of
1964 was also repealed as the issue had already been dealt with by the
Constitution itself. In this regard it is to be noted that the validity of
the Ordinance of 1964 was challenged on the ground of being violative
of fundamental rights. The Full Bench of the High Court in the case of
Syed Akhlaque Hussain Advocate (Writ Petition No. 217 of 1964) held that
the provisions of the said Ordinance offended against Fundamental
Right, namely, the right to enter upon any lawful profession or
occupation, and to conduct any lawful trade or business, but on
appeal, this Court vide the majority judgment reported as Pakistan v.
Syed Akhlaque Hussain (PLD 1965 SC 527) held that the Ordinance
of 1964 did not violate any of the Fundamental Rights of citizens
embodied in the Constitution. The issue was again considered by this
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 6 :-
Court in M/S Haider Automobile’s case (supra) wherein it was held
as under: -
“The right to practice the profession of law is a right
available subject to a system of licensing under the Bar
Councils Act or under the powers of the High Court under its
Letters Patent and of the Supreme Court under its own rules
and a person seeking to practise has to obtain a licence in
that behalf upon satisfying the Licencing Authority that he
fulfils the qualifications laid down and has paid the fees
prescribed for that purpose. He is also subject to the
disciplinary control of the Courts and the tribunals in which
he practises or at any rate was, until the coming into force of
the Legal Practitioners and Bar Councils Act, 1965. Under
the latter disciplinary control has to a large extent, been
transferred to the Bar Councils but the right is nevertheless,
not an uncontrolled or absolute right. Nor could it in the very
nature of things be. Such regulatory provisions are not and
can never be considered to be violative of the Fundamental
Right to carry on a trade or profession. The question then is
as to whether Ordinance No.II of 1964 did impose any bar
which went beyond regulation of the profession. The
impugned Ordinance did not prevent, it will be observed, a
retired Judge of the High Court from doing chamber
practice, that is, advising clients in Chambers or practising
in the jurisdiction of a High Court of which he was not a
Judge or practising in the Supreme Court. Similarly although
a retired Judge or Chief Justice of the Supreme Court was
prohibited from practising before any Court or tribunal in
Pakistan, his right to do Chamber practice remained
unaffected. The Ordinance No.II of 1964 did not, therefore,
introduce any total prohibition but it only restricted the
forums before which a retired Judge could practise, in the
interest of maintaining the independence of the judiciary;
preserving the dignity of a person who had held such a High
Office and preventing embarrassment both to him and to the
Judges before whom he was otherwise likely to appear. Such
a restriction was not, in the circumstances, in my opinion,
violative of the said Fundamental Right No. 8 and, therefore,
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 7 :-
the question of the Ordinance being void did not at all arise.
I am in this respect, in agreement with Cornelius, C. J. Fazle-
Akbar, Yaqoob Ali and Abdus Sattar, JJ. with their opinions
in this regard in the case of Government of Pakistan v. Syed
Akhlaque Hussain and another.”
7.
The rule that a retired Judge is not entitled to appear as a
counsel before a Court of equal or lower jurisdiction to the one in
which he sat in his capacity as a Judge is found all across the
common law world, including England, Canada, India, several US
states, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago. Reference in this regard may be
made to Section 75 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 of UK,
which provides a bar on a Judge as under: -
75. Judges etc. barred from legal practice. No person
holding as a full-time appointment any of the offices listed
in Schedule 11 shall: -
(a)
provide any advocacy or litigation services (in any
jurisdiction);
(b)
provide any conveyancing or probate services;
(ba)
carry on any notarial activities (within the meaning
of the Legal Services Act 2007);
(c)
practise as a barrister, solicitor, public notary,
licensed conveyancer or licensed CLC practitioner,
or be indirectly concerned in any such practice;
(d)
practise as an advocate or solicitor in Scotland, or
be indirectly concerned in any such practice; or
(e)
act for any remuneration to himself as an arbitrator
or umpire.
Schedule 11 includes the Judges of the Supreme Court, Lord Justices
of Appeal, Puisne Judge of the High Court, Circuit Judges, District
Judges, etc. The outline Conditions of Appointment and Terms of
Service of High Court Judge in UK also provides such restrictions, i.e.
“A High Court Judge shall not practise as a barrister or solicitor or be
indirectly concerned in any such practice (S.75 Courts and Legal
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 8 :-
Services Act 1990). … Any offer of appointment is therefore made on the
understanding that appointees will not return to practice”. Similarly,
Article 220 of the Indian Constitution imposes restriction on legal
practice after being a permanent Judge, i.e., “No person who has held
office as a permanent Judge of a High Court … shall plead or act in any
court or before any authority in India except the Supreme Court and the
other High Courts”. In the light of the above it is clear that in the
common law jurisdictions the intention of the legislature has always
been to impose a bar on ex-Judges of the superior Courts to appear as
counsel before the same Court or the Courts/forums subordinate to
that Court.
8.
In this backdrop, we shall consider the relevant provisions
of the Constitution of 1962 as well as 1973. Article 166(3) of the
Constitution of 1962 provided that “A person who has held office as a
permanent judge of a High Court shall not plead or act before that
court or any court or authority within its jurisdiction”; whereas,
Article 207(3)(b) of the Constitution of 1973 provides that “A person
who has held office as a permanent judge of a High Court, shall not
plead or act in any court or before any authority within its
jurisdiction”. A plain reading of two provisions makes it abundantly
clear that not only the words “that Court” been omitted, as relied upon
by the appellant, but also the word “before” has been replaced with the
word “in”, thus, the whole construction of the provision has been
changed. Thus, it can safely be held that by the omission of word “that
Court” the intention of the legislature is not to allow the ex-Judge of a
High Court to appear as a counsel before that Court. In order to
ascertain the real intention of the legislature, it is necessary to keep in
mind the provisions of Article 207(3)(a) ibid, which provides that “A
person who has held office as a permanent judge of the Supreme Court,
Civil Appeal No.1703 of 2013
-: 9 :-
shall not plead or act in any Court or before any authority in Pakistan”.
Thus, from this provision the intention of the legislature is clear that a
ban has been imposed on a Judge not only to appear before the
courts/forums subordinate to that Court but also from the court
where he acted as a permanent judge. This fact further receives
support from the fact that when two permanent Judges of the High
Court of Sindh i.e. Mr. Rasheed A. Rizvi and Mr. Mushtaq Ahmed
Memon, were removed from their office by virtue of the Oath of Office
(Judges) Order, 1999, considering that they were restricted to act and
plead before the said High Court being permanent Judges, special
permission was given to them by means of the Chief Executive’s Order
No.5 of 2000.
9.
These are the reasons for our short order of even date,
whereby the instant appeal is dismissed.
CHIEF JUSTICE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
25th of January, 2018
Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer
| {
"id": "C.A.1703_2013.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL.
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN.
MR. JUSTICE MUNIB AKHTAR.
CIVIL APPEAL NO.171 OF 2019
ON APPEAL AGAINST JUDGMENT DATED
18.12.2018 OF THE HIGH COURT OF
BALOCHISTAN IN ELECTION PETITION
NO.53 OF 2018.
Mir Mujib-ur-Rehman Muhammad Hassani
Appellant
Versus
Returning Officer, PB-41, Washuk & Others
Respondent
For the Appellant(s):
Sardar Muhammad Aslam, ASC.
Ch. Akhtar Ali, AOR.
For the Respondent(s):
Kamran Murtaza, Sr. ASC.
Syed Rifaqat Shah, AOR.
(For Respondent No.2)
M. Amjad, A.D.
(For the Election Commission of Pakistan)
Dates of Hearing:
10.12.2019
11.12.2019
JUDGMENT
IJAZ UL AHSAN, J-. Through this judgment, we are
deciding Civil Appeal No.171 of 2019 arising out of the judgment
of the Honourable High Court of Balochistan, Quetta dated
18.12.2018 passed in Election Petition No.53 of 2019 (the
“Impugned Judgment”).
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 2 -
2.
Brief facts necessary for the decision of this lis are
that the Appellant and Respondent Nos.2 to 15 were contesting
candidates for a seat in the Provincial Assembly of Balochistan
from PB-41 (Washuk), during the general elections held on
25.07.2018. The Appellant secured 12588 votes and Respondent
No. 2, who attained the highest number of votes in the contest,
secured 12807 votes while the remaining candidates only
secured nominal amounts of votes. On 27.07.2018, the Appellant
wrote to the concerned Returning Officer (Respondent No.1) for a
recount of the votes cast in the entire constituency under section
95(5) and (6) of the Elections Act, 2017 (the “Act”). This
application was rejected by Respondent No.1 on 28.07.2018,
holding that:
“As per section 95(5) of Elections Act,2017, it is not in the
domain of the R.O to recount the votes of the entire
constituency, hence, the application in hand is hereby
rejected.”
3.
Aggrieved by the aforenoted order of Respondent
No.2, the Appellant approached the Election Commission of
Pakistan (“ECP”) and filed two petitions: the first under section
95(6) of the Act for a recount of the votes cast in the entire
constituency and the second to seek inclusion/counting of votes
cast in two polling stations, namely Polling Station Nos.44 and
45. Since consolidation had been completed in PB-41, the first
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 3 -
petition was dismissed by the ECP vide order dated 01.08.2018
with the following observation:
“I am directed to refer to the subject noted above, and to
convey that since the consolidation has been completed in
PB-41, Washuk and form-49 has been received, therefore,
the applicant/petitioner may approach the appropriate forum
through an election petition, if so desired.”
4.
On 04.08.2018, the Appellant filed Constitutional
Petition No.1013 of 2018 before the High Court of Balochistan
seeking a recount in PB-41 on the grounds that many of the
rejected ballots were valid and that there had been rigging and
mismanagement during the elections, whereby many of the
postal ballots received by the cut-off date were also rejected on
flimsy grounds. This petition was disposed of by the Balochistan
High Court vide order dated 15.08.2018, with the observation
that since the same matter was also fixed before the ECP, it may
be decided at the earliest.
5.
Finally, the ECP vide its order dated 11.09.2018,
decided the matter in response to the petition filed by the
Appellant seeking inclusion/recount of votes cast in Polling
Station Nos.44 and 45 together with another petition filed by a
candidate for the national assembly seat (NA-270) in the same
area. The ECP noted the ambiguities present in the case and
irregularities between the accounts and comments received from
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 4 -
the different Presiding Officers and the Returning Officer and
ordered the votes from these polling stations to be discarded and
fresh polls to be conducted in Polling Station Nos.44 and 45.
Aggrieved by this order, several parties approached this Court in
appeal, including the Appellant through CA No.1102 of 2018. All
the appeals were dismissed through a combined order of this
Court dated 01.10.2018, whereby it was held that:
“The reasons recorded by the learned Election Commission of
Pakistan for re-poll of Polling Stations No.44 and 45 with
respect to PB-41 and NA-270 are absolutely apt and cogent
and in accordance with the jurisdictional authority vested
with it.”
6.
In accordance with ECP’s order dated 11.09.2018,
which was upheld by this Court, fresh polls were conducted in
Polling Station Nos.44 and 45 on 07.10.2018. While no votes
were cast in Polling Station No.45, after adding up the votes from
Polling Station No. 44 the Appellant secured a total of 12705
votes while Respondent No.2 secured 13040 votes and again
maintained his lead – this time by a margin of 335 votes. On
15.10.2018, Respondent No.2 was notified as the Returned
Candidate vide Notification No.F.2(37)/2018-Cord(1). In response
to this, the Appellant approached the Election Tribunal of the
High Court of Balochistan through Election Petition No.53 of
2018 which was dismissed vide the Impugned Judgment against
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 5 -
which the Appellant has now approached this Court in the
present Appeal.
7.
Learned Counsel for the Appellant has extensively
argued the matter. His primary contention is that under section
95(5) of the Act, it is mandatory for a Returning Officer to
recount votes if a request has been made by a contesting
candidate,
before
the
commencement
of
consolidation
proceedings, in an election where the margin of victory was less
than five percent of the total votes polled or ten thousand votes,
whichever was less. As such, he has argued that Respondent
No.1 could not have rejected the Appellant’s request for a recount
in the entire constituency, given that Respondent No.2’s margin
of victory fell well within the threshold provided in section 95(5)
of the Act, vide his order dated 28.07.2018. Consequently, he
asserts that the Election Tribunal was required in law to direct
recount of the votes or at least the rejected votes.
8.
Learned Counsel for the Appellant has also alleged
that several irregularities and unlawful practices took place
during the election, including instances of the Appellant’s polling
agents not being allowed to witness counting, the casting of
bogus votes, intimidation of voters by Respondent No.2 and his
agents, etc. As a result, he contends that the Impugned
Judgment be set aside, directions should be issued for
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 6 -
recounting of the votes, and given the alleged unlawful practices
and irregularities, the election of Respondent No. 2 should be
declared null and void and the Appellant be declared the
Returned Candidate instead.
9.
On the other hand, Learned Counsel for Respondent
No. 2 has argued that there are no presumptions in favor of the
Appellant in law or fact and the onus lies upon him to prove
every fact that he has alleged in his pleadings as per Articles 117
to 119 of the Qanun-e-Shahadat Order, 1984. It is his contention
that the Appellant during the proceedings and in his pleadings
has failed to prove whether his original application for a recount
before the Returning Officer was even filed before the
commencement of any consolidation proceedings, as required by
section 95(5) of the Act, and whether any of the illegal activities
and unlawful practices alleged by the Appellant even took place
in the manner described by him.
10.
In any case, Learned Counsel for Respondent No.2
has argued that the Appellant did petition the High Court of
Balochistan challenging the order of the Returning Officer dated
28.07.2018 (rejecting the application for a recount in the entire
constituency), but the same was disposed of on 15.08.2018, with
the consent of both parties and with a direction to the ECP to
decide the matter. After the ECP ordered re-polls in two polling
stations vide its order dated 11.09.2018, the Appellant assailed
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 7 -
the order before this Court and the same was upheld vide order
dated 01.10.2018. As a result, Learned Counsel for Respondent
No.2 asserts that the matter has attained finality and the
Appellant by not pressing the matter, first before the High Court
and later by not moving another application after the re-polls
conducted on 07.10.2018, has abandoned his plea and cannot
rely on the same at this stage.
11.
Learned Counsel for Respondent No.2 has pointed out
that since the earlier plea was abandoned by the Appellant, at
this stage the only procedure for obtaining a recount was
through the Election Tribunal under section 101 of the Act read
with rules 139 and 150 of the Election Rules, 2017. However, he
argues that to avail this remedy the Appellant’s election petition
before the Election Tribunal should have complied with the
requirements set out in sections 144 and 145 of the Act, which
the Appellant failed to meet. To this end, Learned Counsel for
Respondent No.2 has relied on the Impugned Judgment and the
requirements outlined in section 144(1)(b) of the Act to point out
that the Appellant’s election petition was patently deficient and
non-proceedable, did not contain a precise statement of material
facts, full particulars of corrupt and illegal practices, names of
the parties involved with dates and venues, etc. as per
mandatory requirements of the law.
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 8 -
12.
Lastly, Learned Counsel for Respondent No.2 has
relied on the judgments of this Court, wherein principles
concerning the recount of votes before the Election Tribunal have
been laid out. He has argued that even though these principles
were laid out when the old law, the Representation of the People
Act, 1976 (“ROPA”), was in place they continue to hold field
today since the legislature has not made anything mandatory on
the Election Tribunal with respect to recounts in the new law (the
Act). To this end, he has placed reliance on the judgments of this
Court in Jam Madad Ali v. Asghar Ali Junejo (2016 SCMR 251),
Ch. Muhammad Ashraf Warraich v. Muhammad Nasir Cheema
(2016 SCMR 998), and Syed Khaliq Shah v. Abdul Raheem
Ziaratwal (PLD 2017 SC 684).
13.
We have heard the Learned Counsel for the parties at
length and have also perused the available record. At the very
outset, a distinction must be drawn between the first round of
litigation – which was initiated by the Appellant after the general
elections were held on 25.07.2018 and ended with the order of
this court dated 01.10.2018, wherein ECP’s order dated
11.09.2018 was confirmed – and the second round of litigation –
which was initiated by the Appellant through an election petition
filed after re-polling in Polling Station Nos.44 and 45 of PB-41 on
07.10.2018 – wherefrom this present Appeal has arisen. This
distinction becomes particularly important as we look at the
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 9 -
pleas taken by the Appellant at various stages before several fora
during this controversy.
14.
It is a matter of record that the Appellant did request
a recount in the entire constituency following the results of the
general elections held on 25.07.2018, under section 95(5) of the
Act. After his request was rejected by the Returning Officer on
28.07.2018, the Appellant approached the ECP to ask for a
recount under section 95(6) of the Act and, through a separate
application, to also seek inclusion/counting of the votes cast in
Polling Station Nos.44 and 45. The Appellant’s first application,
for a recount, was dismissed by the ECP on 01.08.2019 due to
the fact that consolidation proceedings had been completed in
PB-41, against which the Appellant filed a constitutional petition
before the High Court. The record also shows that this petition
was disposed of on 15.08.2018, with the consent of both sides
and with directions to the ECP, which was already considering
the matters raised in the Appellant’s second application, to
decide the same at the earliest. Consequently, when the ECP
passed its order on 11.09.2018 directing that re-polls be
conducted in the two polling stations in question, the Appellant
also challenged it before this Court vide CA No.1102 of 2018.
This Appeal was dismissed by this Court on 01.10.2018 and the
ECP’s decision was confirmed, and hence attained finality.
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 10 -
15.
As
pointed
out
by
the
Learned
Counsel
for
Respondent No.2, we note that during this course of events the
Appellant of his own accord chose to not press the matter of
recount, which was decided by the ECP on 01.08.2018, and
hence abandoned this plea. In any case, when the matter was
finally decided
by the
ECP on 11.09.2018, wherein it
comprehensively looked at the allegations made by the Appellant
and solicited explanations and comments from all concerned, the
Appellant approached this Court in Appeal and the same was
dismissed. At this point, the Appellant did have the avenue of
Review, against the order dated 01.10.2018 of this Court, but he
chose not to exercise it and hence our judgment on the matter
attained finality. With this culmination of the first round of
litigation initiated by the Appellant, the issues raised by the
Appellant therein have now become a past and closed
transaction inter se the parties to the lis and cannot now be re-
agitated.
16.
It is, however, true that section 142 of the Act,
entitles the Appellant to file an election petition within forty-five
days of the publication of the name of the returned candidate to
challenge the election. Once Respondent No.2 was notified as the
Returned Candidate on 15.10.2018, the Appellant did indeed file
an election petition on 06.11.2018 before the Election Tribunal of
the High Court of Balochistan, which was dismissed vide the
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 11 -
Impugned Judgment. However, given that the matters arising out
of the earlier election had already been challenged by the
Appellant and had attained finality, the Appellant cannot be
allowed to now re-agitate the same matters by means of an
alternative remedy that was not resorted to earlier. If this was
allowed, it would go entirely contrary to the “doctrine of election”
which exists to ensure that once a litigant has made the choice of
pursuing a certain course of action available to him or has
abandoned a certain plea/action, that he is not allowed to reopen
the same matter only because he has received unfavorable
results as a result of his first choice. This principle has been
elaborated by this Court on various occasions. Reliance may be
placed on Trading Corporation of Pakistan v. Devan Sugar Mills
Limited (PLD 2018 SC 828), where it was explained that:
“The moment suitor intends to commence any legal action to
enforce any right and or invoke a remedy to set right a
wrong or to vindicate an injury, he has to elect and or choose
from amongst host of actions or remedies available under the
law. The choice to initiate and pursue one out of a host of
available concurrent or co-existent proceeding/actions or
remedy from a forum of competent jurisdiction vest with the
suitor. Once choice is exercised and election is made then a
suitor is prohibited from launching another proceeding to
seek a relief or remedy contrary to what could be claimed
and or achieved by adopting other proceeding/action and or
remedy, which in legal parlance is recognized as doctrine of
election, which doctrine is culled by the courts of law from
the well-recognized principles of waiver and or abandonment
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 12 -
of a known right, claim, privilege or relief as contained in
Order II, rule (2) C.P.C., principles of estoppel as embodied in
Article 114 of the Qanun-e-Shahadat Order 1984 and
principles of res-judicata as articulated in section 11, C.P.C.
and its explanations. Doctrine of election apply both to the
original proceedings/action as well to defences and so also
to challenge the outcome on culmination of such original
proceedings/action, in the form of order or judgment/decree
(for illustration it may be noted that multiple remedies are
available against possible outcome in the form of an
order/judgement/decree etc. emanating from proceedings of
civil nature, which could be challenged/defended under
Order IX, rule 13 (if proceedings are ex-parte), section 47
(objection to execution), section 114 (by way of review of an
order), section 115 (revision), under Order XXI, rules 99 to
103 C.P.C. and section 96 C.P.C. (appeal against the
order/judgment) etc. Though there is no bar to concurrently
invoke more than one remedy at the same time against an
ex-parte order/judgment. However, once election or choice
from amongst two or more available remedy is made and
exhausted, judgment debtor cannot ordinarily be permitted
subsequently to venture into other concurrently or coexisting
available remedies.”
17.
While, as a result of the discussion above, we do not
think that the question of recounting in the entire constituency
of PB-41, Washuk, is a live issue in the present Appeal, an
important question has been raised concerning the interpretation
of section 95(5) of the Act, which we would like to address at this
juncture. It has been argued by the Learned Counsel for the
Appellant that section 95(5) of the Act mandates a Returning
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 13 -
Officer to conduct a recount if he has been requested in writing
by a contesting candidate to do so, provided that the threshold of
the margin of victory provided in section 95(5) is met. For ease of
reference, section 95(5) of the Act is reproduced below:
“(5) Before commencement of the consolidation proceedings,
the Returning Officer shall recount the ballot papers of one or
more polling stations if a request or challenge in writing is
made by a contesting candidate or his election agent and the
margin of victory is less than five percent of the total votes
polled in the constituency or ten thousand votes, whichever
is less, or the Returning Officer considers such request as not
unreasonable:
Provided that the recount shall be made by the Returning
Officer only once.”
18.
From a plain reading of the provision, it is quite clear
that the Returning Officer is empowered to recount the ballot
papers of “one or more polling stations” only before consolidation
proceedings have commenced. Furthermore, it is also clear that
such a recount can only be triggered on the written request of a
contesting candidate (or his election agent) in an election where
the margin of victory was less than five percent of the total votes
polled or ten thousand votes, whichever was less. However, once
the words “or the Returning Officer considers such request as not
unreasonable” at the end of the sentence are read along with the
remaining conditions it becomes clear that ‘such’ an application
for a recount must be considered reasonable by the Returning
Officer in addition to meeting the other pre-conditions imposed
by the provision. To our mind, this is the correct reading of
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 14 -
section 95(5) of the Act based on the linguistic construction of
the sentence, which makes it abundantly clear that the last part
of the sentence (concerning reasonableness) is to be read
conjunctively with the remaining conditions imposed on an
application for a recount to qualify. With this interpretation in
mind, therefore, in order for the Returning Officer to order a
recount under section 95(5) of the Act, (i) a written application
must be made by a contesting candidate or his election agent
before the commencement of consolidation proceedings, (ii) the
application must be in relation to an election where the margin of
victory was less than five percent of the total votes polled in the
constituency or ten thousand votes, whichever was less, and (iii)
the Returning Officer must consider such a request to be
reasonable (or not unreasonable as the law states). Once all
these conditions have been met, only then will a Returning
Officer order a recount in “one or more polling stations”.
19.
It is important to note, however, that a similar
provision existed in the old law, section 39(6) of ROPA that
preceded section 95(5) of the Act, as well. Section 39(6) of ROPA
stated that:
“(6) The Returning Officer may recount the ballot papers-
(a) upon the request of, or challenge in writing made by, a
contesting candidate or his election agent, if the Returning
Officer is satisfied that the request or the challenge is
reasonable; or
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 15 -
(b) if so directed by the Commission, in which case the
recount shall be held in such manner and at such place as
may be directed by the Commission.”
From a bare reading of this provision, it is obvious that in the
new law (section 95(5) of the Act) the legislature has sought to
limit the situations in which applications for a recount before the
Returning Officer can be made in the first place. The intention
behind this quite clearly is to limit the number of frivolous
applications for a recount made by losing candidates in
constituencies around the country and to ensure that recounts
are
entertained
by
Returning
Officers
only
in
those
constituencies where the margin of victory is small enough to
justify a recount, and an objective and tentative assessment is
made by the Returning Officers on the basis of material placed
before them to the effect that prima facie there are grounds
justifying a recount and the request for such recount is not
wholly unreasonable. However, if an election does not meet the
numerical threshold provided in section 95(5) of the Act, the law
in section 95(6) of the Act, still provides for the ECP to order a
Returning Officer directly to conduct a recount, if it deems the
circumstances to be grave enough to warrant such a recount.
20.
In any case, however, the law does not provide a
criterion based upon which a Returning Officer may decide
whether a particular application is not unreasonable. The
exercise of recounting ballot papers for any number of polling
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 16 -
stations is a tedious and time/resource-consuming task and it
cannot be taken up indiscriminately, carelessly, without due
application of mind and a tentative assessment of the material
available on record, and in cases where only vague and general
allegations and insinuations have been made. This exercise,
which can potentially take months to complete, can arguably
lead to the constituency remaining unrepresented for long
periods of time, defeating the very purpose of the law and the
concept of democratic representation. To this end, we are clear in
our minds that even if a request has been made by a contesting
candidate in an election where the threshold set by section 95(5)
is met, but the request itself does not specify any cogent reasons
for the request along with identifying specific polling stations
where the recount is being requested and giving credible
materials/information, it would stand to reason that the
Returning Officer should have the option/discretion to reject
such a request. If this was not the case, we would have the
absurd situation where at the request of an aggrieved candidate
recounting takes place even at polling stations where the
candidate in question has won or that without any allegation of
rigging, corrupt and unlawful practices, and particulars based on
which malpractices and rigging is being alleged, a candidate
could still claim a recount by way of a record change and a
fishing expedition simply showing that the margin of victory was
less than five percent of the total votes polled in the constituency
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 17 -
or ten thousand votes, whichever is less. If that were so, the
phrase “or the Returning Officer considers such request as not
unreasonable” would become redundant. It is settled law that no
redundancy can be attributed to the legislature.
21.
We therefore hold that the provisions of section 95(5)
can only be triggered after all the pre-conditions therein have
been met and the contents of the request itself lend credence to
the need for a recount. To ensure this, the Returning Officer
must exercise his discretion and ascertain the reasonableness of
the request and decide whether recounting is to take place in
“one or more” polling stations, or not at all. A reasonable request,
therefore, must at least contain a narrative of the events that
gave rise to the request in the first place, the details along with
credible material/information regarding events that may have
caused the contesting candidate to demand the recount together
with the names and details of any individuals alleged to be
involved, and the specific polling stations at which the recount is
being requested. Once all the aforenoted conditions have been
met, then the Returning Officer must apply his mind to the facts
and circumstances of the individual case and decide if, and in
how many polling stations, a recount is warranted.
22.
It is clear and obvious from the record available
before us, that after re-polls were conducted, according to ECP’s
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 18 -
order dated 11.09.2018 and the order of this Court confirming
the same on 01.10.2018, the Appellant filed Election Petition
No.53 of 2018 before the Election Tribunal of the High Court of
Balochistan. In this election petition, the Appellant has again
objected to the rejection of his initial request to recount ballot
papers in the entire constituency and has made vague
generalized and unsubstantiated allegations regarding several
irregularities, malpractices, and unlawful activities during the
entire election. As we have discussed above, since the matters
brought up by the Appellant with respect to the recount and
ancillary unlawful and illegal activities alleged by him had
already been litigated before, they could not be reopened and re-
examined. However, as far as the Appellant’s contentions with
respect to the re-polling that took place in Polling Station Nos.44
and 45 of PB-41, and the many allegations leveled by him on the
conduct of these re-polls, we are inclined to agree with the view
taken by the learned Election Tribunal of the High Court of
Balochistan in the Impugned Judgment.
23.
The
record
shows
that
the
allegations
and
insinuations made by the Appellant in his election petition were
deficient in many respects. Section 144 of the Act provides for
the contents of an election petition, the documents that must be
attached with it, and the relief that can be claimed by the
Appellant. In this respect, it is clear that the Appellant is
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 19 -
required to provide the full particulars of any corrupt or illegal
practices alleged by him to have taken place, the names and
other details of the individuals he believes to be responsible for
such practices, and the date and place of the commission of such
practices or acts together with documentary evidence in support
of such allegations. The Appellant has abysmally failed to provide
these details. While the record shows that the Appellant did
annex sixteen affidavits-in-evidence in support of his application,
perusal of these affidavits ex facie shows that they are all
identical and a duplicate of allegations made and details provided
by the Appellant in every one of them. As a result, the Appellant’s
election petition is rendered entirely deficient by virtue of section
144 of the Act.
24.
The
Appellant’s
request
for
recounting
and
verification of the votes cast in the re-polls conducted on
07.10.2018 in Polling Station Nos.44 and 45 of PB-41 is similarly
deficient. The record shows that no objections were raised during
the re-polls by the Appellant or his election agents while the
polling took place. The Appellant has alleged that bogus votes
were cast by supporters of Respondent No.2 during the re-polls.
However, no objections against the casting of such votes have
been found on the record. This is especially problematic given
that section 86 of the Act explicitly provides for challenges to be
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 20 -
made by candidates in such situations at the time of the
occurrence.
25.
The record also shows that following the re-polls
conducted on 07.10.2018, the Appellant filed a petition for
recounting of votes before the ECP on 10.10.2018. However, this
petition was withdrawn by the Appellant of his own accord
during the pendency of his election petition which was dismissed
via the Impugned Judgment. In these circumstances, while it is
true that the learned Election Tribunal of the High Court of
Balochistan did have the right to exercise its power to order a
recount and/or verification of the votes in question we are not
surprised that it chose to not exercise such discretion, given the
many obvious and glaring deficiencies in the petition filed by the
Appellant and the allegations made by him.
26.
In these circumstances, we hold that the learned
Election Tribunal of the High Court of Balochistan, in the
Impugned Judgment, has acted well within its powers and has
exercised its discretion and authority fairly and correctly in
coming to its conclusions. Based on these reasons and in view of
the aforementioned findings and analysis of the relevant
provisions, we find no reason to interfere with the Impugned
Judgment. Consequently, this Civil Appeal No.171 of 2019 is
dismissed, with costs.
CA No.171 of 2019.
- 21 -
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
ISLAMABAD, THE
11th of December 2019.
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
MUA/*
CA 171/2019
Munib Akhtar, J.- I have had the advantage of reading in draft the
judgment proposed to be delivered by my learned brother, Ijaz ul
Ahsan, J., which has the concurrence of my learned brother, Umar
Ata Bandial, J. While I am generally in agreement with the
proposed judgment and certainly in accord with the view that the
appeal fails, I am, with respect, unable to agree with the
interpretation placed on s. 95(5) of the Elections Act, 2017 (“2017
Act”) (paras 17-21 of the majority judgment). While perhaps those
observations may be obiter inasmuch as it is expressly noted in
para 17 that “the question of recounting in the entire
constituency… is [not] a live issue in the present Appeal”, since a
detailed analysis of the statutory provisions has been undertaken,
I have also ventured to express my views on the same.
2.
Section 95(5) had its counterpart in s. 39(6) of the
predecessor legislation, the Representation of People Act, 1976
(“1976 Act”) which has also been considered in the majority
judgment. Subsection (6) of s. 95 is also of some relevance. For
convenience
these
are
again
reproduced
below
(emphasis
supplied):
Section 95:
(5) Before commencement of the
consolidation proceedings, the
Returning Officer shall recount
the ballot papers of one or more
polling stations if a request or
challenge in writing is made by
a contesting candidate or his
election agent and the margin of
victory is less than five percent
of the total votes polled in the
constituency or ten thousand
votes, whichever is less, or the
Returning
Officer
considers
such
request
as
not
unreasonable: Provided that the
recount shall be made by the
Returning Officer only once.
(6) The Commission may, before
Section 39:
(6) The Returning Officer may
recount the ballot papers—
(a) upon the request of, or
challenge in writing made by, a
contesting
candidate
or
his
election agent, if the Returning
Officer is satisfied that the
request or the challenge is
reasonable; or
(b)
if
so
directed
by
the
Commission, in which case the
recount shall be held in such
manner and at such place as
may
be
directed
by
the
Commission.
CA 171/2019
2
conclusion of the consolidation
proceedings, for reasons to be
recorded, direct the Returning
Officer to recount the ballot
papers of one or more polling
stations.
3.
In essence, the majority have concluded that the word “or”,
where appearing in s. 95(5) as emphasized above, is to be
conjunctively. Thus, according to the majority view the subsection
contemplates that a recount is to take place only if both the
conditions, i.e., “the margin of victory is less than five percent of
the total votes polled in the constituency or ten thousand votes,
whichever is less” and “the Returning Officer considers such
request as not unreasonable” are fulfilled and applicable together
(see para 18). (The other conditions also mentioned in the
subsection are, for present purposes, unexceptionable.) With
respect, I am unable to agree. In my view, the word “or” is to be
given its natural meaning and read disjunctively. In other words,
the subsection contemplates two separate and distinct conditions,
and a recount is permissible if either one of them is met.
4.
It is of course well settled that in appropriate circumstances
the word “or” can be read as “and” and vice versa. However, in my
respectful view s. 95(5) requires no such exercise and does not call
for any such conclusion. The reason is that the first and second
conditions are qualitatively distinct, inasmuch as the first contains
no element of discretion with the Returning Officer, while the
second one does (though in rather limited circumstances, as
explained below). The first condition becomes applicable simply on
an affirmative answer to an arithmetical question: is the margin of
victory the lesser of (a) ten thousand votes or (b) less than five
percent of the total votes polled in the constituency? The first
number is of course an absolute: 10,000 votes. The second is a
matter of calculation, of adding up the total votes cast and
calculating five percent thereof. That too yields a specific number.
The margin of victory (which is itself a specific number) is then to
be compared with these two numbers. If it is less than either one of
CA 171/2019
3
them the first condition is fulfilled. Thus, there is no discretion at
all with the Returning Officer. Insofar as the second condition is
concerned, there is an element of discretion: the Returning Officer
must be satisfied that the request is not unreasonable. Only then
is the condition applicable. In my view, with respect, to yoke these
conditions together is to misread, and hence misapply, the
legislative intent.
5.
One result of the view that finds favor with the majority is
that the word “shall” appearing in s. 95(5) must necessarily be read
as “may”. In my view, the legislature (which of course was only too
well aware of the previous state of the law) has deliberately
departed from the discretion that had earlier vested in the
Returning Officer under s. 39(6). The “shall” used in s. 95(5) must
therefore be given its intended mandatory effect. This emerges
clearly if the relevant “or” is read disjunctively. In the first
condition, as soon as the arithmetical exercise is concluded, and
the relevant question answered in the affirmative, the recount
must take place if such an application is moved. It emerges also, in
my view, in respect of the second condition, though perhaps less
obviously. Before considering this aspect, I may note that the
subsection speaks of a “challenge” or a “request” being made to the
Returning Officer. This dual usage also lends support to the view
that I take. Inasmuch as the second condition has an element of
discretion, there is a “request” to the Returning Officer, and indeed
the second condition specifically repeats this word. On the other
hand, the word “challenge” is certainly appropriate for the first
condition. The arithmetical calculations can be carried out by
anyone and on such basis the applicant can throw out a
peremptory “challenge” to the count. If the two conditions are
rolled into one then there can only be a “request”, and the word
“challenge” is rendered redundant.
6.
As I understand it the majority judgment essentially finds no
difference between the requirement previously to be found in s.
39(6)(a) that the Returning Officer could, in his discretion, allow a
CA 171/2019
4
recount if he found the request to be “reasonable”, and the
requirement now contained in the second condition of s. 95(5), that
the Returning Officer find the request to be “not unreasonable”. If
so, I am, with respect, unable to agree. While at first sight such an
equation may seem to exist, the actual position is materially
different. Under the 1976 Act, the onus lay on the applicant to
show that his request was reasonable. Furthermore, even if, in law,
it was, the use of the word “may” meant that the Returning Officer
still retained discretion to nonetheless refuse a recount. Under the
present law, the applicant must obviously, if he seeks recourse to
the second condition, set out the reasons for seeking a recount. An
application in terms of the second condition without any reasons
would be liable to dismissed out of hand. However, if reasons are
given then the onus lies on the Returning Officer (or the other
contesting candidates) to first show that the request in
unreasonable. It is here that the Returning Officer has discretion.
If he concludes that the request is unreasonable, then the onus
would shift on the applicant to show that this is not so. And if, in
law, the applicant is correct, then the Returning Officer would have
no further discretion; the word “shall” ensures that the recount
must be ordered. Here, an interesting latent ambiguity in s. 39(6)
may be noted. The word “may” as used therein had, at least at first
sight, appeared to control both clauses (a) and (b). But that would
have meant that even if the Election Commission had ordered a
recount the Returning Officer could have refused to do so.
Obviously, such a conclusion would have been completely
untenable. Thus, under the previous law the word “may” would
have had to be read as such for the first clause, but as “shall” for
the second. The present law obviates any such difficulty by putting
the power of the Election Commission in a separate subsection.
7.
The majority judgment also sets out in some detail the
legislative policy that would result in the interpretation that finds
favor with it. Again, with respect, I am unable to agree. In my view,
to the extent that the legislative policy can at all be ascertained
from the provisions, it points in the opposite direction. By
CA 171/2019
5
altogether removing the Returning Officer’s discretion in a
situation where the first condition applies, and restricting it to
within a narrow ambit in relation to the second (as explained
above) the policy of the law appears to be to allow recounts to take
place at the earliest stage. This is so to limit, if not altogether
foreclose (that would, perhaps, be hoping too much), such
challenges at a later stage, whether by way of an election petition
under Article 225 (i.e., in terms of the relevant election law) or
constitutional petitions in the High Courts or even this Court. The
democratic principle is of course that once the people have spoken
all other voices must fall silent. However, elections are, more often
than not, strongly contested. Sometimes, after the heat and
especially in the immediate aftermath of the contest, a losing
candidate is unable to acknowledge that he has indeed lost, should
respect the verdict of the people and wait for the next election
cycle. By allowing for recounts in terms as now contained in s.
95(5), the policy of the 2017 Act appears to be to allow for the
“cooling off” to take place at an early stage. If as a consequence a
little more time is required or taken to officially finalize matters,
the law clearly regards that as time well spent.
8.
Subject to the foregoing, I also hold that the appeal fails and
stands dismissed.
Judge
| {
"id": "C.A.171_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHMED, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN
MR. JUSTICE SAJJAD ALI SHAH
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
(Against the order dated 02.10.2019
passed by the Islamabad High Court,
Islamabad in ICA No.37 of 2019).
Mirza Muhammad Nazakat Baig.
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Federation of Pakistan through Secretary Ministry
of Law & Justice, Islamabad and another.
…Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s):
Mr. M. Shahid Kamal Khan, ASC.
For the Federation:
Mr. Sohail Mehmood, DAG.
Mr. M. Kassim Mirjat, AOR.
For Pak. Bar Council:
Mr. Zulfiqar Abbas Naqvi, ASC.
Syed Rifaqat Hussain Shah, AOR.
Date of Hearing:
28.01.2020.
O R D E R
IJAZ UL AHSAN, J.- This appeal with the leave of
the Court arises out of a judgment of a Division Bench of the
Islamabad High Court, Islamabad through which an Intra
Court Appeal filed by the appellant was dismissed. The said
ICA arose out of a judgment of a Single Bench of the same
Court through which a constitutional petition filed by the
Appellant was dismissed.
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
2
2.
Leave to appeal was granted by this Court vide its
order dated 30.10.2019 which for ease of reference is
reproduced below:
”It is contended by the learned counsel for the
petitioner that Pakistan Bar Council is a Statutory
body established under the Legal Practitioners and
Bar Councils Act, 1973 and that such Bar Council
registers the Bar Associations all over Pakistan,
including the Supreme Court Bar Association and
whatever the rules are framed for the Bar
Associations, they are framed by the Pakistan Bar
Council. He contends that Rule 9 of the Supreme
Court Bar Association of Pakistan Rules, 1989,
was amended by Notification of Pakistan Bar
Council dated 18.08.2018 by which first proviso to
clause (a) of Rule 9 was substituted by another
proviso in which Islamabad and Rawalpindi were
shown as one place among which the office of
President of the Supreme Court Bar Association
will be rotated. He contends that Islamabad is a
Capital Territory while Rawalpindi is already part
of the Province of the Punjab and thus these two
cities cannot be clubbed together for providing a
scat of one President rather Islamabad being a
Capital Territory should have its own President
and Rawalpindi being a part of Punjab should not
be separated from it.
2. The submissions made by the learned counsel
for the petitioner needs consideration. Leave to
appeal is granted to consider inter alia the above
submissions of the learned counsel. The appeal
will be herd on the available record, however, the
parties are allowed to file additional documents.
As the matter pertains to the Bar Association
Affairs, office is directed
to fix the
same
expeditiously.
3. Notice be issued to the Attorney General for
Pakistan under Order XXVIIA CPC. Notice be also
issued to the Secretary, Supreme Court Bar
Association. Petitioner is directed to implead
Supreme Court Bar Association as one of the
respondents and file amended title of the case in
this regard within a period of one week.”
3.
The brief facts necessary for decision of this lis are
that the appellant who is a member of the Supreme Court Bar
Association filed a constitution petition before the Islamabad
High Court challenging the vires of Rule 9 (a) of the Supreme
Court Bar Association of Pakistan Rules, 1989. Through the
said rule while granting the right of Presidency of the
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
3
Supreme Court Bar Association to Islamabad Capital
Territory on rotational basis, the territory of Rawalpindi was
also bracketed with the Islamabad Capital Territory. The
stance taken by the appellant was that Rule 9(a) was
discriminatory inasmuch as the right of Presidency had been
granted to every Province including Punjab, however, while
Islamabad Capital Territory was also given such privilege, the
area of Rawalpindi had been added with it which is a part of
Punjab. Hence the amendment was discriminatory as a part
of Punjab had been tagged with the Islamabad Capital
Territory. On an objection was raised regarding competence
and maintainability of a constitution petition in the matter. It
was contended that the Supreme Court Bar Association of
Pakistan Rules, 1989 were statutory in nature inasmuch as
the rule in question was amended by the Supreme Court Bar
Association, which amendment was subsequently notified by
the Pakistan Bar Council. It was further argued that Pakistan
Bar Council as well as Supreme Court Bar Association were
statutory
bodies
owing
their
creation
to
the
Legal
Practitioners and Bar Councils Act, 1973 (“Act of 1973”).
Hence a petition under Article 199 of the Constitution of
Islamic Republic of Pakistan was competent. The learned
Single Judge declined to interfere in the matter on the ground
that the Legal Practitioners and Bar Councils Act, 1973
provides for various fora to its members for raising their
grievances. He concluded that an adequate and efficacious
remedy was available to the Appellant under the Act of 1973.
Further, the Appellant could have raised his grievance
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
4
through the Islamabad Bar Council which he had failed to do.
Therefore the petition was not maintainable and was
dismissed in limine. In Intra Court Appeal, the learned
Division Bench came to the conclusion that the Supreme
Court Bar Association of Pakistan Rules, 1989 were non-
statutory and the Supreme Court Bar Association did not fall
within the definition of “person” within the contemplation of
Article 199 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of
Pakistan. It was further concluded that neither the Supreme
Court Bar Association of Pakistan nor the Pakistan Bar
Council fulfilled the requirements of the, “functionality rule”
and as such were not amenable to the writ jurisdiction of the
High Court. The appellant being dissatisfied of the afore-
noted judgments has approached this Court and has more or
less repeated the arguments made before and rejected by the
High Court.
4.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties
and gone through the record.
5.
The appellant has challenged the amendment
made by the Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan in
the Rules, 1989. The extract of the resolution whereby the
amendment was made in the Rules of 1989 is as follows:
“Amendments in Rule 9 of the Supreme Court Bar
Association of Pakistan Rules, 1989:-
(i)
The words NWFP are proposed to be amended by the
words Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in Rule 9(a) ii, so that the
name of the Province be amended in the light of the
provisions of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic
of Pakistan, 1973.
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
5
(ii)
At the end of the first proviso to clause (a) of Rule 9,
signs,
figures
and
words,
province,
Islamabad/Rawalpindi may be added in the following
manner:-
i.
Balochistan;
ii.
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa;
iii.
Punjab;
iv.
Sindh;
v.
Islamabad/Rawalpindi; and
vi.
Punjab.”
6.
A perusal of the afore-noted amendment shows
that the territory of Islamabad and Rawalpindi has been
added to the rotational Presidency mechanisms provided for
the President-ship of the Supreme Court Bar Association.
Rule 9(a) is designed to ensure that the Presidency of the
Supreme Court Bar Association goes to all regions of Pakistan
and is not monopolized by one region owing to numerical
strength. In the first place we have been informed by the
learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Pakistan Bar
Council as well as the Supreme Court Bar Association that
the aforesaid amendment was tabled in the Annual General
Meeting of the Association in which all members of the
Association including members of the Islamabad Bar
Association and the Rawalpindi Bar Association had a right to
cast their votes and express their grievances (if any).
Admittedly, the said resolution was passed without any major
objection from any side. Further, it is clear and obvious to us
that mechanism for redressal of such grievances is available
under the Legal Practitioners and Bar Councils Act, 1973.
There is no denial of the fact that the said mechanism and
alternate remedies have not been availed by the Appellant
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
6
either directly or through the good offices of the Islamabad
Bar Council.
7.
A bare reading of the provisions of the Legal
Practitioners and Bar Councils Act shows that the Act
provides for establishment of Bar Councils in the Provinces as
well as the Islamabad Capital Territory. It deals with all
matters relating to elections of office bearers, disciplinary and
other professional matters, constitution of committees, their
powers and other related and incidental matters. However, it
is clear that other than the Attorney General for Pakistan
being the ex-officio, Chairman Pakistan Bar Council and
Advocates Generals of the Provinces and Islamabad Capital
Territory being ex-officio, Chairman of the Provincial Bar
Councils and Islamabad Capital Territory neither the
Provincial
nor
the
Federal
Government
exercise
any
administrative control over the affairs of the Pakistan Bar
Council or the Provincial Bar Councils. Pakistan Bar Council
is a statutory body which is autonomous and generates its
own funds independently. The Government does not have any
control over it. Likewise, the Islamabad Bar Council acts as a
regulator for affairs of the Advocates in Islamabad Capital
Territory, admits Advocates to practice before the said High
Court and maintains rolls of such Advocates. The functions of
the Council also inter-alia include initiating proceedings for
misconduct against Advocates on its rolls and award
punishment in such cases. That being so, neither the
Respondent nor any of its constituents or committees can be
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
7
regarded as persons performing functions in connection with
the affairs of the Federation, Provinces or Local Authority
within
the
contemplation
of
the
Article
199
of
the
Constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan. As such we are
in no manner of doubt that Respondent No.2 is not amenable
to the jurisdiction of the High Court in terms of Article 199 of
the Constitution.
8.
The next question that needs to be addressed is
whether the Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan
Rules, 1989 are statutory in nature which is yet another
reason that correctly prevailed with the learned Division
Bench of the High Court in recording a finding that the
constitutional jurisdiction cannot be invoked against the
Supreme Court Bar Association. This question came up for
hearing before a Division Bench of the Lahore High Court in
the case of Abdul Sattar Chughtai Malik. v. Pakistan Bar
Council through Secretary and another (PLD 2007 Lahore
170). The following excerpt from the said judgment elaborates
correctly interprets the law on the subject and is reproduced
below:
“8. The rules are not statutory in nature, therefore,
any violation of the statutes, regulations or rules
would not attract the Constitutional jurisdiction of this
Court under Article 199 of the Constitution. In this
context reference can be made to the cases of Dr. M.
Afzal Beg v. University of Punjab and others (1999
PLC (C.S.) 60), Khalid Hussain v. The Chancellor,
(Governor of Punjab) and others (NLR 1995 CLJ 219),
Muhammad Umar Malik v. The Muslim Commercial
Bank through its President, Karachi and 2 others
(1995 SCMR 453) and Anwar Hussain v. Agricultural
Development Bank of Pakistan and others (PLD 1984
SC 194).
10. The Parliament is the law-making authority. It
passes the Acts and empowers the Government under
the relevant Act to make Rules for carrying on the
business. A statute is the formal “expression” in
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
8
writing of the will of the legislative organ in a State. A
‘Statute’ is a declaration of the law, as it exists or as
shall be from the time at which such statute is, to take
effect. It is usually called an Act of the Legislature. It
expresses the collective will of that body. A Statute is
the highest constitutional formulation of law, the
means by which supreme legislature, after the fullest
deliberation expresses its final will.
11. “Statute law” is defined as the will of the nation,
expressed by the Legislature, expounded by the
Courts of Justice. If the Parliament is not in session
then the laws are enforced through the Ordinances
issued by the President or the Governor expressing
will of the nation as the case may be. So, the Act
passed by the Parliament and the Ordinance issued
by the nation would be called the “Statutory Law”.
12. The Rules framed under the powers conferred by
an Act are integral part of the Act and these Rules are
called Statutory Rules and these are held to be part of
the parent Act. It can do anything if within its scope.
The Rules or the Bye-Laws made under the Statutes
or Act cannot over ride the provisions of other Statute.
Neither the Rules control the construction to be placed
on the provisions of the Act nor they can enlarge the
meaning of the section. The Rules are framed under
the Act in aid to construction of ambiguous Statutes.
The Rules under the Act shall be made by the
Authority, empowered under the Act to frame the
Rules or Bye-Laws. No other authority who is not
empowered under the Act make the Rules. A Rule
Making Body also cannot frame the Rules in conflict
with or derogating from the substantive provisions of
law or Statute under which the Rules are framed.
14. The Supreme Court Bar Association is a Body, the
Organization of lawyers, who are entitled to practise
in the Supreme Court of Pakistan it has not been
constituted under any Act of the Parliament. It is a
non-statutory body, therefore, conditions or rules
framed by this body would also be non-statutory rules
and having no legal backing. The writ petition under
Article 199 of the Constitution against a body,
organization not constituted under the law would not
be competent.”
9.
Learned counsel for the appellant was unable to
persuade us to take a contrary view than the one taken by the
Islamabad High Court in the impugned judgment, by the
Lahore High Court in the afore-noted judgment and by this
Court in a number of judgments including Abdul Sattar
Chughtai Malik. v. Pakistan Bar Council through Secretary
and another (PLD 2007 Lahore 170), Muhammad Tariq Badr
Civil Appeal No.1729 of 2019.
9
and another. v. National Bank of Pakistan and others (2013
SCMR 314), Shafique Ahmed Khan and others. v. NESCOM
through Chairman, Islamabad and others (PLD 2016 SC
377) and Muhammad Zaman and others. v. Government of
Pakistan through Secretary, Finance Division (Regulation
Wing), Islamabad and others (2017 SCMR 571). Further, the
learned counsel for the appellant has not been able to
demonstrate or point to any legal, procedural or jurisdictional
error, defect or flaw in the reasoning and exposition of law
undertaken by the Islamabad High Court in the impugned
judgment. After carefully going through the provisions of the
Legal Practitioners and Bar Councils Act, 1973 as well as the
Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan Rules, 1989, we
have arrived at the same conclusions as the learned High
Court and find no reason to interfere in the impugned
judgment.
10.
For the afore-noted reasons, we find no merit in
this appeal. It is accordingly dismissed with no order as to
costs.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
ISLAMABAD.
28.01.2020.
Zubair/*
‘Not Approved For Reporting’
| {
"id": "C.A.1729_2019.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT: MR. JUSTICE MIAN SAQIB NISAR
MR. JUSTICE IQBAL HAMEEDUR RAHMAN
MR. JUSTICE TARIQ PARVEZ
CIVIL APPEALS NO.1176 AND 1177 OF 2015
AND CIVIL PETITION NO.1428-L OF 2015
(Against the order dated 11.6.2015 of the Lahore High
Court,
Bahawalpur
Bench
passed
in
C.M.Nos.385,
388/2009 & 2051/2015)
Sahabzadi Maharunisa
…in C.As.1176 & 1177/2015
Sahibzadi Madhia Abbasi
…in C.P.1428-L/2015
…Appellant(s)/Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
Mst. Ghulam Sughran and another
…in C.As.1176 & 1177/2015
Sahibzadi Faroq Kamal Abbasi, etc.
…in C.P.1428-L/2015
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
(in C.As.1176 & 1177/2015)
Mr. Nadeem Iqbal Chaudhry, ASC
Qazi Zia Zahid, ASC
For the petitioner(s):
(in C.P.1428-L/2015)
Mr. M. Ozair Chughtai, ASC/AOR
For respondents 8 & 12:
(in C.As.1176 & 1177/2015)
Mr. M. Ozair Chughtai, ASC/AOR
For respondents 2(xviii) & 4:
(in C.As.1176 & 1177/2015)
Mr. Ejaz Ahmed Chaudhry, ASC
For respondents 15 & 22:
(in C.P.1428-L/2015)
Mr. Ejaz Ahmed Chaudhry, ASC
Amicus curiae:
Malik Muhammad Qayyum, Sr. ASC
Ch. Mushtaq Ahmed Khan, Sr. ASC
Syed Najam-ul-Hassan Kazmi, Sr. ASC
Date of hearing:
19.01.2016
…
JUDGMENT
MIAN SAQIB NISAR, J.- In the instant matters we are
called upon to resolve the proposition as to which is to be considered
the “Court which passed the final judgment, decree or order”
within the meaning of Section 12(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (CPC) where an aggrieved person shall file such an application.
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 2 :-
In the context of the above the facts of the instant appeals (along with
the CPLA) are:- respondents No.1 to 4 (plaintiffs) filed a suit for
possession against respondents No.5 to 11 (defendants) assailing
therein the validity of a gift mutation No.162 attested on 25.9.1944
by virtue whereof Muhammad Yar, the predecessor-in-interest of the
plaintiffs, gifted his property (suit property) in favour of Ahmad Yar, his
brother. The suit was initiated on 18.10.1965 and was partly decreed
on 11.6.1968. Both the parties being aggrieved of the above decree,
challenged the same through appeals, the plaintiffs filed RFA
No.11/1968, while the defendants instituted RFA No.27/1968. The
appeal filed by the plaintiff was partly allowed by the learned High
Court vide judgment dated 24.3.1986, but that of defendants was
dismissed through the same judgment. The defendants filed CA
No.193/1986 and CP No.73/1986, whereas the plaintiffs filed CP
No.473/1986, before this Court, all challenging the judgment dated
24.3.1986, while one Murad Bibi and Surriya Begum also filed
applications to be impleaded as parties before this Court in the
abovementioned appeal and/or petitions but were turned down with
the observation that they may avail the remedy before the appropriate
forum in appropriate proceedings. Thereafter, the appeal and
petitions were dismissed by this Court vide judgment dated
26.6.1991.
2.
Aggrieved of the said judgments and claiming those to
have been procured by the respondents through fraud and
misrepresentation, the appellant (in CAs No.1176 and 1177/2015) filed
applications under Section 12(2) of the CPC vide CMs No.385 and
388/2009 in RFAs No.11 and 27/1968 respectively, and the
petitioner (in CP No.1428-L/2015) filed a similar application through CM
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 3 :-
No.2051/2015 in RFA No.11/1968. These applications have been
dismissed vide the impugned judgment dated 11.6.2015 holding that
the application before the High Court is not competently filed, rather
in the light of the law laid down by this Court in Nasrullah Khan and
others Vs. Mukhtar-ul-Hassan and others (PLD 2013 SC 478) the
appellate forum is the Supreme Court of Pakistan. Leave was granted
on 6.11.2015 to consider whether the applications under Section
12(2) of the CPC were rightly dismissed on the grounds that they
were only competent before this Court and also to consider the true
import of the case of Nasrullah Khan (supra); the order is reproduced
below:-
“Learned counsel for the petitioner states that the final
judgment in the instant matter had been passed by the
learned High Court in its appellate jurisdiction, and when
such judgment and decree was assailed before this Court, it
was kept intact. Therefore, the view set out by the learned
High Court while dismissing the application of the
petitioner under Section 12(2) CPC being not maintainable
in light of the law laid down in Nasrullah Khan and others
Vs. Mukhtar-ul-Hassan and others (PLD 2013 SC 478) is
not correct as the rule of merger is not attracted to cases
where judgments of the learned High Court have simply
been kept intact and no modification or reversal has taken
place. In such an eventuality the final judgment and order
shall be that of the learned High Court. Leave is granted to
consider the above. As a short point is involved, let this
matter be listed for hearing within six weeks. We also
appoint M/s Malik Muhammad Qayyum, Syed Najam-ul-
Hassan Kazmi and Ch. Mushtaq Ahmed Khan, learned Sr.
ASCs as amicus curiae to assist the court on the points
raised; and notice be issued to them accordingly.”
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 4 :-
3.
In order to make this opinion concise we are not stating
in detail the arguments/pleas raised by the learned counsel for the
parties and learned amicus, which (pleas) are reflected in the reasons
assigned herein. However it may be stated that, in brief, the
argument of the learned counsel(s) for the appellants is that the
principle of merger is applicable to such application [under Section 12(2)
of the CPC] but only where a judgment, decree or order passed by a
court when appealed against or challenged in the revisional
jurisdiction has been set aside, reversed, modified etc.; however
where it (judgment etc.) has simply been affirmed by the higher forum,
the rule of merger is not attracted and the final judgment, decree or
order shall remain that of the court which passed the judgment etc.
before its affirmation. This according to the learned counsel shall be
the rule applicable at all the levels of adjudication including the
Supreme Court. On the contrary, the learned counsel for the
respondents have pressed for the application of the rule of merger
even to the judgments etc. which have been affirmed in
appeal/revision though subject to certain exceptions which shall be
highlighted in the course of this opinion. This is also the position of
all the three amicus, who have forcefully added that the rule of
merger should also be extended and made applicable to the decisions
of affirmation passed by this Court but with the exception that when
it (this Court) decides a matter on merits after grant of leave or while
deciding an appeal directly filed before the Supreme Court under
Article 185(2) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan,
1973 (Constitution), certain exceptions to the rule of merger will apply.
4.
Heard. Before proceeding to examine the proposition and
provide an answer thereto, we find it expedient to explain the concept
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 5 :-
of merger by referring to the definition of the words ‘merge’ and
‘merger’. According to Chambers English Dictionary (7th Edition),
‘merge’ means “to dip or plunge; to cause to be swallowed up or absorbed in
something greater or superior: to cause to coalesce, combine, or amalgamate – to be
swallowed up or lost: to coalesce: to lose identity in something else”. ‘Merger’ has
been assigned the meaning “a sinking of an estate, title, etc., in one of larger
extent or of higher value: a combine, an absorption; or an act or process of
margining”. The Oxford English Dictionary (1933) defines ‘merge’ as “to
dip, plunge; to sink or extinguish (a lesser estate, title, etc.) in one which is greater
or superior. Hence gen., to cause (something) to be absorbed into something else, so
as to lose its own character or identity; to sink or make to disappear” and
‘merger’ as “extinguishment of a right, estate, contract, action, etc, by absorption
in another”. The definition of ‘merge’ provided in Corpus Juris
Secundum (1936) is “to sink or disappear in something else; to be lost to view
or absorbed into something else; to become absorbed or extinguished; to be
combined or be swallowed up; to lose identity or individuality; to sink the identity or
individuality of; to cause to disappear; to make to disappear in something else; to
cause to be absorbed or engrossed” and ‘merger’ is “absorption of a thing of
lesser importance by a greater, whereby the lesser ceases to exist, but the greater is
not increased; an absorption or swallowing up so as to involve a loss of identity and
individuality; in merger there is a carrying on of the substance of the thing, except
that the substance is merged into, and becomes a part of, a separate thing with a new
identity”. The word ‘merge’ has been explained in The Constitution of
India by Prof. S. R. Bhansali as “to sink or disappear in something else; to
become absorbed or extinguished, to be combined or be swallowed up”, and
‘merger’ as “the absorption of a thing of lesser importance by a greater, whereby
the lesser ceases to exist but the greater is not increased; an absorption or
swallowing up so as to involve a loss of identity and individuality”. On account of
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 6 :-
the definitions above, it is obvious that ‘to merge’ or ‘merger’ is where
something is absorbed into another and/or has coalesced into
another identity by losing its own original character. In the Nasrullah
Khan case (supra) we have held that merger of a judgment/decree
means “that it is integrated, implanted, inculcated, infixed and instilled into the
decree of the higher forum and becomes the decree/order of the later forum for all
legal intents and implications”. It is relevant to mention here that
according to settled law, an appeal (in particular) is a continuation of
the original proceedings and when an appeal is filed the entire case is
reopened for examination both on the question(s) of fact and the
points of law involved in any lis (Note: a second appeal, however, is subject to the
conditions laid down in Sections 100 and 102 CPC). Be that as it may, the legal
position and the concept of merger in relation to an appeal has been
considered and authoritatively resolved in the judgment reported as
F.A. Khan Vs. The Government of Pakistan (PLD 1964 SC 520).
The facts of the case were:- that an employee of the Land Customs
Department was dismissed from service vide order dated 15.8.1950
passed by the Collector of Land Customs. He filed an appeal before
the Central Board of Revenue (in the departmental hierarchy) which was
dismissed on 7.5.1952. On 25.6.1958 he filed a suit for declaration
challenging the order of his dismissal and the one passed in appeal.
The defendant (customs department) took up the preliminary objection
that such suit was barred as per Article 120 of the Limitation Act,
1908 (Limitation Act) because the dismissal order dated 15.8.1950 was
being challenged beyond the period of six years. Considering the
above legal point, the learned Bench of this Court found:-
“…in respect of the nature of an appeal the following
propositions may be regarded as established:
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 7 :-
(i)
when an appeal is filed the matter becomes sub-
judice and is reheard by the appellate Court which does not
Act merely as a Court of error;
(ii)
after there has been an appeal even though an
appellate Court simply affirms the order of the original
Court the only decree or order in existence is the order of
the appellate Court;
(iii)
the original and appellate proceedings are steps in
one proceedings.
…the passing of an order subject to appeal will not
necessitate the filing of a suit for it is only a step in a
proceeding and not a final order. In any case once an
appeal is filed the matter becomes sub-judice and
when the appellate authority passes an order the order
of the original authority disappears and merges in the
order of the appellate authority so that there remains
in existence only the appellate order and this order can
be made the basis of a suit.”
(Emphasis supplied by us)
Thus while taking into account the date of dismissal of the appeal as
the relevant date for the purposes of limitation in F. A. Khan (supra)
the suit was held to be within time, meaning thereby that the rule of
merger was settled and applied in the context of limitation (Note: It may
be relevant to mention that in this judgment considerable case law was considered while
enunciating the law that the rule of merger shall be attracted). However this Court in
the judgment reported as Joydeb Agarwala Vs. Baitulmal Karkhana
Ltd. (PLD 1965 SC 37) took a different view that:-
“Certain contentions raised by Mr. T. H. Khan may be very
briefly disposed of. He contended that the trial Court lacked
jurisdiction to interfere with the decree because it had
become final through being upheld in appeal in the High
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 8 :-
Court and not having been appealed against further, and
secondly, that only the High Court could alter the decree
which had become merged in the decree of the High Court.
The mere fact of the decree having become immune to
further appeal by the dismissal of the appeal in the High
Court and the lack of further appeal does not render the
decree a decree of any other Court except that of first
instance. No modification was made in the decree by the
High Court, and the argument of merger is rendered of no
weight by the consideration that in fact the High Court
rejected the appeal”.
The facts of the case were:- that a decree for specific performance in
favour of the plaintiff passed by the Trial Court attained finality at the
level of the High Court in appeal because the defendant’s appeal was
dismissed subsequent to which the plaintiff filed an application for
amendment of the decree, which (matter) finally came before this Court
wherein it was held as quoted above, that the rule of merger shall not
apply. It is very important to note that the earlier judgment in F. A.
Khan (supra) for whatever reason eluded the attention of this Court
while rendering the opinion in Joydeb Agarwala (Note: the Court also
hardly took into account any previous case law on the subject, which was referred to in F.A.
Khan’s case). In the case reported as Maluvi Abdul Qayyum Vs. Syed
Ali Asghar Shah and 5 others (1992 SCMR 241) wherein the Court
was called upon to resolve the proposition about the application of
the rule of merger in relation to appeals and also to the revisional
jurisdiction, the two verdicts of the Court (supra), F.A. Khan and
Joydeb Agarwala, came up for examination and further case law on
the subject was exhaustively considered and this Court came to a
definite and authoritative conclusion that the rule of merger shall be
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 9 :-
attracted to the case(s) of affirmation of decisions in appeal/revision;
the view of the Court was expressed in the following words:-
“It appears that in holding that the period of limitation for
execution of the decree commenced from the date of the
decision by the Appellate Court, the rule that the decree of
the Court of first instance, merged into the decree of
Appellate Court, which alone can be executed, was not
present to the mind of the learned Judge. It is to be
remembered that till such time, an appeal or revision from a
decree is not filed, or such proceedings are pending but no
stay order has been issued, such decree remains capable of
execution but when the Court of last instance passes the
decree only that decree can be executed, irrespective of the
fact, that the decree of the lower Court is affirmed, reversed
or modified.”
Additionally:-
“In Lala Brij Narain v. Kunwar Tejbal Bikram Bahadur (37
I.A. 70) the Privy Council has taken the view that the trial
Court ceases to have the jurisdiction to amend decree, when
it has been affirmed by the Appellate Court. This would also
strengthen the rule that after affirmation of the decree of the
trial Court, the decree in existence is only that of the
Appellate Court. This view has generally been followed in
the sub-continent…”
As regards the revisional jurisdiction it was opined:-
“The same object is achieved when a revision from the
decree of the lower Court is accepted. Thus in a way
revisional
jurisdiction
partakes
of
appellate
jurisdiction. A case on this point is the one decided by a
Full Bench of Madras High Court in Chappan v. Moidin
Kutti (ILR 1899 Madras 68) where Subramania, J expressed
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 10 :-
the view that appellate jurisdiction includes revisional
powers.”
(Emphasis supplied by us)
Furthermore:-
“9.
These judicial announcements leave no room for
doubt that for the purpose of execution the rule of merger
equally applies to the decree passed in exercise of revisional
jurisdiction. This issue may also be examined from another
angle. Take the case of a suit, which is dismissed by the trial
Court and with this dismissal the First Appellate Court does
not interfere, but it is decreed by the revisional Court. There
should be no doubt that the decree of the Court of revision
can well be executed. So far as executability of a final decree
is concerned, does it make any difference, if the decree of the
First Appellate Court is affirmed by the revisional Court?”
It is clear from the ratio of the noted judgment that an exception was
taken to the law laid down in Joydeb Agarwala and the law laid
down in on F.A. Khan’s case was endorsed; rightly so, because in the
Joydeb Agarwala case the earlier verdict i.e. F.A. Khan and the
settled law on the rule of merger (note:- referred to and relied upon in F.A.
Khan) was not taken into consideration and therefore the said decision
(Joydeb Agarwala case) with due deference, is per incuriam. We have not
come across better decisions in our jurisdiction explaining the rule of
merger than F.A. Khan and Maulvi Abdul Qayyum cases. This rule
has also been reiterated in Nasrullah Khan’s case (supra), wherein it
has been specified as under:-
“From the above it is clear that for all legal purposes,
it is the final decree/order of the last Court in the
series, even if such decree etc. be of affirmation, which
has to be executed and should be considered and
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 11 :-
treated to be the final judgment/decree/order in terms
of Section 12(2) CPC for approaching the forum. Thus,
notwithstanding the reversal or modification of the
decree/order, if the decree/order of a forum below, which
has been affirmed by the higher forum on merits, both on
the points of the facts and the law involved therein, it shall
be that decree/order, which attains the status of the final
decree/order etc. within the purview of section 12(2),
C.P.C. It is so because the higher forum has not only-
endorsed the point(s) of fact and law and has agreed with
the reasoning and conclusion of the lower forum, but may
be, has upheld the decision(s) challenged before it, by
substituting and supplying its own reasons and by
substantially doing away with the reasoning of the
decision(s) challenged before it. Thus, it would be
ludicrous to conceive and hold that the questions of facts
and law which have been finally approved, endorsed,
affirmed and settled by the higher forum should be allowed
to be examined, annulled and obliterated by a forum below,
whose decision stands affirmed in the above manner.
Therefore, we are of the considered view that the impugned
judgment in this case has been rightly founded on the
principle of merger; however before parting it may be
observed that in the case Khawaja Muhammad Yousaf
(supra), an exception has been taken to the rule of merger
in relation to the apex Court, particularly in respect of
those judgments/orders which are affirmed by this Court in
the sense that leave has been refused.”
(Emphasis supplied by us)
In the verdict of this Court reported as Muhammad Yousaf through
Legal Heirs and others Vs. Noor Din and others (PLD 2002 SC
391) it has been held as under:-
“4.
The law on the subject now stands clarified and
settled in view of the dictum laid down in Khawaja
Muhammad Yousaf v. Federal Government through
Secretary, Ministry of Kashmir Affairs and Northern Areas
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 12 :-
and others 1999 SCMR 1516 that if the Supreme Court
merely reaffirms a judgment or order of a High Court
by refusing leave to appeal the final judgment in terms
of section 12(2), C.P.C. will be of the High Court and
not of the Supreme Court and if the Supreme Court
reverses a judgment of a High Court and records a
finding on question of fact or law contrary to what
was held by the High Court, the final judgment or order
would be of the Supreme Court for the purpose of
section 12(2), C.P.C. The same view was reiterated in Abid
Kamal v. Mudassar Mustafa and others 2000 SCMR 900.
5.
Adverting to the case in hand we find that by
dismissing the petition for leave to appeal this Court had
affirmed and not reversed the judgment of the Lahore High
Court. The final judgment in terms of section 12(2), C.P.C.
is, therefore, of the High Court and as such there can be no
dispute with the proposition that jurisdiction to entertain and
decide the application under section 12(2), C.P.C. moved by
the petitioners vests exclusively in the Lahore High Court.”
(Emphasis supplied by us)
We may now consider the important case law from the Indian
jurisdiction, wherein the concept and the rule of merger has been
elucidated and applied i.e. in Commissioner of Income-Tax,
Bombay Vs. M/s Amritlal Bhogilal and Co. (AIR 1958 SC 868) it
was held that:-
“There can be no doubt that, if an appeal is provided
against an order passed by a tribunal, the decision of the
appellate authority is the operative decision in law. If the
appellate authority modifies or reverses the decision of the
tribunal, it is obvious that it is the appellate decision that is
effective and can be enforced. In law the position would be
just the same even if the appellate decision merely confirms
the decision of the tribunal. As a result of the confirmation
or affirmance of the decision of the tribunal by the
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 13 :-
appellate authority the original decision merges in the
appellate decision and it is the appellate decision alone
which
subsists and is operative and capable of
enforcement…”
In Collector of Customs, Calcutta Vs. East India Commercial Co.
Ltd., Calcutta and others (AIR 1963 SC 1124), the rule was laid
down that:-
“…though it may be that the appellate authority has merely
confirmed the order of the original authority and dismissed
the appeal. It is this principle, viz., that the appellate order is
the operative order after the appeal is disposed of, which is
in our opinion the basis of the rule that the decree of the
lower court merges in the decree of the appellate court, and
on the same principle it would not be incorrect to say that the
order of the original authority is merged in the order of the
appellate authority whatsoever its decision-whether of
reversal or modification or mere confirmation.”
In Lakshminarayan Guin & Ors Vs. Niranjan Modak [(1985) 1 SCC
270] the court concluded:-
“It is well settled that when a trial court decrees a suit and
the decree is challenged by a competent appeal, the appeal
is considered as a continuation of the suit, and when the
appellate decree affirms, modifies or reverses the decree on
the merits, the trial court decree is said in law to merge in
the appellate decree, and it is the appellate decree which
rules.”
In Kunhayammed and others Vs. State of Kerala and another
(AIR 2000 SC 2587) the Court has lucidly set out the concept of
merger, its logic, scope and application and concluded as under:-
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 14 :-
“To sum up our conclusions are :-
(i)
Where an appeal or revision is provided against an
order passed by a court, tribunal or any other authority
before superior forum and such superior forum modifies,
reverses or affirms the decision put in issue before it, the
decision by the sub-ordinate forum merges in the decision
by the superior forum and it is the latter which subsists,
remains operative and is capable of enforcement in the
eye of law.”
But considering whether the rule of merger shall be applicable where
leave has been refused by the Supreme Court it was held:-
“(iii) Doctrine of merger is not a doctrine of universal
or unlimited application. It will depend on the nature of
jurisdiction exercised by the superior forum and the
content or subject-matter of challenge laid or capable of
being laid shall be determinative of the applicability of
merger. The superior jurisdiction should be capable of
reversing, modifying or affirming the order put in issue
before it. Under Article 136 of the Constitution the
Supreme Court may reverse, modify or affirm the
judgment-decree or order appealed against while
exercising its appellate jurisdiction and not while
exercising the discretionary jurisdiction disposing of
petition for special leave to appeal. The doctrine of
merger can therefore be applied to the former and
not to the latter.
(Emphasis supplied by us)
(iv)
An order refusing special leave to appeal may be a
non-speaking order or a speaking one. In either case it
does not attract the doctrine of merger. An order refusing
special leave to appeal does not stand substituted in place
of the order under challenge. All that it means is that the
Court was not inclined to exercise its discretion so as to
allow the appeal being filed.
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 15 :-
(v)
If the order refusing leave to appeal is a speaking
order, i.e. gives reasons for refusing the grant of leave,
then the order has two implications. Firstly, the statement
of law contained in the order is a declaration of law by
the Supreme Court within the meaning of Article 141 of
the Constitution. Secondly, other than the declaration of
law, whatever is stated in the order are the findings
recorded by the Supreme Court which would bind the
parties thereto and also the Court, tribunal or authority in
any proceedings subsequent thereto by way of judicial
discipline, the Supreme Court being the Apex Court of the
country. But, this does not amount to saying that the order
of the Court, tribunal or authority below has stood
merged in the order of the Supreme Court rejecting
special leave petition or that the order of the Supreme
Court is the only order binding as res judicata in
subsequent proceedings between the parties.
(vi)
Once leave to appeal has been granted and
appellate jurisdiction of Supreme Court has been invoked
the order passed in appeal would attract the doctrine of
merger; the order may be of reversal, modification or
merely affirmation.”
This judgment has been affirmed and the view set out therein has
been fully endorsed and acknowledged in a later judgment from the
Indian jurisdiction reported as Bakshi Dev Raj and Anr. Vs.
Sudheer Kumar (AIR 2011 SC 3137).
5.
From the ratio of the case law cited above (from both
jurisdictions), it is clear that the doctrine of merger has been duly
applied to the reversal and modification cases and also to all those
cases in which the judgment etc. of a lower forum has been affirmed
in appeal or revision by a higher forum(s) (Note: though there are certain
exceptions to this rule which shall be specified in the concluding part of this opinion). We
may like to add here that the rule of merger shall also extend to the
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 16 :-
writ jurisdiction of the learned High Court(s) where the decisions of
the lower fora, such as Tribunals and Special Courts etc. when
challenged have been affirmed by the court in exercise of its
constitutional jurisdiction.
6.
The learned counsel(s) for the appellants in support of
their contentions, cited certain judgments of this Court, which (case
law) according to them are directly on the subject of 12(2) qua the
forum where such application should be filed. The learned counsel
for the respondents and the learned amicus countered that such
dicta do not impinge upon the rule of merger which is unequivocally
attracted to the decisions of the higher forum affirming the
judgments of the lower fora and that those cases are distinguishable
or fall within the exception(s) to the rule of merger. The first judgment
cited is Government of Sindh and another Vs. Ch. Fazal
Muhammad and another (PLD 1991 SC 197). The facts of the case
were:- that the respondent of the case (Ch. Fazal Muhammad) filed an
application under Section 14 of the Arbitration Act, 1940 against the
appellant (Government of Sindh) and after notice to the appellant and
upon hearing it, the award was made rule of the court; appeal of the
appellant was dismissed for non-prosecution; the restoration
application also was not pursued and thus dismissed. Thereafter an
application under Section 12(2) of the CPC was filed perhaps before
the appellate court (Note: as this is not quite clear from the facts narrated in the
judgment) which was dismissed throughout, and when the matter came
to this Court the focal point was whether in such circumstances the
application was maintainable, but there was no such issue about the
forum where such application should be filed. The Court held:-
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 17 :-
“10.
It will be seen from the above that the appellants
had opportunity to take all the objections to the award and
if they did not plead all the facts and raised all the
objections to the award which were available to them for
an application under sections 30 and 33 of the Arbitration
Act they have to blame themselves. Under Section 12(2),
C.P.C. a party can question the validity of a judgment,
decree or order on the plea of fraud etc. In this case the
challenge is not to judgment, decree or order but to the
award itself. This could be done only under section 30 or
33 of the Arbitration Act. Even a review of the judgment,
decree or order could not be sought because if new or
important matter was discovered the appellant had to
satisfy, in order to succeed, that they had exercised due
diligence and in spite of that the facts pleaded in the
application under Section 12(2) were not within their
knowledge.
12.
Accordingly, an application under section 12(2),
C.P.C. also was not maintainable.”
It is thus noticed that the legal point involved herein was neither in
issue nor was dilated upon and resolved by this Court in the
judgment supra. In Secretary, Ministry of Religious Affairs and
Minorities and 2 others Vs. Syed Abdul Majid (1993 SCMR 1171)
the factual backdrop was:- that the transfer of the property (in question)
as evacuee in favour of the respondent (of the case namely Abdul Majid) by
the Settlement Department was annulled by the Chairman Evacuee
Trust Property (CETP) declaring it to be Evacuee Trust Property. This
order was challenged by the respondent in the constitutional
jurisdiction of the High Court and he succeeded. The leave
application before this Court by Secretary Ministry of Religious
Affairs (the Secretary) was dismissed as being barred by time. Thereafter
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 18 :-
the Secretary moved an application under Section 12(2) of the CPC
before the High Court which was disallowed; the moot points before
this Court in the case were two fold, one about the forum having
jurisdiction in the matter and another a legal issue about the
application of MLR 57. The Court on the first point, which is relevant
for this judgment categorically held:-
“In this connection the next point for consideration is
whether in view of the fact that this Court had dismissed
civil petition for leave to appeal filed by the appellants
against the judgment of the High Court, application under
section 12(2), C.P.C. could be filed in the High Court or in
the Supreme Court. As held in the Government of Sindh
and another v. Ch. Fazal Muhammad PLD 1991 SC 197,
such application can be filed in the Court which passed the
final order. The final order in the present case was
passed by the High Court and therefore the
application filed by the appellants there was
competent”.
(Emphasis supplied by us)
In Khawaja Muhammad Yousaf Vs. Federal Government through
Secretary, Ministry of Kashmir Affairs and Northern Areas and
others (1999 SCMR 1516) the allotment of the land in favour of the
appellant of the case (Khawaja Muhammad Yousaf) as a displaced person
from the State of Jammu and Kashmir which was mutated in his
name by the Tehsildar was set aside by the Collector in appeal; this
order was reversed by the Additional Commissioner on appeal of Kh.
Yousaf. Against the order of the Additional Commissioner, the
Federal Government went in revision before the Member, Board of
Revenue which was rejected on 25.2.1988; the constitutional petition
of the Government was dismissed by the learned High Court vide
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 19 :-
judgment dated 15.8.1989. This judgment was challenged by some
private person(s) by filing applications under Section 12(2) of the CPC
before the High Court on the ground(s) that the allotment of Kh.
Yousaf is the result of fraud etc. and, therefore, the said judgment be
set aside. The applications were allowed and the judgment dated
15.8.1989 was set aside; leave was granted by this Court inter alia to
“examine the legal question as to, whether an application under section 12(2),
C.P.C. could have been filed by the private respondents before the High Court”. In
order to answer the above question, the Court was required to
determine “which of the judgments/orders can be treated as a final
judgment/order in terms of subsection (2) of section 12 C.P.C.” The Court
however on examination of the two earlier judgments of Government
of Sindh and Secretary, Ministry of Religious Affairs approved the
latter dictum while concluding:-
“In our view, the law enunciated in the above case of
Secretary, Ministry of Religious Affairs and Minorities and
2 others v. Syed Abdul Majid (supra) reflects the correct
legal position. If this Court merely reaffirms a judgment or
order of a High Court by refusing leave, the final judgment
in terms of subsection (2) of section 12, C.P.C. will be of
the High Court and not of the Supreme Court. However, if
the Supreme Court, reverses a judgment of a High Court
and records a finding on question of fact or law contrary to
what was held by the High Court, in that event the final
judgment or order would be of the Supreme Court for the
purpose of subsection (2) of section 12, C.P.C. In this view
of the matter, the final judgment in the case in hand was of
High Court as it reversed the findings recorded by the
forums provided under the Settlement Law”.
In Abid Kamal Vs. Muddassar Mustafa and others (2000 SCMR
900) the petitioner who had approached this Court directly under
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 20 :-
Section 12(2) during the course of hearing of the matter, while
accepting Secretary, Ministry of Religious Affairs (supra) as the valid
law laid down by this Court sought the permission of the Court to
withdraw his petition with the observation that the court seized of the
matter (which he would approach) should sympathetically consider the
condonation of delay with regard to the time spent pursuing his
remedy before this Court, the Court held:-
“…In both the cases i.e. 1993 SCMR 1171 and 1999 SCMR
1516 the ratio decidendi is that if Supreme Court merely
affirms judgment or order of High Court by refusing leave
the final judgment in terms of section 12(2), C.P.C. will be
of the High Court and not of the Supreme Court, and if,
however, Supreme Court reverses a judgment of a High
Court and records a finding on question of fact or law
contrary to what was held by the High Court, in that event
the final judgment or order would be of the Supreme Court
for the purposes of section 12(2), C. P. C..
4.
In the case in hand as well this Court had
refused to grant leave to respondent Muddassar
Mustafa and others, therefore, keeping in view these
facts we are of the opinion that application under
section 12(2), C.P.C. subject to all just exceptions will
be competent before the Court which had finally
decided the appeal.”
(Emphasis supplied by us)
In Bakhtiar Ahmed Vs. Mst. Shamim Akhtar and others (2013
SCMR 5) while the question of limitation in the context of Section 48
of the CPC was under consideration and the rule of merger was taken
into account; it was held that mere filing of leave petition before this
Court and the decision thereupon shall not attract the rule of merger
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 21 :-
and extend the period of limitation. In this regard the relevant portion
reads as:-
“There being no, statutory remedy of appeal or revision
available against said decree and the only remedy
available was filing a petition for leave to appeal before
this Court, which is a constitutional court, therefore, unless
the operation of the impugned decree is suspended or the
petition is converted in to an appeal the petitioner cannot
presume that the period of limitation has been clogged.
Mere filing of petition before this court would not
automatically enlarge the time of filing the execution
application. Needless to mention here that in case
relief is granted by this Court after allowing the
appeal with leave of the Court then in the said
eventuality the order of this Court would merge
into order of the lower forums as such the period of
limitation would start from the order of this Court”.
(Emphasis supplied by us)
7.
From the analysis of the above case law, it transpires
that in none of these judgments has the rule of merger been taken
into consideration (Note: exception in Bakhtiar Ahmed case, but that too in a
different context) in the context of the provisions of Section 12(2) of the
CPC. Rather such principle was conceived and applied in clear terms
in Nasrullah Khan’s case (supra) for the first time which enunciation
of law is in line with the rule of merger as defined, perceived and
applied in our jurisprudence and also the Indian jurisprudence (Note:
all the definitions/dicta have been cited in paragraphs No.4 to 6 of this opinion).
Moreover in none of the judgments that we have considered has it
been held that the rule of merger shall not apply to the decisions
passed
in
affirmation
in
appeal/revision/writ.
All
the
later
judgments, subject to their own peculiar features as highlighted
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 22 :-
above, have followed the ratio of the judgment reported as Secretary,
Ministry of Religious Affairs (supra). The distinguishing feature of
the law laid down therein is that the Court is inclined to apply the
rule of merger to the affirmation decision in appeal when the same is
on merits with the proviso that the said doctrine shall not be
attracted where the decision of the lower forum has been simply
upheld in the manner that this Court had declined to interfere with
such decision, through the refusal of leave to appeal. It is thus clear
that where a matter has been heard and decided by this Court in
appeal and the verdict of the lower forum has been affirmed on merits
the rule of merger shall duly apply, and thus the application under
Section 12(2) of the CPC subject to the exceptions mentioned in the
concluding part of this judgment can be competently filed before this
Court. For the plea raised by the appellants’ side that in view of
Order I Rule 5 of the Supreme Court Rules, 1980 (Rules) the
provisions of CPC are not applicable to the proceedings before the
Supreme Court, suffice it to say that there is no bar upon the Court
to apply and resort to the principles of CPC and thus it is within the
absolute prerogative and discretion of this Court to entertain and
decide such an application (under Section 12(2) CPC).
8.
In order to sum up the discussion on the subject, we find
that the following are the situations (with certain exceptions) which would
be relevant to the determination of the final court within the purview
of Section 12(2) of the CPC:-
(i)
Where an appeal/revision/writ is accepted, the
judgment etc. is reversed, varied, modified or affirmed;
(ii)
Where an appeal/revision/writ is not disposed of on
merits but on some other grounds;
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 23 :-
(iii)
Where direct appeals or those after the grant of leave
are allowed or dismissed and the judgment etc. of the
learned High Court(s)/Tribunals or special forums
below has been varied, altered, reversed or affirmed by
this Court;
(iv)
Where the petition(s) for leave to appeal under the
Constitution is declined;
9.
With respect to these four situations, our conclusion is
as under:-
(i)
In the cases where the remedy of appeal/revision is
provided against a judgment etc. or a remedy of writ is
availed, the appellate/revisional/constitutional forum
records reasons on the consideration of the issues of
law and/or fact the judgment etc. of the subordinate
court/forum will merge into the decision of the
appellate court etc. irrespective of the fact that such
judgment reverses, varies or affirms the decision of the
subordinate court/forum and its decision will be
operative and capable of enforcement on the principle
of merger, the application under Section 12(2) of the
CPC
will
be
maintainable
before
the
appellate/revisional/constitutional forum (High Court,
District Court, Tribunal or Special Court as the case may be);
(ii)
In the situation mentioned at serial No.(ii) above, there
are certain exceptions to the rule of merger which (rule)
shall not apply, where an appeal etc. has been
dismissed:- (i) for non-prosecution; (ii) for lack of
jurisdiction;
(iii)
for
lack
of
competence/maintainability; (iv) as barred by law; (v)
as barred by time; (vi) withdrawal of the matter by the
party; (vii) for lack of locus standi; (viii) decided on the
basis of a compromise, if the very basis of the
compromise by the party to the lis or even a stranger
showing prejudice to his rights is not under challenge
on the ground of fraud; (ix) is rendered infructuous or
disposed of as having borne fruit; (x) abatement; (xi)
where the writ is dismissed on the ground of
availability of alternate remedy; (xii) where the writ is
dismissed on the point of laches. It may be mentioned
that such exceptions shall also be attracted to the
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 24 :-
decision(s) of the Supreme Court, where applicable.
However where the case falls within the noted
exceptions the forum for an application under Section
12(2) of the CPC is the one against whose decision the
matter has come and been disposed of in the above
manner by the higher forum;
(iii)
In the cases of reversal or modification of the judgment
of the High Court(s), Tribunal(s) or Special Courts
before this Court, or those affirmed in appeal (where the
matter does not fall within the exceptions) the judgment of the
Supreme Court shall be deemed to be final for moving
an appropriate application on the plea of lack of
jurisdiction, misrepresentation and fraud;
(iv)
In the cases where leave is declined by this Court, the
judgment etc. of the lower fora will remain intact and
final and will not merge into the leave refusing order,
for the purposes of an application under Section 12(2)
of the CPC which can only be filed before the last
forum i.e. the learned High Court(s) if the matter has
been
decided
in
the
appellate/revisional/writ
jurisdiction by the said court, or if the matter has come
to this Court directly for leave from a Tribunal/Special
Court (see Article 212 of the Constitution). However where the
petition for leave to appeal has been dismissed with
detailed reasons and a thorough decision of the
questions of law and fact has been made, the judgment
of the High Court(s)/Tribunal will though not merge
into the order of the Supreme Court yet in order to
avoid a ludicrous situation that once a question of law
and fact has been elaborately and explicitly dealt with
by this Court in the leave refusing order and the court
below may not be in a position to adjudicate upon
those points without commenting on the order/reasons
of the Supreme Court and to reopen the matter, an
application in the nature of Section 12(2) of the CPC
can be filed before this Court, leaving it to the absolute
discretion of this Court to either decide such
application itself or send the matter to the lower fora
for the decision;
9.
The above are the detailed reasons for the short order of
even date whereby these cases were dismissed, which reads as:-
Civil Appeals No.1176 and 1177 of 2015
and Civil Petition No.1428-L of 2015
-: 25 :-
“For the reasons to be recorded later, we do not find any
merit in these cases which are hereby dismissed.”
However before parting we may express our appreciation for the
valuable input and assistance provided by all the three amicus.
JUDGE
JUDGE
JUDGE
Islamabad, the
19th January, 2016
Approved For Reporting
Waqas Naseer/*
| {
"id": "C.A.176_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(Appellate Jurisdiction)
PRESENT:
Mr. Justice Asif Saeed Khan Khosa, CJ
Mr. Justice Mushir Alam
Mr. Justice Manzoor Ahmad Malik
Mr. Justice Sardar Tariq Masood
Mr. Justice Ijaz Ul Ahsan
Mr. Justice Mazhar Alam Khan Miankhel
Mr. Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008 and Civil Miscellaneous
Application No. 1990 of 2015
(Against the judgment dated 14.07.2008 passed by the High Court
of Sindh, Karachi in Constitution Petition No. D-1372 of 2008)
Moinuddin, etc.
…Appellants
versus
The State, etc.
…Respondents
Civil Petition No. 1708 of 2011
(Against the judgment dated 09.06.2011 passed by the Lahore
High Court, Lahore in Writ Petition No. 6915 of 2011)
Abdul Rehman
…Petitioner
versus
The State, etc.
…Respondents
Civil Appeal No. 253 of 2015
(Against the judgment dated 16.03.2015 passed by the Lahore
High Court, Lahore in Writ Petition No. 21957 of 2012)
Muhammad Qaiser alias Billa
…Appellant
versus
The learned District & Sessions Judge/Judge ATC No. 1,
Faisalabad, etc.
…Respondents
Criminal Petition No. 988 of 2015
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
2
(Against the judgment dated 29.01.2015 passed by the High Court
of Sindh at Sukkur in Criminal Revision Application No. 40-D of
2014)
Waryam, etc.
…Petitioners
versus
The State
…Respondent
Criminal Appeal No. 391 of 2015
(Against the judgment dated 13.08.2015 passed by the Lahore
High Court, Multan Bench, Multan in Criminal Revision No. 267 of
2015)
Zafar Hussain, etc.
…Appellants
versus
The State, etc.
…Respondents
Criminal Appeal No. 19 of 2018
(Against the judgment dated 27.01.2015 passed by the Lahore
High Court, Lahore in Criminal Appeal No. 98-J of 2014, Criminal
Appeal No. 324 of 2014, Criminal Appeal No. 337 of 2014 an
Capital Sentence Reference No. 11-T of 2014)
Kalay Khan
…Appellant
versus
The State
…Respondent
In attendance:
Mr. Shahid Azeem, ASC
Mr. Javed Iqbal Raja, ASC
Mr. Burhan Moazam Malik, ASC
Mian Pervaiz Hussain, ASC
Syed Tayyab Mehmood Jaffari, ASC
Mr. Muhammad Ishtiaq Ahmed Raja, ASC
Raja Abdul Ghafoor, AOR
Malik Ghulam Mustafa Kandwal, ASC
Mr. Kamran Murtaza, ASC
Mr. Abid Hussain Saqi, ASC
Mr. Muhammad Sadiq Baloch, ASC
Ch. Munir Sadiq, ASC
Mr. Zulfiqar Khalid Maluka, ASC
Mr. Khadim H. Sandhu, ASC
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
3
On Court’s Notice:
Mr.
Sajid
Ilyas
Bhatti,
Deputy
Attorney-General of Pakistan
Mr.
Tariq
Mehmood
Jehangiri,
Advocate-General, Islamabad
Mr.
Ahmed
Awais,
Advocate-
General, Punjab
Ch.
Faisal
Farid,
Additional
Advocate-General, Punjab
Mr. Ahmed Raza Gillani, Additional
Prosecutor-General, Punjab
Barrister Shabbir Hussain Shah,
Additional Advocate-General, Sindh
Mr.
Salim
Akhtar,
Additional
Prosecutor-General, Sindh
Mr.
Zahid
Yousaf
Qureshi,
Additional
Advocate-General,
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Syed Baqar Shah, State Counsel,
Balochistan
Mr. Ayaz Khan Swati, Additional
Advocate-General, Balochistan
Date of hearing:
02.04.2019
JUDGMENT
Asif Saeed Khan Khosa, CJ.: The
offence
of
‘terrorism’
defined in section 6 and punishable under section 7 of the Anti-
Terrorism Act, 1997 is not a compoundable offence but in many
cases the offence of terrorism is committed simultaneously with
commission of some other offence and such other coordinate
offence may sometimes be a compoundable offence. The effect of
compounding of such coordinate compoundable offence upon the
non-compoundable offence of terrorism or some other non-
compoundable offence is a question which has been referred to the
present Larger Bench for resolution. The circumstances in which
this question has arisen in the present cases are briefly narrated
as follows:
Civil Appeal No. 1772/2008
(Moinuddin and another v The State and others)
The appellants were convicted and sentenced to death under
section 302(a), PPC read with section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act,
1997 besides having been convicted and sentenced for some other
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
4
offences. The appellants’ appeal was dismissed by the High Court
and their appeal before this Court was also dismissed. The
appellants then filed a Criminal Suo Motu Review Petition before
this Court which too was dismissed and their Mercy Petition was
subsequently dismissed by the President of Pakistan. Later on the
parties entered into a compromise but the same was disallowed by
the trial court and the appellants’ Constitution Petition against the
said order was dismissed by the High Court which order was
challenged before this Court and the matter was referred to the
present Larger Bench to determine whether a compromise in
respect of the offence of murder can be treated as a mitigating
circumstance for reducing the sentence of death under section 7 of
the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 to imprisonment for life at such a
stage or not. Through an order passed on 22.04.2015 in Civil
Miscellaneous Application No. 1990 of 2015 this Court had
suspended execution of the appellants’ sentences of death during
the pendency of their main appeal.
Civil Petition No. 1708 of 2011
(Abdul Rehman v The State and another)
The petitioner was tried by the Anti-Terrorism Court, Sargodha
and was convicted and sentenced to death under section 302(b),
PPC as well as under section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997
besides having been convicted and sentenced for some other
offences. The petitioner’s appeal was dismissed by the High Court
and his appeal before this Court also met the same fate. Thereafter
the petitioner filed Criminal Review Petition 65 of 2010 before this
Court which was also dismissed vide order dated 11.11.2010. The
petitioner then filed an application before the Anti-Terrorism
Court, Sargodha seeking permission to compound the offences
against him. The said application was rejected by the said court
vide order dated 18.02.2011 which order was upheld by the High
Court on 16.08.2011 and the petitioner has challenged the said
order before this Court through this petition.
Civil Appeal No. 253 of 2015
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
5
(Muhammad Qaiser @ Billa v The learned District & Session
Judge/Judge ATC No. 1, Faisalabad and others)
The appellant was tried by the Anti-Terrorism Court, Faisalabad
and was convicted and sentenced to death for the offence under
section 302(b), PPC as well as for the offence under section 7 of the
Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 besides having been convicted and
sentenced for some other offences. The appellant’s appeals were
dismissed by the High Court and also by this Court and his
convictions and sentences were upheld. The appellant then filed a
Criminal Suo Motu Review Petition before this Court which was
dismissed and his Mercy Petition was also rejected by the
President of Pakistan. In a subsequent round the appellant’s
application for compromise was dismissed by the trial court and
the High Court refused to interfere in the same. Leave to appeal
was granted by this Court to examine the effect of a compromise in
the compoundable offences on the sentence passed under section
7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 which offence is non-
compoundable.
Criminal Petition No. 988 of 2015
(Waryam and another v The State)
The petitioners were tried by the Anti-Terrorism Court, Sukkur and
were convicted and sentenced to imprisonment for life for the
offence under section 302(b), PPC and also for the offence under
section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 besides having been
convicted and sentenced for some other offences. The petitioners’
appeal was dismissed by the High Court and their Jail Petition
filed before this Court was also dismissed. Subsequently the
parties entered into a compromise but the trial court refused to
give effect to it and later on a revision petition filed by the
petitioners in that regard was dismissed by the High Court which
order was assailed by the petitioners before this Court through a
Criminal Suo Motu Review Petition which is being treated as the
instant petition.
Criminal Appeal No. 391 of 2015
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
6
(Zafar Hussain and another v The State and others)
The appellants were convicted by the trial court for the offence
under section 396, PPC and were sentenced to death and they
were also convicted for the offence under section 302(c), PPC and
were sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for 10 years and later on
their convictions and sentences had been upheld and maintained
by the High Court as well as this Court. The appellants then filed
Criminal Review Petition 106 of 2015 before this Court which was
also dismissed vide order dated 08.09.2015. Subsequently the
parties entered into a compromise but the trial court refused to
give effect to it and a revision petition filed by the appellants in
that regard before the High Court was also dismissed. Leave to
appeal was granted by this Court to consider whether the
sentences of death awarded to the appellants for the offence under
section 396, PPC, which is a non-compoundable offence, could be
converted into imprisonment for life in view of the compromise
affected between the parties in the coordinate compoundable
offence.
Criminal Appeal No. 19 of 2018
(Kalay Khan v The State)
The appellant was convicted by the trial court for the offences
under section 302(b), PPC and section 7(a) of the Anti-Terrorism
Act, 1997 and was sentenced to death for both the said offences
besides having been convicted and sentenced for the offences
under section 324, PPC, section 148, PPC and section 7(c) of the
Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997. During pendency of the appellant’s
appeal before the High Court the complainant party entered into a
compromise with the appellant leading to his acquittal from the
charge under section 302(b), PPC and conversion of his sentence of
death under section 7(a) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 to
imprisonment for life. Leave to appeal was granted by this Court to
examine the effect of a compromise in connection with a
compoundable offence on the conviction and sentence recorded for
an offence under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 which offence is
non-compoundable.
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
7
2.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and the
learned law officers at some length and with their assistance we
have attended to the factual and legal issues involved in these
cases as well as the precedent cases available on the subject.
3.
We find that three questions emerging from the facts of the
present cases need to be answered and they are as follows:
(i)
Can a non-compoundable offence be treated as a
compoundable offence for the purpose of recording an
acquittal in respect of that offence if a coordinate
compoundable offence committed in the same case has
been compounded by the relevant parties?
(ii)
Can
the
sentence
passed
in
a
non-
compoundable offence be reduced on the ground that
a coordinate compoundable offence committed in the
same case has been compounded by the relevant
parties?
(iii)
If the answer to question No. (ii) is in the
affirmative then at what stage and by which court or
forum reduction in the sentence passed in respect of a
non-compoundable offence be ordered, if deemed
warranted in the circumstances of the case?
4.
A careful perusal of different precedent cases decided by this
Court shows that the answers to all these questions are already
available in such cases but they are in a scattered form and the
same need to be consolidated so that the above mentioned
questions may be answered with clarity and any confusion in that
regard may be removed. The relevant extracts from such precedent
cases are reproduced here for facility of reference:
Muhammad Rawab v The State
(2004 SCMR 1170)
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
8
“3.
Heard Dr. Babar Awan, learned Advocate Supreme Court
on behalf of appellant and learned Advocate-Generals for the
State. The pivotal question which needs determination would be
as to whether parties can be allowed to compound the offences
which are not compoundable by virtue of the provisions as
contemplated in section 345, Cr.P.C. specially in view of the
specific bar as mentioned in subsection (7) of section 345, Cr.P.C.
There is no denying the fact that section 365-A, P.P.C. read with
section 7(e) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 is not compoundable.
The provisions as contained in section 345(7), Cr.P.C. have been
couched in such a plain and simple language that there is hardly
any scope for any interpretation except that a non-compoundable
offence cannot be made compoundable by this Court for the
simple reason that no amendment, deletion, insertion or addition
could be made by this Court and it could only be done by the
Legislature as this aspect of the matter falls in its exclusive
domain of jurisdiction. The provisions as contained in section
345, Cr.P.C. cannot be stretched too far by including the non-
compoundable offence therein under the garb of humanitarian
grounds or any other extraneous consideration. The offences
committed by the appellant are not of grave and alarming nature
but the same are against the society as a whole and cannot be
permitted to compound by any individual on any score
whatsoever. It may be noted that tabulation of the offences as
made under section 345, Cr.P.C. being unambiguous remove all
doubts, uncertainty and must be taken as complete and
comprehensive guide for compounding the offences. The judicial
consensus seems to be that “The Legislature has laid down in this
section the test for determining the classes of offences which
concern individuals only as distinguished from those which have
reference to the interests of the State and Courts of law cannot go
beyond that test and substitute for it one of their own. It is
against public policy to compound a non-compoundable offence,
keeping in view the state of facts existing on the date of
application to compound. No offences shall be compounded
except where the provisions of section 345, Cr.P.C. are satisfied
as to all matters mentioned in the section”. (Emphasis provided).
4.
The above judicial consensus is based on the following
authorities:--
Dalsukhram Hargovandas v. Charles DeBretton 28 Bom.
326; Meenakshi Sundarammal v. Subramaniam Ayyar AIR
1955 Mad. 369; Akshoy Singh v. Rameshawar Bagdi AIR
1917 Cal. 705; Mt. Rani v. Mt. Jaiwanti AIR 1925 Nag.
395; Crown v. Muhammad Hussain PLD 1950 Lah. 86;
Gurunarayan Das and others’s case AIR 1948 Pat. 58;
Agha Nazarali Sultan Muhammad v. Emperor AIR 1941
Sind 186; Emperor v. Jarnally and others AIR 1925 Lah.
464;
Ghulam
Rasool
v.
State
1999
MLD
3085;
Muhammad Asif v. State 1991 MLD 1026; Noor
Muhammad alias Noora v. State 1992 SCMR 2079;
Muhammad Nazir alias Jeera v. State PLD 2001 Lah. 212;
Muhammad Anwar v. State 1986 MLD 1111; Nawab-ul-
Hassan v. State 2003 SCMR 658 and Yousaf Ali v. State
2002 SCMR 1885.”
Ghulam Farid alias Farida v The State
(PLD 2006 SC 53)
“5.
The offence of dacoity is not compoundable either under
pure Islamic Law or under the statutory law of Pakistan,
therefore,
the
contention
of
the
learned
counsel
that
notwithstanding the circumstances under which the murder had
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
9
taken place, Qatl with no distinction is compoundable in Islam
and the bar of statutory law would not be applicable, has no
substance. There is concept of right of Afw and Badal-e-Suleh in
a case of Qatl-i-Amd, punishable under section 302(a), P.P.C., as
Qisas and this right can also be exercised with permission of
Court in a case in which punishment of death is awarded as Tazir
under section 302(b) but the concept of Afw and Badl-e-Suleh
under the existing law has not been made applicable to a case
under section 396, P.P.C., in which death is awarded for murder
taken place during the course of committing dacoity and thus the
Court cannot competently give effect to a compromise in a non-
compoundable offence against the policy of law. The petitioner in
the present case was awarded sentence of death under section
396, P.P.C. for murder as Tazir which had taken place during the
course of committing dacoity and the offence under section 396,
P.P.C., being not compoundable, the provision of sections 309
and 310, P.P.C., read with 338(E), P.P.C., could not be made
applicable to give effect to a compromise in a non-compoundable
offence under the law. In the matter of interpretation and
application of provision of Chapter XVI, P.P.C., in respect of the
offences mentioned therein or the matters ancillary or akin
thereto Court can seek guidance from Holy Quran and Sunnah as
provided in section 338(F), P.P.C., but the Court cannot bring a
non-compoundable offence within the purview of section 345,
Cr.P.C., by virtue of section 338-F, P.P.C., for the purpose of
compounding it on the basis of compromise. This is settled law
that Courts can interpret the provisions of law but cannot change
or substitute such provisions and also cannot go beyond the
wisdom of law. The contention of the learned counsel that the
compromise between the parties at least could be treated a
mitigating circumstance for the purpose of lesser punishment,
has also no substance. This Court while upholding the judgment
of the High Court by virtue of which conviction and sentence
awarded to the petitioner by the trial Court was maintained, has
already dismissed the petition for leave to appeal. The present
petition has arisen out of the proceedings in a miscellaneous
application moved by the petitioner for his acquittal on the basis
of his compromise with the legal heirs of the deceased, therefore,
in these proceedings, it was not possible for the High Court to re-
open the case on merits in exercise of its powers under section
561-A, Cr.P.C., and similarly this Court is not supposed to
undertake such an exercise under Article 187 of the Constitution
of Islamic Republic of Pakistan and consider the question relating
to the quantum of sentence on the basis of compromise between
the parties in such a heinous offence which is considered a crime
against the Society.”
M. Ashraf Bhatti and others v M. Aasam Butt and others
(PLD 2006 SC 182)
“7.
In view of the facts that parties have compromised the
matter and compensation has already been received by the
complainants therefore, permission is accorded to compound the
offence under section 345(2), Cr.P.C. Now we would advert to
examine whether in the cases like one in hand where brutal
murder of two young boys has been committed when they were
confined in judicial lock-up, in a shocking manner which has
outraged the public conscience, the convicts are liable for
punishment on the principle of Fasad-fil-Arz. The facts of the case
and material available on record reveal that petitioners/convicts
have committed crime in a brutal manner of the deceased who
were confined in lock-up. Therefore, considering them sitting
ducks, they took the law in their hands, without caring that
police stations or Court premises are considered such places
where law protects the life of citizens. Therefore, in exercise of
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
10
jurisdiction under section 311, P.P.C. the sentence of death of the
two convicts namely Naheeb Butt alias Bhutto and Moazzam Butt
is reduced from death to life imprisonment under section 302,
P.P.C. and under section 7(b) of A.T.A. on both the counts.
Similarly sentences awarded to Muhammad Aasam and Shahbaz
alias Dodi for imprisonment of life under section 302(b), P.P.C. is
reduced to 14 years and sentence awarded to them for life
imprisonment under section 7(b) of A.T.A. is kept intact on both
the counts with benefit of section 382-B of Cr.P.C., which has
already been extended to them by the Lahore High Court.
Remaining sentences awarded to them are kept intact. All the
sentences shall run concurrently.”
Muhammad Akhtar alias Hussain v The State
(PLD 2007 SC 447)
“2.
The petitioner after having been unsuccessful in his
attempts to secure his acquittal in the case initiated making
efforts to effect a compromise with the complainant party and in
this respect he submitted an application before the trial Court for
his acquittal on the basis of the compromise. His this application
was dismissed by the trial Court against which a writ petition was
filed before the High Court. The case was remanded back by the
High Court to the Anti-Terrorism Court (the trial Court) with the
direction to give findings with regard to the compromise between
the parties. This time the trial Court while allowing the
compromise to the extent of charge under section 302(b), P.P.C.,
acquitted the petitioner from the said charge whereas his
application to the extent of conviction and sentence on the charge
under section 7 of the ATA, 1997 was dismissed. The petitioner
again approached the High Court through a Constitution Petition
questioning the legality of the order on the ground that the
conviction and sentence of the petitioner under section 7 of the
ATA, 1997 is the outcome of the main charge under section
302(b), P.P.C. and since the petitioner has already been acquitted
from the said charge he is also entitled to be acquitted from the
charge under section 7 of the ATA, 1997. However, his this plea
was not accepted by the High Court and his writ petition was
dismissed and now the present petition.
3.
The learned counsel for the petitioner has vehemently
contended, as submitted before the High Court, that after the
acquittal of the petitioner under section 302, P.P.C. he was
entitled to the acquittal under section 7 of the ATA, 1997 which is
the offshoot of the main offence under section 302, P.P.C.
4.
We have attended to his this contention. Whatever the
nature or status of an offence but for the purposes of the
compromise it will be seen as to whether the offence/the section
of law for which the compromise is requested is compoundable
under the law or not. The offences which are compoundable have
been mentioned in section 345(1), Cr.P.C. Since the offence is
under section 7 of the ATA, 1997 for which a death penalty has
been prescribed does not find its mention in the aforesaid section
in the category of the offences which are compoundable, and both
the Courts below have rightly disallowed the compromise. In this
respect reliance can be placed on the case of Muhammad Rawab
v. The State 2004 SCMR 1170. The relevant extract from the
judgment in which leave was granted in order to examine, inter
alia, the following:--
“2. ------- The question whether the Court can
permit the parties to compound the offences which
are not mentioned in section 345, Cr.P.C. specially
when there is a bar under section 345(7) of Cr.P.C.
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
11
for entertaining a compromise in the offences not
mentioned in section 345, Cr.P.C.”
The Court while dismissing the appeal held:--
“3. ------- The pivotal question which needs
determination would be as to whether parties can
be allowed to compound the offences which are not
compoundable by virtue of the provisions as
contemplated in section 345, Cr.P.C. specially in
view of the specific bar as mentioned in subsection
(7) of section 345, Cr.P.C. There is no denying the
fact that section 365-A, P.P.C. read with section
7(e) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 is not
compoundable. The provisions as contained in
section 345(7), Cr.P.C. have been couched in such
a plain and simple language that there is hardly
any scope for any interpretation except that a non-
compoundable
offence
cannot
be
made
compoundable by this Court for the simple reason
that no amendment, deletion, insertion or addition
could be made by this Court and it could only be
done by the Legislature as this aspect of the matter
falls in its exclusive domain of jurisdiction. The
provisions as contained in section 345, Cr.P.C.
cannot be stretched too far by including the non-
compoundable offence therein under the garb of
humanitarian grounds or any other extraneous
consideration. The offences committed by the
appellant are not of grave and alarming nature but
the same are against the society as a whole and
cannot
be
permitted
to
compound
by
any
individual on any score whatsoever. It may be
noted that tabulation of the offences as made
under section 345, Cr.P.C. being unambiguous
remove all doubts, uncertainty and must be taken
as
complete
and
comprehensive
guide
for
compounding the offences. The judicial consensus
seems to be that “The Legislature has laid down in
this section the test for determining the classes of
offences which concern individuals only as
distinguished from those which have reference to
the interests of the State and Courts of law cannot
go beyond that test and substitute for it one of
their own. It is against public policy to compound a
non-compoundable offence, keeping in view the
state of facts existing on the date of application to
compound. No offences shall be compounded
except where the provisions of section 345, Cr.P.C.
are satisfied as to all matters mentioned in the
section.”
The aforesaid judgment was followed by this Court in another
case, Ghulam Farid alias Farida v. The State PLD 2006 SC 53.
5.
We have also considered the question of reduction of
sentence in view of the compromise arrived at between the
parties. Since the matter before us is not in the regular
proceeding arising out of the conviction and sentences passed by
the trial Court and his appeal before the High Court and then a
petition before this Court but after the decision having been
rendered by this Court dismissing the petition of the petitioner
against the order of his conviction and sentence and while
dismissing the petition by this Court, his conviction and
sentences under section 302/34, P.P.C. and section 7 of the ATA,
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
12
1997 were kept intact. So once the findings have been given on
merits by this Court, then it would not be appropriate to enter the
merits of the case again to consider the reduction of sentence in
an offence which is not compoundable. In this respect the
relevant portion of paras. 4 and 5 of the judgment passed in the
case of Ghulam Farid (supra) are reproduced hereinbelow:--
“4.
------- There is no cavil to the proposition
that the Courts at all levels without any legal
impediment, while deciding the criminal cases on
merits, in the regular proceedings, can consider
the compromise of an offender with the victim or
his legal heirs, as a mitigating circumstance for the
purpose of question of sentence in a non-
compoundable offence but after final disposal of a
criminal
matter,
Courts
cannot
assume
jurisdiction to re-open the case on merits in
collateral proceedings arising out of miscellaneous
application. The petitioner after losing the case on
merits, before the trial Court, the High Court and
also before this Court in regular proceedings
moved an application to the Court of first instance
for his acquittal on the basis of his compromise
with the legal heirs of the deceased wherein he also
made an alternate prayer of reduction in sentence -
------
5.
------- This is settled law that Courts can
interpret the provisions of law but cannot change
or substitute such provisions and also cannot go
beyond the wisdom of law. The contention of the
learned counsel that the compromise between the
parties at least could be treated a mitigating
circumstance
for
the
purpose
of
lesser
punishment, has also no substance. This Court
while upholding the judgment of the High Court by
virtue of which conviction and sentence awarded to
the petitioner by the trial Court was, maintained,
has already dismissed the petition for leave to
appeal. The present petition has arisen out of the
proceedings in a miscellaneous application moved
by the petitioner for his acquittal on the basis of
his compromise with the legal heirs of the
deceased, therefore, in these proceedings, it was
not possible for the High Court to re-open the case
on merits in exercise of its powers under section
561-A, Cr.P.C., and similarly this Court is not
supposed to undertake such an exercise under
Article 187 of the Constitution of Islamic Republic
of Pakistan and consider the question relating to
the quantum of sentence on the basis of
compromise between the parties in such a heinous
offence which is considered a crime against the
Society.”
6.
The findings of the Courts below by not granting
permission to compound the offence under section 7 of the ATA,
1997 are in accordance with law and particularly in view of the
bar as contained in subsection (7) of section 345, Cr.P.C. We find
no illegality in the orders impugned herein and which does not
deserve any interference. Resultantly we see no force in this
petition, leave is declined and the petition dismissed.”
Muhammad Nawaz v The State
(PLD 2014 SC 383)
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
13
“8.
It is to be noted that the act of terrorism, though is
interlinked with the principal offence i.e. 302(b), P.P.C., falls
under a different provision of law i.e. section 6(2)(n) of ATA.
Deceased Muhammad Mumtaz was on official duty at the time of
the occurrence as it is evident from the statements of P.Ws. that
he was in uniform and was causing arrest of nominated accused
along with raiding police party but to terrorize the police the
accused opened fire, which caused his (Muhammad Mumtaz)
death and also created obstruction in the discharge of their duty.
Sentence under section 302(b) attracts the provision of section
353, P.P.C., which he has already undergone. Thus, the offence
under section 6(2)(n) of ATA also stands established against the
petitioner, which provides the meaning of terrorism and any such
action that falls within the meaning of said section, involving
serious violence against a member of the police force, armed
forces, civil armed forces, or a public servant. This offence stood
established, in view of the facts and circumstances narrated
hereinabove, particularly, accepting the conviction/sentence
under section 302(b), P.P.C. as he has entered into compromise
with the deceased, however as far as the second count of death
sentence under section 7 ATA is concerned, it has got its own
implications and is not compoundable under section 345
subsections (5) and (7) of Cr.P.C. This Court examined this very
proposition in the case of Muhammad Rawab v. State (2005
SCMR 1170), reliance on which has also been placed by the
Sessions Judge when the compromise under section 302(b),
P.P.C. and 7 of ATA was submitted. Learned Special Judge gave
effect the compromise only to the extent of 302(b), P.P.C., whereas
compromise under section 7 ATA was not allowed to be
compounded in view of the law referred to hereinabove.
9.
However, this fact can also not be over sighted that in
respect of murder of Muhammad Mumtaz, Constable, the
petitioner was also sentenced to death and now the parties have
compounded the offence under section 302(b), P.P.C. and
according to the record compensation has also been paid.
Therefore, question for quantum of sentence under section 7 of
ATA can be examined in view of the judgment in the case of M.
Ashraf Bhatti v. M. Aasam Butt (PLD 2006 SC 182) wherein after
the compromise between the parties sentence of death was
altered to life imprisonment.
10.
It is to be noted that both the sentences i.e. death and life
imprisonment
are
legal
sentences,
therefore,
under
the
circumstances either of them can be awarded to him. Thus in
view of the peculiar circumstances noted hereinabove, sentence of
death under section 7 ATA, 1997 is converted into life
imprisonment without extending benefit of section 382-B, Cr.P.C.
as the same was not allowed by the trial Court, first appellate
Court as well as by this Court in the judgment under review.
11.
Accordingly, compromise between the parties is accepted
to the extent of conviction under section 302(b), P.P.C. and the
petitioner is acquitted of the charge. However, the death sentence
under section 7 of ATA is converted into life imprisonment and
the review petition is disposed of.”
Shahid Zafar and 3 others v The State
(PLD 2014 SC 809)
“9.
Insofar as the compounding of the offences is concerned
by the appellants reached through compromise with the legal
heirs of the deceased, it would be seen that Section 7 (a) of the
Anti Terrorism Act, 1997 is not compoundable and hence the
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
14
learned High Court correctly dismissed such compromise
applications. Even otherwise we are of the opinion that the cruel
and gruesome murder of the deceased who had been begging for
his life from the appellants certainly amounted to Fasad-Fil-Arz
within the meaning of Section 311, P.P.C. and hence there could
not be any question of acceptance of compromise between the
parties. However having said as much we are also aware that in
the case of Muhammad Nawaz (Supra) this Court had converted
the sentence of death to that of life imprisonment under Section
7(a) of the Anti Terrorism Act 1997 where the legal heirs had
compounded the matter with the accused as in the present case.
Consequently we would partly allow Criminal Appeal No.8-K of
2014 by directing that the sentence of death imposed upon the
appellant Shahid Zafar be reduced to life imprisonment.”
Kareem Nawaz Khan v The State
(2019 SCMR 1741)
“3.
Karim Nawaz Khan petitioner had allegedly murdered his
sister, a brother and a sister-in-law by firing at them with the use
of a Kalashnikov in an incident taking place at about 12.00 Noon
on 03.06.2007 inside the house of Muhammad Khan complainant
in village Whandi Shiapur in the area of Police Station Moch,
District Mianwali in the backdrop of a motive based upon a
dispute between the parties over some ancestral property. With
these allegations the petitioner was booked in case FIR No 101
registered at the above mentioned Police Station soon after the
incident and after a regular trial the petitioner was convicted on 3
counts of an offence under section 302(b), P.P.C. and was
sentenced to death on each count and to pay compensation and
Diyat to their heirs of the deceased. The petitioner was also
convicted by the trial court for an offence under section 7(a) of the
Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and even on that count of the charge he
was sentenced to death and to pay fine. The petitioner was
additionally convicted by the trial court for an offence under
section 21-L of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and for the said
offence he was sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for five years
and to pay fine. The petitioner challenged his convictions and
sentences before the High Court through an appeal which was
dismissed and all his convictions and sentences recorded by the
trial court were upheld and confirmed by the High Court.
Thereafter the petitioner approached this Court through Criminal
Petition No. 1245-L of 2010 but the said petition was also
dismissed by this Court on 05.06.2012 and leave to appeal was
refused to him. Hence, the present review petition before this
Court.
4.
On 05.06.2012 this Court had dismissed Criminal Petition
No. 1245-L of 2010 after attending to the merits of the petitioner’s
case and it had been held by this Court that the courts below
were justified in convicting and sentencing the petitioner and in
upholding and confirming his sentences. Through the present
review petition it has been brought to this Court’s notice that
after passage of the said order by this Court upholding and
maintaining the petitioner’s convictions, and sentences the heirs
of all the three deceased had entered into a compromise with the
petitioner which compromise was presented before the trial court,
i.e. the Anti-Terrorism Court, Sargodha and vide judgment dated
19.02.2014 the learned Judge, Anti-Terrorism Court, Sargodha
was pleased to accept the said compromise on all the three
counts of the charge under section 302(b), P.P.C. whereas the
said compromise was rejected to the extent of the petitioner’s
convictions and sentences for the offences under sections 7(a)
and 21-L of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997. We have gone through
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
15
the said order passed by the trial court on 19.02.2014 and have
noticed that the trial court had felt satisfied regarding
genuineness and completion of the acclaimed compromise
between the parties. Through the present review petition the
learned counsel for the petitioner has urged that in view of the
compromise affected between the parties vis-à-vis the offences
under section 302(b), P.P.C. the sentence of the petitioner for the
offence under section 7(a) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 may be
reduced from death to imprisonment for life. In support of this
submission the learned counsel for the petitioner has referred to
the cases of Muhammad Nawaz v. State (PLD 2014 SC 383),
Shahid Zafar and 3 others v. The State (PLD 2014 SC 809) and M.
Ashraf Bhatti and others v. M. Aasam Butt and others (PLD 2006
SC 182). The learned Additional Prosecutor-General, Punjab
appearing for the State has submitted that in above mentioned
precedent cases this Court had indeed utilized a compromise
between the parties for reduction of a convict’s sentence of death
to imprisonment for life on a charge under section 7(a) of the
Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and, thus, the matter of reduction of the
petitioner’s sentence on such score in the present case lies within
the discretion of the Court.
5.
After hearing the learned counsel for the parties and going
through the record we have noticed that the appellant was very
closely related to all the three murdered persons in this case, i.e.,
he was a brother of two of the deceased and a brother-in-law of
the third deceased and the incident in issue had taken place
because of a dispute between the parties over some ancestral
property. According to the prosecution itself there was no enmity
between the parties and the present incident had taken place half
an hour of an earlier incident wherein the petitioner and the
deceased and some others had quarreled with each other while
discussing the matter of ancestral property. It could, thus, be
said that in the absence of any on-going enmity between the
parties the present occurrence had taken place because of some
very recent provocation offered to the petitioner by the
complainant party while discussing the issue regarding ancestral
property. It may, therefore, be a case not of grave and sudden
provocation but a case which was based upon some provocation
recently offered to the petitioner although the same was not
sudden. In a case of such a situation this Court has held that the
least that a Court can do in such a case is to reduce the sentence
of death to imprisonment for life and a reference in this respect
may be made to the case of Ghulam Abbas v. Mazhar Abbas and
another (PLD 1991 SC 1059). There is an additional factor
available in this case for reduction of the petitioner’s sentence of
death to imprisonment for life and that is that a valid compromise
had been arrived at between the parties which has already been
allowed by the trial court vis-à-vis three counts of the charge
under section 302(b), P.P.C. In the cases of Muhammad Nawaz v.
The State (PLD 2014 SC 383), Shahid Zafar and 3 others v. The
State (PLD 2014 SC 809) and M. Ashraf Bhatti and others v. M.
Aasam Butt and others (PLD 2006 SC 182) this Court has already
considered a valid and accepted compromise in the coordinate
offence to be a valid ground for reduction of a sentence of death
into imprisonment for life on the charge of terrorism or of a non-
compoundable offence.
6.
For what has been discussed above this review petition is
allowed, the order under review dated 05.06.2012 passed by this
Court in Criminal Petition No. 1245-L of 2010 is recalled, the said
petition is converted into an appeal and the same is partly
allowed with the result that the sentence of death passed against
the petitioner/appellant for the offence under section 7(a) of the
Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 is converted into a sentence of
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
16
imprisonment for life. The order passed by the trial court
regarding payment of fine on that charge is maintained but it is
ordered that in default of payment of fine he shall undergo simple
imprisonment for six months. On account of a valid compromise
having been arrived at between the heirs of the three deceased
and the present appellant, which compromise had already been
allowed by the trial court, his convictions and sentences on three
counts of the charge under section 302(b), P.P.C. are set aside
and he is acquitted of the said counts of the charge. The
appellant has already served out his sentence of imprisonment for
the offence under section 21-L of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997
which shall be deemed to have run concurrently with his other
sentence of imprisonment. The appellant shall be allowed the
benefit under section 382-B, Cr.P.C. as far as his reduced
sentence under section 7(a) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 is
concerned. This review petition and the appellant’s petition
converted into an appeal are disposed of in the terms noted
above.”
5.
The situation is altogether different in cases where the
convictions and sentences of convicts have already attained finality
after decision of their review petitions by this Court. Order XXVI
Rule 9 of the Supreme Court Rules, 1980 provides as follows:
“After the final disposal of the first application for review no
subsequent application for review shall lie to the Court and
consequently shall not be entertained by the Registry.”
There is, thus, no scope for maintainability of a second or
subsequent review petition before this Court after the first review
petition has been decided. It is sometimes argued that in such a
situation, particularly in a case of extreme hardship, this Court
may attend to the matter in exercise of its jurisdictions under
Articles 184(3) or 187 of the Constitution or may resort to
revisiting the earlier order or judgment in order to safeguard the
interests of justice but such arguments have consistently been
rejected by this Court in the past. In many previous cases this
Court has consistently held that after exhausting the review
jurisdiction of this Court a party to a case cannot invoke Articles
184(3) or 187(1) of the Constitution for reopening the same case. It
has also been held by this Court that the question whether an
interpretation of law in any earlier order or judgment of this Court
needs to be revisited or not is a question to be decided by this
Court upon its own initiative and no party to a case or any other
interested person can approach this Court for revisiting its earlier
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
17
orders or judgments. The following precedent cases may be
referred to in this respect:
Khalid Iqbal and 2 others v Mirza Khan and others
(PLD 2015 SC 50)
“12.
The question of maintainability of the 2nd Criminal
Review Petition on the ground that this Court has to do complete
justice by invoking Article 187(1) of the Constitution is also
misconceived. The provisions of Article 187(1) cannot be attracted
in the present case, as this Court has already recorded findings
against the petitioner by the Judgment dated 28-2-2001, against
which review was also dismissed and there was no ‘lis’ pending
before this Court warranting exercise of its jurisdiction under
Article 187(1) of the Constitution, besides Rule 9 of the Order
XXVI of the Supreme Court Rules, bars 2nd Review Petition.
There is a distinction between right of a party to approach the
Court and jurisdiction of the Court to do complete justice on its
own. Once this Court has finally determined the right of the
petitioner in the judgment dated 28-2-2001, holding him guilty,
the petitioner through 2nd Review Petition, cannot reagitate it. If
such a Review Petition is allowed to be entertained, it will land in
a situation where findings of this Court against a party will never
attain finality.
13.
This, however, does not mean that the jurisdiction of this
Court is barred by any restriction placed by the Constitution;
there is no Article in the Constitution which imposes any
restriction or bar on this Court to revisit its earlier decision or
even to depart from them, nor the doctrine of stare decisis will
come in its way so long as revisiting of the judgment is warranted,
in view of the significant impact on the fundamental rights of
citizens or in the interest of public good. This issue was fully
comprehended and answered in the case titled Regarding
pensionary benefits of the Judges of Superior Courts from the Date
of their respective retirements, irrespective of their length of service
as such Judges (PLD 2013 SC 829 at page 993). The relevant
portions are reproduced herein below:--
“3.
My learned brother has exhaustively dealt
with the question of maintainability, which is a
threshold proposition of the matter, and in this
behalf extensive reference to the case-law has also
been made. I therefore have no intention to add
any superfluity to that, however, my approach to
the proposition is quite simple, plain and facile, in
that, the Supreme Court of Pakistan is the apex
Court of the country. It is the final, the utmost and
the ultimate Court, inter alia, in relation to, (a)
resolving disputes inter se the parties before it, (b)
securing and enforcing the fundamental rights of
the citizen/person, when those (rights) are in issue
before the Court, in any of its jurisdiction, either
original or appellate or suo motu, (c) the
interpretation and the enunciation of the law of the
land, (d) examining and adjudging the legislative
Acts and the executive order/actions of the State,
in the exercise of its power of judicial review, (e) the
exercise of original jurisdiction as per the mandate
of Article 184 of the Constitution, (f) the advisory
jurisdiction within the parameter of Article 186 of
the Constitution, (g) the review of its decision
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
18
(judgments)
(see
Article
188)
(h)
a
special
jurisdiction conferred upon this Court by any law.
And above all the power to do complete justice (see
Article 187). In terms of Article 189 of the
Constitution, “Any decision of the Supreme Court
shall, to the extent that it decides question of law or
is based upon or enunciates a principle of law,
(emphasis supplied) be binding on all other courts in
Pakistan”. Moreover, according to Article 190 “All
executive
and
judicial
authorities
throughout
Pakistan shall act in aid of the Supreme Court”.
4. The aforestated legal position explains and
highlights the true magnitude and the supremacy
of this Court in regard to the dispensation of
justice in the country and the enunciation and the
declaration of the law by it. As the law laid down
by the (apex) Court, and the order(s) passed by it,
being the paramount and ultimate in nature, has
to be imperatively and mandatorily followed,
obeyed and adhered to by all the concerned.
Reading Articles 189 and 190 conjointly, and while
keeping in view the scheme of the Constitution, the
very purpose, the pivotal position and the status of
this Court (prescribed above), it is expedient that
correct law should be pronounced by the apex
Court. And pursuant to the above object and due
to the venerated position of this Court, the Court is
cumbered with, inviolable responsibility, and a
sacred duty, to interpret, declare and enunciate
the law correctly, so that it should be followed,
obeyed and adhered to purposively and in letter
and spirit, by all the other organs of the State
(including all other Courts in Pakistan) strictly
inconsonance
with
the
true
aim
of
the
aforementioned Articles. It may be pertinent to
mention here, that any invalid enunciation of law,
shall contravene and impugn the very character,
and attribute(s) of this Court and such bad/wrong
law shall cause drastic adverse effects on the
socioeconomic,
political,
geographical,
ethnic,
cultural aspects and dynamics of the nation, the
society, the people at large and the State in
presentee or in futurio. In the above context,
reference can also be made to Article 4 of the
Constitution which enshrines (inter alia) an
inalienable right of every citizen to be dealt with in
accordance with the law, obviously this shall mean
the law that is, correctly laid down by this Court.
As it is a cardinal principle of justice, that the law
should be worn by the Judge in his sleeves and
justice should be imparted according to the law,
notwithstanding whether the parties in a lis before
the Court are misdirected and misplaced in that
regard. Therefore, if any law which has been
invalidly pronounced and declared by this Court,
which in particular is based upon ignorance of any
provisions of the Constitution, and/or is founded
on gross and grave misinterpretation thereof; the
provisions of the relevant law have been ignored,
misread
and
misapplied;
the
law
already
enunciated and settled by this Court on a specific
subject, has not been taken into account, all this,
inter alia, shall constitute a given judgment(s) as
per incuriam; and inconsistent/conflicting decision
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
19
of this Court shall also fall in that category. Such
decision
undoubtedly
shall
have
grave
consequences and repercussions, on the State, the
persons/ citizens, the society and the public at
large as stated above. Therefore, if a judgment or a
decision of this Court which is found to be per
incuriam (note: what is a judgment per incuriam
has been dealt with by my brother), it shall be the
duty of this Court to correct such wrong verdict
and to set the law right. And the Court should not
shun from such a duty (emphasis supplied). For
the support of my above view, I may rely upon the
law laid down in the dicta Lt. Col. Nawabzada
Muhammad Amir Khan v. The Controller of Estate
Duty, Government of Pakistan, Karachi and others
(PLD 1962 SC 335 at page 340):--
“Where, however, there is found to be
something directed by the judgment
of which review is sought which is in
conflict with the Constitution or with
a law of Pakistan, there it would be
the duty of the Court, unhesitatingly
to amend the error. It is a duty which
is enjoined upon every Judge of the
Court by the solemn oath which he
takes when he enters upon his
duties, viz., to “preserve, protect and
defend the Constitution and laws of
Pakistan” But the violation of a
written law must be clear.”
M. S. Ahlawat v. State of Haryana and another (AIR
2000 SC 1680):--
“15. To perpetuate an error is no
virtue but to correct it is a compulsion
of judicial conscience.”
Bengal Immunity Co. Ltd., v. State of Bihar and
others (AIR 1955 SC 661):--
“19. Reference is made to the
doctrine
of
finality
of
judicial
decisions and it is pressed upon us
that we should not reverse our
previous decision except in cases
where a material provision of law
has been overlooked or where the
decision has proceeded upon the
mistaken
assumption
of
the
continuance of a repealed or expired
statute and that we should not differ
from a previous decision merely
because a contrary view appears to
us to be preferable.
It is needless for us to say that we
should not lightly dissent from a
previous pronouncement of this court.
Our
power
of
review,
which
undoubtedly
exists,
must
be
exercised with due care and caution
and only for advancing the public
well being in the light of the
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
20
surrounding circumstances of each
case brought to our notice but we do
not consider it right to confine our
power within rightly fixed limits as
suggested before us.
If on a re-examination of the question
we come to the conclusion, as indeed
we have, that the previous majority
decision was plainly erroneous then
it will be our duty to say so and not
to perpetuate our mistake even when
one learned Judge who was party to
the previous decision considers it
incorrect
on
further
reflection
(emphasis supplied by me).
In Superintendent and Remembrancer of Legal
Affairs, West Bengal v. Corporation of Calcutta (AIR
1967 SC 997) it is held:-
“If the aforesaid rule of construction
accepted by this Court is inconsistent
with the legal philosophy of our
Constitution, it is our duty to correct
ourselves and lay down the right rule
(emphasis
supplied
by
me).
In
constitutional matters which affect
the evolution of our policy, we must
more readily do so than in other
branches of law, as perpetuation of a
mistake will be harmful to public
interests.
While
continuity
and
consistency are conducive to the
smooth evolution of the rule of law,
hesitancy to set right deviations will
retard its growth. In this case, as we
are satisfied that the said rule of
construction is inconsistent without
republican polity and, if accepted,
bristles with anomalies, we have no
hesitation to reconsider our earlier
decision.”
The question, however, shall be as to how this duty
should be discharged and the object of correcting
the wrong law, and setting it (the law) right should
be achieved. One of the obvious ways of doing so
is, when a party to the lis seeks review of the
wrong judgment in terms of Article 188 of the
Constitution. But what, if that remedy is not
availed for any reason, or even if availed by the
concerned, is discarded by the Court (again by
committing an another wrong). Whether thereafter,
such a wrong decision on the point of law, cannot
be remedied and interfered with, revisited or set
aside at all or in other words, even if a judgment
which is patently per incuriam, infinitely should be
left outstanding, allowing it to become the liability
of this Court and our legal/judicial system, for all
future times. And the (this) Court and the system
should be fettered by it, and held as a captive
thereto, leaving it intact to pervade and permeate
serious prejudice in perpetuity to the persons/
citizens of the country and even the State,
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
21
compelling
them,
to
be
dealt
with
by
a
wrong/invalid law, despite it having come to the
notice
of
the
Court,
through
any
means
whatsoever, that such decision suffers from patent
and gross vice, and it is vividly a judgment per
incuriam by all references. The answer is “No”. In
my candid view the approach to leave such a
decision to stay intact shall be ludicrous and shall
lead to drastic effects as indicated above. Rather in
such a situation this Court, having special position
in our judicature (judicial system as highlighted
above) shall have the inherent, intrinsic and inbred
power (jurisdiction) vested in it, (a) to declare a
judgment per incuriam; (b) decline to follow the
same as a valid precedent, (c) and/or to set it
aside. For the exercise of jurisdiction in that regard
and for the discharge of the duty as mentioned
earlier, it is absolutely irrelevant and immaterial
vide (via) which source it (decision) has come to the
notice of the Court. The Court once attaining the
knowledge of such a blemished and flawed decision
has the sole privilege, to examine the same and to
decide about its fate, whether it is per incuriam or
otherwise. In this context, it may be mentioned, for
example, if while hearing some case, it is brought
to the attention of the Court by the member(s) of
the Bar; or during the hearing of any matter, the
Court itself finds an earlier judgment to be per
incuriam; or if a Judge (Judge of this Court) in the
course of his study or research, comes across any
judgment which in his view is per incuriam or if
any information through the Registrar of the Court
is passed on to the honourable Chief Justice of the
Court or to any other Judge (of this Court), by any
member of the Bar, or the member of the civil
society (any organization/group of the society) that
a judgment is per incuriam (note: without the
informant having any right or locus standi of
hearing or the audience, until the matter is set out
for hearing in the Court and the Court deems it
proper to hear him), the Court in exercise of its
inherent suo motu power and the duty mentioned
above (emphasis supplied) shall have the due
authority and the empowerment to examine such a
judgment, in order to ascertain and adjudge if the
law laid down therein is incorrect or otherwise.
And if the judgment is found to be per incuriam, it
shall be dealt with accordingly. In such a situation
(as earlier stated) it shall not be of much
significance, as to who has brought the vice of the
judgment to the notice of the Court or through
which channel it has reached there. Rather, the
pivotal aspect, the object, the concern and the
anxiety of this Court should be to examine the
judgment and if it is per incuriam to set the law
right with considerable urgency.”
On perusal of the paragraphs referred to hereinabove, we can
safely reach a conclusion that this Court has absolute powers to
re-visit, to review and or to set aside its earlier judgments/orders
by invoking its Suo Motu Jurisdiction under Articles 184(3), 187
or 188 of the Constitution. The Powers of this Court to exercise its
inherent jurisdiction under the above referred Articles of the
Constitution are not dependant upon an application of a party.
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
22
14.
The learned counsel has contended that the petitioner has
the fundamental rights, under Articles 9 and 25 of the
Constitution to seek protection of his liberty as a citizen of this
country. We are not persuaded by this contention of the learned
Advocate Supreme Court of the petitioner. The protection of the
term “liberty” used in this Article would not cover the petitioner,
who was convicted by this Court, and had exhausted all the legal
remedies available in law, against his conviction and sentence.
The findings of this Court against the petitioner had attained
finality, which could not be undone on the basis of the judgment
in the case of Dilawar Hussain (supra) which came, later in time,
and had distinct facts. Therefore, the contention of the learned
Advocate Supreme Court that Article 9 of the Constitution
protects the life and liberty of the petitioner is without force. As
far as the discrimination under Article 25 of the Constitution is
concerned, the petitioner has not been discriminated against at
all. This Court has decided his case on the basis of the material
produced at trial. The petitioner could not plead discrimination of
lesser sentence by relying on the case of Dilawar Hussain (supra),
as every case needs to be decided on its own merits and the
decision of one case will not regulate the quantum of sentence in
the other case, nor it could attract the term ‘discrimination’ as
used in Article 25 of the Constitution.
15.
For the aforesaid reasons, we hold that 2nd Criminal
Review Petition of the petitioner is not competent and the
judgment dated 28-2-2001, in Criminal Appeal No. 23/1997, and
the order dated 6-3- 2008 in Criminal Review Petition
No.12/2001, passed by this Court having attained finality, cannot
be impugned once the petitioner has exhausted all his legal
remedies. Mere delay on the part of executive to execute the
sentence of the petitioner would not give him a right to approach
this Court and have his decision reversed on the aforestated
grounds.”
Syed Shabbar Raza Rizvi and others v Federation of
Pakistan, Ministry of Law and Justice Division through
Secretary, Islamabad and others
(2018 SCMR 514)
“There is another aspect of the matter which is of considerable
importance i.e. the maintainability of these petitions. In this
context, it is held that the petitioners had the remedy of
challenging the judgment, if they were aggrieved of the same, by
filing review petitions, which they did attempted so to do but
could not succeed. They were a party in Khurshid Anwar
Bhinder's case (supra) and their respective submissions were
rejected and the review applications were accordingly dismissed
as being not maintainable; besides observing that the judgment
impugned, being in the supreme national interest, there hardly
appeared any justification for review. Further, the petitioners
contested the contempt notices in Justices (R) Iftikhar Hussain
Chaudhry's case (supra) and then Intra Court Appeals in Justice
Hasnat Ahmed Khan's case (supra) but without any measure of
success. All the points raised in the said cases/judgments have
been re-agitated through the present petitions. In such a
situation, the petitions under Article 184(3) are absolutely
incompetent and not maintainable. Where a person has/had the
opportunity of filing a review or appeal against a judgment, and
either files a review/appeal and fails, or does not avail that
opportunity, or fails to become a party in any pending
review/appeal filed by another person against the same
judgment, then he has no right to re-agitate the matter through a
petition under Article 184(3) ibid. Article 184(3) ibid is a
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
23
constitutional provision which is meant for the purposes of
enforcement of fundamental rights, where there is a question of
public importance involved. It cannot be exercised as a parallel
review jurisdiction by the court, especially when the remedy of
review has already been availed or declined. Yes, a judgment of
this Court can be considered to be per incuriam but it is for the
Judges to revisit any such judgment, if and when pointed out by
any person during the course of hearing of any other case. Such a
finding would be premised on the Court finding the same
judgment to be against any provision of the Constitution or the
law, or the principle(s) already settled by a larger Bench of the
Court. It is not the right of a person, who would have no locus
standi under Article 184(3) of the Constitution, to file such a
petition, particularly in the situation where the review jurisdiction
has been invoked and the same (review) has been dismissed;
thus, such judgment (under review) can never be challenged by
virtue of filing independent proceedings under Article 184(3) of
the Constitution. This would be an abuse of the process of law
and is absolutely impermissible. Resultantly, we do not find any
merit in these petitions which are accordingly dismissed.”
Akhter Umar Hayat Lalayka and others v Mushtaq Ahmed
Sukhaira and others
(2018 SCMR 1218)
“Second review is barred by law and no party can now approach
this Court for a second review, however, this Court has absolute
power to re-visit its earlier judgments/orders by invoking its Suo
Motu Jurisdiction under Articles 184(3), 187 or 188 of the
Constitution. This Power is not dependant upon an application of
any party and it was so held in the case of Khalid Iqbal v. Mirza
Khan (PLD 2015 SC 50), in the following words:-
“12.
The question of maintainability of the 2nd
Criminal Review Petition on the ground that this
Court has to do complete justice by invoking Article
187(1) of the Constitution is also misconceived. The
provisions of Article 187(1) cannot be attracted in
the present case, as this Court has already recorded
findings against the petitioner by the Judgment
dated 28-2-2001, against which review was also
dismissed and there was no 'lis' pending before this
Court warranting exercise of its jurisdiction under
Article 187(1) of the Constitution, besides Rule 9 of
the Order XXVI of the Supreme Court Rules, bars
2nd Review Petition. There is a distinction between
right of a party to approach the Court and
jurisdiction of the Court to do complete justice on its
own. Once this Court has finally determined the
right of the petitioner in the judgment dated 28-2-
2001, holding him guilty, the petitioner through 2nd
Review Petition, cannot re-agitate it. If such a
Review Petition is allowed to be entertained, it will
land in a situation where findings of this Court
against a party will never attain finality.
13.
This, however, does not mean that the
jurisdiction of this Court is barred by any restriction
placed by the Constitution; there is no Article in the
Constitution which imposes any restriction or bar on
this Court to revisit its earlier decision or even to
depart from them, nor the doctrine of stare decisis
will come in its way so long as revisiting of the
judgment is warranted, in view of the significant
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
24
impact on the fundamental rights of citizens or in
the interest of public good. ... …
On
perusal
of
the
paragraphs
referred
to
hereinabove, we can safely reach a conclusion that
this Court has absolute powers to re-visit, to review
and or to set aside its earlier judgments/orders by
invoking its Suo Motu Jurisdiction under Articles
184(3), 187 or 188 of the Constitution. The Powers
of this Court to exercise its inherent jurisdiction
under the above referred Articles of the Constitution
are not dependant upon an application of a party.”
The same view has been reiterated in a recent judgment dated
5.1.2018 passed in the case of Syed Shabbar Raza Rizvi v.
Federation of Pakistan (2018 SCMR 514).”
6.
In view of the legal position already declared by this Court in
the above mentioned precedent cases the questions posed above
are answered as follows:
(i)
Can a non-compoundable offence be treated as a
compoundable offence for the purpose of recording an
acquittal in respect of that offence if a coordinate
compoundable offence committed in the same case has
been compounded by the relevant parties?
It has already been clarified in many a case that the non-
compoundable offence of terrorism is an offence distinct and
independent from any other coordinate offence also committed in
the same case including the offences under sections 302, 365-A,
396 and 460, PPC, etc. and a reference in this respect may be
made to the cases of Muhammad Amin v The State (2002 SCMR
1017), Muhammad Ali and others v The State and others (PLD 2004
Lahore 554), Muhammad Rawab v The State (2004 SCMR 1170),
Muhammad Akhtar alias Hussain v The State (PLD 2007 SC 447)
and Kareem Nawaz Khan v The State through PGP and another
(2016 SCMR 291). It is hereby held that an offence which the law
declares to be non-compoundable remains non-compoundable
even if in a coordinate compoundable offence a compounding takes
place between the relevant parties and, therefore, despite any
compounding of the coordinate compoundable offence an acquittal
cannot be recorded in the non-compoundable offence on that sole
basis.
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
25
(ii)
Can
the
sentence
passed
in
a
non-
compoundable offence be reduced on the ground that
a coordinate compoundable offence committed in the
same case has been compounded by the relevant
parties?
It is declared that in an appropriate case, keeping in view the
peculiar circumstances of the case, compounding of a coordinate
compoundable offence may be considered by a court towards
reduction of the sentence, within the permissible limits, passed for
commission of a non-compoundable offence. It is further declared
that consideration of this factor vis-à-vis reduction of the sentence
passed for commission of the non-compoundable offence lies
within the discretion of the court and cannot be treated as
automatic or as a matter of course.
(iii)
If the answer to question No. (ii) is in the
affirmative then at what stage and by which court or
forum reduction in the sentence passed in respect of a
non-compoundable offence be ordered, if deemed
warranted in the circumstances of the case?
It is clarified that in case of compounding of a coordinate
compoundable offence reduction of a sentence passed or to be
passed for commission of a non-compoundable offence may be
considered on that ground by the following courts at the following
stages of the case:
(i)
by the trial court at the time of passing the sentence at
the end of the trial; or
(ii)
if compounding of the coordinate compoundable
offence takes place at the appellate or revisional stage before
a High Court or before this Court at the stage of petition for
leave to appeal or appeal or review petition then a prayer for
reduction of the sentence passed for commission of the non-
compoundable offence may be made on that ground before
the Court seized of the pending matter; or
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
26
(iii)
if this Court has already passed a final order or
judgment in a petition for leave to appeal or an appeal and
no review petition has been filed so far then reduction of the
sentence passed for the non-compoundable offence may be
sought on the ground of compounding of the coordinate
compoundable offence through filing of a review petition
before this Court; or
(iv)
if the remedy of filing of a review petition before this
Court has already been exhausted then, there being no
scope for filing of a second or subsequent review petition
before this Court and a party to a case or anyone else
interested in the matter being in no position to seek
revisiting of an earlier order or judgment of this Court, the
only remedy left for seeking reduction of the sentence passed
for commission of a non-compoundable offence on the
ground of compounding of a coordinate compoundable
offence is to file a Mercy Petition before the worthy President
of Pakistan who may, in his discretion, consider this aspect
in the light of the judgments passed by this Court on the
subject from time to time; or
(v)
if the remedy of a Mercy Petition before the President
has already been exhausted before compounding of the
coordinate compoundable offence has taken place then after
acceptance of the compromise by the competent court in
respect of the coordinate compoundable offence the
Superintendent of the relevant Jail shall, upon an initiative
of the convicted prisoner, forward a fresh Mercy Petition to
the President on behalf of that convicted prisoner seeking
fresh consideration of the matter by him in respect of the
sentence
passed
against
the
convicted
prisoner
for
commission of the non-compoundable offence in the light of
compounding of the coordinate compoundable offence
committed by him. When seized of such a fresh Mercy
Petition the President may, in his discretion, consider the
Civil Appeal No. 1772 of 2008, etc.
27
matter of the convicted prisoner’s sentence passed for
commission of the non-compoundable offence afresh in the
light of the judgments passed by this Court on the subject
from time to time.
7.
The office is directed to fix the captioned appeals and
petitions for hearing before appropriate Benches of this Court for
their decision in terms of the legal position declared through the
present judgment.
Chief Justice
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Judge
Announced in open Court at Islamabad on 11.10.2019.
Chief Justice
Islamabad
11.10.2019
Approved for reporting.
Arif
| {
"id": "C.A.1772_2008.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
•
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE GULZAR AHhilED, HCJ
MR. JUSTICE IJAZ UL AHSAN �
•.
MR. JUSTICE SAYYED MAZA.HAR ALI AKBAR NAQVI
Mk' ')
:Civil AppeL__
1 No.1.78 of 2020
Against judgment dated 07.11.2019 of
Peshawar High Court, Peshawar, passed in
Civil Revision No.127-B of 2016.
Government of KPK through Secretary „..Appellant(s)
Elementary & Secondary Education,
Peshawar & Others
VERSUS
Latif Ullah Khan �
...Respondent(s)
For the Appellant(s): �Mr. Atif Ali Khan, Addi.AG, KP
For the Respondent(s): �
Mr. Tariq Javed Qureshi, A.SC
OA, ft...5 7or.j._,-,4
Date of Hearing: �
03.02.2021
JUDGMENT
'JAZ tJL AHSAN, J-. Through the instant Appeal
by leave of the Court, the Appellants have challenged the
judgment of the Peshawar High Court, Peshawar dated
07.11.2019 (hereinafter referred to as "the Impugned
Judgment') whereby a Revision Petition (C.R1Va 127-B of
2016) filed by them was dismissed.
2. � Briefly stated the facts necessary for the
disposal of this appeal are that the Appellants advertised
various posts of Primary School Teachers (PST) in the Daily
Aaj newspaper, dated 16.10.2008, inviting applications from
eligible candidates. As per the said advertisement, sixty
,
Civil Appeal No.1 78 of 2020
percent of the posts would be :filled through initial
recruitment based on merit at District level and the
remaining forty percent would be filled through recruitment
on merit at union council level. The Respondent, being a
permanent resident of union council Isak Khel and holding a
two-year diploma in education from Regular institute of
Technical Education (R.I.T.E), applied against the respective
post. However, after completing the requisite test and
interview, the Respondent was placed at No.24 on the merit
list and therefore other candidates who were higher on the
merit list were appointed against the vacant posts.
Aggrieved, the Respondent filed a civil suit for declaration
and mandatory injunction against the Appellant in the Court
of Senior Civil Judge, Lakki Marwat on 02.04.2012. The
Respondent had two main grievances. First, that he is a
qualified diploma holder in education from R.I.T.E whereas
all the appointees had their diplomas from Ailama Iqbal
Open University and as per prevailing policy the R.I.T.E
diploma was given preference over the diplomas of other
institutions. Therefore, he contended that on the basis of
such policy he should have been placed at serial No.01 on
the merit list. The second grievance of the Respondent was
that no marks had been given to him for his five years of
experience in the field of teaching whereas under
recruitment policy the Appellants were bound to count five
extra marks in the total mark of the Respondent. After
recording evidence, the Trial Court decreed the suit in favor
of the Respondent vide judgment and decree dated
-':',1*A-• �
7:4E-VATXWWW-7,74ZZ-44.7.177
Civil Appeal No.178 of 2020
17.03.2015, directing the Appellant to appoint the
Respondent against one of the available posts of PST in
Union Council Isak Khel without further delay.
Subsequently, the Appellant challenged the judgment and
decree before the Additional District Judge, Lakki Marwat,
which was dismissed vide judgment dated 25.05.2016. The
Appellants then filed a Civil Revision Petition before the
Peshawar High Court, Bannu Bench, which was also
dismissed vide judgment dated 07.11.2019. Aggrieved of the
same, the Appellant approached this Court and sought leave
to appeal.
3. � Leave to appeal was granted by this Court vide
order dated 02.03.2020 which is reproduced below for ease
of reference:
"Learned Additional Advocate General, KP has
contended that all the three Court have misread the
evidence, in that, DW-2 in his evidence, has made no
admission that the 05 extra-marks were to be granted on
account of field experience, as in his very cross examination
he stated that no such policy of the Government was in. the
field rather, some proposal was circulating about it. He
further contends that on merits, the respondent has not
qualified and Hasinuilah, who has obtained 67.832 marks
from Isa Khel, Sher Zaman who has obtained 58.84 marks
and Shafiullah, who has obtained 58.826, were appointed,
while the marks obtained by the respondent Latifullah are
51.89, He further contends that even if the alleged 5 marks
are counted for the petitioner, still he will not have similar
marks as that of the three candidates notes above, who
since have been appointed. He further contends that the
suit was filed by the respondent after three years of
appointment of process and such process of appointment
had become past and closed transaction, which could not
have been interfered with by the Court.
'
1?1,1L �
2_211:}'E4lgfi-,1111,1:21.0a210
Civil Appeal No.178 of 2020 �
4
2. �
The contentions raised by the learned AAG require
consideration. Leave to appeal is granted to consider, inter
alia, the same. The appeal shall be heard on the available
record but the parties are allowed to file additional
documents within a period of one month. As the matter
relates to service, office is directed to fix .the same
expeditiously, preferably after three months."
4.
The main argument advanced by the learned
counsel for the Appellant is that all three Courts have
misread the evidence and ignored the fact that all the posts
were filled purely on merit in accordance with the relevant
law and policy. With regards to the argument of the
Respondent that five additional marks should be added to
his total mark based on his five years of field experience,
learned counsel contends that no such recruitment policy
exists in practice and that only a mere a proposal regarding
it has been circulated. Learned counsel points out that the
Respondent's own witness, DW-2, in his cross-examination
admitted this very fact. Thus, he argues that in the absence
of any policy in practice, no relief could have been granted to
the Respondent on the ground of five years of field
experience.
5.
Learned counsel for the Respondent, on the
other hand, has argued that since the Respondent was a
qualified diploma holder from R.I.T.E, which is an. eighteen-
month diploma, whereas the appointees obtained their
diplomas from Allama Iqbal Open University, which is a
nine-month diploma, therefore, in accordance with relevan
policy, the Respondent should be given preference over other
Z.T,T:IlinETITYEZEINFEaIESENZHEE113.1:EIF!0:717,72:TE::*'1: ' �
iFv.,;:!...r....44q.":..v),.:-1:111, kilfsP2U6,127 L42 �
P.d?&:2:1-..i;Y:::;:.
Civil Appeal No. 178 of 2020 �
5
candidates. Learned counsel further submits that no
additional marks for experience were granted to the
Respondent despite the fact that he possessed five years of
experience in the field of teaching and as per recruitment
policy five additional marks should have been added to his
total mark: It has also been argued before us that other
similarly placed candidates who possessed the R.I.T.E
diploma were given preference and appointed against the
posts of PST. Hence, a refusal to grant the same relief to the
Respondent amounts to discrimination and violation of his
fundamental rights protected under the Constitution of the
Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973.
6.
We have heard the learned counsel for the
parties at considerable length and gone through the case
record. The key question which falls for the determination of
this Court is whether under the recruitment policy the
Respondent should have been appointed against the post of
PST based on his qualification and his five years' worth of
field experience in education.
7.
Perusal of the record reveals that the
Respondent is a qualified diploma holder from R.I.T.E and as
per notification Ex.DW1/1, the Associate Degree in
Education (ADE) is given preference in recruitment against
the post of PST, for the reason that ADE is a two-years
program whereas the duration of other diplomas is nine
months or one year. Therefore, it is clear from the outset
that under recruitment policy, a R.I.T.E diploma holder is to
Civil Appeal No.173 of 2020 �
6
be given preference over other candidates. However, it is
pertinent to note that such preference shall only be given
when the candidate has equal marks as the other competing
candidate on merit. Therefore, a distinction must be drawn
between a R.I.T.E diploma holder who has equal marks as
other candidates on the merit list and is thereby given
preference on the basis of his qualification and a RIT.E
diploma holder who scores significantly lower marks than
competing candidates. The latter shall not be given
preference merely by virtue of the diploma. Accordingly, the
Respondent cannot be given preference over the candidates
appointed against the respective posts when his overall
marks were significantly lower than those who were
appointed on merit. Therefore, we do not find this argument
to be sustainable.
8. � With regard to the second argument of the
Respondent that he should be appointed against the post of
PST based on the five additional marks for his field
experience, we are not convinced of the same. It must be
noted that the marks obtained by the Respondent were
51.39 and , even if the additional five marks for experience
were added, his overall mark would be 56.89. On the other
hand, the candidates who have been appointed against the
respective posts have obtained 67.832, 58.84, and 58.826
marks respectively. Therefore, even if the Respondent was
granted the additional five marks, he would still not have
similar marks as those of the three candidates who have
Civil Appeal No.178 of 2020
been appointed. It must also be noted that the Respondent's
own witness (DW-2) admitted during cross examination that
the said policy for granting additional marks for experience
had yet not been implemented in practice and that only a
mere proposal regarding it had been circulated. Therefore, in
the absence of any concrete policy in place, the Respondent
cannot get any relief on account of his five years of
experience in the field of education.
9. � With regard to the final argument of the learned
counsel for the Respondent that various other candidates
were given preference and appointed against the posts of
PST based on the R.I.T,E diploma, therefore a failure to
grant the same treatment to the Respondent amounts to
discrimination, we are not persuaded by the same. We note
that this argument was not made by the Respondent at any
stage of the case, either before the Civil Judge, the
Additional District Judge or before the Peshawar High Court.
Since the Respondent failed to do so and also failed to
implead the alleged similarly placed candidates, it is not
possible for us at this point to ascertain whether the
Respondent was discriminated against.
10. �It is essential to note that under Section 115 of
the Code of Civil Procedure (1908), the supervisory
jurisdiction of the High Court in a civil revision petition is
purely discretionary and rather limited. However, this Court
has held on many occasions that such discretion must be
exercised in a lawful and valid manner on the basis of well
-
_C c
Civil Appeal No.1 78 of 2020 �
8
entrenched principles of the exercise of such discretion.
Therefore, the High Court shall not arbitrarily refuse to
exercise its discretionary powers, rather, it must satisfy itself
as to whether jurisdiction has been exercised properly and
whether the proceedings of the subordinate Court suffer
from any illegality or irregularity. We find that in the present
case, the Peshawar High Court failed to exercise its revision
jurisdiction properly in law.
11. �In light of what has been discussed above, we
find that none of the grounds on the basis of which the
Appellant was ordered to appoint the Respondent against
the post of PST are maintainable, Therefore, the Peshawar
High Court has seriously erred in law by dismissing the Civil
Revision Petition filed by the Appellant. Consequently, the
impugned judgment dated 07.11.2019 passed by the
Peshawar High Court is set aside and the listed appeal is
allowed.
ISLAMABAD, THE
3rd of February, 2021
Fizz'
AC/*
NA Approved For Rep
| {
"id": "C.A.178_2020.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN.
MR. JUSTICE MUSHIR ALAM.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1793 OF 2016 AND C. M. APPEAL NO. 206 OF 2016.
(On appeal against the judgment dated 31.5.2016 of the Lahore High Court,
Rawalpindi Bench passed in FAO No. 49 of 2015).
Nadeem Farooq and others.
…Appellant(s)
Versus
Newze Land Electronic Trading Co. Lee Sharja.
…Respondent(s)
For the appellant(s):
Sh. Zamir Hussain, ASC.
Mr. Ahmed Nawaz Ch., AOR. (Absent)
For the respondent(s):
Mr. Shaukat Rauf Siddique, ASC.
Mr. Mehmood A. Sh., AOR. (Absent).
Date of Hearing:
30.11.2016.
O R D E R
EJAZ AFZAL KHAN, J.- This appeal as of right has arisen out of
the judgment dated 31.05.2016 of the Lahore High Court, Rawalpindi
Bench whereby the learned Judge in its chambers allowed the revision
petition filed by the respondent and set aside the order of the Executing
Court accepting objection of the appellant.
2.
This case was argued at length on many dates. The main
contention of the learned ASC appearing on behalf of the appellants was
that since the decree sought to be executed has been passed by the
Federal Court of first instance which cannot be treated as a decree of
superior Court in terms of Section 44-A CPC, it cannot be executed.
3.
Learned ASC appearing on behalf of the respondent
contended that since the Federal Court of first instance also hears appeals
in the matters against judgments of local Courts, it could also be treated as
Federal Court of appeal and as such a superior Court for all legal and
practical purposes.
4.
We also involved the learned DAG in the matter but the
assistance he provided is summed up as under :-
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1793 OF 2016 AND C. M. APPEAL NO. 206 OF 2016
2
“Learned Deputy Attorney General assisted the Court. Apparently
he appears to have agreed with the proposition that the court of
appeal does not mean the court of appeal exercising appellate
jurisdiction in the matters other than those decreed by such court.
It, according to him, includes the court confirming, reversing or
modifying the decree of the court of first instance. Learned ASC
for the respondent insisted that the court of appeal does not
necessarily mean the court of appeal exercising appellate
jurisdiction against the decree passed by the court of first instance
but since nothing incisive, aboveboard and unambiguous has
been cited as could justify a departure from the ordinary meaning
of the word “superior” used in Section 44-A CPC, the learned
Deputy Attorney General wants a week’s more time to provide the
assistance of that nature. Re-list on 07.11.2016.”
5.
We have gone through the record carefully and considered
the submissions of the learned ASCs for the parties.
6.
The question emerging for the consideration of this Court is
what is the nature of the decree, what is the status of the Court passing it
and whether such decree could be executed in a Court in Pakistan. The
main provision of CPC dealing with the nature of the decree, status of the
Court passing it and its executability is Section 44-A which reads as under :-
“44-A. Execution of decree passed by Courts in the United
Kingdom and other reciprocating territory. (1) Where a
certified copy of a decree of any of the superior Courts of
the United Kingdom or any reciprocating territory has been
filed in a District Court, the decree may be executed in
[Pakistan] as if it had been passed by the District Court.
(2)
Together with the certified copy of the decree shall
be filed a certificate from such superior Court stating the
extent, if any, to which the decree has been satisfied or
adjusted and such certificate shall, for the purposes of
proceedings under this section, be conclusive proof of the
extent of such satisfaction or adjustment.
(3)
The provisions of section 47 shall as from the filing of
the certified copy of the decree apply to the proceedings
of a District Court executing a decree under this section,
and the District Court shall refuse execution of any such
decree, if it is shown to the satisfaction of the Court that
the decree falls within any of the expectations specified in
clauses (a) to (f) of Section 13.
Explanation 1. “Superior Courts”. With reference to
the United Kingdom, means the High Court in England, the
Court of Session in Scotland, the High Court in Northern
Ireland, the Court of Chancery of the County Palatine of
Lancaster and the Court of Chancery of the County
Palatine of Durham.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1793 OF 2016 AND C. M. APPEAL NO. 206 OF 2016
3
Explanation 2. “Reciprocating territory” means [the
United Kingdom and such other country or territory as] the
[Federal Government] may, from time to time, by
notification in the [official Gazette], declare to be
reciprocating territory for the purposes of this section; and
“superior Courts”, with reference to any such territory,
means such Courts as may be specified in the said
notification.
Explanation 3. “Decree”, with reference to a
superior Court, means any decree or judgment of such
Court under which a sum of money is payable, not being a
sum payable in respect of taxes or other charges of a like
nature or in respect of a fine or other penalty, and
a) with reference to superior Courts in the United
Kingdom, includes judgments, given and decree made in
any Court in appeals against such decrees or judgments,
but
b) in no case includes an arbitration award, even
if such award is enforceable as a decree or judgment.]”
7.
What is the status of United Arab Emirates and what is the
superior Court in its hierarchy for the purposes of Section 44-A CPC have
been fully illustrated in the notification SRO No. 208(I)2007 which reads as
under:-
“SRO. 208(I)/2007.--- In exercise of the powers conferred by Section
44A of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), the
Federal Government is pleased to declare the United Arab
Emirates to be a reciprocating territory and the Court of Appeal of
the United Arab Emirates to be Superior Courts for the purposes of
the said Section.
WHEREAS under section 44A of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), the Federal Government is
empowered to declare, by notification in the Official Gazette, any
country to be reciprocating territory for the purposes of said
section and also to declare Superior Courts with reference to any
such territory.”
It is thus clear that United Arab Emirates has been declared as a
reciprocating State and that the Court of Appeal in the United Arab
Emirates is a superior Court for the purposes of Section 44-A CPC. What is
the hierarchy and ranking of the Courts established in United Arab Emirates
has been listed in Article 9 of the Federal Law No. 03 issued on 26.05.1983
(Concerning The Federal Judicial Corps) which reads as under:-
“Article 9. As Amended by Article 1 of the Federal Law No. 2
dated 24/3/1991:
The federal courts in the United Arab Emirates State shall consist
of:
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1793 OF 2016 AND C. M. APPEAL NO. 206 OF 2016
4
1. The Federal Supreme Court.
2. The Federal Courts of Appeal.
3. The Federal Courts of First Instance.
Their ranking among themselves shall be in the order in which they
are listed hereinabove.”
8.
A combined reading of Section 44-A CPC, SRO notification
No. 208(I)/2007 and Article 9 of the Federal Law No. 03 issued on 26.05.1983
(Concerning The Federal Judicial Corps) would reveal that United Arab
Emirates is a reciprocating State and that the Federal Court of Appeal
established in the hierarchy is a superior Court for the purposes of Section
44-A CPC. Now what is left to be determined by this Court is as to what is
the status of the Court passing the decree sought to be executed? A look
at the decree would reveal that it has been passed by the Court of first
instance which can neither be construed as Court of Appeal nor a superior
Court in terms of Section 44-A CPC and the notification issued thereunder.
When so it cannot executed without having recourse to the process of
Section 13 of the CPC. The view taken by the High Court thus does not
appear to be correct.
9.
For the reasons discussed above, we allow this appeal, set
aside the impugned judgment and restore that of the Executing Court. The
respondent, however, would be at liberty to institute a suit in terms of
Section 13 CPC which shall be disposed of as expeditiously as possible but
not later than six months. The C. M. Appeal also stands disposed of.
JUDGE
JUDGE
ISLAMABAD.
30.11.2016.
M. Azhar Malik
| {
"id": "C.A.1793_2016.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PAKISTAN
(APPELLATE JURISDICTION)
PRESENT:
MR. JUSTICE EJAZ AFZAL KHAN.
MR. JUSTICE UMAR ATA BANDIAL.
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
(On appeal from the judgment dated 26.09.2005 passed by the Lahore
High Court, Lahore in C.R. No. 641 of 1991).
Farid Bakhsh.
…Appellant.
Versus
Jind Wadda and others.
…Respondents
For the appellant:
Ch. Mushtaq Ahmed Khan, Sr. ASC
Mr. M.S. Khattak, AOR
For the respondents:
Mian Asif Mumtaz, ASC
(1-a,2,3)
Date of hearing:
30.03.2015.
J U D G M E N T
EJAZ AFZAL KHAN, J.- This appeal has arisen out of the
judgment dated 26.09.2005 of the Lahore High Court, Multan Bench
whereby the learned Judge in its chambers allowed the revision
petition filed by the appellants, set aside the judgment and decree
dated 03.09.1991 of the learned Additional District Judge, Rajan Pur
and restored the judgment and decree dated 12.02.1990 of the
learned Civil Judge.
2.
Facts forming the background of this case have been
narrated in para-1 of the impugned judgment which read as under :-
“On 22.4.1988 the respondent filed a suit against the
petitioner. In the plaint it was stated that Muhammad alias
Bhoori agreed to sell 99 kanals of land to the respondent for
a consideration of Rs.90000/-. He received the entire amount
of consideration and executed an agreement dated
28.11.1986. The executant died before the said date. Later
records were checked and it was found that the deceased
owned only 48 kanals 6 marlas and also the price comes to
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
2
Rs.44500/-. The petitioners are the heirs of the deceased who
has died issueless. He had earlier filed a suit for declaration
which was withdrawn with permission to file afresh on
24.9.1988. The land stands mutated in favour of the
petitioners. With these averments he sought a decree for
specific performance of the said agreement. The petitioners
in their written statement denied the said facts.”
3.
The learned ASC appearing on behalf of the appellant
contended that where the appellant proved the document by
producing positive evidence, which also enjoyed the virtue of being
preponderant, it was for the respondents to prove that the
document was forged and fabricated. The learned ASC to support
his contention placed reliance on the case of Dil Murad and others.
Vs. Akbar Shah (1986 SCMR 306), Nazir Ahmed v. Muhammad Rafiq
(1993 CLC 257) and Jagannath Khan and others v. Bajrang Das
Agarwala and others (AIR 1921 Calcutta 208). Failure to examine the
other attesting witnesses, the learned ASC submitted, cannot furnish
a justification for non-suiting the appellant when the scribe of the
document also supported the testimony of one of the attesting
witnesses. Such failure, the learned ASC maintained, being
procedural in nature cannot be construed as substantive so as to
make it a basis for non-suiting the appellant. The learned ASC to
support his contention placed reliance on the cases of Imtiaz
Ahmed. Vs. Ghulam Ali and others (PLD 1963 SC 382), Jameel
Ahmed. Vs. Late Saifuddin through Legal Representatives (1997 SCMR
260). Though the appellant, the learned ASC went on to argue,
admitted that the executant suffered from a disease which resulted
in his death but such admission appears to have been made without
understanding the implications of the death-bed-transaction,
therefore, no finding could based thereon. The learned ASC next
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
3
contended that where two Courts below were at variance, the High
Court in exercise of its revisional jurisdiction could not have interfered
with the finding of the First Court of Appeal which was also the final
court of fact. The learned ASC by placing reliance on the cases of
S.A.K. Rehmani. Vs. The State (2005 SCMR 364), Muhammad Akram
and another. Vs. Mst. Farida Bibi and others (2007 SCMR 1719) and
Qadir Baksh (Deceased) through L.Rs. Vs. Allah Dewaya and another
(2011 SCMR 1162), contended that no fault could be found with a
document at a latter stage when it was admitted in evidence
without any objection. The learned ASC lastly argued that where
revision petition of the respondents was dismissed for non-
prosecution, its restoration could not be made without hearing the
appellant that too when application moved in this behalf besides
being time barred did not disclose sufficient cause.
4.
The
learned
ASC
appearing
on
behalf
of
the
respondents contended that where appellant being beneficiary of
the document failed to prove it in accordance with the requirements
of Article 79 of Qanoon-e-Shahadat Order [hereinafter referred to as
“the Order”], the High Court was well within its turf to doubt its
genuineness and discard it as such. The learned ASC next
contended that where according to the appellant the executant
received the amount and handed over possession of the property,
what restrained him to get the deed registered. The whole story of
the execution of the agreement to sell, the learned ASC added,
appears to be a yarn spun to grab the property left by the
deceased. While responding to the argument as to the restoration of
the revision petition of the respondents dismissed for non-prosecution,
the learned ASC contended that a revision petition admitted for
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
4
regular hearing could be dismissed for non prosecution and that in
case it was dismissed it could well be restored within a period of
three years as was done in this case. The learned ASC by concluding
his arguments contended that where the appellant himself admitted
that the executant so called was suffering from a disease resulting in
his death, he cannot turn around now to challenge the effect of
such admission.
5.
We have gone through the entire record carefully and
considered the submissions of the learned ASCs for the parties.
6.
The record reveals that the executant so called being a
diabetic was living with the appellant. According to the appellant
the executant so-called agreed to sell his landed property and that
on receipt of sale consideration he executed the document which is
Ex.P-1 on the record. But what happened to the executant so called
during his stay with the appellant which called for the sale of his
property? Alright, every human being with a free will could act in a
manner he liked and even unpredictably but why didn’t appellant
insist on registration of the sale when he paid the entire sum and
there was no impediment in the way, is yet another question
begging aloud for an answer. But when no answer much less
convincing comes to the fore, it can well be gathered that things
have not happened the way they have been portrayed in the plaint
and the evidence examined by the appellant.
7.
The deed witnessing the agreement appears to have
been signed by two attesting witnesses but appellant examined only
one. He to cover up the lapse, in the first instance, sought to construe
the requirements of Article 79 as being procedural rather than
substantive, and then sought to equate the testimony of the Scribe
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
5
with that of an attesting witness. But we cannot appreciate any of
these arguments unless we know the nature of the document and
requirements of law for proving it.
8.
There is no denying the fact that a deed witnessing an
agreement to sell being a document involving financial obligation
has to be proved in accordance with the requirements of Article 79
of the Qanoon-e-Shahadat Order. What are its requirements for
proving a document of this type can well be known by reading it
which runs as under:-
“If a document is required by law to be attested, it
shall not be used as evidence until two attesting
witnesses [at] least have been called for the purpose
of proving its execution, if there be two attesting
witnesses alive, and subject to the process of the
Court and capable of giving evidence:
Provided that it shall not be necessary to call an
attesting witness in proof of the execution of any
document, not being a will, which has been
registered in accordance with the provision of the
Registration Act, 1908, (XVI of 1908) unless its
execution by the person by whom it purports to have
been executed is specifically denied.”
This Article in clear and unambiguous words provides
that a document required to be attested shall not be used as
evidence unless two attesting witnesses at least have been called for
the purpose of proving its execution. The words “shall not be used as
evidence” unmistakably show that such document shall be proved in
such and no other manner. The words “two attesting witnesses at
least” further show that calling two attesting witnesses for the
purpose of proving its execution is a bare minimum. Nothing short of
two attesting witnesses if alive and capable of giving evidence can
even be imagined for proving its execution. Construing the
requirement of the Article as being procedural rather than
substantive and equating the testimony of a Scribe with that of an
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
6
attesting witness would not only defeat the letter and spirit of the
Article but reduce the whole exercise of re-enacting it to a farce.
We, thus, have no doubt in our mind that this Article being
mandatory has to be construed and complied with as such. The
judgments rendered in the cases of Imtiaz Ahmed v. Ghulam Ali and
others and Jameel Ahmed v. Late Safiuddin through Legal
Representatives (supra) have therefore no relevance to the case in
hand. Reference to the judgment rendered in the case of Nazir
Ahmed v. Muhammad Rafiq (1993 CLC 257) (supra) cannot help the
appellant when it being against the terms and meanings of the
Article is per incuriam. The case of Jagannath Khan and others v.
Bajrang Das Agarwala and others (supra) too will not help the
appellant when production of two attesting witnesses was not a
requirement of the law then in force. The argument addressed on the
strength of the judgment rendered in the case of Dil Murad and
others v. Akbar Shah (supra) has not moved us a bit when the
appellant failing to call the other attesting witness failed to prove the
deed in accordance with the requirements of law. Such failure, in the
absence of any plausible explanation, would also give rise to an
adverse presumption against the appellant under Article 129(g) of
the Order. In the case of Hafiz Tassaduq Hussain v. Muhammad Din
through Legal Heirs (PLD 2011 SC 241), this Court after defining the
meanings of the word “attesting” in the light of Black’s Law
Dictionary and other classical books and case law held that a
document shall not be considered, taken as proved or used in
evidence, if not proved in accordance with the requirements of
Article 79 of the Order.
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
7
9.
Another reason for not equating the testimony of a
Scribe with that of an attesting witness is that both of them sign the
document in a different capacity and with a different state of mind.
They, as such, do not meet the requirements of Article 79 of the
Qanoon-e-Shahadat Order. Scribe, however, could be examined by
the party for corroboration of the evidence of the attesting witnesses
but not as a substitute therefor. This aspect was also highlighted in
the case of Hafiz Tassaduq Hussain v. Muhammad Din through Legal
Heirs (supra) in the paragraph which reads as under:-
“To the same effect are the judgments reported as
Qasim Ali v. Khadim Hussain through legal
representatives and others (PLD 2005 Lahore 654)
and Shamu Patter v. Abdul Kadir Rowthan and
others (1912 (16) IC 250). Therefore, in my
considered view a scribe of a document can only
be a competent witness in terms of Articles 17 and
79 of the Qanun-e-Shahadat Order, 1984 if he has
fixed his signature as an attesting witness of the
document and not otherwise; his signing the
document in the capacity of a writer does not fulfil
and meet the mandatory requirement of attestation
by him separately, however, he may be examined
by the concerned party for the corroboration of the
evidence of the marginal witnesses, or in the
eventuality those are conceived by Article 79 itself
not as a substitute.”\
10.
Transaction in this case, could not prima facie be given
a colour of death-bed-transaction, if viewed in the light of the dicta
rendered in the cases of Shamshad Ali Shah and others. Vs. Syed
Hassan Shah and others (PLD 1964 SC 143), Mst. Chanan Bibi and 4
others. Vs. Muhammad Shafi and 3 others (PLD 1977 SC 28), Noor
Muhammad Khan and 3 others. Vs. Habibullah Khan and 27 others
(PLD 1994 SC 650), Rehmat Ali deceased through L.Rs. Vs. Mst. Karam
Bibi and others (2006 SCMR 940), as nothing has been brought on the
record by the respondents to show that the executant so called at
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
8
the time of executing the agreement to sell suffered from a disease
which became the immediate cause of his death; that the disease
he suffered from was of a nature which could induce imminent
apprehension of death and that the disease he suffered from
incapacitated him from pursuing his ordinary activities. But where the
appellant himself, despite having been given to understand what
does the expression death-bed-transaction stand for, admitted that
the executant so called suffered, at the relevant time, from a disease
having all the attributes listed above, he cannot make a somersault
at this stage.
11.
The argument that no fault can be found with a
document at the later stage when it was admitted in evidence
without any objection is ornamental rather than legal as the counsel
cross-examining the witness producing and exhibiting the document,
can not foresee or anticipate that the other attesting witness is not
going to be called. Therefore, the judgments rendered in the cases
of S.A.K. Rehmani. Vs. The State (2005 SCMR 364), Muhammad Akram
and another. Vs. Mst. Farida Bibi and others and Qadir Baksh
(Deceased) through L.Rs. Vs. Allah Dewaya and another (supra) have
no relevance to the case in hand.
12.
The argument about restoration of revision petition in the
absence of the appellant cannot be overplayed when a revision
petition admitted for regular hearing could not be dismissed for non
prosecution and in case it was, it could be restored when an
application in this behalf was moved well within time. The argument
that where two Courts below were at variance, the High Court in
exercise of its revisional jurisdiction could not have interfered with the
finding of the First Court of Appeal, which is also the Final Court of
C. A. No. 1797 of 2005.
9
Fact, is also without substance when the latter handed down the
finding without considering material parts of evidence on the record
and the relevant law in this behalf. We, therefore, hold that the
impugned judgment being based on correct appreciation of
evidence and the relevant law, is unexceptionable on all accounts.
13.
For the reasons discussed above, this appeal is dismissed,
with no order as to cost.
| {
"id": "C.A.1797_2005.pdf",
"url": ""
} |
Ch. Afrasiab Khan, ASC
Mr. Muhammad Munir Piracha, ASC
9.2.2022
For the petitioner:
For the
Date of hearing:
r-t
/
(App el1at
Jur1sdictOfl)
F
R.'
JUSTICEMAZHAR ALAJW KHAN MIANI(JI EL
JUSTICE SYED MAflooR ALL SffAJ4
QLQj5
dgment dated
the Peshawar
id Bench in
. Appellant
I
others
ram
(On appeal from the
23122013 passed
High Court, Abbott
C. No. 138/06)
Muhammad Iqbaj
Matj ur Rebman
.Respondents
ORDER
2frJ7cft5e1J The appellant, being defendant in
.
questioned the impugned judgment dated 23rd
the Peshawar High Court Abbottabad Bench
y predecessor of the respondents for issuance of
n and PO55Cssion was concurrently decreed by
Eience the present appeal with the leave of this
rch, 2015.
counsel for the parties were heard and record of H
record would reveal that predecessor of the
a suit for permanent injunction and Possession
dispute against the present appellant who
of the suit proper, by constructing a
the main case, I
December, 2013
whereby suit filed
Permanent iniii,
the Courts below,
Court dated 13 th M
2. Learne.
the case was perus(
Perusal of t
respondents had Ill
of the Property i
admittedly was in
C.A. No. 180/15
2.
house over the same. It is an established fact that the suit house is
situated in Town Committee Nawan Shehar, Abbottabad and the
house over the land/plot was constructed somewhere in 1981 by the•
P
present appellant for which he properly got an approval of a site plan
and other necessary documents for the purpose. The case of the I
respondents was that the land beneath the house constructed by the
appellant is comprising Khasra No.2222/1 ('Khasra in question'), i
area measuring 02 kanal, situated in "Shamlat 13th Mauza Nawan
Shehar Janubi Tehsil and District Abbottabad' which as per revenue
record, is owned by him, and this very fact was categorically denied
by the appellant by submitting his written statement and alleged that
the same was purchased by him through a registered sale deed
bearing No.90 dated 29th January, 1981 from one Muhammad Yousaf
Khan son of Hidayat Khan and record of the same was also confirmed
by the Clerk Town Committee Nawan Shehar. Besides the above, he
also alleged that the property he purchased is situated in town
committee, Nawan Sheher. It is worth to be mentioned that the suit
filed by the predecessor of the respondents was not for declaration of
his title rather the same was for permanent injunction as stated
above. The facts and circumstances of the case reflect that the
respondents, under the law, were supposed to establish their title
first by filing a suit for declaration along with possession of the
property as a consequential relief as the appellant was admittedly in
Possession of the plot by further establishing the fact that the plot in
F
Possession of the appellant is situated in khasra in question. Mere a
suit for permanent injunction, in the given circumstances is not
maintainable and cannot encompass the claim of respondents.
L.A. No. 180/15
3. During the course of trial, the learned Judge deemed it
appropriate to appoint a Local Commission vide its order dated 24th
June, 1993 which is reproduced herein below:-
It is therefore necessary to appoint a local
commission who should visit the spot in presence of
Patwarj Halqa and both the parties. After yointatjon
QL the suit Khasra number by Patwarj Halcia, he
should prepare report about any construction existing
thereon, the nature of material used in the
construction, the period of construction, the persons
in its possession and assess its market value."
The Local Commissioner, in the light of the directions of the trial1
Court, visited the spot along with revenue officials and Altaf Hussain,
Record Clerk, Town Committee Nawan Shehar. As per report of thej
Local Commissioner, the suit house is situated in Khasra in questioni
but record of the case reflects that the said conclusion by the Local'
Commissioner was made on the basis of statement/ version of the!
Patwarj Haiqa accompanying him at the time of spot inspection.!"
Such type of oral version, in absence of proper proof of the fact, can
in no way be considered as a poof required under the West Pakistan I'
Land Revenue Act, 1967. This is the moot question to be resolved, if
it is established that the suit house admittedly owned, possessed and
constructed by the appellant is situated in Khasra in question then
that khasra as per revenue record produced by the Patwrj is part
and parcel of Shamlat Deh which is jointly owned by the persons;:
1
whose names appear in the proprietary body of the village
(proprietary body of the village is a body of persons who are already I
owners of the agricultural land in the village). The respondents could
I
lay hand on this khasra number as owner if it is established on the!
record that their names appear in the proprietary body and they
I
C.A. No.JMU/lb
- are/were in physical possession of this khasra number prior to the
purchase of appellant. They would also be obliged to prove their.
dispossession either by the vendor of the appellant or the appellant
himself.. Besides the above, it should also have been established
through cogent and reliable evidence that the property in dispute is
part and parcel of Shamlat Deh. The entire exercise done by the Local:
Commissioner as well as the evidence produced by the respondents,
during trial do not reflect that the suit house is situated in khasra in
question being part of Shamlat land. There is no proper demarcation
of the property comprising Sharrilat Deh and specifically khasra 1
No.2222/1. The revenue record produced by the Patwari Haiqa and 1
Sadar Office Qanungo during the trial, will in no way help out the'7
respondents to establish their case unless the above facts are
established through demarcation on the spot. In absence of such.
evidence, the documents so produced would have no evidentiary!
value. The original mutation of the vendor of the Respondents has
not been produced by PW- 1. Mere reference of the mutation in the:
record of rights, as produced as Ex-PW- 1/3 is not sufficient to;•
establish title of Respondents. The record produced by the Appellant
from the proper lawful custody with his possession at the spot is
sufficient to hold him owner of the house in question. This exercise
could have been done by the revenue officer to define the boundaries
of testate or khasra number under Section 117 of the West Pakistan
Land Revenue Act, 1967 or demarcation of the property in question:
under Rule 67-A of West Pakistan Land Revenue Rules, 1968. Proper
location of a khasra number is not possible without such exercise.
The record of the case would reflect that no such exercise was made
in this case. Besides the above, the nature and status of the property.
has been changed to commercial and residential since long. In such a
A No.180/15
5
2
situation, a special kind of expertise would be required to locate and
I
demarcate a specific khasra. number.
4.
We have gone through the judgments rendered by the::
Courts below specially the judgment of the Civil Judge dated 29th
June, 2002 which is totally based on surmises and conjectures and
not on proper appraisal of evidence and the relevant law and the
record. The appellate Court and the High Court have simply.
concurred with the findings of the trial Court and have failed to apply
their judicial mind in the peculiar facts and circumstance of the case.:
We, in view of the above, are left with no option but to allow the
instant appeal by setting aside the judgments and decrees passed by:
the Courts below and suit of the Respondents stands dismissed with
no order as to costs. However, they may seek their lawful remedy, if
any, in view of the above discussion, if so advised.
Bench-
Islamabad,
91h February, 2022
APPROVED FOR REPORTING
/ Y asir Khan/-
| {
"id": "C.A.180_2015.pdf",
"url": ""
} |